March 12, 2026
Nature Done Wright
Incorporating the Celery Farm and Screech Owl Companion blogs
August 10, 2009
Monday Morning Mystery 081009
Sally Teschon found these attractive and delicate fungi in the wood-chip pile at the north end of the Celery Farm.
Anybody want to ID them?
(Thanks, Sally.)
More Monday Morning Mysteries here.
3 comments
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you are most kind-it is exactly the type of relationship I have with the farm-mutual symbiotic
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Thanks, Tom. You are on top of your game, as always…
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What beautiful specimens! It’s Monotropa uniflora–the Indian Pipe. It’s NOT a fungus, but a flowering plant. But it lacks chlorophyll, so it is heterotrophic (doesn’t make its own food). It is in fact in a symbiotic relationship with a mycorrhizal fungus, which in turn gets its food from a tree–a really interesting sort of food chain.
Beautiful photography, Sally!
TB





3 comments
sally teschon
you are most kind-it is exactly the type of relationship I have with the farm-mutual symbiotic
jim wright
Thanks, Tom. You are on top of your game, as always…
Tom Burr
What beautiful specimens! It’s Monotropa uniflora–the Indian Pipe. It’s NOT a fungus, but a flowering plant. But it lacks chlorophyll, so it is heterotrophic (doesn’t make its own food). It is in fact in a symbiotic relationship with a mycorrhizal fungus, which in turn gets its food from a tree–a really interesting sort of food chain.
Beautiful photography, Sally!
TB