Piptoporus australiensis (Curry Punk)

 

The fruit body is a polypore with a rubbery to corky texture and looking like a thick, shelf-like outgrowth from wood. It may project to about 20 centimetres and be up to 8 centimetres thick at the wood surface. The upper surface is at first white but later staining yellow, orange, or brown and may be smooth, ridged or pitted. When fresh it may weep a yellowish fluid from the lower surface, which is yellow to orange and covered with pores.It readily stains fingers that handle it. With age the upper surface may fade to whitish but the rich colour of the underside persists.  

 

The fruit body has a smell of curry (more so as it ages) and this persists, being detectable in dried, herbarium specimens.

 

The fruit bodies appear on living or dead wood, especially fire-damaged wood.

 

The original description of this species (published in 1914) was based on a specimen collected in Queensland but it has been recorded from a wide range of forests, from tropical Queensland, south to Tasmania and South Australia and from south-west Western Australia.   

 

Look-alikes

 

It should not be possible to confuse this fungus with any other species. Pycnoporus fruit bodies are reddish orange and shelf-like, but thinner, don’t weep and do not smell of curry. Species of Fistulina have fleshy, red to reddish-brown shelf-like, non-weeping, curry-less fruit bodies in which the underside consists of separate, but densely packed, tubes.   

 

Piptoporus australiensis is listed in the following regions:

Canberra & Southern Tablelands  |  South Coast


Page 1 of 1 - image sightings only

Species information

  • Piptoporus australiensis Scientific name
  • Curry Punk Common name
  • Not Sensitive
  • Local native
  • Non-invasive or negligible
  • Up to 699m Recorded at altitude
  • Machine learning
  • Synonyms

    Piptoporus australensis
Subscribe

Location information

1,894,611 sightings of 21,075 species in 9,303 locations from 12,926 contributors
CCA 3.0 | privacy
We acknowledge the Traditional Owners of this land and acknowledge their continuing connection to their culture. We pay our respects to their Elders past and present.