Fungus

Fungus Bulgaria inquinans growing on a felled oak trunk (Quercus robur).
Photo taken in Whiteknights Park, Reading, UK, on 2014-12-24.
Fungus Bulgaria inquinans growing on a felled oak trunk (Quercus robur).
Photo taken in Whiteknights Park, Reading, UK, on 2014-12-24.
A mushroom with a very pale green cap: probably the false death cap, Amanita citrina.
Photo taken in the Wilderness, Whiteknights Park, Reading, UK, on 2014-09-21.
The conidial (asexual) form of a Nectria sp fungus, probably Nectria cinnabarina, growing on twig.
It yielded these spores (magnification x600, field width 86um):
These are about 8.5x2.5um which agrees with the 5-10(-12) x 1.5-3 µm given for the conidiospores of N. cinnabarina given on this page at Mycobank.
Crust fungus Phellinus ferreus (= Fuscoporia ferrea).
I took this specimen:
This yielded the following spores (magnification x600, field width 86um).
These are about 5x2um which is consistent with the 5–6.5 x 2–2.5um for Phellinus ferreus given at Rogers Mushrooms.
First photo and specimen taken in the Wilderness, Whiteknights Park, Reading, UK, on 2014-02-11.
A Peniophora sp fungus, probably Peniophora quercina, growing on an oak twig.
It yielded these spores (magnification x600, field width 86um):
These are about 10x3um which is consistent with the 8–12 x 3–4um given for P. quercina at RogersMushrooms.
First photo and specimen taken in Whiteknights Park, Reading, UK, on 2013-12-24.