Skip to main content

Auxiliary menu

  • Blogs
  • Contact us
  • Jobs
  • News

Follow us

  • Flickr
  • Facebook
  • Instagram
  • Youtube
Home

Main navigation

  • About us
    Two dunlins with feet immersed in the sand

    Image credit: Pete Richman

    Find out about who we are, what we do, and how we are governed.

    • Who we are
    • Our work
    • How we are managed
    • How we are funded
    • Get in touch
    • Jobs
  • Support us
    A basking grey seal looks forward. Several other grey seals lay on surrounding seaweed covered rocks

    Image credit: Rob Jordan/2020VISION

    Information for individuals, groups, communities, businesses, corporate sponsors and more!

    • Become a member
    • Volunteering
    • Businesses in the Tees Valley
      • Corporate sponsors
      • Local businesses in the Tees Valley area
      • Wild work days
      • Biodiversity Net Gain with The Wildlife Trusts
    • Leave a legacy
  • Our projects
    • Little Terns at Seaton Carew
    • Barn owls
    • Artist in residence
    • Stronger Shores
    • All Our Futures
    • Five ways to wild wellbeing
    • Tees Valley geology
    • Past projects
  • Visit
    • Reserves
      • Bowesfield
      • Cattersty Gill
      • Coatham Marsh SSSI
      • Gravel Hole
      • Hardwick Dene
      • Hummersea
      • Hunt Cliff
      • Lazenby Bank
      • Margrove Ponds
      • Maze Park
      • Portrack Marsh SSSI
      • Saltburn Gill SSSI
      • The Howls
      • Woodhill Meadow
    • Learning and education
      • School workshops: Early Years and Primary
      • School workshops: Secondary
      • For families
      • Coastal Schools
      • Forest Schools
      • Important information for teachers
      • PE and Sports Premium
      • Wilder Schools
  • Get involved
    • Events
    • Help wildlife at home
    • Volunteer with us
    • Fundraise for us
    • Join us
    • Campaigning
      • Climate Action Middlesborough
      • Restoring 30% of land and sea by 2030
    • 30 Days Wild
  • Wildlife
    • Species
    • Habitats
    • Great crested newts
    • Non-native invasive species
    • Spotted something wrong at the coast?
  • Donate
  • Join
  • Shop

You are here:

  1. Home
  2. Wildlife Explorer
  3. Fungi

Species

John Bridges

Fungi

A jelly ear fungus growing from the trunk of a tree. It's a wrinkled, pinkish fungus that looks remarkably like an ear

Jelly ear

A giant puffball growing in a patch of grass. It's a football-shaped fungus with pockmarked, off-white skin

Giant puffball

Common puffball

Pink waxcap

Pink waxcap

Dryad's Saddle

Dryad's saddle

morel

Morel

St George's Mushroom

St George's mushroom

cedar cup

Cedar cup

green elf cup

Green elf cup

oyster mushroom

Oyster mushroom

devil's fingers fungus

Devil’s fingers fungus

Fly Agaric

Fly agaric

Tawny grisette

Tawny grisette

Shaggy Inkcap

Shaggy inkcap

Red elf cup fungus growing among moss and dead leaves, the Wildlife Trusts

Ruby elfcup

Hare's ear

Hare's ear

Angel's wings

Angel's wings

Violet coral

Violet coral

Velvet Shank

Velvet shank

Common eyelash fungus

Common eyelash fungus

Chicken of the woods

Chicken of the woods

Candlesnuff Fungus

Candlesnuff fungus

Birch Polypore

Birch polypore

Wood blewit

Wood blewit

Stinkhorn fungus

Stinkhorn fungus

Amethyst Deceiver

Amethyst deceiver

Scarlet elf

Scarlet elfcup

Porcelain Fungus

Porcelain fungus

Turkeytail

Turkeytail

Footer decal

Who we are

About us

Contact us

Support us

Donate

Become a member

Volunteer for wildlife

Home

©Tees Valley Wildlife Trust 2026. Registered charity number 511068 / Read our Fundraising Promise and our Privacy Policy