(D.A. Reid) J.A. Cooper 2023
It is a very distinctive species with its delicate multi-layered cap, which makes it easy to identify; under the cap, it has large blunt pale pink spines. These saprophytes are usually found growing from the side of decaying wood in small troops of one to six fruiting bodies, or less commonly, from the top of buried moss-covered wood.
Common name: Pagoda fungus
Found: Native Forest
Substrate: Growing from wood
Spore: White
Height: 100 mm
Width: 30 mm
Season: Autumn
Edible: No