King Alfred's Cakes

The dark, golf ball-size King Alfred's Cake fungus, January 2025

Species introduction

At a glance
Latin name: 
Daldinia concentrica
Family: 
Sac fungus
Family Latin name: 
Hypoxylaceae
Category: 
Fungi
Vernacular names: 

Cramp balls, coal fungus

Species description

Species description

This is an inedible fungus with a nearly spherical appearance that starts reddish-brown when developing, and turns almost black when mature. It can grow to golf ball size, about 8cm across. Fresh growth starts between June and November, but these fungi persist throughout the year. They are commonly associated with branches of Ash that have fallen to the ground.

It is a common and widespread fungi in Britain.

The fruiting body is hard and friable, resembling a smooth lump of coal. Legend has it that an anonymous King Alfred, tasked with minding some wheaten cakes left baking by a fire, fell asleep. The resulting cakes - by that time as inedible as the fungus which takes his name - permanently linked this Saxon King with culinary ineptitude. The name King Alfred's Cakes is a pithy and accurate one for this interesting fungus.

The flesh of the fruiting body is arranged in concentric layers, almost like tree rings, hence the second part of its Latin name. It is generally thought that these concentric rings indicate annual growth, but a research paper (Daldinia: The nature of its concentric zones) suggests that this is not the case. Instead, the paper says, all the rings inside these fungus balls are produced within a single growing season.

Many types of insect and other small animals can live inside this species. Caterpillars of the Concealer Moth (Harpella forficella, not seen in the Cemetery at the time of writing) apparently eat this fungus.

The fungus can be used as a tinder for fire-lighting, the black variety being better adapted to this task. It is thought that this slow-burning briquette could have been used by early man to move fire from place to place.

Species photographs

Larger photograph(s) (click to magnify)

Details

Species family information

This family includes the cup fungi. More broadly, the genus Hypoxlon (of which King Alfred Cake's is a member) consists of fungi commonly found on dead wood.

Category information

Of surviving life forms, the Bacteria are the most ancient, followed by the Archaea. These two groups, the Prokaryotes, lack a membrane-bound nucleus in their cells. From this lineage evolved the Eukaryotes, possessing a nucleus in their cells, two types of which evolved, the Unikonta, with a single appendage (flagellum) for propulsion, and the Bikonta, with two appendages (flagella). The Unikonta gave rise to first the Fungi, then the Animals. The Bikonta evolved into the Algae and Plants. The Fungi therefore share a common ancestor with the Animals, whereas neither is closely related to plants. For this reason, vegans and vegetarians should not eat mushrooms or other fungi, nor eat bread or consume alcoholic drinks because they are prepared using yeast, a fungus.

Colloquially, the word ‘mushroom’ is used for edible species and ‘toadstool’ for poisonous species, but there is actually no scientific distinction between these words. Mycologists, the scientists who study fungi, use the term ‘mushroom’ for all species that have the familiar fruiting bodies that we see above ground. Many fungal groups do not have fruiting bodies, and they have a terminology of their own.

Unlike plants fungi can’t make their own food, but must derive it from plants or animals, living or dead. Fungi called saprophytes serve an important function decomposing and recycling dead matter back into the soil. Symbiotic fungi grow on living organisms, but do not damage them, whereas parasitic fungi do harm their living hosts.