Summary[edit] Camera location35° 32′ 00.31″ S, 148° 54′ 11.75″ EView all coordinates using: OpenStreetMap-35.533420; 148.903265. Description: English: Looking down the throat of a Clathrus archery, also known as Octopus Stinkhorn and Devil's Fingers. Spotted at Smoker's Gap in Namadgi National Park. Date: 21 April 2012. Source: Own work. Author: Steveb68.
Summary[edit] Description: English: Clathrus archeri found in a garden in Western Germany (Kempen; left lower rhine area) Deutsch: Clathrus archeri gefunden in einem Garten auf einer Rasenfläche in Westen von Deutschland (in Kempen am linken Niederrhein). Date: 19 August 2017. Source: Own work. Author: Alxlngr.
Starnberg, OT Landstetten. Tintenfischpilz im Klosterhölzl, einem Wald auf den Moränenhügeln zwischen Starnberger See und Ammersee. LSG „Westlicher Teil des Landkreises Starnberg“ (LSG-00542.01).
Summary[edit] Description: Clathrus archeri, commonly known as octopus stinkhorn, or devil's fingers, is a fungus which has a global distribution. The young fungus erupts from a suberumpent egg by forming into four to seven elongated slender arms initially erect and attached at the top. Date: 29 April 2019, 11:56. Source: Clathrus archeri.. Author: Bernard Spragg. NZ from Christchurch, New Zealand. Camera location43° 27′ 44.2″ S, 172° 41′ 03.12″ EView all coordinates using: OpenStreetMap-43.462277; 172.684199.
Summary[edit] Description: Deutsch: Tintenfischpilz (Clathrus archeri) in der Schwetzinger Hardt, am Waldrand, 21. Juni 2018. Date: 21 June 2018. Source: Own work. Author: Slimguy. Camera location49° 21′ 16.89″ N, 8° 33′ 55.8″ EView all coordinates using: OpenStreetMap 49.354692; 8.565501.
Summary[edit] Description: Deutsch: Tintenfischpilz in einer Feuchtwiese an der Moosalb bei Ettlingen, Deutschland. Date: 25 September 2015. Source: Own work. Author: Ralf Schneider.
Summary[edit] Description: When it come to creepy looking plants, Clathrus archeri has creeps to spare. Commonly known as Devils Fingers (or the rather less scary name of Octopus Stinkhorn), it is a native to Australia and Tasmania, although it has become an introduced species in Europe, North America and Asia. The young fungus erupts from a partly buried white ball known as a suberumpent egg by forming into four to seven elongated slender arms initially erect and attached at the top. The arms then unfold to reveal a pinkish-red interior covered with a dark-olive spore-containing gleba. In maturity it smells of putrid flesh and thereby attract flies which unwittingly spread the spores and therefore proliferate the species. Date: 27 March 2011, 14:29. Source: Clathrus archeri.Devils fingers.. Author: Bernard Spragg. NZ from Christchurch, New Zealand. Camera location43° 27′ 00.64″ S, 172° 36′ 21.16″ EView all coordinates using: OpenStreetMap-43.450177; 172.605879.