Summary: Features include 1) resupinate growth on wood, 2) a whitish to grayish fruitbody with a radially wrinkled to papillose surface that is "very juicy" when fresh, 3) a whitish margin that is fibrillose-hairy, 4) spores that are elliptic-subcylindric, smooth, and inamyloid, 5) a monomitic hyphal system, the hyphae with clamp connections.
Microscopic: SPORES 6.5-9 x 2.5-3 microns, narrowly elliptic - subcylindric, "adaxial side straight or only slightly concave", smooth, inamyloid, acyanophilic, thin-walled; BASIDIA 4-spored, 25-35 x 5-6 microns, narrowly clavate, with basal clamp connection; CYSTIDIA none; HYPHAE monomitic: all hyphae with clamp connections, colorless except parts of hyphae in old fruitbodies, especially next to wood, which may be brown, in subhymenium 2-3 microns wide, thin-walled, richly branched and "forming a dense conglutinate tissue", subiculum hyphae 3-5 microns, parallel to substrate, often forming two discernible layers with the one close to the substrate having non-encrusted hyphae and the one close to the subhymenium having encrusted hyphae, "lumps of crystal matter often occur in the tissue of old fruitbodies", (Eriksson)
Notes: Phlebia centrifuga has been found in BC, NB, ON, AZ, CA, CO, MI, MT, and NY, (Ginns). It has also been found in Austria, Finland, Norway, and Sweden, (Eriksson).
Habitat and Range
Habitat
in spruce forests on the underside of fallen trunks and sides of stumps, (Eriksson), decaying sticks; rotting log; Abies (fir), Acer (maple), Arbutus (madrone), Betula (birch), Picea (spruce), Pinus (pine), Pseudotsuga (Douglas-fir), Thuja plicata (Western Red-cedar), Tsuga (hemlock); associated with a white rot, (Ginns)