Green-tipped coral

Ramaria apiculata

Medium size fruitbodies with usually erect somewhat slender branches that are dull buffy tan to pale orangish brown, bruising darker orange brown to vinaceous brown, tips either colored as branches (and then the stem base or axils greenish), or yellow green to pale green, stem distinct or branching apparently from base, growth on well rotted wood, spores with small low warts often in lines or parts of spirals, clamp connections, and monomitic basal mat and rhizomorphs; collections examined from BC, WA, OR, ID, also ON, AL, AZ, CA, MI, MN, NM, NY, VT, Mexico, Finland, Germany, Italy, Sweden, (Petersen)
Green-tipped Coral! Amazingly looks just like the common name.  Canada,Fall,Geotagged,Green-tipped coral,Ramaria apiculata

Appearance

Fruiting body:
up to 12cm wide, up to 17cm high, but usually narrower and smaller, stem single or branched from base, fruitbody repeatedly branched, branches usually erect, somewhat slender, with long internodes in lower part, "but occasionally lax or spreading, and the
Flesh:
coriaceous [leathery] when fresh, (Marr)
Branch color:
dull buffy tan where fertile, darker where sterile, bruno-vinescent on bruising; tips either colored as branches (and then the stem base or axils greenish), or yellow-green to pale green; specimens showing greenish color at fruitbody base or in branch axi
Stem:
single and discrete or branched from the base so as to appear multiple or cespitose, often covered with felty basal mycelium up to 0.5cm, concolorous with branches, arising from basal tomentum; basal tomentum felty, with diffuse margin disappearing into substrate, or with margin ramifying as a tangle of slender, white, somewhat mealy, often webbed rhizomorphs, stem "white to cream color, or often some shade of green to pale blue-green", (Petersen)
green tipped coral  Fall,Geotagged,Ramaria apiculata,United States,green-tipped coral

Naming

Clavaria apiculata

Habitat

on well-rotted conifer wood or hardwood, including but not limited to Pinus ponderosa (Ponderosa Pine), Abies concolor (White Fir), Pinus strobus (Eastern White Pine), and Populus trichocarpa (Black Cottonwood), or rarely on buried wood and appearing terrestrial;

References:

Some text fragments are auto parsed from Wikipedia.

http://linnet.geog.ubc.ca/Atlas/Atlas.aspx?sciname=Ramaria%20apiculata%20var.%20apiculata
Taxonomy
KingdomFungi
DivisionBasidiomycota
ClassAgaricomycetes
OrderGomphales
FamilyGomphaceae
GenusRamaria
SpeciesRamaria apiculata