Fomitopsis mounceae is a perennial bracket fungus that grows larger every year, with its primary growth spurts occurring in the wettest weather, during spring and fall. Photo: Heather Watson / CHLY 101.7 FM & CVOX.CA

“I just think for me, there’s just so much gloom and doom in the world right now that it’s just, for me, it was just a lighthearted way of acknowledging how special this community is and trying to bring a smile to people’s faces,” Copeman said.

Copeman said she was walking in the Cumberland Forest one day, idly thinking about symbols to build community, when the idea of a Village Fungus occurred to her.

Fomitopsis mounceae is an indicator that a tree is unhealthy, as its main source of nutrients is dead, diseased, and dying trees. Photo: Heather Watson / CHLY 101.7 FM & CVOX.CA

“So she was around wood her entire life,” Copeman said. “She was in Haida Gwaii in the 1920s getting conk samples as a young woman, you know, it’s just, and it, it wasn’t— it was definitely a road less traveled and she just spent her whole life studying tree pathogens.”

It isn’t just the connection to Dr. Mounce that Copeman sees connecting this red belted conk to Cumberland; it has its own characteristics that she sees as befitting the village.

“I wanna call it a decomposer, but it’s actually a forest recycler and it attacks the heartwood and the cellulose within the trees themselves, diseased trees, and it basically brings it back down to very simplified organic matter to rejuvenate the forest and grow more trees,” Copeman explained.

Copeman said this fungus has been referred to as a “small-scale disturbance agent” because one small fruiting body can take down the commercial viability of an entire tree.

Dawn Copeman goes by @cumberlandforesthag online, reclaiming the term from its disparaging connotation to its truer meaning, a knowledge keeper of the community. Photo: Heather Watson / CHLY 101.7 FM

“I think I need to have a groundswell of support that says, yes, we’ll support this position. This is a unique community, we have to have a unique way of telling the world how unique we are, and by having the first municipal official fungus would be the way to do that obviously,” Copeman said.

Dawn Copeman added that if the village decides against naming an Official Village Fungus, there are other routes available.

“I did discover during my research that the BC government does not have an official fungus. So we might just bump it upstairs and go all in for the BC government, because they have a fossil and the fossil was actually initiated by people in Courtenay for the [Traskasaura],” she said.

Copeman first became interested in fungi by walking in the forest, something she does with her dog every day for her own mental health. Photo: Heather Watson / CHLY 101.7 FM & CVOX.CA

If Cumberland were to name the red belted conk the Official Village Fungus, Copeman has some fun ideas for ways to incorporate it into the village identity, anywhere from stickers, to t-shirts with clever puns, to playful uniforms:

“Maybe even epaulettes that the village officials could wear at meetings that would look like bracket fungus. I mean, the possibilities are endless. I mean you’d obviously, you don’t wanna make government a joke, but I think to have a little bit of levity is a good thing.”