A giant puffball growing in a patch of grass. It's a football-shaped fungus with pockmarked, off-white skin
Giant puffball © Dr Malcolm Storey

Giant puffball

Calvatia gigantea

Statistics 
Width:typically 10cm - 80cm

This football-sized fungus can be seen in autumn, sometimes growing on grass verges.

About

The giant puffball is a large fungus, often around the size of a football. It grows on grass verges, field and woodland edges, and amongst rank vegetation. Giant puffballs are saprotrophic, which means they feed on dead organic matter - an important recycling service for decaying plants and other detritus. They usually grow in small clusters, but sometimes form 'fairy rings'. A single giant puffball can produce trillions of spores. They escape through tears in the leathery skin, dispersing on the wind.

How to identify

A very large, often roughly spherical white fungus, with thick leathery skin. The skin becomes browner as it ages. It tends to be around the size of a football, but can grow much larger.

Did you know?

There's a report from 1877 of a giant puffball that measured 1.63m long, 1.37m wide and 0.24m tall!