Fa'auliuli Exsidia (Exidia nigricans)
- Vaega: Basidiomycota (Basidiomycetes)
- Vaevaega: Agaricomycotina (Agaricomycetes)
- Vasega: Agaricomycetes (Agaricomycetes)
- Vasega laiti: Auriculariomycetidae
- Poloaiga: Auriculariales (Auriculariales)
- Aiga: Exidiaceae (Exidiaceae)
- Genus: Exidia (Exidia)
- ituaiga: Exidia nigricans (Blackening Exidia)
luga mafolafola
Exidia nigricans (With.)
Tino fua: 1-3 cm in diameter, black or black-brown, at first rounded, then the fruiting bodies merge into one tuberculate brain-like mass, extending up to 20 cm, adhering to the substrate. The surface is shiny, smooth or wavy-wrinkled, covered with small dots. When dried, they become hard and turn into a black crust covering the substrate. After rains, they can swell again.
Pulp: dark, transparent, gelatinous.
spore pauta: lanu pa'epa'e.
Feeseeseaiga elongated 12-16 x 4-5,5 microns.
tofo: faatauvaa.
sogi: le faaituau.
O le mushroom e le mafai ona 'aina, ae le oona.
It grows on fallen and dried branches of deciduous and broad-leaved trees, sometimes covering a large area.
Widely distributed throughout the northern hemisphere, including throughout Our Country.
Appears in spring in April-May and, under favorable conditions, grows until late autumn.
Exidia spruce (Exidia pithya) – grows on conifers, fruiting bodies are smooth. Some mycologists believe that spruce exsidia and blackening exsidia are the same species.
Exidia glandular (Exidia glandulosa) – grows only on broad-leaved species (oak, beech, hazel). Fruiting bodies never merge into a common mass. Spores in glandular exsidia are slightly larger.