Merging money (Gymnopus confluens)

Systematics:
  • Vaega: Basidiomycota (Basidiomycetes)
  • Vaevaega: Agaricomycotina (Agaricomycetes)
  • Vasega: Agaricomycetes (Agaricomycetes)
  • Vasega laiti: Agaricomycetidae (Agaricomycetes)
  • Poloaiga: Agaricales (Agaric poʻo Lamellar)
  • Aiga: Omphalotaceae (Omphalotaceae)
  • Genus: Gymnopus (Gimnopus)
  • ituaiga: Gymnopus confluens (Money confluent)

Fa'atasi tupe (Gymnopus confluens) ata ma fa'amatalagaIt occurs abundantly and often in deciduous forests. Its fruit bodies are small, grow in groups, the legs grow together in bunches.

Cap: 2-4 (6) cm in diameter, at first hemispherical, convex, then broadly conical, later convex-prostrate, with a blunt tubercle, sometimes pitted, smooth, with a thin curved wavy edge, ocher-brown, reddish-brown, with a light edge , fading to fawn, cream.

Records: very frequent, narrow, with a finely serrated edge, adherent, then free or notched, whitish, yellowish.

E pa'epa'e le pauta o le spore.

Leg: 4-8 (10) cm long and 0,2-0,5 cm in diameter, cylindrical, often flattened, longitudinally folded, dense, hollow inside, first whitish, yellowish-brown, darker towards the base, then red- brown, reddish-brown, later sometimes black-brown, dull, with a “white coating” of small whitish villi along the entire length, white-pubescent at the base.

Pulp: thin, watery, dense, stiff in the stem, pale yellow, without much odor.

Mea'ai

The use is not known; foreign mycologists often consider it inedible due to the dense, indigestible pulp.

Tuua se tali