Aleuria aurantia is a brilliant edible orange, stemless disc fungus that grows, often in clusters, in soil in woodlands, amongst the grass, and along roadsides. It is easily mistaken for discarded orange peel.
The fruit-bodies are saucer-shaped initially but become flat and wavy and are often contorted due to the pressure of surrounding fruit-bodies. The diameter is 20-100 mm, height to 20 mm. The upper surface is bright orange, smooth and waxy, the outer surface is paler and covered with a whitish down.
Unlike many Ascomycetes, which fruit during the spring, Aleuria aurantia can be found from November through January, the peak of the California mushroom season.
Common names: Orange Peel Fungus.
When Christiaan Hendrik Persoon described the species in 1799, he called it Peziza aurantia.
In 1870, the German mycologist Karl Wilhelm Gottlieb Leopold Fuckel (1821-1876) transferred the orange peel fungus to the genus Aleuria and gave it It is now known as Aleuria aurantia.
The specific epithet aurantia means "golden" and refers to the color of the fertile surface of these goblet fungi.
Photo sources:
Photo 1 - Author: S. Harris (CC BY-SA 4.0)
Photo 2 - Author: Holger Krisp (CC BY 3.0)
Photo 3 - Author: giantcicada (CC BY-SA 4.0)
Photo 4 - Author: Elspeth Swan (CC BY-SA 4.0)
Photo 5 - Author: Elspeth Swan (CC BY-SA 4.0)
Color:Orange
Shape: Cup Fungi
Surface:Smooth