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amanita

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amanita

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Fruiting bodies of the death cap in English woodland. The death cap, which can quite easily be mistaken for the edible common field mushroom, is particularly dangerous because there is no known antidote. It takes only 20 gm/0.7 oz of fresh fungus to kill an adult human being, death resulting from acute liver failure.
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Fly agaric toadstool Amanita muscaria. This toadstool contains toxins and is related to the fatally poisonous death cap Amanita phalloides.

Any of a group of fungi (see fungus) distinguished by a ring (or volva) around the base of the stalk, warty patches on the cap, and the clear white colour of the gills. Many of the species are brightly coloured and highly poisonous. (Genus Amanita, family Agaricaceae.)

The fly agaric (Amanita muscaria) is a dangerous, poisonous mushroom with a white-spotted red cap, which grows under birch or pine trees. It is the ‘magic mushroom’ used in religious ritual by early peoples of Siberia, Europe, and India. The buff-coloured death cap (A. phalloides) is deadly. Edible species include the false death cap (A. citrina) and the blusher (A. rubescens). A. pantherina is not edible, causing very unpleasant though nonfatal poisoning; it is often confused with stout agaric (A. spissa), which is edible.



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COLUMN: In our opinion; editorial footnote News that a Newton woman and her son were stricken seriously ill recently when they consumed a wild mushroom known as Amanita virosa - the infamous "destroying angel" - brings to mind the pleasures and perils of the fungi-picking season.
Avoid other mushrooms which look like amanita and false morels.
More than 350 specimens of mushrooms - from Amanita to Xylaria - are expected to be on display Sunday at the 27th annual Mushroom Festival and Plant Sale.
 
 
 
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