Amanita muscaria (Strange float): photo and description

Name:Amanita muscaria
Latin name:Amanita ceciliae
A type: Inedible
Synonyms:The float is strange
Characteristics:

Group: lamellar

Systematics:
  • Department: Basidiomycota (Basidiomycetes)
  • Subdivision: Agaricomycotina
  • Class: Agaricomycetes (Agaricomycetes)
  • Subclass: Agaricomycetidae
  • Order: Agaricales (Agaric or Lamellar)
  • Family: Amanitaceae
  • Genus: Amanita (Amanita)
  • Species: Amanita ceciliae (Amanita muscaria)

Amanita muscaria is a member of the extensive Amanita muscaria family. In Latin, the name sounds like Amanita ceciliae, the second name is Strange Float. It was identified and described by the British mycologist Miles Joseph Berkeley back in 1854.

Description of the Sicilian fly agaric

This species has many characteristics in common with the rest of the Mukhomorovs. A lamellar mushroom with a wide cap and a thin stem. It differs from its relatives in the absence of a ring. Solitary representatives are more common, less often small clusters.

Description of the hat

The mushroom has a large fleshy cap, reaching 15 cm in diameter. In a young specimen, it is ovoid, eventually turns into a convex one, opens up. The surface has a yellowish brown or deep brown color, the edges are always lighter.

The view is distinguished by a large-sized hat

Attention! Young specimens show dark warts. At the old edges, the caps are covered with grooves. The plates are light in color.

Leg description

The leg is thin and high, cylindrical, quite even. In length, it reaches 15-25 cm, in diameter 1.5-3 cm. In young specimens, it is painted in a pale pink or yellowish with a brown tint, as it ages, the color turns to gray. At the bottom there are remnants of a Volvo that darkens when pressed. The leg is at first dense, fibers are palpable in it, as it ages, it becomes hollow.

The leg length can be up to 25 cm

Where and how the Sicilian amanita grows

This species does not like only clay soils, it prefers broad-leaved and deciduous forest zones more. In Europe it is widespread, in Russia it is found in the Far East in the Primorsky Territory and in Yakutia. The mushroom also grows in Mexico. You can meet him from the last days of June until the very end of September.

Is the mushroom edible or not

Amanita muscaria is considered inedible. The pulp does not have a pronounced odor, it does not change its shade when cut. The pulp does not emit milky juice.

Doubles and their differences

The closest twins are other varieties of the Mukhomorovs. The main difference between the Sicilian is that it does not have a characteristic ring.

The most similar pearl species, with a gray pearl color and a ring on the leg, is edible.

Another double is the Vittadini fly agaric, which is part of the conditionally edible group, has a ring and a veil. It is more common in the south of Russia.

Conclusion

Amanita muscaria Sicilian mycologists consider inedible. This mushroom is not common, it is easy to distinguish it from other Mukhomorovs by its characteristic color and the absence of a veil.

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