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Amanita phalloides

 

This largish fungus, known infamously as the Death Cap, accounts for more than 90% of fungus-related poisoning deaths in Europe. Amanita phalloides is quite a common species.

Identification guide

Young cap Animal feeding behaviour has generally been used as the first indication of the edibility of plants and fungi. This can be a treacherous guide, however, as rabbits and squirrels appear to be unaffected by Amanita phalloides and many other fungi that can seriously harm or even kill people.

The Death Cap, Amanita phalloides, was known by the ancient Greeks and Romans to be a deadly poison. It has been a favourite of poisoners down the centuries, and even nowadays it is still the cause of tragic and painful deaths every year.

Colours vary from sample to sample, but the most common form of this fungus has a pale yellow-green or olive cap. There is, however, an all-white form of Amanita phalloides that is very similar in appearance to the Destroying Angel, Amanita virosa. Young Death Cap specimens are sometimes collected in mistake for edible Agaricus species, with disastrous consequences.

Identification guide

Cap
Cap

5 - 15 cm dia; almost white when immature, then yellow, bronze or olive, darker in the centre (occasionally deep grass green shading towards black at the centre); soon losing all fragments of the universal veil; initially egg-shaped, but flattening at maturity. The cap, which is not striate at the margin, tends to crack at the edges when very old. As they decay, Amanita phalloides fungi give off an unpleasant smell.

Gills
Gills

Free, broad and crowded.

Initially the gills are pure white, but they turn cream as the fruit body ages.

Stipe
Stem

Stem height 7 - 15 cm; off-white, with zig-zag mottling somewhat paler than the cap colour.

Amanita phalloides usually retain their fragile, pendant ring through to maturity.

The swollen base is surrounded by a large white, sack-like volva that is often tinged green inside.

 

Spore print

White

Odour/taste

Not distinctive when young, but old specimens have an unpleasant sickly sweet smell. Do not attempt to taste this deadly poisonous species.

Habitat

Mycorhizal with hardwood, especially oaks, and occasionally with softwood trees; most common at low altitude.

Season

July to November.

Occurrence

Frequent.

Similar species

  1. Amanita citrina (False Death Cap) generally has brownish-cream veil fragments on the cap, and a volval rim around its base rather than an open sack-like volva.
  2. Agaricus campestris and other Agaricus mushrooms do not have volvae; also, the gills of immature Amanita phalloides fungi are not grey or pinky-brown as is the case with young Agaricus mushrooms.
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