It is an Amanita, resembling the Fly Amanita, which we will probably soon discover.
2
How shall we know the deadly Amanita among its kindly cousins, the good mushrooms?
3
There are sixteen British species of Amanita; they grow on the ground in or near woods.
4
This is the deadly Amanita muscaria, the fly-agaric.
5
This taxon is designated here as Amanita cf.
6
Our fungus is Frost's Amanita, named after the botanist who first placed it on the list, Frost.
7
It has been described an Amanita phalloides poisoning in a female child of 2 years old with positive outcome.
8
Well, this gorgeous agaric (Amanita caesarea, SCOP.
9
Too late perhaps for medicine to help, and Amanita, the Deathcup, the child of Diablo, has claimed another victim.
10
Distinctive morphological features warrant the recognition of the three new species and a molecular phylogenetic analysis of taxa across Amanita subgen.
11
Later it was named muscarin, and now is sometimes known as amanitin, since it is confined to the mushrooms of the Amanita genus.
12
In point of fact, when eaten raw, the amanitas have no particular flavor.
13
Observe the interesting effect of the strong light upon my orange and blue amanita fungus!
14
I have sometimes employed the mottled amanita, so ill famed in the books, without disastrous result.
15
A second amanita, the sheathed amanita (Amanita vaginata, BULL.
16
Amanita fuligineoides, a lethal mushroom discovered in China, contains abundant cyclic peptide toxins that can cause fatal poisoning.