Hated Caesar
Amanita spreta (Peck) Sacc.
Hated Caesar: https://marylandbiodiversity.com/species/20968
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Source: Wikipedia

Amanita spreta
Scientific classification Edit this classification
Domain: Eukaryota
Kingdom: Fungi
Division: Basidiomycota
Class: Agaricomycetes
Order: Agaricales
Family: Amanitaceae
Genus: Amanita
Species:
A. spreta
Binomial name
Amanita spreta
(Peck) Sacc.
Amanita spreta
View the Mycomorphbox template that generates the following list
Gills on hymenium
Cap is umbonate
Hymenium is free
Stipe has a volva
Spore print is white
Ecology is mycorrhizal
Edibility is inedible

Amanita spreta or the hated amanita[1] is an inedible species of the genus Amanita.[2]

Description

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A. spreta is usually distinguished by its grayish brown cap with dark, radial streaks; its medium to large size, the presence of a ring on the upper stem, and its stem base, in which it features a white, sacklike volva and is not prominently swollen. Its ellipsoid, inamyloid spores also help to distinguish it.[3]

Cap

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The cap measures around 5.8–15.4 centimetres (2+14–6 inches) wide, with whitish or pallid tints of gray and/or brown at first, often darkening to gray-brown or brown-gray, often darkest in the center, often white or nearly white at the margin, having minute colorless spots and/or giving the impression of densely placed radial fibers embedded in the cap skin. In addition, the cap is broadly campanulate to plano-convex, and eventually has a large umbo in a slight depression. The cap is viscid to tacky and dull to shiny to subshiny with drying, and it has a decurved, short-striate margin. The volva is either absent or present as white to pale gray, scant, irregular patches, soft to smooth, easily removable, and membranous. The flesh is white, pale brown under the cap skin in the center, is 8–17 millimetres (1212 in) thick over the stem, and is thinning evenly nearing the margin.[4]

Gills

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The gills are free, receding at maturity, very crowded to crowded, pale cream to cream to white, 8–19 mm broad, broadest at the midpoint, anastomosing, with faint and short decurrent lines on the top of the stem, and with a minutely powdery edge. The short gills are truncate to rounded truncate to subtruncate, unevenly distributed, of diverse lengths, and plentiful (sometimes more plentiful than full-length gills). The short gills can be adjacent to the stipe or adjacent to the cap margin or neither.[4]

Stem

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The stem of A. spreta is 5–10 cm long, up to 2 cm thick, tapering slightly to apex, is whitish, sometimes discoloring a little brownish; finely hairy to shaggy; with a white, skirtlike ring that may discolor brownish; with a slightly enlarged but not bulbous base that is set in a sack-like, flaring or lobed, white volva.[3]

References

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As of this edit, this article uses content from "Amanita spreta", which is licensed in a way that permits reuse under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 3.0 Unported License, but not under the GFDL. All relevant terms must be followed.

  1. ^ "Standardized Common Names for Wild Species in Canada". National General Status Working Group. 2020.
  2. ^ Phillips, Roger (2010). Mushrooms and Other Fungi of North America. Buffalo, NY: Firefly Books. p. 20. ISBN 978-1-55407-651-2.
  3. ^ a b "Amanita spreta". MushroomExpert.com. Retrieved 2016-10-10.
  4. ^ a b "Amanita spreta". Amanitaceae.org. Retrieved 2016-10-10.

Literature

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Saccardo, P.A. 1887. Sylloge Hymenomycetum, Vol. I. Agaricineae, p. 12