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Fly agaric

Amanita muscaria

Description:

The cap of Amanita muscaria ranges from 10 to 20cm diameter at maturity and is red or occasionally orange. Caps usually flatten or even become slightly concave when fully developed, but occasionally the Fly agaric remains broadly convex. Caps of the Fly agaric usually retain irregular, white fragments of the universal veil, but in wet weather they can wash off even while the caps are young and domed. In all but the driest of weather, Amanita muscaria caps flatten at maturity. When damaged, the flesh just below the pellicle of a Fly agaric is initially white but soon turns yellow on exposure to air. Amanita muscaria has white, free, crowded gills that turn pale yellow as the fruitbody matures. Stems are 10 to 25 cm long and 1.5 to 2cm in diameter. White and ragged with a grooved, hanging white ring. The swollen stem base retains the whiteemains of the sack-like rvolva, which eventually fragments into rings of scales around the base of mature specimens.

Habitat:

Usually recurring in the same place for several years, Amanita muscaria is found frequently throughout the northern hemisphere, including Britain and Ireland, mainland Europe, Asia, the USA and Canada. Amanita muscaria is ectomycorrhizal. It forms mycorrhizal associations with a range of hardwood and softwood trees, notably birches, pines and spruces.

Notes:

The photogenic fly agaric spotted in a mixed forest in rural area of Twello, Holland. (sources:see reference)

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4 Comments

Jae
Jae 9 years ago

Thanks, venusflytrap, they are lovely indeed. Apparently there are three subspecies of fly agarics in the USA. On the site mushroomexpert it says "fairly widely distributed in North America, but most common in the Pacific Northwest and Rocky Mountains (occasional--possibly introduced--in northeastern North America, apparently absent in the Midwest, rare in the southeastern United States)". So I think it's an uncommon find in Pennsylvania.

Caleb Steindel
Caleb Steindel 9 years ago

Wonderful! Love fly agarics, they are always so gorgeous. are they found throughout all USA? live in PA, haven't seen one yet

Jae
Jae 9 years ago

Thanks for the comment, Marta. I haven't seen them as much as I used to either. In the KNNV fieldguide they mention that mycorrhizal fungi are becoming rare due to acid rain and forest fertilization :( So I guess I was just lucky.

The MnMs
The MnMs 9 years ago

Super beautiful! I've been looking for these in the neighboring woods where I usually find some in the fall but I have not found them this year yet. I'll keep on searching :-)

Jae
Spotted by
Jae

Gelderland, Netherlands

Spotted on Oct 23, 2014
Submitted on Oct 25, 2014

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