Amanita porphyria
Systematics:
- Department: Basidiomycota (Basidiomycetes)
- Subdivision: Agaricomycotina (Agaricomycetes)
- Class: Agaricomycetes (Agaricomycetes)
- Subclass: Agaricomycetidae
- Order: Agaricales (Agaric or Lamellar)
- Family: Amanitaceae (Amanitaceae)
- Genus: Amanita (Amanita)
- Species: Amanita porphyria (Amanita porphyry)
or
Fly agaric
Amanita muscaria or Amanita porphyria (lat.Amanita porphyria) is a mushroom of the genus Amanita (lat.Amanita) of the family Amanitaceae (lat.Amanitaceae).
Amanita porphyry grows in coniferous, especially pine forests. Occurs in single specimens from July to October.
The cap is up to 8 cm in ∅, first convex, then prostrate, grayish-brown, brown-gray with a gray-violet tinge, with or without filmy flakes.
The pulp is white, with a pungent unpleasant odor.
The plates are loose or poorly adherent, frequent, thin, white. Spore powder is white. The spores are rounded.
Leg up to 10 cm long, 1 cm ∅, hollow, sometimes swollen at the base, with a white or gray ring, white with a grayish tinge. The vagina is adherent, with free edges, first white, then darkening.
The mushroom is poisonous, has an unpleasant taste and smell, and therefore is inedible.
Photo of the mushroom Amanita porphyry from the questions in recognition:
2019.09.07 Alexander Kozlovskikh
2019.03.14
2018.02.04 Alexander
2016.11.22
2018.10.08 Vladimir