Amanita pantherina

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Panther cap

Conservation status
Secure
Scientific classification
Kingdom: Fungi
Division: Basidiomycota
Class: Homobasidiomycetes
Subclass: Hymenomycetes
Order: Agaricales
Family: Amanitaceae
Genus: Amanita
Species: A. pantherina
Binomial name
Amanita pantherina
(DC. ex Fr.) Krombh.

The Panther cap (Amanita pantherina), also known as the False Blusher due to its similarity to the true Blusher (Amanita rubescens), is a poisonous mushroom found in woodland throughout Europe, western Asia and North America.

Contents

A. pantherina has a bronze or pale orange-brown pileus (cap) bearing small white warts and between 5 and 15 cm (2-6 inches) in diameter. In younger specimens the cap is domed, becoming flatter with age. The upper remains of the velum form a ring around the cap margin in younger mushrooms. In moist conditions the pileus is often viscid, with a farinaceous (or starchy) odor.

The stipe (stem) grows to a length of between 6-10 cm and between 1–2½ cm in diameter, with a narrow hoop-like ring low down. The lower remains of the velum form a volva (sheath) around the basal bulb, often with one or two narrow rings.[1]

The white spores are smooth, elliptical, non-amyloid and 9½–13×7–9.5 µm in size.

Although not normally fatal, Amanita pantherina should be studied with caution. It can also be misidentified as Amanita gemmata and confused with the Blusher (Amanita rubescens), though the latter's flesh turns red or 'blushes'.

The Panther cap is an uncommon mushroom, found in both deciduous, especially beech and, less frequently, coniferous woodland and rarely meadows throughout Europe, western Asia and North America in late summer and autumn.[1] It has also been recorded from South Africa, where it is thought to have been accidentally introduced with trees imported from Europe.[2]


It is an ectomycorrhizal fungus, living in root symbiosis with a tree, deriving photosynthesised nutrients from it and providing soil nutrients in return.

The Panther cap contains muscarine and is generally regarded as more poisonous than the related Fly Agaric, having been the cause of some fatalities. Panther caps are rarely used as a hallucinogen, also similar to Fly Agaric but often with even more disastrous results. They are dried or cooked at a low temperature before ingestion.[3]

  1. ^ a b Jordan P & Wheeler S (2001). The Ultimate Mushroom Book. Hermes House. 
  2. ^ Reid DA, Eicker A (1991). "South African fungi: the genus Amanita." (PDF). Mycological Research 95: 80–95. Retrieved on 2007-11-13. 
  3. ^ North, Pamela (1967). Poisonous Plants and Fungi in colour. Blandford Press & Pharmacological Society of Great Britain. 

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