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Amanita muscaria

PostPosted: Sun May 04, 2008 2:36 pm
by zafra52
I took this picture in New Zealand, but this species can
be found also in Australia under pine trees.
Its scientific name is Amanita muscaria.
Sprinkling its cap with sugar or crashing
it with milk makes a poisonous bait that kills flies -
only flies? I wonder... I hope keep your pets keep away
from it.

Image

Re: Amanita Muscaria

PostPosted: Sun May 04, 2008 4:08 pm
by christiand
also DONT'T dry and SMOKE it :roll:,
you may find yourselfy under the illusion of riding a broomstick (flying)
or turning into an animal or even both :shock:

Cheers,
CD

Re: Amanita Muscaria

PostPosted: Sun May 04, 2008 4:15 pm
by christiand
 BTW,

amanita muscaria is called Fliegenpilz (Fly Mushroom) in German.
(Fliege (Fly) being the insect and Pilz = Mushroom).
Amanita muscaria is poisenous and can kill !

Cheers,
CD

Re: Amanita Muscaria

PostPosted: Sun May 04, 2008 5:45 pm
by MCWB
zafra52 wrote:only flies? I wonder... I hope keep your pets keep away
from it.

Lovely pic! It will indeed kill more than flies, it'll even kill humans if they ingest enough (which, thankfully, is still quite a bit for this particular species).

Christian, in English it's also called the fly agaric.

Re: Amanita Muscaria

PostPosted: Sun May 04, 2008 5:54 pm
by ATJ
How cool looking is that? It looks a bit like raw meat that has gone off. Did it smell at all?

zafra52 wrote:Its scientific name is Amanita Muscaria.

By the way, scientific names have sentence style capitalization. The first letter of the genus is capitalised and all the remaining letters are lower case. They are typically italicised, too. i.e. Amanita muscaria.

Re: Amanita Muscaria

PostPosted: Sun May 04, 2008 9:44 pm
by zafra52
Thank you guys. No I did not noticed any smell, but it looked quite attractive and was quite large. By the way, I did not know that Latin names were written with the first letter in capital, so thanks for that.