Simon & Schuster's Guide to Mushrooms

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Format: Paperback
Pub. Date: 1982-03-12
Publisher(s): Touchstone
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Summary

Simon & Schuster's Guide to Mushroomsis indispensable to anyone fascinated by mushrooms and other fungi. Lavishly illustrated, it contains detailed information about 420 types of mushrooms and other fungi found in the United States and Europe. The comprehensive introduction provides general information on the structure, reproduction, life cycles, classification, and distribution of the various species and describes the individual parts of the fungus as well. The entries describe the appearance, habitat, and geographic distribution of each species of fungi. The easy-to-use visual key provides each entry with immediately recognizable symbols that indicate spore color, ecological environment, and whether the species is edible or poisonous. A glossary and analytical index, plus an Index to Genera for locating particular subjects, help make this the most beautiful, valuable, and authoritative book in the field.

Author Biography

Gary Lincoff is the author or editor of several books and articles on mushrooms, including The Audubon Society Field Guide to North American Mushrooms. He teaches courses on mushroom identification at the New York Botanical Garden.

Table of Contents

CONTENTS

FOREWORD
ANALYTIC KEY
MUSHROOMS WITH SCALES ON CAP AND STEM
MUSHROOMS WITH PORES OR SPINES ON CAP AND STEM AND MUSHROOMS WITH DOMED CAPS
SHELF OR CRUST MUSHROOMS
BUSH OR CLUB MUSHROOMS
SPHERES, STARS, PEARS, AND CUP-SHAPED MUSHROOMS
GLOSSARY
BIBLIOGRAPHY
INDEX
INDEX TO GENERA

Excerpts

Chapter 1

MUSHROOMS WITH SCALES ON CAP AND STEM

1 AMANITA CAESAREA

EtymologyFrom Latin, "of Caesar" or "regal," because it was a favorite of the early Roman Caesars.

DescriptionCap 8-20 cm, hemispherical to flat, orange-red washing out to yellow, cuticle separable, sometimes with evident membranous remains of white veil, margin striate. Gills free, crowded, yellow. Stipe 8-15 x 2-3 cm, narrowing at top, hollow when mature, with yellow falling ring, slightly swollen at base, with large white membranous volva. Flesh whitish, yellowish beneath cuticle. Without evident odor. Spores white, elliptical, smooth, 8-14 x 5-8.5 microns.

EdibilityIn Europe, excellent cooked.

HabitatIn airy parts of dry oak woods, in slightly acid ground, and with pines.

SeasonSpring to autumn.

NoteThe common North American form, which may be a distinct species, has a somewhat umbonate cap and a thinner (1-2 cm) yellow stripe, and occurs from eastern Canada to Florida and west to the central states; the same or a similar form occurs in the Southwest and Mexico.

CautionA number of look-alikes of unknown edibility exist in North America. And what is calledA. caesareain North America is not generally regarded as choice.

2 AMANITA MUSCARIA

Muscaria

Common nameFly agaric.

EtymologyFrom Latin "of flies," because of the northern European custom of using the cap, soaked in milk, to kill or stupefy flies.

DescriptionCap 8-25 cm, hemispherical to slightly concave, cuticle detachable, red, covered with white pyramidal warts which may be removed by rain, margin striate. Gills white, crowded, free. Stipe 12-25 x 1.5-2.5 cm, basal bulb with volva of several concentric warty rings, ring white, membranous. Flesh soft and white, orange-red beneath cuticle. Not very conspicuous odor. Spores white, ovoid, smooth, 9-11 x 6-8 microns.

EdibilityFairly poisonous, depending on the season.

HabitatIn mountains under conifers and birch.

SeasonSummer and fall.

NoteAlthough reported from Siberia as producing hallucinations, the red-capped North American variety which is found in northern forests and higher altitudes in the south, causes delirium, manic behavior and deep sleep, sometimes accompanied by profuse sweating.

3 AMANITA MUSCARIA

Formosa

Common nameAmerican fly agaric.

EtymologyFrom Latin, "handsome-looking."

DescriptionThis variety has a yellowish to orange coloration, or has a tinge of red at the center. All the velar remains (ring, volva and warts) are white, and the description ofA. muscaria(2)applies to this variety in all other respects.

EdibilityToxicity appears to vary widely from place to place, and seems to lie for the most part in the cap cuticle.

HabitatThis variety is very common in North America, but becomes rarer, more stender, and tinged with a salmonlike coloration in the southern states. Moving west we also find the typical red-cappedA. muscaria.

SeasonSummer and autumn.

NoteAlthough the toxins in both varieties of this species are reportedly concentrated in the colored skin of the cap, peeling the mushroom does not render it harmless, and poisonings do occur. The hallucinations for which the red-capped Siberian variety is notorious do not seem to occur with either American variety; rather, the experience is often one of delirium and deep sleep, sometimes accompanied by profuse sweating.

4 AMANITA PHALLOIDES

Common nameDeath cap.

EtymologyFrom Latin, "phalluslike," because of the shape of the carpophore in the early stages of growth.

DescriptionCap 5-20 cm, subspherical to flat, rarely with membranous velar remains; fairly deep olive-green to olive-brown but paler toward margin, usually with dark innate radial fibrils. Gills white or slightly yellowish, quite crowded, free. Stipe 8-20 x 1-2 cm, tapering toward top, hollow when mature, white speckled with greenish gray stripes, white membranous ring, striate at top, base bulbous with large, white, membranous volva. Flesh white, but greenish yellow just beneath cuticle. Odor first neutral, then nauseous. Spores white, ovoid to nearly round, smooth, 8-11 x 7-9 microns, amyloid.

EdibilityDeadly poisonous.

HabitatWith a preference for broadleaf trees, particularly oak, but also under pine and spruce.

SeasonLate spring to late autumn.

NoteWhen cut, the outline of the carpophore is white, faintly green in the cuticle area. As little as one cap can prove fatal to ah adult. Symptoms don't occur for about 10-12 hours (or longer). Although only recently confirmed in North America, it is now known from several eastern seaboard states and the Pacific coast.

Copyright © 1981 by Arnoldo Mondadori Editore S.p.A., Milano


Excerpted from Simon and Schuster's Guide to Mushrooms by Gary H. Lincoff
All rights reserved by the original copyright owners. Excerpts are provided for display purposes only and may not be reproduced, reprinted or distributed without the written permission of the publisher.

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