Results 181 to 190 of about 20,253 (215)
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Descriptions of Fungi and Bacteria
Abstract
N.S. Yorou, R. Dramani, D.W. Minter
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Abstract
N.S. Yorou, R. Dramani, D.W. Minter
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Amanita phalloides in Victoria
Medical Journal of Australia, 1993Amanita phalloides is found regularly in suburban Melbourne and country areas where old oaks and other deciduous trees are grown as street trees, in parks, and in private gardens. This deadly poisonous mushroom may be mistaken for the edible Agaricus spp.
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JAMA: The Journal of the American Medical Association, 1963
THE EASILY RECOGNIZABLE orange- or red-capped fly agaric Amanita muscaria is traditionally so named because it has been used to kill flies. Whether or not it is effective for this purpose, it has been considered for centuries to be one of the more toxic wild mushrooms. Mycologists are not in complete agreement as to whether it is really deadly to human
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THE EASILY RECOGNIZABLE orange- or red-capped fly agaric Amanita muscaria is traditionally so named because it has been used to kill flies. Whether or not it is effective for this purpose, it has been considered for centuries to be one of the more toxic wild mushrooms. Mycologists are not in complete agreement as to whether it is really deadly to human
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[Poisoning by phallinic fungi (Amanita phalloides, Amanita verna, Amanita virosa)].
Minerva farmaceutica, 2000S, VIOLA, N, COVA
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