[ Section Lepidella page. ]  [ Amanita Studies home. ]  [ Keys & Checklist/Picturebooks ]
[ Subsaharan List ]

Amanita afrospinosa Pegler & Shah-Sm.
"African Spiny Lepidella"

Technical description (t.b.d.)

BRIEF DESCRIPTION: The following description is based on Pegler & Shah-Smith (1997).

The cap is 40 - 120 mm wide, broadly convex, becoming depressed with age, white, with a strongly appendiculate margin. The volva densely covers the cap with erect, easily removed, pyramidal warts. They leave circular scars when they are removed. The cap flesh is thick, white, and unchanging.

The gills are free, crowded, white to buff to yellowish brown, proportionately rather broad. The short gills are truncate and of at least two lengths.

The stem is 65 - 110 x 15 - 30 mm, solid, white, bearing floccose squamules above the ring, scaly below the ring. The basal bulb often cracks and has a short downward tapering base. The ring is thick, floccose, flaring about the middle of the stem, covered with thick, woolly scales or patches. The volva around the top of the bulb forms two or three closely spaced concentric zones of pyramidal scales.

Odor strong, unpleasant, "soapy" to "buttery."

According to the original description (1997, the spores measure 8 - 9 x 4 - 5 µm and are ellipsoid to elongate and amyloid. Spore measurements from recent Arora collections: (6.5-) 7.0 - 9.4 (-11) x (4.8-) 4.9 - 5.6 (-6.4) and are ellipsoid to elongate, infrequently broadly ellipsoid, infrequently cylindric. Clamps are absent from the bases of basidia.

The species was originally described from Zambia and also reported from Zimbabwe from David Arora.

Pegler and Shah-Smith suggest that A. afrospinosa could be placed in Bas' stirps Polypyramis. This has not been further investigated. -- R. E. Tulloss

Photo: David Arora

[ Section Lepidella page. ]  [ Amanita Studies home. ]  [ Keys & Checklist/Picturebooks ]
[ Subsaharan List ]


Last change 28 September 2009.
This page is maintained by R. E. Tulloss.
Copyright 2003, 2004, 2005, 2008, 2009 by Rodham E. Tulloss.
Photograph copyright 2003 by David Arora.