Amanita aurea - Amanitaceae.org - Taxonomy and Morphology of Amanita and Limacella
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name Amanita aurea
name status nomen acceptum
author (Beeli) E.- J. Gilbert
intro The following description is based on Beeli (1935) and Gilbert (1941).
cap The cap of Amanita aurea is 70 - 80 mm wide, golden-yellow, expanded-campanulate, glabrous and smooth, with a strongly striate from the central umbo to the margin.  The flesh is firm, yellowish-white.  The volva is absent.
gills Gills are free, yellow, 8 mm broad, and pointed at both ends.
stem Its stem is 100 × 7 - 10 mm, stuffed to hollow, exannulate, cylindric, silky, fibrillose, yellow.  The stem is easily detachable from the cap.  The volva at the base is membranous, ample, whitish.  The flesh is yellow.
odor/taste The taste is peppery.
spores Based on measurements from Gilbert's spore drawings (1940 & 1941), the spores are (5.0-) 5.1 - 5.7 (-5.8) × (4.5-) 4.8 - 5.3 μm, subglobose to (occasionally?) broadly ellipsoid, and inamyloid.  Basidia are probably lacking in clamps.
discussion The present species was originally described from the Democratic Republic of Congo.

The stipe is described as having a basal bulb by Beeli and Madame Goossens' watercolor suggests that this may be the case.  If this is confirmed in fresh material, the species should be moved to section Amanita.  For discussions of members of section Amanita with a membranous, limbate volva, see, for example, A. lanivolva Bas, A. pudica (Beeli) E.-J. Gilbert, and A. rhodophylla Beeli.—R. E. Tulloss
brief editors RET

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