Amanita mafingensis - Amanitaceae.org - Taxonomy and Morphology of Amanita and Limacella
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name Amanita mafingensis
name status nomen acceptum
author Härk. & Saarim. in Härk., Saarim. & Mwasumbi
english name "Mafinga Slender Caesar"
cap The cap of Amanita mafingensis is 40 - 130 mm wide, convex, then planar, often with a slight umbo, silky smooth, sticky, sometimes appendiculate with a bit of the partial veil, with striate margin (10±% of the radius); it's cap is copper-brown to chestnut, often with a darker ring near the inner ends of marginal striations.  The flesh is firm, white for the most part, and yellow under the cap skin.  The cap usually lacks volval remnants.
gills The gills are free with decurrent striations on stem apex, fairly crowded, ivory to yellow, fairly thin, and have a smooth edge.
stem The stem is 50 - 110 × 10 - 20 mm, very pale yellow to yellow, with white, hollow, brittle-fibrous flesh.  The robust, saccate volva is white to grayish on the exterior surface, membranous, thick, and lobed.
odor/taste The odor of this species is said to be weak and reminiscent of a "cellar." The taste is said to be mild.
spores The spores measure 10.5 - 12.7 (-15.8) × (6.8-) 7.1 - 8.9 (-10.5) µm and are ellipsoid to elongate and inamyloid.  Clamps are infrequent at bases of basidia.
discussion Amanita mafingensis was originally described from Tanzania.  The species is fairly widely distributed in miombo woodlands in central Africa.

Among other African Slender Caesars are the following: A. loosii Beeli (lacking an umbo), A. masasiensis Härk. & Saarim. in Härk., Saarim. & Mwasumbi, and A. tanzanica Härk. & Saarim. in Härk., Saarim. & Mwasumbi, and A. zambiana Pegler & Piearce (lacking an umbo).  This group of taxa are "market species" and enjoyed by a diverse number of peoples in Africa.—R. E. Tulloss
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