Amanita rubescens

Amanita rubescens

The Blusher is the common name for several closely related species of the genus Amanita. A. rubescens, found in Europe and eastern North America, and A. novinupta in western North America. Both their scientific and common names are derived from the propensity of their flesh to turn pink on bruising, or cutting.
Blusher Mushroom - Amanita rubescens group Orange brown cap with yellow patches. The gills were white and close/crowded. The stem was white/pinkish with a skirt-like ring and enlarged base. The margin of the cap was slightly striate. It was around 12 cm tall. 

Habitat: Growing on the ground in a mixed forest, but in an area that was primarily oak.
https://www.jungledragon.com/image/68521/blusher_mushroom_-_amanita_rubescens_group.html Amanita rubescens,Blusher,Geotagged,Summer,United States,amanita,amanita rubescens group,mushroom

Appearance

The European blusher has a reddish-brown convex pileus (cap), that is up to 15 cm across, and strewn with small cream-coloured warts. It is sometimes covered with an ochre-yellow flush which can be washed by the rain. The flesh of the mushroom is white, becoming pink when bruised or exposed to air. This is a key feature in differentiating it from the poisonous False Blusher or Panther cap (Amanita pantherina), whose flesh does not. The stipe (stem) is white with flushes of the cap colour, and grows to a height of up to 15 cm. The gills are white and free of the stem, and display red spots when damaged. The ring is striate (i.e. has ridges) on its upper side, another feature distinguishing it from Amanita pantherina. The spores are white, ovate, amyloid, and approximately 8 by 5 µm in size.

The flavour of the uncooked flesh is mild, but has a faint acrid aftertaste. The smell is not strong.

The mushroom is often attacked by insects.
The Blusher mushroom The Blusher mushroom - Amanita rubescens Amanita rubescens,Blusher,Bulgaria,Geotagged,fungi,mushrooms,nature

Distribution

It is common throughout much of Europe and eastern North America, growing on poor soils as well as in deciduous or coniferous woodlands. It has also been recorded from South Africa, where it is thought to have been accidentally introduced with trees imported from Europe.
Amanita rubescens This is a picture of Amanita rubescens at Lake Waterford Park in Pasadena, Maryland. Amanita rubescens,Blusher,Geotagged,Summer,United States

Uses

Both of these species are edible when cooked. European Amanita rubescens is known to contain a hemolytic poison in its raw state; it is unknown whether North American A. rubescens and A. novinupta are similarly toxic in its raw state. This toxin is destroyed by cooking.

Amanita novinupta is highly regarded as a choice edible in the region in which it is found. However, the edibility of blusher species other than A. rubescens and A. novinupta has not been established and experimentation is not advised.

Some experts recommend avoiding the consumption of any species of Amanita.

References:

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Status: Unknown
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Taxonomy
KingdomFungi
DivisionBasidiomycota
ClassAgaricomycetes
OrderAgaricales
FamilyAmanitaceae
GenusAmanita
Species