Amanita Section Phalloideae Species in the Mediterranean Basin: Destroying Angels Reviewed

Biology (Basel). 2022 May 18;11(5):770. doi: 10.3390/biology11050770.

Abstract

In Europe, amatoxin-containing mushrooms are responsible for most of the deadly poisonings caused by macrofungi. The present work presents a multidisciplinary revision of the European species of Amanita sect. Phalloideae based on morphology, phylogeny, epidemiology, and biochemistry of amatoxins and phallotoxins. Five distinct species of this section have been identified in Europe to date: A. phalloides, A. virosa, A. verna, the recently introduced North American species A. amerivirosa, and A. vidua sp. nov., which is a new name proposed for the KOH-negative Mediterranean species previously described as A. verna or A. decipiens by various authors. Epitypes or neotypes are selected for species lacking suitable reference collections, namely A. verna and A. virosa. Three additional taxa, Amanita decipiens, A. porrinensis, and A. virosa var. levipes are here considered later heterotypic synonyms of A. verna, A. phalloides, and A. amerivirosa, respectively.

Keywords: Agaricales; amatoxins; epidemiology; phallotoxins; toxicology.

Grants and funding

Part of the work was financed by the Spanish Ministry of Education and Culture through the FPU grant AP2006-00890 and the “Subprograma AGR del Ministerio de Ciencia y Innovación (Plan Nacional I + D+i)” research project AGL2009-12884-C03-03, and the Associazione Micologica Ecologica Romana (AMER) APS, which economically covered the expenses of the sequences obtained from the Italian material of Amanita verna and A. vidua.