Amanita Solitaria
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Amanita Solitaria
''Amanita echinocephala'' is a large, whitish or ivory-coloured mushroom with a characteristic spiny, or warty-looking cap. It lives on chalky soils with beech trees, and appears earlier than most mushrooms of similar size in southern England. It frequently occurs singly or in small groups, resulting in it being referred to as the solitary amanita or, more specifically, European solitary lepidella. It is very drought-tolerant. ''Amanita solitaria'' is a synonym and opinions are divided as to which name takes precedence. Taxonomy It was first described as ''Agaricus echinocephalus'' in 1835 by the Italian mycologist Carlo Vittadini, before being placed in ''Amanita'' by Lucien Quélet and hence receiving its current binomial name. It derives its specific epithet ''echinocephala'' from the Greek ''echino-'' "hedgehog" and ''kephale'' "head". It has been placed in the ''Lepidella'' section of the Amanitaceae by some authors, because of its lack of a well formed volva. ''Amani ...
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Carlo Vittadini
Carlo Vittadini (11 June 1800, in Bertonico – 20 November 1865, in Milan) was an Italian physician, doctor and mycology, mycologist. Life He studied in Milan and at the University of Pavia, where he attended the classes given by Giuseppe L. Moretti (1782–1853). He became a doctor of medicine in 1826 with a thesis entitled ''Tentamen mycologicum seu Amanitarum '' where he described 14 species of the genus ''Amanita''. Outside of several publications on diseases of silkworms, he specialised in obstetrics, working in Milan. He is the author of several important works on Italian mushroom species. Works * * ''Monographia tuberacearum'' (Rusconi, Milan, 1831) - Describes 65 species, of which 51 were new. * ''Descrizione dei funghi mangerecci più comuni dell'Italia e de'velenosi che possono co'medesimi confondersi'' (1835) - Describes 56 species, of which 15 were new. * ''Monographia Lycoperdineorum'' (1842) - Completes his 1831 study and describes 50 species, of which 2 ...
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