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Fly agaric, non-edible poisonous forest mushrooms art sketch illustration isolated. drawing illustration with ballpoint pen
Close-up of fly agaric mushroom and foliage. Cuxhaven, Lower Saxony, Germany
Fly agaric (Amanita muscaria) isolated on white background.
Horizontal closeup photo of a red and white Fly Agaric or Amanita mushroom growing among brown pine needles under a Pine tree in Autumn. New England high country, NSW. Soft focus background.
Grey shaded - Round bright red fly amanita mushroom growing in dry grass | Dangerous poisonous mushroom with white dots on autumn meadow, detail scene.
Amanita muscaria,a poisonous mushroom.
Red Toadstool (Amanita muscaria) in the forest in the Eastern Black Sea region
3D rendering of a fantasy mushroom isolated on white background
a red fly agaric mushroom closeup and a white background
The magical world of fungi, from mushrooms to fungal networks and families in brown and red colors in the forest in a sunny autumn day
Red poison mushroom isolated on white.
Red fly agaric close up
poisonous mushrooms toadstools on a white background
Amanita muscaria (L. ex Fr.) Hooker, Fly Agaric, Amanite tue-mouches, Fausse Oronge Roter Fliegenpilz, Légyölö galoca. Cap 8–20cm across, globose or hemispherical at first then flattening, bright scarlet covered with distinctive white pyramidal warts which may be washed off by rain leaving the cap almost smooth and the colour fades. Stem 80–180×10–20mm, white, often covered in shaggy volval remnants as is the bulbous base, the white membranous ring attached to the stem apex sometimes becoming flushed yellow from the pigment washed off the cap. Flesh white, tinged red or yellow below the cap cuticle, Taste pleasant, smell faint. Gills free, white. Habitat usually with birch trees, Season late summer to late autumn. Common. Deadly poisonous. It contains many different toxins. Distribution, America and Europe (Source R. Phillips).\n\nThis is one of the easiest species to recognize and is quite common, mostly by Birch Trees, in the Netherlands.
Mushrooms in Studio
A small Fly agaric mushroom (Amanita muscaria) growing in the grass of an autumn forest\nShot with Canon R5
Red poison mushroom
mushroom on the forest floor
fly agaric in natural habitat, poisonous mushroom growing deep in the woods
Young fly agaric among the leaves in the forest.
A closeup shot of the Amanita Muscaria growing in the forest
fly agaric, focus on the small mushroom
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Amanita mushroom (Amanita muscaria) commonly known as the fly agaric or fly amanita, grows in the wild. This poisonous mushroom, noted for its hallucinogenic properties, was photographed in the Alaskan forest, Denali National Park, Alaska.
A lone mushroom on our nature walk
Amanita muscaria (L. ex Fr.) Hooker, Fly Agaric, Amanite tue-mouches, Fausse Oronge Roter Fliegenpilz, Légyölö galoca. Cap 8–20cm across, globose or hemispherical at first then flattening, bright scarlet covered with distinctive white pyramidal warts which may be washed off by rain leaving the cap almost smooth and the colour fades. Stem 80–180×10–20mm, white, often covered in shaggy volval remnants as is the bulbous base, the white membranous ring attached to the stem apex sometimes becoming flushed yellow from the pigment washed off the cap. Flesh white, tinged red or yellow below the cap cuticle, Taste pleasant, smell faint. Gills free, white. Habitat usually with birch trees, Season late summer to late autumn. Common. Deadly poisonous. It contains many different toxins. Distribution, America and Europe (Source R. Phillips).\n\nThis is one of the easiest species to recognize and is quite common, mostly by Birch Trees, in the Netherlands.
fly mushrooms Amanita muscaria isolated on white
Amanita muscaria
Red amanita isolated on white background
Four white Agaricus mushrooms stand in a tight group, centered in this monochrome horizontal composition, all touching, emerging from a forest floor.  The mushrooms appear close up, and one is significantly larger than the other three, and leans toward the right of frame.
Free Images: "bestof:Fly agaric engraving by William Miller after R K Greville.jpg s of Cryptogamic Plants belonging chiefly to the Order Fungi; and Intended to serve as a"
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