enow.com Web Search

Search results

  1. Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
  2. Amanita muscaria - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Amanita_muscaria

    Amanita muscaria, commonly known as the fly agaric or fly amanita, [5] is a basidiomycete of the genus Amanita. It is a large white-gilled, white-spotted, and usually red mushroom. Despite its easily distinguishable features, A. muscaria is a fungus with several known variations, or subspecies. These subspecies are slightly different, some ...

  3. Amanita muscaria var. formosa - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Amanita_muscaria_var._formosa

    Amanita muscaria var. formosa, known as the yellow orange fly agaric, is a hallucinogenic and poisonous [1] basidiomycete fungus of the genus Amanita.This variety, which can sometimes be distinguished from most other A. muscaria by its yellow cap, is a European taxon, although several North American field guides have referred A. muscaria var. guessowii to this name. [2]

  4. Muscimol - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Muscimol

    Muscimol (also known as agarin or pantherine) is one of the principal psychoactive constituents of Amanita muscaria and related species of mushroom. Muscimol is a potent and selective orthosteric agonist for the GABA A receptor [3] and displays sedative-hypnotic, depressant and hallucinogenic [citation needed] psychoactivity.

  5. Noticing mushrooms all over your Christmas decor this year ...

    www.aol.com/lifestyle/noticing-mushrooms-over...

    The hallucinogenic fungi have made their way into pop culture through ... Ruck says tales of flying reindeer could have come from shamans who partook of the fly agaric mushroom then had visions ...

  6. Amanita muscaria var. inzengae - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Amanita_muscaria_var._inzengae

    Amanita muscaria var. inzengae, commonly known as Inzenga's fly agaric, is a basidiomycete fungus of the genus Amanita. It is one of several varieties of the Amanita muscaria fungi, all commonly known as fly agarics or fly amanitas.

  7. Deliriant - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Deliriant

    Note on the left, an older witch reading from a grimoire, while anointing the buttocks of a young witch about to fly to the sabbath upon an inverted besom, with a candle upon its twigs. Deliriants such as henbane, belladonna, mandrake, jimsonweed and fly agaric are associated with and featured in many stories and beliefs within European mythology.

  8. Amanita - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Amanita

    The very recognizable fly agaric. The genus Amanita was first published with its current meaning by Christian Hendrik Persoon in 1797. [1] Under the International Code of Botanical Nomenclature, Persoon's concept of Amanita, with Amanita muscaria (L.) Pers. as the type species, has been officially conserved against the older Amanita Boehm (1760), which is considered a synonym of Agaricus L. [2]

  9. Amanita muscaria var. guessowii - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Amanita_muscaria_var...

    Ibotenic acid is mostly broken down into the body to muscimol, but what remains of the ibotenic acid is believed [2] to cause the majority of dysphoric effects of consuming A. muscaria mushrooms. Ibotenic acid is also a scientifically important neurotoxin used in lab research as a brain-lesioning agent in mice.