Chemical tests in mushroom identification

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Of the Chemical tests in mushroom identification the most useful are Melzer's and Potassium hydroxide. A list of tests follows.

Contents

[edit] Ammonia

Household ammonia can be used.

[edit] Iron Salts

Used in Russula identification.

[edit] Meixner Test for Amatoxins

Uses concentrated hydrochloric acid and newspaper to test for the deadly poisonous amatoxins found in some species of Amanita, Lepiota, and Galerina.

[edit] Melzer's Reagent

Melzer's Reagent can be used to test spores for amyloid, nonamyloid, dextrinoid.

  • Spores that stain bluish-gray to bluish-black are amyloid
  • Spores that stain brown to reddish-brown are dextrinoid

[edit] Paradiaminobenzaldehyde

In the genus Lyophyllum the lamellae usually bluing with Paradiaminobenzaldehyde (PDAB).

[edit] Phenol

A 2-3% aqueous solution of phenol gives a color change in some species when applied to cap or stem.

[edit] Potassium Hydroxide

A 5-10% solution of Potassium hydroxide (KOH) gives a color change in some species:

  • In Agaricus, some species turn yellow with KOH
  • Distinctive change for some species of Cortinarius

[edit] Schaeffer's Test

Uses aniline and nitric acid on Agaricus.

[edit] Sulpho-vanillin

Made from Sulphuric acid (H2SO4) and vanillin (vanilla). Used in Russula indentification.

[edit] References

  • Arora, David "Mushrooms Demystified" 2nd Edition, Ten Speed Press, Berkeley, 1986
  • Jordan, Michael "The Encyclopedia of Fungi of Britain and Europe" Frances Lincoln 2004
  • Kuo, Michael "100 Edible Mushrooms", University of Michigan Press, Ann Arbor 2007
  • Largent, David L., Baroni, Timothy J. "How to Identify Mushrooms to Genus VI: Modern Genera" Mad River Press 1988

[edit] External links


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