Talk:Lethal webcaps
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
I'll try to take some better pictures of the deadly webcap when I go hiking this weekend. The fool's webcap doesn't grow here, so if someone else has a picture of it we can use, that would be great.
Sadly the season seems to be over and all the deadly webcaps I've come across (around 10-20 specimens) seem to be partially rotted and hardly usuable for a picture. Therefore I won't be able to get a good picture until next year. If someone else should have a nice picture, please upload it.
Michaelll 16:58, 13 October 2005 (UTC) Michael
Seems someone has uploaded a nice picture, thanks. mic 02:20, 28 February 2006 (UTC)
[edit] World's most poisonous?
I doubt it. I added the LD50 number: 2 g/kg for freeze-dried mushrooms. Since mushrooms are about 90% water, this would be 20 g/kg for fresh deadly webcaps, or what is the convention for LD50 specifications? Anyway, I thought that amanita phalloides and amanita virosa were the most poisonous mushrooms on earth. Han-Kwang 20:06, 6 July 2006 (UTC)
- Perhaps in mg/kg Alpha-amanitin is the most potent, but the latency of orellanine causes a lot of extra damage as the victims aren't treated until the damage is done, maybe? I'm not really sure, I got the reference 'The worlds most poisonous mushroom' from a page belonging to the botanical museum/University of Olso (http://natmus.uio.no/botanisk/bot-mus/giftsopper/cor_rub.html) where the first line says (translated to English): 'Cortinarius rubellus - lethal (the worlds most poisonous mushroom along with cortinarius orellanus)'. If you want to remove the statement I won't protest, long as its toxicity and the fact that it can be lethal is adequately presented.
- Related, I'm working on moving most of the information about toxicity into the Orellanine article, and just mention a few words about it in the lethal webcaps article with a link to the main article (Orellanine), so if you'd be so kind and write your information about the LD into that article your efforts would be greatly appreciated :). —Preceding unsigned comment added by Michaelll (talk • contribs)
-
- From http://www.emedicine.com/ped/topic76.htm : A single gram of fresh A phalloides can yield approximately 0.2-0.4 mg of alpha-amanitin. The lethal dose is less than 0.1 mg/kg. -- So the LD50 for fresh A. phalloides is 0.25--0.5 g/kg . You have a point with the latency. My (nonscientific) mushroom books say that a-amanitin is untreatable, although that info seems to be outdated. Han-Kwang 22:40, 6 July 2006 (UTC)