Calgary Herald

World’s deadliest mushroom prompts warning to foragers

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VANCOUVER The BC Centre for Disease Control is advising mushroom lovers not to forage in urban areas of Vancouver, the Fraser Valley or Vancouver Island because they could unwittingl­y reap a deadly harvest.

It has issued an advisory saying death cap mushrooms are the deadliest on the planet and have been identified in 100 locations in the Vancouver area.

BC Drug and Poison Control Centre pharmacist Raymond Li says the centre handled 30 mushroom exposure calls between June and August, but saw 16 in September alone as wet weather helped all types of mushrooms, including death caps, to flourish.

The proliferat­ion has prompted the creation of a poster and brochure about the death cap, in part because it is easily mistaken for other edible mushrooms and also because it is found almost exclusivel­y in urban areas of the south coast. The death cap is not native to B.C., but was brought in on the roots of trees such as hornbeam, European beech, English and red oak, hazelnut, linden and sweet chestnut, which now line streets in Vancouver, the Fraser Valley and parts of the island.

The centre for disease control says people should report confirmed or suspected death cap mushrooms to a local mycologica­l club or online to B.C.’s Invasive Species Working Group because it’s not known how far the mushrooms have spread.

Paul Kroeger, past president of the Vancouver Mycologica­l Society, says death caps weren’t identified until long after they became establishe­d. “There was no way of knowing (they were) there when we brought the trees here,” he says in the news release.

Death caps are blamed for the death of a Vancouver Island toddler, who ate one in 2016.

Experts say full-grown death caps are often mistaken for paddy straw mushrooms, while immature death caps can look like edible puff balls, but the fairly limited range of the mushroom makes the species easier to avoid.

“I generally caution against foraging in urban environmen­ts because of the added risk,” Kroeger says. “If you’re foraging, go to a natural forest and go with an expert. There are lots of mushroom clubs, events and festivals.”

Anyone worried about children or pets who may have taken a bite out of a suspicious mushroom are advised to take the whole mushroom, or pictures of it, so it can be identified or at least ruled out as a potentiall­y dangerous fungus.

Death cap toxins damage the liver and kidney with symptoms such as cramping, abdominal pain, vomiting, diarrhea and dehydratio­n usually occurring within six to 12 hours after consumptio­n, the centre for disease control says in the news release. Those symptoms can fade before returning more severely within 72 hours.

 ?? VANCOUVER ISLAND HEALTH AUTHORITY/THE CANADIAN PRESS ?? Death cap mushrooms, above, are the deadliest on the planet and have been identified in 100 locations in the Vancouver area.
VANCOUVER ISLAND HEALTH AUTHORITY/THE CANADIAN PRESS Death cap mushrooms, above, are the deadliest on the planet and have been identified in 100 locations in the Vancouver area.

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