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Title
Brown Roll Rim, Poison Pax or Common Roll Rim Paxillus involutus poisonous mushroom in summer forest. Autumn weird mushroom #258461349
Description
Toxic mushroom paxillus involutus growing in the forest. Weird mushroom on autumn forest floor. Piglet Latin Paxillus is a genus of fungi in the piglet family of the Bolete order. Thin pigs were previously considered conditionally edible, but now officially in the USSR since 1984 they belong to poisonous and inedible mushrooms. Other representatives of the genus, in particular, the thick pigs, are not included in this list, but the latter, as well as thin pigs, were excluded from the list of mushrooms allowed for harvesting, processing and sale in the USSR in 1981. When eating thin pigs, an antigen enters the body, which is not excreted and therefore accumulates in the blood, being placed on red blood cells. After the natural death of the erythrocyte, the antigen is transplanted to a new one. Thus, the concentration of this antigen in the blood increases throughout the life of the eater. kidney and liver failure, leading to death. In addition, pigs growing in the neighborhood of industrial zones, roads and railways are able to quickly accumulate unhealthy production waste and exhaust gases that move into the body when eating mushrooms. Pigs accumulate a lot of radiation. Piglet Latin Paxillus is a genus of fungi in the Piglet family Latin Paxillaceae, which is part of the Boletales order. Paxillus involutus, mushroom growing in the woods on the ground or on stumps. Poisonous.