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		Scientists find toxic fungus near Australia's Great 
		Barrier Reef
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		[October 03, 2019]  
		MELBOURNE (Reuters) - A highly poisonous 
		fungus, with toxins that can be absorbed through the skin, has been 
		identified for the first time in the rain forest near the Great Barrier 
		Reef, Australian scientists said on Thursday. | 
        
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			 The Fire Coral fungus, which is better known in South Korea and 
			Japan as being among the world's most poisonous mushrooms, was found 
			near Cairns in the northern state of Queensland, scientists from 
			James Cook University said. 
 "If found, the fungus should not be touched, and definitely not 
			eaten," said Matt Barrett, an expert on fungi at the university's 
			Australian Tropical Herbarium.
 
 "Of the hundred or so toxic mushrooms that are known to researchers, 
			this is the only one in which the toxins can be absorbed through the 
			skin."
 
			
			 
			If eaten, the distinctive red fungus causes a horrifying array of 
			symptoms: stomach pain, vomiting, diarrhea, fever and numbness are 
			followed over hours or days by the skin peeling off the hands and 
			feet, and the shrinking of the brain, he added. 
			
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			It was most likely that the fungus occurred naturally in Cairns, 
			although instances have also been reported from Indonesia and Papua 
			New Guinea, Barrett said in a statement.
 "The fact that we can find such a distinctive and medically 
			important fungus like Poison Fire Coral right in our backyard shows 
			we have much to learn about fungi in northern Australia," he added.
 
 (Reporting by Melanie Burton; Editing by Clarence Fernandez
 
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