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1m ago11.35 AEST
Prosecutor Sarah Lenthall turns to questioning about the website iNaturalist.
McKenzie says she has a profile on the website she describes as a “citizen science” website. She says her profile name is “ChrisMck” and has contributed about 70 posts to the website, mainly about fungi.
She says she has made two posts about sightings of death cap mushrooms. The first was in May 2022 in the gardens of the state parliament house under oak trees.
The second was in Loch in April 2023. Under questioning by Lenthall, McKenzie says she was in Loch on 18 April to visit her daughter:
She said initially she spotted the death caps under a single oak tree and then noticed more under the surrounding oak trees.We’d been for a walk ... my husband and I took our grandson and dog for a walk and we were on the oval sportsground at Loch, surrounded by oak trees. I observed some Amanita phalloides [death cap mushrooms] around the roots, or underneath the oak trees on the western side ... of the oval.
McKenzie said she took photos of the mushrooms and then removed all of the death caps and placed them in a plastic bag.
She says death caps are also toxic to dogs and she knew the area was a popular dog walking spot. She tells the court: “I was very keen to remove all the samples I could find of them.”Because of my training at the poisons centre, I’m very aware about the toxicity of the Amanita phalloides.
McKenzie says it was a “risk” that more could “pop up”.