Limacella agricola - Amanitaceae.org - Taxonomy and Morphology of Amanita and Limacella
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name Limacella agricola
name status insufficiently known
author Murrill
english name "Jamaican Limacella"
intro The only macroscopic data we have for this species are from Murrill's notes on the fresh material.
cap The cap is white, changing to mauve(?) on drying, small, convex, and slimy; margin striate.
gills The gills are free and white, with edges entire. Nothing is reported for the short gills.
stem The stem is white, even, and cylindric.
spores The spores of the type collection measure (4.5-) 6.5 - 6.5 (-7.0) × (4.1-) 4.2 - 5.5 μm and are subglobose to broadly ellipsoid (infrequently globose or ellipsoid).  Reaction to Melzer's reagent not known (t.b.d.).  Clamps probably present on basidia.
discussion

So far as I know this species is known only from the 1909 holotype, which was collected in a hotel lawn in Jamaica and is presently in poor condition.

Murrill commented that the species' habit suggested Marasmius oreades.  Apparently, his report of the spores' size and shape is based on the spores of hyphomycetes which are plentiful over much of the surface of the type material.  The spore measurements reported here are from the mushroom.

H. V. Smith (1945) considered this entity to be a Limacella provisionally.  Examination of the type indicates that the cap bears typical Limacella gluten-supporting hyphae of the type with cylindric terminal cells.  Considering the color of the fresh cap, the grooved cap margin, the geographic location of the original collecting site, and the size-shape of its spores, this mushroom seems similar to Zhuliangomyces subillinitus.  The names may even be synonyms.—R. E. Tulloss

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