Agaricus micromegethus
anise agaricus
Agaricaceae

Species account author: Ian Gibson.
Extracted from Matchmaker: Mushrooms of the Pacific Northwest.

Introduction to the Macrofungi

Photograph

© Michael Beug     (Photo ID #15220)


Map

E-Flora BC Static Map

Distribution of Agaricus micromegethus
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Species Information

Summary:
{See also Small Agaricus Table} Section Minores. Features include 1) small size, 2) a whitish cap with fibrils or fibrillose scales that are at first pinkish (or can be yellowish brown at first according to some authors) and become brownish to grayish brown, 3) the tendency of the cap and stem to become deep yellow, 4) fragile flesh that may bruises yellow, 5) a slight fragile skirt-like ring, 6) an anise or almond odor, 7) growth in grass, 8) yellow reaction to KOH, and 9) small spores. It is also known as Agaricus micromegathus.
Cap:
2-4cm across, "broadly convex to convex-truncate when young, becoming depressed centrally", when old nearly flat; dry, innately fibrillose, fibrils pinkish red, darkening to gray-brown or more dingy, forming appressed to slightly repent fine scales about 0.2cm long and 0.1-0.2cm wide, background whitish to buff, (Kerrigan), 4.5cm across approximately, convex, not umbonate; center brown, elsewhere pallid or whitish, staining deep yellow where bruised; innately fibrillose or with few minute appressed scales, (Hotson), 2-5(8)cm across, convex to flat; dry, "with silky fibrils or fibrillose scales (sometimes very sparse toward the margin)", "fibrils at first pinkish in one form, yellow-brown in another, but in both forms becoming brownish to grayish-brown in age on a whitish to buff background", "yellow to orange stains often developing in age or upon handling", (Arora), "fibrils pinkish-red, in age darkening to gray-brown or darker brown" and "streaked with tiny vinaceous-brown scales; surface bruises saffron yellow to ochraceous", (Chariton), cap exceeding gills markedly, 0.1-0.2cm, (Isaacs)
Flesh:
up to 0.4cm thick; white, unchanging or becoming yellowish, in stem white, to salmon orange when old, (Kerrigan), thick, white, unchanging, (but also notes all parts of sporophore staining deep saffron-yellow where bruised), (Hotson), thin, fragile; "white, unchanging or bruising yellowish", (Arora)
Gills:
free, close, up to 0.3cm broad, "greyish when young, soon pinkish" (quoted from Peck), finally dark blackish brown, (Kerrigan(1)), crowded, broad, thin; white for a long time, becoming pink then purplish gray, (Hotson), free at maturity, close; "pallid or grayish, then pinkish, finally chocolate-brown or darker", (Arora), finally chocolate brown or red-brown, (Chariton)
Stem:
2.5-3cm x 0.2-0.8cm, equal or very slightly bulbous, narrowly stuffed-hollow, cavity 0.05-0.1cm broad; white, becoming orangish when old or when bruised; finely fibrillose when young, bald when old, (Kerrigan(1)), about 4cm long and 0.8cm wide, short, stout, solid; white, staining deep yellow where bruised; bald, (Hotson), 2-6cm x 0.3-1cm, equal or slightly widened at base, "stuffed or hollow, fragile at maturity"; white or staining yellow to orange upon handling, especially in lower part, (Arora)
Veil:
veils sometimes appendiculate, more usually forming a pendant (to intermediate-type), subapical to supramedian white ring, flaring 0.2-0.4cm, partial veil white, loosely interwoven, universal veil a narrow denser zone on ring undersurface, soon becoming orangish, also leaving deciduous fibrils on stem, (Kerrigan(1)), ring "median or inferior, narrow, thin, simple, persistent, white", (Hotson), membranous, thin, "forming a fragile, superior to median ring" or disappearing, ring skirt-like or intermediate, (Arora)
Odor:
almond (Kerrigan(1)), distinctly sweet (anise-like or almondy), (Arora), pleasant (Phillips), pleasant, faintly of anise, (Kibby)
Taste:
pleasant (Phillips), nutty - almond-like (Isaacs)
Microscopic spores:
spores (3.8)4.6-4.9(5.6) x (3.0)3.5-3.8(4.1) microns, elliptic to broadly elliptic, dark brown, hilar appendix fairly prominent, germ pore not evident; basidia 4-spored, 21-25 x 5-7 microns, cylindroclavate, sterigmata 2-3 microns long; cheilocystidia not observed, gill margin fertile, (Kerrigan(1)), spores 5-6 x 4-4.5 microns, (Hotson), spores 4.5-5.5 x 3.5-4 microns, broadly elliptic, smooth, (Arora)
Spore deposit:
chocolate brown (Arora)
Notes:
Murrill gives the distribution as New England (including VA, NJ) to TN, west to MI and TX. Hotson and Isaacs list it for WA, Phillips for OR, and Kerrigan(1) for CA. There are collections from BC deposited at University of British Columbia. But molecular confirmation is desirable. "Only one North American specimen (from California), with a light pink cap, has been ITS-sequenced; the sequence matched that from European sequences assigned to A. comtulus", (Kerrigan(3), with Latin name italicized).
EDIBILITY
yes (Arora)

Habitat and Range

SIMILAR SPECIES
Agaricus comtulus has a white to yellowish cap that is usually tinged brown or buff at the center and usually lacks colored fibrils on the button (but see NOTES above). Agaricus diminutivus group has a reddish-pink to purplish cap, a woolly stem, and woodland habitat. Agaricus kerriganii has brown to reddish fibrils on the cap and a slightly longer stem, and it is found in woods or under trees. Agaricus peckii Isaacs nom. prov., though never validly published, is based on a collection found in Oregon, which Isaacs says "is closely related to A. micromegathus, differing in only one truly distinguishing feature, the larger spores" (5.3-6.5 x (4.4)4.7-5.3 microns).
Habitat
gregarious in lawns, pastures and grassy places, (Kerrigan(1)), single to scattered or gregarious "in lawns, pastures, fields and other grassy or open places", (Arora), prefers short turf especially sandy soils (Kibby)

Synonyms

Synonyms and Alternate Names:
Agaricus pusillus Peck [nom. illegit.]