Tricholoma flavobrunneum. Fr.
The Yellow-Brown Tricholoma. Edible.
Flavobrunneum is from flavus, yellow; brunneus, brown; so called from the brown caps and yellow flesh.
The pileus is three to four or more inches broad, fleshy, conical, then convex, expanded, subumbonate, viscid, brownish-bay, scaly-streaked, flesh yellow, then tinged with red.
The gills are pale yellow, emarginate, slightly decurrent, somewhat crowded, and often tinged with red.
The stem is three to four inches long, hollow, slightly ventricose, brownish, flesh yellow, at first viscid, sometimes reddish-brown. The spores are 6–7×4–5. Found in mixed woods among leaves.
Tricholoma Schumacheri. Fr.
Schumacheri in honor of C. F. Schumacher, author of "Plantarum Sællandiæ." The pileus is from two to three inches broad, spongy, convex, then plane, obtuse, even, livid gray, moist, edge beyond gills incurved.
The gills are narrow, close, pure white, slightly emarginate.
The stem is three to four inches long, solid, fibrillosely-striate, white and fleshy.