Systematists have divided the Agaricini into groups according to the color of their spores. These groups are defined as follows by various authors:
According to—
Elias Fries, 5 groups: Leucosporus, white; Hyporhodius, pink; Cortinaria, ochraceous; Derminus, rust; Pratella, purplish black.
Rev. J. M. Berkeley, 5 groups: Very frequently pure white, but presenting also pink, various tints of brown, from yellowish and rufous to dark bister, purple-black, and finally black; Leucospori, white; Hyporhodii, salmon; Dermini, ferruginous; Pratellæ, brown; Coprinarius, black.
Dr. Badham, 6 groups: Pure white or a yellow tinge on drying; brown; yellow; pink; purple; purple-black; some pass successively from pink to purple and from purple to purple-black.
Mrs. Hussey, 11 shades: White; rose; pale ocher; olivaceous-ocher; reddish-ocher; ochraceous; yellowish olive-green; dull brown; scarcely ferruginous; snuff-color; very dark brown.
Hogg & Johnson, 5 groups: Leucosporei, white; Hyporhodii, salmon; Dermini, rusty; Pratellæ, purplish-brown; Coprinarii, black.
C. Gillet, 7 shades: White; pink; ochraceous; yellow; ferruginous; black or purplish black; round, ovate, elongated, or fusiform, smooth, tuberculate or irregular, simple or composite, transparent or nebulous, etc.
Jules Bel, 5 groups: White; pink; red; brown; black.
Dr. Gautier, 5 shades: White; pink; brown; purplish-brown; black.
Constantin & Dufour, 5 groups: White; pink; ochraceous; brownish-purple; black.
J. P. Barla, 7 groups: Leucosporii, white; Hyporhodii, pink; Cortinariæ, ochraceous; Dermini, rust; Pratellæ, purplish-black; Coprinarii, blackish; Coprini and Gomphi, dense black.
L. Boyer, 5 groups, 11 shades: White to cream yellow; pale pink to ochraceous yellow; bay or red brown to brown or blackish bister; rust color, cinnamon or light yellow.
W. D. Hay, 5 groups: White; pink; brown; purple; black.
C. H. Peck, 5 groups: Leucosporii, white; Hyporhodii, salmon; Dermini, rust; Pratellæ, brown; Coprinarii, black.
Saccardo divides the Agaricini into four sections, according to the color of their spores, as follows: Spores brown, purplish brown or black, Melanosporæ; spores ochraceous or rusty ochraceous, Ochrosporæ; spores rosy or pinkish, Rhodosporæ; spores white, whitish or pale yellow, Leucosporæ.
Dr. M. C. Cooke, 5 groups: Leucospori, white or yellowish; Hyporhodii, rosy or salmon color; Dermini, brown, sometimes reddish or yellowish brown; Pratellæ, purple, sometimes brownish purple, dark purple, or dark brown; Coprinarii, black or nearly so.
These shades are somewhat different from the colors of the mushrooms' gills, so that, when it is of importance to determine exactly the color of the spore in the identification of a species, we may without recourse to the microscope cut off the stem of an adult plant on a level with the gills and place the under surface of the cap upon a leaf of white paper if a dark-spored species, and upon a sheet of black paper if the spores are light. At the expiration of a few hours we will find, on lifting the cap, a bed of the shed spores which will represent their exact shade. These may be removed to a glass slide and their size and form determined by means of the microscope.
In the present work Dr. M. C. Cooke's grouping of the spore series is adopted.
ETYMOLOGY OF THE WORD "MUSHROOM."
Various opinions have been offered as to the derivation of the word "mushroom." According to Hay, it probably had its origin in a combination of the two Welsh words maes, a field, and rhum, a knob, which by gradual corruption have become mushroom. Some writers on the other hand regard it as a corruption of mousseron, a name specifically applied by the French to those mushrooms which are found growing in mossy places. But it seems to be of older usage than such a derivation would imply, and therefore the first explanation seems the more likely to be correct.
In England the term "mushroom" has been most commonly applied to the "meadow mushroom," that being the one best known; but English-speaking mycologists now apply it generically very much as the French do the term "champignon," while the name "champignon" is restricted in England to the Marasmius oreades, or "Fairy Ring" mushroom.
Berkeley says the French word "champignon" was originally scarcely of wider signification than our word "mushroom," though now classical in the sense of fleshy fungi generally. The German word Pilz (a corruption of Boletus) is used to denote the softer kinds by some German authors. Constant and Dufour, in their recently published Atlas des Champignons, include types of a great variety of mushrooms.
Hay contends that the pernicious nick-name "toad-stool" has not the derivation supposed, but that the first part of the word is the Saxon or old English "tod," meaning a bunch, cluster, or bush, the form of many terrestrial fungi suggesting it. The second syllable, "stool," is easily supplied. "The erroneous idea of connecting toads with these plants," says Hay, "seems to be due to Spenser, or to some poet, possibly, before his time." Spenser speaks of the loathed paddocks, "paddock" then being the name given in England to the frog, afterwards corrupted to "paddic," and once received, readily converted by the Scotch into "puddick-stool." It would seem, therefore, from the foregoing, that the term "toad-stool" can have no proper relation to mushrooms, whether edible or poisonous.