Nomenclatural Overview of Lepiotaceous Fungi ~ Else C. Vellinga
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Lepiota alba (Bres.) Sacc., Syll. Fung. 5: 37. 1887; Lepiota clypeolaria var. alba Bres., Fungi
trident. 1: 15. 1882
[probably synonym of Lepiota erminea]
Lepiota alba Beeli in Bull. Soc. roy. bot. Belg. 64: 212. 1932, non Lepiota alba (Bres.) Sacc.,
1887. Congo.
[see Lepiota albida]
Lepiota alba Lloyd ???
[sec. Bres., 1920, in Annales mycol. 18: 64.]
[possibly synonym of Lepiota parvannulata]
Schulzeria alba Rick in Iheringia, Bot. 8: 327. 1961. Brazil.
[type not indicated]
Micropsalliota alba Heinem. & Little Flower in Bull. Jard. bot. nat. Belg. 53: 75. 1983.
{Agaricus}
Lepiota amianthina var. alba Maire in Rea, British Basidiomycetes: 76. 1922.
[Cystoderma, not in Agaricaceae]
Lepiota boudieri var. alba Kelderman, Parasolzwammen van Zuid-Limburg: 77. 1994 (not valid,
no Latin diagn., no type collection).
Lepiota carcharias var. alba (Fr.) Sacc., Syll. Fung. 5: 47. 1887.
Lepiota albiceps Pat. & Gaillard in Bull. Soc. mycol. Fr. 4: 11. 1888. Venezuela.
[type not in FH, not found in PC]
Lepiota albida Massee in Kew Bull. 1914: 72. 1914. Singapore.
Lepiota albida Beeli, Fl. Icon. Champ. Congo 2: 31, pl. 5, fig. 5. 1936, non Lepiota albida
Massee, 1914; Macrolepiota albida (Beeli →) Heinem. in Bull. Jard. bot. nat. Bel. 39:
222. 1969, non Volvolepiota albida Singer, 1959. – Lepiota alba Beeli in Bull. Soc. roy.
bot. Belg. 64: 2112. 1932, non Lepiota alba (Bres.) Sacc., 1887.
Volvolepiota albida Singer in Bol. Soc. arg. Bot. 8: 12. 1959, non Macrolepiota albida (Beeli)
Heinem., 1969; Macrolepiota brunnescens Vellinga, nom. nov., in Mycotaxon 85: 184.
2003.
Agaricus procerus var. albidus Roum., Flore mycologique du département de Tarn-et-Garonne:
55. 1879 (as var. albida).
Echinoderma acutesquamosum f. albineum D. Réaudin in Doc. Mycol. 34 (135-136): 88. 2008.
France. Type in LIP.
[white form of E. acutesquamosum]
Limacella albissima Murrill, N. Amer. Fl. 10: 40. 1914, nom. nov. for Lepiota candida Morgan,
1906, non Lepiota candida Copel., 1906; Lepiota albissima (Murrill) Murrill in Mycologia
6: 268. 1914.
[in Amanitaceae]
Lepiota albocitrina Pat. in Bull. Soc. mycol. Fr. 8: 46. 1892. Tonkin.
[type study Z.L. Yang, 2000]
Lepiota albofibrillosa Cleland in Trans. Proc. roy. Soc. South Australia 55: 154. 1931. Australia.
[type study Grgurinovic, 1997]
Cystolepiota albogilva Singer in Fieldiana, Bot., n.S. 21: 98-99. 1989.
Micropsalliota albonuda (Beeli) Heinem. in Bull. Jard. bot. nat. Belg. 58: 541. 1988; Agaricus
albonudus Beeli in Bull. Soc. roy. Bot. Belg. 61: 93. 1928.
{Agaricus}
Lepiota delicata var. albonuda Rick in Broteria, ser. Bot. 24: 99. 1930. Brazil.
Micropsalliota albosericea Heinem. & Leelav. in Mycol. Research 95: 341. 1991;
Micropsalliota albosericea Heinem. & Leelav. in Heinem. in Bull. trimest. Soc. mycol.
Nomenclatural Overview of Lepiotaceous Fungi ~ Else C. Vellinga
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Fr. 106: 21. 1990 (not valid, Art. 36.1). Holotype BR, Leelavathy F142; on soil; Kerala,
India.
{Agaricus}
Agaricus albosericeus Rauschert in Nova Hedwigia 54 : 213. 1992; nom. nov. for Psalliota
aestivalis F.H. Møller, 1950, non Agaricus aestivalis Schumach., 1803.
{Agaricus}
Lepiota alborubescens Hongo in Mem. Fac. lib. Arts Educ. Shiga Univ., nat. Sci. 12: 40. 1962;
Macrolepiota alborubescens (Hongo) Hongo in Trans. Soc. mycol. Japan 27: 107. 1986;
Chlorophyllum alborubescens (Hongo) Vellinga in Mycotaxon 83: 416. 2002. Japan.
[synonym of Chlorophyllum hortense (Murrill) Vellinga ]
Lepiota alborussea (Berk. & Broome) Sacc., Syll. Fung. 5: 55. 1887; Agaricus alborusseus Berk.
& Broome in J. linn. Soc., Bot. 11: 504. 1871.
[according to Pegler, 1972 & 1986: synonym of Lepiota erythrogramma]
Lepiota albosericea Henn. in Verh. bot. Ver. Prov. Brandenburg 40: 143. 1898. hothouse
Germany.
Lepiota albosquamosa Rick in Broteria, Bot. 18: 48. 1920. Brazil.
Agaricus albuminosus Berk. in Hooker, London J. Bot. 6: 461 bis. 1847; Lepiota albuminosa
(Berk.) Sacc., Syll. Fung. 5: 72. 1887; Collybia albuminosa (Berk.) Petch in Ann. roy.
bot. Gard., Peradeniya 5: 268. 1912; Termitomyces albuminosus (Berk.) R. Heim in
Mém. Acad. Sci. Inst. Fr. 64: 72. 1941; Macrolepiota albuminosa (Berk.) Pegler in Kew
Bull. 27: 189. 1972. Sri Lanka.
[synonym of Leucocoprinus cepistipes sensu Pegler]
[see Turnbull & Watling (1999) for a list of interpretations]
[Termitomyces albuminosus sensu Heim has been renamed as Termitomyces heimii
Natarajan]
Leucocoprinus denudatus var. albus Joss. in Bull. trimest. Soc. mycol. Fr. 90: 237. 1974;
Leucocoprinus straminellus var. albus (Joss.) Migl. & Rava in Micol. Veget. medit. 14
(1): 25. 1999. France.
Micropsalliota allantoidea R.L. Zhao, Desjardin, K. Soyton & K.D. Hyde in Fungal Diversity
45: 47. 2010. Thailand.
{Agaricus}
Lepiota allenae Peck in N.Y. State Mus. Bull. 150: 56. 1911. (Ann. Rep. St. Bot. over 1910)
(cespitose, in a greenhouse. Newtonville, Massachusetts. August. Miss. L.C. Allen)
U.S.A., Massachusetts.
[Peck 1911: 56: “
Pileus thin, conic, convex or campanulate, widely striate on the margin,
unpolished, whitish or tinged with pale yellow, often yellowish brown in the center;
lamellae thin, 1-2 mm broad, free, close, whitish or tinged with pale yellow; stem slightly
tapering upward, glabrous, hollow, colored like the pileus, the annulus slight, persistent
or evanescent; spores broadly ellipsoid or subglobose, 5-7 µ long, 4-6 µ broad. Pileus 8-
15 mm broad; stem 12-20 mm long, 1-2 mm thick.
”]
Agaricus (Lepiota) alliciens Berk. in Herb. n. 76, Cooke in Grevillea 16: 105. (‘1887’) 1888;
Lepiota alliciens (Berk.) Sacc., Syll. Fung. 9: 7. 1891. India.
Agaricus alluviinus Peck in Ann. Rep. N.Y. St. Mus. nat. Hist. 35: 157. (‘1882’) 1884; Lepiota
alluviina (Peck) Morgan in J. Mycol. 12: 243. 1906. U.S.A., New York.
[Peck, 1884:
“Pileus thin, convex or plane, sometimes reflexed on the margin, white,
adorned with minute pale-yellow, hairy or fibrillose scales; lamellae thin, close, free
white or yellowish; stem slender, fibrillose, whitish or pallid, slightly thickened at the
base, annulus slight, subpersistent, often near the middle of the stem; spores elliptical,
.00025’–.0003’ long, .00016’–.0002’ broad. Plant 1 –2’ high; pileus .5–1’ broad; stem
1’’–1.5’’ thick. Alluvial soil, among weeds. Albany. July. In the fresh plant the scales are
of a pale-yellow or lemon color, but in drying they and the whole pileus take a deeper
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