[4] The name Agaricus (Lepiota) muticolor was also used by Miles Joseph Berkeley and Christopher Edmund Broome in 1871 for an unrelated species.
It is covered in small brown fibrillose scales, the cap edges have slight striations and the white surface discolours to a rosy whitish when dry.
Gills: Free, crowded, swollen in the middle (ventricose) and white discolouring to orange or browny yellow when dry.
Cap: 4cm wide, shallow convex with a greyish central disc instead of an umbo.
The rest of the cap surface is whitish and covered in dark cream coloured fibrils (thread like filaments).
Cribb in February 1962 and January 1963 in Lamington National Park, Queensland, Australia.
[4] The Queensland Department of Environment and Science holds a small number of preserved specimens of L. muticolor mostly from the 1960s.