Leucocoprinus tephrolepis

Cap: 2-2.5 cm wide, starting paraboloid before expanding to conico-canpanulate and finally flattening with age with a depressed center and a small round umbo that is raised up.

Gills: Free, moderately crowded and white but with a pink-orange tinge developing in older specimens or within a few hours of collecting.

Stem: 2.5–3 cm long and 2-3mm thick cylindrical to clavate tapering upwards from a slightly bulbous base.

[3] The specimens studied were growing gregariously on leaf litter and old termite nests in humid mixed woodland during February to April.

These species can be very difficult to distinguish based only on macroscopic features and may require microscopic or genetic sequencing.