The deceiver is a small mushroom with a
cap measuring in diameter, convex when young and later flattening or even depressed in the center. It can be various shades of salmon pink, brick-red, or shades of orange or brown when moist or young, and duller and paler when dry. The fibrous
stipe is high and wide. The irregular
gills are widely spaced and decurrent or adnexed, and of similar color to the cap, though whiten with spores as the mushroom matures. The
spore print is white, and the round spiny
spores are 7–10
μm in diameter. The
flesh is thin and has little taste.
Similar species Formerly considered a subspecies by French mycologist
René Maire, the close deceiver (
L. proxima) is a European relative with a fine scaly cap and found in wetter habitats. Microscopically, its spores are narrower and more oval-shaped. In California, what was thought to be
L. laccata under
eucalyptus has turned out to be the Australian species
L. fraterna. Other similar species include
L. amethysteo-occidentalis and
L. bicolor. == Distribution and habitat ==