Limacella illinita (Fr.) Maire (Local name: Лимацелла масляная) This kind has a clear feature: the older, the lighter up to almost white with yellowish shadow, but the cap colours sometimes are variable in one cluster. Cap: 4-7cm wide when adult, bell-shaped, convex as 1/3 of a ball up to almost flat, sometimes with an indistinct knob, margin radial grooved, because skin is transparent; smooth and slimy, somewhat fine velvety when old and dry; colour changed from yellowish-white or light orange-yellow, minor brownish-white up to dull yellow or yellowish-white, minor whitish; the cap top is darker. Flesh is white, thin and fragile. Odour is weak and pleasant. Veil: at very young mushroom, slimy and hairy. Gills: free or almost free, close up to crowded, white up to pinkish- or yellowish-white when old or died. Stalk: 7-12cm long, 0.6-1cm thick, slimy when young, weakly enlarged down; light yellow or yellowish-white, sometimes slightly dull orange hairy or brownish-white with pink cutting when old and drying up. Habitat: small group scattered in wet places or along streams in pine-tree forest with rare birches and aspen (very rare in dry summer, common, when unusual rainy year). Edibility: edible. Season: June-August.