The picture looks more like Bolbitius titubans - specifically the glutinous cap surface matches that better than the Leucocoprinus birnbaumii described in the article.
You'd have to check the gills etc. to be sure though, I am not an expert etc. etc.
Anyway, whatever useful work the mycelium might be doing in the soil, the mushrooms are just dumping spores into your air. I'd probably get rid of them even if they're not the poisonous ones.
The picture looks more like Bolbitius titubans - specifically the glutinous cap surface matches that better than the Leucocoprinus birnbaumii described in the article.
You'd have to check the gills etc. to be sure though, I am not an expert etc. etc.
Anyway, whatever useful work the mycelium might be doing in the soil, the mushrooms are just dumping spores into your air. I'd probably get rid of them even if they're not the poisonous ones.