®Ijp i. f . l|iU ICtbraro 
 
 Jfartl) QIarolina dtatj (Eollrge 
 
 QKBOT 
 B5 
 
 Sep. 
 
QX607 
 3h 
 
 i (\R/1^'? 
 
 Sm it h 
 
 108452 
 
 sup 
 
 Supplemi 
 
 outlines 
 
 This book may be kept out TWO WEEKS 
 ONLY, and is subject to a fine of FIVE 
 CENTS a day thereafter. It is due on the 
 day indicated below: 
 
 5M— F45— Form : 
 
.^x 
 
OUTLINES 
 
 BRITISH FUNGOLOGY 
 
 SUPPLEMENT. 
 
OUTLINES 
 
 BRITISH FUNGOLOdY. 
 
 SUPPLEMENT. 
 
 WORTHINGTON G. SMITH, 
 
 F.L.S., M.A.I., F. U.S.A. IRELAND; 
 AUTHOU OF 'dISEASKS OF FIi;i,n AND GARDEN CROPS,' El 
 
 LONDON : 
 
 L. REEVE & CO., HENRIETTA STREET, COVENT GARDEN 
 
 1891. 
 
PREFACE. 
 
 Thirty' years have passed since the first edition of the 
 Outlines of British Fungoloyy was published. During this 
 time the species of fungi known to be British have more 
 than doubled in number. Not only new species, but many 
 new genera of fungi have been added to the British lists. 
 Mr. Berkeley, in the first edition of this work_, was only 
 able to partially avail himself of Fries' writings. In 1876 
 Fries published his latest work on the higher fungi, 
 or Hymenomyeetes, under the name of Hijmeiiomycetes 
 Eu7'opcei sive Epicriseos Sijstematis Mycoloyici. In that 
 work Fries reviewed the whole family, added several new 
 sub-genera to the genus Agaricus^ as well as new genera 
 elsewhere, and abolished as spurious several genera 
 originally established, and incorporated by Mr. Berkeley in 
 his Outlines. 
 
 The additions and alterations being so extensive, the 
 publishers determined upon the issue of a new edition, 
 which should bring the record of the larger fungi up to 
 the present state of knowledge, and the first idea was to 
 publish a supplement with the names and descriptions of 
 the new British species. On making this attempt, it was 
 found to be thoroughly impracticable, owing to name 
 alterations and to the re-arrangement of many groups of 
 
 108152 
 
VI PHEFACE. 
 
 vspecies by Fries, and their transference sometimes to other 
 sub-genera or even genera. As the number of new 
 British species was found to exceed the number of the 
 old, it was decided to make the supplementary part of the 
 new edition include the names of the whole of the British 
 species of Hymenomycetes. The species as given in the first 
 edition of the Outlines are not re-described in this volume, 
 but the page at which the description may be found in the 
 first volume is given after the name. This plan has fur- 
 nished the opportunity of adding the diameter of the pileus 
 to the descriptions of nearly all the Hymenomycetes. 
 This addition is most necessary, as one of the first facts a 
 beginner wishes to acquaint himself with is the size of the 
 fungus described. A few species of fungi vary greatly 
 in superficies, but the majority have an average size. 
 
 Another addition, which it is hoped will be found of 
 value, especially to London students, is the marking of all 
 the species hitherto found in Epping Forest. 
 
 The new descriptions have been made as short as 
 possible, according to Mr. Berkeley's original plan. Fries 
 has described nearly all his species three, four, or more 
 times, and the longest descriptions are in his Motiographia 
 Hijminomycetvm Sttecue and Hi/incnomi/cetes Et/rojuei. The 
 descriptions of Fries' species in the present volume have 
 been condensed from the two works just quoted. It has 
 not been thought necessary to repeat generic, sub-generic, 
 and sectional characters in the specific descriptions. For 
 instance, if " gills decurrent " is found as a sub-generic 
 or sectional character, it must be understood that this 
 character applies to every species in the sub-genus or 
 section which follows, unless otherwise pointed out in the 
 specific description. The generic and sub-generic charac- 
 
PKEFACE. vn 
 
 ters^ as given by Mr. Berkeley, are not repeated in the 
 present volume, but the page at which the description may 
 be found in Vol. I. is in every instance given. The 
 characters of all new genera and sub-genera are given in 
 full, and the minor sectional characters as given in the 
 present volume will be found to aid greatly in the deter- 
 mination of species ; in fact, as Vol. II. contains more 
 specific descriptions than Vol. I., as well as a complete list 
 of all the higher fungi recorded for Britain up to date, it is 
 obvious that Vol. II. should be used for the determination 
 of species and Vol. I. as a supplement. 
 
 The following is the sequence of the sixty-three genera 
 of Hymenomycetes, as given in the present volume : — 
 
 1 
 
 Agaric us. 
 
 2 
 
 Moiitagnites. 
 
 3 
 
 Coprinus. 
 
 4. 
 
 Bolbitius. 
 
 5. 
 
 Cortinarius. 
 
 6. 
 
 Gomphidius. 
 
 7. 
 
 Paxillns. 
 
 8. 
 
 Hygrophorus. 
 
 il. 
 
 Lactarius. 
 
 10. 
 
 Russula. 
 
 11. 
 
 Cantharellus. 
 
 12. 
 
 Arrhenia. 
 
 13. 
 
 Nyctalis. 
 
 14. 
 
 Marasmius. 
 
 15. 
 
 Lentinus. 
 
 IG. 
 
 Panus. 
 
 17. 
 
 Xerotus. 
 
 18. 
 
 Trogia. 
 
 19. 
 
 Schizophyllum 
 
 20. 
 
 Lenzites. 
 
 21. 
 
 Boletus. 
 
 22. 
 
 Strobilomycers. 
 
 23. 
 
 Fistulina. 
 
 24. 
 
 Polyporus. 
 
 25. 
 
 Trametes. 
 
 20. Ua^dalea. 
 
 27. Hexagonia. 
 
 28. Favolus. 
 
 29. Merulius. 
 
 30. Porothelium. 
 
 31. Solenia. 
 
 32. Hydnum. 
 
 33. Hericium. 
 
 34. Tremellodon. 
 
 35. Sistotrema. 
 
 36. Irpex. 
 
 37. Radulum. 
 
 38. Phlebia. 
 
 39. Grandinia. 
 
 40. Odontia. 
 
 41. Kneiffia. 
 
 42. Mucronella. 
 
 43. Craterellus. 
 
 44. Thelephora. 
 
 45. Cladoderris. 
 
 46. Stereum. 
 
 47. Auricularia. 
 
 48. Corticium. 
 
 49. Cyphella. 
 .')(>. Sparassis. 
 
51. Clavaria. 
 
 52. Calocera. 
 
 53. Pterula. 
 
 54. Typhula. 
 
 55. Pistillaria. 
 
 56. Microcera. 
 
 57. Tremella. 
 
 58. Exidia. 
 
 59. Hirncola. 
 
 60. Femsjonia. 
 
 61. Najmatelia. 
 
 62. Guepinia. 
 (i;;. Dacrvmvces. 
 
 The forty-one siib-genera of Agaricus follow each other 
 in the following order : — 
 
 Series 1.— Leucospoei. 
 
 
 Scries .}.— Dermini. 
 
 White spores. 
 
 
 Broirn spores. 
 
 1. Amanita. 
 
 22 
 
 Acetabularia. 
 
 2. Amanitopsis. 
 
 23 
 
 Togaria. 
 
 3. Lopiota. 
 
 24 
 
 Pluteolus. 
 
 4. Schulzeria. 
 
 1 25 
 
 Pholiota. 
 
 5. Hiatula. 
 
 26. 
 
 Inocybe. 
 
 6. Armillaria. 
 
 
 Hebeloma. 
 
 7. Tricholoma. 
 
 28. 
 
 Flammula. 
 
 8. Clitocybe. 
 
 29. 
 
 Naucoria 
 
 9. Collybia. 
 
 3(1. 
 
 Galera. 
 
 10. Mycena. 
 
 31. 
 
 Tubaria. 
 
 11. Omphalia. 
 
 32. 
 
 Crepidotus. 
 
 12. Pleurotus. 
 
 Serie.s 4.— PratelL/E. 
 
 
 
 Furple spores. 
 
 Sories 2.— Hyporhodii. 
 
 33. 
 
 Chitonia. 
 
 Bosif spores. 
 
 34. 
 
 Psalliota. 
 
 18. Volvaria. 
 
 35. 
 
 Pilosace. 
 
 14. Annularia. 
 
 36. 
 
 Stropharia. 
 
 15. Pluteus. 
 
 37. 
 
 Hypholoma. 
 
 16. Eiitoloiiia. 
 
 38. 
 
 Psilocybe. 
 
 17. Clitopihis. 
 
 39. 
 
 Psathyra. 
 
 IS. l.eptoiiia. 
 
 19. Nolanoa. 
 
 20. Eccilia. 
 
 Series 5.— Coprinaiui 
 Black spores. 
 
 21. Claudopiis. 
 
 40. 
 
 Panteolus. 
 
 
 41. 
 
 Psafhyrella. 
 
 Amongst the new sub-genera of Agaricus, Hiatula, 
 p. 11, is placed in this work amongst the white-spored 
 
Agarics, between Lcpiota and ArmiUaria. This sub-genus 
 is elevated to a genus and placed next to Coprinus by 
 Dr. M. C. Cooke, in the new edition of his Handbook of 
 British Fungi (now in course of publication in GreriUea), 
 and by the Rev. John Stevenson in his British Fungi — 
 Hyinenomycetes. Both authors seem to have overlooked 
 the later views of Fries, the founder of the section Hiatula, 
 as published in the Transactions of the Woolhope Club, 
 1870 (p. 179). Fries there says : " The space in the series 
 Leucospori, left vacant between 2 and 3 " (Lepiota and 
 Arniillaria — analogous with Phiteus and Pilosace) , "is very 
 well filled by the sub-genus Hiatula, described in my work 
 Nov. Si/m. Myc. Of this genus there are numerous tropical 
 species, and two are found growing in our hot-houses on the 
 stems of orchids. They have been found growing in a similar 
 situation at Amsterdam." Fries was obviously right in 
 his later determination, as Hiatula agrees exactly in struc- 
 ture and habit with Pluteus, Phiteolus, and Pilosace. 
 
 Amongst the rosy-spored Agarics, the sub-genus Eccilia, 
 unknown as British when the first edition of the Outlines 
 was published, is now represented by nine species. The 
 sub-genus Claudopus contains three species, removed from 
 Crepidotus, the spores being rosy, and not truly brown. 
 
 Amongst the brown-spored Agarics, five sub-genera have 
 been added since the publication of the Outlines. The 
 first is Acetabularia, which corresponds with Amanita and 
 Volvaria ; the next is Togaria, which corresponds with 
 Lepiota and the non-British Annularia. Togaria was 
 suggested by Fries, whose words, published in the 
 Trans. Woolhope Club., 1870 (p. 179), are " Agaricus aureus 
 occupies in the series Dermini the space between Lepiota 
 and Psalliota, which would readily maintain the type of 
 
X PREFACE. 
 
 its sub-geuus Togiiiia. But," adds Fries, " I am un- 
 willing to found a new sub-genus from a single species/' 
 A. aureus is, however, not the only species which agrees 
 with Lepiota and FsalUota ; all the first eight terrestrial 
 species of Pholiota rightly belong to Toyaria. Phiteolus 
 corresponds with Hiatula and Pluteus. Fries, Cooke, and 
 Stevenson have misplaced this sub-genus in putting it next 
 to Galcra ; it should, as its structure and habit show, 
 be placed between Totjaria and Pholiota, in the posi- 
 tion of Hiatula amongst the white-spored, and Pluteus 
 among the rosy-spored Agarics. Inocybe was formerly 
 included in Hebeloma. Tubaria contains species formerly 
 included in Navcoria and Galeru. Amongst the purple- 
 spored Agarics, the sub-genera Chitonia and P'llosace are 
 new since the publication of the Outlines. Strop// aria was 
 formerly included in Psalliota. 
 
 It has not been thought desirable to make more exten- 
 sive alterations in sequence or the establishment of new 
 genera in the present volume. Nearly all the descriptive 
 work is that of Elias Fries, and this new edition of 
 Berkeley's Outlines fairly represents Fries' views and con- 
 clusions at the time of his death. 
 
 As Mr. Berkeley's original work gives descriptions of all 
 the larger British fungi, including puft-balls, truffles, 
 pezizae, &c., the recent additions to the lists of these fungi 
 have been made good in the present volume. 
 
 No references to published illustrations of fungi are 
 given to the first 1388 species — i.e., to the end of Ayaricini 
 at p. 273 — as nearly all these fungi are illustrated in colour 
 in Illustrations of British Fungi by Dr. M. C. Cooke. For 
 the succeeding species, references to published plates are 
 given. 
 
TKEFACE. xi 
 
 Two hundred and fifty-five excellent," life-size, coloured 
 models of a select number of the higher fungi, made by the 
 late Mr. James Sowerby, are exhibited in the public gallery of 
 the Department of Botany at the British Museum — Natural 
 History — South Kensington. These models are arranged in 
 botanical sequence, and may be consulted with advantage. 
 The Cryptogamic Department of the British Museum also 
 possesses a collection of water-colour drawings illustrative of 
 the higher fungi ; these drawings are many hundreds in 
 number ; each illustration has been prepared from a typical 
 living example. The drawings are supplied with sections 
 and other details, and, like the models, are arranged in 
 botanical sequence. By permission of the Keeper of the 
 Botanical Collections, the drawings may be examined and 
 studied. 
 
 The following summary of the number of British species 
 of Hymenomycetes at present known will show the great 
 advance in their number since 1860. In the Outlines 
 Mr. Berkeley described 877 species. In Dr. Cooke's Hand- 
 book, published in 1871, 1041 species are described. In 
 1886, Mr. Stevenson, in his British Fungi — Hymenomycetes, 
 has enumerated 1673 species ; whilst in the present volume 
 no less than 1919 species are recorded. A large number of 
 varietal forms new to Britain are also described. The non- 
 hymenomycetal fungi described in this volume have in- 
 creased in number in a similar proportion. 
 
 In the preparation of this supplemental volume, use has 
 been made not only of Fries' and other original works, but 
 of Messrs. Berkeley and Broome's contributions to the 
 Annuls and Magazine of Natural History ; to the Rev. John 
 Stevenson's British Fungi — Hymenomycetes ; to Dr. M. C. 
 Cooke's revision of his Handbook of British Fungi, as pub- 
 
Xll lilEFACE. 
 
 lished, ill Grevillea, to the end of the A(jaricini ; and to 
 British Discomycetes hy Mr. William Phillips, 
 
 Dr. Cooke's revision of the Pohjporei, as recently published 
 in Grevillea, Vol. XTII., is at present too imperfect for in- 
 corporation in a Handbook, and Mr. Massee's monograph of 
 the TlielephorecB, as published in the Journal of the Linnean 
 Society, was not far enough advanced for its study and in- 
 corporation in this volume at the time of going to press. 
 
 WORTH IXaTOX a SMITH. 
 
 DrXSTABLE, 189I. 
 
 EliHATA. 
 
 Page 3, line 10, for Soir. read >Siii. 
 
 Page 3, line 30, and 
 
 Page 4, lines 3 and 11, for Amanita read Amanitopsis. 
 
 Page 25, line 4, for miliaris read militaris. 
 
 Page 25, line 2^, for cinerasceus read cinerasccns. 
 
 Page 87, line 8, for nericius read sericeus. 
 
 Page 113, line 2S,for asterospevmus read asterosporus 
 
 Page 149, line 5, for s^-lvaticus i-ead silvaticus. 
 
 Page 226, line 23, for Genus 7 read Genus 8. 
 
 Page 230, line 12, for carpinus )-ead caprinus. 
 
 Page 238, line 21, for hysignis read hysginus. 
 
 Page 289, line 25, for pallascens read pallescens. 
 
 Page 295, line 10, for obduceus read obdusccns. 
 
 Page 311. line ^o, for aterrinuni rr((d alcrrimnm. 
 
BRITISH FUNGOLOGY. 
 
 SUPPLEMENT. 
 
 Family I.— HYMENOMYCETES. 
 
 Order 1. AGARICINI. 
 
 Genus 1. AGARICUS, L. 
 
 Series 1. Leucospori. — Spores v)hite. 
 
 Subgenus 1. Amanita (p. 89).— All growing on the ground. 
 Ring manifest, supei-ior. 
 
 * Volva splitting at the top, border f re"., persistent. 
 
 1. A. (Amanita) virosus, Fr.: white; pileus 3-4 in., at 
 first conical and acute, naked, viscous in wet weather, 
 margin even ; flesh white, unchangeable ; stem stuffed, 
 almost solid, base bulbous, springing from a lax, wide, thick 
 volva ; ring apical, splitting into fioccose fragments ; gills 
 free, thin, linear-lanceolate, broader in front, crowded, 
 floccose at the edge. 
 
 In woods, uncommon. Foetid, poisonous. 
 
 2. A. (Amanita) phalloides, Fr. (p. 89); 3-4 in. 
 Epping Forest. 
 
 3. A. (Amanita) vernus, Bull. (p. 89) ; 3-4 in. Epping 
 Forest. 
 
 .\ 
 
 D. H. HILL LIBRARY 
 
I OU'I'LIXKS OK IIKITISII lUNGOLOCiV. 
 
 4. A. (Amanita) mappa, Butscli. (p. 90) ; 2-3 in. 
 Epping Forest. 
 
 ** Volva ftplittiiKj regular 1 1/ all round, base onarginate, j)ers{ste72t ; 
 pileus clothed vith thick ivarts. 
 
 5. A. (Amanita) miiscarius, L. (p. 90) ; 1 in. Epping 
 Forest. 
 
 f 7//-. regalis ; twice as large as type ; stem solid when 
 young ; pileus bay-brown or the colour of cooked liver. 
 Var, formosa ; pileus lemon-yellow, warts yellowish. 
 Vur. umbrina ; pileus umber, then livid, disc fuscous. 
 
 6. A. (Amanita) pantherinus, DC. (p. 90) ; 4 in. 
 Epping Forest. 
 
 7. A. (Amanita) excelsxis, Fr. (p. 91) ; 4-5 in. Epping 
 Forest. 
 
 8. A. (Amanita) strobiliformis, Mtt. (p. 90) ; 8-9 in. 
 
 9. A. (Amanita) solitarius, Bull. ; pileus convex, then 
 flattened, pelliculose, margin nearly even, warts angular, 
 evanescent ; stem solid, equal, imbricaiedly squamose below, 
 bulb campanulate, rooting, margin inserted, ring torn ; gills 
 attenuatedly adnate. 
 
 On the ground, near Bristol. 
 
 *** Volva friable, broken, vp into small scales oi' warts. 
 
 10. A. (Amanita) rutoescens, Pers. (p. 90); 4 in. 
 Epping Forest. 
 
 11. A. (Amanita) spissus, Fr. ; pileus 3 in., umber, 
 fuliginous or grey, fleshy, compact, smooth, clothed with 
 small, cinereous, angular, adnate warts ; flesh firm, white, 
 unchangeable ; stem bulbous, bulb globoso-depressed, not 
 marginate ; ring superior, large ; gills reaching the stem, 
 slightly striato-decurrent, broad, crowded, shining white. 
 
 In mixed woods, uncommon. Epping Forest. 
 
AGARICIXI. 3 
 
 12. A. (Amanita) nitidus, Fr. ; pileus 1- in., without a 
 viscous pellicle, whitish, sometimes yellowish or greenish, 
 fleshy, somewhat compact, at first hemispherical, the thick 
 volva forming a floccose crust, then broken up into thick, 
 angular, adhering warts which become fuscous ; flesh white, 
 unchangeable ; stem solid, conico-attenuated, squamulose, 
 base bulbous ; ring superior, thin, white, at length dis- 
 appearing. 
 
 In woods. Epping Forest. 
 
 13. A. (Amanita) asper, P. (p. 91) ; 2 in. 
 **** Volva rudlmentari/,jiocculose, disapjjeariiKj. 
 
 14. A. (Amanita) magnifleus, Fr. ; pileus 3 in., whitish, 
 livid, pallid reddish-tan, thin, usually naked or sprinkled 
 with irregularly placed floccose spots; flesh white, changing 
 when broken to tawny; stem stuffed with a distinct pith, 
 at length hollow, equal, no bulb or veil at base, becoming 
 reddish- white when dry ; ring superior ; gills adnate, ventri- 
 cose, broad, with a decurrent tooth. 
 
 In woods of fir, and under beeches. 
 
 15. A. (Amanita) megalodactylus, B. and Br. (p. 91) ; 
 3 J in. 
 
 16. A. (Amanita) lentictilaris, Lasch. ; pileus 3-1 in., 
 colour fleshy-tan or yellowish ; fleshy, globose when young, 
 even, smooth, moist ; flesh soft, spongy, white ; stem elon- 
 gated, slightly bulbous, solid, spongy-soft, squamulose ; ring 
 superior, large, distant from pileus ; gills free, ventricose, 
 crowded, whitish, sometimes inclining to olivaceous. 
 
 In mixed plantations. Coed Coch. Odour mouldy. 
 
 Subgenus 2. AjiAXixorsis. — Ring obliterated or wanting. 
 
 17. A. (Amanita) vaginatus, Bull. (p. 91); 2-5 in. 
 Epping Forest. 
 
4 OUTLINES OF KKITISK FUNGOLOGY. 
 
 Vai\ nivalis, Grev., white. Epping Forest. 
 
 18. A. (Amanita) strangulatus, Fr. ; pileus 3-4 in. 
 livid, date-brown, becoming pale, fleshy, smooth, viscid, 
 covered with broad brown patches, margin striate, then 
 sulcate ; stem stuffed, at length hollow, closely sheathed at 
 the base by the circularly split volva; obliterated ring 
 inferior; gills free, crowded, ventricose, shining white. 
 
 In woods. Local. Epping Forest. 
 = A. Cecilije, B. and Br. (p. 92). 
 
 19. A. (Amanita) adnatus, Sow.: pileus •^ in., pale 
 buff-yellow, fleshy, firm, smooth, somewhat moist, buff 
 beneath the cuticle, margin extending beyond the gills ; 
 stem stufled, at length hollow, pale buff, fibrillose ; ring 
 none ; volva lax, adnate or almost obsolete, white, pubes- 
 cent, remaining in woolly patches on the pileus ; gills 
 adnate, crowded, white. 
 
 In woody places, among oak and holly. Uncommon. 
 
 Subgenus 3. Lepiota (p. 92). 
 A. Epidermis dry. 
 
 * Pkoceri. — RiiKj morabk', distinct from the volva. 
 
 20. A. (Lepiota) procerus, Sro/). (p. 92) ; 4-8 in. 
 Epping Forest. 
 
 21. A. (Lepiota) rachodes, Viti. (p. 92) ; 4-8 in. 
 Epping Forest. 
 
 J^ar. puellaris, Fr. ; half the size of the type, shining 
 white, pileus floccoso-squaraose. 
 
 22. A. (Lepiota) excoriatus, Schajf. (p. 92) ; 3 in. 
 Epping Forest. 
 
 23. A. (Lepiota) gracilentus, Kromb. (p. 93) ; 4 in. 
 21. A. (Lepiota) mastoideus, Fr. (p. 93) ; 2 in. 
 
AGARICIM. 5 
 
 ** Clypeolarii. — Ring ji.red, liomogeaeous loith the universal 
 ceil lohicli clolhes the stem. 
 
 25. A. (Lepiota) Friesii, Lasch -. pileus 6 iu.^ ferrugi- 
 nous-fuscous, fleshy, soft, torn into adpressed, tomentose 
 scales ; stem hollow with arachnoid pith, somewhat bulbous, 
 scaly ; ring superior, pendulous, equal ; gills somewhat 
 remote, linear, crowded, branched. 
 
 On sawdust. King's Lynn. Odour heavy. 
 
 26. A. (Lepiota) acutesquamosus, Weinm. (p. 93) ; 
 4-5 in, Eppiug Forest. 
 
 27. A. (Lepiota) Badhami, B. and Br. (p. 93) ; 2-4 in. 
 
 28. A. (Lepiota) emplastrum, Cke. and Mass. ; gre- 
 garious; pileus 2-3 in., silky, pallid, covered at first with a 
 smooth, membranaceous, dark-brown cuticle which splits up 
 into large adherent patches or scales, margin smooth, 
 naked ; stem equal, fibrillose, fistulose, girt by a superior 
 erect ring with a marginal brown band ; flesh turning 
 pink when cut ; gills crowded, free, remote, narrowed 
 behind, leaving a broad collar round stem. 
 
 Among moss in a churchyard. Ealing. Taste and 
 smell none. Somewhat resembling A. Badhami., but scales 
 smooth and spores larger. 
 
 29. A. (Lepiota) meleagris, Soiv. — S.. (Tricholoma) me- 
 leagris, Soio. (p. 101); pileus 2 in., fawn-coloured, fleshy, 
 thin, at first ovate or hemispherical, then expanded, some- 
 what campanulate, very obtuse, minutely tomentose and 
 warty, dotted with minute brown scales ; flesh turning red ; 
 stem stuffed with cottony threads, fusiform, then nearly 
 equal, of same colour, here and there tinged with yellow, 
 minutely squamulose ; ring soon ruptured, fugacious ; gills 
 remote, distant, rounded behind, somewhat connected, 
 white. 
 
6 OUTLINES OF BRITISH FUNGOLOGY. 
 
 In hot-houses on spent tan, Hare. 
 
 30. A. (Lepiota) biornatus, B. and Br. ; pileus 2 in., 
 fleshy, convex, broadly campanulate, white, silky, sprinkled 
 with dark-red punctiform scales ; flesh white, or slightly 
 yellow ; stem stuffed, then hollow, attenuated at base, rooting, 
 spotted with red, reddish within ; ring descending, spotted 
 at edge ; gills approximate, ventricose, broad, white ; whole 
 plant becoming dark in drying. 
 
 In melon frame. 
 
 31. A. (Lepiota) hispidus, Lasch ; pileus 2-3 in., 
 umber- fuscous, fleshy, soft, hemispherical, then expanded 
 umbouate, at first tomentose, the down separating into 
 scales ; Hesh thin, white, unchangeable ; stem attenuated 
 upwards, tubular, stuffed with fibrils, densely woolly-scaly ; 
 ring fuscous, superior, membranaceous, reflexed ; gills free, 
 approximate, with a collar encircling the stem, crowded 
 ventricose, simple, white. 
 
 In woods, chiefly among pines, rare. 
 
 32. A. (Lepiota) clypeolarius, Bull. (p. 94) ; 2-3 in. 
 Var. felinus, Fr. ; smaller than type, pileus white, umbo 
 
 and scales becoming black, stem attenuated upwards, same 
 colour as pileus ; gills crowded, white, margin serrate. 
 On the ground. Kew. 
 
 33. A. (Lepiota) metulsesporus, H. and Br. ; pileus 
 1 in., white, rather fleshy, campanulate, sulcatc, with small 
 pallid scales, margin appendiculate ; stem stulfed, equal or 
 slightly clavate, pallid lemon-colour within ; gills approxi- 
 mate, ventricose, broad, white. 
 
 84. A. (Lepiota) cristatus, A. and S. (p. 94) ; 1-1| in. 
 Eppiug Forest. 
 
 35. A. (Lepiota) ermineus, Fr. ; pileus 2-2^ in., white, 
 slightly fleshy, campanulate, then flattened, the deeper 
 
AGARICINI. 7 
 
 coloured disc slightly gibbous, dry, smooth, becoming even, 
 silky-fibrillose towards the margin ; flesh soft, white ; stem 
 fistulose, equal, fragile, dry, somewhat fibrillose ; ring mem- 
 branous, at length torn and fugacious; gills free, reaching 
 the stem, obtuse at both ends, somewhat crowded, broad, 
 shining white ; gregarious. 
 
 Grassy places in woods, etc. Coed Coch, etc. Inodorous, 
 with taste of radish. 
 
 *** Annulosi. — Ring supe,rior, fixed, somexoliat persistent^ 
 v.niversal veil adnate to the jnletts. 
 
 36. A. (Lepiota) Vittadini. Fr. (p. 94) ; 5 in. 
 
 37. A. (Lepiota) holosericeus, Fr.; pileus 3 in., whitish 
 or clay-white, fleshy, soft, rather plane, floccoso-silky, 
 somewhat fibrillose, becoming even, disc of the same colour, 
 margin involute when young ; flesh soft, white ; stem solid, 
 bulbous, soft, fragile, silky-fibrillose, whitish ; ring superior, 
 membranaceous, large, soft, pendulous with margin ascend- 
 ing ; gills free, broad, ventricose, becoming whitish. 
 
 In moist woods and gardens, Kew, Staplehurst. In- 
 odorous ; esculent. 
 
 38. A. (Lepiota) naucinus, Fr. (p. 94) ; 1-H in. 
 
 39. A, (Lepiota) cepsestipes, Sow. (p. 95); 1 in. 
 
 40. A. (Lepiota) licmophorus, B. and Br. ; pileus 
 1 in., lemon-yellow, membranaceous, plane, depressed, 
 deeply sulcate, margin crenate ; stem fistulose, slender, 
 attenuated upwards, lemon-yellow, tomentose at the base ; 
 ring median ; gills remote, slightly arched, distant, interstices 
 veined, shining white. 
 
 In hothouses. 
 
8 OU'J'LLNES OF BRITISH FUXGOLOGY. 
 
 **** Granulosi. — L'nioersal veil sheathiny the stem, and at first 
 extending continuously from the stem to the pileics, hut at 
 length ruptured and formiiui an inferior ring. 
 
 41. A. (Lepiota) carcharias, P.; pileus 1| in., flesh- 
 coloured, fleshy, convex, then plane, umbonate, granulose ; 
 stena stuffed, then hollow, somewhat bulbous, squamulose, 
 same colour as pileus ; gills adnexed, shining white. 
 
 On grass, under firs. Epping Forest. 
 
 42. A. (Lepiota) cinnabarinus, A. and S. ; pileus 2-3 
 in., cinnabar colour, fleshy, soon flattened, granuloso-furfu- 
 raceous, fimbriate at margin ; flesh pallid ; stem stuffed, 
 somewhat bulbous, red-scaly below the inferior ring ; gills 
 free, lanceolate, white. 
 
 Fir woods. 
 
 Var. Terreii B. ami Br. .• pileus 1-2 in., bright tawny, 
 somewhat hemispherical, pulverulent, rough with warts ; 
 stem somewhat equal, often cylindrical, furfuraceous-scaly, 
 same colour as pileus below the ring ; ring at length torn ; 
 gills remote, narrow, white, unbranched. 
 
 On sandy ground, Forres, etc. 
 
 f3. A. (Lepiota) granvilosus, Batsch (p. 95) ; 2 in. 
 Epping Forest. 
 
 Var. rufescens, B. and Br. 
 
 At first pure white, then partially turning red, in drying 
 entirely rufous. 
 
 44. A. (Lepiota) amianthinus, Scop. ; pileus 1-H in., 
 ochraceous, somewhat fleshy, convex then plane, somewhat 
 umbonate, furfuraceo-grauulose, flesh yellow; stem equal, 
 slender, squamulose ; ring fugacious ; gills adnate, crowded, 
 white, then pale yellow. 
 
 Var. Broadwoodiae, B. and Br. ; pileus yellow, hemi- 
 spherical, delicately tomentose, margiu iuflexed ; stem equal 
 
AGARICINI y 
 
 and as well as the ring furfuraceous with squamules ; gills 
 adnate, sometimes decurrent, shining white. 
 
 45. A. (Lepiota) polystictus B. (p. 95) ; H- in. 
 
 ***** Mesomouphi. — Small, slender, stem fistulose, pileus dry, 
 cuticle entire. 
 
 46. A. (Lepiota) sistratus, Fr. ; pileus l-H in., prui- 
 nate, whitish, often darker at the disc, slightly fleshy, turning 
 pale yellowish or flesh colour ; flesh thin, soft, fragile, 
 whitish j stem slightly stuffed with fine fibrils, equal, white, 
 silky-fibrillose and pruinate; ring fibrillose, torn, fibrillose 
 round margin of pileus, fugacious ; gills free, reaching the 
 stem, crowded, broad, white. 
 
 On sandy ground. Forres. 
 
 47. A. (Lepiota) seminudus, Lcitic/t .• pileus whitish or 
 flesh-colour, slightly fleshy, umbonate, floccoso-mealy, at 
 length naked, appendiculate at margin with the torn veil; 
 stem mealy ; gills reaching the stem, thin, white. 
 
 In woods, etc. King's Lynn, etc. 
 
 48. A. (Lepiota) Bucknallii, B. and Br. ; pileus 1 in., 
 white, sprinkled with lilac-coloured dust; stem dilated at base, 
 sprinkled like pileus ; gills scarcely reaching the stem, white. 
 
 On the ground, Bristol. Odour strong of gas tar. 
 
 49. A. (Lepiota) mesomorphus, Bull. ; pileus 1 in., 
 whitish or yellow, slightly fleshy, very thin, naked, dry, even, 
 smooth ; stem slightly attenuated upwards, even, smooth, 
 same colour as pileus ; ring continuous with cuticle of pileus 
 and stem, at first entire, spreading ; gills free, crowded, 
 ventricose, white. 
 
 On the ground in woods. Hereford, etc. 
 
 50. A. (Lepiota) martialis, Cke. and Mass. ; pileus 
 1 in., thin, rather fleshy, silky, pulverulent, campanulate. 
 
10 OUTLINES 01' I'.KITISII FUN(iOL00Y. 
 
 then expanded, dark fleshy red with a tinge of ochre, 
 darkest in the centre, margin striate ; stem slender, flstulose, 
 rufous and swollen at the base, ochraceous at apex, with a 
 broad, pendulous, rather distant ring ; gills free, somewhat 
 lanceolate, rather crowded, whitish. 
 
 On tree fern in conservatory, Scarborough. 
 
 51. A. (Lepiota) ianthinus, Cke. ; pileus '^ in., rather 
 fleshy, umbonate, whitish at the even margin, disc dark 
 violet, fibrillose, rest of pileus streaked with innate radiating, 
 violet, hair-like squamules, stem slender, somewhat flexuous, 
 nearly equal, whitish, soon hollow, girt about the middle 
 with a narrow deciduous ring ; gills free, lanceolate, scarcely 
 crowded, whitish. 
 
 In stove. Kew. 
 
 52. A. (Lepiota) micropholis, B. and Br. : pileus ^ in., 
 conical, then flattened, white, clad with minute, radiating, 
 dark cinereous squamules, margin substriate, stem flexuous, 
 nearly equal, white ; ring erect, spreading ; gills white, 
 ventricose, crowded, free. 
 
 On cocoa-nut fibre in a stove. Scarborough. 
 
 B. Cuticle of pileus viscous, contimious. 
 
 53. A. (Lepiota) medullatus, Fr. ; pileus 1^2^ in,, 
 white, disc sometimes grey, slightly fleshy, umbonate, even, 
 smooth, soft ; flesh watery ; stem hollow, with separable 
 outer coat, firm, equal, fragile, dry, silky, squamulose below 
 the veil, striate at apex ; ring incomplete, torn, appendi- 
 culate at margin of pileus ; gills free, broader in front, 
 ventricose, crowded, shining white. 
 
 In fir woods. Rare. Glamis. Odour of radish. 
 
 54. A. (Lepiota) gloiodermus, Fr. (p. 1)5) ; li in. 
 
 55. A. (Lepiota) delicatus, Fr. ; pileus i in., rufescent 
 or becoming yellow, slightly fleshy, somewhat umbonate, 
 
AGAKICINI. 11 
 
 smooth ; stem fistulose, equal, dry, ttoccoso-scaly and tomen- 
 tose ; gills free, crowded, thin, ventricose, shining white. 
 
 About old stumps. Powerscourt. Taste like Po/i/porus 
 squamosus. 
 
 56. A. (Lepiota) illinitus, Fr. ; pileus H-3 in., white, 
 with fuscous umbo, slightly fleshy, smooth, soft, fragile, 
 slightly striate at margin ; stem stuffed, then hollow, equal, 
 cylindrical, fragile, glutinous ; gills free, at length remote, 
 crowded, somewhat connected by veins, shining white. 
 
 In woods. Penzance. 
 
 57. A. (Lepiota) Georginae. Sin.; pileus ^-1 in., white, 
 slightly fleshy, fragile, covered with a minute, dense, viscid 
 pruinosity, which, as well as the white flesh, instantly 
 changes to crimson when touched ; margin at length 
 striate ; stem slightly attenuated upwards, viscid-pruinose, 
 changing to crimson Avhen touched ; ring evanescent ; gills 
 free, thin, somewhat ventricose, white, edge becoming 
 crimson when touched. 
 
 On mosses in a cool fernery. Chelsea. 
 
 Subgenus 4. Schulzeria. — Hpiienopliorum distinct from the 
 stem, without volva or rin<i-. Equal to Lepiota without 
 a ring. 
 No British representatives. 
 
 Subgenus 5. Hiatula. — Pileus very thm, without distinct pellicle, 
 formed from the union of the back of the gills, splitting and 
 veliform when expanded, as in very thin species of Coprmus, 
 but not deliquescent. 
 
 58. A. (Hiatula) Wynnise, B. and Br. ; pileus 1^ in., 
 shining white, tender, striate, pulverulent, darker in the 
 centre ; stem slender, striate ; gills rather broad, rough. 
 
 In a stove. Kew. 
 
 Stem 1 in. high, I line thick. One specimen became 
 darker in drying, and had a longer and thicker stem. 
 
12 OUTLINES OF HIJITISH FUNGOLOC.Y. 
 
 Subgenus 6. Akmillakia (p. 06). 
 
 * Tricholomata svBAyyuhATA.—O'iUsslmutto-adnexed, stem 
 Jlesh//, similar in substance icith the pileus. 
 
 59. A. (Armillaria) bulbiger, A. and S. : pileus 3-4 in., 
 pale yellowish briek-colour, fleshy, not compact, moist, 
 slightly squamuloso-fibrillose, then smooth ; stem stuffed, 
 rarely hollow, terminated at the base by a globose marginate 
 bulb ; external cuticle pale, separable, marked with longitu- 
 dinal fibrils ; ring adhering loosely, oblique, fugacious, 
 white; gills broadly emarginate, somewhat crowded, at 
 length distant, broad, white, then approaching colour of 
 pileus. 
 
 In pine woods, Hereford, etc. 
 
 60. A. (Armillaria) focalis, i<>. ; pileus 4-5 in., fleshy, 
 compact at disc, dry, slightly shining, not squamulose ; 
 cuticle tawny brick-colour, even, but silky-fibrillose ; flesh 
 soft, thick at disc, slightly tawny-pallid ; stem fleshy-solid, 
 fibrous, elastic, equal, not bulbous ; ring medial, oblique, 
 gills emarginato-free, crowded, narrow, white. 
 
 On bare ground under old laurels. Coed Coch. 
 
 Var. Goliath, Fr. ; pileus 8 in., very fleshy, much thinned 
 out towards revolute margin, moist, brown at disc, margin 
 torn into fibres where colour is paler, flesh white, elastic ; 
 stem fibrous-solid, commonly decumbent from weight of 
 pileus, equal or attenuato-rooting at base, becoming tawny 
 with fibrils downwards ; ring medial, fugacious ; gills 
 rounded, free, very broad and veutricose, rather thick 
 crowded, white. Odour mealy. 
 
 61. A. (Armillaria) robustus, A. and S. ; pileus brown, 
 very fleshy, dry, smooth, scaly-fibrillose towards margin; 
 flesh hard, stem obesi , solid, compact, attenuated at base, 
 
AGARICINI. 13 
 
 fibrillose below the inferior, large, floccose ring, white and 
 flocculose at apex ; gills broadly emarginate, almost free, 
 broad, crowded, whitish. 
 
 In woods. Rare. Smell like that of Polyporus 
 squamosus. 
 
 62. A. (Armillaria) ramentaeeus, Bull (p. 96) ; 2-3 in. 
 
 63. A. (Armillaria) haematites, B. and Br. ; pileus 
 1 in., red liver-colour, hemispherical, dry, slightly hispid ; 
 stem same colour as pileus, solid, thickened downwards ; 
 ring spongy, scaly beneath ; gills broad, shortly decurrent. 
 
 Among fir leaves. Glamis. 
 
 64. A. (Armillaria) Jasonis, Cke. and Mass. ; csespitose ; 
 pileus 3 in., rather fleshy, especially at disc, campanulate, 
 then expanded with a rounded umbo, granuloso- papillate, 
 golden yellow, becoming reddish at apex ; stem nearly 
 equal, or a little thickened below, same colour, hollow, 
 squamulose below the torn, squarrose, rather distant, ring ; 
 gills adnate, scarcely crowded, thin, white, then pallid. 
 
 On stumps. Carlisle. 
 
 65. A. (Armillaria) constrictus^ Fr. (p. 96) ; 2 in. 
 Epping Forest. 
 
 ** Clitocyb.e annulate. Gills attenuated behind, more or less 
 decurrent, without a sinus. 
 
 66. A. (Armillaria) malleus, Fl. Dan. (p. 96); 3-6 in. 
 Epping Forest. 
 
 67. A. (Armillaria) subeavus, Schum. ; pileus 2 in., 
 white, umbo brown, somewhat membranaceous, viscous, 
 striate to the middle ; stem fistulose upwards, equal, 
 slightly dotted, ring white, inferior, torn ; gills plane, 
 decurrent, white. 
 
 On the ground. Cirencester. 
 
14 OUTLINES OF l?|{ITlSIf FU^■GOLOGY. 
 
 *** CoLLYBi.E ANNULAT.E. — Gills equal behind, stem externally 
 somewhat cartilaginous. 
 
 ^'6. A. (Armillaria) mucidus, Schrad. ; 1-6 in. Eppiug 
 Forest. 
 
 Subgenus 7. Triciioloma (p. 1)7). 
 
 Series A. — J'ileus viscous, Jihrillose, scalij, or pubescent, not vmtery- 
 moist or becoming even, stem Jibril lose. 
 
 I. LiMACiNA. — Cuticle o/pileus viscid when moist, innato- 
 Jibrillose or squamose, not lacerated. 
 
 * Gills not changing colour. 
 
 09. A. (Tricholoma) equestris, Linn. (p. 97) ; 3-5 in. 
 
 70. A. (Tricholoma) sejunctus, Sow. (p. 97) ; 3 in. 
 Epping Forest. 
 
 71. A. (Tricholoma) portentosus, Fr. (p. 97) ; 3-5 in. 
 Epping Forest. 
 
 7'^. A. (Trichiloma) fueatus, fr. (p. 97) ; 2-3 in. 
 
 73. A. (Trichiloma) quinquepartitus, Fr. ; pileus 3 in., 
 pallid, light yellow, fleshy, thin at circumference, repand, 
 smooth, not streaked, fragile; somewhat hygrophanous ; 
 stem commonly attenuated from base to apex, solid, fleshy, 
 striate, smooth, white ; gills emarginate, broad, white. 
 
 Amongst pine leaves. Rare. Odour none, taste mild. 
 
 74. A. (Tricholoma) resplendens, Fr. ; wholly shining 
 silvery-white, pileus 2-1 in., fleshy, not compact, smooth, 
 disc becoming yellow ; stem solid, fleshy, stout, smooth, 
 equal or bulbous ; gills almost free when young, then 
 emarginate, somewhat crowded, rather thick, but thin at 
 the edge, entire, equally attenuated in front. 
 
 In woods, beech, &c. Frequent. Epping Forest. 
 
 75. A. Tricholoma spermatieus, Fr. (p. 98) ; 5 in. 
 
AGAKICINI. 15 
 
 ** Gills changing colour, commonly with reddish spots. 
 
 76. A. (Trichiloma) colossus, Fr. ; pileus 8 in., brick 
 colour, the whitish margin involute, hemispherical, at length 
 piano-depressed, l)roken up into scales, slightly viscid round 
 margin in wet weather ; flesh hard, dry, and fibrous, turn- 
 ing to a flesh-brick-red colour when broken ; stem solid, 
 oblique, two coloured, compact, base ovato-bulbous, apex 
 constricted, shining white ; gills rounded-free, at first 
 narrow, crowded and white, then broader, more distant and 
 pallid, brick-red. 
 
 Under firs and elms. Taunton. Odour strong like 
 cheese. 
 
 77. A. (Tricholoma) nictitans, Fr. (p. 98) ; 2 in. Epping 
 Forest. 
 
 78. A. (Tricholoma) fulvellus, Fr. (p. 98) ; 1-2 in. 
 Epping Forest. 
 
 79. A. (Tricholoma) flavo-brunneus, Fr. (p. 98) ; 3-6 in. 
 Epping Forest. 
 
 80. A. (Tricholoma) albo-brunneus, Pers. (p. 98) ; 3 in. 
 Epping Forest. 
 
 81. A. (Tricholoma) ustalis, Fr. ; pileus 3 in., brown- 
 rufous, fleshy, not compact, at first umbonate, then plane, 
 even, smooth, unstreaked, slightly dotted at the disc ; flesh 
 white, becoming here and there red where broken ; stem 
 stuffed, then hollow, equal, somewhat rooted, dry, fibrillose, 
 whitish or rufescent, not mealy at apex ; gills emarginate, 
 with a small decurrent tooth, crowded, rather broad, at 
 length rufescent. 
 
 In woods, chiefly pine. Rare. Odourless. Epping 
 Forest. 
 
 82. A. (Tricholoma) pessundatus, Fr. ; pileus bay- 
 
16 OUTLINES OK IlKfTISH FUXCIOLOGV. 
 
 browu or rufescent^ paler or whitish at circumference, com- 
 pactly fleshy, obtuse, flexuous, smooth, unstreaked, granu- 
 late or guttato-spotted, viscid, margin bent in ; stem solid, 
 hard, at first in the form of a bulb, villous with whitish 
 squaranles, then somewhat equal, rather smooth, white ; gills 
 deeply emarginate, somewhat free, crowded, at first very 
 narrow, shining white, then broader and rufescent. 
 
 In fir woods, chiefly pine. Rare. Said to be edible. 
 
 83. A. (Tricholoma) stans, Fr. ; pileus rufescent, com- 
 pact, viscid, even, not granulated or spotted ; flesh reddish 
 under the cuticle ; stem solid, somewhat equal, squamu- 
 lose ; gills rounded, white, spotted red. 
 
 There are two forms, cum pest r is and montana, the first 
 with a short stem and broad pileus, growing in deciduous 
 groves, the second with elongated stem and smaller pileus 
 growing in mountainous pine woods. 
 
 Coed Coch, etc. 
 
 84. A. (Tricholoma) russula, Schceff. ; pileus 3-4 in.,, 
 fleshy, convex, then depressed, obtuse, granulate, viscid, 
 rosy flesh-colour ; stem solid, firm, nearly equal, rosy, 
 squamulose at apex ; gills rounded then decurrent, rather 
 distant, white, a little spotted with red. 
 
 Under trees. Kew. Taste mild. 
 
 85. A. (Tricholoma) frumentaceus, Fy. ; pileus 2-3 in., 
 whitish or clay-colour and variegated rufous, fleshy, viscous, 
 dry in fine weather, even, smooth ; flesh white ; stem solid, 
 equal, fibrillose when dry, whitish ; gills rounded, somewhat 
 crowded, rather broad, at length rufous-spotted. 
 
 Has all the appearance of an l<]ntoloma, see the plant 
 described by Berkeley, A. (Entofoma) fr anient aceus. — Bull, 
 p. 144, No. 222. 
 
 On the ground. 
 
AGARICINI. 17 
 
 II, Genuina. — Cuticle ofjyileus never viscid, hut lacerated 
 into scaly fiocci or fibrils. 
 
 * Gills not changing colour, or nmrked loith rufous or black spots. 
 
 86. A. (Tricholoma) rutilans, Schcejf. (p. 99) ; 2-J< in. 
 Epping Forest. 
 
 87. A. (Tricholoma) variegatus, Scop. ; pileus 2-4 in., 
 fleshy, at length flattened, obsoletely umbonate, fragile, 
 sprinkled with purple-reddish fiocci ; flesh whitish, then 
 pallid light-yellow ; stem stuffed, curved, sometimes bulbous, 
 almost naked, or variegated with thin reddish-villous down, 
 yellowish white ; gills rounded, crowded, thin, pale whitish- 
 yellow, edge always entire, acute, and same colour. 
 
 On rotten wood. Epping Forest. 
 
 88. A. (Trieholoma) luridus, Schcpff. (p. 99). 
 
 89. A. (Tricholoma) guttatus, Schaff. ; somewhat 
 csespitose, pileus 3-5 in., cinnamon or pale yellowish, fleshy, 
 dry, broken up into granular or floccose squamules, margin 
 sulcate, at first involute, white-floccose ; flesh firm, white ; 
 gills emarginate, decurrent in the form of lines, crowded, 
 white. 
 
 In woods. Downton. Odour and taste bitter-acrid. 
 
 90. A. (Tricholoma) columbetta, Fr. (p. 99) ; 2-4 in. 
 Epping Forest. 
 
 91. A. (Tricholoma) scalptiiratus, Fr. (p. 101); 2-3 in. 
 Epping Forest. 
 
 Var. argyraceous, Bull. ; more slender and graceful than 
 the typical form, with narrower and more crowded gills. 
 
 In grassy places. 
 
 Var. virescens, Whar. ; similar to last, but turning yellow- 
 ish-green in all parts when bruised or in drying. 
 
18 OUTLINES OF lUMTlSU [• CXriOLOCV. 
 
 ** Gills rufescent or becoming cinereous, the edtje commonh/ 
 marked vnth rufoi's o?' red sjwts. 
 
 92. A. (Tricholoma) imbricatus, Fr. (p. 99) ; 3 in, 
 Epping Forest. 
 
 93. A. (Tricholoma) vaccinus, Pers. (p. 100) ; 1-.2 in. 
 Epping Forest. 
 
 94. A. (Tricholoma) immundus, Berk. ; ca^spitose ; 
 pileus 2 in., dirty-white, stained with bistre, fleshy, minutely 
 silky, margin inflexed, silky or minutely scabrous and 
 squamulose ; stem fibrillose, same colour as pileus ; gills 
 emarginate, marked with transverse lines, somewhat cinereous 
 with a pinkish tinge. Every part blackish when bruised. 
 
 Among short grass on sheep's dung. Rare. 
 
 95. A. (Tricholoma) gausapatus, Fr. ; pileus 2-3 in., 
 grey, cinereous, fleshy, somewhat thin, bullate, margin 
 tomentose, bent-in, then repand ; stem solid, stout, equal, 
 laxly-fibrillose, shining white, furnished with a cortina ; 
 gills emarginate, free, crowded, broad, grey. 
 
 In grassy woods. Epping Forest. Mild, inodorous. 
 
 96. A. (Tricholoma) terreus, ASVArt;//". (p. 100); 1^3 in. 
 Var. argyraceus, Bull. ; gills, and commonly pileus 
 
 shining white. 
 
 Epping Forest. 
 
 Var. atrosquamosus, Chev. ; pileus furnished with black 
 squamules, stem with black squamulose points at apex. 
 
 Var. orirubens. Quel. ; stem streaked with rose at the 
 base. 
 
AGARICINI. 19 
 
 III. RiGiDA. — Cuticle o/2nleus rigid, j^uiictato-granulate or 
 broken into short squamules m drying. 
 
 * Gills iv/iite or becoming pale, not rufescent or becoming 
 cinereous or spottedj. 
 
 97. A. (Tricholoma) macrorhizus, Lasch ; pileus 8 in. 
 ochraceous, compact, even, smooth, then broken up in a tessel- 
 lated manner ; stem solid, stout, whitish, then ochraceous, 
 delicately granulated ; root thick, fleshy, blunt ; gills 
 emarginate, pallid. 
 
 On the ground. King's Lynn. Odour very powerful. 
 
 98. A. (Tricholoma) saponaceus, Fr. (p. 101) ; 2-4 in. 
 Epping Forest. 
 
 Var. squamosus. Cke. : stem s^qnamose. 
 
 99. A. (Tricholoma) meleagris, Soto. (p. 101). Now 
 placed in Lepiota, No. 29. 
 
 100. A. (Tricholoma) cartilaginous, Btd/. (p. 101) ; 
 2-3 in. 
 
 101. A. (Tricholoma) loricatus, Fr. ; pileus 1-2 in., 
 livid-fuscous or umber, paler at margin, slightly fleshy, 
 undulated or sinuato-lobed, moist, smooth, punctato- 
 rugulose under a lens, clothed with a thick, horny, fuscous 
 cuticle ; stem fleshy-fibrous, tough, somewhat hollow, twisted, 
 irregular, rooted, brick-fuscous or fibrilloso-striate under a 
 lens; gills free, separable from the hymenophore, crowded, 
 ventricose, entire, whitish-straw colour. 
 
 In mixed woods. Glamis. Odour strong, unpleasant. 
 
 102. A. (Tricholoma) atrocinereus, Pe7's. ; pileus 1^ in., 
 cinereous, the prominent disc darker, fleshy, at first even, 
 then rimosely incised, revolute at margin, fragile ; stem 
 stufled, internally soft, hyaline when moist, equal, slightly 
 striate ; gills free, or decurrent with a tooth or arcuato- 
 aduexed, ventricose, thin, crowded, hyaline, white. 
 
20 OUTLINES OF BRITISH FUNGOLOGY. 
 
 On grassy ground. Hothorpe, etc. 
 
 103. A. (Tricholoma) cuneifolius, Fr. (p. 102) ; \-\ in. 
 Epping Forest. 
 
 Var. griseo-riniosus, Baiseh ; larger than type ; pileus 
 concentrically rimose ; gills broad, somewhat distant. 
 
 In grassy places. Kew. 
 
 ** Gills chawjimj colour, rufescent, or becomimj cinereous or 
 spotted. 
 
 lOi. A. (Tricholoma) crassifolius, B. (p. 100); 2-4 in. 
 
 105. A. (Tricholoma) tumidus, P. ; pileus 3 in., 
 cinereous-livid, variegated with spots, fleshy, irregular, 
 undulate, bullate, at length riraosely incised, shining when 
 dry, margin thin ; flesh white ; stem solid, stout, fleshy, 
 fibrous, striate, shining white, often attenuated into a root 
 at base; gills emarginate, thick at the base, somewhat 
 distant, shining white, at length cinereous-rufescent. 
 
 In moist pine woods. Coed Cech, etc. 
 
 Var. Keithii, Phill. and Ploiv. ; pileus cinereo-rufescent ; 
 stem dirty white with innate brownish fibres, tinged with 
 red at base. 
 
 In pine woods. Forres. 
 
 106. A. (Tricholoma) murinaceus. Bull. (p. 100) ; 
 4^ in. 
 
 107. A. (Tricholoma) virgatus, Fr. ; pileus grey-cine- 
 reous, umbo often darker, rigid, dry, even in rainy weather, 
 streaked with fine black lines, broken into squamules when 
 old ; flesh thin, cinereous-whitish ; stem solid, firm, equal 
 or tuberous at base, striate, smooth or squaraulose, whitish, 
 white within; gills broadly emarginate, crowded, at length 
 hoary. 
 
AGAKICINI. 21 
 
 In mixed woods. Forres, etc. Inodorous ; taste bitter 
 like gall when young. 
 
 Var. Major ; pileus black, squamulose, scales separating. 
 In beech woods. 
 
 IV. Sericella. — Pileus at first slighthj silky, soon smooth 
 and dry. 
 
 * Gills broad, rather thick, someirhat distant ; strong scented. 
 
 108. A. (Tricholoma) sulphurous, Bull. (p. 102) ; 
 i-4 in. 
 
 109. A. (Tricholoma) bufonius, Pers. (p. 102). 
 
 110. A. (Tricholoma) lascivus, Fr. (p. 102) ; 2 in. 
 Var. robustus, Che. ; more robust than type ; pileus almost 
 
 white ; scarcely any odour. 
 
 111. A. (Tricholoma) inamcenus, 7^"/'. (p. 102); 1-2 in. 
 
 ** Small and inodorous ; ijills thin, crouxled, narrow. 
 
 112. A. (Tricholoma) cerinus, Pers. ; pileus l-li in., 
 dingy yellowish wax-colour, or becoming fuscous, fleshy, 
 convex, at length depressed, opaque, dry, even, becoming 
 smooth ; flesh thin, firm, white ; stem stuffed, equal, 
 fibrilloso-striate, yellow, base sometimes fuscous ; gills 
 sinuato-adnexed, separating, horizontal, very thin, crowded, 
 dark yellow or wax colour. 
 
 On lawns. Associated with pines. 
 > 113. A. (Tricholoma) fallax, Peck. ; pileus 1 in., firm, 
 convex, expanded, rarely depressed in centre, moist, smooth, 
 yellow, stuffed, then hollow, sometimes attenuated at base ; 
 gills rounded behind, crowded, white, then yellowish. 
 
 Under firs. Scarborough. 
 
 114. A. (Tricholoma) ionides, Bull. (p. 103); pileus 
 
22 OUTLINES OF liKITJSIl FUNGOLOGY. 
 
 2 in., violet, lilac, fuscous-purple or reddish-livid, becoming 
 paler with age. 
 
 King's Clifl'e, etc. 
 
 Var. pravus, Lasck : smaller, thinner, and more fragile 
 than type ; gills eroded, white, pulverulent. 
 
 In a stove. 
 
 115. A. (Tricholomaj carneus, Bii//. (p. 103); 1 in. 
 Epping Forest. 
 
 116. A. (Tricholoma) cselatus. Fr. : pileus 1 in., fuscous, 
 pale grey when dry, slightly fleshy, umbilicate, smooth when 
 fresh, flocculose or rimosely scarred when dry ; stem tough, 
 elastic, stuffed or hollow, equal or slightly thickened 
 upwards, fuscous, obsoletely pruinate at apex ; gills sinuato- 
 adnate with a small decurrent tooth, crowded, slightly 
 arcuate, dingy-whitish or grey. 
 
 In woods. Charmy Down, etc. 
 
 Series B. — Pileios even, smooth, not villous, scaly or viscous, moist 
 in rainy weather ; Jlesh vjatery and hygrophanous. 
 
 V. Guttata. — Pileus fleshy, fragile, spotted as if by drops, or 
 rivulose, stem, solid. Often vernal, groicirig in troops or 
 ccespitose, often in, rings, fragrant. 
 
 ■' ( J ills ivhitish. 
 
 117. A. (Tricholoma) gambosus, Fr. (p. 101); 3-4 in. 
 Epping Forest. 
 
 118. A. (Tricholoma) monstrosus, Soir. (p. 104); see 
 Clitocybe, No. 177. 
 
 119. A. (Tricholoma) albellus, Fr. (p. 104); 3 in. 
 
 ** (,'ills changing colour, rufescent or fidiginous. 
 
 1 20. A. (Tricholoma) amethystinus, Scop. ; pileus 
 fleshy, repand, smooth, even, moist, spotted azure-blue, or 
 
AGAKICINI. 33 
 
 bluish-violet ; margiu wrinkletl, paler ; stem solid, curt, 
 attenuated at base ; gills somewhat adnate, crowded, white, 
 then rufesceut. 
 
 In pine woods. Glamis. Sept. 
 
 121. A. (Tricholoma) tigrinus, Schaf. ; pileus 2 in., 
 pallid brown, variegated with darker spots, fleshy, at length 
 repand ; flesh thick, firm, white, thin at invohite margin ; 
 stem compact, solid, obese, pruinate, white ; gills rounded 
 behind, at length decurrent with a tooth, crowded, narrow, 
 white, at length darker. 
 
 Under firs and on open grassy ground. June to July. 
 
 122. A. (Tricholoma) pes-caprse, Fr. ; pileus fleshy, 
 conical then expanded, umbonate, fragile, unequal, grey 
 then dusky, smooth, margin cracked, at length splitting ; 
 stem solid, equal or attenuated at base, smooth ; gills 
 emarginate, smooth, crowded, then rather distant, white, 
 then cinereous. 
 
 Var. multiformis, Schceff. ; ctespitose, sometimes con- 
 fluent at base, margin involute, entire. 
 Under trees. Kew. 
 
 VI. Spongiosa. — Pileus compact, then spongy, obtuse, even, smooth, 
 not hyijrophcmous ; gills spuriously {sinuately) decurrent. 
 Appearing late in the year, growing in troops. 
 
 * Gills not changing colour. 
 
 123. A. (Tricholoma) Schumacheri, Fr. ; pileus 3 in., 
 cinereous-livid, fleshy, compact, convex, then flattened, 
 regular, well-formed, smooth, moist in rainy weather, 
 margin (which exceeds the gills) inflexed ; flesh white ; 
 stem solid, stout, equal, villous and sometimes ventricoso- 
 bulbous at base, slightly striate, white, externally fibrous ; 
 gills emarginate, plane, crowded, white. 
 
24 OUTLINES OF BUITISH FrNOOLOOV. 
 
 In a hothouse. Apethorpe. 
 
 124. A. (Tricholoma) patulus, Fr. , pileus 2^-4 in., 
 pallid-cinereous to pale yellowish, fleshy, firm, often repand ; 
 flesh moderately thin, not compact, white ; stem fleshy- 
 fibrous, solid, firm, equal, somewhat elastic, smooth, shining 
 white; gills emarginate, almost free, crowded, rather 
 narrow, somewhat veined at the sides, whitish. 
 
 On the ground. Reigate. Oct. 
 
 125. A. (Tricholoma) arcuatus, Bull. ; pileus .2-3 in., 
 rufous-fuscous, becoming pale, disc blackish, soft, moist, 
 smooth ; flesh coloured ; stem solid, firm, fibrilloso- 
 squamulose, blackish downwards, bulbous ; gills arcuato- 
 adnate, decurrent with a tooth, somewhat undulated, fragile, 
 crowded, white. 
 
 On grassy ground. St. Andrews, etc. 
 
 126. A. (Tricholoma) oreinus, F/-..- pileus 1 in., fuscous- 
 livid, fleshy, compact, even, smooth, margin thin, not ex- 
 ceeding the gills ; flesh white ; stem solid, thickened at 
 base, at length ochraceous, white-squamulose at apex, 
 internally fibrillose ; gills rounded then free, crowded, 
 plane, white. 
 
 On heath and open ground. King's Clifte. 
 
 127. A. (Tricholoma) alhus, SchafJ'. (p. 105); 3-4 in. 
 
 128. A. (Tricholoma) leucocephalus, Fr. ; pileus lA in., 
 white, with no tinge of yellow, thin, tougli, even, moist, 
 smooth, when young covered with whitish silky villous 
 down ; margin acute ; stem hollow, twisted, fleshy fibrous, 
 somewhat cartilaginous, polished externally, rooted at the 
 attenuated solid base ; gills rounded, free, crowded, thin, 
 entire, shining white. 
 
 In woods, among leaves. Bowood, Wilts. 
 
AGARICINI. 25 
 
 ** Gills changing colour. 
 
 129. A. (Tricholoma) acerbus, Bull. (p. 105) ; 3-4 in. 
 Eppiog Forest. 
 
 130. A. (Tricholoma) miliaris, Lasch ; pileus 4-7 in., 
 ciunamon colour, floccose white at the involute margin, then 
 plane or depressed, compact, flexuous, smooth, viscous; stem 
 solid, squamulose, fibrillose, pallid, somewhat bulbous at 
 the base, with thick radical fibrils ; gills emarginate, some- 
 what croAvded, whitish, at length livid-spotted, torn. 
 
 In woods. Glamis. Odour and taste unpleasant. 
 
 131. A. (Tricholoma) civilis, Fr. ; pileus 3 in., pale 
 yellowish, disc darker, not streaked, fleshy, soft, fragile, 
 smooth, moist with a separable pellicle ; flesh whitish ; stem 
 solid, soft, fragile, attenuated upwards from the thickened 
 base, fibrillose or squamulose, whitish ; gills deeply emar- 
 ginate, almost free, crowded, soft, white, becoming trans- 
 lucent yellowish, unspotted. 
 
 In pine woods. On the ground. Epping Forest. 
 
 132. A. (Tricholoma) personatus, Fr. (p. 105) ; 3-6 
 in. Epping Forest. 
 
 133. A. (Tricholoma) nudus. BnU. (p. 105) ; 3 in. 
 Epping Forest. 
 
 134. A. (Tricholoma), cinerasceus, Bull. p. (106) ; 
 2-3 in. 
 
 135. A. (Tricholoma) panseolus, Fr.; pileus 3 in., 
 cinereous - fuliginous, variegated grey, pruinose, with a 
 marbled appearance, often guttate, fleshy, firm, at length 
 plane or depressed, or repand and excentric ; flesh spongy, 
 white when dry ; stem solid, tough, elastic, externally 
 fibrous, smooth, naked, whitish-grey ; gills emarginate 
 or rounded, somewhat decurrent when the pileus is 
 
 D. H. HILL LIBRARY 
 
26 OUTLINES OF HKITISII l'UN(;OLOOV. 
 
 depressed, crowded, entire, plane, white, then grey or dingy, 
 rufescent. 
 
 In grassy places. Street. Odour none. 
 
 136. A. (Trieholoma) duracinus, Cke. ; pilcus 3 in., 
 fleshy, compact, firm, dry, smooth, shining, convex, broadly 
 umbonate, cinereous ; margin involute ; stem solid, attenu- 
 ated upwards, striate below, reticulato-squamose above, 
 rather paler than the pileus ; flesh nearly white ; gills 
 narrow, crowded, emarginate, arcuate, cinereous. 
 
 On the ground, under cedar. Kew. 
 
 VII. Hyorophana. — Pileus tJiin, regular, iunhonate,Jlesh soft, 
 hygrophcDious. 
 
 * (Jills ivhitis/i, Kuspotted. 
 
 137. A. (Trieholoma) grammopodius, Bidl. (p. 106) ; 
 3-6 in. Epping Forest. 
 
 138. A. (Trieholoma) melaleucus, P. (p. ]06); 1|- 
 3 in. 
 
 Vur. porphyroleucus, Ball. ; firmer ; pileus fleshy, fuli- 
 ginous or fuscous, then rufescent, with a darker and vanish- 
 ing umbo ; stem solid, somewhat fibrillose, elongated, or 
 curt ; gills white. 
 
 139. A. (Trieholoma) brevipes, Bull.; pileus 2 in., 
 umber, then becoming pale, fleshy, soft, even, smooth, 
 moist, opaque when dry ; flesh of pileus fuscous when 
 moist, white when dry ; stem solid, rigid, at length fibrous, 
 pruinate at the ape.x, externally and internally fuscous ; 
 sometimes very short, attenuated downwards, equal or 
 bulbous ; gills emarginato-frec, crowded, ventricose, dis- 
 appearing siiort of the margin, entire, fuscous, then whitish. 
 
 In plantations, fields, etc. Said to be esculent. June 
 to October. 
 
AGAKICINl. 27 
 
 140. A. (Tricholoma) humulis, Fr. (p. 106) ; 2-3 in. 
 Var. blandus, B. ; pileus thiu, pulverulent, grey-lilac ; 
 
 stem slender, sub-fibrilloso-rimose, rather bulbous, base 
 brown ; gills broad, rounded behind and nearly free, white. 
 Plantations and roadsides. 
 
 141. A. (Tricholoma) exscissus, Fr. ; pileus 1 in., 
 mouse-colour or fuscous-cinereous, not changing colour when 
 dry, smooth, shining, at length plane with a prominent 
 umbo ; flesh thin, white ; stem solid, thin, equal, polished, 
 white ; gills emargiuate, crowded, linear, shining-white. 
 
 In pastures. Cromer. ]\Iay. 
 
 142. A. (Tricholoma) subpiilverulentus, Pers. (p. 107) ; 
 li in. Epping Forest. 
 
 ** Gills hecomimj riolaceous, <jrey, fidigmous. 
 
 143. A. (Tricholoma) sordidus, Fr. ; pileus 1-3 in. 
 livid lilac, becoming violet-fuscous or violet flesh-colour, 
 changing colour to dirty fuscous when old, somewhat fleshy, 
 at length plane or depressed, somewhat umbonate, smooth ; 
 margin when full-grown slightly striate ; stem stufted, 
 pliant, commonly thickened at base, somewhat incurved, 
 fibrilloso-striate, same colour as pileus ; gills at first 
 rounded, then sinuato-decurrent, somewhat crowded, at 
 length distant, violaceous, then pale or fuliginous. 
 
 On dung, etc. Great Elm, Somerset. Epping Forest. 
 
 144. A. (Tricholoma) paedidus, Fr. ; pileus H in., 
 mouse-coloured, fuliginous, flaccid, umbonate, at length 
 depressed round the prominent umbo, moist, streaked with 
 innate fibrils, margin naked, flesh thin, tough, becoming 
 white ; stem stufted, externally somewhat cartilaginous, 
 internally fibrous, slightly bulbous, tough, somewhat striate, 
 
28 OUTLINES ()!• i:i;iTI.SI[ FrXGOLOGV. 
 
 naked, dingy-grey ; gills somewhat sinuate, with a small 
 decurrent tooth, crowded, narrow, whitish, then grey. 
 In grassy places and woods. Abergavenny, etc. 
 
 145. A. (Tricholoma) lixivius, Fr, ; pileus 2-3 in., 
 cinereous-fuscous, umber, slightly fleshy, umbonate, umbo 
 vanishing, never depressed, even, smooth, with a flattened, 
 membranaceous, at length slightly striate margin, some- 
 times sinuous ; stem stuffed, then hollow, compressed, often 
 fibrous, flexuous, fragile, cinereous, at first white-floccoso- 
 pruinose ; gills rounded-aduexed, almost free, distant, soft, 
 sometimes crisped, attenuated from stem to margin, grey. 
 
 In pine woods. Ascot. November. 
 
 146. A. (Tricholoma) putidus, Fr. ; pileus 1 in., some- 
 what olivaceous-grey, hoary when dry, hygrophanous, 
 slightly fleshy, even, umbonate, soft; margin straight; 
 stem hollow, equal, somewhat compressed, soft, somewhat 
 fragile, striate, slightly pruinose ; gills almost free, slightly 
 adnexed to top of cone, crowded, ventricose, cinereous. 
 
 In fir woods. Jedburgh, etc. October to November. 
 Odour strong, rancid. 
 
 Su))<;enus S. Clitocybe (p. lOT). 
 
 Series A.- Pileus fleshy, tiorning j^ide ivhen dry^ not hycjro- 
 phanous. 
 
 I. DisciFOiiMES. — Pileus disc-shcqyed, convex, then pla7ie or 
 depressed, reyidar ; (jills at flrst adnate or regidarly adnato- 
 decurrent. 
 
 * Pileus cinereovs or fuscous. 
 
 147. A. (Clitocybe) nebularis, Batsch. (p. 107) ; 3-5 in. 
 Epping Forest, 
 
 148. A. (Clitocybe) clavipes, P.; pileus H-2 in., fuscous, 
 fuliginous, cinereous-livid, generally whitish at margin. 
 
AGAPJCINI. 29 
 
 fleshy, sooa plane, almost obconical, smooth, dry ; flesh 
 las. white, thin towards margin ; stem conical, solid, inter- 
 nally spongy, somewhat fibrillose, fuliginous-livid ; gills 
 deeply decurrent, somewhat distant, flaccid, entire, broad, 
 white, but varying yellowish. 
 
 In woods. Common. Epping Forest. 
 
 149. A. (Clitocybe) gangrsenosus, Fr. ; pileus at first 
 whitish, pulverulent, occasionally greenish, becoming livid, 
 fleshy, variegated or streaked, at length jet black ; flesh 
 becoming black or variegated with black ; stem solid, spongy, 
 somewhat bulbous, soft, striate, curved, sometimes excentric ; 
 gills somewhat decurrent, arcuate, crowded, dingy white. 
 
 In woods. Rare. Odour foetid. 
 
 Var. nigrescens, Lasch ; pileus thin, subumbonate, 
 sometimes depressed : stem tomentose. 
 
 In larch plantations. Odour rather sweet according to 
 Dr. Cooke ; taste unpleasant. 
 
 150. A. (Clitocybe) inornatus, Sow. (p. 108) ; 3 in. 
 
 151. A. (Clitocybe) hirneolus, Fr. ; gregarious ; pileus 
 ■| in., hoary, slightly fleshy, at leugth depressed in the 
 centre and umbilicate, even, slightly shining, moist, involute 
 margin very thin ; flesh white ; stem slender, not cartilagi- 
 nous, elastic, equal, flexuous, grey, smooth, white pruinose 
 at apex, internally flocculose, stufl'ed ; gills somewhat 
 decurrent, crowded, thin, rather broad, whitish grey. 
 
 AmoQgst moss. Coed Coch. 
 
 152. A. (Clitocybe) xygophyllus, Cke. and Mass. ; pileus 
 2-4 in., rather fleshy, convex, then expanded, disc depressed, 
 hygrophanous, tough, flaccid, pallid, with a greyish tint 
 when moist, ochraceous white when dry ; margin thin, at 
 first involute, rugose, or plicate, as if pinched up at regular 
 intervals ; stem equal stuffed, spongy, white expanding 
 
30 OUTLIXES (»F I!|;IT[SII l'UXf;OLO(;V. 
 
 into the pileus, even, smooth, with a thiu white toraentum 
 at base ; gills deeply decurrent, rather distant, distinctly 
 connected by veins, cinereous. 
 
 Among leaves. Swarraton, Hants. 
 
 ■••■'-■■ Pileus violaceous, rvfescent. 
 
 153. A. (Clitocybe) cyanophseus, Fr. ; pileus 3-4 in., 
 becoming azure- blue-fuscous, compact, at length plane, 
 smooth ; stem attenuated upwards, robust, solid, smooth ; 
 azure-blue when young, violaceous, then pale. 
 
 Var. Pengeilei. B. and Br. ; smaller than type. 
 
 154. A. (Clitocybe) amarus, Fr. ; pileus 2-3 in., rufes- 
 cent, whitish fuscous or becoming fuscous, then pale, whitish, 
 fleshy, pliant, at length flattened, dry, at first fibrilloso- 
 silky, then smooth, rivulose, margin at first involute, thin, 
 sometimes unequal and repaud ; flesh compact, white ; stem 
 white, stuffed, tough, firm, equal, at first fibrillose, then 
 smooth, white-tomentose at base ; gills adnato-decurrent, 
 crowded, thin, entire, becoming pale-white. 
 
 In woody places. Holm Lacy. Taste very bitter. 
 
 155. A. (Clitocybe) socialis, Fr. ; densely gregarious ; 
 pileus 1 in., pale yellowish with a reddish tinge, fleshy, 
 acutely umbonate, even, smooth, dry, flesh moderately thin, 
 white ; stem solid, fibrous, smooth, reddish, the rooting base 
 hairy. 
 
 Amongst fir leaves. Downton, Hereford. 
 
 *** Pileus becomitKj yellow. 
 
 156. A. (Clitocybe) amarella, P. ; pileus pale yellowish 
 or pallid fawn-colour, fleshy, somewhat umbonate, smooth ; 
 stem solid, compact, tough, equal, white- villous at base; 
 
AGARICINI. 31 
 
 gills somewhat decurreiit, crowded, pallid-grey, paler than 
 pileus, somewhat shining, here and there dichotomous. 
 
 In woods. Coed Coch. Smell that of prussic acid, taste 
 very bitter. 
 
 157. A. (Clitocybe) vernieosus, Fr. (p. 108) ; 2 in. 
 
 158. A. (Clitocybe) venutissimus, Fr. ; pileus 1-2 in., 
 brilliant glittering intense orange-reddish, becoming pale 
 yellowish, slightly fleshy, obtuse or somewhat umbilicate, 
 becoming silky-even, sometimes striate and crisped ; flesh 
 same colour ; stem stufted, then hollow, equal, smooth, red- 
 dish, commonly white-villous at base ; gills decurrent, 
 slightly distant, somewhat arcuate, glittering orange and 
 reddish. 
 
 Amongst larch leaves. Penicuik. Odour none. 
 
 159. A. (Clitocybe) subalutaceus. Batsch ; pileus 1-2 
 in., pale tan, becoming whitish, fleshy, soft, tough, obsoletely 
 umbonate or depressed, smooth ; stem stuff'ed, internally 
 spongy, elastic, almost equal, naked, becoming pale-straw 
 colour ; gills adnate, then somewhat decurrent, distant, 
 broad, simple, pallid. 
 
 Under holly. Oxton, Exeter. Odour like that of anise 
 or disagreeable. 
 
 **** Pileus (jreen, becoming pcde. 
 
 160. A. (Clitocybe) odorus, Bui/, (p. 108); 3 in. 
 Epping Forest. 
 
 161. A (Clitocybe) Trogii, Fr. ; pileus 3 in., cinereous 
 white, fleshy, compact, smooth, opaque ; stem solid, firm, 
 curt, thickened and villous at base, white ; gills somewhat 
 decurrent, crowded, white. 
 
 In woods. Coed Coch, etc. Fragrant. 
 
 162. A. (Clitocybe) rivulosus, P. ; pileus 1-2 in., flesh- 
 
32 OUTLINES OF BKITISH FUNOOLOGY. 
 
 colovir, beconiiug white or fuscous when old, somewhat thin, 
 at length depressed, rimoso-rivulose and undulato-lobed, 
 never umbonate ; margin at first involute, villous ; flesh 
 compact, white ; stem stuffed with a spongy pith, at length 
 hollow, tough, elastic, ecjual, somewhat fibrillose and white ; 
 gills obliquely acute behind, aduate, then somewhat decur- 
 rent, broad, somewhat crowded, flesh colour, then white. 
 
 On lawn amongst moss. Coed Coch, etc. 
 
 Var. neptuneus, Batsch ; smaller than the type. 
 
 On dry mountain pastures near the sea. Llaudulas. 
 
 ***** Colour sliininy ivhitish. 
 
 163. A. (Clitocybe) cerussatus, Fr. (p. 108) ; 2-3 in. 
 Var. dift'ormis, Schuiu. (p. 112); caespitose ; often very 
 
 large, pileus 2-7 in., undulato-lobed ; stem curt, sulcate 
 or longitudinally wrinkled ; gills at length pallid. 
 
 On rich ground. After continual rain. Epping Forest. 
 
 164. A. (Clitocybe) phyllophilus, Fr. (p. 109) ; 2-4 in. 
 Epping Forest. 
 
 165. A. (Clitocybe) pithyophilus. Seer. : gregarious, 
 pileus 2-3 in., dead-white when moist, shining whitish when 
 dry, fleshy, plane, umbilicate, at length irregular, repand 
 and undulato-lobed, even, smooth, flaccid ; margin slightly 
 striate when old ; stem somewhat hollow, rounded, then 
 compressed, equal, even, smooth, obsoletely pruinose at apex, 
 white tomentose at the base ; gills aduate, somewhat decur- 
 rent, crowded, plane, entire, white. 
 
 In fir woods, frequent. 
 
 166. A. (Clitocybe) tornatus, Fr.; pileus regular, 1-2 in., 
 fleshy at disc, thin, plane at length depressed round the 
 gibbous disc, dry, smooth, slightly silky, at length delicately 
 rimoso-rivulose, white ; flesh white ; stem stuffed, tough. 
 
AGAPJCINI. 33 
 
 fibrous, equal or attenuated downwards, smooth, unpolished, 
 white, base pubescent ; gills horizontal, adnate with a small 
 decurrent tooth, crowded. 
 
 Among grass, near old decayed elm stumps. North 
 Kilworth. 
 
 167. A. (Clitocybe) candicans, P. (p. 109) ; 1 in. 
 
 168. A. (Clitocybe) dealbatus, Sow. (p. 109) ; 1 in. 
 Epping Forest. 
 
 169. A. (Clitocybe) gallinaceus, Scop. ; Var. minor 
 Cke. (p. 109) ; ^-1 in. Epping Forest. 
 
 II. DiFFORMES. — Irregular in shape, ;J^7e^^s at first umbonate then 
 depressed, (jenerally ccespitose. 
 
 170. A. (Clitocybe) decastes, Fr. ; csespitose, pileus 
 livid tan or mouse colour, fleshy at disc, thin, fragile, smooth, 
 margin membranaceous, much undulated and lobed ; flesh 
 white; stem white, solid, soft, fibrous, splitting, commonly 
 attenuated and compressed, smooth, naked or pruinose at 
 apex ; gills adnato-decurrent or rounded, attenuated to- 
 wards margin, crowded or slightly distant, wavy. 
 
 In oak and beech woods. On sawdust. Coed Coch. 
 
 171. A. (Clitocybe) aggregatus, Schceff. ; csespitose, 
 pileus 3-4 in., grey-livid, then rufescent, fleshy, umbonate, 
 then depressed, often flaccid and excentric, somewhat 
 silky-streaked ; stem stuffed, fibrous-fleshy, thickened up- 
 wards, white-rufescent, curved, compressed ; gills unequally 
 decurrent, crowded, thin, flesh colour, then light yellow. 
 
 In oak woods. On sawdust. Coed Coch. 
 
 172. A. (Clitocybe) elixus. Sow. (p. 109) ; 2-3 in. 
 Epping Forest. 
 
 173. A. (Clitocybe) fumosus, P. (p. 107); 1-3 in. 
 Epping Forest. 
 
34 OUTLINES OF I'.UITISII rrXGOLOGY. 
 
 174. A. (Clitocybe) tumulosus, Kulcltbr. ; ccespitose ; 
 pileus umber, then pale fieshy, conical, then expanded, um- 
 bonate, even, smooth ; stem solid, floccoso-pruiuose, pallid ; 
 gills slightly emarginate and dccurrcnt, crowded, white, then 
 cinereous. 
 
 In woods. Hereford. 
 
 175. A. (Clitocybe) pergamenus, Cke. ; csespitose, whitish 
 like vellum, rather cartilaginous, pileus H-2 in., convex, be- 
 coming plane, obtusely umbonate, smooth, even ; stem equal, 
 ascending, solid with a cartilaginous coating ; punctato- 
 squamose at apex ; gills broadly adnate, with a decurrent 
 tooth, rather crowded, white. 
 
 On old stump. Lyndhurst. 
 
 176. A. (Clitocybe) cryptarum, Letell. ; csespitose, 
 pileus brown, spotted, somewhat conical, depresso-floccu- 
 lent ; stem fistulose, more or less compressed, attenuated 
 upwards, streaked, somewhat striate, white ; gills somewhat 
 decurrent, arcuate, narrow, white. 
 
 On sawdust. Coed Cocli. 
 
 177. A. (Clitocybe) monstrosus, Soiv. ; often csespi- 
 tose ; pileus fleshy, convex and umbonate, waved and 
 lobed, opaque as if white-washed ; margin inflexed ; stem 
 compressed, solid, streaked, opaque, white, tomentoso- 
 squamulose above, slightly rooting ; gills moderately distant, 
 scarcely rounded behind, not decurrent, white or cream 
 colour. 
 
 On the ground. Probably esculent. 
 
 178. A. (Clitocybe) opacus, ll'itli. (p. 110); 1-2 in. 
 
III. Infundibuliformes. — Funnel sJiaped, or deeply tombilicato 
 depressed, gills deeply decurrent from the first. 
 
 * Fileus coloured or becominy pale, the surface innato-floccidose or 
 silky ; hihulous. 
 
 A. (Clitoeybe) giganteus, Boiv. (p. 110). This is 
 Paxillus giganteus, Fr. 
 
 179. A. (Clitoeybe) maximus, Fr. ; pileus 12 in., pale 
 tan or whitish, fleshy, compact at the disc, thin, somewhat 
 flaccid, broadly iufuudibaliform, with a central umbo, dry, 
 surface silky, even or squamulose ; margin involute, pubes- 
 cent, even ; stem thick, solid, compact, internally spongy, 
 elastic, attenuated upwards, fibrilloso-striate, whitish ; gills 
 deeply decurrent, attenuated at both ends, somewhat 
 crowded, whitish, not changeable. 
 
 On grassy places, banks of hedges, etc. Frequent. 
 Epping Forest. 
 
 180. A. (Clitoeybe) infundibuliformis, Schceff. (p. 110) ; 
 3 in. Epping Forest. 
 
 Var. membranaceous, Fr. ; ditfers in all its parts, thinner, 
 stem equal, pileus without au umbo, colour brighter. 
 In fir woods and grassy places. Rare. 
 
 181. A. (Clitoeybe) truUseformis, Fr. ; pileus 2 in., 
 fuscous-cinereous, unchangeable, fleshy, iufundibuliform, 
 margin flattened, flocculoso-villous, dry ; flesh white ; stem 
 spongy-stuft'ed, firm, elastic, attenuated upwards, fibrilloso- 
 striate, cinereous, villous downwards ; gills decurrent, distant, 
 connected by veins, broad, shining white. 
 
 On the border of a fir wood. Coed Coch. 
 
 182. A. (Clitoeybe) incilis, Fr. ; pileus 2 in., ruddy 
 brick-red, fleshy, plano-umbilicate, then iufundibuliform, 
 smooth when young, then silky-flocculose, inflexed margin 
 
36 OUTLINES OF BKITISH FUNGGLOGY. 
 
 crenate ; stem hollow, fibrous, tough, unequal, attenuated 
 downwards, brick colour, at first covered with a delicate 
 floceulose pruina ; gills dccurrent, arcuate, distant, reticu- 
 lated with veius or distinct, white, becoming pale, but not 
 yellow. 
 
 In woods. King's Lynn. 
 
 183. A. (Clitocybe) parilis, Fr. ; pileus ;^ in., fuscous, 
 then grey-whitish, not hygrophanous, slightly lieshy, 
 depressed at the atomate or floceulose disc, without stripe, 
 involute, stem stuffed, tough, equal, smooth, naked, fuscous- 
 grey ; gills deeply dccurrent, very crowded, narrow, whitish- 
 grey. 
 
 By the sides of plantations. Coed Coch. 
 
 ** Pileus coloured or ])cdlicl, smooth, moist in wet iveather. 
 
 184. A. (Clitocybe) gilvus, Fr. ; pileus 2-4 in., pale 
 yellowish, fleshy, compact, convex then depressed, even, 
 smooth, somewhat moist, polished and shining when dry, 
 here and there spotted, margin involute ; flesh compact, at 
 length fragile, somewhat the same colour as pileus; stem 
 solid, fleshy, stout, not elastic, equal, smooth, paler than 
 pileus, villous at base ; gills dccurrent, thin, crowded, often 
 branched, arcuate, narrow, pallid then ochraceous. 
 
 In woods. West Farlcigh. Kent. 
 
 185. A. (Clitocybe) subinvolutus, Batsch ; pileus brick 
 colour, convex, depressed, smooth, margin involute ; flesh 
 pallid ; stem paler, stout, straight, somewhat equal, clothed 
 at the lowei part with elevated veins or wrinkles, tomentose, 
 and inclining to flesh colour above, base obtuse ; gills 
 decurrent, rather broad, same colour as pileus. 
 
 In woods, chiefly of Conifers. 
 
 186. A. (Clitocybe) spinulosus, Stev. and Sm. ; pileus 
 1^-3 in., creamy flesh colour, fleshy, then plane or depressed, 
 
gibbous or umbonate, leathery, smooth, edge eveu and in- 
 curved ; flesh white ; stem solid or stufted, attenuated from 
 the thickened base, fibrillose, whitish, zoned with crowded 
 spots of the same colour as pileus ; gills deeply decurrent, 
 rather crowded, white then light yellow. 
 
 Among grass by wayside. Greeniogs. Odour sweet and 
 pleasant. 
 
 This is A. geotropus. Bull. ; var. subinvolutus, Sm., in 
 Journal of Botany, 1873, p. 336. 
 
 187. A. Clitocybe geotropus, BuU. (p. 110); 1^-5 in. 
 
 188. A. (Clitocybe) splendens, P. ; pileus 3 in., pale 
 yellowish, becoming yellow, somewhat fleshy, thin round the 
 reflexed margin, piano-depressed, at length iufundibuliform, 
 eveu, smooth, shining ; flesh white, stem solid, equal, or 
 attenuated from base, even, smooth, same colour as pileus : 
 gills deeply decurrent, thin, crowded, simple, white, light 
 yellow when old. 
 
 In wood among dead leaves. E,eading. 
 
 189. A. (Clitocybe) inversus, Scop. (p. Ill) ; 2-3 in. 
 Epping Forest. 
 
 190. A. (Clitocybe) flaccidus, 8ow. (p. Ill) ; 2-3 in. 
 Epping Forest. 
 
 191. A. (Clitocybe) vermicularis, Fr. ; gregarious, 
 pileus flesh-colour then tan-flesh-colour, fleshy, thin, urabili- 
 cato-convex then reflexed, iufundibuliform, undulato-lobed, 
 even, smooth ; stem hollow, equal, soon compressed, 
 smooth, shining, white, not elastic, somewhat fragile ; gills 
 shortly decurrent, very crowded, thin, white. 
 
 In fir wood. Forres. 
 
 192. A. (Clitocybe) senilis, Fr. ; gregarious ; pileus 
 2 in., dingy-fuscous-tan, fleshy-membranaceous, flaccid; disc 
 depressed when young, soon iufundibuliform, undulato- 
 lobed, even, smooth ; stem solid, equal, smooth, whitish. 
 
38 OUTLINES OF mtlTlSlI FUXUOLOGY. 
 
 naked at base ; gills deeply decurrent, linear, narrow, very 
 crowded, at first whitish, then same colour as pileus. 
 On lawn. Coed Coch. 
 
 *** Pileus shinimj, lohitish, sprinkled over vntli small superficial 
 Jlocci or becoming smooth. 
 
 193. A. (Clitocybe) catinus, Fr. ; pileus 2 in., at first 
 white, then passing into pale tlesh-colour during rain and 
 into tan colour in dry weather, fleshy, then plane, then 
 infundibuliform, obtuse, even, smooth ; flesh thin, flaccid, 
 white; stem stuffed, internally spongy, elastic, tough, 
 thickened and tomentose at base ; gills decurrent, broad, 
 not much crowded, white. 
 
 Araoug dead leas'es. Ludlow. Epping Forest. 
 
 194. A. (Clitocybe) tuba, Fr. ; wholly white; pileus 
 2-3 in., fleshy, thin, convexo-plaue, umbilicate, even, 
 without striffi at margin, dead white when moist, shining 
 whitish when dry, smooth, but at first covered with a thin 
 silky film ; stem stufi'ed then hollow and compressed, very 
 tough, equal, naked upwards ; gills deeply decurrent, very 
 crowded, broad, white, becoming pale. 
 
 On dead leaves. Coed Coch, etc. 
 
 195. A. (Clitocybe) ericetorum, Bull. ; pileus 1-2 in., 
 white, fleshy, globose, then plane or concave, somewhat 
 turbinate, often exceutric and repand, smooth, shining ; stem 
 solid, floccoso-soft internally, attenuated downwards, some- 
 times compressed, tough, naked, smooth, white ; gills rather 
 shortly decurrent, somewhat distant, connected by veins at 
 the base, white. 
 
 Among short grass. Coed Coch. Epping Forest. 
 
AGAlilCINI. 39 
 
 Series B. — Pileus between flashy and membranous, hyrjro- 
 ■phanous. 
 
 IV. Cyathiformes. — Pileus fleshy -membranous, liyijrophanous, 
 depressed, at length cup-shaped; gills adnate, then decii^rrent. 
 Colour dingy ivhen moist. 
 
 196. A. (Clitocybe) cyathiformis Fr. (p. Ill) ; U-3 
 in. Epping Forest. 
 
 197. A. (Clitocybe) expallens, P. ; pileus 1-2 in., when 
 young somewhat fleshy, convexo-plane, cinereous-fuscous, 
 at first sprinkled white-silky, then plano-infundibuliform, 
 livid, disc slightly fleshy ; margin membranaceous and 
 striate ; stem flocculose internally, soon hollow, tough, 
 equal, smooth, white-silky at apex ; gills decurreut, thin, 
 slightly distant, soft, white-cinereous. 
 
 In mixed wood. Glamis. 
 
 198. A. (Clitocybe) obbatus, Fr. ; pileus 1 in., fuscous- 
 blackish, pale \vhen dry, cinereous, somewhat membrana- 
 ceous, coiivexo-plane with broadly umbilicate disc, smooth, 
 striate to the middle ; stem hollow, flexuose, smooth, slightly 
 striate, fuscous-cinereous ; gills slightly decurrent, distant, 
 broad, dark cinereous, white-pruinose. 
 
 In fir woods. 
 
 199. A. (Clitocybe) pruinosus, Lasch ; pileus 1-2 in., 
 brown, becoming cinereous when dry, hygrophanous, fleshy- 
 membranaceous, when young umbilicate, with lead-coloured 
 pruina, when full grown broadly infundibuliform and 
 smooth, sometimes squamulose ; flesh thin, becoming cine- 
 reous ; stem stufi'ed or obsoletely fistulose, equal, often 
 curved, flocculose at base, fibrillose when young, same colour 
 as, or paler than, pileus. 
 
 On rotten wood and on the ground. 
 
40 OUTLINES OF BRITISH FUXGOLOGY. 
 
 200. A. (Clitocybe) eoncavus, Scop. ; pileus 1-2 iu.^ 
 hygrophanous, fuliginous wheu moist, ciuereous or clay-hoary 
 when dry, slightly fleshy, very thin, flaccid, at first plano- 
 convex, widely and deeply umbilicate, then concave, smooth, 
 border undulated ; flesh tough, pallid ; stem stufl'ed, tough, 
 wholly fibrous-soft, curt, equal, naked, smooth, cinereous ; 
 gills decurrent, arcuate, very crowded, dark fuliginous. 
 
 In woods and pastures. Rare. 
 
 201. A. (Clitocybe) brumalis, Fr. : 1 in. Eppiug Forest. 
 
 V. Orbiformes. — Pileus round, someiohat fleshy, moist, hyyro- 
 phanous, convex, tlien flattened 07' depressed, gills adnate. 
 
 * Gills hecominy cinereous. 
 
 202. A. (Clitocybe) metachrous, Fr. (p. 91); 1-2 in. 
 Epping Forest. 
 
 203. A. (Clitocybe) pausiacus, Fr. ; pileus 1 in., 
 cinereous, becoming somewhat olive, fleshy, thin, at first 
 convex, sometimes umbouate, then plane and depressed, 
 even, smooth, when young hoary-silky ; stem tough, some- 
 what hollow, equal, striate, often undulated, smooth, white- 
 pruinose at apex, cinereous ; gills broad behind, obtusely 
 adnate, crowded, semicircular, inclining to olivaceous. 
 
 In woods, amongst leaves. On the ground. Coed Coch. 
 
 204. A. (Clitocybe) ditopus, Fr. ; pileus 2 in., 
 cinereous, somewhat fleshy, tough, convexo-plane, then 
 inverted, infuudibuliform, often uudulato-lobed and irregu- 
 lar ; stem hollow, then compressed, equal, naked, pale 
 cinereous, pubescent at base ; gills adnate, crowded, thin, 
 at length turned upwards, dark cinereous. 
 
 Among dead leaves. Moccas Park. Epping Forest. 
 
AGARICINI. 41 
 
 ** Gills loJiitish ; jnleus becoming ^;a/e. 
 
 205. A. (Clitocybe) diatretus, Fr. ; pileus 1-2 iu., 
 slightly fleshy^ tough, regular, margin involute, pubescent, 
 then piano-depressed, often fiexuose, even, smooth, hygro- 
 phanous, flesh colour when moist, then tan-colour and 
 flaccid ; stem spongy-stutt'ed, then hollow, elastic, flexile, 
 not cartilaginous, equal, round, even, smooth, pallid, naked 
 at apex^ pubescent at base ; gills adnate, decurrent with a 
 tooth, crowded, at first white-flesh colour, then pale white. 
 
 In pine woods. Coed Coch. 
 
 206. A. (Clitocybe) fragrans, Sow. (p. 112) ; 1-2 in. 
 Epping Forest. 
 
 207. A. (Clitocybe) angustissimus, Lasch ; pileus 
 2 in., watery white, shining whitish when dry, fleshy, thin, 
 piano-depressed, not umbilicate, even, smooth ; margin at 
 length slightly striate ; flesh thin, moderately firm ; stem 
 stuft'ed, internally fibrous, often curved and fiexuose, smooth, 
 or pubescent at base ; gills somewhat decurrent, very 
 crowded, thin, narrow white. 
 
 In woods, among leaves and moss. Ascot. 
 
 208. A. (Clitocybe) obsoletus, Batsch ; pileus 1 in., 
 at first grey, soon clay-whitish, sometimes inclining to 
 flesh colour, somewhat fleshy, soft, convex, then plane and 
 depressed, even, smooth ; stem stuff'ed, then hollow, round, 
 then often compressed, even, smooth, obsoletely pruinate at 
 apex, whitish ; gills obtusely adnate, almost rounded behind, 
 then adnato-decurrent, broad, crowded grey-whitish. 
 
 By road-sides in pine woods. Among grass and leaves. 
 Coed Coch. Epping Forest. 
 
42 OUTLINES OF JSIMTI.SH FUNGOLOUY. 
 
 VI. Versiformes. — Variable in sJuqje. Pileus thin, convex, then 
 irreyular in shape squamulose or mealij, ijills adnate, broad, 
 rather thick, distant, poicdered toith lohite meal. 
 
 * Pileus dinyy, scaly. 
 
 209. A. (Clitocybe) ectypus, Fr. (p. 113); ^2-3 in. 
 
 210. A. (Clitocybe) belltis, P. (p. 113) ; 2 iu. Epping 
 Forest. 
 
 ** Pileus briylit, one colour. 
 
 211. A. (Clitocybe) laccatus, Scop. (p. 113) ; 1 in. 
 Epping Forest. 
 
 Var. amethystiuus, Bolt. ; whole plant of a beautiful 
 amethystine violet. 
 
 Var. tortilis, Bolt. ; small, irregular, often Ci\3spitose, 
 resembling type, but much smaller. 
 
 A. (Clitocybe) difformis, P. ; = A. cerassatus, Fr. ; 
 No. 163. 
 
 212. A. (Clitocybe) Sadleri, B. and Br.; 2-2^ in., 
 CEespitose; light yellow, centre tawny, piano-depressed or 
 umbilicate, at first slightly silky, at length becoming smooth 
 towards centre; stem yellow with tawny fibrils, base 
 thickened ; gills decurrent, thin, very crowded, lemon- 
 yellow, entire at margin. 
 
 On an oak tub in Conservatory. Edinburgh. 
 
 Subgenus 9. Collybia (p. 114). 
 
 Series A. — Gills 'white or briyhtly coloured, not cinereous ; 
 flesh white. 
 
 I. Stri.epedes. — i:item fihrilloso- striate. 
 
 * GiUs broad, somewhat distant. 
 
 213. A. (Collybia) radicatxis, Behl. (p. 114); 3-4 in. 
 Epping Forest. 
 
AGAPJCINL 43 
 
 214. A. (CoUybia) longipes, Bull (p. Ill) ; 3-4 in. 
 
 215. A. (CoUybia) platyphyllus, Fr. (p. 114) ; 3-4 in. 
 Epping Forest. 
 
 Var. repens, Fr. ; pileus more fleshy than type, depressed ; 
 stem hollow, compressed, pruinate at apex, with a creeping 
 string-like mycelium. 
 
 216. A. (CoUybia) semitaUs, Fr. ; pileus 1-4 in., 
 black, fuliginous or smoky-livid, hygrophanous, when dry 
 pallid cinereous-yellow or grey, fleshy-cartilaginous, thin, 
 convex then plane ; margin inflexed then plane and pellucid- 
 striate ; flesh white when dry ; stem somewhat hollow, 
 tough, elastic, attenuated from the bulbous or bluntly 
 rooted base, fibrilloso-striate, fuscous or cinereous-white, 
 naked at apex ; gills obtuse behind, adfixed in the form of 
 a ring with a small decurrent tooth, somewhat distant, 
 broad, white, then cinereous, spotted black when touched, 
 at length black. 
 
 By road-sides after rain. Coed Coch. 
 
 217. A. (CoUybia) fusipes, Ball. (p. 115) ; 1^ in. 
 Epping Forest. 
 
 Var. cedematopus, Sclueff. ; pileus rufous-date-browu, 
 conical, then plane, pulverulent ; stem stout, ventricose, 
 fibrillose, pulverulent ; gills pallid. 
 
 On trunks. Glamis. 
 
 ** Gills crotoded, narrow. 
 
 218. A. (CoUybia) maculatus, A. and S. (p. 115) ; 
 3-5 in. Epping Forest. 
 
 219. A. (CoUybia) fodiens, Kalchb. ; pileus fleshy, 
 firm, convex, obtuse, margin iuflexed, even, smooth, flesh- 
 colour, becoming yellowish, darker and gibbous in centre ; 
 stem hollow, tough, somewhat ventricose, often longitudi- 
 
44 OUTLIXKS (;F liltlTISH Fl'XGOLUdV. 
 
 rally costate, attenuated into a rooting base of equal length 
 or longer, deeply immersed in the ground, smooth, white ; 
 gills rounded, emarginate, crowded, narrow, yellowish- 
 white. 
 
 On grass borders. Alresford, Hants. 
 
 2.20. A. (CoUybia) prolixus, Fl. Dan. ; pileus 2-3 in., 
 iieshy, convex, then flattened, gibbous, large, even, 
 smooth ; stem solid, rather stout, nearly equal, abrupt at 
 base, sulcate, brick-red ; gills free, crowded, entire, white, 
 unspotted. 
 
 Among dead leaves. Kew. 
 
 221. A. (Collybia) distortus, Fr.; gregarious, pileus 
 3 in., bay brown, then pale, not hygrophanous, fleshy, thin, 
 convex then expanded, umbonate, lax, even, smooth ; stem 
 attenuated upwards, base tomentose, fragile, externally 
 cartilaginous, internally spongy, soon hollow, contorted, 
 sulcate, pallid ; gills slightly adnexed, crowded, somewhat 
 linear, at length spotted-rubiginous. 
 
 On roots of trees. Bowood. Epping Forest. 
 
 222. A. (CoUybia) butyraeeus, Bull. (p. 115) ; 2-3 in. 
 Epping Eorest. 
 
 223. A. (Collybia) xylophilus, IJ^einm. ; ca3spitose ; 
 pileus 3 in., whitish or becomiug fuscous-tan in middle, 
 slightly fleshy, campanulatc, sometimes slightly umbonate, 
 at length rimosely split towards the margin, broadly gibbous, 
 smooth, moist ; flesh thin, fragile, then watery-fuscous ; 
 stem hollow, equal, flexuose, librilloso-striate, whitish, in- 
 ternally fuscous ; gills adnate, often decurreut with a small 
 tooth, narrow, crowded, entire. 
 
 About old stumps. Black Park, Langlcy. 
 
ac;aricini. 45 
 
 II. Vestipedes. — Stem velvety, Jioccose or i^ruinose. 
 * Gills broad, somewhat distant. 
 
 224. A. (CoUybia) velutipes, Curt. (p. 116) ; 1-4 m., 
 Epping Forest. 
 
 Var. rubescens, Cke. ; pileus 1 in., viscid, bright ferru- 
 ginous brown, obscurely striate, stem as in type, velvety 
 dark brown, internally blackish below, white above ; gills 
 becoming spotted with brown. 
 
 Among fir leaves. Largo, N.B. 
 
 225. A. (Collybia) laxipes, Fr. ; pileus 1| in., white, 
 slightly fleshy, convexo-plane, obtuse, smooth, moist; stem 
 stuffed, rufous-velvety, long, stiff; gills separating-free, 
 distant, broad, ventricose, white. 
 
 On wood and chips. 
 
 226. A. (Collybia) mimicus, Sin. ; pileus 2 in., pale 
 brownish-yellow, smooth, with a ihin separable cuticle ; 
 stem fibrillose at base, fibrilloso-striate in middle, naked 
 or slightly pruinose at apex ; gills very broad, somewhat 
 distant, thin, white. 
 
 Among shavings. Odour and taste strong, fishy. 
 
 227. A. (Collybia) floccipes, Fr. ; pileus rather fleshy, 
 campanulate, then convex, umbonate, even, silky, becoming 
 pale ; stem fistulose, straight, rooting, pallid, rough, with 
 floccose, punctiform, black squamules ; gills adnexed, ven- 
 tricose, rather distant, thick, white. 
 
 In a stump. Leigh Woods, Bristol. 
 
 228. A. (Collybia) vertirugis, Cke. 
 
 = A. (Collybia) undatus. Berk. (p. 117) ; 1 in. 
 
 229. A. (Collybia) stipitarius, F. (p. 116) ; \-\ in. 
 
 ** Gills very narroio, very croivded. 
 
 230. A. (Collybia) hariolorum, DC. ; gregarious ; pileus 
 
46 OUTLINES OF i!i;iTisir FrxooLonv. 
 
 2 in., tan-colour, whitish, somewhat membranaceousj pliant, 
 campanulato-convex, then flattened, rather depressed, even, 
 smooth, somewhat striate at the margin ; stem cartilagi- 
 nous, fistulose, somewhat equal and compressed, mostly 
 rufescent-villous, naked at apex ; gills at first slightly ad- 
 nexed, soon free, crowded, linear, whitish. 
 In Avoods. Coed Coch, Strong-scented. 
 
 231. A. (Collybia) confluens, P. (p. 116) ; 1 in. Epping 
 Forest. 
 
 232. A. (Collybia) ingratus, Schum. (p. 116) ; li in. 
 
 233. A. (Collybia) conigenus, P. (p. 117) ; ]-l in. 
 231. A. (Collybia) cirrhatus, Sc/iuni. (p. 117); ^| in. 
 
 Epping Forest. 
 
 235. A. (Collybia) tuberosus, Bii//. (p. 117) ; ^ in. 
 Epping Forest. 
 
 236. A. (Collybia) racemosus, P. (p. 118); ^ in. 
 
 III. LyEviPEDES. — Stem even. 
 * GUIs broad, commonhj someioJmt distant. 
 
 237. A. (Collybia) coUinus, Scop. ; pileus 1-2 in., pale 
 fuscous or pale tan, fleshy-membranaceous, campanulate, 
 then expanded and umbonate, smooth, somewhat viscous, 
 slightly striate, when dry, even, shining; flesh thin, white; 
 stem fistulose, somewhat fragile, equal or slightly attenuated 
 upwards, even, smooth, pallid-whitish, pubescent at base ; 
 gills adnexed, then free, somewhat distant, broad, quater- 
 nate, becoming pale white. 
 
 On grassy slopes. Beech stumps. Uncommon. 
 
 238. A. (Collybia) thelephorus, Cke. and Mass. ; pileus 
 1-1^ in., rather fleshy, campanulate, with an acute mammi- 
 late umbo, ochraceous, becoming darker and fuliginous at 
 
AGAKICIXI. 47 
 
 apex, margin at first incurved, then repand, faintly striate ; 
 stem cylindrical, equal, hollow, purple at base, paler at 
 apex, slender, smooth ; gills broadest behind, adnate, rather 
 crowded. 
 
 In peat bogs. Scarborough. 
 
 239. A. (Collybia) ventricosus, Bull. ; pileus tan or 
 dingy, slightly fleshy, campanulato-convex, umbonate, 
 smooth ; stem fistulose, even, naked, rufescent, ventricose 
 at base, rooted ; gills arcuato-adfixed, ventricose, lax, some- 
 what crowded, undulated, rufescent. 
 
 In woods. Bathford. 
 
 240. A. (Collybia) Stevensoni, B. and Br. ; pileus \ in.,, 
 pallid yellow, semi-ovate, obtuse, viscid, here and there 
 spotted-viscous ; stem thin, fibrillose, pulverulent upwards, 
 composed of fibres, slightly rufous, rooting; gills adnate, 
 with a decurrent tooth, broad, somewhat ventricose, distant, 
 white. 
 
 In old pasture. Glamis. 
 
 241. A. (Collybia) psathyroid.es, Cke. ; pileus f in., 
 campanulate, obtuse, rather viscid; margin regular, even; 
 stem hollow, slender, equal, rather tongh ; gills adnate, 
 with a decurrent tooth, broad, triangular, rather distant, 
 white. 
 
 On the ground. Epping Forest. 
 
 242. A. (Collybia) xanthopus, Fr. (p. 118) ; 1-2 in. 
 
 243. A. (CoUybia) nitellinus, Fr. ; pileus l-\\ in., 
 tawny or brick-tawny, when dry somewhat tan, somewhat 
 membranaceous, convexo-plane, smooth, obscurely rugulose, 
 pellucido-striate when moist ; flesh same colour ; stem soft- 
 cartilaginous, readily splitting into fibrils, stuffed, then 
 fistulose, equal, flexuose, somewhat rooted, ferruginous- 
 tawny, yellow when dry, white villous at base, obsoletely 
 
48 OUTLINES OF 15KITIS1I FUNCIOLOGV. 
 
 pruinose at apex ; gills adnate, very obtuse behind, some- 
 what crowded, narrow, whitish. 
 By roads in woods. 
 
 244. A. (Collybia) succineus, Fr. ; pileus 1 in., rufous 
 or brown-fuscous, becoming pale, fleshy, thin, convex, then 
 flattened, obtuse, at length depressed and unequal, rimosely 
 split when dry, even, smooth ; stem fistulose. tough, at- 
 tenuated at base, not rooted, polished, pidlid-rufescent ; 
 gills adnate, obtuse behind, slightly crowded, broad, thick, 
 becoming pale white, edge serrulated. 
 
 Amongst grass. In mixed wood. Coed Coch. 
 
 245. A. (Collybia) nummularius, Fr. ; pileus \\ in., 
 pallid, slightly variegated with yellow and red, slightly 
 fleshy, rather plane, depressed round the obsolete umbo, 
 even ; stem stuffed, then hollow, smooth, pallid, thickened 
 at apex ; gills free, somewhat distant, white. 
 
 Amongst leaves. In mixed woods. Glamis. 
 
 246. A. (Collybia) esculentus, Jacq. (p. 118); \ in. 
 
 247. A. (Collybia) tenacellus, P. ; h in. 
 
 Var. stolonifer, Jungh. ; pileus fuscous, becoming pale, 
 slightly fleshy, plane, obtuse, somewhat depressed, smooth ; 
 margin somewhat striate ; stem fistulose, equal, smooth, 
 becoming fuscous, with a creeping somewhat stoloniferous 
 rooting stem ; gills rounded-adnexed, vcntricose, somewhat 
 distant, whitish. 
 
 In pine woods, amongst leaves. Frequent. 
 
 ** (Jills narroio, crovxled. 
 
 248. A. (Collybia) acervatus, Fr. (p. 119) ; 2-3 in. 
 219. A. (Collybia) dryophilus, Bull. (p. 119); 1-2 in. 
 
 Epping Forest. 
 
 250. A. (Collybia) aquosus, BuU. ; pileus watery. 
 
AGARICINI. 49 
 
 ochraceous or brick-colour, then whitish, slightly fleshy, 
 rather plane, obtuse, smooth, hygrophanous ; margin striate ; 
 stem fistulose, naked, rufous-tawny, fibrillose at base; gills 
 rounded-free, crowded, narrow, tense and straight, white or 
 pallid. 
 
 Among moss. Coed Coch. 
 
 251. A. (CoUybia) extuberans, Fr. ; pileus 1-2 in., 
 rufous-fuscous, bay-brown, sometimes pale, not hygropha- 
 nous, slightly fleshy, convex, then flattened, orbicular, at 
 length depressed round the prominent umbo, even, smooth, 
 slightly viscid Avhen moist ; flesh white ; stem tough, fistu- 
 lose, equal, tense and straight, smooth, even, shining, same 
 colour as pileus or paler, rooted at base ; gills somewhat 
 free, reaching the stem, with a small tooth, crowded, narrow, 
 white. 
 
 On the ground and trunks. 
 
 252. A. (Collybia) exsculptus, Fr. (p. 119) ; 1-2 in. 
 
 253. A. (Collybia) macilentus, Fr. ; pileus 1 in., dark 
 yellow, slightly fleshy, convex, then plane, obtuse, orbicular, 
 even, smooth, dry ; flesh thin, yellow ; stem obsoletely 
 fistulose, tough, cartilaginous, filiform, flexuose, smoQth, 
 light yellow, slightly rooted at base ; gills separating-free, 
 very crowded, narrow, linear, unequal, yellow. 
 
 In pine woods. Corstorphine, etc. 
 
 254. A. (Collybia) clavus, L. (p. 119) ; J in. 
 
 255. A. (Collybia) ocellatus, Fr. (p. 120) ; \ in. 
 Epping Forest. 
 
 256. A. (Collybia) muscigenus, Fr. ; pileus \ in., 
 somewhat membranaceous, pellucid, globoso-hemispherical, 
 then flattened, obtuse, even, smooth, withering ; margin 
 ►entire, persistent, not revolute; stem capillary, flexuose. 
 
50 OUTLINES OF BlUTISII FUNOOLOGY. 
 
 flaccid^ naked, smooth, somewhat rootiug at base ; gills 
 adnata, somewhat crowded, linear, edge entire. 
 
 Amongst moss and grass. Coed Coch. Epping Forest. 
 
 257. A. (CoUybia) leucomyosotis, Cke. and Sm. ; pileus 
 convex, then expanded, sometimes obtusely umbonate, 
 pale mouse-colour, disc darker, whole plant becoming pallid, 
 almost white when dry, strong-scented, rather fragile ; 
 margin faintly striate ; stem hollow, very brittle, slightly 
 pruinose above, pallid, white at base and obtuse ; gills 
 thick, moderately distant, adnate, sinuate behind. 
 
 On Sjihagnum in bogs. Wimbledon, etc. 
 
 Series B. — Gills hecominy cinereous. 
 
 IV. Tephropiian.e. — Colour dingy, becoming cinereous. 
 
 * Gills crowded, somewhat narroio. 
 
 258. A. (CoUybia) rancidus, Fr. ; pileus 1-2 in., 
 not hygrophanous, lead-colour-black, fuliginous, then pale, 
 slightly pruinose-silky, slightly tleshy-cartilaginous, tough, 
 convex, then plane, broadly and obtusely umbonate, even, 
 smooth ; stem fistulose, rigid, equal, smooth, livid with a long 
 fusiform, villous, rooting stem ; gills free, crowded, narrow, 
 ventricose, dark cinereous, somewhat pruinose. 
 
 Under cedars. About trunks in woods. Burnham 
 Beeches. Odour of rancid meal. 
 
 259. A. (CoUybia) coracinus, Fr. : pileus 1^ in., hygro- 
 phanous, fuscous and shining, then grey and opaque, some- 
 what fleshy-cartilaginous, convexo-cxpanded, umbonate or 
 depressed, often undulated and irregular, even or wrinkled 
 round margin, smooth ; ^flesh white ; stem hollow, cartilagi- 
 nous, tough and rigid, then fragile, compressed (sometimes 
 lacunose), somewhat attenuated downwards, not rooted, be- 
 
AGARICINI. 51 
 
 coming fuscous, mealy at apex ; gills obtusely aduate, 
 separating, broad, scarcely crowded, at length connected by 
 veins, whitish-grey. 
 
 260. A. (Collybia) ozes, Fr.: pileus 1 in., hygrophauous, 
 grey-fuscous, pallid when dry, slightly fleshy, convex, then 
 plane, umbonate, smooth, striate at margin when moist ; 
 stem at length hollow, almost equal, lax, flexuose, fragile, 
 slightly striate, fuliginous-grey, white-mealy at apex ; gills 
 adnate, somewhat ventricose, crowded, broad, entire, fuligi- 
 nous-olivaceous. 
 
 On the ground. On pine leaves. Hothorpe, Northants. 
 
 261. A. (Collybia) inolens, Fr. ; pileus 1-2 in., hygro- 
 phanous, livid, then pale tan and slightly silky, opaque, slightly 
 fleshy, campanulato-convex, then plane, obtusely and broadly 
 umbonate, smooth, margin inflexed, then expanded, striate, 
 undulated ; stem compressed, rigid, fistulose, then soft and 
 hollow, equal, livid, becoming pale, white strigose at base, 
 white squamulose at apex ; gills adfixed, separating, some- 
 what free, broad, linear, slightly ventricose, whitish grey. 
 
 In woods, chiefly pine. Uncommon. 
 
 262. A. (Collybia) plexipes, Fr. ; pileus 1-2 in., blackish, 
 whitish at margin, then fuliginous-livid, fleshy-membran- 
 aceous, campanulate, umbonate, somewhat wrinkled, slightly 
 striate ; stem fistulose, equal, cartilaginous, surface finely 
 silky-fibrous, slightly striate, livid, shortly and bluntly 
 rooted ; gills attenuated behind, free, ventricose, somewhat 
 crowded, white, then becoming glaucous. 
 
 On trunks. In woods. Uncommon. 
 
 263. A. (Collybia) atratus, Fr. (p. 120) ; 1 in. Epping 
 Forest 
 
 264. A. (Collybia) ambustus, Fr. ; pileus 1 in., fuscous, 
 then fuscous-livid, somewhat membranaceous, convex, plane. 
 
52 OUTLINES OF BKITIRII FUXGOLOGY. 
 
 then depressed, umbonatc with a minute papilla, smooth, at 
 first even, then slightly striate ; stem fistulose, cartilaginous, 
 tense and straight, livid fuscous, pruinose, then naked ; 
 gills adnate, with a decurrcut tooth, crowded, plane, lanceo- 
 late, becoming fuscous. 
 
 On scorched ground. Kew. 
 
 ** Gills very broad, more or less distant. 
 
 265. A. (CoUybia) laceratus, Lasch (p. 120); U in. 
 Epping Forest. 
 
 266. A. (CoUybia) murinus, Batsch ; pileus 1 in., 
 fuscous-brown, then pale, slightly fleshy, tough, campanu- 
 lato-convex, then expanded, obtuse, or umbilicate, without 
 striae, slightly wrinkled or very thinly squaraulose ; margin 
 at first involute, always even ; stem hollow, equal, tense 
 and straight, not rooting, pubescent at base, slightly fibril- 
 lose under a lens, becoming cinereous-white ; gills attenuato- 
 adnexed, broad, thick, distant, white, then cinereous. 
 
 On the ground in woods. Marlborough Forest. 
 
 267. A. (CoUybia) protractus, Fr. ; pileus 1 in,, grey- 
 fuscous, shining, somewhat membranaceous, convexo-plane, 
 disc slightly depressed, with a rudimentary umbo ; margin 
 paler, striate ; stem fistulose, cartilaginous, then soft, tense 
 and straight, even, smooth, livid-grey, extended under- 
 ground in root form, attenuated, fibroso-strigose ; gills 
 adfixed, ventricose, broad, somewhat distant, grey, white- 
 pruinose. 
 
 In pine woods. On mossy ground, beside stumps. Rare. 
 
 268. A. (CoUybia) tesquorum, Fr. ; \-h in, fuscous- 
 black, then pale, fleshy-raembranaceous, slightly firm, convex, 
 obtuse, smooth ; flesh same colour: stem fistulose, filiform, 
 
AGARICINI. 53 
 
 flexuose, smooth, fuscous, mealy at apex ; gills free, broad, 
 ventricose, somewhat distant, cinereous-fuscous. 
 On waste ground, and in open pastures. Ascot. 
 
 269. A. (Collybia) clusilis, Fr. ; pileus 1 in., livid, then 
 pale, grey clay-colour, somewhat membranaceous, rather 
 plane, broadly depressed in centre, much sloped towards 
 incurved margin, even, smooth, fragile, slightly striate 
 at margin when moist ; stem wholly cartilaginous-soft, 
 flexile, stufted, polished, livid ; gills adnate, plane, with 
 a decurrent tooth, not ventricose, white, becoming 
 pale. 
 
 Amongst moss. 
 
 Var. B. minor ; half the size of type. 
 
 270. A. (Collybia) tylicolor, Fr. ; pileus ^ in., grey- 
 cinereous, slightly fleshy, somewhat umbonate, even, opaque ; 
 stem fistulose, somewhat fragile, not rooting, equal, even, 
 grey, everywhere whitish-pulverulent ; gills free, distant, 
 broad, rather thick, grey, paler than pileus. 
 
 In shady woods amongst grass. Coed Coch. 
 
 271. A. (Collybia) Dorothese, B. ; pileus 1 in., at flrst 
 globose, dark brown, hemispherical, expanded, with a slight 
 umbo, then depressed and pale brown, sulcate from the 
 crenate margin almost to centre, granulate, and beset with 
 small bristles ; stem brownish above, white below, with a 
 minute disc-like swelling at the base, then yellowish or 
 rufous below and white above, granulated and beset with 
 white bristles like the pileus ; gills white, distant, adnexed, 
 slightly ventricose, connected behind, edge entire. 
 
 On a dead fern stem in a hothouse. Dangstein. 
 
 272. A. (Collybia) caldarii, B. ; pileus \ in., hemi- 
 spherical, umbonate, brown, rugose, not turning pale ; 
 stem paler, even, cartilaginous externally ; gills adnato- 
 
54 OUTLINE.S OF F.HITISII KUXGOLOGY. 
 
 decurrent^ somewhat ash-coloured, interstices near the 
 margin veined. 
 
 On Sphaymini, in an orchid pot. Dangstein. 
 
 Subgenus 10. Mycena (p. 121). 
 I, Calodontes. — Edfje of y ills darker, denticidate. 
 
 27o. A. (Mycena) pelianthinus, Fr. (p. 121) ; H in. 
 
 274. A. (Mycena) balaninus, Berk. (p. 121) ; H in. 
 
 275. A. (Mycena) Iris, Berk. (p. 121) ; § in. 
 
 276. A. (Mycena) mirabilis, Cke. and Quel. ; pileus 
 fleshy, campanulate, umbo darker, smooth, finely striate; 
 stem rather tomentose-rooting, bluish floccose ; gills slightly 
 adnexed, distant, white, edges darkened with minute par- 
 ticles. 
 
 On fir trunks, amongst Hypnum. Dr. Cooke considers 
 this plant to be distinct from the next. 
 
 277. A. (Mycena) marginellus, P. : pileus ^ in., some- 
 what fuscous when young, then changeable, slightly fleshy, 
 campanulate, not viscid, with exception of the smooth 
 darker umbo, slightly striate and somewhat azure-blue, 
 floccose ; stem somewhat tomentose-rooting, with the same 
 flocci as on pileus ; gills slightly adnexed, distant, white or 
 cinereous, fringed at edge with dark azure-blue or red. 
 
 Amongst flr trunks, with Hypnum cupressiforme. 
 Aboyne. The Rev. John Stevenson considers this i)lant to 
 1)C the same with the last. 
 
 278. A. (Mycena) aurantio-marginatus, Fr. ; pileus 
 1 in., olivaceous-fuscous, then pale, fleshy at the disc, cam- 
 panulate, convex, obtuse, or obsoletely umbonate, even, 
 smooth ; margin straight, slightly striate at margin when 
 moist; stem brittle, flstulose, inflated, ventricose, zoned 
 
AGAlilGINI. 55 
 
 with yellow strigose down at base, even, smooth, livid-pale ; 
 gills veutricose, atteuuato-adnexed, almost free, connected 
 by veins, becoming livid-green, orange, edge toothed or 
 fiocculoso-pencilled. 
 
 In silver-fir wood. Perth. Smell strong. 
 
 279. A. (Mycena) elegans, P. (p. 121) ; h in, Epping 
 Forest. 
 
 280. A. (Mycena) rubro-marginatus, Fr. (p. 122) ; 1 in. 
 Var. fusco-purpureus, Lasch ; purple-brown ; stem 
 
 finely striate, with a rooting villous base ; gills eroded, 
 edge brown. 
 
 On willow trunks. 
 
 281. A. (Mycena) strobilinus, Fr. (p. 122) ; h in. 
 
 Var. coccineus ; same as type, but gills not darker at 
 the edge. 
 
 282. A. (Mycena) rosellus, Fr. (p. 122). 
 
 II. Adoxid.e. — Colour pure, bright^ not becoming fuscous or 
 cinereous. 
 
 283. A. (Mycena) pvirus, P. (p. 122) ; A-3 in. Epping 
 Forest. 
 
 284. A. Mycena pseudo-purus, Cke. ; pileus 1 in., 
 rosy, then pale, rather fleshy, campanulate, then convex, 
 expanded, obtusely umbonate, smooth ; margin obscurely 
 striate ; stem slender, hollow, rigid, straight, even, naked, 
 at first rosy-white, then brown ; gills adnate, whitish. 
 
 In woods. Coed Coch. 
 
 285. A. (Mycena) zephirus, Fr. ; pileus 1 in., livid- 
 reddish, white flesh-colour, disc sometimes fuscous, some- 
 what membranaceous, diaphanous, campanulate, obtuse, 
 striate to the middle, smooth ; stem fistulose, equal or 
 attenuated upwards, slightly striate, white-squamulose at 
 
56 OUTLINES OF nitlTlSH FUKGOLOGY. 
 
 apex when young, then naked, rufescent, incurved and 
 woolly at base ; gills adnate, somewhat decurrent with a 
 small tooth, broad, at length separating, connected by veins. 
 
 On decayed fir wood. Glamis. 
 
 28(). A. (Mycena) Adonis, Bull. (p. 1.'23) ; -iin. Epping 
 Forest. 
 
 287. A. (Mycena) lineatus, Bidl. ; pilcus \ iu., light yellow, 
 varying whitish, membranaceous, hood-shaped then cam- 
 panulate, obtuse, lineato-sulcate, smooth ; stem fistulose, 
 filiform, equal, even, smooth, becoming light yellow, white- 
 villous, somewhat velvety at base ; gills adnate, linear, 
 somewhat distant, white. 
 
 Among moss. Foxley. 
 
 288. A. (Mycena) luteo-albus, Bolt. (p. 123); I in. 
 
 289. A. (Mycena) flavo-albus, Fr. ; growing in troops, 
 pileus \ in., ochraceous, yellow-white or white, somewhat 
 membranaceous, very slightly fieshy, campanulate, then 
 flattened, umbonate, smooth, even, rimosely split when dry, 
 stem fistulose, slightly rigid, tense and straight, equal, 
 pellucidly white, smooth at base, pruinose at apex ; gills 
 adnexed, ventricose, distant, white. 
 
 In woods and meadows. Frequent. 
 
 290. A. (Mycena) lacteus, P. ; \ in. Epping Forest. 
 
 291. A. (Mycena) gypseus, Fr. ; cicspitose ; fragile; 
 pileus membranaceous, couico-campanulate, glabrous, striate 
 to umbo, stem straight, attenuated upwards, hairy at base ; 
 gills attenuato-adnexed, subuncinate, white. 
 
 On trunks. Epping Forest. 
 
 III. KiciDiPEDES. — Stem rigid ; r/ills changinr/ colour from 
 white to (/reij or reddish. 
 
 292. A. (Mycena) cohgerans, Fr. ; pileus ] in., cinnamon 
 
AGAMCINI. 57 
 
 or bay-tawny-j becoming pale, slightly fleshy, campauulate, 
 smooth, but velvety in appearance ; stem fistulose, almost 
 horny, equal, shining, bay-brown upwards, whitish at apex, 
 date-brown and villous-downy below ; gills rounded behind, 
 somewhat free, distant, connected by veins, broad, white 
 then pale. 
 
 On bramble, among pine leaves, etc. Batheaston. 
 Csespitoso-fasciculate. 
 
 293. A. (Mycena) proliferus, Fr. (p. 123). 
 
 294. A. (Mycena) excisus, Lasch ; pileus campanulato- 
 convex, slightly fleshy at disi*, somewliat umbonate, slightly 
 wrinkled, date-brown, fuscous-brackish ; stem firm, tough, 
 rooted, even, becoming fuscous ; gills ventricose, thick, 
 distant, connected by veins, hoary, somewhat free. 
 
 In mixed woods, on trunks. Glamis. Odour at length 
 nauseous. 
 
 295. A. (Mycena) psammicola, B. and Br.; pileus \ in., 
 brown, becoming paler at margin, hygrophanous, somewhat 
 hemispherical, sprinkled with minute particles ; margin 
 striate ; stem solid, firm, rooting, umber downwards, white 
 upwards, wholly white-pulverulent ; gills shortly aduate, 
 sinuate behind. 
 
 On a sandbank among moss. Addington. Odour strong. 
 
 296. A. (Mycena) rugosus, Fr. ; pileus cinereous, 
 becoming pale, tough, slightly fleshy at disc, mem- 
 branaceous, campauulate, then expanded, plane, corrugated, 
 dry, striate at circumference ; stem short, cartilaginous, 
 fistulose, rigid, tough, straight, at length compressed, 
 smooth, pallid with a short, strigose root ; gills arcuato- 
 adnate, with a decurrent tooth, united behind in a collar, 
 somewhat distant, connected by veins, broad, ventricose, 
 white then grey, edge entire or serrulated. 
 
5« OUTLINES OF UKITISII FUXGOLOGY. 
 
 Oa and near trunks and stumps. Common. Eppiug 
 Forest. Inodorous. 
 
 297. A. (Mycena) sixdorus, Fr. ; pileus 1 in., diaphanous, 
 somewhat membranaceous, convex, umljonate, often 
 irregular, striate, viscous ; stem firm, rooting even, dry, 
 rather smooth ; gills obtusely adnate, without a tooth, broad, 
 thick, somewhat distant, white, then somewhat flesh colour. 
 
 On old stumps. Haywood Forest. Commonly solitary. 
 
 298. A. (Mycena) galericulatns, Scop. (p. 121); 1-2 in. 
 Epping Forest. 
 
 Var. calopus ; stems chestnut colour, united at the base 
 into a fusiform common stem. 
 On stumps. 
 
 299. A. (Mycena) polygrammiis, JluJI. (p. 124) ; 1 in. 
 Epping Forest. 
 
 300. A. (Mycena) parabolicuSjjFr. (p. 124). Epping Forest. 
 
 30 1. A. (Mycena) tintinnabulum, Fr. ; gregarious or 
 csespitose ; pileus 1 iu., date-brown, azure-blue, pale 
 yellowish-fuscous, becoming pale, somewhat membra- 
 naceous, tough, campanulato - convex, plane, scarcely 
 umbonatc, even, somewhat viscid when moist ; stem even, 
 smooth, pallid, tough, white-strigose at base ; gills adnate, 
 decurrent with a tooth, horizontal, thin, crowded, becoming 
 pale and at length slightly inclining to flesh colour. 
 
 On fallen beech trunks. Glamis. Epping Forest. 
 
 302. A. (Mycena) codoniceps, Cke. : minute, t' aiiiv 
 pileus campanulate, scarcely expanding, sulcate, sprinkled 
 with somewhat erect short hairs, wholly umber, stem 
 attenuated downwards, umber below, whitish above, slender ; 
 gills adnate, linear, not crowded, white. 
 
 On tree-fern stems. 
 
 303. A. (Mycena) fiavipes, Quel. ; pileus mem- 
 
AGAEICINI. 59 
 
 branaceous, striate, diaphanous, smooth, violet or purplish 
 pink, disc brownish ; stem tough, shining, pellucid yellow, 
 villous at base ; gills uncinate, adnate, connected by veins, 
 distant, white, then rosy flesh-colour. 
 
 On stumps. Whitby, Yorks. Radish scented. 
 
 IV. Fragilipedes. — Stem frfujile. 
 
 304. A. (Mycena) atro-albus, Bolt. (p. 124) ; 1 in. 
 
 305. A. (Mycena) dissiliens, Fr. (p. 125). 
 
 306. A. (Mycena) atro-eyaneus, Batsch ; pileus i in., 
 fuscous, then azure-blue-grey, membranaceous, campanu- 
 lato-convex, at length flattened, gibbous, umbo fuscous- 
 blackish, somewhat wrinkled, angular and obtuse, deeply 
 sulcate, sprinkled with white powder; stem fistulose, fili- 
 form, slightly attenuated, equal, rigid, fragile, smooth, dark 
 blue-black, base bulbous ; gills joined in a collar, attenuato- 
 adnate, ventricose, distinct, distant, white. 
 
 In fir woods. Ascot. 
 
 307. A. (Mycena) pullatus, B. and Cke. ; pileus 
 f in., dark brown with a tinge of purple, disc almost black, 
 membranaceous, campanulate, obtusely umbonate, sulcato- 
 striate to the middle ; stem fistulose, thickened downwards, 
 same colour, white floccose at base, sometimes rooting ; gills 
 adnexed, broad, white. 
 
 On the ground, among dead leaves. Epping Forest. 
 
 308. A. (Mycena) pauperculiis, Berk. (p. 125) ; -^ in. 
 
 309. A. (Mycena) leptocepliaUis, P. ; pileus cinereous, 
 somewhat membranaceous, campanulato-expanded, repand, 
 umbonate, sulcate, pruinose, opaque ; stem equal, slightly 
 striate, opaque, dry ; gills emarginate, white-cinereous. 
 
 On trunks and on the ground. Laxton Park, Northants. 
 Epping Forest. vStrong odour of nitre. 
 
60 UL'TLLNES OF HHITISII FUNGOLOGY. 
 
 310. A. (Mycena) alkalinus, Fr. (p. 125) ; 1-2 in. 
 Epping Forest. 
 
 311. A. (Mycena) ammoniacus, Fr. ; pileus fuscous- 
 blackish at the tlisCj paler at the striate margin, varying 
 cinereous, somewhat membranaceous, at first acutely conical, 
 papillate, then campanulate, naked, discoid, opaque ; stem 
 rooting, firm, polished, dry, equal, whitish, strigose at base ; 
 gills adnate, linear, distant, whitish or grey, whitish towards 
 apex. 
 
 On the ground, among grass. Frequent. Epping Forest. 
 Strong odour of ammonia. 
 
 312. A. (Mycena) metatus, Fr. ; gregarious; pileus ^in., 
 hygrophanous, cinereous, flesh-coloured, livid, then whitish, 
 somewhat membranaceous, bemispherico-campanulate, ob- 
 tuse, soft, slightly striate, then plane, somewhat silky under 
 a lens ; stem soft-flaccid, even, smooth, whitish-cinereous, 
 fibrillose at base ; gills adnate, linear, distant, whitish. 
 
 In mixed wood, among grass. Glamis. Epping Forest. 
 Odour weakly alkaline. 
 
 313. A. (Mycena) plicosus, Fr. ; pileus 1 iu., fuscous- 
 cinereous, opaque when dry, membranaceous, fragile, cam- 
 panulate, then expanded, with a slightly fleshy, broad obtuse 
 umbo, deeply lineato-sulcate, almost plicose, often split ; 
 stem slightly firm, fragile, tense and straight, equal, smooth, 
 grey, becoming fuscous, blunt, white-villous at base ; gills 
 adnate, thick, distant, connected by veins, at length whitish 
 pruinosc. 
 
 On the ground, in wood. Rare. Killin. 
 
 314. A. (Mycena) peltatus, Fr. ; growing in crowded 
 troops ; pileus f in., black-fuscous, then grey, convex, then 
 plane, blackish striate, margin upturned, disc slightly fleshy, 
 orbicular, even, plane, slightly unibilicate ; stem equal. 
 
AGAEICINI. 61 
 
 rigid, somewhat fragile, often flexuose, even, smooth, naked, 
 livid ; gills adnate, with a small decurrent tooth, at first 
 crowded, ventricose, at length somewhat distant, grey, paler 
 towards edge. 
 
 In woods, among moss. Altyre. Rare. 
 
 315. A. (Mycena) aetites, Fr. ; growing in troops ; 
 pileus ^ in., fuscous-grey, becoming pale, membranaceous, 
 campanulate, then convex with a broad obtuse, prominent 
 umbo, sulcate, smooth, margin black ; stem usually fistulose, 
 often compressed, fragile, smooth, shining, whitish-fuscous ; 
 gills adnate, somewhat uncinate, slightly arcuate, thin, at 
 first cohering in the form of a collar, reticulated with veins, 
 somewhat distant, white or grey. 
 
 In woods. Ascot. Odour bitterish or obsolete. 
 
 316. A. (Mycena) stanneus, Fr. ; pileus 1^ in., hygro- 
 phanous, grey, then tin colour, silky glistening, smooth, 
 membranaceous, campanulate, then flattened, fragile, often 
 rimose, striate, smooth; stem fistulose, slightly rigid, even, 
 shining, smooth, becoming pale; gills adnate, with a small 
 decurrent tooth, connected by veins, whitish-grey. 
 
 In woods, among grass. Cabalva. 
 
 317. A. (Mycena) vitreus, Fr. ; growing in troops; 
 pileus 1 in., opaque, fuscous, then livid or bluish-grey, mem- 
 branaceous, campanulate, obtuse, lineato-striate, smooth, 
 dry, margin entire ; stem fistulose, equal, smooth, glistening, 
 striate under a lens ; fibrillose at base ; gills adnate, linear, 
 thin, somewhat distant, whitish, edge same colour. 
 
 In woods. Uncommon. 
 
 318. A. (Mycena) tenuis (p. 125) ; h in. Epping Forest. 
 
 V. FiLiPEDES. — Stem thread-like. 
 
 319. A. (Mycena) filopes, Bull. ; k in. Epping Forest. 
 
62 OUTLINES OF lUtlTLSII FUXGOLOGY. 
 
 320. A. (Mycena) amietus, Fr. ; gregarious, pileus \-h in., 
 greeu, bluish-grey, livid, membrauaceous, couico-cam- 
 panulate, scarcely umbouate, slightly pellucid-striate to 
 middle, then pruinate ; stem thinly fistulose, equal, flexile, 
 wholly villous-pulverulent, livid, the long tortuous rooting 
 stem almost smooth ; gills free, or reaching the stem, linear, 
 crowded, narrow, grey, edge paler. 
 
 Among leaves. Glamis. Epping Forest, 
 
 321. A. (Mycena) debilis, Fr. ; pileus \ in., whitish- 
 livid or flesh colour, then fuscous, membranaceous, cam- 
 panulate then convex, obtuse, striate, then even ; stem 
 slightly fistulose, weak and lax, same colour as pileus, 
 fibrillose at base ; gills broadly adnate, rather broad, some- 
 what distant, whitish, edge same colour. 
 
 In chestnut wood. Wrothara, Kent. 
 
 322. A. (Mycena) vitilis, Fr. (p. 126) ; I in. Epping 
 Forest. 
 
 323. A. (Mycena) coUariatus, Fr. ; pileus \ in., fuscous, 
 pale, grey- whitish, pale pink, fuscous at disc, membranaceous, 
 campanulate, then convex, somewhat umbonate, striate, 
 rigid, smooth ; stem fistulose, tough, dry, smooth, even 
 then pale, striate under a lens ; gills adnate, joined in the 
 form of a collar behind, thin, crowded, hoary- whitish, or 
 obsoletely flesh-coloured. 
 
 In wood. Among oak bark. Glamis. 
 
 324. A. (Mycena) speireus, Fr. (p. 126) ; \ in. 
 
 325. A. (Mycena) tenellus, Fr. (p. 126) ; \ in. 
 
 326. A. (Mycena) acicula, Sc//ceff. (p. 127) ; j- in. 
 
 VI. Lactipedes. — Stem and yills inilky. 
 
 327. A. (Mycena) hsematopus, P. ; csespitose ; pileus 
 1 in., white-flesh-colour, fleshy-membranaceous, slightly 
 
AGAEICINI. 68 
 
 fleshy at disc, conical then campanulate, obtusCj convex^ 
 spuriously umbonate^ naked, even, striate at the denticulate 
 margin ; stem fistulose, rigid, pulverulent with whitish, 
 delicate, villous down, sometimes plane ; gills adnate, often 
 with small decurrent tooth, whitish. 
 
 On stumps. Frequent. Epping Forest. Abounding 
 with dark blood-coloured juice. 
 
 328. A. (Mycena) cruentus, Fr. (p. 127) ; i in. 
 
 329. A. (Mycena) sanguinolentus, A. and S. (p. 127) ; 
 ^ in. Epping Forest. 
 
 330. A. (Mycena) crocatus, Fr. (p. 127) ; A-1 in. 
 
 331. A. (Mycena) ehelidonius, Fr. (p. 127) ; ^-1 in. 
 
 332. A. (Mycena) galopus, Fr. (p. 128) ; h in. Epping 
 Forest. 
 
 333. A. (Mycena) leucogalus, Cke. ; pileus i in., purple- 
 brown, paler at margin, black at umbo, membranaceous, 
 campanulate, umbonate, sulcate to middle ; stem fistulose, 
 slender, a little thickened downwards, same colour as pileus, 
 base tomentose ; gills adnate, with a small decurrent tooth, 
 rather distant, connected by veins, cinereous. 
 
 On rotten stump. Kew. Epping Forest. INIilk white, 
 plentiful. 
 
 VII. Glutinipedes. — fStem ylutinous. 
 
 334. A. (Mycena) epipterygius, Scoji. ; l-l in. Epping 
 Forest. 
 
 335. A. (Mycena) clavicularis, F;\ ; pileus i in., whitish, 
 light yellowish, then fuscous, membranaceous, couvexo- 
 expanded, striate, dry, without a pellicle, depressed at disc : 
 stem fistulose, tough, even, smooth, whitish, fibrillose at 
 base ; gills adnate, somewhat decurrent, often connected bv 
 veins, whitish. 
 
64 OUTLINES OF BRITISH FUNCOLOGY. 
 
 On grassy ground in fir woods, (jlarais. Epping 
 Forest. 
 
 336. A. (Mycena) pelliculosus, Fr. (p. 128) ; ^1 in. 
 
 337. A. (Mycena) vulgaris, P. (p. 128) ; i in. 
 
 338. A. (Mycena) eitrinellus, P. ; gregarious ; pileus 
 ^ m., lemon -yellow, darker at disc, becoming pale, mem- 
 branaceous, campanulate, then hemispherical and flattened, 
 striate; stem fistulose, filiform, smooth, lemon-yellow, 
 villous at base ; gills uncinate, alternate, distant, moderately 
 broad, shining white. 
 
 In pine woods. Uncommon. 
 
 339. A. (Mycena) plicato-crenatus, Fr. ; pileus ^ in,, 
 white then light yellow, very thin, conical, somewhat 
 umbonate, sulcato-plicate and crenate without a separable 
 pellicle ; stem filiform, pallid reddish, internally light yellow, 
 smooth ; gills ascending, narrow, attenuated behind, adnate, 
 with a snuall decurrent tooth, distant white. 
 
 Among heath. Coed Coch. 
 
 340. A. (Mycena) roridus, Fr. ; \ iii. Popping Forest. 
 
 VIII. Basipedes. — Stem dilated into a 'disc or swollen into a 
 minute bulb at base. 
 
 341. A. (Mycena) stylobates, P. (p. 129) ; ^ in. 
 
 342. A. (Mycena) tenerrimus, B. (p. 129) ; -\jin. 
 
 343. A. (Mycena) discopus, Lev. ; shining white ; pileus 
 conical, obtuse, mealy-pulverulent ; stem very tender, mealy 
 pulverulent, with a small hairy bulb ; gills adnate, few, very 
 distant, plicose. 
 
 On twigs. Very small. 
 
 344. A. (Mycena) sacchariferus, B. and Br. ; whitish, 
 everywhere beset with shining granules ; pileus ^ in., 
 hemispherical ; stem long, filiform, fixed at the base by a 
 
AGARICINI. 65 
 
 few flonci ; gills arcuato-decurrent 8-9, very distant, rather 
 thick. 
 
 On bramble and nettle stems. Batheaston. 
 
 345. A. (Mycena) pterigenus, Fi\ (p. 129); \ in. 
 
 IX. Insiteti.e. — Grouniiy upon other plants ; without root, 
 tubercle or flocci at base. 
 
 346. A. (Mycena) corticola, Schum. (p. 129) ; J in. 
 
 347. A. (Mycena) hiemalis, Osbeck : pileus thin, cam- 
 panulate, obsoletely umbonate, striate at margin ; stem 
 ascending, slightly downy towards base, gills adnate, unci- 
 nate, narrow, linear, whitish. 
 
 On trunks. Oak, etc. Rare. 
 
 348. A. (Mycena) setosus. Sow. (p. 130) ; yV i"- 
 
 349. A. (Mycena) capillaris, Schum. (p. 130) ; -'t in. 
 Epping Forest. 
 
 350. A. (Mycena) juncicola, Fr. (p. 130) ; Vt ^^• 
 
 Subgenus 11. Ompiialia (p. 131). 
 
 I. CoLLYBiARii. — Pileus at first dilated, margin inflexed. 
 
 * Hydrogrammi. — (rills narroio, crowded, arcuate. 
 
 351. A. (Omphalia) hydrogrammus, Fr. ; somewhat 
 csespitose ; of one colour, livid or whitish-livid, then whitish ; 
 pileus 2 in., somewhat membranaceous, flaccid, umbilicate, 
 hygrophanous, border spreading, undulated, striate ; stem 
 cartilaginous, hollow, smooth, rooted, hairy white at base, 
 short or elongated, often decumbent and compressed, livid, 
 naked at apex ; gills decurrent, crowded, narrow, arcuate, 
 «ntire, unequal, livid whitish. 
 
 Among dead leaves. Coed Coch. Epping Forest, 
 
 352. A. (Omphalia) umbilicatus, Schaff. ; somewhat 
 
 E 
 
66 OUTLINES OF RHITISH ITXGOI^OnV. 
 
 csespitose; pileus 1 in., livid, disc fuscous, thin, whitish, 
 somewhat membranaceous, umbilicate, convexo-plane, even, 
 smooth ; stem cartilaginous, fistulose, equal, flexuose, some- 
 what rooted, cohering with villous down at base, even, 
 silky-striate with white fibrils at apex ; gills decurreut, 
 crowded, thin, unequal, whitish. 
 In woods among moss. Perth. 
 
 353. A. (Omphalia) maurus, Fr. ; pileus 1 in., fuli- 
 ginous, then livid, somewhat membranaceous, convex, 
 umbilicate, smooth, hygrophanous, striate, then even, silky- 
 shining; stem cartilaginous, somewhat horny, rigid, fragile, 
 flocculoso-stuffed, smooth, fuliginous blackish ; gills attenu- 
 ated at both ends, decurrent, arcuate, crowded, white. 
 
 On lawns and in moist places. Coed Coch. 
 
 354. A. (Omphalia) offuciatus, Fr. : pileus 1 in., dark, 
 then pale flesh colour, pale, whitish, slightly fleshy, theu 
 piano-depressed, even, smooth, hygrophanous ; stem cartila- 
 ginous, fistulose, equal, round, then compressed, smooth, 
 reddish, obsoletely pruinate at apex ; gills decurrent, plane, 
 straight, crowded, narrow, same colour as pileus. 
 
 Under beech, etc. Coed Coch. 
 
 ** Pyxidati. — Gills sliyJdlij distant, narroic. 
 
 355. A. (Omphalia) chrysophyllus, Fr. ; pileus 1-2 in., 
 hygrophanous, yellow-fuscous, then tan hoary, or whitish, 
 somewhat membranaceous, flaccid, deeply umbilicate, border 
 somewhat reflexed, floccoso-squamulose; stem tough, fistulose, 
 equal, smooth, somewhat rooted, yellow ; gills decurrent, 
 distant, broad, yellow. 
 
 On pine chips and rotten pine wood. On pine sawdust. 
 Glamis. 
 
AGARICINI. 67 
 
 35G. A. (Omphalia) Postii, Fr. ; pileus 1-2 in., bright 
 orange, membranaceous, urabilicate, smooth, convex, striate 
 towards margin ; stem fistulose, equal, tense, straight, 
 smooth, becoming light yellovr ; gills decurrent, linear, 
 arcuate, whitish. 
 
 In swampy places. On charcoal beds. Downtou. 
 
 357. A. (Omphalia) pyxidatus, Bull. (p. 130) ; 1 in. 
 Epping Forest. 
 
 358. A. (Omphalia) leucophyllus, Fr. ; pileus 1 in., 
 dark cinereous, somewhat membranaceous, infinidibuliform, 
 even, not floccose, reflexed, margin involute ; stem stuffed, 
 then fistulose, slightly rigid, equal, smooth, cinereous ; gills 
 decurrent, slightly distant, arcuate, shining white. 
 
 Among short grass. Coed Coch. 
 
 359. A. (Omphalia) strisepileus, Fr. ; pileus 1 in., 
 hygrophanous, livid fuscous, then pale-white, somewhat 
 membranaceous, convex, then flattened, umbilicate, striate, 
 smooth, even ; stem fistulose, firm, equal, often flexuose, 
 slightly tough, even, smooth, becoming fuscous ; gills decur- 
 rent, somewhat crowded, whitish. 
 
 Among moss and leaves. Among grass in mixed wood, 
 Glamis. 
 
 360. A. (Omphalia) telmatiseus, B. and Cke. ; pileus 
 f in., hygrophanous, brown, then mouse-coloured, infundi- 
 buliform, minutely virgate ; stem compressed, tomentose at 
 base ; gills distant, decurrent. 
 
 On Sphagnum. Aboyne. 
 
 361. A. (Omphalia) sphagnicola, B. (p. 131); 1-1 ^ in. 
 
 362. A. (Omphalia) philonitis, Lasch ; pileus |-| in., 
 cinereous-fuliginous, membranaceous, deeply infundibuli- 
 form, margin erect, without striae, hygrophanous, then 
 floccose ; stem fistulose, equal, smooth, floccose at base ; gills 
 
68 
 
 OUTLINES OF HKITISH FUNGOLOGV. 
 
 decurrent, somewhat distant, narrow lanceolate, white, then 
 smoky. 
 
 On Sphaynuin. Glamis, 
 
 363. A. (Omphalia) oniscus, Fr. (p. 131) ; 1 in. Epping 
 Forest. 
 
 364. A. (Omphalia) caespitosus, Bolt. : pileus i-1 in., 
 hygrophauous, yellowish-white, then opaque-white, some- 
 what membranaceous, convex, hemispherical, umbilicate, 
 margin crenate, sulcate nearly to centre, otherwise smooth ; 
 stem curved, fistulose, somewhat bulbous; gills distant, 
 triangular, decurrent, whitish. 
 
 On peat and sandy heaths. King's Lynn. 
 
 365. A. (Omphalia) glaucophyllus, Lasch ; pileus \ in., 
 mouse-colour, hygrophanous, then pale, membranaceous, 
 infundibuliform, plicato-striate, becoming even when dry ; 
 stem stuffed, firm ; gills decurrent, somewhat distant, 
 lanceolate, olivaceous. 
 
 On the ground in woods. King's Lynn. 
 
 366. A. (Omphalia) rusticus, Fr. ; pileus h in., fuscous 
 then grey, smooth or slightly silky and hoary, membra- 
 naceous, umbilicate, convex and striate, then even ; stem 
 stuffed, curt, equal, smooth, fuscous, then grey, slightly 
 villous at base; gills decurrent, thick, somewhat distant, 
 grey, arcuate. 
 
 Grass avenue in wood. Coed Coch. 
 
 *** Umisellifeui. — Gills very distant, broad, often thick. 
 
 367. A. (Omphalia) demissus, Fr. ; =A. rufulus, B. and 
 Br. (p. 132) ; pileus \ in., fuscous rufescent, somewhat 
 membranaceous, convex then expanded, obtuse, at length 
 umbilicate, striate then even and smooth, or obsolctely 
 pruinose ; stem somewhat cartilaginous, stuft'ed, equal. 
 
AGARICINI. 69 
 
 shining^ liver-rufescent ; gills adnate, decurrent, broad 
 behind^ somewhat triangular, distant, becoming purple. 
 
 In waste places. Resembling a small A. laccatns. 
 Epping Forest. 
 
 368. A. (Omphalia) hepaticus, iJa^^cA (p. 131) ; 4-14 in. 
 
 369. A. (Omphalia) muralis, Soiv. (p. 131) ; ^1 in. 
 
 370. A. (Omphalia) umbelliferus, L. (p. 132) ; h in. 
 Var. abieguus, B. and Br. ; pale yellow. 
 
 On decayed fir stumps and on the naked ground. 
 Var. viridis, Fl. Dan. ; wholly of a dull green colour. 
 
 371. A. (Omphalia) infumatus, B. and Br. ; pileus ^in., 
 green then smoky, obtuse, not membranaceous ; stem thin, 
 yellow, dilated at base, tomentose, especially below ; gills 
 decurrent, few, broad, distant, yellow. 
 
 On bark among moss. Garthewin. 
 
 372. A. (Omphalia) retostus, Fr. ; pileus k in., umber, 
 slightly fleshy, piano-depressed, even, then polished, margin 
 convex, involute ; flesh same colour ; stem curt, fistulose, 
 tough, equal, smooth, paler than pileus ; gills slightly 
 decurrent, distant, pallid, umber. 
 
 On lawns and amongst dead leaves. Coed Coch. 
 
 373. A. (Omphalia) abhorrens, B. and Br. ; pileus 
 fuscous, umbilicate, even ; stem slender, same colour, white 
 tomentose at base; gills decurrent, distant, thick. 
 
 On lawn. Coed Coch. Odour foetid. 
 
 374. A. (Omphalia) pseudo-androsaceus, Bull. ; whitish 
 or grey, pileus fleshy-raembranaceous, convex, deeply 
 umbilicate, at length infundibuliform, smooth, striato- 
 plicate ; margin crenulate ; stem stuficd, slender ; gills 
 decurrent, distant. 
 
 Among moss on lawn. Coed Coch. Epping Forest. 
 
 375. A. (Omphalia) griseo-pallidus, Desm. ; pileus ^ in., 
 
70 OUTLINES OF BRITISH FUNGOLOGY. 
 
 fuscous-grey, then hoary, slightly fleshy, convex then plane, 
 umbilicate, even, smooth, slightly shining, hygroi)hanoiis, 
 unequal and excentric, margin deflexed ; stem stuffed, 
 slightly firm, equal, smooth, fuscous ; gills decurrent, dis- 
 tant, thick, same colour as pileus, or darker. 
 
 On the ground. King's Lynn. 
 
 37(5. A. (Omphalia) stellatus, Sow. (p. 132) ; ^ in. 
 
 II. Mycenarii. — Pileus at first camimnulate, margin straijld, 
 pressed to the stem. 
 
 * Campanell^. — Gills broad, j^erfect, unequul. 
 
 377. A. (Omphalia) campanella, Batsch (p. 133) ; \ in. 
 
 378. A. (Omphalia) pictus, Fr. ; pileus j in., higher 
 than broad, fuscous, the umbilicate disc light yellow, the 
 sides striate, margin paler, membranaceous ; stem almost 
 filiform, horny, rigid, stuff'ed, smooth, date-brown with a 
 small radiating-membranous base, slightly thickened up- 
 wards ; gills adnate, somewhat decurrent, higher than 
 broad, distant, whitish, then light yellow. 
 
 On wood, chips, etc. In mixed wood. Killin. 
 
 379. A. (Omphalia) camptophyllus, B. (p. 133) ; \ iu. 
 
 380. A. (Omphalia) umbratilis, Fr. ; gregarious ; pileus 
 1 in., shining black-fuscous, then hoary, membranaceous, 
 obtusely campanulate, then convex and umbilicate, smooth, 
 margin striate ; stem tough, tubular, flocculoso-stuff'ed, 
 equal, smooth, fuscous dead-black ; gills adnato-decurrent, 
 arcuate, crowded, broad, becoming fuscous-white. 
 
 In damp places. On the ground, among grass. 
 
 381. A. (Omphalia) griseus, Fr. (p. 133) ; h in. 
 
 382. A. (Omphalia) fibula, Bull. : \ in. 
 
AGAKICIXI. 71 
 
 Va)\ Swartzii, Fr. ; firmer ; pileus at length rather plane, 
 "whitishj disc fuscous ; stem whitish, somewhat violaceous at 
 apex. 
 
 Il woody places. In groves abounding in springs. 
 
 3S3. A. (Omphalia) directus, B. and Br. ; white, very 
 slender, pileus nail-shaped, plane at apex ; stem long, thread- 
 like, slightly rufous, ascending, clothed with long hairs 
 towairls the base ; gills deeply decurrent. 
 
 Oi dead leaves. Chiselhurst. May to November. 
 
 38k A. (Omphalia) Bellise, Johns, (p. 134); k in. 
 
 38». A. (Omphalia) gracillimus, fVeinm. ; pileus ^ in., 
 memlranaceous, hemispherical, sometimes papillate, some- 
 times umbilicate, tiocculose, then smooth, sulcate at sides ; 
 stem delicately fistulose, bristle-like, soft, with a floccose 
 base gills decurrent, thin, somewhat distant, alternate gills 
 dimidate. 
 
 I. marshy ground, on decaying leaves and stems of 
 vegetables. Rare. 
 
 b;6. A. (Omphalia) bullula, Brig. ; very small, scat- 
 tered wholly shining white ; pileus membranaceous, hemi- 
 sphercal, diaphanous ; stem very thin, filiform ; gills distant, 
 arcua:)-decurrent. 
 
 Oniead sticks. Coed Coch. 
 
 ** Integrelli. — (J ills fold-like, narrow. 
 
 387. A. (Omphalia) integrellus, P. ; wholly white, 
 pileus in., membranaceous, conical, soon hemispherical, 
 frequeily irregular, broad and depressed at disc, striate at 
 margin stem delicately fistulose, thin, slightly firm, pilose 
 downwds and adnate, often with a small villous bulb at 
 base ; gls decurrent, narrow, in the form of folds, distant, 
 
72 OUTLINES OF HltniSII l'TN(;OI.OGV, 
 
 commonly disappearing short of margin of pileus, equal or 
 branched, acute at edge. 
 
 In shady places, on decayed sticks, etc. Uncoramoa. 
 
 388. A. (Omphalia) buccinalis, Soiv. ; an uncertain 
 species. Fries says it approaches A. stellatns, but may be 
 a form of A. umbeUiferus ; B. and Br. say it cannot be 
 either of these species, but that it has the habit )f A. 
 j)tychophylh(s^ Cd. ; gills not plicate. — Sow. f. 107. 
 
 Not uncommon, according to Sowerby. 
 
 389. A. (Omphalia) Nevillse, B. ; pileus ^ in., Irowu, 
 hemispherical, depressed in centre, rugose, minutely granu- 
 lated, striate, then pale towards the undotted ma-gin ; 
 stem brownish, stuffed, white within, rough, with black 
 granules, dilated and clothed with villous hairs at !)ase ; 
 gills white, arcuato-decurrent ; interstices and sides veioso- 
 rugose. 
 
 On Sphagnum, in an orchid pot at Dangstein. 
 
 Subgenus 12. Pleurotus (p. 134). 
 
 I. ExcENTRici. — Pileus latercdly extended, excentric. 
 
 * Veil forming a ring. 
 
 390. A. (Pleurotus) corticatus, />.; pileus 2-() in. grey, 
 then whitish, compact, convex, then flattened, horioutal, 
 entire, when young covered with dense grey dova and 
 margin involute ; flesh hard, shining, white ; sten solid, 
 hard, rooted, excentric, curved-ascending, some whal equal, 
 squamuloso-fibrillose, white ; ring silky-floccose, moerately 
 thick, white, ruptured in a torn manner, adhering 3 stem 
 and margin of pileus, at length vanishing; gilli deeply 
 decurrent, anastomosing behind, dichotomously bnched, 
 somewhat distant, white or becoming yellow when Id. 
 
 On decayed ash, elm, etc. Epping Forest. 
 
AGARICINI. 73^ 
 
 391. A. (Pleurotus) dryinus, P. (p. 134) ; 2-6 in. 
 Epping Forest. 
 
 392. A. (Pleiirotus) spongiosus, Fr. ; pileus 2-3 in., 
 tomentose, with persistent cinereous down, fleshy, excentric, 
 somewhat lateral, pulvinate ; flesh laxly floccose, white ; 
 stem short, or almost obsolete, incurved, excentric, white, 
 tomentose ; ring white, soon torn, appendiculate at margin 
 of pileus, soon vanishing ; gills sinuato-adnexed, with a 
 decurrent tooth, simple, separate, crowded, entire, white. 
 
 On rotten beech and other trunks. Epping Forest. 
 
 ** Veil none, gills sinuate en' obtusely adnate. 
 
 393. A. (Pleurotus) ulmarius, Bvll. (p. 134) ; 3-5 in. 
 Epping Forest. 
 
 394. A. (Pleurotus) tessulatus, Bull. ; solitary or csespi- 
 tose, pileus 3-5 in., becoming pale-livid, often marbled with 
 spots, fleshy, compact, horizontal, regular, but somewhat 
 excentric, convex, then plane, disc-shaped, even, smooth ; 
 flesh white, tough ; stem solid, compact, equal, or attenu- 
 ated at base, excentric, even, smooth, white ; gills sinuate 
 behind, uncinato-adnate, thin, crowded, white, becoming 
 yellow. 
 
 On trunks. Coed Coch. 
 
 395. A. (Pleurotus) subpalmatus, Fr. (p. 135) ; 2-1 in. 
 Epping Forest. 
 
 396. A. (Pleurotus) craspedius, Fr. ; ca^spitose ; pileus 
 3-5 in., brick colour, pale tan or cinereous, excentric, 
 fleshy, thin, almost membranous at margin, flaccid, plane, 
 even, smooth, moist, without a separable pellicle ; margin 
 at first involute, elegantly crenato-lobed and fimbriate ; 
 flesh thin, watery, white when dry ; stem thick, solid, firm, 
 elastic, internally spongy, generally unequal, pallid, com- 
 
74 OUTLINES OF BRITISH FUNGOLOGY. 
 
 monly smooth or slightly villous at base; gills adnate, 
 obtuse behind, very thin, crowded, narrow, at length 
 lacerated, shining white. 
 
 On trunks and rotten wood. 
 
 .'597. A. (Pleurotus) fimbriatus, Bolt. (p. 135) ; 3 in. 
 
 398. A. (Pleurotus) Ruthae, B. and Br.; pileus H in., 
 dirty- whitish, fan-shaped, slightly hispid above the gelatin- 
 ous stratum, the very thin margin striate ; stem short, 
 lateral, hispid ; gills white, rather broad, acute behind, 
 anastomosing, with a reddish tinge like that of the stem, 
 interstices veined; mycelium fibrous. 
 
 On sawdust. Coed Coch. 
 
 399. A. (Pleurotus) lignatilis, Fr. ; pileus 3-4 in., 
 dingy whitish, commonly cxcentric, rarely lateral, often 
 reniform, iieshy, thin, compact, tough, convex, then plane, 
 dbtuse and often umbilicate, fiocculoso-pruinate, at length 
 plane, repand ; margin at first involute, then expanded, 
 undulato-lobed ; stem stutted, then hollow, thin, unequal, 
 curved or flexuose, tough, whitish, pruinato-villous, rooting 
 and some^vhat tomentose at base ; gills adnate, crowded, 
 narrow, unequal, shining white. 
 
 On beech, etc. Burnham Beeches. 
 
 400. A. (Pleurotus) circinatus, Fr. ; solitary, wholly 
 white, not hygrophanous ; pileus 3 in., orbicular, horizontal, 
 fleshy, tough, convex, then plane, flat, obtuse, even, but 
 covered over with a shining whitish-silky lustre ; stem 
 stuffed, elastic, equal, central, or slightly cxcentric, com- 
 monly straight, smooth, bluntly rooted at base ; gills 
 adnate, slightly dccurrent, crowded, broad, white. 
 
 On rotten wood. Birch. Rare. Odour pleasant. 
 
AGAKICINI. 75 
 
 ■*** Veil none, yilh deejihj decurrent, stem distinct, somewhat 
 vertical. 
 
 401. A. (Pleurotus) sapidus, iCa/c^. ; c^spitose; pileus 
 fleshy, somewhat excentric, deformed, smooth, depressed in 
 centre, white or brownish ; stems solid, connate at base, 
 smooth, white. 
 
 On elm trunks. Isleworth, Kew, Morpeth, etc. 
 
 402. A. (Pleiirotus) pantoleucus, Fr. ; wholly white, 
 often opaque ; pileus 3 in., broad, fleshy, excentric, dimi- 
 diate, spathulate, and slightly convex, even, smooth, some- 
 what depressed and marginate behind ; margin equal, 
 entire ; stem solid, ascending, very excentric, equal or 
 attenuated downwards, not rooted, even, smooth ; gills 
 decurrent, somewhat crowded. 
 
 On trunks, willow, etc. Coed Coch. 
 
 403. A. (Pleurotus) mutilus, Fr. ; wholly white ; pileus 
 excentric or lateral, slightly fleshy, soft, tough, reniform, 
 spathulate and depressed behind, somewhat umbilicate, 
 smooth and silky when dry ; stem erect or ascending, 
 excentric or somewhat lateral, round, solid, tough, smooth, 
 except at the villous base ; gills decurrent, somewhat 
 crowded, narrow, rather thick, simple ; springing from an 
 efi"used flaxy mycelium. 
 
 On dead wood. On grassy open hillside. Penzance. 
 
 **** Veil none, gills deeply decurrent, jnleus sessile or extended 
 behind into a short oblique, stem-like base. 
 
 404. A. (Pleurotus) ostreatus, Jactj. (p. 135) ; 3-5 in. 
 Epping Forest. 
 
 Var. glandulosus ; gills broad, glandular, white, anas- 
 tomosing behind. 
 
76 OUTLINES OF BKITISH FUNGOLOGV. 
 
 Far. colnmbinus, Bres. ; pileus fleshy, irregular, sub- 
 rotund, margin involute, plano-convex, gibbous, then 
 umbilicate; margin pigeon-colour-blue, centre rather tlesh- 
 colour, becoming yellowish, smooth, umbo or umbilicus 
 whitish, pilose ; stem excentric, lateral, strigose, variable 
 in length ; Hesh white ; gills crowded, broad, attenuato- 
 decurrent, anastomosing behind, glaucous, edge entire, or 
 delicately fimbriate under a lens. 
 
 On stumps. Kew. 
 
 405. A. (Pleurotus) euosmus, B. (p. 135) ; 3 in. Epping 
 Forest. 
 
 406. A. (Pleurotus) revolutus, Kickx, ; pileus at first 
 smoky, then lead- or mouse-colour, darker in the centre, 
 fleshy, firm, elastic, convexo-plane, smooth, slightly shining, 
 depressed behind, margin incurved ; stem curt, thick, 
 smooth or pubescent ; gills decurrent, serrulated, white. 
 
 407. A. (Pleurotus) salignus, All), and Sch. (p. 136) ; 
 2-3 in. 
 
 408. A. (Pleurotus) acerinus, Fr. ; shining white ; pi- 
 leus 1-4 in., fleshy, tough, thin, unequal, silky-villous, not 
 hygrophanous ; stem somewhat lateral, thin or obsolete, 
 villous ; gills decurrent, very crowded, thin, white, then 
 becoming yellow. 
 
 On plane and ash. Epping Forest. 
 
 II. Dlmidiati. — Pileus lateral, immarginate behind, vol at 
 first resujiinate. 
 
 409. A. (Pleurotus) petaloides, Bull. (p. 136) ; 1-2 in. 
 Epping Forest. 
 
 410. A. (Pleurotus) pulmonarius, Fr. ; pileus 2-3 in., 
 cinereous, then cinereous-tan, continuous with stem, fieshy, 
 
AGAKICINI. '77 
 
 soft, tough, flaccid, obovate, or reniform, plane or reflexo- 
 conchate at margin, even, smooth ; flesh thin, soft, white ; 
 stem very short, solid, lateral, horizontal, or ascending, 
 round, villous, expanded into pileus ; gills decurrent, 
 moderately broad, not branched or anastomosing, livid or 
 cinereous. 
 
 On trunks. Aberdeen Fungus Show. 1874. 
 
 411. A. (Plevirotus) serotinus, Schrad. (p. 136); ^-3 in. 
 
 412. A. (Pleurotus) mitis, P. (p. 136) ; \ in. Epping 
 Forest. 
 
 413. A. (Pleiirotus) gadinoides, Sni. ; whole plant 
 white ; pileus rather fleshy, tender, dimidiate, clothed with 
 fine adpressed flocci, hygrophanous, with no gelatinous 
 upper stratum ; stem small, lateral or none ; gills some- 
 what crowded, slightly branched. 
 
 On tree-fern stems. Chelsea. 
 
 414. A. (Pleuxotus) limpidus, Fr. ; pileus 1 in., hyaline- 
 white, then shining-white, slightly fleshy, obovate or reni- 
 form, horizontal, even, smooth, hygrophanous, without a 
 viscous pellicle, margin thin, shortly inflexed ; no separate 
 stem, but the pileus narrowed behind into a stem-like base ; 
 gills thin, crowded, decurrent at base, white. 
 
 On trunks ; on old ash stump. Epping Forest, Pen- 
 zance, etc. 
 
 415. A. (Pleurotus) reniformis, Fr. ; pileus ^ in., cine- 
 reous, slightly fleshy, horizontal, reniform, plane, emargi- 
 nate behind, margin entire ; flesh very thin, somewhat 
 gelatinous, diaphanous ; stem a very short villous rudi- 
 ment ; gills thin, linear, grey. 
 
 On branches ; silver fir, etc. Glarais. 
 
 416. A. (Pleurotus) lauro-eerasi, B. and Br.; pileus 
 
78 OUTLINES OF BRITISH KUXGOLOGY. 
 
 1 in., brown, oyster-shaped, sulcate, cuticle ver}- thiu, giving 
 way at the furrows and exposing flesh of pileus ; stem 
 obsolete ; gills connected by veins. 
 
 On the naked trunk of a laurel. Coed Coch. 
 
 417. A. (Pleurotus) tremulus, Schoiff. (p. 137) ; h in. 
 
 418. A. (Pleurotus) acerosus, Fr. (p. 137) : -^ in. 
 Epping Forest. 
 
 III. Resupinati. — Pileus at first resupinate, loith the gills meeting 
 at an excentric poiiit, then re/lexed, sessile. 
 
 * Pileus fleshy uniform. 
 
 419. A. (Pleurotus) porrigens, P. (p. 137); 1—4 in. 
 
 420. A. (Pleurotus) septicus, Fr. (p. 137) ; h in. 
 Epping Forest. 
 
 ** Pileus fleshy, striate, loith an upper gelatinous stratum, 
 or viscous pellicle. 
 
 421. A. (Pleurotus) mastrueatus, Fr. (p. 138) ; 1-4 in. 
 Epping Forest. 
 
 422. A. (Pleurotus) atro-cseruleus, Fr. p. 138) ; 1-2 in. 
 
 423. A. (Pleurotus) Leightoni, B. (p. 138) ; i in. 
 
 424. A. (Pleurotus) algidus, Fr. (p. 138) ; 1-2 in. 
 
 425. A. (Pleurotus) fluxilis, Fr. ; pileus 1 in. ; some- 
 what umber, thin, dimidiate, horizontal, plane, reniform, 
 covered with a fluid gelatinous stratum which is not covered 
 with a cuticle ; flesh proper very thin, pallid, soft ; gills 
 rounded behind, linear, distant, whitish, a few reaching the 
 base, many shorter ones. 
 
 426. A. (Pleurotus) cyphellaeformis, 5. (p. 138); ^in. 
 
 427. A. (Pleurotus) applicatus, Batsch (p. 139); k iu- 
 
AGARICINI. 79 
 
 *** Pileiis memhmndceous, not viscid. 
 
 428. A. (Pleurotus) Hobsoni, B. (p. 138) ; ^ in. 
 
 429. A. (Pleurotus) striatulus, Fr. (p. ]38) ; \ in. 
 
 430. A. (Pleurotus) hypnophilus, B. (p. 138). 
 
 431. A. (Pleurotus) chioneus, P. (p. 138) ; ^in. Epping 
 Forest. 
 
 Series 2. Hyporhodii. — Spuirs niHi/^ ruhiginoKs, or salmon- 
 colour. 
 
 Subgenus 13. Volvaria (p. 131)). — Volvaria corresponds with 
 Amanita ; the spores rosy, not white. 
 
 * Pilens dr>/, silh/ or fihrillose. 
 
 432. A. (Volvaria) bombycinus, Schceff. (p. 139) ; 
 3-8 in. 
 
 433. A. (Volvaria) volvaeeus, B7(/l. (p. 139) ; 3 in. 
 
 434. A. (Volvaria) Loveianus, B. (p. 140) ; ^-24 in. 
 
 435. A. (Volvaria) Taylori, B. (p. 140) ; 1| in. 
 
 436. A. (Volvaria) temperatus, Z^. a/?// 5r. ; pileus 1^ in., 
 convex^ umbonate, pulverulent, striate ; stem slender, pel- 
 lucid ; volva ample. 
 
 On soil in a greenhouse. Sibbertoft. 
 
 ** Pileus more or less viscous and smooth. 
 
 437. A. (Volvaria) speciosus, Fr. (p. 141) ; 3-5 in. 
 
 438. A. (Volvaria) gloiocephalus, Dec. Ft. ; pileus 3 in., 
 fuliginous, mouse-grey, fleshy, cauipanulate, then expanded, 
 umbonate, smooth, glutinous, striate at margin ; stem 
 solid, smooth, becoming fuscous or tawny ; volva circularly 
 split, pressed close, fragments sometimes seen on the pileus ; 
 gills free, reddish. 
 
 On the ground, uncommon. Odour strong and unplea- 
 sant. Very poisonous according to Letellier. 
 
^0 OUTLINES OF BRITISH FUXGOLOGY. 
 
 439. A. (Volvaria) medius, Schiu/i. ; pileus 1-1^ in., 
 slightly fleshy, con vexo- plane, obtuse, viscous, silky when 
 dry ; margin even, smooth ; stem solid, equal, smooth ; 
 ■volva lobed, sheathing ; gills free, rosy flesh-colour. 
 
 On the ground, lapping Forest. 
 
 440. A. (Volvaria) parvulus, Weinm. 
 
 = A. (Volvaria) pusillus, Fr. (p. 140) ; gregarious ; 
 pileus .V-1 in., whitish, umbo darker, slightly fleshy, conical, 
 then campanulate, at length plane and umbonate, at first 
 viscid, soon dry, silky ; stem somewhat fistulose, equal, 
 silky, villous at base, white ; gills free, flesh-coloured. 
 
 In pastures, soil in gardens, etc. Frequent. 
 
 ■{Subgenus 14. Annularia. — Annularia corresponds with Lepiota, 
 the spores rosy, not white. Annulate, but destitute of a 
 volva, gills free, hymenophore distinct from the stem. 
 Chamseota, Sm. ; in Jour. Botany, 1870. 
 
 No British species. 
 
 Subgenus lA. Pluteus (p. 141). — Pluteus corresponds with 
 Hiatula ; the spoi'es rosy, not white. 
 
 * (Juticle of pileus separating intojihrils or flood. 
 
 441. A. (Pluteus) cervinus, Schceff. (p. 141) ; 3 in. 
 Epping Forest. 
 
 Var. eximius. Sin. ; pileus even, covered with a viscid 
 separable cuticle, umber, becoming reddish, stem fibrillose, 
 iit length blackish. 
 
 On sawdust. 
 
 Var. patricius, Sr/m/z : pileus whitish, then smoky-grey, 
 furnished with umber or cinnamon scales, at length smooth, 
 silky, shining, and cracked in a radiate manner ; stem even, 
 white. 
 
AGARICINI. 81 
 
 On oak trunks. 
 
 Far. petasatus, Fr. (p. 141); 5-6 in. 
 
 Var. Bullii_, B. ; pileus even, pallid^, darker at the disc, 
 convex then expanded^ smooth ; stem thick, solid, brown, 
 slightly swollen at the base, fibrillose, white and silky 
 above; gills broad, rounded behind, free, flesh colour. 
 
 On rotten wood. 
 
 442. A. (Pluteus) umbrinus, -Fr. (p. 141). Epping Forest. 
 = A. umbrosus. P.; pileus umber ; stem villoso-squamose ; 
 
 gills fuliginous. 
 
 443. A. (Pluteus) ephebeus, Fr. ; pileus 1-2 in., fleshy, 
 convex then flat, obtuse, clad with a bluish tomentum, 
 margin naked; stem stufled, smooth, often curved and turn- 
 ing bluish, minutely striate; gills free, yellowish, then 
 flesh-colour. 
 
 On rotten wood. 
 
 444. A. (Pluteus) salicinus, P. ,- pilevis 1 in., bluish-grey, 
 then cinereous, slightly fleshy, convex, then plane, some- 
 what umbonate, smooth, but flocculoso-rugulose and darker 
 at the disc; stem stufi'ed, equal, fibrillose, fragile, white azure- 
 blue, or sometimes becoming green ; gills free, rose colour. 
 
 In the interior of a hollow willow. South Wootton. 
 
 445. A. (Pluteus) hispidulus, Fr. ; pileus h in., grey, 
 slightly fleshy, convex, then plane, obtuse, everywhere 
 silky or slightly pilose, even, dry, at length slightly striate 
 at margin ; stem fistulose, equal, curved, round, fragile, 
 smooth, silvery ; gills free, flesh colour. 
 
 On beech stumps. Stapletou Park. 
 
 446. A. (Pluteus) pellitus, Fr. ; white ; pileus 2 in., 
 rather fleshy, convex, then plane, even, dry, silky ; stem 
 stuffed, smooth, even, shining ; gills flesh-coloured. 
 
 On and about trunks. 
 
 P 
 
82 OUTLINES OF BRITISH FUNGOLOGY. 
 
 ** Pileus prutnaie, somewhat pulverulent. 
 
 44!7. A. (Pluteus) nanus, P. (p. Ml) ; 1 in. Epping 
 Forest. 
 
 Va?'. lutescens ; stem, and often the gills, yellow. 
 On trunks. 
 
 448. A. (Pluteus) spilopus, B. and Br. ; pileus brown, 
 rugulose ; stem fiexuose, black-dotted. 
 
 On stumps. Batheaston. Dwarf, allied to A. nanus. 
 
 449. A. (Pluteus) semibulbosus, Fr. ; pileus \ in., rather 
 fleshy, hemispherical, atomate, soft, sulcate, white ; stem 
 fistulose, pubescent, inflated in a bullate manner at base ; 
 gills free, whitish, then flesh colour. 
 
 On wood. 
 
 *** Pileus 'naked, smooth. 
 
 450. A. (Pluteus) violarius, Mass. ; gregarious ; pileus 
 2— IJ in., hemispherical, then nearly plane, velvety, even, 
 watery, dark purple, disc darker, margin undulate ; flesh 
 thick, grey ; stem tliickest at base, pale umber, whitish 
 above, silky, fistulose, sprinkled below with delicate black 
 fibrils ; gills crowded, margin serrulate, whitish, then 
 somewhat bright flesh colour. 
 
 On a stump. Odour none, taste pleasant. Stains paper 
 violet. 
 
 451. A. (Pluteus) roseo-albus, Fr.; pileus 3 in., rather 
 fleshy, convex, then expanded, smooth, rosy, margin naked ; 
 stem solid, attenuated, white-pruinose ; gills free, rather 
 distant, flesh coloured. 
 
 On elm trunk. Burghill Court. Herefordshire. 
 
 452. A. (Pluteus) leoninus, Schaff. (p. 142); U-3 in. 
 
 453. A. (Pluteus) chrysophseus, Schceff. (p. 142) ; 2 in. 
 
AGARICINI. 83 
 
 454. A. (Pluteus) phlebophorus, Dittm. (p. 142) ; 1 in. 
 
 Var. reticulatus, Cke. ; pileus salmon -colour, reticulated 
 with elevated anastomosing ribs, forming deep, hexagonal 
 pits ; margin incurved ; stem short, curved. 
 
 On stumps. 
 
 Subgenus 16. Entoloma (p. 142). — Entoloma corresponds 
 with Tricholoma, spores rosy not white. 
 
 I. Genuini. — Typiccd species. 
 
 Pileus fleshy, smooth, often viscid, not hygrophanous (W innato- 
 floccose or squamulose. 
 
 455. A. (Entoloma) sinuatus, Fr. ; gregarious ; pileus 
 6 in., becoming yellow-white, fleshy, convex, then expanded, 
 at first gibbous, then depressed, repand and sinuate at mar- 
 gin; stem solid, firm, stout, equal, compact, at first fibril- 
 lose, then smooth, naked, shining, white ; gills emarginate, 
 adnexed, broad, crowded, pale yellowish-rufescent. 
 
 In mixed woods. Odour strong, like burnt sugar. 
 Poisonous. Epping Forest. 
 
 456. A. (Entoloma) lividus, Bull. ; pileus 4 in., livid- 
 tan, becoming pale, fleshy, compact at disc, convex, then 
 plane, gibbous, dry, smooth, longitudinally fibrillose ; stem 
 somewhat hollow or stuffed, stout, equal, slightly striate, 
 pruinose at apex, rigid, shining white ; gills rounded, some- 
 what free, attenuated in front, whitish flesh-colour. 
 
 In woods. East Dereham. Epping Forest. Odour mealy. 
 Poisonous. 
 
 Var. roseus, Cke. ; pileus plane, smooth, polished, disc 
 rosy, margin whitish ; stem attenuated upwards. 
 
 On logs. 
 
84 OUTLINES OF imiTISIl FUNGOLOGV. 
 
 457. A. (Entoloma) prunuloides, Fr. (p. 143) ; 2 in. 
 Epping Forest. 
 
 458. A. (Entoloma) repandus, Bull. (p. 143) ; 1-2 in. 
 
 459. A. (Entoloma) placenta, Batsch (p. 143) ; H in. 
 
 460. A. (Entoloma) helodes, F)\ (p. 143) ; 2 in. 
 
 461. A. (Entoloma) bulbigenus, B. and Br. ; pileus 
 campanulate, obtusely umbonate^ rather fleshy, squamoso- 
 tomentose, pallid, shining-white, fragile; stem long, some- 
 what bulbous, solid at base, fibrillose, whitish ; gills ci'owded, 
 slightly adnexed, fleshy-red. 
 
 On the ground. 
 
 462. A. (Entoloma) Batschianus, Fr. ; pileus i-1^ in., 
 dark-fuscous, or fuliginous-black, viscid, shining when dry, 
 slightly fleshy and convex, at length depressed, smooth, 
 margin at first involute ; flesh same colour, white when 
 dry; stem thick, hollow, tough, fibrous, sub-equal, slightly 
 striate with ad pressed fibrils, grey; gills narrowed behind, 
 adnexed, plane, at first crowded, then distant, dingy whitish, 
 then fuliginous. 
 
 On the ground. Coed Coch. 
 
 463. A. (Entoloma) Bloxami, B. : 1 in. 
 
 464. A. (Entoloma) ardosiacus, Bvll. ; lo-2in. 
 
 465. A. (Entoloma) liquescens, Cke. ; pileus 2-2i in., 
 smooth, even, convex, then plane, broadly umbonate, 
 yellowish-ochre, disc reddish-brown, margin thin, flexuose, 
 stem erect, flexible, equal, white, hollow ; gills crowded, 
 free, white, then pale dirty-lilac. 
 
 On the ground, under trees. Resembling Hiatula in being 
 deliquescent like Coprinus. 
 
 466. A. (Entoloma) ameides, B. and Br. ; pileus 1-2| in., 
 pale reddish-grey, irregular, broadly campanulate, thin, 
 gibbous, polished in centre ; margin white flocculent, at 
 
AGARICINI. 85 
 
 length smooth, silky-shining, undulated ; stem stuffed, 
 compressed, white-villous at base, striate and fibrillose 
 upwards, fiocculent at apex ; gills distant, adnexed, wrinkled. 
 In pastures. Bodelwyddan. Becoming reddish when 
 dry. 
 
 II. Leptonidei. — Iiidiniiig to Le-ptonia. 
 Plletis dry, flocculose, someichat scaly. 
 
 457. A. (Entoloma) Saundersii, Fr. ; pileus 2-3 in., 
 white, becoming fuscous when old, fleshy, campanulate, 
 then expanded, obtuse, repaudo-lobed, adpressedly tomentose, 
 not hygrophanous ; stem solid, equal, silky-flbrous, white; 
 gills slightly adnexed, broad, distant, reddish. 
 
 On naked ground and river sand. Rare. Epping Forest. 
 
 468. A. (Entoloma) fertilis, jB. (p. 142) ; 6 in. 
 
 469. A. (Entoloma) jubatus, Fr. ; growing in clusters ; 
 pileus 1-2 in., mouse-colour, somewhat fleshy, campanulate, 
 then expanded and flattened, umbonate, floccoso-scaly and 
 fibrillose ; flesh thin, same colour as pileus ; stem fleshy- 
 fibrous, rigid, fragile, hollow, equal, becoming fuscous, 
 clothed with fuliginous fibrils ; gills adnexed, somewhat 
 emarginate, easily separating, crowded, ventricose, at first 
 fuliginous, then purple-fuliginous. 
 
 In old pastures and mossy places. Uncommon. Epping 
 Forest. 
 
 470. A. (Entoloma) resutus, Fr. ; pileus 1 in., becoming 
 fuscous, disc darker, slightly fleshy, convex, obtuse, floccoso- 
 scaly, sometimes with darker adpressed scales, or becoming 
 even, longitudinally fibrillose ; stem fibrous, soft, stuffed, 
 at length hollow, equal, polished, smooth, slightly striate, 
 somewhat grey ; gills adnexed, ventricose, reddish, almost 
 free, plane, crowded, thick, grey, at first darker. 
 
86 OUTLINES OF UKITISJI l'UNC;OLOGV. 
 
 In old pasture. Glamis. 
 
 t71. A. (Entoloma) griseo-cyaneus, Fr. ; pileus 1 in., 
 white, grey, or inclining to blue, slightly fleshy, campanu- 
 late, then convex, obtuse, floccoso-scaly ; stem fibrous, 
 hollow, externally floccoso-fibrillose, pallid, then becoming 
 azure-blue, sometimes white ; gills adnexed, separating free, 
 veutricose, whitish, then flesh-colour. 
 
 In pastures and open woods. Rare. 
 
 A. frumentaceus, Bull. (p. 144). This is a Tricholoma. 
 See No. 85. 
 
 472. A. (Entoloma) sericellus, Fr. (p. 144); \ in. Epping 
 Forest. 
 
 473. A. (Entoloma) Thompson!, B. and Br. ; pileus 
 \^-2 in., grey-tomentose, plane, with raised radiating ribs 
 which form reticulations in centre ; stem fibrillose, tomen- 
 tose, paler than the pileus ; gills broad, flesh-colour. 
 
 Among grass in plantation. West Farleigh. 
 
 III. NoLANiDEi. — Inclininy to Nolanea. 
 
 PileitiS thin,Jor viost part scissile, hygro-phcinous, smooth, silky 
 lohen dry, commonly irregular, pileus repand. 
 
 474. A. (Entoloma) clypeatus, L. : 3 in. 
 
 475. A. (Entoloma) rhodopolius, Fr. ; 2-5 in. 
 
 476. A. (Entoloma) majalis, Fr. ; esrspitose; pileus li- 
 2i in., somewhat cinnamon, ochraceous, pale yellow when 
 dry, fleshy-membranaceous, campanulatc, then convex, 
 somewhat umbonate, fragile, smooth, even, margin repand, 
 rimoso-incised ; stem slender, fistulose, compressed, twisted, 
 striate, somewhat fibrillose, whitish, slightly thickened at 
 the base, white-tomentosc ; gills free, ventrieose, crowded, 
 crenate, pallid, flesh-colour, 
 
 In meadows and open woods. Rare, April to May. 
 
AGARICINI. 87 
 
 477. A. (Entoloma) Wynnei, B. and Br. ; pileus 2-3 in., 
 fuliginous, at first plaue, velvety, convex, squaniulose ; 
 margin striate, often undulated ; stem fuliginous azure- 
 biue, compressed, cottony at base ; gills broad, transversely 
 ribbed, pallid, creuulate at margin. 
 
 In fir woods. Coed Cocb. Odour of bugs. 
 
 478. A. (Entoloma) costatus, Fr. (p. 145) ; 2-3 in. 
 
 479. A. (Entoloma) sericius, Bull. (p. 145) ; 1 in. 
 Epping Forest. 
 
 480. A. (Entoloma) Persoonianus, Phil, and Plow, ; 
 pileus 2 in, shining white, then pale, somewhat fleshy, very 
 fragile, convex, obtusely umbonate, silky-shining ; stem 
 long, bulbous, and solid at base, otherwise hollow, thin, 
 piloso-squamulose ; gills adnexed, crowded, obovate, red- 
 flesh-colour ; darker at maturity. 
 
 On the ground ; in grassy places. East Dereham. 
 
 481. A. (Entoloma) nidorosus, Fr. (p. 145); 3 in. 
 
 482. A. (Entoloma) specultim, Fr. ; somewhat caespi- 
 tose ; pileus straw-white, silvery, hygrophanous, almost 
 membranaceous, pellucid, convex, then flattened and de- 
 pressed, disc obsoletely umbonate, smooth ; margin thin, 
 bent inwards, flexuose, striate ; stem fistulose, smooth, 
 round, then compressed, shining ; gills adnexed, broadly 
 emarginate, ventricose, flaccid, white, then flesh-colour, 
 edge entire, becoming fuscous. 
 
 On the ground, among grass. Coed Coch. 
 
88 OUTLINES OF HKITISPI FUNGOLOGY. 
 
 Subgenus 17. Clitopilus (p. 145). — Clitopilus corresponds 
 with Clitocybe, spores rosy, not white. 
 
 I. Orcelli. — Gills deeply decurrent, jnleus irregular, somewhat 
 eccentric, Jlexuose, scarcely hygrophanous, margin at first 
 
 fioccidose. 
 
 483. A. (Clitopilus) prunulus, Scop. (p. 145) ; 2-4 in. 
 Epping Forest. 
 
 484. A. (Clitopilus) Orcella, Jia//. ; growing iu troops ; 
 pileus becoming yellow-white, fleshy, solt, piano-depressed, 
 at first irregular, slightly silky, somewhat viscid when 
 moist; stem curt, solid, Hocculose, thickened upwards; gills 
 crowded, whitish flesh-colour. 
 
 On open grassy ground. Frequent. Epping Forest. 
 Commonly smaller and thinner than A. j)rwiulus ; pileus 
 undulato-lobed, often spotted and zoned ; flesh softer and 
 unchangeable; gills more crowded. Edible. 
 
 485. A. (Clitopilus) mundulus, Fr. ; pileus 2 in., be- 
 coming pale-white, thin, spotted, cinereous, at length black, 
 fleshy, thin, at first convex, gibbous, with an involute mar- 
 gin, floccoso-soft, soon flattened and depressed, unequal, 
 repand, often excentric, even or rivulose; flesh soft, but 
 tough, white ; stem stuft'ed, equal, floccoso-villous, then 
 smooth, white villous at base, at length black internally ; 
 gills crowded, narrow, thin, pallid. 
 
 In woods, among leaves. Uncommon. 
 
 486 A. (Clitopilus) popinalis, Fr. ; pileus 1-2 in., 
 cinereous, mottled with guttate spots, slightly fleshy, 
 flaccid, convex, then depressed, somewhat repand, smooth, 
 opaque ; flesh whitish-grey, unchangeable ; stem stuft'ed, 
 equal, flexuose, naked, paler than the pileus ; gills broader 
 than flesh of pileus, lanceolate, crowded, dark grey, at 
 length reddish. 
 
AtlARICINI. 89 
 
 Oil downs. Worthing. 
 
 487. A. (Clitopilus) undatus, Fr. ; pileus 1^ in., fuligi- 
 nous-cinereous, becoming pale, not hygrophanous, slightly 
 silky-opaque when dry, fragile, umbilicate, sometimes in- 
 fundibuliform, unequal, undulated ; stem often very short, 
 fibrous, hollow, unequal, compressed, attenuated at base 
 and covered downwards with whitish pubescence ; gills not 
 crowded, thin, entire, dark, cinereous. 
 
 On open downs. Batheaston. 
 
 488. A. (Clitopilus) cancrinus, Fr. ; pileus 1 in., whitish 
 tan or white, not hygrophanous, somewhat membranaceous, 
 at first convex with involute margin, then plane, irregular, 
 at length cracked, smooth, no cuticle, becoming floccoso- 
 even, flesh white, hyaline at gills ; stem curt, white, stuft'ed, 
 or fistulose, round or compressed, equal or thicker at apex, 
 smooth ; gills distant, rather thick, arcuate, then straight, 
 white, then flesh-colour. 
 
 Grass flelds. Apethorpe. 
 
 489. A. (Clitopilus) cretatus, B. and Br. ; pileus ^| in. 
 dead white, shining membranaceous, convex then umbilicate. 
 margin involute ; stem short, often curved and thickened at 
 base, tomentose, especially below, white ; gills narrow, rose- 
 colour. 
 
 On naked soil in woods and pastures. Uncommon. 
 
 II. Sericelli. — Pileus reyular, silhj or hygrojohanous-silkij, 
 margin involute ; gills adnate, slightly decurrent. 
 
 490. A. (Clitopilus) carneo-albus, With. ; pileus 1 in., 
 white, somewhat fleshy, convexo-plane, orbicular, even, 
 slightly silky, somewhat disc- shaped ; disc at length 
 depressed, rufescent ; stem white, unequal, fibroso-striate ; 
 gills thin, somewhat distant, white, then flesh colour. 
 
90 OUTLINES OF BinTLSlI FUNCJOLOGV. 
 
 lu heathy places. Rare. Epping Forest. 
 
 491. A. (Clitopilus) vilis, Fr. ; pileus 1 in., grey, some- 
 what membranaceous, convex, umbilicate, soft, when dry 
 silky-fibrillose, opaque ; stem fistulose, equal, somewhat 
 tough, but fibroso-fissile, same colour as pileus, fibrilloso- 
 striate ; white-villous at base ; gills plano-decurrent or 
 adnate with a decurrent tooth, nearly triangular, crowded, 
 almost extending beyond margin of pileus, Mhitish. 
 
 In pine woods. Among moss, etc. Leigh Down. 
 
 492. A. (Clitopilus) stilbo-cephalus, B. and Br. ; pileus 
 campanulate, obtuse, sometimes umbonate, hygrophanous, 
 when dry whitish, somewhat silky, sparkling, margin 
 straight; stem hollow, somewhat equal, undulato-fibrous, 
 silky ; gills broad, adnate, sometimes emarginate behind, 
 veined. 
 
 Ascot. 
 
 493. A. (Clitopilus) straminipes, Mass. : pileus 1-2 in., 
 thin, membranaceous, fragile, convex then expanded and 
 depressed, whitish, even, rather shining ; stem equal, hollow, 
 smooth, often compressed, straw-colour below, sprinkled 
 with white meal above ; gills scarcely crowded, shortly 
 decurrent, whitish then rosy. 
 
 On the ground. Carlisle. 
 
 Hubgenus l.s. — Lei'TONIa (p. 14(>). 
 
 Leptonia corresponds with Collybia, spores rosy, not white. 
 
 * Gills ivhitish, pileus slightli/ jleshy, icithouf stricK, not 
 hygrophanous. 
 
 494. A. (Leptonia) placidus, Fr. ; pileus 1 in. fleshy-mem- 
 branaceous, campanulate, then convex, obtuse, disc villous 
 and blackish, otherwise squamulose on a cinereous-whitish 
 
AGAKICINI. 91 
 
 ground with fuliginous-black fibrils, or at first flocculose, 
 becoming grey azure-blue, then with concentric scales on a 
 white ground; stem stuffed, equal, rigid, white-pruinose and 
 minutely black dotted at the somewhat thickened apex, 
 dark azure-blue or black-blue ; gills annexed, broad behind, 
 crowded, whitish, edge same colour. 
 On beech trunks. Downton. 
 
 495. A. (Leptonia) lappula, Fr. ; pileus 1-1^ in. grey, 
 fleshy, hemispherical, convex o-plane, umbilicate, at first 
 flocculoso-soft, then roughish with short erect black fibrils 
 crowded towards centre ; stem fistulose, equal, tough, 
 minutely striate and black-dotted upwards, fuscous-lilac 
 or dark purple, white-villous at base ; gills at first adnate 
 with a small tooth then separating, plane, broad, ovate, 
 crowded, distinct, white-grey. 
 
 Amongst beech leaves. Forres. 
 
 A. (Leptonia) lampropus, Fr. (p. 146). 
 
 496. A. (Leptonia) sethiops, Fr. ; pileus ^—1 in. black 
 then fuliginous, slightly fleshy, piano-depressed, streaked 
 with fibrils, smooth, shining; stem slender, stuffed, smooth, 
 fuscous-blackish, black-dotted upwards ; gills adnexed or 
 adnate, sometimes linear, ventricose, whitish, edge same 
 colour and entire. 
 
 Grassy places in woods. Killiu. 
 
 497. A. (Leptonia) solstitialis, Fr. ; pileus fuscous, 
 slightly fleshy, depressed, papillate in centre, slightly 
 wrinkled, obsoletely innato-fibrillose ; stem somewhat 
 fistulo&e, smooth, smoke colour ; gills emarginate, broad, 
 whitish, same colour at edge. 
 
 Among stones and on grassy ground. Loch Kiuord, etc. 
 
92 OUTLINES OF BRITISH FUKGOLOGY. 
 
 ** Gills at first azure-hhije or slujlitlij dark blue. 
 
 4.98. A. (Leptonia) serrulatus, P. (p. 146), 
 
 499. A. (Leptonia) euchrous, P. (p. 146) ; 1 iu. 
 
 500. A. (Leptonia) chalybseus, P. (p. 147) ; 1 in. 
 
 501. A. (Leptonia) lazulinus, Fr. ; gregarious; pileus 
 1-1 2 in., black-fuliginous, somewhat membranaceous, cam- 
 pauulate, then expanded and obtuse, striate, at first smooth, 
 then obsoletely umbilicate and rimoso-squamulose, fragile ; 
 stem cartilaginous, fistulose, smooth, even, dark blue, white- 
 ■woolly at base ; gills adnate, separating, pallid deep blue, 
 equally attenuated from stem to margin of pileus, edge 
 same colour. 
 
 On the ground, among graso. 
 
 ***■ Gills 2}allid, becoming blue, ijelloio, or green. 
 
 502. A. (Leptonia) incanus, Fr. (p. 147). 
 
 503. A. (Leptonia) formosus, Fr. ; pileus 1 in., yellow 
 wax-colour, sprinkled with minute fuscous squamules or 
 fibrils, somewhat membranaceous, slightly tough, convex, 
 then plane, umbilicate, striate ; stem cartilaginous, some- 
 what fistulose, internally stuffed with soft white flocci, 
 equal, even, smooth, shining, yellow ; gills adnate, with a 
 decurrent tooih, somewhat distant, light yellow-pallid, then 
 flesh-colour, edge entire, same colour. 
 
 Among Eqaisetuni. Scarborough. 
 
 Var. suavis, Lasdi ; stem becoming bluish. 
 
 Among Equisetwn. 
 
 504. A. (Leptonia) chloropolius, Fr. ; pileus 1 in., 
 livid, blacU-squamulosc in centre, membranaceous, convex, 
 then flattened ; margin at first iuflexed, striate ; stem fistu- 
 
AGARICINI. \)6 
 
 lose^ slightly firm, rigid, smooth, l)luish-grey-green ; gills 
 adnate, whitish, edge same colour. 
 In grassy places. Cabalva. 
 
 **** Gills (jre// or glaucous, lii/groj^hanous, jjileits somewhat striate. 
 
 505. A. (Leptonia) asperellus, Fr. (p. 147); 1-H in. 
 
 506. A. (Leptonia) nefrens, Fr. ; pileus 1-2 in., hygro- 
 phanous, fuliginous, then livid-grey, membranaceous, cam- 
 panulate, then flattened, somewhat undulated, striate, obso- 
 letely fibrillose, with a deep darker umbilicus, at length 
 infundibuliform ; stem fistulose, fragile, equal, smooth, 
 somewhat naked, fuscous-livid ; gills adnexed, separating, 
 broad, pallid grey, edge slightly black, entire. 
 
 In grassy places. A.scot. 
 
 Subgenus I 'J. — ISTolanea. 
 
 Nolanea corresponds with Mycena, spores rosy, not white. 
 
 * Gills grey or fuscous. Pileus darh-coloured,hygrophanous. 
 
 507. A. (Nolanea) pascuus, P. (p. 147) ; 1-3 in. 
 Epping Forest. 
 
 508. A. (Nolanea) Babingtonii, Blox. (p. 148) ; \ in. 
 
 509. A. (Nolanea) mammosus, Fr. ; pileus umber or 
 fuliginous, then dull silky, hygrophanous, membranaceous, 
 conico-campanulate, papillate, rarely obtuse, striate, smooth ; 
 stem rigid, fistulose, cartilaginous, tense, straight, slightly 
 thickened and white-mealy at apex, otherwise polished, even 
 or compressed, smooth, fuliginous-livid ; gills adnexed, 
 sepa rating-free, ventricose, slightly distant, grey, then hoary 
 or pure rose-colour. 
 
 On lawns. Coed Coch. 
 
 510. A. (Nolanea) junceus, Fr.; pileus 1 in., fuliginous. 
 
94 OUTLINES OF BRITISH FUXGOLOOY. 
 
 then livid, hygrophanous, membranaceous, conical, then 
 campanuiate, obtuse or umbilicate, somewhat squamulose 
 at disc, striate ; stem cartilaginous, fistulose, slender, equal, 
 round or compressed, even, smooth, fuscous, livid-fuscous ; 
 gills ascending, adnexed, separating, somewhat distant, 
 oblong, grey. 
 
 In woods. Carnarvonshire. 
 
 oil. A. (Nolanea) fulvo-strigosus, B. and Br. ; pileus 
 1^ in., grey, conical, slightl}' wrinkled ; stem furfuraceo- 
 squamulose, clothed at base with rigid red hairs, tinted with 
 same colour above ; gills adnate, grey. 
 
 On the ground. East Farleigh. 
 
 ** Gills hecomin;/ ijellow, or rufescent. 
 
 512. A. (Nolanea) pisciodorus, Ces. ; pileus j— li in., 
 tawny-cinnamon, somewhat membranaceous, conical, cam- 
 panuiate, then convex, obtusely umbouate, velvety soft ; 
 stem somewhat fistulose, tough, very thinly pruinate, chest- 
 nut-brown, then black, ])aler at apex, velvety ; gills slightly 
 adnexed, pale yellowish, then flesh-colour, at length slightly 
 tawny. 
 
 Among chips and decayed leaves. Odour of rotten fish. 
 Epping Forest. 
 
 513. A. (Nolanea) nigripes, Troy. ; pileus 1 -^ in., sub- 
 membranaceous, conical, then campanidate, obtuse, without 
 striae, sprinkled with paler flocci, fuscous ; stem fistulose, 
 twisted, smooth, black ; gills nearly free, thin, ventricose, 
 yellow flesh-colour. 
 
 Amongst moss in swamp. Watford. Odour of putrid 
 fish. 
 
 514. A. (Nolanea) rufo-carneus, B. (p. 148); 1 in. 
 
 515. A. (Nolanea) icterinus, Fr. ; pileus -V-1 in., light 
 
AGARICINI. 95 
 
 yellow-green or yellowish-honey-colour, then pale, hygro- 
 phanous, somewhat membranaceous, sometimes slightly 
 floccose or fuscous -squamulose, slightly firm, campanulate, 
 then convex or wholly reflexed, pellucid, striate, smooth, 
 opaque, then slightly silky ; stem stuffed, rigid, more or 
 less mealy, same colour as pileus, or fuscous ; gills adnexed, 
 separating, ventricose, distant, pallid, saffron-yellow. 
 In woods and gardens. 
 
 *** Gills shining ir/iite, then rosy^ hjjgrophanous. 
 
 516. A. (Nolanea) pieeus, Kalch. : pileus black, umber 
 when dry, somewhat membranaceous, conical, then cam- 
 panulate, papillate, smooth ; stem tistulose, somewhat 
 tough, short, even, pruinose, same colour as pileus ; gills 
 emarginate, decurrent, with a small tooth, ventricose, some- 
 what distant, white, then flesh-colour. 
 
 In grassy places. Odour of cucumber or fishy. 
 This is possibly a form of A. pisciodoriis, and both may 
 be the same with A. cucumis. 
 
 517. A. (Nolanea) infula, Fr. : pileus \-\h in., fawn, 
 fuliginous, then dull livid, shining, membranaceous, pliant, 
 conical, or campanulate, often repand and irregular, centre 
 at length depressed, polished ; stem somewhat fistulose, 
 cartilaginous, very tough, striate, polished, naked, same 
 colour as pileus, pubescent, with mycelium at base ; gills 
 adnexed, separating-free, thin, narrow, crowded, shining- 
 white. 
 
 On lawns. 
 
 Var. versiformis; pileus \ in., densely striate, umbonate, 
 papillate, sometimes infundibuliform. 
 On burnt ground. 
 
96 OUTLINES OF HUITISH FUNGOLOGY. 
 
 **** Grills whitish, pileus not hyyroplianous. 
 
 518. A. (Nolanea) verecundus, Fr. ; deusely gregarious ; 
 pileus watery, reddish, pallid, somewhat membranaceous, 
 slightly fleshy at disc, at first umbonate, then obtuse, obso- 
 letely pellucid, striate to the middle, smooth, slightly silky 
 towards the flocculose margin ; stem slightly firm, somewhat 
 fistulose, cartilaginous, not rigid, easily splitting into fibrils, 
 becoming pale, mealy at apex ; gills adnate, separating, 
 rather thick, distant, ventricose, segmental, whitish, watery. 
 
 Among short grass. 
 
 519. A. (Nolanea) coelestinus, Fr. ; pileus iHn., dark 
 azure-blue, streaked, not hygrophanous, campanulate, then 
 convex, obtuse, the rugged disc darker or blackish, striate, 
 lax ; stem somewhat fistulose, atteimated upwards, white- 
 pruinate at apex, otherwise smooth, azure- blue-black ; gills 
 adnate, ventricose, broad, hoary-white, edge same colour. 
 
 On old trunks. On wood. Stoke Pogis. 
 
 520. A. (Nolanea) rubidus, B. (p. 148) ; J in. 
 
 Subgenus 20. Ecctlia.^ — Pileus membranaceous, at first infliexed 
 stem cartilaginous, hollow or stufled ; gills attenuated behind, 
 decurrent not separating from stem. 
 
 Ecc'din cori'esponds witli Oinphalia ; spores rosy, not white. 
 
 521. A. (Eccilia) Parkensis, Fr. ; pileus 1 in., fuscous, 
 then blackish, not hygrophanous, membranaceous, plano- 
 convex, umbilicatc, smooth, slightly striate to middle ; stem 
 fistulose, attenuated downwards, smooth, fuscous ; gills 
 decurrent, ci'owdec], distant, linear, whitish, then becoming 
 dingy flesh-colour. 
 
 In grassy places. Hatheaston. 
 
 522. A. (Eccilia) carneo-griseus, B. and Br. ; pileus 
 1 in., grey-desh-colour, umbilicatc, striate, delicately dotted. 
 
AGAPJCINI. 97 
 
 margin slightly glittering witli dark particles ; stem slender, 
 fibrous-hollow, same colour as pileus, shining, white- tomeu- 
 tose at base; gills adnato-decurrent, somewhat undulated, 
 distant, rosy, the irregular margin darker. 
 Among fir leaves, Aboyne. 
 
 523. A. (Eccilia) griseo-rubellus, Lasch ; pileus 1 in,, 
 hygrophanous, umber or fuscous, then grey, membranaceous, 
 umbilicate, at first convex at circumference, then plane, 
 striate ; stem fistulose, equal, smooth, same colour as, or 
 paler than pileus ; gills decurrent, somewhat distant, grey, 
 then flesh-colour. 
 
 In pine woods. On the ground. Sibbertoft. 
 
 524. A. (Eccilia) atrides, Lasch ; pileus black, fuscous, 
 then pale, black-streaked, somewhat membranaceous, plane, 
 umbilicate, striate ; stem somewhat fistulose, pallid, black- 
 dotted upwards ; gills decurrent, whitish, attenuated behind, 
 somewhat crowded, the black edge slightly toothed. 
 
 In moist woods. On the ground. Hereford. Perhaps 
 a form of A. serrulatus. 
 
 525. A. (Eccilia) atro-punctus, P, ; gregarious ; pileus 
 pale cinereous, somewhat fleshy, soft, hemispherical ; stem 
 somewhat tough, pallid, shining with black punctiform 
 squamules ; gills decurrent, arcuate, distant, alternate, 
 cinereous flesh-colour. 
 
 On the ground. Diumore. 
 
 526. A. (Eccilia) nigrella, P. ; somewhat tufted ; pileus 
 becoming blackish, umbilicate, smooth; stem short, glaucous; 
 gills flesh-colour, then somewhat cinereous. 
 
 In pastures, Perth, 
 
 527. A. (Eccilia) rhodocylix, Lasch ; pileus h in,, some- 
 what fuscous, then grey, hygrophanous, membranaceous, 
 infundibuliform ; margin reflexed, remotely striate, then 
 
98 OUTLINES OF BRITISH FUNGOLOGY. 
 
 Hocculose ; stem stuffed, thickened upwards, tough, smooth, 
 cinereous ; gills decurrent, distant, broad, few, whitish, then 
 flesh-colour. 
 
 On rotten wood. On tops of walls. Lincoln. 
 
 528. A. (Eccilia) floseulus, S?n. ; pileus submembrana- 
 ceous, pruinoso-crystalline, umbilicate, somewhat irregular, 
 black-brown, then white ; stem pruinose or innato-fibril- 
 lose, cartilaginous, with a fleshy pith, attenuated down- 
 wards; gills decurrent, somewhat waved, thick, pink. 
 
 On the ground at the foot of, and upon the stems of 
 tree ferns. 
 
 529. A. (Eccilia) acus, Sm. ; pileus submembranaceous, 
 umbilicate, densely pruinose, white ; margin striate and 
 incurved ; gills thick, distant, deeply decurrent, pink ; stem 
 cartilaginous, smooth. 
 
 Among germinating coffee seeds, in cocoa-nut fibre. 
 Odour strong. 
 
 Subgenus 21. Claudopus. — Pileus excentric, lateral or 
 
 resupinate. 
 
 Claudopus corresponds with Pleurotus, spores rosy not white. 
 
 The British species removed from Crepidotus. 
 
 530. A. (Claudopus) variabilis, P. (p. IGl). Epping 
 Forest. 
 
 531. A. (Claudopus) depluens, Batscli (p. IGl). 
 
 532. A. (Claudopus) byssisedus, 7-*. (p. 1G4). 
 
99 
 
 Series 3. — Dermini (p. 149). 
 
 Subgenus 22. Acetabularia. — Universal veil distinct from 
 
 pileus ; hymenophore distinct ; gills free. 
 
 Acetabularia, corresponds with Amanita and Volvaria, 
 
 spores brown, not white or rosy. 
 
 533. A. (Acetabularia) acetabulosus, Sow. ; pileus 1 in., 
 light brown, convex, striate or rimose, especially at margin ; 
 stem long, white, equal, hollow ; volva nearly white ; gills 
 free, narrow, hispid, light brown, glandular. 
 
 Bank of Thames, near high-water mark. Millbank. 
 
 Subgenus 2:1. Togaria. — Pileus squamulose, floccose, fibrillose or 
 plane ; stem furnished with a ring ; gills free, adfixed or adnate . 
 
 Togaria corresponds with Lepiota, spores brown, not white. 
 As in Lepiota, the species are noinnally terrestrial. 
 
 * E UDERMINI. — Spores ferrvAjinous. 
 
 534. A. (Togaria) aureus, Matt. ; wholly golden tawny ; 
 pileus 6 in., fleshy, convex, obtuse, soft, velvety, then hairv- 
 squamulose; flesh thin, soft,. white, at length yellow; stem 
 solid, equal, smooth, pale, naked above ring, apex flocculose, 
 near ring ferruginous scurfy ; ring distant, medial or infe- 
 rior, erect, spreading, generally wide, laciniate, flocculose ; 
 gills adnexed, then free, ventricose, crowded, connected by 
 veins, pallid-ferruginous. 
 
 On the ground. Dumfries. Perth. 
 
 Var. Vahlii, Schum. ; pileus even, smooth ; gills some- 
 what free. Dunkeld. Moncreiffe. 
 
 Var. Herefordiensis, Benni/ ; stem granulated and tuber- 
 culated. Herefordshire. 
 
100 OUTLINES OF BltlTISII FUXGOLOGY. 
 
 535. A. (Togaria) caperatus, P. ; pileus 3-5 in., yellow, 
 fleshy, ovate, tlieu expanded, obtuse, moist, or sub-viscid, eveu 
 at disc,lacunoso-wrinkled at sides, incrusted with white super- 
 ficial flocci ; stem solid, stout, cylindrical, base tuberous, 
 shining-white, squamulose above the membranaceous ring ; 
 gills adnate, crowded, thin, somewhat serrated, clay -cinnamon. 
 
 In woods. Uncommon. 
 
 536. A. (Togaria) terrigenus, Fr. ; pileus 1 \-3 in., dingy 
 yellow, fleshy, compact, convex, then flattened, adpressedly 
 silky with fibrils, fibrilloso-scaly towards margin ; flesh 
 yellow ; stem fleshy, fibrous, stufied or hollow, sub- equal, 
 dingy yellow, warty-squarrose and fibrillose ; gills adnate, 
 with a decurrent tooth, not sinuate, pallid light yellow, then 
 olivaceous-ferruginous. 
 
 Damp ground, chiefly in woods. On old earthy stumps. 
 Kenmore. Epping Forest. 
 
 537. A. (Togaria) erebius, Fr. : gregarious; pileus 2 in., 
 livid or ferruginous-livid, then ochraceous-clay, slightly 
 fleshy, convex, then flattened, smooth, almost viscid, hygro- 
 phanous, striate at margin when dry, fragile ; stem hollow, 
 smooth, somewhat striate, pale ; ring superior, apical, 
 sulcate, white ; gills adnate, somewhat distant, pallid, then 
 dingy cinnamon. 
 
 In grassy places in woods. On soil, under beeches. 
 
 538. A. (Togaria) ombrophilus, Fr. : gregarious ; pale 
 ferruginous; pileus 3 in., fleshy, convex then plane, gibbous, 
 partially repand, smooth, almost viscid, hygropbanous, striate 
 at margin when moist ; flesh thin, soft, white when dry ; 
 stem hollow, somewhat fragile, equal, obsolctely fibrillose or 
 slightly striate, pallid ; ring distant, entire, reflexed, mem- 
 branaceous, white ; gills adfixed, vcntricose, at length sepa- 
 rating, almost free, crowded, pallid then w^atery ferruginous. 
 
AGAEICmi. 101 
 
 In grassy places after heavy rains. On the ground. 
 Coed Coch. 
 
 539. A. (Togaria) molliscorium, Che. ^' Mass. ; pileus 
 \l-o in.j fleshy, convex, smooth, soft like kid leather, tawny 
 yellow ; disc darker, dry, shining, margin acute, thin ; stem 
 equal, paler, fistulose, silky, punctately squamulose at apex ; 
 ring broad, distant, brownish, deciduous ; flesh yellow ; gills 
 narrowly adnate, ventricose, crowded, thin. 
 
 On the ground. Carlisle. 
 
 540. A. (Togaria) togularis, Bull. ; growing in troops ; 
 pileus IJ in., pallid ochraceous, fleshy, soft, campanulate, 
 then expanded, obtuse, orbicular, smooth; flesh thin, soft, 
 yellow ; stem fistulose, rigid, equal, cylindrical, fibrilloso-stri- 
 gose, naked, yellow at apex, fuscous downwards ; ring-medial, 
 entire, spreading-reflexed ; gills adnato-separating, ventricose, 
 crowded, narrowed in front, yellow, at length ferruginous. 
 
 In grassy places. In a wood among chips. Rare. 
 = A. mesodactylus, B. and Br. 
 
 ** Phaeoti. — Spores fuscous-ferruginous. 
 
 541. A. (Togaria) durus, Bolt. (p. 149) ; 3 in. 
 
 542. A. (Togaria) prsecox, P. (p. 149) ; 3 in. Epping 
 Forest. 
 
 Subgenus 24. Pluteolus. — Pileus slightly fleshy, viscid, conical 
 or campanulate, then expanded, margin at first ■■ - i-+ 
 adpressed to the stem ; stem somewhat cartilaginous, 
 separate from the hymenophore ; giUs rounded-free. 
 
 Pluteolus corresponds with Hiatula and Pluteus ; spores 
 brown, not white or rosy. 
 
 543. A. (Pluteolus) reticulatus, P. (p. 162) ; 2 in. 
 Removed from Galera. 
 
102 OUTLIXKS OF 15HITI8H FUNGOLOGY. 
 
 544, A. (Pluteolus) aleuriatus, Fr. ; pileus i-1 iu., 
 bluish-grey, livid, rose-colour, somewhat membranaceous, 
 conical, then couvcxo-planc, viscous, striate ; stem fistulose, 
 incurved pulverulent, white ; gills free, ventricose, saffron- 
 ochraceous. 
 
 On rotten sticks. Coed Coch. 
 
 Subgenus 2.j. Pholiota (p. 149). — Pholiota agrees with Armil- 
 laria ; spores brown, not white. 
 
 A. Truncigeni. — On wood, mostly ca'spitose. 
 
 * JEoiERnmi.—l^ileus naked, not seedy, hut slightly rimoso- 
 rivvlose ; giUs j)(dlid, then rufescent, or fuscous. 
 
 545. A. Pholiota radicosus, Bull (p. 150); 3-5 in. 
 Epping Forest. 
 
 546. A. (Pholiota) pudicus, Bull. (p. 150) ; 2-4 in. 
 
 547. A. (Pholiota) leoehromus, Cke. ; ctespitose ; pileus 
 bright-tawny, whitish at margin, fleshy, convexo-plane, at 
 length depressed, soft, smooth, rivulose from cracking of 
 cuticle ; stem slender, solid, fibrous, internally amber-brown 
 at base, externally paler, white above, nearly equal, smooth, 
 shining ; ring persistent, tawny ; gills rounded, adnate, 
 slightly ventricose, pallid then cinnamon. 
 
 On old stumps, elm, etc. Ilighgate. Said to be edible. 
 
 548. A. (Pholiota) capistratus, Cke. ; subcsespitose ; 
 pileus 2-3 iu. livid, tawny, rather viscid when moist, whitish 
 when dry, fleshy, convex, margin involute and slightly 
 striate; stem thick, stufted, nearly equal, sub-squamulose ; 
 ring large, entire, spreading, persistent ; gills decurrent, 
 crowded, rather fleshy, pallid, growing darker. 
 
 On old stumps, elm, etc. Highgate. Said to be edible, 
 taste rather unpleasant. 
 
AGARICINI. 103 
 
 549. A. (Pholiota) segerita, Fr. ; cfespitose ; pileus 
 tawuy, becoming pale white towai'ds margin, fleshy, convex 
 then plane, rivulose_, slightly wrinkled ; flesh white, stea«. 
 stuffed, equal, white-silky, fibrillose ; ring superior, 
 swollen ; gills adnate, decurrent with a small tooth, 
 crowded, pallid, then fuscous. 
 
 On poplar trunks. On dead ash. King's Lynn. Odour 
 pleasant. 
 
 550. A. (Pholiota) iTixurians, Fr. ; csespitose ; pileus 
 yellowish- white then rufous- fuscous, fleshy, convexo- 
 gibbous, very irregular, then flattened, unequal, silky then 
 squamulose ; flesh white ; stem stuffed, rigid, somewhat 
 squamulose, white then fuscous ; ring apical, torn, 
 fugacious ; gills adnexed then decurrent, crowded, grey 
 flesh-colour then fuscous. 
 
 On oak and elm trunks. King's Lynn. 
 
 ** Squamosi. — Pileus scaly, not hygrophanoiis, gills changing 
 colour. 
 
 f Gills pallid, becoming Juscous, olivaceous, clay-coloured. 
 
 55L A. (Pholiota) comosus, Fr. (p. 150) ; 3 in. Epping 
 Forest. 
 
 552. A. (Pholiota) heteroclitus, Fr. ; pileus 2-3 in. 
 whitish or yellow, then tawny, compact and hard when 
 young, generally exceutric, hemispherical then flattened, 
 obtuse, sometimes even, commonly broken up into broad 
 scattered, innate, adpressed, spot-like, dark scales, sometimes 
 viscid ; flesh thick, firm, pallid ; stem thickened-bulbous, 
 bluntly rooting, thick, solid, hard, fibrillose, white, veiled at 
 apex, internally rhubarb-colour at base ; gills rounded 
 
104 OUTLINES OF BKITISH FUNGOLOGY. 
 
 behind, slightly adnexed, broad, plane, crowded, at first 
 pallid, then dirty ferruginous. 
 
 On trunks, birch, poplar. Bromley. 
 
 553. A. (Pholiota) aurivellus, Batsch (p. 150) ; 3-5iu. 
 
 554. A. (Pholiota) squarrosus, Mull. (p. 150); 3-5 in. 
 Epping Forest. 
 
 Var. Miilleri, Fr. ; pileus obtuse, moist, pallid, with 
 darker adpressed scales ; gills becoming tawny-fuscous ; 
 stem equal ; ring entire. 
 
 Epping Forest. 
 
 Var. A. verruculosus, Lasch ; pileus compact, obtuse, 
 yellow, with crowded cinnamon scales and pajnlhc ; stem 
 villous-scaly. 
 
 On trunks of maple. King's ClifFe. Epping Forest. 
 
 555. A. (Pholiota) subsquarrosus, Fr. ; somewhat ca3S- 
 pitose ; pileus 2 in., brown-ferruginous, with darker ad- 
 pressed floccose scales, fleshy, convex, obtuse or gibbous, 
 viscid; stem stuffed or hollow, equal, yellow-ferruginous, 
 clothed with darker adpressed scales ; furnished with an 
 annular zone at apex, becoming yellow-ferruginous within ; 
 gills sinuate, emarginate, almost free, arcuate, crowded, at 
 first pale, then dingy yellow. 
 
 On trunks and on the ground. On fir stump. Hereford. 
 
 ft Gills yellow, then pure forriujinous or taiony, not 
 Jiygrophanous. 
 
 556. A. (Pholiota) spectabilis, Fr. = A. aureus (p. 149) ; 
 casspitose; pileus 2-5 in., tawny or golden yellow, then 
 pale, shining, fleshy, compact, hemispherical, obtuse, dry, 
 torn into adpressed, innate, pilose squamules of same colour, 
 continued into veil at inflexed margin ; flesh thick, hard, 
 sulphur-yellow ; stem solid, hard, ventricose, base fusiform. 
 
AGARICLN-I. 105 
 
 sheathed with veil, smooth, shining or squamulose, sulphur" 
 yellow, mealy above the inferior, spreading, persistent, even 
 ring ; gills adnate, generally with a decurrent tooth, crowded, 
 narrow, at first yellow, then ferruginous. 
 
 On stumps. Frequent. Epping Forest. Taste, bitter- 
 aromatic. 
 
 557. A. (Pholiota) adiposus, Fr. (p. 151) ; 3-7 in, 
 Epping Forest. 
 
 558. A. (Pholiota) flammans, Fr. (p. 151) ; 2-4 in. 
 
 559. A. (Pholiota) Junonius, Fr. ; pileus 2 in., yellow, 
 fleshy, firm, convexo-plane, obtuse, dry, even, smooth ; flesh 
 compact pallid ; stem yellow, solid, equal, firm, incurved, 
 often excentric, even, mealy above ring; ring inferior 
 reflexed, entire ; gills adnate, crowded, broad, plane, yellow, 
 then ferruginous. 
 
 On trunks. Highgate, 
 
 560. A. (Pholiota) tuberciilosus, Sch(eff. ; pileus ^ in., 
 tawny yellow, compactly fleshy, convexo-plane, obtuse, 
 sometimes depressed, dry, smooth, or broken up into innate 
 broad adpressed scales ; flesh becoming yellow ; stem curt^ 
 bulbous, hollow, incurved, fibrillose, somewhat scaly, often 
 excentric, bright light yellow ; ring somewhat membrana- 
 ceous, reflexed, falling off"; gills emarginate, crowded, broad, 
 plane, light yellow, then tawny or spotted-ferruginous, edge 
 serrulated. 
 
 On trunks, chiefly birch. On sawdust. Coed Coch. 
 
 561. A. (Pholiota) curvipes, Fr. ; gregarious; pileus 
 H-2 in., tawny yellow, or orange, fleshy, thin, firm, tough, 
 convex, then expanded, obtuse, wholly innato-flocculose, 
 then torn into minute scales, dry ; stem fistulose, equal, 
 incurved, tough, fibrillose or delicately squamulose, light 
 yellow ; ring floccoso-radiate, soon vanishing ; gills adnate. 
 
106 OUTLINES OF BRITISH FUNGOLOriY. 
 
 crowded, light yellowish, pallid at sides, at length tawuy, 
 edge white, at length floccoso-crenate. 
 
 On sawdust and fallen trunks. Coed Coch. 
 
 562. A. (Pholiotaj cruentatus, Cke. and Sm. ; pileus 
 rather fleshy, convex, then expanded, torn into adpressed 
 floccose scales ; stem somewhat fistulose, thin, incurved, 
 fibrillose, yellow, as well as the floccose ring ; gills adnate, 
 broad, white, then yellowish, at length tawny. 
 
 On trunks. 
 
 *** Hygrophani. — Gills cinnamo)/, not at fast light yellovh 
 
 563. A. (Pholiota) paxillus, Fr. ; pileus 3-5 in., rather 
 compact, gibbously convex, then expanded, even, moist, 
 subrepand ; stem solid, long, stout, rather attenuated, 
 smooth ; ring narrow, spreading ; gills decurreut, crowded, 
 broad, cinnamon. 
 
 On trunks. 
 
 564. A. (Pholiota) dissimulans, B. and Br. ; pileus 1 in., 
 livid, becoming pale or whitish, campanulate, obtuse, scarcely 
 viscid, at length flattened, involute at margin ; stem fistu- 
 lose, with transverse dissepiments, thickened downwards, 
 shining white, cottony at base ; ring erect, generally per- 
 sistent ; gills sinuato-adnate, then decurrent, pallid clay 
 colour. 
 
 On sticks of hawthorn and sloe. Hothorpe. 
 
 565. A. (Pholiota) Cookei, Fr. ; pileus 2 in., dirty pale- 
 yellowish, fleshy, conical, then convex, viscid when moist, 
 sprinkled with darker adpressed scales ; stem solid, equal, 
 fibrillose, rufous-brown below; ring tender; gills adnate, 
 slightly vcntricose, at length brown. 
 
 In damp places among grass. Dinmore. 
 
 566. A. (Pholiota) subluteus, Fl. Dun.; pileus 3 in., 
 
AGAPJCIXI. 107 
 
 yellow, fleshy, thin, flattened, umbonate, squamulose, margin 
 striate when moist ; stem stufled, smooth, yellow, thickened 
 at base ; ring spreading ; gills decurrent, crowded, cinna- 
 mon. 
 
 On grassy ground. Faldonside. 
 
 567. A. (Pholiota) confragosus, Fr. ; pileus 1^ in., 
 brick-red or cinnamon -rufous, then tawny, slightly fleshy, 
 conveso-plaue, obtuse, densely flocculoso-furfuraceous ; 
 margin with or without strife ; stem fistulose, equal, flexuose, 
 wholly pale-ferruginous ; veil sheathed-fibrillose on stem ; 
 ring striate near apex, membranaceous, persistent ; gills 
 adnate, thin, crowded, rufous or cinnamon-rufous, edge 
 under lens unequal, crenulated. 
 
 On old fallen elm. Coed Coch. 
 
 568. A. (Pholiota) mutabilis, Schcejf. (p. 151) ; 2 in. 
 Epping Forest. 
 
 569. A. (Pholiota) marginatus, Batsch (p. 151) ; 1 in. 
 Epping Forest. 
 
 570. A. (Pholiota) mustelinus, Fr. ; pileus 2-3 in., 
 yellow, ochraceous, slightly fleshy, campanulate, convex, 
 smooth, dry; stem fistulose, even, pallid, white- mealy above 
 the superior reflexed ring, thickened and white-villous at 
 base; gills adnate, somewhat distant, tawny-cinnamon. 
 
 On stumps. Guildford. 
 
 571. A. (Pholiota) unicolor, Fl. Dan.; gregarious; 
 pileus ^ in., bay-brown, then ochraceous, fleshy, campanu- 
 late, then convex, somewhat umbonate, smooth, striate at 
 margin ; stem stuff"ed, then fistulose, equal, somewhat 
 smooth, same colour as pileus ; ring membranaceous, entire, 
 slight, persistent; gills slightly adnexed, ventricose, broad, 
 pallid-ochreous. 
 
 On trunks and branches, larch, etc. Hereford. 
 
108 OUTLINES OF BUITLSII FUXGOLOGY. 
 
 A. (Pholiota) Leveillianus, D. and M. (p. 152). 
 = A. (Toffaria) erebius. 
 
 C. MusciGENi. — llycjrophanous, stem ringed. Growing in 
 inossy places. 
 
 572. A. (Pholiota) pumilus, Fr. (p. 152) ; ^ in. 
 
 573. A. (Pholiota) mycenoides, Fr. (p. 152) ; \ iu. 
 
 Subgenus 20. Inocybe (p. 152). — Universal veil somewhat Hbril- 
 lose, conci-ete with the cuticle of pileus, often free at 
 margin in the form of a cortina ; gills somewhat sinuate, 
 adnata oi- decuirent, changing colour, but not cinnamon- 
 pulverulent. 
 
 Inocybe, with the next subgenus Hebeloma, corresponds with 
 Tricholoma and Entoloma, spores more or less fuscous- 
 ferruginous, not white or rosy. Inocybe would have been 
 better kept as a section of Hebeloma ; or subgenera 
 corresponding with Inocybe should have been established 
 amongst the white, rosy and purple-spored series of Agarics. 
 Fries' plan is here followed in deference to the author. 
 
 * Squarrosi. — Pileus at first squarrose, somewhat fuscous, stem 
 scaly of the same colour. 
 
 574. A. (Inocybe) hystrix, Fr. ; pileus 2-3 in , mouse- 
 colour, fleshy, firm, convex, then flattened, obtuse, orbicu- 
 lar, squarrose, with revolute, floccose scales ; flesh white ; 
 stem solid, firm, equal or attenuated downwards, fuscous 
 mouse-colour, densely squarrose as far as the annular zone, 
 above the zone even, pallid; gills aduate, crowded, linear, 
 whitish, then fuscous. 
 
 In beech woods. Heywood Forest, Herefordshire. 
 
 575. A. (Inocybe) reclinus, Fr. (p. 152) ; -^ in. 
 
 576. A. (Inocybe) calamistratus, Fr. ; pileus 1-2 in., 
 
AGAPJCIXI. 109 
 
 everywhere fuscous . aud squar rose-scaly, slightly fleshy, 
 campaaulate, obtuse ; margin at first bent inwards, often 
 repaud, then flattened ; flesh reddish ; stem solid, rigid, 
 tough, equal, rooting, fuscous, dark azure-blue at base, 
 squarrose ; gills adnexed, separating, crowded, broad, white, 
 then ferruginous, edge white, thick, serrate. 
 
 In ditches and waysides in woods. In fir woods. Rare. 
 
 577. A. (Inocybe) hirsutus, Lusch ; pileus h in., fuscous, 
 slightly fleshy, conical, then carapanulate, umbonate, acute, 
 squarrose, with fasciculato-pilose scales, then ochreous and 
 fibrillose towards the fringed margin ; stem solid, slender, 
 tough, fibrillose, floccoso-scaly at apex, thickened and dark 
 greenish at base ; gills adnexed, crowded, thin, narrow, 
 pallid, then fuscous, edge white, toothed. 
 
 In moist beech woods, etc. Rare. 
 
 578. A. (Inocybe) lanuginosus, Ball. (p. 153) ; 1 in. 
 
 579. A. (Inocybe) dulcamarus, A. and S. ; gregarious ; 
 pileus 1-iu., olivaceous-fuscous, slightly fleshy, campanulate, 
 convex, then expanded and umbonate, floccoso-scaly, silky 
 towards margin; flesh thin, yellow-white; stem somewhat 
 hollow, not rigid, equal, cortinato-fibrillose and adpressedly 
 squamulose, paler than pileus, mealy at apex ; gills arcuato- 
 ad fixed, ventricose, crowded, pallid, then olivaceous. 
 
 In fir plantations. On the ground in mixed wood. 
 Pass of Killiecrankie. 
 
 580. A. (inocybe) plumosus, Bolt. (p. 253); l-li in. 
 
 581. A. (Inocybe) cincinnatus, Fr. ; somewhat grega- 
 rious ; pileus ^-1 in, fuscous, slightly fleshy, convexo-plane, 
 obtusely umbonate, villoso-scaly ; flesh white ; stem solid, 
 tough, equal, straight, fibrilloso-scaly, fuscous-violaceous ; 
 gills adnexed or attenuated behind, separating, ventricose, 
 crowded, fuscous-violaceous. 
 
110 OUTLINES OF BRITISH FUNGOLOGY. 
 
 In woods. Beech woods. Coed Cocli. 
 
 582. A. (Inocybe) hsemaetus, B. and Cke. ; pileus 1 in., 
 umber, fleshy, compact, obtuse, campanulate, floccosely 
 fibrillose, disc subsquamulose, darker ; stem solid, smooth, 
 scarcely fibrillose, whitish above, verdigris-green at base, 
 nearly equal ; gills adnate, pallid, then clay-colour ; fiesh 
 everywhere turning blood-red when touched or broken. 
 
 On lawn. 
 
 583. A. (Inocybe) fasciatus, Ckc. and Mass. ; csespi- 
 tose; pileus 2-3 in., tawny rufous, at disc silky, clad with 
 minute darker squarrose scales ; flesh thin ; stem slender, 
 equal, or a little attenuated below, fibrillose, solid, reddish 
 within and without at the base, pallid above ; gills crowded, 
 attenuated in front, rounded behind or slightly sinuate, thin, 
 soft, pallid. 
 
 On the ground. Kew. 
 
 II. Laceri. — Pileus torn into scales or fibres, stem coloured, 
 jxder than jydeiis, fibrillose. 
 
 584. A. (Inocybe) pyriodorus, P. (p. 153) ; 2-3 in. 
 Epping Forest. 
 
 585. A. (Inocybe) incarnatus, Bres. ; pileus fleshy, 
 convex, campanulate, then expanded and gibbon*, or broadly 
 umbonate, fibrillose, then squamulose ; margin fimbriate, 
 yellowish, then rufescent or tinged with flesh-colour ; stem 
 solid, attenuated, somewhat rooting at base, fibrillose, rosy 
 flesh-colour, white and mealy at apex • flesh white, deep 
 red when broken ; gills crowded, sinuate, adnate, broad, 
 fringed at edge, whitish, greyish, cinnamon, then spotted 
 with red or wholly rufescent. 
 
 In woods. Odour strong and persistent of pears. 
 
 586. A. (Inocybe) scaber, Midi. (p. 153); \\ in. 
 
AGAPJCINI. * 111 
 
 587. A. (Inocybe) maritimus, Fr. ; pileus 1 in., fuscous 
 or mouse- colour, hoary, hygrophanous, fleshy, somewhat 
 soft, convex, then flattened, obtuse or umbonate, fibrillose, 
 adpressedly scaly ; flesh becoming fuscous-grey ; stem 
 solid, equal, fibrillose, at first with a cortina, paler than 
 pileus, not pulverulent at apex ; gills rounded-adnexed, 
 separating, ventricose, fuscous-grey, then becoming ferru- 
 ginous. 
 
 In sand. By roadsides. On sandy ground in woods. 
 Glamis. Epping Forest. 
 
 588. A. Hookeri, Klotsch (p. 154) ; = A. (Psalliota) 
 echinatus. 
 
 589. A. (Inocybe) lacerus, Fr. (p. 154) ; 1 in. Epping 
 Forest. 
 
 590. A. (Inocybe) flocculosus, B. (p. 154) ; 1 in. 
 
 591. A. (Inocybe) Bongardii, Weinm. ; pileus 1-2 in., 
 fuscous then pale, fleshy, campanulate, obtuse, scaly on 
 disc, fibrillose towards margin, flesh thin, reddish, stem 
 solid, rigid, equal, base bulbous, fibrillose, pallid-rufescent, 
 reddish-silky downwards, white-pulverulent at apex ; 
 gills adnexed, ventricose, broad, paliid-reddish then cin- 
 namon. 
 
 On sandy ground. Culbin sand-hills. Findhorn, etc., 
 May to August. Odour of pears. 
 
 592. A. (Inocybe) muticus, Fr. ; pileus 1—2 in., 
 whitish, fuscous-fibrillose, fleshy, convex then plane, obtuse, 
 depressed in centre, somewhat squamulose, dry ; stem 
 hollow, attenuated downwards, fibrillose, white straw-colour, 
 then fuscous ; gills adnate, thin, crowded, white, then 
 slightly fuscous. 
 
 By waysides. In shady woods. Coed Coch. 
 
 593. A. (Inocybe) carptus, Scop. ; pileus 1 in., dark 
 
112 OUTLINES OF BRITISH FUXGOLOGY. 
 
 fuscous, fleshy, convex, then flattened, depressed, clothed 
 with woolly filaments ; stem hollow, attenuated down- 
 wards, clothed like pileus ; gills ad fixed, ventricose, broad, 
 brown-fuscous. 
 
 In woods. On naked soil. Coed Coch. Taste bitterish- 
 sweet. 
 
 594. A. (Inocybe) deglubens, Fr. ; pileus 1^—2 in., at 
 first brown-rufescent, then yellow, slightly fleshy, convexo- 
 plane, obtuse, or obtusely umbouate, adpressedly fibrillose, 
 fibrils separating ; flesh white ; stem solid, slender, ad- 
 pressedly scaly-fibrillose, pale, darker with pruina at apex ; 
 gills obtusely adnate, ventricose, distant, grey, then 
 cinnamon. 
 
 In moist woods. Rare. 
 
 595. A. (Inocybe) obscurus, P. (p. 154); 1-2 in. 
 
 59G. A. (Inocybe) Rennyi, B. and Br. ; small ; pileus 
 fawn-coloured, centre brown, hemispherical ; stem atten- 
 uated downwards, fibrillose. 
 
 Hereford. 
 
 111. lliMOSi. — Pileus loiKjitudinally Jihrous, soon cracked; stem 
 irhUish, fibrillose ; many species become yelloio when old. 
 
 597. A. (Inocybe) schistus, Cke. and Sm. ; pileus 
 2-3 in., obtusely campanulate, broadly sub-urabonate, bay- 
 brown, cracking longitudinally, rather fibrillose ; stem 
 stout, equal, twisted, solid, paler than pileus ; gills adnate, 
 with a decurrent tooth, rather broad, rufescent with a pale 
 serrate margin. 
 
 On lawns. 
 
 598. A. (Inocybe) flbrosus, Sow. (p. 154) ; o in. 
 
 599. A. (Inocybe) perlatus, Cke. ; pileus 3-4 in., 
 fleshy, convex, then expanded, broadly umbonate, longitu- 
 
AGARICINI. 113 
 
 dinally fibrous with darker fibrils, fuscous, margin paler, 
 incurved, disc dark bistre, nearly black ; stem solid, equal, 
 sometimes twisted, striate, dark below when old, pallid and 
 mealy above, flesh dirty white ; gills adnexed, somewhat 
 rounded behind, rather broad, pallid, then umber. 
 On the ground. Eppiug Forest. Near Oxford. 
 
 600. A. (Inocype) phsecocephalus, Bull. ; pileus 3 in., 
 bay-brown, fuliginous, fleshy, conico-campanulate, umbo- 
 nate, repand, squamulose ; stem solid, bulbous, same colour 
 as pileus at top, white below, villous ; gills free, arcuate, 
 light yellow, then earth colour. 
 
 On the ground. In mixed woods. Rare. 
 
 601. A. (Inocybe) fastigiatus, Fr. ; (p. 155) 2 in. Epping 
 Forest. 
 
 602. A. (Inocybe) hiulcus, Fr. ; pileus 1-2 in., 
 fuscous, then olive, fleshy, at first conical, then expanded, 
 the more fleshy umbo prominent, adpressedly squamuloso- 
 fibrillose, cracked ; stem stuffed, slightly firm, equal or 
 slightly bull)ous, adpressedly fibrillose, squamuloso-mealy 
 at apex, becoming pale, rufescent when touched, internally 
 white, then reddish ; gills almost free, with a decurrent 
 line on stem, soon ventricose. thick, distant, at length plane, 
 whitish flesh colour, darker at base, then olivaceous-brown. 
 
 In woods. In pine woods. Uncommon. 
 
 603. A. (Inocybe) Curreyi, B. (p. 155) ; 2 in. 
 
 604. A. (Inocybe) rimosus, BuU. (p. 155) ; 1-2 in. 
 Epping Forest. 
 
 605. A. (Inocybe) asterospermus. Quel. ; pileus 1-1^ in.^ 
 bistre, with brown strife, convex, umbonate, cracked ; 
 stem stuffed, firm, bulbous with a separable cuticle, 
 reddish, pubescent, with brown strite ; gills emarginate, 
 ventricose, thin, whitish-bistre, then cinnamon. 
 
 n 
 
114 OUTLINES OF BRITISH FUNGOLOGY. 
 
 On the gnjuud in woods. Dinedor. Eppiug Forest. 
 Odour mouldy. 
 
 606. A. (Inocybe) eutheles, B. and Br. ; pileus fawn- 
 colour, expanded, strongly umbonate, somewhat undulated, 
 silky shining, somewhat squamulose ; stem solid, fibrous, 
 somewhat equal, slightly striate, pallid ; gills slightly 
 toothed, pallid, margin white. 
 
 On the ground among fir leaves. Aboyne. Epping 
 Forest. 
 
 607. A. (Inocybe) margarispora, B. ; pileus 2 in., 
 campanulate, then expanded, broadly undulated, fawn- 
 colour, silky, clad with adpressed filjrillose scales ; stem 
 elongated, equal, pallid, solid, fibrillose ; gills reaching 
 stem, pallid. 
 
 On the ground. 
 
 608. A. (Inocybe) destrictus, Fr. ; pileus l-|-2i in., 
 pallid, then rufescent, fleshy, campanulato-couvex then 
 flattened, umbonate, at length depressed round fuscous 
 umbo, fibrillose, torn into scales ; flesh thin, white ; stem 
 solid, rather soft, somewhat equal, smooth, fibrilloso-striate, 
 becoming reddish, mealy at apex ; cortina thin, fugacious ; 
 gills uncinato-adnate, crowded, thin, broad, whitish then 
 grey cinnamon. 
 
 On the ground. In pine woods. Coed Coch. Epping 
 Forest. Odour unpleasant. 
 
 609. A. (Inocybe) perbrevis, Weinm. ; pileus 1 in., 
 rather fleshy, convex, obtusely umbonate, fibrous or 
 squamose, margin rather striate, at length cracked ; stem 
 stuffed, short, pallid, clad with white fibrils, somewhat 
 attenuated at base, gills uncinately adnexed, rather distant, 
 ■whitish, then tawny or clay-colour. 
 
 In shady woods. 
 
AGARICINI. 115 
 
 610. A. (Inocybe) descissus, Fr. ; pileus 1 in., 
 whitish, then pallid fuscous, slightly fleshy, conical then 
 campanulate, split into radiate cracks when expanded ; 
 fragile, fibrilloso-striate at margin ; stem hollow, fragile, 
 equal, undulated, somewhat fibrillose, white-pulverulent at 
 apex, white ; gills somewhat free, crowded, thin, linear, 
 pallid then fuscous, 
 
 In woods. In pine woods. Rare. 
 Var. auricomus, Batsch (p. 155). 
 
 611. A. (Inocybe) Trinii, Weinm. ; pileus \ in., 
 whitish-rufescent then tawny, slightly fleshy, hemispherical, 
 obtuse, longitudinally rufescent-fibrillose, scarcely cracked ; 
 stem stuff'ed, equal, slender, laxly rufous-fibrillose, white- 
 mealy ; gills rounded, ventricose, edge white-floccose. 
 
 In grassy places. In mixed woods. Rare. Clove 
 scented. 
 
 IV. Velutini. — Pileus not cracked, cuticle Jibrillose-tcoven, becoming 
 even or adpressedhj scaly, disc even; stem polished, smooth, 
 whitish, merely at ajjex. 
 
 612. A. (Inocybe) sambucinus, Fr. ; pileus 2^ in., 
 white or pallid yellow, fleshy, firm, convex then expanded, 
 often repand, obtuse, fibrilloso-silky, becoming even ; flesh 
 white ; stem solid, stout, obese, equally clavate at base, 
 often decumbent, striate, smooth, white, slightly pruinose at 
 apex; gills slightly aduexed, crowded, ventricose, whitish, 
 sometimes at length brown. 
 
 In pine woods. Perth. 
 
 613. A. (inocybe) caesariatus, Fr. ; gregarious, some- 
 what csespitose; pileus 1^ in., dull-tawny, fleshy, convex 
 then expanded, gibbous, repand, silky-even at disc, silky at 
 margin ; flesh thin, white ; stem solid, unequal, somewhat 
 
116 OUTLINES OF BRITISH FUNGOLOGY. 
 
 twisted, somewhat thickened at base, pruinose, pallid ; gills 
 aduate, then crowded, ventricose, whitish-fuliginous, edge 
 same colour. 
 
 In beech woods. Coed Coch. 
 
 614. A. (Inocybe) lucifugus, Fr. (p. 156) ; 1 in. 
 
 615. A. (Inocybe) sindonius, Fr. (p. 156). 
 
 616. A. (Inocybe) Clarkii, B. and Br. ; pileus \ in., 
 white, campanulate, silky ; stem stuffed ; somewhat equal, 
 slightly thickened at base ; flocculose ; gills adnexed, 
 white-margined. 
 
 On the ground. In shady places. Street, Somerset. 
 
 617. A. (Inocybe) geophyllus, Soiv. (p. 156); h in. 
 Epping Forest. 
 
 618. A. (Inocybe) scabellus, Fr. ; gregarious ; pileus 
 2 in., fuscous or rufesceut, slightly fleshy, conical then 
 expanded, umbouate, silky-fibrillose or torn into scales 
 outside umbo ; flesh dingy ; stem stuffed or hollow, then 
 equal, smooth, rufescent or pale, slightly pruinose at apex ; 
 gills adnexed, somewhat ventricose or linear and narrow, 
 somewhat crowded, dingy then fuscous. 
 
 Among short grass. Little Orme's Head, etc. 
 
 619. A. (Inocybe) violaceo-fuscus, Cke. and Mass. ; 
 subcsespitose ; pileus 1—2 in., flocculose, fibrillose, concen- 
 trically squamose, dry, umber; margin thin, torn and flm- 
 briate ; stem solid, violet above, within and without, pallid 
 below, smooth or sdky, equal, flesh pallid when old ; gills 
 broad, scarcely crowded, adnate or emarginate, violet, then 
 umber, margin paler, serrulate, veil at first whitish. 
 
 Among grass, in open places. Forest of Dean. 
 
AGARICINI. 117 
 
 V. VisciDi. — Pileus becoming even, viscid. 
 
 620. A. (Inocybe) trechisporus, B. ; pileus 1 in., umbo 
 tawny, margin paler, with a livid tinge, somewhat membra- 
 naceous, convex, strongly umbouate ; margin thin, at first 
 viscid, soon dry and silky ; stem white, slightly striate under 
 a lens and mealy, nearly equal, except at the base, the outeif 
 coat of which is cottony ; gills emarginate, ventricose, 
 pinkish grey ; margin denticulate. 
 
 In woods, among fern. 
 
 621. A. (Inocybe) vatricosus, Fr. ; pileus i in., slightly 
 fleshy, convex, then plane, obtusely umbonate, even, smooth, 
 viscid, when dry shining and slightly silky round margin ; 
 stem fistulose, equal, curved, and contorted, white, white- 
 villous at base and wholly white pulverulent ; gills adnexed, 
 broadly emarginate, broad, white, then fuscous. 
 
 On dead stumps and naked soil. Bodelwyddan. 
 
 622. A. (Inocybe) Whitei, B. and Br. ; pileus tawny ; 
 margin white and slightly viscid, convex, hemispherical ; 
 cortina shining-white, fibrillose, at length expanded and 
 tawny ; stem solid, shining-white, then tawny and smooth ; 
 gills adnexed, at first shining-white. 
 
 In pine wood. Rannoch. 
 
 623. A. (Inocybe) tricholoma, A. and S. ; pileus ^-1 in., 
 whitish, slightly fleshy, orbicular, plane, depressed in centre, 
 fibrillose with while adpressed, at length obsolete hairs, 
 fringed at margin with strigose hairs, viscid when moist, 
 shining when dry ; flesh thin, white ; stem stufi^ed, thin, 
 slightly attenuated upwards, whitish, fibroso-scaly at apex ; 
 gills decurrent, thin, crowded, pallid fuscous, then clay- 
 fuscous. 
 
 In mixed woods. Herts. 
 
118 OUTLINES OF BRITISH FUNGOLOGY. 
 
 Subgenus 27. Hebeloma (p. 152). 
 
 Margin of pileus at first incurved, cuticle continuous, smooth, 
 somewhat viscid, the partial veil fibrillose or obsolete ; stem 
 fleshy, fibrous, somewhat mealy at apex ; gills sinuato-adnate, 
 edge more or less of a different coloui-, whitish. 
 
 Hebeloma, with Inocybe, corresponds with Tricholoma and 
 Entoloma. Spores somewhat clay colour, not white or rosy. 
 
 I. Indusiati. — Furnished loith a cortina, hy which the 2nleios is 
 often sujierficially silky at the margin. 
 
 624<. A. (Hebeloma) mussivus, Fr.; pileus 2-4 in., 
 yellow, sometimes darker at disc, fleshy, compact, convex, 
 theu plane, unequal, obtuse, viscid, at first even, then re- 
 pand and squamulose ; margin infiexed, at length repand; 
 flesh yellow; stem fleshy, stuft'ed, or hollow at apex, fibril- 
 lose and pruinate at apex, light yellow ; veil fibrillose, fuga- 
 cious; gills emarginate, somewhat crowded, dry, at first 
 yellow, then somewhat ferruginous. 
 
 In pine woods. Ascot. 
 
 625. A. (Hebeloma) fastibilis, Fr. ; somewhat caespitose ; 
 pileus 2 in., pale yellowish or tan, becoming paler, fleshy, 
 convexo- plane, obtuse, somewhat repand, even, smooth ; 
 margin involute, pubescent ; stem solid, fleshy fibrous, 
 stout, often twisted and sub-bulbous, white-silky and fibril- 
 lose, pallid, white-scaly upwards ; cortina white, occasionally 
 ring-like ; gills emargiuate, somewhat distant, rather broad, 
 at first pale white, then dingy clay colour, edge whitish, dis- 
 tilling drops in rainy weather. 
 
 In woods. Ei)piiig Forest. Odour nauseous. Poisonous. 
 Often mistaken for the true mushroom. 
 
 626. A. (Hebeloma) glutinosus, Lind. ; pileus 3 in., 
 vellow-white, disc darker, fleshy, convex then plane, regular, 
 
AGAEICINI. 119 
 
 obtuse, with a tenacious viscous gluten, slimy in wet 
 weather, sprinkled with white superficial squamules ; flesh 
 whitish then light yellow; stem stuffed, firm, somewhat 
 bulbous, white-squamulose and fibrillose, white-mealy at apex, 
 often strigose at base, at length ferruginous within ; partial 
 veil manifest as a cortina ; gills sinuato-adnate, somewhat 
 decurrent, crowded, broad, pallid, light yellowish, then clay- 
 cinnamon. 
 
 On branches and among leaves of oak and beech. 
 
 627. A. (Hebeloma) testaceus, Batsch (p. 157) ; 1^ in. 
 
 628. A. (Hebeloma) flrmus, P. ; 2-3 in., brick-red, 
 fleshy, campanulate, then flattened or depressed, umbonate, 
 the broad umbo darker, thin at circumference, even, 
 smooth, viscid ; stem solid, firm, commonly attenuated and 
 darker downwards, clothed with white floccose squamules ; 
 cortina white, gills rounded, crowded, thin, dry, clay colour, 
 ferruginous, white-serrulated at edge. 
 
 In fir woods. Laxton Park. 
 
 629. A. (Hebeloma) claviceps, Fr. ; pileus pallid, 
 convex then expanded, fleshy at the gibbous disc, even, 
 naked ; stem stuffed, equal, white-mealy, fuscous down- 
 wards; gills emarginate ; crowded, dry, pallid. 
 
 In mixed woods. Uncommon. 
 
 630. A. (Hebeloma) punctatus, Fr. ; gregarious ; 
 pileus 1-2 in., fleshy, convex, plane, disc gibbous, darker 
 and viscoso-papillose, at length depressed, becoming pale 
 round centre ; at first superficially silky round margin 
 with the whitish fibrillose veil ; stem at first hollow, equal, 
 dry, pallid, white-pruinose at apex, otherwise silky-fibrillose 
 with adpressed veil ; gills arcuato-adnate, slightly ventri- 
 cose, crowded, entire, narrow, plane, pallid. 
 
 In pine woods. Uncommon. 
 
120 OUTLINKS or HIUTISH FUNCOLOGV. 
 
 G31. A. (Hebeloma) versipellis, Fr. ; somewhat Cisspi- 
 tose ; pileus 1-3 iu., fleshy, convexo-plane, with a tenacious 
 glutinous pellicle, pale at disc ; margin glued with white- 
 silky villous down ; stem hollow, tough, equal ; white-silky 
 with the cortina, white-mealy above ; gills rounded, 
 crowded, thin, arid, almost white, pallid then clay- 
 cinnamon. 
 
 In grassy places, among fir leaves. Uncommon. 
 
 632. A. (Hebeloma) mesophseus, Fr. ; pileus 1 in., pale 
 yellowish, disc brownish, slightly fleshy, conical then convex, 
 plane or depressed, smooth, viscous ; stem somewhat fistu- 
 lose, tough, equal, fibril lose, whitish then ferruginous, 
 fuscous at base, pruinose at apex ; cortina thin, fugacious ; 
 gills rounded or emarginate, crowded, thin, dry, clay ferru- 
 ginous, edge entire, same colour. 
 
 In woods. Epping Forest. In pine woods. Un- 
 common. 
 
 Var. minor, Cke. ; smaller than type. 
 
 633. A. (Hebeloma) subeollariatus, B. and Br. ; pileus 
 1 in., pallid, somewhat fuscous in centre, somewhat fleshy, 
 convex, slightly glutinous, fioccose veil vanishing ; stem 
 stuffed, at length delicately fistulose, brown at base and 
 pulverulent ; gills ventricose, separating, forming a short 
 interrupted collar, clay-colour, shining white at edge. 
 
 On naked soil. Sibbcrtoft. 
 
 634. A. (Hebeloma) senescens, Batsch ; pileus 3 in., 
 ochraceous- tawny, convex then flattened, slightly glutinous, 
 delicately tomentose and white at extreme margin ; flesh 
 white ; stem solid, at first bulbous and fuscous downwards, 
 then, with exception of shining white tomentose apex, squa- 
 mulose ; gills adnexed, crowded, pallid then cinnamon. 
 
 Among fir trees. Gwrwch Castle. Corstorphine. 
 
AGAKICINI. 121 
 
 II. Denudati. — Pileus smooth, at first with no cortina. 
 
 635. A. (Hebeloma) sinapizans, Fr.; pileus 3-5 in., 
 clay colour, pale yellowish at disc, fleshy, compact, convex 
 then plane, obtuse, repand, and often excentric, even, 
 slightly viscid ; flesh white ; stem stout, rigid, somewhat 
 solid, equal or fusiform, fibrilloso-striate, white, squamulose 
 at apex ; gills emargiuate, crowded, fragile, opaque clay- 
 cinnamon, dry, unspotted. 
 
 In moist woods. Under trees in a field. Epping 
 Forest. 
 
 636. A. (Hebeloma) crustuliniformis, Bull. (p. 157). 
 Var. minor, Cke. ; smaller than type. Epping Forest. 
 
 637. A. (Hebeloma) elatus, Batsch ; pileus 3 in., tan- 
 colour, fleshy, convex then flattened, obtuse, even, smooth, 
 viscid, opaque, paler when dry ; margin thin ; stem stuffed, 
 equal, cylindrical, tense and straight, twisted, adpressedly 
 fibrillose, pale whitish, white-mealy at apex ; gills rounded 
 with a decurrent tooth, crowded, dry, pale cinnamon. 
 
 In pine woods, among moss and leaves. 
 
 638. A. (Hebeloma) longicaudus, P. (p. 157) ; li-2in. 
 Var. radicatus, Cke. ; stem fusiform, rooting. 
 
 639. A. (Hebeloma) lugens, Jungh. ; pileus 2-3 in., 
 brown, becoming somewhat yellow, fleshy, convexo-plane, 
 smooth, somewhat viscid ; stem solid, shining, fibrilloso- 
 striate, somewhat bulbous, white-mealy at apex ; gills some- 
 what free, fragile, crowded, pallid, then ferruginous, crenu- 
 late, darker at edge. 
 
 Under beech. Lyndhurst. Odour strong. 
 
 640. (A. Hebeloma) truneatus, Schceff. ; pileus 2-3 in., 
 somewhat rufous, paler at margin, fleshy, compact, convex 
 then flattened, obtuse, undulato-repand, irregular, smooth. 
 
122 OUTLINES OF BKITISII FUNGOLOGY. 
 
 margin at first iuflexed, naked ; flesh thick, white ; stem 
 solid, equal, white, pruinatc under a lens; gills emarginato- 
 fiee, drv, white, pale or flesh-white, then watery ferru- 
 ginous. 
 
 On grassy banks. Daugsteiu. 
 
 641. A. (Hebeloma) nudipes, Fr. ; pileus 2 in., pale tan 
 or clay colour, fleshy, convex then flattened, obtuse, unequal, 
 even, viscid, margin at first inflexed, then ascending ; thin, 
 exceeding the gills ; flesh watery, then white ; compact at 
 disc; stem solid, fibrous, equal, straight or curved, smooth, 
 naked above, white ; gills emarginate, crowded, dry, tan 
 colour. 
 
 In woods. Coed Coch. 
 
 642. A. (Hebeloma) ischnostylus, Cke. ; pileus 1-2 in., 
 white or slightly pallid at disc, convex then expanded, 
 broadly umbonate, slightly viscid, even ; margin thin ; stem 
 solid, equal, or slightly thickened at base, smooth, naked ; 
 gills rounded behind, adnate, slightly serrate at margin, 
 whitish then clay-colour. 
 
 On the ground among grass. Shrewsbury. 
 
 643. A. (Hebeloma) nauseosus, Cke. ; pileus l-l^ iu., 
 more or less expanded, even, smooth, viscid, ochrey-white ; 
 stem equal or slightly attenuated below, same colour, mealy 
 above, faintly striate downwards, and in decay turning 
 black at base, solid ; gills ventricose, sinuate, very broad, 
 rather distant, pallid, then clay-colour, at length ferru- 
 ginous. 
 
 On the ground in mixed woods. Park End, Forest of 
 Dean. Foetid. 
 
 644. A. (Hebeloma) capnioeephalns, Ball. ; pileus fleshy, 
 convexo-plane, obtuse, even, smooth ; margin at length 
 becoming blackish ; stem stuffed, attenuated downwards. 
 
AGAEICINI. 123 
 
 reddish-fibrilloso- striate, becoming pale ; gills emarginate, 
 broad, ferruginous. 
 On the ground. 
 
 III. PusiLLi. — Filer's scarcely an inch broad. 
 
 645. A. (Hebeloma) magnimamma, Fr. ; pileus with a 
 fleshy disc, extended in a mammiform umbo, not hygro- 
 phanous, convexo-plane, circumference thin, naked, brick- 
 red, growing pale ; stem obsoletely fistulose, equal, smooth, 
 naked, pale gilvous; gills obtusely adnate, crowded, pallid, 
 then ferruginous. 
 
 On the ground, amongst grass. 
 
 6-i6. A. (Hebeloma) petigenosus, Fr. ; pileus \ in., rather 
 fleshy, conical or convex, then expanded, dry, disc swollen, 
 brown, circumference silky-grey ; stem stufi'ed, tough, slen- 
 der, pulverulent, brick-red ; gills free, ventricose, yellow, 
 then olive-bay. 
 
 On the ground in beech woods. 
 
 Subgenus 28. Flammula (p. 157). 
 
 Flammvila corresponds with Clitocybe and Clitopilus; spores 
 ferruginous, fuscous-ferruginous or tawny ochraceous, not 
 white or rosy. 
 
 I. Gymnoti, — Veil none ; pileus dry, generally squamidose. 
 
 647. A. (Flammula) gymnopodius, Bull. ; csespitose ; 
 dark ferruginous ; pileus 2-3 in., broad, fleshy, campauulato- 
 convex, squamulose ; stem solid, then smooth, equal; gills 
 decurrent, arcuate, crowded. 
 
 On pine sawdust, Munstead. 
 
 648. A. (Flammula) vinosus, Bull. ; pileus ferruginous- 
 brown, fleshy, expanded, at length depressed, dry, delicately 
 
124 OUTLINES OF BRITIISII FUNGOLOGY. 
 
 flocculose ; stem solid^ firm, somewhat thickened at base, 
 delicately flocculose; gills decurrent, crowded, simple, 
 narrow, ferruginous. 
 
 Oil the ground. Morfa, Couway. Rare. 
 
 649. A. (Plammula) floccifer, B. and Br. ; caespitose ; 
 pileus 2 in., tawny, sprinkled with white fibrils, somewhat 
 fleshy, convex, expanded, flesh tawny at the edge and 
 beneath the cuticle, elsewhere white; stem fistulose, at- 
 tenuated upwards, white, with silky scales, umber within, 
 furfuraceous near pileus ; gills moderately broad, rouuded 
 behind, adnate, scarcely ventricose, wrinkled transversely, 
 ferruginous, edge white. 
 
 On lime stumps. Colleyweston. 
 
 650. A. (Flammula) decipiens, Sm. ; somewhat fascicu- 
 late; pileus 1 in., rich brown, becoming pale, umbo almost 
 white, fleshy, convex, dry, minutely squamulose ; flesh 
 golden yellow ; stem rich tawny, bright brown at base, 
 often swollen, attenuated downwards, twisted, striate ; gills 
 decurrent, crowded, moderately broad, luminous brown. 
 
 On burnt earth, charcoal, etc. Epping Forest. 
 
 651. A. (Flammula) clitopilus, Cke. and Sotv. ; pileus 
 2 in., rather fleshy, convex, disc depressed and umbilicate, 
 smooth, dry, purplish brown ; stem ventricose, erect, hollow, 
 fuliginous, with a few scattered fibrils towards base, brown 
 within ; gills scarcely crowded, ventricose, slightly adnexed, 
 pallid. 
 
 Among firs. 
 
 652. A. (Flammula) purpuratus, Cke. and Mass. ; pileus 
 1-2 in., fleshy, convex, then expanded, obtusely umbonate, 
 purple or purple-brown, clad with minute floccose scales of 
 same colour ; stem curved, equal, smooth and pallid above, 
 purple below and granulose, solid ; flesh pale yellowish 
 
AGARICIXI. 125 
 
 above, purplish below; ring fibrillose; gills adnate, some- 
 what rounded behind, not crowded, lemon-yellow, at length 
 bright-ferruginous. 
 
 On tree fern stems. Kew. Taste very bitter. 
 
 653. A. (Flammula) nitens, Cke. and Mass. ; cfespitose ; 
 pilous 1-1 2 in., hemispherical, convex, then expanded, 
 obtuse, shining, dry, somewhat silky, purple-brown ; stem 
 equal, solid, flesh-colour, fibrillose ; gills crowded, adnate ; 
 margin entire, pallid, then umber. 
 
 On the ground. Carlisle. 
 
 654. A. (Flammula) ochrochlorus, Fr. ; casspitose ; pi- 
 leus fleshy, convex then plane, obtusely umbonate, dry, 
 minutely silky, rather squamulose, greenish straw-colour; 
 stem hollow, squamose, clad with white flocci, flexuose at 
 base and ferruginous within ; gills adaate, crowded, whitish, 
 then greenish, at length olivaceous. 
 
 On old trunks. Scarborough. 
 
 II. LuBRici. — Pileii^ covered ivith a viscous pellicle, cortina 
 fihi'illose. 
 
 655. A. (Flammula) lentus, P. (p. 158) ; 2-3 in. 
 
 656. A. (Flammtda) lubricus, Fr. ; pileus 2-4 in., 
 bright cinnamon, tough, fleshy, convex, then flattened, 
 obtuse, occasionally depressed and repand, even, viscous, 
 thin towards margin; flesh white; stem solid, equal or 
 slightly attenuated upwards, dry, laxly fibrillose, whitish, at 
 length fuscous, pubescent at base ; gills adnate, somewhat 
 decurrent, crowded, pallid, then clay-colour. 
 
 On trunks. Tunbridge Wells. 
 
 657. A. (Flammula) lupinus, Fr. ; pileus 3-4 in., tan- 
 fuscous, fleshy, convex, obtuse, then piano-depressed, even, 
 covered with a viscous separable pellicle ; flesh soft, white ; 
 
126 OUTLINES OF BRITISH FL'NGOLOGY. 
 
 stem curt, firm, thickened upwards or downwards, whitish 
 at apex, otherwise ferruginous, with deuse ad pressed fibrils, 
 stuffed or hollow, becoming ferruginous ; gills adnato- 
 decurrent, moderately crowded, broad, clay-colour. 
 
 In grassy places. In pastures. Glamis. Odour strong 
 and bitter. 
 
 658. A. (Flammula) mixtus, Fr. ; pilcus 1-2 in., dull- 
 tan, fiesby, convexo-plane, obtuse, even, disc minutely 
 wrinkled with gluten, paler towards margin ; stem tough, 
 hollow, equal, flexuose, whitish, clothed with reflexed rufous- 
 fuscous scales, somewhat thickened at base ; cortina fibril- 
 lose; gills somewhat decurrent, broad, somewhat crowded, 
 white then clay-colour, unequal at edge. 
 
 In pine and mixed woods. Epping Forest. Rare. 
 
 659. A. (Flammula) juncinus, Sm. ; pileus li in., sul- 
 phury yellow, disc rich brown, fleshy, hemispherical ; stem 
 elongated, thin, attenuated downwards, clothed with a few 
 fibres; gills broad, very thin, red-brown. 
 
 On dead bullrushes. N. Wootton. Taste disagreeable, 
 nauseous, bitter. 
 
 660. A. (Flammula) gummosus, Lasch ; pileus 1-2 in., 
 pallid light yellow, becoming greenish, at length ferrugi- 
 nous, paler at circumference, fleshy, cainpauulate, soon 
 flattened, smooth, obtuse or depressed, covered with a sepa- 
 rable viscid cuticle, sprinkled with superficial floccose scales ; 
 flesh thin, yellow ; stem stuffed or hollow, equal, straight, 
 rigid, silky-fibrillose, rod-brown at base, paler upwards ; 
 gills adnate, crowded, narrow, whitish, light yellow, then 
 cinnamon. 
 
 On old stumps. Botanic Garden, Cambridge. Epping 
 Forest. 
 
 661. A. (Flammula) spumosus, Fr, ; pileus 2 in., pallid 
 
AGAKICINI. 127 
 
 light yellow, disc darker, slightly Heshy, convex, then plaue, 
 somewhat umbonate, covered with a viscous separable 
 pellicle, naked ; flesh watery, pale greenish yellow ; stem 
 hollow, thin, attenuated downwards, light yellow, fibrillose, 
 furnished with a cortina ; gills adnate, crowded, light yellow, 
 then ferruginous. 
 
 In fir woods and on sawdust. Rare. Epping Forest. 
 
 66.2. A. (Flammula) carbonarius, Fr. ; gregarious ; pi- 
 leus 1 in., tawny, fleshy, convex, then plane, often depressed 
 at the disc, even, smooth, viscous ; margin inflexed ; flesh 
 slightly firm, yellow ; stem somewhat fistulose, rigid, equal 
 or slightly thickened upwards, fibrilloso-squamulose, pallid, 
 often blackish at base; cortina fibrillose, fugacious; gills 
 adnate, crowded, rather broad, becoming fuscous clay- 
 colour. 
 
 On charcoal and burnt earth. Epping Forest. 
 
 III. Uni. — Cuticle of pileus eontinuous, not separable ; cortina 
 
 663. A. (Flammula) Alius, Fr. ; pileus 2-3 in., fleshy, 
 thin, convex, then plane, smooth, pale orange-red with 
 rufous disc, moist after rain, gilvous ; stem fistulose, long, 
 smooth, pallid, reddish at base and within ; gills adnate, 
 rather crowded, white, then pallid. 
 
 On the ground in woods. 
 
 664. A. (Flammula) fusus, Batsch ; pileus 2 in., some- 
 what brick-colour, fleshy, convex, then plane, obtuse, even, 
 smooth, slightly viscid ; flesh firm, pallid ; stem firm, stuffed, 
 attenuated, fusiform, rooting, fibrilloso-striate, pallid ; gills 
 somewhat decurrent, not very crowded, pallid or light 
 yellow, then ferruginous. 
 
 On the ground and on stumps and logs. Worthing. 
 
128 OUTLINES OF BRITISH FUNCxOLOGY. 
 
 665. A. fFlammula) astragalinus, Fr. ; somewhat Cfespi- 
 tose ; pileus 2 in., blood-satt'rou or golden-flesh-colour, darker 
 at the disc, fleshy, convex, then flattened, obtuse, moist, 
 even, at first slightly silky round margin ; flesh firm, same 
 colour, ofteu becoming black when wounded ; stem stuffed, 
 then hollow, equal or attenuated downwards, fiexuose, scaly, 
 fil)rillose, pallid ; cortina appendiculatc, white ; gills adnate, 
 crowded, broad, pallid light yellow, edge fiocculose when 
 young. 
 
 On pine and fir stumps. Bothiemurchus. Glamis, 
 
 666. A. (Flammula) alnicola, Fr. ; pileus 2-3 in., 
 yellow, then ferruginous and greenish, fleshy, convex, then 
 flattened, obtuse, slimy, at first slightly fibrillose towards 
 margin ; flesh same colour ; stem stuffed, then hollow, 
 attcuuato-rooted, commonly fiexuose, fibrillose, yellow, then 
 ferruginous ; cortina fibrillose or arachnoid ; gills somewhat 
 adnate, broad, plane, at first dingy yellowish-pallid, at length 
 ferruginous. 
 
 On stumps. Rare. Epping Forest. Odour and taste 
 bitter. 
 
 A. (Flammula) flavidus, Sr//(pjf. (p. 158) ; 1-5 in. 
 
 667. A. (Flammula) inauratus, Sin. ; pileus 1 in., fleshy, 
 moist, smooth, furnished with a distinct veil ; stem some- 
 what hollow, incurved, clothed with innate scales ; gills 
 adnate, with a decurrent tooth, broad, pale yellowish clay- 
 colour. 
 
 On willows. North Wootton. 
 
 668. A. (Flammula) conissans, Fr. ; csespitose ; pileus 
 |-3 in., light yellowish tan, fleshy, thin, hemispherico- 
 expanded, obtuse, smooth, moist ; flesh white ; stem hollow, 
 equal or attenuated downwards, often compressed, irregu- 
 lar, twisted, light yellow-white, white-villous at base ; cor- 
 
AGAEICIXI. 129 
 
 tiaa silky-fibrillose, appendiculate ; gills aduate, with a 
 decurrent tooth, very crowded, linear, whitish, at length 
 fuscous-clay colour. 
 
 669. A. (Flammula) inopus, Fr. (p. 158) ; 2-4 in. 
 Epping Forest. 
 
 A. (Flammula) apicreus, Fr. ; somewhat csespitose ; 
 pileus yellow, then pale and tan, disc tawny, fleshy, thin, 
 rather plane, even, smooth, moist ; stem hollow, equal, not 
 rooted, ferruginous fibrils at base ; gills adnate, crowded, 
 thin, shining, ferruginous. 
 
 Ou rotten trunks. In pine wood. Glamis. 
 
 IV. Sapinei. — Pileus scarcely pelliculose, not viscous ; gills light 
 yellovj, then tcnony. 
 
 670. A. (Flammula) hybridus, Fr. (p. 158) ; 2 in. 
 Epping Forest. 
 
 671. A. (Flammula) sapineus, Fr. ; somewhat csespi- 
 tose ; pileus 1-4 in., golden-tawny, opaque at disc, paler and 
 shining towards margin, fleshy, compact, hemispherical, 
 then convexo-plane, obtuse, dry, floccoso-squamulose or 
 rimoso-scaly ; flesh firm, then soft, yellow ; stem stout, 
 irregular, fleshy-fibrous, sulcate, lacunose, naked, pallid 
 yellow, turning fuscous when bruised, rooting ; gills adnate, 
 crowded, golden, at length tawny-cinnamon. 
 
 On pine-branches, chips, and sawdust, and on charcoal 
 heaps in woods. Uncommon. 
 
 672. A. (Flammula) liquiritise, P. ; gregarious ; pileus 
 1-3 in., bay-brown or orange-tawny, then pale, slightly 
 fleshy, convex, then flattened, somewhat umbonate, even, 
 smooth, moist, margin at length flaccid and striate ; flesh 
 thin, yellow ; stem hollow, attenuated upwards, often un- 
 equal and curved, striate, almost naked, tawny, then ferru- 
 
 I 
 
130 OUTLINES OF BltlTISII FUNGOLOGY. 
 
 ginous, yellow-tawny within, thickened and villous at base ; 
 gills obtusely adnate, sometimes rounded, separating, plane, 
 crowded, golden, then tawny. 
 
 On larch trunks. On fir, Mattishall. Taste sweet, 
 like liquorice. 
 
 673. A. (Plammula) picreus, Fr. ; c?espitose ; pileus 
 1 in., rufous or bay-brown-cinnamon, then pale and tawny, 
 slightly fleshy, campanulate, then convex, obtuse, regular, 
 even, smooth, moist ; flesh thin, same colour as pileus, 
 stem fistulose, slightly attenuated upwards, tense, straight, 
 umber, white-pulverulent ; gills ascending, crowded, narrow, 
 yellow, then ferruginous, adnate or decurrent, separating. 
 
 On old deal boards and pine stumps. Rare. 
 
 V. Sericelli. — Furnished v:ith a cortina, pileus sUglitlij silky, 
 dry, or at first viscid. 
 
 074. A. (Flammula) helomorphus, F/\ ; pileus ^-f in., 
 white, fleshy, convexo-plane, gibbous or umbonate, viscid, 
 then adpressedly fibrilloso-even, the thin unequal margin 
 inflexed, naked ; stem solid, equal, base incurved, even, 
 smooth, whitish ; gills plano-decurrent, very crowded, 
 whitish-clay-colour. 
 
 In fir woods. Mossburnford. 
 
 675. A. (Flammula) scambus, Fr. (p. 157) ; i-l in. 
 
 (570. A. (Flammula) flliceus, Cke. ; pileus fleshy, con- 
 vexo-plane, minutely squamuloso-fibrillose ; stem stuffed, 
 equal, slender ; veil adhering to stem and margin of piieus 
 in reddish fugacious threads ; gills crowded, adnate, sulphur- 
 yellow, at length tawny-cinnamon. 
 
 On old tree-fern stems. 
 
AGAKICINI. 131 
 
 Subgenus 29. Xaucoria (p. l.")i)). 
 
 Pileus more or less fleshy, convexo-plane or conical ; margin at 
 first inflexed ; veil none or fugacious, squamulose ; stem 
 cartilaginous, tistulose or spongy-stuffed ; gills free, or adnate, 
 not decurrent. 
 
 Naucoria corresponds with Collybia and Leptonia, spores 
 brown, not white or rosy. 
 
 I. Gymnoti. — Pileus smooth ; veil none. 
 
 * Gills free or sliglitly adnexed. 
 
 677. A. (Naucoria) lugubris, Fr. ; often cfespitose ; 
 pileus 2-3 in., pallid^ ferruginous, then brown, fleshy, cam- 
 panulate, then expanded, gibbous, even, smooth ; flesh 
 white; stem long, attenuated, fusiform, stuffed with a 
 spongy pith, cartilaginous, rigid, smooth, pallid at top, 
 ferruginous downwards ; gills free, ventricose, broad behind, 
 crowded, pallid, then ferruginous, edge serrated. 
 
 In a mountain fir wood. Coed Coch. 
 
 678. A. (Naucoria) festivus, Fr. ; pileus submembrana- 
 ceous, globoso-campanulate, umbilicate, punctulate ; margin 
 incurved, somewhat lobed ; stem fistulose, slender, silky- 
 fibrillose, white ; gills attenuated, adnate, ascending, slightly 
 lobed, cinnamon. 
 
 On the ground, amongst firs. 
 
 679. A. (Naucoria) obtusus, Cke. and Mass. ; pileus 
 1 in,, campanulate, obtuse, smooth, becoming faintly striate 
 at margin, rufous, becoming paler ; stem equal, fistulose, 
 flesh-colour, darker within, especially at base, smooth ; gills 
 broadly adnate, or with a tooth, broad, ventricose, with a 
 serrate edge. 
 
 On the ground. Scarborough, 
 
 680. A. (Waucoria) subglobosus, J. and S. ; pileus 
 
132 OUTLINES OF BRITISH FUXGOLOGY. 
 
 rather fleshy, hemispherical, rather viscid, yellowish ; stem 
 thiu, becoming hollow, equal, short, longitudinally striate ; 
 gills very broad, nearly free, rhomboidal, convex, ochraceous 
 flesh-colour. 
 
 On the ground. Epping Forest. Dr. Cooke considers 
 this plant to be a Nolanea with pale salmon-coloured, not 
 ochraceous, spores ; some species of Flammula have tawny- 
 ochraceous spores. 
 
 G81. A. (Naucoria) hamadryas, Fr. ; pileus lv-2 in., 
 bay-brown-ferruginous, then pale yellowish, slightly fleshy, 
 convex, then expanded, gibbous, even, smooth ; stem hollow, 
 equal, smooth, pallid, somewhat fragile ; gills attenuato- 
 adnexed, somewhat free, slightly ventricose, crowded, 
 ferruginous, opaque. 
 
 On the ground in woods. Brandon. 
 
 682. A. (Naueoria) cidaris, Fr. ; pilous 1-2 in., clay- 
 cinnamon, then tan, slightly fleshy at disc, membranaceous 
 round the undulated margin, conical, then campanulate, 
 smooth, slightly striate at margin ; flesh white when dry ; 
 stem fistulose, attenuated from apex to base, somewhat 
 compressed, flexuose, smooth, tough, mostly fuscous-black ; 
 gills adfixed, separating-free, ascending, ventricose, crowded, 
 honey-colour or cinnamon-clay. 
 
 In pine woods. Hereford, 
 
 683. A. (Naucoria) cucumis, P. (p. 159) ; 1-1 i in. 
 
 684. A. (Naucoria) anguineus, Fr. ; pileus 2 in., pale 
 yellowish or rufous, then somewhat tan, slightly fleshy, 
 campanulate, then convex, gibbous, smooth, with a super- 
 ficial silky zone near margin when young ; stem somewhat 
 hollow and flexuose, densely white-fibrillose, bay-brown ; 
 gills somewhat free, crowded, somewhat linear, dull pallid, 
 ilien ferruginous.. 
 
AGAEICINI. 13;3 
 
 In a flower-pot. On the ground. West Lynn. 
 
 685. A. (Naucoria) centunculus, Fr. (p. 159) ; J-_^ in. 
 Epping Forest. 
 
 686. A. (Waucoria) horizontalis, Bull. (p. 159); ^ in. 
 
 687. A. (l^Taucoria) rimulincola, Rabenh. ; cinnamon ; 
 pileus hemispherical, umbilicate, plicate, slightly wrinkled- 
 tomentose; stem somewhat excentric, short, incurved, 
 somewhat thickened at base ; gills adnexed, somewhat dis- 
 tant, thick, very broad, whitish^ crenulate. 
 
 On twigs. On cut elm. Rannoch. 
 
 688. A. (iTaucoria) semiflexus, B. and Br. ; pileus i in., 
 chestnut, hygrophanous, moderately fleshy, somewhat cam- 
 panulate, then hemispherical or flattened above, margin 
 with a delicate white veil ; flesh white ; stem solid, semi- 
 horizontal; gills adnexed, distant, tawny. 
 
 On the side of a bank. Ascot. 
 
 689. A. (Waucoria) rubricatus, B. and Br. ; csespitose ; 
 white, then tinged with red; the very small pilei at length 
 rather plane; stems slender. 
 
 On decayed bramble-twig. Hereford. 
 
 ** Gills adnate, 2)ileus convexo-2')lane. 
 
 690. A. (nSTaucoria) abstrusus, Fr. ; pileus 1^ in., ferra- 
 ginous-clay, fleshy, thin, convex, then plane, orbicular, even, 
 smooth, viscid; flesh watery; stem cartilaginous, tough, 
 rigid, fistulose, equal, round, straight, polished, naked, pallid- 
 ferruginous, darker at base ; gills adnate, crowded, plane 
 cinnamon or watery ferruginous. 
 
 On sawdust and in woods. Coed Coch. 
 
 691. A. (Waucoria) innoeuus, Lusch ; pileus 1^ in., 
 rufous, then pale, slightly fleshy, convex, obtuse, rather 
 
134 OUTLINES OF lilllTISH FUXGOLOGY. 
 
 smooth, striate ; stem stufted, white-fibrillose, woolly at 
 base; gills adaate, somewhat crowded, yellow-ochraceous. 
 
 Ou the ground in damp places. 
 
 092. A. (Naucoria) cerodes, Fr. ; pileus A-1 iu., watery- 
 ciuuamou, then tan-colour, somewhat membranaceous, cani- 
 panulato-convex and flattened, at length depressed, obtuse, 
 smooth, pellucid-striate at circumference, then even, slightly 
 silky-atomate ; stem slightly firm, fistulose, equal, some- 
 what flexuose, becoming bay-brown-fuscous, pallid upwards, 
 mealy at apex; gills adnate, separating, broad behind, 
 almost triangular, somewhat distant, pallid, then cinnamon. 
 
 On burnt soil. Among moss. 
 
 693. A. (Naucoria) melinoid.es, Fr. (p. IGO) ; ^-^ in. 
 Epping Forest. 
 
 G94<. A. (Naueoria) pusiolus, Fr. ; pileus A in., yellow, 
 somewhat membranaceous, hemispherical, then expanded, 
 obtuse, smooth, slightly viscid ; stem filiform, fistulose, 
 tough, flexile, smooth, slightly viscid, shining light-yellow ; 
 gills adnate, broad, crowded, plane, watery-cinnamon. 
 
 Ou the ground. West of England. 
 
 *** Gills adnate, pileios ca.mjxmulate thai expanded. 
 
 695. A. (Naucoria) nuceus, Bolt. (p. 159) ; i-1 in. 
 
 696. A. (J^faucoria) glandiformis, Sm.; pileus 1 in.; at first 
 obtusely campauulate, becoming somewhat hemispherical, or 
 filbert- shaped, nut-brown, disc darker, smooth, even ; stem 
 erect, elongated, equal, stuffed, then hollow, pallid, some- 
 times twisted ; gills very broad, rounded behind, adnate, 
 umber. 
 
 On the ground. 
 
 697. A. (Naucoria) seolecinus, Fr. ; pileus 1 in,, bay- 
 brown ferruginous, opaque, paler at margin, slightly fleshy, 
 
AGARICIXI. 135 
 
 campanulate, theu convex, sometimes umbonate or obtuse, 
 smooth, fragile, striate at margin ; stem rigid, fistulose, 
 equal, fiexuose and curved, rufous-ferruginous, at first 
 white-mealy, base fuscous ; gills adnate, somewhat distant, 
 l)roader behind, whitish flesh-colour, then ferruginous, 
 flocculose, edge ciliated. 
 
 On moist ground, under alders. Powerscourt, Wicklow. 
 
 698. A. (Naucoria) striaepes, Cke. ; pileus 1-H in., 
 ochraceous, campanulate, obtuse, then expanded, smooth, 
 even ; stem hollow, equal, erect or flexuose, white, longitu- 
 dinally striate ; gills slightly adnate behind, rather distant, 
 tawny- ferruginous. 
 
 Amongst grass on lawn. Kew. 
 
 699. A. (Waueoria) sideroides, Bull. ; pileus pale yel- 
 lowish or cinnamon, then tan- ochraceous, somewhat shining, 
 slightly fleshy, campanulate, then expanded, umbonate, 
 smooth, even, slightly viscid ; margin at first incurved and 
 slightly striate ; stem fistulose or stufted, equal, undulated, 
 smooth, white-pruinose at apex, pallid, then yellow, ferru- 
 ginous downwards ; gills adnate, with a decurrent tooth, or 
 sinuate, crowded, linear, watery, yellow-ochraceous, then 
 somewhat cinnamon. 
 
 On trunks and stumps. On ash. Rare. 
 
 700. A. (Naucoria) badipes, Fr. ; pileus ^ in., pale 
 yellowish-ferruginous, then tan, somewhat membranaceous, 
 campanulate, theu convex, umbonate, smooth, pellucidly 
 striate to umbo when moist ; stem fistulose, equal, firm, 
 flexuose, ferruginous, darker towards naked base, upper 
 part scaly ; gills adnate, ventricose, thin, somewhat distant, 
 pale yellowish-ferruginous. 
 
 Under larch. Coed Coch. 
 
136 OUTLINES OF BKTTISH FUNGOLOGY. 
 
 II. Pn.'EOTi — Pileus tuihed, the 2)artial veil, tJiou(jh fugacioits, 
 generally visible. 
 
 * Pediadei. — Groiving infields and on plains. 
 
 701. A. (Naucoria) vervacti, Fi\ 
 
 A. (Naucoria) triscopus, Fr. ; pileus ^ in., bay-browu, 
 then ochraceous, opaque, slightly fleshy, hemispherical, 
 obtuse, then convexo-plane, with a prominent umbo, smooth ; 
 stem stuffed, then delicately fistulose, filiform, equal, flexuose, 
 smooth, opaque, ferruginous, umber at base ; gills adnate, 
 thin, somewhat crowded, dark ferruginous. 
 
 On old wood. Kilburn. 
 
 702. A. (Naucoria) pediades, Fr. (p. 10) ; 1-2 in. 
 Epping Forest. 
 
 703. A. (Naucoria) arvalis, Fr. ; pileus f-li in., rather 
 fleshy, tough, convex, then plane, growing pale ; stem fistu- 
 lose, slightly pulverulent, becoming yellowish, long, fusiform; 
 gills adnexed, rather distant, tawny, then ferruginous. 
 
 On the ground. 
 
 704. A. (Naucoria) semiorbicularis, Fr. (p. IGO) ; 1-2 in. 
 Epping Forest. 
 
 705. A. (Naucoria) tabacinus, Dec. ; pileus J— | in., 
 umber, then bay-cinnamon, moist, dingy-tan, slightly fleshy, 
 plane, obtuse at base, involute at margin, smooth ; stem 
 hollow, attenuated downwards, somewhat flexuose, naked, 
 darker and fuscous at base ; gills adnate, crowded, linear 
 or ovate, at length brown-bay-cinnamon. 
 
 By waysides, Among short grass. Kew. 
 
 ** ScoRPioiDEi. — Grouting in moist, uncidtivated, roooded 
 2)laces. 
 
 706. A. (Naucoria) tenax, Fr. ; pileus 1 in., varying 
 cinnamon, and olivaceous and somewhat fuscous-yellowish, 
 
AGAPJCINI. 137 
 
 palC;, somewhat fleshy, gills shining through thin margin, 
 hemispherical, then expanded, obtusely umbonate, smooth, 
 viscid ; stem stuffed, then hollow, equal, round, even- 
 fibrillose, dingy-pallid, light yellowish, then fuscous or 
 olive; gills adnate, then rounded and somewhat separating, 
 broad, almost distant, triangular, or oblong, whitish-fuscous, 
 becoming ferruginous-whitish and entire at edge. 
 
 On grassy walks and on sticks. Welford, Northants. 
 
 707. A. (Naucoria) myosotis, Fr. ; pileus 1 in., oliva- 
 ceous or fuscous-green, then pale and light yellow, disc 
 darker, fleshy, convex, then plane, somewhat umbonate, 
 with a viscous pellicle ; flesh thin, pallid ; stem fistulose, 
 slightly firm, equal, flexuose, fibrillose or scaly ; fugitive 
 cortina fringing the margin ; gills adnate, decurrent, with a 
 tooth, somewhat distant, broad, pallid umber-olivaceous, then 
 brown-ferruginous, serrated ; edge white. 
 
 In woods. In moist places. Scarborough. 
 
 708. A. (Naucoria) temulentus, Fr. ; pileus A— 1 in., 
 ferruginous, then ochraceous, hygrophanous, somewhat mem- 
 branaceous, fleshy at disc, campanulate, then convex, some- 
 what umbonate, smooth, striate at circumference, then 
 even ; stem fistulose, with a pith, tough, equal, flexuose, or 
 undulated on surface, polished, pulverulent at apex, white- 
 villous at base ; gills adnate, somewhat distant, attenuated 
 in front, lurid ferruginous, then umber. 
 
 In moist open woods. Glamis, etc. 
 
 709. A. (Naucoria) latissimus, Cke. ; pileus \-\\ in., 
 subglobose, then hemispherical, with a fleshy disc, margin 
 at first incurved ; stem attenuated downwards, rooting, 
 hollow, smooth, dark brown below, pallid above ; gills very 
 broad, rounded behind, slightly adnate, tawny-umber. 
 
 In a churchyard. 
 
138 OUTLIXKS OF BRITISH FUXGOLOGV. 
 
 III. Lepidoti. — rUeus /lucculose or squamrdose, veil manifest. 
 * Squamules o/pileus sujjerjicud, separatinr/. 
 
 710. A. (Naucoria) porriginosus, Fr. ; pileus rather 
 fleshy, convex, then plane, obtuse, viscid, clingy, growing 
 pale, clad with superficial, evanescent, saffron-coloured flocci ; 
 stem fistulose, equal, rather soft, silky, becoming smooth, 
 pallid ; gills adnate, entire, crowded, yellow, then cinnamon. 
 
 Amongst twigs. 
 
 711. A. (Naucoria) sobrius, Fr. ; pilous \-\ in., honey- 
 colour, disc darker, then pale, slightly fleshy, convex, obtuse, 
 smooth, moist, slightly silky ; veil pruinose, fugacious ; 
 stem fistulose, equal, ferruginous-fuscous downwards, some- 
 times sprinkled with silky whitish spots from the veil ; 
 gills broader behind, obtusely adnate, broad, paler than 
 pileus. 
 
 On the ground in mixed woods. Rare. 
 
 Var. dispersus, B. and Br. ; pileus |~^ in., ochraceous, 
 convex, delicately marked with small dots, margin furfura- 
 ceous ; stem fistulose, thickened upwards or equal ; furfura- 
 ceous ; ring appendiculate ; gills adnate, pallid white at 
 margin. 
 
 On lawns, 
 
 A. inquilinus, Fr. (p. 161). Removed to Tubaria. 
 No. 711. 
 
 A. furfuraeeus, Pers. (p. 161). Removed to Tubaria. 
 No. 731.. 
 
 ** I 'ileus irith innate squaimdes. 
 
 712. A. (Naucoria) erinaceus, Fr. (p. 161) ; i in. 
 
 713. A. (Naucoria) siparius, Fr. (p. 161) ; i-i in. 
 711. A. (Naucoria) conspersus, P. ; gregarious ; pileus 
 
 l-l 2 in., bay-brown, or rufous-cinnamon, then ochraceous. 
 
AGAincixi. 139 
 
 hygrophanous, slightly fleshy, campanulato-convex, theu 
 flattened, obtuse, at flrst even, soon furfuraceous and scaly, 
 fragile; stem fistulose, equal, fibrillose, cinnamon, then 
 ochraceous, squamuloso-furfuraceous at apex; gills at first 
 adnata, then emarginato-separating, crowded, linear or ven- 
 tricose, dark cinnamon^ edge entire, same colour. 
 
 In woods and moist places, among leaves. Uncommon. 
 
 715. A. (Waucoria) escharoides,Fr.; pileus i in., tan, then 
 whitish, disc fuscous, slightly fleshy, soft, conico-convex, 
 soon flattened, obtuse, squamuloso-furfuraceous ; flesh white ; 
 stem fragile, fistulose, equal, flexuose, adpressedly fibrillose, 
 pallid, then fuscous, somewhat pruinose at apex ; gills ad- 
 fixed, decurrent with a tooth, or emarginate, somewhat free, 
 ventricose, broad, pallid tan, then cinnamon. 
 
 On bare damp ground. Apethorpe. 
 
 *** Pileus destitute of scales, silk;// or sjyrinJded with atoms. 
 
 716. A. (Naueoria) carpophilus, Fr. ; pileus \ in., 
 somewhat tan, pallid, whitish, even, hygrophanous, some- 
 what membranaceous, convex, obtuse, furfurate with shining 
 atoms or floccoso-squamulose ; stem filiform or capillary, 
 stufled or obsoletely fistulose, pallid, at first furfuraceous, 
 then naked ; gills rounded-adnexed, somewhat free, ventri- 
 cose, broad, somewhat distant, crenulate, pallid, then ochra- 
 ceous. 
 
 On beech mast and leaves. Rare. Epping Forest. 
 
 717. A. (Naueoria) graminicola, Nees ; pileus \ in., 
 fuscous, then fawn-ochraceous, somewhat membranaceous, 
 convex, papillate, shaggy tomentose ; stem slender, tough, 
 hirsute, fuscous ; gills slightly adnexed, somewhat distant, 
 pallid-ochraceous. 
 
 On stalks of grass. 
 
140 OUTLINES OF BrJTISII FUNGOLOGY. 
 
 Subgenus 30. Galera (p. 1(;2). 
 
 Pileus more or less membranaceous, conical or oval, then ex- 
 panded, striate, margin at first sti-aiglit, adpiessed to stem ; 
 veil none or fibrillose; stem somewhat cartilaginous, con- 
 tinuous with the hymenophoi'e, tubular, somewhat hollow ; 
 gills not decurrent ; slender, fragile. 
 
 Galera corresponds with Mycena and Nolanea, spores ochrey- 
 ferruginous, not white or rosy. 
 
 * CoKOCEPiiALi. — Pileus conico-camjoanulate, hij(jrophanoiis ; 
 
 stem straight ; gills ascending sometvhat crowded, 
 
 veil none. 
 
 718. A. (Galera) lateritius, Fr. (p. 162); 1 iu. 
 
 719. A. (Galera) tener, Schccff. (p. 1G2); i iu. Epping 
 Forest. 
 
 720. A. (Galera) siligineus, Fr. ; pileus membranaceous, 
 globoso-campauulate, then expanded, unequal, even, not turn- 
 ing pale; stem rather flexuose, equal, pallid, somewhat 
 pruinose ; gills adnate, broadly linear, rather crowded, 
 ochre. 
 
 On road scrapings. Scarborough. 
 
 721. A. (Galera) ovalis, Fr. (p. 162) ; 1 in. Epping 
 Forest. 
 
 722. A. (Galera) antipus, LascJi ; pileus ^-1 in., deep 
 ochraceous, then pale, almost white, even, smooth, hygro- 
 phanous, campanulate, then expanded with a slightly 
 fleshy, prominent disc ; flesh white ; stem pale, striate, mealy, 
 bulbous at base, with a long rooting stem ; gills almost 
 free, attenuated behind, crowded, semi-lanceolate, light 
 yellowish-ochraceous, then cinnamon. 
 
 On soil in gardens and on dung. Rare. 
 
 723. A. (Galera) confertus, Bolt. (p. 163); 1 in. 
 
 724. A. (Galera) sparteus, Fr. (p. 163); ^ in. 
 
AGARICIXI. 141 
 
 725. A. (Galera) pygmseo-afl5,nis, Fr.; pileus 1 in., 
 somewhat fuscous or honey-colour, then tan, fleshy mem- 
 brauaceous, campanulate then flattened, dry, delicately 
 reticulato-wriukled, almost rugged ; stem fistulose, fragile, 
 equal, shining white, obsoletely pruinose at apex ; gills 
 slightly reaching stem, crowded, thin, entire, clay 
 ochraceous, then ferruginous-ochraceous. 
 
 In a cucumber house. 
 
 ** Bryogeni. — Growing mnong moss ; j':)^7e^^s membranaceous, 
 striate, liyrjroplmnous, gills adnate, someivhat denticulate. 
 
 726. A. (Galera) vittseformis, Fr. ; pileus ^-1 in., date- 
 brown, conical, then hemispherical, striate towards margin, 
 smooth ; stem fistulose, equal, somewhat straight, opaque, 
 rubiginous ; gills somewhat distant, watery cinnamon then 
 ferruginous. 
 
 Among moss and grass. Perth. 
 
 727. A. (Galera) rubiginosus, P. ; pileus 
 
 i_i 
 
 in. 
 
 cinnamon or honey colour then tan, campanulate, obtuse, 
 striate throughout, smooth ; stem filiform, fistulose, tough, 
 flaccid, smooth, shining, bay-brown or dark ferruginous ; 
 gills broad, distant, ochraceous, often connected by veins. 
 
 Among moss. Kew. Epping Forest. 
 
 A. embolus, i^r. (p. 163). Removed to Tubaria, No. 738. 
 
 728. A. (Galera) hypnorum, Batsch (p. 163), ^-i in. ; 
 Epping Forest. 
 
 Var. sphagnorum, P. ; twice or thrice as large as type, 
 yellow ochraceous ; disc broad, stem firm, fibrillose, tawny. 
 
 On Sphagna. 
 
 Var. bryorum, P. ; larger than type, watery cinnamon, 
 rather horcy. 
 
 Among moss. 
 
142 OUTLINES OF BPJTISII FUXGOLOGY. 
 
 729. A. (Galera) mniophilus, Lasch ; pileus h \n., 
 fuscous-light-yellowish, almost clay colour, campanulate, 
 almost papillate, striate, disc even ; stem equal, Hexile, 
 fibrillose, yellow, mealy at apex, iloccose at base ; gills 
 obtusely adnate, piano-ascending, broad, somewhat distant, 
 light yellowish-ochraceous, or becoming fuscous-clay-colour. 
 
 Among Mnium. Raunoch. Epping Forest. 
 
 730. A. (Galera) minutus, Quel. ; pileus ^ in., chamois- 
 bistre, campanulate ; stem long, somewhat capillary, 
 smooth, tawny, base webbed-spreading, white ; gills adnato- 
 arcuate, as broad as long, moderately crowded, yellowisli, 
 then clay colour, edge whitish. 
 
 Among moss. Wrotham, Kent. 
 
 *** EiiiODERMEi. — Pileus somewhat membranaceous, veil mani- 
 fest, su2:)erjicial, sejjarating, at first silky and sqimmulose 
 at margin. 
 
 731. A. (Galera) ravidus, Fr. ; gregarious; pileus 
 h.-\\ in., greyish, at first campanulato-hemispherical, even, 
 moist, very hygrophanous, somewhat silky when dry, then 
 appendiculato-toothed with the white veil, fragile ; stem 
 fistulose, fragile, equal, pallid, becoming yellowish, silvery- 
 shining, fibrilloso-striate, somewhat pruinose at apex ; gills 
 somewhat free, broad, ventricose, distant, ochraceous-saffrou 
 or pale yellowish. 
 
 On the ground among chips. 
 
 732. A. (Galera) mycenopsis, Fr. ; pileus \ in., pallid 
 honey-colour, slightly fleshy-membranaceous, somewhat 
 globose, campanulate then convexo-plane, gibbous with a 
 l)roadly elevated, naked, even disc ; striate and silky with 
 superficial white villous down to middle ; stem fistulose, 
 attenuated upwards, yellowish but white-silky with ad- 
 pressed villous down, obsoletely pruinatc at apex ; gills ven- 
 
AGARICINI. 143 
 
 tricose, almost triangalar, distant, at first adnexed, at 
 length somewhat free^ pallid, edge delicately flocculose. 
 In marshy ground among Sphac/Jia. King^s ClifFe. 
 
 Subgenus 3 1 . — Tubaria. 
 
 Pileus somewhat membranaceous, often clothed with the universal 
 floccose veil, sometimes umbilicate or depressed ; stem some- 
 what cartilaginovis, fistulose ; gills somewhat decui-rent, or 
 broadest behind and triangular. 
 
 Tubaria corresponds with Omphalia and Eccilia; spores ferrugi- 
 nous or fuscous-ferruginous, not white or rosy. 
 
 * Genuini. — Spores ferruginous. 
 
 733. A. (Tubaria) cupularis, Bidl. ; piieus 1 in., rufescent 
 then light yellowish, hygrophanous, slightly fleshy, plano- 
 depressed,obtuse, even, smooth; stem slender, fistulose, naked, 
 attenuated upwards, whitish ; gills decurrent, crowded, 
 tawny. 
 
 On the ground. On mountainous heath. Creag 
 Maoiseach. Strathtay. 
 
 734. A. (Tubaria) furfuraceus, P. ; o-l in., removed 
 from Naucoria. 
 
 Var. trigonophyllus, Lasch. ; smaller, growing pale ; gills 
 very broad, triangular, dingy ochre. 
 By waysides. Epping Forest. 
 
 735. A. (Tubaria) paludosus, Fr. ; pileus i-J in., pale 
 yellowish-fuscous, silky with superficial, pallid flocci, some- 
 what membranaceous, at first conical, then convex, umbo- 
 nate, with a very prominent papilla ; stem attenuated 
 upwards, fistulose, flexuose, ochraceous, paler and -white- 
 villous below, flocculose above with remains of veil ; gills 
 decurrent, broad behind, triangular, with a decurrent 
 tooth, crowded, thin, watery ochraceous. 
 
 On marshy ground among Sphagna. 
 
144 OUTLINES OF BUITLSII FUXGOLOGY. 
 
 73G. A. (Tubaria) stagninus, Fr. ; pileus \-l iu., bay- 
 browu ferruginous, theu ocliraceous, somewhat membrana- 
 ceous, conical then hemispherical, obtuse, sometimes 
 slightly depressed in centre, somewhat viscid, slightly 
 striate, then even, clothed and appendiculate round margin 
 with floccose, superficial, concentric, white scales ; stem 
 slightly tough, fistulose, equal, rubiginous then date-brown, 
 somewhat pruinose at apex ; gills decurrent, broad, tri- 
 angular, ferruginous. 
 
 On marshy ground. Sibbertoft. Epping Forest. 
 
 737. A. (Tubaria) pellucidus, Bull. ; pileus rather 
 fleshy, conic then campanulate, umbonate, cinnamon, 
 hygrophanous, silky and squamulose at striate margin ; 
 stem thin, short, attenuated upwards, shining, pruinose at 
 apex ; gills decurrent, broad behind, triangular, paler. 
 
 Among leaves. 
 
 738. A. (Tubaria) embolus, Fr. (p. 1G3) ; h'm.; removed 
 from GaU'.ru. 
 
 739. A. (Tubaria) autochthonuB, B. and Br. ; pileus ^ in., 
 ochrey-white, obtuse, hemispherical, silky, flocculose at 
 margin ; stem flexuose, thickened upwards and at the white 
 woolly base ; gills adnate, with a tooth, horizontal, honey- 
 coloured. 
 
 On naked soil. Wooduewton, Northauts. 
 
 * * Pii^oTi. — Sjyores fnscous-ferrwjinous. 
 
 740. A. (Tubaria) crobxilus, Fr. ; pileus i-| in., slightly 
 fleshy, flattened, obtuse, slightly viscid, covered with floc- 
 cose, somewhat squarrose, separating white scales, then 
 naked, becoming hoary-tan, shining ; stem fistulose, equal, 
 flexuose, fuscous, densely beset with white floccose scales ; 
 
AGAPJCINI. 145 
 
 gills adnate, somewhat decurrent, crowded, becoming fuscous- 
 ferruginous. 
 
 Among sticks. Welford, Northants. 
 
 741. A. (Tubaria) inquilinus, Fr. (p. 161); h in.; re- 
 moved from Naucoria. 
 
 742. A. (Tubaria) muscorum, P. ; pileus membrana- 
 ceous, convex, depressed in centre, striate, smooth, tawny- 
 yellow ; stem fistulose, short, same colour, incrassated at 
 base ; gills rather decurrent, horizontal, paler. 
 
 Among moss on heaths. Scarborough. 
 
 Subgenus 32, Crepidotus (p. 163). 
 
 Pileus excentiic, lateral or resupinate. 
 
 Crepidotus coiTesponds with Pleurotus and Claudopus, spores 
 
 ferruginous, not white or rosy. 
 
 743. A. (Crepidotus) palmatus, Bull. ; pileus fleshy, 
 compact, convex, then expanded, irregular, smooth, pellicu- 
 lose, ferruginous : stem excentric or lateral, incurved, firm, 
 smooth, whitish ; gills fixed to a collar, ventricose, rather 
 distant, same colour. 
 
 On trunks. 
 
 744. A. (Crepidotus) alveolus, Lasch (p. 163) ; 2 in. 
 
 745. A. (Crepidotus) mollis, Schceff. (p. 164); 1-3 in. 
 Epping Forest. 
 
 746. A. (Crepidotus) applanatus, P. ; pileus watery- 
 ciunamon, then whitish, very hygrophanous, slightly and 
 watery-fleshy, soft, fragile, plane and horizontal, extended 
 straight into a short white tomentose stem, otherwise reni- 
 form, slightly striate at margin when moist, even when dry, at 
 length depressed behind and somewhat sessile ; gills ending 
 determinately behind, crowded, linear, thin, whitish, then 
 watery-cinnamon . 
 
 On decaying wood. Penzance. 
 
146 OUTLINES OF BKITISH FUXGOLOGY. 
 
 747. A. (Crepidotus) calolepis, Fr. ; pileus ^ in., slightly- 
 fleshy, reniform, convex, almost shell-shaped, dimidiate, ses- 
 sile on a small villous knot, margined with white behind, 
 variegated with minute, crowded, rufescent scales ; flesh 
 firm ; gills concurrent at base, rounded behind, comparatively 
 broad, pallid-fuscous, then fuscous-ferruginous. 
 
 On rotten branches. Ou dead wood. Edinburgh Fungus 
 Show. 
 
 748. A. (Crepidotus) haustellaris, Fr. (p. 161); -^1 in. 
 
 749. A. (Crepidotus) rubi, Berk. (p. 164) ; ^-^ in. 
 
 750. A. (Crepidotus) chimonopliilus, B. and Br. 
 (p. 164) ; J in. 
 
 A. variabilis, P. ; removed to Claudopus, No. 530. 
 A. dupluens, Batsch ; removed to Claudopus, No, 531. 
 A. byssisedus, P. ; removed to Claudopus, No. 532. 
 
 751. A. (Crepidotus) epibryus, Fr. ; pileus ^ in., shining 
 white, membranaceous, resupinate, sessile, adnate at vertex, 
 becoming silky-even; gills concurrent in centre, thin, crowded, 
 whitish, then pale yellowish. 
 
 On mosses, grasses, holly leaves, living Vaccinium, etc. 
 Coed Coch. 
 
 752. A. (Crepidotus) Phillipsii, B. and Br. ; pileus J in., 
 slightly umber, opaque, striate, smooth ; stem solid, incurved 
 at base ; gills shortly adnate, narrow, ventricose. 
 
 On grass. Wrekin. Penicuik. 
 
 753. A. (Crepidotus) Pezizoides, Nees (p. 165). 
 
 754. A. (Crepidotus) epigseus, P. ; pileus reniform, fra- 
 gile, reddish-grey ; base villous, whitish ; gills distinct, 
 watery-rufescent, divergent, not red when dry. 
 
 On the clay of the marlstoue. 
 
 755. A. (Crepidotus) Ralfsii, B. and Br. ; pileus yellow, 
 semi-reflexed, delicately furfuraceous, slightly hispid, the 
 
AGARICmi. 147 
 
 involute margin spreading, adfixed by cottony ilocci ; stem 
 obsolete ; gills ventricose, clay-colour, margin whitish. 
 On decaying wood. Penzance. 
 
 Series 4. Peatell^. — Spores -jjuiylisJi^ imrijlish-brown, or 
 
 dark i^wrplish. 
 
 Subgenus 33. Chitonia. 
 
 Universal veil distinct from pileus ; hymenopliore distinct 
 
 from the stem ; gills free. 
 
 Chitonia corresponds with Amanita, Volvaria and Acetabularia, 
 
 spores purphsh, not wlaite, rosy or brown. 
 
 756. A. (Chitonia) rubriceps, Cke. and Mass. ; pileus 
 1 in., rather fleshy, campanulate, then expanded, umbonate, 
 smooth, even, testaceous ; margin faintly striate ; stem 
 erect, iistulose, paler than the pileus, rooting ; volva sheath- 
 ing, accate, whitish, torn at margin ; gills free, lanceolate, 
 rather crowded, purplish-brown ; ring obsolete. 
 
 On soil in an Aroid house. Kew. 
 
 Subgenus 34. Psalliota (p. 1G5). 
 
 Stem ringed, separate from hymenophore ; gills free. 
 
 Psalliota corresponds with Lepiota, Annularia and Togaria, spores 
 
 purplish-brown, not white, rosy or brown. 
 
 * Edules. — Large, fleshy. 
 
 757. A. (Psalliota) augustus, Fr. ; pileus 4-5 in., glo- 
 bose, hemispherical, then expanded, obtuse, disc even, cir- 
 cumference fibrilloso-squamose ; stem solid, thick, smooth, 
 attenuated upwards, white, tinged with red if bruised ; ring 
 superior, broad, externally cracked into angular scales ; gills 
 crowded, narrow, remote, leaving a collar round stem, pallid, 
 then brown. 
 
 In woods. 
 
 758. A. (Psalliota) Elvensis, B, and Br. ; csespitose ; 
 pileus 6 in., somewhat globose, then hemispherical, fibril- 
 
148 OUTLIXES OF BRITISH FUNGOLOGY. 
 
 lose, broken up into large persistent brown scales, areolate 
 in centre ; margin very obtuse, thick, covered with pyra- 
 midal warts ; flesh turning red when cut ; stem solid, stuffed 
 with delicate threads, at first nearly equal, at length swollen 
 in centre and attenuated at base, fibrillose and areolate 
 below, nearly smooth near the pileus ; ring thick, large, 
 deflexed, broken, areolato-verrucose beneath ; gills free, 
 brownish flesh-colour. 
 
 Under oaks. Bodelwyddan. Esculent. 
 
 759. A. (Psalliota) arvensis, Schceff. (p. 166) ; 3-6 in. 
 Epping Eorest. 
 
 Var. villditicus, Brand.; acquiring a large size audvery scaly. 
 On the ground. 
 
 Vai'. purpurascens, Cke. ; pileus becoming tinged with 
 purple. 
 
 In woods, etc. 
 
 760. A. (Psalliota) pratensis, Schceff. ; pileus 2-3 in., 
 fleshy, ovoid, then expanded, becoming smooth or squamu- 
 lose, whitish, then cinereous ; stem stuff'ed, thickened at 
 the base, naked ; ring median, simple, deciduous ; gills free, 
 narrow, acute, rounded behind, cinereous, at length brown. 
 
 In pastures and woods. Odour and taste pleasant. 
 
 761. A. (Psalliota) cretaceus, Fr. (p. 167) ; 3 in. 
 Epping Forest. 
 
 762. A. (Psalliota) campestris, L. (p. 165) ; 3 in, Epping 
 Eorest. 
 
 Var. hortensis, Cke. ; pileus fibrillose or squamulose, 
 brownish. 
 
 = Var. elongatus and var. Buchanaui. 
 These are the cultivated forms of hot beds. 
 Var. costatus, Fr. ; pileus sulcate, repand. 
 In woods. 
 
AGAEICIXI. 149 
 
 Var. rufescens, B. ; rufous like A. vaccinus ; flesh turn- 
 ing bright red when bruised,, gills at first white. 
 In pastures. 
 Var. exannulatus, Cke. ; ring evanescent or obsolete. 
 
 763. A. (Psaliiota) sylvatieus, Schcpjf. (p. 167) ; 3 in. 
 Epping Forest. 
 
 764. A. (Psaliiota) hsemorrhoidarius, Kalch. ; pileus 
 4 in., rufous-fuscous, fleshy, ovate then expanded, covered 
 with broad adpressed scales ; margin at first bent inwards ; 
 flesh when broken immediately blood-red ; stem soon hollow, 
 fibrillose, adpressedly squamulose below, or mealy ; base 
 solid, somewhat bulbous ; ring superior, large ; gills free, 
 approximate, crowded, rosy-flesh-colour, at length purple 
 umber. 
 
 In woods. Lilleshall, Salop. 
 
 765. A. (Psaliiota) subgibbosus, Fr. ; pileus 2-3 in., 
 rather fleshy, convex, then plane, umbo even, smooth, 
 circumference silky, fibrillose ; stem hollow, thin ; ring 
 fugacious ; gills remote, white, then cinereous brown. 
 
 In woods. 
 
 ^ ** MiNORES. — Pileus iliinhj fleshy, not used as food. 
 
 7QQ. A. (Psaliiota) comtulus, Fr. ; pileus 1—1^ in., 
 yellowish-white, slightly fleshy, convex, then plane, obtuse, 
 adpressedly fibrilloso-silky, becoming even ; flesh thin, soft, 
 same colour as pileus ; stem hollow, stuft'ed with floccules 
 when young, somewhat attenuated, even, smooth, white, 
 becoming somewhat light yellow ; ring median, torn, fuga- 
 cious, same colour; gills rounded-free, crowded, soft, 
 broader in front, flesh-colour, rosy, at length fuscous-flesh- 
 colour. 
 
 In woods. Coed Coch. 
 
150 OUTLINES OF lUIlTlSll FUXGOLOGY. 
 
 767. A. (Psalliota) sagatus, Fr. ; pilcus 2 in., rather 
 fleshy, convexo-plaue, even, stnootli, fulvous, rather shiuiug ; 
 stem hollow, equal, ring distant, spreading ; gills free, 
 ventricose, umber. 
 
 Under beech. 
 
 768. A. (Psalliota) echinatus, Both. (p. 167) ; li in. 
 
 Subgenus 35. Pilosace. 
 
 Hymenophore distinct from stem ; gills free, tit first remote from 
 stem; without ring or volva. 
 
 Pilosace corresponds with Hiatula, Pluteus and Pluteolus, 
 spores purplish, not white, rosy or brown. 
 
 769. A. (Pilosace) Algeriensis, Fr. ; pileus fleshy, com- 
 pact, smooth, convex, then plane, white ; stem solid, stout, 
 silky, white ; gills free, narrow, dark purple. 
 
 On the ground. 
 
 Subgenus 36. Stropharia (p. 1G7). 
 
 Hymenophore continuous with the stem ; veil annular ; 
 gills more or less adnate. 
 
 Stropharia coiTCsponds with Armillai-ia and Pholiota, spores 
 purplish, not white or brown. 
 
 A. VisciPF.LLES. — Pellicle of inhus even or scalij, most frequentl i) 
 viscous. 
 
 * IMuNDi. — Growing on the ground, or not on dung. 
 
 770. A. (Stropharia) versicolor, With. (p. 167) ; 1-4 in. 
 
 771. A. (Stropharia) seruginosus, Citrt. (p. 167) ; 3—1 in. 
 Eppiog Forest. 
 
 772. A. (Stropharia) albo-cyaneus, Desm. (p. 167) ; 1 in. 
 Epping Forest. 
 
 773. A. (Stropharia) inunctus, Fr. ; pileus 1 in., pallid 
 
AGAEICIXI. 151 
 
 light yellow^ then livid purple with gluten^ fleshy^ convexo- 
 plane, somewhat umbonatCj pelliculose^ viscid, smooth, 
 slightly striate at margin ; flesh thin, soft, white ; stem 
 fistulose, equal, flexuose, often decumbent, soft, dry, 
 shining-white, silky-fibrillose below the medial, distant, 
 fugacious ring ; gills adnate, with a decurrent tooth, whitish, 
 then becoming fuscous, whitish at the sides when bruised. 
 
 In pastures. Ely, Epping Forest, etc. 
 
 774*. A. (Stropharia) obturatus, Fr. ; pileus light yellow, 
 thick, convex, then plane, obtuse, obsoletely viscid, com- 
 monly dry, even, often rimosely squamulose ; flesh compact, 
 shining white ; stem firm, stuffed, attenuated downwards, 
 even, whitish ; ring superior, deflexed, white ; gills adnate, 
 crowded, plane, white, then purple-umber, often sterile and 
 remaining white. 
 
 On the ground, among grass. Rare. 
 
 775. A. (Stropharia) coronillus, Bull. ; pileus fleshy, 
 hemispherical, then flattened, convex, even, rather viscid, 
 ochraceous, fulvous, then pale ; margin at first whitish floc- 
 cose, flesh white ; stem white, stuft'ed, then fistulose, fibril- 
 lose, attenuated downwards, base equal or slightly bulbous ; 
 ring adhering to the stem, median, sulcato-plicate ; gills 
 crowded, sinuately adnate, whitish, purple-violet, then 
 blackish, edge whitish, pruinose under a lens. 
 
 By waysides. Epping Forest. Odour somewhat of 
 radishes. 
 
 776. A. (Stropharia) melaspermuSj^M//. (p. 168); 1-2 in. 
 
 777. A. (Stropharia) squamosus, F?'. (p. 168) ; 1-3 in. 
 Epping Forest, 
 
 Var. thraustus, Kalchbr. ; more graceful and slender 
 than the typical form ; squamules of pileus deciduous, very 
 fragile and hygrophanous. Epping Forest. 
 
152 OUTLINES OF BEITISII FUNGOLOGY. 
 
 Var. aurantiacus, Cke. ; pileus orange or brick-red. 
 Among grass. 
 
 778. A. (Stropharia) Percevali, B. and Br. ; pileus 
 2 in., ochraceous, fleshy, umbonate^ then flattened, slightly 
 viscid, white-floccose chiefly at margin, flesh dull umber ; 
 flocci deciduous ; stem attenuated upwards, hollow and 
 pallid above, umber within, transversely scaly, rooting ; 
 ring narrow, more or less persistent ; gills adfixed, very 
 distant, white, then somewhat cinereous, at length pallid 
 umber. 
 
 On sawdust. Wallington, Northumberland. 
 
 779. A. (Stropharia) Worthingtonii, Fr. ; pileus 1 in., 
 yellow, slightly fleshy, campanulate, even, smooth, viscid ; 
 stem fistulose, slender, flexuose, smooth, dark blue ; ring 
 incomplete, distant ; gills adnate, broad, brown-cinnamon. 
 
 In pastures. Epping Forest, etc. 
 
 ** Merdarii. — Growing on dung, lihuj often incomjilete. 
 
 780. A. (Stropharia) luteo-nitens, Fr. ; pileus 1-2 in., 
 fleshy, thin, conical, campanulate, umbonate, viscid, yellow ; 
 margin squamulose, stem hollow, even, pruinose above the 
 distant ring ; gills adnexed, ventricose, cinereous, becoming 
 blackish. 
 
 On sawdust, dung, and humus. 
 
 781. A. (Stropharia) merdarius, Fr. ; gregarious ; pileus 
 2 in., yellow, then straw colour, fleshy, at first obtusely 
 campanulate, then convexo-plane, gibbous, smooth, pellicu- 
 lose, moist, hygrophanous, slightly viscid, margin thin, 
 deflexed, even ; flesh white ; stem tough, stuffed with a 
 pith, equal, somewhat flexuose, flocculoso-villous and 
 slightly silky, dry, straw-white, white-villous at base, striate 
 at apex from the decurrent teeth of gills ; ring torn, 
 
AGAPJCINI. ir>3 
 
 commonly adhering to margin of pileus ; gills adnato- 
 decarrent, somewhat crowded, very broad behind, dingy 
 pallid, at length brown-fuscous. 
 
 On horse-dung. Sibbertoft. Epping Forest. 
 
 782. A. (Stropharia) stercorarius, Fr. (p. 168) ; 1 in. 
 Epping Forest. 
 
 783. A. (Stropharia) semiglobatus,-Ba/5cA (p.l69) ; l\w. 
 Epping Forest. 
 
 B. Spintrigeri. — Pileus icithout a pellicle, but innato-fibrillose, 
 not viscous. 
 
 784. A. (Stropharia) caput-Medusse, Fr. ; pileus 3 in., 
 fleshy, ovate^ then convexo-expanded, obtuse or obtusely 
 umbonate, dry, when young densely scaly-squarrose with 
 the veil, soon naked, even and umber on the vertex, 
 lacunose, paler and somewhat tan-colour towards margin ; 
 stem whitish, hollow, the somewhat bulbous base solid, 
 attenuated upwards, covered below the superior ring 
 with crowded, imbricated and squarrose whitish-fuscous 
 scales, white-mealy above ; gills adnate, ventricose, lanceo- 
 late then semi-ovate, not very crowded, at first clay-white, 
 then pale umber, fuscous-spotted. 
 
 About Scotch fir stumps. Rare. Glamis. 
 
 785. A. (Stropharia) scrobinaceus, Fr. ; caespitose ; 
 pileus at first fuscous, livid, then yellow in centre, grey- 
 violaceous at the circumference, fleshy, thin, hemispherical 
 then expanded, gibbous, slightly sulcate, covered with 
 crowded, adpressed, separating, blackish squamules ; stem 
 hollow attenuated from the thickened base, fibrillose, white, 
 mealy at apex ; ring superior, fugacious, white ; gills 
 adnate, crowded, crenulate, white flesh-colour, then be- 
 coming purple. 
 
 On and near stumps. Glamis. 
 
154 OUTLINES OF BRITISH FUXGOLOGY. 
 
 78G. A. (Stropharia) Jerdoni, B. ami Br. ; pileus 2 in., 
 ochraceous theu brown, fleshy, campanulate, umbo obtuse, 
 minutely rivulose, clothed with superficial, evanescent, 
 white scales ; cuticle not peeling off ; stem hollow, cylin- 
 drical, white, pulverulent above, brownish with silky trans- 
 verse scales below ; ring superior, deflexed ; gills adnate, 
 forming a line down the stem but not decurrent, pallid 
 then brown, transversely striate. 
 
 Ou fir stumps. Hare. 
 
 787. A. (Stropharia) spintriger, Fr. ; ca3spitose ; pileus 
 3-4 in., tawny or flesh-colour, becoming whitish, rather 
 fleshy, ovate then flattened, obtuse, even, smooth, fragile ; 
 stem hollow, equal, floccosely fibrillose, white, naked at 
 apex ; ring distant, thin, fugacious ; gills adnate, crowded, 
 fuscous-brown. 
 
 On trunks. 
 
 788. A. (Stropharia) hypsipus, Fr.; pileus 2 in., convex, 
 tan colour, pallid, then plane, even, smooth, fragile, hygro- 
 phanous, striate at margin ; stem equal, hollow, smooth ; 
 ring medial, persistent ; gills adnate, seceding, rather dis- 
 tant, white, then brown. 
 
 Solitary, in swampy places. 
 
 Subgenus 37. Hypholoma (p. 1(")9). 
 
 Hypholoma corresponds v/ith 'rricholonia, Entoloma and Hebe- 
 loma, spores dark purplish, not white, rosy or brown. 
 
 * Fasciculakes. — Colour of the tough, smooth, dry pileus 
 bright ; not hygrophanous. 
 
 789. A. (Hypholoma) silaceus, P. ; pileus 3 in., 
 orange-rufous, fleshy, convex, viscous, silky and whitish 
 round margin ; stem stuffed, then hollow, bulbous, shining, 
 
AGARICINI. 155 
 
 fibrilloso-striate ; gills adnate, crowded, grey then 
 ochraceous. 
 
 In old pasture. Glamis. 
 
 790. A. (Hypholoma) sublateritius, SchcEJif. (p. 169). 
 Epping Forest. 
 
 Var. squamosus, Cke. ; pileus spotted with superficial scales, 
 especially towards margin. 
 
 On trunks. 
 
 Var. ScheefFeri, Fr. ; pileus conical, at length depressed, 
 wrinkled ; gills narrow, decurrent, even in the young 
 specimens. 
 
 On trunks. 
 
 791. A. (Hypholoma) capnoides,Fr.; csespitose; pileuslin.; 
 ochraceous, yellowish, fleshy, convex, then flattened, obtuse, 
 dry, smooth ; flesh somewhat thin, white ; stem hollow, 
 equal, often curved and flexuose, becoming silky-even, 
 pallid, whitish at apex, partially striate, becoming ferrugi- 
 ginous ; cortina appendiculate, white, becoming fuscous- 
 purple. 
 
 On pine stumps. Uncommon. 
 
 792. A. (Hypholoma) epixanthus, Fr. ; pileus 2-3 in., 
 light yellow, then pale, the disc commonly darker, fleshy, 
 moderately thin, convexo-plane, obtuse or gibbous, even, 
 slightly silky, then smooth ; flesh white, becoming light 
 yellow ; stem hollow, attenuated from the thickened base 
 or equal, floccoso-fibrillose, pale ferruginous, fuscous below, 
 pruinose at apex ; cortina appendiculate, white ; gills 
 adnate, crowded, at first light yellow-white, then cinereous. 
 
 On fir stumps. Epping Forest. Frequent. Odour acid, 
 strong. 
 
 793. A. (Hypholoma) elseodes, Fr. ; ca3spitose ; pileus 
 brick-red or tan, fleshy, rather plane, somewhat umbonate. 
 
156 OUTLINES OF BKITISH FUNGOLOGY. 
 
 dry, smooth opaque ; flesh yellow ; stem stuffed, then 
 hollow, equal, slender, incurved or flexuose, fibrillose, same 
 colour as pileus, becoming ferruginous ; gills adnate, 
 crowded, greenish, then olivaceous. 
 
 On trunks and on the ground. Slough. Odour bitter. 
 
 794. A, (Hypholoma) fascicularis,///^c/.9. (p,169); 2-4in. 
 Epping Forest. 
 
 795. A. (Hypholoma) dispersus, Fr. (p. 169) ; 1-H in. 
 Epping Forest. 
 
 ** VisciDi. — Pileus naked, viscous. 
 
 796. A. (Hyplioloma) cedipus, Cke. ; pileus i-1 in. ; 
 glutinous, fleshy in centre, turbinate, hemispherical then 
 convex, smooth, dull, hygrophanous, disc umber, pallid at 
 ragged margin which slightly exceeds gills ; stem thick, 
 enlarged downwards to a bulbous base, solid, fibrillose 
 below, pruinose above ; ring evanescent ; gills at first 
 whitish, then umber, adnate by their entire breadth, or with 
 a minute decurrent tooth, plane, edge somewhat granular. 
 
 Attached to decayed sticks and dead leaves. 
 
 *** Velutint. — Pileus silk// loith innate fibrils or streaked. 
 
 797. A. (Hypholoma) storea, Fr. ; pileus 3 in., pale 
 fuscous then dingy-isabelline, fleshy, convex, broadly umbo- 
 nate, somewhat depressed round umbo, broken up into 
 longitudinally adnate or squarrose fibrils ; cortina a prolon- 
 gation of fibrils of pileus, appendiculate at margin ; flesh 
 white, compact ; stem solid, equal, round, even, somewhat 
 fibrillose, pallid ; gills adnate with a decurrent tooth, livid- 
 cinereous, at length fuscous, edge serrulated, white. 
 
 On roots of trees. On beech stumps. Ascot. Perth. 
 Epping Forest. 
 
AGAKICINI. 157 
 
 l^ar. ca3spitosus, Cke. ; ctespitose ; stem fistulose, some- 
 times tinged with yellow at the base. 
 = A. hijpoxanthus of Phil, and Plow. 
 On beech stumps. 
 
 798. A. (Hypholoma) lacrymabundus, Fr. (p. 170) ; 
 2-3 in. Epping Forest. 
 
 799. A. (Hypholoma) pyrotrichus, Holinsk. ; casspitose ; 
 pileus 3 in., fiery -tawny, slightly fleshy, hemispherical, 
 obtuse then expanded, densely clothed with somewhat 
 adpressed, partially fasciculate, tawny fibrils ; flesh tawny ; 
 stem hollow, fibrous-soft, equal, fibrillose, or slightly 
 squarrose, becoming tawny ; cortina tawny ; gills adnate, 
 somewhat crowded, broad, pallid, then brown, at length 
 free ; edge white, flocculose. 
 
 About roots of trees, beech, etc. King's Lynn. Glamis. 
 Epping Forest. 
 
 800. A. (Hypholoma) velutinus, Pers. (p. 170) ; 2-4 in. 
 Eppiug Forest. 
 
 Var. leiocephalus, B. and Br. ; densely csespitose, much 
 smaller than type ; pileus hygrophanous, rugged, smooth, 
 except at the fibrillose margin, pallid ; stem pallid, apex 
 pruinose. 
 
 On old stumps. 
 
 **** Flocculosi. — With Jioccose, superficial separatmg scales. 
 
 801. A. (Hypholoma) cascus, Fr. ; gregarious; pileus 
 li-3 in., livid-grey, then tan- whitish, somewhat fleshy, 
 oval, then expanded, obtuse, smooth, slightly wrinkled, 
 even on disc, when young superficially scaly, fragile ; stem 
 hollow, equal, fibrillose, white, white-pulveruleut at apex ; 
 veil appendiculate at margin of pileus, squamulose, white; 
 
158 OUTLINES OF BRITISH FUNGOLOGY. 
 
 gills roimded-adnexed, veutricose, dry, grey, then black- 
 fuscous, edge whitish. 
 
 In mountain wood. Rannoch, 
 
 802. A. (Hypholoma) piinctiilatus, Kalch. ; pileus 
 fleshy, thin, convex, dry, pallid, squamuloso-punctate froju 
 the veil, then naked ; stem stuffed, pallid, clad with punc- 
 tiform squamules up to the ring ; gills sinuately adnate 
 with a decurrent tooth, broad, rather crowded, pallid, then 
 pale umber. 
 
 On chips, etc. 
 
 ***** Appendiculati, — Pileus smooth, hy<jro2)hanous. 
 
 803. A. (Hypholoma) lanaripes, Cke. ; somewhat 
 csespitose; pileus l|-3 in., pallid, disc tawny or brownish, 
 rather fleshy, campanulate, then expanded, hygrophanous, 
 squamose with superficial scales from the breaking up of 
 the cuticle, veil attached in fugacious patches, margin 
 thin; stem white, hollow, fragile, somewhat fibrilloso tomen- 
 tose at base ; gills reaching the stem whitish, then purplish - 
 brown. 
 
 On soil in conservatories. 
 
 804. A. (Hypholoma) CandoUeanus, Fr. (p. 170) ; 2-4- iu. 
 Epping Forest. 
 
 805. A. (Hypholoma) appendiculatus, Btdl. (p. 170) ; 
 2-3 in. Epping Forest. 
 
 A. (Hypholoma) felinus, Passer. ; gregarious ; sub- 
 csespitose ; pileus fleshy, membranaceous, hemispherical, 
 then expanded, smooth, hygrophanous, ochraceous ; stem 
 fistulose, short, thin, rather shining-white, incrassated at 
 base and rather floccose, striate at apex ; gills adnate, white, 
 then fuscous — A. catarius. Fr. Hym. Eur. 
 
 On ground, among grass. 
 
AGARICINI. 159 
 
 806. A. (Hypholoma) leiieoteplirus, B. and Br. ; cses- 
 pitose ; pileus 3 in., pallid, then whitish, somewhat cam- 
 panulate, wrinkled, then convexo-expanded ; stem fistulose, 
 silky fibrillose downwards, striate or sulcato-striate at apex ; 
 ring large, partially appendiculate ; gills slightly adnate, 
 narrow, cinereous-whitish grey, then black. 
 
 At base of ash trees. North Kilworth. 
 
 807. A. (Hypholoma) egenulus, B. and Br. ; pileus 
 1-J in., white, hemispherical, expanded, umbonate, smooth, 
 even except towards edge, margin finely striate, appendicu- 
 late; stem fistulose, attenuated upwards or nearly equal, 
 minutely adpressedly scaly; gills adnate with a tooth, 
 slightly ventricose, moderately distant, purplish umber, 
 edge white. 
 
 On the ground, among grass. Apethorpe. 
 
 808. A. (Hypholoma) hydrophilus, Bidl. ; pileus fleshy- 
 membranaceous, convex, then expanded, subrepand, smooth, 
 hygrophanous, rugose, bay-brown, disc even, margin rather 
 broken ; stem fistulose, curved, closely fibrillose, growing 
 pale ; gills adnexed, ventricose, crowded, dripping, pallid, 
 then brownish-cinnamon or bay. 
 
 About trunks. Epping Forest. 
 
 809. A. (Hypholoma) pilulseformis, Bull.; pileus 1 in., 
 fuscous, then dingy ochraceous, somewhat membranaceous, 
 globose, then expanded, obtuse, even, smooth ; stem fistu- 
 lose, fiexuose, smooth, white, naked at apex ; cortina mani- 
 fest, woven in the form of a ring when young ; gills adnexed, 
 easily separating, thin, narrow, linear, dry, white, then 
 cinereous, at length fuscous. 
 
 On mossy trunks. Rare. Perhaps a young condition 
 of A. hydrophilus. 
 
160 OUTLINES OF BRITISH FUXGOLOGY. 
 
 Subgenus 38. — Psilocybe (p. 171). 
 
 Psilocyl)e corresponds with Collybia, LeptonLa and Naucoria, 
 spores dark purplish, not white, rosy or brown. 
 
 I. Tenaces. — Veil not essential, rarely consjncuous ; stem thick 
 skinned, flexile, mostly coloured ; 'p^leus bright coloured, 
 pellicidose, often rather viscid in toet ireather, hecoinivy sonie- 
 lolmt jicde. 
 
 * Gills ventricose, not decnrrent. 
 
 810. A. (Psilocybe) saroocephalus, i^r. ; pileus fleshy, 
 compact, convex, then expanded, obtuse, even, dry, pallid- 
 ferruginous ; stem robust, stuffed, then hollow, whitish, 
 clad with white meal at apex; gills adnate, broad, cine- 
 reous flesh-colour, then sooty. 
 
 In grassy places, mostly about stumps. 
 
 811. A. (Psilocybe) ericseus, P.; gregarious; pileus 
 1-1^ in., tawny-ferruginous, then tawny-yellow, fleshy, 
 thin, convex, then expanded, even, smooth, dry and shining, 
 somewhat viscous when wet ; stem fistulose, tough, equal, 
 somewhat smooth, or silky, becoming light yellow, white- 
 villous at base ; gills adnate, plane, somewhat distant, 
 pallid, then blackish olive, pruinose, edge whitish. 
 
 In exposed pastures after rain. In woods and pastures. 
 Biare. Epping Forest. 
 
 812. A. (Psilocybe) subericseus, Fr. ; pileus 2 in., rather 
 fleshy, rather convex, then plane, even, smooth, tawny ; 
 stem fistulose, smooth, becoming yellowish ; gills sinuate, 
 adnexed, broad, pallid, then blackish. 
 
 In fields. 
 
 813. A. (Psilocybe) udus, P. ; pileus ^-1 in., brick- 
 tawny, then pale, slightly fleshy, convex, then flattened, 
 sub-umbonate, smooth, even or slightly wrinkled ; stem 
 fistulose, equal, fibrillose, tawny-ferruginous, paler at apex ; 
 
AGARICINI. 161 
 
 gills adfixed^ ventricose, broad, plaue or convex, pallid^ then 
 fuscous-purple. 
 
 In swampy places, among Sphagna. Epping Forest. 
 
 814. A. (Psilocyba) canofaoiens, Cke. ; gregarious ; pileus 
 Ih in., campanulate, then expanded, with a fleshy disc, 
 even, dark bay-brown, ferruginous at apex, clad (including 
 stem) with scattered white hairs, soon evanescent at apex ; 
 veil white, fibrillose, at first attached to margin of pileus ; 
 stem same colour as pileus, nearly equal, stuffed, dark at 
 base; flesh of pileus pallid, of stem rufescent, gradually 
 darker downwards ; gills broad, adnate, veutricose, dark 
 umber. 
 
 On rotten straw. 
 
 815. A. (Psilocybe) araolatus, Klotsch (p. 172); li-3in. 
 
 816. A. (Psilocybe) agrariug, Fr. ; pileus 1 in., white 
 and dull, then cinereous, slightly firm and fleshy, convex, 
 then flattened and often umbonate, even, smooth ; flesh 
 white ; stem fistulose, equal, smooth, white ; gills obtusely 
 adnate, crowded, then somewhat distant, linear, white, at 
 length fuscous. 
 
 About roots of decayed trees, etc. North Kil worth. 
 
 817. A. (Psilocybe) chondrodermus, B. and Br. ; pileus 
 1 in., dark date-brown, fleshy, campanulate, smooth, with 
 exception of appendiculate margin, even, cracked ; veil 
 woven and jagged; stem fistulose, equal, paler than pileus, 
 fibrillose, squamulose at base ; gills adfixed, separating, 
 ventricose, margin white. 
 
 In Scotch fir wood. Glamis. 
 
 818. A. (Psilocybe) scobicola, B. and Br. ; pileus 
 convex, umbilicate, white, smooth ; stem fibrillose, nearly 
 equal, or dilated at apex, fistulose ; gills broad, adnexed. 
 
 On sawdust. 
 
 L 
 
162 OUTLINES OF BRITISH FUNGOLOGV. 
 
 ** frills jilane, very broad be/iind, somewhat decnrrent. 
 
 819. A. (Psilocybe) ammophilus, Z)?«*. and Mont. ; pileus 
 somewhat fleshy, hemispherical, theu umbouate ; stem 
 hollow, buried half-way in saud, base clavate ; gills decur- 
 rent with a tooth, smoky, black-pulverulent. 
 
 On sandy ground, on the sea-shore. St. Andrews. 
 
 820. A. (Psilocybe) coprophilus, Bull (p. 171) ; 1 in. 
 
 821. A. (Psilocybe) buUaceus, Bull. (p. 172) ; ^\ in. 
 
 822. A. (Psilocybe) physaloides, ii«//. (p. 172) ; 3-4 in. 
 
 823. A. (Psilocybe) atro-rufus, Schccff. ; pileas black- 
 rufous or purple-fuscous, then pale, slightly fleshy, hemi- 
 spherico-convex, obtuse, smooth, sometimes striate at margin ; 
 stem thin, fistulose, equal, at first somewhat fibrillose, then 
 smooth, pallid date-brown, slightly pruinose at apex ; gills 
 adnate, somewhat decurrent, triangular, umber or purple- 
 umber. 
 
 In mixed wood. Glamis. 
 
 824.. A. (Psilocybe) nucisedus, Fr. ; pileus slightly fleshy, 
 light yellowish, then yellow, convex, obsoletely umbonate, 
 even, slightly silky when dry ; stem fistulose, slender, pallid, 
 somewhat attenuated downwards, becoming fuscous, white- 
 villous at base; gills adnate, broad, plane, fuscous, then 
 umber-hlack. 
 
 On beech-mast and among chips. West Farleigh, Kent. 
 
 *** Gills someirhat linear, asceudiiuj. 
 
 825. A. (Psilocybe) comptus, Fr.: pileus 1-1 i in., 
 pallid, then ochraceous, somewhat membranaceous, conical, 
 then expanded, striate, sprinkled with shining spots, some- 
 what crenulate at margin ; stem fistulose, flexuose, even, 
 silky- shining; gills adnate, ascending, distant, rosy-umber. 
 
 In woods, among grass. 
 
AGARICIXr. 163 
 
 826 A. (Psilocybe) semilanceatus, Fr. (p. 17.2) ; \ in. 
 Epping Forest. 
 
 Var. cserulescens, Cke. ; base of stem turniag indigo- 
 blue. In pastures. Poisonous. 
 
 II. E-iGiDi. — A^o veil, stem rigid, pileus scarcely pelliculose, hut 
 flesh easily cut, hygrojyhanous ; gills adnexed, very rarely 
 adnate. 
 
 827. A. (Psilocybe) spadiceus, Fr. (p. 171) ; 3-4 in. 
 Epping Forest, 
 
 Vur. hydrophilus, Fr. ; pileus tawny, then clay-colour ; 
 stem somewhat fusiform, rooting; gills emargiuate, with a 
 deeply decurrent line ; at length umber-brown. 
 
 At roots of ash. 
 
 Var. polycephalus, Fr. : densely crowded ; stem thinner, 
 flexuose ; gills nearly free, at length tawny umber. 
 
 About trunks. 
 
 828. A. (Psilocybe) cernuus, Mull. (p. 171) ; l-2i in. 
 
 829. A. (Psilocybe) hebes, Fr. ; pileus 1 in., livid, then 
 pale, hygrophanous, slightly fleshy, convex, then expanded, 
 obtuse, even, smooth, slightly viscid, striate at margin, 
 becoming even ; stem cartilaginous, rigid, fistulose, equal, 
 even, smooth, naked, becoming pale white ; gills broad 
 behind, triangular, adnate, crowded, arid, white, then 
 fuscous. 
 
 On trunks, leaves, etc. On 'grass, among leaves, near 
 chestnut. Hothorpe. 
 
 830. A. (Psilocybe) foenisecii, P. ; 1-2 in. Epping 
 Forest. 
 
 831. A. (Psilosybe) clivensis, i^. and Br. ; pileus 1 in., 
 pallid brown, then whitish, pallid ochre, somewhat hemi- 
 spherical, even, sprinkled with shining particles, margin 
 
164 OUTLINES OF BRITISH FrXGOLOGY. 
 
 striate ; stem fistxilose, equal, except at the slightly clavate 
 base, somewhat silky : gills broad, aduate, widely emarginate, 
 ventricose in front, rather distant, umber, margin white. 
 On the ground. King^s Clitfe. 
 
 832. A. (Psiloeybe) seobicola, B. and Br. : pileus white, 
 convex, umbilicate, smooth ; stem fistulose, somewhat equal 
 or dilated at apex, fibrillose ; gills adnexed, broad. 
 
 On pine sawdust. Glamis. 
 
 Subgenus 39. Psathyra (j). 173). 
 
 Psathyi-a corresijonds with Mycena, Kolanea, and Galei-a, 
 spoi'es dark purplish, not white, rosy, or brown. 
 
 I. CoNOPiLEi. — nieus conico-campannlate ; gills ascending, 
 adnexed, often free ; veil none. 
 
 833. A. (Psathyra) conopilus, P. (p. 173) ; 1 in. Epping 
 Eorest. 
 
 834. A. (Psathyra) mastiger, B. and Br. ; pileus 1 in., 
 dark rich-brown, then umber-tan, somewhat fleshy^ at first 
 nearly cylindrical, obtuse, then conico-campanulate, with a 
 strong mammiform umbo, repand, margin straight ; stem 
 fistulose, attenuated upwards, white, smooth, or fibrillose 
 and furfuraceous, pale umber within ; gills affixed, ascend- 
 ing rather narrow, umber, edge paler. 
 
 On roadsides among grass. Apethorpe. 
 
 835. A. (Psathyra) corrugis, P. (p. 173); \-\\ in. 
 Epping Forest. 
 
 Var. gracilis, Fr. ; habit more slender. 
 
 On the ground. 
 
 Var. vinosus, Corda ; pileus somewhat roseate. 
 
 In gardens, etc. 
 
 836. A. (Psathyra) pellospermus, BidL ; pileus sub- 
 
AGAPJCINI. 165 
 
 campanulate or subovate, even, then striate, sometimes 
 rugose, white or ochrey-white, becoming fuliginous ; flesh 
 thin, white ; stem fistulose, naked, nearly equal, white or 
 same colour as piieus ; gills broad, free, much narrowed at 
 the tips, cinereous, then fuliginous, at length black. 
 On the ground. 
 
 837. A. (Psathyra) gyroflexus, Fr. ; piieus h in., mem- 
 branaceous, conico-campanulate, striate, atomate, becoming 
 pallid ; stem slender, flexuose, silky, shining white ; gills 
 adnate, crowded, becoming purplish grey. 
 
 Margin of woods. 
 
 II. Obtusati. — Piieus campanulato-convex, flattened, smooth or 
 atomate, gills piano- or arcuato-adfixed. 
 
 838. A. (Psathyra) spadiceo-griseus, Schaejf. (p. 173); 
 .2 in. 
 
 839. A. (Psathyra) obtusatus, Fr. ; piieus 1 in., date- 
 brown-fuscous, or umber-fuscous, paler at margin, somewhat 
 membranaceous, conical, then convex, at length flattened, 
 obtuse, even at the disc, striate at margin, flesh same 
 colour ; stem fragile, fistulose, round, equal, fibrilloso- silky, 
 whitish, even at the apex ; gills adnate, broad, distinct, 
 somewhat distant, cinereous-fuscous, then umber. 
 
 On the ground and on wood. Rare. 
 
 III. FiBRiLLOSi. — Piieus and stem at first fibrillose or floccose 
 from the universal veil. 
 
 840. A. (Psathyra) bifrons, B. (p. 173); £ in. 
 Var. semitinctus, Phil. : half-dyed. 
 
 841. A. (Psathyra) semivestitus, B. and Br. ; piieus 
 i in., dark brown, then pale, ovate, obtuse, sprinkled with 
 little white fibrils more than half-way up ; stem fistulose, 
 
lOG OTTLINKS OF liKlTlsll ] rX( ;OI.(J( ;V. 
 
 uearly straight, fibrilloso - silky, white ; gills adnate, 
 ascending, broad behind, umber-brown. 
 
 Among grass in rich pasture. King's Cliffe. Epping 
 Forest. 
 
 8J2. A. (Psathyra) fatuus, Fr. : pileus clay colour then 
 whitish, somewhat membranaceous, ovato-campanulate then 
 expanded, rugose, at first tibrillose then smooth, fragile ; 
 stem slender, becoming smooth, white, striate and mealy at 
 apex; gills adnate, crowded, linear, whitish then brown. 
 
 In gardens. 
 
 8i3. A. (Psathyra) flbrillosus, P. (p. 173); 1 in. Epping 
 Forest. 
 
 844, A. (Psathyra) Gordoni, B. and Br. ; densely 
 ca^spitose ; pileus 1-| in., pale cinereous then white, 
 membranaceous, campanulate, sulcato-striate, sprinkled 
 with white floccose scales ; stem fistulosc, brittle, 
 transversely undulated, white-pruinose above, fioCcose 
 below, at length smooth and shining ; gills narrowly 
 adnate, ascending, distant, moderately broad, cinereous. 
 
 On old stumps. Orton Longueville. Odour faint, 
 nauseous. 
 
 845. A. (Psathyra) glareosus, li. and Br.; pileus \ in., 
 grey, pale chestnut at apex, campanulate, obtuse or 
 umbonate, striate, with flocci like small crumbs, flesh 
 brown; stem fistulosc, clothed with white fibrils, brown, 
 gills broad behind, adnate, umber. 
 
 On gravelly soil after wet weather. 
 
 84G. A. (Psathyra) helobius, Kulch. ; pileus submem- 
 branaceous, conico-campanulate then plane, somewhat 
 umbonate, with concentric elevated ridges at the disc, 
 otherwise radiately rugose, fuliginous, margin striate, 
 brown ; stem fistulosc, slender, umber, becoming reddish. 
 
AGAPJCIXI. 167 
 
 clad with fugacious whitish flocci ; gills adnate, rounded 
 behind, rather crowded^ fuliginous. 
 
 Moist places in pine woods. 
 
 847. A. (Psathyra) pennatus, Fr. ; gregarious ; pileus 
 ^-1 in., livid, white, or becoming fuscous-black, somewhat 
 membranaceous, ovate then campanulate, clothed with 
 white plumose scales, at length naked, fragile ; stem fistu- 
 lose, equal, villous, white-pulverulent at apex, silvery ; gills 
 adnexed, crowded, ventricose, broad, livid, then fuscous- 
 blackish. 
 
 On naked soil in gardens and on burnt sawdust. Rare. 
 Epping Forest. 
 
 84S. A. (Psathyra) gossypinus, Bull. 
 
 849. A. (Psathyra) noli-tangere, Fr. ; gregarious ; 
 pileus 1 in., pallid umber, dark fuscous, becoming pale, 
 hygrophanous, membranaceous, campanulate then expanded, 
 obtuse, smooth, with separating squamules at margin, striate 
 throughout, becoming even, fragile; stem fistulose, equal, 
 somewhat naked, even at apex ; gills adnate, broad, plane, 
 sometimes pallid, somewhat dark fuscous. 
 
 Among moss. On oak chips. On damp shady ground. 
 In woods. Rare. 
 
 850. A. (Psathyra) microrhizus, Lasch ; gregarious ; 
 pileus ochraceous, or rufous brown, becoming pale, mem- 
 branaceous, campanulate, even, dry, shining with atoms, at 
 first yellow-piiose, fragile ; stem short thin, rooted, silky, 
 whitish ; gills adnexed, crowded, narrow, pallid, then 
 black brown. 
 
 In grassy places. In gardens. On naked soil. Sib- 
 bertoft. 
 
 851. A. (Psathyra) urticsecola, B. and Br. ; pileus 
 ^ in., white, campanulate, flocculent, margin at length 
 
168 OrTLIXES OF BRITISH FUXOOLOGV. 
 
 straight, striate ; stem fistulose, slender, attenuated 
 upwards flocculent, white ; gills ventricose in front, 
 attenuated behind, aduexed, at first white, then rich 
 chocolate. 
 
 On nettle roots. King's Cliffe. 
 
 Series 5. Coprinarius. — Spores Black. 
 
 Subgenus 4U. Pan.eolus (p. 174). 
 
 Panajolus coi-responds with Collybin, Leptonia, Naucoria and 
 
 Psilocybe, spores black, not white, rosy, brown or purple. 
 
 * Pileus ivith a (jelatinoiis-Uqiiescent cuticle, viscous, shinivrj 
 
 irliPii drij. 
 
 852. A. (Panseolus) separatus, L. (p. 171) ; 1 in. 
 Epping Forest. 
 
 853. A. (Panaeolus) egregius, Mass. ; pileus 2 in., 
 ovato-campanulate, smooth, even, viscid when moist, dark 
 orange-brown, disc darker, fleshy, exceeding the gills at 
 margin, with a trace of agglutinated down on the pileus, 
 virgate when dry ; flesh ochraceous ; stem thickened at base, 
 solid, fibrillose, splitting longitudinally, brown without and 
 within, duller than the pileus, white and cottony at base, 
 smooth at apex ; gills A inch, broad in centre, ventricose, 
 adnexed, crowded, thin, brownish-black, edge entire, paler, 
 dry, not deliquescent ; spores brown, then blackish purple. 
 
 Ou the ground. 
 
 854. A. (Panaeolus) leucophanes, B. and Br. ; pileus 
 ^ in., white here and there, somewhat ochraceous, cam- 
 panulate, obtuse, viscid, shining when dry, innately silky, 
 appendiculate at margin ; stem fistulose, attenuated 
 upwards, white, fibrillose, sprinkled with mealy particles, 
 transversely somewhat undulated ; gills adnate, pallid, grey- 
 flesh-colour, then black, margin white. 
 
 In grass fields. King's Clifl'e. 
 
AGARTCINT. 169 
 
 855. A. (Panseolus) fimiputris (p. 174) ; 1 in. Epping 
 Forest. 
 
 856. A. (Panseolus) phalsenarum (p. 175). Epping Forest. 
 
 857. A. (Panseolus) scitulus, Mass. ; pileus \ in., 
 campannlate, obtuse, smooth, even, viscid, margin exceed- 
 ing gills, dirty ochre, pale ; flesh thin, white ; stem equal, 
 fistulose, white, shining, base peronate, sheath ending in a 
 persistent ring below middle of stem ; gills crowded, nar- 
 row, becoming ashy grey, speckled with the black spores, 
 margin entire, paler ; spores black. 
 
 On soil in a flower-pot. Scarborough. 
 
 ** Pileus moist, opaque, bibulous, token dry somewhat flocculose. 
 
 858. A. (Panaeolus) retirugis, Fr. (p. 175). Epping 
 Forest. 
 
 859. A. (Panseolus) sphinctrinus, Fr, ; pileus 1 in., 
 fuliginous or fuliginous-grey, then livid, hygrophanous, 
 slightly fleshy, parabolic then campanulate, obtuse, opaque, 
 moist then somewhat silky, sometimes fibrillose ; stem 
 fistulose, tense and straight, equal, fragile, smooth, fuligi- 
 ginous-grey, pruinose ; veil appendiculate at margin of 
 pileus, fugacious, white ; gills adnate, ascending, crowded, 
 cinereous, blackish, edge same colour. 
 
 On dung. Glamis. Epping Forest. 
 
 *** Pileus dry, smooth, slightly shiniuf/, not zoned. 
 
 860. A. (Panseolus) campanulatus, L. : o-l in. Epping 
 Forest. 
 
 861. A. (Panseolus) papilionaceus, Fr. Epping Forest. 
 
 862. A. (Panseolus) caliginosus, Jungh. ; pileus brown, 
 slightly fleshy, campanulate, obtuse, even, smooth ; stem 
 
170 orTLiN?:s of isritisii fuxgology. 
 
 equal, even, naked, same colour as pileus ; gills slightly 
 adnexed, ascending, lanceolate, fuliginous-black. 
 In rich pasture. Glarais. ]"]pping Forest. 
 
 "**** Pileus dr>/, smooth, :.oiied round inanjin. 
 
 863. A. (Panseolus) subbalteatus, B. and Br. ; ca^spi- 
 tose ; pileus l.j-2 in., dull deep fawn colour, pallid when 
 dry, hygrophanous, rather fleshy, convex, with the margin 
 slightly incurved, then expanded, obtuse or slightly umbo- 
 nate, irregular, slightly wrinkled, naked near margin with 
 a dark narrow zone ; stem red-brown, fistulose, brittle, 
 stringy, splitting longitudinally, marked with short white 
 fibrils ; gills adnate, slightly vcntricose, brownish, margin 
 white, slightly toothed. 
 
 In a tare field. Apethorpe. 
 
 864. A. (Panseolus) acuminatus, Fr. ; pileus flesh tan- 
 colour, slightly fleshy, conical, sharp-pointed, even, smooth, 
 shining, zoned with a blackish line round margin which is 
 at first crenulate ; stem thin, equal, pruinose, thickened at 
 base, pallid above, fuscous downwards ; gills adnexed, vcn- 
 tricose, crowded, blackish. 
 
 On dung. Sibbertoft. 
 
 865. A. (Panaeolus) fimicola, Fr. (p. 175). 
 
 Var. cinctulus ; pileus somewhat fleshy, campanulate, 
 then expanded, even, smooth, margin with a broad brown 
 zone ; stem rather firm, equal, brownish ; gills ventricose, 
 olivaceous black. 
 
 On dung. A doubtful variety, founded on Bolton's 
 figure. 
 
AGAKICIXI. 171 
 
 Subgenvis 41. Psathyrella. 
 
 Psathyrella corresponds with Mycena, Xolanea, Galera and 
 Psiithyra, spores black, not white, rosy, brown, or purple. 
 
 * Stem tense and straight, smooth. 
 
 866. A. (Psathyrella) subatratus, Fr. ; gregarious ; 
 pileus 1-2 in._, umber-rufescent, then pallid-rufesceut, 
 membranaceous^ campanulate^ obtuse, smooth, even, slightly 
 striate at margin, fragile ; stem fistulose, equal, smooth 
 becoming pale white ; gills adnexed to top of cone, then 
 adnate, linear, broad, crowded, fuliginous-blackish, almost 
 umber, edge same colour. 
 
 In grassy places. On rich ground. Batheaston. 
 
 867. A. (Psathyrella) gracilis, Fr. (p. 176) ; i-1 in. 
 
 868. A. (Psathyrella) hiascens, Fr. (p. 176) ; 1 in. 
 
 869. A. (Psathyrella) aratus, B. (p. 176) ; 1 in. 
 
 870. A. (Psathyrella) trepidus, Fr. ; pileus 1 in., date 
 brown at disc, otherwise fuliginous, membranaceous, fragile, 
 campanulate, obtuse, smooth, even at disc, otherwise slightly 
 but densely striate ; stem fistulose, equal, smooth, naked, 
 diaphanous hyaline ; gills adnate, crowded, ventricose then 
 fuliginous, shining black. 
 
 On wet ground. Hothorpe. Epping Forest. 
 
 871. A. (Psathyrella) hydrophorus, ^2^//. ; pileus mem- 
 branaceous, campanulate then expanded, smooth, margin 
 striate, then revolute ; stem smooth, dripping with 
 moisture, white ; gills adnate, crowded, narrowly linear, 
 livid, becoming black. 
 
 In gardens. 
 
 ** Stem flexuose j)ruinate at apex. 
 
 872. A. (Psathyrella) caudatus, Fr. ; pileus 2 in., date- 
 brown, membranaceous, very tender, conical then campanu- 
 
172 Ol'TLIXES OF BRITISH FUXG0LO(;Y. 
 
 late, at lengtli flattened^, smooth, the somewhat gibbous 
 disc even, otherwise pellucid-striate, not corrugated ; stem 
 fistulose, attenuated, base thickened, rooting, becoming pale 
 white ; gills adnate, ciuereous-black, edge same colour. 
 
 Among blocks of a wooden pavement. Sibbertoft. 
 
 873. A. (Psathyrella) pronus, Fr. ; pileus \ in., fuligi- 
 nous then hoary, hygrophanous, membranaceous, campanu- 
 late then hemispherical, obtuse, smooth, pellucid-striate, 
 obsoletely silky-atomate when dry ; stem fistulose, filiform, 
 lax, equal, smooth, becoming pale ; gills adnate, plane, some- 
 what triangular, distant, livid-fuliginous, with black dots 
 from the spores. 
 
 In grassy places. Rare. Epping Forest. 
 
 874'. A. (Psathyrella) empyreumaticus, B. and Br. : 
 pileus \\ in., rufous theu pale, hygrophanous, expanded 
 atomate, margin crenate ; stem fistulose, silky-furfuraceous, 
 pallid, gills adnate with a decurrent tooth, broad, distant, 
 connected by veins, rufous then brown-purple, pallid at 
 edge. 
 
 On wooden pavement. Sibbertoft, 
 
 875. A. (Psathyrella) atomatus, Fr. (p. 176) ; -i-l in. 
 
 876. A. (Psathyrella) crenatus, Lasch ; pileus i^l in., 
 ochrey or rufescent, then pale, hygrophanous, membrana- 
 ceous, hemispherical, sulcate, atomate, crenate at margin, 
 fragile ; stem somewhat curved, fragile, smooth, whitish, 
 striate ; gills adnate, somewhat ventricose, light yellowish- 
 fuscous then blackish. 
 
 On the ground. Penzance. 
 
 877. A. (Psathyrella) disseminatus, Pe?'j?. (p. 176); Vin. 
 Epping Forest. 
 
AGAKICINI. 173 
 
 Gexus 2. MONTAGNITES, Fr. 
 
 The viniversal veil forming a volva, pei-si.stent. Stem dilated at 
 apex into a plane round disc, even on both sides, to the 
 mai-gin of which are adfixed the gills which are free, not 
 joined to any membrane, radiating, i-azor-shaped, persistent, 
 obtuse at edge ; trama cellulose ; spores oblong, even, black, 
 fuscous. 
 
 No British species. 
 
 Genus 3. COPRINUS, P. (p. 177). 
 
 Tribe 1. Pelliculosi. — Gills covered above witli a fleshij or mem- 
 branaceous citticle, pileus not opening in furrows along the 
 gills, becoming torn and revolute. 
 
 * OoMATi. — Furnished with a ring arising from the volv.t, 
 the cuticle torn into scales. 
 
 1. C. comatus, Fr. ; 3 in. Epping Forest, 
 
 2. C. ovatus, Schceff. ; pileus white, somewhat membra- 
 naceous, at first ovate and densely imbricated with thick, 
 spreading concentric scales, covered with an even hood at 
 apex, then expanded, striate ; stem solid at base, rooting, 
 otherwise hollow with arachnoid threads within, attenuated 
 upwards, flocculose, shining white ; ring not very con- 
 spicuous and soon vanishing ; gills free, then remote, 
 slightly ventricose, at first somewhat naked, long remain- 
 ing shining white, at length umber-blackish, never becom- 
 ing purple. 
 
 In pastures. Epping Forest. 
 
 3. C. sterquilinus, Fr. (p. 177). 
 
 4. C. obleetus, Bolt. ; jjileus membranaceous, conico- 
 campanulate, everywhere silky, then smooth, sulcata ; stem 
 hollow, soft, silky, becoming even, with a sheathing ring- 
 like base ; gills free, linear, flesh-colour, growing black. 
 
 On dung. Not recorded since Bolton^s time. 
 
174 OUTLINES OF BllITISII FUNGOLOGY. 
 
 ** Atramentarii. — Sorneichat ringed, hut no volva, pileus 
 dotted or spotted tcith mimde innate squamules. 
 
 5. C. atramentarius, Fr. (p. 177). Epping Forest. 
 
 0. C. soboliferus, Fr. ; pileus submembranaceous, ovate, 
 theu expanded, truncate, spotted with scales, dirty white ; 
 stem stufi'ed, rather ventricose, tuberously rooting with 
 runners ; ring fugacious ; gills free, ventricose, pallid, 
 becoming black. 
 
 At the base of trunks. 
 
 7. C. fuscescens, Fr. (p. 178). 
 
 Var. riraoso-squamosus. 
 
 Pileus becoming cracked into angular patches. 
 
 About stumps. 
 
 *** PicACEi. — Universcd veil flocculose, at first continuons then 
 broken up into superficial scales ichich form patches on the 
 pileus. 
 
 8. C. picaceus, Fr. (p. 178). Epping Forest. 
 
 9. C. aphthosus, Fr. (p. 178). 
 
 10. C. flocculosus, Fr, ; pileus dingy white, membrana- 
 ceous, ovate, then expanded, striate, split, covered with 
 floccose scales ; stem hollow, attenuated upwards, even, 
 white, swollen at the base ; gills free, violaceous, then 
 fuscous-black. 
 
 In pastures and on garden ground. Rare. 
 
 11. C. similis, B. and Br. ; pileus pallid, centre darker, 
 hygrophanous, ovato-campanulate, lineato-striate, clothed 
 with acute separating warts which are fuscous at the apex ; 
 stem hollow, white, broader at base ; gills adnate, attenu- 
 ated behind, somewhat linear, brownish near the margin. 
 
 On trunks of dead trees. Bodelwyddan. 
 
AGAKICINl. 1 / O 
 
 **** ToMENTOSi. — Pileus at first clothed with distinct flocci 
 or lax t'illoiis down, tlien plane, ring none. 
 
 12. C. exstinctorius, Fr. (p. 178) ; 3 in. 
 
 13. C. flmetarius, Fr. (p. 179). 
 
 Var. pullatus, Fr. ; pileus adpressedly squamose and 
 tomentose, soon naked, fuscous, becoming blackish ; stem 
 equal, at length smooth. 
 
 Var. macrorhizus, P. ; pileus squamose ; stem shorter^ 
 rather marginately bulbous, rooting, villous. 
 
 Var. cinereus, Schceff. ; pileus membranaceous, floccosely 
 mealy, then naked, ashy grey; stem almost equal, twisted,, 
 not rooting, hollow at base. 
 
 14. C. tomentosus, Fr. (p. 179). 
 
 15. c. niveus, Fr. (p. 179), 1-2 in. Epping Forest. 
 
 ***** MiCACEi. — Pileus covered with small 'micaceous scales 
 or granules, which fall off and disappear. Veil none. 
 
 16. C. micaceus, Fr. (p. 179). Epping Forest. 
 
 17. C. aratus, B. and Br.; pileus 3 in., umber, campa- 
 nulate, deeply sulcate to darker disc which is sometimes 
 wrinkled, sometimes even, sprinkled with large micaceous 
 particles, revolute in decay ; stem fistulose, attenuated 
 upwards, slightly bulbous, straight, smooth, or minutely 
 silky, white, umber within ; gills separating, narrow, atten- 
 uated at either end, deep rich brown, then black. 
 
 In a hollow tree. King's Cliffe. Epping Forest. 
 
 18. C. radians, Fr. (p. 179), ^ in. Epping Forest. 
 
 19. C. papillatus, Fr. ; pileus ^ in., fuscous, disc darker, 
 membranaceous, ovate then campanulate, at length flattened 
 and revolute, torn, striate, scurfy and beset with minute 
 warts which are more crowded on the disc ; stem fistulose, 
 equal, smooth except at base, hyaline-pellucid, commonly 
 
176 OUTLINES OF BKITISII FUNGOLOGY. 
 
 discoloured at apex Avitli the spores ; gills few, free, reach- 
 iug the stem, blackish. 
 
 On dung and ou the ground. Shrewsbury. 
 
 ****** Glabrati. — Fileus smooth, loithout floccose or 
 micaceous squamules. Veil none. 
 
 20. C. alternatus, Fr. ; somewhat Cccspitose ; pileus 
 \\ in., chalky pallid, pale umber at disc, somewhat fleshy, 
 hemispherical, even, smooth, discoid, striped with alternate 
 striae broad and narrow ; stem hollow, attenuated from the 
 thickened base, smooth, becoming pale ; gills adnate, linear, 
 cinereous then black. 
 
 On the ground. East Dereham. 
 
 21. C. deliquescens, Fr. (p. 180) ; 3-4 iu. Epping 
 Forest. 
 
 22. C. tardus, Kurs. ; pileus membranaceous, campanu- 
 late, sulcate, smooth, becoming gilvous or isabelline ; stem 
 iistulose, a little thickened downwards, silky pruiuose, then 
 smooth, rather striate, white; gills adnate, whitish then black. 
 
 On naked soil. 
 
 23. C. congregatus, Bnll. ; densely cjespitose ; pileus 
 membranaceous, cylindrical, then campanulate, smootli, 
 viscid, of one colour, ochraceous, margin faintly striate ; 
 stem fistulose, thin, short, smooth ; gills reaching the stem, 
 linear, white, becoming black. 
 
 On ground by roadsides. Eppiug Forest. 
 
 Tribe 2. Veliformes. — Pileus very thin icithoiit a pellicle, at 
 length ope)dn<j into ficrrows along the back of tlie gills and 
 becoming plicato-sulcate ; stem thin, fistulose ; gills melting 
 away into very thin lines. 
 
 * Cyclodei. — Stem annulate or volvate. 
 
 , 21. C. Hendersonii, B. (p. 180). 
 
AGARICIXI. 177 
 
 ** Lanulatuli. — Pileus clotlml with sicperjicial separathig 
 Jioccules, gills free. Ringless. 
 
 25. C. lagopus, Fr. (p. 180.) 
 
 26. C. narcoticus, Fr. ; pileus 1 in., white, conico- 
 cylindrical, villous with recurved floccose scales, theu 
 flattened, denuded, striate, hyaline ; stem fistulose, equal, 
 at first villous, at length smooth ; gills free, reaching the 
 stem, white, then blackish. 
 
 On manure heaps. Shrewsbury. Odour narcotic- 
 alkaline, very powerful. 
 
 27. C. macrocephalus, B. (p. 180), \ in. 
 
 28. C. nycthemerus, Fr. (p. 181), -| in. 
 
 29. C. radiatus, Fr. (p. 181), \ in. Epping Forest. 
 
 30. C. Spraguei, B. (p. 182), \ in. 
 
 *** FuBFURELLi. — Pileiis furfm'cvG&ous or micaceous, gills com- 
 rao^dy adnate to apex of stem, lohich, in some species is dilated 
 into a collar ; ringless. 
 
 31. C. domesticus, Fr. (p. 181), 2 in. 
 
 32. C. stercorarius, Fr. ; pileus very thin, ovate, theu 
 campanulate, covered with a dense white micaceous meal, 
 then expanded, margin striate ; stem at first ovately bulbous, 
 then elongated, attenuated, at first pruinate, white ; gills 
 adnexed, ventricose, black. 
 
 On rich soil and dung. 
 
 33. C. ephemerus, T. (p. 181.) 
 
 3-i. C. sociatus, Fr. ; pileus 1^ in., fuscous, theu pale, 
 disc date-brown, ovali-cylindrical, then expanded, densely 
 split into furrows, the raised ribs slightly scurfy, the even 
 disc umbilicate in centre ; stem fistulose, delicately attenu- 
 ated from base to apex, smooth, white, not pellucid ; gills 
 
 M 
 
178 OUTLINES OF BltlTlSH FUXGOLOGY. 
 
 aduexed in the form of a collar, not remote, somewhat 
 ventricose, attenuated behind, cinereous black. 
 On damp soil. Cabalva. 
 
 35. C. plicatilis, Fr. (p. 181.) Epping Forest. 
 
 36. C. cothurnatus, Godey. ; pileus very thin, conico- 
 campanulate, then expanded, densely mealy, then umbonate 
 and unequally split, wholly white, becoming reddish ; stem 
 fistulose, attenuated upwards, white, base squamulose, 
 sheathing ; gills free, somewhat lanceolate, white, then 
 flesh-colour, at length black. 
 
 On cow-dung. 
 
 37. C. filiformis, B. and Br. ; pileus -^l in., grey, shin- 
 ing with white mealy particles, cylindrical, striate ; stem ex- 
 tremely fine, white, sprinkled with a few short delicate hairs. 
 
 On the ground in wood. Colleyweston. 
 
 **** Hemerobii. — Pileus smooth, 
 
 38. C. hemerobius, Fr. (p. 182.) 
 
 39. C. platypus, B. ; pileus thin, campanulate, convex, 
 then expanded, white then ochraceous-flocculose ; stem 
 slender, discoid at the base, whitish even ; gills free, narrow, 
 distant, becoming black. 
 
 On palm stems in conservatories. 
 
 Genus 4. BOLBITIUS, Fr. (p. 152.) 
 
 1. B. hydrophilus, Fr. ; ctespitose ; pileus li in., date 
 brown, then tawny, fleshy, membranaceous, bullate then 
 convex and expanded, at first moist, wrinkled when dry, 
 the prominent disc even, the bent in margin undulated ; 
 flesh very thin, easily scissile, white when dry ; stem fistu- 
 lose, somewhat curved and often compressed, under a lens 
 reticulated with fibrils, at first white then becoming ferru- 
 
AGARICINI. 1 79 
 
 giuous, obsoletely mealy at apex ; veil marginal, fringing, 
 white, fugacious or none ; gills adnate, ventricose, appear- 
 ing almost free, crowded, watery, shedding drops, date- 
 brown fuscous. 
 
 In woods and on sawdust. Frequent, 
 
 2. B. Boltonii, Fr. (p. 182.) Epping Forest. 
 
 3. B. vitellinus, Fr. ; pileus between fleshy and mem- 
 branaceous, ovate then expanded, viscid, egg-yellow, at 
 first even, then with the margin, sulcate and split ; stem 
 fistulose, equal, clad with white scales ; gills slightly 
 adnexed, ochraceous clay colour. 
 
 On horse-dung. 
 
 4. B. fragilis, Fr. (p. 182), 2 in. Epping Forest. 
 
 5. B. titubans (p. 182), 1 in. 
 
 6. B. apicalis, Sin. ; pileus brown, disc ochraceous, 
 membranaceous, striate from the first, then plicate, liable to 
 split, disc somewhat fleshy, obscurely umbonate ; stem 
 hollow, striate, white, minutely pruinose under a lens; 
 gills somewhat broad, ventricose, free, at first pressed to 
 the stem, brown. 
 
 In pastures. Stapleburst. 
 
 7. B. conocephalus, Bull. ; pileus membranaceous, 
 conical, hygrophanous, disc even, slightly viscid, margin 
 striate ; stem fistulose, equal, smooth, shining, rather 
 tough, white ; gills free, ventricose, din^y, then ferruginous. 
 
 On the ground in palm house. Kew. 
 
 8. B. tener (p. 183). 
 
 9. B. rivulosus, B. and Br.; pileus 1^ in., tan colour, 
 campanulate, rivulose ; stem attenuated upwards ; gills 
 narrow, cinnamon. 
 
 On earth in an orchard house. Chiswick. 
 
 10. B. grandiusculus, Cke. and Mass. ; pileus 1-2 in.,, 
 
180 OUTLINES OF BRITISH FUNGOLOGY. 
 
 campanulate, expanded, smooth, pallid and faintly striate at 
 margin, rufous at apex ; stem smooth, white, fistulose, 
 slender, gradually attenuated upwards ; gills crowded, 
 linear, narrow, attenuated behind and free, rusty ochre. 
 Amongst grass on cliffs. Scarborough. 
 
 Genus 5. CORTINARIUS, Fr. (p. 183.) 
 
 Subgenus 1. Phlegmacium. — Partial veil araclmoid ; pileus 
 equally fleshy, viscous ; stem fii-m, dry. 
 
 t Cliduchii. — Partial veil superior, pendvloits in the/orm oj a 
 ring from the apex of the •nearly equal or clavate stem. 
 
 * Gills pallid then clay colour. 
 
 1. C. (Phlegmacium) triumphans, Fr. ; pileus 3-5 in., 
 yellow, tinged with brown or ochraceous when moist, 
 yellow when dry, variegated at disc with minute spot-like 
 scales or naked, fleshy, convexo-plane, obtuse, regular, 
 margin even ; flesh compact, white ; stem solid, firm, 
 attenuated upwards, base ovato-bulbous, striate, yellowish 
 white, with circles or rings of tawny scales ; partial cortina 
 superior, woven, somewhat ringed ; gills emarginate, 
 crowded, with a decurrent tooth, ending in a mealy-white 
 zone, veined at sides, whitish or pale bluish grey, at length 
 clay colour and somewhat cinnamon. 
 
 In woods under birch. On grassy ground. Rare. 
 
 2. C. (Phlegmacium) claricolor, Fr. ; pileus 3-4 in., 
 yellow, fleshy, convexo-flattened, at length depressed, veiled 
 with superficial, silky-pruinose, villous down, then smooth 
 and broken into scales ; stem solid, hard, white, clothed as 
 far as the superior cortina with white scaly flocci, at length 
 corlina and scales disappear, otherwise curt, bulbous, or 
 elongated and conico-attenuated or cylindrical ; flesh of 
 pileus and stem white ; gills emarginate, almost free or 
 
AGAEICINI. 181 
 
 adnatCj crowded^ at first whitish, then clay colour, edge 
 unequal. 
 
 In mixed woods. Glamis, etc. 
 
 3. C. (Phlegmacium) turmalis, Fr. ; pileus yellow-tan, 
 frequently darker at disc, compact, convex then plane, 
 obtuse, even, smooth or obsoletely piloso-virgate, when 
 young veiled with pruinate fugacious villous down, soon 
 naked, viscid ; flesh white ; stem solid, hard, cylindrical or 
 attenuated at base, shining white when dry, when young 
 sheathed with a white woolly veil, at length naked ; 
 cortina fibrillcse, superior, persistent in form of a ring, at 
 length ferruginous ; gills variously adnexed, rounded, 
 emarginate, or decurrent with a tooth, crowded, serrated, 
 white then clay colour. 
 
 Chiefly in beech woods. In mixed woods. Glamis. 
 
 4. C. (Phlegmacium) erassus, Fr . ; pileus 3-5 in., 
 thickly fleshy, plane or depressed, of one dirty yellow 
 colour, opaque, disc smooth, elsewhere strigose with innate 
 fibrils ; stem stout, plump, fibrillose, white, mealy at apex ; 
 gills rounded, crowded, entire, pallid, then clay colour. 
 
 In moist woods. 
 
 5. C. (Phlegmacium) balteatus, Fr. ; pileus 3 in., 
 compact, flattened, viscid, soon dry and broken up into 
 innate flocci ; margin becoming somewhat bluish, silky, 
 inflexed ; stem plump, solid, at first tomentose ; apex 
 velvety and as well as the cortina and flesh white ; gills 
 emarginate or decurrent, crowded, entire, whitish. 
 
 In dry places, chiefly in pine woods. 
 
 6. C. (Phlegmacium) sebaceus, Fr. ; pileus 2^-5 in., 
 fleshy, colour of tallow, growing pallid, expanded, some- 
 what repand with a pruinose whitish veil, rather viscid ; 
 flesh white ; partial veil fugacious, delicate, white ; stem 
 
182 OrXLlNES OF l'.i;iTIs]l FUXGOLOGV. 
 
 solid, often twisted and compressed, stout, equal, fibrillose, 
 gills eraarginate, not crowded, clay colour. 
 In pine woods. In mixed woods. Glamis. 
 
 7. C. (Phlegmacium) lustratus, Fr. : wliicisli, pileus 
 fleshy, convex then plane, equal, even, smooth, viscid, 
 margin fibrillose, fringed with the veil ; stem solid, stout, 
 nearly equal ; gills rounded, crowded, unchangeable. 
 
 In heathy places. 
 
 ** (ri/ls violaceous or pxiiyliffh, then cinnamon. 
 
 8. C. (Phlegmacium) varius, Fr. (p. 18b), .2 in. 
 Epping Forest. 
 
 9. C. (Phlegmacium) cyanopus, Fr. (p. 184), 2-\ in. 
 Epping Forest. 
 
 10. C. (Phlegmacium) variicolor, Fr. ; pileus compact, 
 convex then expanded, viscid, discoid, margin tomentose, 
 violet ; stem hard, stout, at first villous, bluish then whitish, 
 flesh same colour ; gills decurrently emarginate, somewhat 
 arcuate, crowded, bluish, clay-colour, then cinnamon. 
 
 In pine woods, etc. 
 
 Var. nemorosus, Fr. ; pileus 4-5 in., compact, at flrst 
 smooth, viscid, soon dry, opaque, piloso-rivulose, bay- 
 brown, then yellowish ; stem clavate, hollow and mealy at 
 apex ; gills rounded, rather decurrent. 
 
 11. C. (Phlegmacium) largus, Fr.; pileus 4-G in., 
 date-brown-tawny, fleshy, compact at the broad disc, thin 
 at the circumference, convexo-flattened, obtuse, slightly 
 viscid, then adpressedly silky-tibrillose, commonly rivuloso- 
 squamulose; flesh flbrous, firm, whitish bluish-grey, white 
 when exposed to air ; stem solid, short and bulbous, or 
 long, thick and equal, often curved, fibrillose; cortina 
 superior, fibrillose, pendulous, top of stem pruinose, white- 
 
AGARICINI. 183 
 
 tinted violaceous ; flesh same as pileus ; gills adnate or 
 emarginate, crowded, at first bluish -grev, clay-colour then 
 cinnamon. 
 
 In pine woods. Herefordshire. Epping Forest. 
 
 12. C. (Phlegmacium) Riederi.Fr.; pileus3in.,ochraceous, 
 compact, campanulato-expaaded, obtusely umbonate, even, 
 streaked, glutinous, shining when dry ; flesh watery ; stem 
 solid, clavate, lilac-silky and tawny-fibrillose ; gills adnate, 
 rather thick, eroded, lilac, then cinnamon. 
 
 In pine woods. Herefordshire. Epping Forest. 
 
 *** Crills jjelloic, cinnamon, ferrvAjinov^, not at first ivhitish or 
 
 violaceoics. 
 lo. C. (Phlegmacixim) saginus, Fr. ; pileus 4-5 in., 
 yellow, fleshy, plano-convex, irregular, repanu, viscous ; 
 flesh white, soft; stem solid, somewhat bulbous, flbrillose, 
 light yellowish, naked at apex ; cortina flbrillose, fugacious, 
 not conspicuous ; gills decurrent, attenuated at both ends, 
 dingy pallid, then cinnamon, eroded at edge. 
 In woods. Hereford, etc. 
 
 14. C. (Phlegmacium) russus, Fr. ; pileus 4 in., uni- 
 colorous, coppery-rufous, fleshy, convex, then flattened, 
 obtuse, viscid, smooth at disc, innately flbrillose at margin; 
 flesh soft, whitish flesh-colour ; stem stuffed, then hollow, 
 attenuated upwards, not bulbous, soft, adpressedly flbril- 
 lose, pale white, delicately pruinose at apex; cortina deli- 
 cate, fugacious ; gills obtusely adnate, crowded, connected 
 by veins ; rufous-ferruginous. 
 
 In moist woods. Uncommon. 
 
 **** Gills olivaceons. 
 
 15. C. ^Phlegmacium) infraetus, i^/\ ; pileus expanded, 
 even, virgate, viscid, disc compact, then pale ; margin thin. 
 
1^4 Ol'ILI.NKS OK I!i;iTJsn FrNGOLOGV. 
 
 broken, at length revolute, Hexuose; stem solid, ovately 
 clavate, adpressedly fibrillose, growing pale ; gills adnate, 
 broad, crowded, olivaceous-umber. 
 
 In beech woods. Epping Forest. Taste nauseous and 
 bitter. 
 
 10. C. (Phlegmacium) anfractus, Fr. (p. 184) ; 2-3 in. 
 
 17. C. (Phlegmacium) Berkley!, Cke. ; large, pileus 
 4— G in., convex, then expanded, rather viscid, shining when 
 dry, fleshy, smooth or radiately silky ; margin plicato- 
 sulcate, becoming nearly even when old, the whole fungus 
 at first enclosed in a whitish volva which breaks up in 
 patches on disc ; stem thick, swollen at base, white, densely 
 fibrillose, solid ; flesh white; gills scarcely distant, ventri- 
 cose, slightly emarginate, dingy olive, at length pale cinna- 
 mon. = C. anfractus, p. 184. 
 
 ft ScAuni.^ — Cluh-footed, bulb depressed w turbinate, marginate ; 
 stem fleshy, fih'ous : cortina commonly inferim', arising from 
 inanjliiofbvlb; p'dcus equally fieshy ; gills somewhat sinuate. 
 
 * GUIs P'hitis/i, t](Pn day coloured or 2^cile cinnamon. 
 
 18. C. (Phlegmacium) multiformis, Fr. (p. 184.) Epping 
 Forest. 
 
 19. A. (Phlegmacium) napus, Fr. ; pileus .2-3 in., fuli- 
 ginous, then tawny-brown, fleshy, couvexo-plane, obtuse, 
 even, smooth, glutinous ; margin regular, bent inwards ; 
 flesh compact, white, with a horny line at the hymenophore 
 next gills; stem solid, equal, ascending, smooth, firm, white, 
 at length yellow at the base, inserted in an obconic, acutely, 
 and obliquely marginate bulb ; gills emarginate, somewhat 
 distant, broad, crisped, whitish fuliginous, hyaline at sides. 
 
 In pine woods. Herefordshire. 
 
 20. C. (Phlegmacium) allutus, Fr. ; small ; pileus fleshy, 
 
AGARICINl. 185 
 
 conico-convex, smooth, viscid, then pale ; margin darker ; 
 flesh rufescent ; stem viscid, white, mealy at apex, striate 
 with reddish lines below, marginately bulbous; gills adnate, 
 rather crowded, crenulate, thin, whitish, then rufescent. 
 In pine woods. 
 
 21. C. (Phlegmaeium) talus, Fr. ; pileus 2-3 in., dirty 
 yellowish, then pale ; margin somewhat olivaceous, yellowish, 
 fleshy, thin, equal, convexo-plane, even, smooth, viscous ; flesh 
 watery, dingy pallid- whitish, with hyaline spots, and varie- 
 gated with a horny line next the hymenophore ; stem solid, 
 equal, cylindrical, smooth, marginato-bulbous, pale ; gills 
 emarginate, somewhat crowded, straw-colour or ochrey- 
 pallid, scarcely changing colour. 
 
 In woods. Epping Forest. 
 
 ** Gills violaceous, dark blue, purplish at length cinnamon. 
 
 22. C, (Phlegmaeium) glaucopus, Fr. (p. 184) ; 3-4 in, 
 Epping Forest. 
 
 23. C. (phlegmaeium) calochrous, Fr. (p. 185.) 
 
 24. C. (Phlegmaeium) cserulescens, Fr. (p. 185); 2 in. 
 
 25. C. (Phlegmaeium) purpuraseens, Fr. (p. 185); 
 4-5 in. Epping Forest. 
 
 Var. subpurpurascens, Fr. ; pileus thinner than type, 
 slightly virgate, growing pale; stem stufied, nearly equal, 
 white, with a bluish tinge ; bulb somewhat marginate ; gills 
 cinnamon, and, as well as the flesh, purple when bruised. 
 
 On the ground. 
 
 *** Gills ferruginous tau:ny or yellov:. 
 
 26. C. (Phlegmaeium) dibaphus, Fr.; pileus 3-4 in., 
 purplish, disc yellowish, then variegated with lilac, fleshy. 
 
186 OUTLINES OF IJKITISH FUNGOLOGY. 
 
 convex, then plane, at length depressed, somewhat repand, 
 viscous, smooth ; flesh yellow, variegated under the pellicle 
 with a violet hue ; stem margiuato-bulbous, stufled, fibril- 
 lose, yellow, shining, purplish at apex, light yellowish 
 within; gills adnate, slightly rounded, somewhat crowded, 
 entire, purplish-ferruginous. 
 
 In woods of beech and oak. Fordingbridge, Hants. 
 
 Va)'. xanthophyllus ; gills at first and for a long time 
 yellow. 
 
 27. C. (Phlegmaeium) turbinatus, f/-. (p. 185.) Epping 
 Forest. 
 
 28. C. (Phlegmaeium) corrosus, Fr. ; pileus 2 3 in., 
 fleshy, expanded and umbilicate, smooth, viscid, discoloured, 
 at length rivulose, subfloccose, ferruginous, then clay- 
 colour, opaque when dry ; flesh firm, white ; stem nearly 
 hollow, equal, white, naked at apex ; cortina fibrillosCj, 
 white ; bulb depressed, marginate ; gills emarginate, crowded, 
 narrow, sub-ferruginous. 
 
 In pine woods. 
 
 29. C. (Phlegmaeium) fulgens, Fr. ; pileus 2-3 in., 
 orange-tawny, fleshy, couvexo-plane, obtuse, viscid, some- 
 times punctate, at length silky-fibrillose or squamulose ; 
 flesh compact, white-yellow, at length spongy and tan- 
 colour ; stem solid, curt, equal above the depressed mar- 
 ginate bulb, woolly with the yellow, densely fibrillose or 
 viscid cortina, when full-grown elongated ; gills emarginate, 
 somewhat crowded, entire, at first yellow, at length distant, 
 tawny, or ferruginous. 
 
 In pine woods. Rare. 
 
 30. C. (Phlegmaeium) fulmineus, Fr. ; pileus 3 in., 
 tawny, variegated with dense irregular, agglutinated scales, 
 fleshy, at first hemispherical and attached to bulb, then 
 
AGAPJCINI. 187 
 
 convex, viscous ; margin regular, at first involute ; flesh 
 thick, white, yellow at circumference, or wholly yel- 
 lowish; stem when young enclosed in bulb, then extended, 
 solid, obese, yellow, naked, white-cortinate at apex ; bulb 
 depressed, marginate, rooting, wider than young pileus ; 
 gills rounded, thin, crowded, golden tawny, then tawny. 
 In shady woods. Ledbury. 
 
 31. C. (Phlegmacium) oriohalceus, Batsch ; pileus Sin., 
 blood-red or liver-rufescent, margin livid or bay-brown- 
 ferruginous and cinereous-olive at margin, fleshy, convex, 
 soon flattened, at length depressed with a viscous pellicle, 
 or glutinous, the disc spotted with scales ; stem solid, equal, 
 springiug from a marginate somewhat volvaceous bulb, 
 fibrillose, fibrils viscid in wet weather from the gluten of the 
 pileus, yellow-green or dingy pale-yellow ; gills adnate, 
 broad, crowded, sulphur-yellow, then green. 
 
 Under trees. Lyndhurst. New Forest. 
 
 **** Gills olivaceous. 
 
 32. C. (Phlegmacium) prasinus, Fr. (p. 186.) 
 
 33. C. (Pklegmacium) atro-virens, Kalchb. ; pileus com- 
 pact, convex, even, viscid, dark green or olivaceous-umber, 
 flesh greenish-yellow ; stem solid, stout, fibrillose, except 
 the sub-turbinate, marginate bulb ; gills adnate, crowded, 
 sulphury, then greenish, at length cinnamon. 
 
 In pine woods. 
 
 3-1. C. (Phlegmacium) scaurus, Fr. (p. 186) ; 2-3 in. 
 
 35. C. (Phlegmacium) herpeticus, Fr. ; pileus 3 in., 
 fleshy, equal, somewhat spotted, viscid, disc becoming paler ; 
 flesh violet, then whitish ; stem stufied, flrm, fibrillose, 
 squalid pallid, base marginate-bulbous ; gills somewhat 
 adnate, violet-umber, then dingy olive. 
 
 In woods. 
 
188 OUTLINES ov liinnsii fl'ngoi,0(,;y. 
 
 ttt Elastici. — Cortina sinijilr^ tlnii, j'iKjacioiis, iiiediul or inferior; 
 stem at first extended, somevhat thin, never margimito-hdhous 
 or sheathed, hat rigid-elastic, exlernaUy somewhat cartilaginouSy 
 polished, naked at apex, at length comvwnh/ holhnr : pileus 
 thin, often h;/grophanovs. 
 
 * Gilh vliitish, then chuj coloured, or dirtg cinnamon. 
 
 36. C. (Phlegmacium) ciimatilis, Fr. ,- pileus 3 iu., 
 violet or purple-violet, convex, obtuse, often irregular, with 
 a viscous pellicle, even, smooth ; Hesh hard, shiuing white, 
 furnished with a cortina at apex ; the universal veil which 
 serves as a pellicle of pileus ruptured at the base and adnate 
 to it as a separable agglutinated membrane same colour 
 as pileus ; gills attenuato-adnexed, almost free, crowded, 
 narrow, with a small decurrent tooth, acute at apex, white, 
 then clay-colour. 
 
 In woods. Honningham, Norfolk. 
 
 37. C. (Phlegmacium) serarius, Vr. ; pileus 3-4' in., 
 fleshy, convex, then plane, gibbous, unpolished, viscid, 
 opaque ; stem solid, equal, fibrillose, shining, white ; Hesh 
 white ; gills arcuatcly adtixed with a decurrent tooth. 
 crowded, whitish, then clay-colour. 
 
 In woods. 
 
 38. C. (Phlegmacium) emollitus, /*>. ; pileus 3-4 iu., 
 fleshy, lax, sub-repand, delicately fibrilloso-virgate, viscid, 
 shining when dry, ochraceous-yellow ; margin tliin, broken ; 
 stem stuffed, short, unequal, fibrillose, soft, white ; flesh 
 white ; gills emarginate, broad, rather distant, white, then 
 ochraceous. 
 
 In grassy places in beech woods. 
 
 39. C. (Phlegmacium) crystallinus, Fr. ; pileus 3 in., 
 fleshy, flattened, even, smooth, viscid, shining, hygropha- 
 
AGAKICIXI. 189 
 
 nous, white when dry ; stem hollow^, uearly equal, fragile, 
 fibrillose, whitish ; gills emarginate, crowded, clay-colour. 
 In beech woods. Taste acrid. 
 
 40. C. (Phlegmacium) deeoloratus, Fr. ; pileus 2-4 in., 
 clay-colour, disc darker, thin, equally fleshy, campanulate, 
 then convex, obtuse, soft, viscous, soon dry, smooth, corru- 
 gated when old ; flesh soft, white, watery ; stem stuffed, 
 thin, somewhat equal, slightly thickened at base, fibrillose, 
 silvery, often curved, smooth, naked at apex ; cortiua infe- 
 rior, fibrillose ; gills emarginate, adnate, or decurrent, not 
 much crowded, broader than flesh of pileus, clay-colour, 
 then cinnamon. 
 
 In beech, pine, and birch woods. Epping Forest. E liii- 
 burgh Fungus Show. 
 
 ** (Jills violaceous, purplish, flesh colour. 
 
 41. C. (Phlegmacium) decolorans, Fr. ; pileus H-2-2 in., 
 yellow, fleshy, convex, then flattened, somewhat gibbous, 
 equal, even, smooth, viscous ; flesh thin, firm, white ; stem 
 stuffed, equally attenuated, shining white, smooth above the 
 somewhat distant medial cortina ; gills sinuato-adnexed, 
 crowded, thin, purplish, then soon cinnamon. 
 
 In fir woods. Epping Forest. 
 
 42. C. (Phlegmacium) porphyropus, Fr. : pileus ll -3 in., 
 livid light-yellowish, or clay-colour, thin at margin, convexo- 
 plane, obtuse, even, innately streaked, viscid; flesh thin, 
 soft, whitish, becoming purple-lilac when broken ; stem 
 stuffed, at length hollow, somewhat bulbous or equally 
 attenuated from the thickened base, sometimes equal, 
 fragile, externally and internally violaceous-lilac, then pale 
 or whitish, but soon violaceous-lilac again when touched ; 
 cortina inferior, fibrillose; gills rounded or emarginate, 
 
190 OUTLINES OF BRITISH FUXGOLOGY. 
 
 somewhat crowded, rather broad, purplish, then watery 
 cinnamon, purple when touched. 
 In woods. Coed Coch. 
 
 43. C. (Phlegmacium) croceo-cseruleus, /<>. ; pileus 1 in., 
 lilac or faintly violaceous, fleshy, then convex, at length plane, 
 obtuse or gibbous, even, smooth, viscous ; flesh watery 
 pallid ; stem hollow, somewhat equal, or attenuated down- 
 wards, even, smooth, naked, fragile, whitish ; cortina white, 
 fibrillose, fugacious ; gills attenuated or emargiuate, with a 
 small decurrent tooth, plane, somewhat distant, blue, then 
 clay-saffron. 
 
 In woods. Laxton Park, Northants. 
 
 *** Gills pure ochre, tawny or Jerruginous. 
 
 44. C. (Phlegaeium) coruseans, Fr. ; pileus fleshy, plane, 
 viscid, even, smooth; stem solid, elastic, equal, fibrilloso- 
 striate, white; gills plano-decurrent, thin, much crowded, 
 ochraceous. 
 
 In copses. 
 
 45. C. (Phlegmacium) papulosus, Fr. ; pileus .2^-3 Hn., 
 honey-tan-colour at circumference, darker at disc, fleshy, at 
 first convex, then plane and depressed, viscid, the cuticle 
 breaking up into minute, granular, fuscous patches when 
 dry; flesh white; stem solid, firm, fleshy, equal, or thick- 
 ened at base, densely fibrillose, naked at apex, white ; 
 cortina inferior, very fugacious, white ; gills adnato-decur- 
 rent, crowded, at length separating from stem and forming 
 a spurious collar, pallid, soon ochraceous, at length pale 
 yellow-cinnamon. 
 
 In woods. Durdham Down. Bristol. Glamis. 
 
 **** Gills olivaceous, fuliyinous. 
 No British species. 
 
AGARICINI. 191 
 
 Subgenus 2. Myxacium. (p. 186). — Universal veil and 
 
 bulbous stem glutinous ; pileus fleshy somewhat thin ; 
 
 gills adnate, decuri'ent. 
 
 t OoLLiNiTi. — Stem Jloccoso-23eronate, the floccl at first covered 
 vjith gluten. 
 
 46. C. (Myxacium) arvinaeeus, Fr. ; pileus 3—4 in., 
 orange-tawny, fleshy, soft, convex, then flattened, reflexed 
 and undulated, even, smooth, viscous, glistening when dry ; 
 margin slightly striate when in full vigour ; stem tall, solid, 
 equal, silky-viscous, never broken up into scales, white ; 
 cortina soon fibrillose and fugacious; gills adnato-decurrent, 
 broad, somewhat distant, crenulate at edge, at first straw- 
 colour, then bright ochraceous. 
 
 In beech woods. Blaize Castle. Bristol. 
 
 47. C. (Myxacium) coUinitus, Fr. (p. 186.) Eppiug 
 Forest. 
 
 48. C. (Myxacium) mucifluus, Fr. ; pileus livid-clay, tan 
 when dry, opaque, somewhat fleshy, campauulato-expanded. 
 smeared with separating hyaline gluten ; margin striate ; 
 stem attenuated downwards, soft, viscid with the floccoso- 
 scaly, fugacious veil, white or inclining to azure-blue ; gills 
 adnate, distinct, clay-colour, then watery cinnamon. 
 
 On the ground. Hereford. Odour sweet. 
 
 49. C. (Myxacium) elatior, Fr. (p. 186) ; 3-4 in. Epping 
 Forest. 
 
 50. C. (Myxacium) grallipes, Fr. ; pileus 3 in., ferrugi- 
 nous when moist, ochraceous-tan when dry, opaque, almost 
 membranaceous with exception of disc, with a prominent, 
 often acute umbo, campanulate, then flattened, even, hygro- 
 phanous, slightly viscid ; stem stufted, then hollow, equal, 
 flexuose, tough, fibroso-striate, viscous, yellowish tawny. 
 
192 OUTLINES OF BRITISH FUNGOLOGY. 
 
 ochraceous when dry, naked at apex ; gills adnate, with a 
 decurrent tooth, plane, attenuated in front, crowded, clay- 
 colour, then ferruginous. 
 
 Under polars and oaks. Among grass near trees. Ashton 
 Park, Bristol. 
 
 51. C. (Myxacium) livido-ochraceous, B. (p. 186) ; 1 in. 
 
 it Delibuti. — Veil entireli/ viscid ; stem viscid, notfloccoso- 
 j)ero')iate ; loith a varnished appearance when dry. 
 
 * Gills ivhitish, then clay colour. 
 No British species. 
 
 ** Gills at first violaceous, dark blue or reddish. 
 
 52. C. (Myxacium) salor, Fr. ; pileus grey, bright viola- 
 ceous at the thin inflexed margin, at length same colour, 
 obtusely conical or parabolic, campanulate, at length flat- 
 tened with a broad umbo, even, thinly viscous, fibrillose 
 towards margin when dry; stem solid, conico-attenuated 
 from the bulbous base, white, when young covered to the 
 apex with the azure-blue glutinous veil, when old pale, 
 softer; gills adnate, distant, at first pale grey, edge viola- 
 ceous or bluish-grey, when full-grown grey-clay-colour or 
 cinnamon. 
 
 In woods. Coed Coch. 
 
 53. C. (Myxacium) delibutus, Fr. : pileus 2-3 in., light 
 yellowish, fleshy, thin, convex, then flattened, obtuse, at 
 length somewhat depressed, viscid with hyaline gluten, 
 slightly silky-fibrillose when the gluten disappears ; stem 
 stuffed or hollow upwards, equally attenuated from the 
 slightly bulbous base or somewhat equal, elastic, viscous as 
 far as the scanty fibrillose fugacious cortina, when dry var- 
 nished, yellowish- white, white at apex; gills aduate, at 
 
AGAKICINI. 193 
 
 length rounded or slightly etnarginate, more or less distant, 
 serrulated, pallid, often crisped at edge, at first dark or 
 violaceous dark-blue, then clay-cinnaraon. 
 
 On the ground. In grassy places. King's Lynn. 
 
 5 4. C. (Myxacium) illibatus, Fr. ; pileus 1-3 in., yellow, 
 disc darker, slightly fleshy, campanulate, then convex, at 
 length plane and somewhat umbonate, with a viscous 
 pellicle, even, smooth ; flesh white, very thin at circumfer- 
 ence ; stem stuff'ed, then soon hollow, soft, slightly attenu- 
 ated upwards, smooth, viscid, white, with reddish dots 
 upwards ; cortina superior, fibrillose, fugacious ; gills adnato- 
 decurrent, arcunte, thin, crowded, entire, flesh-colour, then 
 clay-cinnamon. 
 
 In woods. Coed Coch. 
 
 *** Gills at first ochraceous or cinnamon. 
 
 55. C. (Myxacium) stillatitius, Fr. ; pileus 2 in., slightly 
 fleshy, convex, then plane, somewhat umbonate, even, 
 smooth, covered with azure-blue gluten which is at first 
 continuous with stem, fuscous-livid when the gluten sepa- 
 rates in the form of drops, at length grey-white ; flesh soft, 
 watery, hygrophanous ; stem hollow, soft, equally attenu- 
 ated, at first sheathed with the azure-blue gluten which is 
 extended into the cortina, apex naked ; gills emarginate, 
 scarcely crowded, somewhat distant, dark cinnamon. 
 
 Among dead leaves. In mossy places. 
 
 56. C. (Myxacium) vibratilis, Fr. ; pileus fleshy, thin, 
 nearly plane, even, smooth, viscid, shining, hygrophanous ; 
 stem stufi'ed, soft, conically attenuated, white, glutinous ; 
 veil fugacious ; gills somewhat adnate, then decurrent, thin, 
 crowded, pallid ochraceous, then cinnamon. 
 
 In woods. Odour and taste disagreeable. 
 
 X 
 
?94 OUTLINES OF P.KITISH FUXGOLOGY. 
 
 57. C. (Myxaciumj pluvius, Fr. ; pileus i-1 iu., pale 
 yellow-tawny wheu moist, opaque ocbrey-tau when dry, 
 slightly fleshy, at first somewhat globose, then convex, 
 gibbous, at length pellucid-striate, hygrophanous, viscid and 
 shining in rainy weather; iiesh thin, same colour; stem 
 elongated, stufted, then hollow, soft, equal or slightly 
 attenuated upwards, even, naked or obsoletely viscid, with 
 whiter silky spots ; cortina w^iite and fibrillose, slightly 
 covered with slime, fugacious ; gills adnexed, separating., 
 ventricose, crowded, light yellowish, or at first whitish, then 
 ochraceous. 
 
 In woods. Lea, Gainsborough. Glamis. 
 
 Subgenus 3. — Ixoloma (p. 1<S7). 
 * Gills at first white or jxdlid. 
 
 58. C. (Inoloma) argentatus, Fi'. ; pileus 4 in., silvery- 
 shining, disc becoming pale, at first silky-lilac at margin, 
 then dun, fleshy, convexo-plane, at length gibbous, silky- 
 even, becoming smooth; flesh whitish; stem solid, attenu- 
 ated from the base, smooth, white, at length yellow at base, 
 internally white; cortina fibrillose, fugacious, adhering to 
 margin of pileus, pallid ; gills emarginate, crowded, slightly 
 serrated, pallid, then watery-cinnamon. 
 
 In woods. Epping Forest. 
 
 Vai'. pinetorum, Cke. ; smaller and more graceful. 
 
 Pine woods. 
 
 ** Gills as well as the veil and stem violaceo7is. 
 
 59. C. (Inoloma) violaceus, Fr. (p. 187) ; 3-0 in. Epping 
 Forest. 
 
 60. C. (Inoloma) cyanites, Fr. ; pileus 3-5 in., dark 
 blue, then pallid azure-blue or livid-fuscous, fleshy, soft. 
 
AGARICINI. 195 
 
 convex, then flattened, obtuse, silky, becoming even and 
 smooth ; flesh azure-blue, then whitish, here and there 
 reddish when broken ; stem solid, bulbous, fibrillose, dark 
 azure-blue, lilac when touched, azure-blue within, reddish 
 blood-colour on contact with atmosphere, when compressed 
 exuding a watery vinous-reddish juice ; cortina fibrillose, 
 azure-blue; gills rounded, crowded, thin, commonly dark 
 blue. 
 
 In woods. Reading. 
 
 61. C. (Inoloma) muricinus, Fr. ; pileus 3-4 in., com- 
 pact, obtuse, becoming smooth, violaceous, then reddish 
 liver-colour ; margin fibrillose ; flesh blue, becoming whitish ; 
 stem bulbous, without juice, villous, purplish violet, as well 
 as the emarginate rather crowded gills. 
 
 In larch woods. 
 
 62. C. (Inoloma) albo-violaceus, Fr. ; pileus 2—3 in. 
 violaceous- white, fleshy, convex, broadly umbonate, dry, 
 innately silky and even; flesh juicy, azure-blue white, 
 solid, firm, clavato-bulbous, or conico-attenuated, externally 
 and internally white-violaceous, white- villous, fibrillose above 
 with the cortina, often with the white veil as a zone at the 
 middle ; gills adnate, somewhat distant, somewhat serru- 
 lated, cinereous-violaceous, at length cinereous-cinnamon. 
 
 In shady woods. Forres. Epping Forest. 
 
 63. A. (Inoloma) malachius, -Fr. ; pileus 2 in., rather 
 compact, obtuse, pallid lilac, then tawny- ferruginous or 
 hrick-red, becoming pale with a whitish pubescence, soon 
 discoloured and smooth, at first clad with white fibrils ; 
 stem bulbous with a bluish veil, the veil and interior 
 becoming whitish ; gills emarginate, crowded, pallid, pur- 
 plish, then watery-ferruginous. 
 
 In fir woods. 
 
196 OUTLINES OF 15K1TISII rUXGOLOOY. 
 
 04. A. (Inoloma) camphoratus, Fr. ; pileus 2—3 in., 
 lilac, then yellow or white, not hygroplianous, fleshy, convex, 
 then flattened, obtuse, at first silky, then smooth ; flesh 
 azure-blue : stem solid, soft, bulbous or obclavate, when 
 young with a woolly sheath, violet, internally white at base ; 
 cortina fibrillose, azure-blue, at length cinnamon ; gills at 
 first arcuate, adnato-decurrent or emarginatc, thin, crowded, 
 at first intense azure-blue, then purple. 
 
 In woods. Fineshade. Odour foetid. 
 
 65. C. (Inoloma) hircinus, Bolt. : pileus fleshy, obtuse 
 or gibbous, silky, with adpressed violet fibrils, growing 
 paler, disc smooth, becoming ferruginous; stem bulbous, 
 without juice, cortinate, pallid violet, yellowish at base and 
 within ; gills emarginate, rather distant, broad, entire, violet, 
 then cinnamon. 
 
 In fir woods. Foetid. This species is founded on 
 Bolton's figure. 
 
 *** Gills or veil cinnamon, red or ochraceous. 
 
 GO. C. (Inoloma) traganus, Fr. ; pileus 3 in., fleshy, 
 convex, then flattened, obtuse, dry, at first silky, becoming 
 even, lilac-purplish, soon pale, at length smooth and yellowish 
 externally and internally ; stem bulbous, solid, spongy, 
 silky, fibrillose, villous below, violaceous, then whitish, 
 internally deep safi'ron-ochraceous ; cortina continues with 
 covering of pileus, pallid violaceous, then cinnamon ; gills 
 emarginate. broad, firm, thick, safi'ron-ochraceous, at length 
 cinnamon, somewhat crenate at edge. 
 
 In pine woods. Forres, etc. Odour foetid. 
 
 Var. finitimus, IVeinm. ; pileus silky, at length smooth, 
 lilac like stem, which is yellowish and mottled within, not 
 
AGAEICINI. 197 
 
 saffron-colour or brown, odour pleasant, but peculiar, 
 resembling gum beginning to ferment. 
 
 67. A. (Inoloma) tophaceus, Fr. ; subcaespitose ; pileus 
 3 in., golden tawny, opaque, fleshy^ thin at margin^ hemi- 
 spherical, villoso-squamulose, or slightly silky and shining ; 
 flesh soft, white ; stem solid, bulbous, villoso-squamulose, 
 tawny, fibrillose ; veil same colour ; gills emarginate, distant, 
 same colour, at length tawny cinnamon. 
 
 In beech woods. King^s Lynn. Strong smelling. 
 Va)\ redimitus, Fr. ; pileus thinner, obtusely umbonate, 
 shining, golden, streaked with innate fibrils ; flesh white ; 
 stem slightly thickened at base, solid, internally soft, fibroso- 
 striate, yellowish; gills adnate, with a small decurrent 
 tooth, light yellow, then tawny. 
 
 In mixed wood. Glamis. 
 
 68. A. (Inoloma) callisteus, Fr. (p. 187.) 
 
 69. A. (Inoloma) Bulliardi, Fr. (p. 187.) 
 
 70. A. (Inoloma) vinosus, Cke. ; pileus 2-3 in., sub- 
 globose, then expanded, at length flattened, vinous-red, 
 smooth, even, shining; stem cylindrical, violet, thickened 
 abruptly into a marginate, bulbous, reddish base ; flesh of 
 pileus paler violet, as well as the upper part of stem ; cortina 
 reddish ; gills adnexed, ventricose, scarcely crowded, ferru- 
 ginous cinnamon. 
 
 Under trees. 
 
 71. A. (Inoloma) bolaris, Fr. (p. 188) ; 1-2 in. Epping 
 Forest. 
 
 **** Gills or veil dark, fuscous^ olivaceous. 
 
 72. A. (Inoloma) pholideus, Fr. (p. 188) ; 2-4 in. 
 Epping Forest. 
 
 73. A. (Inoloma; phrygianus, Fr. ; pileus 2-3 in. 
 
198 OUTLINES OF BRITISH FUXGOLOGY. 
 
 obtuse, honey- colour, hispid, with dense black simple fibrils ; 
 stem bulbous, reticulated, Avith lax black fibrils ; gills 
 rounded, rather crowded, dirty yellow. 
 In shady, moist places, under beeches. 
 
 74. A. (Inoloma) sublanatus, Fr. (p. 188) ; 3-1 in. 
 
 75. A. (Inoloma), arenatus, Fr. (p. 188.) 
 
 70). A. (Inoloma) penicillatus, Fr. ; pileus 1 in,, ferru- 
 ginous-fuscous, tawny when dry, thin, slightly fleshy, convex, 
 minutely umbonate, dry, densely floccoso-scaly, scales innate, 
 dark ferruginous-fuscous ; flesh thin, same colour as pileus ; 
 stem stuff'ed, equal, fragile, squamose, with adpressed, 
 fuscous-ferruginous, concentric scales, paler than pileus, 
 paler and adpressedly silky at apex ; gills separating, plane, 
 somewhat crowded, broad, dark-brown. 
 
 In pine woods. Cabalva. 
 
 Subgenus 4. — Dermocybe (p. 189). 
 * Gills at first ichitish or pallid. 
 
 77 . C. (Dermocybe) ochroleucus, Fr. (p. 189) ; 2 in. 
 Epping Forest. 
 
 78. C. (Dermocybe) decumbens, Fr. ; pileus l-H in., 
 sometimes white, yellowish, silky-shining, not hygrophanous, 
 fleshy, firm, convex, then plane, gibbous, at length obtuse, 
 even, smooth, with a fibrillose pellicle ; stem stuffed, at 
 length hollow, clavato-bulbous downwards, smooth, white; 
 cortina fugacious, white ; gills adnexed, crowded, thin, white, 
 then clay-colour, at length ochrey-cinnaraon. 
 
 In woods and grassy places. Epping Forest. 
 
 79. C. (Dermocybe) tabularis, Fr. (p. 189) ; 1 in. Ep- 
 ping Forest. 
 
 80. C. (Dermocybe) camurus, Fr. ; pileus 2-3 in.. 
 
AGAPJCIXr. 19P 
 
 oblique, purple, pallid, fuscous-hoary, not hygi'ophanous, 
 becoming pale, pallid yellowish, umbo darker, unequally 
 fleshy, somewhat compact at disc, but membranaceous almost 
 to middle, with a broad obtuse umbo, when dry riraosely 
 incised; flesh white; stem somewhat hollow, equal, twisted, 
 smooth or fibrillose below, externally and internally white, 
 naked, and silvery shining at apex ; gills variously ad- 
 nexed, adnate, or almost free, thin, grey-clay colour, then 
 watery-cinnamon, somewhat fuscous, entire, same colour at 
 edge. 
 
 In mixed woods. Glamis. Epping Forest. Odour rancid. 
 
 81. C. (Dermocybe) diabolicus, Fr. ; pileus 1 in., 
 fuscous, crusted with grey, thin, smooth, and fuscous- 
 yellowish, fleshy, thin, hemispherical, obtuse, then gibbous, 
 dry, fragile, at length cracked ; stem thin, stuffed, attenuated 
 downwards, smooth, pale, bluish-grey at apex ; cortina 
 fugacious ; gills adnate, separating, somewhat emarginate, 
 somewhat crowded, very pale, bluish-grey, then soon whitish, 
 at length clay-colour, 
 
 In mixed woods. Uncommon. 
 
 ** Gills, veil and stem at first violaceous, becoming purple. 
 
 82. C. (Dermocybe) caninus. Fr. (p. 189); 3-4 in. 
 Epping Forest. 
 
 83. C. (Dermocybe) myrtillinus, Fr. ; pileus 2-3 in., 
 fuliginous, hoary-silky with fibrils, not rufescent, fleshy, 
 thin, tough, gibbous, then plane ; flesh watery-fuscous when 
 moist, white when dry, violaceous at apex of stem ; stem 
 stufted, tough, slightly bulbous, white silky; cortina scarcely 
 manifest ; gills adnate, somewhat distant, amethyst azure- 
 blue, scarcely changing colour, never purple. 
 
 In mixed woods. Glamis. Rannoch. 
 
200 OUTLINES OF BRITISH FUXGOLOGY. 
 
 8J^. A, (Dermocybe) azureus, Fr.; pileus 1^-2 iu., fleshy^ 
 obtuse^ silky shining, and atomate, lilac, becoming hoary ; 
 stem stuffed, smooth, finely striate, thickened at base, 
 villous, becoming whitish ; gills rather crowded, bright 
 blue, then violet. 
 
 In beech woods. 
 
 H5. A. (Dermocybe) albo-cyaneus, Fr. ; pileus fleshy, 
 convex, then plane, obtuse, with an evanescent silky pellicle, 
 then smooth, from white becoming yellowish ; stem stuffed, 
 somewhat clavate, naked; gills emarginate, broad, crowded, 
 bluish purple, becoming somewhat ochraceous. 
 
 In beech woods. 
 
 86. A. (Dermocybe) anomalous, Fr. (p. 190) ; 1 in. 
 Epping Forest. 
 
 87. A. (Dermocybe) spilomeus, Fr. (p. 190) ; 1 in. 
 
 88. A. (Dermocybe) lepidotus, Ckc\ ; pileus 1-2 in., 
 fleshy, smooth, even, rather thin, convex, then expanded, 
 gibbous, umber, with a tinge of violet near the margin, 
 becoming rufescent near the disc ; flesh whitish, with a 
 darker line near gills ; stem attenuated upwards, becoming 
 hollow when old, violet at apex, dirty white below ; veil 
 whitish, with a tinge of violet ; gills adnate, rather crowded, 
 thin, violet, then cinnamon. 
 
 On the ground. Epping Forest. 
 
 *** Gills bright cinncmwn, red, yelloir ; stem and fibril! ose 
 cortina coloured. 
 
 89. A. (Dermocybe) miltinus, Fr.; pileus 1-1^ in., bay- 
 brown-cinnaraou, when moist dark cinnamon, when dry 
 shining brick-colour, disc somewhat bay-brown, fleshy, thin, 
 convex, then expanded, obtuse or gibbous, even, lustrous, 
 smooth, flesh watery, tan when dry ; stem fistulose, tough. 
 
AGAPJCINI. 201 
 
 somewhat cartilaginous, attenuated upwards, often twisted, 
 white-tomentose at base, ciunamou or reddish, with red 
 fibrils, often villous at apex ; cortina red ; gills aduatC;, 
 almost linear, crowded, thin, reddish cinnamon, then fer- 
 ruginous. 
 
 In mixed woods. Ledbury. 
 
 90. C. (Dermocybe) cinnatoarinus, Fr. ; pileus 2-3 in,, 
 scarlet-red, fleshy, campanulate, thin, flattened, obtuse or 
 obtusely umbonate, silky, then smooth, shining and obso- 
 letely silky; flesh paler; stem solid, equal, or bulbous, 
 fibrillose or striate, scarlet-red, reddish brick-colour in- 
 ternally ; cortina fibrillose, lax, cinnabar ; gills adnate, 
 somewhat decurrent, somewhat distant, connected by veins, 
 unequal and darker at edge, dark blood-colour when 
 bruised. 
 
 In beech woods. Street, etc. Epping Forest. 
 
 91. C. (Dermocybe) sanguineus, Fr. (p. 190) ; \-\h in. 
 Epping Forest, 
 
 92. C. (Dermocybe) anthracinus, Fr. ; pileus dark 
 chestnut or brown-fuscous, fleshy at the umbonate disc, 
 otherwise thin, convex then expanded, umbo persistent, 
 becoming fibrillose, even or smooth ; flesh dark, same as 
 pileus ; stem fistulose, equal, fibrillose, intense blood-colour, 
 fuscous towards base ; gills adnate, crowded, deep fiery-red, 
 blood-red when bruised. 
 
 In woods. Coed Coch, 
 
 93. C. (DermocybeJ cinnamomeus, Fr. (p. 190); li— 1 
 in. Epping Forest. 
 
 Var. semisanguineus, Fr. ; gills blood-red. 
 Var. croceus, Fr. ; smaller ; pileus, somewhat squamu- 
 lose ; gills less crowded, becoming yellowish. 
 
 94?. C. (Dermocybe) croceo-conus, Fr. ; pileus rather 
 
202 
 
 OUTLINES OF BlilTISII FUXGOLOGY. 
 
 fleshy, conic, tlien campanulate, persistently acute, becom- 
 ing smooth, tawny, cinnamon ; stem slender, llexuous ; 
 gills ascending, linear, crowded, cinnamon. 
 Among moss. 
 
 95. C. (Dermocybe) uliginosus, B. (p. 190) ; 2 in. 
 
 96. C. (Dermocybe) orellanus, Fr. ; pilcus orange, 
 tawny, fleshy, obtusely umbonate, villoso-squamulose or 
 orange fibrillose; flesh same colour as pileus, reddening; 
 stem solid, tawny, firm, striate, fibrillose ; cortina tawny ; 
 gills adfixed, broad, somewhat distant, at length opaque. 
 
 In mixed woods. Coed Coch. Epping Forest. 
 
 97. C. (Dermocybe) infucatus, Fr. ; small ; pileus 
 1-1 2 in. j bright yellow, not hygrophanous, fleshy, convex, 
 obtuse, silky when dry, even ; flesh whitish ; stem equally 
 attenuated upwards, base clavate, solid, even, fibrillose, 
 externally and internally pallid light yellow ; cortina mani- 
 fest, yellow, then cinnamon ; gills adnate, crowded, thin, 
 almost linear, tawny, then cinnamon. 
 
 In woods. Heywood Forest, Hereford. 
 
 **** Olivaceous; veil dingy ^xdlid or fuscous ; 2>ileus not torn 
 into scales. 
 
 98. C. (Dermocybe) cotoneus, Fr. ; pilcus 3 in., fleshy, 
 campanulate, then expanded, bullate, somewhat rcpand, in- 
 nately velvety, olive ; stem solid ; girt by the dusky veil, 
 incrassated at base; gills rather crowded, olive, then brown - 
 cinnamon. 
 
 Under oaks. 
 
 99. C. (Dermocybe) subnotatus. P.; pileus 4 in., fleshy, 
 thin, campanulate, then flattened, squamulose with hoary, 
 superficial flocci, fragile, olive, then fuscous; stem spongy, 
 stuffed, conical, elongated, marked with scales or fibrils 
 
AGAEICINl. 203 
 
 and the yellowish veil, smooth and shining at apex ; gills 
 adnate, ventricose, connected by veins, broad, somewhat 
 thick, rather distant, yellowish, then olivaceous-cinnamon. 
 Under beeches, etc. 
 
 100. C. (Dermoeybe) raphanoid.es, Fr. (p. 191), 1-2 in. 
 
 101. C. (Dermoeybe) valgus, Fr. ; pileus convex, some- 
 what gibbous, even, becoming smooth, olivaceous, then 
 brick-red, margin somewhat membranaceous ; stem some- 
 what hollow, elongated, twisted, naked, pallid, shining, apex 
 striate, sub-violaceous, bulb rooting, whitish, tomentose ; gills 
 affixed, rather distant, dingy yellow, then brick-red. 
 
 Among moss in woods. 
 
 102. C. (Dermoeybe) venetus, Fr. ; gregarious ; pileus 
 I2-2 in., green, greenish-yellow, then yellow, not hygro- 
 phanous, fleshy, hemispherical, obtuse, equal, persistently 
 velvety or tomentose ; flesh yellowish-pallid ; stem stuffed 
 or hollow upwards, equal. Arm, curved, same colour or 
 paler than pileus, externally tibrilloso-silky, greenish-yellow, 
 or yellow- villous ; cortina fibrillose, green ; gills adnate, con- 
 nected by veins, somewhat distant, broad, segmental, darker 
 than pileus, olivaceous. 
 
 In woods. Rannoch. 
 
 Subgenus 5. — Telamoxia (p. 191). 
 
 103. C. (Telamonia) macropus, Fr. ; pileus 3 in., brick- 
 «olour, then ferruginous, fleshy, thin, convex, then flattened, 
 margin at first inflexed, obtuse, dry, hoary with small 
 squamules, then smooth ; flesh cinereous ; stem solid, some- 
 what equal, stout, fibrillose, dingy-whitish, then same colour 
 as pileus; veil distant, woven into a narrow ring, white; 
 gills adnexed, broad, distant, crenate or entire, pallid, then 
 -watery cinnamon. 
 
201 OUTLINES OF BKITISH FUNGOLOGV. 
 
 lu woods. Leigh Wood, Bristol. 
 
 104. C. (Telamonia) laniger, Fr. ; pileus compact, 
 hemispherical, expanded, obtuse, woolly with superficial 
 white scales, then smooth, golden-tawny ; stem stout, nearly 
 equal, while, sheathed with a peronate white veil, annulate ; 
 gills adnexed or rounded behind, rather distant, tawny- 
 saftron, shining. 
 
 In larch woods. 
 
 105. C. (Telamonia) bivelus, Fr. ; growing in troops ; 
 pileus 2-4 in., tawny-ferruginous, spotted or darker at disc, 
 not hygrophanous, somewhat equally fleshy, convexo-plane, 
 obtuse, soft, bibulous, smooth or slightly silky at margin, 
 shining, rarely opaque, sometimes rivulose; stem solid, 
 fleshy-spongy, sometimes bulbous, or longer and equally 
 attenuated, or curt, thick, dingy-white, internally somewhat 
 ferruginous; exterior veil villous, sheathing, white; ring 
 spurious, fugacious, above which the thin cortina vanishes ; 
 gills adnate, somewhat emarginate, at first somewhat 
 crowded, then somewhat distant, more or less broad, bright 
 tawny-cinnamon. 
 
 In woods. Coed Coch., Glamis. 
 
 106. C. (Telamonia) bulbosus, Fr. (p. 191) ; 3 in. 
 
 107. C. (Telamonia) urbicus, Fr.; pileus 2 in., clay- 
 whitish, fleshy, convexo-plane, obtuse, smooth, pitted when 
 large; flesh firm, whitish; stem solid, equal, round above 
 middle, with a narrow ring, when young villous above ring ; 
 gills emarginate, crowded, thin, broad, watery-ferruginous. 
 
 In grassy places. Cabalva. 
 
 108. C. (Telamonia) licinipes, Fr.; pileus 2-3 in., pale 
 yellow, tan-pallid when dry, fleshy-membranaceous, cam- 
 panulate, then convex and flattened, obtusely umbonate, at 
 length depressed round umbo, even, smooth ; flesh hygro- 
 
AGAKICIXI. 205 
 
 phanous ; stem stuffed, then hollow, fragile, equal, flexu- 
 ous, white, white-villous at base, elsewhere clothed with 
 shining floccoso-plumose scales, at length plane ; ring dis- 
 tant, membranaceous ; gills adnate, broad behind, some- 
 what crowded, entire, watery-cinnamon. 
 
 In fir woods. 
 
 109. C. (Telamonia) microcyclus, Fr. ; pileus 1 in., 
 submembranaceous, convexo-plane, even, smooth, testaceous 
 brown, becoming pale, opaque, umbonate, disc darker ; 
 stem stuffed, attenuated upwards from the thickened base, 
 pallid ; veil collapsing in an annular zone ; gills adnate, 
 broad, distant, lilac, then cinnamon. 
 
 Under trees. 
 
 ** Stem and gills violctceous ; cortina commonly white- 
 violaceous ; universal veil white. 
 
 110. C. (Telamonia) torvus, Fr.=^C. torosus (p. 191), 
 3-4 in. Epping Forest. 
 
 111. C. (Telamonia) impennis, Fr. ; pileus 1-4 in., 
 umber, then brick-colour, at length dingy, somewhat equally 
 fleshy, obtuse, convex, smooth, at first silky at margin, at 
 length cracked; iiesh pallid; stem solid, cylindrical, scarcely 
 bulbous, not scaly, pale, becoming violet at apex, internally 
 azure blue, girt towards apex by a white zone formed by veil ; 
 cortina same colour ; gills adnate, then emarginate, distant, 
 rather thick, at first deep bright purplish-violaceous, theu 
 watery-ferruginous. 
 
 Among dead leaves. Bomere. 
 
 112. C. (^Telamonia) plumiger, Fr. ; pileus fuscous-oli- 
 vaceous, when dry brick-tan, hygrophanous, slightly fleshy, 
 conical, then campanulate, with a broad, obtuse, prominent 
 
206 OUTLINES OF BRITISH FUXGOLOGY. 
 
 umbo, ofteu cracked, dry and clothed with dense white 
 floccoso-plumose scales, erect and squarrose or adpressed 
 and silky ; stem solid, clavate, pale, internally watery- 
 whitish ; veil floccoso-scaly on apex of stem, somewhat 
 ring-like, shining white ; gills adnate, scarcely crowded, 
 broad, at first violaceous, then watery, at length pure cin- 
 namon, edge entire, same colour, or clay-colour. 
 In mixed woods. Glamis. 
 
 113. C. (Telamonia) scutulatus, Fr. ; small; purple 
 umber or brick-fuliginous, hygrophanous, brick-colour when 
 dry, somewhat fleshy, ovato-globose, then campanulato- 
 hemispherical, obtuse, white-silky at margin, then naked, 
 rivulose, innato-squamulosc or lacunose-wrinkled ; flesh 
 thin, violaceous ; stem solid, rigid, cylindrical or bulbous, 
 externally and internally deep violaceous, then fuscous, 
 white-villous at base, somewhat rooted, sheathed, and some- 
 what ringed by the white veil ; gills adnate or emarginate, 
 more or less distant, violaceous, then purple, serrated at 
 edge when young, at length cinnamou. 
 
 In moist woods. Foxley. Cabalva. Variable. Odour 
 of radish. 
 
 114. C. (Telamonia) evernius, Fr. (p. 191) ; 2-4 in. 
 Epping Forest. 
 
 115. C. (Telamonia) quadricolor, Fr. ; pileus 2-3 in., 
 pallid yellow, somewhat tawny, shining when dry, slightly 
 fleshy, conical, then flattened, umbonate, smooth, at length 
 pierced or spotted, radiato-striate at margin ; flesh thin, same 
 colour; stem stuff'ed, thin, hollow, equal, flexuous, slightly 
 rigid, fibrilloso-striate with adpressed veil, violaceous-whitish ; 
 veil collapsing above as a round, oblique, white, evanescent 
 ring ; gills adnate, distant, broad, thin, white, serrated at 
 edge, dark violaceous, or purplish, then cinnamon. 
 
AGAEICIXI. 207 
 
 In woods. Coed Coch. Blaize Castle, Bristol. 
 
 *** Stem and veil reddish or yellow ; gills taiony or cinnamon^ 
 neither violaceous or becoming brown. 
 
 116. C. (Telamonia) armillatus, Fr. (p. 192) ; 3-5 in. 
 Epping Forest. 
 
 117. C. (Telamonia) hsematoehelis, Fr. ; pileus pallid^ 
 fuscous brick-colour, fleshy, thin, gibbous, silky fibrillose ; 
 stem solid, thickened, not bulbous, attenuated upwards, 
 encircled with a rufous zone, becoming fuscous internally ; 
 gills adnate, crowded, somewhat narrow, pallid cinnamon. 
 
 In woods. Coed Coch. 
 
 118. C. (Telamonia) limonius, Fr. (p. 192) ; 3-4 in. 
 
 119. C. (Telamonia) helvolus, Fr. ; pileus 1-3 in., dark 
 tawny-cinnamon, thin, pale yellow, slightly fleshy, convexo- 
 plane, obtuse or obtusely umbonate, smooth, then even, 
 margin cortinate, bent upwards; stem firm, solid, rarely 
 pierced, somewhat equal, not tense and straight, fibrillose,^ 
 furnished with an annular, narrow, ferruginous-margined 
 zone, formed of the woven veil ; gills marginate, broad, 
 distant, thick, veined at base, opaque, tawny, then dark 
 cinnamon. 
 
 In mixed woods. Coed Coch. Glamis. 
 
 120. C. (Telamonia) hinnuleus, Fr. (p. 192.) Epping 
 Forest. 
 
 121. C. (Telamonia) gentilis, Fr. ; gregarious; pileus 
 \-\ in., tawny-cinnamon, yellow when dry, hygrophanous, 
 slightly fleshy, conico-expended, then flattened, acutely 
 umbonate, rimosely incised, varying somewhat silky ; flesh 
 thin, same colour ; stem stuffed, then hollow, slender, 
 equal or attenuated at base, often curved, fibrillose, same 
 colour as pileus, never pale ; veil forming one or more 
 
208 OUTLINES OF lUUTISlI I'UNGOLOGY. 
 
 ammlar zones, oblique, sometimes lloccose, scaly below 
 ring, yellow ; gills adnate, thick, distant, plane, connected 
 by veins, entire, tawny-cinnamon. 
 In woods, chiefly pine, frequent. 
 
 122. C. (Telamonia) helvelloides, Fr. ; pileus A— 1 in., 
 ferruginous, tawny when dry, somewliat membranaceous, 
 convex, then flattened, umbonate, smooth, somewhat striate 
 when moist, then cracked and squarrosc ; stem fistulose, 
 equal, undulated and flexuous, somewhat ferruginous, with- 
 out whiteness ; veil yellowish, silky at margin of pileus, 
 somewhat ring-like at the white, silky and glittering apex of 
 stem ; gills adnate, thick, and distant, rather broad, at first 
 violaceous-umber, with white-floccose edge, then umber- 
 cinnamon and ferruginous. 
 
 In mixed woods, uncommon. 
 
 123. C. (Telamonia) rubellus, Ckc. ; pileus 2-3 in., 
 Heshy, campanulate, then expanded, rufous-orange, darker 
 at umbo, disc fleshy, thin at margin ; flesh reddish-ochre ; 
 stem thick, solid, equal or attenuated upwards, pale above, 
 darker below, marked with concentric, dark ferruginous, 
 fibrillose bands ; gills adnate, sinuate, rather narrow, 
 •scarcely crowded, pale, then bright ferruginous-red. 
 
 In swampy places. 
 
 **** Stem becoming //(scoits ; veil/itscons or (firti/, <jllls dark- 
 coloitred. 
 
 124'. C. (Telamonia) bovinus, Fr. ; pileus 4 in., fleshy, 
 convex, then plane, even, becoming smooth, watery-cinna- 
 mon, at length pertuse ; stem stout, spongy-bulbous, grey, 
 then dingy-cinnamon, whitish above the dusky zone : gills 
 affixed, broad, rather distant, cinnamon. 
 
 In woods. 
 
aCtAricini. 209 
 
 125. C. (Telamonia) nitrosus, Cke. ; pileus 2-3 in., 
 fleshy^ rather thin, obtuse, convex, then expanded, undulate 
 at margin, fawn-colour or tawny, darker and brownish at 
 disc, soon breaking up into minute, somewhat concentric 
 darker scales; stem, short, stout, solid, ochraceous, darker 
 at base, nearly equal, paler than pileus, marked below with 
 concentric darker squamose bands; gills broad, somewhat 
 distant, emarginate, violet, then watery-cinnamon. 
 
 In mixed woods. 
 
 126. C. (Telamonia) brunneus, Fr. ; pileus campanu- 
 late, then flattened, umber, reddish, tan-colour when dry, 
 naked, resolved at margin into innate fibrils, umbo fleshy, 
 obtuse; stem stuffed, elongated, attenuated upwards, elastic, 
 dingy, white-striate ; veil, band-like, dingy-white ; gills ad- 
 nate, thick, distant, purplish, then brownish-cinnamon. 
 
 In moist places in woods. Epping Forest. 
 
 127. C. (Telamonia) injucundus, Weinm. ; pileus com- 
 pact, convex, then plane, obtuse, cinnamon, becoming dusky, 
 fibrillose; stem solid, clavate, attenuated upwards, same 
 colour, at length tawny-yellowisb, fibrils and veil dingy; 
 gills emarginate, broad, lilac, then clay-colour. 
 
 In fir woods. 
 
 128. C. (Telamonia) glandicolor, Fr. ; umber ; pileus 
 1-2 in., somewhat fleshy, convex then flattened, umbonate. 
 becoming dusky-hoary when dry ; stem rather hollow, 
 equal, slender, straight, somewhat fibrillose ; veil in the 
 form of a distant white zone ; gills aduate, broad, distant 
 entire. 
 
 In pine woods. 
 
 129. C. (Telamonia) punctatus, Fr. : pileus h in., 
 hoary-umber, tan, somewhat membranaceous, couico-convex, 
 smooth, at length even, pierced; stem somewhat fistulose,^ 
 
 o 
 
210 OUTLINES OF BRITISH FUNGOLOGV. 
 
 equal, slender, uudulated, fibrilloso-striate, yellow fuscous, 
 girt with a pallid, fuscous zone from the fugacious veil ; 
 gills aduate, distant, entire, brown-cinnamon. 
 
 Leptophylli. — Gills iiarrow, thin, more or less crowded; pileus 
 thin, stem externally more rigid, someichat cartilaginous, stuffed 
 or hollow, often attenuated downwards. 
 
 * Stem whitish, pallid, not Jloccoso-scal f/ . 
 
 130. C. (Telamonia) triformis, Fr.; pileus 2-3 in.,hygro- 
 phanous, fawn-colour, brownish, then livid yellowish or 
 honey-colour, isabelline or dingy-tan when dry, unequally 
 fleshy, thin at the margin, convex, then plane, obtuse, or 
 slightly gibbous, superficially fibrillose or becoming smooth, 
 at length pierce-dotted, even, opaque ; stem somewhat 
 bulbous, stuffed, spongy internally, fragile, rather smooth, 
 pallid, ringed upwards with the woven veil ; ring distant, 
 white ; gills adnate, ventricose, somewhat emarginate, con- 
 nected by veins, somewhat distant, thin, watery honey- 
 colour, then watery-cinnamon. 
 
 In woods. Alresford, Hants. 
 
 131. C. (Telamonia) biformis, Fr. ; pileus li-3 in., 
 conico-campanulate, then expanded, smooth, shining, fer- 
 ruginous-bay, with a prominent fleshy umbo ; stem stuffed, 
 rigid, attenuated downwards, fibrilloso-striate, paler, with 
 an oblique, white, sometimes obsolete, ring ; gills adnate, 
 rather crowded, crenulate. cinnamon. 
 
 In mixed woods. 
 
 ** Stein inclining to violet. 
 
 132. C. (Telamonia) periscelis, Fr. (p. 193) ; 2 in. 
 
 133. C. (Telamonia) flexipes, Fr. ; pileus l-l in., dark 
 fuscous- brown, or inclining to violaceous, then pale, pale 
 
AGARICINT. 211 
 
 yellow in dry weather, tan when old, slightly fleshy, at first 
 conical and acute, then expanded and acutely umbonate, at 
 length depressed round umbo, hoary-fibrillose, then naked, 
 torn when old ; flesh thin, same colour as pileus ; stem 
 stuffed, then pierced, equal, flexuose, floccoso-scaly below 
 the woven white ring, pallid, violaceous at apex or through- 
 out; gills adnate, slightly distant, broad, purple or umber 
 violaceous, at length cinnamon, whitish at edge. 
 In woods. Frequent. 
 
 134. C. (Telamonia) flabellus, Fr. ; growing in troops ; 
 pileus f in., olivaceous-fuscous, tan when dry, somewhat 
 membranaceous, acutely umbonate, conical, then flattened, 
 at first superficially scaly, silky when dry, at length rimosely 
 incised, fibrillose ; flesh thin, paler ; stem generally elon- 
 gated, stuff'ed, then hollow, equal, undulated and flexuose, 
 floccoso-scaly, pallid, violet at apex ; veil white, inferior, 
 originating the scales on stem, terminating in a ring ; gills 
 adnate, crowded, linear, narrow, dark violaceous, cinnamon 
 then ferruginous. 
 
 In woods. Coed Coch. 
 
 *** Stem and pileus taivny, ferruginous. 
 
 135. C. (Telamonia) psammocephalus, Fr. (p. 193) ; 1 in. 
 
 136. C. (Telamonia) incisus, Fr. ; growing in troops or 
 csespitose ; pileus tawny-ferruginous or olivaceous-fuscous, 
 opaque, slightly fleshy, variable, acutely or obsoletely um- 
 bonate, convexo-expanded, naked, then fibrillose or scaly, 
 even and shining after exposure to sun ; veil somewhat 
 zoned, white ; stem curt or elongated, somewhat stuffed, 
 flexuose, fibrous, fibrillose, not polished ; gills adnate, some- 
 what distant, cinnamon-ferruginous. 
 
 In woods. Loughborough. 
 
212 OUTLINES OK BRITISH FUNGOLOGY. 
 
 137. C. (Telamonia) iliopodius, Fr. (p. 193) ; 1-2 in. 
 
 **** S'tem /loccoso-scalij, and, as icell as the j^'deus, fuscous. 
 
 138. C. (Telamonia) hemitrichus, Fr. ; pileus 1 -3 in.^ 
 dark fuscous^ then fuscous-tan, acute or obtuse, umbo dark, 
 somewhat fleshy, convexo-expanded, or obtuse, sometimes 
 umbilicate, more or less superficially white-fibrilloao-curled 
 with erect flocci, never torn ; stem hollow, equal, thick, firm, 
 pallid fuscous, white fiocculose below the medial woven ring ; 
 shining white, membranaceous and reflexed; gills adnate,ven- 
 tricose at base, crowded, clay-colour, at length cinnamon. 
 
 In mixed woods. Uncommon. Epping Forest. 
 
 139. C. (Telamonia) stemmatus, Fr. ; pileus 1-^-2 in., 
 date-brown when moist, pale when dry, slightly fieshy, 
 convex then flattened, obtuse, fragile, hoary-silky at margin 
 when moist, fibrillose when dry ; stem stufted then fistulose, 
 ringed or naked, equal or attenuated at base, often curved, 
 soft, externally and internally ferruginous date-brown, paler, 
 becoming silky- even at apex; gills aduate^ crowded, broad, 
 narrower behind, date-brown, opaque. 
 
 In moist woods. Lyne. Sussex. 
 
 140. C. (Telamonia) rigidus, Scop. ; pileus 1 in., some- 
 what membranaceous, conical, then convex, umbonate, 
 smooth, shining bay-brown ; flesh dark, like pileus ; stem 
 stuffed, then hollow, thin, equal, flexiiose, paler, girt with 
 a squamose, white veil ; gills adnate, rather crowded, broad, 
 distinct, ferruginous, then cinnamon. 
 
 In damp places in woods. Epping Forest. Strong 
 scented. 
 
 141. C. (Telamonia) paleaeeus, Fr. ; pileus fuscous when 
 damp, dingy when dry, hygrophanous, somewhat membra- 
 naceous, conical then expanded, acutely or obtusely umbo- 
 
AGARICINL 213 
 
 nate, at first silky, with superficial squamulose white-villous 
 dowu, becoming smooth, opaque ; fiesh of disc same colour ; 
 stem fistulose, slender, somewhat tough, undulated, exter- 
 nally and internally fuscous, at first paler, white-villous at 
 base and slightly squamulose with white flocci, white ring 
 at apex; gills adnate, broad, pallid-whitish, then cinnamon. 
 In beech woods. Cabalva. Epping Forest. 
 
 142. C. (Telamonia) Cookei, Quel. ; pileus i in., tawny- 
 yellow, invested with a paler, shining, woolly veil ; pileus 
 conical, umbonate, fibrillose ; stem slender, flexuose, stuffed, 
 girt with floccose rings ; gills violet, then reddish, at length 
 rust-colour. 
 
 In woods. 
 
 Subgenus 6. Hygrocybe (p. 193). — Pileus smooth, or supei-ficially 
 white-fibrillose, not viscous, changing colour from moist to 
 dry ; cortina thin, fibrillose or collapsing and forming an 
 irregular zone on stem. 
 
 I. FiRMiORES. — Pileus sonieichat fleshy, convex or camipamdato- 
 convex, expanded, obtuse or gibbous ; margin at first incurved • 
 stem usually attenuated upwards. 
 
 * Stem and cortina white. 
 
 143. C. (Hygrocybe) flrmus, Fr. ; pileus equally fleshy, 
 hemispherical, then expanded, obtuse, becoming smooth, 
 ochraceous, ferruginous when moist ; flesh compact, white ; 
 stem solid, stout, somewhat bulbous, fibrilloso-striate, white, 
 fibrils and cortina becoming ferruginous ; gills affixed, thin^ 
 ferruginous, then cinnamon. 
 
 In woods. 
 
 144. C. (Hygrocybe) subferrugineus, Fr. ; pileus 3 m., 
 ferruginous or watery-cinnamon, more or less hygropha- 
 nous, shining when dry, tawny, becoming pale, unequally 
 
214 OUTLINES OF EPxITISII FUNGOLOGV. 
 
 fleshy, more compact at disc, convex then expanded, obtuse, 
 slightly flexuose, firm, not rigid, even, smooth, dingy isabel- 
 line-white ; stem variable, solid, more or less bulbous, at- 
 tenuated upwards, adpressedly fibrillose, externally rigid 
 and somewhat cartilaginous, pallid, internally soft, saflFron- 
 yellow at base ; veil fibrillose, marginal, fugacious ; gills 
 emarginate, more or less crowded, opaque, pallid, watery, 
 then dark ferruginous. 
 In woods. Coed Coch. 
 
 145. C. (Hygrocybe) armeniacus, Fr. (p. 193) ; 2-4 in. 
 
 146. C. (Hygrocybe) damascenus, Fr. ; pileus 3 in., 
 fleshy, thin, convex then plane, obtuse then broadly gib- 
 bous, smooth bay-cinnamon, brick-ved and rivulose when 
 dry; stem solid, firm, cylindrical, elastic and, as well as 
 the fibrillose veil, becoming whitish ; gills adnate, thin, 
 crowded, opaque, cinnamon. 
 
 In grassy places. Taste acrid. 
 
 147. C. (Hygrocybe) privignus, Fr. ; pileus 2 in., ground 
 colour fuscous, becoming hoary, pale with a thin white 
 film, pallid-tan when dry; slightly fleshy, convex, then flat- 
 tened or reflexed and undulated, obtusely umbonate, dry, 
 hygrophanous ; stem stuff'ed then hollow, attenuated from 
 base, equal or twisted, pale- silvery, partially white-silky from 
 veil ; gills adnate, broad, not crowded, distinct, at first 
 watery, then opaque-cinnamon, serrated and whitc-firabriate 
 at edge when perfect. 
 
 In pine woods. Herefordshire. 
 
 148. C. (Hygrocybe) duracinus, Fr. ; pileus 2 in., 
 watery brick-colour when moist, tan when dry, opaque, 
 fleshy, plane with a broad obtuse umbo, elevated ridge 
 round margin, which is at first bent inwards, white-silky, 
 then flattened, naked and even, cuticle hard, rigid, fragile ; 
 
AGARICINI. 215 
 
 stem solid, hard, somewhat bulbous, rooted at attenuated 
 base, externally even, smooth, rigid, with a thick carti- 
 laginous separable cuticle, fragments revolute on breaking 
 up ; cortina forming a narrow silky-white zone at margin 
 of pileus ; gills adnate, moderately crowded, watery cinna- 
 mon. 
 
 On the ground in woods. In old pastures beside stumps. 
 Dun. Scone. 
 
 149. C, (Hygrocybo) illuminus, Fr. ; pileus fleshy, con- 
 vex, then plane, gibbous, smooth, pale brick-red, reddish- 
 tan when dry, circumference thin, virgate under a lens ; 
 stem somewhat hollow, attenuated, silky-fibrillose, pallid, 
 then becoming ferruginous ; gills adnate, slightly crowded, 
 somewhat distant, pallid, then cinnamon. 
 
 In pine woods. 
 
 150. C. (Hygrocybe) tortuosus, Fr. ; pileus rather fleshy,, 
 convex, somewhat gibbous, smooth, even, shining, ferrugi- 
 nous-bay, brick-red when dry ; stem rather hollow, rigid, 
 equal, somewhat twisted, silvery ; gills adnate, crowded, 
 entire, tawny, becoming purple when bruised. 
 
 In damp pine woods. 
 
 151. C. (Hygrocybe) dilutus, F/-. (p. 194) ; 2 in. Epping 
 Forest. 
 
 "■■■* Stem and gills commonly inclining to violet. 
 
 152. C. (Hygrocybe) saturninus, Fr. ; somewhat csespi- 
 tose; pileus 2-5 in., dark bay-brown, changing colour, 
 umber when damp, soon pale, brick-colour, unequally fleshy, 
 campanulate then expanded, obtuse, even, smooth, super- 
 ficially silky from veil at margin ; flesh violaceous, then 
 whitish ; cortina inferior, abundant, white, not forming a 
 
216 OUTLINES OK BIHTLSH FUNGOLOGY. 
 
 zone ; gills rounded^ adfixed, broad, crowded^ thin, fragile, 
 purplish, at length watery-ferruginous. 
 In grassy places. Kpping Forest. 
 
 153. C. (Hygrocybo) imbutus, Fr. ; pileus 3 in., sienna- 
 brown, then pale yellowish, unequally fleshy, convex, obtuse, 
 even, smooth, obsoletely hoary-fibrillose at margin ; stem 
 solid, equal, sometimes twisted, even, whitish, pale viola- 
 ceous at apex, same colour internally ; cortina fugacious, 
 white, adhering to margin of pileus and apex of stem ; gills 
 rounded, somewhat distant, at first dark bluish-grey or 
 violaceous-cinereous, then watery cinnamon, never purplish. 
 
 In woods. Dinmore. 
 
 154. C. (Hygrocybe) oastaneus, Fr. (p. 194.) 
 
 155. C. (Hygrocybe) bicolor, Cke.; pileus 1-2 in., rather 
 fleshy, campanulate, then expa;ided, broadly or acutely um- 
 bonate, somewhat fragile, dingy whitish, with an occasional 
 tinge of lilac, even, smooth, silky, shining ; flesh thin, 
 colour of pileus, or paler ; stem equal or attenuated down- 
 wards, pallid violet, becoming whitish, solid ; flesh bright 
 purplish-violet at base, pallid above ; veil fugacious, white ; 
 gills adnate, with a tooth, sub-ventricose, slightly eroded at 
 edge, rather broad, scarcely crowded, purplish-violet, then 
 cinnamon. 
 
 On the ground, in mixed woods. 
 
 *** Stem and someivhat obsolete veil yellom or rn/ous. 
 
 15G. C. (Hygrocybe) balaustinus, Fr. ; pileus fleshy, 
 convex then plane, obtuse, moist, virgate with innate fibrils, 
 smooth, reddish ferruginous, tawny, brick-red and shining 
 when dry ; stem solid, conically attenuated, flbrilloso-striate, 
 
AGAKICINI. 217 
 
 pallid, then within and without tawny-ferruginous ; gills 
 adnata, broad behind, rather crowded, ferruginous-red. 
 In beech woods. 
 
 157. C. (Hygrocybe) colus, Fr. ; pileus 1-2 in., browu- 
 rufescent, brick-colour, paler and shiniug when dry, some- 
 what fleshy, campanulate, convex, obtusely umbonate or 
 obtuse, dingy whitish when dry ; flesh same colour ; stem 
 stuffed, almost solid, equally attenuated upwards, with 
 blood-red mycelium at base, stiff, naked, not cartilaginous, 
 paler than pileus, fibrillose, fibrils same colour as pileus ; 
 cortina fibrillose, tawny-reddish ; gills adnate, scarcely 
 sinuate, plane, firm, tough, rather thick, scarcely crowded, 
 veined, dark cinnamon, paler when young. 
 
 In woods. Blaize Castle, Bristol. 
 
 158. C. (Hygrocybe) isabellinus, Batsch ; pileus rather 
 fleshy, convex, somewhat umbonate, honey-colour, smooth, 
 becoming yellowish and shining when dry ; stem rather 
 hollow, equal, rigid, striate, naked, becoming yellowish ; 
 gills adnate, firm, rather distant, yellow, then cinnamon 
 clay-colour. 
 
 In pine woods. 
 
 159. C. (Hygrocybe) renidens, Fr. ; pileus 1-2 in., 
 ferruginous-tawny when damp, ochraceous when dry, be- 
 coming pale at disc, slightly fleshy, firm, convexo-plane, 
 obtuse or gibbous, smooth, shining ; flesh thin, paler ; stem 
 firm, stufted, equal, externally somewhat cartilaginous, dis- 
 solvable into fibrils of same colour as pileus, pale yellowish, 
 then tawny ; cortina laxly fibrillose, fugacious, yellow ; 
 gills adnate, separating-free, somewhat crowded, entire, 
 pallid-cinnamoD, then tawny. 
 
 ' In shady woods. Epping Forest. 
 
318 OUTLINES OF BRITISH FUXGOLOGY. 
 
 **** Stem inclining to fuscous ; c&i'tina pallid dirty lohite, 
 not yelloiv ; gills dark. 
 
 160. C. (Hygrooybe) uraceus, F7\ ; pileus 1-2 iu.^ when 
 moist umber or inclining to olive, somewhat shining, when 
 dry tan or isabelline, when young brick-colour, slightly 
 fleshy, conical, campanulate, then expanded, umbonate or 
 obtuse, when moist even and smooth, when dry somewhat 
 fibrillose ; flesh fuscous, darker in the stem ; stem slightly 
 tubular, stufted then hollow, cylindrical, equal, firm, fibril- 
 loso-striate, becoming even, fuscous, naked and pale at 
 apex, inclining to olive, at length wholly fuscous-black, 
 internally same colour ; cortina superior, fibrillose, fuscous ; 
 gills adnate, ventricose, firm, distant, cinuamou-brown, 
 edge entire and same colour, or white and fimhriato- 
 scrrated. 
 
 In pine woods. Dinmore. 
 
 161. C. (Hygrocybe) jubarinus, Fr. ; pileus 1^-3 in., 
 tawny-cinnamon, shining, somewhat fleshy, campauulato- 
 flattened, obsoletely umbonate, when large and old depressed 
 in centre, often repand and undulated, at length reflexed, 
 rimoso-incised at margio, fragile, even, smooth at disc ; 
 when young silky at margin with the white veil, when 
 old innately fibrillose under a lens; stem at first stufi'ed, 
 then hollow, fibrilloso-striate, externally and internally 
 pale tawny, paler at base and naked apex ; gills adnate, 
 somewhat distant, tawny-cinnamon, edge entire, same 
 colour. 
 
 In woods. Coed Coeli. 
 
 162. C. (Hygrocybe) pateriformis, Fr. ; pileus 1 in., 
 somewhat fleshy, rigid, plane or depressed, obtuse, orbi- 
 cular, dusky-chestnut, sprinkled with fugacious white 
 
AGARICINI. 219 
 
 fibrils ; stem hollow, equal, straight, fibrillose, white then 
 dusky ; gills emarginate, adnate, somewhat crowded, brick- 
 red. 
 
 In damp places. 
 
 163. C. (Hygrocybe) unimodiis, B)-it. ; pileus 1^-2 in., 
 campanulate, then expanded, rufous-brown, smooth, margin 
 straight ; stem equal, fibrous, same tint ; gills distant, 
 brown. 
 
 In grassy places. 
 
 II. Tenuiores. — Pileus someichat mewhrunaceous, conical then 
 exjjanded, umbo aciite or obtuse, vanishing, margin at first 
 straight ; stem somewhat equal or attenuated at base. 
 
 * Stem white. 
 
 164. C. (Hygrocybe) dolabrates, Fr. ; pileus 2-4 in., 
 between fleshy aud membranaceous, campanulate then ex- 
 panded, obtuse, smooth, brick-red, even and tan-colour 
 when dry, silky at margin ; stem long, stout, cylindrical, 
 smooth, clear white ; gills adnate, very broad, distiuct, 
 distant, tawny-cinnamon. 
 
 In damp places in pine woods. Epping Forest. 
 
 165. C. (Hygrocybe) ringens, Fr. ; pileus 1-2 in., 
 opaque tan-clay-colour when damp, tan-whitish when dry, 
 fleshy, thin, campanulate, lax, then convex, obtuse or 
 broadly gibbous, even, smooth ; flesh slightly firm, white ; 
 stem stuffed, with a cartilaginous bark, elastic, rigid, tough, 
 rooted, smooth, even, naked, pale when moist, white when 
 dry; gills adnate, somewhat decurrent, distant, broad, 
 watery clay-colour, then pallid cinnamon. 
 
 In mixed woods. Epping Forest. Uncommon. 
 
 166. C. (Hygrocybe) Krombholzii, Fr. ; often csespi- 
 tose ; pileus 1 in., conico-campanulate, then gibbous, even, 
 
220 OUTLINES OF J5i;rnsii ruxGOLOGY. 
 
 smooth, disc fleshy, margin thiu ; veil appendiculate ; stem 
 fistulose, equal, naked, whitish ; gills nearly free, broad, 
 ferruginous, edge becoming yellowish. 
 Among moss. 
 
 167. C. (Hygrocybe) Reedii, B. (p. 194) ; 1 in. 
 
 168. C. (Hygrocybe) leucopus, Fr. (p. 194) ; 1 in. 
 
 169. C. (Hygrocybe) scandens, />. ; pileus tawny-ferru- 
 ginous, then honey-colour, tan when dry, slightly fleshy, 
 umbo tawny, somewhat membranaceous, smooth, slightly 
 striate at margin ; flesh yellowish ; stem flstulose, thickened 
 at apex, very thin, flexuose, soft, even, yellowish, whitish 
 when dry ; cortina fibrillose, white ; gills adnate, thiu, 
 somewhat distant, narrow, attenuated in front, tawny- 
 cinnamon, edge entire, same colour. 
 
 In pine wood. Forres. 
 
 ** Stem inclining to violet or reddish. 
 
 170. C. (Hygrocybe) erythrinus, Fr. ; pileus 1—1^ in,, 
 bay-brown-rufous when moist, tawny when dry, slightly 
 fleshy, conical then convex, darker at umbo, even, smooth ; 
 flesh when moist same colour ; stem stufi'ed, then hollow, 
 equal, or thickened at base, straight, smooth, striate with 
 adpressed fibrils, shining, silvery- white, violaceous, often 
 pruinate upwards; cortina superior, fibrillose, white; gills 
 slightly adnexed, then somewhat distant, ventricose, pallid, 
 then pale cinnamon. 
 
 In woods. Coed Coch. 
 
 171. C. (Hygrocybe) decipiens, Fr. ; pileus 1 in., shining, 
 bay-brown, brick-colour vvhcn dry, umbo darker, fleshy mem- 
 branaceous, campanulato-expandcd, acutely umbonate, then 
 depressed round umbo, smooth, margin slightly striate, then 
 innately torn ; stem stuff'ed, then fistulose, equal, tense and 
 
AGAIIICINI. 221 
 
 straight or flexuose, fibrillose, pallid, pale rufescent or with 
 brick-coloured spots, brick-colour internally, externally 
 covered with a pallid separable cuticle ; cortina fibrillose, 
 white, fugacious ; gills adnate, more or less crowded, thin, 
 brick-colour ferruginous. 
 
 In mixed woods. Epping Forest. Frequent. 
 
 172. C. (Hygrocybe) germanus, Fr.; pileus 1 in., hygro- 
 phanous, fuscous wheu moist, clay-colour when dry, opaque, 
 somewhat membranaceous, campanalate, obtusely umbo- 
 nate, fragile, somewhat silky, not squamulose or striate ; 
 stem somewhat fistulose, equal, often twisted, smooth sil- 
 very-pale, somewhat lilac ; cortina fibrillose, fugacious ; gills 
 adnate, somewhat distant, broad, watery-cinnamon. 
 
 In pine woods. Logic, Forfarshire. Epping Forest. 
 Strong smelling. 
 
 *** Stem ydlovish, becommg pale. 
 
 173. C. (Hygrocybe) detonsus, Fr.; pileus 1-2 in., bright 
 yellowish when moist, tan when dry, somewhat membrana- 
 ceous, conical then expanded, somewhat umbonate, slightly 
 silky-smooth, striate to middle, fragile ; flesh thin, whitish ; 
 stem stuffed, then fistulose, equal or attenuated upwards, 
 soft, smooth, pale-yellowish ; gills adnate, ventricose, some- 
 what distant, entire, unicolorous, bright yellowish, then 
 brick-cinnamon. 
 
 Among moss in woods. Glamis. 
 
 174. C. (Hygrocybe) obtusus, Fr. ; pileus ^-H in., bay- 
 brown-ferrugiuous, then cinnamon, when dry pale ochra- 
 ceous, or tan-whitish, somewhat membranaceous, conical 
 then campanulate, at length expanded and obtusely umbo- 
 nate, smooth, striate to margin ; stem spongy-stuffed, soon 
 hollow, thick, curved, attenuated at base, fragile, sprinkled 
 
222 OUTLINES OF BRITISH FUXGOLOGY. 
 
 with adpressed, white, silky fibrils, otherwise smooth, tan- 
 yellowish, whitish when dry ; gills adnate, ventricose, some- 
 what distant, connected by veins, tawny-cinnamon, white- 
 fringed at edge. 
 
 In woods, chiefly pine. Epping Forest. 
 
 175. C. (Hygrocybe) acutus, Fr. (p. 195.) 
 
 176. C. (Hygrocybe) Junghuhnii, Fr. ; pileus 1 in., shin- 
 ing cinnamon, tawny when dry, slightly fleshy at disc, other- 
 wise thin, convexo-plane, umbonate with a papilla, when 
 damp striate to middle and very finely sparsely fibrillose 
 under a lens ; stem stuffed, then hollow, externally pale 
 brick-colour, internally darker, externally shining and 
 adpressedly fuscous-fibrillose, equal or attenuated, whitish 
 at base; veil inclining to fuscous; gills adnate, ventricose, 
 thin, veined at base, saftron brick-colour. 
 
 In woods. Kings Clifl'e. 
 
 177. (Hygrocybe) depressus, i^r. ; pileus 2-3 in., some- 
 what membranaceous, conical then convex, umbonate, smooth, 
 striate at margin, at first silky ; stem hollow, equal, even, 
 rigid, reddish, dingy at base, white-silky ; gills adnate, 
 rather crowded, safFron-yellow, becoming yellowish. 
 
 In moist woods. 
 
 178. C. (Hygrocybe) milvinus, Fr. ; pileus V-l in., 
 olivaceous-fawn-umber, hoary tan and opaque when dry, 
 membranaceous with exception of disc, conical then convex, 
 umbonate, striate to middle, clad at margin with white 
 squamules, somewhat silky when dry ; flesh thin, same 
 colour; stem somewhat fistulose, curved, even, not scaly, 
 pallid fuscous, here and there clad with slight silky spots ; 
 gills adnate, connected by veins, somewhat distant, thin, 
 scarcely ventricose, watery-ferruginous, becoming olive. 
 
 In woods. Wrotham. Kent. 
 
AGAKICIXI. 223 
 
 179. C. (Hygrocybs) fasciatus, Fr. ; pileus J in., some- 
 what membranaceous, conical then expanded, acute umbo 
 blackish, brick-colour at circumference, smooth, slightly 
 silky, pale when dry; stem straight, elongated, flexuose, 
 fistulose, undulated on surface, smooth, not furnished with 
 a cuticle, fissile into fibrils, pallid-fuscous, then cinnamon- 
 fuscous ; gills adnate, slightly ventricose, thin, distant, 
 cinnamon. 
 
 In pine woods. Dinmore. 
 
 Gexus 6. GOMPHIDIUS, Fr. (p. 196.) 
 
 1. G. glutinosus, Fr. (p. 196) ; 2-5 in. Epping Forest. 
 Var. roseus, Fr. ; pileus rose colour ; stem attenuated, 
 
 rosy flesh colour at base. 
 
 2. G. viscidus, Fr. (p. 196) ; 2-3 in. 
 
 3. G. maeulatus, Scoj}. ; pileus 2 in., fleshy, convex, viscid, 
 white, variegated with black spots when old ; stem firm, 
 cylindrical, yellow, short ; gills decurrent, branched, thick, 
 umber. 
 
 In woods. Epping Forest. 
 
 4. G. gracilis, B. and Br. (p. 196.) 
 
 Genus 7. PAXILLUS, Fr. (p. 195.) 
 Tribe 1. Lepista. — Pileus entire, central. 
 
 1. P. giganteus, Fr.; pileus 4-14 in., tan white, fleshy, 
 thin, depressed, plano-infundibuliform, soft, margin involute, 
 easily splitting, spreading, smooth, sulcate in the form of 
 small channels ; stem solid, obese, smooth ; gills decurrent, 
 crowded, slightly branched and anastomosing, whitish, then 
 tan colour. 
 
 In meadows and woods. Uncommon, 
 
224 OUTLINES OF BRITISH FL'NGOLOGY. 
 
 This is Agaricus giganteus, Soiv. (p. 110.) 
 
 2. P. Alexandri, Gi/L ; pileus 2-3 in., flesliy, compact, 
 plane, then depressed, dry, unpolished, fawn colour ; margin 
 closely involute, becoming flattened and faintly striate ; 
 flesh white, turning yellow ; stem stout ; gills rather decur- 
 rent, crowded, colour of boxwood. 
 
 On the ground. Epping Forest. 
 
 3. P. lepista, Fr ; pileus 3-4 in., dingy whitish, com- 
 pactly fleshy or piano-depressed, obtuse, without stri?e, rimu- 
 loso-squamulose towards circumference, dry, margin undu- 
 lato-flexuose ; flesh white ; stem elongated, or short and 
 attenuated downwards, equal, blunt at base, solid, compact, 
 spongy-elastic, at length hollow, whitish, rufescent or 
 inclining to fuscous, white-villous at base ; gills decurrent ; 
 somewhat branched, simple at base, crowded, entire, dingy- 
 white, at length darker. 
 
 In woods. Slough. 
 
 4. P. extenuatus, Fr. ; pileus 1-3 in., rigid, extended 
 from the fleshy disc, campanulato-convex, then expanded, 
 naked, smooth, moist, tan-coloured, becoming fuscous, margin 
 involute, pubescent, even; stem solid, tough, smooth, tuber- 
 ously rooting at base ; gills decurrent, arcuate, crowded, 
 white, then mouse-colour. 
 
 In grassy places in fir woods. 
 
 5. P. panseolus, Fr. ; pileus 1-2 in., whitish, fleshy, thin, 
 convexo-plane, then somewhat depressed, even, smooth, 
 moist, margin thin, involute; flesh becoming black; stem 
 stufted, striato-fibrillose, rufescent, thickened downwards ; 
 gills slightly decurrent, crowded, narrow, at length watery- 
 ferruginous. 
 
 On the ground. In pine woods. 
 
 Var. spiloraoelus ; pileus spotted as with drops, and as 
 
AGARICINI. 2)ib 
 
 well as the slender stem, yellowish-white ; gills at length 
 watery-ferrugiuous, hoary-grey at base. 
 Among fir leaves. Stoke Poges. 
 
 6. P. orelloid.es, Cke. and Mass. ; pileus at first white, 
 becoming stained with livid or greyish blotches, minutely 
 silky, shining, margin thin, involute ; stem tapering towards 
 base, solid, elastic, silky-fibrillose, livid-ochraceous ; gills 
 crowded, readily separating from the hoary hymenophore, 
 whitish, then livid, at length dirty yellowish-brown, adnate, 
 decurrent. 
 
 Among grass. 
 
 7. P. lividus, Cke. ; pileus 1-2 in., convex, at length 
 slightly depressed at disc, dingy white, or livid-ochraceous, 
 opaque ; flesh nearly white ; stem attenuated downwards, 
 white, fibrillose, stufted, then hollow ; gills arcuate, decur- 
 rent, white, almost crowded. 
 
 lu fields. 
 
 8. P. revolutus, Cke. ; pileus li in., convex, obtuse, 
 pale ochraceous, slightly darker at disc ; margin thin, 
 even, at first sometimes tinged with violet and somewhat 
 revolute; stem solid, gradually attenuated downwards, paler 
 than the pileus, often tinted violet at base ; gills decurrent, 
 scarcely crowded, pallid, then clay-colour. 
 
 In a field. Odour mealy. 
 
 Tribe 2. Tapinia. 
 
 9. P. paradoxus, Kalch. ; pileus 2-3 in., fleshy, convex, 
 then plane, dry, tomentose, rufous-umber ; stem solid, 
 somewhat rooting, unequal, fibrillose, yellow or reddish ; 
 gills decurrent, distant, connected by veins, yr^llow, then 
 golden-yellow, becoming reddish when old. 
 
 On the ground. 
 
226 OUTLINES OF BRITISH FUNOOLOGY. 
 
 10. P. involutus, Fr. (p. 195) ; 3-5 in. Epping Forest. 
 
 11. P. leptopus, Fr. ; pileus li-3 in., fuscous-yellowish, 
 excentric or lateral, depressed, gibbous in naiddle, fleshy, 
 thin, dry, downy, soon torn into fuscous or yellowish villous 
 scales ; flesh yellow ; stem short, somewhat incurved, 
 attenuated downwards, yellow within ; gills decurrent, 
 not anastomosing, tense and straight, crowded, narrow, 
 yellowish, then darker, not spotted when touched. 
 
 On the ground, about stumps. Forres. Glen Tilt. 
 Kenmore. 
 
 12. P. atrotomentosus, 7?cr/5c// (p. 195); 2-4 in. Epping 
 Forest. 
 
 13. P. crassus, Fr. ; pileus fleshy, oblique, nearly plane, 
 becoming even and ferruginous ; stem stuffed, excentric, 
 short, ascending ; gills decurrent, broad, rather distant, 
 straight, cinnamon. 
 
 On mound of rifle-butts. Dr. Cooke considers this to 
 belong rather to Flammula than Paxillus. 
 
 14. P. panuoides, Fr. (p. 196) ; 1^ in. 
 
 15. P. fagi, B. and Br. ; gregarious ; crisped, pallid 
 upwards, orange beneath ; gills crisped, orange. 
 
 On beech stump. 
 
 Genus 7. HYGROPHORUS (p. 197). 
 
 Tribe 1. Limacium. — Universal veil viscid, with occasionally a 
 JlocGose partial veil, annular or marginal ; stem clothed with 
 scales, or more frequently rcith dots above; gills adnato- 
 decurrent. 
 
 * ]\-7iite or yelloiuish ivhite. 
 
 1. H. chrysodon, Fr. (p. 197); 2-3 in. Epping Forest. 
 
 2. H. eburneus, Fr. (p. 197) ; 2-3 in. Epping Forest. 
 
 3. H. cossus, Fr. (p. 197) ; iHn. Epping Forest. 
 
AGARICINI. 227 
 
 4. H. penarius, Fr. ; pileus tan-colour, opaque, fleshy, 
 umbonate, then obtuse, hemispherical, at length flattened 
 and undulated, even, smooth, dry ; margin at first involute, 
 exceeding gills ; flesh thick, hard, white, unchangeable ; 
 stem solid, compact, hard, attenuated above and below, fusi- 
 form and rooting at base, pale white, smeared with tenacious 
 slime, scabrous, firm, cuticle somewhat fragile ; veil not 
 conspicuous; gills adnato-decurrent, acute behind, distant, 
 thick, veined, pale tan. 
 
 In mixed woorls. Stoke Poges. Epping Forest. 
 
 5. H. pulverulentus, B. and Br. ; pileus ^ in,, shining- 
 white, pulvinate, viscous ; margin involute, tomentose ; 
 stem stufi'ed, nearly equal, attenuated at base, wholly pow- 
 dered with rose-coloured meal ; gills decurrent, thick, 
 obtuse at edge, whitish. 
 
 Among pine leaves. Glamis. 
 
 ** Reddish. 
 
 6. H. erubescens, Fr. ; growing in troops or circles ; 
 pileus 2-4 in., white, becoming red, fleshy, gibbous, then 
 convexo-plane, viscid, adpressedly dotted with squamules or 
 becoming smooth, compact, thin towards naked margin; flesh 
 firm, white ; stem sometimes short and robust, long and 
 attenuated upwards, or elongated, equal, or attenuated at 
 base, solid, flexuose, clad with red fibrils, dotted with red 
 upwards; gills decurrent, distant, soft, white, red-spotted. 
 
 In pine woods. Hereford. 
 
 7. H. pudorinus, Fr. ; pileus 2 in., fleshy, convex, then 
 depressed, even, smooth, viscid, flesh-colour; stem solid, 
 firm, white, contracted at apex, rough with white dots ; 
 gills thick, distant, white. 
 
 In fir woods. 
 
228 orTiJXES OK r.niTisii fungology. 
 
 8. H. glutinifor, Fr. ; gregarious ; pileus rufescent, 
 ■whitish at margin, fleshy, convexo-expancled, thin, with 
 exception of broadly gibbous, wrinkle-dotted disc, pellicle 
 glutinous; stem stuffed, somewhat elastic, ventricose down- 
 wards, with a viscous veil, same colour as pileus, white- 
 squamulose at apex ; gills arouato-decnrrcnt, rather thick, 
 shining white. 
 
 In woods. Penzance. 
 
 *** Tau-vij, or light yellow. 
 
 9. H. arbustivus, Fr. ; pileus 2 in., slightly tawny- 
 brick-colour, paler at margin, opaque, fleshy, convexo-plane, 
 obtuse, somewhat repand, viscid, streaked with innate 
 fibrils, smooth, even ; stem solid, equal, smooth at base, 
 pale white, externally rigid and polished, internally some- 
 what spongy and elastic ; gills adnate, distant, thick, white. 
 
 In woods, under birch, etc. Colleyweston, etc. 
 
 10. H. aureus, Arrh. ; pileus 2 in., golden yellow, fleshy, 
 convex, then plane, even, glutinous ; stem stuff'ed, smooth, 
 somewhat ringed with the glutinous tawny-red veil ; gills 
 adnately decurrent, distant, thiu, whitish. 
 
 In woods. 
 
 11. H. discoideus, P. ; gregarious or solitary ; pileus 
 1-2 in., pale yellowish or pale clay-coloured, disc some- 
 what ferruginous, slightly fleshy, firm, campanulato-convex, 
 margin inflexed, then plane, obtuse, at length depressed at 
 disc, even, smooth, very glutinous ; flesh yellowish-white ; 
 jsieoa stuff'ed, equal or attenuated upwards, very soft, 
 fibrous, flocculose, viscid, pale-white, with white dots at 
 apex : veil glutinous, rarely forming a ring on stem ; gills 
 adnate, somewhat crowded, then decurrent, distant, thin, 
 soft, pale, yellowish -white. 
 
AGARICINI. 229' 
 
 In grassy places. Laxton Park, Northants. 
 12. H. aromaticus, B. (p. 198.) 
 
 livaceous-um 
 
 her. 
 
 13. H. limaeinus, Fr. ; pileus \h-2h in., disc umber 
 then ferruginous, paler at margin, fleshy, convex, then 
 flattened, obtuse, smooth, viscid ; flesh firm, white ; stem 
 solid, firm, ventricose, viscous, flocculose, fibrilloso-striate, 
 roughened with squamules at apex ; gills adnate, then de- 
 current, somewhat distant, thin, white, inclining to cinereous. 
 
 In woods, among damp leaves. St. Leonards. 
 
 14. H. olivaceo-albus, Fr. (p. 198) ; 1-2 in. 
 
 15. H. hypothejus, Fr. (p. 198) ; 1-2 in. 
 
 16. H. cerasinus, B. (p. 197) ; U-24 in. 
 
 ***** Fuscous-cinereous or livid. 
 
 17. H. fusco-albus, Fr. ; pileus 2 in., fuscous, then cine- 
 reous, fleshy, moderately flrm, convexo-plane, even, smooth, 
 viscous, margin white-floccose ; stem solid, equal, white- 
 floccose at apex when dry ; gills decurrent, broad, rather 
 thick, white. 
 
 Among moss. Gwro'ch. 
 
 18. H. agathosmus, Fr. ; pileus I2-22 in., livid grey, 
 dotted with minute, viscous, pellucid papilla?, fleshy, convex, 
 thin, plane, gibbous, viscous, margin at first involute and 
 villous, soon unfolded and naked, at length reflexed and 
 undulated ; flesh soft, watery, whitish ; stem solid, flrm, then 
 soft and hollow, equal and slightly thickened downwards, 
 somewhat fibrilloso-striate, not viscous, roughened upwards 
 with white, punctiform, at length cinereous squamules ; par- 
 tial veil not conspicuous ; gills distant, decurrent, soft, 
 entire, veined at base, shining white. 
 
230 OUTLINES OF BRITISH FUXGOLOGY. 
 
 In fir woods. Forres, Glamis. Odour of anise, sweet. 
 
 19. H. mesotephrus, B. and Br. (p. 198) ; 1 in. 
 
 20. H. livido-albus, Fr. ; pileiis livid, imicolorous, 
 fleshy, thin, obtuse, even, smooth, viscid, margin naked ; 
 stem stuft'ed, slender, equal, rather even ; gills decurrent, 
 distant, shining white. 
 
 In woods. Street, Somerset. 
 
 Tribe 2. Camarophyllus. — Veil none ; stem even, smooth or fibril- 
 lose, not rough with dots ;pileusfirm, opaque, not viscous ; gills 
 distant, arcuate. 
 
 * Gills deeply and at length obconicalhj decurrent. 
 
 21. H. carpiuus, Fr. ; pileus 2-4 in., at first blackish- 
 fuliginous or blackish, at length cinereous-fuliginous, vary- 
 ing azure-blue, fleshy, conico-convex, umbonate, then 
 flattened or depressed, obtuse, repand, at first slightly 
 viscid, streaked with fibrils ; flesh soft, fragile, thin at re- 
 pand margin ; stem solid, equal or attenuated downwards ; 
 soft, hollow, and fragile at apex ; externally longitudinally 
 fibrillose, fuliginous, whitish-pubescent at base ; gills de- 
 current, distant, broad, thick, entire, at first white, then 
 waxy-soft, glaucous. 
 
 In pastures. Bath. Glamis. 
 
 22. H. leporinus, Fr. (p. 199) ; 1-2 in. 
 
 23. H. nemoreus, Fr. ; pileus somewhat orange, equally 
 fleshy, convex, then expanded, gibbous, at length depressed, 
 somewhat smooth ; stem stufted, firm, squamulose ; fibroso- 
 striate, attenuated at base; gills decurrent, thick, distant, 
 same colour. 
 
 In woods. St(dve Pogcs. 
 
 24. H. pratensis, Fr. (p. 199); 1-2 in. Epping Forest. 
 Var. cinereus, Fr. ; pileus thinner ; gills cinereous, 
 
 margin at length striate ; stem white. 
 
AGARICIXI. 2ol 
 
 In grassy places. 
 
 Var. pallidus, B. and Br, ; pileus pallid^ infundibu- 
 liform, margiu undulated^ deflesed ; stem dilated upwards, 
 fibriiloso-striate ; gills distant, decurrent, branched, pallid, 
 
 lu grassy places. Coed Coch, 
 
 25. H. fcetens, Phill. ; pileus 1 in., dark brown, somewhat 
 fleshy, convex, becoming plane, smooth, at length broken 
 into squamules ; stem stuffed, attenuated downwards, 
 shining, clothed with transversely arranged fibrous scales, 
 paler than pileus; gills decurrent, distant, rather thick, 
 same colour as, or paler than pileus, somewhat glaucous- 
 primrose. 
 
 On the ground, Shrewsbury. Foetid, nauseous. 
 
 26 H. virgineus, Fr. (p. 199) ; 1 in. Epping Forest. 
 
 27. H. ventricosus, B. and Br. ; pileus 2-3 in., fleshy, 
 unequal, convex; stem solid, at length partially hollow, 
 attenuated at base and apex ; gills deeply decurrent, narrow, 
 sometimes forked. 
 
 Among grass. Coed Coch. 
 
 28. H. niveus, Fr. (p. 199) ; 1 in. 
 
 29. H. Wynnise, B. and Br. ; lemon yellow, hygro- 
 phanous, pileus thin, umbilicate or somewhat infuudibuli- 
 form, striate; gills decurrent, narrow, thin. 
 
 On chips, old stumps, etc. Coed Coch. 
 
 30. H. russo-coriaceus, B. and Br. (p. 199) ; oin. 
 Epping Forest. 
 
 31. H. mieaceus, B. and Br. ; pileus ^-J in. ; hemi- 
 spherical, light yellow, then cinereous, wrinkled, micaceous ', 
 stem solid, granulated, light yellow, then brown downwards; 
 gills decurrent, pallid umber. 
 
 On clayey soil. Coed Coch. 
 
232 OUTLINES OF BRITISH FUNGOLOGY. 
 
 ** Gills ventricose, simuito-arciiate or j)la7io-adnate. 
 
 32. H fornicatus, Fr. ; pileus 1 in., white or pallid- 
 livid, fleshy, thin, carapanulate, then expanded, obtusely 
 umbonate, somewhat repand, viscid, even, smooth ; stem 
 solid, or hollow at apex, compact, firm, tough, equal, some- 
 what undulated, smooth, shining white ; gills almost free, 
 or slightly sinuato-adnexcd, thick, ventricose, distant, 
 exceeding the margin, white. 
 
 In pastures. Holme Lacy, Herefordshire. Batheaston. 
 
 33. H. distans, B. (p. 200) ; 2 in. 
 
 34. H. Clarkii, B. and Br. ; pileus 3-4 in., livid cine- 
 reous, convex, somewhat umbonate, viscous, margin even ; 
 stem hollow, same colour; gills adnate, ^ in. broad in large 
 examples, distant, thick, white. 
 
 In pastures. Street, Somerset. Perth Fungus Show. 
 
 35. H. metapodius, Fi\ ; pileus li-3 in., cinereous- 
 fuscous, compactly fleshy, convex, plane, then obtuse, even 
 and shining, then silky and squamulose, irregular ; flesh 
 pallid-grey, reddish when broken, at length black ; stem 
 stufi'ed, attenuated downwards, unequal, smooth, cinereous- 
 reddish internally ; gills adnate, arcuato-decurrent, or 
 broadly emarginate, distant, thick, veined, grey-white. 
 
 In eld pastures. Street. Glarnis. 
 
 36. H. ovinus, Fr. (p. 200) ; 2 in. 
 
 37. H. subradiatus, Fr. ; pileus white or livid, disc fus- 
 cous, membranaceous, slightly fleshy at disc from the dilated 
 apex of stem, irregular, somewhat tough, convex, then ex- 
 panded, obsoletcly umbonate, hygrophanous when moist, 
 radiato-striate from the translucent gills ; stem fistulose, 
 attenuated at base, twisted, smooth, pale, white at base ; 
 
AGARICINI. 233 
 
 gills plane, decurrent with a tooth, ventricose, somewhat 
 thin, distant, connected by veins, white. 
 
 In old pastures. Glamis. 
 
 Var. lacmus, Fr. ; pileus 1 in., lilac, then pale, fragile, 
 piano-depressed, occasionally at same time umbonate, un- 
 equal at circumference ; stem elongated, stuffed, then 
 hollow, somewhat shining, narrow at base and apex, gills 
 cinereous. 
 
 In old pastures. Glamis. 
 
 38. H. irrigatus, Fr.; pileus 1-2 in., livid, dingy-white 
 as the gluten separates, slightly fleshy, ficgile, campanulate, 
 expanded, obtuse, even, smooth, viscous ; stem flexuose, 
 fistulose, tough, equal, smooth, very \iscous, livid; gills, 
 adnate with a decurrent tooth, somewhat distant, fragile, 
 rather thick, wholly white or grey. 
 
 In grassy places in fir woods. Laxton, Northants. Glamis. 
 
 39. H. Houghtoni, B. and Br. ; pileus 1^-2 in., bright- 
 coloured, sienna-red, convex, at length depressed in centre, 
 striate, very viscous ; stem transversely undulated, very 
 viscous, tawny light-yellow ; gills decurrent, thin, ])ale 
 yellowish. 
 
 Among grass. Preston, Salop. Odour foxy. 
 
 Ti-ibe 3. Hygrocybe. — Veil none, ichole fungus thin, watery suceu- 
 lent,fragile ; pileus viscid when moist, shining, rarely floccoso- 
 scaly v)hen dry. Most oj the species brightly coloured, shining. 
 * Gills decurrent. 
 
 40. H. Colemannianus, Blooc. (p. 200) ; 1—2 in. Epping 
 Forest. 
 
 41. H. seiophanus, Fr ; gregarious; pileus i-1^ in., 
 hygrophanous, deep tawny or brick-colour, pale, then white, 
 thin, slightly fleshy at disc, otherwise membranaceous. 
 
231' OUTLINES OF BPJTISII FUNGOLOGY. 
 
 hemispherical, obtusely carapauulate, then expauded, obtuse, 
 slightly viscid, evea at disc, remotely and pellucidly striate 
 to middle, regular, torn when older ; stem hollow, equal, 
 thin, flexuose, even, smooth, never tense and straight, 
 tawny-yellowish, paler than pileus, nt length white ; gills 
 attenuato-adnate, plano-decurreut, distant, same colour as 
 pileus or inclining to rose. 
 In mossy places. Perth. 
 
 42. H. leetus, Fr. (p. 200) ; 1 in. Epping Forest. 
 
 43. H. vitelliuus, Fi'. ; pileus \-\ in., citron egg-yellow, 
 white when dry, thin, slightly llesby at disc, otherwise 
 membranaceous, smooth, viscid ; margin plicato-striate ; 
 stem fistulose, equal, even, smooth, pallid light-yellow, 
 white when dry, fragile, slightly flexuose; gills decurrent, 
 somewhat distant, egg-yellow. 
 
 In pastures, Penzance. 
 
 44. H. eeraceus, Fr. (p. 201); 1 in. Epping Forest. 
 
 45. H. coccineus, Fr. (p. 201) ; 1-2 in. Epping Forest. 
 
 46. H. miniatus, Fr. (p. 201) ; 1 in. Epping Forest. 
 
 47. H. turundus, Fr. ; pileus ^-1 in., yellow or tawny, 
 with cinereous-fuscous squamules, slightly fleshy, fragile, 
 convex then expanded, umbilicate or depressed, crenate at 
 margin ; stem rigid-fragile, stuffed then fistulose, round, 
 equal, polished, tawny-reddish ; gills decurrent, distant, 
 juicy, white then yellow, edge acute. 
 
 On peat soil. Farragon, Perthshire. Epping Forest. 
 
 Var. mollis, B. and Br. ; pileus -^-^ in., nearly plane, 
 at length slightly depressed, clad with soft, short, radiating 
 hairs, same colour ; stem stuffed, equal ; gills decurrent, 
 arcuate, narrow, distant. 
 
 On moist mossy ground. Hare. 
 
 48. H. mucronellus, Fr. ; pileus i^ in., when moist 
 
AGARICINI, 235 
 
 scarlet or yellow, when dry changing colour, hoary, slightly 
 fleshy, acutely conical or campanulate and obtuse, when 
 moist pellucidly striate, when dry silky ; fragile ; stem fistu- 
 lose, thin, somewhat attenuated and white at base, otherwise 
 yellow, even, smooth, flexuose; gills ascending, distant, 
 broad and adnate behind, somewhat decurrent, yellow. 
 In grass field. King^s Lynn. 
 
 ** Gills aduexecl, somewhat sepaircting. 
 
 49. H. punieeus, Fr. (p. 101) ; 2-4 in. 
 
 50. H. obrusseus, Fr. (p. 201) ; 2-3 in. 
 
 51. H. intermedius, Pass.; pileus thin, campanulate, 
 obtuse, then flattened, rather dry, fibrillosely silky, golden 
 yellow, becoming cinereous; stem fistulose, fibrillosely 
 striate ; gills aduate, veutricose, distant, whitish, then 
 yellowish. 
 
 On damp ground. 
 
 52. H. conieus, Fr. (p. 201) ; 2 in. Epping Forest. 
 
 53. H. calyptrseformis, B. and Br. (p. 202); 2 in. Epping 
 Forest. 
 
 Var. niveus ; wholly white. 
 Pastures and lawns. 
 
 54. H. chlorophanus, Fr. ; pileus 1 in., sulphur-yellow 
 or scarlet, not changing colour, somewhat membranaceous, 
 fragile, convex, plane, obtuse, orbicular and lobed, then 
 cracked, viscid, striate ; stem hollow, equal, round, even, 
 viscid when moist, shining when dry, unicolorous, light 
 yellow ; gills emarginato-adnexed, ventricose, with a thin 
 decurrent tooth, thin, distant, distinct. 
 
 In grassy and mossy places. Common. Epping Forest. 
 Never becoming black. 
 
 55. H. psittacinus, Fr. (p. 202) ; 1 in. Epping Forest. 
 
236 OUTLINES OF BRITISH FUXGOLOGY. 
 
 56. H. spadiceus, Scop. ; pileus thin, couical, acute, re- 
 pand, fibrilloso-virgate, at first covered with au olivaceous 
 bay- brow II gluten ; stem hollow, equal, dry, becoming 
 dusky and fibrillose; gills rounded behind, free, distant, 
 iemon-yellow. 
 
 On the ground. Clun Forest. Not turning black. 
 
 57. H. unguinosus, Fr. (p. 202) ; 2 in. 
 
 58. H. murinaceus, Fr. (p. 203) ; 2 in. 
 = H. nitratus, Fr. 
 
 Far. glauco-nitens, Fr. ; gaping ; pileus fibrilloso-vir- 
 gate, dark olive or sooty, becoming pale ; stem equal, 
 shining; gills becoming glaucous. 
 
 In grassy places. 
 
 Genus 9. LACTARIUS, Fr. (p. 203.) 
 
 Tribe 1. Piperites. — Stem central, gills unchangeable, — not 
 changing colour, not pruino8e ; milk at first white, commonly 
 
 acr 
 
 id. 
 
 * Triciiolomoidei. — Pileus viscid ivhen vioist, margin at 
 first involute^ tomentose. 
 
 1. L. scrobieulatus, Fr. ; pileus 4-12 in., yellow, zoue- 
 less, fleshy, not compact, convex, umbilicate, at length in- 
 fundibuliform, obtuse, with agglutinated villous down, viscid 
 when moist ; margin involute, bearded, at length unfolded 
 and almost naked ; sometimes zoned ; flesh lax, whitish, 
 yellow when broken ; stem stout, stufted, then hollow, equal, 
 light yellow, pitted with broad rounded spots, smooth, 
 somewhat viscid, pubescent at base ; gills adnato-decurrent, 
 thin, crowded, white ; milk abundant, white, sulphur- 
 yellow when exposed to air. 
 
 On the ground. Bristol. Very acrid, odour not un- 
 pleasant. 
 
AGAEICINI. 237 
 
 2. Lactarius intermedius, Kromb. ; pileus fleshy, broad, 
 infundibuliform, viscid, smooth, ochraceous-yellow, margin 
 involute, tomentose, then smooth ; gills broad, livid, whitish, 
 somewhat decurrent, affixed, entire ; stem short, thick, solid, 
 or sometimes hollow, yellowish, covered with spot-like 
 depressions ; milk white, then yellowish. 
 
 In woods. Rather acrid. Fries considers this plant 
 to be L. cicilioides. 
 
 3. L. torminosus (p. 203) ; 3 in. Epping Forest. 
 
 4. L. cicilioides, Fr. (p. 203) ; 2-4 in. 
 
 5. L. turpis, Fr. (p. 203); 4-12 in. Epping Forest. 
 
 6. L. controversus, Fr. ; pileus 3 in., fleshy, compact, 
 rigid, convex, broadly umbilicate, then somewhat infundi- 
 buliform, oblique, at first dry, flocculose, whitish, then 
 viscid, reddish with blood- coloured spots and zones ; 
 margin when young acute, involute, more or less villous ; 
 flesh very firm ; stem attenuated towards base, often excen- 
 tric, solid, obese, even, pruinate at apex, white ; gills decur- 
 rent, with an obsolete tooth, crowded, rarely branched, 
 pallid white-flesh-colour ; milk white, unchangeable, abun- 
 dant. 
 
 In woods. Uncommon. Abergavenny. Epping Forest, etc. 
 
 7. L. pubescens, Fr. ; pileus 3 in., whitish flesh-colour, 
 fleshy, plane, depressed, then broadly infundibuliform, zone- 
 less, even, dry, then smooth at disc, shining ; margin involute, 
 fibrilloso-pubescent ; flesh thin, firm, pliant, white, un- 
 changeable ; stem attenuated downwards, sometimes com- 
 pressed, stuff'ed, soft internally, even, commonly pruinaro- 
 pubescent when young, becoming smooth, flesh-colour, then 
 white ; gills adnate or slightly decurrent, crowded, narrower 
 than flesh of pileus, pallid, slightly flesh-coloured ; milk 
 white, unchangeable, not abundant. 
 
238 OUTLINES OF BRITISH FUNGOLOGY. 
 
 Among pebbles. Loch Kenord, Aberdeenshire. 
 
 Var. margine-tomentoso, B. and Br. ; pileus clothed 
 with fine matted down ; margin tomentose ; stem nearly- 
 equal. 
 
 8. L. aspideus, Fr. ; pileus 2-4- in., fleshy, gibboso- 
 convex, then depressed, viscid, zoneless, straw-coloured, 
 with a tomentose marginal ring which is deciduous, leaving 
 the margin quite smooth ; gills rather thick, pallid ; milk 
 at first white, then lilac. 
 
 In moist places. 
 
 ** Lamacini. — Pileus viscid when moist, pelliculose, 
 margin naked. 
 
 9. L. insulsus, Fr. (p. 204) ; 3-4 in. Epping Forest. 
 
 10. L. zonarius, Fr. (p. 204) ; 2-4 in. 
 
 11. L. utilis, Weinni. ; pileus 5-8 in., convexo-planc, at 
 length funnel-shaped, even, smooth, tan-colour; stem hollow, 
 even, same colour ; gills adnate, crowded, pallid ; milk 
 white, mild, then slightly acrid. 
 
 On the ground. 
 
 12. li. blennius, Fr. (p. 204) ; 2-4 in. Epping Forest. 
 
 13. L. hysignis, Fr. (p. 204) ; 2^-4 in. 
 
 14. L. trivialis, Fr. ; pileus 4-7 in., dark livid, then 
 pale, pallid yellowish tan-flesh-colour, zoneless, depressed, 
 then infundibuliform ; margin at first involute, then flat- 
 tened, even, viscous ; flesh somewhat rigid, white ; stem 
 inflated-hollow, even, smooth, unspotted, paler than pileus; 
 gills somewhat decurreut, tense and straight, rather broad, 
 somewhat thin, crowded, whitish, becoming pale ; ^milk 
 white, unchangeable. 
 
 15. L. circeUatus, Fr. (p. 204) ; 2-3 in. 
 
 16. L. uvidus, Fr. (p. 205) ; 2-4 in. 
 
AGAEICINI. 239 
 
 *** PiPERATi. Pileus loithout a 2)eUicle, dry, generally unpolished. 
 
 17. L. flexuosus, Fr. ; pileus 2-4 in., lead grey or violet- 
 grey, pale, zoned or zoneless, fleshy, convex, plane, de- 
 pressed, repand margin bent inwards, at length spreading, 
 erect, dry, smooth, shining, then rivuloso-scaly, unpolished, 
 opaque ; flesh hard, grumoso-compact, white ; stem solid, 
 obese, or attenuated downwards, sometimes eccentric, 
 slightly lacunose, not pitted, pallid grey, apex whitish, base 
 somewhat yellowish; gills adnate, somewhat horizontal, 
 thick, distant, connected by branches, light yellowish, at 
 length whitish flesh-colour, milk white, unchangeable. 
 
 In pine woods, etc. Heywood Forest. Rothiemurchus. 
 Glamis. 
 
 18. L. pyrogalus, Fr. (p. 205) ; 2-3 in. Epping 
 Forest. 
 
 19. L. squalidus, Fr. ; pileus pallid, lurid, compact, 
 convexo- plane, umbilicate, dry, smooth, zoueless; flesh 
 white, sprinkled at margin with saffron-yellow dots ; stem 
 equal, smooth, pallid brown ; gills adnate, narrow, yellowish, 
 milk whitish, sweet. 
 
 In moist places, Scotland. 
 
 20. L. capsicum, Schulz. : pileus 3 in., chestnut, paler 
 at disc, compact, pulvinate, dry, margin closely involute ; 
 flesh yellowish, becoming fuscous on exposure to air; stem 
 solid, firm, whitish, striate, with tawny or rufescent fibrils ; 
 gills adnato-decurrent, somewhat crowded, tawny, somewhat 
 orange; milk white, acrid. 
 
 In woods. Dumfries. 
 
 21. L. chrysorheus, Fr. (p. 206) ; 2-3 in. Epping 
 Forest. 
 
 22. L. acris, Fr. (p. 207) ; 3 in. 
 
240 OUTLINES OF JJRITIHU FUNGOLOGY. 
 
 23. L. umbrinus, P. ; pileus 3 in., compact, convexo- 
 plane, umbilicate, dry, rivuloso-lloccose, umber, zoneless ; 
 stem solid, very short, white, turning greyish ; gills 
 crowded, pallid yellowish; milk acrid, white, causing grey 
 spots. 
 
 In piue woods. 
 
 24. L. pergamenus, Fr. ; pileus fleshy, pliant, convex, 
 then piano-depressed, repand, zoneless, slightly wrinkled, 
 smooth ; stem stuffed, smooth, changing colour ; gills 
 adnate, very narrow, horizontal, very crowded, branched, 
 white, then straw colour ; milk white, acrid. 
 
 In woods. Heywood Forest. Epping Forest. 
 
 25. L. piperatus, Fr. (p. .205) ; 4-9 in. Eppitig 
 Forest. 
 
 26. L. vellereus, Fr. (p. 20G) ; 5-7 in. Epping Forest. 
 
 27. L. exsuccus, Sm. ; pileus clothed with depressed 
 down, fleshy, depressed, with an involute margin; stem 
 very short, white, clothed with adpressed down ; gills de- 
 current, connected by veins and forked, white, shaded with 
 verdigris ; whole plant rigid, brittle, milkless. 
 
 In woods. Somewhat uncommon. 
 
 28. L. scoticus, B. and Br. ; pileus depressed-tomeutose, 
 then smooth, involute, margin tomentose, flesh firm; stem 
 somewhat unequal, smooth, somewhat flesh-colour ; gills 
 thin, scarcely branched ; milk persistently white, acrid. 
 
 Among moss. Aboyne. Odour pungent. 
 
 Tribe 2. Dapetes. — Stem central ; gills naked ; milk at first 
 deeply coloured. 
 
 29. L. deliciosus, Fr. (p. 206) ; 2-6 iu. ]^:ppinj 
 Forest. 
 
241 
 
 Tribe 3. Russulares. — Stem central ; gills pallid then changing 
 colour, afterwards darker, glancing when turned to the light, at 
 length white-pruinose ; milk at first ivhite, mild, or from mild 
 turning acrid. 
 
 * Pileus at first viscous. 
 
 30. L. pallidus, Fr. (p. 207); 3-6 in. Epping Forest. 
 
 31. L. quietus, Fr. (p. 207) ; 3 in. Epping Forest. 
 
 32. L. aurantiaeus, Fl. Dan. ; pileus 1-2 in., fleshy, 
 plane, then depressed, even, zoneless, orange; stem stuff"ed, 
 smooth, same colour as pileus ; flesh pallid ; gills decur- 
 rent, crowded, yellowish, ochraceous ; milk white, slowly 
 acrid. 
 
 On the ground. Epping Forest. 
 
 33. L. theiogalus, Fr. (p. 206). 
 
 34. L. cremor, Fr. ; pileus 1^-2 in., fleshy, thin, convex, 
 then plane, minutely punctulate, viscid, tawny, margin 
 striate ; stem hollow, fragile, same colour ; gills adnate, 
 rather distant, pallid ; milk mild, watery white. 
 
 In woods. 
 
 Var. pauper, Kars. : pileus 3 in., yellowish flesh-colour 
 or gilvous-tan, ochraceous when dry, margin membranaceous, 
 at length pectinately sulcate ; stem equal, naked, paler than 
 pileus; flesh without juice, slowly acrid, white. 
 
 Under larch. 
 
 35. L. vietus, Fr. ; pileus lo-2o in., flesh-colour or 
 livid-grey, somewhat papillate, plane, umbilicate, somewhat 
 infundibuliform, margin somewhat deflexed, even, smooth, 
 viscid, slightly silky when dry, fragile ; flesh whitish ; stem 
 attenuated upwards or equal, stufted then hollow, smooth, 
 dry, same colour as pileus; gills, adnato-decurrent, thin, 
 somewhat crowded, flaccid, narrow, whitish, becoming 
 yellowish, milk white, then greyish. 
 
 Q 
 
242 OUTLINES OF BRITISH FUXGOLOGY. 
 
 In grassy woods. Stoke Pogcs. Glamis. 
 
 36. L. cyathula, Fr. ; pileus 1-2 in.^ slightly fleshy, 
 <jouvexo-[)laue, umbouatc, piano-depressed, umbo often van- 
 ishing, viscid, soon dry, opaque, rufescent-brick or flesh 
 colour, slightly zoned, when dry livid or llesh colour, 
 hoary-tan, rimoso-rivulose ; flesh white flesh colour; stem 
 stuffed, internally spongy-soft, equal, round, smooth, pale, 
 then whitish ; gills decurrent, crowded, thin, linear, white 
 flesh colour, then yellowish; milk white, unchangeable, 
 acrid. 
 
 In woods. Rare. Aboyne. 
 
 ** Pileus uniioUshed, squamulose, villous 07' pritinose. 
 
 37. L. rufus, (p. 208) ; 3-4 in. Epping Forest. 
 
 38. L. helvus, Fr. ; pileus 2-i in., pale yellowish-brick- 
 colour, then pale, fleshy, fragile, convex, then flattened and 
 somewhat umbonate, surface broken up into granuloso- 
 squamulose flocci ; flesh soft, paler than pileus ; stem 
 stuffed, sometimes hollow, firm, soft, equal, pale brick- 
 colour, slightly pruinate, somewhat tomentose at base ; 
 gills decurrent, crowded, in groups of eight, often dicho- 
 tomous, fragile, whitish, then somewhat flesh colour, at 
 length yellowish ; milk scanty, somewhat acrid, white. 
 
 In fir wood. Grantown, Morayshire. 
 
 39. L. tomentosus, Otto ; pileus 3 in., fleshy, at first 
 umbonate, then depressed and iufundibuliform, dingy flesh 
 colour or rufesceut, brownish, finely tomentose ; gills rather 
 decurrent, yellow flesh colour, flesh compact ; stem erect, 
 at first stuffed, becoming hollow, pallid, naked, smooth ; 
 milk whitish, mild. 
 
 On the ground. 
 
AGARICIXI. 243 
 
 40. L. mammosus, Fr. ; pileus grey-fnscous^ fleshy, at 
 first convex, acutely umbonate, depressed as umbo vanishes, 
 soft, clothed with ad pressed down, dry, zoneless, margin 
 involute, white-pubescent ; stem short and thick, stuffed, 
 then hollow, firm, pubescent, white, inclining to pale ; gills 
 adnate, crowded, whitish, then pallid-ferruginous; milk 
 white, slowly acrid. 
 
 In pine woods. Holme Lacy. 
 
 Var. monstrosus, Cke. ; pileus 3 in. ; larger than type. 
 
 41. L. glyeiosmus, Fr. (p. 209); 1-2 in. Epping 
 Forest. 
 
 42. L. fuliginosus, Fr. (p. 209) ; 1-4 in. Epping 
 Forest. 
 
 43. L. picinus, Fr. ; pileus umber or blackish-umber, 
 zoneless, fleshy, convex then plane, umbonate, orbicular, 
 dry, even, villous, somewhat velvety, disc becoming smooth ; 
 flesh firm, not very thick, pallid; stem thin, stuffed, in- 
 ternally spongy, equal, even, smooth, paler than pileus ; 
 gills adnate, thin, very crowded, straight, plane, ochraceous ; 
 milk white, unchangeable, acrid. 
 
 In pine woods. Fosley, Hereford. Rothiemurchus. 
 
 44. L. lilaeinus, Lasch ; pileus 2 in., rosy-lilac, then 
 pale, zoneless, fleshy, thin, convex, then depressed, papillate, 
 floccose when dry, granular, fragile ; stem stuffed, then 
 hollow, white-mealy, pallid ; gills adnate, somewhat distant, 
 pallid flesh colour; milk abundant, white, acrid. 
 
 In woods. Hawthornden. Epping Forest. 
 
 45. L. spinulosus, Quel. ; pileus thin, cyathiform, acutely 
 umbonate, clad especially towards margin, with minute 
 ■erect spines, of tenzoned and spotted, flesh colour, brick- 
 red, rosy-lilac ; stem hollow, slender, flexuous, rugose, 
 granulate, fragile, shining, same colour, growing paler ; 
 
241 OUTLINES OF BRITISH FUNCiOLOOY. 
 
 gills decurreut, narrow, thin, yellow tlesh colour, at length 
 yellowish; milk white;, acrid. 
 
 On the ground. 
 
 Var. violaceus Cke. ; pileus rosy-violet, margin un- 
 curved; stem pale, almost smooth, stuffed. 
 
 On the ground. 
 
 *** Fileus polished, smooth. 
 
 46. L. volemiis, Fr. (p. 207) ; 3 in. Epping Forest. 
 
 47. L. ichoratus, Fi-. ; pileus 3-4 in., tawny brick-colour, 
 disc brown, zone fleshy, thin, at first rigid, then softer, 
 obtuse, piano-depressed, often unequal, excentric, sometimes 
 repand, even, dry, opaque; flesh pallid, stem solid, at first 
 hard, then softer, internally spongy, equal or fusiform 
 downwards, even, smooth, tawny, then rufescent; gills 
 adnate, decurrent with a tooth, scarcely crowded, white, 
 then ochraceous, not spotted ; milk white, unchangeable, 
 sweet. 
 
 In woods. Hereford. 
 
 48. L. serifluus, Fr. (p. 207); 1-2 in. Epping 
 Forest. 
 
 49. L. mitissimus, Fr. (p. 208) ; 1-3 in. Epping 
 Forest. 
 
 50. L. subdulcis, Fr. (p. 208) ; 2-3 in. Epping 
 Forest. 
 
 51. L. Terrei, B. and Br. ; csespitose ; pileus ^ in., bay- 
 brown, corrugated, depressed; stem hollow, thickened at 
 base, same colour as pileus, clad with orange down; gills 
 decurrent, pallid. 
 
 On the ground. Stoke Poges. Odour sweet. 
 
 The Kev. J. Stephenson considers this plant allied to 
 
AGARICIXI. 245 
 
 L. subdulcis ; Dr. Cooke considers it to be a variety of 
 L. camphoratus. 
 
 52. L. camphoratus, Fr. (p. 208) ; 1-2 in. Epping 
 Forest. 
 
 Var. cimicarius, Batsch. ; pileus plane, then infundibuli- 
 form, margin unequally sinuate, lobes convex, pulviuate, 
 dusky ferruginous ; flesh soft, dry ; stem opaque, less dark 
 in colour, hollow ; gills rather broad, dusky ochre, milk, 
 limpid, like serum. 
 
 On the ground. Epping Forest. Odour of bugs. 
 
 53. L. subumbonatus, Lind. Bot. Not.; pileus fleshy, 
 thin, convex, then depressed, rather umbonate, rugose, 
 punctate, dark cinnamon, zoneless, at length undulated, 
 rep and ; flesh grey, then jellowish; stem stufled, rufescent ; 
 gills adnate, flesh colour, then rufescent ; milk watery 
 white. 
 
 On the ground. Epping Forest. Odour foetid when 
 old. 
 
 54. L. obnubilus, Lasch ; pileus 1 in., brown, fuligin- 
 ous, papillate, zoneless, fleshy, thin, convex, then umbili- 
 cate, smooth, somewhat striate ; stem stufl'ed, then hollow, 
 thin, paler than pileus ; gills somewhat crowded, yellowish ; 
 milk white, somewhat sweet. 
 
 In woods. In damp places below alder and in pastures. 
 Greeshop, [Morayshire. Glamis. 
 
 55. L. minimus, Sm. ; pileus \-% in., pallid clay-coloui, 
 fleshy, pulvinate, rounded or slightly umbonate, margin 
 incurved ; stem very short, generally eccentric, same colour 
 as gills ; gills somewhat decurrent, arcuate, branched, 
 moderately distant; milk abundant, white, mild. 
 
 In pastures and woods. Abergavenny. Forres. 
 
346 OUTLINES OF BRITISH FUNGOLOGV 
 
 Tribe 4. Pleukopus. — tStem excentric or lateral ; ijrowbuj on 
 trimhs. 
 
 5G. L. obliquus, Fr. ; white, turning yellowish ; pileus 
 fleshy, thin, i)laiio-depressed, oblique, zoned with grey, 
 lobate, silky ; stem stuffed, then hollow, rather excentric, 
 curved ; gills crowded, white. 
 
 On trunks, etc. 
 
 10. RUSSULA, Fr. (p. 209.) 
 
 1. Compacts. — Pileus fleshy throufjhout^ margin at Jirst bent 
 imcards, ivithout strice, tuithout a distinct viscous pellicle, colour 
 not variable, 07ily changing with age ; Jiesh compact, firm ; 
 stem solid, fleshy ; gills unequal. 
 
 1. R. nigricans, Fr. ; .2-4 in. Eppiug Forest. 
 
 2. R. adusta, Fr. (p. 209). 
 
 3. R. albo-nigra, Kromb. ; pileus fleshy, convexo-plane 
 depressed in centre, at length iufundibuiiform, viscid, 
 whitish, smoky at margin ; flesh white, becoming blackish 
 when broken ; stem solid, stout, fuscous, then blackish ; 
 gills decurrent, crowded, unequal, dusky, whitish. 
 
 In grassy places. Kew. Epping Forest. Probably a 
 variety of R. nigricans. 
 
 4. R. densifolia, Seer. ; pileus fleshy, compact, convex, 
 then depressed, margin inflexed, smooth, not striate, 
 whitish, becoming fuliginous, grey or brownish, blackened 
 in centre ; flesh white, reddish on exposure to air, at 
 length black ; stem short, cylindrical, smooth, slightly 
 pruinose, whitish, then grey, at length blackish; gills adnato- 
 decurrent, unequal, thin, white or rosy. 
 
 On the around. 
 
AGAKICINI. 247" 
 
 5. R. semicrema, Fr. ; pileus white, compactly fleshy, con- 
 vex, then plane, even, smooth, dry, disc umbilicate, margin at 
 first involute, even ; flesh juiceless, white, unchangeable ; 
 stem curt, solid, firm, white, when broken cinereous inter- 
 nally, at length black; gills decurrent, crowded, thin, white. 
 
 In mixed woods. Glamis. 
 
 6. R. delica, Fr. (p. 210) ; 3-5 in. Epping Forest. 
 
 7. R. elephantina, Fr. ; pileus 3 in., fuscous-tan, paler 
 at margin, not changeable, equally fleshy, firm, at first con- 
 vexo-umbilicate, margin bent inwards, smooth, undulated,, 
 and almost exceeding the gills, never striate, covered with 
 an inseparable pellicle ; flesh equal, compact, thin ; stem 
 solid, obese, hard, even, smooth externally and internally, 
 shining white ; gills obtuse or somewhat sinuato-adnate,. 
 arcuate, somewhat crowded, thin, divided behind, unequal 
 in front, white, becoming pale-yellowish when touched. 
 
 In woods. Stoke Poges, luodorus. 
 
 8. R, mustelina, Fr. ; pileus equally fleshy, firm, con- 
 vex, then depressed, opaque, margin reflexed, even ; stem 
 solid, firm, pallid ; gills adnexed, rounded behind, crowded, 
 connected, white, a few short ones. 
 
 In woods. 
 
 2. FuRCATiE. — Pileus cornpact, firm, covered toith a thin adnate 
 pellicle which at length disappears, margin abruptly thin, at 
 first inflexed, then sjyreading, acute, even ; stem at first compact,, 
 tlien spongy-soft ivithin; gills someivhat forked, commonly 
 attenuated at both ends, thin and normally narroiv. 
 
 9. R. olivascens, Fr. ; pileus everywhere fleshy, flattened, 
 umbilicate, olive, with the disc becoming yeiiow, margin 
 even ; stem firm, white ; gills attenuated behind, crowded^, 
 almost equal, white, then turning yellowish. 
 
.2i8 OUTLINES OF BKITISH FUXGOLOGY. 
 
 In shady woods. 
 
 10. R. fureata, Fr. (p. 210) ; 3 in. Epping Forest. 
 
 Var. pictipes Cke. ; pileus 4-6 in., plane, depressed, darker 
 at disc, even ; margin even, or at length slightly striate ; 
 stem stout, slightly attenuated downwards, rosy at apex, 
 tinted green below, even ; gills adnate, rather distant, 
 white ; cuticle of pileus separable, flesh rosy beneath. 
 
 Under trees. Taste mild. 
 
 Var. ochroviridis Cke. ; pileus 4 in., at first viscid, 
 polished when dry, with a thin aduate pellicle, ochraceous 
 towards margin, disc olivaceous or fuliginous, margin 
 spreading, even, acute ; stem short, reticulatcly rugulose, 
 white, rarely growing pallid, flesh fuliginous when cut, 
 stuflFed, spongy within ; gills attenuated both ways, lanc- 
 eolate, crowded, many furcate, white, becoming somewhat 
 dirty white when old. 
 
 On the ground. Taste mild. 
 
 11. R. sanguinea, Fi: (p. 210) ; 2-3 in. 
 
 12. R. rosacea, Fr. (p. 210) ; 2-4 in. Epping Forest. 
 
 13. R. maculata, Quel. ; pileus 3 in., solid, convex, 
 then plane, viscid, reddish flesh colour, pallid, then spotted 
 with purple or brown, margin undulate, and often darker ; 
 flesh white ; stem striate, short, solid, reticulated, white 
 or somewhat rosy, then spotted with ochre ; gills attenuated 
 behind, adnate, bifurcate, pallid sulphur, then somewhat 
 peach- colour. 
 
 In woods. Epping Forest. Taste acrid. 
 
 14. R. sardonia, Fr. (p. 211) ; 2-3 in. 
 
 15. R. depallens, Fr. (p. 211). Epping Forest. 
 
 16. R. purpurea, Gill. ; pileus fleshy, at first hemi- 
 spherical, then convex, more or less depressed in centre, 
 rugoso-plicate, dark purple, darker in centre, margin even. 
 
AGARICINI. 249 
 
 then faintly striate; flesh yellowish, red beneath the 
 cuticle, stem slightly incrassated at base, longitudinally 
 striate, white at apex, rosy at middle, yellowish at base ; 
 gills rounded, broad, often bified, white, then yellowish. 
 Under larch. 
 
 17. R. coerulea, P. ; pileus fleshy, convex, flattened or 
 depressed, polished, margin even ; stem spongy, solid, firm, 
 white ; gills adnata, nearly equal, turning yellowish, acute at 
 apex. 
 
 In woods. 
 
 18. R. drimeia, Cke. ; pileus 2-4 in., bright purple, 
 compact, firm, convex, then depressed, scarcely viscid when 
 moist and opaque when dry, margin somewhat incurved, even ; 
 stem solid, firm, cyliodrical, equal, tinged with purple; gills 
 adnexed, scarcely crowded, narrow and furcate at base, at 
 first pale sulphur-yellow, then deeper yellow, never white. 
 
 On the ground among larch. Black Park. Taste acrid. 
 
 3. RiGiDJE. — Pileus withoitt a viscid 2^c^licle, dry, rigid, cuticle 
 breaking up intoflocci or granules ; flesh thick, compact, firm, 
 vanishing short of straight, never involute margin, soon 
 spreading, ahoays icithout strice ; stem solid, hard, then softer 
 and spongy ; gills dimidiate, divided, rigid, dilated in front 
 and running ovt xoith a broad rounded apex ; margin of pileus 
 obtuse, not inflexed ; handsome, — somewhat rare. 
 
 19. R. laetea, Fr. ; pileus 2 in., white, then tan-white, 
 compactly fleshy, campanulate, then convex, often excentric, 
 without a pellicle, dry, at first even, then slightly cracked, 
 margin straight, thin, obtuse, even ; flesh compact, white ; 
 stem solid, compact, at length spongy-soft within, equal, 
 even, white ; gills free, broad, thick, distant, rigid, forked, 
 white. 
 
250 OUTLINES OF BRITISH FUXGOLOGY. 
 
 In mixed woods. Uncommon. Taste mild. 
 
 Vai'. incarnata Quel. ; pileus at leugth depressed, farinose, 
 then areolate, white, tinged with rose, at length tan- 
 coloured, growing pale ; flesh white ; stem stufted, firm, 
 pruinose, white ; gills adnate, broad, furcate, rigid, white, 
 then yellowish. 
 
 Under fir trees. Epping Forest. 
 
 20. R. virescens, Schn'ff ; (p. 212). Epping Forest. 
 
 21. R. Du Portii, PJiill. ; pileus U-2| in., centre 
 rufous or flesh-red, margin bluish, compact, fleshy, firm, 
 convexo-plane, depressed, smooth, dry, margin even, obtuse; 
 flesh turning red when cut ; stem spongy-stuft'ed, minutely 
 striate, glabrous, white ; gills rounded behind, broad, dis- 
 tant, -white. 
 
 In wood. Mattishall, Norfolk. Odour of crab. 
 
 22. R. lepida, Fr. (p. 212); 3 in. Epping Forest. 
 
 23. R. rubra, Fr. (p. 212). Epping Forest. 
 
 Var. sapida, Cke. ; large, fleshy; pileus plane, tlicn de- 
 pressed, dark purple, shining, dry, rather viscid in wet 
 weather, margin entire, even; flesh firm ; stem straight, solid, 
 stufted, white, somewhat cylindrical ; gills fleshy, often 
 furcate, broad, white, entire. 
 
 Among grass. Taste mild. 
 
 2i-. R. Linnasi, Fr. ; pileus 3-1 in., dark purple, blood- 
 red or bright rose, opaque, not becoming pale, fleshy, rigid, 
 piano-depressed, sometimes repand, even, smooth, dry, with- 
 out a separable pellicle, margin spreading, obtuse, without 
 striae ; flesh thick, spongy-compact, white ; stem stout, 
 firm, spongy-soft within, somewhat ventricose, obsoletely 
 fibrilloso-reticulate, blood-red ; gills adnate, somewhat 
 decurrent, rather thick, not crowded, broad, fragile, 
 sparingly connected by veins, white, yellow when dry, with 
 
AGARICINI. 251 
 
 a few dimidiate gills intermixed^ somewhat anastamosing 
 behind. 
 
 In woods. Stoke Poges. Taste mild. Epping Forest. 
 
 25. R. xerampelina, Fr. ; pileus 3 in., rosy purple, disc 
 becoming pale, fleshy, compact, convex, then flattened, at 
 length depressed, without a distinct pellicle, dry, opaque, 
 even, when older thinly rimulose, under a lens thinly 
 granulated or punctate, margin spreading, without striae ; 
 flesh compact, white, inclining to yellowish ; stem stout, 
 firm, internally at length soft, spongy, even, hollow, com- 
 monly thickened at base, even, white or reddish ; gills ad- 
 nexed, somewhat crowded, broader in front, forked behind, 
 whitish, then yellowish. 
 
 In Scotch fir wood. Glamis. Taste mild. Epping 
 Forest. 
 
 26. R. olivacea, Fr. ; pileus dingy purple, then oliva- 
 ceous or fuscous-olivaceous, fleshy, convexo-flattened and 
 depressed, slightly silky and squamulose, margin spreading, 
 even ; flesh white, becoming somewhat yellow ; stem firm, 
 ventricose, rose-colour to pallid, spongy -stufl'ed within ; 
 gills adnexed, wide, yellow, with shorter and forked ones 
 intermixed. 
 
 In woods. Slough. Taste mild. 
 
 27. R. serotina. Quel. ; pileus f-l^ in., globose, slightly 
 flattened, purplish-bistre or olive, white-pruinose ; margin 
 lilac, extreme edge whitish, flesh tough, white ; stem 
 wrinkled, mealy ; gills eroded, white, with a tinge of yellow. 
 
 Under beeeh. Taste acrid. 
 
 28. R. cutefraeta, Cke. ; pileus 3-4 in,, green, purple, 
 dull red, etc., fleshy, firm, dry, opaque, convex, then de- 
 pressed in centre, cuticle cracking from the margin inwards 
 into minute, firm, adnate, areolae, otherwise even ; flesh 
 
252 OUTLINES OF liHlTISH FUXGOLOGY. 
 
 beneath cuticle tinged with purple ; stem firm, solid, nearly 
 equal or a little attenuated above, smooth, slightly tinged 
 with purple ; gills somewhat crowded, narrowed behind, 
 furcate, adnexed or nearly free, white. 
 
 On the ground in woods. Epping Forest, etc. Taste 
 mild. 
 
 1. HeteropiiylL/E. — Pileus fleshij, firm, vith a thin margin 
 ivhich is at first infiexed, then expanded and striate, covered 
 zoith a thin adnate 2yellicle ; the gills consist of many shorter 
 ones mixed imth larger ones, others forked ; stem solid, stout, 
 spongy within. 
 
 29. R. vesca, Fr. (p. 211). Epping Forest. 
 
 30. E,. lilacea, Quel. ; jiilcus 2j— 3i in., convex, then 
 depressed, rather fleshy, viscid, violet or purple, margin 
 growing pale, striate ; flesh violet under the cuticle ; then 
 spongy, corticate, fragile, pruinose above, rosy at base ; 
 gills distant, ventricose, white, connected by veins. 
 
 In moist woods. 
 
 31. R. azurea, Bres. ; pileus 2-2 .\ in., fleshy, convex then 
 plane or depressed, soon dry and even, minutely granulose, 
 margin scarcely striate, bright blue, margin sometimes lilac 
 growing pale, cuticle separable ; stem white, ventricose, or 
 clavate at base, smooth, rugulose, firm, spongy, a little hol- 
 low when old ; flesh white ; gills crowded, equal, attenuated 
 behind, adnexed, bifid, white, unchangeable. 
 
 In fir woods. 
 
 32. R. cyanoxantha, Schceff. ; pileus 2-3 in., lilac pur- 
 plish, then olivaceous-green, disc becoming pale, often yel- 
 lowish, margin becoming azure blue, or livid purple, compact, 
 convex, plane, depressed or infundibnliform, sometimes 
 wrinkled or streaked, viscous ; margin deflexed then expanded, 
 
AGARICINI. 2bo 
 
 remotely, slightly striate ; Hesh firm, white, reddish beneath 
 the separable pellicle ; stem spougy-stuffcd, firm, equal, 
 smooth, even, shining white ; gills rounded behind, connected 
 by veins, not much crowded, broad, forked, shining white. 
 In mixed woods. Common. Epping Forest. 
 
 33. R. heterophylla, Fr. ; (p. 211). 
 
 Var. galochroa, Fr. ; smaller ; pileus at first white, then 
 greenish, rather plane, viscid in wet weather, dry, even, 
 sometimes sprinkled with white floccose spots, slightly 
 striate at margin ; stem solid, firm, not red ; gills thin, 
 more or less forked and imequal. Epping Forest. 
 
 34. R. consobrina, Fr. • pileus 3 in., dark cinereous, or 
 fuscous-olivaceous, fleshy, fragile, campanulate, then ex- 
 panded, at length depressed ; margin spreading, even, 
 membranaceous ; flesh white, cinereous under the thick, vis- 
 cous, separable pellicle ; stem solid, soft, equal, even, 
 smooth, shining white, at length becoming cinereous ; gills 
 at first free, broad, crowded, shining white, many dimidiate, 
 and ^orked. 
 
 In pine woods. In mixed woods. Glamis. 
 
 Var. sororia., Fr. ; pileus convex, then plane or depressed, 
 margin striate ; stem even, white ; gills rather distant, con- 
 nected by veins. 
 
 In pine woods. Epping Forest. 
 
 Var. intermedia, Fr. ; pileus fleshy, depressed, viscid, 
 margin thin, striate ; stem usually attenuated downwards, 
 becoming cinereous and striate ; gills dirty-white. 
 
 On the ground, under trees. 
 
 35. R. fcBtens, Fr. (p. 213) ; 4-5 in. Epping Forest. 
 
 36. R. subfoetens, Sin. ; pileus bullate, somewhat viscid; 
 disc fleshy ; margin somewhat membranaceous, tuberculoso- 
 striate ; stem not stout ; gills thick, distant, branched. 
 
254 OUTLINES OF BRITISH FLTx\GOLOGV. 
 
 Oa the ground. Smaller than R. fcetens ; odour some- 
 what disagreeable, taste slightly acrid. Epping Forest. 
 
 37. R. fellca, Fi\ ; pileus 1-2 in., straw-colour or 
 yellow, disc darker, thinly fleshy, convex, then plane, 
 polished, smooth, margin even, slightly striate when old, 
 pellicle closely adnate, thin ; flesh firm, same colour as 
 gills ; stem spongy-stuffed, then hollow, fragile, equal, even, 
 •white, then straw-colour; gills adnate, crowded, thin, 
 narrow, obsoletely connected by veins, others dimidiate or 
 bifid. 
 
 In beech Avoods. Epping Forest. Common. Very 
 acrid. 
 
 38. R. elegans, Bres.; pileus H-2 in., fleshy, thin, con- 
 vex, then rather depressed, margin tuberculose, striate when 
 old, viscid, bright rosy flesh colour, soon ochraceous at 
 circumfei'ence, wholly densely granulate ; stem spongy- 
 stufl'ed, then hollow, a little thickened at base, white 
 ochraceous below, rather rugulose ; flesh white, turning 
 ochraceous ; gills attenuated behind, adnexed or slightly 
 rounded, very crowded, equal, rarely furcate, whitish, be- 
 coming here and there orange ochre. 
 
 In mixed woods. Acrid with age. 
 
 39. R. Queletii, Fr. ; pileus 3 in., violaceous-black or 
 fuscous, ])urple-lilac at slightly striate margin, compact, 
 campanulato-convex, then plane, even, viscous ; flesh thin, 
 firm, white, reddish under pellicle; stem spongy, mealy, 
 violaceous purple ; gills attenuated, unequal or forked, 
 white, exuding drops, which on becoming dry form azure- 
 blue, cinereous or pallid olivaceous spots. 
 
 In woods. Common. Acrid. 
 
 40. R. expellens, Gill.; pileus 3-4 in., fleshy, firm, 
 rather depressed, viscid, bright purple, centre dark purple, 
 
AGAEICINI. 2o5 
 
 at length decoloured, except at disc, cuticle separable ; 
 flesh purple, stem cylindrical, firm, equal, or a little thickened 
 at base, turning purple, mealy ; gills pallid yellow, furcate 
 at base, broad. 
 Under trees. 
 
 5. Fragiles. — Pileus more or less fleshy, rigid-fragUe, covered vnili 
 a continuous pellicle, in ivet weather viscid and somewhat 
 separable, margin membranaceous, at first convergent, not 
 involute, in fidl groivn plants sulcate and tubercular ; flesh 
 floccose, lax, friable; stem spongy, at length soft and hollow ; 
 gills almost all equal, simp>le, broader in front, free. 
 
 * GUIs and spores white. 
 
 41. R. emetica, (p. 212) ; 3-4 in ; flesh reddish under 
 the separable pellicle. Epping Forest. 
 
 Var. clusii, Fr. ; pileus convex, then expanded, blood- 
 red ; flesh white, turning yellowish ; gills obsoletely ad- 
 nexed, at length adnate, pallid, yellowish. 
 
 In woods. 
 
 Var. fallax, Schceff.; thinner, more fragile; pileus dirty 
 reddish, or variedly coloured, opaque, discoid ; gills ad- 
 nexed, distant, whitish, or watery pallid. 
 
 In moist places. Epping Forest. 
 
 42. R. atropurpureus, Kromb. ; large ; pileus fleshy, 
 plane, then depressed, dark purple, shining, dry, rather viscid 
 in wet weather, margin entire, even ; flesh white ; stem 
 straight, solid, stufled, white, somewhat cylindrical ; gills 
 fleshy, often furcate, broad, white, entire. 
 
 Among grass. Epping Forest. Hereford. Taste mild. 
 Fries considers this plant to be a form of R. emetica, 
 but Dr. Cooke places it in Section II. — Rigidce. 
 
 43. R. flngibilis, Britz.; pileus 2 iu., yellow, convpx. 
 
256 OUTLINES OF BRITISH FUXGOLOGV. 
 
 then plane or depressed, viscid, darker in centre, thin 
 towards margiu, not striate ; stem equal, soft, white, spong\% 
 at leugtli hollow ; flesh white ; gills rather unequal, at- 
 tenuated behind, somewhat crowded, thin, Avhite. 
 Under trees. Inodorous. Taste mild. 
 
 44. R. pectinata, F)\ ; pileus 3 in., viscous, brown, be- 
 coming pale, tan, disc darker, fleshy, rigid, convex, then 
 flattened and depressed, concavo-infundibuliform, margin 
 thin, pectinato-sulcate, here and there irregular ; flesh 
 white, light yellowish under the not easily separable pellicle ; 
 stem rigid, spongy- stuffed, longitudinally slightly striate, 
 shining white, often attenuated at base; gills attenuato- 
 free behind, broader at margin, somewhat crowded, equal, 
 simple, white. 
 
 In mixed woods. Glamis. Epping Forest. Odour 
 nauseous. 
 
 45. R. ochroleuca, Fr. ([). 212) ; I-I2 in. Epping 
 Forest. 
 
 46. R. granulosa, Cke. ; pileus 2-3 in., convex, plane, 
 then depressed or infundibuliform, at first viscid, ochra- 
 ceous-yellow, disc darker, breaking up into minute granules, 
 margin even, or faintly striate when old ; stem minutely 
 granular or mealy throughout, granules white at apex, 
 fuscous below, internally white, spongy ; gills rather crowded, 
 somewhat attenuated behind, nearly free, equal, rarely 
 furcate, white. 
 
 On the ground, under trees, Epping Forest, 
 
 47. R. seruginea, Fr. ; pileus convex, then flattened, 
 disc darker, depressed, even, rather dry, verdigris-greeu, 
 margin striate ; stem firm, even, smooth, white ; gills at- 
 tenuated behind, slightly adnexed, rather distant, white. 
 
 In woods. Taste mild. 
 
AGAKICIXI. 257 
 
 48. R. citrina, Gill. ; pileus 4-5 in., fleshy, convex, a 
 little depressed in middle, rather viscid when moist, smooth, 
 a little wrinkled at margin when old, bright citron-yellow 
 or slightly greenish, sometimes a little lighter at margin, 
 centre at length pale ochraceous, epidermis easily raised at 
 margin ; gills white, slightly decurrent, bifurcate at base 
 and occasionally in middle, broader at marginal extremity, 
 graduated towards base ; stem solid, white, striate, equal, 
 or slightly attenuated at base, straight or slightly flexuose ; 
 flesh white, rather firm. 
 
 In mixed woods. Taste sweet to slightly acrid. Odour 
 none. Epping Forest. 
 
 49. R. fragilis, P. (p. 213). Epping Forest. 
 Var. nivea, P. ; whole plant Avhite. 
 
 Var. violacea. Quel. ; pileus 1^22 in., depressed, thin, 
 viscid, striate, bright violet, with a narrow white margin, 
 sometimes spotted with yellow, green or olive; flesh soft, 
 white ; stem spongy, then hollow, fragile, slender, striate, 
 pruinose, white ; gills adnate, crowded, thin, white. 
 
 In shady woods. Epping Forest. 
 
 50. R. punctata, Gill. ; pileus 22-3 in., margin striate, 
 attenuated, convex, then flattened, viscid, rosy, darker in 
 centre, punctate with dark rufous point-like tubercles, be- 
 coming pale when old; flesh white, reddish under cuticle; stem 
 stuffed, colour of pileus, attenuated at base and whitish ; gills 
 adherent, convex, white, then yellowish, edge often reddish. 
 
 In woods. Taste mild. 
 
 ** (tiUs ami spores ichite, then bright yelloioish, or bright 
 lemon-yellow. 
 
 51. R. veternosa, Fr. ; pileus 2 in., rose or flesh colour, 
 soon pale, whitish or yellowish at disc, slightly fleshy, then 
 
258 OUTLINES OF BRITISH FUNGOLOGY. 
 
 plane, depressed in middle, covered with a thin, adnate, 
 somewhat viscid pellicle, margin even, scarcely membrana- 
 ceous ; flesh soft, white ; stem soft, spongy, hollow, fragile, 
 even, equal, white ; gills adnate, crowded, narrow, broader 
 in front, with short ones intermixed, white, then straw 
 colour. 
 
 In woods. Chatteris. Taste acrid. 
 
 52. R. Integra, Fr. (p. 213) ; 3-4 in. Epping Forest. 
 Va7\ alba, Cke.; whole plant creamy- white. 
 
 On the ground. 
 
 53. R. decolorans, Fr. (p. 213} ; 3 in. 
 5 i. R. aurata, Fr. (p. 213) ; 2-3 in. 
 
 55. R. BarlsB, Quel. ; pileus 2^-3^ in., compact, viscid, 
 dry, convex, even, then flattened and depressed, peach 
 coloured, yellow, tinged with orange-red, sometimes cracked ; 
 flesh firm, turning reddish-brown when cut, white ; stem 
 fleshy, spongy, firm, silky pruinose, white ; gills white, 
 then pallid-ochraceous. 
 
 Among grass, under trees. Odour sweet, like melilot, 
 or, according to Dr. Cooke, like crab. Taste sweet. 
 
 56. R. nitida, Fr. (p. 214) ; 2 in. 
 
 Var. cuprea, Kromb. ; pileus convex, then plane, obtusely 
 umbonate, then expanded, depressed in centre, copper 
 colour or brick-red, turning yellowish, centre darker, smooth, 
 rather shining, somewhat viscid, margin acute, a little in- 
 flexed, sulcate ; gills broad, rather thick, equal, bright 
 yellow or orange, arcuate ; stem slender, curved, attenuated 
 downwards, naked, white, then reddish, delicately striate, 
 stuffed, silky shining. 
 
 In woods. 
 
 Var. pulchralis, Britz. ; pileus 2 in., viscid, thin, convex, 
 then flattened and depressed, circumference ochraceous. 
 
AGARICINI. 259 
 
 centre spotted with red or purple, margin thin, deeply 
 striate, often split ; stem equal, ventricose or thickened at 
 base, fragile, white; gills broad, distant, rather thick, 
 whitish, then ochraceous-yellow. 
 In woods. 
 
 *** Gills and sjyores ochraceou^. 
 
 57. R. alutacea, Fr. (p. 214) ; 2-4 in. Epping Forest 
 
 58. R. armeniaca, Cke. ; very fragile, pileus 1—1^ in., 
 convex, then depressed, smooth, even, peach colour, paler 
 at edge, margin thin, even; stem attenuated upwards, 
 smooth, white, hollow ; gills adnate, rounded behind, rather 
 broad, somewhat distant, bright ochre, almost egg-yellow. 
 
 Among grass, under trees. Epping Forest. 
 
 59. R. puellaris, Fi\ ; pileus 1—1^ in., membranaceous 
 except at disc, conically convex and tuberculose, livid- 
 purplish, becoming yellowish, disc brown, always darker ; 
 stem soon hollow, white, becoming yellowish ; gills attenu- 
 ated behind, adnate, thin, crowded, naked, white, then 
 pallid yellow. 
 
 On waysides in woods. 
 
 Var. intensior, Cke. ; pileus darker, nearly same size 
 deep purple, nearly black at disc ; stem and gills as in 
 type. 
 
 In same places. 
 
 Var. rosipes, -Seer. ; pileus 2-3 in., fleshy, margin thin, 
 convex, then flattened and depressed, soon dry, rosy flesh 
 colour, rosy orange, or rosy with a tinge of ochre, at first 
 spotted with whitish, at length blanched, margin shortly 
 tuberculate, striate ; flesh whitish, then rather yellowish ; 
 gills rather crowded, equal, some dimidiate or furcate, 
 furcate behind and rounded, free, rather distant, sometimes 
 
260 OUTLINES OF lUHTISH FUNGOLOGY. 
 
 with au ad'.iate tooth, ventricose, whitish theu ochraceous 
 egg-yellow, connected by veins ; stem stuffed, lacunose, 
 white, here and there sprinkled with rosy meal. 
 In woods. Taste and odour pleasant. 
 
 60. R. ochracea, A. and S. ; pileus fleshy, soft, piano- 
 depressed, thin, pellicle viscid, shining, margin thin, sulcate ; 
 flesh ochraceous ; stem spongy, stuffed, soft, striate ; gills 
 touching the stem, broad, scarcely crowded, same colour. 
 
 In fir woods. 
 
 61. R. lutea, Fr. (p. 2U) ; 1-2 in. Epping Forest. 
 
 62. R. nauseosa, Fr. ; pileus variable in colour, typi- 
 cally purplish at disc, livid, becoming pale and whitish, 
 laxly fleshy, thin, at first piano-gibbous, then depressed, 
 viscid in wet weather, sulcate and somewhat tubercular at 
 the somewhat membranaceous margin ; flesh soft, white ; 
 stem spongy-stutted, slightly striate, white ; gills aduexed, 
 ventricose, somewhat distant, light yellow, theu dingy 
 ochraceous. 
 
 In woods, chiefly pine. Coed Coch. Taste mild, but 
 nauseous. 
 
 63. R. vitellina, Fr. ; 1 in. 
 
 64s R. chamaeleontina, Fr. ; pileus 1-2 in., thickly 
 fleshy, soon flattened, sometimes oblique, with a thin, sepa- 
 rable, viscid pellicle, at first flesh colour, yellow at disc, 
 then wholly yellow, margin even, then slightly striate ; 
 stem thin, somewhat hollow, slightly striate, white; gills 
 more or less adnexed, thin, crowded, equal, narrow, some- 
 what forked, light yellow-ochraceous. 
 
 In woods. Rare. Epping Forest. 
 
AGARICINI. 261 
 
 Genus 10. CANTHAEELLUS, Fr. (p. 215). 
 
 I. Mesopus. — P ileus entire : stem central. 
 * Pileics and solid stem fleshy. 
 
 1. C. cibarius, Fr. (p. 215) ; 2-4 in. Epping Forest. 
 Var. rufipes, Gill ; stem rufous at the base. 
 
 2. C. Friesii, Quel. ; pileus some'what orange, fleshy, 
 thin, convex, then depressed, villous ; stem solid, slender, 
 villous at base, white, attenuated ; gills narrow, fold-like, 
 branched, yellow. 
 
 In woods. Sydenham Hill. 
 
 3. C. aurantiacus, Fr. (p. 215) ; 2-3 in. Epping 
 Forest. 
 
 4. C. Brownii, B. and Br. (p. 215) ; \ in. 
 
 5. C. carbonarius, A. and S. ; pileus date-brown, then 
 black, somewhat fleshy, striato-squamulose, umbilicate ; 
 stem paler ; gills tense and straight, white. 
 
 On charcoal heaps. Rare. 
 
 Var. radicosus, B. and Br. ; slender, deeply umbilicate, 
 floccose, black, stem rooting, pallid ; gills white, narrow. 
 On charcoal. 
 
 6. C. umbonatus, Fr. (p. 216) ; 1 in. 
 
 7. C. albidus, Fr, ; pileus \-\ in., whitish, inclining to 
 yellowish or rufescent, fleshy, thin, somewhat infundibuli- 
 form, irregular, somewhat repand, loose, smooth, somewhat 
 zoned ; stem solid, tough, equal or compressed, smooth, 
 white, rarely yellowish ; gills decurrent, thin, somewhat 
 crowded, repeatedly dichotomous, white. 
 
 In mossy places. Coed Coch. 
 
 8. C. Houghtoni, Phil. ; pileus 1-2 in., dirty white, 
 with a tinge of flesh colour, thin, convex, umbilicate 
 smooth ; stem stuff'ed, slender, thickened at apex, at first 
 
262 OUTLINES OF BRITISH FUXGOLOGY. 
 
 delicately fibrillose, rooting at the more or less cottony base; 
 gills somewhat decurrent, narrow, scarcely forked, pallid 
 flesh colour. 
 
 On the ground. Hereford. 
 
 ** Pilevs someivhat membranaceous, stem tnh^dar, polished. 
 
 9. C. tiibseformis, Fr. (p. 216) ; 1—1 in. Epping 
 Forest. 
 
 Var. lutescens, Fr. ; pileus convexo-umbilicate, rather 
 even, somewhat regular ; stem more equal, attenuated up- 
 wards ; gills less divided. 
 
 10. C. infundibuliformis, Fr. (p. 216) ; 1-2 in. Epping 
 Forest. 
 
 11. C. cinereus, Fr. (p. 216) ; 1-2 in. 
 
 12. C. cupulatus, Fr. ; pileus k in., pallid fuscous when 
 damp, becoming pale, somewhat rufescent, when dry mem- 
 branaceous, plano-infuudibuliform, repand, not zoned, wheu 
 moist smooth, striate at margin, when dry even, flocculose; 
 stem stufted, equal, tense and straight, tough, smooth, paler 
 than pileus ; gills decurrent, very distant, branched and 
 simple, bi'oad, obtuse at edge, grey. 
 
 In waste places. Rare. 
 
 13. C. Stevensoni, B. and Br. ; pileus ^ in., pallid, 
 orbicular, nmbilicate, smooth, margin inflexed ; stem 
 cylindrical, delicately pulverulent, white, then darker ; gills 
 decurrent, pallid, becoming fuscous in front. 
 
 On rotten stump among moss. Glamis. 
 
 14. C. reflexus, Fr.; pileus membranaceous, campanulate, 
 convex, expanded and inverted, striate, fuscous, then cine- 
 reous ; stem fistulose, smooth, thickened above ; gills adnate, 
 decurrent. connected by veins, distant, branched and dimi- 
 diate, hoary white. 
 
AGAEICINl. 26^ 
 
 Among grass. 
 
 Var. devexus, Fr.; pileus cucullate^ stem stuffed with a 
 floccose pith; gills simple, ciuereous. 
 In burnt places. 
 
 II. Merisma. — /Stems very numerous, united into an elongated 
 cohimn or branched. 
 
 No British species recorded. 
 
 III. Pleuropus, — Dimidiate, stem exactly lateral. 
 
 15. C. muscigenus, Fr. (p. 217) ; 1 in. 
 
 16. C. glaucus, Batscli ; grey ; pileus membranaceous, 
 strap-shaped, ascending, silky, without zones ; stem lateral, 
 short, pruinate; gills fold-like^ swollen, distant, dichotomous. 
 
 On sandy slopes. 
 
 IV. Resupinati.— PiYe^ts entire, at first cup-shaped, adfixed by 
 the vertex, then somewhat reflexed. 
 
 * Bryophili. — Groiviny amongst mosses. 
 
 17. C. retirugis, Fr. (p. 217) ; | in. 
 
 18. C. lobatus, Fr. (p. 217) ; 1 in. 
 
 ** LiGNATiLES. — Growing on wood. 
 No British species recorded. 
 
 Genus 12. ARRHENIA, Fr. 
 
 Minute, membranaceous, very tender, moderately persis- 
 tent, hymeneum inferior and striate with few, delicate, 
 slightly raised, simple, straight veins, which take the place 
 of gills. 
 
 No British species recorded. 
 
264 OUTLINES OF BRITISH FUNGOLOGY. 
 
 Genus 13. NYCTALIS, Fr. (p. 217). 
 
 I. Spele.e. — Gills crowded, somen'hut coalescent. In hollovj places. 
 These species are j)robahly fontis of others, chanyed in appearance 
 owing to their place of groioth. 
 
 1. N. caliginosa, Sm. ; pileus white when dry ; marked 
 with light and dark dull grey colours when wet^ very fleshy, 
 floccoso-pruinose when dry, margin involute, slightly ex- 
 ceeding the gills ; stem solid, floccoso-pruinose, base naked ; 
 gills decurrent, thick, branched. 
 
 In a dark place in Bishop's Wood, Highgate. Odour 
 and taste rank and disagreeable, like Polyporus squamosus. 
 II. Pakasit.k. — Gills disti7ict, distant. On putrid Jungi. 
 
 2. N. asterophora, Fr. (p. 217) ; ^f in. Epping 
 Forest. 
 
 3. N. parasitica, Fr. (p. 218) ; i-1 in. Eppiug Forest. 
 
 Genus 14. MARASMIUS (p. 218). 
 
 I. CoLLYBiA. — Fileus flesh ij-pliuvt, at length someivhat coriaceous, 
 silicate or xvrinhled, margin at first involute, stem someichat 
 cartilaginous, mycelium floccose ^chen manifest. 
 
 A. ScROTEi. — Stem solid, or stuffed loith a ^^/i//, then hollow 
 iiiternally fibrous, externally clad with villous doivn which is 
 easily wiped from the cartilaginous cuticle. 
 
 * Stem tvoolly or strigose at base. 
 
 1. M. urens, Fr. (p. 218) ; 2-o in. Eppiug Forest. 
 
 2. M. peronatus, Fr. (p. 218) ; 1—2 in. Epping Forest, 
 o. M. porreus, Fr. (p. 219) ; 1-2 in. 
 
 ** Stem naked at base, often composed of twisted fibres. 
 
 4. M. oreades, Fr. (p. 219) ; 1-2 in. Eppiug Forest. 
 
 5. M. plancus, Fr. ; pileus fleshy, tough, plane, then 
 
AGARICINI. 265 
 
 depressed, obtuse, even, growing pale ; stem hollow, soon 
 compressed, with a villous white bark, rather attenuated and 
 naked at base ; gills receding, free, distant, linear, darker. 
 In woods. 
 
 6. M. scorteus, Fr. ; pileus h in., pale when dry, 
 slightly convex, scarcely umbonate, even, not striate at 
 margin, slightly wrinkled when dry; stem obsoletely 
 fistulose, thin, filiform, equal, not rooted, smooth, delicately 
 pruinose at apex, contorted and fuscous when dry ; gills 
 free, broad, rounded behind, ventricose, white. 
 
 In grass among trees. MoncreiflFe. 
 
 B. Tergini. — Stem roothnj, tubular, not Jibrous, cartilaginous; 
 gills separating -free ; pileus thinner than in forme/)' section, 
 hygrophanous, sometimes even, sometimes striate at margin. 
 
 * Stem voolly dowmoards, smooth upwards. 
 
 7. M. prasiosmus, Fr. ; pileus rather membranaceous, 
 tough, campanulate, then convex, flattened, obtuse, rugu- 
 lose ; stem fistulose, pallid above, becoming smooth, in- 
 crassated downwards, pale rufous or fuscous, somewhat 
 tomentose; gills adnexed, a little crowded, at first white. 
 
 Among leaves. Strong scented. 
 
 8. M. varicosus, Fr. ; pileus \ in., fuscous purple, darker 
 when dry, somewhat membranaceous, pliant, campanulate, 
 then convex, plane, umbonate, even ; stem thin, fistulose, 
 rubiginous, blackish when dry, smooth above, containing 
 dark blood-coloured juice ; gills separating-free, crowded, 
 linear, narrow, same colour as pileus, becoming dark, 
 umber-fuscous when dry. 
 
 In damp mossy places. Apethorpe. 
 
 9. M. fuseo-purpureus, Fr. (p. 219) ; i-1 in. Epping 
 Forest. 
 
266 OUTLINES OF BRITISH FUXGOLOGY. 
 
 10. M. terginus, Fr. = M. Stephensii, B. and Br. (p 
 220); pileus 1 in., llesh colour, whitish when dry, shining 
 tough, slightly fleshy, convex, then plane, at length de- 
 pressed, margin striate when moist ; stem fistulose, slightly 
 attenuated upwards, smooth, shining and pallid upwards, 
 reddish downwards, white villous at rooting base ; gills 
 separating-free, somewhat crowded, narrow, pallid. 
 
 Among leaves, beech, etc. Dursley. Epping Forest. 
 Inodorous, juiceless, solitary. 
 
 ** SteDi zohen dry, j;riti?irtft)-veZvei?/. 
 
 11. M. Wynnei, B. and Br. (p. 219) ; 1-1^ in. 
 
 12. M. erythropus, Fr. (p. 220) ; 1 in. Epping Forest, 
 lo. M. archyropus, Fr. (p. 220) ; 1 in. 
 
 M. torquescens. Quel. 
 
 The specimens named as above, from Glamis, in Mr. 
 Berkeley's herbarium at Kew, have, according to Dr. Cook, 
 brown spores, and belong to Naucoria. 
 
 14. M. impudicus, Fr. ; pileus 2-I in., gregarious, 
 bay-browu-rufous, pale when dry, slightly fleshy at disc, 
 convex then plane, often depressed, soft, membranaceous, 
 striato-plicate, paler from circumference to middle; stem 
 fistulose, equal, sometimes compressed, rooting at attenuated 
 base, tough, flexile, naked, rufous, rufous-fuscous or viola- 
 ceous-purple, but covered with white villous down when 
 dry ; gills at first reaching stem, then free ; truncate be- 
 hind, connected by veins, ventricose, crowded, distant 
 whitish flesh colour. 
 
 On and about pine trunks. Hanham. Odour strong 
 and disgusting. 
 
AGARICINI. 267 
 
 c. Calopodes. — Stem curt, rootless, inserted, of ten furnished toith a 
 fleshy tubercle at base; pileus convexo-involute, then i:>lane and 
 depressed ; gills typically adnate, slightly decurrent when pileus 
 is de])ressed. On stipules, branches, etc., gregarious, arid. 
 
 * Stem smooth and shining upwards, base simple. 
 
 15. M, scorodonius, Fr. (p. 220) ; i Id. 
 
 16. M. calopus, Fr. ; pileus ^ in., whitish, slightly fleshy, 
 tough, convex, then flattened, obtuse, rarely depressed, even 
 smooth, slightly wrinkled when dry ; stem fistulose, slightly 
 attenuated upwards, even, smooth, tough, rufous, or bay- 
 brown-rufous, shining, somewhat rooted ; gills slightly 
 emarginate, then white. 
 
 On twigs. Bristol. Inodorous. 
 
 17. M. Vaillantii, Fr. (p. 221) ; i in. 
 
 18. M. angulatus, B. and Br. ; pileus fuscous-whitish, 
 somewhat membranaceous, hemispherical, then flattened, 
 at length plicato-angular ; stem thin, rufescent-grey, 
 thickened at both ends, hairy at base ; gills distant, 
 whitish. 
 
 On grass. Cefn, Denbighshire, above bone cave. 
 
 19. M. languidus, Fr. ; pileus \ in., white, inclining to 
 Hesh colour or light yellow, slightly fleshy, at first convex, 
 margin involute, then more expanded and umbilicate, 
 tlocculose, rugoso-sulcate ; stem stuffed, thickened upwards, 
 naked, pallid, becoming fuscous, and commonly white- 
 villous at base ; gills adnate, then decurrent, distant, 
 connected by veins, narrow, white. 
 
 On dead leaves of grass. Coed Coch. 
 
 ** Stem velvety or pruinate vxith a somewhat tuhercidar base. 
 
 20. M. fcEtidus Fr. (p. 221) ; \ m. 
 
 21. M. amadelphus Fr. (p. 221) ; J in. 
 
268 OUTLIXES OF BRITISH FUNGOLOGY. 
 
 22. M. ramealis, Fr. (p. 221) ; ^ in. Epping Forest. 
 
 23. M. candidus, Bolt. (p. 222). 
 
 II. Mycena. — Stem horni/, fistuJose, or loith a pith, tough, arkl, 
 mycelium o'hizomorphoid, corticate notjioccose ; pileus somewhat 
 membranaceous, campanulate then eximnded, margin at first 
 straight, adpressed to stem. 
 
 A. CnoRDALES. — Stevi rigid, rooting, or adnate by a dilated 
 base ; pileus camjiumdate or convex. 
 
 24. M. alliaceus, Fr. (p. 223); 1-U in. 
 
 25. M. caulicinalis, Fr. ; pileus h in., dingy yellow, 
 becoming ferruginous, then ochraceous, membranaceous, 
 thin, pliant, campanulate, then convex, obtuse, at length 
 plane, striato-sulcate ; stem fistulose with a pith, rigid, 
 tough, floccoso-villous and bay-brown below, attenuated, 
 paler and mealy upwards, somewhat inserted at base ; gills 
 adnato-decurrent, somewhat distant, connected by a net- 
 work of veins, pallid light yellow. 
 
 Among leaves. Rare. 
 
 26. M. cohserens, A. and S. ; pileus rather fleshy, cam- 
 panulate, then expanded, obsoletely umbonate, velvety, 
 cinnamon-brown, growing pale ; stem horny, rigid, even, 
 smooth, shining, bay, pallid above ; gills free, distant, 
 connected by slight veins, white, then yellowish, growing 
 pallid. 
 
 On bramble. Epping Forest. 
 
 B. RoTUL^. — Ste7)i filiform, flaccid, inserted at base, pileus soon 
 
 rather plane or utnbilicate. Groiohig on leaves. 
 
 * Stem very smooth, shining. 
 
 27. M. rotula, Fr. (p. 222) ; ^ in. Epping Forest. 
 
 28. M. graminum, B. and Br. (p. 222) ; ^ in. 
 
AGARICINI. 369 
 
 29. M. androsaceus, Fr. (p, 22.2) ; ^ in. Epping 
 Forest. 
 
 30. M. splachnoidesj Fr. ; pileus somewhat membran- 
 aceous, convex, then expauded and umbilicate, smooth, 
 striate; stem horny, fistuiose, smooth, shining, red, becoming 
 fuscous; gills somewhat decurrent, crowded, simple, anas- 
 tomosing, white. 
 
 Among pine leaves. Cabalva, Foxley. 
 
 31. M. Cvirreyi, B. and Br. ; pileus pallid rufous, furrows 
 paler, umbo fuscous, somewhat plane, sulcate, somewhat 
 radiate ; stem inserted, very smooth, shining, black, white 
 at apex ; gills attached to a collar, few, somewhat ventricose, 
 cream coloured, interstices veined. 
 
 On leaves of grasses. Fineshade, Norths. 
 
 ** S'tem velvet}/ oi- pilose. 
 
 32. M. perforans, Fr. (p. 223) ; I in. 
 
 33. M. insititius, Fr. (p. 223) ; ^ in. 
 
 34. M. Hudsoni, Fr. (p. 223) ; ^ in. Epping Forest. 
 
 35. M. epichloe, Fr ; pileus whitish, bay-brown fuscous 
 in centre, thin, plano-convex, somewhat papillate, without 
 striae; stem bay-brown, opaque, sulcato-striate, strise 
 slightly bristly, paler at base; gills rounded, somewhat 
 crowded, broader behind. 
 
 On the base of grasses. Hereford. 
 
 36. M. actinophorus, B. and Br. ; small ; pileus convex, 
 umbilicate, bay-brown, radiately lined, rugose when dry; 
 stem hair-like, pallid ; gills white. 
 
 On twigs, etc. 
 
 37. M. saccliarinus, Fr. (p. 224). 
 
 38. M. epiphyllus, Fr. (p. 224) ; \-\ in. Epping 
 Forest. 
 
270 OUTLINES OF I'-ItlTISII FUNGOLOGY. 
 
 39. M. polyadelphus, Lasch ; minute, white, rather 
 tough; pileus very thin, hemispherical, sulcate, flocculose ; 
 stem tough, floccose at base; gills decurrent, almost fold-like 
 
 On dead leaves. 
 
 III. Apus. — Pileus sessile, resupinate. 
 
 40. M. spodoleucus, B. and Br. (p. 224) ; | in. 
 
 41. M. Broomei, B. ; half-resupinate, pallid brown, then 
 striate, black ; hymenium, shining white ; gills distant, 
 veined^ interstices even. 
 
 On dead twigs. Batheaston. Dr. Cooke states, from 
 an examination of the examples in the Berkeley Her- 
 barium, Kew, that the last two species are identical with 
 each other; if this conclusion is correct, it is remarkable 
 that Mr. Berkeley should have described an unique species 
 twice and in different terms. 
 
 Genus 15. LENTINUS, Fr. (p. 224). 
 
 I. Mesopodes. — Pileus nearly entire, stem distinct. 
 
 * Lepidei. — Pileus scaly ; more or less manifestly veiled. 
 
 1. L. tigrinus, Fr. (p. 224) ; 2 in. 
 
 2. L. Dunalii, Fr. (p. 225) ; 2 in. 
 
 3. L. lepideus, Fr. (p. 225) ; 2-4 in. Epping Forest. 
 
 ** PuLVERULEXTi. — Pileus vUlous or 2'>ulveruhnt. 
 
 4. L. leontopodius, Schulz. ; pileus tan-clay-colour, 
 fleshy-coriaceous, tough, irregular, delicately tomentose, 
 disc, depressed, margin deflexed, slightly lobed ; stem thick, 
 woody, unpolished, pulverulent, pale chestnut^ blackish 
 downwards ; gills decurreot, connected by veins, wrinkled 
 at side, serrated at edge. 
 
 On decayed willow. Menmuir, Forfarshire. 
 
 5. L. pulverulentus, Fr. ; tufted ; pileus 2 in., yellow, 
 mealy-white or mealy-umber, fleshy-pliant, at first infundi- 
 
AGARICIXI. 271 
 
 buliform, lateral flabelliform, convex ; stem stout, elongated, 
 equal, rigid, mealy-white ; gills slightly toothed or de- 
 current, white. 
 
 On dead trunks. Glamis. 
 
 Va7\ resinaceus, Fr. ; somewhat c^spitose ; pileus ochra- 
 ceous-cinnamon, somewhat fleshy, pliant-excentric, some- 
 what gummy-villous ; stem unequal, tomentose ; gills 
 crowded, serrated, shining white. 
 
 On trunks. Forres. 
 
 6. L. adhserens, Fr. (p. 225). 
 
 *** CocHLEATi. — Lobed and hoisted in shape ; 2nlei(s smooth. 
 
 7. L. cochleatus, Fr. (p. 226); 2-3 in. Epping Forrest. 
 
 II. FhEVRoii.— Dimidiate, sessile or furnished with a someichat 
 lateral stem. ^ 
 
 8. L. scoticus, B. and Br. ; pileus -^-lo in,, pallid, then 
 brownish, hygrophanous, umbilicate, sometimes infundibuli- 
 form, at length flattened, extremely variable in form, 
 stemless and reniform, or stipitate, lobed at margin and 
 sinuate or plicate ; stem when present cylindrical, darker, 
 pulverulent, springing from a brown flbrillose mycelium ; 
 gills decurrent when the stem is developed, rather distant, 
 strongly toothed. 
 
 On decayed Ulecc, birch and spruce. Menmuir. 
 
 9. L. flmbriatus, Curr. ; pileus \-\ in., fawn-colour, 
 covered with darker floccose scales, somewhat dimidiate, 
 somewhat coriaceous, thin, depressed, sometimes almost 
 cyathiform, margin slightly involute, almost strigose ; stem 
 lateral, rough, with somewhat reflexed scales, same colour 
 as gills, or rather paler ; gills descending, but not decurrent, 
 irregularly serrated and torn at margin, pale brown. 
 
 10. L. vulpinus (p. 226) ; 3 in. 
 
272 OUTLINES OF BRITISH FUNGOLOGY. 
 
 11. L. flabellaeformis (p. 226); 1 in. 
 
 Genus 16. PANUS (p. 220.) 
 * Pileus irregular, stem excentric. 
 
 1. P. conchatus, Fr. (p. 227) ; 2— t in. 
 
 2. P. torulosus, Fr. (p. 226) ; 2-3 in. Epping Forest. 
 
 ** ^'tein lateral. 
 
 3. P. styptieus, Fr. (p. 227) ; ^-1 in. Epping Forest. 
 
 4. P. farinaceus, Schum. ; pileus cinnamon-umber, some- 
 what coriaceous, fiexuous, cuticle separating into whitish 
 bluish-grey scurf; stem short, lateral, same colour as pileus ; 
 gills determinately free, distinct, paler. 
 
 On a fir pole. Glamis. Epping Forest. 
 
 Var. albido-tomentosus, Cke. and Mass. ; pileus 1 in., 
 often imbricated ; stem sometimes absent or attached to a 
 villous base ; gills attenuated behind, lanceolate, honey 
 colour, entire, rigid, scarcely crowded, mixed with shorter 
 ones. 
 
 *** Pileus resupinute, sessile, or extended behind. 
 
 5. P. patellaris, Fr. ; pileus ^ in., pallid externally, 
 resupiuate, coriaceous, orbicular, plano-cup-shaped, adnata 
 by the sessile vertex, margin free, involute, purpuraceo- 
 villous externally; gills concurrent in a central point, 
 crowded, entire, arid, dark ochraceous. 
 
 On cherry. Forres. 
 
 0. P. Stevensonii, B. and Br. ; pileus ochraceous light- 
 yellow, spathulate ; flesh greenish yellow ; stem dilated 
 upwards, convex and golden, slightly hispid ; gills narrow, 
 entire. 
 
 On oak. Glamis. 
 
POLYPOREI. 273 
 
 Genus 17. XEROTUS (p. 227.) 
 1. X. degener, Fr. (p. 227} ; 1| in. 
 
 Genus 18. TROG-IA Fr. 
 
 Gills fold-like, edge longtitudinally channelled, or in the 
 
 single European species, crispid. 
 
 Reviving with wet. 
 
 1. T. crispa, Fr. ; i x 1 in. Formerly placed in Cra- 
 terellus. 
 
 = C. crispus, Fr. (p. 266). 
 
 Genus 19. SCHIZOPHYLLUM (p. 228.) 
 ] . S. commune, Fr. (p. 228) ; 1 in. 
 
 Genus 20. LENZITES (p. 228.) 
 
 * On wood of deciduous trees. 
 
 1. L. betulina, L. ; 1—2 in. Epping Forest. 
 
 2. L. flaccida, Bull. 
 
 * On wood of coniferous trees. 
 
 3. L. sepiaria, Fr. ; 1—3 in. 
 
 4. L. abietina, Fr. ; i in. x 12 in. 
 
 Order 2. POLYPOREI (p. 229.) 
 
 Genus 21. BOLETUS Fr. (p. 229.) 
 
 Series i. Euchroi. — Tubes bright- coloured, commonly 
 yellow, not white or grey. 
 
 A. Viscipellis. — PUeus covered with a viscous pellicle : stem solid, 
 not bulbous or reticulated with veins ; tubes adnate to tJie stem, 
 rarely sinuate, of one colour. 
 
 1. B. luteus, Fr. (p. 229) ; 2-4 in. 
 
274 OUTLINES OF BKITIISH FUNGOLOOY. 
 
 .'2. B. elegans, Schum. (p. 229) ; 2-1' in. Epping Forest. 
 
 3. B. flavus, JVith. (p. 230) ; 2-3 in. Epping Forest. 
 
 4. B flavidus, F)\ ; pileus 1-2 in.^ livid light yellowish, 
 gibbous, then plane, viscous, flesh pallid ; stem somewhat 
 equal, pallid, sprinkled with fugacious glandules above the 
 viscous ring; tubes decurrent ; pores large, angular; com- 
 pound, dirty light yellow. Kromb. t. 4: f. 35-37. 
 
 In pine woods, llannoch. 
 
 5. B. coUinitus, Fr. ; pileus becoming pale when the 
 fuscous gluten separates, pulvinate, even ; Hesh white ; stem 
 firm, attenuated downwards, ringless, white, becoming 
 fuscous, somewhat reticulated with adpressed squamules ; 
 tubes adnate, elongated ; pores divided in two, pallid, thin, 
 yellow, naked. Kromb. t. 76, f. 10, 11. 
 
 In fir woods. Ascot. 
 
 6. B. granulatus, L. (p. 230), 
 
 7. B. tenuipes, Cke. ; pileus gilvous, viscid, streaked 
 with minute fibrils when dry; stem attenuated at base, 
 yellow, becoming rufescent ; pores adnate, with faint decur- 
 rent lines on top of stem ; fiesh under the pileus roseate 
 pink. 
 
 On the ground in woods. Epping Forest. 
 
 8. B. aurantiporus, Howse ; pileus 2 in.; at first fer- 
 ruginous, then pale gilvous, pulvinate, then expanded, 
 viscid, at length squamulose about the margin ; stem equal, 
 beautifully reticulated with yellow and red ; tubes deeply 
 decurrent; pores broad, angular, golden yellow, then orange, 
 turning red when bruised ; flesh becoming slightly red- 
 dish. 
 
 Under trees. Near Shere. 
 
 9. B. bovinus, L. (p. 230) ; 2 in. Epping Forest. 
 
 10. B. badius, Fr. (p. 281) ; 3-6 in. Epping Forest. 
 
POLYPOKEI. 275 
 
 11. B. sanguineus, PFith. (p. 231) |-li in. 
 
 12. B. piperatus, Bull. (p. 231) ; 1-3 in. Eppiug 
 Forest. 
 
 B. SuBTOMENTOSi. — PiUus destitute of a viscid 2JdUcle, villous 
 when young, rarely becoming smooth; stem not bulbous, or 
 reticidated ivith veins ; here and there rtigose or striate ; tubes 
 adnate to stem; flesh rarely changing colour ; tubes of one 
 colour. 
 
 13. B. variegatus, Sw. (p. 231); 3-5 in. 
 
 14. B. sulphureus, Fr. ; caespitose; pileiis sulphur-yellovVj 
 compact^ convex, then plane, silky-tomentose, with innate 
 flocci ; flesh light yellow, more or less blue when broken, 
 golden when exposed to the air, here and there reddish near 
 the tubes; stem firm, ventricose, even, smooth, sulphur-yellow, 
 at length dingy-ferruginous ; tubes adnato-decurrent, short, 
 changeable on being touched, at length ferruginous 
 spotted ; pores minute, compound, sulphur-yellow, at length 
 green. 
 
 Amongsawdust. Loch-an-Eilan, Rothiemurchus. Spring- 
 ing from golden woolly mycelium. 
 
 15. B. strisepes, Seer. (p. 232) ; 2-2h in. 
 
 16. B. chrysenteron, Fr. (p. .23.2) ; 2-3 in. Epping 
 Forest. 
 
 17. B. subtomentosus, Z/. (p. 232); 3 in. Epping Forest. 
 Var. radicatus, Kromb. ; somewhat verdigris green. 
 
 Epping Forest. Kromb. t. 18 /. 1-6. 
 
 18. B. spadiceus, Sehaeff. ; pileus date-brown, opaque, 
 pulvinato-expanded, moderately compact, dry, tomentose, 
 then widely cracked ; flesh white, unchangeable, fuscous- 
 reddish above ; stem firm, clavate, even, flocculoso-fur- 
 furaceous, yellow, inclining to fuscous; tubes adnate, 
 
276 OUTLINES OF BRITISH FUNGOLOGY. 
 
 yellow ; pores minute, somewhat round. Kroiub. t. 36, 
 /. 19, 20. 
 
 In mixed woods. Glamis. 
 
 19. B. radicans, P. ; pileus olivaceous-cinereous, then 
 pale yellowish, pulvinate, dry, somewhat tomentose, margin 
 thin, involute ; flesh light yellow, becoming dark azure- 
 blue ; stem attenuato-rooted, even, light yellow, flocculose, 
 with reddish pruina, naked, dark when touched ; tubes 
 aduate ; pores unequal, large, lemon yellow. Opatowsky . 
 Bolet. t. 1. 
 
 In woods. Epping Forest. Taste bitterish. 
 
 20. B. rubinus, Sm. ; pileus 2-3 in., yellow-fuscous, 
 pulvinato-gibbous, then plane, dry, somewhat tomentose, 
 slightly cracked ; flesh vivid yellow, wholly unchangeable ; 
 stem yellow, smeared with crimson, irregular ; tubes some- 
 what decurrent, compound, medium size, wholly carmine. 
 Jour. Bot. 1868, /. 75, /. 1-4. 
 
 Under trees. Caddington, Dunstable, Epping Forest. 
 In mixed woods. 
 
 c. SuBPRUiNOSi. — Tubes adnate to stem, i/elloioish ; stem equal, 
 even, not bulbous or reticulated ; pileus smooth or pruinose. 
 
 21. B. versicolor, Rostk. ; pileus convex, then plane, dry, 
 even, smooth, or pulverulent, blood-red ; flesh yellow ; stem 
 solid, firm, smooth, more or less equal, base yellow; tubes 
 rounded behind, adnate, yellow ; pores large, angular. 
 Rostk. t. 10. 
 
 In beech woods. Epping Forest. 
 
 22. B. pruinatus, Fr. ; pileus 2 in, purplish bay-brown, 
 umber-pruinose, convex, then plane, rigid, dry ; flesh white, 
 obsoletely green or azure-bluish; stem firm, somewhat 
 veutricose, even, smooth, variegated yellow and reddish ; 
 
POLYPOREI. 277 
 
 tubes adnate, light yellow; pores minute, round. Bull, 
 t. 393, /. B.C. 
 
 On grassy ground. Kew. 
 
 23. B. parasiticus, Bull. (p. 231) ; 1-2 in. Epping 
 Forest. 
 
 D. Calopodes. — ^item stout., at first hulhous, in typical species 
 reticulated inith veins ; tubes adimte ; p>ores not reddish. 
 
 2 Jr. B. variecolor, 7^. and Br.; pileus olivaceous, convex, 
 somewhat tomentose, margin involute ; flesh dark purple 
 under the cuticle ; stem bulbous, attenuated upwards, reti- 
 culated at apex, yellowish downwards, rufescent and deli- 
 cately pubescent upwards ; tubes minute, free, yellow. 
 B. and Br. n. 1020, L 13,/. 3. 
 
 In woods, etc. Uncommon. 
 
 25. B. calopus, Fr. (p. 232) ; 4 in. Epping Forest. 
 
 26. B. olivaceus, Schcpff. (p. 233) ; 2-3 in. 
 
 27. B. paehypus, Fr. (p. 233) ; 4-8 in. Epping Forest. 
 
 28. B. eandicans, Fr. ; pileus 4-8 in., leathery, smooth 
 and polished when dry, dirty white, with a faint greenish 
 tinge, margin irregular, somewhat crenate ; stem lemon- 
 white, reticulated, solid ; flesh changing rapidly from white 
 to indigo-blue on exposure to air ; tubes lemon ; orifices 
 uneven and irregular. S. and Sm. Myc. 111. t. 17. 
 
 In open spaces among grass. Epping Forest. 
 
 E. Edules. — Tubes not reddish at orifice, rounded and 
 
 aboiit stem, somewhat free ; stem stout, bulbous, not [except in 
 B. edulis) reticulated, or dotted vnth small scales or red colour ; 
 fiesh scarcely changing colour ; taste jileasant. 
 
 29. B. edulis, Bull. (p. 234) ; 3-6 in. Epping Forest. 
 
 30. B. sereus. Bull. ; pileus small, olivaceous-fuscous 
 somewhat blackish, pulvinate, smooth, somewhat pelliculose ; 
 
^iyb OUTILXES OF r.iaTISH rUXGOLOGY. 
 
 flesh whitCj becomiog yellow ou exposure to air; stem stout, 
 somewhat reticulated, yello^vish, fuscous at base; tubes 
 minute, somewhat free, sulphur-yellow. Bull. t. 321.; -oar, 
 t. 385. Kromb. t. 36/. 1.7. Quel t. 16, /. 2. Rost, t. 15. 
 la woods. Surrey. 
 
 31. B. fragrans, Vitt. ; pileus fuscous-uraber, pulvinate, 
 repand, somewhat tomentose, margin inflexed ; flesh yellow, 
 unchangeable, or becoming green or azure-blue, at length 
 becoming red ; stem stout, at first ovato-bulbous, often 
 fusiform at the base, even, variegated yellowish and red ; 
 tubes half free ; pores minute, round, yellow, becoming 
 green. — Vitt., t. 19; Ventvr., t. 33,/. 3-5; Kromb., t. 75, 
 
 / 15-21. 
 
 In woods, under oak, etc. 
 
 32. B. impolitus, Fr. (p. 234) ; 4 in. Epping Forest. 
 
 33. B. aestivalis, Fr. (p. 234) ; 6-8 in. Epping Forest. 
 
 F. LuiUDi. — Tubes rounded toioards stem, free ; jwres atjirst closed, 
 red; jnleus compact, then softjpidvhiate; fleshy, ^ulcy, changing 
 colour; stem stout, at first curt, bulb-shaped, then elongated 
 and nearly equal, someiohat reticulated or dotted. Groioing 
 chiefly in deciduous woods. Said to be poisonous. 
 
 34. B. satanas, Len;::. (p. 233) ; 4-8 in. Epping Forest. 
 
 35. B. luridus, Scha'Jf. (p. 233) ; 4-8 in. Epping Forest. 
 
 36. B. erythropus, F. (p. 233). Epping Forest. 
 
 37. B. purpureas, Fr. (p. 231). Epping Forest. 
 
 Series ii. TEPniioLEUCi.— 7'»/>es at first white or grey. 
 
 (;. Favosi. — Tubes large, angidar, unequal, adnate to stem, often 
 shortened, around it, uotfornung a rovndedly-free stratum. 
 
 38. B. laricinus, B. (p. 230) ; 2-3 in. Epping Forest. 
 
 39. B. viscidus, L. (p. 235). 
 
POLYPOREI. ^/y 
 
 H. Yersipelles. — Tubes minute, round, equal, crowded together 
 in a convex stratum ivhich is free Jrom the stem ; spores ferrv^ 
 ginous. 
 
 40. B. versipellis, Fr. (p. 235) ; 2-5 in. Epping 
 Forest. 
 
 41. B. scaber, Fr. (p. 235); 2-7 in. Epping Forest. 
 
 42. B. duriusculus, Kalckb. ; pileus 2—5 in.^ globose 
 then hemispherical, soft, smooth, viscid when moist, whitish 
 tawny then dirty chestnut colour or olivaceous ; flesh white, 
 becoming coppery-red, passing into greyish-violet ou expo- 
 sure to air ; stem attenuated at base, ventricose, whitish, 
 normally densely punctate with delicate umber squamules ; 
 tubes free, elongated, thin, livid, becoming tawny; pores 
 white, at length same colour. 
 
 In woods. Epping Forest. Said to be " edible and 
 delicious." 
 
 43. B. cruentatus, Vent. ; pileus 3 in., convex, rather 
 velvety, then plane, smooth, at length rugulose, gilvous ; 
 stem thick, rather bulbous, attenuated downwards into a 
 rooting base, and upwards into pileus ; flesh yellowish, 
 turning blood red, especially near top of stem when cut ; 
 pileus stained red where touched or bruised ; tubes adnata ; 
 pores small, simple, yellow. — Vent. Mic. t. 4i^, f. 3—4. 
 
 Under beech. Kew. Odour foetid. 
 
 I. Hyperpodii. — Tubes adiuite to stem, lohitish ; spores rosy 
 then irhite fiesh-colour. 
 
 44. B. felleus, Bull. (p. 236) ; 3-4 in. Epping Forest. 
 
 45. B. alutarius, Fr. (p. 235). 
 
280 OUTLINES OF BRITISH FUXGOLOGY. 
 
 K Cariosi. — Stem externally never reticulated, internally stuffed 
 with a spomjy pith, at length commonly holloio ; tubes at first 
 v^hite, then often light yellowish ; j^ores minnte, round ; spores 
 white. 
 
 46. B. cyanescens, Bull. (p. 236) ; 2-5 in. 
 
 47. B. castaneus, Bull. (p. 236) ; 2-3 in. Epping Forest. 
 
 48. B. fulvidus, Fr. ; pileus convexo-plane, rigid as well 
 as the stem, which is stuffed, then hollow, equal, firm, even, 
 smooth, shining, growing dusky ; flesh white, then yel- 
 lowish ; tubes free, elongated ; pores white, then lemon- 
 yellow. — Rostk. t. 45. 
 
 Under trees. Kew. 
 
 Subgenus i. Gyrodon, Opat. — Pores sinuous or gyroso-plicate ; 
 tubes very short, slightly ad?iate to hymenoj>hore. 
 
 No British species recorded. 
 
 Subgenus ii. Boletinus, Kalch. — Hymenophore not even, hut with 
 projecting points which descend like a trama between the tubes ; 
 stem anmdate. 
 
 No British species recorded. 
 
 Of uncertain affinity. 
 
 49. B. carnosus, Bostk. ; compact ; pileus fuscous, pul- 
 vinate, smooth ; flesh pallid, dirty yellowish ; stem short, 
 firm, somewhat striate, rufesceut, light yellow ; tubes ad- 
 nate, depressed round stem, dark yellow ; pores rather 
 large, angular, same colour. — Rostk. t. 14, 
 
 In woods. Stoke Poges. 
 
 Genus 22. STROBILOMYCES B. (p. 236.) 
 1. S. strobilaceus, B. ; 2—1 in. 
 
 Genus 23. FISTULINA (p. 2:^7 .) 
 1. P. hepatica, Fr. ; 6-12 in. 
 
POLYl'ORFJ. 281 
 
 Genus 24. POLYPORUS (p. 237.) 
 
 I. Mesopus. — Pileus entire or excentric ; stem distinct, vertical, 
 simple, same colour at base, not definitely blackish. 
 
 A. Carnosi. — P ileus fleshy, Jr agile or pliant, not coriaceous, 
 zoneless ; lohite spored ; growing on the grouiul ; autumnal. 
 
 * Pileus unpolished, scaly or floccose. 
 
 1. P. leucomelas, Fr.; pileus 2-3 in., fuliginous, fleshy, 
 somewhat fragile, irregular, slightly silky squamulose ; flesh 
 white, reddish when broken ; stem stout, equal or unequal, 
 somewhat tomentose, sometimes tuberous and becoming 
 black internally, same colour as pileus ; pores rather large, 
 unequal, cinereous whitish. 
 
 In fir wood. Rothiemurchus. 
 
 *'* Pileus ptolished, very smooth. 
 No British species recorded. 
 
 B. Lbnti. — Pileus jlesJiy-pliant tlien coriaceous, zoneless ; white- 
 spored ; growing on trunks ; persistent. 
 
 * Pileus unpolished, scaly or villous. 
 
 2. P. lentus, Berk. (p. 237) ; li in. 
 
 3. P. brumalis, Berk. (p. 237) ; 1-4 in. 
 
 ** Pileus even, smooth. 
 
 4. P. fuscidulus, Fr. (p. 237) ; 1-2 in. 
 
 5. P. leptocephalus, Fr. (p. 237) ; 1 in. 
 
 c. Spongiosi. — Pileus at first spongy-soft, absorbing water, tomen- 
 tose, then corky or coriaceous; stem curt, irregular; pores 
 irregidar, pruinose, changing colour ; spores lohite ; generally 
 terrestrial ; mostly rare. 
 
 6. P. Schweinitzii, Fr. (p. 238) ; 8 in. Epping Forest. 
 
 7. P. rufescens, Fr. (p. 238) ; 2-4 in. Epping Forest. 
 
282 OUTLINES OF BKITISII FUNGOLOCxV. 
 
 D. SuBCORiACEi. — Pilevs at first indurated, arid, then corky or 
 coriaceous ; stem definite ; jiwes at first sprinkled with a white 
 bloom; substance ferruginous ; groicing on the ground or on 
 trunks ; more rigid than the Spongiosi ; more regular and 
 2Jersistent ; not reviving. 
 
 * Pileus tomentose, velveti/. 
 
 8. P. perennis, Fr. ; 1^-3 iu. Eppin^ Forest. 
 
 ** PiUus very smooth. 
 No British species recorded. 
 
 II. Pleuropus. — Pileus 2>li(^iii or corky, horizontal, not circular ; 
 istem simple, ascending, corticate, either definitely lateral or 
 excentric, always black at base ; growing on ivood. 
 
 A. Lenti. — Pileus fieshy-pliant ; stem excentric, blackish at base : 
 tubes short; sid)stance 2')cdlid, somewhat fibro}'s. 
 
 * Pileus scaly orfioccose. 
 
 9. P. squamosus, Fr. (p. 238) ; 3-16 in. Epping Forest. 
 
 10. P. Michelii. Fr. ; pileus 2-3 in., yellowish-white, 
 fleshy-pliant, depressed, repand, slightly silky, some- 
 what squamulose ; stem somewhat lateral, bulbous, rough, 
 white, becoming fuscous at base ; pores large, somewhat 
 round-oblong, entire, white.— Rostk. t. 1 ; Mich. t. 61,/. 2. 
 
 On stumps. Penzance. 
 
 11. P. melanopus, Fr. ; pileus 2-3 in., white, then 
 yellowish-fuscous, fleshy-pliant, plane, then infundibuliform, 
 at flrst delicately flocculose, then smooth ; flesh thick, 
 white, soft, not becoming woody ; stem excentric, some- 
 what velvety, incurved, thickened downwards, black ; pores 
 decurreut, curt, minute, obtuse, unequal, white. Rostk. 
 t. 4. 
 
 On dead wood and roots. Uncommon. 
 
POLYl'OiiEI. 283 
 
 ** Pileus even, very smooth. 
 
 l:l. p. Rostkovii, Fr. (p. 238) ; 6 in. 
 
 13. P. picipes, Fr. (p. 238); 6 iu. 
 
 14. P. varius, Fr. (p. 238) ; i— 4 in. Epping Forest. 
 
 15. P. elegans, Fr. (p. 238) ; 2-4 in. Epping Forest. 
 Var. uummularius, Fr. ; pileus 1 in., smaller, thinner, 
 
 somewhat regular ; stem equal, excentric. 
 On trunks. 
 
 16. P. petaloides, Fr. ; pileus chestnut-fuscous, some- 
 what membranaceous, spathulate, rugose, smooth, zoneless, 
 flaccid when moist ; stem lateral, compressed, smooth, not 
 rooting, whitish, adnate at the dilated shield-like base ; 
 pores decurrent, short, small, white. 
 
 On old stumps. Sibbertoft. 
 
 B. SuBEROSi-LiGNOsi. — PUeus thick, hard, zoneless ; stem stout, 
 vertical, same colour at base ; pores elongated. 
 
 \7. P. lueidus, Fr. (p. 240); 2-6 in. Epping Forest. 
 
 III. 3iERiSMA. — Many pileoli proceeding frmn a common trunk or 
 tubercle, arising from subdivision of primary pileus; the 
 largest of all fungi. 
 
 A. Carnosi. — Pileus fleshy, firm, floccoso- fibrous, zoneless, not 
 coriaceo-indurated ; tufts central, sti2ntate, sjrringing from a 
 common base ; in slender forms resembling a central, simple, 
 lobed pileus ; pores separating from pileus; white spored ; 
 2)«'rtially grouping on the ground; all said to be edible. 
 
 18. P. umbellatus, Fr. ; very much branched, fibrous- 
 fleshy, toughish ; pileoli very numerous, ^-1^ in., fuligi- 
 nous, rufous or pallid light-yellow, entire, umbilicate; 
 stems elongated, separate, united at base, white; pores 
 minute, white. — Kromb. t. 52, /. 3-9; Lenz. f. 44; Trat- 
 
284 OUTLINES OF BKITISII FUNGOLOGY. 
 
 ten. t. T. ; Quel. t. 18, /. 1 ; Schteff. t. III., 265, 266 
 Jacq. Austr. t. 172; FI. Dan. t. 1197. 
 Ou stump. Epping Forest. 
 
 19. P. frondosus, Fr. ; tufts 6-12 in.; very much 
 branched, fibrous-fleshy, toughish; pileoli very numerous, 
 h—2 in., fuliginous-grey, dimidiate, rugose, lobed, intricately 
 recurved ; flesh white ; stems growing into each other, 
 white ; pores rather tender, very small, acute, white. — Sv. 
 dtl. Sv. t. 44; Kromh. t. 48, /. 17-20; Rostk. ^.18; Fl. 
 Dan. t. 952 ; Paul. t. 29 ; Sterb. t. 28. 
 
 On stumps and roots. Rare. 
 
 20. P. intybaceus, Fr. (p. 240) ; Epping Forest. 
 
 21. P. cristatus, Fr. (p. 240) ; pileoli 3 in. 
 
 B. J^^T^TH.—Pileus Jleshy-pliant, then someivhat coriaceoiis, more or 
 less zoned, fibrous loithin ; 2J0i'es achiate ; tufts lateral, some- 
 u'hat stijiitate, in many imbricated layers ; stems moi'e or less 
 connate, or cjr owing from a common tuber ; tvhite spored ; not 
 edible ; fragile when old ; autumnal and not lasting till foUov:- 
 ing spring ; growing at the base of trunks. 
 
 22. P. giganteus, Fr. (p. 240) ; tufts 1-2 ft. Epping 
 Forest. 
 
 23. P. acanthoides, Fr. ; in many imbricated layers, 
 pliant then coriaceous ; pileoli ferruginous, infundibuliform, 
 inciso-dimidiate, somewhat zoned, longitudinally rugose ; 
 stems connecto-branched, white then rufescent ; pores lamel- 
 loso-sinuate, thin, toothed at edge, white then rufescent. — 
 Bull. t. 486 ; Pers. Ic. Pict. t. 6. 
 
 On trunks. Penzance. 
 
POLYPOREI. 285 
 
 c. Caseosi. — PiUus cheesy, at first soft andjaicy, then arid fragile, 
 without a pellicle, zoneless ; jjores separating ; tufts sessile on 
 stems of trees, commonly dimidiate, but in a hm^izontal sitiudion 
 expanded on all sides, central, at first evolved from a shapeless 
 tubercle into numerous pileoli ; acid ; growing in spring and 
 summer, soon decaying, 
 
 24. P. stilphureus, Fr. (p. 124) ; 1-2 ft. ; pilei 8 in. 
 Epping Forest. 
 
 25. P. imbricatus, Fr.; in many csespitose layers, fibrous- 
 cheesy, at length pale and dividing ; pileoli imbricated, 
 lobed, opaque, yellowish-tawny, margin pallid, slightly 
 zoned ; pores small, round, pallid dingy-yellow. — Bull. 6, 
 418. 
 
 On trunks. Rare. Epping Forest. 
 
 26. P. Herbergii, Roslk. ; ceespitose, rather corky ; pileoli 
 imbricated, bright bay, sulphury about margin ; pores laby- 
 rinthiform, unequal, torn and toothed, pale cinereous. — 
 Rostk. xxix. t. 18. 
 
 On trunks. Edinburgh Fungus Show. 
 
 27. P. alligatus, Fr. (p. 241). 
 
 D. SuBEROsi. — Pileus corky or coriaceous, persistent, tough, substance 
 floccose, somewhat soft, suitable for tiruler ; p>ores adnate ; tufts 
 someichat sessile, lateral or central, according to situation; 
 pileoli drawn together, free at base, not effused ; on trunks 
 close to the ground; not edible. 
 
 28. P. heteroelitus, Fr. (p. 241). 
 
 29. P. salignus, Fr. (p. 241). 
 
386 OUTLINES OF mUTISH FUKGOLOGY. 
 
 IV. Apus. — Stemless ; pileus sessile, normally adnate hy a thickened 
 dilated base, dimidiate, or entire and attached behind, 
 commonly by a,n ximbo, more rarely attenuated and sessile, 
 moi'e frequently toholly resiqnnate ; (jroimnrj on u'ood ; very 
 abundant, irith an endless variety of forms. 
 
 A. Anodermei. — Pileus loithout a cuticle, surface broken up into 
 Jlocci or fibres, zoneless, but transversely zoned within, or more 
 m' less fibrous. 
 
 1. (Jarnosi. — Pileus checf^y, at first watery-soft, Jrayile, fioccidose, 
 not bristly-hispid ; pores white ; v)hen fully grown soft or hard, ; 
 soon putrifying, not lasting through the vnnter. 
 
 * EuPOLYPOREi. — Pores round, entire, obtuse, without small 
 teeth. 
 
 30. P. epileucus, Fr. ; pileus 3—4 in., whitish internally 
 and externally, semi-orbicular, concave beneath, cheesy, 
 soft, then firm, pulvinate, villous-rugged, not zoned ; pores 
 minute, round, entire, white. — Fl. Dan. t. 1791. 
 
 On stumps, chiefly fir and elm. Rare. 
 
 31. P. alutaceus, Fr.; somewhat imbricated; pileus 
 ] in., tan colour, fleshy, at. length tough, reniform-dilated, 
 somewhat velvety, sometimes hairy and rugose, obsoletely 
 zoned within, margin acute, even ; pores very small, thin, 
 somewhat round, whitish-tan. — Bostk. t. 30. 
 
 On decayed pine stiimps. Glamis, 
 
 32. P. pallascens, Fr. (p. 244) ; 2 iu. 
 
 33. P. chioneus, Fr. (p. 211) ; 1 in. Epping Forest. 
 
 34. P. cerebrinus, B. and Br. ; pileus 1 in., white, pul- 
 vinate, delicately tomentose, becoming smooth, margin cre- 
 nate ; pores rounded, entire, dissepiments thick, obtuse. 
 
 On fir. Glamis. Looks like a portion of Avhite brain. 
 
POLYPOREI, 287 
 
 ** Pores elonyated,jiexuous, acute, torn ; not becoming hard. 
 
 35. P. lacteus, i^>\ ; shining white; pileus fleshy-fibrous, 
 fragile, triangular, pubescent, at length smooth, zoneless 
 externally and internally, margin infiexed, acute ; pores 
 thin, acute, toothed, at length, labyrinthiform, torn. — Fr. 
 Icon. t. 182,/. 1. 
 
 On dead laburnum and birch. Rare. 
 
 36. P. fragilis, Fr. (p. 242). 
 
 37. P. mollis, Fr. ; pileus flesh colour, fleshy-fibrous, 
 soft, not watery, effuso-reflexed, somewhat triangular, 
 rugose, margin acute; pores unequal, elongated, flexuose, 
 soft, white, spotted with red when touched. — Fr. Icon, 
 t. 182, /. 3. 
 
 On dead pine. Slough. 
 
 38. P. csesius, Fr. (p. 242). Epping Forest. 
 
 39. P. trabeus, Rostk. ; white ; pileus fleshy-fibrous, 
 then firm, eft'aso-reflexed, transversely elongated, zoneless, 
 pallid ; pores curt, minute, somewhat round or elongated, 
 toothed, white. — Rostk. t. 28. 
 
 On dead pine. Den of Dun. Menmuir. 
 
 40. P. destructor, Fr. (p. 242). 
 
 Lexti. — Pilei(s jieshy-iMant, tough, soft, elastic, villoso-tomentose 
 substance fibroso-Jloccose ; pores somewhat adnate, coloured, 
 always soft, somewhat flexile, lasting to the folloioing spring. 
 
 * Substance coloured. 
 
 41. P. nidulans, Fr. (p. 242) ; \-\ in. 
 
 42. P. rutilans, Fr. (p. 242). 
 
 43. P. gilvus, Schw. ; pileus pale yellowish, fleshy-pliant, 
 effuso-reflexed, soft, even, becoming smooth, zoneless, mar- 
 gin spreading, thin, acute ; pores very small, naked, entire, 
 
288 OUTLINES OF BKITISH FUNGOLOCiV. 
 
 pale yellowish-ferruginous, opaque. = Sowerby's Boletus 
 impiiber^ t. 195. 
 
 On trunks. Rare. 
 
 ** Substance v-hite. 
 
 44. P. fumosus, Fr. (p. 21-3) ; 2-4 in. 
 
 45. P. adustus, Ft. (p. 243). Eppiug Forest. 
 
 46. P. erispus, Fr. (p. 243). 
 
 47. P. amorphus, Fr. (p. 213). 
 
 48. P. adiposus, Fr. (p. 243). Epping Forest. 
 
 49. P. Keithii, B. and Br. ; \ in. ; shell-shaped, stem- 
 less, decurrent behind; pileus bright red-brown, rough 
 with rigid tooth-shaped processes ; hymenium pallid ; dis- 
 sepiments lacerated. 
 
 On fallen sticks. Dunphail. 
 
 3. Spongiosi. — At first and whilst moist spongi/, when dry firm, 
 elastic, for the most part hristhj -hispid, internally fihroubs ; flesh 
 commonly presenting an intermediate stratum more compact 
 than tlie exterior ; firm ; annual ; autumnal ; finest examples on 
 living trunks. 
 
 * Substance coloured. 
 
 50. P. hispidus, Fr. (p. 213) ; 4-6 in. Epping Forest. 
 
 51. P, cuticularis, i^/-. ; pileus ferruginous-fuscous, then 
 blackish, thin, spongy-fleshy, then juiceless, becoming 
 plane, hairy, tomentose, internally laxly composed of paral- 
 lel fibres, margin fibroso-fimbriate, incurved ; pores minute, 
 long, pallid then ferruginous. — Bull. t. 462. 
 
 On trunks. Epping Forest. Burnham Beeches. 
 
 ** Siibstaiice white. 
 
 52. P. spumous, Fr. ; 3 in. 
 
 53. P. borealis, Fr. ; pileus 2 in., white then yellowish, 
 spongy then corky, compact, somewhat pulvinate, hairy, 
 
P0LYP0i:i:i. 289 
 
 internally composed of parallel fibres, margin spreading ; 
 pores adnate, unequal, sinuoso-flexuous and torn, white. 
 — Rostk. 4, t. 40 ; Schceff. t. 314. 
 
 On stumps. Slough, Balnamoon, Forfarshire. Stra- 
 chau, Kincardineshire. 
 
 B. Placodermei.— /'i'Zeif^ clothed with a continuous zoneless or 
 concentricalbj silicate crust ; persistent. 
 
 4. SuBEEOSi. — Pileus fleshy and jiucy, then hard, covered v:ith a 
 somewhat thin crzist; pores slender, at length somewhat sepa- 
 rating ; autumnal^, sometimes lasting till /ollovnng spring 
 but never producing strata. 
 
 * Substance coloured. 
 
 54. P. dryadeus, Fr. (p. 244) ; 3-7 in. Epping Forest. 
 
 ** Substance white, not zoned. 
 
 55. P. betulinus, Fr. (p. 214) ; 3-6 in. Epping Forest. 
 
 56. P. quercinus, Fr. (p. 239). 
 
 b. FoMEXTARii. — Pileus JloGcose, juiceless, not fiesliy or spongy, 
 covered with a hard, horny crust ; pores at length stratose ; 
 growing on wood ; someivhat pidvinate ; perennial. 
 
 * Substance umher or fuscous. 
 
 57. P. vegetus, Fr. (p. 245). 
 
 ** Substance somewhat Jerraginous. 
 
 58. P. applanatus, Fr. (p. 245). Epping Forest. 
 
 59. P. fomentarius, Fr. (p. 245). Epping Forest. 
 Var. pomaceus, P. The common form on willow ; spores 
 
 dark and ferruginous. 
 
 60. P. nigricans, Fr. (p. 245). 
 
 61. P. igniarius, Fr. (p. 246). Epping Forest. 
 
 T 
 
290 OUTLINES OF BKITISH FUNGOLOGV. 
 
 G2. P. fulvus, Fr. ; pileus tawuy, then boary, woody- 
 corky^ very hard, triangular, even, not concentrically sulcate, 
 at first villous ; pores short, round, minute, cinnamon, at 
 first covered with a cinereous-yellow pruina. — Fr. Icon. 
 A 184,/. 3. 
 
 On decayed trunks. Rare. 
 
 ()'3. P. pectinatus, A7. ; pileus ferruginous-fuscous, corky- 
 woody, hard, triangular, concentrically lamellato-plicate 
 above, tomentoso-scaly ; margin pale yellowish, naked ; 
 pores very small, short, obtuse, pale-yellowish, naked. — 
 Quel. /. 17, /. 5. 
 
 Penzance. 
 
 64. P, conchatus, Fr. (p. 246). 
 
 65. P. ribis, Fr. (p. 246) ; 4 in. 
 
 66. P. salicinus, F. (p. 21'6) ; 12 in. 
 
 *** Si(hstance irliAte or judlid {except P. rosevs). 
 
 67. P. roseus, Fr. ; somewhat cicspitose ; 2-4 in., pileus 
 externally and internally rose-colour, corky-w^oody, hard, 
 triangular, even, somewhat banded, as if sprinkled with cine- 
 reous-blackish powder externally, internally floccoso-fibrous ; 
 pores minute, round, rose-colour. 
 
 On dressed wood in conservatory. Glamis, 
 
 68. P. ulmarius, Fr. (p, 246) ; 3-4 in. 
 
 69. P. cytisinus, Berk, {p, 247) ; 12 in. 
 
 70. P. connatus, Fr. (p. 248) ; 12-24 in. 
 
 C. LiGXOSi. — Pileus from the Jirst, hard, woody, juiceless, covered 
 rvith a thin somewhat lustrous crust, sometimes effused at base ; 
 pores not stratose ; perennial ; flatter than informer group, or 
 cjfnso-reflexed. 
 
 71. P. fraxineus, Fr. (p. 247). Epping Forest. 
 
POLYPOREI. 291 
 
 72. p. variegatus, Seer. (p. 247). 
 
 73. P. carneus, Nees ; pileus flesh colour^ same colour 
 internally, etfuso-reflexed, woody, hard, thin, rugose, smooth, 
 zoneless ; pores minute, round, decurrent at base. — Nees 
 Nov. Act. Cur/OS. xliii. t. 3. 
 
 On old stump. Welshpool. 
 
 P. cervinvis, P. (p. 217) = Tramt'tes tnollis, Fr. 
 
 74. P. annosus, Fr. (p. 247) ; 3-18 in. Epping Forest. 
 
 75. P. populinus, Fr. ; h. in., pileus corky-woody, rigid, 
 zoneless, villous, same colour internally, margin obtuse ; 
 pores minute, short, round. 
 
 On trunks of poplars. Uffington, Lincolnshire. 
 
 (". IxoDERMEi. — Pileus arid,jirm icith a thin fibrous cuticle : 
 annual or biennial, not reviviny. 
 
 7. ^T\5VVOfii.— Pileus flocculose, then smooth or adjrressedfy 
 villous, uneven, zoneless, texture fibrous. 
 
 * Substance coloured. 
 
 76. P. radiatus, Fr. (p. 248) ; 1 in. Epping Forest. 
 
 77. P. polymorphus, Rostk. ; pileus umber, bay-brown - 
 pallid, resupiuate, effused, coriaceus, margin reflexed, crisped, 
 smooth; pores large, angular, torn, pallid. — Rostk. 4 /. 56. 
 
 On fir. Forres. 
 
 78. P. eryptai'um, Fr. ; pileus rufescent-ferruginous, 
 corky-cottony, effuso-reflexed, variable, zoneless, adpressedly 
 ssilky, paler internally ; pores very long, minute, rounds 
 paler than pileus. ^ — Pers. Myc. Eur. 2, t. 16, f. 3 ; Bu/I. 
 t. 478. 
 
 On firs. Frequent. 
 
 ** Substance a-hite. 
 
 79. P. gcssypiniis, Ler. ; pileus coriaceus, effuso-re- 
 
292 OUTLINES OK RIMTISII FUNCOLOOY. 
 
 flexed, theu pale, tomentose, zoueless, white witliiu aud 
 without ; pores at first labyrinthine, theu angular, pallid- 
 cinereous, dissepiments thin, slightly toothed. 
 On old stumps of Ulex. Sibbcrtoft. 
 
 80. P. fibula, Ft. (p. 218). Eppiiig Forest. 
 
 8. CoiiiACEl. — PiUus coriaceous, villous; banded vith concentric 
 zones, r/eneraUij of di^ffereut coloi(rs. 
 
 81. P. hirsutus, Fr. : pileus unicolorous, zoned with 
 concentric furrows, whitish, corky-coriaceous, conve.xo- 
 plane, shaggy with rigid hairs ; pores round, obtuse, whitish, 
 becoming somewhat fuscous. 
 
 On dead trunks. Near Twycross. 
 
 82. P. velutinus, Fr. (p. 218) ; 2 in. 
 
 83. P. versicolor, Fr. (p. 218) ; 2-3 in. Epping Forest. 
 84.. P. abietinus, Fr. (p. 219); 1-2 in. 
 
 85. P. Wynnei, B. and Br. (p. 219). 
 
 y. Resupixati. — Pileiis none; resiqnnate ; pores seated on the wood// 
 matrix or on a stratum of mycelium ; in a Icorizonlal position 
 the pores are vertical, in a vertical jjosition, oblique or fjajyintj. 
 
 * Pores fuscous or blackis/i. 
 No British species recorded. 
 
 * Pores ferrwjinous or cinnamon. 
 
 8G. P. umbrinus, T^r. ; rufous-umber, determinate, uii- 
 dulato-tubercular, defined by a smooth, paler margin ; pores 
 minute, somewhat round, unequal, same colour as pileus. 
 
 On trunks. Knowle Park. 
 
 87. P. ferruginosus, Fr. (p. 219) ; 1 in. 
 
 88. P. contiguus, Fr. (p. 249) ; 3 iu. 
 
I'OLYPOKEI, 293 
 
 ■** I\yres purple or violaceous. 
 
 89. P. violaceus, Fr. ; violaceous, eft'used, determinate, 
 thin, short, even, smooth, closely adnate, destitute of a dis- 
 tinct subiculum ; pores short, cellular or veined, entire. — 
 Rostk. 27, t. 3, 
 
 On fir poles and stumps. Frequent. 
 
 90. P. purpureus, Fr. (p. 250; 4-12 in. 
 
 *** Pores red. 
 
 91. P. inearnatus, Fr. (p. 250) ; 1 in. 
 
 92. P. rufus, Fr. , blood-red-rufous, effused, coriaceous, 
 thin, adnate even, smooth, determinate ; pores very small^ 
 thin, acute. 
 
 On broom. Strachan, Kincardineshire. 
 
 93. P. rhodellus, Fr. ; white-flesh-colour, 2 in., thin, ad- 
 nate, soft, margin determinate, naked ; pores minute, some- 
 what round, continuous. — Fr. Icon. t. 189,/. 2 ; Bull. t. 442, 
 ./".D. 
 
 In Scotch fir wood. Glamis. 
 
 94. P. micans, Fr. ; whitish flesh colour, effused, some- 
 what orbicular, confluent, fugacious, thin, adnate, soft, cir- 
 cumference flaxy, white ; pores very thin, resembling honey- 
 comb, angular, somewhat crenate. 
 
 On dead ash wood. Leigh Wood, Bristol. Altyre. 
 
 -:■;•:::-»* Pores i/elloicish. 
 
 95. p. nitidus, Fr. (p. 250). 
 
 96. P. Lsestadii, Fr. and B. ; yellow ; substance white, 
 hymenium here and there tubercular, forming confluent 
 patches ; pores bright lemon yellow. 
 
 Under side of deal board in hot house. Coed Coch. 
 
 97. P. bombicynus, Fr. !p. 250). 
 
 98. P. aneirinus, HommerJ (p. 252). 
 
294 OUTLINES OF r.lMTlSII IL'NOOI.OOY. 
 
 99. P. ramentaceus, B. nnil lh\ : somewhat orbicular ; 
 subiculum white, tomeutose, margin obsolete ; pores honey- 
 colour, large, .'tt in. across, somewhat hexagonal, dissepi- 
 ments thin, slightly rigid, acute. 
 
 On Scotch fir, Glamis. 
 
 ****** Pores white, ihen chaixjinij colour. 
 
 100. p. cinctus, B. (p. 250) . 
 
 101. P. armeniaeus, B. (p. 250). 
 
 102. P. Rennyi, B. and Br. ; subiculum thick, pulvinate, 
 pulverulent, forming a thick, at first somewhat frothy, then 
 pulverulent mass, white, lemon-colour when dry ; pores 
 sparingly produced, white, elongated, dissepiments thin. 
 
 On Scotch fir and on the ground. Hereford. Glamis. 
 
 103. P. subfusco-jaavidus, Rostk. ; white, then light 
 yellow-fuscous, broadly effused, confluent, thin, coriaceous, 
 arid, adnate, margin thin, white-flax}-, determinate ; pores 
 minute, irregular. — Rostk.27, f. 11. 
 
 On old planks. Roof of King's Cliffe Church. 
 
 104. P. viridans, B. : white, when dry pallid green, 
 effused, crustaceo-adnate, thin, margin pulverulento-tomen- 
 tose ; pores minute, angular, dissepiments thin. 
 
 On rotten wood. Rare. 
 
 105. P. terrestris, Fr. (p. 252). 
 
 106. P. subgelatinosus, B. and Br. : orbicular, forming 
 little pulvinate masses with an obtuse raised border, which 
 is at first tomentose and pallid, becoming black, of a some- 
 what gelatinous consistence ; pores pale, delicate grey, with 
 an acute edge, about ,'„ in. diameter. 
 
 On dead wood, parasitic on P. amorp/ii/s. Rannoch. 
 
I'OLVPOIiEl. 29^ 
 
 ******* Pores 'persistently icltite, unequal, (dujidar, dose 
 to one another, commonly rather large. 
 
 107. P. medulla-panis, Fr. (p. 20!). Epping Forest. 
 
 108. P. mueidus, Fr. : white, then pale, eft'used, rather 
 thick, somewhat immersed, soft, the intermediate circumfer- 
 ence flaxy ; pores medium-sized, seated on the crust formed 
 of tie mycelium, unequal, torn. 
 
 On decayed fir. Penzance. 
 
 109. P. vitreiis (p. 251). 
 
 110. P. obduceiis, Pers. (p. 251). 
 
 111. P. callosiis, Fr. ; wholly white; widely effused, 
 e"'en, tough, entire, separable like soft leather ; pores seated 
 01 a thin skin, firm, round, equal, entire. 
 
 On dead wood ; annual. Glamis. 
 
 112. P. vulgaris, i^r. (p. 251). Epping Forest. 
 
 113. P. moUuseiis, Fr. (p. .2-51). 
 
 11 1. P. collabefactus, B and Br. ; stratum smooth, re- 
 Simbling a Corticium ; pores seeming to at first arise from 
 tie mere collapsing of the substance, short, margin obtuse. 
 
 On dead wood. Glamis. 
 
 ****** Pores persistently ichite, unequal, angular, close 
 to one another, commonly rather large. 
 
 115. P. sanguinolentus, Fr. : whitish, bleeding when 
 touched, nodulose, soon confluent, effused, soft, flaxy cii- 
 cumference vanishing ; pores small, somewhat round, change- 
 able in form, unequal, at length torn. 
 
 On dead branches. LTncommou. 
 
 116. P. radula, Fr. ; white, eftused, made up of the naked 
 tomentose mycelium, closely compacted, soft, villous be- 
 neath; pores medium size, angular, toothed, pubescent when 
 young. 
 
296 OUTLINES OV liltlTJSIl FUNGOLOGY. 
 
 ()u fir. Strachan, Kincardineshire. 
 
 117. P. vaporarius, Fr. (p. 252). Epping Forest. 
 ror. secernibus, i?. nnd Br.; sinning white, honey-colour 
 
 when dry, separable. 
 
 On fir leaves, under moss. 
 
 118. P. G-ordoniensis, ]i. and Br.; persistently shining 
 white ; eflfused, superficial, membranaceous, very thin, separ- 
 able, margin shortly fringed ; pores minute, unequal, angular, 
 dissepiments very thin, fimbriato-toothed. 
 
 On fir poles. Aboyne. I 
 
 P. Stephensii, Fr. (p. :2o2) = Trainetes serpens. 
 
 119. P. Vaillantii, Fr. (p. 252). 
 
 120. P. farinellus, Fr. ; fugacious to the touch ; white; 
 widely effused, thin, mycelium naked, flocculoso -pulverulent 
 not woven ; pores thin, continuous, unequal, somewha 
 liexuous, intricate. , 
 
 On beech. Aboyne. 
 
 121. P. hymenocystis, B. and Br. ; white, arachnoid 
 beneath and at margin ; pores large, the scarious dissepi- 
 ments collapsing, at length pallid. 
 
 On dead wood. Glamis. > 
 
 •:)?*****• Pqi-cs T'hite, snperficud, distant, puncti form. ' 
 
 122. P. blepharistoma, B. and Br.; white, mycelium 
 arachnoid, somewhat mealy ; pores small, dissepiments thin, 
 margin ciliato-dentate. 
 
 On dead wood. Glamis. 
 
 123. P. corticola, iv'. ; efluscd, equal, firm, white, pallid ; 
 pores naked, superficial, punctiform, sometimes obsolete. 
 
 On a vine stem in greenhouse. Dunstable. 
 
 124. P. retieulatus, 7<r.; white; orbicular, thin, fugacious, 
 
I'OLYPOEEI. 297 
 
 radiating like flax at the floccose margin ; pores distant, cup- 
 shaped. — Fr. Icon. t. 190,/. 3. 
 
 On rotten wood. Glamis. Forres. 
 
 t Species of uncertain affinity. 
 
 125, P. bathyporus, Rosik. : effused; white; stratose ; 
 circumference thin, flaxy ; stratum of second season fuscous- 
 ferruginous ; pores rather large, cyathiform, toothed. Rostk. 
 iv. /. 59. 
 
 On dead oak branches. 
 
 126. P. hybridus, 7i, and Br. ; white ; mycelium thick, 
 forming a dense membrane or creeping branched strings ; 
 hymenium breaking up into arese ; pores long, slender, 
 minute. — Sou-, t. 289, /, 387, /. 6. Outlines, Addenda, 
 p. xvii. 
 
 On oak in ships, etc. The " dry-rot '' of oak-built 
 vessels , perhaps, according to Fries, a monstrous form of 
 P. destructor. 
 
 Genus .25. TRAMETES (p. 252). 
 
 I. Apodes. — Stemless ; pileus dimidiate, sessile. 
 
 •^ Substance coloured. 
 
 1. T. pini, Fr. (p. 253). 
 
 *"* Substance ic/tite. 
 
 2. T. gibbosa, 7''/-. (p. 253). Epping Forest. 
 
 3. T. Bulliardi, Fr. ; pileus white, becoming fuscous 
 externally and internally, at length zoned ; corky ; becoming 
 plane, even, smooth ; pores somewhat round, deep, unequal, 
 pallid, then rufescent. — Bnll, olO. 
 
 On dead wood. Bathampton. Glamis. Fragrant. 
 
298 OUTLINES OF lUMTisii Frxcor.oov. 
 
 4. T. suaveolens, Fr. (p. 25o) . 
 
 5. T. odora, Fr. (p. 253). 
 
 6. T. inodora, Fr. ; shining white ; pileus corky, firm, 
 becoming smooth, zoneless ; pores minute, round, entire, not 
 changing colour. — Fr. Icon. t. V.)\, fig. 7. 
 
 On old mossy beech stump. Stoke Poges. Scentless. 
 
 II. Resupinati. — I' ileus resupinate. 
 
 7. T. mollis, Fr. ; resupinatc, determinate, somewhat 
 membranaceous, pallid-wood-colour, at length fuscous, be- 
 coming black, umber at margin, which is at length revolute 
 and pubescent beneath; pores large, unequal, torn.= 
 Polyporus cervinus, p. 217. 
 
 On wood, especially beech. Epping Forest. 
 
 8. T. Terrei, B. and Br. ; 3 in., resupiuate, broad, some- 
 what orbicular, zoneless, pulvinatc ; substance corky and 
 and white; pores angular, here and there sinuate. 
 
 On beech. Stoke Poges. 
 
 9. T. serpens, Fr. = Po/!/poriis Stevensii, p. 2.")2. 
 
 Genus 26. D^DALEA (p. 2oi). 
 
 * Corky-iooodij, dimidiate, sessile. 
 
 1. D. quercina, P. (p. 254). Epping Forest. 
 
 2. D. aurea, F;'. ; 2 in.; golden; imbricated; pileus trian- 
 gular, corky coriaceous, gibbous, velvety, somewhat zoned, 
 margin swollen, unicolorous, internally light yellow, the 
 porous, narrowly sinuato-labyrinthine hymenium same 
 colour; veins for the most part radiating. — liatL t. 35, 
 
 /. F. 
 
 On dead oak. Hereford. 
 
 3. D. confragosa, P. (p. 251). I"]pping Forest. 
 
POLYI'OREI. 299 
 
 4. D. cinerea, Fr. ; H-S in.; perennial; stratose ; pileus 
 cinereous^ corky-woody, thick, somewhat undulated, zoned, 
 tomentose ; pores minute, obtuse, entire, some round, others 
 very long, labyrinthiform, flexuous, intricate, white, or ciner- 
 eous. — Fr. Icon. 1. 182,/. 2. 
 
 On trunks. Penzance. 
 
 ** Coriaceous, dimidiate, sessile. 
 
 5. D. unicolor, Fr. (p. 254). Epping Forest. 
 
 *** Eesujnnate. 
 
 6. D. latissima, Fr. (p. 54.). 
 
 7. D. vermieularis, P. ; 4-6 in., flesh-colour-refu;icent ; 
 broadly effused, thin, becoming even ; sinuses short, atten- 
 uated at both ends, flexuous, poriform at margin, adhering 
 to soil by root-like fibres. — Sow. t. 424. 
 
 On the ground. 
 
 t Of uncertain affinity. 
 
 8. D. ferruginea, Schiim. ; imbricato-connate ; pileus 
 light-yellow-ferruginous, white-villous when young and at 
 margin ; internally flesh-colour, coriaceous, efl'uso-reflexed, 
 zored; hymenium porous, narrowly labyrinthiform, wavy. 
 — Fl. Dan. t. 2029. 
 
 On dead wood. Strachan, Kincardineshire. 
 
 Genus 27. HEXAGONIA. Poll. PI. nov. (p. 35). 
 
 Hymenophore descending and foi-ming a trama of same colour 
 and similar with pileus ; pores from the first dilated into 
 hexagonal, regular, woody-hard alveoli, the dividing walls 
 firm, never torn ; dimidiate ; sessile ; growing on wood ; 
 corky-woody ; persistent ; not forming strata. 
 
 No British examples recorded. 
 
300 OUTLINES OF BRITISH FUNGOLOGY. 
 
 Genus 28. FAVOLUS. Fr. 
 
 Hymenium reticulato-cellular or alveolate ; alveoli ladiating, 
 formed of the densely anastomosing gills ; elongated, dimi- 
 diate, soinewliat stipitate ; fleshy, pliant ; annual ; growing 
 on wood ; spoi-es white. 
 
 No Britisli examples recorded. 
 
 Gknus 2U. MERULIUS (p. 254). 
 
 I. Leptospohi. — Ilymeniuni naked, or obsoletehj pruinose. 
 •■•" Piletis effuso-reflexed, circumference determinate. 
 
 1. M. tremellosus, Schrad. (p. 255). Eppiag Forest. 
 
 2. M. aiirantiacus, Klotsch. (p. 256); 1 in. 
 
 3. M. cerium, Fr. (p. 255) ; 2-3 in. Eppiug Foi'est. 
 
 ^* Jlesvj)iitaiv-e^(j'iised,JJ<.ixt/-inem.hranaceoris, separating, flaxy 
 beneath andj at circumference. 
 
 4. M. laeticolor, B. and Br. ; bright orange ; effused, 
 adnata ; margin tomentose^ white ; hymeuium even, then 
 plicato- rugose ; folds distant. 
 
 On sawdust and leaves. King's Lynn. 
 
 5. M. himantioides, Fr. ; lilac ; effused, silky, very soft, 
 fiibrous-silky beneath, circumference flaxy ; folds porous, 
 then gyrose, dingy yellow, then somewhat olivaceous. — Fr. 
 Icon, t. 193,/ 1 ; Pars. Myc. Em: t. 14,/. 3. 
 
 On fir wood and club mosses. Hare. 
 
 6. M. molluscus, Fr. (p. 255). 
 
 ■*** Crustoso-adiiate, ciroi inference somewhat flaxy . 
 
 7. M. porinoides, Fr. (p. 255). 
 «. M. rufus, P. (p. 255). 
 
 9. M. serpens, Tode (p. 255). 
 
POLYPOREI. 301 
 
 10. M. pallens, B. (p. 255). 
 
 11. M. Carmichaelianus, B. (p. 256). 
 
 II. CoNioPHORA. — Ilymeniuiii jyulveruleni vjith the ferruginous 
 
 12. M. lacrymans, Fr. (p. 25G). 
 
 Var. pulverulentus, Fr. ; very broac", membranaceous, 
 becoming even, zoned, arid, spider-web-velvety beneath, 
 gradually decaying from centre to circumference ; folds 
 marginal, somewhat reticulated, tawny. 
 
 Strachan, Kincardineshire. 
 
 Genus 30. POROTHELIUM (p. 2oG). 
 
 1. P. Priesii, Mont. (p. 257). 
 
 2. P. Stevensoni, B. and Br. ; substance rather thick, 
 gelatinous, margin rather coarsely hispid, at length more 
 or less denuded ; warts of hymenium distinct, interstices 
 very smooth, bearing at the apex a limpid, diaphanous 
 yellow globule. 
 
 On old pine rail. Glamis. 
 
 3. P. Keithii, B. and Br. ; narrowly adnate, slightly 
 umber; circumference very thin, at first somewhat gelati- 
 nous ; warts short, at length collapsed, gelatinous in 
 centre. 
 
 On dead fir. Sanquhar. Dunphail. Glamis. 
 
 4. P. confusum, B. and Br. ; narrowly adnate, pallid, 
 margin very thin, arachnoid, substance at first floccoso- 
 pulverulent ; warts very small. 
 
 On fir sticks. Glentanner. Leigh Wood. Glamis. 
 Pitoulish, Inverness-shire. 
 
302 OUTLINES OK liltlTISH FUNGOLOGV. 
 
 Gexus 31. SOLENIA. 
 
 Keceptacle none ; tubes membranaceous, somewhat cylindrical, 
 turbinate, distinct and free from one another ; definitely 
 facing the ground ; mouth narrowed, in which respect they 
 .liiier from CypbelUe. Hoff. D. Fl. II. t. 8/. 2. 
 
 1 . S. ochracea, Hoffiii. ; ochraceous, m bite internally ; 
 scattered ; clavato-cylindrical ; toraentose. 
 On dead wood. Uncommon. 
 
 Order 3. HYDNEI (p. 257). 
 
 Genus 32. HYDNUM L. (p. 257). 
 
 I. Mesopus. — Entire, simple with a central stem; all terrestrial, 
 chiefly groiving in pine tvoods. 
 
 f Cahnosa. — Pileits fleshy, some wh at fragile. 
 
 * Spines changing coloicr ; 2}ileus scaly or tomentose. 
 
 1. H. imbricatum, L. (p. 257); 4 in. 
 
 2. H. squamosum, Schceff. ; pileus rufous-fuscous, fleshy, 
 irregular, depressed, smooth, breaking up into irregular 
 scales ; flesh rigid, w^liitisli ; stem short, attenuated down- 
 wards, white ; spines grey-fuscous, whitish at ape.\. — 
 >SV-A«//. /. 273. 
 
 On the ground. 
 
 3. H. scabrosum, Fr. ; l in., pileus umber-ferruginous, 
 compactly-fleshy, at flrst turbinate, then plane above, very 
 convex beneath, tomentose, then rough with flocci which 
 are fasciculate in the form of minute crowded squamules, 
 slightly repand at margin ; flesh very thick, white, descend- 
 ing into stem ; stem very short and thick, round or com- 
 pressed, dotted with rudiments of spines decurrent on it, 
 
HYDXEI. 303 
 
 cinereous, attenuated downwards, rounded and blackish at 
 base ; spines equal, awl-shaped, fuscous-ferruginous, whitish 
 at apex, at first grey -fuscous. — Schaff. t. 271. 
 In pine wood. Forres. 
 
 ■-•■■* Spines chamjing colour, ptleits even, smooth. 
 
 4. H. Isevigatum, Sw. ; 4—6 in., pileus umber, fleshy, 
 compact, firm, regular, plane, very smooth, margin circi- 
 nate, not repand; flesh whitish, compact, not fibrous, soft 
 when fresh, pliant when dry ; stem short, thick, even, 
 pallid-fuscous ; spines thin, same colour. — Sv. citl. Sv. t. 81. 
 
 In pine woods. Rannoch. 
 
 5. H. fragile, Fr. ; large, 1:2 in. ; pileus pallid, then 
 cinereous, or brick-rufescent, somewhat zoned towards 
 margin, fleshy, fragile, unequal, surface pubescent then 
 smooth, even, but here and there minutely squamulose and 
 slightly wrinkled, margin undulated and lobed ; flesh grey, 
 somewhat zoned; stem stout, unequal, smooth, cinereous; 
 spines scarcely decurrent, very much elongated, slender, 
 fragile, whitish then grey. — Sc. ntl. Sv. t. 89 ; Ber(/. Pyr. 
 /. 16 ; Paul t. 34. 
 
 In pine woods among heath. Hare. 
 
 "•■'•■■* Spines unchangeable, unicolourous, whitish. 
 
 G. H. repandum, L. (p. 258) ; Epping Forest. 
 
 Var. rufescens, P. ; 2-3 in., pileus thin, somewhat regu- 
 lar, pubescent; stem thin, unequal; spines regular. — 
 Bolt. 89. 
 
 tt LiGXoSA. — Pileas corky or coriaceous, tough. 
 
 * Spines changing colour, and as icell as the spores, somewhat 
 
 Juscous. 
 
 7. H. compactum, Fr. 'p. 258) ; 1-6 in. 
 
304 OUTLINES OF lUlITISIl l'L'X(;()LO( ;V. 
 
 8. H. aurantiacum, All), and >Sc/ttr. ; 1-5 in., pileus 
 orange, corky, compact, turbinato-dilatcd, with small ele- 
 vations, zoneless, often covered with whitish down, zoned 
 internally ; stem thick, orange, Avhitish, becoming fuscous. 
 — Fl. Dan. t. 1439 ; Batsch. ./'. \in. 
 
 In pine woods. Grantown. 
 
 9. H. ferrugineum, Fr. : 1-i in., pileus obconic, then 
 flattened, sometimes depressed, spongy-corky, soft, at first 
 covered with whitish down which exudes blood-red drops 
 in the depressions, then more even, internally ferruginous ; 
 spines awl-shaped, equal, fuscous-ferruginous. — F)-. Iron. 
 t.4; Kromb. t. 50,/. 10, 11 ; Bnll. t. 409. 
 
 In fir wood. Rothiemurchus. 
 
 ** Spines cItaiKjtng colour and as veil as the spores, ferriiijinons. 
 
 10. H. scrobiculatum, Fr. ; 1-2 in., ferruginous ; pileus 
 corky-coriaceous, clavatc, then piano- iufundibuliform^ 
 pubescent, disc slightly pitted, scaly, zoned within ; stem 
 equal, smooth, often rooted ; spines short, slightly decur- 
 rent, thin, fragile, same colour as pileus, at length fuscous. 
 — Fy. Icon. t. 5, /. 1 ; Mich. Gen. t. 72, f. 7 ; Bull. t. 156. 
 
 In fir woods. Minstead, Lyndhurst. Rothiemurchus, etc. 
 
 11. H. zonatum, Batsch. (p. 258) ; 1-2 in. Epping 
 Forest. 
 
 *** Spines uachanyeahle ; spores irhitish. 
 
 12. H. nigrum, Fr. ; csespitosc ; pileus azure-blue-black, 
 zoneless, margin white, corky- rigid, club-shaped when 
 young, turbinate, flattened then piano-depressed, tuber- 
 cular, tomentose, blue-black internally ; stem stout, often 
 rooting, unequal, blue-black, tomentose at base, internally 
 same colour; spines awl-shaped, thin, rather short, white. - 
 Fr. Icon. t. o,f. 2; Batsch. f. 22.".. 
 
HYDNEI. 305 
 
 In pine woods. Street, Somerset. 
 
 13. H. graveolens, Delast. ; (p. 258) ; 1 iu, 
 
 14. H. melaleucum, Fr. ; pileus black ; coriaceous, thin, 
 rigid, irregular, striate, with little elevations at disc, 
 margin white ; stem slender, smooth, black ; spines white. — 
 Schceff. t. 272. 
 
 In fir woods. Ascot. Forres. 
 
 15. H. cyathiforme, Schcpff. ; small ; pileus pale cine- 
 reous ; margin white, coriaceous, thin, plano-infundibuliform, 
 zoned, disc somewhat tomentose; stem slender, smooth, 
 pale cinereous ; spines white. 
 
 On fir wood. Ascot. 
 
 II. Pleuropus. — Someivhat dimidiate ; stem lateral. 
 
 16. H. auriscalpium, L. (p. 258) ; ^-f in. 
 
 III. Merisma. — Vert/ much branched, or tubercidiforhi and 
 
 immavginute. 
 
 * Very much branched. 
 
 17. H. eoralloides, Scop. (p. 259). 
 
 ** Simjjle ; tuhercidiform : inimarginate. 
 
 18. H. erinaceum, Bull. (p. 259); 8 in. Epping Forest. 
 
 19. H. caput-Medusse, Bull. (p. 259). 
 
 IV, Apus. — Stemless ; pileus sessile, dimidiate, margiuute : 
 
 often effuso-rejlexed. 
 
 * Pileus fleshy, soft. 
 
 20. H. cirrhatum, P. ; pileus pallid, fleshy, expanded, 
 fibrilloso-curled above with scattered decumbent abortive 
 spines ; margin fimbriate, incurved ; spines long, slightly 
 
 u 
 
i306 OUTLINES OF F.lilTISH FUXGOLOGY. 
 
 tough, equal. — Sr. (if/. Sr. t. 71, /. 1; F1. Dan. t. 1789, 
 /2. 
 
 On a beech tree. Epping Forest. 
 
 21. H. diversidens, Fr. ; 2 in., pileus white, fleshy, 
 thick, substipitate, irregular, densely beset above with 
 erect, variously shaped, incised teeth, clothed at margin 
 with club-shaped spines and beneath with entire awl-shaped 
 regular spines. — Sv. citl. Sv. t. 71, /, 2 ; Kromb. t. 51, /. 8-12. 
 
 On beech and hornbeam. Guildford. Epping Forest. 
 
 ** Ccespitose ; pilei imbricated ; cominonhj pliant, tough. 
 No British species recorded. 
 
 *** Siriqjle ; piltus coriaceous or corky. 
 22. H. ochraceum, P. (p. 259) ; 1-3 in. 
 
 **** J'ileus ineiiihranaceous. 
 No British species recorded. 
 
 V. Resupinati. — Pileus none; resupinate ; with straic/ht or 
 oblique spines. 
 
 * Spines fuscous, ferruginous. 
 
 23. H. squalinum, Fr. (p. 259). 
 
 24. H. fusco-atrum, Fr. ; subiculura crustaceous, thin, 
 at first glaucous, flocculoso-pruinose, then smooth, ferrugi- 
 nous-brown ; spines short, couically subulate, acute, fawn- 
 colour, then blackish. 
 
 On rotten wood. 
 
 25. H. membranaeeum, Bull. (p. 2(50). 
 
 26. H. Weinmanni, Fr. (p. 260). 
 
 27. H. crinale, F/-. ; subiculum umber ; effused, villoso- 
 
HYDXEl. 307 
 
 interwoven, thin ; spines long like hairs, crowded, equal, 
 very slender, umber. — Per. Myc. Eur. t. 17, f. 13. 
 
 On dead wood. Rare. Essex. = H. fusciim, P. p. 260. 
 
 28. H. ferruginosum, Fr. (p. 260) ; 2-3 in. Epping 
 Forest. 
 
 21>. H. varicolor, Fr. (p. 260). 
 
 ** Spines yelloioish, green. 
 
 30. H. auretim, Fr. ; subiculum golden ; determinate, 
 somewhat cartilaginous, continuous, smooth, radiate in the 
 form of teeth at circumference ; spines awl-shaped, equal, 
 same colour as subiculum. 
 
 On dead branches. Penzance. 
 
 31. H. dentieulatum, P.; light yellow-ochraceous, shin- 
 ing, longitudinally effused, somewhat fleshy, subiculum thin, 
 smooth, somewhat mealy ; spines crowded, equal, slightly 
 toothed at margin. 
 
 On rotten wood. Penzance. 
 
 32. H. alutaceum, Fr. (p. 260) ; 3-5 in. 
 
 33. H. sordidum, Weinm. ; dingy yellowish ; broadly 
 effused, thin, easily separating, mucid, at circumference 
 gyroso-porous, sulphur-yellow ; spines very crowded, com- 
 pressed, incised, rather acute. 
 
 On dead wood. Stoke Poges. 
 
 34. H. limonicolor, B. and Br. ; adnate, bright lemon- 
 yellow; spines crowded, acute, short; mycelium shining- 
 white, scanty or obsolete. 
 
 On stone buried among pine leaves. Glamis. 
 
 35. H. spathulatum, Fr. (p. 261). 
 
 36. H. multiforme, B. and Br. ; ochrey-white, at first 
 even, resembling a Corticiuni, at length here and there fer- 
 
308 OUTLINES OF lilllTISIl FUNGOLOOY. 
 
 tile ; spiues very acute, crowded, then pallid and fimbriate ; 
 texture floccose-mealy. 
 On dead wood. Glamis. 
 
 37. H. anomalum, B. and lir. : pallid light yellow ; 
 stratum thin, gelatinous ; teeth in i'orm of granules ; then 
 stipitate and obtusely divided upwards. — li. and Br. 1438 ; 
 Icon. 
 
 Inside a very rotten ash tree. Langridge, Somersetshire. 
 
 38. H. melleum, B. and Br. ; honey-colour ; effused, thin, 
 margin delicately tlaxy ; subiculum and teeth acute and 
 sometimes divided at apex, pulverulent downwards, naked 
 at middle. 
 
 On broken rails on the ground. Coed Coch. 
 
 39. H. sepultum, B. and Br. ; wholly resupinate ; golden; 
 margin white ; spines acute, medium-sized. 
 
 On stones buried among i)ine leaves. Glamis. 
 
 **■■■■■ Spines flesh-colour, lUac, rufescant. 
 
 40. H. udum, Fr. (p. .261). 
 
 41. H. bicolor, A. and -S. ; 8 in., subicidum white ; 
 widely effused, tomentose, adpressed, thin ; spines minute, 
 whitc-villous, naked at apex, acute, rufous-date-brown. 
 
 On bramble. Batheaston. 
 
 **■* Spines ic/iite, or liylit jellotrisli when old. 
 
 42, H. nodulosum, Fr. ; whitish ; broadly effused, crus- 
 taceous, closely adnate, smooth, even, nodulose ; spines very 
 long, on the even part depressed and adnate to the wood, 
 on the lower side of nodules free and pendulous. — Pcrs. Myc. 
 Eur. 2, t.2, 22, j: 1. 
 
 On fir stumps. Glamis. 
 
 43. H. Stevensoni, B. anil Jir. ; white ; effused, mealy 
 
HVDXEI. 300 
 
 beneath, here find there flaxy ; spines cylindrical, obtnse or 
 truncate, sometimes compressed, pulverulent at apex. 
 On dead wood. Glamis. 
 
 44. H. niveum, P. (p. .261)). 
 
 45. H. farinaeeum, P. (p. 261). 
 
 46. H. argutum,F/-..- white ; subiculum effused in scattered 
 patches, tomentoso-iuterwoven, adnate ; spines acute, awl- 
 shaped, unequal, under a lens serrated or slightly toothed at 
 sides. Roth. Ust. Ann. i, t.lf.5 ?. 
 
 On wood and bark. Bodelwyddan. Twycross. 
 
 47. H. stipatum, Fr. ; whitish, isabelline or light 
 yellowish ; subiculum very widely effused, flocculoso- 
 furfuraceous, forming an adnate crust ; spines crowded in 
 the form of granules, rather obtuse and slightly toothed. 
 
 On rotten wood. Carlisle. 
 
 48. H. plumosiim, Dulnj. (p. 261). 
 
 Genus 33. HERICIUM, P. 
 
 Pleshy, club-shaped, in place (jf a pileus divided at apex into 
 .spines, which are extended u])\\ar<ls, not inferior and facing 
 the ground. 
 
 No British species recorded. 
 
 Genus 34. TREMELLODON, P. 
 
 (jtelatinous, pileate, aculeate below ; sjtines awl-shaped, equal. 
 
 1. T. gelatinosum, 7-'er.v. = Hydnum gelatinosum, Scop. 
 (p. 259). 
 
 Genus 35. SISTOTREMA, P. (p. 261). 
 1. S. confiuens, P. (p. 262 j. Epping Forest. 
 
310 (JUTLIXES OF HRITISFr FUXGOLOOY. 
 
 (Ienus 36. IRPEX. Fr. (p. 262). 
 * Stipitatc. 
 No British species recorded. 
 
 *••■ Pendulous, loith pileus extended behind. 
 
 1. I. pendulus, Fr. (p. 262). 
 
 ■•■•■•■■■•■■ Sessile or pj}'i(so-r<'jlexe<l, niarginafe. 
 
 2. I. fusco-violaceus. Fr. ; 2 in., pileus white inclining 
 to hoary ; effuso-reflexed, coriaceous, silky, zoned ; teeth in 
 rows in the form of plates, fusco-violaceous, incised at apex. 
 —KL Bor. t. 536 ; Willd. Bot. May. iv. /. 2 /. 5. 
 
 On pine trunks. Rare. Leigh Woods. 
 
 ■••*** licsi'jjijiate. 
 
 3. I. Johnstoni, B. (p. 262). 
 
 4. I. spathulatus, Fr. ; shining white ; eft'ased, membra- 
 naceous, flaxy, then smooth ; teeth spathulate, equal, entire, 
 reticulato-connected with obsolete veins. — Schrad. Spic. t. 4, 
 
 /• 3. 
 
 On larch. Wallington, Northumberland. 
 
 5. I, obliquus, Fr. (p. 262). 
 
 6. I. deformis, Fr. : white ; etlVised, crustaceous, thin, 
 circumference pubescent, somewhat tiaxy ; teeth extended 
 in awl-shape from a minutely porous base, thin, somewhat 
 digitato-inciscd. 
 
 On wood. Strachan, Kincardineshire. 
 
 7. I. carneus, Fr. ; 1-3 in. ; reddish ; effused, cartilagi- 
 nous-gelatinous, membranaceous, adnate; teeth obtuse and 
 awl-shaped, entire, united at base. 
 
 On wood. Penzance. 
 
HYDNEI, 311 
 
 Genus 37. RADULUM, Fr. (p. 263). 
 
 * Denuded ; very variable. 
 
 1. R. orbiculare, Fr. (p. 263) ; 2-3 in. 
 
 2. R. quercinum, Fr. (p. 26:]) ■ o_3 in. Epping Forest. 
 
 3. R. tomentosum, Fr. ; white, inclining to pale ; effused, 
 innate, rather thick, circumference swollen, erect, tomen- 
 tose ; tubercles short, crowded, angular, obtuse, smooth, 
 confluent. 
 
 On Pijrus aucuparia. Menmuir, Forfarshire. New Pit- 
 sligo, Aberdeenshire. 
 
 4. R. deglubens, B. and Br. ; ^ in. ; orbicular, ferru- 
 ginous, somewhat diaphanous ; tubercles erect, somewhat 
 cylindrical, irregular, scattered ; interstices even, pulverulent 
 with the white spores. 
 
 On ash. Sanquhar, :Morayshire. New Pitsligo, Aber- 
 deenshire. 
 
 5. "R. covQllinu^, B. and Br. ; 3 in.; white; effused, 
 subiculum shining, very thin, pelliculose ; tubercles fasci- 
 culate, :^in. across, divided downwards, obtuse, coralloid. 
 
 On oak branches partially covered with lichens. Glamis, 
 
 6. R. epileucum, B. and Br. ; effused for several inches ; 
 ochrey-white ; resupinate ; subiculum white, covered by a 
 waxy stratum ; tubercles scattered, cylindrical, under a lens 
 li mbriated at apex ; deciduous. 
 
 On decorticated wood. Glamis. 
 
 ** Innate, removing the hark. 
 
 7. R. fagineum, Fr. ; white, becoming pale ; innate, 
 smooth, tubercles elongated, round, various, obtuse, entire. 
 
 On dead beech. Epping Forest. 
 
 8. R. aterrinum, Fr. ; black ; innate ; strigose ; tubercles 
 
812 OUTLINES OF r.RITISH FUNGOLOGY. 
 
 elongated, distant, large, irregularly shaped, somewhat com- 
 pressed, black. 
 
 On branches. Kensington Gardens, 
 
 Genus 38. PHLEBIA, Fr. (p. 2G3). 
 
 1. P. merismoides, Fr. (p. 263) ; 2-3 in. 
 
 2. P. radiata, Fr. (p. 263) ; 1-3 in. 
 
 3. P. contorta, Fr. (p. 264). 
 
 4. P. vaga, Fr. (p. 264) ; 2 in. 
 
 5. P. lirellosa. P. ; umber-grey ; resupinate, free at mar- 
 gin ; sinuses very small, linear, intermixed with spores. — 
 Pers. Mi/c. Eur. iii. p. 2, i. 1 7, f. 2, 3. 
 
 Genus 39. GRANDINIA, Fr. (p. 264). 
 
 1. G. granulosa, Fr. (p. 26 i). Epping Forest. 
 
 2. G. mucida, Fr. ; pale yellowish; waxy-mucid, effused, 
 somewhat innate, circumference determinate, somewhat 
 radiate ; hymenium continuous ; granules crowded, large, 
 unequal, hemispherical, soft. 
 
 On rotting pine. Glamis. 
 
 3. G. ocellata, Fr. ; livid; waxy, broadly effused, aggluti- 
 nated, indeterminate circumference sterile ; hymenium un- 
 equal, continuous; granules crowded, somewhat conical, 
 obtuse, equal, same colour. 
 
 On dead trunks. Bodelwyddan. Coed Coch. 
 
 4. G. papillosa, Fr. ; white, yellowish beneath ; membra- 
 naceous, somewhat round, separating when entire, smooth 
 beneath, circumference furfuraceous ; hymenium much 
 cracked ; granules minute, crowded, somewhat spherical, 
 equal. 
 
 On sticks. Rare. 
 
HYDXEI. 313 
 
 5. G, crustosa, Fr. ; -white; fioccoso-mealy, irregularly 
 eifused, crustaceous, adnate ; granules somewhat rouud^ 
 crowded, obtuse, same colour at apex. 
 
 On Pohjporus versicolor. Dun. 
 
 Gexus 40. ODONTIA, Fr. (p. 264). 
 
 J. O. barba-Jovis, Fr. : 12 in.; white, then yellowish; 
 rtaxy membranaceous, eflPused, equal; warts at first papil- 
 lose then conical, with an orange fringe at apex. 
 
 On decayed wood. Epping Forest. 
 
 2. O. fimbriata, Pers. (p. 264). 
 
 Gexus 41. KNEIFFIA, Fr. (p. 265). 
 
 1. K. setigera, Fr. 
 
 2. K. subgelatinosa, B. and Br. ; yellowish, then cream- 
 colour; thin; granules minute, somewhat gelatinous, fringed 
 at apex. 
 
 On stumps of fir. Glamis. 
 
 Genus 42. MUCRONELLA, Fr. 
 
 Receptacle none ; spines awl-shaped, simple, acute, 
 smooth, definitely facing the ground ; small ; growing on 
 wood. 
 
 No British species recorded. 
 
314 OUTLINES Ot' UUITISJI FUNGOLOGY. 
 
 Ordku L THELEPHOREI, Fr. 
 = AURWULARINI {^.20:^). 
 
 Hymcnium inferior or amphi^enous, coriaceous or 
 Avaxy, even, rarely ribbed or papillose ; sporophores four- 
 s pored. 
 
 Gexus 43. CRATERELIiUS, Fr. (p. 2G5). 
 * Tuho'Jorm ; pervious to base of stem. 
 
 1. C. lutescens, Fr. (p. 265) ; 1-4 in. 
 
 2. C. cornucopioides, P. (p. 260). Epping Forest. 
 
 ** InfundihiiUform ; stem stuffed. 
 
 3. C. sinuosus, Fr. (p. 266) ; 1 in. 
 
 4. C. crispus, Fr. (p. 266). Epping Forest. 
 
 *** Irregular ; ^nlens and stemffeshy. 
 
 5. C. clavatus, Fr. ; 2 in., pileus somewhat light-yel- 
 lowish, fleshy, turbinate, truncate or depressed, flexuose, 
 unpolished, attenuated into the solid stem ; flesh thick, 
 white; hymenium even, then corrugated, purplish, then 
 changing colour. 
 
 There are four colour-forms, one umber, one date- 
 brown, one purplish, and the other flesh colour. — Schcejf. 
 t. 164 and t. 276 ; Schmid. Ic. 2, t. 60 ; IVuIf. in Jacq. 
 Coll. ii. t. 12, /. 3. 
 
 In beech woods. Bisham, Berks. 
 
 Genus 44. THELEPHORA, Fr. (p. 266). 
 * Erect ; pileus entire or hranched. 
 
 1. T. Sowerbii, li. and Br. (p. 266). 
 
 2. T. multizonata, B. and Br. ; pileus bright rufous;- 
 
THELEPHOREI. 315- 
 
 flesh colour above ; many-zoned^ multiplex, infundibuli- 
 form, formed from various confluent lobes and stems, 
 margin lobed and creuulate ; hymenium slightly ribbed, 
 smooth, paler. 
 
 On the ground. Hare. Epping Forest. 
 
 3. T. undulata, Fr. ; \-\ in., pallid ; coriaceo-membra- 
 naceous, depressed, even, slightly smooth, margin entire, 
 undulated ; stem short, villous ; hymenium ribbed, slightly 
 bristly. 
 
 On the ground. Coed Coch. 
 
 4. T. earyophyllea, P. (p. 267). 
 
 5. T. tuberosa, Pers. (p. 267). 
 
 6. T. anthocephala, Ft. (p. 267). Epping Forest. 
 
 7. T. elavularis, Fr. ; rufous-fuscous ; coriaceous, soft, 
 irregularly branched, branches round, attenuated, even, 
 smooth, delicately pruinose ; apices acute, pubescent ; 
 stem whitish ; somewhat tuberous. 
 
 On the ground. Epping Forest. Wallington, Northum- 
 berland. 
 
 8. T. palmata, Fr. (p. 267) ; l-2in. Epping Forest. 
 
 ** Pileate : dimidiate; horizontal: someirhat sessile or 
 efuso-rejlexed. 
 
 9. T. intybacea, P. ; cffispitose ; whitish rufous-ferru- 
 ginous, then fuliginous ; soft ; stems somewhat lateral, 
 growing into each other ; pileoli imbricated, fibrous, dilated 
 at margin, at first white-fringed, then entire, same colour > 
 hymenium inferior, papillose, somewhat floccose. — Bull, t^ 
 483, /. 6, 7, t. 278. 
 
 On the ground in Scotch fir wood. Glamis. 
 
 10. T. terrestris, Ehrb. (p. 267) ; 1-3 in. 
 
 11. T. laciniata, Pers. (p. 268). Epping Forest. 
 
516 OUTLINES OF HIIITISII FUXGOLOGV. 
 
 12. T. biennis, F/-. (p. 268) . 
 
 13. T. mollissima, Pcrs. (p. 268). 
 
 *** liesirpiaaie : for the most part Incrustiiuj ; forms varions. 
 11. T. cristata, Fr. (p. 268). Epping Forest. 
 
 15. T. fastidiosa, Fr. (p. 268). 
 
 16. T. sebacea, P. (Fo/. /., p. xvii.) ; M'hitish ; effused, 
 ileshy-waxy, becoming hard, changeable in form by encrust- 
 ing, tubular or resembling stalactite, circumference similar ; 
 hymeniura collapsing, flocculoso-pruinose, 
 
 17. T. Crustacea, Schiun. ; fuscous-umber; broadly 
 effused, somewhat fleshy, undulated and tubercular, circum- 
 ference similar, white-floccose ; hymenium papillose, 
 slightly bristly.— F/. Dan. t. 1851,./'. 2. 
 
 On the ground. Burnham. J*]pping Forest. 
 
 18. T. cffisia, P. (p. 268). 
 
 T. byssoides, P. (p. 269) ; v 
 T. puteana, Schum. (p. 269) ; 
 T. laxa, Fr. (p. 269) ; 
 T. arida, Fr. (p. 269) ; 
 T. olivacea, Fr. (p. 2()9) ; 
 T. anthochroa (p. 270) ; 
 
 Genus 15. CLADODERRIS, P. 
 
 Coriaceous ; hymenium woody, radiated on branched 
 ribs, persistent, at length roughened with warts. 
 
 1. C. minima, B. and Br. : | in. , white ; flabelliform, spriug- 
 ing from a stem-like or obsolete base ; resupinate ; pileus 
 tomentose ; hymeuium radiated on branched ribs. 
 
 On birch. Glamis. 
 
 The original examples at Kew look like dwarf specimens 
 of Steremn hlrsutnm. — AV. G. S. 
 
 Transferred to Corticiuoi. 
 
TliELEPHOKEI, olT" 
 
 Gexus 46. STEREUM. 
 
 J. Merisma. — Pilei renj numerous, (fscending, ivih'icated 
 in a free tuft. 
 
 No British examples recorderl. 
 
 II. Apus. — Pileus sessile, at first resupinate, then commonly 
 pileato-reflexed, or adnate hehind ; coriaceous ; raarginate. 
 
 * Hjimeniuiii smooth. 
 
 1. S. ochroleueum, Fr. ; pileus horny^ coriaceous- 
 membranaceous, free, expanded, flaccid, silky, zoned ; 
 liymenium even, smooth, yellowish, or grey. 
 
 On wood. Glamis, 
 
 2. S. purpureum, P. (p. 270). Epping Forest. 
 
 3. S. vortieosum, Fr. ; pileus pallid, margin same colour ; 
 coriaceous, eftuso-reflexed, obscurely zoned, strigoso- hirsute ; 
 hymenium somewhat ribbed, smooth, purplish. 
 
 On beech. jMenmuir, Forfarshire. 
 
 4. S. hirsutum, Fr. (p. .270). Epping Forest. 
 
 5. S. spadiceum, Fr. (p. 270). Epping Forest. 
 
 G. S. sanguinolentum, Fr. (p. 271). Epping Forest. 
 
 *-:;:- Ili^p^ieniniH simple, slightl// bristl// or velvet//. 
 
 7, S. rubiginosujn, Fr.,=Hymenoch(Bte rubiginosa Lev. 
 (p. 271). 
 
 Epping Forest. 
 
 8, S. tabacinum, Fr., = Hninenochdite lahacina Lev. 
 (p. 271). 
 
 Epping Forest. 
 
 9, S. rufo-hispidum, /S/ef. ; pallid fawn-colour; ligid, 
 margin obtuse, raised, hispid with rufous bristles. 
 
 Duukeld . 
 
■318 OITLINES OF BIUTISH FUNGOLOGY. 
 
 10. S. avellanum, Fr. ; coriaceous, hard ; pileiis dingy, 
 eft'used, and as well as the obtuse, free, narrowly reflexed, 
 date-brown margin, villous ; hymenium even, velvety, then 
 pruinate and becoming smooth, pale ferruginous, here and 
 there bleeding. 
 
 *** Wondy : ppj-pnnhd : scarcely reflexed, hit marjlnate; hTjmenium 
 stratose hy confluent pilei, at flrst 2Jruinose. 
 
 11. S. frustulosum, Fr. ; date-brown blackish ; woody, 
 resupinate, tubercular, crowded, as if confluent, then broken 
 in fragments, smooth beneath and at the obsoletely margi- 
 nate circumference ; hymenium convex, cinnamon, then 
 pale, pruinose. 
 
 On hard oak wood. South of England. 
 
 •**"** lUyid ; smifple hymenium jJruinose. 
 
 12. S. rugosum, Fr. (p. 271). Epping Forest. 
 
 13. S. pini, Fr. ; pallid ; coriaceo-cartilaginous, resupi- 
 nate, adnate in shield-form, somewhat marginate, smooth 
 beneath, at length buUate ; hymenium purplish-flesh-colour, 
 becoming fuscous, pruinose. 
 
 On bark of Scotch fir. Glamis. 
 
 14. S. rufum, Fr. ; rufous, then fuscous ; coriaceo-cartila- 
 o-inous, erumpent, tubcrculiform, then somewhat round, 
 marginate, smooth beneath ; hymenium grey pruinose, at 
 length buUate-tubercular. 
 
 On dead pine and ash. (Jlamis. 
 
TIIELEPHOREI. 319 
 
 III. Resupinata. — Crustaceo-adnate, intermediate, vjithout a distinct 
 pileus, at length admitting of being detached like a 2)iece of 
 leather ; circumference notflaxij; incrusting wood. 
 
 * True species ; coriaxieous. 
 
 15. S. stratosum, B. and Br. ; eft'used; bright ochraceous- 
 white, smooth, becoming yellow ; here and there wrinkled, 
 stratose, the strata at length breaking up. 
 
 Penzance. 
 
 ** Imperfect ; crustuceo-adnate ; sterile. 
 
 16. S. acerinum, Fr. (p. 271). 
 
 Genus 47. AURICULARIA. 
 
 1. A. mesenterica, BiiH. (p. 27.2); 2—3 in. Epping 
 Forest. 
 
 2. A. lobata, Somm. (p. 272) ; 7 in. 
 
 Genus 18. CORTICIUM (p. 272). 
 
 I. LoMANTiA. — Resitpinate, hut free at circumference, determinate, 
 marginate, commmily cup-shaped, then expanded. 
 
 1. C. evolvens, Fr. : resupinate, marginate or etfuso- 
 reflexed, soft, flocculose with whitish down beneath, zone- 
 less ; hymenium naked, smooth, somewhat wrinkled, fuscous, 
 becoming paler; divided in cracks when dry. 
 
 On dead wood, especially cherry. 
 
 2. C. salicinum, Fr. ; white villous externally, coriaceous, 
 soft, rigid when dry, persistently cup-shaped, adfixed at 
 centre ; hymenium rather even, naked, persistently blood- 
 red; continuous when dry. 
 
 On Sialix aurata. Kinrara, Morayshire. 
 
 3. C. amorphum, Fr. ; J in.; white-toraentose exter- 
 nally ; waxy pliant, somewhat coriaceous, cup-shaped, then 
 
o20 OUTLINES OF lUtlTISII FL'.NMIOI.OCV. 
 
 flattened, confluent, raarginate ; hymeuiuin even, continuous,, 
 pale. 
 
 On silver fir. Perth, Dunkckl. 
 
 II. HiMAXTi.E. — Resujj'nmte, effused, hnmarginate, clothed witli 
 flaxy fibrils or strigosely hairy at circumference and beneath : 
 often sterile ; mycelium fibrillose ; hymenium vxvxy-soft. 
 
 * Mycelium and circumference white. 
 
 4. C. giganteum, Fr. (p. 27.2). 
 
 5. C. lacteum, Fr. (p. 273). 
 
 6. C. porosum, Fr. ; B. and Curt. ; resupinate ; white ; 
 here and there porous, margin free, reflexed. 
 
 On wood, Aboyne. 
 
 7. C. arachnoideum, B. (p. 273). 
 
 8. C. fcBtidum, B. and Br. ; effused, resupinate, arach- 
 noid beneath ; white, then ochraeeous and smooth. 
 
 On sawdust. Coed Coch. 
 
 9. C. Iseve, P. (p. 273). Epping- Forest. 
 
 10. C. roseum, P. (p. 273). 
 
 ** Mycelium and circumference coloured. 
 
 11. C. velutinum, Fr. (p. 273), 
 
 12. C. subdealbatum, B. and Br. ; shining white ; 
 effused ; hymenium pallid fawn-colour with the bristles. 
 
 On fir. Badmington. 
 
 13. C. laetescens, Berk. (p. 274). 
 
 14. C. sanguineum, Fr. (p. 273) . 
 
 15. C. sulphureum, Fr. (p. 274). 
 
 16. C. cinnamomeum, Fr. ; cinnamon; effused, irregular, 
 confluent, adpressed, fibrilloso-strigose beneath and at cir- 
 cumference ; hymenium licshy, soft, sraootli, naked, same 
 colour ; cracked when dry. 
 
 On birch log. Glamis. 
 
THELEPHOREI. 321 
 
 17. C. cseruleum, Fr. (p. 274). 
 
 18. C. atro-virens, Fr. (p. 274). 
 
 III. Leiostroma. — Agglutinated icithout a strigose or Jihrillose 
 circimiference ; miyceliuin jiassing at once into hymenium which 
 is agglutinated to the substratum; hymeniuin thicker, VMxy- 
 soft, fertile ; or thinner and sterile. 
 
 * Waxy, when fertile facing the grou,nd, uniform, riniose when 
 dry. 
 
 19. C. calceum, Fr. (p. 274). 
 
 20. C. puberum, Fr. ; white or clay-colour ; broadly 
 effused, waxy, closely adnate, indeterminate ; hymenium 
 even, velvety with short bristles, cracked when dry. 
 
 On dead wood. Aboyne. Forres. Glamis. 
 
 21. C. scutellare, B. and Curt. ; whitish, then slightly 
 tan-colour ; resupinate, effused, immarginate ; hymenium 
 broken up into minute areolae. 
 
 On Ulex. Strachan, Kincardineshire. Glamis. 
 
 22. C. lividum, Pers. (p. 275). 
 
 23. C. ocliraceum, Fr. (p. 275). 
 
 *• Amphigenous ; becoming rigid, circumference very thhUy 
 floccose and radiating, soon naked. 
 
 24. C. quercinum, Fr. (p. 275). Epping Forest. 
 
 25. C. cinereum, j^r. (p. 275). 
 
 26. C. incarnatum, Fr. (p. 275). Epping Forest. 
 
 27. C. nudum, Fr. (p. 276). 
 
 Var. eitrinum, P. ; hymenium papillose ; colour bright 
 light yellow. 
 
 On dead wood. INIoncreiffe. 
 
 28. C. confluens, Fr. (p. 276). 
 
322 OUTLINES OF BRITISH FUNGOLOGY. 
 
 *** Amphigenotis ; at first hardened, someiohat grumous, 
 circumference naked. 
 
 29. C. polygonium, Pers. (p. 276). 
 
 30. C. violaceo-lividum, Fr. ; violaceous livid ; somewhat 
 eflFused, adnatc, hardened ; hymenium spuriously corrugated, 
 tubercular, sprinkled with thin whitish pruina. 
 
 On dead wood. Glamis. 
 
 31. C. maculseforme, Fr. ; ^ in. ; somewhat rose-colour ; 
 orbicular, then confluent, hardened, thin, circumference 
 similar, smooth ; hymenium spuriously papillose, bluish- 
 grey-pruinose. — Fl. Dan., t. 1738, /. 2. 
 
 On dead wood. Penzance. 
 
 32. C. limitatum, Fr. ; lurid ; becoming pale, roundish, 
 closely adnate, grumous-hardened, smooth, circumference 
 with a defined black edge ; hymenium naked. 
 
 On Cytisus. Perth. 
 
 33. C. corrugatum, Fr. ; pallid cinnamon ; somewhat 
 effused, closely adnate, soon grumous ; hymenium beset 
 with ferruginous bristles, very much cracked when dry. = 
 Hymenochd'te corrwjata, B. (vol. i. p. 272). 
 
 On dead wood. Very common. 
 
 **** Amphigenous ; very thin, innate, removing the hark. 
 
 34. C. comedens, Fr. (p, 276). Epping Forest. 
 
 ***** Less knoion species, doubtful. 
 
 35. C. aurora, Berk. (p. 276). 
 
 36. C. typhse, Fckl. ; longitudinally effused, thin, at first 
 orbicular, white and fiaxy, smooth, then somewhat mealy, 
 tan-colour. 
 
 On Typha latifolia. North Wootton. 
 
THELEPHOKEI. 323 
 
 Subgenus 1. — Coxiophora. — Fleshy, undulate and tubercular, rarely 
 membranaceous, becoming even ; hymenium smooth, pulverulent 
 vdth the spores : groivi'iig on wood. 
 
 37. C. puteanum, Fr., — Thdephora puteana, Schum. 
 (vol. i. p. 269). 
 
 Epping Forest. 
 
 Var. cellare P. Epping Forest. 
 
 38. C. stabulare, Fr. ; effused, flaxy, white, then fleshy- 
 soft, vinous-fuscous, circumference flaxy, white ; hymenium 
 tubercular, white-pruinose, tubercles collapsing. 
 
 On fir wood. Perth. Odour foetid. 
 
 39. C. urabrinum, Fr. ; umber; eft'used, fleshy- soft, vil- 
 lous beneath, circumference short, radiating, same colour ; 
 hymenium tubercular then collapsing, ferruginous-pul- 
 verulent. 
 
 On dead wood. Penzance. Hothorpe. 
 
 40. C. laxum, Fr., — Thelephora laxa, Fr. (vol. i. p. 269). 
 
 41. C. byssoideum, Fr., = Thelephora byssoides, P. (vol. i. 
 p. 269). 
 
 42. C. aridum, Fr., = Thelephora arida, Fr. (vol. i. p. 269), 
 
 Subgenus 2. — Hypochxus. — Breaking up and becoming floccose, or 
 furnished loith a tomentose, somewhat pulverident hymenium. 
 
 * Breaking up and becoming Jloccose. 
 
 43. C. serum, i^r. ; white; broadly efi'used, incrusting, 
 thin, fleshy, smooth, pruinose, then and when dry splitting 
 open into flocci, papillse round, crowded together, equal. 
 
 On trunks in winter. Epping Forest. Glamis. Meumuir. 
 
 44. C. sambuci, Fr. (p. 276). 
 
324 OUTLINES OF BRITISH FUXGOLOGY. 
 
 ** Hiimenium tomentose, somewhat pulverulent. 
 
 45. C. olivaceum, Fr., = Thelephora oliracea, Fr. (vol. i. 
 p. 269). 
 
 EppiDg Forest. 
 
 46. C. ferrugineum, Fr. ; ferruginous ; eft'used, adnate, 
 everywhere tomeutose ; hymenium papillose, pulveraceous. 
 
 On branches. Altyre. 
 
 47. C. lacunosum, B. and Br. ; broadly effused, soft, 
 mycelium woolly-tawny, lacunose ; hymenium pulverulent. 
 
 On branches. Aboyue. 
 
 48. C. anthochroum, Fr., ■=. TJielrphora anthochroa, P. 
 (vol. i. p. 270). 
 
 Genus 49. CYPHELLA, Fr. (p. 277). 
 
 * L1GNICOL.E. — Groiring on v^ood. 
 
 1. C. Bloxami, B. and PMIl. ; white ; floccoso-membrana- 
 ceous ; disc becoming light yellow, crcnato-lobed ; flocci 
 even. 
 
 On Ulex. Twycross. 
 
 2. C. griseo-pallida, Weinm. (p. 277). 
 
 3. C. ochroleuca, B. and Br. (p. 277), 
 
 4. C. stuppea, B. and Br. ; erumpent, sessile, pezizae- 
 form, externally coarsely hispid, brownish, then becoming 
 white ; hymenium fuscous. 
 
 On broom. Menniuir, Forfarshire. 
 
 5. C. fulva, B. and Bai\ ; brown-tawny ; membranaceous, 
 cup-shaped, deflexed, externally tomentose. 
 
 On dead bark. 
 
 6. C. brunnea, PJnll. ; \-\ in., scattered or crowded ; 
 dirty brown ; sessile, cupulate, clothed near the margin 
 W'ith a grey pruina, margin incurved, lacerated, mouth 
 
THELEPHOREI. 325 
 
 oblique ; hytneniutn smooth, discoloured-brown ; flesh paler, 
 subgelatinous. 
 
 On bark and wood of old elder trees. Shrewsbury. 
 
 7. C. fraxinicola, B. and Br. ; minute ; orbicular, ex- 
 ternally white ; shortly villous ; disc light yellow, becoming 
 fuscous with the spores ; proliferous. 
 
 On ash. Batheaston. 
 
 8. C. Curreyi, B. aad Br. (No. 935) ; gregarious, some- 
 times slightly crowded ; pezizseform ; white externally, vil- 
 lose. 
 
 On twigs of broom, furze, elm, etc. Not uncommon. 
 Epping Forest. 
 
 ** MuscicoL.E. — Growing on mosses. 
 9. C. muscigena, Fr. (p. 277). 
 
 10. C. galeata, Fr. {277). 
 
 11. C. catilla, Stn. ; f in., somewhat membranaceous, 
 expanded, margin crisped, and undulated; hymenium veined, 
 broad, grey. 
 
 On moss and dead leaves. King's Lynn. 
 
 12. C. museicola, Fr. (p. 277). 
 
 *** Stipiticol.e. — Growing on stems, 
 
 13. C. lacera, Fr. (p. 277). 
 
 14. C. capula, Fr. (p. 277). 
 
 Var. cernua, Schiim. [Flor. Salland, p. 421) ; minute ; 
 scattered ; whitish, pallid ; cyathiform, nodding, margin 
 entire or laciniate, teeth unequal, somewhat turned in ; 
 stem rather short, thin, dilated at apex, diaphanous, when 
 old umber at base. 
 
 On elder bark. Ayrshire. 
 
 15. C. Pimii, Phill. ; ^ in., fasciculate ; white or very 
 
32G OUTLINES OF BRITISH FUNGOLOGY. 
 
 pale yellow ; cup-shaped, erect or pendent, membranaceous, 
 pubescent, margin of cup somewhat incised ; stem rather 
 slender, crooked, enlarged upwards. 
 
 On dead herbaceous stems in water. Dublin. 
 
 ♦*** CAULICOL.E AND EpiPHYLL.^. — GruioiiKj Oil stcdks mid 
 leaves. 
 
 16. C. pallida, B. and Br. ; cups -l in., sometimes proli- 
 ferous ; at first orbicular, at length irregularly lobed, plane, 
 tomentose, or slightly hispid, sessile ; hymenium at length 
 wrinkled, pallid ochraceous. 
 
 On old stems of Clematis vitalba. 
 
 17. C. cuticulosa, B. (p. 278). 
 
 18. C. Goldbachii, Weinm. (p. 278). 
 
 19. C. dochmiospora, B. and Br. ; white ; minute ; 
 peziza?form ; hairs not granulated. 
 
 Batheaston. Epping Forest. 
 
 Orders. CLAVAHIEI {p. 27H). 
 Genus 50. SPARASSIS, Fr. 
 
 Fleshy; branched, M'ith flat, leaf-like branches, composed 
 of two plates, fertile on both sides. 
 
 1. S. crispa, Fr. ; 4—12 in., whitish ; very much branched, 
 intricate, recurved at apex, zoneless, serrated. — Sv. ail. Sv. 
 t.l7 ; Kl.Bor. i.4()S- Hogg andJohnst. t. 24; Bail, t.27 ; 
 Wulf. in Jacq. Misc. t. 14,/. 1 ; Kromb. t. 22, f. 2, 3 ; Schceff. 
 t. 163. 
 
 Beside fir trees and stumps. Rare. Edible. 
 
CLAVAPJEI. 327 
 
 Genus 51. CLAVARIA, L. (p. 278). 
 I. Ramaria. — Branched, branches attenuated iqnoards. 
 
 A. Leucospor^. — Spores white or imllid. 
 * Colour bright, yellow, red, or violet ; on the ground. 
 
 1. C. botrytes, P. (p. 278) ; 3 iu. 
 
 2. C. amethystina, Bull. (p. 279) ; 3 in. Epping 
 Forest. 
 
 3. C. fastigiata, L. (p. 279) ; 1 in. Epping Forest. 
 
 4. C. muscoides, L. (p. 249). 
 
 5. C. curta, /'>. ; greenish-yellow ; very small ; very much 
 branched, pressed close together; stem none ; branches short, 
 crowded, obtuse. 
 
 On the ground. Coed Coch. Holme Lacy. 
 
 ** Colour white w grey ; on the ground. 
 
 6. C. coralloid.es, L. (p. 279). Epping Forest. 
 
 7. C. cinerea, Bull. (p. 279). Epping Forest. 
 
 8. C. umbrina, B. (p. 279). 
 
 9. C. cristata, P. (p. 280). Epping Forest. 
 
 10. C. rugosa, Bull. (p. 280). Epping Forest. 
 
 11. C. Krombholzii, Fr.; csespitose ; shining white: 
 fragile, even, sparingly branched ; branches somewhat com- 
 pressed, obtuse.— A'rowZ*. /. 53, /, 15, 16, 18-20; Bull, 
 t. 496, /. 3. 
 
 In old pastures. Glamis. Moncreiffe. 
 
 12. C. Kunzei, Fr. (p. 280). 
 
 *** Colour ivkitish or dingy ; on loood. 
 
 13. C. pyxidata, P. ; 4-5 in., pallid, then tan-colour, 
 somewhat rufescent; trunk thin, smooth, branched; branches 
 and branchlets hollowed out in cup-shape at apex, cups 
 
328 OUTLINES OF BRITISH FUNGOLOGY. 
 
 radiate in a proliferous manner at margin. — Pers. Comm. 
 ,\,f. I; FJ. Dan., t. 1301,/. 1. 
 On the ground. Penzance. 
 
 H. OcHiiosPOR.E. — Spores ochraceous or cimuimon ; spongy, 
 tough ; the majority hitter, 
 
 * Colour yellow, somewhat cinnamon, saffron ; on the ground. 
 
 14. C. aurea, Schrpff. (p. 280) ; 3-4 in. Epping 
 Forest. 
 
 15. C. formosa, P.; trunk thick, whitish, elastic; 
 branches very much ramified, elongated, orange-rose-colour, 
 branchlets obtuse, light yellowish. — Pe7's. Ic. and Desc, 
 t. 3, /. 5; Kromb. t. 54, /. 21, 22; Holmsk. 1 n, 13, 
 Icon.; Corda Ic. iii. /. 136; Hare. t. 7, lower Jig. ; Batsch, 
 /. 48. 
 
 In woods. Rare. 
 
 16. C. spinulosa, P. ; trunk short, rather thick, pallid ; 
 branches elongated, crowded, tense and straight, attenuated, 
 somewhat cinnamon, fuliginous-date-brown, same colour at 
 apex. 
 
 In pine woods. Coed Coch. 
 
 17. C. abietina, P. (p. 280) ; 2-3 in. 
 
 18. C. flaecida, Fr. (p. 280) ; 1-H in. 
 
 19. C. crocea, P. (p. 280). 
 
 ** Colour vjhitisJb, grey or violet ; on the ground. 
 
 20. C. grisea, P. (p. 281). Epping Forest. 
 
 21. C. condensata, Fr. ; 3—4 in., tan-rufescent ; tufts 
 very dense, without a common trunk, very much branched 
 from base ; smooth, unchangeable when bruised ; branches 
 tense and straight, crowded in a parallel manner, even. 
 
CLAVARIEI. 329 
 
 fasti{<iate at apex, twice or thrice-toothed, yellow. — Schteff. 
 t. 177. 
 
 On the ground, under trees. West Farleigh. 
 
 *** Growing on trunks. 
 
 22. C. stricta, P. (p. 281). 
 
 23. C. crispula, Fr. (p. 281) > 1-3 in. 
 
 II. Syncoryxe, — Somewhat simjjle, ccespitose at base or fasciculate. 
 * Reddish. 
 
 24. C. purpurea, Fr. (p. 281) ; 3 in. 
 
 25. C. rufa, Fl, Dan.; \\ in., esespitose; rufous; clubs 
 stuffed, thickened, somewhat bifid, acute. 
 
 On the ground, llannoch. The Burn, Forfarshire. 
 
 26. C. rosea, Fr. (p. 281), U in. 
 
 ** Yellowish or ichite. 
 
 27. C. fusiformis, Soiv. (p. 281) ; 3 in. Epping Forest. 
 
 28. C. ceranoides, P. (p. 282) ; 3 in. 
 
 29. C. insequalis, FL Dan. (p. 282); 1-3 in. Epping 
 Forest. 
 
 Var. aurantiaca, P. ; somewhat wrinkled, and com- 
 pressed.— iiTrow^*. t. 53, f. 19, 20; Faill, t. 7, f. 5. 
 
 30. C. argillacea, Fr. (p. 282) ; i-1 in. 
 
 31. C. vermicularis, Scop. (p. 282) ; 3 in. Epping 
 Forest. 
 
 32. C. fragilis, Holmsk. (p. 283) ; 1-3 in. Epping 
 Forest. 
 
 *** Fuliginous or blackish. 
 
 33. C. striata, P. ; esespitose; fistulose ; sub fuliginous ; 
 clubs very long, flexuous, somewhat twisted, sparsely striate, 
 — Fres. Ic. and Desc. t. 3, /. 5. 
 
330 OUTLINES OF BRITISH FUNGOLOGY. 
 
 On the ground. General cemetery, Shrewsbury. 
 
 34. C. fumosa, P. ; fuliginous ; fasciculate, fistulose, 
 fragile ; clubs even, tense and straight, somewhat com- 
 pressed. — Kromb. t. 53, /. 18. 
 
 In pastures. Uncommon. 
 
 III. IIoLocoRYNE. — tSonieivhat shnple, sejmrate at base. 
 * Colour changeable, becoming dark. 
 
 35. C. pistillaris, L. (p. 283) ; 6-12 in. Epping Forest. 
 
 36. C. ligula, Fr. ; yellowish when young, then pallid- 
 refuscent; simple, gregarious, spongy-fleshy, elongate, clavate, 
 obtuse, villous at base. — Schmeid. Ic. t. 5, upper fig.; Fl.Dan. 
 t. 837 ; Wulf. in Jacq. Misc. ii. t. 2, /. 2 ; Sv. Bot. t. 504, 
 /. 3; Schceff. t. 171; Kromb. t. 52,/. 12. 
 
 In woods. Strachan, Kincardineshire. 
 
 37. C. contorta, Holmsk (p. 283) ; 1 in. Epping 
 Eorest. 
 
 38. C. flstulosa, Fr. ; light yellowish, then rufescent ; 
 simple, slender, very long, tense and straight, fistulose, rather 
 obtuse; root short, villous.- .F/. Dan. t. 1256, 1100,/. 3; 
 Holmsk. i. p. 15, with fig. ; Kromb. t. 5, /. 19. 
 
 On small branches and twigs. 
 
 Var. Ardenia, Sow. (p. 283) ; 8 in. The variety only 
 recorded as British. 
 
 39. C. juncea, Fr. (p. 283) . 
 
 40. C. tuberosa, /So/a'. = Calceora tuberosa, Fr. (vol. i. 
 /. 284). 
 
 ** Colour unchangeable, covunonli/ shining white. 
 
 41. C. canaliculata, Fr. ; 3 in., shining white; solitary ; 
 fistulose, slightly tough, very smooth, not rooting, at length 
 compressed, channelled or splitting longitudinally. — Quel, 
 t. 21,/ 1. Bull. t. 496,/. L.M. 
 
CLAVAPJEI. 331 
 
 On the ground. Coed Coch. 
 
 42. C. tenuipes, B. and Br. (p. 281); 1 in. 
 
 43. C. incarnata, IVeinni. ; gregarious; i-liiuch; flesh- 
 colour, white-pruinose, internally purple ; simple, solid, 
 cjlindrieal. 
 
 On the ground. Terrington, Norfolk. 
 
 44. C. acuta, Sow. (p. 283) ; 1-3 in. 
 
 45. C. uncialis, Grev. (p. 284) ; 1 in. 
 
 Genus 52. CALOCERA, Fr. (p. 284). 
 * Branched. 
 
 1. C. viscosa, Fr. (p. 284) ; 1 in. Epping Forest. 
 
 2. C. palmata, Fr. ; orange-yellow ; branched, tremelloso- 
 tough, compressed, dilated upwards, divided ; branchlets 
 somewhat round, divaricate, obtuse. 
 
 On wood. Twycross, 
 
 C. tuberosa, Fr. Transferred to Clavaria, No. 40. 
 
 ** Ccespitose. 
 
 3. C. cornea, Fr. (p. 284) ; h in. Epping Forest. 
 
 4. C. corticalis, Fr. ; — in., pallid flesh-colour; caespi- 
 tose, erumpeni, soft, pellucid ; clubs small, awl-shaped, 
 somewhat distinct. — Batsch. f. 162. 
 
 On dead bark. Penzance. 
 
 *** Simple, distinct. 
 
 5. C. striata, Fr. ; 4-3 in., yellow ; simple, solitary, 
 elongated, blunt at base, linear, even when dry. — Bonord, 
 f. 255. 
 
 On ash. Belvoir Castle. 
 
 6. C. striata, Fr. ; yellow ; simple, solitary, tough, lanceo- 
 late, acute, striate when dry. — Hojfin. Germ. t. 7, /. 1. 
 
332 OUTLINES OF BRITISH FUNGOLOGY. 
 
 On prostrate trunks. Batheaston. 
 7. C. glossoides, Fr. (p. 281) ; I in. 
 
 Genus 53. PTERULA, Fr. 
 
 Cartilaginous, filiform, arid, equal, without a distinct 
 stem ; hymenium pubescent, then smooth ; simple or 
 branched. 
 
 1. P. subulata, Fr. ; \\ in. ; densely crowded, tense and 
 straight, thread-like, equal except at attenuated base ; 
 sparingly branched, branches growing into each other, 
 whitish cinereous, multifid at apex, awl-shaped, smooth, 
 becoming yellow. — Linn. 1830, /. 11, /. 4. 
 
 On wood. Burnham Beeches. 
 
 2. P. multifida, Fr. ; 1-2 in. ; pallid-whitish, then dirty 
 pale-yellowish ; very much branched, very delicate, flaccid, 
 slightly tough ; branches tense and straight, almost hair- 
 like, heaped as if swept together, somewhat fastigiate, spear- 
 shaped at apex, same colour. 
 
 On dead branches. 
 
 Genus 54. TYPHULA, Fr. (p. 284). 
 I. PiiACORiiiiiz.*:. — Springing from sderotioid liyhernacula. 
 
 1. T. erythropus, Fr. (p. 284) ; \ in. 
 
 2. T. phacorrhiza, Fr. (p. 284) ; 3-4 in. Epping Forest. 
 
 3. T. incarnata, Lascli. (p. 285). 
 
 4. T. gyrans, Fr. ; white ; simple, very tender, somewhat 
 cylindrical ; stem thin, pubescent ; hybernaculum pallid, 
 becoming fuscous. — Batsch. f. 164. 
 
 On straw, etc. Uncommon. The hybernaculum is 
 Sclerotium complanatum. 
 
 5. T. musicola, Fr. (p. 285) ; 2-3 in. 
 
CLAVARIEI. 333 
 
 11. Leptorrhiz.e. — Radical tubercle vmnting. 
 
 G. T. GreviUei, Fr. (p. 285). 
 
 7. T. gracillima, JVhite ; white ; stem very slender, 
 curved, smooth, club elongated. 
 
 On various herbaceous plants. Perth. 
 
 8. T, flliformis, Fr. (p. 285) . 
 
 9. T. gracilis, B. and Desm. (p. 285) ; ~ in. 
 
 10. T. translucens, B. and Br.; minute ; white ; pellucid ; 
 stem shorty thickened upwards ; head irregular, somewhat 
 obovate. 
 
 On the ground. Glamis. 
 
 Genus 55. PISTILLARIA, Fr. (p. 285). 
 
 1. P. micans, Fr. (p. 285) ; -^ in. 
 
 2. P. culmigena, Fr. (p. 285). 
 
 3. P. quisquiliaris, Fr. (p. 286) ; J in. Epping Forest. 
 
 4. P. furcata, Sm. ; 1\ in. ; clubs white or yellowish ; 
 waxy, then tough, compressed, broad at apex, attenuated 
 downwards, generally furcate and ctespitose. 
 
 In greenhouses. 
 
 5. P. puberula, Berk. (p. 286) ; -^ in. 
 
 6. P. pusilla, Fr. (p. 286) ; -'-^r in. 
 
 Genus 56. MYCROCERA. 
 
 External veil persistent, membrauaceous-floccose, break- 
 ing above into many lacinia3 ; receptacle fleshy, club-shaped, 
 formed of simple spore-bearing fibres, spores fusiform, 
 arcuate. 
 
 No British examples recorded. 
 
334 OUTLINES OF BRITISH FUNGOLOGY. 
 
 Order G. TREMELLINEI. 
 Genus 57. TREMELLA, Fr. (p. 286). 
 
 I. Mesentekiformes. — Gelatinous, inclining to cartilaginous, 
 foliaceous, nailed. 
 
 1. T. fimbriata, P. (p. 280) ; 2-3. 
 
 2. T. frondosa, Fr. (p. 286). 
 
 3. T. foliacea, P. (p. 287) ; 1-2. Epping Forest. 
 
 4. T. lutescens, P. (287) ; ^-1 in. 
 
 II. OerebrintE. — Firm, then ptdpy, someiohat p'uinose loith 
 the spores. 
 
 5. T. mesenterica, Bet::, (p. 287). Epping Forest. 
 
 6. T. intumescens, Sm. (p. 288). 
 
 7. T. vesicaria, Enr/. Bot. (p. 287). 
 
 8. T. albida, Hud. (p. 287) ; 1 in. Epping Forest. 
 
 III. Crustace.e. — Diffused, becoming pla')ie. 
 
 9. T. viscosa, B. (p. 288). 
 
 10. T. epigsea, B. and Br. (p. 289) . 
 
 IV. TuBERCULiFORMES. — Small ; somewhat erumpent. 
 
 11. T. violacea, Rehl.— Dacrymyces violaceus, Fr. (vol. 
 i. p. 290). 
 
 12. T. indecora, Sommerf. (p. 288) ; ^ in. 
 
 13. T. moriformis, Eng.Bot. (p. 287). 
 
 14. T. tubercularia, 5. (p. 288). 
 
 15. T. foliicola, Fckl. ; white above, brown below ; scat- 
 tered, crowded, somewhat sessile, granular, globose, gelati- 
 nous above, hard and dry below, when dry cup-shaped. 
 
 On lower surface of leaves of Rubus fruticosus, with 
 Phraymidium. 
 
TREMELLINEI. 335 
 
 16. T. torta, B. (p. 288). \ in. 
 
 17. T. versicolor, B. (p. 288). 
 
 T. sareoides, 8m. = Ombrophila sarcoides, Jacq. 
 one of the Discomycetes. 
 
 Genus 58. EXIDIA (p. 289). 
 I. AuRicuLiN.E. — Pezizoicl. 
 
 1. E. truncata, Fr. ; 1 in., black ; shining, soft, distended 
 with jelly ; disc truncato-plane, glandular, at length caver- 
 nous, rough with dots beneath ; stem very short. 
 
 On lime branches. Yester Gardens. 
 
 2. E. recisa, Fr. (p. 289). 
 
 II. Spiculari.e. — Somewhat plane, unpolished beneath, 
 gla-ndular, here and there gyrose. 
 
 3. E. glandulosa, Fr. (p. 289) ; 2-3 in. Epping Forest. 
 
 4. E. saccharina, Fr. (p. 89). 
 
 Genus 59. HIRNEOLA, Fr. (p. 289). 
 1. H. auricula- Judse, B. (p. 289). 1-3 in. 
 
 Genus 60. FEMSJONIA, Fr. 
 
 Cup-shaped, distended with firm jelly, different on the 
 two sides ; disc thick, heterogeneous, even, not glandular ; 
 sporophores immersed, globose ; spores oblong, curved ; 
 on wood, erumpent, brightly coloured. 
 
 No British examples recorded. 
 
 Genus 61. NJEMATELIA, Fr. (p. 290). 
 
 1. N. encephala, Fr. (p. 290) ; k in. 
 
 2. N. nueleata, Fr. (p. 290) ; ^ in. 
 
 3. N. virescens, Corda (p. 290). 
 
336 OUTLINES OF BRITISH FUNCxOLOGY. 
 
 Genus 62. GUEPimA, Fr. 
 
 Gelatinous incliniug to cartilaginous ; free ; different on 
 the two sides, variable in form ; substipitate ; hymeniura 
 confined to one side ; sporopliores linear, long-forked, two 
 spored ; spores curved. 
 
 1. G. peziza, Tul. ; yellow ; cup-shaped, somewhat sessile, 
 smooth on both sides, adnate behind ; stem slender. 
 
 On wood. Shere. 
 
 Genus 63. DACRYMYCES, Nees (p. 290). 
 * Red. 
 
 1. D. maerosporus, B. and Br. ; rose-colour ; gelati- 
 nous, tuberculated. 
 
 On dead branches. Batheaston. 
 
 **■ Yellowish. 
 
 2. D. deliquescens, Dub. (p. 291) ; h in. Epping Forest. 
 
 3. D. stillatus, Nees. (p. 291). Epping Forest. 
 
 4. D. chrysocomus, Tul. (p. 291). Epping Forest. 
 
 *** Pallid or fuscous. 
 
 5. D. sebaceus, B. and Br. ; \ in., whitish; somewhat 
 round, composed of filaments which are variously branched 
 and often clavate above. 
 
 On twigs of ash and maple. Bath. 
 
 6. D. succineus, Fr. ; amber-colour ; punctiform, some- 
 what gelatinous, smooth, becoming pale externally when 
 moistened, disc darker and immarginate. 
 
 On pine leaves, Grantown, Morayshire. 
 
 7. D. vermiformis, B. and Br. ; grey ; minute, worm- 
 shaped ; sporophores globose, pallid-fuscous. 
 
 On rotten wood. Batheaston. 
 
HYPOG^I. 337 
 
 D. violaceus, Fr. ; removed to Tremella violacta. 
 
 Apyrenium lignatile 
 
 (P- 291) ; 
 „ , ^.^ . / other funsri, not belongiusf to 
 
 Hymenula punctiformis, ' ^ ^ ° * 
 
 Fr^ 
 
 Probably imperfect forms of 
 
 B. and Br. (p. 291) ; J ^^" ^^''^^ Hymenomycetes. 
 Ditiola radicata^ Fr. (p. 291) =Dacry my ces deliquescens. 
 
 Family II.— GaSTEROMYCETES. 
 
 Okder 7. HYPOG^I. 
 
 6-1. OCTAVIANIA, Vitt. (p. 292). 
 
 1. O. asterosperma, Vitt. (p. 293) ; generally near the 
 surface, often partially exposed. 
 
 2. O. Stephensii, Vitt. (p. 293) ; f in., near the sur- 
 face, often wholly superficial ; often covered with dead 
 leaves. 
 
 3. O. compacta, Tul. ; small ; snowy-white ; peridium 
 rather soft, cottony ; cells rounded or oblong, very minute, 
 soon obliterated, septa scarce conspicuous ; spores very 
 small, spherical, rough, yellowish, then ochraceous. — Tul. 
 Hyp., 79, t. xi. /. 3. 
 
 In woods. Shoreham. 
 
 65. MEL ANOG ASTER, Cda. (p. 293). 
 
 1. M. variegatus, Tul. (p. 293); gregarious; some two 
 or three inches beneath the surface, or partly exposed, only 
 covered by leaves and twigs ; under beeches, poplars, etc. 
 
 2. M. ambiguus, TuL ; same habit as last. 
 
 Y 
 
838 OUTLINES OF BRITISH FUNGOLOGY. 
 
 6(5. HYDNANGIUM, JVa/Ir. (p. .293). 
 
 1. H. carotsecolor, B. (p. .^QS) ; generally superficial. 
 
 2. H. carneum, JFullhr. ; subglobose, irregular, smooth, 
 flesh-coloured ; cells pale flesh colour, immutable ; basidia 
 prominent ; spores spherical, echinulate ; spinules long, 
 slightly coloured. 
 
 Generally superficial. 
 
 About the roots of Eucalijpt'i. Edinburgh. 
 
 Q7. HYSTERANGIUM, Vitt. (p. 291). 
 
 1. H. nephritieum, B. (p. 291) ; commonly eight or nine 
 inches deep in the ground, with copious mycelium. 
 
 2. Thwaitesii, B. and Br. (p. 294) ; habit same as 
 last. 
 
 68. RHIZOPOGON, TuL (p. 294). 
 
 1. R. rubescens, TuL; almost superficial, but often some 
 inches deep in very light peaty or fibrous soil. 
 
 69. HYMENOG ASTER, Tid. (p. 295). 
 
 1. H. Klotzschii, Tul. (p. 295). 
 
 2. H. muticus, B. and Br. (p. 295). 
 
 3. H. luteus, V'ttt. (p. 295). 
 1. H. decorus, Tul. (p. 295). 
 
 5. H. vulgaris, Tul (p. 296). 
 
 6. H. pallidus, Tul (p. 296). 
 
 7. H. citrinus, Vitt. (p. 296). Edible. 
 
 8. H. olivaceus, Vitt. (p. 296). 
 
 9. H. tener, B. (p. 296). 
 
 10. H. Thwaitesii, B. and Br. (p. 297). 
 
 11. H. pusillus, B. and Br. (297) ; the habit of all the 
 species of Hunienoy aster is nearly superficial. 
 
TRICHOGASTRES, 339 
 
 Order 8. FHALLOIDEL 
 70. PHALLUS, L. (p. 297). 
 
 1. P. impudicus, L. (p. 297). 
 
 2. P. iosmus, B. (p. 298). 
 
 71. MUTINUS, Hiids., FL Anyl. 
 = ('YXOFIIALL[jS, Fr. (p. 1^98). 
 
 1. M. caninus, Fr. (p. 298). 
 
 2. M. bambusinus, Zoll. Syst. Verz. 1854, P- H ; whole 
 fungus about 4 in. high ; stem pallid, rubiginous, or rosy, 
 6-8 mm. thick, the walls containing one stratum of cavities ; 
 capitulum long, half the entire length, acutely conical, 
 dingy purple, externally rugose, impervious at apex ; mass 
 of spores, sooty-olive ; spores 6x4 mm. 
 
 On the ground. Sunningdale. 
 
 72. CLATHRUS, Mich. (p. 298). 
 1. Clathrus caneellatus, L. fp. 298). 
 
 Order 9. TRICHOGASTRES. 
 73. BATARREA, F. (p. 299). 
 J. B. phalloides, P. (p. 299). 
 
 74. TULOSTOMA, P. 
 
 1. T. mammosum. Fr. (p. 2991. 
 
34-0 OUl'LINES OF BRITISH FUNGOLOGY. 
 
 75. GE ASTER, Mic/i. (p. 299). 
 
 1. G. coliformis, P. (p. 299). 
 
 2. G. fornicatus, Fr. (p. 299). 
 
 3. G. striatus, D. C. (p. 3()(»). 
 
 4. G. Bryantii, B. (p. 300). 
 
 5. G. limbatus, Fr. (p. 3O0). 
 (). G. flmbriatus, Fr. (p. 300). 
 
 7. G. mammosus, Chev. (p. 300). 
 
 «. G. rufesceus, P. (p. 300). 
 
 9, G. hygrometrieus, P. (p. 301). 
 
 10. G. Michelianus, Worth. Sm. ; outer peridium pale 
 buff, thick, fleshy, generally splitting into five or si.x sub- 
 equal lacinise, clothed on the outside with a thin, dark 
 brown bark, which again splits into elegant honeycomb 
 patterns ; inner peridium pale slatey buff, spherical ; mouth 
 prominent, obtuse, dentate, paler in colour than body of 
 inner peridium ; spores tuberculoso-echinulate. — G. Chron. 
 1873; Grc'villea, ii. p. 35,/. xiii. ; Mich. t. 100,/. 1; Cke. 
 Handbook, No. 1079. G. funlcatua, Grevillea, i. p. -40 ; 
 G. cri/ptorr/ii/nchus, Kaldtb. 
 
 On the ground. 
 
 Spores "OOOli" dia. When mature, and when the outer 
 peridium bursts, this plant sometimes throws itself nine 
 or more inches away from its place of growth. 
 
 11. G. saccatus, Fr. ; outer peridium saccate, cleft into 
 many flaccid subinvolute lacinise ; interior peridium sessile, 
 crowned with a circular flat disc, and a sharp, silky mouth : 
 spores dark brown, slightly echinulate. 
 
 By hedge banks. Truro. 
 Spores -OOOIS in. dia. 
 
 12. G. lagenseformis, Vitt. ; outer peridium splitting 
 
TRICHOGASTRES. 341 
 
 to the middle, in nearly equal, acuminate lacinise, inner 
 stratum very thick, evanescent ; inner peridium sessile, 
 flaccid ; mouth determinate, piano-conic, ciliato-fimbriate ; 
 columella rather long, clavate. — Jltf. Ltjcop. t. 1, /. 2; 
 Payer,/. 519, 520; GreviUea, ii. ^a 35, p. xiv. 
 
 On the ground. 
 
 In infancy this Geaster resembles an antique jar with a 
 narrow mouth, hence the specific name ; spores spherical, 
 in this differing from the majority of Geasters, '00012" dia. 
 
 76. BOVISTA, Dill. (p. 301). 
 
 1. B. nigrescens, P. (p. 301). 
 
 2. B. plumbea, P. (p. 301). 
 
 3. Bovista ovalispora, Cke. and Mass. ; subglobose ; 
 sessile; cortex thin, whitish or ochraceous, subpersistent ; 
 peridium thin, flaccid, smooth, dull lead-colour, dehiscing 
 by an irregular apical rupture ; capillitium and spores 
 umber in the mass ; threads 12-16 mm. at the thickest 
 part, much and vaguely branched, tapering to long slender 
 tips, dirty umber by transmitted light ; spores oval, 6x4^ 
 mm., brownish umber, with a narrow hyaline border 
 caused by the thickened epispore ; pedicels long and stout, 
 hyaline. 
 
 On the ground. Kew. 
 
 Differing from B. plumbea in being 2 inches or more 
 large, in the oval spores, and from B. nigrescens in the 
 oval spores and absence of the purple tinge in the capillitium 
 and spores. 
 
 4. B. olivacea, Cke. and Mass.; globose, 1 2—2 in. dia., with 
 a short, stout, rooting base ; cortex very thin and evanescent ; 
 peridium thick, at first soft and pliant like leather, becom- 
 ing brittle and breaking away in patches, pale ochraceous, 
 
312 OUTLINES 01' MKITISH FUNGOLOGY. 
 
 at length whitish ; mass of spores, and very dense capilli- 
 tium bright citrine, then olive ; threads thin, liaccid, simple ; 
 spores globose, smooth, pale yellow, sometimes pedicellate, 
 5 mm. dia. 
 
 On the ground. Diirdham Down. 
 
 77. LYCOPERDON, Toifrn. (p. 301;. 
 
 1. L. giganteum, Batsch (p. 302). 
 
 2. L. cselatum, Fr. (p. 302). 
 
 3. L. atro-purpureum, Vitt. (p. 302). 
 
 4. L. pusillum, Fr. (p. 302). 
 
 5. L. saccatxim, Valil. (p. 302). 
 (3, L. gemmatum, Fr. (p. 302). 
 
 7. L. pyriforme, Schacjf (p. 30o). 
 
 8. L. Cookei, Mass. ; gregarious ; ^-f in. dia., hemi- 
 t^pherical or globose, abruptly contracted into a short, thick 
 stem-like base, smoky-brown above, white below, minutely 
 areolato-furfuraceous, dehiscing by a small irregular mouth > 
 capillitium continuous with the well-developed cellular 
 sterile base ; threads varying in thickness, simple, firm ; 
 spores bright citrine yellow, then olivaceous-umber, globose, 
 smooth, sometimes stipitate, 4 mm. dia. 
 
 On the ground. Norfolk. Kew. 
 
 9. L. Hoylei, B. and Br. ; peridium stipitate, subglobose, 
 bristling with elongated rigid brown warts, sterile base 
 small, confluent with the capillitium ; spores globose, 
 echinulate, lilac. 
 
 On the ground. Heading. 
 
 Stem 1 in. high, | in. thick, lacunose ; olivaceous within ; 
 peridium 2 in. across ; warts li-2 lines high ; capillitium 
 and spores lilac; spores '00015 in.; mycelium thread-likc) 
 white. 
 
ELVELLACEI. 343 
 
 10. H. echinatum, P. ; peridiuoi turbinate, substipitate 
 pale umber or yellowish, rough with rather distant stout 
 spiny warts ; spores echinulate. 
 
 In woods. Berks. 
 
 Spores echinulate, •000.2--000,2o" dia. 
 
 78. SCLERODERMA, P. (p. 303). 
 
 1. S. vulgare, Fr. (p. 303). 
 
 2. S. Bovista, Fr. (p. 303). 
 
 3. S. verrucosum, P. (p. 303). 
 
 4. S. geaster, Fr. ; sessile ; subglobose ; growing pallid ; 
 peridium dehiscing at the apex in stellate lacinise; inner 
 mass dirty purplish black ; spores globose, verrucose. — 
 Seem. Jour. Bot. ix. t. 116; Trans. Woolh. CI. 1870, p. 252; 
 Icon.; Mich. /. 99, /. 1. 
 
 On the ground, near Herefoid. 
 
 79. POLYSACCUM, D.C. (p. 304). 
 1. P. olivaceum, Fr. (p. 804). 
 
 80. CENOCOCCUM, Fr. 
 1. C. geophilum, Fr, 
 
 Family V.— ASCOMYCETES. 
 
 Order 23. ELVELLACEI. 
 
 242. MORCHELLA, Dill. (p. 358). 
 
 A. Pihus adnate at base. 
 
 1. M. esculenta, P. 
 
 Var. rotunda, P. ; colour whitish-pallid, when dry struw- 
 colour or pale yellow. 
 
344 OUTLINES OF BRITISH FUXGOLOGY. 
 
 In woods and bushy places, chiefly on sandy soil. 
 
 ~'. M. conica, P. ; pileus conical, oblong, adnata at 
 base ; primary ribs longitudinal, obtuse, secondary fornaing 
 transverse folds; pits elongated, narrow, plicato-lacunose ; 
 stem subterete, cylindrical, whitish. — Kromb., t. 16,/. 7. 
 
 On the ground ; esculent ; three or four inches high. 
 
 Var. deliciosa, Ft\ ; pileus subcylindrical, acute ; stem 
 short. 
 
 In grassy places. Spring. Esculent. 
 
 3. M. crassipes, P. ; pileus subconical, brown, adnate at 
 base ; ribs irregularly undulating, thick ; pits large, variable 
 in form, deep, the bottom celluloso-plicate ; stem large, 
 tall, incrassated at base, lacunose, globose, somewhat flesh- 
 coloured. — Kromb., t. 16, /. 1. 
 
 On the ground. Spring. Esculent ; attaining a height of 
 12 in. 
 
 •A. M. Smithiana, Cke. ; pileus subglobose, tawny, adnate 
 at base ; ribs irregular, undulating, thick ; pits polymor- 
 phous, deep, plicate at bottom ; stem large, tall, thickened 
 at base, hollow, attenuated upwards, sulcate, toraentose, 
 white or flesh coloured. — Jonr. Bot. 1868, t. 73. 
 
 Spring. Esculent ; reaching a height of 12 in. and a dia. 
 
 of 7 in. 
 
 B. Pileus free the base. 
 
 5. M. patula, P. (p. 358). 
 
 6. M. gigas, P. ; pileus conical, free at base, which is 
 somewhat undulate ; ribs longitudinal, anastomosing ; pits 
 large, elongated, lacunose within ; stem stout, long, en- 
 larged downwards, sulcate, dirty white, covered with ferru- 
 ginous squamules, hollow. — Vitt. Many., t. 15, /. 6-7. 
 
 On the earth iu shady places. Spring. Attaining a 
 height of 8 ia. 
 
ELVELLACEI. 345 
 
 7. M. semilibera, D.C. (p. 358). 
 
 243. GYROMITRA, Fr. (p. 358). 
 
 1. G. esculenta, Fr. (p. 353). Audley End. 
 
 2, G. gig as, Kromb. ; pileus large, lobed, undulato- 
 plicate or curled, pallid, whitish or ochraceous ; lobes sub- 
 adnate to the stem, adpressed, somewhat undulating ; stem 
 thick, cellular, waxy, whitish, externally lacunose, sub- 
 glabrous. Kromb.^ t.20,f. 1-5. 
 
 On the ground. Esculent. 
 
 244. HELVELLA, L. (p. 358). 
 A. >Stem stout, sulcate. 
 
 1. H. crispa, Fr. (p. 359). Epping Forest. 
 
 2. H. lacunosa, Afz. (p. 359). Epping Forest. 
 
 3. H. sulcata, Afz. ; pileus deflexed, 2-3 lobed, adnate ; 
 stem stuffed, furrowed with equal ribs 2 in. long. — Pat., 
 f. 272. 
 
 Kew. 
 
 4. H. subcostata, Cke. ; pileus deflexed, free, sublobate, 
 even, under side paler, ribbed and veined ; stem equal, 
 longitudinally ribbed. 
 
 Pileus 2^ in. broad ; stem 2i in. long ; under side of 
 pileus free from stem, with branching ribs. 
 Glamis. 
 
 B. Stem stout, nearly even. 
 
 5. H. infula, Schcpff. ; pileus lobate, deflexed, even ; 
 margin adhering very closely to stem, at length undulate, 
 subcinnamoneous ; stem enlarged upwards, stuffed, then 
 hollow, smooth, often here and there irregularly lacunose, 
 pallid, slightly villous. — Schoeff.^ t. 159. 
 
346 OUTLINES OF BRITISH FUNGOLOGY. 
 
 On the ground in woods. llotliimurchus. Brandon. 
 
 G. H. monachella, Fr. ; pileus defiexed, lobate, adnate, 
 even, subspadiceous ; stem hollow, 1-2 in. long, even, 
 glabrous, white. — Kromh., t. 19, /. 22-26. 
 
 On sandy ground in mountain woods. Old Roar Wood, 
 St. Leonard's. 
 
 7. H. guepinioides. B. and ('ke. ; pileus entire, de- 
 flexed, free, ochraceous ; stem elongated, equal, even, 
 hollow, whitish. 
 
 On the ground. 
 
 c. Stem slender, even. 
 a. Externally pruinose, furjuraceous or rjlabrovs. 
 
 8. H. elastica, Bu/l (p. 359). 
 
 9. H. atra, Konig. ; fuliginous black ; pileus detlexed, 
 adpressed on both sides, free, even beneath ; stem stuffed, 
 furfuraceo-villous.— iCrom^., t. 21, f. 18-20. 
 
 In moist woods, summer and autumn. Aviemore, Loch 
 Killein, and Loch Laggau. 
 
 10. H. pulla, Holms. ; pileus defiexed, free, lobed, un- 
 dulated, fuliginous, nearly naked underneath and also at 
 middle of stem. — Cke., Mijcoyr., f. 338. 
 
 On moist ground in woods, sometimes on old rotting 
 trunks of trees. King's Lynn. 
 
 11. H. Klotzschiana, Cdu. ; pileus nearly two-lobed, 
 defiexed, membranaceous, even, opaque, brown, margin 
 repand, even beneath and yellowish; stem slender, sub- 
 cylindrical, pale yellow, clear white within. — Corda in Sturm. 
 Flo., iii. /. 57. Cooke, Mycocjr., f. 168. 
 
 In fernery. Coed Coch. 
 
 12. H. ephippium, Lev. (p. 359). 
 
ELVELLACKI. 317 
 
 245. VERPA, Swartz. (p. 359). 
 
 1. V. digitaliformis, P. (p. 359). 
 
 2. V. ruflpes, Phill. ; pileus conical, rugulose, sublobate, 
 umber, whitish and tomentose beneath ; stem ventricose, 
 rufous squammolosCj stuifed. — Phill. Brit. Disc. pi. 1, p. 1. 
 
 Terrington St. Clement's, North Wootton. 
 
 3. V. conica, Sow. (p. 259). 
 
 (v. speeiosa Vitt. ; recorded doubtfully by B. and 
 Br. — Ann. Ma^. Nat. Hist. 1922.) 
 
 246. MITRULA, Fr. (p. 360). 
 
 1. M. cucullata, Fr. (p. 360). 
 
 2. M. paludosa, Fr. (p. 360). 
 
 3. M. alba, Sm. ; head globose, even, white ; stem 
 stutted, white ; asci cylindrical, sporidia lanceolate, hyaline, 
 eguttulate, 16^3 mm. ; Grevillea, 1, /. 10, lower figure. 
 
 East Budleigh, Budleigh Salter ton. 
 
 247. SPATHULARIA, P. (p. 360j. 
 1. S. flavida, P. (p. 360). 
 
 248. LEOTIA, Hill. (p. 360). 
 
 1. li. lubrica, P. (p. 360). Epping Forest. 
 
 2. L. chlorocephala, Schw. ; csespitose ; pileus globose, 
 very glabrous, nearly pellucid, asruginous green ; stem 
 very long, twisted, powdered ; asci clavato-cylindrical ; 
 sporidia 8, fusiform, curved, 3-guttulate, 20-22 x 5 mm.; 
 paraphyses filiform. — Cooke, Mycogr,, f. 174. 
 
 Variable in size, reaching 4 in. high. 
 On the ground. Hampshire. 
 
348 OUTLINES OF BRITISH FUXGOLOGY 
 
 3. L. circinans, P. ; gregarious, somewhat ca^spitose, or 
 arranged in circles ; pileus fleshy, convex, afterwards undu- 
 late, margin involute, nerves underneath running down 
 into stem; stem fistulose, somewhat powdery; asci clavate ; 
 sporidia 8, linear, cylindrical, or clavate, straight or curved, 
 multi-guttulate, 50-60 x 3 mm., paraphyses filiform, curved 
 at apices. — Pers. Icon, et Descr., t. 5,/. 5-7 ; Cooke, Mycogr.^ 
 
 f. 172. 
 
 On the ground in fir woods. Autumn. Forres. Avie- 
 more. Glamis. Menmuir. 
 
 4. L. aeicularis, P. ; gregarious or scattered ; small ; 
 white ; pileus waxy, fragile, undulato-convex, margin 
 straight, under-side granulose ; stem simple or branched, 
 becoming crooked, discoloured ; asci clavate ; sporidia 8, 
 fusiform, biguttulate, becoming pseudo-uniseptate, 25-28 
 
 X 4 mm., paraphyses filiform. — Cooke, Mycogr., f. 369. 
 
 On decayed stumps of trees near the ground ; ?>— 1 in. 
 high. Halifax. Pophills. Appen. King's Lynn, etc. 
 
 5. L. nana, Fr. (p. 360). 
 
 249. VIBKISSEA, Fr. (p. 361). 
 A. S'tipitate, 
 
 1. V. truncorum, Fr. (p. 361). 
 
 2. V. Margarita, White ; simple ; head orbicular, 
 orange-vermilion, margin hispid ; stem cylindrical, hir- 
 sute with black articulated hairs ; internally whitish- 
 cinerous ; asci cylindrical ; sporidia 8, filiform, multi- 
 septate, 180 X 2 mm., paraphyses filiform, branched near 
 apices, which are subclavate and brown. — Phill. Transx 
 Linn. Soc, Ser. 2, vol. ii., /. 1,/. 10-16. 
 
ELVELLACEI. 349 
 
 On dead sticks of heather in a pool at an altitude of 
 3200 feet. 
 
 Mor. Shron. Braemar. 
 
 .3. V Fergussoni, B. and Br. ; stem short, thickened 
 upwards ; cups plane, externally dark brown, granulose ; 
 hymenium plane or pulvinate, yellow; asci elongated; 
 sporidia filiform, 220 mm.; summits of paraphyses globose. 
 —B. and Br. Ann. Nat. Hist., No. 1490, t. 11,/. 6. 
 
 On Prunus Padus. New Pitsligo, N.B. 
 
 4. V. microscopia, B. and Br. ; very minute ; plane or 
 cup-shaped ; hymenium and receptacle grey ; stipes short, 
 slender, black ; asci clavate ; sporidia 8, filiform, 50-60 x 2 
 mm. ; paraphyses filiform, numerous, — Phill. Trans. Linn. 
 Soc, Ser. 2, vol. ii. t. I, f. 17-24. 
 
 On damp fir wood. Rannock, N.B. 
 B. Sessile. 
 
 5. V. Guernisaci, Crouan ; minute, lentiform or tur- 
 binate ; hymenium pallid, ochraceous, or grey, convex ; asci 
 cylindrical, long ; sporidia 8, filiform, hyaline, 270 mm. long ; 
 paraphyses slender, branched near the clavate summits. — 
 PhiU. Brit. Disc, pi. x. /. 61. 
 
 On dead submerged branches of Salix in water. May 
 and June. Wexham. Habberley. Berrington. 
 
 6. V. turbinata, Phill. ; scattered ; turbinate ; hymenium 
 plane or convex, ochraceous yellow, margined by the thin 
 edge of the receptacle, which is bluish grey, smooth ; asci 
 cylindrical ; sporidia 8, filiform, 180 x 2 mm. ; paraphyses 
 slender, branched near the summits, which are slightly 
 enlarged and brownish. — Phill. Trans. Linn. Soc, Ser. 2, 
 vol. ii. t. 11,/. 14-18. 
 
 On branches of ash in wateycourse. Shrewsbury 
 
 7. V. leptospora, B. and Br. ; hemispherical, then 
 
350 OUTLINES OF liKITlSII FUNGOLOGY. 
 
 expanded, sessile ; hymeniura pallid or straw-colour ; 
 externally lurid, from the scattered, black, ad pressed flocci ; 
 margin crenulate ; sporidia filiform ; 200-230 x 2 mm. 
 broad, — PhilL Trans. Linn. Soc, Ser. 2. \o\. ii. /. 2, 
 / 19-23. 
 
 On decayed wood. About i a line across. Jedburgh. 
 
 250. GEOGLOSSUM, P. (p. 361). 
 
 1. G. viride, P. (p. 361). 
 
 2. G. olivaceum, P. (p. 361). 
 
 3. G. viscosum, P. ; glabrous ; viscid ; black ; club 
 cylindrical, confluent with the stem, afterwards slightly 
 thickened, olivaceous-black below ; asci cylindraceo-clavate ; 
 sporidia 8, linear, rounded at the ends, straight or slightly 
 curved, 3-septate, brown; 80x95 mm. ; paraphyses filiform, 
 non-septate, apices globose. — Cooke, Mycogr., fig. 10. 
 
 On the ground ; mountain pastures, etc. ; 2-3 in. high. 
 Foxhall, Terrington, 
 
 4. G. glabrum, P. (p. 362). 
 
 5. G. glutinosum, P. (p. 362). 
 
 6. G. microsporum, Cke. and Pk. ; glabrous ; somewhat 
 viscid ; club obtuse, distinct ; stem slightly squamulose ; 
 asci cylindrical, a little curved, hyaline, faintly 7-septate, 
 50 X 10 mm. ; paraphyses filiform, straight, not enlarged at 
 apices. — Cooke, Mycogr., f. 11. 
 
 On the ground. Autumn. Ilanham, Clifton. 
 
 7. G. tremellosum, Cke. ; glabrous ; tremellose ; black ; 
 contiguous ; club subcompressed, hollow ; stem even, glu- 
 tinous, same colour ; asci clavate ; sporidia fusiform, straight 
 or curved, hyaline, 30-32 x 5 mm., at length 5-7 septate ; 
 paraphyses linear. — Cooke, Mycogr.,/. 47. 
 
 On the ground. Rannoch, KB, 
 
ELVELLACEI. 351 
 
 RHIZINA. Fr. 
 
 Sessile ; eft'used like a crust, afterwards bullato-inflated^ 
 determinate ; hymenium occupying the upper surface ; 
 under side furnished with root-like fibrils ; flesh firm, per- 
 sistent ; asci cylindrical ; sporidia 8, large. 
 
 1. R. undulata, Fr.; efl'used, undulate; bay-brown; 
 margin inflexed ; flocculose beneath, and pallid ; asci cylin- 
 drical ; sporidia 8, fusiform, subacute, 2-guttulate, at 
 length pseudo-septate ; 30-35 x 9 mm. ; paraphyses filiform, 
 enlarged and brown at apices, which adhere firmly together. 
 —Schaff. t. 153; Tul. Hyp. t. 21, f. 16; Cur r. Linn. Trans. 
 xxiv. ^.51, /. 7—9. 
 
 On gravelly and sandy soil recently exposed to fire. 
 Ascot Heath. Wrekin. 
 
 2. R. laevigata, Fr. ; orbicular ; even ; brown ; margin 
 prominent ; granulose beneath ; fibrils pallid ; asci cylin- 
 drical ; sporidia 8, fusiform, acuminate, bi-guttulate, uni- 
 seriate, hyaline ; paraphyses filiform. — GrtviUea, ii. /. 22, 
 
 ./• 1. 
 
 On stumps. Glamis. 
 
 251. PEZIZA, L. (p. 362). 
 
 The genus Peziza of the Outlines, is now represented by 
 the Order, Pezizee, in two Series : Nudee and Vestita. 
 These Series contain twelve genera and twenty-nine sub- 
 genera, as compared with the eleven subgenera of the 
 Outlines. The sequence of species now diflers from the 
 sequence as given in the Outlines. In the following list of 
 British species, new since the publication of the Outlines, 
 only those species are given which measure an inch or 
 more in diameter. 
 
352 OUTLINES OF BRITISH FUNGOLOGY. 
 
 P. acetabulum, L. (p. 363) ; 2 in. 
 
 P. Percevali, B. and Cke. ; 1^ iu.; solitary; cup at 
 length expanded, somewhat pruinose, margin closely in- 
 flexed ; stem somewhat thick, subattenuated below, with 
 slender rooting fibrils; asci clavato-cylindrical. — Cke., 
 My cog., f. :i92. 
 
 On the ground. Glamis, etc. 
 
 P. ammophila, Dr. and M. ; 1 in. ; cup turbinate, 
 fragile, thick ; hymenium brown externally, pallid, dry, 
 margin splitting into triangular teeth ; stem elongated, 
 rooting, very fragile, — Cke., Mijcoy., f. 100. 
 
 Immersed in sand on the sea-coast at the roots of 
 Psamma. 
 
 St. Andrews, N.B., Brampton Burrows, Ilfracombe. 
 
 P. pleurota, Phill. ; Ij iu. ; cup sessile, expanded, 
 nearly cochleate, umber brown, paler externally, elongated 
 on one side. — Cke., Mycog.,f. 351. 
 
 On cow dung. Autumn. Shrewsbury. 
 
 P. onotica, P. (p. o6o) ; 1-2^ in. Epping Forest. 
 
 P. leporina, Batsch. (p. 363); 1-3 in. 
 
 P. auricula, Cke. ; 1-2 in. ; sub-ciespitose ; fleshy, 
 elongated on one side, ear-shaped, flesh-red, externally 
 farinose ; asci cylindrical, stipitate. — Cke., Mycog., f. 213. 
 
 E,oss, Herefordshire. 
 
 P. apophysata, Cke. and Phill.; ^-\ in.; cup sessile un- 
 equal, lobed, subcontorted, elongated on one side, exter- 
 nally umber-brown ; hymenium blackish-brown^, smooth. — 
 Cke., Mycog., f. 350. 
 
 On the side of a wet ditch. Autumn. Shrewsbury. 
 
 P. phlebopliora, B. and Br. ; ^-1^ in. ; cup poculi- 
 form, oblique, substipitate, finely pulverulent, venoso-costate 
 at base. 
 
ELVELLACEI. 353 
 
 On clay bank. Kings Cliffe. Brislington, etc. 
 
 P. aurantia, Fr. (p. 363) ; 2-5 in. Epping Forest. 
 
 Var, stipitata, Phill. ; disc bright scarlet ; stem equal to 
 height of cup, about 1^ lines. 
 
 Wokingham, 
 
 Var. atro-marginata, Phill. and Ploiv. ; cup ^1 in. 
 broad ; hymenium blood-red, wrinkled, margin black, 
 owing to the presence of minute, septate, bristle-like 
 hairs.— G. Chron.,'^Qh. 11, 1882; Icon. 
 
 Clenchwarton, Norfolk. 
 
 P. luteo-nitens, B. and Br. ; (p. 364) . 
 
 P. badia, P. (p. 363); 1-2 in. 
 
 P. flbrillosa, Curr. ; I in ; cup nearly sessile, ir- 
 regular, orange, clothed externally with dingy -white downy 
 fibrillae, which form a regular, dense, tomentose edging to 
 cup. — Cke. Mycog. f. 207. 
 
 On the ground. Oct. Hanham Wood. Kings Lynn. 
 
 P. cochleata, Bull. ; 1-2 in ; sporidia not rough. 
 
 P. alutacea, P. 2 in ; cup sub-sessile, contorted, pallid 
 ferruginous; sporidia rough. — Cke. Mycog. f. 214. 
 
 On the ground in woods. 
 
 P. grandis, P. ; 2-3 in ; csespitose or solitary, sessile, 
 flexuous ; externally olivaceous-umber, with a lacunose 
 albo-tomentose base; hymenium ochrey yellow. — Cke., 
 Mycog., f. 376. 
 
 On the ground ia pine woods. Heywood Forest, near 
 Hereford. 
 
 P. ochracea, Boud. ; 1-2 in ; cup sessile, ca^spitose, 
 entire, subfiexuous, bright ochraceous, externally furfu- 
 raceous. — Cke. Mycog. f. 377. 
 
 On the ground in beech woods. Spring. Wrekin, Salop. 
 
 P. Adse, Sadler. ; \-2 in ; cup sessile, subciespitose, 
 
 z 
 
354 OUTLINES OF BRITISH FUNGOLOGY. 
 
 cochleate, irregular, becoming expanderl, margin entire or 
 lobed, reflexcd ; hymeniura white, rosy-white, violaceous, or 
 ochraceous. — Grevillea, vi. L 97, f. 1-3. 
 
 On damp walls, etc. Inverleith House, Edinburgh. 
 
 P. isabellina, JVo7 Sm. ; 1-2 in ; cup sessile, ctes- 
 pitose, fleshy, subglobose, internally smooth, brownish yellow 
 with a shade of red, externally paler, sub-pruinose. — 
 Grevillea., i. /. 9. 
 
 On decayed coniferous wood, Kings Lynn. 
 
 P. macropus, P. (p. 364) ; h-l in. 
 
 Var. flavida, PMIl. ; less furfuraceous externally; colour 
 brighter, yellow, not pallid-fuliginous. 
 
 On decayed wood. Moccas, Herefordshire. 
 
 P. trachycarpa, Cnrr. ; \-\\ in ; cup orbicular, then 
 plane, very often umbilicate ; hyraenium blackish-brown, 
 rough, tuberculate ; externally granulated. — Curr. Trans. 
 Linn. Soc, xxiv. t. 51,/. 3, 5. 
 
 On burnt ground. Summer and Autumn. Ascot, etc. 
 
 P. leiocarpa, Carr ; lo-3 in., cup at first connivent, 
 sub-globose, externally rough, principally towards margin ; 
 vinous-brown, thin, semi-pellucid, sometimes pallid near 
 base, at length expanded, almost plane ; hyraenium olive- 
 brown. — Curr. Trans. Linn. Soc. xxiv. t. 51,/. 4-8. 
 
 On burnt ground. Ascot. 
 
 P. repanda, TFahl. (p. 3G3) ; 1-4 in. Epping 
 Forest. 
 
 P. reticulata, Grer. = P. venosa, P. (p. 362) ; 
 2-5 in. 
 
 P. coronaria, Jacq. ; 4-5 in. ; cup at first buried, 
 then more or less exposed, sub-globose, splitting in a 
 stellate manner, nearly violet or rosy, externally pallid ; 
 stem short, thick, rooting. — Cke. Mycog.f. 238. 
 
ELVELLACEI. 355 
 
 On the ground, under trees. Spring. Street, Somerset. 
 Chichester. King's Lynn, etc. 
 
 P. venosa, P. ; 1-2 in., cup sessile or sub-stipitate ; 
 umber-brown, externally whitish, rugose, with costate 
 veins; base produced into a very short stem, Cke. My coy. 
 f. 228. 
 
 On the ground. Spring. Said to be esculent. King's 
 Cliffe. Sibbertoft. Apethorpe, etc. 
 
 P. succosa, B. (263) ; 1 in. 
 
 P. radula, B. and Br. (p. o6dt) ; 1 in. 
 
 P. pustulata, P. (p. 364) A-U in. 
 
 P. vesiculosa, Bull. (p. 364) ; 1-3 in. Epping 
 Forest, 
 
 P. cerea, Suiv. (p, 363) ; 1-3 in, 
 
 P. bufonia, P. ; cup hemispherical, often fragile ; 
 hymenium bright brown, externally warty, of the same 
 colour, margin entire or laterally incised ; rstem short, 
 rooting, becoming pallid, — Cke. Mycoy.f. 292. 
 
 In moist woods, and on rubbish heaps. Grantham, 
 
 P. purpurascens, P. ; \-\ in., cup sessile, campanu- 
 late, then expanded, conically attenuated to base, livid- 
 purple, glabrous, — Cke. Mycoy. f. 276, 
 
 On the ground. Autumn. King's Lynn, 
 
 P. tectoria, Cke. ; j-l| in,, cup sessile, or substipitate, 
 globose, afterwards expanded, applanate ; hymenium plane, 
 sub-umbilicate, pallid-ochraceous ; externally whitish, fur- 
 furaceous, becoming smooth, — Cke. Mycoy. f. 263, 
 
 On damp plaster walls. Summer and autumn, Epping 
 Forest. Shrewsbury. Edinburgh, Marlborough, etc, 
 
 P. ampliata, P. ; ^-1 in,, cup sessile, fleshy, fragile, 
 thin, expanding directly from the base, nearly cinnamon, 
 externally pallid, nearly smooth, — Cke. Mycoy. f. 384. 
 
35G OUTLINES OF BRITISH FUNGOLOGY. 
 
 On rotting wood, and bark of oak, poplar, etc. Autumn 
 and winter. Hereford. Guildford. Kew, etc. 
 P. cribrosa, Grev. (p. 372) ; ^-1 in. 
 P. tuberosa, Bull. (p. 365) ; i-l in. 
 
 P. radiculata, Soiv. (p. 367); l-\\ in. Epping 
 Forest. 
 
 P. coccinea, J acq. (p. 367) ; 1 in. Epping Forest. 
 P. cerium, Weherb ; \-\\ in.; cups stipitate, waxy, 
 when dry sub-coriaceous, saucer-shape, becoming expanded, 
 sometimes laterally compressed ; black ; externally velvety ; 
 stem equal or thickened below, deeply sulcate or subrugose, 
 glabrous, paler at base. Cke. Mijcorj. f. 187. 
 
 On the ground on sandy soil. Spring. North Wootton. 
 P. bulbosa, Heclw. ; \-\ in. ; cups hemispherical, 
 becoming expanded, waxy, when dry subcoriaceous, cineres- 
 cent, minutely squamulose ; hymenium blackish brown \ 
 stem firm, rather slender, arising from a tuberform base. 
 On sandy soil. Summer and autumn. King's Lynn. 
 P. cocotina, Cke. ; 1 in. ; cups rooting, fleshy, hemis- 
 pherical, becoming applanate, margin entire ; hymenium 
 pale orange ; externally, together with the stem, whitish 
 tomeutose. — Cke. Mycog. f. 356. 
 
 On cocoa-nut fibre in a caterpillar-cage, and on sawdust, 
 October. Epping Forest. Edinburgh. Brandon, etc. 
 P. macropus, P. (p. 365) ; 1-2 in. Epping Forest. 
 P. sepulta, Fr. (p. 365) ; 1-2 in. 
 
 P. hemispherica, Jlef/f/. (p. oG7) ; ^-2iu. Epping 
 Forest. 
 
 P. Sumneriana, Cke. 1-2 in.; cup large, scattered 
 waxy, sessile, at first globose, immersed, then partly 
 expo!^ed, becoming expanded, the margin splitting int(/ 
 irregular lobes ; externally chestnut-brown, covered with 
 
ELVELLACEI. 357 
 
 a dense coating of long, slender, brown, flexuous. septate 
 hairs ; hymenium pallid ochraceous, with a tint of flesh- 
 colour. — Cke. Mycog.f. 111. 
 
 On the ground under cedars, larch, etc. Spring. Fitcham 
 Park. Chiswick. Ware. Warwick, etc. 
 
 264. TUBER, Mich. (p. 376). 
 
 1. T. brumale, Mich. ; commonly 2 or 3 in. deep ; when 
 under cedars quite superficial. 
 
 2. T. sestivum, Vitt. ; copses, hedgerows, and open 
 places in plantations, gregariously with other species of 
 Tuber, generally in plantations of beech, oak, or birch, 
 rarely pine ; on an argillaceous or calcareous soil. 
 
 3. T. maerosporum, Vitt. ; in clayey places under oaks 
 and beeches, rarely willows and poplars ; sometimes rather 
 near the surface, at other times deep underground. 
 
 4. T. bituminatum, B. and Br. ; this is the T. mesen- 
 tericmn of Vittadini ; in sandy ground, calcareous soils and 
 calcareous clays, deep beneath the surface. 
 
 5. T. rufum, Pico ; two or three inches deep. 
 
 T. nitidum, Vitt. ; this is merely the young condition of 
 T. rufum. 
 
 6. T. scleroneuron, B. and Br. ; deep in sand or sandy 
 ground, sometimes in calcareous clays or calcareous soils. 
 
 7. T. puberulum, B. and Br. ; in loose sand or leaf 
 mould, two or three inches deep. 
 
 8. T. dryophilum, Tul. ; habit same as last. 
 
 9. T. excavatum, Vitt. ; subglobose, 1 in. ; peridium 
 discrete, ochraceous, minutely verrucose, firm ; flesh horny, 
 cinereous- red, liver-coloured or tawny ; veins pallid ochrac- 
 eous. Jour, of Bot. 1865, pp. 11, 137, tab. 30. Generally 
 quite superficial, under dead leaves. Somersetshire. 
 
358 OUTLINES OF BRITISH FUNCIOLOGV. 
 
 10. T. maculatum, V'llf. ; in loose leaf mould, 3 or 4 
 inches deep. 
 
 2G5. CHOIROMYCES, Vitt. (p. 377). 
 
 1. C. meandriformi 8, Vitt. (p. 377) ; opeu hilly positions 
 among oaks, half buried in stiff soil. June and July. 
 
 266, AMYLOCARPUS, Curr. (p. 377). 
 1. A. encephaloides, Curr. 
 
 267. PACHYPHLCEUS, Tul. (p. 377). 
 
 1. P. melanoxanthus, Tvl. ; in loose soil and leaf mould, 
 two or three inches deep. 
 
 2. P. citrinus, B. and Br. ; habit same as last. 
 
 0. P. conglomeratus, B. and Br. ; superficial^ on dead 
 sticks under leaves. &c. 
 
 268. STEPHENSIA, Tul. (p. 377). 
 
 1. S. bombycina, Tul. ; on lawns, &c. ; almost super- 
 ficial ; sometimes an inch or two deep. 
 
 269. HYDNOTRIA, 7i. and Br. (p 377). 
 
 1. H. Tulasni, B. and Br. ; generally ^ix or eight inches 
 deep in sand. 
 
 270. HYDNOBOLITES, Tul (p. 377). 
 
 1. H. cerebriformis, Tul.; superficial, under dead 
 leaves. 
 
 271. SPH^ROSOMA, A7. (p. 378). 
 1. S. ostiolatum, Tut. ; habit same as last. 
 
 272. BALSAMIA, Vitt. (p. 378). 
 
 1. B. platyspora, B. and Br.; almost superficial, but 
 immersed in fallen fir leaves. 
 
ELVELLACEI. 359 
 
 2. B. vulgaris, Viti. ; habit same as last. 
 
 3. B. fragiformis, Tul. ; superficial^, covered with dead 
 leaves. 
 
 273. GENE A, Vitt. (p. 378). 
 
 1. G. verrucosa, Vitt. ; superficial, covered ^yith dead 
 leaves. 
 
 2. G. Klotsehii, B. and Br. ; habit same as last. 
 
 3. G. hispidula, B. ; sometimes superficial, ofteu just 
 beneath the surface, involved iu grass roots. 
 
 274. ELAPHOMYCES, Nees. (p. 378). 
 
 1. E. anthracinus, J^itt. ; four or five inches beneath 
 the soil. 
 
 - 2. E. variegatus, Vitt. ; habit same as last. Eppiug 
 Forest. 
 
 3. E. granulatus, Fr. ; habit same as last. 
 
 286. HYPOCREA, Fr. (p. 383;. 
 
 H. tremelloid.es, Fr. ; fleshy, convex, with a compressed 
 base, pallid, ferruginovis-umber, perithecia immersed. 
 
 Sutton. Dinmore, Hereford. 
 
 H. eitrina, Fr. ; forma Fungoram ; Karst. Myc. Fenn. ii. 
 (p. 204). 
 
 On hymeuium of Pohjporus betulinus. Darnaway Forest. 
 
 H. ringens, Fr. ; subcarneous, flattened, scarcely mar- 
 ginate, at length greenish-black ; interior white ; perithecia 
 confined to the disc, scattered. 
 
 On dead wood. Brandon = Sphaeria lenta, Sch. and 
 Hypocrea rufa, var. umbrina, Sacc. 
 
 H. alutacea, Fr. ; fleshy, soft ; head clavate. tan- 
 coloured, pallid, confluent with the stem. — Tul. Carp. iii. /. 
 iv. /, 1-6. — Sow. t. lo9.= Cordiceps alutacea (\o\. 1 .p. 382) 
 
360 OUTLINES OF BIJITISH FUNGOLOGY. 
 
 Dinmore. Probably parasitic on Spathularia flavida. 
 
 H. aureo-virida, Plow, and Cke. ; pulvinate, then 
 flattened, fleshy, pale yellow, then orange, disc becoming 
 olive; perithecia confined to the disc, immersed. 
 
 On rotten oak and hazel. North Wootton. 
 
 Hypocrea lactea, Fr. ; fleshy, eft^used.. naked, white ; 
 perithecia rather large, globose ; ostiola punctiform. 
 
 On hymenium of Polyporus medulla-panis. Castle 
 Rising. 
 
 H. argillacea, Phitl. and Plow. ; pulvinate, clay- 
 coloured, rather thin, 1-3 mm., perithecia rather large, 
 darker, prominent, pale brown ; ostiola minute, prominent. 
 
 On soft rotten wood, apparently ash. Dersingham. 
 
 H. strobilina, Phill. and Plow. ; discoid, stroma whitish, 
 thin, 1-4 mm. across ; perithecia yellowish, honey- 
 coloured, rather large. 
 
 On cones of spruce fir. Belmont, Hereford. 
 
 H. splendens, Phill. and Plow. ; subglobose, then ex- 
 panded, golden-yellow, then reddish-orange, ■when old -with 
 tinge of brown, fleshy, thick, hemispherical, then convex, 
 bearing perithecia on the w^hole of the upper surface, 
 3-6 mm. across ; flesh yellowish white, firm ; perithecia 
 minute, darker 
 
 On laurel sticks. Leicestershire, 
 
 Hypocrea viscidula, Phill. and Plow. ; stroma at first 
 globose, flattened above, then discoid, becoming capulate; 
 5-10 mm. across, margin thin, at length repand and 
 revolute, at first straw-coloured, viscid, shining; flesh firm, 
 whitish, becoming yellow ; disc dotted with dark green 
 perithecia. 
 
 On wood and bark of Pinus sylveslris. Brandon. 
 
 H. moriformis, Cke. and Mass. ; fleshy, hemispherical. 
 
ELVELLACEI. 361 
 
 1 ram. dia., scattered, pallid, at length black ; perithecia 
 convex, minute, rather prominent, pierced with a pore. 
 
 On rotten wood. Carlisle. 
 
 Hypocrea contorta, B. and Curt. ; subrotund, fixed to 
 the matrix by the central portion, spreading, becoming thin 
 towards margin, where it is free and variously lobed, dark 
 olive-green externally, yellowish-white within ; perithecia 
 minute, globose, confined to the upper surface. 
 
 On a rotten stick, Foxley Woods. 
 
 288. XYLARIA, Schrank. (p. 384). 
 
 Xylaria Scotica, Cke. ; suberose ; stem very long, 
 pallid, root-like, slender 1-3 times dichotomously branched 
 above ; brauches elongated, or very short and fasciculate ; 
 heads elongated, sub-cylindrical; apex more or less acute, 
 greyish-brown, then black, perithecia very numerous, 
 slightly papillate. 
 
 On the ground. Meihlouer, 
 
 Entire length, including rooting base, 2-6 in.; clubs 
 about 1 in. long. 
 
 Xylaria tortuosa, Sow. and Cke. ; corky, brittle, re- 
 peatedly branched, slender and rhizomorphoid, black, about 
 4 inches high, here and there bearing clavate, fertile 
 branches, which are obtuse ; perithecia rather prominent, 
 crowded. 
 
 On the ground. 
 
 329. ENDOGENE, Lk. (p. 408). 
 
 1. E, pisiformis, Lk. ; doubtfully belonging to the 
 Tuberacei ; near the surface, but sometimes three or four 
 inches below it. 
 
 2. E. lactifluus, B. and Br. ; habit same as last. 
 
 D. H. HILL LIBRARY 
 
ADDENDA. 
 
 The following species and varieties have mostly been pub- 
 lished as British whilst the foregoing sheets were passing 
 through the press. 
 
 39a (p. 7). A. (Lepiota) cepa3stipes ; Sow. 
 
 Var. cretaceus, Bull. ; pileus chalky- white, with darker 
 scales. 
 
 39Z* (p. 7). A. (Lepiota) citropliyllus, B. and Br.; 
 pileus obtuse or broadly umbouate^ at length depressed, 
 lemon yellow, clad with rufous scales ; stem lemon yellow, 
 stuffed, then hollow, squamulose ; gills veutricose, rounded 
 behind or attenuated, approximate, lemon yellow. 
 
 On the ground. 
 
 Q)\a (p. 12). A. (Armillaria) aurantius, Schceff. ; pileus 
 fleshy, convex, then plane, obtuse, innato- squamulose, 
 viscid; stem solid, equal, concolorous, guttate above, clad 
 with orange scales, sub-annulate ; gills aduexed, with a 
 tooth, crowded, white. 
 
 In pine woods. Forres. Grautown. 
 
 66a (p. 13). A. (Armillaria) citri, Inz. Sic; cajspitose ; 
 1 in. ; pileus fleshy, thin, convex, then plane, rather 
 umbouate, smooth, sulphur yellow, margin crenulate, 
 becoming white ; stem slender, whitish, floccose at apex, 
 pallid, rufescent at base ; gills adnate, crowded, white. 
 
 On stumps. Odour of fresh meal. 
 
ADDENDA. 363 
 
 91a (p. 17). A. (Tricholoma) scalpturatus, Fr. 
 
 Var. chrysites, Jungh. ; golden. 
 
 94a (p. 18). A. (Tricholoma) inodermeus, Fr. ; pileus 
 fleshy, thin, conic, then campanulate, at length convex, 
 umbonate, torn into fibrils and variegated with radiating 
 scales, fuscous, turning reddish ; stem somewhat stufl:ed, 
 white, then reddish, sprinkled with red meal at apex ; 
 gills free, broad, distant, white, spotted with red when 
 touched. 
 
 In grassy places. 
 
 119a (p. 22). A. (Tricholama) borealis, Fr.; pileus 
 fleshy, irregular, rather umbonate, smooth, rivulose when 
 dry, flesh-colour, growing pale, margin even, naked ; stem 
 solid, elastic, unequal, often twisted, attenuated at base; 
 gills emarginate, decurrent, thin, crowded, white. 
 
 In grassy places. Odour and habit of A. prunuhis. 
 
 123a (p. 23). A. (Tricholoma) circumtectus, Cke. ; 
 2-3 in. ; pileus convex, dry, fleshy, obtusely umbonate 
 at first, or not at all, disc tawny, cracking a little when old, 
 circumference olive or dusky, margin tomentose, incurved, 
 sinuate; stem obclavate, or sometimes attenuated down- 
 wards, whitish, striate, firm, solid ; gills reaching the stem, 
 a little sinuate, scarcely crowded, white. 
 
 On the ground. 
 
 138a (p. 26). A. (Tricholoma) melaleucus, Fr. 
 
 Var. polioleucus, Fr. ; pileus obtusely umbonate, livid, 
 then grey ; stem nearly equal, whitish, pruinose at apex, 
 gills whitish. 
 
 In grassy places. 
 
 150a (p. 29). A. (Clitocybe) curtipes, Fr. ; pileus 
 slightly fleshy, convexo-plane, obtuse, oblique, smooth ; 
 stem solid, short, rigid, unequal, brown, thickened up- 
 
364 OUTLINES OF BHITISH FUNUOLOGY, 
 
 wards, sub-pruiuose, shining white ; gills aduate, crowded, 
 white. 
 
 Aiioagst grass. B lat of G.irtea, laveraess-shire. 
 
 153a (p. 30). A. (Clitocybe) opiparus, Fr.; 2-4 in.; 
 pileus compact, convex, then plane, obtuse, even, smooth, 
 flesh colour, shining ; stem solid, stout, smooth ; gills 
 adnato-decurrent, crowded, connected by veins, white. 
 
 In mossy places. 
 
 lG9a (p. 33). A. (Clitocybe) amplus, Pers. ; pileus 
 fleshy, convex, then plane, somewhat repand, fragile, 
 becoming even, rather hygrophanous, disc compact, margin 
 thin, naked, soon spreading, and reflexed ; stem solid, stout, 
 rather cartilaginous, naked, white, a little villous at the 
 apex; gills decurrent, rather crowded, broad, fuliginous, 
 then dirty white. 
 
 In woods. 
 
 173a (p. 33). A. (Clitocybe) fumosus, Pers. 
 
 Var. csespitosus, Cke. ; growing in tufts. 
 
 170a (p. 33). A. (Clitocybe) subdecastes, Cke. and 
 Mass. ; 2\ in., csespitose ; pileus fleshy, campanulate, 
 convex, obtuse, even, smooth, white at the margin and 
 lobed, becoming yellow at the apex, disc compact, else- 
 where thin ; stem solid, confluent at base, smooth, equal, 
 fibrillose ; gills broad, rather crowded, attenuated in front, 
 rounded behind, white. 
 
 On the ground. 
 
 178a (p. 34). A. (Clitocybe) occultus, Cke.; 1t-2|- in.; 
 pileus fleshy, convex, then plane and depressed, even, 
 smooth, but innately virgate, viscid, pallid, smoky about 
 disc, whitish at margin ; stem equal or slightly expanded 
 above into the pileus, solid, white, striately fibrillose, often 
 curved ; gills rather distant and broad, adnate, a little 
 
ADDENDA. 365 
 
 decurrent, scarcely emarginate, white ; substance white, 
 tough, cartilaginous. 
 
 Gregarious on charred ground. 
 
 182a (p. 35). A. (Clitocybe) sinopicus, Fr. ; pileus 
 fleshy, thin, plane, then depressed, umbilicate, dry, at 
 length floccosely rivulose ; stem stuffed, equal, rather 
 fibrillose; gills decurrent, very crowded, rather broad, pure 
 Mhite, then turning yellowish. 
 
 In woods, chiefly on burnt places. 
 
 196a (p. 39). A. (Clitocybe) cyathoides, W. Sm. 
 
 Smaller than A. cyathlformis ; pileus thin, plane, then 
 depressed ; gills white, turning yellowish ; stem fibrillose, 
 reticulate. 
 
 On the ground. 
 
 (This is A. cinerascens, Batsch, but as there is already 
 A. [Tricholoma] cinerascens, Bull., BatscVs name cannot 
 stand. There is also A. Batschianus, Fr.) 
 
 258a (p. 50). A. (CoUybia) eustygius, Cke. ; \\-2 in,; 
 pileus rather fleshy, convex, then plane, sometimes de- 
 pressed, even, smooth, shining when dry, tough, dingy- 
 white, a little darker about the disc, margin thin, smooth, 
 occasionally flexuous ; stem stufted, rarely hollow, at- 
 tenuated downwards into a rooting base, white above, 
 sprinkled with small punctate scales, darker below, and 
 often becoming fuliginous, somewhat longitudinally striate 
 or fibrous ; gills rather broad, rounded behind, not crowded, 
 dark grey; whole plant on drying becomicg black. 
 
 On the ground. Odour of rancid meal. 
 
 280a (p. 55). A. (Mycena) olivaceo-marginatus, Mass.; 
 h, in. ; pileus membranaceous, campanulate, tawny honey 
 colour, striate up to the disc, darker when dry ; stem 
 fistulose, smooth, shining, naked, dry, slender, tinged with 
 
366 OUTLINES OF BRITISH FUXGOLOGY. 
 
 rufous at the base, with a little white cottony tomeutum ; 
 gills rather distant, adnexed, uncinate, broad, slightly 
 connected by veins, pallid, edge brownish olive, wholly 
 greyish when dry. 
 
 On lawns. 
 
 314a (p. 60). A. (Mycena) consimilis, Cke. ; l-H in. ; 
 gregarious; pileus membranaceous, conically campanula te, 
 margin soon reflexed, striate to the middle, at length 
 splitting, smooth, opaque, ciuereous, with umbo darker; 
 stem attenuated upwards, often compressed below, rather 
 rigid, dry, smooth, paler than pileus, fistulose ; gills slightly 
 adnate, nearly free, linear, scarcely crowded, cinereous. 
 
 Among grass. Odour none. 
 
 474ff (p. 86). A. (Entoloma) nigrocinnamoneus, KaJcli. 
 2-4 in., gregarious ; pileus slightly fleshy, convex, then 
 flattened, depressed about the umbo, even, smooth, umber, 
 becoming blackish ; stem hollow, rather twisted, fibrillose, 
 grey, becoming tawny ; gills soon receding, rounded, distant, 
 reddish cinnamon. 
 
 In pastures, etc. Odour of fresh meal. 
 
 540« (p. 101). A. (Togaria) blattarius, Fr. ; pileus 
 rather fleshy, soon flattened, somewhat umbonate, smooth, 
 ferruginous, hygrophanous, margin striate ; stem fistulose, 
 equal, straight, ring entire, distant, white ; gills free, 
 rounded, ventricose, crowded, watery cinnamon. 
 
 In gardens and cultivated places. 
 
 648a (p. 123). A. (Flammula) purpuratus, Cke. and 
 Mass.; 1-2 in.; pileus rather fleshy, convex, then ex- 
 panded, obtusely umbonate, purple or purple-brown, clad 
 with minute floccose scales of the same colour; stem 
 curved, ascending, equal, smooth and pallid above, purple 
 below and granulose, solid ; flesh pale yellowish above, 
 
ADDENDA. 367 
 
 purplish below ; ring fibrillose ; gills adnate, somewhat 
 rounded behind, not crowded, lemon-yellow, at length 
 bright ferruginous. 
 
 On tree-fern stems. Taste very bitter. 
 700a (p. 135). A. (Naucoria) nasatus, Kalch.; pileus 
 thin, rather fleshy, campanulate, terminated by a long 
 papillteform umbo, margin striate or sulcate, smooth, 
 ochraceous ; stem fistulose, equal, flexuous, fibrillose, rather 
 ferruginous ; gills emarginate, with a decurrent tooth, 
 somewhat crowded, broad, ventricose, ferruginous. 
 In swampy places. 
 
 762a (p. 148). A. (Psalliota) campestris, L. 
 Var. siivicola, Vitt. ; pileus becoming even, shining, 
 white; stem stuffed, elongated, somewhat bulbous, ring 
 simple ; flesh somewhat unchangeable ; gills acute behind, 
 whitish, then slowly becoming fuscous. 
 In woods. 
 
 7626 (p. 148). Var. albo-squamosus, W. Sm. ; pileus 
 large, fleshy, furnished with large, adnate, white scales, 
 the remains of a very thin volva ; flesh, dry, tough, 
 changing to rose, yellow-sienna and brown on being cut 
 or broken ; gills crowded, changing to black, edge at first 
 white ; stem tough, with a distinct pith, and slight remains 
 of volva at base ; spores few, pale in colour. 
 On mushroom beds. Icon. Mus. Brit. 
 781a (p. 152). A. (Stropharia) merdarius, Fr. 
 Var. major, Fr. ; much larger, pileus gibbous, straw 
 colour; stem stufi'ed. 
 
 808a (p. 159). A. (Hypholoma) instratus, Brit::.; cses- 
 pitose ; 1 in ; pileus hemispherical, convex, broadly um- 
 bonate, dark brown, radiately rugose ; stem hollow, equal, 
 white and smooth above, fibrillose or squamulose below. 
 
368 OUTLINES OF BRITISH FUNGOLOOY. 
 
 veil white, appendiculate ; flesh brownish ; gills subventri- 
 cose, aduate, brown, then purple brown, paler at edge. 
 
 On stumps. 
 
 31« (p. 187). C. (Phlegmacium) testaceus, Cke. ; pileus 
 2^-4 in. ; fleshy, convex, then flattened and obtusely 
 umbonate or depressed, brick-red, rather vinous, growing 
 paler with age, smooth, even, viscid ; stem attenuated 
 upwards from a sub-maginate bulbous base, whitish above, 
 becoming rufous about the base, solid, longitudinally 
 fibrously striate below ; flesh rather flesh coloured, be- 
 coming ruddy at apex and base ; gills broad, scarcely crowded, 
 adnate, a little emarginate behind, dusky cinnamon. 
 
 On the ground. 
 
 51a (p. 192). C. (Myxacium) nitidus, Fr. ; 2-5 in.; 
 pileus fleshy, convex, then plane or depressed, smooth, 
 viscid, discoid, tan-colour; stem somewhat stufted, clavate, 
 elastic, white, at first viscid, Avhitish-mealy at apex, then 
 naked and dry ; gills equally attenuated, decurrent, 
 crowded, narrow, clay-colour. 
 
 On the ground. 
 
 Ilia (p. 205). C. (Telamonia) lucorum, Fr. ; pileus 
 even, when moist bay-brown, with a tinge of brick-red ; 
 stem firm, clavate, fibrillose, of one colour, pallid; gills 
 emarginate, rather distant, watery cinnamon, with a fuga- 
 cious tinge of violet flesh colour. 
 
 On the ground. 
 
 117a (p. 207). C. (Telamonia) croceofulvus, D. C. ; 
 4 in.; pileus fleshy, flattened, umbonate, even, orange- 
 tawny ; stem solid, equal, yellow, becoming reddish, zoned 
 with an orange line, pale at the apex ; gills adnate, becom- 
 ing ferruginous. 
 
 In woods. 
 
ADDENDA. 369 
 
 159a (p. 217). C. (Hygrocybe) angulosus, Fr. ; 3 in.; 
 pileus rather fleshy, flattened, repand, fragile, quite smooth, 
 hygropbanous, warm tawny-yellow, ochraceous and opaque 
 when dry ; stem hollow, twisted, equal, striate, tawny ; 
 cortina tawny, very fugacious ; gills adnate, thick, rather 
 distant, tawny, edge entire, same colour. 
 
 In fir woods. 
 
 28fl (p. 240). L. involutus, Sopp. Every part white 
 with pale ochraceous tinge; 1-2 in.; pileus firm, equally 
 fleshy to margin, smooth, even, convex, becoming plane or 
 slightly depressed, margin arched, strongly involute, extreme 
 edge minutely silky ; stem solid, equal, or slightly incras- 
 sated below, glabrous, even ; milk not scanty, white, acrid, 
 unchangeable ; gills sub-decurrent, densely crowded, very 
 narrow, sometimes forked. 
 
 On the ground. 
 
 17a (p. 249). R. virginea, C. and M. ; mild ; 2 in. ; pileus 
 fleshy, firm, convex, then depressed, smooth, even, viscid 
 when moist, polished when dry, margin even, white ; stem 
 attenuated upwards, firm, solid, white, finely rugulose ; gills 
 very narrow, crowded, sub-decurrent, repeatedly forked, 
 connected by veins, brittle, white. 
 
 On the ground under trees. 
 
 45a (p. 256). R. ochroleuca, P. 
 
 Var. claroflava. Grove; 2-3 in.; pileus convex, at first 
 buUate, then plane, slightly depressed in centre, chrome- 
 yellow, margin turned down, at length patent, perfectly 
 even or slightly striate when old, often paler than the disc, 
 sometimes of a deeper colour, cuticle not easily separable 
 as in E. ochroleuca ; flesh white, yellow beneath the 
 cuticle ; stem smooth, white, cylindrical, blunt at base, 
 slightly spongy within, at length rugose and cinereous, 
 
 2 A 
 
370 OUTLINES OF liKITlSH FrXnOLOGY. 
 
 or even blackish; gills scarcely crowded, not reaching the 
 stem so much as in R. ochroJeuca, not united behind ; 
 ■white, then pale lemon-yellow, at length sub-ochraceous. 
 
 Amongst grass in damp places. 
 
 12« (p. 318). S. rugosum, Fr. 
 
 Var. lauro-cerasi, B. On ('erusiis Lauro-cerasus. 
 
 6fl (p. 342). L. perlatum, P. ; peridium variable, sub- 
 globose, with an elongated stem, sub-globose or depressed, 
 and nearly sessile, umbonate, ochraceous, or dirty brown, 
 at first covered with spinose warts, which are smaller 
 downwards, disappearing with age, mouth small, torn at apex 
 of umbo ; capillitium continuous with the convex, cellular, 
 sterile base, and forming a columella. 
 
 In woods, especially of oak. Summer and autumn. 
 
37 J 
 
 INDEX TO GENERA, SUB-GENERA, 
 AND SPECIES. 
 
 Agaricini, 1 
 Agaricus, l 
 
 abhorrens, 69 
 abiegnus, 69 
 abstrusus, 133 
 acerbus, 25 
 acerinus, 76 
 acerosus, 78 
 acervatns, 48 
 Acetahularia, 99 
 acetabulosus, 99 
 acicula, 62 
 acuminatus, 170 
 acus, 98 
 
 acutesquamosus, 5 
 adiposus, 105 
 adnatus, 4 
 Adonis, 56 
 segerita, 103 
 seruginosus, 150 
 sethiops, 91 
 Eetites, 61 
 aggregatus, 33 
 agrarius, 161 
 albellus, 22 
 albo-brunneus, 15 
 albo-cvaneus, 150 
 albo-sqimmosus, 367 
 albus, 24 
 aleuriatns, 102 
 Algeriensis, 150 
 algidus, 78 
 alkalinus, 60 
 alnicola, 128 
 alveolus, 145 
 Amanita, 1 
 Amanifopsis, 3 
 amarella, 30 
 amarus, 30 
 
 A.^QXiQ\l.B— continued. 
 ambustus, 61 
 ameides, 84 
 amethj'stinu.s. 22, 42 
 amianthinus, 8 
 amictus, 62 
 ammoniacus, 60 
 ammophilus, 162 
 amplus, 364 
 anguineus, 132 
 angustissimus, 41 
 Annularia, 80 
 antipus, 140 
 apicreus, 129 
 appendiculatus, 158 
 applanatus, 145 
 applicatus, 78 
 aquosus, 48 
 aratus, 171 
 arcuatus, 24 
 ardosiacus, 84 
 areolatus, 161 
 argyraceuti, 17, 18 
 Armillaria, 12 
 arvalis, 136 
 arvensis, 148 
 asper, 3 
 asperellus, 93 
 asterosporus, 113 
 astragalinus, 128 
 atomatus, 172 
 atratus, 51 
 atrides, 97 
 atro-albus, 59 
 atro-cffiruleiis, 78 
 atro-cinereus, 19 
 atro-cvaiieus, 59 
 atro-punctus, 97 
 atro-rufus, 162 
 
 Agaricus —contin lied. 
 atro-squamosus, 18 
 augustus, 147 
 aurantiaciis, 152 
 aurantio- marginatus, 
 
 54 
 aurantius, 362 
 aureus, 99 
 auricomus, 115 
 aurivelhis, 104 
 autochthonus, 144 
 Babingtonii, 93 
 Badhami, 5 
 badipes, 135 
 balaninus, 54 
 Batschianus, 84, 365 
 Bellire, 71 
 belliis, 42 
 bifrons, 165 
 biornatus, 6 
 blandus, 27 
 blattarius, 366 
 Bloxami, 84 
 bombycinus, 79 
 Bongardii, 111 
 borealis, 363 
 brevipes, 26 
 Broadwoodiaj, 8 
 brumalis, 40 
 bryoruru, 141 
 buccinalis, 72 
 Buchanani, 148 
 Bucknalli, 9 
 buf cuius, 21 
 bulbigenus, 84 
 bulbiger, 12 
 bullaceus, 162 
 Bullii, 81 
 bullula, 71 
 
372 
 
 INDEX TO GENERA, .SUB-GENEKA, AND SPECIES. 
 
 Ag&vicViS— continued. 
 biitvrac.cus, 44 
 byssLsuduus, 98, 146 
 Cielatus, 22 
 cajrulescens, 163 
 ca?sariatus, 115 
 ca>.spitosns, 68, 157, 
 
 364 
 calamistratus, 108 
 caldarii, 53 
 caliginosus, 160 
 calolepis, 146 
 calopus, 58 
 campauella, 70 
 campanulatus, 169 
 campestris. 16, 148 
 camptophvllns, 70 
 cancrinu.s, 89 
 candicans, 33 
 CandoUeanus, 158 
 canofaciens, 161 
 caperatus, 100 
 capillnris, 65 
 capistratus, 102 
 capniocephalus, 122 
 capnoides, 155 
 caput-Medusa^ 153 
 carbonarius, 127 
 carchariup, 8 
 carneo-albiis, 89 
 carneo-griseus, 96 
 carneiis, 22 
 carpoijhilus, 139 
 carptus, 111 
 cartilagineus, 19 
 cascus, 157 
 catarius, 158 
 catinus, 88 
 caudatus, 171 
 Ceciliiu, 4 
 centunculus, 133 
 cepjEstipes, 7 
 cerinus, 21 
 cernuus, 163 
 cerodes, 134 
 cernssatus, 32, 42 
 cervinup, 80 
 chalybctus, 92 
 chelidonius, 63 
 chiraonophihis, 146 
 chioneuH, 79 
 Chiton i a, 147 
 cliloropoliiis, 92 
 chondrodermii.s, 161 
 cliry sites, 36 ' 
 chrysoplitxjus, 82 
 
 Ag&TioViS— continued. 
 chrysophyllus, 66 
 cidaris, 132 
 cincinnatus, 109 
 ciiierascens, 25, 365 
 ciunabarinus, 8 
 circiiiatus, 74 
 circumtectus, 363 
 cirrhatus, 46 
 citri, 362 
 citrinellus, 64 
 citrophyllus, 362 
 civilis, 25 
 Clarkii, IKJ 
 ('luii<h>2)KS, 98 
 claviceps, 119 
 clavicularis, 63 
 clavipes, 28 
 clavus, 49 
 Clituci/be, 28 
 Clitopilus, 88 
 clitopilus, 124 
 clivensis, 163 
 clusilis, 53 
 clypeatns, 86 
 clypeolarius, 6 
 codoniceps, 58 
 coelestinus, 96 
 coha?rens, 5(5 
 collarlatus, 62 
 colliiius,46 
 CoUfihia, 42 
 colossus, 15 
 columbutta, 17 
 columbinus, 76 
 comosus, 103 
 comiituliis, 149 
 comptus, 162 
 concavus,40 
 confertus, 140 
 conflueiis, 46 
 confragosus, 107 
 conigonus, 46 
 coni-ssaiis, 128 
 conopileus. 164 
 consiinilis, 366 
 conspersus, 138 
 constrictus, 13 
 Cookei, 106 
 Coprinarii, 168 
 coprophilus, 162 
 coracinus, 50 
 coronillus, 151 
 corrugis, 164 
 corticatus, 72 
 corticola,65 
 
 Agaricus— con^)n/efZ. 
 
 costatus, 87, 148 
 craspcdiiis, 73 
 crassifolius, 20 
 crenatus, 172 
 ( repidvtiis, 145 
 cretaceus, 148, 362 
 cietatu?, 89 
 cristatus, 6 
 crobulus, 144 
 crocatns, 63 
 crueutatus, 106 
 cruentiis, 63 
 crustuliiiiformis, 121 
 cryptariini, 34 
 cucuiuis, 95, 132 
 cuneifolius, 20 
 cupularis, 143 
 Curreyi, 113 
 curtipes, 363 
 curvipes, 105 
 cyanophjBUS, 30 
 cyathiformis, 39, 365 
 cyathoides, 365 
 cyphcllajformis, 78 
 dealbatns, 33 
 .debilis, 62 
 decastes, 33 
 decipicns, 124 
 deglubens, 112 
 delicatus, 10 
 demissus, 68 
 depluens, 98 
 Dermini, 99 
 descissus, 115 
 destrictus, 114 
 diatretus, 41 
 difforniis, 32, 42 
 direct us, 71 
 discopus, 64 
 dispersiis, 138, 156 
 disseminatus, 172 
 di.ssilens, 59 
 dissimulans, 106 
 distoitus, 44 
 ditopns, 40 
 Dorothese. 53 
 dryinus, 73 
 dryophilus, 48 
 dulcamarus, 109 
 dupluens, 146 
 duracinus, 26 
 durus, 101 
 Eccilia, 96 
 echinatus, 150 
 ectypus,42 
 
INDEX TO GENERA, SUB-GEN EEA, AND SPECIES. 
 
 373 
 
 Agaricus — continued. 
 egenulus, 159 
 egregius, 168 
 elajodes, 155 
 elatus, 121 
 elegans, 55 
 elixus, 33 
 elongatus, 148 
 Elvensis, 147 
 embolus, 144 
 empla-stnim, 5 
 etopyienmaticus, 172 
 Entolo,na,m 
 ej hebeup, 81 
 epibryus, 14(3 
 epigEeus, 146 
 epipterygius, 63 
 epixanthus, 155 
 equestris, 14 
 erebriiis, 100, 108 
 ericaeus, 160 
 ericetorum, 38 
 erinaceus, 138 
 ermineus, 6 
 escharoide?, 139 
 esculent us, 48 
 euchrous, 92 
 euosmus, 76 
 eustygius, 365 
 eutheles, 114 
 exannulatus, 149 
 excelsus, 2 
 excisus, 57 
 excoriatus, 4 
 eximius, 80 
 expalleus, 39 
 exscissus, 27 
 exsculptus, 49 
 extuberans, 49 
 fallax, 21 
 fasciatus, 110 
 fasciculaiis, 156 
 fastibilis, 118 
 fastigiatu?, 113 
 fatuus, 166 
 felinus, 6, 158 
 fertilis, 85 
 festivus, 131 
 fibrillosus, 166 
 fibrosus,112 
 fibula, 70 
 filiceus, 130 
 filius, 127 
 filopes, 61 
 fimbriatup, 74 
 fimicola, 170 
 
 Agaricus — continitecl. 
 limiputris, 169 
 firiuus, 119 
 flaccidus, 37 
 flammans, 105 
 Flammula, 123 
 flavidus, 128 
 flavipes, 58 
 flavo-albus, 56 
 tlavo-brunneus, 15 
 floccifer, 124 
 floccipcs, 45 
 flocculosus, 111 
 floscuhis, 98 
 fluxilis, 78 
 focalls, 12 
 fodiens, 43 
 foenisecii, 163 
 formosus, 92 
 fragran*, 41 
 Friesii, 5 
 
 frumtntaceus, 16, 86 
 fucatus, 14 
 fulvellus, 15 
 fulvo-strigosus, 94 
 f umosus, 33 
 furfuraceus, 138, 143 
 fusco-purpureup, 55 
 f usipes, 43 
 fusus, 127 
 gadinoides, 77 
 Galera, 140 
 galevicnlatus, 58 
 gallinacens, 33 
 galopus, 63 
 gambosus, 22 
 gangTfenosup, 29 
 gausapatus, 18 
 geophyllus, 116 
 Georgina.-, 11 
 geotropus, 37 
 giganteus, 35 
 gifvus, 36 
 glandulosus, 75 
 glandifoimis, 134 
 glareosus, 166 
 glaucophyllus, 68 
 gloiocephalus, 79 
 gloiodermus, 10 
 glutinosus, 118 
 Goliath, 12 
 Gordon], 166 
 gossypinus, 167 
 gracilentup,4 
 gracilis, 164, 171 
 gracillimus, 71 
 
 Agaricus — continued, 
 graminicola, 139 
 grammopodius, 26 
 granulosus, 8 
 griseo-cyanens, 86 
 griseo-pallidus, 69 
 griseo-rimosus, 20 
 griseo-iubellus, 97 
 griseus, 70 
 gummosus, 126 
 guttatus, 17 
 gymnopodius, 123 
 gypsens, 5i> 
 gyroliexus, 165 
 h?emactus, 110 
 haematites, 13 
 hajmatopus, 62 
 hfemorrhoidariup, 149 
 hamadryas. 132 
 harioloium, 45 
 haustellaris, 146 
 HeheJomu, 118 
 hebes, 163 
 helobius, 166 
 helcdes, 84 
 helomorphus, 130 
 hepaticus, 69 
 Herefordiensis, 99 
 heteroclitus, 103 
 hiascens, 171 
 Hiatulo,\l 
 hiemalis, 65 
 hirneolus, 29 
 hirsutus, 109 
 hisi^idulus, 81 
 hispidus, 6 
 hiulcns, 113 
 Hobsoni,79 
 holosericeus, 7 
 Hookeii, 111 
 horizontalis. 133 
 hortensis, 148 
 humilis, 27 
 hybridus, 129 
 hydrc'grammus, 65 
 hydrophilus, 159, 163 
 hydrophorus, 171 
 hypnophilus, 79 
 hypnorum, 141 
 Hiipholoma, 154 
 Hiiporltodii , 79 
 hypoxanthus, 157 
 hvpsipus, 154 
 hystrix, 108 
 ianthinus, 10 
 icterinus, t!4 
 
374 
 
 INDEX TO GENEKA, sriM;E.\Ki:\, AND SPECIES. 
 
 Ag&ricns— continued 
 
 illiiiitus, 11 
 imlnicatiis, 18 
 imnnuHliis, 18 
 iiiauufiius, 20 
 inuuiatus, 128 
 incanus, ',t'2 
 incarnatus, 110 
 incilis, 85 
 infula, 95 
 infumatus, (59 
 infundibuliformis, 35 
 ingratus, 46 
 innocmis, 133 
 Jnocylc, 108 
 inodermeiis, 363 
 inolens, 51 
 inopus, 129 
 inornatns, 29 
 inquiliiuis, 138, 145 
 instratus, 867 
 integix'llus, 71 
 inunctus, 150 
 inversus, 37 
 ionides, 21 
 Iris, 54 
 
 ischnostyhis, 122 
 Jasonis, 13 
 Jerdoui, 154 
 jubatus, 85 
 junceus, 93 
 juncicola, 65 
 juncinus, 126 
 Junonius, 105 
 Keithii, 20 
 laccatus, 42 
 laceratus, 52 
 lacerus. 111 
 lacrymabundus, 157 
 lacteus, 56 
 lampropiis, 91 
 lanaripes, 158 
 lannginosus, 109 
 lappula, 91 
 lascivus. 21 
 lateritius, 140 
 latissimus, 137 
 lauro-cerasi, 77 
 laxipes, 45 
 lazulinus, 92 
 Leightoni, 78 
 leiocephalus, 157 
 lenticularis, 3 
 lent us, 125 
 leocln-onius, 102 
 leoninus, 82 
 
 Agaricus — continued. 
 Lepiota. 4 
 leptoceplialus, 59 
 Leptoain, 90 
 leucoceplialus, 24 
 leucogalus, 63 
 leucomyosotis, 50 
 leucophanes, 168 
 leucophyllus, 67 
 LeucoajMrrl, 1 
 leucotephrus, 159 
 Levoillianus, 108 
 licniophorus, 7 
 liguatilis, 74 
 limpidus, 77 
 lineatus, 56 
 liquescens, 84 
 liquiriteaj, 129 
 lividus, 88 
 lixivius, 28 
 longicaudus, 121 
 longipes, 43 
 loricatus, 19 
 Loveianus, 79 
 lubricus, 125 
 lucifugus, 116 
 lugens, 121 
 lugubris, 131 
 lupinus, 125 
 luridus, 17 
 luteo-albus, 56 
 luteo-nitens, 152 
 lutescens, 82 
 luxurians, lo3 
 macilentus, 49 
 macrorhizus, 19 
 maculatus, 43 
 magnificus, 3 
 magnimamma, 123 
 majalis, 86 
 major, 21, 367 
 mammosus, 93 
 mappa. 2 
 
 margarispora, 114 
 marginatus, 107 
 marginellus, 54 
 maritimus. 111 
 martialis, 9 
 mastiger, 164 
 mastoideus, 4 
 mast meat us, 78 
 maurus, 66 
 maxinius, 35 
 niedius, 80 
 niedullatns, 10 
 megalodactylus, 3 
 
 Agaricus— c""/i««€rf. 
 nielaleucus, 26 
 melaspermus, 151 
 meleagris, 5, 19 
 melinoides, 134 
 melleus, 13 
 membranaceus, 35 
 merdarius, 152 
 mesodactylus, 101 
 mesomorphus, 9 
 mesophaeus, 120 
 metachrous, 40 
 metatus, 60 
 metulfesporus, 6 
 micropholis, 10 
 microrhizus, 167 
 militaris, 25 
 mimicus, 45 
 minor, 53, 121 
 minutus, 142 
 mirabilis, 54 
 mitis, 77 
 mixtus, 126 
 mniophilus, 142 
 mollis, 145 
 molliscorium, 101 
 monstrosus, 22, 34 
 raontana, 16 
 mucidiis, 14 
 Mulleri, 104 
 multiformis, 23 
 mundulus, 88 
 muralis, 69 
 murinaceus, 20 
 murinus, 52 
 muscarius, 2 
 muscigenus, 49 
 muscorum, 145 
 mussivua, 118 
 mustelinus, 107 
 mutabilis, 107 
 muticus, HI 
 mutilus, 75 
 Mijcena, 54 
 myceuoides, 108 
 mycenopsis, 142 
 myosotis, 137 
 nanus, 82 
 nasatus, 367 
 naucinus, 7 
 JWtueoria, 131 
 nauseosus, 122 
 nebularis, 28 
 nefrens, 93 
 neptuneus, 32 
 Nevilla;, 72 
 
INDEX TO GENERA, SUB-GENEKA, AND SPECIES, 
 
 375 
 
 AgSiVicViS—contiHiced. 
 nictitans, 15 
 nidorosus, 87 
 nigrella, 97 
 • nigrescens, 29 
 nigripes, 94 
 nigrocinnamomeas, 
 
 366 
 nitellinus, 47 
 nitens, 125 
 nitidus, 3 
 nivalis, -i 
 Nolanea, 93 
 noli-tangere, 167 
 nucens, 134 
 nucisediis, 162 
 nudipes, 122 
 nudus, 25 
 nummularius, 48 
 obbatus, 39 
 obscurus, 112 
 obsoletus, 41 
 obturatus, 151 
 obtusatus, 165 
 obtusus, 131 
 occultus, 364 
 ocellatus, 49 
 ochrochlorus, 125 
 odorus, 31 
 cedematopus, 43 
 oedipus, 156 
 offuciatus, 66 
 olivaceo-marginatus, 
 
 365 
 ombropliilus, 100 
 OniphaUa, 65 
 oniscus, 68 
 opacus, 34 
 opiparus, 364 
 Orcella, 88 
 oreinus, 24 
 orirubens, 18 
 ostreatus, 75 
 ovalis, 140 
 ozes, 51 
 paedidus, 27 
 palmatus, 145 
 paludosus, 148 
 Panceolus, 168 
 panaeolus, 25 
 pantherinus, 2 
 pantoleucus, 75 
 papilionaceus, 169 
 parabolicus, 58 
 parilis, 36 
 Parkensis, 96 
 
 Agaricus — contimoed. 
 parvulus, 80 
 pascuus, 93 
 patricius, 80 
 patulus, 24 
 pauperculus, 59 
 pausiacus, 40 , 
 paxillus, 106 
 pediades, 136 
 pelianthinus, 54 
 pelliculosus, 64 
 pellitus, 81 
 pellucidus, 144 
 pellospermus, 164 
 peltatus, 60 
 Pengellei, 30 
 pennatus, 167 
 perbrevis, 114 
 Fercevali, 152 
 pergamenus, 34 
 perlatus, 112 
 personatus, 25 
 Persoonianus, 87 
 pes-capras, 23 
 pessundatus, 15 
 petaloides, 76 
 petasatus, 81 
 petigenosus, 123 
 pezizoides, 146 
 phteoceplialus, 113 
 phalaenarum, 169 
 phalloides, 1 
 Phillipsii, 146 
 philonites, 67 
 phlebophorus, 83 
 PhoUota, 102 
 phyllophilus, 32 
 physaloides, 162 
 piceus, 95 
 picreus, 130 
 pictus, 70 
 FiJosace, 150 
 piluljeformis, 159 
 pisciodorus, 94, 95 
 pithyophilus, 32 
 placenta, 84 
 placidus, 90 
 platyphyllus, 43 
 Pleurotus, 72 
 plexipes, 51 
 plicato-crenatus, 64 
 plicosus, 60 
 plumosus, 109 
 Pluteolus, 101 
 Flu teas, 80 
 polioleucus, 363 
 
 A various— conti)iued. 
 polycephalus, 163 
 polygrammus, 58 
 polyst ictus, 9 
 popinalis, 88 
 porphyroleucus, 26 
 porrigens, 78 
 porrigiiiosus, 13S 
 portentosus, 14 
 Postii, 67 
 prjecox, 101 
 pratensis, 148 
 pravus, 22 
 procerus, 4 
 proliferus, 57 
 prolixus, 44 
 pronus, 172 
 protractus, 52 
 pruinosus, 39 
 prunuloides, 84 
 pi'unuhis, 88 
 Psnlliota, 147 
 psammicola, 57 
 Psathyra, 164 
 Psathnrella, 171 
 psathyroides, 47 
 pseudo-androsaceus, 
 
 69 
 pseudo-purus, 55 
 Psilocijhe, 160 
 pterigenus, ()5 
 pudicus, 102 
 puellaris, 4 
 pullatus, 59 
 pnlmonarius, 76 
 pumilus, 108 
 punctatus, 119, 124 
 punctulatus, 158 
 purpurascens, 148 
 purpuratus, 366 
 purus, 55 
 pusillns, 80 
 piisiolus, 134 
 putidus, 28 
 pigmeo-atiinis, 141 
 pyriodorus, 110 
 pyrotrichus, 57 
 pyxidatus, 67 
 quinquepartituj 
 racemosus, 4(5 
 racliodes, 4 
 radicatus, 42, 121 
 radicosus, 102 
 Ralfsii, 146 
 ramentaceus, 13 
 rancidus, 50 
 
 14 
 
37() 
 
 LXDKX TO GEXEKA, SUH-GENEKA, AND Sl-ECIES. 
 
 Agarieus—cotitlnued. 
 lavidus, 142 
 relicinus, 108 
 rcniformis 77 
 Kenny i, 112 
 repandus, 84 
 repens, 43 
 resplendens, 14 
 resutus, 85 
 reticulatus, 101 
 rotirugis, HVJ 
 retostus, (>'.• 
 revolutus, 70 
 rhodocylix, 97 
 rhodopolius, 86 
 rimosus, 113 
 rimiilincola, 133 
 rivulosus, 31 
 robustus, 12, 21 
 roridus, 04 
 rosellus, 55 
 roseo-albus, 82 
 roseus, 83 
 rubescen.s, 2, 45 
 rubi, 146 
 rubidus, 96 
 rubiginosus, 141 
 rubricatus, 133 
 rubriceps, 147 
 rubro-marginatus, 55 
 rufescens, 8, 149 
 rufo-carneus, 94 
 rugosns, 57 
 russula, 16 
 rusticus, 68 
 Rutha3, 74 
 rutilans, 17 
 sacchariferus, 64 
 Sadleri, 42 
 sagatus, 150 
 salicinus, 81 
 salignus, 76 
 sambucinus, 115 
 sanguinolentus, 63 
 sapidus, 75 
 sapineus, 129 
 saponaceus, 19 
 Sandersii, 85 
 sarcocephaliis, 160 
 scabellLus, 110 
 scaber, llo 
 scalpturatus, 17 
 scambus, 130 
 Schajfferi, 155 
 sehistus, 112 
 Schidzeria, 11 
 
 Agaricus — continued. 
 ydiumaclieri, 23 
 scitulus, 169 
 scobicola, 101, 164 
 scobinaceus, 153 
 scolecinus, 134 
 sejunctus, 14 
 semibulbosus, 82 
 semiHexus, 133 
 semiglobatus, 153 
 semilanceatus, 163 
 seminudus, 9 
 semiorbicularis, 136 
 semitalis, 43 
 semitinctus, 165 
 semivestitus, 105 
 senescens, 120 
 senilis, 37 
 separatus, 168 
 septicus, 78 
 sericellus, 86 
 sericeus, 87 
 serotinus, 77 
 serrulatns, 92, 97 
 setosus, 65 
 sideroides, 135 
 silaceus, 154 
 siligineus, 140 
 silvaticus, 149 
 silvicola, 367 
 sinapizans, 121 
 sindoniiis, 116 
 sinopicus, 365 
 sinuatus, 83 
 siparius, 138 
 sistratus, 9 
 sobrius, 138 
 socialis, 30 
 solitarius, 2 
 solstitialis, 91 
 sordidus, 27 
 spadiceo-griseus, 165 
 spadiceus, l(;;j 
 sparteus, 14(> 
 speciosus, 79 
 spectabilis, 104 
 speculum, 87 
 speireus, 62 
 speruiaticus, 14 
 sphagnicola, 67 
 sphagnoruni, 141 
 sphinctrinus, 109 
 spilopus, 82 
 spintrigor, 154 
 spinulosus, 3() 
 spissus, 2 
 
 Agarious—ront hived- 
 splendens, 37 
 spongiosus, 7.> 
 spuiuosus, 12(> 
 squamosus, 19, 151, 
 
 155 
 squarrosus, 104 
 stagninus, 144 
 stanneus, 01 
 stans, 10 
 stellatus, 71 1 
 stercorarius, 153 
 Stevensoni, 47 
 stilbocephaliis, 90 
 stipitarius, 45 
 stolonifer, 4s 
 storea, 156 
 straminipes, 9(i 
 strangulatus, 4 
 striaspes, 135 
 striaipileus, 07 
 striatulns, 79 
 strobilifoniiis, 2 
 strobiliuus, 55 
 Strajjfitiria, 15() 
 stylobates, 04 
 suavis, 92 
 subalutaceus, 31 
 subatratus, 171 
 subbalteatu!!, 170 
 subcaviis, 13 
 subcollariatus, 120 
 subdecastes, 304 
 subeiicffius, lOo 
 subgibbosus, 14<) 
 subglubosus, 131 
 subinvolutus, 3(), 37 
 sublateritius, 155 
 subluteus, 1(10 
 subpalmatus, 73 
 snbpulverulentiis, 27 
 subsquarrosu.s, 104 
 succineus, 4s 
 sndorus, 58 
 sulphureus, 21 
 Swaitzii, 70 
 tabacinus, 13() 
 Taylori, 79 
 telniatiaiHs, 07 
 temperatu.s, 79 
 temulentus, 13() 
 tenacellus, 48 
 tenax, 130 
 tenellus, 02 
 tenor, 140 
 tenerrimus, 04 
 
INDEX TO GEXEEA, SUB-GENERA, AND SPECIES. 
 
 377 
 
 Agaricus — continued. 
 tenuif=, (il 
 Terreii, 8 
 terreus, 18 
 terrigenus, 100 
 tesquorum. /J2 
 tessulatus, 73 
 testaceus, 119 
 thelephorus, 4(5 
 Thompsoni, 86 
 thraustus, 151 
 tigrinns, 23 
 tintinuabulum, 58 
 Togaria, 1)9 
 togularis, 101 
 tornatus, 32 
 tortilis, 42 
 trechisporus, 117 
 tremiilus, 78 
 trepidiLs, 171 
 TrichoJoma, 14 
 tricholoaia, 117 
 trigonophyllus, 143 
 Trinii, 115 
 triscopus, 13(3 
 Trogii, 31 
 truUffiformis, 35 
 truncatusi, 121 
 tuba, 38 
 Tuhuria, 143 
 tuberculosis, 105 
 tuberosus, 4(3 
 tumidus, 20 
 tumulosus, 34 
 tylicolor, 53 
 udus, 160 
 ulmarius, 73 
 umbelliferus, 69 
 umbilicatus, 65 
 umbratilis, 70 
 umbrinus, 81 
 umbrosus, 81 
 undatus, 45, 89 
 unicolor, 107 
 urticsecola, 1(;7 
 ustali.s, 15 
 vaccinus, 18, 149 
 vaginatus, 3 
 Yahlii, 99 
 variabilis, 98, 14(3 
 variegatus, 17 
 vatricosus, 117 
 velutinus, 157 
 velutipes, 45 
 ventricosus, 47 
 venustissimus, 31 
 
 Agaricus— cc;«YT«i<e(/. 
 
 verecniidus, 9(3 
 ; vermiculaiis, 37 
 
 vernico.su.s, 31 
 
 vernus, 1 
 
 verruculosus, 104 
 
 versicolor, 150 
 
 versiformis, 95 
 
 versipellis, 12o 
 
 vertirugis, 45 
 
 vervacti, 13t; 
 
 vilis, 90 
 
 villaticus, 148 
 
 vinosus, 123, 1(34 
 
 violaceo-fuscus, 116 
 
 violarius, 82 
 
 virgatus, 20 
 
 virescens, 17 
 
 viridis. (59 
 
 virosus, 1 
 I vitilis, ()2 
 
 vitreus, (Jl 
 I Vittadiiii, 7 
 I vittajformis, 141 
 j volvaceus, 79 
 
 Valvar i a, 79 
 
 vulgaris, 64 
 
 Whitei, 117 
 
 Worthingtonii, 152 
 
 Wynnei, 87 
 
 Wynnias, 11 
 
 xauthopus, 47 
 
 xygophjllus, '29 
 
 xylophilus, 44 
 
 zephirus, 55 
 Amy lo Corpus, 358 
 
 encephaloides, 358 
 Apyrenium, 337 
 
 ligiiatile, 337 
 
 Arrhenia, 263 
 Ascomycetes, 343 
 Auricularia, 319 
 
 lobata, 319 
 mcseiitcrica, 319 
 Auricularini, 314 
 
 Balsamia, 358 
 
 fragiforruis, 359 
 platyspora, 358 
 vulgaiis, 359 
 
 Batarrea, 339 
 
 phalLiidcs, 339 
 Bolbitius, 178 
 apicalis, 179 
 Boltonii, 179 
 conocephalus, 179 
 
 Bolbitiu S—confin uetl. 
 
 fragilis, 179 
 
 grandiusculus, 179 
 
 hj'drophilus, 178 
 
 rivulosus, 179 
 
 tener, 179 
 
 titubans, 179 
 
 vitellinus, 179 
 Boletus, 273 
 
 aereus, 277 
 
 aestivalis, 278 
 
 alutariiis, 279 
 
 aurantiporus, 274 
 
 badius, 274 
 
 bovinus, 274 
 
 calopus, 277 
 
 candicans, 277 
 
 carnosus, 280 
 
 castaneus, 280 
 
 chrysenteron, 275 
 
 collinitus, 274 
 
 cruentatus, 279 
 
 cyanescens, 280 
 
 duriusculus, 279 
 
 edulis, 277 
 
 elegans, 274 
 
 erythropus, 278 
 
 feileus, 279 
 
 flavidus, 274 
 
 fiavHs, 274 
 
 fragrans, 278 
 
 fulvidus, 280 
 
 granulatus, 274 
 
 impolitus, 278 
 
 laricinus, 278 
 
 luridus, 278 
 
 luteus, 273 
 
 olivaceus, 277 
 
 pachypus, 277 
 
 parasiticus, 277 
 
 piperatus, 275 
 
 pruinatus, 276 
 
 purpureus, 278 
 
 radicans, 27() 
 
 radicatus, 275 
 
 rubinus, 276 
 
 sanguineus, 275 
 
 satanus, 278 
 
 scaber, 279 
 
 spadiceus, 275 
 
 strisepes, 275 
 
 subtomentosus, 275 
 
 sulphureus, 275 
 
 tenuipes, 274 
 
 variecolor, 277 
 
 variegatus, 275 
 
378 
 
 INDEX TO GENERA, SUli-dENEIJA, AND Sl'KCIES. 
 
 Boletua—coiit! inieil. 
 
 versicolor, 270 
 
 versipellis, 21 'J 
 
 viscidus, 278 
 Bovista, 341 
 
 nigroscens, 341 
 
 olivacea, 341 
 
 ovalispora, 341 
 
 plumbeu, 341 
 
 Caloeera, 331 
 
 cornea, 331 
 corticalis, 331 
 glossoides, 332 
 palmata, 331 
 striata, 331 
 stricta, 331 
 tuberosa, 330, 331 
 viscosa, 331 
 Cantharellus, 20i 
 
 albidiis, 201 
 aurantiacus, 261 
 Brovvnii, 201 
 carbonarius, 261 
 cibarius, 261 
 cinereus, 262 
 cupulatus, 262 
 devexus, 263 
 Friesii, 261 
 glaucus, 26 5 
 Houghtoni, 261 
 infundibuliformis, 262 
 lobatvis, 263 
 lutescens, 262 
 muscigenus, 203 
 radicosus, 261 
 refiexus, 262 
 retirugis, 203 
 rufipes, 201 
 Stevensoni, 202 
 tubseforiuis, 262 
 umbonatiis, 201 
 
 Cenococcum, 343 
 
 geopliiliun, 343 
 
 Choiromyees, 358 
 
 lueaiidriformis, 358 
 
 Cladoderris, 316 
 
 minima, 310 
 Clathrus, 339 
 
 cancellatus, 339 
 Clavaria, 327 
 
 abietina, 328 
 acuta, 331 
 aiuethystina, 327 
 Ardenia, 330 
 argillacea, 329 
 
 Clavaria — continued. 
 
 aurantiaca, 329 
 
 aurea, 328 
 
 botrytes, 327 
 
 canaliculata, 330 
 
 ceranoides, 329 
 
 cinerea, 327 
 
 condensata, 328 
 
 contorta, 330 
 
 coralloides, 327 
 
 crispula, 329 
 
 cristata, 327 
 
 crocea, 328 
 
 curta, 327 
 
 fastigiata, 327 
 
 fistulosa, 330 
 
 flaccida, 328 
 
 formosa, 328 
 
 fragilis, 329 
 
 fumosa, 330 
 
 fusiformis, 329 
 
 grisea, 328 
 
 inajqualis, 329 
 
 incarnata, 331 
 
 juncea, 330 
 
 krombholzii, 327 
 
 Kunzei, 327 
 
 ligula, 330 
 
 muscoides, 327 
 
 pistillaris, 330 
 
 purpurea, 329 
 
 pyxidata, 327 
 
 rosea, 329 
 
 rufa, 329 
 
 rugosa, 327 
 
 spinulosa, 328 
 
 striata, 329 
 stricta, 329 
 tenuipes, 331 
 tuberosa, 330 
 umbrina, 327 
 uncialis, 331 
 verniicularis, 329 
 Coprinus, 173 
 alternatus, 170 
 aphthosu.s, 174 
 aratns, 175 
 atramentarius, 174 
 cinereus, 175 
 comatus, 173 
 congregatus, 176 
 cothurnatus, 178 
 deliquescens, 176 
 domesticus, 177 
 eplieinerus, 177 
 extinctorius, 175 
 
 Coprinns— continued. 
 
 filiformis, 178 
 
 fimetarius, 175 
 
 llocculosus, 174 
 
 fuscescens, 174 
 
 hemerobius, 178 
 
 Hendersonii, 176 
 
 lagopus, 177 
 
 macrocepalus, 177 
 
 macrorhizus, 175 
 
 micaceus, 175 
 
 narcoticus, 177 
 
 niveus, 175 
 
 nycthemerus, 177 
 
 oblectus, 173 
 
 ovatus, 173 
 
 papillatus, 175 
 
 picaceus, 174 
 
 platypus, 178 
 
 plicatilis, 178 
 
 puUatus, 175 
 
 radians, 175 
 
 radiatus, 177 
 
 rimososquamosus,174 
 
 similis, 174 
 
 soboliferus, 174 
 
 sociatus, 177 
 
 Spraguei, 177 
 
 stercorarius, 177 
 
 sterquilinus, 173 
 
 tardus, 170 
 
 tomcntosus, 175 
 Cordiceps, 359 
 
 alutacea, 359 
 Corticium, 319 
 
 amorplnuu, 319 
 
 antliochroum, 324 
 
 arachnoideum, 320 
 ariduuj, 323 
 atrovirens, 321 
 aurora. 322 
 byssoideum, 323 
 cajruleum, 321 
 calceum, 321 
 cinereum, 321 
 ciiinamoineum, 320 
 citrinurn, 321 
 coiiiedens, 322 
 conliuens, 321 
 corrugatum, 322 
 evolvens, 319 
 ferrugineum, 324 
 foetiduni, 320 
 giganteum, 320 
 incarnatum, 321 
 lactesccns, 320 
 
INDEX TO GENERA, SUB-GENERA, AND SPECIES. 
 
 379 
 
 Cortioivm— «n. 
 
 tinned. 
 lacteum, ;520 
 lacunosiim, 324 
 laeve, 320 
 laxum, 323 
 limitatum, 322 
 lividum, 321 
 maculEeforme, 322 
 nudum, 321 
 ochraceum, 321 
 olivaceum, 324 
 polygonium, 322 
 porosum, 320 
 puberum, 321 
 puteanuoi, 323 
 quercinum, 321 
 roseum, 320 
 salicinum, 319 
 sambuci, 323 
 sanguineum, 320 
 scutellare, 321 
 serum, 323 
 istabulare, 323 
 subdealbatum, 320 
 sulphureum, 320 
 typhffi, 322 
 umbrinum, 323 
 velutinum, 320 
 violaceo-lividum, 322 
 Cortinarius, 180 
 acutus, 222 
 albo-cyaueus, 200 
 albo-violaceus, 195 
 allutus, 184 
 anfractus, 184 
 angulosus, 369 
 anomalus, 200 
 anthracinup, 201 
 arenatus, 198 
 argentatus, 194 
 armeniacus, 214 
 armillatus, 207 
 arviuaceus, 191 
 atro-virens, 187 
 azureus, 200 
 balaustinus, 216 
 balteatus, 181 
 Berkley!, 184 
 bicolor, 216 
 biformis, 210 
 bivelup, 204 
 bolaris, 197 
 bovinus, 208 
 brunneus, 209 
 bulbosus, 204 
 
 I Cortinarius— co)i- 
 
 I tinued. 
 
 \ Bulliardi, 197 
 
 caerulescens, 185 
 
 callisteus, 197 
 
 calochrous, 185 
 
 camphoratus, 196 
 
 camurus, 198 
 
 caninus, 199 
 
 castaneus, 216 
 
 cinnabarinus, 201 
 I cinnamomeus, 201 
 
 claricolor, 180 
 
 collinitus, 191 
 
 colus, 217 
 
 Cookei, 213 
 
 corrosus, 186 
 
 coruscans, 190 
 
 cotoneus, 202 
 
 crassus, 181 
 
 croceo-c^ruleus, 190 
 
 croceo-conus, 201 
 
 croceo-fulvus, 368 
 
 croceus, 201 
 
 crystallinus, 188 
 
 cumatilis, 188 
 
 cyanites, 194 
 
 cyanopus, 182 
 
 damascenus, 214 
 
 decipiens, 220 
 
 decolorans, 189 
 
 decoloratus, 189 
 
 decumbens, 198 
 
 delibutus, 192 
 
 depressus, 222 
 
 Dermocijhe, 198 
 
 detonsus, 221 
 
 diabolicvis, 199 
 
 dibaphus, 185 
 
 dilutus, 215 
 
 dolabrates, 219 
 
 duracinus, 214 
 
 elatior, 191 
 
 emollitus, 188 
 
 erythrinus, 220 
 
 everneus, 206 
 
 fasciatus, 223 
 
 finitimus, 196 
 
 firmus, 213 
 
 flabellus, 211 
 
 flexipes, 21(1 
 
 fulgens, 186 
 
 fulmineus, 186 
 
 gentilis, 207 
 
 germanus, 221 
 
 glandicolor, 209 
 
 I Cortinarius— coH- 
 
 tiniied. 
 glaucopiis, 185 
 grallipes, 191 
 hsematochelis, 207 
 helvelloides, 208 
 helvolus, 207 
 hemitrichus, 212 
 herpeticus, 187 
 hinnuleus, 207 
 hircinus, 196 
 Hygrocyhe, 213 
 iliopodius, 212 
 illibatus, 193 
 illuminus, 215 
 imbutus, 216 
 impennis, 205 
 incisus, 211 
 infractus, 183 
 iufucatus, 202 
 injucundus, 209 
 Jnoloma, 194 
 isabellinus, 217 
 j jubarinus, 218 
 Junghuhnii, 222 
 Krombholzii, 219 
 lauiger, 204 
 largus, 182 
 lepidotus, 200 
 leucopus, 220 
 licinipes, 204 
 limonius, 207 
 livido-ochraceous, 192 
 lucorum, 368 
 lustratus, 182 
 macropus, 203 
 malachius, 195 
 microcyclns, 205 
 miltinus, 200 
 milvinus, 222 
 mucifluus, 191 
 multiformis, 184 
 muricinus, 195 
 myrtillinus, 199 
 Ilijxaciiim, 191 
 napus, 184 
 nemorosus, 1S2 
 nitidus, 368 
 nitrosus, 209 
 obtusus, 221 
 ochroleucus, 198 
 orellanus, 202 
 orichalceus, 187 
 paleaceiis, 212 
 papulosus, 190 
 jjateriformis, 218 
 
380 
 
 INDEX TO GENERA, 811! (lENERA, AND SPECIES. 
 
 Cortinarius— co»- 
 
 tinued. 
 penlcelliitus, 198 
 periscelis, 210 
 Fldeymacium, 180 
 pholideus, )97 
 phrj-gianus, l'J7 
 pinetorum, lil-l 
 pluiniger, 205 
 pluvius, ly-i 
 porphyropus, 189 
 prasinus, 187 
 privignus, 214 
 psammocephalus, 211 
 punctatus, 2U9 
 purpurascens, 185 
 quadricolor, 2Uti 
 raphanoides, 203 
 redimitus, 197 
 Keedii, 220 
 redimitus, 197 
 renidons, 217 
 Riederi, 183 
 rigidus, 212 
 ringens, 219 
 rubellus, 208 
 russus, 188 
 saginus, 183 
 salor, 192 
 sanguineus, 201 
 saturninus, 215 
 scandens, 220 
 scaurus, 187 
 scutelatus, 20(5 
 sebaceus, 181 
 semi-sanguineus, 201 
 serarius, 188 
 spilomeus, 200 
 stemmatus, 212 
 stillatitius, 193 
 subfeiTugineus, 213 
 sublanatus, 198 
 subnotatus, 202 
 subpurpuiascens, 185 
 tabularis, 198 
 talus, 185 
 Tekimonia, 203 
 testaceus, 3G8 
 tophaceus, 196 
 tortuosus, 215 
 torvus, 205 
 traganus, 190 
 triform is, 210 
 triumphans, 180 
 turbinatus, 180 
 turmalis, 181 
 
 Cortinarius— co»- 
 
 tiuucd. 
 
 uliginosus, 202 
 
 unimodus, 219 
 
 uraceus, 218 
 
 urbicus, 204 
 
 valgus, 203 
 
 variicolor, 182 
 
 varius, 182 
 
 venetus, 203 
 
 vibratiiis, 193 
 
 vinosus, 197 
 
 violaceus, 194 
 
 xanthophyllus, 186 
 Craterellus, 314 
 
 clavatus, 314 
 
 cornucopioides, 314 
 
 crispus, 314 
 
 lutescens, 314 
 
 sinuosus, 314 
 Cynophallus, 339 
 
 banibusinus. 339 
 caninus, 3;)9 
 Cyphella, 324 
 Bloxami, 324 
 brunnea, 324 
 capula, 325 
 catilla, 325 
 cernua, 325 
 Curreri, 325 
 cuticulosa, 326 
 dochmiospora, 326 
 fraxinicola, 325 
 fulva, 324 
 galeata, 325 
 Goldbachii, 326 
 griseo-pallida, 324 
 lacera, 325 
 musicola, 325 
 muscigena, 325 
 ocliroleuca, 324 
 pallida, 326 
 Pimii, 325 
 stuppea, 324 
 
 Dacrymyces, 336 
 
 chrysocnnuis, 336 
 deliquescens, 336, 33' 
 macrosporus, 336 
 sebaceus, 336 
 stillatus, 336 
 succineus, 336 
 vernuforinis, 336 
 violaceus, 334, 337 
 
 Dsedalea, 298 
 
 anrca, 298 
 
 Dsedalea— cojf^iMHpf/. 
 
 cinerea, 299 
 
 confragosa, 298 
 
 ferruginea, 299 
 
 latissima, 299 
 
 quercina, 298 
 
 unicolor, 299 
 
 veiniicularis, 299 
 Ditiola, 337 
 
 radicata, 337 
 
 Elaphomyces, 359 
 
 anthracinus, 359 
 
 granulatus, 359 
 
 variegatus, 359 
 Elvellacei, .'.43 
 Endogeae, 301 
 
 lactifluus, 361 
 
 pisiformis, 361 
 Exidia, 335 
 
 glandulosa, 335 
 
 recisa, 335 
 
 saccharina, 335 
 
 truncata, 335 
 
 Favolus, 300 
 Femsjonia, 335 
 Fistulina, 280 
 
 hopatica, 2.S0 
 
 G-asteromycetes, 
 
 337 
 
 Geaster, 340 
 
 Bryantii, 340 
 coiiformis, 340 
 cryptorrhynchus, 340 
 fimbriatus, 340 
 fornicatus, 340 
 hygromctricus, 340 
 lagenreforinis, 340 
 limbatus, 340 
 mammosus, ;540 
 Michelianus, 340 
 rufescens, 340 
 saccatus, 340 
 striatus, 340 
 tunicatus. 340 
 
 Genea, 359 
 
 hispidula, 359 
 Klotschii, 359 
 verrucosa, 359 
 
 Geoglossum, 350 
 
 glabriini, 350 
 glutinosiiin, 350 
 microsporum, 850 
 
IXDEX TO GENERA, STB-GEXEHA, AND SPECIES. 
 
 381 
 
 Geoglossum. — con- 
 tin ued. 
 
 olivaceum, 350 
 
 tremellosiim, 350 
 
 viride, 350 
 
 viscosiim. 350 
 Gomphidius, 223 
 
 glutino.sns, 223 
 
 gracilis, 223 
 
 maculatus, 223 
 
 rosens, 223 
 
 viscidus, 223 
 Grandinia, 312 
 
 crustosa, 313 
 
 granulosa, 312 
 
 mucida, 312 
 
 ocellata, 312 
 
 papulosa, 312 
 Guepinia, 33G 
 
 jK'ziza, 336 
 Gyrodon, 280 
 Gyromitra, 345 
 
 esculenta, 345 
 
 gigas, 345 
 
 Helvella, 345 
 
 atra, 346 
 crispa, 345 
 elastica, 346 
 ephippium, 346 
 guepiuioides, 346 
 infula, 345 
 Kl.jtschiana, 346 
 lacunosa, 345 
 monachella, 346 
 pulla, 346 
 Mibcostata, 345 
 sulcata, 345 
 Hericium, 309 
 Hexagonia, 299 
 Hiatula, li 
 
 Wvnni:u, 11 
 
 Hirneola, 335 
 
 auricula-Judaj, 335 
 Hydnangeum, 338 
 
 carneum, 338 
 
 carota^color, 338 
 Hydnei, 302 
 Hydnobolites, 358 
 
 cerebriformis, 358 
 Hydnotria, 358 
 
 Tnlasiii, 358 
 Hydnum, 302 
 
 alutacfum, 307 
 
 anomalum, 308 
 
 argutum, 309 
 
 Hydnum -continued. 
 aurantiacum, 303 
 aureum, 307 
 auriscalpium. 305 
 bicolor, 308 
 caput -iledusaj, 305 
 cin-hatum, 305 
 compactum, 303 
 coralloides, 305 
 crinale, 306 
 cyathiforme, 305 
 denticulatum, 307 
 diversidens, 306 
 erinaceum, 305 
 farinaceiim, 309 
 ferrugineum, 304 
 ferruginosuru, 307 
 fragile, 303 
 fusco-atrum, 306 
 gelatinosum, 309 
 graveolens, 305 
 imbricaturu, 302 
 Iffivigatum, 303 
 limonicolor, 307 
 melaleucum, 305 
 melleum, 308 
 membranaceum, 306 
 multiforme. 307 
 nigrum, 304 
 niveum, 309 
 nodulosum, 308 
 ochraceum, 306 
 plumosum, 309 
 repandum, 303 
 rufescens, 303 
 scabrosum, 302 
 scrobiculatum, 304 
 sepultum, 308 
 sordidum, 307 
 spathulatum, 307 
 squalinum, 306 
 squamosum, 302 
 Stevensoni, 308 
 stipatum, 309 
 udum, 308 
 variecolor, 307 
 Weinmanni, 306 
 zonatum, 304 
 
 Hygrophorus, 226 
 atratho^mus, 229 
 ai-bustivus, 228 
 aromaticus, 229 
 aureus, 228 
 calyptrffiformis, 235 
 caprinus, 230 
 ceraceus, 234 
 
 233 
 
 Hygrophorus— con- 
 
 tinued. 
 ceracinus, 229 
 chlorophanus, 235 
 chrjsodon, 226 
 cinereus, 230 
 Clarkii, 232 
 coccineus, 234 
 Colemannianus 
 conicus, 235 
 cossus, 226 
 discoideus, 228 
 distans, 232 
 eburneus, 226 
 erubescens, 227 
 fcetens, 231 
 fornicatus, 232 
 fusco-albus, 229 
 glauco-niteus, 236 
 glutinifer, 228 
 Houghtoni, 233 
 hypothejus, 229 
 intermedius, 235 
 irrigatus, 233 
 lacmus, 233 
 lEetus, 234 
 leporinus, 230 
 limacinus, 229 
 livido-albus, 230 
 mesotephi-us, 230 
 metapodius, 232 
 micaceu?, 231 
 miniatus, 234 
 mollis, 234 
 mucronellus, 234 
 murinaceus, 236 
 nemoreus, 230 
 nitratus, 236 
 niveus, 231-235 
 obrusseus, 235 
 olivaceo-albus, 229 
 ovinus, 232 
 pallidus, 231 
 penariu.^, 227 
 pratensis, 230 
 psittacinus, 235 
 pudorinus, 227 
 pulverulentus, 227 
 puniceu«, 235 
 russo-coriaceus, 231 
 sciophanus, 233 
 spadiceus, 236 
 subradiatus, 232 
 turundus, 234 
 unguinosus, 236 
 ventricosus, 231 
 
.382 
 
 IXDKX TO GEXKUA, sriJ-GEXEKA, AXD SPECIES. 
 
 Hygrophorus— co»- 
 
 fuiue,l. 
 virgineus, 231 
 vitellinns, 284 
 Wynniiu, 2;)1 
 Hymen ogaster, 338 
 citrinus, 338 
 deconis, 338 
 Klotzschii, 338 
 luteus, 338 
 muticus, 338 
 olivaceus, 338 
 pallidus, 338 
 pusillus, 338 
 tener, 338 
 Thwaitesii, 338 
 vulgaris, 338 
 
 Hypocrea, 359 
 
 alutacea, 359 
 
 argillacea, 360 
 
 aureo-virida, 360 
 
 citrina, 359 
 
 contorta, 360 
 
 lactea, 360 
 
 moriformis, 360 
 
 ringens, 359 
 
 rufa, 359 
 
 .splendens, 360 
 
 strobilina, 360 
 
 tremelloides. 359 
 
 umbrina, 359 
 
 viscidula, 360 
 Hypogaei, 337 
 Hysterangium, 
 
 "3S 
 
 nephriticum, 338 
 
 Thwaitesii, 33S 
 Hymenochaete, 317 
 
 corrugata, 322 
 
 rubiginosa, 317 
 
 tabacina, 317 
 Hymenula, 337 
 
 puiiftiformis, 337 
 
 Irpex, 310 
 
 carneus, 310 
 deformis, 310 
 fusco-violaceu?, 310 
 Johnstoni, 310 
 obliquus, 310 
 l)endiilus, 310 
 spathulatus, 310 
 
 Kneiffia, 313 
 
 setigera, 313 
 subgelatinosa, 313 
 
 Lactarius, 236 
 
 acris, 239 
 aspiduns, 238 
 aurantiacus, 241 
 blennius, 238 
 camphoratiis, 245 
 capsicum, 239 
 chiysorheus, 239 
 cilicioides, 237 
 cimicarius, 245 
 circellatus, 238 
 controversus, 237 
 cremor, 241 
 cyathula, 242 
 deliciosus, 240 
 exsuccus, 240 
 flexuosus, 239 
 fuliginosus, 243 
 glyciosmus, 243 
 helvus, 242 
 hysginus, 238 
 ichoratus, 244 
 insulsns. 238 
 interniedius, 237 
 involutus, 369 
 lilacinus, 243 
 mammosus, 243 
 margine-tomentoso, 
 
 238 
 minimus, 245 
 mitissimus, 244 
 obliquus, 246 
 obnubilus, 245 
 pallidus, 241 
 pauper, 241 
 pergamenus, 24(1 
 picinus, 243 
 piperatus, 240 
 pubescens, 237 
 Ijyrogalus, 239 
 quietus, 241 
 rufus, 242 
 scoticus, 240 
 scrobiculatus, 236 
 seriduus, 244 
 spinulnsus, 243 
 squalidus, 239 
 subdulcis, 244 
 suburabonatus, 245 
 Terrei, 244 
 tlieiogalus, 241 
 toraeiitosus, 242 
 torminosns, 237 
 trivialis, 238 
 turpis, 237 
 umi)rinus, 240 
 
 Lactarius— wi- 
 
 tinued. 
 
 utilis, 238 
 
 uvidus, 238 
 
 vellereus, 240 
 
 vietus, 241 
 
 violaceu-s, 244 
 
 volemus, 244 
 
 zonarius, 238 
 Lentinus, 270 
 
 adhserens. 271 
 
 cochleatus, 271 
 
 Dunalii, 270 
 
 fimbriatus, 271 
 
 flabelliformis,271 
 
 leontopodius, 270 
 
 lepideus, 270 
 
 pulverulentus, 270 
 
 resinaceus, 271 
 
 scoticus, 271 
 
 tigrinus, 270 
 
 vulpinus, 271 
 Lenzites, 273 
 
 abietina, 273 
 
 betulina, 273 
 
 flaccida, 273 
 
 saspiaria, 273 
 Leotia, 347 
 
 acicularis, 348 
 
 chlorouephala, 347 
 
 circinans, 348 
 
 lubrica, 347 
 
 nana, 348 
 Lycoperdon, 342 
 
 atro purpureum, 
 342 
 
 ca?latum, 342 
 
 Cookei, 342 
 
 echinatum, 343 
 genimatum, 342 
 giganteum, 342 
 
 Hoylei, 342 
 perlatum, 370 
 pusillum, 342 
 pyri forme, 342 
 saccatum, 342 
 
 Marasmius, 264 
 
 actin()pliorus,269 
 alliacx'us, 268 
 amadelplius, 267 
 androsaceus, 269 
 angulatus, 267 
 archyropus, 266 
 Broomei, 270 
 calopus, 267 
 
INDEX TO GENEKA, SUB-GENERA, AND SPECIES. 
 
 383 
 
 Marasinius--co«- 
 
 tinued. 
 Candidas, 268 
 caulicinalis, 268 
 cohcereris, 208 
 Curreyi, 269 
 epichioe, 269 
 epiphyllus. 269 
 erythropus, 266 
 foetidus, 267 
 fusco-purpureup, 265 
 graminum, 268 
 Hudsoni, 269 
 impudicus, 266 
 insititius, 269 
 languidus, 267 
 oreades, 264 
 perforans, 269 
 pei'onatus, 264 
 plancns, 264 
 polyadelphus, 270 
 porreus, 264 
 prasiosmus, 265 
 ramealis, 268 
 rotula, 268 
 saccharinns, 269 
 scorodonins. 267 
 scroteus, 265 
 splachnoide.s, 269 
 spodoleucus, 270 
 Stephensii, 266 
 terginus, 266 
 torquescens, 266 
 urens, 264 
 Vaillantii, 267 
 varicosus, 265 
 Wynnei, 26(') 
 Meianogaster, 337 
 anibigiuis, 337 
 variegatiis, 337 
 Merulius, 300 
 aurantiacup, 300 
 Carmichaelianus, 
 
 301 
 corium, 300 
 himantioide.s. 300 
 lacrymans, 3(il 
 ItEticolor, 300 
 moUusciis, 300 
 pallens, 301 
 porinoides, 300 
 pulverulentus, 301 
 rufus, 300 
 serpens, 300 
 tremellosus, 300 
 Microcera, 333 
 
 Mitrula, 347 
 
 alba, 347 
 
 cucullata, 347 
 
 paludosa, 347 
 Montagnites, 173 
 Morchella, 343 
 
 conica, 344 
 
 crassipes, 344 
 
 deliciosa, 344 
 
 esculenta, 343 
 
 glgas, 344 
 
 patula, 344 
 
 rotunda, 343 
 
 semilibera, 345 
 
 Smithiana, 344 
 Mucronella, 313 
 Mutinus, 339 
 
 bambusinus, 339 
 
 caninus, 339 
 
 Nsematelia, 335 
 
 encephala, 335 
 nucleata, 335 
 virescens, 335 
 Nyctalis, 264 
 aslerophora, 264 
 caliginosa, 264 
 parasitica, 264 
 
 Octaviania, 337 
 
 asterosperma, 337 
 
 compacta, 337 
 
 Stephensii, 337 
 Odontia, 313 
 
 barba-Jovis, 313 
 
 fimbriata, 313 
 Ombrophila, 335 
 
 sarcoides, 335 
 
 Pachyphloeus, 358 
 
 citrinus, 358 
 conglomeratns, 358 
 melanoxanthus, 358 
 Panus, 272 
 
 albo-tomentosus, 
 
 272 
 conchatus, 272 
 farinacfus, 272 
 patellaris, 272 
 St even son i, 272 
 stipticus, 272 
 
 tonilosus, 272 
 Paxillup, 223 
 
 Alexandri, 224 
 
 atro-tomentosus, 226 
 
 crassus, 226 
 
 PaxillllS— cont'nnied. 
 
 extennatus, 224 
 
 fagi, 226 
 
 giganteus, 223 
 
 involntus, 226 
 
 lepista, 224 
 
 leptopus. 226 
 
 lividus, 225 
 
 orelloides, 225 
 
 panjeolus, 224 
 
 panuoides, 226 
 
 paradoxus, 225 
 
 revolutus, 225 
 
 spilomcphis, 225 
 Peziza, 351 
 
 acetabulum, 352 
 
 Adfe, 353 
 
 alutacea, 353 
 
 ammophila, 352 
 
 ami^liata, 355 
 
 apophysata, 352 
 
 alro-marginata, 353 
 
 aurantia, 353 
 
 auricula, 352 
 badia. 353 
 bufonia, 355 
 bulbosa, 356 
 cerea, 355 
 coccinea, 356 
 cochleata, 353 
 cocotina, 356 
 corium, 356 
 coronaria, 354 
 cribrosa, 356 
 fibrillosa, 353 
 flavida, 354 
 grandis. 353 
 hemispherica, 356 
 isaVellina, 354 
 leiocarpa, 354 
 leporina, 352 
 luteo-nitens, 353 
 macropus, 356 
 micropus, 354 
 ochracea, 353 
 onotica. 352 
 Percevali, 352 
 phlebophora. 352 
 pleurota, 352 
 purpurascens. 355 
 pustulata, 355 
 radiculata. 356 
 radula, 355 
 repanda, 354 
 reticulata. 354 
 sepulta, 356 
 
384 
 
 INDEX TO GENKKA, SIH-GEXEKA, AND SPECIES. 
 
 continued. 
 
 stipitata, 353 
 
 succosa, 355 
 
 Sumne liana, 356 
 
 tectoria, 355 
 
 trachycarpa, 354 
 
 tubero-sa, 356 
 
 vcnos;i, ;{55 
 
 vesiciilcxa, 355 
 Phallotdei, 339 
 Phallus, 339 
 
 impudicus, 339 
 
 iosmus, 339 
 Phlebia, 312 
 
 contorta, 312 
 
 Urellosa, 312 
 
 merismoides, 312 
 
 radiata, 312 
 
 vaga, 312 
 Pistillaria, 333 
 
 culmigena, 333 
 
 f areata, 333 
 
 micans, 333 
 
 quisquiliaris, 333 
 
 puberula, 333 
 
 pusilla, 333 
 Polyporei, 273 
 Polyporus, 281 
 
 abietiiuis, 292 
 acanthoides, 284 
 adiposus, 288 
 adustus, 288 
 alligatus, 285 
 alutaceus, 286 
 amorphus, 288 
 aneirinus, 293 
 annosus, 291 
 applanatus, 289 
 armeniacur,, 294 
 bathyporus, 297 
 betulinus, 289 
 blepharistoma, 296 
 bombvcinus, 293 
 boreaiis, 288 
 brumalis, 281 
 caisius, 287 
 callosus, 295 
 carneu?, 291 
 cerebrinus, 286 
 cervinus, 291 
 chioneus, 286 
 cinctus, 294 
 coUabefactus, 295 
 conchatus, 290 
 connatus, 290 
 contiguus, 292 
 
 Polyporus— to/i- 
 
 tinufid. 
 corticola, 296 
 crispus, 288 
 cristatus, 284 
 cryptariim, 291 
 cuticularis, 288 
 cvtisinus, 290 
 destructor, 287, 297 
 dryadeus, 289 
 elegans, 283 
 epileucus, 286 
 farinellus, 296 
 ferruginosus, 292 
 fibula, 292 
 fomentarius, 289 
 fragilis, 287 
 fraxineus, 290 
 frondosus, 284 
 fulvus, 290 
 f umosus, 288 
 fuscidulus, 281 
 giganteus, 284 
 giivus, 287 
 Gordoniensis, 296 
 gossypinus, 291 
 Herbergii, 285 
 heteroclitus, 285 
 hirsutus, 292 
 hispidus, 288 
 hybrid us, 297 
 hymenocystis, 296 
 igniarius, 289 
 imbricatus, 285 
 incarnatus. 293 
 intybaceus, 284 
 Keithii, 288 
 lactens, 287 
 Lajstadii, 293 
 lentus, 281 
 leptocephalus, 281 
 leucomelas, 281 
 lucidus, 283 
 medulla-panis, 295 
 melanopus, 282 
 micans, 293 
 Miclielii, 282 
 mollis, 287 
 raolluscus, 295 
 mucidus, 295 
 nidulans, 287 
 nigricans, 289 
 nitidus, 293 
 nummularius, 283 
 obducens, 295 
 pallescens, 286 
 
 Polyporus— coH- 
 
 iinued. 
 pectinatus, 290 
 perennis, 282 
 petaloides, 283 
 picipes, 283 
 polymorphus, 291 
 pomaceus, 289 
 populinus, 291 
 purpureas, 293 
 quercinus, 289 
 radiatus, 291 
 radula, 295 
 ramentaceus, 294 
 Rennyi, 294 
 reticulatus, 296 
 rliodellus, 293 
 ribis, 290 
 roseus, 290 
 Rostkovii, 283 
 rufescens, 281 
 rufus, 293 
 rutilans, 287 
 salicinus, 29 J 
 salignus, 285 
 sanguinolentus, 295 
 Schweinitzii, 281 
 secernibilis, 296 
 spumeus, 288 
 squamosas, 282 
 Stephensii, 296, 298 
 subfusco-fiavidus, 294 
 subgelatinosus, 294 
 sulphureus, 285 
 terrestris, 294 
 trabeas, 287 
 ulmarius, 290 
 umbellatus, 283 
 umbrinus, 292 
 Vaillantii, 296 
 vaporarius, 296 
 variegatus, 291 
 varius, 283 
 vegetus, 289 
 veiutinus, 292 
 versicolor, 292 
 violaceus, 293 
 viridans, 294 
 vitreus, 295 
 vulgaris, 295 
 Wynnci, 292 
 Polysaccum. 343 
 
 olivacfuiu, 343 
 
 Porothelium, 301 
 
 confusiim. 3ol 
 Friesii, 301 
 
INDEX TO (iENEKA, SUB-i;ENEKA, AND SPECIES. 
 
 885 
 
 Porothelium— co/i- 
 
 tinued. 
 Keithii, 301 
 Stevensoni, 301 
 Pterula, 332 
 multifida, 332 
 subulata, 332 
 
 Radulum, 3ii 
 
 aterrimuni, 311 
 corallinum, 311 
 (legiubens, 311 
 epileucum, 311 
 fagineum, 311 
 orbicnlare, 311 
 quercinum, 311 
 tomentosum, 311 
 
 Rhizina, 351 
 
 lajvigata, 351 
 uiidulata, 351 
 Rhizopogon, 338 
 
 rubescens, 3:58 
 
 Russula, 246 
 
 adiista, 246 
 nirugint-a, 256 
 alba, 258 
 albo-nigra, 246 
 alutacea, 259 
 armeniaca, 259 
 atropurpureus, 
 
 255 
 aurata, 258 
 azurea, 252 
 Barlae, 258 
 chamaileontina, 
 
 260 
 citrina, 257 
 claroflava, 369 
 I'lnsii, 255 
 coerulea, 249 
 consobrina, 253 
 cuprea, 258 
 cutefracta, 251 
 cyanoxantha, 252 
 decolorans, 258 
 delica, 247 
 densifolia, 246 
 depallens, 248 
 drimeia, 249 
 Du Portii, 250 
 elegans, 254 
 elephantina, 247 
 emetica, 255 
 expallens, 254 
 fallax, 255 
 fellea, 254 
 
 Russula— w»- 
 
 tinued. 
 fiugibilis, 255 
 foetens, 253 
 fragilis, 257 
 furcata, 248 
 galochroa, 253 
 granulosa, 256 
 heterophylla, 253 
 incarnata, 250 
 Integra, 258 
 intensior, 259 
 intermedia, 253 
 lactea, 249 
 lepida, 250 
 lilacea, 252 
 Linnffii, 250 
 lutea, 260 
 maculata, 248 
 mustelina, 247 
 nauseosa, 260 
 nigricans, 246 
 nitida, 258 
 nivea, 257 
 ochracea, 260 
 ochroleuca, 256 
 ochroviridis, 248 
 olivacea, 251 
 olivascens, 247 
 pectinata, 256 
 pictipes, 248 
 puellaris, 259 
 pulchralis, 258 
 punctata, 257 
 purpurea. 248 
 Queletii, 254 
 rosacea, 248 
 rosipes, 259 
 rubra, 250 
 sanguinea, 248 
 sapida, 250 
 sardonia, 248 
 semicrema, 247 
 serotina, 251 
 sororia, 253 
 subfoetens, 253 
 vesca, 252 
 veternosa, 257 
 violacea, 257 
 virescens, 250 
 virginea, 369 
 vitellina, 2(J0 
 xerampelina, 251 
 
 Schizophyllum, 
 
 conimune, 273 
 
 Scleroderma, 343 
 
 Bovista, 343 
 
 geaster, 343 
 
 verrucosum, 343 
 
 vulgare. 343 
 Sistotrema, oU9 
 
 contluens. 309 
 Solenia, 3U2 
 
 ochracea. 302 
 Sphgerosoma, 358 
 
 ostiolatum. 358 
 Sparassis, 326 
 
 crispa. 326 
 Spathularia, 347 
 
 flavida. 347 
 
 Stereum, 317 
 acerinum, 319 
 avellanum, 318 
 frustulosum, 318 
 hirsutum, 816, 317 
 lauro-cerasi, 370 
 ochroleucum, 317 
 pini, 318 
 purpureum, 317 
 rubiginosum, 317 
 rufo-hispidum. 317 
 rufum, 318 
 rugosum. 318 
 sanguinolentum, 317 
 spadiceum. 317 
 stratosum. 319 
 tabicinum, 317 
 vorticosum, 317 
 I Stevensia, 358 
 bombycina, 358 
 
 Strobilomyces, 280 
 strobilaceus, 280 
 
 Thelephora, 3i4 
 
 anthocephala. 315 
 anthochroa. 316, 324 
 arida, 316, 328 
 biennis, 316 
 byssoides, 316, 323 
 csesia, 316 
 caryophyllea. 315 
 clavularis, 315 
 cristata, 316 
 Crustacea, 316 
 fastidiosa, 316 
 intybacea, 315 
 laciniata. 315 
 laxa, 316, 323 
 mollisima, 316 
 multizonata, 314 
 olivacea, 316, 324 
 2 B 
 
'6HG 
 
 INDKX TO CENEIIA, SUll-GENKHA, AND SI'IXI KS. 
 
 (J, 3-2 S 
 
 Thelephora- 
 
 tinued. 
 palmata. :'.15 
 puteana, ;!1(; 
 sebacea. 31() 
 Sowerbeii, 314 
 tubevosa, 315 
 tenestris, 315 
 undulata. 315 
 Thelephorei, -'-N 
 Trametes, '-'iT 
 
 J'.uUiardi. -J'.IT 
 gibbosa, 2tt7 
 inodora, '2V*8 
 mollis, 21)8 
 odora, 298 
 pini, 297 
 serpens, 296 
 suaveolcns, 298 
 Terrei, 298 
 Tremella, 334 
 albida, :;B4 
 
 epi-H-a, :!;;4 
 
 fimbriata, 334 
 foliacea, 334 
 foliicola, 334 
 frondosa. 334 
 indocnrata, 334 
 intumcscons, 334 
 luU:scen>, 334 
 
 Tremella— «;»</«Mff?. 
 
 mesenterica, 334 
 
 moriformis. 334 
 
 torta, 335 
 
 tubercularia, 3;>4 
 
 versicolor, 335 
 
 vesicaria. 334 
 
 violacca. 'i\'.\A 
 
 viscosa, 334 
 Tremeliini, 334 
 Tremellodon, '-it'i 
 
 gt'latindsuiii. :'.n'.i 
 Triehogastres, :i;>'.i 
 Trogia, 273 
 
 crisjja. 273 
 
 Tuber, 357 
 
 jestivum. 357 
 bituminatum, 357 
 brumale, 357 
 dryophilura, 357 
 excavatuni, 357 
 macrosporum, 357 
 puberulum. 357 
 rufum, 357 
 scleroiu'uron. 357 
 Tulostoma, 33; i 
 
 inamraosuni, 33'.t 
 
 Typhula, 332 
 
 ervthropus. 332 
 llliformis, 333 
 
 Typhula— f^'»<*/'"e'i. 
 Grevillei, 333 
 gracilis, 333 
 gracillima, 333 
 gyrans, 332 
 incarnata, 332 
 muscicola, 332 
 phacorrhiza, 332 
 Transluccns, 333 
 
 Verpa, 347 
 
 conica, 347 
 digitaliforniis. 347 
 rnfipes. 347 
 spociosa, 347 
 
 Vibrissea, 348 
 
 Fergiissoni. 349 
 Gucrnisaci, 349 
 leptospora, 349 
 Margarita, 348 
 microscopica , 349 
 truncorum, :!4S 
 turbinata, :n9 
 
 Xerotus, 273 
 
 degencr, 273) 
 
 Xylaria, ".ci 
 
 Scotica. 3()1 
 
 tortuosa, 3i)l 
 
WORKS ON BOTANY. 
 
 The Botanical Mag'azine; Figures and Descriptions of New 
 and Kare Tlants. By Sir J. D. Hookee, K.C.S.I., C.B., F.R.S. Third 
 Series, Vols. I. to XLVL, each 42.S. Published Monthly, with Six 
 Plates, 3.S. 6c/., coloured. Annual Subscription, 42.S. 
 Ke-Issue of the Thikd Series in Monthly Vols., 42.9. each ; to 
 Subscribers for the entire Series, 36s. each. 
 
 Handbook of the British Flora. By Geokge Ben tham, F.u.S. 
 
 Fifth Edition, Revised by Sir J. U. Hooker, C.B., K.C.S.I., F.R.S. 
 IO.S'. 6</. 
 
 Illustrations of the British Flora : a Series of Wood En- 
 gravings, with Dissections, of British Plants, from Drawings by 
 W. H. Fitch, F.L.S., and W. G. Smith, F.L.S., forming an Illus- 
 trated Comi^anion to Bentham's "Handbook," and other British 
 Floras. New Edition, Revised and Enlarged. 131 1 Wood Engrav- 
 ings, lo.^. 6(1. 
 
 Outlines of Elementary Botany, as introductory to Local 
 
 Floras. By Geokge Bentham, F.R.S. New Edition. i,v. 
 
 British Wild Flowers, Familiarly Described in the Four Seasons. 
 By Thomas Moore, F.L.S. Twenty-Four Coloured Plates. 16s. 
 
 British Grasses. By M. Plues. With Sixteen Coloured Plates 
 and One Hundred Wood Engravings. los. 6d. 
 
 British Ferns. With Chapters on the Structure, Propagation, 
 Cultivation, Diseases, Uses, Preservation, and Distribution of Ferns. 
 By M. Plues. With Sixteen Coloured Plates, and Fifty-five Wood 
 Engravings. los. 6d. 
 
 The British Ferns. By Sir W. J. Hooker, F.R.S. Sixty-Six 
 Coloured Plates. £2 zs. 
 
 Garden Ferns : a Selection of Exotic Ferns. By Sir "W. J. 
 Hooker, F.R.S. Sixty-Four Coloured Plates. ;^2 2.-*. 
 
 Filices Exoticae ; Coloured Figures and Description of Exotic 
 Ferns. By Sir W. J. Hooker, F.R.S. Royal 4to. One Hundred 
 Coloured Plates. £6 ii-s. 
 
 Ferny Combes : a Kamble after Ferns in the Glens and Valleys 
 of Devonshire. By Charlotte Chanter. Thinl Edition. Eight 
 Coloured Plates and a Map of the County. 5s-. 
 
 REEVE & CO., 5 Henkietta Street, Covent (tai: 
 
ll'OA'A'S 0\ BOTANY. ^continued. 
 
 Synopsis of British Mosses, containinjr Descriptions of all 
 the Geiiura and Sjiecies (with localities of the rarer ones) found in 
 Great Britain and Ireland. By CHARLES P. HOBKIRK, F.L.S. 
 
 New Edition, entirely revised. 7*. 6d 
 
 Handbook of British Mosses. By the Kev. M. J. Berkeley, 
 31. A., F.L.iS. 'r\v(iity-?"our Coloured Plates. 2i.s. 
 
 The British Moss-Flora. By R. Braithwaite, M.D., F.L.S. 
 
 ^'ol. I., witli Fortv-live finelv executed Plates, 50.*. Part XL, 8s. 
 Part X]]., 7.S-. Part XIII., 6.s-." 
 
 Outlines of British Fung-olOg-y. By the Kev. :M. J. Berke- 
 ley. M.A., F.J^.S. Twenty-Four Coloured Plates. 30s. 
 
 The Esculent Funguses of Eng-land: their History, Uses, 
 
 Characters, Development, Structure, Nutritious Properties, Modes 
 of Cookint; and Preserving-, &c. By C. D. Badham, M.D. Second 
 Edition. Edited by F. Curhey, F.Il.S. Twelve Coloured Plates. 12S. 
 
 British Seaweeds. By S. O. Gray. With Sixteen Coloured 
 
 Plates. lo.s. (id. 
 
 PhyCOlOgia Britannica; or, History of British Seaweeds. By 
 Dr. W. H Hv^hvey, F.R.S. New Edition. 4 vols. 360 Coloured 
 Plates. £"] \os. 
 
 PhyCOlogia Australica : a History of Australian Seaweeds. 
 By Dr. W. II. Ha]£VEy, F.R.S. 5 vols. 300 Coloured Plates. ;^7 I3«. 
 
 Flora of West Yorkshire ; with an Account of the Climatolopy 
 and Litholotrv in connection therewith. Bv Frederic Arnolp 
 Lees, M.R.C.S. Eng., L.R.C.P. Lond. With Coloured Map. ! 2i.s-. 
 
 Flora of Hampshire, including; the Isle of Wight, with localities 
 of the less common species. By F. To\vnsend, M.A., F.L.S. With 
 
 Coloured Map and Two Plates. " i6.s'. 
 
 The Natural History of Plants. By H. Baillon, President 
 
 of the Liniuuan Society of Paris. Vols. I. to YIIL, with 3553 Wood 
 Engravings, 25.S. each. 
 
 Collections and Recollections of Natural History and 
 
 Sport. T.y the Rev. G. ('. GREEN. Illustrated witli Woodcuts 
 from Sketches by the Author. 7.V. 6*/. 
 
 West Yorkshire : im Account of its Geology, Physical Geo- 
 graphy, Climatology, and Botany. l?y J. W. DAVIS, F.L.S., and 
 F. Arnold LEE.srF.L.S. Second Edition. Twenty-One Plates, 
 many coloured, and Two Large Maps. 21*. 
 
 L. JiEEVE et CO., 5 Henkietta Street, Covknt Gakden. 
 
All Books sent Post-free on receipt of remittance. 
 
 LIST OF AVOEKS 
 
 ON 
 
 NATURAL HISTORY, TOPOGRAPHY, 
 ANTIQUITY, AND SCIENCE. 
 
 CONTEJS'TS. 
 
 Botany 
 
 
 
 Page 
 
 3 
 
 Ferns . 
 
 
 
 7 
 
 Mosses 
 
 
 
 8 ' 
 
 FUNGOLOGY . 
 
 
 
 ^ i 
 
 Seaweeds . 
 
 
 
 9 ' 
 
 ShkLLS AND 
 
 M0LLUSK^ 
 
 , 9 
 
 Entomology 
 
 
 
 10 
 
 Zoology 
 
 Antiquity 
 
 Miscellaneous 
 
 Seeials 
 
 Victohta Library 
 
 Plates . 
 
 Forthcoming Works . 16 
 
 Page 
 
 . 13 
 . 13 
 . 14 
 . 15 
 . 16 
 . 16 
 
 L. REEVE AND CO., 
 
 Pdbltshees to the Koue, Coloniai,, and Ikcian Governments, 
 
 ), HENRIETTA STREET, COVENT GARDEN, W.C. 
 
2 
 
 L. Reeve & Co.'s Crown Series of Natural History. 
 
 For descriptive details, see Catalogue. 
 
 British Beetles. By E. C. Rye. 2ncl Edition, 
 
 revised by Rev. Canon Fowlkk, M.A., F.L.S. K! Coloured 
 Plates, and Woodcuts, h)s. (itl. 
 
 British Zoophytes. By Authur S. Pennlvgton, 
 
 F.L.S. 24 Plates, 10*. (5d. 
 
 British Insects. By E. F. Staveley. 16 Coloured 
 
 Plates and Woodcuts, Us. 
 
 British Butterflies and Moths. By H. T. Stainton. 
 
 16 Coloured Plates, and Woodcuts, lO*-. 6d. 
 
 British Bees. By W. E. Shuckahd. 16 Coloured 
 
 Plates, and AVoodcuts, lOi'. Gd. 
 
 British Spiders. By E. F. Staveley. 16 Coloured 
 
 Plates, and Woodcuts, 10*. Hd. 
 
 The .Edible Mollusca of Great Britain and Ireland, 
 
 with Reciges for Cooking them. By M. S. Lovell. Second 
 . Edition. 12 Coloured Plates, 10*. 6d. 
 
 Synopsis of British Mosses. By 0. P. Hubkikk, 
 
 F.'L.S." Revised Edition, 7i.'6(/. 
 
 British Grasses. By M. Plues. 16 Coloured 
 
 Plates, and AVoodcuts, lO*-. Gd. 
 
 British Ferns. By M. Plues. 16 Coloured Plates, 
 
 and YVoodcuts, 10s. 6d. 
 
 British Seaweeds. By S. 0. Gray. 16 Coloured 
 
 Plates, 106'. 6d. 
 
 Handbook of the British Flora. By G. Bentham, 
 
 F.R.S. 6th Edition, Revised by Sir J. D. Hooker. C.B., 
 K.C.S.I., F.R.S., &c., 10s.6(/. . . 
 
 illustrations of the Bi'itish Flora. Drawn by 
 
 W. H. Fitch, F.L.S., and W. G. Smith, F.L.S. 1315 Wood 
 Engravings. 4th Edition, revised and enlarged. 10*-. 6d. 
 
 :x>i ... ..;:.-v. . .. 
 
3 
 
 BOTANY. 
 
 Annals of the Royal Botanic Garden, Calcutta. 
 
 Bv- Geobge King, M.B., LL.D., F.L.S. Part I., Small folio, 
 91 Plates in Portfolio, 2os. Part II., 137 Plates in Portfolio. 
 ■lOs. Appendix to Vol. I., 12 Plates, 10^. 6d. Vol. II., 104 
 Plates, 32*. 6f/. Vol. III., 174 Plates. 70*-. net. Vol. IV., 220 
 Plates, 70s. net. Vol. V., Part I., 101 Plates, 325. 6f/. Part II., 
 99 Plates, 32s. 6cl Vol. VI., Part I., 9 Plates, 30*. Vol. VII., 
 119 Plates, 40*. 
 
 The Natural History of Plants. By H. Baillon, 
 
 President of the Linnsean Society of Paris, Professor of Medical 
 Natural Histor_v and Director of the Botanical Garden of the 
 Faculty of iMedicine of Paris. Super-royal 8vo. Vols. I. to VIII., 
 with 3545 Wood Engravings, 25s. each. 
 
 Handbook of the British Flora; a Description of 
 
 the Flowering Plants and Ferns indigenous to, or naturalized in, 
 the British Isles. For the use of Beginners and Amateurs. B}' 
 (iBOKGE Bentham, F.R.S. 6th Edition, revised by Sir J. T). 
 HooKEE, C.B., K.C.S.I., F.R.S., &c. Crown 8vo, 10*. 6d. 
 
 Illustrations of the British. Flora; a Series of 
 
 Wood Engravings, with Dissections, of British Plants, from 
 Drawings by W. H. FiTCH, F.L.S., and W. G. Smith, F.L.S., 
 forming an Illustrated Companion to Bentham's " Handbook," 
 and other British Floras. 4th Edition, revised and enlarged 
 1315 Wood Engravings, lOs. 6d. 
 
 Outlines of Elementary Botany, as Introductory 
 
 to Local Floras. By Geohge Bentham, F.R.S. , F.L.S. New 
 Edition, Is. 
 
 British Wild Flowers, Familiarly Described in the 
 
 Four Seasons. By Thomas :\Ioore, F.L.S. 24 Coloured Plates 
 16s. 
 
 The Narcissus, its History and Culture, with 
 
 Coloured Figures of all known Species and Principal Varieties. 
 By F. W. Buebidge, and a Review of the Classification 
 by J. G. Baker, F.L.S. Super-royal S/o, 48 Cok.ureJ 
 Plates, 32s. 
 
 A 2 
 
The Botanical Magazine ; Figures and Descriptions 
 
 of New and Eaie Plants suitable for tlie Garden. Stove, or 
 Greenhouse. By Sir J. D. Hookee, K.C.S.I., C.B., F.R.S., late 
 Director of the Royal Gardens, Kew. Royal 8vo. Third Series, 
 Vols. I, to LII., each 42.v. net. Published Monthly, with 6 
 Plates, 3a-. 6(/., colouied. Annual Subscription, 42*-. 
 Ue-Issue of the Third Seeies in Monthly Vols., 42*. each; to 
 Subscribers for the entire Series, 36a-. each. 
 
 Curtis's Botanical Magazine ; complete from the 
 
 commencement to the end of 1896. 122 Vols., and Index to the 
 first 53 Vols, in 99 Vols., £130 net. 
 
 The Floral Magazine; New Series, Enlarged to 
 
 Royal 4to. Figures and Descriptions of the choicest Xew Flowers 
 for the Garden, Stove, or Conservator}'. Complete in Ten Vols., 
 in handsome cloth, gilt edges, 42s. each. 
 FlEST Series complete in Ten Vols., with 560 beautitully-coloured 
 Plates, £18 7s. 6d. 
 
 The Young Collector's Handybook of Botany. 
 
 By the Rev. H. P. Dvnstee, M.A. 66 Woodcuts, 36-. 6d. 
 
 Klementary Lessons in Botanical Geography . By 
 •J. G. Bakee, F.L.S. 3a-. 
 
 Report on the Forest Resources of Western 
 
 Australia. By Baron Feed. Muellek, C.M.G., M.D., Ph.D., 
 P.R.S., Government Botanist of Victoria. Royal 4to, 20 
 Plates of the Eucalyptus, 12*. 
 
 Flora Vitiensis ; a Description of the Plants of 
 
 the Viti or Fiji Islands, with an Account of their History, Uses, 
 and Properties. By Dr. Berthold Seemank, F.L.S. Royal 
 dto; Coloured Plates. Part X., 2os. net. 
 
 Flora Hongkongensis ; a Description of the 
 
 Flowering Plants and Ferns of the Island of Hongkong. By 
 Geoege Bentham, F.R.S. With a Supplement by Dr. Hance. 
 2I*.net^ Published ui]der tiie authority of Her Majesty's Secretary 
 of State for the Colonies The Sujiplement separately, 2*. 6d. net. 
 
Flora of Mauritius and the Seychelles ; a Descrip- 
 tion of the Flowering Plants and Ferns of those Islands. By 
 J. G. Bakee, F.L.S. 24.y. net. Published under the authority 
 of the Colonial Government of Mauritius. 
 
 Flora of British India. By Sir J. D. Hooker, 
 
 K.C.S.I., C.B., P.Pt.S., &c. ; assisted by various Botanists. Parts 
 I. to Xlir., 10^. 6d. each, XIV. to XIX., 9s. each. Part XX., 
 7s. 6d. Parts XXI. and XXII., 9a-. each. Vols. I. to IV., cloth, 
 32*. each; Vol. V., 38*.; Vol. VI., 36*. net. Published under 
 the authority of the Secretary of State for India in Council. 
 
 Flora of Tropical Africa. By Daniel Oliver, 
 
 F.R.S., F.L.S. Vols. I. to III., 20*. each, net. Published under 
 the authority of the rirst»Commissioner of Her Majesty's Works. 
 
 {_Vol. IV. in the i^ress. 
 
 Handbook of the New Zealand Flora; a Systematic 
 
 Description of the Native Plants of New Zealand, and the 
 Chatham, Kermadec's, Lord Auckland's, Campbell's, and Mac- 
 quarrio's Islands. By Sir J. D. HoOKEE, K.C.S.I., F.R.S. 
 'i2*. net. Published under the auspices of the Government of 
 that Colony. 
 
 Flora Australiensis ; a Description of the Plants 
 
 of the Australian Territory. By Geoege Bentham., F.R.S., 
 assisted by Febdinakd Muellee, F.R.S. , Government Botanist, 
 Melbourne, Victoria. Complete in Seven Vols., £7 4*. Vols. I. 
 to VL, 20*. each; Vol. VII., 24*. net. Published under the 
 auspices of the several Governments of Australia. 
 
 Flora of the British West Indian Islands. By 
 
 Dr. Grisebach, F.L.S. 42*. net. Published under the auspices 
 of the Secretary of State for the Colonies. 
 
 Flora Capensis ; a Systematic Description of tlie 
 
 Plants of the Cape Colony, Caftiaria, and Port Natal. By 
 William H. Haevet, M.D., F.R.S., Professor of Botany in 
 the University of Dublin, and Otto Wilhelm Sondee. Ph.D. 
 Vols. I. to III., 18s. each, net. Vol. VI.^ 24*. net. 
 
 [Vols. IV. and V. preparing 
 
6 
 
 Genera Plantarum, ad Exemplaria imprimis in 
 
 Heibaiiis Kewensibus servata definita. By George Bentham, 
 F.R.S., F.L.S., and Sir J. D. Hooker, F.R.S.,late Director of the 
 Roj'al Gardens, Kew. Complete in 7 Parts, forming 3 Vols., £8 2s. 
 
 Flora of West Yorkshire ; with an Account of the 
 
 Climatology and Litliology in connection therewith. By Feedeeic 
 Abnold Lees, M.R.C.S. Eng., L.R.C.P. Lond., Recorder for the 
 Botanical Record Club, and President of tlie Botanical Section of 
 the Yorkshire Naturalists' Union. Svo, with Coloured Map, 21*. 
 
 Flora of Hampshire, including the Isle of Wight, 
 
 with localities of the less common species. B}' F. Townsent), 
 M.A., F-L.S. VV-th Coloured Map and two Plates, 16.«. 
 
 CoTiti'ihutions to the Flora 'of Mentone, and to a 
 
 "Winter F ora of the Riviera, including the Coast from Marseilles 
 to Genoa. By J. Tkahernk Muggridge, F.L.S, Royal Svo. 
 Complete in One Vol., with 99 Coloured Plates, 63«. net. 
 
 British Grasses; an Introduction to the Study 
 
 of the Gr.imiu'a; of Gieat l!rit;iin and Ireland. B\ M. Plues. 
 C own 8vo, with 16 Coloured Plates and ICK) Wood Engravings, 
 IUa-. Gd. 
 
 Wild Flowers of the TTnderchff, Isle of Wight. 
 
 By Chaei.otte O'Beien and C. Paekinson. Crown Svo, 8 
 Coloured Plates, 7s. 6d. 
 
 Icones Flantarnm. Figures, with Brief Descrip- 
 tive Characters and Remf.xks, of New and Rare Plants, selected 
 from the Author's Herbarium. By Sir W. J. Hooker, F.R.S. 
 New Series, Vol. V. lUO Plates, Sis. 6d. 
 
 Botanical Names for EngUsh Readers. By Randal 
 
 H. Alcock. 8vo. 6s. 
 
 A Second Century of Orchidaceous Plants, selected 
 
 from the Subjects puhiislied in Curtis's "Botanical Magazine" 
 since the issue of the " First Century." Edited by James Bate- 
 man, Esq., F.R.S. Complete in One Vol., Royal 4to, lUO Coloured 
 Plates, £5 5s. 
 
Dedicated hy Special PerminKion to H.R.H. the Princess of Wales. 
 
 Monograph of Odontoglossum, a Genus of the 
 
 Vandeous Section of Orchidaceous Plants. B}' James Bateman, 
 Esq., F.E.S. Imperial folio, in One Vol., with 30 Coloured Plates, 
 and Wood En^rasiiigs.jilQJth, £'.6 16*. 6cZ...._.. 
 
 The Rhododendrons of Sikkim-Himalaya ; being 
 
 an Account, Botanical and Geograpiiical, of the Rhododendrons 
 recentl}' discovered in the Mountains of Eastern Himalaya, hy 
 Sir J. D. Hooker, F.R.S. By Sir W. J. Hookkh, F.R.S. Folio, 
 30 Coloured Plates, £4 14s 6d. 
 
 Insuhir Floras. A Lecture delivered by Sir J. D. 
 
 Hooker, C.B., before the British Association for the advance- 
 ment of Science, at Aottiughara, Auijust 27, J866. 2s. 6d. 
 
 FERNS. 
 
 "British Ferns; an Introduction to the Study of 
 
 the Feens, LlYCopods, and- Equiseta indiore.nous to the British 
 Isles. With Chapters on the Structure, Propagation, Cultivation, 
 Diseases, Uses, Preservation, and Distribution of Ferns, By 
 M. Plues. Crown 8vo, with 16 Coloured Plates, and 55 Wood 
 Engravings, 10a\ 6d. 
 
 The British Ferns ; Coloured Figures and Descrip- 
 tions, with Analysis of the Fructification and Venation of the 
 Ferns of Great Britain and Ireland. By Sir W. J. HooKEB, 
 F.R.S. Royal Svo, G6 Coloured Plates, £2 2*. 
 
 Garden Ferns ; Coloured Figures and Descriptions 
 
 with Analysis of the Fructification and Venation of a Selection of 
 Exotic Ferns, adapted for Cultivation in the Garden, Hothouse, 
 and Conservatory. By Sir W. J. Hooker, F.R.S. Royal Svo, 
 64 Coloured Plates, £2 2*. 
 
 Filices Exoticae ; Coloured Figures and Description 
 
 of Exotic Ferns. By Sir W. J. Hooker, F.R.S. Royal 4tc, 
 100 Coloured Plates, £6 ll.y. 
 
•s 
 
 Ferny Combes ; a Ramble after Ferns in the Glens 
 
 and Valleys of Devonshire. By Chaelotte Chanter. Third 
 Edition, Fcap. 8vo, 8 Coloured Plates and a Map of the 
 County, 5*. 
 
 MOSSES. 
 Synopsis of British Mosses, containing Descrip- 
 tions of all the Genera and Species (with localities of the rarer 
 ones) found in Great Britain and Ireland. By Charles P. 
 HoBKlEK, F.L.S., &c., &c. New Edition, entirely revised. 
 Crown 8vo, 7a-. tid 
 
 Handbook of British Mosses, containing all that 
 
 are known to be natives of the Biitisli Islts. By the Rev. M. J, 
 Bekkkley, M.A., F.L.S. Second Edition, 24 Coloured Plates, 
 21*. 
 
 The British Moss-Flora. By R. Braithwaite, 
 
 M.D., F.L.S. Vol. I., Imperial Svo, with 45 tinely executed 
 Plates, 50x. Vol. II., with 39 Plates, 42*. 6cL PartXVlI., 6*. 
 
 FUNGI. 
 British Fungi, Phycomycetes and Ustilaginese. 
 
 By George Masse k (Lecturer on Botany to the London Society 
 for the Extension of University Teaching), Crown Svo, with 
 8 Plates, 7*. 6</, 
 
 Outlines of British Fungology. By the Rev. 
 
 M. J. Berkkley, M.A., F,L.S. With a Supplement of nearly 
 400 pajif-s by Worthingon G. Smith, F.L.S, bringing? tiie 
 work down to the present state of Science. Two vols,, 24 
 Coloured Plates, 36*. The Supplement separately, I2s. 
 
 The Escident Funguses of England. Containing 
 
 an Account ot their Classical History, Uses, Characters, Develop, 
 ment, Structure, Nutritious Properties, Modes of Cookinfj and 
 Preserving, &c. By C, D. Badham, M.D. Second Edition. 
 Edited by F. Currey, F.R.S. 12 Coloured Plates, 12.y. 
 
Clavis Agaricinorum ; an Analytical Key to tlie 
 
 British Agaricini, with Characters of the Genera and Sub-genera. 
 By WoKTHiNGTON G. Smith, P.L.S. 6 Plates, 2*. dd. 
 
 SEAWEEDS. 
 
 British Seaweeds; an Introduction to the Stud3''of 
 
 the Marine ALGiE of Great Britain, Ireland, and the Channel 
 Islands. By S. 0. Gray. Crown 8vo, with 16 Coloured Plates, 
 10,9. Gd. 
 
 Phycologia Britaunica; or, History of British 
 
 Seaweeds. Containing Coloured Pignres, Generic and Specific 
 Characters, Synonyms and Descriptions of all the Species of Algte 
 inhabiting the Shores of the British Islands. By Dr. W. H. 
 Harvey, F.R.S. New Edition, Eoyal 8vo, 4 vols. 3C0 
 Culoured Plates, £7 lOs. 
 
 Phycologia Australica; a History of Australian 
 
 Seaweeds, comprising Coloured Figures and Descriptions of the 
 more characteristic Marine Alga) of New South Wales, Victoria, 
 Tasmania, South Australia, and Western Australia, and a 
 S^'nopsis of all known Australian Algaj. By Dr. W. H. Harvey, 
 F.R.S. Royal 8vo, Five Vols., 300 Coloured Plates, £7 IS*. 
 
 SHELLS AND MOLLUSKS. 
 
 Elements of Conch ology ; an Introduction to 
 
 the Natural History of Shells, and of the Animals which form 
 them. By Lovell Reeve, F.L.S. Royal 8vo, Two Vols., 62 
 Coloured Plates, £2 16s. net. 
 
 Conchologia Iconica ; or, Figures and Descriptions 
 
 of the Shells of Mollusks, with remarks on their Affinities, Syno- 
 nymy, and Geographical Distribution. By Lovell Reeve, 
 F.L.S., and G. B. Sovverby, F.L.S., complete in Twenty Vols., 
 4to, with 2727 Coloured Plates, half-calf, £178 net. 
 
 A detailed list of Monographs and Volumes may be had. 
 
 The Edible Mollusca of Great Britain and Ireland, 
 
 with the Modes of Cooking them. By M. S. Lovell. With 12 
 Coloured Plates. New Edition, rewritten and much enlarged, 
 10a-. 6d. 
 
10 
 
 Testacea Atlantica ; or, the Land and Freshwater 
 
 Shells of the Azores, Madeiras, Salva|2feR, Canaries, Cape Verdes, 
 and Saint Helena. By T. Veunon Wollaston, M.A., F.L.S. 
 Demy 8vo, 25*. 
 
 ENTOMOLOGY. 
 
 Dedicated, by Special Permission, to Her Majesty Queen Victoria, 
 Empress of India. 
 
 Lepidoptera Tndica. By F. Moore, F.Z.S. 4to. 
 
 Vol I., with 94, and Vol. II., with 96, Cloured Plntes, each 
 £9 5*., cloth; £9 155., half-morocco. Parts XXV. to XXVII., 
 with Coloured Plates, 15s. each net. 
 
 The Lepidoptera of Ceylon. Bj F. Mooue, F.L.S. 
 
 Three Vols., Medium 4to, 215 Coloured Plates, cloth, ijilt tops. 
 £21 128. Published under the auspices of the Government of 
 Ceylon. 
 
 The Larvae of the British Lepidoptera, and their 
 
 Food Plants. By OwKN S. Wilson. With Life-sized Figures 
 drawn and coloured from Nature, by Eleanora WiLSON. Super 
 royal Svo, with 40 coloured Plates. G3s. net. 
 
 The Hemiptera-Heteroptera of the British Islands. 
 
 By Edward Saunders, F.L.S. Complete in One Vol., with a 
 Structural Plate, 14s. Large Paper Illustrated Edition, with 31 
 Coloured Plates, 48.s-. net. 
 
 The Hymenoptera Aculeata of the British Isles. 
 
 By Edward Saunders, F.L.S. Complete in One Vol., with 3 
 Structural Plates, 16.y. Large Paper Edition, with 49 Coloured 
 Plates, G8.V. net. 
 
 The Hemiptera Homoptera of the British Islands. 
 
 A Descriptive Account of the Families, Genera, and Species 
 indigenous to Great Britain and Ireland, with Notes as to 
 Localities, Habitats, &c. By Jam ks Edwards, F.E.S. Complete 
 in One Vol., with 2 Structural Plates, 12s. Large Paper, with 
 28 Coloured Plates, 43*. net. 
 
11 
 
 The Lepidoptera of the British Islands. By 
 
 Chables G. Baebett, F.E.S. Vol. I., Rhopalocera (Butterflies), 
 12s. Large Paper Edition, with 40 Coloured Plates, 53s. net. 
 Vol. II., Sphing-^s and Bombycas, l-2s. Large Paper, with 46 
 Coloured Plates, 63.y. net VoL III., Bombyces and Noctuae, 12*. 
 Large Paper, with 50 Coloured Plates, 63*. net. Parts XXXV. 
 to XLII. 5s. each. 
 
 TheColeoptera of theBritish Islands. ADescriptive 
 
 Account of tlie Families, Genera, and Spi'cies indigenous to Great 
 Britain and Ireland, wi'h Notes as to Localities, Habitats, &c. 
 By the Rev. Canon Fowlee, M.A., FL.S. With two 
 Structural Plates and Wood Engravings, complete in 5 Vols., £4. 
 Laige Paper Illustrated Edition, with 18 J Coloured Plates, 
 containing 2300 tigu^es, £14 net. 
 
 A Catalogue of the British Coleoptera. By 
 
 D. Shabpe, ma., F.R.S., and W. W. Fowleb, MA., Is. 6d., 
 or printed on one side for labels, 2s. 6d. 
 
 The Butterflies of Europe: Illustrated and De- 
 scribed. By Heney Charles Lang, M.D., F.L.S. Complete 
 in Two Vols., super-royal 8vo, with 82 Coloured Plates, con- 
 taining upwards of 900 Figures, cloth, £3 18s. 
 
 *,* The Systematic List op Eubopean Bcttkeflies from ike alove work 
 teparately , price %d. ; or printed on one side of the paper only for Labels, Is. 
 
 British Insects. A Familiar Description of the 
 
 Form, Structure, Habits, and Transformations of Insects. By 
 
 E. F. Statelet, Author of " British Spiders." Crown 8vo, with 
 16 Coloured Plates and numerous Wood Engravings, 145. 
 
 British Beetles ; an Introduction to the Study 
 
 of our indigenous Coleopteba. By E. C, Rye. 2Dd Edition, 
 revised by Rev. Canon Fowlek. Crown 8vo, 16 Coloured 
 Steel Plates, and 11 Wood Engravings, 10«. Qd. 
 
 Britisli Bees ; an Introduction to the Study of the 
 
 Natural History and Economy of the Bees indigenous to the 
 British Isles. By W. E. Shuckaed. Crown 8vo, 16 Coloured 
 Plates, and Woodcuts of Dissections, 10*. Qd. 
 
12 
 
 BritisTi Butterflies and Moths ; an Introduction to 
 
 the Study of our Native Lepidoptkra. By H. T. Stainton. 
 Crown 8vo, 16 Coloured Plates, and Wood F.nsravlngs, 10*. 6d. 
 
 British Spiders ; an Introduction to the Study of 
 
 the Aeaneidje found in Groat Britain and Ireland. By E. F. 
 Staveley. Crown 8vo, 16 Coloured Plates, and 44 Wood 
 Engravings, 10s. Gd. 
 
 Harvesting Ants and Trap-door Spiders ; Notes 
 
 and Observations on their Habits and Dwellings. By J. T. 
 MoGGraDGE, F.L.S. With Supple.uent, 17a-. The Supple- 
 ment sepanitely, cloth. 7s. Gd. 
 
 Ourtis's British Entomology. Illustrations and 
 
 Descriptions of the Genera of Insects found in Great Britain 
 and Ireland, containin<^ Coloured Figures, from Nature, of the 
 most rare and beautiful Species, and in many instances, upon the 
 plants on which they are found. Eight Vols., Royal 8vo, 770 
 Coloured Plates, £28. 
 
 Or in Separate Monographs. 
 
 Orders. 
 
 Plates. 
 
 £ 
 
 s. 
 
 d. 
 
 Or,l,rs. 
 
 riatcs. 
 
 £ s. 
 
 rf. 
 
 ArnANIPTEIJA . 
 
 2 
 
 
 
 2 
 
 
 
 IlyMICNOPTERA . 
 
 12:. 
 
 5 
 
 
 
 UOLEOPTERA . . 
 
 256 
 
 12 
 
 10 
 
 
 
 Ll;PIDOPTl!HA 
 
 193 
 
 9 13 
 
 
 
 Debmaptera . . 
 
 1 
 
 
 
 1 
 
 
 
 Ne'JHOPTERA . . 
 
 13 
 
 13 
 
 
 
 ■DiCTTOPTEUA. . 
 
 1 
 
 
 
 1 
 
 
 
 Omalopteba . . 
 
 6 
 
 6 
 
 
 
 DiPTERA . . . 
 
 103 
 
 5 
 
 3 
 
 
 
 Orthoptera . . 
 
 5 
 
 5 
 
 
 
 Hemipteba . . 
 
 32 
 
 1 
 
 12 
 
 
 
 Stkbpsipteba . 
 
 3 
 
 3 
 
 
 
 HOMOPTHRA . . 
 
 2] 
 
 1 
 
 1 
 
 
 
 Tkichoptera 
 
 9 
 
 9 
 
 
 
 " Curtis's Entomologj'," which Cuvier pronounced to have " reached 
 the ultimatum of perfection," is still the standard work on the Genera 
 of British Insects. The Figures executed by the author himself, with 
 wonderful minuteness and accuracy, have never been surpassed, even 
 if equalled. The price at wliicli the work was originally published 
 was £43 16*. 
 
 Insecta Britannica ; Diptera. Vol. III. By 
 
 Fkancis Walker. F.L.S. 8vo, with 10 Plates, 25*. 
 
 The Structure and Life History of the Cockroach 
 
 (Periplaneta Orientalis). An Introduction to the Study of 
 Insects. By L. C. MiALL, Professor of Biology in the Yorkshire 
 College, Leeds, and Alfred Denny, Lecturer on Biology in the 
 Firth College, Sheffield. Demy 8vo, 125 Woodcuts, 7*. Gd. 
 
i; 
 
 ZOOLOGY. 
 
 Foreign Finches in Captivity. By Arthur G. 
 
 BcTLEK, Ph.D., F.L.S., F.Z.S. Complete in One Vol. Royal 4t(), 
 with 60 Coloured Plates, cloth, gilt toj^s, £6 6s.; half morocco, 
 £7 net. 
 
 The Physiology of the Invertebrata. By A. B. 
 
 Griffiths, Ph.D., F.R.S.E. Demy 8vo, 81 cuts, 15s. net. 
 
 British Zoophytes; an Introduction to the Hy- 
 
 droida, Actinozoa, and Polyzoa found in Great Britain, Ireland, 
 and the Channel Islands. By Arthur S. Penkington, F.L.S. 
 Crown Svo, 24 Plates, 10*. 6rf. 
 
 Handbook of the Vertebrate Fauna of Yorkshire ; 
 
 being a Catalogue of British Mammals, Birds, Reptiles, Amphi- 
 bians, and Fishes, found in the County. By AVilliam Eagle 
 Clarke and William Denison Roebuck. Svo, 8s. 6d. 
 
 Handbook of the Freshwater Fishes of India; 
 
 giving the Characteristic Peculiarities of all the Species 
 known, and intended as a guide to Students and District Officei's. 
 By Capt. R. Beavan, F.R.G.S. Demy Svo. 12 Plates, 10*. 6d. 
 
 The Zoology of the Voyage of H.M.S. Samarang, 
 
 under the command of Captain Sir Edward Belcher, C.B., during 
 the Years 1843-46. By Professor Owen, Dr. J. E. Gray, Sir J. 
 Richardson, A. Adams, L. Reeve, and A. White. Edited by 
 Arthur Adams, F.L.S. Royal 4to, 55 Plates, mostly coloured, 
 £3 10*. 
 
 ANTIQUARIAN. 
 A Manual of British Archaeology. By Charles 
 
 BoUTELL, M.A. Second Edition. 20 Coloured Plates, 10*. 6^/. 
 
 Sacred Archeeology; a Popular Dictionary of 
 
 Ecclesiastical Art and Institutions from Primitive to Modern 
 Times. By Mackenzie E, C. Walcott, B.D. Oxon., F.S.A., 
 Precentor and Prebendary of Chichester Cathedral. Svo, 18.v. 
 
14 
 
 MISCELLANEOUS. 
 
 Respiratory Proteids. Researches in Biological 
 
 Chemistry. By A. B. Griffiths, Ph.D., F.K.S.E. Cruwn 8vo, 
 6*'. net. 
 
 Collections and Recollections of Natural History 
 
 and Sport in the Life of a Country Vicar. By the Rev. G. C. 
 Green. Illustrated with Woodcuts from Sketches by the Author. 
 Crown 8vo, 7?. 6d. 
 
 West Yorkshire; an Account of its Geology, Physical 
 
 Geography, Climatology, and Botany. By J. W. Davis, F.L.S., 
 and F. Aenold Lees, F.L.S. Second Edition, 8vo, 21 Plates, 
 many Coloured, and 2 large Maps, 21«. 
 
 Natal ; a History and Description of the Colony, 
 
 including its Natural Features, Productions, Lidustrial Condition 
 and Prospects. By Henry Brooks, for many years a resident. 
 Edited by Dr. R. J. Mann, F.R.A.S., F.R.G.S., late Superin- 
 tendent of Education in the Colony. Demy 8vo, with iMaps, 
 Coloured Plates, and Photographic Views, 214-. 
 
 St. Helena. A Physical, Historical, and Topo- 
 graphical Description of the Island, including its Geology, Fauna, 
 Flora, and Meteorology. By J. C. Melliss, A.I.C.E., F.G.S., 
 F.L.S. In one large Vol., Super-royal 8vo, with 56 Plates and 
 Maps, mostly coloured, 42*. 
 
 The Young Collector's Handy Book of Recreative 
 
 Science. By the Rev. H. P. DcNSTEK, M.A. Cuts, 3*. 6d. 
 
 The Geologist. A Magazine of Geology, Palaeont- 
 ology, and Mineralogy. Edited by S. J. Mackie, F.(f.S., F.S.A. 
 Vols. V. and VI., each with numerous Wood Engravingc, 18s. 
 Vol. VII., 9a-. 
 
 Everybody's Weather-Guide. The use of j\leteoro- 
 
 logical Instruments clearly explained, with directions for secur- 
 ing at any time a probable Prognostic of the Weather. By 
 A. Steinmetz, Esq., Author of " Sunshine and Showers," &c. Is. 
 
15 
 
 Meteors, Aerolites, and Falling Stars. By Dr. T. 
 
 L. Phipson, F.C.S. Crown 8vo, 25 Woodcuts and Lithographic 
 Frontispiece, 6s. 
 
 Papers for the People. By One of Them. No. 1, 
 
 OUR LAND. 8vo, 6d. (By Post, 7d. in stamps.) 
 
 The Royal Academy Album ; a Series of Photo- 
 graphs from Works of Art in the Exhibition of the Royal Academy 
 of Arts, 1875. Atlas 4to, with 32 tine Photographs, cloth 
 gilt edges, £6 6s. ; half-morocco, £7 7s. 
 
 The same for 1876, with 48 beautiful Photo-prints, cloth, £6 6*-. ; 
 half-morocco, £7 7^. Small Edit. Royal 4to, cloth, gilt edges, 63*. 
 
 Manual of Chemical Analysis, Qualitative and 
 
 Quantitative ; for the use of Students. By Dr. Henry M. Noad, 
 P.R.S. New Edition. Crown 8vo, 109 Wood Engravings, 16s. 
 Or, separately. Parti., "QUALITATIVE," New Edition, new 
 Notation, 6s. ; Part II. "QUANTITATIVE," lOv. 6d. 
 
 The Gladiolus : its History, Cultivation, and Exhi- 
 bition. By the Rev. H. Honywood DoMBK.iiN, B.A. Is. 
 
 SERIALS. 
 
 The Botanical Magazine. Figures and Descrip- 
 tions of New and Rare Plants. By Sir J. D. Hooker, C.B., 
 F.R.S. Monthly, with 6 Coloured Plates, 3s. 6d. Annual 
 subscription, post free^ 4<2s. ^ ... 
 
 Re-issue of the Third Series, in Monthly Vols., 42.y. each ; to Sub- 
 scribers for the entire Series, 36.?. each. 
 
 Lepidoptera Tndica. By F. C. Moore. In Parts, 
 
 with Coloured Plates, los. each. 
 
 The Lepidoptera of the British Islands. By 
 
 Chas. G. Babeext, F.E.S. Illustrated Edition. Monthly, os. 
 
 The Naturalist. Monthly, 6d. ; per annum, post- 
 free, 6«., in advance. 
 
16 
 
 THE VICTORIA LIBRARY. 
 
 New Series of Standard and Popular Works 
 
 ill all departments of Literature, in hand}- pocket volumes, neatly 
 bound in whole clotli, yellow edges, price Is. each. 
 
 Vol. I., Beitish Oratoey, containinjj Six famous Speeches, 
 viz. : Grattan on Irish Independence, Pitt on Union, Peel on 
 Corn Laws, Bright on Iveform, Jones on Democracy, (Jladstone 
 on Oaths. 
 
 Vol. II. English Dbamas : The Birth of Merlin, and Thomas 
 Lord Cromwell. 
 
 Vol. III. On the Study and Use of History : By Lord 
 Bolinsjbroke. 
 
 Vol. IV. English Dramas: By Congreve, " The Way of the 
 World," and " Tlie Mourning Bride." 
 
 Vol. V. A Tale of a Tub : By Dean Swift. With notes and 
 translations. 
 
 Vol. VI. Spenser's Fairy Queen: A selection of the most 
 beautiful passages in modernized orthography, with analyses of 
 each book. Notes and explanations of archaic words. 
 
 Vol. VII. Life of William Pitt: By T. Evan Jacob, M.A, 
 
 Vol. VIII. Elizabethan Songs and Sonnets. 
 
 PLATES. 
 Floral Plates, from the Floral Magazine. Beauti- 
 
 fullj' Coloured, for Screens, Scrap-books, Studies in Flower-painting, 
 ifec. (jd. and l.v. eacli. Lists of over 1000 varieties. One Stamp. 
 
 Botanical Plates, fi:*om the Botanical Magazine. 
 
 Beautifully-coloured Figures of new and rare Plants. 6d. and Is. 
 each. Lists of over 3000, Three Stamps. 
 
 FORTHCOMING WORKS. 
 
 Flora of India. By Siii J. D. IJoukek. Parts 23 
 
 and 24. General Index. 
 
 Flora of Tropical Africa. Vol. IV. In the press. 
 Flora Oapensis. Vol. IV. In the press. 
 
 UontJon : 
 1 >' 1':EVE<% OO..fi. HENRIETTA STREET. COVE NT GARI > I*: iV. 
 
 lilLUhKl AND RIVINUXON, LD., ST. JOHNS HOl'Si:., CLERK ENVVILL, E.C.