1029. C. salor Fr. (from its greyish colour, like the sea, salum) a b.
P convex, obtuse or broadly umbonate; mid. grey; marg.
violaceous or steel-grey. St. attenuate upwards, white, when
young covered with bluish gluten. Co. forming an imperfect
Z. G. emarginate or adnate, distant, grey or cinnamon.
Woods. Oct. 3 X 3S X I in.
1030. C. delibutus Fr. (from the besmeared gluten; ddibuo, to
besmear) a b . n a x
P. convexo-flat or subdepressed, light yellow. St. stuffed or
hollow, attenuate upwards, white, sometimes pale steel-blue
above. Co. forming an imperfect Z. G. adnate, slightly
emarginate or subdecurrent, subdistant, serrulate.
Taste watery to slightly pungent. On the ground, damp grassy places.
Sept.-Oct. 2 j X 3J X A in-
1031. c. illibatus Fr. (from the gills, the margin entire, not serrulate,
as in the la st; illibatus, entire) a.
P. convexo-plane, obtuse or subumbonate, yellow; mid. darker.
St. stuffed or hollow, slightly attenuate above, white, often red-
do'tted upwards. G. adnato-decurrent, crowded.
Woods, pine. Autumn. l | X 2j X A Smaller and more slender than
1030, with no trace of violet colour.
1032. C. stillatitius Fr. (from the dripping gluten; stillo, to drip) a b.
P. convexo-plane, subumbonate, hygrophanous; mid. tan-grey;
marg. steel-grey and appendiculate with gluten. St. hollow,
attenuate upwards, steel-grey with gluten. Co. forming an
imperfect Z. G. emarginate, subdistant.
Odour none. Mossy places, pastures, amongst dead leaves ; uncommon.
Oct. 24 X 3i X I in.
1033. C. vibratilis Fr. (from a fancied tremulous habit; vibratilis,
quivering) a b . , j
P. piano-gibbous, hygrophanous, shining goldra-yellow. St.
stuffed, attenuate upwards, whitish. Co. forming a glutinous
fugitive Z. G. emarginato-decurrent, thin, crowded.
Taste and odour disagreeable. Woods. Sept. i | X i f X J in.
1034. C. pluvius (from its viscidity in rainy weather; pluo, to rain) a
P. convexo-gibbous, hygrophanous, pale yellow-tawny; marg.
striate. St. stuffed to hollow, nearly equal, naked, obsoletely
viscid, white. G. adnexed, crowded.
Taste w a t e r y , then acrid-pungent. Woods, pine. Sept.-Nov. i j x 2 x 4 i n .
SuBGENus 3. Inoloma.
(From the fibrillose or fringed v e il; Gr. is, inos, a fibre,
loma, a fringe.)
Veil single, fibrillose. Pileus equally fleshy, dry, subcompact, at
first silky with innate scales or fibrils, becoming smooth, flesh
continuous, not hygrophanous. Stem fleshy, somewhat bulbous.
(Fig. 55.)
Handsome and easily distinguished. Species 1035—1057
' ' n i '
I I 'T
Gills at first white or pallid. 1035 1038
Gills, Veil and Stem violaceous. 1039—1045
Gills or Veil cinnamon, red or ochreous. 1046—1052
Gills or Veil dark, fuscous, olivaceous. 1053—1057
1035. C. argutus Fr. (from the graceful habit; argutus, graceful) a b.
P. expanded, gibbous then subdepressed, ochreous. St. solid,
ventricose, fibroso-squamose, yellowish-white. G. adnate,
rounded, subdistant, white clay-colour.
Woods, amongst leaves, oak. Oct. 44 X 3 4 X i in.
1036. C. argentatus Fr. (from the silvery white pileus and stem;
argentum, silver) abc .
P. convexo-plane, broadly gibbous; marg. pale lilac then dun.
St. solid, slightly attenuate upwards, yellowish at base. G.
emarginate, crowded, becoming watery-cinnamon or sienna.
Taste insipid; odour weak to strong, sweet, not fetid. Woods. Sept.-Oct.
5 X 3f X i in. Var. pinetorum. Cooke, smaller and more graceful, odour
faint. Woods, pine.
1037. C. opimus Fr. (from its obese appearance; opimus, fruitful) a.
P. convexo-plane, hard, dry, wavy-deformed, rimoso-rivulose,
white, covered with short ochreous down. St. solid, hard,
subturbinate, white-fibrillose with Co., base rooting. G.
emarginate, subcrowded, whitish then tan.
Solitary. Woods. Autumn. 44 X 14 X i j in.