r i ,
touched. GL whitish, passing through buff to rufous olive
Irama white.
° and’2 ^ 7 5 ^»‘»y-Nov. Diam. i j in. A form between this
and 211 7 has Iwen named var. modesbis B. & Br. This is H. populetorum
n . ÒZ Hr. non lui.
'ft™“ *® substance; tener, tender) a b c
Globose, irregular, more or less indented, silky or obscurely scaly
soft, tender. Pe. thin, dull white. GL with a conspicuous
sterile base, pale rose, then greyish-brown.
tttong- Pingent, like the odour of acrid Lactarii, in decay like sewer-
gas. Woods, under oak-leaves. Sept.-Jan. Diam. i in. This is H
hlaanus B. & Br. non Vitt.
(afte"« George Henry Kendrick
I hwaites) a c.
Irregularly ovate or elongate to globose, firm. Fe. dull white
here and there discoloured. Gl. brown. '
Sept.-Oct. Diam. J in.
'ft™“ *® S™y i griseus, grey) a.
Globose, somewhat irregular or depressed. Pe. brown at first
covered with evanescent whitish down. Gl. with minme grev
cells which become mottled-blackish.
Odour sweet of lily-of-the-valley. In leaf soil. Diam. ® in.
2122. H. pusillus B. & Br. (from the small size ; pusillus, small) a b
Obovate or subdepressed, white. Gl. with a comparatively large
sterile base, cells comparatively large, dull white
when dry and then closely resembling Sclerotium coJm planYateullmo.wish-brown
RECENT ADDITIONS
52a. Lepiota serena Gill, (serenus, clear, bright). White.
ympanulate, glabrous ; mid. sometimes slightly darkened.
òt. Slender, subbulbous. A. deciduous.
Amongst grass. Carlisle, Miss Decima Graham, Sept. 1908. i j x 2 f x® in.
121a. Trieholoma earneolum Karst, (from the colour, caro, flesh)
P . hemispherical to convexo-plane, pale flesh-colour. X/. partly
white subpruinose. G. finally very broad, very crowded.
Grassy places in woods. Yorkshire, Sept. 1908. i® x I® x J in.
154b. Clitocybe obseurata Cooke in litt. {obscurus, obscure).
P. plane, then infundibuliform, moist, greyish-umber, paler towards
marg. M. solid, smooth or slightly striate, slightly attenuate
downwards and never clavate, colour as P. G. decurrent,
subdistant, white.
Odour of meal. Amongst gra s s and dead leaves in company with 154. Carlisle,
Miss Decima Graham, Sept. 1908. 2 X i® X ® in.
187a. Clitocybe connata Gill, (from the connate stems at the
tuberous base). White.
P. fleshy, thin, conical, then expanded with an evanescent umbo,
unequal, naked. St. hollow, thick, smooth. G. unequally
decurrent, narrow, crowded, subarcuate.
Moist woods. Carlisle, Miss Decima Graham, Sept. 1908. 2® X 3 X J in.
262. Collybia dryophila Quél. Var. alvearis Cooke in litt. Large,
coarse.
P. shaped like a bee-hive, rufescent at mid., 3 in. diam. St. very
hollow.
Amongst dead leaves. Carlisle, Miss Decima Graham, Sept. 1908.
593a. Pholiota sororia Karst, (from its relationship to 593, soror, a
sister).
P. fleshy, convexo-expanded, striate, squamulose, fulvous-cinnamon.
St. fistulose, equal, flexuous, with white fibrillose
sq., apex furfuraceous. G. sinuato-adnate, crowded, pallid-
cinnamon.
On wood-shavings. Yorkshire, Sept. 1908.
640a. Inoeybe eommixta Bres. (from being confused with 640,
commixtus, mixed together).
P. fleshy, conico-campanulate, expanso-umbonate, white or white-
cinereous, silky-fibrillose, dry ; marg. often fissile. St. solid,
white, slightly pruinose, apex furfuraceous, base turbinato-
bulbous. G. crowded, free, white to grey-cinnamon.
Pine-woods. Yorkshire, Sept. 1908.
GENERA OMITTED
Cenoeoeeum Fr., one of the Tuberacece.
Pilaere Fr., placed by Lindau (in Engler and Prantl, P. flanzen-
familien, vol. i. pt. i**, p. 86) near Auricularia, is of doubtful
position.
Polyangium Link, an insect production.
Thelebolus Tode, one of the Ascomycetes.
I»’"