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692. F. eonissans Gill. (from its abundant dust-like spores ; Gr.
konis, dust) abc .
P fiat, subdepressed, light yellowish-tan or pale bronzy-ochre.
St. attenuate downwards, lighter than P., ferruginous below,
base white-villous. G. adnate with a tooth, crowded, fuscous-
ferruginous. Flesh white.
Densely cæspitose. T a s t e and odour none or acid. Woods, willows. Oct.-
Nov. 24 X 4 X i in. Often passed over as 826.
693. F. inopus Karst, (from its fibrillose stem ; Gr. is, inos, a fibre,
pous, a foot) abc.
P. expanded, obtuse, pale yellowish-tan or sulphur ; mid. sienna.
57. fistulose, attenuato-rooting, pallid above, sienna-brown below
within and without, sometimes with a fibrillose A. when young.
G. adnate, yellowish-white, pale olive-brown or sulphur-greenish,
sometimes fuscous. Flesh paler than P.
Fasciculate Woods, stumps, fir, larch, rooting amongst pine-leaves, on the
ground ; rare. Vernal and Aug.-Dee. 3 X X A in. Must not be
confounded with 824.
694. F. apierea Gill, (from its taste ; Gr. apikros, not bitter) a.
P. expanded, pale ochreous-tan ; mid. sienna. St. hollow, colour
as P., fibrillose, ferruginous below. G. adnate or adnato-
decurrent, ferruginous.
Subcæspitose. Odour mild. Woods, pine, trunks. Sept.-Oct.
4Ì X 3 i X A « •
d. Sapineoe.
695. F. hybrida Gill, (from its hybrid characters) abc .
P. flat, obtuse or subdepressed, tawny-buff, orange or sienna. St.
attenuate upwards, tan-brownish, brownish below. G. adnate,
tawny or rufous, unspotted. Flesh yellowish or brownish.
Subcæspitose or in troops. Fir, stumps, branches, under beeches, on sawdust
and wood ; rare. Aug.-Deo, 2® X 2® X 4 in.
696. F. sapinea Quél, (from its growing on pine-wood ; sapinus, a
pine) abc .
P. flat, golden-tawny or orange-vermilion; mid. darker; marg.
'appendiculate with white V. in young examples. St. sulcate,
orange or fuscous-white above, white or brown below. A.
fibrillose, fugitive. G. adnate, colour as P. or tawny-
cinnamon.
Single or cæspitose. Taste unpleasant, bitter ; odour strong, not unpleasant.
Fir-stumps, branches, sawdust, wood, in and near woods, sometimes on
the ground, under beeches and larches. Aug.-Jan. 2® X 3Ì X 4 in.
Var. terrestris Sacc., fusiform-rooting.
697. F. liquiritiæ Quél, (from its taste of liquorice) a c.
P. flat, subumbonate, bay-brown or orange-tawny ; mid. darker.
St. hollow, attenuate upwards, striate, tawny or ferruginous.
G. adnate or sinuate, golden or tawny.
Gregarious or cæspitose. Taste sweet ; odour acid. Firs. Oct.
I f X 2 j X A «■
698. F. pierea (Gr.pikros, bitter) abc.
P. convex, obtuse, rufous ; traces of white V. at marg. in young
examples. St. fistulose, umber, darker at base ; when young
wholly white-pulverulent. G. adnato-ascending or decurrent,
ferruginous.
Cæspitose. Pine-stumps, old deal boards ; rare. Oct.-Dec. 24x 4| x 4 in.
pi,I
e. Sericelloe.
699. F. F iL iC E A Sacc. (from its habitat, tree-fern stems ; filix, a
fern) abc .
P. flat, subumbonate, golden-yellow, appendiculate with V. St.
■ stuffed or hollow, fibrillose, colour as P., ferruginous below.
V. annulate, fibrillose, fugacious, reddish. G. adnate,
tawny.
Tree-ferns in greenhouses. Spring and summer, i f X i f X f in.
700. F. oehroehlora Karst, (from the colour of the pileus ; Gr.
ochros, yellow, chloros, green) a b.
P. plane, subumbonate, subviscid, pale dull olive-ochre, minutely
white-squamulose. St. fistulose, paler than P., ferruginous at
base, white-squamose. V. slight, seen in young examples. G.
adnate, olivaceous, then olive-brown.
Cæspitose. Old trunks, furze-roots, hazel-sticks. Aug.-Nov. 2fX2fx4in.
701. F. helomorpha Quél. (from its resemblance to a nail ; Gr. helos,
a nail, morphe, form) a c.
P. convex, gibbous or obtusely umbonate, viscid, white or clay-
white. St. solid, smooth, tan-white. G. plano-decurrent,
clay-white. Spores pale brown.
Sqattei-ed. Wood, fir. Nov. f X i f X f in.
702. F. seamba Sacc. (from the frequently curved stem ; Gr. skambos,
bow-legged) a b.
P. plane, subdepressed, viscid in wet weather, whitish or faintly
ochreous. Si. stuffed, flocculose or mealy, colour as P. ; base
sometimes faintly rufescent. G. adnate, light clay-yellowish.
Flesh brownish.
Gregarious. Suspected poisonous. Odour strong like 1527. Woods,
pine, rotten wood, larch, on the ground ; uncommon. Sept.-Oct.
i f X I® X i in.
■Î' I
XXVIII. NAUCORIA Quél.
(From the almost obsolete veil ; naucum, a trifle.)
Veil squamulose, fugacious or obsolete. Hymenophore confluent
with, but heterogeneous from the cartilaginous stem. Pileus more
or less fleshy, convex, conical or convexo-plane, becoming flat.