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164
756. G. rubiginosa Gill, (from the dark ferruginous stem ; rubigo,
rust) a c.
P. wholly striate, cinnamon or honey-colour to tan ; mid. darker.
G. adnato-ascending, distant, ochreous.
Amongst moss. Sept.-Oct. iJ X 2f X J in.
757. G. hypnorum Quél, (from its growing on moss ; Pfypnum, a
genus of mosses) abc .
P . campanulato-expanded, obtuse or umbonate, pale ochre or pale
sienna to tan ; mid. darker. St. sienna below, paler and white-
pruinose above. G. ventricose, distant, cinnamon-tawny.
Odour very strong, alkaline. Amongst mosses and hepatics in woods.
May-Nov. i X 4 X A « . Var. biyorum Gill. Larger than type.
Var. sphagnoruvi Quél. On Sphagnum in swamps.
758. G. mniophila Gill, (from its growing on moss ; Gr. mnion, moss,
philos, loving) a.
P. subpapillate, fuscous - light-yellowish to clay-colour. St.
fibrillose, mealy above, floccose below, yellow. G. adnato-
ascending, fuscous-clay-colour.
On moss. Sept.-Oct. f X 3j X A « .
759. G. minuta Quél, (from its very small size) a.
P. tan-ochreous. St. tawny; base forming a small white disc.
G. triangular, adnate, clay-colour, edge whitish.
Decayed wood, amongst moss. Sept.-Oct. J X f X gV 'u.
c. EriodermecB.
760. G. ravida Quél, {ravus, grey) a.
P. tan-greyish or tan-umber ; marg. appendiculate with white V.
St. pallid, white-silky. G. adnexed, ventricose, ochreous-
salmon.
Gregarious. On the ground, amongst chips and rotten wood. Autumn,
i f X 2 j X J in.
761. G. myeenopsis Quél, (from its resemblance to a Mycena ; Gr.
opsis, resemblance) a.
P. expanded, umbonate, pale honey-colour ; marg. appendiculate
with white V. St. white-yellowish, white silky. G. adnexed,
ventricose, yellowish.
On Sphagnum, marshy ground. Aug.-Oct, iJ X 4§ X J in. Somewhat
like 350.
XXX. TUBARIA Gill.
(From the trumpet-shape of typical species ; tuba, a trumpet.)
Veil universal, floccose at margin of pileus. Hymenophore confluent
with, but heterogeneous from the cartilaginous stem. Pileus submembranaceous,
sometimes umbilicate or depressed, margin—except
770—striate. Stem centr.al, subcartilaginous, fistulose, simple or
imperfectly annulate. Gills subdecurrent, broadest behind and r
13
- BBri
Fig. 39.—A, T u b a ria fu r fu r a c e a Gill. ; B, T . paludosa Karst.
Entire and in section. One-half natural size.
somewhat triangular. Spores ferruginous or fuscous-ferruginous.
(Fig- 39-)
The species are all small ; some grow on the ground, others on
mosses, twigs, chips, leaves, etc.
Tubaria agrees in its chief structural characters with Omphalia
and Eccilia. Species 762—771
a. Genuinæ. Spores ferruginous. 762—768
b. Phæotoe. Spores fuscous-ferruginous. 769—771
a. Genuinæ.
762. T. eupularis Gill, (from the shape of the pileus ; cupularis, cupshaped)
a.
P. plano-depressed, hygrophanous, smooth, rufescent to light
yellowish. St. whitish or faintly ochreous. G. serrulate,
reddish.
Mountainous heaths, amongst grass. Aug.-Sept. i j X 2 X A 'u.
763. T. furfuracea Gill, (from the scurfy pileus ; furfur, bran) abc.
P. flat, umbilicate, cinnamon to tan-whitish; marg. substriate
when moist, appendiculate with white-squamulose V. St.
floccose, colour as P., villous at base. G. subdecurrent,
bright cinnamon or clay.
Gregarious. Tasteless or pleasant. Thatch, chips, twigs, wood, shavings, ivy,
humus. Jan.-Dec. i f X i j X J in. Polymorphous. Var. trigonophylla
Sacc. Smaller than type ; G. triangular. Var. heterosticha Karst. P.
depressed, umbonate.