li
3. C. (Phlegmaoium) cyanopus, F r .; pileus fleshy, hemispherical,
flattened, even, viscid ; margin thin, smooth, of the
same colour; flesh dirty-white; stem solid, violet, then white,
naked above the thin veil; bulb depressed, oblique; gills adnate,
emarginate, broad, rather crowded, violet, turning pallid.
—Sow. t. 233.
In woods. Pileus livid-brown, then tan.
4. C. (Phlegmacinm) anfraetns, F r .; pileus fleshy, unequal,
deeply plicate aud undulated, viscid, shining when d ry ; stem
stuffed, unequal, closely fibrillose, violet above and veiled; gills
arcuate, affi.xed, crisped, rather distant, dingy-olive, then cinnamon.
In woods. Rare. King’s Cliffe. Pileus several inches
across, deep-bay in my specimens, which I have named after
a drawing sent me by Pries. The gills, however, are rather
emarginate than arcuato-affixed, and the whole plant, when
young, is covered with a white volva. Stem very thick and
bulbous at the base. In outward form the two are identical.
5. C. (Phlegmacinm) multiformis, F r .; pileus fleshy, convex,
expanded, equal, smooth, viscid; flesh and fugacious veil
white; stem solid, attenuated, closely fibrillose, white, changing
to yellow; bulb somewhat margined; gills emarginate, crowded,
serrated, dirty-white, then clay-coloured, inclining to cinnamon.—
Sow. t. 103.
In woods. Rare. Pileus yellowish. I have seen the bulb
so margined as to give the impression of a volva like that of
Ag. pantherinus.
6 . C. (Phlegmacinm) glauoopus, F r .; pileus compact, expanded,
subrepand, viscid, then floccoso-squamose or fibrillose;
flesh at length yellowish; stem stout, solid, striate,
bluish, then yellowish, margined below; gills emarginate,
broad, blue, then clay-coloured, inclining to cinnamon.—Huss.
In pinewoods. Rare. Pileus remarkable for a brown,
raised zone near the margin, at length turning pale.
7. C. (Phlegmacinm) caUochrons, F r . ; pileus fleshy, convex,
flattened, smooth, viscid, unchangeable; flesh compact,
white; stem solid, equal, fibrillose, white, changing to yellow ;
bulb distinct, margined; gills emarginate, crowded, serrate,
blue, changing to purple. (Plate 1 2 , fig. 3 .)
In woods. Not uncommon. Pileus tawny.
8 . C. (Phlegmacinm) cserulescens, Fr.; pileus fleshy, convex,
expanded, even, viscid; flesh soft, blue, turning white as
well as the solid, attenuated, naked stem; bulb margined; gills
adnexed, crowded, quite entire, at first of a pure dark blue.
In woods. King’s Cliffe. Bristol, Dr. Stephens. Very
beautiful, pilens at first blue, spotted in my specimens from
the presence of minute fibrils. Stem not always marginate,
rough above with the threads of the veil.
9. C. (Phlegmacinm) purpurascens, F r .; pileus compact,
dilated, somewhat waved, virgate, viscid ; flesh bluish; stem
solid. Hunt, fibrillose; bulb margined, evanescent; gills crowded,
broadly emarginate, blue, then clay-colonred, inclining to
cinnamon-purple when bruised.
Woods. Common. Pileus about 3 inches across, not
turning pale, bright brown, at length tawny. This species
has sometimes, but not constantly, a marginal zone.
1 0 . C. (Phlegmacinm) turhinatus, F r.; pileus fleshy, plane,
then depressed, viscid, self-coloured, smooth, turning pale;
flesh soft, white;-stem stuffed, nearly equal, shining, dirty-
white, marginato-bulbous; gills atteimato-adnate, crowded,
quite entire, reddish-grey, then ferruginous.
In woods. King’s Cliffe. My specimens have the margin
of the bulb so strongly developed as to appear volvate, like
Ag. pantherinus. Pileus yellow when dry, variable in width.