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In woods. King’s Cliffe. Pileus variable in colour.
27. C. (Dermoeybe) anomalus, Fr-.; pileus fleshy, thin,
convex, obtuse, then gibbous, dingy-rufous, whitish with
evanescent fibrils; stem somewhat stuffed, slender, attenuated,
fibrillose, slightly scaly, pallid-violet; gills crowded,
dente-decurrent, bluish or purple, then cinnamon. (Plate 12,
fig. 4,)—Bull. t. 431. / . 2.
In woods. Very common. Pileus 24 inches across. A.
araneosus, Sow. t. 384. f. 1, belongs to this, probably, and not
to the next.
28. C. (Dermoeybe) spUomeus, F r .; pilens slightly fleshy,
gibbous, dry, at length smooth, brownish, and changing colo
u r; stem rather hollow, slender, white, inclining to lilac,
variegated with rufous or tawny scales; gills crowded, emarginate,
narrow, bluish-lilac, at length cinnamon.
In woods. Not common. King’s Cliffe. Bristol, Dr.
Stephens. A. violaceus, Sow., is undoubtedly A. personatus.
29. C. (Dermocybe) sanguineus, F r .; pileus fleshy, thin,
obtuse, innato-sericeous or squamulose, dark blood-red, as
well as the veil and thin, equal, at length bulbous stem; gills
crowded, rather hroad, darker.—Sow. t. 4 3 .
In woods. Not uncommon. Eemarkable for its brilliant
colour.
30. C. (Dermocybe) cinnamomens, F r.; pileus fleshy, thin,
obtusely umbonate, cinnamon-brown, silky with innate yellowish
fibrils, or squamulose; stem equal, slender, stuffed, then
hollow, yellowish, as rvell as the flesh and veil; gills adnate,
broad, crowded, shining.
In woods. A very common but variable species. Sometimes
the gills are red.
31. C. (Dermocybe) uliginosus, n .s .; pileus campanulato-
conical, then expanded, bright red-brown, very strongly umhonate,
sillqv, sometimes streaked; flesh yellow-olive, then
cinnamon; stem flexuous, paler than the pileus ; gills distant,
adnate, with a tooth, yellow, then olive, then cinnamon.
In boggy woods, amongst Sphagnum, etc. King’s Cliffe.
Pileus not exceeding 2 inches in diameter, of a beautiful red-
brown (almost hrick-red), and remarkable for its very strong
but scarcely acute umbo.
32. C. (Dermocybe) raphanoides, Fr. ; olive, then changing
colour; pileus fleshy, campanulate, then expanded, gibbous,
silky with innate fibrils; stem stuffed, firm, fibrillose,
opaque, paler than the pileus, as well as the veil ; gills ad-
nato-ventricose, rather crowded, olive, then cinnamon.
In beech- and fir-woods. Highlands of Scotland, Klotzsch.
Subgenna 5. Teiamonia.—Pileus moist, hygroplianous, smooth,
or clothed only with evanescent threads ; stem peronate
(sheathed with the interwoven veil).
33. C. (Telamonia) bulbosns, Fr. ; pileus slightly fleshy,
campanulato-expanded, smooth, bright-brown ; disc fleshy,
somewhat gibbous ; stem stout, bulbous, pallid or paler than
the pileus, sheathed with a white veil ; ring imperfect ; gills
adnate, rather distant, opaque, cinnamon.—Sow. t. 130.
In woods. Bare. Stem saffron-coloured within.
34. C. (Telamonia) torosus, Fr. ; pileus fleshy, convex, expanded,
obtuse, pale red-brown, whitish with squamules or
fibrils, at length pierced, smooth ; stem stout, .sheathed with
the white persistent veil, and furnished with a ring ; veil at the
apex violet; gills thick, distant, very hroad, purplish-umber,
then cinnamon.—Bull. t. 600. Q. R. S.
In woods. Not uncommon.
35. C. (Telamonia) evernius, F r.; pileus carnoso-membra-
naceous, conico-campanulate, expanded, smooth, purplish-bay.
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