changing to reddish-white, at length fibrillose and torn; stem
stout, cylindrical, soft, violet, scaly from the remains of the
white veil; gills adnate, very hroad, distant, violet, inclining
to purple.—Sow. t. 125.
In woods. Not uncommon.
36. C. (Telamonia) armiUatus, F r .; pileus fleshy, campanulate,
then expanded, innato-fibrillose and scaly, torn, bright
red-brown; margin th in ; stem solid, elongated, bulbous, fibrillose,
reddish, girt with a red zone; gills fixed, very broad,
distant, pallid, then dark-cinnamon.—Fluss. i. t. 19; Bull
/. 527./. 1 .
In woods. Uncommon. A large species, remarkable for
the blood-red zone on the stem. Mrs. Hussey’s plant is the
same with Bulliard’s, and both seem to me to belong to this
species.
37. C. (Telamonia) limonius, F r .; pileus fleshy, convexo-
plane, obtuse, smooth, tawny, at length rimuloso-squamulose;
stem solid, firm, equal, of the same colour, as well as the
floccoso-squamose veil; gills adnate and emarginate, rather
distant, yellow, then tawny-cinnamon.—Holmsk. ii. t. 40.
In pine-woods. Scottish Highlands, Klotzsch.
38. C. (Telamonia) hinnuleus, F r .; pileus carnoso-mem-
branaceous, conico-campanulate, then expanded, subumbonate,
smooth, pale tawny-cinnamon, at length pierced; stem stuffed,
rigid, tawny, attenuated downwards, girt ahove with the white
silky veil; gills subemarginate, distant, broad, then tawny-
cinnamon, quite entire.—Row. t. 173.
In woods. Extremely common. This is said to be distinguished
from C. gentilis by its white veil, but I fear this
character is not constant.
39. C. (Telamonia) brunneus, F r .; pileus campanulate,
flattened out, umber, naked, broken up into innate fibrils near
the margin; umbo fleshy, obtuse; stem stuffed, elongated,
attenuated upwards, elastic, brownish, marked with white
streaks, girt with the brownish-white veil ; gills adnate, thick,
distant, purplish, then cinnamon-umher.
In woods. Not observed since the time of Withering.
40. C. (Telamonia) periscelis, Weinm. ; pileus campanulate,
then convex, lilac and white, silky ; umbo fleshy, membranaceous
elsewhere ; stem equal, fibrillose, of the same co-
lour ; veil woven, brownish, forming an imperfect ring ; gills
adnate, crowded, narrow, pallid, then obscurely ferruginous.
In bogs or under beech-trees. Bowood, C. E. Broome.
41. C. (Telamonia) psammooephalus, Fr. ; tawny-cinnamon
; pileus slightly fleshy, convexo-expanded, at length umbonate,
furfuraceo-squamulose ; stem stuffed, attenuated,
squamulose, and sheathed with the continuous veil; gills adnate,
arcuate, crowded.—Bull. t. 531. /. 2 .
In woods. Not uncommon. King’s Cliffe. Pileus about
an inch across.
42. C. (Telamonia) ileopodius, F r.; pileus slightly fleshy,
convex, subumbonate, at first clothed with silky white threads,
light reddish-yellow, then smooth and tan-coloured, at length
even and rimose; stem equal, slender, tawny without and
within, sheathed with the pallid veil, naked above, fibrilloso-
striate ; gills adnate, rather crowded, thin, inclining to cinnamon.—
Bull. t. 586. /. 2 A, B.
In woods. Not uncommon. Very variable. Pileus l - l j
inch across.
Subgenus 6. Htgeocybe.—Pileus hygrophanous; stem distinct
from the fibrillose veil, hence neither annulate nor floccososquamose.
43. C. (Hygroeybe) Armeniacus, Fr. ; pileus suhcarnose.