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266 OUTLINE S OF B R IT ISH FUNGOLOGY.
nium remotely costate, even, then rough with interwoven
veins.—Do«. /. 105. / . 3.
In woods. Very rare. Edinburgh, Dr. Greville.
2. C. oornuoopioides, F r . ; pileus submembranaceous,
trumpet-shaped, pervious, minutely squamulose, dingy-black;
stem hollow, black, even, then obscurely wrinkled, cinereous.
(Plate 19, fig. 6.)—Huss. ii. t. 37.
In woods, on the ground. Local.
3. C. sinuosus, F r .; pileus slightly fleshy, funnel-shaped,
undulated, flocculoso-villous, brownish-grey; stem stufied,
pallid-cinereous, as well as the hymenium, which is at length
implexo-rugose.— Vaill. Par. t. 11. / . 11-13.
In woods. Scotland, Mrs. Wynne.
4. C. crispns, F r .; pileus crisped, dingy, somewhat tawny;
stem stuffed below; hymenium nearly even.—Sow. t. 75 ;
Huss. ii. t. 18.
In woods. Not uncommon. Hymenium sometimes white,
sometimes dingy.
35. THELEPHORA, Fr.
Pilens destitute of cuticle, consisting of interwoven fibres.
Hymenium costato-striate or papillose, of a tough, fleshy
consistence, at length rigid, and finally collapsing and floc-
culent.
* Not resupinate.
1. T. Sowerbeii, D e rc o ria c e o u s , somewhat funnel-shaped,
reddish-brown, zoned; margin subplicate, dirty flesh-coloured
beneath, smooth; substance of the same colour as the pileus.
—Sow. t. 155.
On the ground, in woods. Rare. Cotterstock, Northamptonshire.
In Sowerby’s original specimens there is not the
least trace of hairs on the hymenium: they cannot, therefore.
f):
A U R ICU LA R IN I . 267
be the same with the plant of Pries and Persoon. The same
species occurs in Australia.
3. T. tuberosa, Grev. ; suhcoriaceous, smooth, pallid, becoming
rufous; pileus cut down to the bulbous stem into
compressed branches, disposed so as to assume the form of
funnels; hymenium inferior, smooth.—Grev. t. 178.
On the ground. Extremely rare. Edinburgh, Dr. Greville.
3. T. anthocephala, Fr. ; soft, but coriaceous, subferru-
giiious ; pileus cut down, as far as the simple, equal, villous
stem, into suberect laciniæ, which are dilated and fimbriate
ahove; hymenium inferior, even. (Plate 17, fig. 4.)—Sow.
t. 156.
Ou the ground, in woods. Not uncommon. Scentless.
Very variable as to the form of the bleached laciniæ. Sometimes
regular, as in Bulliard’s fig. t. 453. f. 1, sometimes
irregular, as in the figures quoted ahove.
4. T. earyophyllæa, Fr. ; suhcoriaceous, brown, purple ;
pileus depressed, fibrous, torn ; margin sometimes incised,
sometimes cut into linear divisions ; hymenium nearly even,
smooth.
On the ground, in woods. Rare. Bungay, Mr. Stock,
abundantly. Sometimes regularly infundibuliform.
5. T. palmata, Fr.; soft, but coriaceous, erect, very much
branched, pubescent, hrown-purple ; base simple, stem-shaped ;
branches flat, even, dilated ahove, palmate, somewhat fasti-
giate; tips fimbriate, whitish.—Grev. t. 46.
On the ground. Not common. Very fetid.
6. T. terrestris, Fr. ; cæspitose, soft, brown, at length
blackish; pileoli imbricate, flattened, fibroso-strigose, zoneless,
elongated into a somewhat lateral stem ; hymenium inferior,
radiato-rugose.—Nees, f. 251.
On the ground. Not common. T. laciniata is often confounded
with this.