280 OUTLINE S OE B R IT ISH EUNGOLOGY.
Tn woods. Common in some districts.
8. C. oristata, Holmsk. ; tough, even, stuffed, white or
dingy; branches dilated above, acutely incised, crested.—
Grev. t. 190.
In woods. Not uncommon.
9. C. rugosa. Bull.; tough, simple or branched, thickened
ahove, wrinkled, white or dingy; branches few, irregular, obtuse.
(Plate 18, flg. 3.]— Grev. t. 328.
In woods. Common. The dingy form requires to be carefully
distinguished from C. cinerea.
10. C. Kunzei, F r .; rather hrittle, very much branched
from the slender tufted base, white; branches elongated,
crowded, repeatedly forked, somewhat fastigiate, even, equal;
axils compressed.—Bull. t. 358. / . 1 C.
In woods. Very rare. Sherwood Forest.
** Spores yellowish or coloured.
11. C. aurea, Schceff.; trunk thick, elastic, pallid, divided
into numerous stout, straight, dichotomous, round, obtuse,
rather toothed, yellow branches.—Schceff. t. 287.
In woods. Rare, Bristol, Dr. Stephens.
13. C. abietina, Schum.; v e r y much branched,ochraceous;
trunk rather thick, clothed with white down; branches straight,
c r o w d e d when dry,longitudinally wrinkled; branchlets straight.
— Grev. /. 117.
In fir-woods. Common. Sometimes turning green when
bruised.
13. C. flacoida, F r .; slender, very much branched, flaccid,
ochraceous ; trunk slender, smooth ; branchlets crowded, unequal,
converging, acute.
Amongst moss, in woods. Not common. King’s Cliffe.
14. C. crooea, P. ; minute, slender, saffron-yellow; trunk
f r
CLAVARIEI . 281
naked, pale ; branches crowded, somewhat forked, as well as
the similar hranchletg.—Pers. Ic. et Descr. t. 11. /. 6.
On the ground. Very rare. Wraxall, Somersetshire,
C. E. B.
15. C. grisea. P.; firm; trunk thick, dirty-white; branches
attenuated, rather wrinkled, obtuse, dingy-cinereous, as well
as the unequal, obtuse branchlets.—Kromb. t. 53. /. 9, 10.
In woods. Bare. Appin, Capt. Carmichael. Known by
its brownish spores.
16. C. stricta, P . ; very much branched, pallid, brown when
bruised; trunk rather thick; branches and branchlets straight,
even, adpressed, acute. (Plate 18, fig. 5.)—Sow. t. 157.
In gardens, springing from rotten woods. Rare. Kew, etc.
Mycelium forming long creeping strings.
17. C. crispula, F r .; very much branched, tan-coloured,
then ochraceous; trunk slender, villous, sending out roots;
branches flexuous, multifid ; branchlets of the same colour, divaricate.—
Bull. t. 358. / . 1 a, b.
At the base of trees. Bare. Woodnewton, in great quantities,
in a hollow ash.
2. Simple.
* Clubs more or less connate at the base.
18. C. purpurea, Afii«.; tufted, purple; clubs elongated,
hollow, then compressed, simple, acute.—Fl. Dan. t. 337. f. 2.
Amongst grass, in pastures. Tansor, Northamptonshire.
Coed Coch. Of a dingy purple.
19. C. rosea, Fr. ; subfasciculate, brittle, rose-coloured;
clubs stuffed, at length yellowish at the apex.
In pastures. Bare. Leicestershire, Rev. C. Babington.
20. G. fusiformis, Sow.; csespitoso-connate, rather firm,
yellow, soon hollow; clubs somewhat fusiform, simple and
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