53. A. (Tricholoma) cimeifolius, Fr.; extremely brittle;
pileus smooth at first, hut soon cracked; stem hollow, attenuated
downwards, pruinose above ; gills thin, crowded, white,
broad in front, obliquely truncate, attenuated behind, with a
decurrcnt tooth.—Bull. t. 580 A, B.
In pastures. Not uncommon. About one inch across.
Surface of the pilens rufous where not broken up; stem
white. Smell like that of new meal.
53. A. ( T r i c h o l o m a ) s u l f u r e u s , Bull.; strong-scentcd ; pileus
fleshy, unequal, subumbonate, at first slightly silky, then
smooth and even; stem stuffed, nearly equal, slightly striate,
sulplmr-colonrcd, as well as the distant gills. (Plate 4, fig. 4.)
—Row. t. 44.
In woods. Common. Smell like that of gas-tar, or Heme-
rocallis flava.
54. A. (Tricholoma) bufonius, P . ; strong-scented; pileus
fleshy, subumbonate, at first slightly silky, then smooth,
opaque, punctato-rugose; stem stuffed, nearly equal, floccu-
lo se ; gills arcuato-subdecurrent, rather distant, of a yellow-tan
colour.—Bull. t. 5 4 5 ./. 3, C.
In pine-wobds. Coed Coch, Mrs. Wynne. Pileus purplish,
brownish, tan-colourcd, etc.
55, A. (Tricholoma) lascivus, F r .; pileus fleshy, obtuse,
somewhat depressed, at first silky, then smooth and even;
stem solid, equal, stiff, rooting and tomentose at the base,
white, as well as the close arcuate adnexed gills.
In woods. Canterbury. Smell like that of the two last.
Pileus pale-tan; flesh white.
56. A. (Tricholoma) inamoenus, F r .; strong-scented; pileus
fleshy, somewhat umbonate, slightly silky at first, then
smooth and even; stem solid, rooting, white, as well as the
very distant arcuato-affixed and decurrent gills.
In woods. Not uncommon. Pileus white, with a slight
tinge of ochre, often minutely cracked. Stem not always
rooting. Smell like that of the last.
57. A. (Tricholoma) immnndus, n. s . ; csespitose, fleshy;
pilens at first convex, dirty white, stained with bistre, minutely
silky; margin inflexcd, silky or minutely scabrous and
squamulose; stem fibrillose, of the same colour as the pileus;
gills subcinereons, with a pinkish tinge, marked with transverse
lines, emarginate.
Amongst short grass, on sheep’s dung. On the top of
IMoelfre-uchaf, Denbighshire, Oct. 1859. Pileus 3 inches or
more across. Every part blackish when bruised. Border
deflexed ; spores white. Fries, to whom specimens were sent,
compares this with A. gangrmnosus and A. graveolens, but it
seems distinct from either. The figure of A. fumosus, Pers.
Ic., gives some notion of its outward appearance.
58. A. (Tricholoma) ionides. B ull.; pileus fleshj’, at first
campanulate, umbonate, even, nearly smooth, changing colour
; margin at first flocculose; stem stuffed, elastic, attenuated,
fibrillose; gills crowded, emarginate, with a decurrcnt
tooth, thin, eroded, white, at length discoloured.—Bull. t. 533.
/ . 3. A. purpureus, Bolton, t. 41.
In woods. Not found since the time of Bolton.
59. A. (Tricholoma) carnens, Bull.; pileus slightly fleshy,
obtuse, even, nearly smooth, becoming pallid; stem short,
stuffed, rigid, reddish like the pileus, thickened upwards, pruinose
; gills very wide behind, rounded, crowded, white.—Bull,
t. 5 3 3 ./. 1.
In pastures. Not uncommon. Pileus seldom exceeding
1 inch, of a rufous pink. Stem minutely squamulose, .often
splitting, at length hollow.