135. A. (Mycena) rnbro-marginatus, Fr.; pileus submembranaceous,
campanulate, obtuse, striate, hygrophanous; stem
rigid, even, juiceless; gills adnate, distant, dirty-white, edged
with purple or purple-hrowii.
On pine-stumps. Nassington, Northamptonshire. Nov.
1859. A small species, resembling somewhat A. sanguino-
lentus, hut distinguished at once by the absence of red juice
in the stem.
136. A. (Mycena) strobilinus, Sow.; scarlet; pileus slightly
fleshy, bell-shaped ; umbo acute, even; margin striate; stem
stiff, juiceless, even, clothed at the base with white strigose
hairs; gills adnate, edge dark blood-colour.—Sow. t. 197.
On fir-cones. Rare.
127. A. (Mycena) rosellns, F r .; rose-coloured; pileus
membranaceous, hemispherical, obtuse, umbonate, striate;
stem slender, soft, juiceless, clothed with white fibrillose hairs
at the base; gills adnate, edge darker.
Amongst fir-leaves. Rare. West of England, C. E. Broome.
An extremely pretty little species.
** Stem not dilated into a 'disc at the base; gills self-coloured.
128. A. (Mycena) purus. P .; strong-scented; pileus slightly
fleshy, bell-shaped, then expanded, obtusely umbonate, smooth,
turning pallid; margin striate; stem rigid, even, nearly naked,
villous at the base; gills very broad, widely sinuated, adnexed,
connected by veins, paler than the pileus.—FIuss. ii.
t. 49.
Amongst leaves, in woods. Extremely common. Known
at once by its strong scent and pretty colour, which changes
as the pileus becomes dry. A. pelianthinus, which it somewhat
resembles, is distinguished by the discoloured edge of
the gills, and other characters.
139. A. (Mycena) Iris, Berk.; pileus hemispherical, obtuse,
striate, subviscid, adorned with blue fibrillse; stem fasciculate,
pilose; gills almost free. (Plate 6, fig. 3.)
On fir-stumps. Rare. Clifton, Notts. The little fibrils
glued down to the cuticle are very characteristic. When the
stem is extremely elongated, it is sometimes nearly smooth.
130. A. (Mycena) Adonis, B u ll.; pileus membranaceous,
conico-campanulate, smooth, nearly even; stem slender, even,
smooth; gills uncinate, adnexed, linear, narrow, white, or
tinged with rose-colour.—Bull. t. 5 6 0 ./. 3.
In woods. Rare. Kirriemuir, Klotzsch. King’s Clift'c.
AVliite, yellowish, orange, or green.
131. A. (Mycena) luteo-albus. Bolt.; pileus membranaceous,
hell-shaped, umbonate, slightly striate, dry, yellowish,
as well as the smooth shining stem; gills adnate, somewhat
uncinate, broad, white.—Bolt. t. 3 8 ./. 3.
Amongst moss, in woods. Rare. Halifax.
133. A. (Mycena) lactens, P . ; pileus membranaceous, bellshaped
or convex, subumbonate, striate when moist, even when
dry; stem equal, filiform, rather tough, flexible, smooth; gills
adnate, ascending, narrow, milk-white.'—Bull. t. 563 N, 0.
In fir-woods, attached to the leaves, or on the naked soil.
Often very abundant. Milk-white, or sometimes yellowish in
in the centre.
*** Stem firm, rigid; gills changing colour ; pileus not
hygrophanous.
133. A. (Mycena) proliferus, Sow.; pileus rather fleshy,
broadly bell-shaped, dry, darker in the centre; margin at
length sulcate; stem firm, rigid, smooth, shining, minutely
striate, rooting; gills adnexed, more or less distinct, at length
pallid.—Sow. t. 169.