spherical, at length obsoletely umhilioate, sulcato-striate; stem
slightly scurfy; gills broadly adnate, broad, somewliat ovate,
paler.
Amongst moss, on bark. Extremely common. Very variable
in colour, white, lilac, cinereous, etc. AVitheriiig when
dry, but often reviving when moistened.
160. A. (Mycena) setosus, Sow.; very delicate; pileus hemispherical,
smooth; stem thread-like, covered with spreading
hairs; gills distant, white.—Soiv. t. 302.
On dead leaves, in woods. Nearly allied to the next.
161. A. (Mycena) capillaris, Schum.; very delicate; pileus
campanulate, at length umbilicate, smooth; stem threadlike,
smooth; gills adnate, ascending, distant.
On dead leaves, in woods. Not uncommon. Slightly
tinged with cinereous. So delicate as to he transported with
difficulty. Stem often much elongated.
162. A. (Myeena) juncioola, F r .; very delicate; pileus
convex, sometimes minutely umbonate, at length slightly depressed,
even, red, striate; stem of the same colour, smooth;
gills adnate, distant, white.
On dead rushes, in bogs. Hare. Resembling the foreign
Marasmius hcematocephalus. Pileus in my specimens of a
deep blood-red, inclining to tawny. Gills few, yellowish-
white. Stem brown, paler ahove, smooth.
Subgenus 8. Omphalia.—Stem cartilaginous. Gills truly
decurrent.
* Gills moderately distant, rather narrow; margin at first
163. A. (Omphalia) pyxidatus. Bull.; pileus submembranaceous,
at first umbilicate, then infundibuliform, hygroplia-
nous; margin striate; stem stuffed, at length fistulöse, even;
gills decurrcnt, rather distant, narrow, reddish-grey. (Plate 6,
fig. 8 .)
Amongst short grass on lawns, etc. Not uncommon. When
moist of a deep red-grey. Gills at first flesh-coloured. A
small species.
164. A. (Omphalia) hepatieus, Batsch; tough, rigid; pileus
smooth, rather shining, even ; stem at length compressed,
flesh-coloured, inclining to rufous ; gills distant, connected by
veins and forked, rather thick, pallid.—Batsch, f. 2 1 1 .
On lawns. Coed Coch, Denbighshire. Of the same colour
as the last, but rather different in habit, and approaching
A. umhelliferus.
165. A. (OmphaUa) sphagnioola, B. ; tough; pileus infundibuliform,
snbcarnose, minutely squamulose, moist ; stem
fistulöse ; gills narrow, dirty-ochraceous.
On Sphagnum acutifolium. Chartley Moss, Staffordshire.
Pileus 1-14 inch across, of a dirty pale-ochre, obscurely striate
; gills thick ; edge flattish. Stem at first minutely squamulose
ahove, distinguished from A . Philonotis by its tough,
elastic substance, and other points.
166. A. (Omphalia) Onisous, Fr.; pilous submembranaceous,
convex, piano-depressed, remotely radiato-striate;
smooth, hygrophanous, smooth when dry; stem subfistulose,
firm, equal, livid or dirty-white, as well as the adnate, decurrent,
straight, somewhat distant gills.—Bolt. t. 41.
In swamps. Not observed since the time of Bolton.
** Gills very distant, hroad, and generally tUch ; margin at first
incurved.
167. A. (Omphalia) muralis. Sow.; pilens submembranaceous,
umbilicate, radiato-striate, smooth; brownish-rufous,
as well as the short tough stem; margin crenulate; gills decurrent,
distant, paler.—Sow. t. 322.
K 3