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Iciigtli striate; stem tall, solid, rigid, fibrilloso-striate, attenuated
upwards; gills very broad, free, crowded, drying up,
white, then reddish.—Him. of Nat. Hist. xiii. pi. 9. /. 2.
On sawdust, in England, Scotland [Lady Orde), and AVales,
hut not common.
313. A. (Pluteus) leoninus, Schmff.; pileus submembranaceous,
campanulate, then expanded, smooth, naked, margin
striate; stem solid, smooth, striate; gills free, yellow, then
flesh-coloured. (Plate 7, fig. 4.)
On wood. Rare. Pileus often of the most brilliant orange.
213. (A . P l u t e u s ) c h r y s o p h s e u s , Schmff.; pileus submembranaceous,
campanulate, then expanded, naked, nearly even,
smooth or somewhat virgate, margin striate; stem smooth;
gills free, white, then flesh-coloured. (Plate 7, fig. 5.)
On wood, hollow trees, etc. Not uncommon. Pileus dingy,
2 inches or more across. Stem white or yellowish, solid in
my specimens, hut hollow according to Eries.
214, A. (Pluteus) phlebophorus, D ittm .; pileus slightly
fleshy, convex, expanded, marked with prominent veins, naked,
margin even; stem fistulöse, smooth, incurved, shining; gills
free, white, then flesh-coloured.
On fallen sticks. Rare. Pileus about an inch broad. A
very beautiful species.
Subgenus 12. E n t o l o m a .— Hymenophorum continuous with the
fleshy or fibrous stem; gills sinuato-adnexed, or parting from
the stem.
215. A. (Entoloma) fertilis, P.; pileus smooth, pulverulento-
squamulose, dry, fleshy, obtuse; stem fibrillose, subsquamulose,
somewhat bulbous; gills flesh-coloured, adnexed.—BmM. t. 590,
547./. 1.
In woods. Smell like that of fresh meal. Pilens 4 inches
or more across, of a pinkish-buff. Exactly the plant of Bulliard.
A. sinuatus, Er., under which Bulliard’s figures are
quoted, must be diflbrent.
316. A. (Entoloma) prunuloides, Fr. ; pileus fleshy, campanulate,
then expanded, umbonate, even, smooth, slightly
viscid ; stem solid, unequal, smooth, somewhat striate, white ;
gills free, white, then flesh-coloured, ventricose.
On the ground. Rare. Mossburnford, A. Jerdon, Esq.
Gills emarginate. Smell farinaceous.
217. A. (Entoloma) Placenta, Batsch; pileus fleshy, convex
expanded, umbonate, regular, smooth, brown as well as the
solid, equal, fibroso-striate stem; gills emarginate, adnexed,
crowded, rather thick, pallid flesh-colour.—Batsch, f . 18.
On the ground. Swanage, C. E. Broome.
218. A. (Entoloma) Elodes, Fr. ; pileus slightly fleshy, convexo
plane, somewhat umbonate, moist, becoming smooth ;
stem hollow, pallid, fibrillose, thickened at the base ; gills
emarginate, adnexed, rather distant, white, then flesh-coloured.
On moors. Coed Coch. Smell like that of new meal.
Pileus purple, dingy-brown, etc.
319. A. (Entoloma) repaudns, Bull. ; pileus fleshy, conical,
umbonate, indistinctly silky ; margin lohed ; stem short, solid,
minutely silky, white ; gills dull rose-coloured, broad in front.
—Bull. t. 433. /. 2.
Amongst grass. Rare. Pileus 1-3 inches across. Smell
like that of fresh meal. Certainly not the plant of Eries.
220. A. (Entoloma) Bloxami, B. and Br. ; pileus compact,
campanulate, obtuse, somewhat lohed, moist, hlackish-blue,
somewhat silky; flesh white; stem slightly attenuated upwards,
obtuse at the base ; gills rather broad, attenuated, adnexed.
In open, exposed pastures. Not uncommon. Pileus 1 inch
or more across.