i 154 OUTLINE S 01' B R IT ISH FUNGOLOGY.
In woods. Not common. Pileus I J inch across, dingy.
361. A . (Hebeloma) lacerus, F r .; pileus somewhat fleshy,
convex, expanded, obtusely umbonate, clothed with little
fibrillose scales; stem stuffed, thin, short, fibrillose, naked
above, red within; gills adnexed, hroad, ventricose, white,
tinged with red, then mouse-coloured.
On the naked ground, in woods. Not uncommon.
362. A. (Hebeloma) flooculosus, B . ; pileus snbcarnose,
convex, suhcampairalate, umbonate, sericeo-sqnamulose; stem
fibrillose, squamuloso-pulverulent above; gills pale fawn-
coloured, then obscurely ferruginous, ventricose, adnate.—
Eng. FI. I. c. p. 97.
On the naked soil, and amongst grass. Rare. Smell like
that of new meal. Pileus 1 inch across, brownish-fawn.
Amongst grass the pileus is smoother, more tawny, and the
gills broadly adnate.
363. A. (Hebeloma) Hookeri, Klotzsch ; pileus submembranaceous,
obtuse, umbonate, clothed with branny scales;
stem shining, purple, pruinose with fawn-coloured meal; gills
purple, at length cinnamon, adnexed.—Eng. FI. I. c.
In garden-pots. Glasgow, Dr. J. D. Hooker. Pileus 5-8
lines across, fawn-coloured.
364. A. (Hebeloma) obseurus, P . ; pileus somewhat fleshy,
flatly campanulate, umbonate, longitudinally fibrillose; disc
scaly; stem stuffed, somewhat flexuous, fibrillose, violet-brown;
gills adnexed, uncinate, crowded, ventricose, olive, then brown.
On the naked ground. East Bergholt, Dr. Badham. Pileus
scarcely an inch across.
*** Pileus rimóse; stem ivhitish, sliglitly tinged with the colour of
the pileus, fibrillose.
265. A. (Hebeloma) flbrosus, Sow.; pileus fleshy, thin, ob-
AG AR IC IN I . 155
tusely campanulate, silky, even, at length cracked; margin
flexuous, broken ; stem long, solid, striate, squamoso-flocculose
above; gills free, crowded, linear-lanceolate, dirty-white.—
Svw. t. 414.
In fir-woods. Keynston, Dorsetshire, Miss Rackett. Eries
refers A. répandus. Bull., to this species. Pileus 4 inches
across. Stem 1 inch thick.
266. A. (Hebeloma) fastigiatus, Fr. ; pileus fleshy, thin,
conico-campanulate, longitudinally fibrous, cracked ; stem
solid, stout, rather twisted, finely fibrillose; gills crowded,
free, yellow, then brownish-olive; spores rough. (Plate 8,
fig. 4.)
In woods. Rare. King’s Cliffe. June. Pileus 2 inches
across, yellow-brown. Stem attenuated upwards. Spores
rough with little nodules.
267. A. (Hebeloma) Curreyi, B.; pileus convex, expanded
longitudinally, fibrous, slightly cracked, not umbonate ; stem
straight, attenuated upwards, finely fibrillose ; gills yellowish,
then brownish-olive, free ; spores perfectly even.
In woods. Fineshade, Northamptonshire, Aug. 8 . Closely
resembling the last, hut by no means umbonate. The stem is
dark, and the spores, which are subcymbiform, perfectly even.
268. A. (Hebeloma) rimosus. Bull. ; pileus thin, fleshy,
campanulate, fibrous, expanded longitudinally, rimóse ; stem
solid, firm, nearly smooth, bulbous, mealy above; gills free,
somewhat ventricose, brownish clay-coloured. (Plate 8, fig. 5.)
On the ground, in woods. Extremely common. Pileus
brownish, with a yellow tint. There are several varieties, in
some of which the stem is white, in others coloured like the
pileus.
369. A. (Hebeloma) aurioomus, Batsch ; small, thin ;
pileus yellowish, striate, much cracked ; stem fistulöse ; gills
p i
, \
I
iij t |
il .c i| <1
-'i. ,'n i
M
■ 1 -I
'V i; f/ ■ »
" i ii
I . i j
\ t