160 OUTLINE S o r B R IT ISH FUNGOLOGY.
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gills attenuated, adnate, ascending, somewhat lobed, cinnamon.—
Bolt. t. 70.
On the ground, amongst fir-trees, Bolton. I have never seen
this species. Pileus scarcely an inch across, pale chestnut.
286. A. (Naucoria) melinoides, F r .; pileus slightly fleshy,
convc.xo-plane, obtusely umbonate, smooth, moist; stem hollow,
rather thick, pruinose above, white at the base; gills adnate,
broad, triangular, toothed, honey-coloured. (Plate 9,
fig. 3.)
On lawns. Very common. Pileus about an inch across,
yellowish.
** Pileus smooth ; spores broionish-ferruginous.
287. A. (Naucoria) vervaeti, F r .; pileus fleshy, convexo-
plane or umbonate, smooth, viscid, shining when d ry ; stem
stuffed, then hollow, attenuated, smooth, stiff, dirty-white,
rootless; gills adnate, with a decurrent tooth, crowded, then
ventricose, pallid, then ferruginous-brown.
In meadows, gardens, etc. Bromley, Mr. Sparkes. Probably
not uncommon. Pileus yellowish.
288. A. (Nancoria) pediades, F r . ; pileus slightly fleshy,
convexo-plane, obtuse or depressed, dry, at length opaque; stem
containing a distinct pith, somewhat flexuous, slightly silky,
yellowish, somewhat bulbous at the base; gills adnexed, broad,
somewhat distant, brownish, then dirty-cinnamon.
In pastures. Cranford, Middlesex, Mr. J. Graham. Probably
not uncommon.
289. A. (Nancoria) semiorbicularis. Bull.; pileus slightly
fleshy, hemispherical, expanded, even, smooth, somewhat viscid
; stem slender, tough, nearly straight, pale ferruginous,
shining, containing a distinct separable p ith ; gills adnate,
very broad, crowded, pallid, then ferruginous. (Plate 9, fig. 4.)
AG AR IC IN I . p ß x
On lawns and pastures. Summer and early autumn. Extremely
common. Often confounded with A. semiglobatus.
290. A. (Nauooria) inquüinns, F r . ; pileus submembranaceous,
convexo-plane, smooth, slightly striate, hygroplianous,
somewhat fleshy iu tlie centre; stem sliort, fistulöse, tough'
dark-brown, attenuated downwards; gills triangular, convex,
adnato-decurrent, scarcely crowded, brownish-ferruginous.
On chips, in woods, gardens, etc. Royal Botanic Gardens,
Regent s Park, etc. Pileus a few lines across, yellowish or
tan-coloured.
*** Pileus flocculose or squamulose.
291. A. (Nancoria) furfuraceus, F. ; pileus slightly fleshy,
convexo-plane, obtuse and depressed, moist, hygrophanous, at
first clothed with silky evanescent scales; stem fistulöse, flocculose,
rigid, pale; gills adnate, decurrent, rather distant, ein-
namon.
On chips, etc. Extremely common. Pileus reddish-hrown,
often nearly white when dry.
292. A. (Nancoria) erinaceus, F r .; pileus slightly fleshy,
convex, somewhat umbilicate, clothed with scales consisting
of fasciculate hairs; stem slender, fistulöse, short, incurved,
hairy; gills acluate, rather crowded, entire.—Sow. t. 417.
On dead sticks. Rare. Southwick, Northamptonshire, etc.
Pileus half an inch across, bright brown, as well as the stem.
293. A. (Nancoria) siparius, F r . ; pileus slightly fleshy,
obtuse, clothed with downy scales, as well as the stuffed stem,
which is pruinose above; gills broad, adnate, somewhat distant,
floccose at the edge.
On soil and caddis-cases at the edge of a pond. East
Bergholt, Dr. Badham. Resembling the last, but not so
bright in colour.