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base; gills tbin, adnate, somewliat ventricose, crowded, pallid
straw-colour, then clouded.
Ou stumps aud on tlie ground, in pine-woods. Mossburnford,
Jerdon. Coed Coch. Either scattered or fasciculate.
Pileus 14 inch across, tawny.
326. A. (Hypholoma) laorymabundus, F r .; pilens fleshy,
campanulato-convex, obtuse, spotted with innate hairy scales;
flesh white, as well as the hollow, fibrilloso-squamose stem,
which is slightly thickened at the base; gills adnate, seceding,
white, then brown-purple.
On trunks of trees, and on the ground. Pileus not hygrophanous,
as in the next.
327. A. (Hypholoma) velutinus, P . ; pileus somewhat
fleshy, ovate, then expanded, gibbous, fibrillose, hygrophanous,
at length nearly smooth, fleshy and hollow, equal, fibrillose,
striate; stem yellow-brown; gills truncato-adnexed, ventricose,
scarcely crowded, brown, then umber, studded with
drops of moisture. (Plate 11, fig. 2.)
On stumps of trees. Extremely common. Very variable
in size, but generally larger than the foregoing.
328. A. (Hypholoma) appendioulatus. Bull.; pileus car-
noso-membranaceous, ovate, expanded, smooth, hygrophanous,
when dry wrinkled and sparkling with atoms ; stem fistulöse,
equal, smooth, white, pruinose above; gills somewhat adnate,
crowded, dirty-white, then rosy-brown. (Plate 11, fig. 3, 4.)
On dead stumps. Extremely common. Veil attached in
patches to the margin.
329. A. (Hypholoma) Candollianus, Fr.; pileus somewhat
fleshy, campanulate then convex, expanded, obtuse, smooth,
hygrophanous; stem hollow, brittle, subfibrillose, white,
striate above; gills rounded, adnexed, crowded, violet, then
brownish-cinnamon.—FI. Dan. t. 774.
On dead stumps. Rare. King’s Cliife. I have not seen
it elsewhere.
Subgeuus 24. Psilooybe.—Veil, if present, not forming a ring.
Margin of pileus at first incurved.
330. A. (Psilooybe) spadiceus, Schmff.; rigid; pileus
fleshy, convexo-plane, obtuse, even, moist, hygrophanous;
stem hollow, tough, pallid, even above ; gills rounded behind,
adnexed, dry, crowded, white, then rosy-brown.
On dead stumps, on the ground, etc., in woods. Very common.
A variable species.
331. A. (Psüooybe) cernuns, pileus slightly fleshy,
campanulato-convex, expanded, smooth, hygrophanous, minutely
wrinkled when dry; stem flexuous, smooth, white,
pruinose above, fistulöse; gills adnate, slightly ventricose,
scarcely crowded, cinereous, white at first, then brownish-
black.—FI. Dan. t. 1008.
On chips, decayed wood, etc. Apethorpe. Pileus pallid.
This has no veil.
332. A. (Psilooybe) Foeniseoii, P. ; pileus slightly fleshj'-,
campanulate, expanded, obtuse, pallid when dry, even, smooth,
as well as the fistulöse, rootless, pallid-rufous stem ; gills adnate,
ventricose, widely emarginate, scarcely crowded, brownish
umber. (Plate 11, fig. 5.)—Huss. i. t. 39.
Amongst grass, in fields and gardens. Extremely common.
Pileus when moist dark-brown. Attention must he paid to
the colour of the spores, or this species will be sought for
amongst the Panmoli.
333. A. (Psilooybe) coprophilus, Bull.; pileus slightly
fleshy, hemispherical, expanded, then umbonate, at length
smooth, as well as the somewhat fistulöse stem, which is
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