I !
•: }î'
yellow, often shaded with green, suh-distant, thick, hroad in the centre ;
stem 2-3 in. high, about 2 lines thick, hollow, splitting, green, yellow at the
base, very slimy. - Orev. Spores *0002 X *00028 in ,
6 7 6 . H y g z o p h o zu s c a ly p tzæ fo zm is . B . 4 B r . “ Hood-like
Hygrophorus.”
Pileus thin, acutely conical, lobed belo*w,_ minutely innato-
fibrillose ; stem white, smooth, slightly striate, hollow ; gills
rose-coloured, at length pallid, very narrow, acutely attenuated
behind.—Deri*. Outl p. 202. Mag. Zool. 4 Bot. no. 63. Trans.
Woolh. C l .\ 8 6 l , t . 21,f . 4-6.
On the borders of woods and open pastures. Oct.
Pileus acutely conic, lobed below, about 1 in.high, fin . hroa,d at the base,
in unexpanded specimens moist, striate under a lens, with innate, hut
raised fibrillæ, rose-ooloured, gradually turning pallid ; flesh rather thin ;
gills rose-coloured, at length pallid like the pileus, very narrow, and otten
almost evanescent behind, thongh properly adnate, distinct ; stem 1 in. or
more high, pure white, except within the pileus, where it has a slight roseate
tinge, brittle, often splitting longitudinally, remarkably smooth, slightly
striate, hollow, the walls fibrous within ; the young pileus has a great resemblance
to the internal bractoea of an artichoke just before expansion.—Ai. J . B.
Spores *0001 X *00015 in.
5 7 7 . H y g z o p h o z u s u n g u i n o s u s . Fr. “ Dingy Hygrophorus.”
Fragile. Pilens thin, campanulate, then convex, obtuse, even,
clothed witb dingy gluten, as well as tbe bollow, unequal, snb-
compressed stem ; gills adnate, ventricose, plane, tbick, wbite,
becoming glaucous.—Fr. Epicr. p. 332. Mag. Zool. 4 Bot. no.
62.
In woods and pastures. Oct.
Stem hollow, 2 in. long, 3 lin. thick, commonly attenuated towards either
end ; pileus smooth or at length cracked, ahout 2 in. broad ; gills thick, distan
t, connected by veins, broad. Inodorous.
5 7 8 . H y g z o p h o zu s m u z in a c e u s . Fr. “ Mouse-coloured Hygrophorus.”
Fragile, strong scented. Pileus tbin, campanulate, theu expanded,
irregular, viscid, soon dry, rimuloso-sqnamulose ; stem
nearly bollow, unequal, sub-compressed, even; gills adnate, seceding,
broad, distant, somewbat waved,, wbite, then glaucous.—
F r .E p ic r .p .333. B u ll.t. 520. Now. i. 106. Krombh. t.72. Batt.
t. 1 9 ,/. A.
In pastures.
Stem twisted, equal but compressed, fragile, 2-3 in. long, 3-5 lin. thick,
polished, whitish ; pileus 2 in. broad, at flrst rather viscid, then squamulose,
growing pale; gills broadly emarginate, very broad, conneoted by veins.
Gen. 8. GOMPHIDIUS, F r. Fpicr. p. 319.
K g . 50.
Spores large, greenisb-grey,
becoming black, fusiform (often
spuriously uniseptate,according
to Fries) ; veil universal, glutinous,
terminated on tbe stem
by a floccose annnlns; pileus
continuous with tbe stem, fleshy,
convex, at length top-sbaped;
stem witb a floccose annulns,
confluent with the bymenopbore
; gills strongly decurrent,
somewbat branched, soft, mucilaginous,
often spreading in
a continuous membrane.
Hab. Growing on the ground, chiefly in pine
5 7 9 . G o m p h id iu s g lu t in o s u s . Fr. “Glutinous Gomphidius.”
Pileus obtuse, glutinous, purplish-brown ; 8^1®
"I*-
In fir woods. .
Spores larger than the typical form. ( J
5 8 0 .
G o m p h i d i u s viscidus. Fr. “ Viscid Gomphidius.”