by reason of the growth of the pileus, when young free. Stem J -lin . high,
J line thick, white, curved, rooting, the root villous, minutely stuffed, smooth,
even under a high magnifying power, powdered at the top with the spores,
generally thicker below ; spores white, round; odour farinaceous.—A/. J.B .
1 8 8 . A g a z icu s (M y cen a ) v it z e u s . Fr. “ Glassy Mycena.”
Very fragile ; pileus membranaceous, campanulate, every where
lineato-striate, except the umbo or somewhat fleshy disc ; stem
slender, minutely striate, shining, base fibrillose ; gills adnate,
distinct, linear, whitish.—Fr. E picr.p. 111. B. 4 B r. Ann. N.H.
(1866), no. 1 1 1 1 .
In woods. Oct. Bryn Tyrch, Caernarvon.
Pileus livid brown, margin naked. Stem 2-4 in. long, J lin. thick, minutely
striate, base fibrillose, insinuating itself amongst moss, falsely rooting
(pseudo-radicate).
1 8 9 . A g a z icu s (M y c en a ) t e n u is . JBolt. “ Slender Mycena.”
Very brittle ; pileus membranaceous, campanulate, then convex,
obtuse, lineato-striate, margin crenate, appendicuiate; stem membranaceous,
pellucid, straight ; gills adnate, distant, distinct, thin,
watery, whitish.—F r.E p ic r.p . 111. Bolt. t. 87. Price f . 9.
In shady moist woods. Rare.
Delicate, very fragile and watery. Stem 3 in. or more long, scarcely 1 liu.
thick ; hyaline white, or yellowish, at the base. Pileus about J in. broad, hyaline,
or tawny white. Spores "OOOlBx "0001 in.—IF. G. B.
1 9 0 . A g a z icu s (M y cen a ) t e n e llu s . Sclmwi. “ Delicate Mycena.”
Cæspitose. Pileus membranaceous, campanulate, then convex,
obtuse, pellucid ; margin striate ; stem slender, soft, smooth; base
villous ; gills uncinate, very thin, crowded, white or flesh-coloured.
—Fr. Epicr.p. 111. Bay. Syn. t. l , f . 2.
On decayed trees.
Pileus i in . broad, entirely white, or tinged with rose-colour. Has not been
found since the time of Hay, and it is very rare on the Continent.—M. J. B.
Sect. 3. Filopedes—stem filiform, flaccid.
A g a z icu s (M y cena ) S lo p e s . Bu ll. “ Thready-stern
Mycena.”
Pileus membranaceous, obtuse, campanulate, then expanded,
striate ; stem filiform, flaccid, rather brittle, smooth ; base pilose,
rooting; gills free, lanceolate, crowded, white.—Fr. Epicr. p 112
Bull. t. 820. Hoffm. t. 6. f . l . B a ts c h .f.2 . Eng. F I.y . p. 56.
In woods, amongst leaves. [United States.]
Pileus hvid, brown, or umber, tinged with pink, J in. broad, convex or
conico-campanulate, striate; gills free, or minutely adnexed, slightly ventri-
cose, white, ora dilute shade of the pileus ; stem 2-3 in long, fistulöse juicy
smooth, except the rooting base, which is pilose, brownish.—Af, J .B . r livid, dirtyj white,, or
1 9 2 . A g a z icu s (M y c en a ) v i t i l i s . Fr. “ Flexile Mycena.”
Pileus membranaceous, conical, then expanded, papillate,
moist, deeply striate, becoming pale; stem filiform, straight,
flexile, smooth, without juice, shining, rooting; gills attenuato-
adnate, rather distant, greyish-white.—F r. Epicr. p .118 Sow t
385,/. 5. Bull. t. 518,/. 0.
Amongst leaves.
Stem thin, hollow, 3-6 in. long, filiform, rooting; pileus papillate, 3-4 lin.
broad, striate to the middle, dry, livid, or brown, becoming pale or whitishs
gills linearj wliitisli, or grey, edge growing paler.
193. A g a z icu s (M y cena ) sp e iz eu s. Fr. “ Opaque Mycena.”
Pilens membranaceous, conico-convex, then plane, unpolished,
striate; disc darker, at length depressed; stem filiform, tough,
shining, fibrillose, rooting; gills plane, then decurrent, distant,
white.—Dr. Epicr.p. 113. Berh. Out.p. 126.
On mossy tranks.
Stem 2 in long, J lin. thick; pilens 2-3 lines broad, opaque, greyish brown,
sometimes fibrillose or pruinose.
1 9 4 . A g a z icu s (M y cena ) a c ic u la .
Mycena.”
Schceff. “ Orange
Pileus membranaceous, campanulate or convex, smooth,
orange-red ; margin striate, stem rooting, setaceous, tough, shining;
gills rounded-adnexed, ventricose, distant, yellow, becoming
whitish at the edge.—Dr. Epicr.p. 114. Schoeff. t. 222. Enq. F I.
V. p. 52.
On leaves, twigs, &c., in woods.
Tileus J-4 lines broad, campanulate, generally umbonate, margin striate,
under a powerful lens, most minutely pilose,bright orange, the umbo darkest,
suh-carnose, within deep orange; gills few, somewhat ventricose, adnexed or
adnate, with shorter ones between them, white, tinged with yellow; stem
about i in. long, quite filiform, flexuous, nearly equal, minutely pilose, like
tne pileus, pale yellow, with a line within.— FI.