i; i'
ti
ti
9 4 AGARICINI.
coming p a le ; gills rounded, adnexed, seceding, serrulated, dirty
flesli colour.—F r .E p ic r .p .146. B u ll.t.534. Huss.\\.t.42. Berh.
Outl. t.7 ,f . 6 . Bolt. t. 69. B u x b .iy .t.6.
In gardens, &c.
Pileua 4 in. or more aorosa, gregarious, lurid, when dry grey and rather
shining, virgate, and spotted.
2 6 0 . A g a z icu s (E ntoloma) zh od op o liu s. Fr. “ Rosy
Entoloma.”
Pileus slightly fleshy, campanulate, then expanded, a t length
slightly depressed, hygrophanous ; margin flexuose, broken ; stem
hollow, nearly equal, smooth, white, pruinose above ; gills adnate,
sinuate, white, then roseate.—Er. Epic r.p. 147. Bolt. t. 6. F l.
Da«, i. 1736. DromM. i. 55 ,/. 17-22.
In woods. Sept. [Cincinnati.]
Pileus about 3 in. across pileus when young fibrillose, soon smooth, when
moist livid or tawny ; margin slightly striate, when dry shining, with a satiny
lustre. Spores very irregular; average diameter -00027 in.
2 6 1 . A g a z icu s (E ntoloma) m a ja lis .
Entoloma.”
Fr. “ Cinnamon
Pileus between fleshy and membranaceous, campanulate or convex,
umbonate, even, smooth, hygrophanous; margin expanded,
repand; stem fistulose, twisted, striate, whitish, tomentose at the
base ; gills nearly free, crenate, pallid, then roseate.—Fr. S. M.
p. 205. B. 4 B r. Ann. N .H . 1865, no. 998.
In woods. Coed Coch, Denbighshire.
Snb-CEespitose. P ileu s cinnamon-colour, when d ry ochraceous, 2-3 in. b road,
em 3-4 in. long, 2-3 lin e s th ie k , tw is te d ; gills Stem free, ventricose.
2 6 2 . A g a z icu s (Entoloma) c o sta tu s .
Entoloma.”
Fr. “ Costate
Pileus rather membranaceous, convexo-hullate, then nearly
plane, sub-umhilicate, undulate, smooth, hygrophanous ; stem
hollow, short, deformed, sub-striate, grey, whitish-squamulose
above ; gills nearly free, entire, transversely ribbed, pallid.—Fr.
Epicr. p . 147. Ann. N .H . no. 679.
In meadows. Oct. Common.
Pileus 2 in. or more, livid, tawny
stem 2 in. long, 3-4 lines thick.
gills, which are rounded behina, ana nearly iree, traverseü at lengtJi by
waved ribs, and with their margin undulate, and not discoloured. Smell
none; spores irregular, sub-globose, with a globular nucleus.—M. J. B.
2 6 3 . A g a z icu s (Entoloma) se z ic eu s .
Entoloma.”
Bu ll. “ Meadow
Pileus between fleshy and membranaceons, convex, then expanded,
smooth, hygrophanous, when dry silky; margin inflexed,
repand, rather striate; stem fistulose, short, fibrillose; gills emarginate,
plane, rather distant, grey.—Fr. Epicr. p. 147. Bull. t.
413,/. 1. A.pascuus, Eng. F l. { in p a r t) Berh. Outl.p. 145.
In meadows.
Gregarious,
and more broad
Odour strong
I. Stem hollow, 1-2 in. long, 1-2 lines thick, grey. Pilens 1 in.
jad, umber, paler when dry, margin at first involute and striate,
r of new meal.
2 6 4 . A g a z icu s (Entoloma) n id o zo su s.
Entoloma.”
Fr. “ Strong-scented
Pileushetweenfleshyandmemhranaceous,convex,then_expanded,
rather depressed, smooth, hygrophanous; when dry silky, shining
; stem stuffed, equal, smooth, white, then growing pallid;
whitish pruinose aliove; gills emarginate, free, broad, rather distant,
flexuose, pallid flesh-colour.—Fr. Epicr.p. 1 4 8 . A. rhodo-
polius, Eng. F l. Y . p . 7 6 .
In woods. Common.
Pilens l i to 3 in. broad, piano-expanded or sub-depressed, occasionally
minutely umbonate, oohraoeous, with a brownish tint, the margin sometimes
darker and waved, in large specimens sub-carnose, smooth and shining, with
a satiny lustre, most minutely silky under a lens, but the silkmess quite adpressed
• gills very broad, thick, and adnate, more or less rounded behind,
and separating from the stem; stem 2-4 in. high, 2 lines or more thick, hollow
and stringy within, sub-flexuous, pulverulent at the apex, downy at the
base, minutely fibrilloso-striate. Odour strong.—Af. / . B. Spores somewhat
irregular, -00034 in. average length,
Sub-Oen. 14. C l it o p il u s . F r. Epior. p. 1 4 8 .
Spores salmon colour, in some species very pale, almost white,
pip-shaped, somewhat irregular spheres, or altogether irregular,
as in Entoloma, fig. 1 2 ; pileus pruinose, dull white, cinereous, or
brownish, generally fleshy ; stem fleshy or fibrous, confluent with
the hymenophore and homogeneous with i t ; gills decurrent,
never sinuated.
H a b . All are terrestrial.— ( PI. I I I ., fig. 1 4 .)
With the exception of the gills, most of the characters correspond with
Entoloma. The odour of the species ismore or less mealy some, however,
are oilv, some tasteless, others edible. Clitopdusis closely allied to CMocybe,
and differs from Entoloma precisely as Clitocybe differs from Trmlwloma,
Clitopilus agrees more or less with Flammula.—W, G. S.
t i;■.
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