í
î
1 1 2 4 . Hygrophoius (Hydrocybe) sp adiceus. Scop. C'a)«, ii., 443.
Fr. ITym. JEiir. 420.
Spadi'ceus == of a chestnut-brown colour.
See ante p. 304. Coohe Illu s. Supp. t. 1161.
1154 lis. Lactarius iu v o lu tu s . Soppift. CooJce Illus. t. 1194.
Every part white, with pale ochraceous tinge. Pileus 1-2 in.
across, firm, equally fleshy up to the margin, smooth, even, convex,
becoming plane or slightly depressed, margin /c h e d , strongly involute,
extreme edge minutely silky ; stem solid, equal or slightly
incrassated below, glabrous, even, about 1 in. long by 3 lines thick ;
milk not scanty, white, very hot, unchangeable ; gills sub-decur-
ront, densely crowded, very narrow, sometimes forked ; spores
white, pip-shaped, smooth, 5 x 3 / .
On the ground.
This may be Lactarius scoticus, which we have never seen.
11 4 5 . Lactarius sq u a lid u s. Kromlh.
See ante p. 309. Coohe Illus. Supp. t. 1195.
1197 Us. R u ssu la (Furcatæ) v ir g in e a . C. 4 M„ Grev. x ix ., 41.
Vir'ginea = virgin ; from its whiteness.
Mild. Pileus fleshy, firm, convex, then depressed (5 c.m.
diam.), smooth, even, viscid when moist, polished when dry,
margin even, snow white. Stem attenuated upwards, firm, solid
(5 c.m. long, 2 c.m. thick a t the base), finely rugulose ; gills very
narrow, crowded, snbdecurrent, repeatedly forked, connected by
veins, brittle, as well as the stem, quite white. Spores globose,
4 p .— Cooke Illus. Supp. t. 1197.
On the ground, under trees.
1 2 2 5 . R u s s u l a (F ragiles) ochroleuca. Pers. See omiep. 332.
var. Claroflava {Grove). Kussula olaroflava. Grove Midi. Nat. 188,
p. 265.
Claro-flava = of a clear yellow.
Pileus (2-3 in.) convex, at first búllate, then plane, slightly
depressed in the centre, chrome-yellow, margin turned down, at
length patent, perfectly even or slightly striate when old, often
paler than the disc, but sometimes of a deeper colour, cuticle not
so easily separable as in ochroleuca; flesh white, yellow beneath the
cuticle ; stem l i - 2 | X in., smooth, white, cylindrical, blunt a t
base, slightly spongy within, a t length rugose and cinereous, or
even blaokish ; gills scarcely crowded, not reaching the stem so
much as in ochroleuca, not united behind, white, qc'"
pale lemon-yellow, at length sub-ochraceous.— Coo/« Illus. 1.119 .
Amongst grass, in damp places.
12 3 6 . R u s s u l a (Fragiles) n itid a . Pers. {ante p.33&).
By error the two varieties of this species have been transposed
in the tex t, so th a t they stand under No. 1235 as varieties of
R. Barlce, whereas they are varieties of R. nihda, and should have
appeared as Russula nitida, var. cuprea, Krombh. See Gooke Ulus
t. 1095 B ; and Russula nitida, var. pulchralis, Britz. bee Ooo/i«
Illus. t. 1095 A.
1 1 4 2 . R u s s u l a (F r a g i l e s ) n a u s e o s a . Pers. (a»ie p. 338).
The more common forms are figured in Cooke’s Illus. Supp. t.
1147.
1 2 5 9 . Cantharellus r eflexu s, var. d e v e x u s. Fries. See ante p. 242.
Figured in Coohe Illus. t. 1150, f. A.
In addition to the foregoing, the following should be referred to
their respective places :—
2 7 . A g a r i c u s (L e p io ta ) h i s p id u s . Lasch. 8ee ante p. 13.
Figures in accord with drawing by Fries. See Cooke Illus.
Supp. t. 1180.
35 Us Ag aricus (Lepiota) licm oph o ru s. Perk. 4 Br. Ceylon
Fungi, No. 20. Lepiota flammula, Gillet Champ. Fr.
Licmoph'orus = bearing a winnowing-fan (XtK/ds).
Pileus (1 in.) lemon-coloured, membranaceous, deeply plicately
sulcate, up to the disc, margin crenate ; stem (3J in high, 1 line
thick) attenuated upwards, truncate at the base, ring half way up ,
gills distant, slightly arched, remote, interstices veined, spores
lemon-shaped.—Cooke Illus. t. 1179.
On the ground in hothouses.
57 bis. Agaxicus (Armillaria) c itr i. Inzenga Sic. t. 3, / . 1. Fr.
Hym. Fur. 46.
Citri = of citron, citron-coloured.
Cæspitose ; pileus fleshy, thin, convex, then plane, rather umbonate
(about 1 in. broad), smooth, sulphur yellow, margin crenulate,