2 4 1 . ^ Agaricus (Collybia) m ur inus. Batsch. Consp. f. 19.
Murinus=m.onse-colonred.
Pileus rath er fleshy, companulato-convex, then expanded, umbi-
licate, smooth, then somewhat squamulose or rugulose, growing pale ;
stem hollow, cylindrical, not rooting ; gills slightly adnexed, broad’
rath er distant, dirty white, becoming pallid.—F r. Hym. E u r. 128.
On ground in woods. Oct.
Pileus brownish, becoming pale.
2 4 2 . Ag a r icu s (Collybia) protractus. Er. Hym. Eur. 128,
FroZ/-acZMS=drawn out, lengthened ; from the long root.
Pileus snbmembranaceons, convexo-plane, shining, disc fleshy
depressed, sub-papillate, d a rk e r; margin striate ; stem obsoletely
hstulose, even, smooth, grey ; root long, fibrilloso-strigose; gills
fixed, ventricose, very broad, grey, finely dusted with the white
spores.—7V./com. Z, 6 7 ,/. 2 . Cooke Illus. t. 276, a.
In pine woods on the ground.
2 4 3 . Ag a r icu s (Collybia) tesquorum. Fr. Hym. Ewr. p. 128.
T e sg u o fum ^ o i rough or waste places, tesqua or tesca.
Pilens rather fleshy, convex, then plane, obtuse, even, dark
brown becoming pale ; stem fistulöse, thin, brown, pruinose above;
gtZZs/rcc, ventricose, rather distant, greyish-brown. Fr. Icon t
7 0 ,/. 8. Cooke Illus. t. 276, b.
In open pastures.
2 4 4 . Ag a r icu s (Collybia) c lu s ilis Fr. Hym. Eur. 129.
Clu'silis=e:aú\y closing.
Pileus submembranaceous, hemispherical, expanded, umbilicate
smooth, hygrophanous ; margin rounded, inflexed, slightly striate •’
stem stuffed with flocci, then hollow, smooth, flexile, not rooting ■
gills subarcuate, affixed, broad, semicircular, plane, white, growine
pallid.—B u ll t. 4 1 1 , / 2. Cooke Illus. t. 247, b.
In woods.
Var. ß. minor. Amongst Hypnum.
Stem 1^2 in. high, 1 line thick; pilens in. broad.
2 4 5 . Ag a r icu s (Collybia) ty lic o lo r . Fr. Hym. Eur. 129.
Tyhc olor=.of the colour of Tylus an isopodons crustacean
allied to the “ woodlouse ” Oniscus. The name occurs in Pliny!
Hist. Nat. 29, 39. See also Ag. {OmphaliaL) oniscus. F r.
Pileus rather fleshy, convex, then plane, somewhat umbonate,
even, smooth ; stem fistulöse, equal, even, pu lv e ru len t; gills free
distant, plane, gxeflfri.— Cooke Illus. t. 247, a.
In woods.
Small, wholly cinereous ; stem 1 in. long; pileus ¿ in. wide.
%
u
The following two species are not truly indigenous.
Ag aricus (Co llybia) Dorotheæ. Berk, in Grev. I., 88.
Dorothe'ce, in honour of Lady Dorothy Nevill.
Pileus a t first globose, dark brown, then flatly hemispherical, at
length expanded, with a slight umbo, and eventually depressed,
pale brown, an inch or more across, radiated, sulcate from the
crenate margin almost to the centre, granulated, beset with short
white bristles, which in the young state point in every direction.
Stem 2-2-j inches high, scarcely a line thick, at first brownish
above, white below, with a minute disc-like swelling a t the base,
then yellowish or rufous below and white above, granulated like
the pileus, and beset with white bristles. Gills white, distant, adnexed,
slightly ventricose, connected behind ; edge quite entire.
On dead fern stem, in a hothouse at Dangstein.
Ag a r icu s (Collybia) ca ld a rii. Berk, in Grev. i., 89.
Caldarii=oi a caldarium or hot-bath ; because found in a h o thouse.
Pileus hemispherical, umbonate, brown, rugose, not turning
pale ; ^ an inch across ; stem paler, even, cartilaginous externally ;
2 inches high, not a line thick ; gills adnato-decurrent, somewhat
ash-coloured, interstices near the margin veined.
On Sphagnum, in an orchid pot a t Dangstein.
Sub.-Gen. 7. MYCENA. F r. S. M. i. p. 140.
Mycena, from /AUKi?s=a fungus.
Pileus more or less membranaceous, generally striate, with the
margin always straight, and a t first pressed to the stem, never
involute, expanded, campanulate, and generally umbonate (not depressed,
as in Omphalia) ; stem externally cartilaginous, tubular,
not stuffed when young, confluent with the hymenophore, but
heterogeneous from it ; gills never decurrent, though some species
have a broad sinus near the stem.
a. C alo d o n tb s. Edge of the gills dark, denticulate.
2 4 6 . A g a ric u s (lOEycena) p e li a n th in u s . Fr. Hym. Eur. 180.
Pelianth'inus, from Trckmivopae
=to be or become livid, “ black and
blue.’-
Pileus somewhat fleshy, convex, then expanded, obtuse, moist,
hygrophanous; margin striate ; stem firm, iibrilloso-striate above,
equal, pallid ; gills adnexed, emarginate, beautifully connected by
veins, parplish, with a darker, toothed edge.—Bolt. t. 4, f . 1.
Berk. Outl. t. 6 , / 1. Cooke Illus. t. 156, a.
Amongst dead leaves in woods.