T
6 9 8 . A g a iicu s (Ciepidotus) applauatus.
/• 3.
Pers. Obs. i.,p . 8, t. 5,
Ap-pJana tus = levelled, made plane.
Pi‘''ne> reniform, or wedge-
^ very short loMte tomentose stem •
,/Ilsrf«i«,7«reai« crowded, linear ; whitish, then pale cinnamon.—
Pr. Hym. Eur. 275.
On decaying wood.
6 9 9 . Agaiicus (Ciepidotus) calolepis. Pries Hym. Pur. 276.
Calo-lepus, from KaXo's = beautiful, and hems = a scale.
o -IltT h sessile in a villons nodule, mar-
V ’ ®'®«antly variegated with crowded minute rufescent
S £ 7 £ r S S T ’ f” «»"“ « - -
On rotten branches.
700. A g a iicu s (Ciepidotus) h a u s te ila iis . Pries Hym. Pur. 276:
HausteUa'ris = of a drawer of water. Because found by Fries
on damp decaying branches of aspen (Syst. Myc. i., p. 274)
sUaMH, reniform, even,
vSiflloouus?, wwhhitei r; ’ gills rounded, nearly free, pallid, then ubprowwanrids:h,
c in n am o n .-P a is cF / . 121. Coohe Illu s. t. 515 A.
On dead trunks.
70 1 . Agaiicus (Ciepidotus) Phillipsii. p . 4 Pr. Orevillea vi., 101.
Phillipsi, in honour of W. Phillips, F .L .8 ., of Shrewsbury.
Small, somewhat umber ; pileus oblique, striate, smooth : stem
s L a ’ ventricose, shortly adnate.
On grass.
Pilens about 3 lines across, Stem l - l j lines high, spores 5 long.
7 0 2 . A g a iicu s (Ciepidotus) R u b i. PerTc. Outl. p. 164, t. 9 ,/, 7.
Rubi = of bramble.
Pileus flesliy, clothed with very minute crystalline meal ■ stem
S e y s h ’X i f u m i ’ adnato-decurrent, cAi:,. ™5 S : * " 276.
On dead bramble, &c. Aug.
7 0 3 . A g a iicu s (Ciepidotus) chimonoph ilu s. P. 4 Ur. Berk. Outl.
p. 164.
Chimonoph'ilus, from x r’P-"" = winter, and ®Aos = loving.
Because first found in December.
White. Pileus convex, rather thick, villous ; margin reflexed ;
stem very short, or obsolete ; gills distant, attenuated behind,
few distant.—Fr. Hym. Eur. 276. Coolce Illu s. t. 515 A.
On small dead branches of Pyrus torminalis.
7 0 4 . A g a iicu s (Ciepidotus) R a lfsii, P. 4 Ur. Ann. Nat. Hist. (1883),
p. 372, No. 2008.
Ralfsdi, in hour of J . Ralfs.
Pileus semi-reflexed, yellow, delicately hispid or chaffy, margin
involute, flat, fixed by cottony flocoi, stem obsolete, gills ventricose,
clay-coloured, margin whitish. — Coohe Illus. t. 516 D.
On decaying wood.
705. A g a i i c u s (Ciepidotus) e p ib iy u s. Fries Hym. Pur. 277.
Epih'ryus, from e « = upon, and fiyoor — moss.
White. Pileus membranaceous, resupinate, sessile, adnate,
by the vertex, silky then smooth ; gills concurrent in the centre,
thin, crowded, white then gilvous.—Gooke Illus. t. 516 C.
On larger mosses.
706 A g a iicu s (Ciepidotus) p e z izo ide s. Nees. A . N. Cur. ix., t. 6,
/.1 8 .
Peziz'oides = like a Peziza.
Pileus sessile, thin, cup-shaped, then reflexed, mealy, subtomen-
tose ; gills meeting in the centre, somewhat distant, olivaceous-
brown, then tawny.—Fr. Hym. Eur. 277. Gooke Illus. t. 516 D.
On rotten branches.
707. A g a iicu s (Ciepidotus) epigaeus. Pers. Syn. p. 484. Ag.
depluens, Batsch., fig. 122.
Epigce'us, eiri-yaios = upon the earth.
Pileus reniform, fragile, reddish grey ; base villose, whitish ;
gills distinct, watery rufescent, divergent.—Ooo/« Illus. t. 516 A.
On the clay of the marlstone.
“ Spores oblong, '0004 in. long, not irregular, and more or less angular, as
in the plant usually referred to A . depluens, as figured by Hoffmacn, so
that its affinities seem rather to be with Crepidotus than Claudopus. The
present is exactly the plant of Batsch, and we think it better to leave the
name with what has formerly been considered bis species, and retain that
of Persoon. The gills of A. epigceus are no longer red when dry. —B. 4 Br.
V\f.
.--_Js4sfe ill