6 AGARICINI. 



Phiegma- In pine woods. Herefordshire. Sept.-Oct. 



cium 



Name largns, large. Fr. Morwgr. ii. p. 10. Hym. Eur. p. 339. 

 Grevillea, vol. viii. p. 76. Quel. Grev. t. 103. f. i. 



8. C. Riederi Fr. Pileus 7.5 cent. (3 in.) broad, ochraceous, 

 compact, campanulato-expandecl, obtusely umbonate, even, glu- 

 tinous, shining when dry; flesh watery. Stem 10-12.5 cent. 

 (4-5 in.) long, solid, clavate, lilac-silky and tawny-fibrillose. Gills 

 adnate, rather thick, eroded, lilac then cinnamon. 



Pileus slimy when moist, obsoletely streaked. Allied to the Myxacia. 

 In pine woods. Herefordshire. Sept.-Oct. 



Name After Rieder. Fr. Hym. Eur. p. 339. Grevillea, vol. viii. p. 76. 

 Quel. Grev. t. 104. f. i. 



*** Gills yellow, cinnamon, 



9. C. saginus Fr. Pileus 10-12.5 cent - (4- 5 i n -) broad, yellow, 

 fleshy, plano-convex, irregular, repand, viscous; flesh soft, white. 

 Stem 7.5 cent. (3 in.) long, 2.5 cent, (i in.) and more thick, solid, 

 somewhat bulbous, fibrillose, light yellowish, naked at tlie apex. 

 Cortina fibrillose, fugacious, not very conspicuous. Gills truly 

 decurreJit, S-io mm. (4-5 lin.) broad, attenuated at both ends, 

 dingy pallid then cinnamon, eroded at the edge. 



Very gregarious, somewhat caespitose. 

 In woods. Hereford, &c. 



Name sagina, corpulence. From its size. Fr. Monogr. ii. p. 12. Hym. 

 Eur. p. 340. Grevillea, vol. v. /. 56, vi. /. 92. S. Mycol. Scot. Supp. Scot. 

 'f. 1882, p. 216. 



10. C. russus Fr. Pileus 10 cent. (4 in.) broad, unicolorous, 

 rufous, fleshy, convex then flattened, obtuse, viscid, smooth at the 

 disc, innately fibrillose round the margin. Stem 7.5 cent. (3 in.) 

 long, scarcely 2.5 cent, (i in.) thick, stuffed then hollow, attenu- 

 ated upwards, not bulbous, often curved-ascending, soft, ad- 

 pressedly fibrillose, pale-white, delicately pruinate at the apex. 

 Cortina very tender, fugacious. Gills obtusely adnate (scarcely 

 perceptibly rounded), 8-10 mm. (4-5 lin.) broad, crowded, con- 

 nected by veins, rufous-ferruginous. 



Well distinguished by its coppery-rufous pileus, bitter nauseous taste, and 

 by the softyfe/z being -whitish-Jiesh-colour. 



In woods. Uncommon. Sept.-Oct. 



Spores 8x6 mk. W.G.S. Name russus, red. Fr. Monogr. ii. p. 13. 

 Hym. Eur. p. 341. C. Hbk. ?i. 489. S. Mycol. Scot. n. 450. Worth. Smith, 

 Trans. Woolh. Cl. 1870, /. i. 



