8 AGARICINI. 



Phlegma- forma. Very various in shape. Fr. Monogr. ii. p. 15. Hym, Eur. p. 343. 

 cium. Berk, Out. p. 184. C. Hbk. n. 491. S. Mycol. Scot. n. 451. Quel. Grev. t, 



104. f. 4. A. turbinatus Sow. t. 102. 



13. 0. napus Fr. Pileus 5-7.5 cent. (2-3 in.) broad, fuliginous, 

 then date -brown -tawny, fleshy, convexo- plane, obtuse, even, 

 smooth, glutinous, the regular margin bent inwards j flesh com- 

 pact, white, with a horny line (hymenophore) next the gills. 

 Stem 5 cent. (2 in.) long, 12 mm. (*4 in.) thick, solid, equal, 

 ascending, smooth, firm, white, at length becoming yellow at 

 the base, inserted in an obconic, acutely and obliquely marginate 

 bulb. Gills emarginate, somewhat distant, broad, crisped, whitish- 

 fuliginous, hyaline at the sides. 



It differs conspicuously from species near to it in the broad, crisped, some- 

 what dista?it, whitish-fuliginous gills. 



In pine woods. Hereford. Oct. 



Name napus, a turnip. From the bulb. Fr. Monogr. ii. p. 16. Hym. 

 Eur. p. 343. Grevillea, vol. xii. /. 41. 



14. C. talus Fr. Pileus 5-7.5 cent. (2-3 in.) broad, of a yel- 

 lowish dirty colour, becoming pale, margin somewhat olivaceous, 

 yellowish, fleshy, thin, equal, convexo-plane, even, smooth, vis- 

 cous ; flesh watery, dingy pallid-whitish, with hyaline spots, and 

 variegated with a horny line next the gills. Stem 7.5 cent. (3 in.) 

 long, 12 mm. (% in.) thick, solid, equal, cylindrical (not oblique), 

 becoming smooth, marginato-bulbous at the base, pale. Gills 

 emarginate, somewhat crowded, beautiful straw-colour or ochrey- 

 pallid, scarcely changing colour. 



Very pretty, very much allied to C. turbinatus, but quite distinct in its 

 colours. The bulb is small, somewhat round, marginate. 



In woods. Epping Forest. Oct. 



Name talus, an ankle bone. From the swelling at the base of the stem. 

 Fr. Monogr. ii. /. 17. Hym. Eur. p. 344. Icon. t. 145. f. 2. Grevillea, 

 vol. xiv. p. 38. 



** Gills "violaceous, &*c. 



15. C. glaucopus Fr. Pileus dingy yellow, tan-tawny or clay- 

 colour, very fleshy, at first bent inwards, then flattened and 

 unequal, somewhat repand, slightly viscid, rarely even, commonly 

 floccoso-scaly, often marked with a raised fuscous-blackish zone 

 round the margin ; flesh compact, white. Stem solid, very stout, 

 at first in the form of a bulb (2.5 cent., i in.), and marginato- 

 bulbous, fibrillose, woolly, chiefly at the apex, at length elongated 

 (7.5 cent., 3 in.), the bulb vanishing, but the base remaining 



