LENTINUS. 



153 



On dead leaves, twigs, c. Common. Sept. -Oct. Marasmius. 



In large specimens the gills form a close collar round the stem, margin of 

 the collar cream-coloured. M.J.B. Name eni, upon ; <f>v\\ov, a leaf. Fr. 

 Mt'HOgr. \\. p. 231. Hyin. Enr. p. 479. Berk. Out. p. 224. C. Hbk. n. 

 679. S. Mycol. Scot. n. 645. Ag. Tratt. Austr.f. 22. Fl. Dan. t. 1194. /! 

 i. Sow. t. 93. 



III. APUS. 



35. M. spodoleucus Berk. Pileus 4 mm. (2 lin.) broad, cinere- 

 ous, pulverulent or slightly furfuraceous, conchate, resupinate, 

 margin free, arched. Stem none. Hymenium white, very even. 

 Gills few, narrow, entire, so short as to have a naked space at 

 the base, white, interstices even. 



On dead elm-twigs. Batheaston. 



Spores very small, 1-2 mk. IV. G.S. Name cnroSo?, wood-ash; 

 white. From the cinereous pileus and white hymenium and gills. B. r Br. 

 n. 803. Berk. Out. p. 224. C. Hbk. n. 68 1. 



36. M. Broomei Berk. Half-resupinate. Pallid brown then 

 striate black ; hymenium shining white. Gills distant, veined ; 

 interstices even. 



On dead twigs. Batheaston. Jan. 

 Name after C. E. Broome. B. & Br. n. 1795. 



GENUS XV. Lentinus (lentus, tough or pliant). Fr. Epicr. p. 387. Lentinus. 



Pileus fleshy-coriaceous, pliant, or in fleshy species becoming 

 hard when old, persistent. Hymen- 

 ophore continuous with the stem 

 or the base of the pileus when ses- 

 sile. Gills concrete with the hy- 

 menophore, thin, unequal, membran- 

 aceous, with the edge serrated or 

 torn in a tootJied manner. Spores 

 somewhat round, even, white. WitJi 

 the exception of one species, grow- 

 ing on wood, polymorpJious, some- 

 what irregular, very numerous in 

 warmer countries, decreasing in num- 

 ber and not becoming so hard to- 



o 



wards the north. Fr. Hym. Eur. 



P' 4S - LIV. Lentinus cochlcatns. 



A very natural, though very poly- fourth natural size. 



u 



One- 



