Cantharellus AGARICACEyE 295 



1371. C. Friesii Que'l. (after Elias Fries) a b c. 



P. convex to infundibuliform, fleshy, villous, somewhat orange. 

 St. solid, attenuate downwards, yellowish-white or pale orange. 

 G. narrow, yellow or orange. 



Woods, on elder. Aug.-Nov. li x X T 3 S in. Intermediate between 

 1370 and 1372. 



1372. C. aurantiaeus Fr. (from its golden yellow colour ; auran- 



tiacus, orange-yellow) a b c. 



P. plane to infundibuliform, somewhat thin, subtomentose ; marg. 

 undulate, at first involute, orange-ochreous ; mid. sienna. 

 St. stuffed to hollow, attenuate downwards, ochreous or reddish, 

 sienna or black at base. G. crowded, thin, deep orange or 

 orange-vermilion. 



Gregarious. Said to be poisonous. Taste unpleasant. Woods, chiefly 

 pine, heaths, on elder, on grass-roots. Oct.-Dec. 3^ x 2 x J in. 

 Possibly a Clitocybe rather than a Cantharellus. There is a white and a 

 yellowish-white var. with white gills. A mould, Dactylium dendroides, 

 the conidial stage of Hypoinyces rosdlus, is common on the gills of this 

 fungus. 



1372a. C. hypnorum Brond. (from its habitat, moss, Hypmuii). 



P. campanulato-convex then expanded and slightly depressed ; 

 marg. incurved, minutely downy, pale primrose-yellow to pale 

 ochre. St. slender, slightly flexuous, almost glabrous, yellow, 

 sometimes darker than P. near base. G. thin, edge acute, 

 somewhat crowded, branched, decurrent, yellow. Flesh thin, 

 whitish. 



Cudworth, Yorks. Sept. 1905. li X I in. Allied to 1372, but differing 

 in colour, P. less tomentose and spores smaller. 



1373. C. Brownii B. & Br. (after J. Brown) a b. Ochreous-white. 



P. convex, obtuse or umbonate, thin, obscurely silky. St. stuffed, 

 equal, somewhat furfuraceous. G. subdecurrent, linear, narrow, 

 subdistant, sometimes branched. 



Amongst grass. Autumn. x i^ X T V in. 



1374. C. earbonarius Fr. (from its habitat, burnt wood and earth ; 



car bo, charcoal) a b c. 



P. convexo-umbilicate to infundibuliform, striato-squamulose, 

 date-brown to dark purple-slate and black. St. solid, attenuate 

 downwards, often deeply rooting, yellowish-white above, as P. 

 below. G. narrow, white. 



Often fasciculate. Charcoal beds, burnt ground. July-Dec. 2 x i X J in. ; 

 rooting stem 2^ in. Often grows in company with 183 and 277, to which 

 small examples of 1374 are not unlike. 



1375. C. umbonatus Pers. (from the sometimes umbonate pileus/ 



a b c. 



P. convex and umbonate to depressed, even, dry, floccoso-silky, 

 cinereous-blackish, somewhat pale slate or umber-slate. St. 



