HYPORHODII. 221 



5. f. 12. Fr. Hym. Eur. p. 213. Monogr. i. p. 401. Berk. Out. p. 164. /. 10. Claudopus. 

 f. i. C. Hbk. n. 272. Illust. PL 344. a. S. Mycol. Scot. n. 267. Hussey 

 \. t. 50. Hoffm. Anal. t. 22. f. 3. A. sessilis Bull. t. 152. Fl. Dan. t. 1556. 

 A. niveus Sow. t. 97. 



488. A. depluens Batsch. Pileus as much as 2.5 cent, (i in.) 

 broad, rufescent - hoary, somewhat membranaceous, resupinate 

 then reflexed, changeable in form, somewhat silky ; at first with a 

 villous stem then stemless. Gills scarcely decurrent, diverging, 

 broad, ventricose, somewhat crowded, grey then rufescent. 



Spores almost rose-colour. After the type of A. variabilis it is resupinate 

 then reflexed, with astern, which is manifest and villous in younger specimens, 

 and then vanishing, but much more changeable in form, sometimes entire 

 with a central and vertical stem, so that scarcely any form is constant. It is 

 easily distinguished, however, by its thin, -watery, fragile substance, by the 

 rufescent-hoary colour (very hygrophanous), and by the pileus being so deli- 

 cately silky that it appears rather smooth, most manifestly white-villous at the 

 base however, with the margin slightly striate in moist specimens. 



On the ground among moss, in hothouses, &c. Rare. Oct. 



Name depluo, to rain. From its watery substance. Batsch f. 122. Fr. 

 Monogr. i. p. 401. Hym. Eur. p. 214. Berk. Out. p. 165. C. Hbk. n. 273. 

 Illust. PI. 344. b. Hoffm. Anal. t. 15. /. 2. A. epigseus Pers. perhaps dis- 

 tinct and a species of Crepidotus. B. & Br. n. 1849. 



489. A. byssisedus Pers. Pileus 1-2.5 cent, (^-i in.) broad, 

 grey, becoming pale when dry, slightly fleshy, at length horizontal, 

 reniform, plane, even, villous ; flesh, which is of the same colour, 

 thin. Stem incurved, villous, attenuated upwards, 12 mm. ()4 in.) 

 long, zoned at the base with white cottony fibrils. Gills adnato- 

 decurrent, ventricose, rather broad, whitish-cinereous^ then rubigi- 

 nous with the spores. 



When young resupinate. The stem is more distinct and persistent than in 

 A. depluens, &c. 



On bare soil. Rare. Sept. 



Fries found it on rotten beech wood. Spores irregular, angulato-stellate, 7 

 mk. B. &" Br. ; 11x7 mk. \V. G.S. ; irregular, 6-angled, 8-10x5-6 mk. B. 

 Name byssus, fine linen thread ; scdeo, to sit. From the cottony fibrils at the 

 base of the stern. Pers. Ic. descr. t. 14. f. 4. Fr. Monogr. i. p. 402. Hym. 

 Eur. p. 214. B. &> Br. n. 686. Berk. Out. p. 165. C. Hbk. n. 274. Illust. 

 PI. 344. c. A. striatulus griseus Pers. Obs. 2. /. 5. f. 8, 9. 



