DERMINI. 283 



yellowish-ferruginous when moist, tan when dry, somewhat mem- 

 branaceous, campanulate then convex, umbonate, quite smooth, 

 pellucidly striate to the umbo when moist, even when dry. Stem 

 5-7.5 cent. (2-3 in.) long, 2 mm. (i lin.) thick, fistulose, exactly 

 equal, firm and rigid, but often flexuous, ferruginous, darker and 

 becoming fuscous towards the base, variegated up to the middle 

 with white floccose scales, above the middle wholly naked, even, 

 paler. Gills adnate, ventricose, thin, somewhat distant, disti)ict, 

 at length plane, pale yellowish-ferruginous. 



Allied to Galerce ; the margin of the pileus is almost straight and adpressed 

 to the stem. The gills are so ventricose that when casually inspected they 

 appear as if free. The partial veil is not evident ; but the scales on the stem 

 are without doubt the fragments of a universal veil. 



Under larch. Coed Coch, 1878. Oct. 



Spores pruniform, 10-12 mk. Q. Name badius, bay-brown ; pes, a foot. 

 From the colour of the stem. A. badipus Pers. Syn. p. 318? Fr. Monogr. \. 

 '. 374. Hym. Eur. p. 259. Icon. t. 123. /. 3. B. &= Br. n. 1764. C. lllust. 

 s'l. 491. a. 



II. PH^EOTI. Pileus naked, 



* Pediadei, growing in fields and plains. 



635. A. vervacti Fr. Pileus light yellow or pallid yellow, 

 fleshy, convex, then plane, obtuse, soft, even, smooth, slightly 

 viscid, shining when dry ; flesh white. Stem 2.5 cent, (i in.) long, 

 4-6 mm. (2-3 lin.) thick, cartilaginous, rigid, stuffed then hollow 

 upwards, equally attemiated, even, smooth, not rooted, whitish. 

 Gills adnate with a decurrent tooth, crowded, 6 mm. (3 lin.) broad, 

 exactly plane, at first pallid, at length ferruginous-fuscous. 



Veil quite obsolete. The stem is rather thick, attenuated sometimes up- 

 wards, sometimes downwards. Gills at length ventricose. 



In meadows, gardens, c. Uncommon. Sept.-Nov. 



Name vervactum, fallow ground. Fr. Monogr. i. p. 376. Hym. Eur. p. 

 260. Berk. Out. p. 160. C. Hbk. n. 364. A. arvalis Batt. t. 13. F. 



636. A. triscopus Fr. Pileus 4-10 mm. (2-5 lin.) broad, bay- 

 brown when moist, ochraceous when dry, always opaque, slightly 

 fleshy, at first hemispherical, obtuse, then convexo-plane, with a 

 prominent umbo, even, smooth. Stem 1-2.5 cent. ( l /z-\ in.) and 

 more long, stuffed then delicately fistulose, filiform, equal, curved 

 or flexuous, smooth, opaque, ferruginous, umber at the base. 

 Gills adnate, plane, thin, somewhat crowded, dark ferruginous. 



Spores dark ferruginous. Stature that of A. inquilimis, colour that of A. 

 sparteus, to which it is somewhat like, but the stem is not tense and straight 



