286 AGARICUS. 



Naucoria. In moist places. Scarborough. Aug. 



Name from combination of colours in Myosotis. Fr. Monogr. i. /. 378. 

 Hym. Eur. p. 261. Icon. t. 125. f. T., C. Illust. PI. 494. 



642. A. temulentus Fr. Pileus 1-2.5 cent - ( 1 A~ 1 in-) broad, 

 ferruginous when moist, ochraceous when dry, hygrophanous, 

 somewhat membranaceous, somewhat fleshy at the disc, campan- 

 ulate then convex, somewhat umbonate, smooth, striate at the cir- 

 cumference when moist, even when dry. Stem 5-7.5 cent. (2-3 in.) 

 long, 2 mm. (i lin.) thick, fatu/ose with a pith, tough, equal, flex- 

 uous or undulated on the surface, even, polished, smooth, pulveru- 

 lent at the apex, white-villous at the base. Gills adnate, some- 

 what distant, attenuated in front, at first lurid-ferruginous, at 

 length umber. 



The pileus is never depressed, nor has it a distinct pellicle. Veil none. 

 Slender. Not allied to A. tenax, &c., and inclining towards Galerce. 



In open wood. Glamis, &c. Aug.-Sept. 



Name temulentus, drunken. Full of moisture. Fr. Monogr. i. p. 379. 

 Hym. Eur. p. 262. Icon. t. 125. f. 2. B. & Br. n. 1530. S. Mycol. Scot, 

 n. 339. C. Illust. PL 459. Bat sch t. 7. fig. d. 



III. LEPIDOTI. (Typical Naucorias.) Pileus flocculose, &c. 

 * Squamules of pileus superficial, separating. 



643. A. sobrius Fr. Pileus 6-10 mm. (3-5 lin.) broad, honey- 

 colour, disc darker, becoming pale, slightly fleshy, convex, obtuse, 

 well formed, smooth, even, moist, scarcely viscid, very slightly 

 silky, veil pritinose, fugacious. Stem 4 cent. (i% in.) long, 2 mm. 

 (i lin.) thick, fistulose, slightly firm, moderately tough, straight or 

 slightly bent, equal, pallid upwards, ferruginous-fuscous down- 

 wards, occasionally sprinkled with slightly silky whitish spots 

 (from the veil). Gills broader behind, obtusely adnate, somewhat 

 distant, plane, 3 mm. (i}4 lin.) broad, paler than the pileus. 



The pileus is not bibulous and hygrophanous. Its habit is that of A.fur- 

 turaceus, but it differs by many marks, and especially by the veil being so 

 obsoletely squamulose, that traces of it appear only in the younger state (on 

 the margin of the pileus and stem), wherefore it is rather to be looked for 

 among Gymnoti. 



On the ground in mixed woods. Rare. Sept.-Oct. 



In ' Hym. Eur.' Fries describes the gills as crowded, as " saffron-yellow-pal- 

 lid " and "whitish at the edge." In my specimens they were scarcely crowded. 

 The edge is whitish in var. dispersus. Name sobrius, sober. Not bibulous ; 

 not imbibing moisture. Fr. Monogr. i. p. 382. Hym. Eiir. p. 263. B. & 

 Br. n. 912. C. Hbk. n. 367. S. Mycol. Scot. n. 340. 



