Rev. IVI. J. Berkeley and Mr. C. E. Broome on British Fungi. 397 



Gate cottony fibres. In full-grown specimens there is only a slight 

 mark showing where the edge of the pileus rested. It is allied 

 to the veil-less species from the Himalayas. The name is intended 

 to record the services which have been rendered to Mycology by 

 many excellent illustrations and in other ways by Cecilia E. 

 Berkeley. 



664. A. (Lepiota) Badhami, n. s. Pileo primum campanulato 

 obtuso, dein expanso 1. depresso umbonatoque squamis minutis 

 velutinis ermineis hispido ; stii)ite deorsum bulboso albo sericeo 

 fibrilloso-farcto ; annulo lirmo submobili ; lamellis remotis ven- 

 tricosis ; totus vulneratus croceo-sanguineus. 



Under yew trees. Apethorpe, Norths., Sept. J 852. East 

 Bergholt, Suffolk. 



Pileus 2-4 inches across, at first campanulate obtuse, at length 

 expanded, often depressed and umbonate, hispid, with minute 

 velvety fuliginous scales, but sometimes entirely fuliginous without 

 any distinct scales. Stem 2-3 inches high, ^-i inch or more 

 thick, attenuated above, bulbous below, white, silky or floccoso- 

 squamose, stuffed with cottony threads; ring firm, erect and 

 deflexed, more or less moveable beneath, frequently clothed with 

 dingy granules; gills truly remote, ventricose, rather broad; 

 spores elliptic, -0003 inch long, flesh tolerably compact. The 

 whole plant when wounded assumes a rich red tint. 



A splendid Agaric resembling some forms of J. clypeolarius, 

 but more robust. In some specimens the surface is decidedly 

 scaly, in others simply velvety. The margin often projects 

 beyond the gills and is delicately silky and fimbriated. The 

 stem, though bulbous, is by no means marginate. Smell rather 

 disagreeable. 



^A. melleus, Vahl. A ringless form of this species occurs in 

 Suffolk and Northamptonshire. 



665. A. (Tricholoma) equestris, L. Suec. no. 1219. In fir 

 plantations. Stapleton, Gloucestershire, C. E. Broome, Esq. 



666. A. (Tricholoma) portentosus, Fr. Ep. p. 26. In woods. 

 King's Chffe, Sept. 7, 1852. Exactly according with a di-awing 

 transmitted by Fries. 



667. A. (Tricholoma) nictitans, Fr. Ep. p. 28. In woods. 

 Suffolk, Rev. Dr. Badham, Sept. 1851. 



668. A. (Tricholoma) acerbus, Bull. t. 571. fig. 2. In woods. 

 East Bergholt, Rev. Dr. Badham. A very fine species, remark- 

 able for its bitter taste and involute sulcate margin. 



669. A. (Tricholoma) subpulver-ulentus, Pers. Myc. Eur. iii. 

 p. 221. In grassy pastures. Abundant, as at King's Cliffe, 

 Oct. 24, 1851; Kent, Mrs. Ilussey, Oct. 1851. The same 

 species apparently occurs at Tibet, on the river Shayuk, at 

 Sassar, not far from the Karakoram Pass, at a height of 16,000 



