o 



62 FUXGUS-FLOPvA. 



Hygroxjliorus ar/atJwsmus, Fries, Monogr., ii. p. ; Ckc, 

 Hdbk., p. 293 ; Cke., Illustr., pi. 913. 



In pine woods, &c. 



Smell, especially when old, pleasant, resembling aniseed. 

 In luxurious specimens the pileus is much larger than indi- 

 cated above, and iiexuous, the stem is also sometimes curved 

 or flexuous. Larger and firmer than L. jpiistulatus. (Fries.) 



Hygropliorns (Lima.) mesotephrus. B. & Br. 



Pileus 1-1 i in. across, flesh rather thick at the disc, thin 

 elsewhere, somewhat hemispherical, white with a brown 

 disc, viscid, striate ; gills decurrent, pure white, rather 

 distant; stem lh-1 in. long, slender, flexuous, attenuated 

 towards the base, viscid, whitish, granular at the apex; 

 spores elliptical, apiculate, 9-10 X 5 /x. 



Sycjropliorus mescAeplirus^ B. and Br., Ann. Xat. Hist., xiii. 

 t. 15, f. 2 ; Cke., Hdbk., p. 293 ; Cke., Illustr., pi. 914. 



In woods. 



Pileus about 1 in. across, convex, subhemispheiical, white 

 with the disc brown, viscid, striate, the extreme margin often 

 remaining quite even, flesh white, hygrophanous. Stem 

 about 2 in. high, 2 lines thick, flexuous, attenuated at the 

 base, white, viscid, floccoso-granulated at the apex, stuff'ed 

 with a fibrillose pith. Gills pure white, moderately broad, 

 rather distant, ventricose, shortly decurrent. A very deli- 

 cate species, allied to H. fusco-alhus, but with a very ditferent 

 habit. In age the lower part of the stem is slightly stained, 

 but by no means squamose. (B. and Bi\) 



Cooke's figures, quoted above, differ much from Berkeley's 

 description and figures. In Cooke's "Illustrations" the 

 pileus is pale yellowish buff, disc darker, plane, umbonate, 

 and depressed round the umbo; altogether suggesting a 

 slender, pale form of H. prntensis. 



Hygrophorus (Lima.) livido-albus. Fr. 

 Pileus li-2^ in. across, flesh everywhere thin; expanded, 

 obtuse, more or less irregularly waved, even, glabrous, 

 viscid, livid, all one tint, margin naked; gills decurrent, 

 distant, 1-1 i line broad, distinct, clear white; stem 2-3 in. 

 long, about 2 lines thick, nearly equal, often more or less 

 flexuous, stufl'ed, whitish, glabrous; spores elliptical with 

 an oblique apiculus, 10 X 6 /^. 



