29 



OF AUSTRALIAN FU iHQl— continued. 



S.M. I. 289 (1821).— Ag.aricus. 



Ground ... 



Chips, decayed wood, 



&c. 

 Woods 



Exposed pastures 



after rain 

 Among grass, lawn 



Dead stumps, ground, 

 &c. , in woods 



Seem. Jouni. (1876). — -Agaricus, Psilocybe. 



517 1 W.A. I ... I ... I ... I ... 1 ... I ... I Ground in woods .. 



518 I ... I ... I ... I ... 1 ... I Q. I ... I Chips 



S.M. I. 11 (1821).— Agaricus. 



Epicr. 253 (1838).— Agaricus. 



Teat. disp. 62 (1797). — Agaricus. 



Epicr. 234 (1838). — Agaricus. 



Ground ... 

 Gardens, &c. 



Ground ... 



Oak trunks and 



ground 

 Ground ... 



Stable refuse 

 Moist ground 



Dung 



Among grass 



Thiu, brick red. Stem elongated, oclircy, downy downwards. 

 Somewhat fleshy, wrinkled when dry, white. Stem hollow, white. 



Pale ochrey, grooved, with scattered shining spots. Stem shining, 



silky. 

 Fleshy, rather viscid when moist, shining when dry, ferruginous tawny. 



Somewhat fleshy, dark brown, hemispherical or bell shaped. Stem 



pale red. 

 Fragile, rigid. Fleshy, bay to umber, moist. Stem hollow, tough, 



pale. 



Dark red or purple brown. Rather fleshy, discoloured when dry. 

 Eather fleshy, yellowish, silky when dry. 



Large, graceful. Sub-membranaceous, growing pale. Stem tall. 



Common. 

 Very fragile. Sub-membranaceous, clay coloured, rugged. Stem 



smooth. 

 Ochrey to clayey. Sub-membranaceous, downy, becoming smooth. 

 Sub-membranaceous, wrinkled, ratlier shining, obtuse. Stem rigid. 



Pale and dirty yellowish, acutely convex. Stem white, silky. 



Memln-anaceous, white, bell shaped. Stem long, hollow. 



Fragile, graceful, from livid to clay white. Membranaceous, conical, 



rather viscid. 

 Small, but rather tall. Sub-iuembranaceous, viscid, pellucid, yellow, 



becoming pale. 

 Small, tall, veryfragile, trembling and tottering. Membranaceous, yellow. 



Sides of roads, pas- 

 tures 

 Old stumps 

 Dung-hills 

 Dung-heaps 

 Dung-heaps 

 About old stumps . . . 

 Ground ... 

 Horse-dung 

 Road-sides, &c. 



Pastures ... 

 Rich soil and dung 

 Dung and rich pas- 

 tures 

 Wood 



Rich soil ... 



Dung 



Dung, rich pastures 



&c. 

 Manure ... 

 Diuig, rich pastures, 



&c. 

 Dung 

 Dung 

 In garden among 



grass 



Large and tall, white. Rather fleshy, cylindrical. Cuticle broken and 



feathery. Edihic. 

 Large. Sub-membranaceous, livid, top papillate. Stem hollow. 

 Small. Very thin, splitting, somewhat mealy. Stem slender. 

 Sub-membranaceous, soon torn, disc livid. Stem scaly. 

 Leathery to scaly. Stem rooting, shaggy. 



Small. Sub-membranaceous, brown, covered with glittering particles. 

 Small. Sub-membranaceous, with prominent papilla at apex, grey. 

 Small. Sub-membranaceous, clad with dense white down. 

 Sub-membranaceous, deep black, variegated, with broad white superficial 



scales. 

 Small, delicate. Very thin, splitting, furrowed and folded, grey. 

 Very thin, ovate, covered with a dense white micaceous meal. 

 Sub-raembrauaceous, cylindrical to conical, woolly to downy, whitish 



grey. 

 Membranaceous, deliquescent, ferruginous ochrey, at first densely 



micaceous. 



Fragile. Soraewlmt fleshy, bell sh.aped, shining, dry, red brown. 

 Rather fleshy, ivory white, shining. Stem fragile, elongated. 

 Somewhat fleshy, marked near margin with a narrow brown zone. Stem 



fragile, elongated. 

 Rather fleshy, ovate, at length cracked, white. Stem erect, silky. 

 Somewhat fleshy, pale tan, conico-convex, when dry cracked and scaly. 



Rather fleshy, viscid, dirty clay colour. Veil fleeting. 

 Somewhat fleshy, reticulated with raised ribs, flesh to tan colour. 

 Velvety, grey, convex or bell shaped, Stem elongated, hollow, silvery 

 grey. 



