36 AGARICINI. 



Dermocybe. Spores pruniform, 10x4-5 mk. C.B.P. ; 7 x 4 mk. W.P. Name— meaning 

 not apparent. Fr. Monogr. ii. p. 66. Hym. Eur. p. 371. B. & Br. ?i. 1270. 

 S. Mycol. Scot. n. 480. Ag. Bull. t. 598. Perhaps yungh. Linn. v. £ 6. 

 /. 19. 



73. C. infucatus Fr. — Pileus 2.5-4 cent. {1-1% in.) broad, 

 yellow, not hygrophanous, fleshy, comparatively small, convex, 

 obtuse, silky when dry, even ; flesh whitish. Stem 7.5 cent. (3 in.) 

 long, equally aite?iuated u p ward s/r<? 7/2 the clavate base (12 mm., 

 % in. thick), 4-6 mm. (2-3 lin.) thick at the apex, solid, even, 

 fibrillose, externally and internally pallid light-yellow. Cortina 

 manifest, j'ellow, then darkened with the cinnamon spores. Gills 

 adnate, crowded, thin, 2 mm. (1 lin.) broad, almost linear, tawny 

 then cinnamon. 



Remarkable for its bright yellow colour. It approaches C. percomis and C. 

 callisteus ; the former is readily distinguished by its viscous pileus and yellow 

 flesh, the latter with more difficulty by its robust stature, by the pileus being 

 smooth then slightly cracked with minute squamules, but especially by its 

 firmer broad distant gills. 



In woods. Haywood Forest, Hereford. Oct. 



Name— /««, to paint. From its bright colour. Fr. Monogr. ii. p. 309. 

 Hym. Eur. p. 372. Icon. t. 155. f. 2. Grevillea, vol. xii. p. 42. 



**** Olivaceous, veil dingy pallid, &c. 



74. C. cotoneus Fr. — Pileus 7.5 cent (3 in.) broad, everywhere 

 clothed with a velvety, dense, beautifully olivaceous covering, 

 fleshy, but not compact, lax, campanulate then expanded, obtuse, 

 somewhat repand, fragile when old ; flesh thin for its breadth, 

 soft, olivaceous-pale. Stem 7.5 cent. (3 in.) long, 12 mm. {%. in.) 

 thick, solid, stout, soft, bulbous, somewhat fibrillose, olivaceous- 

 pallid. Veil persistent, woven i?ito a ftiscous zone towards the 

 apex of the stem. Gills adnate, separating, somewhat crowded, 

 4-6 mm. (2-3 lin.) broad, olivaceous then cinnamon, of the same 

 colour and quite entire at the edge. 



Handsome, soft to the touch, opaque. 



In oak woods. Clifton. 



Name — kotivo?, wild olive. From the colour. Fr. Monogr. ii. p. 68. Hym. 

 Eur. p. 372. B. & Br. n. i960. Quel. Grev. t. nx.f. 5. 



75. C. raphanoides Fr. — Pileus 2.5-5 cent - ( I_2 m broad, fus- 

 cous-olivaceous, when fuller grown changing colour, becoming 

 tawny, slightly fleshy, campanulate then expa?ided, obtusely umbo- 

 nate, often undulated, silky-Jib rillose, when fuller grown becoming 

 smooth, flesh pallid, almost of the same colour. Stem about 



