HYPORHODII. 20 1 



Spores, including the angles, .015 mm. Phil. 5f Plow. ; 10x13 mk. B. 6^ Entoloma. 

 Br. Name — from Persoon. Phil. 6^ Plow. Gard. Chron. 1881, p. 874. C. 

 Illust. PL 315. A. Persoonii Du Port, Grevillea, vol. x. p. 42. A. bul- 

 bigenus B. §f Br. n. 1937. A. sericeus Pers. Ico7i. 6^ descr. t. 6. f. 2. 



442. A. nidorosus Fr. — Pileus as much as 7.5 cent. (3 in.) 

 broad, fawn-cinereous when fresh, livid when dry, somewhat 

 membranaceous (composed of two thin plates), convex then 

 expanded, and at length often concave and irregularly shaped, 

 rimose, very fragile, wholly smooth, but silky shining when dry. 

 Stem 5-7.5 cent. (2-3 in.) long, 2-4 mm. (1-2 lin.) thick, stuffed, 

 almost solid, wholly equal, smooth, even, becoming pale-white, 

 white-pruinose at the apex. Gills emarginato-free, broad (6 mm., 

 3 lin., and more), at length distaiit, fragile, pallid then flesh- 

 colour, sometimes undulato-flexuous. 



Fragile, with a strong alkaline smell, but it also occurs inodorous. Much 

 thinner than A. rhodopolius, which is somewhat like it. 



On lawns, and in open woods. Common. Aug.-Sept. 



Spores elliptic. M.J.B. ; irregular, full of angles, 7-10 mk. K. ; 8-10x7-8 

 mk. B. ; 8 mk. IV. G.S. Name — fiidor, sm.el\. Strong-smelling. Fr. Monogr. 

 i. p. 278. Hym. Eitr. p. 196. Ico7i. t. 94. f. 2. Berk. Out. p. 145. C. Hbk. 

 n. 264. Illust. PI. 321. S. Mycol. Scot. n. 250. 



443. A. speculum Fr. — Pileus when moist watery or straw- 

 white, silvery when dry, in either state shining and without a silky 

 appear a7ice, hygrophanous, almost membranaceous or composed 

 of two scissile membranes, pellucid when moist, at first convex, 

 soon flattened and depressed, but the disc is also obtusely and 

 obsoletely umbonate, even, very smooth, margin thin, bent in- 

 wards, flexuous, pellucid-striate. Stem 5-7.5 cent. (2-3 in.) long, 

 about 4 mm. (2 lin.) thick, fistulose, smooth, round when young, 

 then compressed, shining. Gills slightly adnexed, broadly 

 emarginate near the stem, 6-8 mm. (3-4 lin.) broad, very ventri- 

 cose, flaccid, the shorter ones narrower, white then flesh-colour, 

 the edge, which is quite entire, becoming fuscous. 



Very fragile, inodorous, becoming wholly pale-white. Primary form some- 

 what csespitose, thinner, pileus repand, obtuse; another solitary, firmer, 

 pileus regular, depressed round the obtuse umbo. 



On the ground among grass, &c. Coed Coch, 1881, &:c. Oct. 



Spores irregular, 13 mk. B. 6^ Br. Name — speculum, a mirror. From its 

 shining appearance. Fr. Monogr. \. p. 278. Hym. Ezir. p. 197. Icon. t. 95. 

 /. 2. B. &^ Br. n. 1938. C. Illust. PI. 308. Batt. t. 20. / D—F. 



