2 74 AGARICUS. 



Fiammula. of the Same colour as the pileus. Stem 5-7.5 cent. (2-3 in.) long, 

 2-4 mm. (1-2 lin.) thick, fistidose, slightly attenuated upwards, 

 tense and straight, when young everywhere white-pulvemlent, 

 umber. Cortma no?ie. Gills ascending, crowded, 7tarrow (scarcely 

 2 mm. (i lin.) hr 02.6), yellow then becoming ferrugi7ioiis, normally 

 adnate, but varying decurrent and separating. 



Spores ferruginous. Caespitose, slender. There is a smaller variety with 

 the pileus campanulate and rimuloso-papillate. 



On old deal boards, and pine-stumps. Rare. 



Spores sphaeroid-elhpsoid, 8x5-6 mk. K.; 5x4 mk. W.G.S. Name— 

 TTiKpo;, bitter. Fr. Mono^r. \. p. 362. Hvni. Eur. p. 251. Icon. t. 119./. 2. 

 B. b' Br. n. 1244. C. Hbk. n. 350. Illust. PI. 448. 



V. — Sericelli. Ftcrnished with a cortina, &^c. 



613. A. helomorphus Fr. — Pileus 12-18 mm.(>^-^ in.) broad, 

 white, truly fleshy, convexo-plane, gibbous or with a broad obtuse 

 prominent umbo, often angular, viscid; when dry becoming ad- 

 pressedly fibrilloso-even, the thin unequal margin inflexed, naked. 

 Stem scarcely 2.5 cent, (i in.) long, 4 rarely 6 mm. (2, 3 lin.) thick, 

 solid, equal or not perceptibly attenuated from the base, ascending 

 from the incurved base, wholly even and smooth, whitish. Gills 

 plano-decurrent, very crowded, not 2 mm, (i lin.) broad, whitish, 

 scarcely clay-colour. 



Stem slightly adpressedly silky upwards only under a lens. Spores pallid 

 ferruginous, paler than i?i the rest of the species. 



In fir woods. Mossburnford. Nov. 



Spores pale brown, 4x6 mk. B. b= Br.; 3x4 mk. W.G.S. Name— 17A0S, 



a nail; /u.op07j, form. Nail-shaped. Fr. Monogr. \. p. 349. Hym. Eur. p. 252. 



Ico7i. t. 12.0. f. 4 var. B. 6^ Br. n. 1239. C. Hbk. n. 338. Illust. PI. 449. A. 

 S. Mycol. Scot. 71. 330. 



614. A. scambus Fr. — Pileus 1-2.5 cent. {Yz-i in.) broad, whit- 

 ish, fleshy, thin, convex then plane and depressed, slightly silky, 

 when young viscous in wet weather, but the viscus is soon ab- 

 sorbed by the underlying down, so that it is commonly very dry, 

 opaque. Stem 1-2.5 cent, (/^-i in.) or little more long, 2 mm. (i 

 lin.) thick, stuffed^ equal, curved-ascending, _/f^rr?//(?j^ or sprinkled 

 with white mealy squamules, whitish, pubescent at the base. Gills 

 adnate, crowded, somewhat repand, light yellow-clay-colour. 



The stem has a paler line down the centre indicative of hoUowness, and 

 is fixed by the effused white naked mycelium. A very distinguished species, 

 departing very much from the type. Gregarious, tough. Very changeable. 

 There is a form with the stem attenuated and becoming ferruginous down- 



