258 FUNGL'S-FLORA. 



In damp woods. 



Eemarkable for the great development of the ring, and 

 the smooth pinkish tan pileus. Stem 4—6 in. long. Tileus 

 3-4 in. broad. Fries places it in Amanita. (Cooke.) 



Lepiota Georginae. W. G. Smith. 



Pileus -^-1 in. across, flesh rather thin, white, changing to* 

 crimson when broken ; fragile, campannlate then plane, 

 covered with a dense, viscid mealiness, white, changing 

 instantly to crimson when touched, margin at length striate ; 

 gills free, very thin, moderately distant, somewhat ventri- 

 cose, about 1|- line broad, white, the edge becoming crimson 

 when touched ; stem 1-2 in. long, up to 1 line thick, slightly 

 attenuated upwards, clothed with white, viscid meal which 

 becomes crimson when touched, fistulose ; ring evanescent, 

 spores elliptical, 10-12 x 6-7 /x, 



Agaricus (Le-piota^ Georginae^ AV. G. Smith, Seeman's 

 Journ. Bot., vol. ix. p. 1, t. 112 (1871); Cke., Hdbk., p. 20: 

 Cke., lUustr., pi. 132 (after Smith). 



On mosses in a cool fernery. 



Eeadily distinguished by being white at first, and every 

 p)art turning crimson at once when touched. An introduced 

 species. 



AMANITOPSIS. Roze. 



Stem with a volva at the base ; ring absent; remainder 

 as in Amanita. 



Amanitopsis, Eoze, in Karst., Hattsv., i. p. 6 ; Sacc, Syll.,. 

 vol. V. p. 20. 



Amanita, Pers., Syn., p. 246 ; Cke., Ildbk., p. 6 (as a sub- 

 genus of Agaricus). 



The present genus dififers from Amanita in the absence of 

 a ring, and from Lepiota in the presence of a volva. 



Amanitopsis vaginata. Eoze. 



Pileus 2-5 in. across, flesh rather thin, whitish ; campami- 

 late then expanded, obtuse, glabrous, naked or rarely with 

 fragments of the volva attached, moist in rainy weather, 

 somewhat shining when dry, margin quite membranaceous, 

 and coarsely striate ; colour variable, lead-colour, orange- 

 rufous, whitish, &c. ; gills free, ventricose, not much crowded, 



