74 FUNGUS-FLORA. 



slightly striate when old ; gills adnexed then adnate, rather 

 narrowed behind, 2 lines broad in front, rather distant, 

 pallid then pale yellow; stem 2-3 in. long, f in. thick, 

 ^qnal, almost even, firm, white, spongily stuffed; spores 

 -globose, minutely echinulate, 9-10 jx diameter. 



Considered by Fries as a variety of B,. emetica, from which 

 it differs entirely in those characters which more especially 

 •characterise the last-named — free, persistently pure white 

 gills. The points of the present are : acrid taste, deep red 

 pileus, and pale yellow, naked gills. 



Russula rosacea. Fr. 



Acrid. Pileus 2-4 in. across, flesh thick, firm, cheesy 

 white ; convex then expanded, obtuse, but never depressed, 

 usually unequal, wavy, sometimes incised ; pellicle viscid in 

 moist weather, separable ; margin even ; rosy flesh-colour, 

 varying in depth, often with darker spots, whitish in places 

 where the cuticle has disappeared; gills adnate in every 

 stage, thin, crowded, fragile, forked behind, shorter ones 

 intermixed, always persistently white, broad ; stem 1 J-2 in. 

 long, up to f in. thick, even, white with a tinge of rose- 

 ■colour, spongy but solid ; spores 8 /x diameter. 



Bussula rosacea, Fries, Epicr., jd. 351 ; Cke., Hdbk., p. 322 ; 

 €ke., Illustr., pi. 1020. 



In woods. 



Allied to B. sanguinea, but differs in being irregular, often 

 ■excentric, pileus rather wavy, scarcely depressed ; gills less 

 ■crowded, broader, less divided, and hardly connected. Some- 

 times pale flesh-colour, becoming -psde and marked with 

 darker spots. (Fries.) 



Distinguished from similarly coloured species by the thick 

 flesh and persistently white adnate gills. Slowly becoming 

 acrid. 



Russula sanguinea. Fr. 

 Acrid. Pileus 2-4 in. across, flesh thick, cheesy, white; 

 •at first convex, obtuse, then depressed or infundibuliform, 

 base of the depression usuall}^ gibbous, polished, even, moist 

 in wet weather, blood-red, usually becoming pale at the 

 •even, spreading mar)j,in ; gills truly decurrent, closely 

 crowded, very narrow, connected by veins, fragile, somewhat 

 forked, white ; stem stout, spongily stuffed, apex at first 



