LEPIOTA. 247 



Lepiota licmophora. B. & Br. 



Entirely j^ale lemon-colour. Pilous about 1 in. across, 

 flesh very thin ; coarsel}^ grooved, up to the disc, margin 

 crenate, subcylindrical, then campanulate, at length plane, 

 gills free, very remote from the stem, distant, sligiitly ven- 

 tricose, thin, l^V line broad, interstices veined; stem 3-4 in. 

 high, 1-li^ line thick above, becoming thickened downwards, 

 base abrupt, smooth, hollow ; ring distant, persistent; spores 

 lemon-shaped, 9-10 X 5 /.t. 



Agaricus (Lepiota) licmophorus, Beik. & Broome, Ceylon 

 Fungi, n. 20; Cke., Hdbk., p. 20 & 381; Cke., Illustr., 

 pL 1179. 



On soil in hot-houses, stoves, Sec. 



First desciibed from Ceylon specimens, and undoubtedly 

 an introduced species. Di-stinguished from L. cepaestipes by 

 the glabrous pileus. Perhaps only a variety of the last- 

 named species. 



lY. GEANCLOSI. 



Lepiota cinnabarina. A. & S. 



Pileus 2-3 in. across, flesh rather thick, jjallid ; convex 

 soon expanded, obtuse or more or less gibbous, granulosely 

 scurfy, persistently brick red ; gills free, 1^-2 lines broad, 

 lanceolate, white ; stem 1 J-2 in. long, 2 lines thick, base 

 thickened, clothed with red scales up to the imperfect ring, 

 pale and smooth above, stuffed ; spores 6-7 X 5 /a. 



Agaricus cinnaharinus, Alb. & Schw., p. 147 ; Cke., Hdbk., 

 p. 16 ; Cke., Illustr., pi. 43. 



In pine woods. 



Distinguished from L. granulosa by the larger size and 

 persistently biick-red, or red-lead colour of the pileus. 



Var. Terreyi, Berk. & Broome, Ann. -Nat. Hist., n. 1183; 

 Cke., Hdbk., p. 16. 



Pileus subhemispherical, bright tawny red, rough with 

 minute warts ; stem subequal, clad with furfuraceous scales 

 of the same colour ; ring at length torn ; gills white, narrow, 

 remote ; spores 7 X -1 ja. 



Pileus 1-2 in., bright tawny ; scales on the stem of the 

 same colour, often cylindrical ; gills not branched. Spores 

 •0002 in. long by -00015 wide (= about 7x4/^). 



