AGAEICINI. 103 



cencling, obovate, somewhat distant, grey-brown, then purplish. 

 —Fr. Ep.p. 156. B. ^-Br.Ann.N.H. (1866j,7io. 1116. 



In a wood. Oct. Caernarvonshire. 



St?m slender, 3 in. long, smooth, brown, then livid-brown. Pileus very 

 obtuse, about 1 in. broad, dingy when fresh, livid when dry. 



Sub- Gen. 18. Eccilia. Fr. S. M., i. p. 207. 



Spores salmon-colour ; pileus generally umbilicate, disc homo- 

 geneois, margin at first incurved, as in Leptonia ; stem hollow, 

 conflU''nt with but heterogeneous from the hymenophore ; gills 

 truly cecurrent.— (P/. I I I., fig. 18.) 



Corre.'ponds with Ompliolm. The species fissured is Ago/rlca^ (Eccilio.) 

 Po.rkenS'i, Fr., for specimens of which I am indebted to Mr. C E. Broome. 

 Averagesize of spores '00027 in. — W. G. S. 



286. Agaricus (Eccilia) carneo-griseus. B, S; Br. " Flesh - 



grey Eccilia." 



PileiB umbilicate, greyish-flesh colour, finely striate, margin 

 darkened with micaceous particles ; stem slender, shining, smooth, 

 of the s;me colour, -.vhitish tomentose at the base, hollow upwards; 

 gills disant, adnato-decurrent, sub-undulate, rosy, margin irregu- 

 larly da-kened.— B. ^ Br. Ann. N.H. (1865), no. 1001, pi. xiii. 

 fig-'^' 



Amoigst fir leaves. Aug. Aboyne, Aberdeenshire. 



Spores rregular, rose-coloured. Its closest ally is A. atrides, from which 

 it differs n the smooth stem, delicate colour, &c. — B. <£• Br. 



287. Agaricus (Eccilia) Paxkensis. Fr. '" UmbOicate 



Eccilia." 



Pleus membranaceous, plano-convex, strongly umbilicate, quite 

 smo'th, brown when moist, blackish when dry ; stem fistulose, 

 shor, attenuated downwards, smooth, brown ; gills decurrent, 

 crowded, whitish, then dingy flesh colour. — Fr. Monogr.p. 301. 



Ii grassy places. Elmhurst. 



Pilus scarcely an inch broad, striate to the middle, not hygrophanous ; 

 stemhort, scarcely 1 in. (PI. III., jig. 18.^ 



288. Agaricus (Eccilia) rhodocylis. Lasch. "Roseate 



Eccilia." 



PIbus membranaceous, rugulose,floccose, soft, umbilicate, then 

 infunlibuliform ; stem stuffed, slender, incurved, even, smooth ; 

 gills trongly decurrent, distant, thick, whitish. — Ann. Nat. Hist. 

 no. 9(1. Fr. Epicr. p. 160. 



