94 AGARICIN"!. 



coming pale ; gills rounded, adnexed, seceding, serrulated, dirty 

 flesli colour. — Fr.Epicr.j^.l'iC). I>vll.t.b34:. I{uss.u.t.4:2. Berk. 

 Outl. 1. 1 J. 6. Bolt. t. G9. Buxb. iv. t. 6. 



In gardens, &c. 



Pileus 4 in. or more across, gregarious, lurid, when dry grey and rather 

 shining, virgate, and spotted. 



260. Agaricus (Entoloxna) rhodopolius. Fr. " Eosy 



Entoloma." 



Pileus slightly fleshy, campanulate, then expanded, at length 

 slightly depressed, hygrophanous ; margin flexuose, broken ; stem 

 hollow, nearly equal, smooth, white, pruinose above ; gills adnate, 

 sinuate, white, then roseate. — Fr. Epicr. p. 147. Bolt.t.Q. Fl. 

 Dan. 1. 1736. Kromhh. t. 66, f. 17-22. 



In woods. Sept. [Cincinnati.] 



Pileus about 3 in. across ; pileus when young fibrillose, soon smooth, when 

 moist livid or tawny ; margin slightly striate, when dry shining, with a satiny 

 lustre. Spores very irregular ; average diameter •00027 in- 



261. Agaricus (Entoloma) znajalis. Fr. " Cinnamon 



Entoloma." 



Pileus between fleshy and membranaceous, campanulate or con- 

 vex, umbonate, even, smooth, hygrophanous ; margin expanded, 

 repand; stem fistulose, twisted, striate, whitish, tomentose at the 

 base : gills nearly free, crenate, pallid, then roseate. — Fr. S. M. 

 p. 205. B. ^- Br. Ann. N.H. 1865, no. 998. 



In woods. Coed Coch, Denbighshire. 



Sub-csespitose. Pileus cinnamon-colour, when dry ochraceous, 2-3 in. broad. 

 Stem 3-4 in. long, 2-3 lines thick, twisted; gills free, ventricose. 



262. Agaricus (Entolozna) costatus. Fr. " Costate 



Entoloma." 



Pileus rather membranaceous, convexo-bullate, then nearly 

 plane, sub-umbilicate, undulate, smooth, hygrophanous ; stem 

 hollow, short, deformed, sub-striate, grey, whitish-squamulose 

 above ; gills nearly free, entire, transversely ribbed, pallid. — Fr. 

 Epicr.p. 147. Ann. N.H. no. 679. 



In meadows. Oct. Common. 



Pileus 2 in. or more, livid, tawny, or with a scorched appearance, shining; 

 stem 2 in. long, 3-4 lines thick. Eeadily distinguished by the distant broad 

 gills, which are rounded behind, and nearly free, traversed at length by 

 waved ribs, and with their margin undulate, and not discoloured. Smell 

 none; spores irregular, sub-globose, with a globular nucleus. — M, J. B. 



