AGAEICi:EfI. 67 



In fir woods, on leayes, or naked soil. [S. Carolina.] 



Stem 1 in. and more long, villous at the base. Pileus thin, papillate, even 

 Tvhen dry, 3-5 lin. broad ; gills scarcely | lin. broad. Spores "0002 X "OOOlSin. 



Sect. 3. Rigidipedes — stem firm, rigid. 



179. Agaricus (Mycena) proliferus. Soiv. " Proliferous 



Mycena." 



Pileus somewhat fleshy, carapanulate, then expanded, dry, with 

 a broad darker umbo ; margin at length silicate ; stem firm, rigid, 

 smooth, shining, minutely striate, rooting ; gills adnexed, sub- 

 distinct, white, then pallid. — Fr. Epicr.p. 105. Sow. t. 1G9. 



On soil in gardens. Inodorous. 



Densely casspitose; stem frequently proliferous. Stem pallid above, but be- 

 low tawny or bay ; pileus pallid, disc darker and obtusely umbonate j margin 

 somewhat striate, and at length cracked. 



180. Agaricus (IVIycena) rugosus. Fr. " Paigose Mycena." 



Pileus somewhat fleshy, campanulate, then expanded, with un- 

 equal elevated wrinkles, cinereous; stem firm, tough, smooth, 

 pallid, strigose below ; gills arcuato-adnate, uncinate, connected 

 by reins, sub-distant, whitish grey. — Fr. Ep. p. 106. B. ^' Br. 

 Ann.X.H.lS66,no.9dO. Bull.t.olS.f. K.JI. 



On a prostrate oak. Sep. Bodelwyddan. 



" Pileus at first campanulate, then convex, sulcate up to the ambo, cinere- 

 ous, as well as the short compressed stem, which is glabrous above ; gills dis- 

 tant, cinereous, uncinato-adnate, connected by veins." — B.djBr. 



181. Agaricus (Mycena) galericulatus. Scop. "Little-cap 



Mycena."' 



Pileus submembranaceous, conico-campanulate, then expanded, 

 striate to the umbo, dry, smooth ; stem rigid, polished, even, 

 smooth, base rooting, fusiform; gills adnate, with a decurrent 

 tooth, connected by veins, whitish, or flesh-coloured. — Fr. Epicr. 

 ;?. 106. BuU.t.DlS.f.C.D.E. Hopn.t.4.J.l. Paul. 1. 122 J. 1. 

 Eng. Fl. \.p. 58. Price/. 55. 



On trunks of trees. Very common. [United states.] 



Often densely caespitose, sometimes scattered. Pileus 3-9 lines broad, some- 

 times larger, campanulate or conical, often subumbonate, at length depressed, 

 innato-fibrillose. striate, brownish-white, ^vith sometimes tints of blue or 

 yellow ; gills rather distant, not so broadly adnate as in ^4. nJcaliiiuSy some- 

 times nearly free, often pinkish ; stem variable in length, rigid, smooth, ex- 

 cept at the base, which is densely strigose. Inodorous, insipid. — J/. /. B. 



