T A B. LXXVI. 



AGARICUS TERREUS. IFitb. v. 3. 311. 



Occasionally a very common plant, particularlj' 

 in pine groves, clullering and often forming very large 

 circles. Sometimes it grows erecf^, and the whole fur- 

 face is fmooth ; more generally cracked and dillorted, 

 or aHuming variety of appearances. See Schxffer's 

 A. multiformis^ tab. 14. undoubtedly a fportivc variety. 



T A B. LXXVII. 

 AG ARICUS AUREUS. Bull. t. 92. 



F I L A M E N TOS U S . Schctff. /. 209. 



vJx ftumps of hornbeam, &c. not very common, 

 fometimes 24 inches in circumference. 1 have gene- 

 rally found it in September, varying but little in colour 

 or other rcfpects. I believe it but little known in the 

 perfect ftate, and perhaps a variety of this may be 

 the A. pilofus of Withering, 295, confounded with 

 A. foccofus, which I can fliew by fpecimens to be a 

 diftin(5l plant. May not this be Schacifer's A. obfcurus 

 alfo? 



T A B. LXXVIII. 



PEZIZA COCCI NE A. Hudf. 636. Bull. t. 474. Scb.rff. 

 t. 148. 



1 HAVE many dried fpecimens of this plant, and 

 cannot agree \\\i\\ Dr. Withering, that it is the fame 

 fpecies with P. cpidcndra. 



