T A B. CCXXI. 

 AGARICUS nvBRiDUS. 



v_.OMMON on fome parts of Epping-foreft, in Sep- 

 tember and Odober : I have fcen it but feldom elfe- 

 Avherc. It partakes a little of the charaders of fome 

 other Agarics ; I have therefore called it hybridus. 

 The jmIcus fomewhat rcfembles h. ^liitinojus of Curtis, 

 and, like moll of the Fungi, is glutinous in wet wea- 

 ther. 



T A B. CCXXII. 



AGARICUS poLVGRAMMUs. Bull. t. 395. 



1 HE ingenious author of the Herbier de la France, 

 who fo very aptly caught the different appearances of 

 the Agarics, did not let the beautiful fatiny ftriated ap- 

 pearance of this plant efcape his notice. I follow his 

 example in defcribing it as a fpecies, and adopt his 

 fpecilic name, though I fufpedl it may be a variety of 

 A. i-arius of Dr. Withering, clvpeatus of Linnaeus, &c. 

 of which I hope to enable the reader to form a general 

 idea, when I figure the ufual appearance of the plant. 



Some individuals of the Aearic now before us have 

 a very long extent of root or flem under ground. 



T A B. CCXXIII. 



AGARICUS GLAUCOPUS. With. vol. 3. 206. 



1 A M obliged from my own obfervation to fay, I think 

 this and A. violaceus Linn, fee tab. 219, are varieties of 

 A. araneojus., and A. nudus of Bulliard, and alfo \. fuh- 

 purptirofcens of Dr. Withering, w hich IJatfch fecms to 

 have figured, tab. 74, from an half-dried fpccimen, un- 

 der the name of A. obfoletus. 'i hefe and other obvious 

 varieties having been made fpecies, I am afraid of being 

 under the neccHity of adding more figures in order to 

 make all the varieties clearlv underrtood. 



