on healthy graffes, &c. and not oozing out, or in the 

 leall degree appearing to grow from them. Some- 

 times it runs over dead leaves, &c. in woods and 

 other places. It decays like the laft, varying according 

 to the weather, and is often fmpother coated, in fome 

 parts occafionally whiter, as if bleached. It occurs 

 after rain in autumn. 



Fig. 3. R. CARNOSA. Bull. ^ii\. fig. \. 



THIS cafually falls (if I may fo fay) on thriving 

 graffes, &:c. It is very nearly allied to R. alba., being 

 cottony, like that, on the outfide, but more condenfed 

 within, holding a black powder in fomewhat laby- 

 rinthiform cells, like the two former. 



P'lG. 4. R. CEREA. 



PERHAPS a variety of the lail:; dried fomewhat 

 ^vaxy before it was quite ripe, as fometimes happens 

 'to fome of the Fungus tribe. 



TAB. CD. 



Fig. I. LYCOPERDON echiniformis. 



1 H I S may poffibly be a variety of L. fmiplex^ t. i'j2 > 

 The cracks in the Ikin are perhaps caufed by drying 

 fuddenly. 



Fig. 2. L. Epidendrum. 



A VARIETY in a very luxurious and moift ftate, as 

 I have often dete6led it in Kenfmgton Gardens, though 

 in fmaller quantities. 



Fig. 3. The same in a latkr state. 



THESE two figures are taken from drawings made 

 by Mifs Browne, of Netherfet, near Norwich, 



Fig. 4. MucoR fulva, 



THIS grew on rats' dung. The ftipes is of a rranf- 

 parent white, tapering upwards ; the head round, com- 

 pofed of a yellow powder, with a few pellucid drops of 

 moiflure attached to it in different parts. 



