33 



BRITISH FUNGI. 

 By M. C. Cooke. 



CContinued frcyni Yol. iii., page 186.J 



Agaxicus (Lepiota) cinnabazinus. Fr. Epicr. ed. n.,^.36. 



Pileus fleshy, soon flattened, obtuse, granulose-mealy, persistently 

 vermilion ; stem stuffed, somewhat bulbous, squamosa below the 

 ring ; gills free, lanceolate, white, — Ag. granulosus v. cinna- 

 harinus, Alb. & Sch., 147. Fl. Dan. t. 1795 (gills incorrect). 

 Berk. ^ Br. Ann. N.H., No. 1402. 



In pine woods. New Pitsligo. 



Pileus 2-3 inches broad, flesh pallid, taste mild. 

 Agaxicus (Azmillaria) subcavus. Schum. Fr. Ej)icr., ed. ii., p. 46. 



Pileus submembranaceous, convex, somewhat plane, viscid, striate 

 to the middle, disc rather fleshy, umbonate ; stem fistulose upwards, 

 equal, punctulate, even above the torn ring ; gills plane, decurrent , 

 white.— /Sc/mw. in Flor. Dan. t., 1843. Berk. ^ Br. Ann N.H., 

 No. 1403. 



On the ground. Cirencester. Nov. 



Slender, wholly white, except the umber umbo. 



Agazicus (Tzicholoxna) panaeolus. Fr. Ic. t. 36, /. 2. 



Pileus between spongy and compact, convexo-plane, variegated 

 with pruinose grey spots ; margin inllexed, repand ; stem solid, 

 short, fibroso-striate, gills arcuate, adnate, somewhat crowded, 

 grey or dirty rufous. — Fi: Epicr. ii., 73. Berk. (|- Br. Ann. N.H., 

 No. 1404. 



On the groimd. Street (J. A. Clark). 



Agazicus (Tzicholoma) paedidus. Fr. Ic. t. 46, /. 1. 



Pileus somewhat fleshy, tough, convex, then flattened, depressed 

 about the conical umbo, fibrillose, becoming smooth, moist ; 

 margin involute, naked ; stem stuffed, short, somewhat striate ; 

 gills sinuate-decurrent, crowded, narrow, white, then grey. — Berk. 

 ^ Br. Ann. N.H., No. 1405. 



In fields. Abergavenny (J. Renny). Wollaston (Miss Hume). 

 Agazicus (Clitocybe) diatzetus. Fr. Epic. U.,p. 104. 



Inodorous ; pileus somewhatfleshy, convex, then plane, depressed, 

 even, smooth, hygrophanous ; stem stuffed, then hollow, elastic, 

 even, straight, smooth and naked above ; gills decurrent, with an 

 acute tooth, crowded, narrow, white. — Berk. 4' Br. Ann. N.H., 

 No. 1406. 



In pine woods. Coed Coch. 



Gathered at the same time with A. fragrans, from which it was 

 at once distinguished by the total absence of the particular odour 

 of that species. 



Agazicus (Clitocybe) angustissimus. Fr. Ic. t. 59./. 2. 



Hygrophanous, inodorous ; pileus rather fleshy, thin, convex, 

 then plane or depressed, even, smooth, whitish ; stem stuffed, then 



