THE MUSHROOM FAMILY. 525 



Ayaricus Fibula. Among moss, a common and pretty little fungus, 

 of a yellowisli orange colour, the stalk scarcely more than an 

 inch high, with a pileus half an inch broad. 



cyathiformis. P. 



Bolton, ii. 59 (as A. sordidus). 



ostreatus. S. Very fine near Ashton-upon-Mersey. 



Curtis, i. 145. 



palmatus. S. Newton Heath. 



stypticus. S. 



Bolton, ii. 72, Fig. 1 (as A. hetulinus). 



prunulus (The Mouceron). P. Mobberley. (Mr. Holland.) 



squarrosus. S. 



Curtis, ii. 290 (as A.floccosus). 



rimosus. W. 



geophyllus. W. Easily distinguished by the disagreeable 



odour of its pretty satiny and usually lilac pileus, scarcely an 

 inch broad. 



furfuraceus. S. 



melinoides. P. 



• involutus. W. Hough End Clough. 



Bolton, ii. 55 (as A. adscendens). 



variabilis. S. 



Georgii. P., often near haystacks. 



campestris (the common mushroom). P. 



Bolton, ii. 45. 



precox. P. 



Bolton, ii. 67, Fig. 1 (as A. durus). 



semiglobatus. P. 



Curtis, i. 145 (as A. glutinosus). 



cEruginosus. P. W. Dunham Park. 



Curtis, ii. 363. 



fascicularis. S. Hough End Clough. 



Bolton, i. 29. 



semiovatus. On foul substances. 



Bolton, ii. 53 (as A. ciliaris). 



fiyniputris. Similar habitats. 



disseminatus. On the ground, above buried wood or old 



stumps, especially of willows, yellowish, an inch high, and 

 growing in tufts of hundreds together. 



