Rev. M. J. Berkeley and Mr. C. EK. Broome on British Fungi. 58 
stem, and adnate clay-coloured gills, occurred in immense quan- 
tities at the above-mentioned locality. 
1121. A. (Naucoria) autochthonus, n.s.  Pileo obtuso, hemi- 
spherico, ochreo-albo, sericeo, margine flocculoso ; stipite tenui, 
flexuoso, sursum basique albo-lanato incrassato; lamellis mel- 
leis horizontalibus distincte dente adnatis. 
On the naked soil. Woodnewton, Norths. 
Pileus } inch across; stem ? inch high, not half a line thick 
in the centre. Spores paler than in 4. furfuraceus, 00019 inch 
long (those of A. furfuraceus ‘00022 inch long). It does not 
become pallid in drying, like that species, but is of an ochraceous 
white from the first. It is probably a very common species. 
1122. A. (Naucoria) escharoides, Fr. Ep. p. 201. 
On the bare ground. Apethorpe, Aug. 16, 1865. 
Exactly the plant of Scheffer, t. 226. 
Pileus campanulate, obtuse, slightly fleshy, umbonate or umbi- 
licate, sometimes plane, hygrophanous, innato-squamulose, often 
venulose, tawny, at length pallid; veil white, evanescent ; stem 
flexuous, nearly equal, clothed with white fibrils, pale, ringless, 
fistulose; gills broad, bright cinnamon, distant, fixed, acute 
behind, at length seceding ; spores ‘O006--00065 ineh long, of 
a pure ochre, not peroxidate. Brittle. 
1123. A. (Galera) aleuriatus, Fr. Ep. p. 203. 
On rotten sticks, &e. . Coed Coch, Oct. 26, 1865. 
An extremely pretty species, exactly according with a figure 
from Fries. 
1124. A. (Galera) mycenopsis, Fr. Ep. p. 208. 
In marshy ground, in a wood amongst Sphagna. King’s 
Cliffe, Aug. 18, 1865. 
Our plant belongs to a variety, mentioned by Fries, with ad- 
nate gills. 
Pileus with the margin clothed with little white scales, the 
remains of the veil; stem slightly furfuraceous above; gills 
adnate, not merely fixed with a tooth. 
The species occurred also in Oct. at Pont Gyffyng, between 
Bettws and Capel Curig, and near Lake Idwell, where Ag. semi- 
lanceatus was abundant, with pallid gills entirely devoid of 
spores. 
1125. A. (Galera) paludosus, Fr. Ep. p. 209. 
In marshy ground in a wood, amongst Sphagna. King’s 
Cliffe, Aug. 18, 1865. 
1126. A. (Hypholoma) hydrophilus, Bull. t. 511. 
In woods, &c. Not uncommon in England. Coed Coch, 
Oct. 23, 1865. 
This species was described in the ‘ English Flora,’ but was by 
some accident omitted in the ‘Outlines of English Botany.’ 
