150 FUNGI OF EAST DORSET. 



of Daggons Road Station. Belt of woodland E. 

 side of St. Giles' Park. 

 T. saponaceum Fr. (Lat., soapy, as to odour). 



Woods ; rather common. Castle Hill Wood. 

 Sutton Holms. 

 T. virgatum Fr. (Lat., striped). 



Pine woods ; infrequent. Plantation S. of 

 Daggon Road Station. 

 T. sulphureum Fr. (Lat., sulphur-coloured). 



In woods ; poisonous. Goatham. Great Down 

 Copse. Witchampton. 

 T. lascivum Fr. (Lat., playful, sporting from type). 



In mixed woods ; rare. Furze Common Copse. 

 T. album Schaeff. (Lat., white). 



In woods ; rare. Great Down Copse. 

 T. personatum Fr. (Lat., wearing a mask). " Blewits." 

 Not common. Furze Common Copse, W. R. 

 Linton. A pale form, var. sacrum, open Down a 

 little S. of Beckington Beeches. 



T. nudum Bull. (Lat., naked, from the glabrous margin). 

 Common in woods. Castle Hill Wood. Creech 

 Hill Wood, St. Giles. Withy Beds, Crichel. 

 Furze Common Copse. Belt E. Fide of St. Giles' 

 Park. Witchampton. 

 T. grammopodium Bull. (Gr., with lines on the stem). 



Rare ; edible. Branksome Park. Great Down 

 Copse. 



Genus 6. CLITOCYBE Fr. (Gr. elites, a steep slope, kube, 

 head, from the decurrent gills of the genus). Stem 

 externally fibrous. 



C. nebularis Batsch. Lat., nebula, a cloud, the pileus 

 being cloud-grey). 



Esculent and of good flavour ; frequent. 

 Cranborne. Furze Common Copse. Witchampton. 

 C. clavipes Pers. (Lat., club-footed, the stem being 

 swollen at the base). 



