FUNGI OF EAST DORSET. 153 



C. radicata Rehl. (Lat., having a root). 



In woods ; edible. Castle Hill Wood. Belt of 

 wood E. side of St. Giles' Park. 

 C. maculata A. and S. (Lat., spotted). 



Pine woods. Plantation S. of Daggon's Road 

 Station. Ferndown, Mrs. Pr ingle. Copse near 

 Mt. Pleasant. 



C. butyraeea Bull. (Lat., buttery, from the sticky 

 pileus) . 



Rather common in woods. Castle Hill Wood. 

 Plantation near Cranborne. Furze Common Copse. 

 C. velutipes (Curt.) Fr. (Lat., velvet-footed, from 

 the velvety stem). 



Gregarious ; on trunks and stumps. Elm 

 stump, Edmondsham. Ferndown. Belt on E. 

 side of St. Giles' Park. 



C. confluens Pers. (Lat., from the closely gregarious 

 habit). 



Among leaves in woods ; rare (absent from 

 Rayner's New Forest list). Creech Hill, St. Giles. 

 Furze Common Copse. 

 C. conigena Pers. (Lat., evolved from fir-cones). 



Growing on dead half -buried cones of Scotch fir 

 in woods ; not uncommon. Branksome Park. 

 Broadstone. Furze Common Copse. Lower 

 Mannington Plantation. 



C. cirrhata (Schum.) Fr. (Lat., curled, from the slender 

 twisted stem). 



Among moss ; rare. Castle Hill Wood, and in 

 a copse near it. 

 C. tenacella (Pers.) Fr. (Lat., somewhat persistent). 



Chiefly pine woods ; not common. Ferndown, 

 Mrs. Pringle. Witchampton. 

 C. dryophila (Bull) Fr. (Gr., oak-loving). 



In oak woods, among dead leaves ; said to be 

 common. Castle Hill Wood. Plantation near 

 Cranborne . Ferndown . 



