218 TBICHOLOMA 



622. T. albobrunneum (Pers.) Fr. (= Tricholoma striatum (Schaeff.) 



Quel.) Barla, Champ. Alp. Marit. t. 27, figs. 7-11. 



Albus, white; brunneum, brown. 



P. 7-5-10 cm., rich brown, or chestnut, fleshy, compact only at the 

 papillose disc, campanulate, then hemispherical, viscid, streaked with 

 innate fibrils; margin incurved, often wrinkled-crenate. St. 4-5 x 2-5- 

 4 cm., rufescent, constantly white at both ends, equal, dry, apex white mealy. 

 Gills white, becoming pale, or rufescent, rounded emarginate, scarcely 

 crowded, very broad, 6 mm. and more wide, firm. Flesh white, scissile. 

 Spores white globose, or elliptical, 4-6 x 4/x, 1-guttulate. Taste mild. 

 Edible. Coniferous woods. Sept. Nov. Common, (v.v.) 



623. T. irregulare Karst. In, not; regulare, regular 

 P. 10 cm., pale, tinged tawny rufous, convex, then expanded, very 



irregular, rather viscid, fibrillosely virgate. St. 6-9 x 1-5-3 cm., white, 

 equal, curved, apex fiocculose. Gills white, then reddish, or spotted, 

 emarginate. Flesh white. Spores white, subglobose, 3-4 x 2-3/it. 

 Smell strong of meal. 



624. T. ustale Fr. Gonnerm. & Rabenh. t. 14, fig. 2. Ustale, burnt. 

 P. 3-8 cm., bay brown rufous, disc darker, fleshy, not compact, 



hemispherico-expanded, umbonate at first, soon plane, obtuse, viscid, 

 smooth. St. 5-7 cm. x 12 mm., rufescent, apex whitish, equal, some- 

 what rooted, dry, fibrillose, often rufous scaly downwards. Gills white, 

 at length rufescent, emarginate, with a small decurrent tooth, crowded, 

 rather broad. Flesh white, becoming reddish in places when broken. 

 Spores white, subglobose, 5 x 4-5/x, 1-guttulate. Taste bitter. Pine 

 woods, and under larches. Sept. Oct. Not uncommon, (v.v.) 



625. T. pessundatum Fr. Holland, Champ, t. 21, no. 39. 



Pessundatum, ruined. 



P. 6-9 cm., bay brown, or rufescent, paler or whitish at the margin, 

 compactly fleshy, convex, then expanded, very obtuse, granulate, or 

 guttato-spotted, viscid. St. 5-7-5 x 2-5 cm., white, covered with small, 

 brownish granules, bulbous at first, then somewhat equal. Gills white, 

 then rufescent, deeply emarginate, somewhat free, crowded. Flesh 

 white. Spores white, globose, 5/x, 1-guttulate. Smell of new meal, 

 taste acid, and bitter. Edible. Fir woods, heaths, and pastures. 

 Sept. Oct. Uncommon, (v.v.) 



626. T. stans Fr. (= Tricholoma striatum Schaeff. sec. Quel.) Fr. 



Icon. t. 28, as Tricholoma pessundatum Fr. Stans, standing. 



P. 7-12 cm., rufescent, compact, convex, then flattened, smooth, 



viscid. St. 5-7-5 x 1-5-2 cm., whitish, tinged rufescent, squamulose, 



somewhat equal. Gills whitish, stained reddish on the margin, rounded 



behind, crowded. Flesh reddish under the cuticle. Spores white, 



