48 FUNGUS-FLOE A. 



Pileus without a distinct pellicle, all one colour, dark purple, 

 Tolood-red, &c., opaque, not becoming pale, 3-4 in. across ; 

 gills hardly crowded, rarely connected by veins, with but 

 few short intermediate ones, distinctly anastomosing behind. 

 (Fries.) 



Russula chamaeleontina. Fr. 



Mild. Pileus 1-2 in. across, plane or slightly depressed, 

 pellicle separable, rather viscid ; margin even at first then 

 slightly striate, deep rose-red, purplish-lilac, the disc or 

 every part soon becoming yellowish, or sometimes yellowish 

 from the first; gills slightly adnexed or free, narrow, 

 ihin, closely crowded, or somewhat forked, yellow ; stem 

 1-3 in. long, about 2 lines thick, white, indistinctly 

 wrinkled, imperfectly hollow; spores globose, ochraceous, 

 78 fji, diameter. 



Russula chamaeleontina, Fries, Epicr., p. 303; Cke., Hdbk., 

 p. 338 ; Cke., Illustr., pi. 1 098. 



In woods, especially pine. 



Inodorous. Very fragile and slender; usually small, but 

 Pries says that the pileus is sometimes 3 in. across. Known 

 among the small species with ochraceous gills and spores by 

 the deep rose-red or purplish pileus, and absence of smell. 



In mixed woods, especially pine. Sweet, inodorous, very 

 fragile, small. Stem somewhat hollow, up to 3 in. long, but 

 thin^ slightly striate, white. Pileus thin, soon expanded, 

 1-2 in. across, sometimes oblique, with a thin, viscid, se- 

 parable pellicle, at first flesh-coloured, soon losing colour, 

 the disc becoming yellowish, and at length entirely yellow. 

 Gills more or less adnexed, thin, crowded, equal, narrow, 

 ochraceous-yellow. (Pries.) 



Russula puellaris. Fr. 



Mild. Pileus 1-1| in. across, flesh almost membranaceous 

 except the disc ; conico-convex then expanded, at first rather 

 .gibbous, then slightly depressed, scarcely viscid, colour 

 peculiar, purplish-livid then yellowish, disc always darker 

 and brownish; tuberculosely striate, often to the middle; 

 .gills adnate but very much narrowed behind, thin, crowded, 

 white then pale yellow, not shining nor powdered with 

 the spores ; stem 1-1 1 in. long, 2-4 lines thick, equal, soft, 



