Messrs. Berkeley and Broome on British Fitngi. 13o 



developed. Species of Coprimis occasionally occur without a 

 trace of spores. 



1561. H. cinereus, Fr. Ep. p. 413 ; Atl. 8vamp. tab. 30. 

 Coed Cocli, Mrs. Lloyd Wynne. Great Elm, Somerset, 



C. E. Broome. Rannocli, Dr. Buchanan White. Exactly 

 according with the upper figures in the plate cited above, and 

 surely distinct from H. pratensis. 



1562. Bussuki oltvacea, Fr. Ep. p. 445. 

 Slough, M. Terry, Esq. 



1563. B. gahckroa, Fr. Ep. p. 447 ; Bull. tab. 509 L, M. 

 Slough, M. Terry, Esq. 



1564. B. pedinata, Fr. Ep. p. 449 ; Bull. tab. 409 n,o, p. 

 Glamis, Rev. J. Stevenson. Smell like that of B.foetens. 



Pellicle separable. Exactly resembling the two latter figures 

 of Bulliard, which he refers rather doubtfully to B. hetero- 

 phylla. 



1565. Cantharellus Haughtoni^ Phillips, MS. Pileo tenui, 

 convexo, umbilicato, glabro ; stipite gracili, apice incrassato, 

 primum subtiliter fibrilloso; lamellis subdecurrentibus angustis 

 pallide carneis. 



Hereford, W. Phillips and others. 



Pileus 1 inch or more across, thin, dirty white, with a tinge 

 of flesh-colour. Stem 2 inches high, 1 line thick, slightly 

 thickened above, minutely fibrillose, stuffed, rooting at the 

 base, which is more or less cottony. Gills scarcely forked, 

 narrow, slightly decurrent. Sometimes 2 inches across. Allied 

 to C. albidus, and possibly included by Fries, but very dif- 

 ferent from the ' Flora-Danica ' plant recorded before under 

 no. 1421. 



1566. ]\[arasm{us f^/c7^?oe,Fr.Ep.p.479. M.grammetis,Liev. 

 On the base of grasses. Hereford, J. Renny. Undoubtedly 



L^veill^'s plant, but possibly a mere form of M. stijntarius. 



1567. Lentinus pulveruhntus^ Fr. Ep. p. 482. Agariciis 

 jmlverulentus, Scop. Carn. p. 434. 



Glamis, Rev. J. Stevenson. 



Tufted, at first infundibuliform, then lateral flabelliform, 

 fuliginous, floccoso-pulverulent, with little umber particles; 

 stem elongated, at length smooth ; gills thick, pallid, deeply 

 decurrent, their edge crenulate but not torn. Pileus 2 inches 

 across, stem 3 inches high. This seems to be truly the plant 

 of Scopoli. 



1568. Polyporus Jloccopus, Rostk. tab. 13. 

 Glamis, Rev. J. Stevenson. 



Fries remarks that it is a question whether this species is 

 not a form of Poli/2^07'us hrwnaUs ; but it appears to us quite 

 distinct. 



