374 Rev. M. J. Berkeley and Mr. C. E. Broome on British Fungi. 



904 A. (Eccilia) rJiodocalyx, Lasch. in Linn. 1839^ no. 567. 

 On tops of walls at Lincoln, Sept. 1860. 



This has just the habit of A. umbelliferus. 



^A. (Pholiota) spectabilis, Fr. El. p. 28, Ep. p. 166. 



Fries informs us that Ac/, aureus of the * Introduction to 

 British Fungology ' is certainly A. spectabilis of the ' Epicrisis,' 

 and not A. aureus. Fries, indeed, refers Sowerby's plant to his 

 A. aureus, but that is clearly the same with our plant ; therefore 

 at present we must consider A. aureus, Fr., as a stranger to the 

 British flora. 



905. A. (Hebeloma) fastihilis, Fr. Ep. p. 178. Belvoir, on 

 the borders of the Plantations, Sept. 1860. 



The old A. fastibilis comprises several species. The present, 

 which is the plant to which Fries attaches the name in the 

 ' Epicrisis,' has a distinct veil. 



906. A. (Hebeloma) punctatus, Fr. El. p, 30. In pine woods. 

 Lea, near Gainsborough, Sept. 1860. 



907. A. (Hebeloma) versipellis, Fr. Ep. p. 179. 



Amongst fir-leaves. Mossburnford, A. Jerdon, Esq., Aug. 16, 

 1860. Smell like that of several species of Hymenogaster ; not 

 unpleasant. 



908. A. (Hebeloma) mesophaus, Pers. Myc. Eur. iii. p. 173. 

 In pine woods; common. Apethorpe; Lea, near Gains- 

 borough; Mossburnford, &c. 



909. A. (Flammula) ^oca/er, n.sp. Csespitosus, subcarnosus; 

 pileo convexo fulvo, fibrillis niveis adsperso; stipite deorsum 

 attenuato, e squamis sericeis, albo, fistuloso, intus umbrino ; la- 

 mellis latiusculis adnatis ferrugineis. 



On stumps of lime. Colleyweston, Oct. 2, 1860. 



Csespitose. Pileus 2 inches across, convex, expanded, tawny, 

 somewhat zoned in drying, sprinkled with white fibrils, rather 

 fleshy ; flesh tawny at the edge and beneath the cuticle, else- 

 where white ; stem 1^ inch high, ^ thick, attenuated down- 

 wards, furfuraceous within the pileus, white, with silky scales, 

 hollow, umber within ; gills moderately broad, rounded behind, 

 adnate, scarcely ventricose, wrinkled transversely, ferruginous ; 

 edge white. Spores ferruginous ; ring none. 



The habit is that of A. velutinus. Its proper place seems to 

 be next to A. scambus. 



Plate XIV. tig. 1. A.jloccifer, nat. size and vertical section. 



910. A. (Naucoria) carpophilus, Fr. Obs. i. p. 45. 



On dead beech-mast and leaves. Colleyweston, Sept. 19, 

 1860. 



911. A. (Naucoria) conspersus, Pers. Ic. et Descr. t. 12. f. 3. 

 On the ground in woods. Colleyweston, Sept. 20, 1860. 



