LEUCOSPORI. 63 



whitish ; flesh becoming fuscous. Gills easily separating from the Tricholoma. 

 hymenophore, rounded-free, crowded, broad, 4-6 mm. (2-3 lin.), 

 fragile, white then becoming cinereous, darker than the pileus. 



Very various in stature. Gregarious. The stem is sheathed at the base in a 

 peculiar manner with the floccose, compact, white mycelium. It might perhaps 

 be regarded as a species of JPaxillus, on account of the gills easily separating 

 from the hymenophore. 



In woods. Frequent. Aug. 



Smell rather disagreeable, pungent ; the stem, however, when broken smells 

 like new meal. B. & Br. Spores 5 mk. W.P. Name cinis, ashes. Be- 

 coming ash-colour. Bull. t. 428. /. 2. Fr. Monogr. ii. p. 287. Hym. Eur. p. 

 73. Berk. Out. p. 106. B. & Br. n. 787. S. Mycol. Scot. n. 74. Vivian 

 t. 20. C. Illust. PL 170. Lepista C. Hbk. n. 545. 



120. A. panseolus Fr. Pileus about 7.5 cent. (3 in.) broad, 

 cinereous-fuliginous, variegated with grey -pruinose spots and often 

 guttate, fleshy, not thick, but firm, convex then becoming plane or 

 here and there depressed, obtuse, here and there repand and ex- 

 centric, even ; flesh alike of the pileus and stem spongy, absorb- 

 ing moisture, white when dry, but the pileus by no means hygro- 

 phanous. Stem 2.5 cent, (i in.) or little more long, 12 mm. 

 (}4 in.) thick, solid, tough, elastic, externally fibrous, internally 

 spongy, smooth, naked, unpolished, whitish-grey. Gills emargi- 

 nate or rounded, at length somewhat decurrent when the pileus 

 is depressed, very crowded, quite entire, plane, 4 mm. (2 lin.) broad, 

 white then grey or dingy rufescent. 



Odour none. The spotting on the pileus gives it a marbled appearance. 



In grassy places. Street, Somerset, &c. Autumn. 



Spores 3x5 mk. W.P. Name Trai/aioAos, variegated. Fr. Monogr. \.p. 87. 

 Hym. Eur. p. 73. Icon. t. 36. /. 2. C. Illust. PL 97. 



121. A. duracinus Cke. Pileus 7.5 cent. (3 in.) diameter, cin- 

 ereous, fleshy, compact, firm, convex, broadly umbonate, dry, 

 smooth, shining, margin involute. Stem 7.5 cent. (3 in.) long, 

 attenuated upwards, 3 cent. (\% in.) thick at the base, nearly 2.5 

 cent, (i in.) at the apex, solid, striate below, reticulate squamose 

 above, rather paler than the pileus ; flesh nearly white. Gills 

 narrow, little more than 2 mm. (i lin.) broad, crowded, emargi- 

 nate, arcuate, cinereous. 



Fleshy disc nearly an inch thick. Whole fungus cinereous and firm. Allied 

 to A. tigrinus Fr. 



On the ground under cedar. Kew, 1883. Oct. 



Name diirus, hard, acinus, berry. Grevillea, vol. xii. p. 41. 



