DERMINI. 265 



Stem 5 cent. (2 in.) and more long, 6 mm. (3 lin.) thick, solid, Flammula. 

 becoming smooth, equal. Gills deeply decurrent, arcuate, crowded. 



Caespitose, most distinct. Stems ascending. 

 On pine sawdust. Munsted. 



Name yu/xi/6?, naked; TTOVS, a foot. Smooth-stemmed. Bull. t. 6oi.f. i. 

 Fr. Hym. Eur. p. 244. C. Illust. PL 431. 



590. A. vinosus Bull. Pileus ferruginous-fawn, fleshy, ex- 

 panded, at length depressed, dry, delicately flocculose. Stem 

 solid, firm, somewhat thickened at the base, delicately flocculose 

 like the pileus. Gills decurrent, crowded, simple, narrow, ferrug- 

 inous. 



On the ground. Very rare. Morfa, Conway, &c. 



From the figure of Bulliard the pileus is very fleshy at the disc and very thin 

 at the margin, and the gills very decurrent. Fries thought it might be a 

 species of Paxillus, but Berkeley is now satisfied that it is a true Flammula. 

 Spores 5 mk. B. & Br. Name vinum, wine. Wine-coloured. Bull. t. 54. 

 Fr. Hym. Eur. p. 244. B. &> Br. n. 1943. C. Illust. PI. 437. 



591. A. floccifer B. & Br. Pileus 5 cent. (2 in.) broad, tawny, 

 sprinkled with snow -white fibrils, somewhat fleshy, convex, ex- 

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

 where white. Stem 4 cent. (\y z in.) long, 6 mm. (3 lin.) thick, 

 fistulose, attenuated downwards, white, with silky scales, umber 

 within, furfuraceous within the pileus. Ring none. Gills moder- 

 ately broad, rounded behind, adnate, scarcely ventricose, wrinkled 

 transversely, ferruginous, edge white. 



Spores ferruginous. Casspitose. The pileus is somewhat zoned in drying. 

 The habit is that of A. velutinus. 



On stumps of lime. Colleyweston. Oct. 



a flock of wool ; fero, to carry. From the white woolly 

 fibrils on the pileus. B. & Br. n. 909. t. 14. /. i. C. Hbk. n. 340. Illust. 

 PI. 438. A. Fr. Hym. Eur. p. 245. 



592. A. decipiens Smith. Pileus 2.5 cent, (i in.) broad, rich 

 brown, becoming pale, umbo almost white, fleshy, convex, dry, 

 minutely squamulose ; flesh pallid. Stem 5 cent. (2 in.) long, 

 rich tawny, often swollen, attenuated downwards, twisted, striate. 

 Gills decurrent, crowded, moderately broad, luminous brown. 



Flesh within golden-yellow, bright brown at base. Ring none. Inclined to 

 be fasciculate. Though at a first glance it resembles A. carbonarius, it differs 

 greatly in the attachment of the gills, which are adnate in A. carbonarius. 



On burnt earth, charcoal, &c. Epping Forest. June. 

 Spores bright tawny, oval, or with an apiculus at one end, 6x4 mk. W.G.S. 



