DERMINI. 



2 97 



This species has occurred with pallid gills entirely devoid of spores. B. & Br. Galera. 

 Name fy<-s, resemblance. Mycena-like. Fr, Monogr. i. p. 395. Hym. 

 Eur. p. 271. Icon. t. 129.7. i. B. & Br. n. 1124. C. Hbk. n. 384. Illust. 

 PI. 467. b. Hoffm. Ic. t. 6. a. 



Subgenus XXVI. TUB ARIA (tuba, a trumpet). Worth. Smith Tubaria. 

 in Seem. Journ. 1870. Stem somewhat cartilaginous, fistulose. 

 Pileus somewhat membranaceous, 

 often clothed with the universal floe- 

 cose veil. Gills somewhat decurrent. 

 Spores ferruginous or (in Phasoti) fus- 

 cous-ferruginous. The species re- 

 ferred to this subgenus were taken 

 from Naucoria and Galera because 

 they correspond with Omphalia and 

 Eccilia. The pileus is, however, dis- 

 tinctly umbilicate or depressed in only 

 a few of them ; the others are placed 

 here on account of their somewhat de- 

 current gills, which are broadest be- 

 hind and triangular. Fr. Hym. Eur. 

 p. 272. 



* Genuini (typical species). Spores ferrug- 

 inous. 

 ** Phaeoti (clouds, dusky). Spores fuscous-ferruginous. 



XXb'UI. Agaricus (Tubaria) 

 furfuraceus. One-half natural 

 size. 



* GENUINI. Spores ferruginous. 



666. A. cupularis Bull. Pileus scarcely 2.5 cent, (i in.) broad, 

 rufescent then light yellowish, hygrophanous, slightly fleshy, 

 piano-depressed, obtuse, even, smooth. Stem 5 cent. (2 in.) and 

 more long, slender, fistulose, naked, attenuated upwards, whitish. 

 Gills decurrent, crowded, tawny. 



On mountainous heath. Creag Maoiseach, Strathtay, 1877. 

 Aug. 



Spores brown-ferruginous. Name cupularis, cup-shaped. Bull. t. 554. 

 /. 2. Fr. Hym. Eur. p. 272. B. & Br. n. 1657. S. Mycol. Scot. n. 353. 



667. A. furfuraceus Pers. Pileus 1-2.5 cent - ( l A~i in.) broad, 

 pale cinnamon, becoming pale, hoary-tan when dry, slightly 

 fleshy, convex and obtuse when young, flattened and umbilicate 

 when more grown, slightly and somewhat pellucidly striate 

 when moist, when dry even and slightly silky, covered chiefly 



