AGAKICINI. 15 



** Gills changing colour, commonly with reddish spots. 



76. A. (Trichiloma) colossus, Fr. ; pileus 8 in., brick 

 colour, the whitish margin involute, hemispherical, at length 

 piano-depressed, l)roken up into scales, slightly viscid round 

 margin in wet weather ; flesh hard, dry, and fibrous, turn- 

 ing to a flesh-brick-red colour when broken ; stem solid, 

 oblique, two coloured, compact, base ovato-bulbous, apex 

 constricted, shining white ; gills rounded-free, at first 

 narrow, crowded and white, then broader, more distant and 

 pallid, brick-red. 



Under firs and elms. Taunton. Odour strong like 

 cheese. 



77. A. (Tricholoma) nictitans, Fr. (p. 98) ; 2 in. Epping 

 Forest. 



78. A. (Tricholoma) fulvellus, Fr. (p. 98) ; 1-2 in. 

 Epping Forest. 



79. A. (Tricholoma) flavo-brunneus, Fr. (p. 98) ; 3-6 in. 

 Epping Forest. 



80. A. (Tricholoma) albo-brunneus, Pers. (p. 98) ; 3 in. 

 Epping Forest. 



81. A. (Tricholoma) ustalis, Fr. ; pileus 3 in., brown- 

 rufous, fleshy, not compact, at first umbonate, then plane, 

 even, smooth, unstreaked, slightly dotted at the disc ; flesh 

 white, becoming here and there red where broken ; stem 

 stuffed, then hollow, equal, somewhat rooted, dry, fibrillose, 

 whitish or rufescent, not mealy at apex ; gills emarginate, 

 with a small decurrent tooth, crowded, rather broad, at 

 length rufescent. 



In woods, chiefly pine. Rare. Odourless. Epping 

 Forest. 



82. A. (Tricholoma) pessundatus, Fr. ; pileus bay- 



