16 OUTLINES OK IlKfTISH FUXCIOLOGV. 



browu or rufescent^ paler or whitish at circumference, com- 

 pactly fleshy, obtuse, flexuous, smooth, unstreaked, granu- 

 late or guttato-spotted, viscid, margin bent in ; stem solid, 

 hard, at first in the form of a bulb, villous with whitish 

 squaranles, then somewhat equal, rather smooth, white ; gills 

 deeply emarginate, somewhat free, crowded, at first very 

 narrow, shining white, then broader and rufescent. 



In fir woods, chiefly pine. Rare. Said to be edible. 



83. A. (Tricholoma) stans, Fr. ; pileus rufescent, com- 

 pact, viscid, even, not granulated or spotted ; flesh reddish 

 under the cuticle ; stem solid, somewhat equal, squamu- 

 lose ; gills rounded, white, spotted red. 



There are two forms, cum pest r is and montana, the first 

 with a short stem and broad pileus, growing in deciduous 

 groves, the second with elongated stem and smaller pileus 

 growing in mountainous pine woods. 



Coed Coch, etc. 



84. A. (Tricholoma) russula, Schceff. ; pileus 3-4 in.,, 

 fleshy, convex, then depressed, obtuse, granulate, viscid, 

 rosy flesh-colour ; stem solid, firm, nearly equal, rosy, 

 squamulose at apex ; gills rounded then decurrent, rather 

 distant, white, a little spotted with red. 



Under trees. Kew. Taste mild. 



85. A. (Tricholoma) frumentaceus, Fy. ; pileus 2-3 in., 

 whitish or clay-colour and variegated rufous, fleshy, viscous, 

 dry in fine weather, even, smooth ; flesh white ; stem solid, 

 equal, fibrillose when dry, whitish ; gills rounded, somewhat 

 crowded, rather broad, at length rufous-spotted. 



Has all the appearance of an l<]ntoloma, see the plant 

 described by Berkeley, A. (Entofoma) fr anient aceus. — Bull, 

 p. 144, No. 222. 



On the ground. 



