20 OUTLINES OF BRITISH FUNGOLOGY. 



On grassy ground. Hothorpe, etc. 



103. A. (Tricholoma) cuneifolius, Fr. (p. 102) ; \-\ in. 

 Epping Forest. 



Var. griseo-riniosus, Baiseh ; larger than type ; pileus 

 concentrically rimose ; gills broad, somewhat distant. 



In grassy places. Kew. 



** Gills chawjimj colour, rufescent, or becomimj cinereous or 

 spotted. 



lOi. A. (Tricholoma) crassifolius, B. (p. 100); 2-4 in. 



105. A. (Tricholoma) tumidus, P. ; pileus 3 in., 

 cinereous-livid, variegated with spots, fleshy, irregular, 

 undulate, bullate, at length riraosely incised, shining when 

 dry, margin thin ; flesh white ; stem solid, stout, fleshy, 

 fibrous, striate, shining white, often attenuated into a root 

 at base; gills emarginate, thick at the base, somewhat 

 distant, shining white, at length cinereous-rufescent. 



In moist pine woods. Coed Cech, etc. 



Var. Keithii, Phill. and Ploiv. ; pileus cinereo-rufescent ; 

 stem dirty white with innate brownish fibres, tinged with 

 red at base. 



In pine woods. Forres. 



106. A. (Tricholoma) murinaceus. Bull. (p. 100) ; 

 4^ in. 



107. A. (Tricholoma) virgatus, Fr. ; pileus grey-cine- 

 reous, umbo often darker, rigid, dry, even in rainy weather, 

 streaked with fine black lines, broken into squamules when 

 old ; flesh thin, cinereous-whitish ; stem solid, firm, equal 

 or tuberous at base, striate, smooth or squaraulose, whitish, 

 white within; gills broadly emarginate, crowded, at length 

 hoary. 



