AGAPJCINL 43 



214. A. (CoUybia) longipes, Bull (p. Ill) ; 3-4 in. 



215. A. (CoUybia) platyphyllus, Fr. (p. 114) ; 3-4 in. 

 Epping Forest. 



Var. repens, Fr. ; pileus more fleshy than type, depressed ; 

 stem hollow, compressed, pruinate at apex, with a creeping 

 string-like mycelium. 



216. A. (CoUybia) semitaUs, Fr. ; pileus 1-4 in., 

 black, fuliginous or smoky-livid, hygrophanous, when dry 

 pallid cinereous-yellow or grey, fleshy-cartilaginous, thin, 

 convex then plane ; margin inflexed then plane and pellucid- 

 striate ; flesh white when dry ; stem somewhat hollow, 

 tough, elastic, attenuated from the bulbous or bluntly 

 rooted base, fibrilloso-striate, fuscous or cinereous-white, 

 naked at apex ; gills obtuse behind, adfixed in the form of 

 a ring with a small decurrent tooth, somewhat distant, 

 broad, white, then cinereous, spotted black when touched, 

 at length black. 



By road-sides after rain. Coed Coch. 



217. A. (CoUybia) fusipes, Ball. (p. 115) ; 1^ in. 

 Epping Forest. 



Var. cedematopus, Sclueff. ; pileus rufous-date-browu, 

 conical, then plane, pulverulent ; stem stout, ventricose, 

 fibrillose, pulverulent ; gills pallid. 



On trunks. Glamis. 



** Gills crotoded, narrow. 



218. A. (CoUybia) maculatus, A. and S. (p. 115) ; 

 3-5 in. Epping Forest. 



219. A. (CoUybia) fodiens, Kalchb. ; pileus fleshy, 

 firm, convex, obtuse, margin iuflexed, even, smooth, flesh- 

 colour, becoming yellowish, darker and gibbous in centre ; 

 stem hollow, tough, somewhat ventricose, often longitudi- 



