AGAlilGINI. 55 



with yellow strigose down at base, even, smooth, livid-pale ; 

 gills veutricose, atteuuato-adnexed, almost free, connected 

 by veins, becoming livid-green, orange, edge toothed or 

 fiocculoso-pencilled. 



In silver-fir wood. Perth. Smell strong. 



279. A. (Mycena) elegans, P. (p. 121) ; h in, Epping 

 Forest. 



280. A. (Mycena) rubro-marginatus, Fr. (p. 122) ; 1 in. 

 Var. fusco-purpureus, Lasch ; purple-brown ; stem 



finely striate, with a rooting villous base ; gills eroded, 

 edge brown. 



On willow trunks. 



281. A. (Mycena) strobilinus, Fr. (p. 122) ; h in. 



Var. coccineus ; same as type, but gills not darker at 

 the edge. 



282. A. (Mycena) rosellus, Fr. (p. 122). 



II. Adoxid.e. — Colour pure, bright^ not becoming fuscous or 

 cinereous. 



283. A. (Mycena) pvirus, P. (p. 122) ; A-3 in. Epping 

 Forest. 



284. A. Mycena pseudo-purus, Cke. ; pileus 1 in., 

 rosy, then pale, rather fleshy, campanulate, then convex, 

 expanded, obtusely umbonate, smooth ; margin obscurely 

 striate ; stem slender, hollow, rigid, straight, even, naked, 

 at first rosy-white, then brown ; gills adnate, whitish. 



In woods. Coed Coch. 



285. A. (Mycena) zephirus, Fr. ; pileus 1 in., livid- 

 reddish, white flesh-colour, disc sometimes fuscous, some- 

 what membranaceous, diaphanous, campanulate, obtuse, 

 striate to the middle, smooth ; stem fistulose, equal or 

 attenuated upwards, slightly striate, white-squamulose at 



