5« OUTLINES OF UKITISII FUXGOLOGY. 



Oa and near trunks and stumps. Common. Eppiug 

 Forest. Inodorous. 



297. A. (Mycena) sixdorus, Fr. ; pileus 1 in., diaphanous, 

 somewhat membranaceous, convex, umljonate, often 

 irregular, striate, viscous ; stem firm, rooting even, dry, 

 rather smooth ; gills obtusely adnate, without a tooth, broad, 

 thick, somewhat distant, white, then somewhat flesh colour. 



On old stumps. Haywood Forest. Commonly solitary. 



298. A. (Mycena) galericulatns, Scop. (p. 121); 1-2 in. 

 Epping Forest. 



Var. calopus ; stems chestnut colour, united at the base 

 into a fusiform common stem. 

 On stumps. 



299. A. (Mycena) polygrammiis, JluJI. (p. 124) ; 1 in. 

 Epping Forest. 



300. A. (Mycena) parabolicuSjjFr. (p. 124). Epping Forest. 



30 1. A. (Mycena) tintinnabulum, Fr. ; gregarious or 

 csespitose ; pileus 1 iu., date-brown, azure-blue, pale 

 yellowish-fuscous, becoming pale, somewhat membra- 

 naceous, tough, campanulato - convex, plane, scarcely 

 umbonatc, even, somewhat viscid when moist ; stem even, 

 smooth, pallid, tough, white-strigose at base ; gills adnate, 

 decurrent with a tooth, horizontal, thin, crowded, becoming 

 pale and at length slightly inclining to flesh colour. 



On fallen beech trunks. Glamis. Epping Forest. 



302. A. (Mycena) codoniceps, Cke. : minute, t' aiiiv 

 pileus campanulate, scarcely expanding, sulcate, sprinkled 

 with somewhat erect short hairs, wholly umber, stem 

 attenuated downwards, umber below, whitish above, slender ; 

 gills adnate, linear, not crowded, white. 



On tree-fern stems. 



303. A. (Mycena) fiavipes, Quel. ; pileus mem- 



