64 OUTLINES OF BRITISH FUNCOLOGY. 



On grassy ground in fir woods, (jlarais. Epping 

 Forest. 



336. A. (Mycena) pelliculosus, Fr. (p. 128) ; ^1 in. 



337. A. (Mycena) vulgaris, P. (p. 128) ; i in. 



338. A. (Mycena) eitrinellus, P. ; gregarious ; pileus 

 ^ m., lemon -yellow, darker at disc, becoming pale, mem- 

 branaceous, campanulate, then hemispherical and flattened, 

 striate; stem fistulose, filiform, smooth, lemon-yellow, 

 villous at base ; gills uncinate, alternate, distant, moderately 

 broad, shining white. 



In pine woods. Uncommon. 



339. A. (Mycena) plicato-crenatus, Fr. ; pileus ^ in,, 

 white then light yellow, very thin, conical, somewhat 

 umbonate, sulcato-plicate and crenate without a separable 

 pellicle ; stem filiform, pallid reddish, internally light yellow, 

 smooth ; gills ascending, narrow, attenuated behind, adnate, 

 with a snuall decurrent tooth, distant white. 



Among heath. Coed Coch. 



340. A. (Mycena) roridus, Fr. ; \ iii. Popping Forest. 



VIII. Basipedes. — Stem dilated into a 'disc or swollen into a 

 minute bulb at base. 



341. A. (Mycena) stylobates, P. (p. 129) ; ^ in. 



342. A. (Mycena) tenerrimus, B. (p. 129) ; -\jin. 



343. A. (Mycena) discopus, Lev. ; shining white ; pileus 

 conical, obtuse, mealy-pulverulent ; stem very tender, mealy 

 pulverulent, with a small hairy bulb ; gills adnate, few, very 

 distant, plicose. 



On twigs. Very small. 



344. A. (Mycena) sacchariferus, B. and Br. ; whitish, 

 everywhere beset with shining granules ; pileus ^ in., 

 hemispherical ; stem long, filiform, fixed at the base by a 



