AGAEICIXI. 129 



tiaa silky-fibrillose, appendiculate ; gills aduate, with a 

 decurrent tooth, very crowded, linear, whitish, at length 

 fuscous-clay colour. 



669. A. (Flammula) inopus, Fr. (p. 158) ; 2-4 in. 

 Epping Forest. 



A. (Flammula) apicreus, Fr. ; somewhat csespitose ; 

 pileus yellow, then pale and tan, disc tawny, fleshy, thin, 

 rather plane, even, smooth, moist ; stem hollow, equal, not 

 rooted, ferruginous fibrils at base ; gills adnate, crowded, 

 thin, shining, ferruginous. 



Ou rotten trunks. In pine wood. Glamis. 



IV. Sapinei. — Pileus scarcely pelliculose, not viscous ; gills light 

 yellovj, then tcnony. 



670. A. (Flammula) hybridus, Fr. (p. 158) ; 2 in. 

 Epping Forest. 



671. A. (Flammula) sapineus, Fr. ; somewhat csespi- 

 tose ; pileus 1-4 in., golden-tawny, opaque at disc, paler and 

 shining towards margin, fleshy, compact, hemispherical, 

 then convexo-plane, obtuse, dry, floccoso-squamulose or 

 rimoso-scaly ; flesh firm, then soft, yellow ; stem stout, 

 irregular, fleshy-fibrous, sulcate, lacunose, naked, pallid 

 yellow, turning fuscous when bruised, rooting ; gills adnate, 

 crowded, golden, at length tawny-cinnamon. 



On pine-branches, chips, and sawdust, and on charcoal 

 heaps in woods. Uncommon. 



672. A. (Flammula) liquiritise, P. ; gregarious ; pileus 

 1-3 in., bay-brown or orange-tawny, then pale, slightly 

 fleshy, convex, then flattened, somewhat umbonate, even, 

 smooth, moist, margin at length flaccid and striate ; flesh 

 thin, yellow ; stem hollow, attenuated upwards, often un- 

 equal and curved, striate, almost naked, tawny, then ferru- 



I 



