132 OUTLINES OF BRITISH FUXGOLOGY. 



rather fleshy, hemispherical, rather viscid, yellowish ; stem 

 thiu, becoming hollow, equal, short, longitudinally striate ; 

 gills very broad, nearly free, rhomboidal, convex, ochraceous 

 flesh-colour. 



On the ground. Epping Forest. Dr. Cooke considers 

 this plant to be a Nolanea with pale salmon-coloured, not 

 ochraceous, spores ; some species of Flammula have tawny- 

 ochraceous spores. 



G81. A. (Naucoria) hamadryas, Fr. ; pileus lv-2 in., 

 bay-brown-ferruginous, then pale yellowish, slightly fleshy, 

 convex, then expanded, gibbous, even, smooth ; stem hollow, 

 equal, smooth, pallid, somewhat fragile ; gills attenuato- 

 adnexed, somewhat free, slightly ventricose, crowded, 

 ferruginous, opaque. 



On the ground in woods. Brandon. 



682. A. (Naueoria) cidaris, Fr. ; pilous 1-2 in., clay- 

 cinnamon, then tan, slightly fleshy at disc, membranaceous 

 round the undulated margin, conical, then campanulate, 

 smooth, slightly striate at margin ; flesh white when dry ; 

 stem fistulose, attenuated from apex to base, somewhat 

 compressed, flexuose, smooth, tough, mostly fuscous-black ; 

 gills adfixed, separating-free, ascending, ventricose, crowded, 

 honey-colour or cinnamon-clay. 



In pine woods. Hereford, 



683. A. (Naucoria) cucumis, P. (p. 159) ; 1-1 i in. 



684. A. (Naucoria) anguineus, Fr. ; pileus 2 in., pale 

 yellowish or rufous, then somewhat tan, slightly fleshy, 

 campanulate, then convex, gibbous, smooth, with a super- 

 ficial silky zone near margin when young ; stem somewhat 

 hollow and flexuose, densely white-fibrillose, bay-brown ; 

 gills somewhat free, crowded, somewhat linear, dull pallid, 

 ilien ferruginous.. 



