158 OUTLINES OF BRITISH FUNGOLOGY. 



gills roimded-adnexed, veutricose, dry, grey, then black- 

 fuscous, edge whitish. 



In mountain wood. Rannoch, 



802. A. (Hypholoma) piinctiilatus, Kalch. ; pileus 

 fleshy, thin, convex, dry, pallid, squamuloso-punctate froju 

 the veil, then naked ; stem stuffed, pallid, clad with punc- 

 tiform squamules up to the ring ; gills sinuately adnate 

 with a decurrent tooth, broad, rather crowded, pallid, then 

 pale umber. 



On chips, etc. 



***** Appendiculati, — Pileus smooth, hy<jro2)hanous. 



803. A. (Hypholoma) lanaripes, Cke. ; somewhat 

 csespitose; pileus l|-3 in., pallid, disc tawny or brownish, 

 rather fleshy, campanulate, then expanded, hygrophanous, 

 squamose with superficial scales from the breaking up of 

 the cuticle, veil attached in fugacious patches, margin 

 thin; stem white, hollow, fragile, somewhat fibrilloso tomen- 

 tose at base ; gills reaching the stem whitish, then purplish - 

 brown. 



On soil in conservatories. 



804. A. (Hypholoma) CandoUeanus, Fr. (p. 170) ; 2-4- iu. 

 Epping Forest. 



805. A. (Hypholoma) appendiculatus, Btdl. (p. 170) ; 

 2-3 in. Epping Forest. 



A. (Hypholoma) felinus, Passer. ; gregarious ; sub- 

 csespitose ; pileus fleshy, membranaceous, hemispherical, 

 then expanded, smooth, hygrophanous, ochraceous ; stem 

 fistulose, short, thin, rather shining-white, incrassated at 

 base and rather floccose, striate at apex ; gills adnate, white, 

 then fuscous — A. catarius. Fr. Hym. Eur. 



On ground, among grass. 



