AGAEICINI. 181 



adnatCj crowded^ at first whitish, then clay colour, edge 

 unequal. 



In mixed woods. Glamis, etc. 



3. C. (Phlegmacium) turmalis, Fr. ; pileus yellow-tan, 

 frequently darker at disc, compact, convex then plane, 

 obtuse, even, smooth or obsoletely piloso-virgate, when 

 young veiled with pruinate fugacious villous down, soon 

 naked, viscid ; flesh white ; stem solid, hard, cylindrical or 

 attenuated at base, shining white when dry, when young 

 sheathed with a white woolly veil, at length naked ; 

 cortina fibrillcse, superior, persistent in form of a ring, at 

 length ferruginous ; gills variously adnexed, rounded, 

 emarginate, or decurrent with a tooth, crowded, serrated, 

 white then clay colour. 



Chiefly in beech woods. In mixed woods. Glamis. 



4. C. (Phlegmacium) erassus, Fr . ; pileus 3-5 in., 

 thickly fleshy, plane or depressed, of one dirty yellow 

 colour, opaque, disc smooth, elsewhere strigose with innate 

 fibrils ; stem stout, plump, fibrillose, white, mealy at apex ; 

 gills rounded, crowded, entire, pallid, then clay colour. 



In moist woods. 



5. C. (Phlegmacium) balteatus, Fr. ; pileus 3 in., 

 compact, flattened, viscid, soon dry and broken up into 

 innate flocci ; margin becoming somewhat bluish, silky, 

 inflexed ; stem plump, solid, at first tomentose ; apex 

 velvety and as well as the cortina and flesh white ; gills 

 emarginate or decurrent, crowded, entire, whitish. 



In dry places, chiefly in pine woods. 



6. C. (Phlegmacium) sebaceus, Fr. ; pileus 2^-5 in., 

 fleshy, colour of tallow, growing pallid, expanded, some- 

 what repand with a pruinose whitish veil, rather viscid ; 

 flesh white ; partial veil fugacious, delicate, white ; stem 



