192 OUTLINES OF BRITISH FUNGOLOGY. 



ochraceous when dry, naked at apex ; gills adnate, with a 

 decurrent tooth, plane, attenuated in front, crowded, clay- 

 colour, then ferruginous. 



Under polars and oaks. Among grass near trees. Ashton 

 Park, Bristol. 



51. C. (Myxacium) livido-ochraceous, B. (p. 186) ; 1 in. 



it Delibuti. — Veil entireli/ viscid ; stem viscid, notfloccoso- 

 j)ero')iate ; loith a varnished appearance when dry. 



* Gills ivhitish, then clay colour. 

 No British species. 



** Gills at first violaceous, dark blue or reddish. 



52. C. (Myxacium) salor, Fr. ; pileus grey, bright viola- 

 ceous at the thin inflexed margin, at length same colour, 

 obtusely conical or parabolic, campanulate, at length flat- 

 tened with a broad umbo, even, thinly viscous, fibrillose 

 towards margin when dry; stem solid, conico-attenuated 

 from the bulbous base, white, when young covered to the 

 apex with the azure-blue glutinous veil, when old pale, 

 softer; gills adnate, distant, at first pale grey, edge viola- 

 ceous or bluish-grey, when full-grown grey-clay-colour or 

 cinnamon. 



In woods. Coed Coch. 



53. C. (Myxacium) delibutus, Fr. : pileus 2-3 in., light 

 yellowish, fleshy, thin, convex, then flattened, obtuse, at 

 length somewhat depressed, viscid with hyaline gluten, 

 slightly silky-fibrillose when the gluten disappears ; stem 

 stuffed or hollow upwards, equally attenuated from the 

 slightly bulbous base or somewhat equal, elastic, viscous as 

 far as the scanty fibrillose fugacious cortina, when dry var- 

 nished, yellowish- white, white at apex; gills aduate, at 



