198 OUTLINES OF BRITISH FUXGOLOGY. 



obtuse, honey- colour, hispid, with dense black simple fibrils ; 

 stem bulbous, reticulated, Avith lax black fibrils ; gills 

 rounded, rather crowded, dirty yellow. 

 In shady, moist places, under beeches. 



74. A. (Inoloma) sublanatus, Fr. (p. 188) ; 3-1 in. 



75. A. (Inoloma), arenatus, Fr. (p. 188.) 



70). A. (Inoloma) penicillatus, Fr. ; pileus 1 in,, ferru- 

 ginous-fuscous, tawny when dry, thin, slightly fleshy, convex, 

 minutely umbonate, dry, densely floccoso-scaly, scales innate, 

 dark ferruginous-fuscous ; flesh thin, same colour as pileus ; 

 stem stuff'ed, equal, fragile, squamose, with adpressed, 

 fuscous-ferruginous, concentric scales, paler than pileus, 

 paler and adpressedly silky at apex ; gills separating, plane, 

 somewhat crowded, broad, dark-brown. 



In pine woods. Cabalva. 



Subgenus 4. — Dermocybe (p. 189). 

 * Gills at first ichitish or pallid. 



77 . C. (Dermocybe) ochroleucus, Fr. (p. 189) ; 2 in. 

 Epping Forest. 



78. C. (Dermocybe) decumbens, Fr. ; pileus l-H in., 

 sometimes white, yellowish, silky-shining, not hygrophanous, 

 fleshy, firm, convex, then plane, gibbous, at length obtuse, 

 even, smooth, with a fibrillose pellicle ; stem stuffed, at 

 length hollow, clavato-bulbous downwards, smooth, white; 

 cortina fugacious, white ; gills adnexed, crowded, thin, white, 

 then clay-colour, at length ochrey-cinnaraon. 



In woods and grassy places. Epping Forest. 



79. C. (Dermocybe) tabularis, Fr. (p. 189) ; 1 in. Ep- 

 ping Forest. 



80. C. (Dermocybe) camurus, Fr. ; pileus 2-3 in.. 



