AGAPJCINI. 201 



somewhat cartilaginous, attenuated upwards, often twisted, 

 white-tomentose at base, ciunamou or reddish, with red 

 fibrils, often villous at apex ; cortina red ; gills aduatC;, 

 almost linear, crowded, thin, reddish cinnamon, then fer- 

 ruginous. 



In mixed woods. Ledbury. 



90. C. (Dermocybe) cinnatoarinus, Fr. ; pileus 2-3 in,, 

 scarlet-red, fleshy, campanulate, thin, flattened, obtuse or 

 obtusely umbonate, silky, then smooth, shining and obso- 

 letely silky; flesh paler; stem solid, equal, or bulbous, 

 fibrillose or striate, scarlet-red, reddish brick-colour in- 

 ternally ; cortina fibrillose, lax, cinnabar ; gills adnate, 

 somewhat decurrent, somewhat distant, connected by veins, 

 unequal and darker at edge, dark blood-colour when 

 bruised. 



In beech woods. Street, etc. Epping Forest. 



91. C. (Dermocybe) sanguineus, Fr. (p. 190) ; \-\h in. 

 Epping Forest, 



92. C. (Dermocybe) anthracinus, Fr. ; pileus dark 

 chestnut or brown-fuscous, fleshy at the umbonate disc, 

 otherwise thin, convex then expanded, umbo persistent, 

 becoming fibrillose, even or smooth ; flesh dark, same as 

 pileus ; stem fistulose, equal, fibrillose, intense blood-colour, 

 fuscous towards base ; gills adnate, crowded, deep fiery-red, 

 blood-red when bruised. 



In woods. Coed Coch, 



93. C. (DermocybeJ cinnamomeus, Fr. (p. 190); li— 1 

 in. Epping Forest. 



Var. semisanguineus, Fr. ; gills blood-red. 

 Var. croceus, Fr. ; smaller ; pileus, somewhat squamu- 

 lose ; gills less crowded, becoming yellowish. 



94?. C. (Dermocybe) croceo-conus, Fr. ; pileus rather 



