226 OUTLINES OF BRITISH FUNOOLOGY. 



10. P. involutus, Fr. (p. 195) ; 3-5 in. Epping Forest. 



11. P. leptopus, Fr. ; pileus li-3 in., fuscous-yellowish, 

 excentric or lateral, depressed, gibbous in naiddle, fleshy, 

 thin, dry, downy, soon torn into fuscous or yellowish villous 

 scales ; flesh yellow ; stem short, somewhat incurved, 

 attenuated downwards, yellow within ; gills decurrent, 

 not anastomosing, tense and straight, crowded, narrow, 

 yellowish, then darker, not spotted when touched. 



On the ground, about stumps. Forres. Glen Tilt. 

 Kenmore. 



12. P. atrotomentosus, 7?cr/5c// (p. 195); 2-4 in. Epping 

 Forest. 



13. P. crassus, Fr. ; pileus fleshy, oblique, nearly plane, 

 becoming even and ferruginous ; stem stuffed, excentric, 

 short, ascending ; gills decurrent, broad, rather distant, 

 straight, cinnamon. 



On mound of rifle-butts. Dr. Cooke considers this to 

 belong rather to Flammula than Paxillus. 



14. P. panuoides, Fr. (p. 196) ; 1^ in. 



15. P. fagi, B. and Br. ; gregarious ; crisped, pallid 

 upwards, orange beneath ; gills crisped, orange. 



On beech stump. 



Genus 7. HYGROPHORUS (p. 197). 



Tribe 1. Limacium. — Universal veil viscid, with occasionally a 

 JlocGose partial veil, annular or marginal ; stem clothed with 

 scales, or more frequently rcith dots above; gills adnato- 

 decurrent. 



* ]\-7iite or yelloiuish ivhite. 



1. H. chrysodon, Fr. (p. 197); 2-3 in. Epping Forest. 



2. H. eburneus, Fr. (p. 197) ; 2-3 in. Epping Forest. 



3. H. cossus, Fr. (p. 197) ; iHn. Epping Forest. 



