260 OUTLINES OF lUHTISH FUNGOLOGY. 



with au ad'.iate tooth, ventricose, whitish theu ochraceous 

 egg-yellow, connected by veins ; stem stuffed, lacunose, 

 white, here and there sprinkled with rosy meal. 

 In woods. Taste and odour pleasant. 



60. R. ochracea, A. and S. ; pileus fleshy, soft, piano- 

 depressed, thin, pellicle viscid, shining, margin thin, sulcate ; 

 flesh ochraceous ; stem spongy, stuffed, soft, striate ; gills 

 touching the stem, broad, scarcely crowded, same colour. 



In fir woods. 



61. R. lutea, Fr. (p. 2U) ; 1-2 in. Epping Forest. 



62. R. nauseosa, Fr. ; pileus variable in colour, typi- 

 cally purplish at disc, livid, becoming pale and whitish, 

 laxly fleshy, thin, at first piano-gibbous, then depressed, 

 viscid in wet weather, sulcate and somewhat tubercular at 

 the somewhat membranaceous margin ; flesh soft, white ; 

 stem spongy-stutted, slightly striate, white ; gills aduexed, 

 ventricose, somewhat distant, light yellow, theu dingy 

 ochraceous. 



In woods, chiefly pine. Coed Coch. Taste mild, but 

 nauseous. 



63. R. vitellina, Fr. ; 1 in. 



64s R. chamaeleontina, Fr. ; pileus 1-2 in., thickly 

 fleshy, soon flattened, sometimes oblique, with a thin, sepa- 

 rable, viscid pellicle, at first flesh colour, yellow at disc, 

 then wholly yellow, margin even, then slightly striate ; 

 stem thin, somewhat hollow, slightly striate, white; gills 

 more or less adnexed, thin, crowded, equal, narrow, some- 

 what forked, light yellow-ochraceous. 



In woods. Rare. Epping Forest. 



