262 OUTLINES OF BRITISH FUXGOLOGY. 



delicately fibrillose, rooting at the more or less cottony base; 

 gills somewhat decurrent, narrow, scarcely forked, pallid 

 flesh colour. 



On the ground. Hereford. 



** Pilevs someivhat membranaceous, stem tnh^dar, polished. 



9. C. tiibseformis, Fr. (p. 216) ; 1—1 in. Epping 

 Forest. 



Var. lutescens, Fr. ; pileus convexo-umbilicate, rather 

 even, somewhat regular ; stem more equal, attenuated up- 

 wards ; gills less divided. 



10. C. infundibuliformis, Fr. (p. 216) ; 1-2 in. Epping 

 Forest. 



11. C. cinereus, Fr. (p. 216) ; 1-2 in. 



12. C. cupulatus, Fr. ; pileus k in., pallid fuscous when 

 damp, becoming pale, somewhat rufescent, when dry mem- 

 branaceous, plano-infuudibuliform, repand, not zoned, wheu 

 moist smooth, striate at margin, when dry even, flocculose; 

 stem stufted, equal, tense and straight, tough, smooth, paler 

 than pileus ; gills decurrent, very distant, branched and 

 simple, bi'oad, obtuse at edge, grey. 



In waste places. Rare. 



13. C. Stevensoni, B. and Br. ; pileus ^ in., pallid, 

 orbicular, nmbilicate, smooth, margin inflexed ; stem 

 cylindrical, delicately pulverulent, white, then darker ; gills 

 decurrent, pallid, becoming fuscous in front. 



On rotten stump among moss. Glamis. 



14. C. reflexus, Fr.; pileus membranaceous, campanulate, 

 convex, expanded and inverted, striate, fuscous, then cine- 

 reous ; stem fistulose, smooth, thickened above ; gills adnate, 

 decurrent. connected by veins, distant, branched and dimi- 

 diate, hoary white. 



