284 OUTLINES OF BKITISII FUNGOLOGY. 



ten. t. T. ; Quel. t. 18, /. 1 ; Schteff. t. III., 265, 266 

 Jacq. Austr. t. 172; FI. Dan. t. 1197. 

 Ou stump. Epping Forest. 



19. P. frondosus, Fr. ; tufts 6-12 in.; very much 

 branched, fibrous-fleshy, toughish; pileoli very numerous, 

 h—2 in., fuliginous-grey, dimidiate, rugose, lobed, intricately 

 recurved ; flesh white ; stems growing into each other, 

 white ; pores rather tender, very small, acute, white. — Sv. 

 dtl. Sv. t. 44; Kromh. t. 48, /. 17-20; Rostk. ^.18; Fl. 

 Dan. t. 952 ; Paul. t. 29 ; Sterb. t. 28. 



On stumps and roots. Rare. 



20. P. intybaceus, Fr. (p. 240) ; Epping Forest. 



21. P. cristatus, Fr. (p. 240) ; pileoli 3 in. 



B. J^^T^TH.—Pileus Jleshy-pliant, then someivhat coriaceoiis, more or 

 less zoned, fibrous loithin ; 2J0i'es achiate ; tufts lateral, some- 

 u'hat stijiitate, in many imbricated layers ; stems moi'e or less 

 connate, or cjr owing from a common tuber ; tvhite spored ; not 

 edible ; fragile when old ; autumnal and not lasting till foUov:- 

 ing spring ; growing at the base of trunks. 



22. P. giganteus, Fr. (p. 240) ; tufts 1-2 ft. Epping 

 Forest. 



23. P. acanthoides, Fr. ; in many imbricated layers, 

 pliant then coriaceous ; pileoli ferruginous, infundibuliform, 

 inciso-dimidiate, somewhat zoned, longitudinally rugose ; 

 stems connecto-branched, white then rufescent ; pores lamel- 

 loso-sinuate, thin, toothed at edge, white then rufescent. — 

 Bull. t. 486 ; Pers. Ic. Pict. t. 6. 



On trunks. Penzance. 



