368 OUTLINES OF BRITISH FUNGOLOOY. 



veil white, appendiculate ; flesh brownish ; gills subventri- 

 cose, aduate, brown, then purple brown, paler at edge. 



On stumps. 



31« (p. 187). C. (Phlegmacium) testaceus, Cke. ; pileus 

 2^-4 in. ; fleshy, convex, then flattened and obtusely 

 umbonate or depressed, brick-red, rather vinous, growing 

 paler with age, smooth, even, viscid ; stem attenuated 

 upwards from a sub-maginate bulbous base, whitish above, 

 becoming rufous about the base, solid, longitudinally 

 fibrously striate below ; flesh rather flesh coloured, be- 

 coming ruddy at apex and base ; gills broad, scarcely crowded, 

 adnate, a little emarginate behind, dusky cinnamon. 



On the ground. 



51a (p. 192). C. (Myxacium) nitidus, Fr. ; 2-5 in.; 

 pileus fleshy, convex, then plane or depressed, smooth, 

 viscid, discoid, tan-colour; stem somewhat stufted, clavate, 

 elastic, white, at first viscid, Avhitish-mealy at apex, then 

 naked and dry ; gills equally attenuated, decurrent, 

 crowded, narrow, clay-colour. 



On the ground. 



Ilia (p. 205). C. (Telamonia) lucorum, Fr. ; pileus 

 even, when moist bay-brown, with a tinge of brick-red ; 

 stem firm, clavate, fibrillose, of one colour, pallid; gills 

 emarginate, rather distant, watery cinnamon, with a fuga- 

 cious tinge of violet flesh colour. 



On the ground. 



117a (p. 207). C. (Telamonia) croceofulvus, D. C. ; 

 4 in.; pileus fleshy, flattened, umbonate, even, orange- 

 tawny ; stem solid, equal, yellow, becoming reddish, zoned 

 with an orange line, pale at the apex ; gills adnate, becom- 

 ing ferruginous. 



In woods. 



