818 Rev. M.J. Berkeley and Mr. C. E. Broome on BritishFungi, 



We have little hesitation in referring this to L. pubescens, 

 though the margin is tomentose rather than fibrillose — a circum- 

 stance scarcely sufficient to justify us in considering it as an 

 undescribed species. It seems to be just what Krombholz figures 

 at tab. 13. figs. 1, 2. 



1016. L. cyathuhf Fr. Syst. Myc. p. 66. 



In woods. Aboyne, Aberdeenshire, Aug. 1862. 



Pileus plane, at length depressed or infundibuliform, lJ-2 

 inches across, opake, slightly viscid, obtuse or obscurely um- 

 bonate, somewhat zoned, of a pallid flesh-colour ; stem spongy, 

 stuffed, 1^-2 inches high, ^ inch thick, nearly equal, at length 

 compressed, shining with a silky aspect ; gills narrow, crowded, of 

 a yellowish flesh-colour, subdecurrent ; milk white, not changing 

 colour, at length acrid ; smell somewhat like that of bugs. 



^Cantharellus cinereus, Er. Syst. Myc. p. 320. 



Burnham Beeches, Bev. G. H. Sawyer. Hampshire, Mrs. 

 Wynne. In both cases abundantly. Not gathered before in 

 England since the time of Bolton. 



1017. Marasmius languidus, Fr. Ep. p. 379. (Pers. Myc. Eur. 

 iii. p. 110, t. 26. fig. 6.) 



Coed Coch, Denbighshire. On dead leaves of grass. 



The specimens agree very closely with A. grossulus, Pers., 

 quoted above, the gills being more decurrent than in the typi- 

 cal form. Persoon, in the text, quotes fig. 2, not fig. 6 ; but it is 

 clearly a slip of the pen. 



1018. M. angulatus [A. anguIatuSjVevs.Mycl^u.v. iii. p. 155, 

 tab. 26. f. 3, 4). 



On grass. Cefn, Denbighshire, just above the Bone-cave. 

 Very diff'erent from M, Vaillantii, to which Fries refers it. 



1019. Lentinus fimbriatus, Curr. /. c. p. 151, tab. 25. f. 2. 

 On a stump in a pond. Lewes, F. Currey. 



1020. Boletus variecolor, n. s. Pileo convexo subtomentoso 

 olivaceo, margine involuto ; came sub cute atro-purpureo ; sti- 

 pite bulboso sursum attenuato apice reticulato, deorsum lute- 

 scente, sursum rufescente subtiliter pubescente ; tubulis minutis 

 liberis luteis. 



Deeside, Aberdeenshire, Aug. 11, 1862. 



The flesh of the pileus and stem is pale, here and there in- 

 , dining to yellow, and partially marbled. 



This species is just intermediate between the sections Subto- 

 mentosi and Calopodes of Fries, approaching B. subtomentosus in 

 habit, but with the bulbous reticulated stem of the latter. 



Plate XIII. fig. 3. a. B. variecolor, nat. size ; b. section of ditto. 



*-B. cyanescens, Bull. t. 369. 



Mr. Cooke has lately met with this interesting species on the 



