100 OUTLIXKS OF BRITISH FUNGOLOGY. 



In fir-woods. Taste mild. Stem stuffed, at length hol- 

 low. 



41. A. (Tricholoma) vaccinus, P. ; pileus fleshy, at first 

 campanulate, umbonate, dry, rough with floecose scales; 

 margin involute, tomentose ; stem hollow, equal, fibrillose ; 

 gills fixed, rather distant, at length rufous. 



In fir-woods. East Bergholt, Br. Badham. Nassington, 

 Northamptonshire. Taste disagreeable. 



45. A. (Tricholoma) crassifolius, Berk.; pileus fleshy, 

 waved, minutely adpresso-squamulose, umbouate, ochraceous ; 

 disc umber; stem solid, nearly equal, pruinose ; gills thick, 

 modcj'ately distant, nearly free, at length yellowish, stained 

 with broAvn. 



In fir-woods. Winkbourn, Notts. Pileus 2-4 inches 

 across. Smell rather strong. 



46. A. (Tricholoma) murinaeeus, Bull. ; pileus thin, firm, 

 brittle, at first campanulate, then expanded, cracked, streaked, 

 silky, dry; stem stout, cracked, and streaked with minute 

 black scales, solid ; gills very broad, undulated, distant, more 

 or less anastomosing, brittle, cinereous, often marked with 

 raised lines; edge at length black. — Sow. t. 106. 



In woods. Not common. Taste bitter, unpleasant ; odour 

 not nitrous. Not an Hygrophorus, and very different from 

 H. murinaeeus, Fr. 



47. A. (Tricholoma) terreus, Sc/ieeff. ; inodorous ; pileus 

 fleshy, soft, at first campanulate, dry, umbonate, clothed with 

 innate floecose or scaly down ; stem stuffed, nearly equal, 

 dirty white, adpresso-fibrillose ; gills adnexed, with a decur- 

 rent tooth, crenulate, pale grey. — Sow. t. 7Q>. 



In woods, especially fir-woods. Common. This species 

 varies, with white and yellowish gills. A. millus, Sow., is a 

 form of this, or of one of the following species. 



