AGARICINI. 103 



111 woods. Not uncommon. Pilcus white, with a slight 

 tiiigc of ochre, often minutely cracked. Stem not always 

 rooting. Smell like that of the last. 



57. A. (Tricholoma) immundus, n.s.; csespitosc, flesliy; 

 pileus at first convex, dirty white, stained with bistre, mi- 

 nutely silky ; margin inflexed, silky or minutely scabrous and 

 squamulose ; stem fibrillose, of the same colour as the pileus ; 

 gills subcinereous, with a pinkish tinge, marked with trans- 

 verse lines, emarginate. 



Amongst short grass, on sheep's dung. On the top of 

 Moelfre-uchaf, Denbighshire, Oct. 1859. Pileus 2 inches or 

 more across. Every part blackish Avhen bruised. Border 

 deflexed ; spores white. Fries, to whom specimens were sent, 

 compares this with A. gangnpnosus and A. graveolens, but it 

 seems distinct from either. The figure of A. fumosus, Pers. 

 Ic, gives some notion of its outward appearance. 



58. A. (Tricholoma) ionides, Bull. ; pileus fleshy, at first 

 campanulate, umbonate, even, nearly smooth, changing co- 

 lour ; margin at first flocculose ; stem stuffed, elastic, attenu- 

 ated, fibrillose; gills crowded, emarginate, with a decurrent 

 tooth, thin, eroded, white, at length discoloured. — Bull. t. 533. 

 /. 3. A. purpureus, Bolton, t. 41. 



In woods. Not found since the time of Bolton. 



59. A. (Tricholoma) carneus, Bull.; pileus slightly fleshy, , 

 obtuse, even, nearly smooth, becoming pallid ; stem short, 

 stuffed, rigid, reddish like the pileus, thickened upwards, prui- 

 nose ; gills very wide behind, rounded, crowded, white. — Bull, 

 t. 533./. 1. 



In pastures. Not uncommon. Pileus seldom exceeding 

 1 inch, of a rufous pink. Stem minutely squamulose, often 

 splitting, at length hollow. 



