108 OUTLINES OF BRITISH FUNGOLOGY. 



densely efespitose. In the latter state it is the subspecies 

 A. polms. It occurred abundantly in October^ 1859, at Coed 

 Coch. 



74. A. (Clitocybe) inornatus, Soio. ; pileus fleshy, plane or 

 depressed, obtuse, even, smooth ; cuticle separable ; stem solid, 

 nearly equal, smooth, firm, grey, as well as the adnate, plane, 

 at length dccurrent, crowded gills. — Soiv. t. 342. 



Amongst grass. I have not met with this species. The 

 separable cuticle indicates A. yrummopodius, but the gills are 

 not in the least arcuato-adnatc. 



75. A. (Clitocybe) vernicosus, Fr. ; pileus fleshy, depress- 

 ed, obtuse, even, smooth, shining ; stem stuffed, equal, short, 

 yellow, as well as the adnate, slightly dccurrent, rather distant 

 gills.— -STom;. t. 36G. 



In fir-woods. Pileus 3 inches across. Not found in this 

 country since the time of Sowerby. 



76. A. (Clitocybe) odorus, Bull. ; dirty green, tough ; pi- 

 leus fleshy, at length plane, even, smooth ; stem stuffed, un- 

 equal, elastic, thickened at the base ; gills adnate, moderately 

 distant, broad, pallid. — Sow. t. 42. 



In woods. Common. Easily known by its greenish colour 

 and strong smell of aniseed ; stem smooth and downy. A. vi- 

 ridis, With. (Bolton, t. 12. n. 10), is too doubtful to insert. 

 Greville's figure has much greater right to be considered the 

 same as Bull. 176, having narrow gills. The two supposed 

 species are probably not distinct. 



77. A. (Clitocybe) cerussatus, Fr. ; white ; pileus fleshy, 

 at first convex, obtuse, even, moist, soon smooth ; stem spon- 

 gy, solid, tough, elastic, naked; gills adnate, very crowded, 

 thin, then dccurrent, and unchanged in colour. — Ft. Dan. 

 t. 1796. ' 



In fir-woods. Not urabonate as A. opacus. Probably es- 

 culent. 



