112 OUTLINES OF nUlTIsn FUNGOLOGY. 



In meadows, etc. Very common late in the year. Pileus 

 2 inches across, variable in colonr, as arc the gills, generally 

 of a dark brown or bistre. 



90. A. (Clitocybe) brumaliSj F?:; inodorous; pileus rather 

 fleshy, thin towards the margin, umbilicate, funnel-shaped, 

 smooth, flaccid, hygrophanous ; margin reflexed, even ; stem 

 equal, somewhat incurved, smooth, dirty white ; gills distinct, 

 decurrent, pallid.— J5m//. t. 248 A, B. 



In woods. Canterbury. This is A. metachroiis, Engl. Fl., 

 whose characters agree rather with Bulliard's figure quoted 

 above than with Fries's character. Livid grey when moist, 

 nearly white when dry. 



91. A. (Clitocybe) metachrous, Fr. ; inodorous; pileus 

 somewhat fleshy, convex, then plane and depressed, hygro- 

 phanous; stem stuffed, then hollow, equal, tough, pruinose 

 above ; gills adnate, crowded, pale, cinereous. 



In woods amongst leaves. King's Clifife. Pileus li-2 inches 

 across ; gills not truly decurrent. 



92. A. (Clitocybe) fragrans, aS'o«<;. ; sweet-scented; pileus 

 rather fleshy, convex, then plane or depressed, hygrophanous ; 

 stem stuffed, then hollow, elastic, smooth ; gills rather crowd- 

 ed, subdecm'rent, distinct, dirty white. — Soiv. t. 10. 



In woods. Common. KnoAvn by its sweet, anise-scent, 

 which resembles that of A. odorus. Pileus 1^ inch across, 

 ochraceous, white. 



93. A. (Clitocybe) difformis, P.; pileus submembranace- 

 ous, convex, then plane, subumbilicate, smooth, hygrophanous, 

 striate when moist, even when dry, at length subsquamuloso- 

 rimose ; stem hollow, equal, smooth, shining ; gills adnate, 

 distant, dirty white. — Bolt. /. 17 (dry state). 



In fir plantations. Near Halifax. Livid when moist. 

 91. A. (Clitocybe) eetypus, Fi: ; pileus rather fleshy, flat- 



