120 OUTLINES or BRITISH FUXGOLOGY. 



On twigs, leaves, etc. This is a minute species, differing 

 from A. acicula in its white stem and gills, but agreeing 

 somewhat in the orange-red pileus. It is introduced on the 

 faith of Bolton's figure and description, t. 39 B, which, how- 

 ever, may possibly be A, acicula. I have not met with it 

 myself^ The * English Flora' plant is A. acicula. 



119. A. (Collybia) ocellatus, Fr. ; pileus slightly fleshy, 

 nearly plane;, even ; disc depressed, darker, urabonate ; stem 

 minutely fistulose, filiform, smooth, brownish-white, rooting 

 and fibrillose at the base; gills crowded, white, adnexed, at 

 length separating. — Bull. t. 569./. 1 H~P. 



On the ground, amongst leaves. Not common. Kinnordy, 

 Klotzsch. 



** GUIs at length cinereous. 



120. A. (Collybia) laceratus, Lasch ; pileus between 

 fleshy and membranaceous, campanulate, rather blunt, moist, 

 streaked with brown ; stem stuffed, then hollow, firm, twisted, 

 fibroso-striate, floccoso-pruinose above, at length compressed ; 

 gills distant, adnexed, broad, thick, greyish-white. 



In pine- woods. Bristol, Dr. H. 0. Stephens. Pileus dingy, 

 pallid when dry, H inch across. Allied to A. platyphyllus. 



121. A. (Collybia) atratus, Fr. ; pileus slightly fleshy, 

 piano-depressed, umbilicate, very even, smooth, shining ; mar- 

 gin convex ; stem stuffed, short, even, smooth, brown m ithout 

 and within ; gills adnatc, rather broad, dirty-white. 



On burnt soil, in woods. King's Cliffe. Pileus 1 inch 

 across, dark brown at first. Stem 1 inch high, 1-2 lines 

 thick. I have a figure of this from the Swedish Museum, 

 Avhich represents the stem as nearly white. 



* I have a specimen from Dr. Stephens, gathered at Bristol, marked by him 

 A. clavus. Bull., which is apparently Bulliard's plant. 



