164 OUTLINES OF BRITISH FUNGOLOOY. 



lateral, obovatc, and waved, opaque, contracted and tomentoso- 

 villous behind ; gills crowded, determinate, broad, clay-brown. 

 On old stumps. King's Cliftc. Pileus brownish-ochraceous. 

 Nearly allied to the next, but not so soft and watery. 



303. A. (Crepidotus) mollis, S'cA«^.; pileus subgelatinous, 

 flaccid, even, smooth, turning pale ; stem obsolete ; gills 

 crowded, linear, dirty- white, then watery-cinnamon. (Plate 9, 

 fig. 6.) — Huss. i. t. 74. 



On old stumps. Common. Pileus l|-3 inches across, 

 pale. 



304. A. (Crepidotus) haustellaris, Fr. ; pileus slightly fleshy, 

 reniform, even, slightly villous ; stem lateral, attenuated uj)- 

 wards, villous, white ; gills rounded, nearly free, brownish- 

 cinnamon. — Bnischjf. 121. 



On dead trunks. Rare. Not observed since the time of 

 Withering. 



305. A. (Crepidotvis) Rubi, B. ; pileus fleshy, clothed with 

 very minute crystalline meal ; stem short, incurved, solid, stri- 

 gose at the base; gills adnato-decurrent, greyish, then umber, 

 slightly ventricose. (Plate 9, fig. 7.) 



On dead bramble, etc. Rare. Pileus half an inch across, 

 yellowish or livid-grey. Spores umber. 



306. A. (Crepidotus) ohimonophilus, B. and Br. ; white ; 

 pileus convex, rather thick, villous ; stem very short or obso- 

 lete; gills distant, attenuated behind. 



On small dead branches of Pyrus torminaJis. Benefield, 

 Northamptonshire. Spores pale yellow-brown. Pileus a 

 quarter of an inch across. JNFargin inflexed. 



307. A. (Crepidotus) variabilis, P.; pileus submcmljrana- 

 ceous, resupinate, then reflexed, clothed with white down ; 

 gills rather close, white, then rusty-red, at length pale-cinna- 

 mon. (Plate 10, fig. \.)—Huss. i. /. 50. 



