AGARICINI. 187 



siibmcmbranaccoiis, viscid, margin not striate ; stem attenu- 

 ated at eitlier end, subsquamosc, striate above the fugitive 

 veil, stuffed Avith cottony fibres ; gills cinnamon, subadnexed, 

 broad in front. 



In woods. King's Cliffe. Coed Coch. Pileus 1 inch 

 across, livid-ochre. Nearest to the smooth-stemmed form of 

 C. collinitus. 



Subgenus 3. Inoloma.— Pileus fleshy, dry, at first silky with 

 scales or innate fibres, not hygrophanous ; stem bulbous. 



16. C. (Inoloma) violaceus, F?-. ; dark-violet; pileus fleshy, 

 obtuse, villoso-squamose ; stem bulbous, spongy, villous, cine- 

 reous-violet within ; gills broad, fixed, thick, distant. — Huss. 

 i. /. 12. 



In woods. England and Scotland. Not common. Pileus 

 4 inches or more across. 



1 7. C. (Inoloma) callisteus, F7\ ; yellow-tawny ; pileus 

 fleshy, convexo-plane, at length smooth, even, innato-squa- 

 mulosc ; margin rather silky ; flesh Avhitish-yellow ; stem 

 elongated, bulbous, clothed with tawny fibres; gills aduate, 

 floceose, connected behind. 



In woods. Rare. My Ag. validus (see Engl. Fl.) appears 

 certainly to be this species, agreeing with it not only in 

 other respects, but in the minute character of the gills ad- 

 hering to the stem after they separate by a few flocci. The 

 colours are nearly those of Ag. aureus. 



18. C. (Inoloma) BuUiardi, Fr. ; pileus fleshy, campanu- 

 lato-eonvex, even or sqiuamulose, rufescent ; stem short, firm, 

 bulbous, vermilion below and adorned with similarly coloured 

 fibres, white above ; gills broad, adnexed, purplish, then ferru- 

 ginous.— J5w//. t. 431. /. 3. 



In woods. Not common. Bristol, Dr. Stephens. This 



