190 OUTLINES OF lUUTISII FUNGOLOGY. 



In -woods. King's Cliffb. Pileus variable in colour, 



27. C. (Dermocybe) anomalus, Fi\ ; pileus fleshy, thin, 

 convex, obtuse, then gibbous, dingy -rufous, whitish with 

 evanescent fibrils ; stem somewhat stuffed, slender, attenu- 

 ated, fibrillose, slightly scaly, pallid-violet; gills crowded, 

 dente-decurrent, bluish or purple, then cinnamon. (Plate 12, 

 fig. 4.)— 5m//. /. 431./. 2. 



In woods. Very common. Pileus 2^ inches across. A. 

 araneosiis, Sow. t. 384. f. 1, belongs to this, probably, and not 

 to the next. 



28. C. (Dermocybe) spilomeus, Fr. ; pileus slightly fleshy, 

 gibbous, dry, at length smooth, brownish, and changing co- 

 lour ; stem rather hollow, slender, white, inclining to lilac, 

 variegated Avith rufous or tawny scales ; gills crowded, emar- 

 ginate, narrow, bluish-lilac, at length cinnamon. 



In woods. Not common. King's Cliffe. Bristol, Dr. 

 Stephens. A. violaceus, Sow., is undoubtedly A. personatus. 



29. C. (Dermocybe) sanguineus, Fr. ; pileus fleshy, thin, 

 obtuse, innato -sericeous or squamulose, dark blood-red, as 

 well as the veil and thin, equal, at length bulbous stem ; gills 

 crowded, rather broad, darker. — Soio. t. 43. 



In woods. Not uncommon. Remarkable for its brilliant 

 colour. 



30. C. (Dermocybe) einnamomeus, Fr.; pileus fleshy, thin, 

 obtusely umbonate, cinnamon-brown, silky with innate yel- 

 lowish fibrils, or squamulose; stem equal, slender, stuffed, then 

 hollow, yellowish, as well as the flesh and veil ; gills adnate, 

 broad, crowded, shining. 



In woods. A very common but variable species. Some- 

 times the gills are red. 



31. C. (Dermocybe) uliginosus, n.s.; pileus campanulato- 

 conical, then expanded, bright red-brown, very strongly um- 



