230 OUTLINES OF BRITISH FUNGOLOGY. 



yellow, and slightly ferruginous ; stem firm, unequal, golden- 

 yellow, at length rufous, dotted above the fugaeious, white, 

 then yellowish ring; pores dceurrent, shining, minute, simple, 

 golden-sulphur. — Grev. t. 183; Kroinb. t. 3 k/. 1-10; IIuss. 

 ii. t. 12. 



In mixed woods. Far less common, and more beautifully 

 coloured than the last. 



3. B. flavus, With.; firm; pileus clothed with yellow eva- 

 nescent gluten; stem yellow, then broAvn, criljrosc at the tip 

 with the decurreut tubes, which are rather large, angulai', and 

 yellow. — Soiv. t. 2(55. 



In woods. Common. Requires to be carefully distin- 

 guished from B. hdeus. 



4. B. larieinus, B. ; pileus dirty-white, with livid stains, 

 covered at first with dirty-yellow or brownish evanescent 

 slime, subsquamosc; stem cribrose above tlie ring, scrobicu- 

 late below, dirty-white ; tubes adnatc, subdecurrent, com- 

 pound, at first nearly white. — Huss. i. /. 25. 



Amongst larch -trees. Common. Flesh white, very slightly 

 tinged with yellow. 



5. B. granulatus, L. ; pileus convex, expanded, glutinous, 

 brown-ferruginous, and when the gluten vanishes yellowish ; 

 stem without any riiig, yellowish, punctato-granulose al)ove ; 

 tubes adnatc, short, simple, yellow, orifice granulated. — Soiv. 

 t. 420. 



In grass, amongst firs. Not common. Dorsetshire, etc. 

 Often densely gregarious. Orifices of tubes at first dripping 

 with a milky fluid. Spores ochraceo-ferruginous. 



6. B. bovinus, L. ; pileus nearly plane, smooth, viscid, 

 reddish-grey; stem equal, even, self-coloured; tubes subde- 

 current, angular, compound, greyish-yellow, then ferruginous. 

 — Kromb. t. 75. /. 1-G; Huss. i. /. 34. 



