232 OUTLINES OF BRITISH FUNGOLOGY. 



raoistj tawny-yellow, sprinkled with superficial fasciculato- 

 pilose scales ; margin acute, at first flocculose ; stem ringless, 

 equal, even ; tubes adnate, unequal, minute, brownish-cinua- 

 mon, then pallid. — Kromb. t. 3i. /. 15-18. 



In pine-woods. Not common. Helensburgh, Klotzsch. 

 Dorsetshire. Sometimes nearly smooth. 



12. B. striaepes, Sec. ; pileus convex, then plane, soft, 

 silkj'^, olive ; cuticle ferruginous within ; stem curved, firm, 

 yellow, with brownish-black striae, brownish-rufous at the 

 b;ise; tubes minute, angular, at length green; orifice yellow. 



In woods. Rare. Coed Coch. Stem dirty-yellow, dotted 

 under a lens with broad bay lines. Flesh white, red near the 

 cuticle, sparingly changing to blue. 



13. B. ehrysenteron, Fr. ; pileus eonvexo-plane, soft, floc- 

 eoso-squamose, brownish, inclining to brick-red ; flesh yellow, 

 red near the cuticle ; stem nearly equal, rigid, fibroso-striate, 

 scarlet or yellow ; tubes subadnate, rather large, angular, un- 

 equal, yellowish-green. — Bull. t. 490. /. 3 ; Huss. i. t. 5. 



In meadows, woods, etc. Extremely common. 



II. B. subtomentosus, L. ; pileus pulvinate, expanded, soft, 

 dry, villoso-tomentose, somewhat olive, not red under the 

 cuticle; stem stout, unequal, sulcate, and ribbed minutely 

 dotted and rough, yellow^, as well as the broad angular ad- 

 nate tubes. — Kromb. t. 37./. 8-11. 



In woods. Not so common as the last. Abundant at 

 Coed Coch. In the former, when the pileus is cracked, the 

 cracks are red, in this yellow. 



*** Stem reticulated; tubes adnate or merely depressed, not 

 rounded ; orifice of tuhes yellow. 



15. B. calopus, Fr. ; pileus globose, then pulvinate, not 

 polished, subtomentose, olive ; stem firm, at first conical, then 



