tiDH OUTLINES OF UKITISII tUXGOLOCJY. 



In woods. Extremely common in some districts, but local. 

 Smell very fetid. 



2. P. iosmos, B. ; pale reddish-grey ; pileus conical, reti- 

 culated ; borders of the reticulations strongly toothed. — Curt. 

 Brit. Ent. x. t. 469. 



Sandhills. Lowestoft. I have seen no fresh specimens. 

 Scent somewhat like violets at a distance, but very offensive 

 when the plant is dried. 



60. CYNOPHALLUS, Fr. 



Pileus adnatc, imperforate, uneven. Veil none. 



1. C. caniniis, Fr. — Soiv. t. 330. 



Amougst decayed leaves, in woods. Local. Stem white 

 or pinkish. Root filiform, branched, creeping in every di- 

 rection. 



61. CLATHRUS, Mich. 



Stem none. Receptacle forming an ovate or globose net- 

 work; branches of the network cellular within. 



1. C. cancellatus, L. ; obovate, branches of the receptacle 

 anastomosing obliquely. — Huss. i. t. 86. 



In woods. South of England and Ireland, as at the Isle 

 of Wight, Torquay, etc. Very beautiful, but extremely fetid. 

 Branches resembling sealing-wax, covered here and there with 

 an olive sporiferous mass. 



Order 9. TBICHOGASTRES. 



Peridium single or double. Hymenium at length drying 

 up into a dusty mass of threads and spores. 



