18 Messrs. Berkeley and Broome on British Fung?. 
Northants, July 8, 1876. Exactly agreeing with the Ceylon 
specimens, except that the gills are not ventricose. 
1634, A. (Lepiota) seminudus, Lasch.; Fr. Hym. Eur. 
. 38. 
; King’s Lynn, Mr. Plowright. A very delicate little piant. 
*A. (Lepiota) gliodermus, Fr. Ic. t. 15. fig. 1 
Perthshire, Dr. Buchanan White. 
1635. A, (Armillaria) hematites, B. & Br. Pileo hemi- 
spheerico jecormo sicco hispidulo ; stipite concolori deorsum 
incrassato, solido; annulo spongioso ; lamellis breviter decur- 
rentibus. 
Amongst fir-leaves. Glamis, Rev. J. Stevenson. 
Pileus about 1 inch across; stem 2 inches high, + inch 
thick at the base ; ring scaly beneath. 
We cannot point out any species to which it is allied. 
Like A. subcavus it is analogous to Lepiote. 
1636. A. (Tricholoma) cerinus, Pers. Syn. p. 821; Fr. Ic. 
te oigs. 7. 
On a lawn. Ballinluig, Rev. J. Stevenson, no. 902. 
The yellow gills, contrasted with the brown pileus, make it 
a very pretty species. ‘The pileus in our specimens is brown, 
which seems to be the more usual colour; but it is sometimes 
yellow. 
*A. (Tricholoma) tigrinus, Scheeff. t. 89; Fr. Ic. t. 41 inf. 
Rev. J. Stevenson, no. 900. On the sea-shore. 
Allied to A. gambosus. 
It varies a good deal in the scaliness of the pileus. Mr. W. 
S. Smith’s plant from Reigate is presumably the same; but 
ours can scarcely be called feetid (Cooke, Handb. p. 33). 
1637. A. (Clitocybe) socialis, Fr. Ic. t. 49. fig. 2; Hym. 
Eur. p. 83. . 
Amongst fir-leaves. Downton, Herefordshire. Hereford 
Fungus Show, 1876. 
1638. A. (Clitocybe) amarella, P.; Fr. Hym. Eur. p. 84. 
In woods. Coed Coch, Oct. 19, 1876. 
The taste is bitter and disgusting, the smell that of prussic 
acid. 
1639. A. (Mycena) rubro-marginatus, Fr. Hym. Eur. 
. 132. 
Var. fusco-purpureus, Lasch. 
Amongst dead leaves. Hast Farleigh. 
Very distinct from the usual form, having much the appear- 
ance of an exotic Marasmius. 
1640. A. (Mycena) Zephirus, Fr. Ic. t. 78. fig. 6; Hym. 
Kur. p. 133. 
On decayed wood. Rev. J. Stevenson. Rose-coloured. 
