202 FUNGUS-FLOEA. 



one witli a perfectly dry, virgate pileus ; all the other virgate 

 species, as T. portentomm, &c., having the pileus viscid. 

 Taste bitter when young, but insipid at maturity. 



The figure in " Illustrations " is too dark. The pileus is 

 usually white with a slight cinereous tinge. (Cooke.) 



IV. SEEICELLA. 

 * Gills broad, rather distant. Smell strong. 



Trieholoma sulphureum. Fr. 



Foetid. Pileus 1-3 in. across, flesh rather thick ; sub- 

 globose, then soon convexo-plane, rather umbonate, at 

 length depressed, slightly silky at first, soon almost 

 glabrous and even, pale sulphur-colour, sometimes with a 

 rufescent tinge ; gills adnexed, narrowed behind, arcuately 

 emarginate, rather thick, distant, distinct, bright sulphur- 

 colour ; stem 2-4 in. long, 3-6 lines thick, almost equal, 

 often curved, almost glabrous, striate, sulphur-yellow; 

 same colour inside, and fibrous; spores 9 — 10 x 5 ju,. 



Agaricus (Trieholoma) sulfureus, Fries, Syst. Myc, i. p. 110; 

 Cke., Hdbk., p. 85 ; Cke., lUustr., pi. 62. 



In woods. 



Gregarious. Distinguished by the sulphur-yellow colour 

 of every part, and the strong, penetrating, unpleasant smell. 



Pileus 1-2 in. broad, fleshy, obtuse, at length expanded 

 or depressed with a slight appearance of an umbo, sometimes 

 flexuous and irregular, dirty yellow, or ochraceous-umber, 

 darker in the centre, the margin at first involute and 

 minutely tomeiitose, the whole clothed with extremely 

 minute silkiness or squamulae, so as to give it a pulverulent 

 appearance, retaining the impression of the fingers; flesh 

 yellow. Gills subdistant, rounded, flexuous, emarginate or 

 acuto-adnate. Stem 2 in. or more high, 4 lines thick, occa- 

 sionally subbulbous, stuffed, sometimes at length hoUow, 

 the surface of the cavity rather slimy, yellow within, 

 furnished at the base occasionally with many rather strong 

 yellow fibrous roots. Odour disagreeable, at first farina- 

 ceous, then like that of Hemerocallis flava. Taste unpleasant 

 but acrid. (Berk.) 



