68 
NEW BRITISH FUNGI. 
Copiinus cothurnatus, Godey in Gillct, Planches, Sup., 3 series. 
[We have as yet seen no published diagnosis of this species.] 
Penzance. 
Stem about 2in. long ; pileus about lin. broad. Yellowish. 
Cortinarius (Telamonia) scutulatus, Fr. Eym. Eur. 377. Grevillea 
VIII. 77. 
“ The form figured by Quelet, and not that by Fries in his 
‘ leones.’ ” 
Cortinarius (Telamonia) stemmatus, Fr. Eym. Eur. 385. 
Pileus rather fleshy, convex, then plane, obtuse, bright hay, about 
the margin hoary silky, when dry becoming paler, fibrillose ; stem 
somewhat fistulose, floccose, squamose, and annulate, ferruginous 
bay ; gills adnate, crowded, bay-brown. 
In moist woods. Lyne, Sussex. 
“ The ringless form mentioned by Fries in the text.” 
Cortinarius (Hygrocybe) germanus, Fr. Eym. Eur. 397. 
Pileus almost membranaceous, conical, then expanded, obtusely 
umbonate, rather silky, fragile, even, brownish (clay-coloured) ; 
stem somewhat fistulose, thin, equal, smooth, lilac, then becoming 
pale, gills adnate, rather distant, broad, watery cinnamon. 
In beech woods. Coed Coch. 
Stem 3in. long, 1 line thick. Pileus lin. 
Hygrophorus glutinifer, Fr. Eym. Eur. 408. 
Pileus fleshy, convex, then expanded, with a glutinous pellicle, 
rufescent, disc rugose-punctate, stem stuffed, ventricose upwards, 
with a viscid veil, of the same colour, apex whitish squamulose, 
gills arched, decurrent, rather thick, white. 
In woods. Penzance. 
“ Probably the same with the little known Ag. aromaticus, Sow.” 
Hygrophorus vitellinus, Fr. Eym. Eur. 417. 
Pileus membranaceous, disc rather fleshy, smooth, viscid, lemon- 
yellow, whitish when dry, margin plicate-striate, stem fistulose, 
fragile, pale yellow, gills decurrent, rather distant, egg yellow. 
In fields, &c. Penzance. 
Lactarius hysginus, Fr. Hym. Eur. 426. Cooke Eandhook, No. 590. 
Near Morpeth. 
Lentinus lepideus, Fr. Eym. Eur. 481. Coohe Handbook, No. 684. 
“ In an old hollow elm. The veil still adhering to the edge of 
the pileus. Specimens found before in this country have been on 
imported pine wood. The proper name is ‘ ‘ lepideus’ 
inaccurately.” — B. Br. 
[We have had it, at least two or three times, on indigenous 
wood. — Ed. Grev.~\ 
Polyporus (Pleuropus) petaloides, Fr. Eym. Eur. 536. 
Pileus somewhat membranaceous, spathulate, rugose, zoneless, 
chestnut-brown, flaccid when moist ; stem lateral, ascending, com- 
pressed, smooth, rootless, whitish, adnate by a dilated scutate base ; 
pores decurrent, very short, small, white. 
