98 
NEW BRITISH FUNGI. 
By M. C. Cooke. 
{Continued from p. 70J 
Agaricus (Hebeloma) ischnostylus, Cooke. 
Pileus slightly viscid, smooth, even, convex, then expanded, and 
broadly umbonate, white or a little pallid at the disc, inodorous (or 
with a faint odour of Spircea), margin thin, stem slender, equal, or 
a little thickened at the base, solid, smooth, naked, gills rounded 
behind and adnate, slightly serrate at the margin, whitish then 
argillaceous. 
On the ground, amongst grass. Shrewsbury. 
Pileus 1-2 inches broad, stem 2 inches long, inch* thick. 
Spores *012 x ‘0075 mm. Belongs to the section Denudati and 
allied to Ag. nudipes, but evidently not any form of that species. 
Will be figured in the “ Illustrations.” 
Agazicus (Naucoria) cidaris, Fr. Hym. Fur. 253. 
Pileus rather fleshy, conical then campanualate, even, clay 
coloured cinnamon, when dry tan-coloured, margin undulated, 
striate, stem hollow, fusiform short, smooth dark brown, gills 
affixed, then seceding, ventricose crowded, honey-coloured. 
In pine woods, and on the ground around trunks. Near Here- 
ford (Dr. Bull). 
Pileus an inch high and broad, or more ; stem IJ in. long. 
Inodorous. 
Hydnum (Resupinati) stipatum, Fr. Hym. Fur. 617. 
Whitish. Subiculum broadly effused, flocculoso-fnrfuraceous, 
crustaceous, adnate, spines crowded, granuliform, rather obtuse and 
denticulate. 
On rotten wood. Carlisle (Dr. Carlyle). 
Differing from the other species with white spines in the fur- 
furaceous stratum. The spines are obtuse and crowded, very few 
being toothed. The whiteness is retained in drying. 
Hydnum Weinmanni, Fr. Hym. Eur. 613. 
The typical form has been found by Dr. Carlyle, near Carlisle, 
and also, what appears to be, a variety, which differs in being of a 
deep bay- brown when fresh, with obtuse spines of the same colour. 
This species was only found previously in this country by the late 
Rev. A. Bloxam. 
IVIozchellia Smithiana, Cooke MycograpMa t. 83. 
This species has again been found and forwarded to us in a fresh 
state from Malton, Yorks. There is no doubt in our minds of its 
being a good species. The pileus of the specimen in question was 
four inches in diameter, and four inches in height. The sporidia 
are proportionately narrower than in allied species, being about *02 
X *008, and although sometimes as long as '022 or '023 mm, the 
