46 
NEW BRITISH FUNGI. 
fugacious whitish flocci ; gills adnate, rounded behind, rather 
crowded, fuliginous. — Fr. Hym. Eur. 308. 
Moist places in pine woods. Coed Coch (Rev. M. J. Berkeley ). 
Boletus tenuipes. Cooke. 
The form described as Boletus granulatus, var. tenuipes , in 
“ Grevillea,” vol. xii., p. 43, has occurred again this year several 
times in Epping Forest. The bright, clear yellow pores are very 
distinctive, conjoined with the other characters already indicated, 
and, in fact, it cannot be united, with any reason, to B. granu- 
latus or B. bovinus , hence we have applied to it the above specific 
name. 
On the ground in woods. Epping Forest, several localities. 
Oct., 1884. 
Boletus candicans. Fr. Hym. Eur. 507. 
Pileus leathery, smooth and polished when dry, dirty white with 
a faint greenish tinge of colour, margin irregular, somewhat 
crenate ; stem lemon white, reticulated, solid ; flesh changing 
rapidly from white to indigo-blue when exposed to the light ; 
tubes lemon, with their orifices uneven and irregular in size. 
Spores -012 x *005. Boletus p achy pus, Smith Ulus. t. 17. Boletus 
elephantinus , with. Arr., ed. iii., vol. 4, p. 317. 
In open places, amongst grass. 
Emulating B. pachypus in size, and long known in this country, 
but included with that species. Fries considers it sufficiently dis- 
tinct to merit the specific name which he assigned to it, although 
Withering’s has priority, if it is the same species, of which there 
is little doubt. 
Boletus duriusculus. Kalch. Fr. Hym. Eur. 515. 
Pileus globose then hemispherical, soft, smooth, viscid when 
moist, whitish tawny, then dirty chestnut-colour (often olivaceous), 
stem attenuated at the base, ventricose, whitish, normally densely 
punctate with delicate umber squamules ; tubes free, elongated, 
thin, livid, becoming tawny, pores white at length of the same 
colour. — Kalchb. fy Schulz. Icon. 
In woods. Epping Forest. 
About the size of B. scaber , with which it has probably been 
confounded. Pileus when dry cracking into small areolae in a 
tessulated manner. Flesh firm, white, on contact with the air 
becoming coppery-red, passing into greyish-violet, with the 
margin and base remaining white. Stem very firm, “edible, 
delicious.” 
Hydnam diversidens. Fries. Hym. Eur. 609. 
Pileus fleshy, inclining to stipitate, greatly deformed, white, 
densely clad on the upper surface with variable erect incised teeth, 
margin entire, furnished with clavate teeth, and beneath invested 
with regular entire subulate spines. — Fr. Sver. Svam. t. 71, f. 2. 
On trunks. Near Fairmead in Epping Forest. Sept.-Oct., 
1884 (H. T. Wharton and J. C. Webb). 
Forming a caespitose mass about six inches in diameter. The 
