58 
NEW BRITISH FUNGI. 
Pileus about an inch. Stem reaching to 4 or 5 inches, about 2 
lines thick. Habit very much resembling the figure in Fries’ leones 
of Ag . ( Naucoria ) myosotis , hence the name. 
Agaricus (Leptonia) formosus, Fr. Hym. Eur. 205. 
Pileus submembranaceous, cony exo-plane, rather umbilicate, 
faintly striate, waxy-yellow, squamulose with addressed scattered 
brownish fibrils, stem stuffed, striate, smooth, shining, yellow ; gills 
adnate, rather distant, pallid yellow, 
var. suavis, Lasch. 
Stem becoming blue. Cooke, Illustr., t. 488. 
Amongst Equisetum . Scarboro’. ( G. Massee.) 
Agaricus (Fholiota) luxurians, Fr. Hym. Eur. Ag. (Pholiota) 
segerita. Phillips in CooJce lllus. t. 365. 
Pileus fleshy, convex, gibbous, then expanded, unequal, silky 
then squamulose ; stem stuffed, rigid, somewhat squamulose, white 
becoming rufescent, ring apical , torn, fugacious ; gills adnexed, 
then decurrent, crowded, greyish, flesh colour, becoming brownish. 
Bait. t. 23,/. B. 
On oak trunks. 
Caespitose. Pileus at first white, then yellowish ; at length reddish 
tawny, flesh white. 
Agaricus (Pholiota) cruentatus, Che. Sf Smith. 
Pileus fleshy, convex then expanded, obtuse, dry, yellow, break- 
ing up into darker adpressed scales ; margin incurved ; stem of 
the same colour as the pileus, curved, solid, attenuated at the base 
and rooting, dark red brown and sparsely squamulose below, ring 
fibrillose ; flesh pale yellow, at length changing to cinnabar colour. 
Gills rather distant, emarginate, finally separating from the stem, 
yellow then clay colour. Cooke lllus. t. 502. 
On oak stump, and also on burnt ground. Aug., 1872. {W. G . 
Smith.) 
Pileus about 2 inches diam., yellow then turning red. Stem 2 
inches long, ^in. thick above. Gills 2 lines or more. Allied to 
Ag. tuberculosus and Ag. curvipes. Taste insipid. 
Agaricus (Inocybe) incarnatus, Bresadola, Fung. Trid. t. 53. 
Pileus fleshy, convex campanulate, then expanded and gibbous, 
or broadly umbonate, fibrillose then squamulose, margin fimbriate, 
yellowish then rufescent or tinged with flesh colour (6-8 c.m. 
broad). Stem solid, attenuated and somewhat rooting at the base, 
rather fibrillose, rosy flesh colour, white and mealy at the apex. 
Flesh of the pileus white, becoming deep red when broken, odour 
strong and persistent of pears, taste mild. Gills crowded, sinuate, 
adnate behind, broad, rather fringed at the edge, whitish, then 
greyish cinnamon ; at length spotted with red, or wholly rufescent. 
Spores subovate (•009- , 011X'006- , 007 mm.). Cooke lllus. t. 473. 
In woods near Bristol and at Dinedor. Oct., 1884. 
Stem more robust than in A. pyriodorus, which this species re- 
sembles in habit and odour. 
