70 
NEW BRITISH FUNGI. 
specimens. It is, however, quite accurate that they were “ino- 
dorous, gregarious, pileus an inch broad, disc at length depressed, 
rufescent ; spores angular.” Size and habit very similar to Agari- 
cus atropunctus , P. 
Agaricus (Fholiota) mustelinus, Fr. Hym. Eur., 225. 
Pileus rather fleshy, campanulate, convex, even, smooth, dry ; 
stem fistulose, even, pallid-whitish, farinose above the reflexed 
ring, thickened at the base, and villose-white ; gills adnate, rather 
distant, tawny cinnamon. — Mich. Gen.t. 80,/. 6. 
On stumps. Near Guildford (T. Howse). 
Solitary. Pileus hardly an inch broad, rufous or testaceous ; 
stem less than an inch long, thickened at the base, which is 
surrounded and attached by a white tomentum. Not included in 
Fries’ Mon. Hym. Sueciae. 
Agaricus (Inocybe) haemactus, Berk, Cke. 
Pileus fleshy, compact, obtuse, campanulate, floccosely fibrillose, 
disc subsquamose, darker ; stem solid, smooth, scarcely fibrillose, 
whitish above, seruginous at the base, nearly equal ; gills adnate, 
pallid, at length clay-colour ; flesh everywhere turning blood-red 
where touched or wounded. 
On lawn. Credinhill Court, Oct., 1882. 
Pileus about an inch broad, umber, margin pallid, clad with long, 
darker fibrils, the obtuse disc darkest, and somewhat scaly ; stem 
nearly 2 inches long, 3-4 lines thick, seruginous at the base, the 
colour penetrating through the flesh. Everywhere changing slowly 
to blood-red when wounded. Spores elliptical, attenuated towards 
one end, smooth. In some respects agreeing with Ag. calamis- 
tratus, but not squarrose. 
Cortinarius (Myxacium) mucifluus, Fr. Hym. Eur., 355. 
Pileus rather fleshy, campanulate, then expanded, covered with 
an evanescent hyaline gluten, margin striate ; stem attenuated 
downwards, soft, viscid from the fugacious floccose squamose veil ; 
gills adnate, distinct, clay-colour, then watery cinnamon. — Fr. 
Icon. t. 
On the ground. Around Hereford, &c., Oct., 1882. 
“ Allied to C. collinitus, and for a long time united with it as a 
variety, but apparently quite distinct. It differs (1) in the spongy 
stem, attenuated downwards, white ; (2) pileus thinner, campanu- 
late, then expanded, at length reflexed and repand, membranaceous, 
margin striate ; (3 ) colour of the pileus livid, clay colour, when dry 
of an opaque tan colour; (4) gluten of the pileus thin, hyaline, 
diffluent, not forming a thick persistent bright-coloured pellicle ; 
(5) odour sweet. Gills clay-coloured, then cinnamon. No violet 
in the whole fungus.” — Fr. Mon. n., 37. 
Cortinarius (Hydrocybe) renidens, Fr. Hym. Eur., 392. 
Pileus rather fleshy, convex, then plane, even, smooth, shining , 
tawny (ochrace'ous) ; stem stuffed, Aim, equal, smooth, yellow as 
well as the fibrillose veil ; gills subadnate, crowded, thin, tawny. — 
Fr. Icon. t. 162, /. 1. 
