100 
NEW BRITISH FUNGI. 
Agaxicus (Eccilia) nigrella. Pers. Syn, p. 463 . 
Small, somewhat tufted ; pileus smooth, umbilicate, growing 
blackish ; gills flesh-coloured, then somewhat cinereous ; stem short, 
glaucous. — Berk. ^ Br. Ann. Nat. Hist., No. 1651. 
In mountain pastures. Perthshire. 
“ This appears to be quite distinct from Ag. atrides ; the stem is 
not nigro-punctate above, nor are the gills nigro-denticulate.” — 
B. ^ Br. 
Agazicus (Pholiota) Vahlii. Schum. FI. Dan. t. 1496 . 
Solitary, ferruginous orange ; pileus hemispherical, even ; stem 
long, thick, even, rather bulbous at the base ; ring large, plicate, 
erect, punctate with white ; gills narrower than the flesh of the 
pileus ; rounded at the base. — B. ^ Br. Ann. Nat. Hist., No. 1652. 
On grassy banks of the railroad. Dunkeld. 
Fries considers this a variety of A. aureus. 
Agaricus (Znocybe) dulcamazus. Pers. Ic. Piet. t. XY.Jig. 2 . 
Pileus convex, umbonate, umber, clothed with adpressed fibres, 
the centre breaking up into areolate patches, about inch across ; 
stem 1 inch or more high, 1 line thick, of the same colour as the 
pileus, scaly below, tomentose above ; gills clay-coloured, ventri- 
cose, margin paler, waved, adnate, with a strong decurrent tooth ; 
spores even; flesh white; taste at first pleasant. — Berk. 4’ Ann. 
Nat. Hist., No. 1653. 
On the ground. Scotland. 
Agazicus (Inocybe) cincinnatus. Fr. Hym. Eur.p. 228 . 
Pileus rather fleshy, convexo-plane, squarrose scaly ; stem solid, 
thin, scaly ; gills adnexed, crowded, ventricose, brownish-violet. — 
Berk. 4' Br. Ann. Nat. Hist., No. 1654. 
Amongst moss. Coed Coch. 
Spores granulated or irregular. “ This appears to be what Quelet 
figures under the name of A. dulcamarus, his A. cincinnatus being 
rather referable to that species.” — B. 4' Br. 
Agazicus (Inocybe) cazptus. Fr. Hym. Enr. p. 230 . 
Pileus fleshy, convex, then flattened, depressed; stem hollow, 
attenuated downwards, woolly, filamentose ; gills affixed, ventri- 
cose, broad, tawny- brown. — Berk. 4" Br. Ann. Nat. Hist., No. 1655. 
On naked soil. Coed Coch. 
Spores even. 
Agazicus (Inocybe) Tzinii. Wehwi.p. 194 . 
Pileus rather fleshy, hemispherical, obtuse, longitudinally fibril - 
lose with reddish fibrils ; stem stuffed, equal, slender, loosely fibril- 
lose, whitish mealy ; gills rounded, ventricose, cinnamon, with white 
flocci at the edge. — Flies Hym. Eur. p. 233. Bei^k. 4' Br. Ann. 
Nat. Hist., No. 1656. 
In grassy places. Scotland. 
Spores strongly granulated. 
Agazicus (Galeza) zninutus. Qnelet. lii.p. 10 , tab. i.jig. 5 . 
Berk. 4’ Br. Ann. Nat. Hist., No. 1656.* 
In woods amongst moss. Wrotham, Kent. 
