FUNGI MACOWANIANT. 
147 
Meliola amphitricha, Fr. 
In fol. Justiciae anagalloidis, Nees. Natal, Wood, Nos. 241, 
22, 57. In Plectranthe ciliat. et Hypsobromo elato, ad Soin. E 
et Grahamstown, leg. MacOwan, Nos. 1259, 1292, 1328. 
Darluca filum, Castg. 
In fol. Oxalidis purpuratae, Jacq., Som. E., No. 1042. 
NEW BRITISH FUNGI. 
By M. C. Cooke. 
(Continued from p. 52.) 
The following includes descriptions of the new species enume- 
rated by Messrs. Berkeley and Broome in the “ Annals of Natural 
History ” for March, 1882 : — 
Agaricus (Tricholoma) Schumacheri, Fr. Hym. Fur., 69. 
Pileus spongy, compact, convex, then plane, obtuse, even, moist, 
margin exceedingly indexed ; stem fleshy, solid, thick, fibrillose- 
striate ; gills slightly emarginate (at length decurrent ), plane, narrow, 
crowded, white. Flor. Dan., t. 2267, Jig. 1 ; B. Br. Ann. N. 
H., No. 1927. 
In a hothouse. Apethorpe. 
Agreeing very closely with the figure in Flora Danica, espe- 
cially as regards the gills. 
Agaricus (Tricholoma) porphyroleucus, Fr. Hym. Bur., 75. 
Firm, pileus fleshy, umbo darker and evanescent, stem solid, 
somewhat fibrillose, gills white. Bull., t. 443 ; B. Br. Ann. 
N. H., No. 1928 ; Illust., t. 119 b. 
On the ground. Coed Coch. 
Included by Fries under Ag. melaleucus. 
Agaricus (Clitocybe) incilis, Fr. Hym. Bur., 94. 
Pileus fleshy, plane, umbilicate, even, opaque, margin rather 
silky, inflexed, crenate ; stem hollow, short, silky, attenuated down- 
wards, at length compressed, gills adnate-decurrent, rather distant, 
connected by veins, white, growing pallid. B. Br. Ann. N . H., 
No. 1929. 
In woods. Shrewsbury (W. Phillips). 
Pileus 2 in., stem ^ in. and more, 2-3 lines thick. 
Agaricus (Mycena) pseudopurus, Cke. 
Pileus rather fleshy, campanulate, then convex, expanded, ob- 
tusely nmbonate, smooth, growing pale, margin obscurely striate ; 
stem rigid, straight, even, naked, at first rosy-white, becoming 
brown when dry ; gills adnate, whitish. Spores elliptical. 
In woods. Coed Coch, 1870. 
Pileus scarcely exceeding an inch, rosy, then pale ; stem 2-3 
inches long, slender, erect, hollow, turning dark brown in drying, 
