150 
NEW BRITISH FUNGI. 
volute ; stem thickened downwards, white, fistulose, cottony at the 
base ; ring erect, often persistent ; gills pallid clay-colour, 
sinuately adnate, at length decurrent. B. $ Br. Ann. N. H., No. 
1940. 
On sticks of hawthorn and sloe. Hothorpe. 
Pileus 1 inch. “ It ought perhaps to be recorded in the section 
Tubaria , which, however, is a purely artificial division, and the ring 
is against this. It must be placed at the head of the hygro- 
phanous Pholiotce, though it is not allied to the species in that 
division.” — B. Br. 
Agaricus (Inocybe) Bongardi, Fr. Myc. Eur ., 220. 
Spores bulging on one side, as in Eunotia , -0005 in. long. — B. 
Br. 
Agaricus (Inocybe) flocculosus, B. Eng. FI., v., 97. 
Spores irregular, *0003 in. diam., sometimes slightly elongated. — 
B. Br. 
Agaricus (Inocybe) scabellus, Fr. 
Spores granulated as in A. fastigiatus. — B. <$• Br. 
Agaricus (Inocybe) caesariatus, Fr. Hym. Eur ., 234. 
Pileus fleshy, convex then plane, gibbous, tawny, clad with 
ochraceous fibrillose scales : stem solid, equal, fibrillose, ochraceous, 
growing pallid ; gills somewhat adnate, quite entire, pallid ochra- 
ceous. B. Br. Ann.N. H., No. 1941. Fr. Icon., 109,/. 3. 
In beech woods. Coed Coch, Oct , 1881. 
Spores even, -0004 in. long. 
Agaricus (Hebeloma) senescens, Batsch.,fig. 197. 
Pileus convex, then plane, slightly glutinous, ochraceous- tawny, 
extreme margin delicately white, tomentose ; stem at first bulbous 
and brown below, then, except the white tomentose apex, squamu- 
lose, solid ; gills crowded, at first pallid, adnexed, then cinnamon ; 
flesh white. B. § Br. Ann.N. H ., No. 1941 bis. 
Among fir trees. Gwrwch Castle. 
Sometimes semiglobose ; stem 5 inches high, always dark below ; 
pileus 3 inches or more in diameter. 
Agaricus (Hebeloma) subcollariatus, B.& Br. 
Pileus convex, rather fleshy, pallid, centre brownish, slightly 
glutinous ; veil floccose, evanescent ; stem stuffed, at length deli- 
cately fistulose ; base brown, pulverulent ; gills ventricose, seceding, 
forming a short interrupted collar, clay colour, edge white. B. 
Br. Ann. N. H ., No. 1492. 
On naked soil. Sibbertoft. 
“ Pileus about an inch. Allied to A. mesophceus, of which we 
were at first inclined to consider it a variety. Spores elliptic, uni- 
nucleate, *0005 in. long.” — B. Br. 
Agaricus (Hebeloma) firmus, Pers. Ic. Sc Des., t. 5, f. 3, 4. 
This appears to be a very variable species. The figure m the 
11 leones ” does not accord in several respects with the characters 
in “ Hym. Eur.” The pileus is neither campanulate nor umbonate, 
but at length depressed. An Agaric certainly referable to this 
