RUSSULA REDIVIVA. 
77 
Diam. 3 in. Stem white, 1£ in. long, 10 lines thick, inflated at 
apex, compressed, curved, and attenuated at the foot. Firm and 
dry. — Seer. 529. 
var. sororia. Fr. Hym. Fur. 447. Stevenson II., 124. Coolce Hdbk. II., 
1215. Coolce Illus. t. 1057. Fries Icon. t. 173,/. 1. Larbr. t . 19, f. 7. 
Pileus convex, then plane or depressed, margin striate , gills 
rather distant, connected by veins. 
In pine woods. 
Habit and colour the same, but differing in many points. Stem 
white, gills with many dimidiate but few furcate. — Fr. Hym. 
Fur. 447. 
var. intermedia. Cooke Illus. t. 1056. Cooke Hdbk. n., No. 1215. 
Pileus fleshy, depressed, viscid, margin thin, striate ; stem 
usually attenuated downwards, becoming cinereous and striate ; 
gills dirty white. 
On the ground under trees. 
This resembles sororia in the striate margin, differs in the 
cinereous, striate stem. From consobrina it differs in the striate 
margin, but resembles it in the cinereous stem. — M. C. G. 
Spores subglobose, 10 p diam. 
1216. Russula (Heterophyllae) foetens. Fers. Syn. p. 443. Fries 
Mon. 195. Fr. Hym. Fur. 447. Fr. Sver. Svam. t. 40. Sacc. Syll. 
1833. Krombh. t. 70,/. 1-6. Full. Champ, t. 292. Venturi t. 33,/. 
1-3. Viviani t. 41. Sow. t. 415. Stevenson n., 14. Cooke Hdbk. ii., 
1216. Cooke Illus. t. 1046. 
Acrid, foetid, pileus bullate, then expanded and depressed, rigid, 
adnate pellicle viscid, disc fleshy, margin broad, membranaceous, 
at first turned in, tubercnlose-sulcate, stem stout, stuffed, then 
hollow, gills adnexed, unequal, and furcate, veined and anastomos- 
ing, whitish, at the first weeping. 
In woods. Common. 
Large, very rigid, with a very deep empyreumatic odour, soon 
distinct, pileus at length reflexed and repand. Gills (at first free) 
thin, obsoletely yellowish, dirty when bruised. — Fr. Hym. Eur. 4:4:7. 
In woods, etc., everywhere common. Large, in a manner rigid, 
with a heavy empyreumatic odour. Taste acrid. Stem stout, 
stuffed, then hollow, 2 in. and more long, ^-1 in. thick, whitish. 
Pileus slightly fleshy, at first bullate, then expanded and depressed, 
pellicle adnate, not separable, in moist weather viscid, 4-5 in. and 
more broad, dingy yellow, sometimes growing pale, margin broadly 
membranaceous, and long sulcate, the ribs at length tuberculose, 
at first infracted. Flesh thin, rigid-fragile, pallid ; gills adnexed, 
crowded, connected by veins, mixed with many dimidiate and 
furcate, whitish, at first weeping watery drops, by which it differs 
from all the preceding. In dry weather the odour sometimes 
obsolete. — Fr. Mon. 196. 
Spores. — 8 p (W. G. S.) ; 9-12 x 7-9 p (Britz.) ; 8 p (Bizz.) ; 
8 p diam., or 9-10 x 7-8 p (Sacc.). 
