NEW BRITISH FUNGI. 
7 
yellow, becoming reddish when old. — B. ^ Br. Ann. N.H.^ No. 
1555. 
Amongst decayed ferns. Shrewsbury. Wrotham. Sept. 
Pileus 2-3 in. across. 
The spores are more like those of a Boletus than an Agaric. 
They are oblong, ‘OOOSb-’OOOSG in., and about one-fourth as much 
wide. 
Lactarius squalidus. Kroirib. t. 4 , /. 23 - 25 , 
Pileus compact, convexo-plane, umbilicate, dry, smooth, without 
zones, pallid, lurid ; stem solid, equal, smooth, pallid brown ; gills 
adnate, narrow, becoming yellowish ; milk whitish, mild. — Fries 
Ep. zY., 428. B. ^ Br. Ann. iSf.H., No. 1556. 
In moist places. Scotland. 
Lactarius minimus. Sm. in Journ. Bot. 1873 , p. 205 . 
Fries Ejjicr. ii.,p. 438 . B. ^ Br. Ann. N.H., No. 1557 . 
In pastures. Forres. 
Hygrophorus discoideus. Fr. Ep. i?. 408 . 
Pileus fleshy, thin, convex or gibbous, then plane or depressed, 
even, smooth, glutinous, grey, becoming pallid, disc darker and 
rather ferruginous ; stem stuffed, soft, floccnlose, viscid, whitish, 
punctate above ; gills adnate then decurrent, thin, soft, growing 
pallid. — Gonn. ^ Bahli. viii. t. 10, /.4. B. ^ Br, Ann. N.H., No. 
1558. Agaricus semigilvus, Seer., No. 771. 
In grassy places. Laxton Park, Norths. 
Solitary or tufted ; stem dotted all over with viscid granules. 
Hygrophorus cinereus. Fr. Ep. p. 413 . Att. Svamp. t. 30 . 
Pileus thinner, and gills cinereous ; stem white, otherwise the 
same as Hygr. pratensis. — B. ^ Br. Ann. N.H., No. 1561. 
In mossy plaees. Coed Coch, &c. 
Hygrophorus sciophanus. Fr. Ep. p. 417 . 
Somewhat testaceous, pileus rather fleshy, convex, then depressed, 
obtuse, slightly viscid, opaque, margin striate ; stem hollow, equal, 
subflexuous, even ; gills decurrent, distant, connected by veins. — 
B. ^ Br. Ann. N.H., No. 1560. 
In mossy places. Perth. 
Spores very pale clay-coloured. There were two forms, one with 
a darker pileus and the flesh dark, the other paler, with the flesh 
also pale. The former only deposited spores, it is probable there- 
fore that the pale form was not so fully developed. 
Russula olivacea. Fr. Ep. p. 445 . 
Mild ; pileus fleshy, convex, then plane or depressed, silky and 
squamulose, margin patent, even, flesh white, or becoming yellow- 
ish ; stem firm, ventricose, rosy-pallid, spongy and stuffed within ; 
gills annexed, broad, yellow, mixed with shorter ones, and furcate. 
— Sclioeff. Ic. t. 204. Kromhh. t. 68 /. 13. B. ^ Br. Ann. N.H., 
No. 1562. 
In pine woods. Slough. 
Spores yellow. 
