132 
THE FUNGI OF THE BRISTOL DISTRICT. 
Olidus, pileo e campannlato convex©, albo, stipiteque deorsnm 
pulvere lilacino conspersis, lamellis albis marginem vix attingentibus. 
Pilens nearly 1 inch across ; stem 3 inches high, dilated at the 
base. A donbt has been suggested whether this may not be Qnelet’s 
var. lilacinus of Ag. seminudus ; bnt as he does not mention the 
strong gas-tar smell, they cannot be the same. The spores in this 
species are much longer, *00027 X *0001 in. ; in Ag. seminudus^ 
•00015 X *00007 in. B. S Br. (Plate I., fig. 2.) 
Tricholoma. 
Agaricus terreus, v. argyra- 
cevis , Bull. Leigh Wood, Nov. 1877. 
The plant referred to Ag. scalpturatusj at p. 208, Vol. II., is 
pronounced by the Eev. M. J. Berkeley to be this species. The 
pileus and gills become stained with lemon-yellow as the plant decays. 
Clitocybe. 
697. Agaricus candicans, Fr. 
Wick, 
Sept. 1880. 
Pleueotus. 
698. Agaricus subpalmatus, Fr. 
Portishead, 
July, 1880. 
CoLLYBIA. 
699. Agaricus platyphyllus, Fr. 
Blaize Castle 
Wood, 
O 
o 
oo 
00 
o 
700. ,, butyraceus, Bull. 
Abbots’ Leigh, 
701. „ rancidus, Fr. 
Leigh Wood, 
SI 
702. ,, atratus, Fr. 
ss ss 
Mycena. 
703. Agaricus rugosus, Fr. 
Westridge Wood, 
Wotton-under- 
Edge 
Sept. 1880. 
704. „ sudorus, Fr. 
Stapleton Park, 
•j )> 
„ electicus, n. sp. 
( Leigh A¥ood, 
) Abbots’ Leigh, 
Oct. 1879. 
Mar. 1881. 
On dead furze, bracken, &c. Entirely white. Pileus hemi- 
spherical, at length sulcate, clothed, as well as' the stem and gills, 
with sparkling, glandular pubescence ; stem filiform, slightly dilated 
and hairy at the base ; gills adnate, broad— four to nine. 
