THE FUNGI OF WARWICKSHIRE. 
257 
115. Ag. metatus, Fr. Amongst moss in woods. Oct. 
Amongst leaves and moss, New Park, Middleton, 
named by Mr. C. B. Plowright. 
116. Ag. stanneus, Fr. Amongst grass, in woods. Rare. 
Oct. Colesliill Pool ; Bradnock’s Hayes. 
117. Ag. vitrens, Fr. Woods. Rare. Sept. Water’s Wood, 
Maxtoke ? (1882). 
118. Ag. tenuis, Bolt. Moist woods. Rare. Sept.-Oct-. 
Burton Green Wood, Kenilworth, Russell, lllustr. Pine 
wood, Colesliill Heath, on sphagnum ; Haywood, on 
sphagnum. 
119. Ag. filopes, Bull. Ag. varius, var. 3, With. Amongst 
leaves in woods. Sept.-Oct. Edgbaston Park, With., 
237. Combe Woods, Adams. Sutton Park ; New Parle, 
Middleton. 
Withering’s plant can scarcely be this species. 
120. Ag. amictus, Fr. Rare. Oct. Among fern roots, etc., 
under a glass shade, in the house, Birmingham ; Cooke, 
lllustr., t. 286. 
121. Ag. vitilis, Fr. In woody places, among grass. Not 
common. Bradnock’s Marsh ; Olton Reservoir; Sutton 
Park. 
122. Ag. acicula, Schaff. On sticks. Sept.-Oct. Hopsford, 
Adams. Driffold Lane, Sutton ; New Park, Middleton. 
123. Ag. sanguinolentus, A. and S. Amongst leaves in 
woods. Oct. Not uncommon. Sutton Park; Four 
Oaks ; Trickley Coppice ; Hams Hall; Marston Green. 
124. Ag. galopus t Pers. Amongst leaves. Frequent. Sept.- 
Nov. Red Lane; Crackley Wood! Clarendon Villa, 
Kenilworth, Russell, lllustr. High Wood, Combe, 
Adams. Edgbaston Park ; Sutton Park ; New Park ; 
Trickley Coppice ; Colesliill Pool; Water Orton ; Iron 
Stone Wood, Oldbury; Olton Reservoir; Solihull; 
Haywoods, etc. 
Var. candidus, all pure white milk, abundant. See 
“ Journal of Botany,” xxii., 129. At Four Oaks. 
125. Ag. leucogalus, Cke. Very rare. New Park, Middleton, 
on the ground, Oct. 7tli, 1883. Cooke, lllustr., t. 653, 
was not published at that time, but it represents the 
New Park species very closely ; the description agrees 
exactly, except in the habitat. “ I have just now 
(Sept., 1888) re-discovered this species at Langley; 
this time I observed it was attached to a fragment 
of wood in the soil.”—W. B. G. 
