258 
THE FUNGI OF WARWICKSHIRE. 
126. Ag. epipterygius, Scop. Amongst dead leaves. Oct. 
On the mossy bark of a tree, Kenilworth, Russell, 
lllustr. Combe Woods, Adams. Sutton Park ; Trickley 
Coppice ; New Park; Maxtoke ; Brown’s Wood, 
Solihull; Marston Green ; Bradnock’s Hayes. 
127. Ag. vulgaris, Pers. Woods. Rare. Combe Woods, 
Adams. School Rough, Marston Green. 
128. Ag. tenerrimus, Berk. Fir cones and twigs. Rare. 
Kenilworth, Russell, List. Greenhouse at Lady Adams’, 
Ansty, Adams. Sutton, on dead bark; Four Oaks. 
129. Ag. electicus, Buckn. Very rare. Oct. Sutton Park ; 
Olton Reservoir ; in both places on dead and rotting 
rush stems. 
130. Ag. corticola, Schum. Ag. corticalis, Purt. On dead 
branches of bramble, &c. Rare. Oct. Ragley Wood ; 
Oversley Wood, Purt., iii., 214. Clarendon Villa, 
Kenilworth, Russell, lllustr. Hopsford, near Brinklow. 
Adams. Sutton; Olton Reservoir. Merulius fcetidus, 
Purt., ii., 620, from his garden at Alcester, is, teste ipso, 
a form of this ; see iii., 391. 
Sub-genus VIII.— Omphalia. 
[Ag. pyxidatus, Bull. Occurred among grass by the 
roadside, California, Harborne, Worcestershire.] 
131. Ag. sphagnicola, Berk. On sphagnum. Rare. May- 
June. Bog above Blackroot Pool, Sutton Park, Dr. 
Cooke, 1883. 
132. Ag. hepaticus, Batsch. Grassy places. Rare. Oct. 
Kenilworth, Russell, lllustr. By the railway above 
Blackroot Pool, Dr. Cooke, 1883. 
133. Ag. muralis, Sow. Walls, &c. Rare. On a wall 
amongst moss, Edgbaston. 
134. Ag. umbelliferus, Linn. Heaths. Sept.-Oct. Sutton 
Park ; New Oscott. 
Var. mgochrous, Fr. Hym. Eur., p. 161. Merulius fuscus, 
With., 147—“ Packington Park, in clusters,”—is 
referred by Fries to this variety. The gills are described 
as subdicliotomons, and the colour of the whole as 
fuscous umber. 
135. Ag. pseudo-androsaceus. Bull. Heaths. Rare. On the 
top of an old wall at Wixford, Oct 15, 1820, Purt., iii., 
185. It is likely that Purton’s plant was rather a form 
of the preceding species. 
