62 
salmon white; annulus distant, persistent, membranous, white 
Gills broader in front, whitish ; edge bordered with dark umber, 
Flesh thin, 2 x 22 x $ 1n. 
Amongst grass, Scarborough, May, 1885. W.G. Smith l.c, p, 385. 
Lepiota atrocrocea W.G.Sm. Mass, Eur. Fung. FI, p. 11. 
Pileus expanded, slightly depressed ; bright salmon-orange ; more 
or less covered with purple-brown, almost black, granular flocci, 
Stem hollow, attenuate upwards; bright salmon-orange ; salmon- 
brown squamulose. Annulus fugacious. Gills broadly adnate ; 
salmon white. Flesh thin; salmon-orange-brown. 14 x 14x in, 
Clevedon, Somerset, Oct., Edwin Wheeler. Allied to Z. granulosa 
Batsch. and L. amianthina Scop. W.G. Smith lc. p. 385. 
Tricholoma squarrulosum Bres. Fung. Trid., Vol. IL., p. 47, pl. 152, 
see pl. 4. 
Pileus fleshy, 4-8 cm. across, convex then expanded, fuscous, 
densely covered with blackish squamules, dry, margin exceeding the 
gills and fibrillose. Stem 4-5 cm. high by 7-12 mm. thick, stuffed 
then somewhat hollow, equal or incrassated at the base, of the same 
colour as the pileus and densely covered with blackish fuscous squamules, 
Flesh greyish, then white. Gills sinuato-adnexed, almost free in 
some specimens, 6-7 mm. wide, crowded, grey, occasionally spotted 
with red when bruised. Spores elliptical, 7-8 x 4-5. 
Under oaks and hazel, Black House Hill Wood, Worcestershire, 
17th September, 1903. C. Rea. 
Easily distinguished from its allies by the blackish fuscous squa- 
mulose stem. 
Collybia Henriettae W. G. Sm. Jour. Bot. XLI. 1903, p. 139. 
Pileus dry, even, somewhat downy, somewhat yellowish umber, 
4 in. diam. Stem attenuate upwards, subpruinose, even, slightly 
rooting ; pale pallid yellowish brown within and without, 77 in. long, 
1 in. thick. Gills in. broad, broadly adnate, distant, slightly 
rounded near the stem. Flesh very thin. Spores ‘0005 x *0007 1”. 
Intermediate between Collybia radicata Rehl. and C. /ongipes Bull. 
On and about stumps, trees, &c., September. 
This species differs from C. radicata in the dry, even, not glutinous, 
rugose pileus and in the much thinner flesh; in the even, sub- 
pruinose, not sulcate and glabrous stem, and in the broadly adnate 
attachment of the gills to the stem. It has not the fleshy, velvety 
pileus and stem of C. dongipes, and differs widely in the attachment 
of the gills to the stem, adnexo-free in C. longipes. 
