65 
Hypholoma pseudostorea W. G. Sm. Jour. Bot. XLI. (1903), p. 386. 
Pileus convex, obtuse or subumbonate, then expanded, fleshy ; 
at first purplish-brown with a darker middle, soon breaking up into 
large, fibrillose, purplish-brown scales, silky-white to pale fawn beneath 
the scales; margin appendiculate and entire when young. Stem 
hollow, equal or attenuate downwards, at first even, then silky-brown 
fbrillose; white above, pale yellowish below. Gills adnate, at first 
white, then rose, becoming brown to purple-brown ; not exuding 
drops of water. Usually caespitose, sometimes solitary. Paste ins 
sipid, somewhat disagreeable ; odour strong, disagreeable. Spores 
§-7X2°5-3m. 2EX4gX gin. 
Woods, plantations, under larches, September-November. 
This is the plant usually described, when found in this country, 
as A. storea Fr. Dr. Plowright* thinks it is HZ, lacrymabundum Fr., 
but as our plant never has any tear-drops it can hardly be H. /acrym- 
abundum. Spores of H. lacrymabundum 9-11 x Ou. 
Paxillus porosus Berk, W.G. Smith, Jour. Bot. XLI. (1903), p. 386. 
Not unlike P. involutus, to which it is allied, but the margin is 
never involute, and the pores are sulphury-green, changing to pale 
blue or brownish when bruised. 4% x 34x fin. Tasteless, odour very 
strong, unpleasant. 
Moist woods, under firs. Small forms somewhat resemble Boletus 
piperatus. 
Hygrophorus melizeus Fr. Hym. Eur., p. 406, Fr. JO Ae Rots ae 
Rievaulx, collected at Yorkshire Fungus Foray. Naturalist, 
November, 1903, p. 426. 
Aygrophorus Karstenii Sacc. and Cub. 
The record of H. bicolor Karst., noted in the Naturalist for Nov., 
1902, p. 356, and at p. 38 of the Trans. Brit. Myc. Soc., Vol. II. 
should be altered to Karstenit, as there is another H. bicolor B. & Br. 
W.G. Sm. Jour. Bot, XLI. (1903), p. 314. 
Hygrophorus Clarkii B. & Br. Ann, and Mag. Nat. Hist., May 
1873, p. 341. 
; Worthington G. Smith identifies the AH. Jatitabundus Inivtoar 
Silas by M. C. Cooke on p. 14 of the Trans. Brit. Myc. Socy., 
ol. II., as this species. Jour. Bot. XLI. (1903), p. 314. 
See Trans. Brit, Myc. Soc., Vol. L, p. 45. It is referred to H. cotoneum by 
Quél CR. 
