170 
Amongst Pine needles, Lawn Wood, Swarraton, Hampshire, 
28th October, 1904. C.R. 
Easily distinguished amongst the strong smelling species of 
Collybiae by the grey stem being everywhere covered with 
white flocci. 
Chlorospora Eyret Mass. (=Schulzeria Eyrei Mass. Grevillea 
vol. 22, p. 38, pl. 185. 
This very distinct and interesting species was discovered by 
the Rev. W. L. W. Eyre at Alresford, Hampshire, in 1893, and 
he again found some specimens there in October, 1906. In 
1901 it was recorded at the Fungus Foray of the Yorkshire 
Naturalists’ Union from Potridings Wood, and on the 12th of 
October, 1906, Mr. E. W. Swanton gathered it on Heyshott 
Downs, Sussex. 
Entoloma pulvereum Rea. See pl. 14 hereof. 
Pileus 5-30 mm. broad, campanulate, then expanded and 
flattened, fuliginous, densely covered with very mznute scales, 
which are erect at the centre, striate at first, margin very slightly 
incurved. Flesh thin fuliginous. Stem 25-50 mm. long, 2-3 
mm. thick, stuffed at length hollow, equal, densely velvety and 
covercd when young with a reddish rust coloured meal which 
becomes darker with age, externally and internally fuliginous. 
Gills adnate with a minute sinus, 2-5 mm. wide, grey at length 
dusted with the pinkish ferruginous spores, vezmed, somewhat 
distant, exceeding the margin of the pileus, edge irregular, 
thick, pale or pinkish at first, then deep rose colour. Spores 
pinkish ferruginous, irregular, angular, 12-13 x 6p. Inodorous. 
Amongst oak leaves under a holly tree. Preston Oak Hills, 
Hampshire, 13th October, 1905. Carleton Rea. . 
Easfly distinguished amongst the Leptonidei group of Ento- 
lomata by the reddish rust coloured meal on the stem, the 
minute scales on the pileus which give it a farinaceous appear- 
ance and the veined gills exceeding the margin of the pileus. It 
should come next after Extoloma griseocyaneum Fr. 
Coprinus tuberosus Quélet. Bull. Soc. Bot. France XXIV. 
(1877), p. 280, pl. 3. 
On dung, Kew Gardens. The Wild Fauna and Flora of the 
Roy. Bot. Gardens, Kew, 1906, p. 128. 
Hebeloma subsaponaceum Karst. 
Allerthorpe Common, near Pocklington, Y.N.U. Excursion 
August, 1905. Massee and Crossland. Naturalist, January 
1900, p. 7. 
