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Outlines of British Fungology : containing characters of above a thousand species of Fungi, and a complete list of all that have been described as natives of the British Isles / by M.J. Berkeley
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OUTLINES OF BRITISH FUNGOLOGY.

subbulbous stem, and yellowish gills, are its principal dif-ferences,

36. A. (Trieholoma) spermaticus, Fr.; white; pileus some-what fleshy, at first convex, then expanded, smooth, viscid;margin membranaceous, naked; stem stuffed, at length hol-low, twisted, even; gills emarginate, rather distant, eroded.Paul. t. 45.

In fir-woods. Coed Coch, Denbighshire, October 13, 1859.Smell strong, unpleasant. Pileus several inches across.

37. A. (Trieholoma) nietitans, Fr.; pileus fleshy, convexo-plane, obtuse, even, smooth, viscid; stem stuffed, dry, elastic,nearly equal, squamulose, yellow, as well as the crowded ob-soletely spotted gills, which from the first are rounded behindand free. Bull. t. 574. /. 1; Huss. ii. t. 46.

In woods. East Bergholt, Dr. Badham.

37*. A. (Trieholoma) fulvellus, Fr.; pileus fleshy, con-vexo-plane, viscid, even, disc darker, punctato-rugose; stemstuffed, then hollow, fibrillose, at length rufous, tip naked;gills crowded, white, at length rufous, rounded, then emar-ginate. Bull. t. 555. /. 2.

In woods. Coed Coch, October 1859. Fries considers thismerely a subspecies.

38. A. (Trieholoma) flavo-brunneus, Fr.; pileus fleshy,at first conical, at length expanded, viscid, clothed with littlestreak-like scales; stem hollow, somewhat ventricose, fibrillose,at first viscid, tip naked; gills emarginato-decurrent, crowded,yellowish, becoming rufous.

In woods. Not uncommon. Smell like that of new meal.Schaeffers t. 62, quoted under this by Fries, appears to be Ag.rnelleus.

39. A. (Trieholoma) albo-brunneus, P. ; pileus fleshy, he-mispherical, obtuse, viscid, streaked; stem solid, short, equal,