Buch 
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
Entstehung
Seite
103
JPEG-Download
 

AGAKIC1NI.

103

In woods. Not uncommon. Pileus white, with a slighttinge of ochre, often minutely cracked. Stem not alwaysrooting. Smell like that of the last.

57. A. (Tricholoma) immundus, n. s. ; caespitose, fleshy;pileus at first convex, dirty white, stained with bistre, mi-nutely silky; margin inflexed, silky or minutely scabrous andsquamulose; stem fibrillosc, of the same colour as the pileus;gills subcinereous, with a pinkish tinge, marked with trans-verse lines, emarginate.

Amongst short grass, on sheeps dung. On the top ofMoelfre-ucliaf, Denbighshire, Oct. 1859. Pileus 2 inches ormore across. Every part blackish when bruised. Borderdeflexed; spores white. Erics, to whom specimens were sent,compares this with A. gangra>nosus and A. graveolens, but itseems distinct from either. The figure of A. fumosus, Pers.Ic., gives some notion of its outward appearance.

58. A. (Tricholoma) ionides, Bull. ; pileus fleshy, at firstcampanulate, umbouate, even, nearly smooth, changing co-lour ; margin at first flocculosc; stem stuffed, clastic, attenu-ated, fibrillosc; gills crowded, emarginate, with a decurrcnttooth, thin, eroded, white, at length discoloured. Bull. 1 . 533.f. 3. A. purpureus, Bolton, t. 41.

In woods. Not found since the time of Bolton.

59. A. (Tricholoma) carneus, Bull.; pileus slightly fleshy,obtuse, even, nearly smooth, becoming pallid; stem short,stuffed, rigid, reddish like the pileus, thickened upwards, prui-nose; gills very wide behind, rounded, crowded, white. Bull,t. 533./. 1.

In pastures. Not uncommon. Pileus seldom exceeding1 inch, of a rufous pink. Stem minutely squamulose, oftensplitting, at length hollow.