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
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AGARIC1NI.

161

On lawns and pastures. Summer and early autumn. Ex-tremely common. Often confounded with A. semiglobatus.

290. A. (Naueoria) inquilinus, Fr.; pileus submembrana-ceous, convexo-plane, smooth, slightly striate, hygrophanous,somewhat fleshy in the centre; stem short, fistulose, tough,dark-brown, attenuated downwards; gills triangular, convex,adnato-decurrent, scarcely crowded, brownish-ferruginous.

On chips, in woods, gardens, etc. Royal Botanic Gardens,Regents Park, etc. Pileus a few lines across, yellowish ortan-coloured.

*** Pileus Jloeculose or sguamulose.

291. A. (Naueoria) furfuraceus, P.; pileus slightly fleshy,convexo-plane, obtuse and depressed, moist, hygrophanous, atfirst clothed with silky evanescent scales; stem fistulose, floc-culose, rigid, pale ; gills adnate, decurrent, rather distant, cin-namon.

On chips, etc. Extremely common. Pileus reddish-brown,often nearly white when dry.

292. A. (Naueoria) erinaceus, Fr.; pileus slightly fleshy,convex, somewhat umbilicatc, clothed with scales consistingof fasciculate hairs; stem slender, fistulose, short, incurved,hairy ; gills adnate, rather crowded, entire. Sow. t. 417.

On dead sticks. Rare. Southwick, Northamptonshire, etc.Pileus half an inch across, bright brown, as well as the stem.

293. A. (Naueoria) siparius, Fr.; pileus slightly fleshy,obtuse, clothed with downy scales, as well as the stuffed stem,which is pruinose above; gills broad, adnate, somewhat dis-tant, floccose at the edge.

On soil and caddis-cases at the edge of a pond. EastBergholt, Dr. Badham. Resembling the last, but not sobright in colour.

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