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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AGAUICIN1.

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sulcate, and revolute; stem very brittle, white, woolly; gillsfree, linear, at length remote, distant.

On dung. Not uncommon. Remarkable for the dense,cottony coat of the stem.

18. C. nyehthemeras, Fr.; pileus very thin, soon rimose,expanded, flocculoso-furfuraceous, then naked, furcato-striatc;stem equal, flaccid, smooth, dirty-white; gills free, narrow, atlength black, at first crowded, then distant, remote. Bull. t.542. /. D. I.

On dung. Kings Cliffe. Pileus grey, a few lines across.

19. C. radiatus, Fr.; very delicate; pileus clavato-campa-nulate, tomentose, soon split, flattened, naked, plicato-radiate;stem filiform; gills free, distant, few in number. Bull. 452.L. E.-H.

On dung, in meadows. Very common. Minute.

20. C. domesticus, Fr.; pileus thin, ovato-campanulate,obtuse, split, undulato-sulcate, furfuraceo-squamulose; stemattenuated, silky, white; gills fixed, crowded, linear, white,with a reddish tint, then brown-black. Huss.

On damp carpets, etc. Not uncommon.

21. C. ephemeras, Fr.; pileus very delicate, ovali-ciavate,then campanulate,split,radiato-sulcate, somewhat furfuraceous;disc raised, even; stem slender, equal, pellucid, smooth; gillsreaching the stem, distant, dirty-white, then brown and black. Bull. t. 128.

On dunghills. Common.

22. C. plicatilis, Fr.; pileus very delicate, ovali-cylindrical,soon expanded, split, sulcato-plicate, nearly smooth; disc broad,at length depressed, even; stem equal, smooth, white; gillsadhering to a distinct collar, greyish-black. Curt. Loud. t. 200.

In pastures. Very common. Spores broadly elliptic,inch long.