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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AGARICINI.

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the margin; umbo fleshy, obtuse; stem stuffed, elongated,attenuated upwards, elastic, brownish, marked with whitestreaks, girt with the brownish-white veil; gills adnate, thick,distant, purplish, then cinnamon-umber.

In woods. Not observed since the time of Withering.

40. C. (Telamonia) periseelis, Weinm. ; pileus campanu-late, then convex, lilac and white, silky ; umbo fleshy, mem-branaceous elsewhere; stem equal, fibrillose, of the same co-lour ; veil woven, brownish, forming an imperfect ring; gillsadnate, crowded, narrow, pallid, then obscurely ferruginous.

In bogs or under beech-trees. Bowood, C. E. Broome.

41. C. (Telamonia) psammoeephalus, Fr. ; tawny-cinna-mon ; pileus slightly fleshy, convexo-expanded, at length um-bonate, furfuraceo-squamulose; stem stuffed, attenuated,squamulose, and sheathed with the continuous veil; gills ad-nate, arcuate, crowded. Bull. t. 531. /. 2.

In woods. Not uncommon. Kings Cliffe. Pileus aboutan inch across.

42. C. (Telamonia) ileopodius, Fr. ; pileus slightly fleshy,convex, subumbonate, at first clothed with silky white threads,light reddish-yellow, then smooth and tan-coloured, at lengtheven and rimose ; stem equal, slender, tawny without andwithin, sheathed with the pallid veil, naked above, fibrilloso-striate; gills adnate, rather crowded, thin, inclining to cin-namon. Bull. t. 586. /. 2 A, B.

In woods. Not uncommon. Very variable. Pileus 1-1 ^inch across.

Subgenus 6. Hygrocybe.Pileus hygrophanous; stem distinct

from the fibrillose veil, hence neither annulate nor fioccoso-

squamose.

43. C. (Hygrocybe) Armeniacus, Fr. ; pileus subcarnose,