. British fungi (Hymenomycetes). Fungi -- Great Britain. 2 I 2 AGARICUS. Leptonia. In grassy places. Ascot. Name—ne, not; freyido, to bite. From the edge of the gills being without teeth. Contrasted with A. serrulatus. Fr. Motiogr. i. /. 290. Hym. Eur. p. 205. B. ^ Br. n. 1759. Krombh. t. 2. f. 22 ? Noianea. Siibgeiiiis XVI. NOLANEA {nola, a little bell). Fr. Syst. Myc. i. p. 204. Rosy-spored. Stem fistulose, the tube more rarely stuffed with a pith, caj-filaginous. Pileus somewhat membranaceous, campaimlate, somewhat papillate, stri- ate and sometimes even, sometimes also clothed with flocci,


. British fungi (Hymenomycetes). Fungi -- Great Britain. 2 I 2 AGARICUS. Leptonia. In grassy places. Ascot. Name—ne, not; freyido, to bite. From the edge of the gills being without teeth. Contrasted with A. serrulatus. Fr. Motiogr. i. /. 290. Hym. Eur. p. 205. B. ^ Br. n. 1759. Krombh. t. 2. f. 22 ? Noianea. Siibgeiiiis XVI. NOLANEA {nola, a little bell). Fr. Syst. Myc. i. p. 204. Rosy-spored. Stem fistulose, the tube more rarely stuffed with a pith, caj-filaginous. Pileus somewhat membranaceous, campaimlate, somewhat papillate, stri- ate and sometimes even, sometimes also clothed with flocci, margin straight and at the first pressed to the stem, and not involute. Gills free or adfixed and not decurrent. Fr. Hym. Eiir. p. 206. Noianea agrees with Leptonia and Eccilia among the pink-spored spe- cies. It corresponds with Myce?ia, Galera, and Psathyra. Several En- tolomata are nearly allied. The spe- cies are thin and slender, commonly inodorous and fragile, though some of them are tough. Growing- on the. XVII. Af;aric7is {Noianea) pas ctius. One-third natural size. ground in summer and autumn. * Gills grey or fuscous. Pileus dark-coloured, hygrophanous. ** Gills becoming yellow, or rufesccjit. *** Gills shining white then rosy. Hygrophanous. **** Gills whitish. Pileus not hygrophanous. * Gills grey or fuscous, &^c. 467. A. pascuus Pers.—Pileus from scarcely to cent. (1-3 in.) hrodid, fuligifious when moist, hoary or becoming pale fawn when dry, membranaceous, somewhat acute, conical then expanded, but not flattened, commonly umbonate, smooth, striate when moist, even, silky-shining luhen dry. Stem commonly cent. (2-3 in.) long, 2-4 mm. (1-2 lin.) thick (sometimes com- pressed), fistulose, soft, equal, silky-fibrous or when more fully grown fibrillose, striate, commonly pallid fuliginous. Gills very much attenuated behind, almost free, thin, crowded, ventricose or rather broader and obtuse towards the margin, grey or whitish- fuliginous, sprinkled


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