. Guide to Sowerby's models of British fungi in the Department of Botany, British Museum (Natural History) . Fig. 54.—Clavaria cinerea Bull.(One-third natural size.) ;5.—Clava;(One-half natural size.) Fig. 55.—Clavaria vermicularis branched ; branches unequal, dilated upwards; branchlets crowded,acute. Rare in shady woods. Edible. Sold in the markets of Italy. 145. Clavaria stricta Pers.—Yellowish-pallid, fuscous whenbruised ; trunk thick, much branched; branches and branchletsstiff, straight, even, adpressed, crowded, acute. C. stricta grows in woods on and about stumps; uncommon. 146. Clavar


. Guide to Sowerby's models of British fungi in the Department of Botany, British Museum (Natural History) . Fig. 54.—Clavaria cinerea Bull.(One-third natural size.) ;5.—Clava;(One-half natural size.) Fig. 55.—Clavaria vermicularis branched ; branches unequal, dilated upwards; branchlets crowded,acute. Rare in shady woods. Edible. Sold in the markets of Italy. 145. Clavaria stricta Pers.—Yellowish-pallid, fuscous whenbruised ; trunk thick, much branched; branches and branchletsstiff, straight, even, adpressed, crowded, acute. C. stricta grows in woods on and about stumps; uncommon. 146. Clavaria fusiformis Sow.—Known from all other Britishspecies of Clavaria by the toothed or pointed fuscous apex of eachgenerally simple, yellow club; trunks connate, slightly firm, even,soon hollow, and attenuated at the base. A common plant in woods and pastures. 147. Clavaria insequalis O. F. Mull.—Yellow, gregarious, some-what fasciculate, compressed or channelled; trunks variable, simpleor forked, sometimes jagged at the apex and ventricose in centre ;tufts much less dense than in C. fiisi/unn


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