. Guide to Sowerby's models of British fungi in the Department of Botany, British Museum (Natural History) . n in woods, sometimes caespi-tose. Sub-genus 2. Myxacium.—There arefourteen British species of Myxacium, onlyone of which is represented by a Myxaciuin the pileus and stem are glu-tinous, and the gills adnate or decurrent. Fig. 33.—Type form of Myxa-cium. Cortinarius collinitus, rt .. IT -i. T^ T->-i Fr. (One-fifth natural size.) 76. Cortinarius collinitus Fr.—Pileus fleshy, convex, then expanded, orange-tawny, glutinous ; gills adnate, somewhatcrowded, whitish blue-grey or
. Guide to Sowerby's models of British fungi in the Department of Botany, British Museum (Natural History) . n in woods, sometimes caespi-tose. Sub-genus 2. Myxacium.—There arefourteen British species of Myxacium, onlyone of which is represented by a Myxaciuin the pileus and stem are glu-tinous, and the gills adnate or decurrent. Fig. 33.—Type form of Myxa-cium. Cortinarius collinitus, rt .. IT -i. T^ T->-i Fr. (One-fifth natural size.) 76. Cortinarius collinitus Fr.—Pileus fleshy, convex, then expanded, orange-tawny, glutinous ; gills adnate, somewhatcrowded, whitish blue-grey or clay-coloured, then cinnamon; stalk solid, forthe most part floccose and glutinousnear the top; in young specimens showinga glutinous, fugacious ring; colour blue-grey or white, sometimes yellowish. Common in woods. SuB-GENUs 3. Inoloma,—There arenineteen British species of Inoloma, ofwhich two are represented by Jnchuia the pileus is fleshy, dry, atFig. 34.—Type form of Inoloma. first silky, not hygrophanous ; stalk some- ! what bulboUS, with a Single ^^^^
Size: 1388px × 1799px
Photo credit: © Reading Room 2020 / Alamy / Afripics
License: Licensed
Model Released: No
Keywords: ., bo, bookcentury1800, bookdecade1890, bookidguidetosowerbysm00smit