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Cap distinct. Gills slightly swollen (folds), reticulate-veined. Stem bare, most often thickened.
*) Cap whole, fleshy or membranaceous, usually infundibuliform.
Agaricus alectorophoides. The dark-yellow chanterelle or "roe-foot" a common name for the golden chanterelle. S. t. 206.
Agaricus chantarellus. The common (edible) chanterelle. t. 82.
? Agaricus degener. The deformed gill-mushroom. t. 243.
? Agaricus incurvus. The crooked gill-mushroom. t. 65.
Merulius (Elvela. S.) tubaeformis. The trumpet-shaped vein-mushroom. t. 156.
**) Cap dimidiate (leathery).
Merulius fepiarius. The fir-mushroom. t. 76.
Agaricus dubius. The dubious hard wood-mushroom. S. t. 231.
Agaricus quercinus? The hard oak-mushroom. S. t. 57.
Fungus club-shaped, finely veined at the sides. Cap distinct, no analogue.
Elvela carnea S. The flesh-colored nail-mushroom. t. 114.
Elvela purpurascens. The brownish-purple nail-mushroom. t. 226.
b) With the hymenium the spore-bearing surface protruding into tubes.
Cap cushion-shaped, fleshy or corky, whole or dimidiate. Tubes fused together.
SVILLUS. Cap cushion-shaped, convex. Tubes elongated, easily separating from the substance of the cap.
Boletus annulatus. The ringed cow-bolete. t. 114.
Boletus appendiculatus. The strong-rooted cow-bolete. t. 130.
Boletus aureus. The gold-yellow cow-bolete. S. t. 115.
Boletus bulbosus (esculentus). The edible cow-bolete. Stone-bolete. t. 134 and 135.
Boletus bovinus (scaber Bull.?). The black-headed cow-bolete. S. t. 104.
Boletus crassipes. The thick-stemmed cow-bolete. t. 112.
Boletus cupreus. The copper-colored cow-bolete. t. 133.