| TRUFFLES | Fruiting bodies of a subterranean fungus, predominantly one of the many species of the genus tuber (8) |
| SEWER | Part of a subterranean system |
| EARTHBALL | Any of some tuberous, subterranean fruiting bodies of fungi (5-4) |
| MUSHROOMS | Fruiting bodies of several fungi (9) |
| TRUFFLE | Subterranean fungus (7) |
| ERIGERON | Genus of plants of the daisy family, many species of which are cultivated as ornamentals (8) |
| MAP | From the Latin meaning "sheet of the world", any one of the many diagrammatic representations of Earth's surface created in the art or science of cartography (3) |
| WHELK | Name applied to a number of marine gastropods, especially species of the genus Buccinum (5) |
| CHIMPANZEE | Hominid species of the genus Pan which split from the human species 4-6 million years ago (10) |
| SALMONELLA | Genus of bacteria occurring mainly in the gut, many species of which cause food poisoning (10) |
| GREYLAG | A goose, the type species of the genus Anser |
| WHOOPER | A swan, the type species of the genus Cygnus |
| JAGUAR | Large cat species of the genus Panthera, native to the Americas (6) |
| LOVAGE | Only species of the genus Levisticum whose leaves serve as a herb (6) |
| GNAT | Any member of many species of tiny flying insects in the Dipterid suborder Nematocera |
| CHAMELEON | Lizard of Africa and Asia, many species of which have the ability to change colour (9) |
| OXLIP | A species of the genus Primula (5) |
| ETCHING | Work of art created with a printmaking technique involving the use of acid, drypoint or engraving, such as any one of the many by Rembrandt (7) |
| INTUITION | "One of the many sad results of the Industrial Revolution was that we came to depend more than ever on the intellect, and to ignore the - with its symbolic thinking." Madeleine L'Engle, Walking on Wat |
| OXLIPS | A beast of burden may slip over many species of primroses |