Inocybe AGARICACE.E 1 39 



630b. I. Bucknallii Mass, (after John Bucknall, mycologist) a, 



P. campanulato-convex, fibrillose ; mid. subsquamose, brownish. 

 St. fibrillose, brownish. G. adnexed, thick, subdistant, rusty- 

 brown, edge minutely fimbriate. 



Under bushes. Autumn, f x ij X T V in. Distinguished by the large size 

 of the basidia, spores and periphyses. 



630e. I. duriuseula Rea (from its firm substance) a. 



P. fleshy, campanulate, expanso-gibbous, floccose, soon longi- 

 tudinally fibrillose, tawny-ochreous ; mid. paler ; marg. at length 

 revolute. St. solid, firm, apex and base slightly enlarged, 

 striate, white. G. sinuato-adnate, decurrent as ribs on apex of 

 St., somewhat crowded, white, then brown. Flesh white. 

 Open places in woods. Sept. 2 2f X 3? X f in. 



631. I. destrieta Quel. (from the fibres of the pileus stripping off; 



destringo, to strip off) a b c. 



P. flat, umbonate, whitish to vinous or rich sienna-brown, fibres 

 stripping off and often showing white cracks. St. solid, some- 

 times subbulbous, light or dark rufescent or whitish above or 

 below. G. uncinato-adnate, grey-brown or olive-shaded. 

 Flesh rufescent. 



Odour unpleasant. Woods, pine, oak. July-Oct. 2^ x 2.\ X J in. Some- 

 times 4 inches or more high. 



632. I. perbrevis Gill, (from the comparatively short stem ; perbrems, 



very short) a b. 



P. expanded, undulate, umbonate, dry, silky, fibrillose, tawny or 

 rufous, becoming yellowish. Sf. stuffed, attenuate downwards, 

 colour as P. G. uncinato-adnexed or sinuate, subdistant, 

 tawny to cinnamon. 



Woods, shady places. Autumn. 2 X l X T 3 S in. 



633. I. descissa Que'l. (from the split pileus scissus, split) a b c. 



P. campanulate, umbonate, whitish to pallid fuscous or ochreous- 

 sienna. St. hollow or solid, white or pallid, darker below. 

 G. adnexo-free, fuscous. 



Suspected poisonous. Woods, pine ; rare. Sept.-Nov. i| X i| X in. 

 Var. anricoma Gill, smaller, P. golden-fibrillose. Somewhat resembling 

 640, but differing in colour of P. and absence of odour. 



633a. I. Godeyi Gill, (after Dr. Godey, French botanist) a. 



P. campanulate, obtusely umbonate, silky, fibrillose, rimose, 

 whitish, then tinged rosy, sometimes rosy and ochreous. 

 St. equal, subbulbous, colour of P., apex white-pruinose. 

 G. adnexo-free, narrowed behind, whitish, then dusky 

 cinnamon with an olive tinge, edge minutely flocculose, white. 

 Autumn, if X 2f X J in. Rosy-red and ochreous-rosy when bruised. 



634. I. Trinii (after Carl Bernard Trinius, Russian botanist) a b. 



P. convex, obtuse, whitish-rufescent, tawny or pale brown-reddish. 

 St. stuffed, colour as P., or paler. G. rounded-adnexed, 



