. INOCYBE. 197 



about 2 lines thick, equal, undulate, rather fibrillose, ai)ex 

 with white powder, whit« both outside and inside; spores 

 elliptical, smooth, 8 x 4-5 fi. 



Agaricus (Inocyhe) descissus, Fries, Epicr., p. 174; Cooke, 

 Hdbk., p. 157. 



In woods. 



Slenderer than J. geophylla, which the present species 

 somewhat resembles ; stem white outside and inside ; pileus 

 brownish-white, margin often striate. (Fries.) 



Var. auriconms, Batsch. Smaller and more slender than 

 the typical form, margin striate, becoming yellowish ; stem 

 hollow; gills adnexed, ventricose, brownish-white. 



In woods, &c. 



Kequires to be carefully distinguished from yellowish 

 forms of I. geophylla. Pileus cracked. (Fries.) 



Inocybe Trinii. Weinm. 



Pileus h-'i' iu. across, flesh very thin except, at the disc, 

 hemispherical, obtuse, whitish with a rufous tinge, with 

 longitudinal rufous fibrils, tawny when dry ; gills adnexed, 

 rounded behind, about 1 line broad, venrricose, cinnamon, 

 «dge white, floccose ; stem 1-1 J in. long, about 1 line thick, 

 with loose rufous fibrils, powdered with white meal ; spores 

 subglobose, coarsely war ted, 9-10 /x diam. 



Agaricus {Inocyhe) Trinii, Weinm., Eoss., p. 194; Cooke, 

 Illustr., pi. 428b. 



Among grass. 



Smell like clove-pinks. Leaning on one side ; pileus 

 scarcely rimose ; not squamose, J in broad, whitish-rufous, 

 tawny when dry. (Fries.) 



y^ 'f' * 'i* 



VELUTINI. 



Inocybe sambucina. Fr. 



Pileus 2-3 in. across, flesh white rather thick, firm ; 

 convex then exj^anded, often wavy, not incurved, obtuse, 

 silky-fibrillose, even, white, rarely pallid-yellowish ; gills 

 slightly adnexed, crowded, ventricose, 2-3 lines broad, 

 whitish ; stem solid, stout, 1-1 i in. long, ^-1 in. thick, equal 

 or clavate, often decumbent, striate, glabrous, white, apex 



