INOCYBE. 201 



polished, usually slightly flexuous, base with a very minute, 

 more or less marginate bulb, glabrous, white, everywhere 

 mealy, not pellucid. 



Clypeus suhrimosus, Karsten, Meddl. af Soc. pro Fauna et 

 Flora Fennica, 1888-91, p. 38 ; Cke., Illustr., pi. 402 (called 

 Inocybe scahella.) 



Among grass. 



Flesh white ; inodorous and tasteless. 



Inocybe Renneyi. B. & Br. 



rileus ^-5 in. acvoss, flesh very thin except at the disc, 

 hemispherical, slightly fibrillose, disc brown, the remainder 

 fawn-colour ; gills rounded behind and almost free, 1 line 

 broad, dingy ochraceous ; stem 1 ?,-2 in. long, 1^ line thick 

 at the apex, slightly attenuated downwards, paler thnn the 

 pileus, fibrillose, solid ; spores pip-shaped, the narrow end 

 slightly curved, rough, 12 X 7-8 /x. 



Agaricus (^Inocybe) Benneyi, Berk. & Br., Ann. Nat. Hist., 

 n. 1761 ; Cke., Illustr., pi. 520a. 



On the ground. 



Var. major; coloured like the type form, but larger; 

 pileus up to 1 in. across, campanulate ; gills broadly adnate, 

 cinnamon-colour, stem equal. Flesh dingy, as is also that of 

 the typical form; spores pip-shaped, rough, 13-17 x 10 /x. 



Cke., Illustr., pi. 520b. 



In fir woods. 



Inocybe trechispora. Berk. 



Pileus l^-f in. across, somewhat membranaceous, convex 

 then expanded, umbonate, at first viscid but soon dry and 

 silky, umbo brownish, remainder whitish ; stem 1^-2 in. 

 long, 1| in. thick, nearly equal, often slightly wavy, whitish, 

 slightly striate and mealy, nearly solid ; gills emarginate, 

 rather distant, ventricose, pinkish-grey ; spores irregularly 

 nodulose, 7 X 5-6 ju, ; cystidia subfusiform, sometimes slightly 

 toothed at the apex, 35-45 x. 10 fx. 



Agaricus (Inocyhe) trechisjporus, Berk., Outl., p. 156 ; t. 8, 

 f, 6; Cke., Hdbk., p. 160; Cke., Illustr., pi. 403a. 



In woods amongst ferns, &c. 



Somewhat resembling I. geophylla^ but distinguished by 

 the dark umbo, and the nodulose spores. 



