1 34 AGARICACE.-E Inocybe 



scaly, paler than P. or smoky. G. subadnate, pallid mouse- 

 colour. 



Odour faint, not unpleasant. Woods, pine, moist places ; rare. Aug. 

 if x 2§ x J in. The colours are not unlike those of Series II., 

 Hyporhodii. 



605. I. eineinnata Quel, (from the curved scales of the pileus; 



cinci7i7ius, a curl) a. 

 P. convexo-plane, usually subumbonate, villoso-scaly, fuscous. 

 St. nbrilloso-scaly, fuscous-violaceous or lavender above, 

 brownish below. G. adnexed, fuscous-violaceous or lavender. 



Subgregarious. Odour none. Woods, beech. Autumn. I x 2 x | in. 

 Compare 618 and 641a. 



606. I. hsemaeta Sacc. (from the change of colour to blood-red when 



broken ; Gr. haimaktos, mingled with blood) a b. 



P. plano-convex, floccoso-fibrillose, umber ; mid. dark ; marg. 

 pallid. St. scaly-fibrillose, whitish above, dull verdigris below 

 inside and out. G. adnate, clay-umber. Flesh crimson in 

 P., greenish-blue below. 



Subcaespitose. Lawns. Aug.-Oct. if X 2 x £ in. 



607. I. faseiata Sacc. (from its growing in bundles ; fasciatus, bound 



together in bundles) a b. 



P. convex, obscurely acuto-umbonate, minutely brown-squarroso- 

 scaly on a pale ground. St. solid, attenuate below, pallid 

 above, vinous within and without at base. G. adnato-sinuate, 

 crowded, thin, soft, pallid. 



Densely caespitose. Taste and odour none. Grassy places. 3 X 3j X T 5 & in. 



b. Lacerce. 



608. I. pyriodora Quel, (from its odour of pears ; pyrtis, a pear, odor, 



a smell) a b c. 

 P. convex, subumbonate, fuscous to tan-ochreous. St. solid, 

 whitish. G. adnato-emarginate, fuscous, often olive-shaded, 

 edge whitish. Flesh becoming pale reddish. 



Taste none ; odour strong, sweet, pleasant of pears, decaying pears, violets, 

 cinnamon, of Muscari racemosum. Woods, gardens. May-Dec. 

 2£ X 3f X T 5 S in. Sometimes P. and St. whitish-tan, G. tan-rufescent. 



609. I. inearnata Bres. (from the flesh-coloured pileus ; incar?iattis) 



a b. 

 P. expanded, broadly umbonate, sometimes tinged with pale 

 orange-scarlet, crimson or purple ; marg. appendiculate with V. 

 St. solid, base enlarged, colour as P. G. sinuate, whitish to 

 olive-brownish, often spotted orange, scarlet or crimson, or 

 wholly rufescent, edge crenulate, white. Flesh pale orange or 

 pale purple-hyacinth. 



Odour strong of meal or pears. Woods, pine, etc. June-Oct. 3 X 3^ X J in. 

 Red when bruised or broken. Closely allied to 608. 



