CLASSIFICATION OF AGARH i:,:; 



panded plane, umbonate, grayisb brown, umbo cinnamon or umber, 

 ftbrillose at first, becoming fibrillose-scaly < u- floccose-scaly, flesh 

 thin, whitish. GILLS adnexed, rather broad, ventricose, close, 

 whitish becoming cinnamon. STEM 2 5 cm. long, 2-3 nun. thick, 

 equal. stuffed, Bilky-fibrillose, whitish or faintly violaceous at apex, 

 becoming dingy brown below, white within. SPORES elongated^ 

 oblong, smooth. 10-14 x l<; micr. CYSTLDIA flask-shaped, 50 70 x 

 15-L'i) micr., apex crystallate. ODOK slight. 



Solitary or gregarions. On low, wet ground. Ann Alitor, Bay 

 View. May-July. Frequent. 



Scarcely differs from preceding excepl in size. In those plants 

 which grow in wet places the stem is hollow. Peck says the cuticle 

 of the pileus is more lacerated in wet weather than in dry weather. 



473. Inocybe flocculosa Berk. 



Eng. Flora. 



Illustration : Cooke, 111., PI. 393. 



PILEUS 1-2 cm. broad, subcampanulate, expanded-umbonate, 



tawny-brown with tinge of fuscous, fibrillose-scaly, not rimose. 

 GILLS rounded-adnate, broad, ventricose, almost subdistant, brown- 

 ish-ashy then eoncolor, edge limhriate-crenulate. STEM 1-1' cm. 

 long, l-L* mm. thick, equal, hollow, pruinose-hoary, scurry at apex. 

 tinged brown. SPORES 8-9x4-6, elliptical-ovate, smooth. OYS- 

 TIDIA on sides and edge of gills, llask shaped, apex cryslallate. 

 about 60 micr. long. 



Among spruce needles and on the ground in swamps. Bay View. 

 New Richmond. August. 



This little species is usually found in low, wet places. The stem 

 is tinged rufous-brown in most cases. 



**Spores angular. 

 474. Inocybe decipientoides Pk. 

 Torr. Bot. Club Bull. 34, p. 100, 1907. 



PILEUS 14 cm. broad, campanulate-convex, expanded-umbonate, 



umbo subconic, 8%lkgfloccosr, then scaly-dill'raeted, dry. brownish- 

 ochraceous; flesh thin, pallid. GILLS adnate, broad, close, whitish 



