CLASSIFICATION OP 1 AGARICS |,„; 



blunt, subcylindrical tubercles which are broader toward base, '- 1 11 

 micr. < JYST] I HA abundant <>n sides and edge of gills, 50-75 s L5 2 1 

 mier., ventrieose, apes crystallate. ODOR Blight or subnauseous. 



Gregarious. In low, Bandy, frondose woods. Ann Arbor. June* 

 August. 



It is rather difficult to keep /. asterospora and I. caloapora dis- 

 tinct. The rimose and scaly characters by which they are set apart 

 may vary under certain weather conditions so ;is to be obliterated. 

 The spores are very similar, but those of /. asterospora are not as 

 truly spherical as in /. calospora. With as this species tends to 

 be Bmaller than the figures show it. it is at once separable 

 from the other red-brown species by the spiny-tuberculate spores. 



Section IV. Vchitiimr. LMleus not rimose, cuticle of interwoven 

 fibrils, glabrescent or appressed-sCaly. 



*Spores angular-tuberculate 



487. Inocybe repanda Bres. 



Fung. Trid.. Vol. II, 1892. 



Illustrations: Ibid, PI. 119. 

 Plate XCV of this Report. 



I'll. His 3-5 cm. broad, obtusely conic-campanulate, then ex- 

 panded and broadly umbonate, umbo fulvous and glabrous, else- 

 where covered with orange-fulvous fibrils on a whitish foundation, 

 sublubricous, margin a1 Length split or subrimose, sometimes scalv- 

 cracked. FLESH white, rather fragile, thick on disk. GILLS ad- 

 nexed or almost free, broad, subventricose, close, at first white. 

 rufescent, finally argillaceous-cinnamon, edge white-fimbriate. 

 STEM 3-6 cm. long, strict. 5-6 mm. thick, equal above the abrupt or 

 founded bulb, stuffed, terete, even, slightly silky fibrillose, the fibrils 

 fulvous-tinged toward base, apex white-pruinose. SPORES angu- 

 lar, 7-9.5 x 6-7 micr., longer than wide, sometimes rectangular in • 

 line, with minute papillate tubercles. CYSTIDIA moderately 

 abundant on edge and sides of gills, ventricose-fusiform, apex 

 crystallate. 60-75 x L2 L8 mice. ODOB and TASTE mild. 



Gregarious. On the ground, in low frondose woods. Ann 

 Arbor. July-August. Infrequent. 



This is one of our larger Inocybes and is well-marked. The 



