30 Dansk Botanisk Arkiv, Bd. 2, Nr. 7. 



jf Cap smaller il— 3 cm). 



" Cap fibrillose-tomentose. grayish-brown, l 1 /« — 



3 cm /. lanuginella v 43) 



""Cap subrimose, brown, small (1 cm^ /. putilla (44) 



2. Spores small (7 - 8 n long). Young cap covered with 

 whitish squamules or fibrillose scales, small (1— 2 cm). 

 * Subfascicnlate; stem not everywhere pruinate only 



slightly flocculose) /. rufo-alba (45) 



** Solitary. Stem brown, everywhere pruinate . . /. petiginosa (46) 

 B. depanperatæ. Cystidia not crested, obtuse, inflated club- 

 shaped or somewhat ventricose). 



Cap dark brown, tomentoso-squamose. Stem flocculose, 

 brownish /. lanuginosa 47 



SYSTEMATIC AND FLORISTIC NOTES. 



As many of the Inocybes can only be distinguished by 

 minule details which it is often almost impossible to depict 

 with sufficient exactness, I think it not superfluous to give more 

 detailed notes on their macroscopic characteristics than usual 

 in these studies. 



Spores etc. of all the species are figured on plate II. 



I. EU-INOCYBE. 



A. MURICULATÆ. 



a. PYRIODOR.K. 



1. Inocybe incarnata Bres. (= / pgriodora nar.). 



Spores broadly ovate, 6 1 /* — 10 x 3 1 /*— 6 M- Cystidia inflated bottle- 

 shaped, about 12 — 18 u broad, muriculate. 



Figured specimens: Marselisborg near Aarhus, under young 

 beeches, moist ground in wood, Oct 1916 (leg. Poul Laksen). Rare. 



Very nearly related to the ordinary I. pyriodora, but more 

 robust (stem over 1 cm). The cap is at first almost smooth, 

 pallid-ochraceous or whitish clay colour, then somewhat fibrillose- 

 subsquamulose , ochraceous- brownish, somewhat flushed with 



