66 NEW YORK SI Al |- Ml'Sia'M 



pruinose, whitish; spores suliglobcjsc, even or minutely nodulose, 

 4-5 //. in diameter. 



Pileus 2-3 cm broad; stem 4-5 cm long, 2-3 mm thick. 



Ground among fallen leaves in woods. Lewis co. September. 



This is a rare species which departs from the generic character 

 in its decurrent lamellae. It is unlike any of our other species of 

 Inocybe in its minute globose spores. These have been described 

 in Sylloge as echinulate, but in our plant the spores appear even 

 under ordinary magnification, most minutely uneven under higher 

 power or better definition. By some, the species has been referred 

 to the genus Flammula. It has also been taken as the type species 

 of a genus Ripartites, instituted by Karsten to include all the species 

 of this section. 



Inocybe trechispora (Berk.) Karst. 

 ROUGH SPORE INOCYBE 



Ag. (Hebeloma) trechisporus Berk. Outl. B. Fungi, p. 156 



Pileus thin, convex, acutely umbonate, at first viscid, then dry 

 and silky, whitish with the umbo yellowish ; lamellae subdistant, 

 ventricose, sinuate, whitish becoming subferruginous ; stem equal, 

 slightly striate, stuffed, mealy, whitish ; spores subglobose or 

 ellipsoid, nodulose, 6-8 ,a in diameter or 7-8 x 5-6 a, cystidia 

 40-50 X 12-20 ,". 



Pileus 2-3 cm broad ; stem 2.5-5 ^"^ lo"g> ^^-5 ^^^^^^ thick. 



Ground in woods. Herkimer and Onondaga counties. August. 



Inocybe fuscodisca (Pk.) ]^,Ia5s. 

 BROWN DISK INOCYBE 



A g. (Hebeloma) fuscodisca Pk. N. Y. State Mus. Rep't 27, p.95, 



pi. I, fig.3-6 



Pileus conic becoming campanulate or expanded, umbonate, 

 slightly viscid, fibrillose, whitish, blackish brown on the umbo ; 

 lamellae close, adnexed, whitish becoming brownish ferruginous, 

 white crenulate on the edge; stem equal, solid, whitish pruinose 

 at the top, fibrillose below, brownish; spores ellipsoid, even, 

 8-10 x 5-6 ,'j., cystidia 40-70 x 12-20,". 



Pileus 1.5-2.5 cm broad; stem 3.5-7 cm long, 2-4 mm thick. 



Ground under trees. Sullivan co. September. Rare. 



The viscid pellicle is separable. The odor resembles that of 

 chestnut blossoms. 



