8 
66 FORTY-FIRST ANNUAL REPORT ON THE 
yellowish-olivaceous, then cinnamon-brown; stem equal, hollow, fibril- ~ 
lose-squamose, pallid; spores even, .0004 in. long, .00025 broad. 
Pileus 10 to 18 lines broad; stem about 1 in. long, 1 to 2 lines thick. 
Damp mossy banks in woods. Bethlehem, Albany county. August. 
The species belongs to the Squarrose. 
Inocybe subfulva, 2. sp. 
Pileus at first broadly conical or subcampanulate, then convex or 
nearly plane, umbonate, fibrillose-squamose, tawny-ochraceous; lamellee 
broad, close, rounded behind, adnexed, ventricose, pallid, becoming 
tawny-cinnamon; stem, equal, firm, solid, fibrous-striate, obscurely 
pruinose, a little paler than the pileus; spores stelletely rough, .0004 
to .0005 in. long, .0003 to .00035 broad. 
Pileus 8 to 16 lines broad; stem 1 to 2 in. long, 1 to 2 lines thick. | 
Sandy soil, in fields. Sellark. August. 
Related to /. calospora, from which it differs in the erect scales of the 
pileus, the adnexed lamella, the solid stem and the somewhat elliptical _ 
shape of the spores. The species belongs to the Lacerz. 
Inocybe violaceifolia, n. sp. 
Pileus thin, convex or nearly plane, fibrillose, subsquamulose, 
grayish; lamellze close, adnexed, at first pale violaceous, then brownish- 
cinnamon; stem firm, solid, slender, fibrillose, whitish; spores ever 
.0004 in. long, 00025 broad. 
Pileus 6 to 12 lines broad; stem about is in. Ones 1 line thick. 
Mossy ground in woods. Selkirk. August. 
A small, pale species, remarkable for the violaceous tint of the young 
lamelle. It belongs to the Rimosez. 
Inocybe asterospora, (uel. rf 
Woods and open places. Sandlake. June. South Ballston. July. 
Inocybe margarispora, Berk. 
Grassy ground in thin woods. Greenbush, Rensselaer county. - 
June. Our specimens are a little smaller than the typical ones, but 
they appear to belong to this species. 
Inocybe commixta, Bres. 
, Adirondack mountains. July. 
ay re, iq ae 
| Bh Bi Cine ae 
