198 INOCYBE 



var. auricoma (Batsch) Fr. Auricoma, golden-haired. 



Smaller, and thinner than the type, p. becoming yellow, margin striate, 

 gills adfixed, ventricose, whitish fuscous. Remarkably cracked. Woods, 

 and burnt soil. 



551. I. cervicolor (Pers.) Quel. Fr. Icon. t. 107, figs. 1, 2, as Inocybe 

 Bongardii (Weinm.) Fr. Cervus, a deer; color, colour. 



P. 3-5 cm., pale brown, or fawn colour^ covered with brown, recurved 

 firils, campanulate, thin. St. 4-10 cm. x 4-6 mm., whitish, fibrillose 

 with brown, recurved filaments, firm, flexuose. Gills cream colour, then 

 rusty brown, margin white, denticulate, emarginate, ventricose, thick. 

 Flesh white, tinged purplish when cut. Spores brown, elongate pip- 

 shaped, 10-12 x 6-7 /z. Cystidia cylindric-fusoid, 45-50 x 12-14/n, 

 numerous. Smell strong, unpleasant, like a mouldy cask. Woods, 

 and heaths. Aug. Oct. Common, (v.v.) 



552. I. deglubens Fr. Cke. Illus. no. 420, t. 394. 



Deglubens, peeling off. 



P. 25 cm., date-brown-rufescent, then becoming yellow, slightly 

 fleshy, convexo-plane, obtuse, or obtusely umbonate, adpressedly torn 

 into fibrils, peeling off in darker, then separating fibrils. St. 4-7 cm. 

 x 4-5 mm., pallid, equal, adpressedly fibrillose, apex slightly rough 

 with brown points. Gills grey, then cinnamon, obtusely adnate, ventri- 

 cose, somewhat distant. Flesh white. Spores pallid brown, pip-shaped, 

 8-10 x 5-6/i. Cystidia ventricose, 50-60 x 10-15//,, fairly abundant. 

 Smell earthy. Pine woods. Aug. Sept. Rare. 



ffGills with an olive tinge. 



553. I. abjecta Karst. Abjecta, mean. 

 P. 1-3-5 cm., brownish, becoming ochraceous-brown when dry, every- 

 where covered with white fibrils, disc with whitish, subsquarrose squa- 

 mules, fleshy, subcampanulate, or convex, then expanded, sometimes 

 umbonate. St. 2-5-4 cm. x 4-8 mm., pallid, everywhere covered with 

 white, fibrous squamuks, equal, or fusiform, rather tough, flexuose, 

 apex white-pruinose. Gills pale cinnamon-olive, adnate, ventricose in 

 front, 6-7 mm. wide, rather distant, margin minutely flocculoso- 

 crenulate at first. Flesh white. Spores ferruginous, pip-shaped, 

 14-16 x 6-7 /*, 1-guttulate. Cystidia ventricose, 50-65 x 13-16^,, 

 scanty. Amongst sand. Sept. Oct. Uncommon, (v.v.) 



554. I. Godeyi Gillet. (= Agaricus (Inocybe) hiukus (Fr.) Kalchbr. 

 and Cke. Illus. no. 427, t. 337.) Trans. Brit. Myc. Soc. n, t. 8. 



Dr Godey, an eminent French mycologist. 



P. 3-5 cm., whitish at first, then more or less suffused with rose which 

 is usually accompanied by an ochraceous tinge, fleshy, campanulate, 



