184: FUNGUS-FLOKA. 



in. long, 1J line thick, flexuous, floccosely scaly, coloured 

 like the stem, apex naked (not mealy or pminose), stuffed 

 then hollow. 



Agaricua plumosus, Bolton, t. 33 ; Cke., Hdbk. p. 151 ; Cke., 

 Illustr., pi. 425A. 



In damp pine woods, &c. Pileus thickly covered with 

 little, erect, downy tufts; not yellowish nor tinged red 

 inside. 



Inocybe cincinnata. Fr. 



Pileus ^1 in. across, flesh thin, convex then plane, com- 

 monly indistinctly umbonate, villosely scaly, brown ; gills 

 adnexed, attenuated behind, separating from the stem, 

 ventricose, crowded, violet-brown ; stem solid, tough, about 

 1^ in. long, 1-1^ line thick, equal, straight, fibrillosely scaly, 

 brownish-violet, spores irregular, nodulose, 7-8 p diam. 



Agaricus (Inocybe} cincinnatus, Fries, Epicr., p. 172; Cke., 

 Hdbk., p. 151 ; Cke., Illustr., pi. 425s. 



In woods, &c. 



Inodorous. Slender, subgregarious. Distinguished from 

 every other species by the brownish-violet gills. (Fries.) 



Inocybe haemacta. Berk. & Cke. 



Pileus about 1 in. across, fleshy, compact, campanulate, 

 obtuse, floccosely fibrillose with dark fibrils, the disc rather 

 scaly and darker ; gills slightly rounded behind and adnate, 

 pallid then dingy tan-colour ; stem about 2 in. long, 34 

 lines thick, smooth, scarcely fibrillose, whitish above, tinged 

 with verdegris green at the base, nearly equal, solid ; spores 

 elliptical, smooth, 8 x 4-5 /A; flesh everywhere turning 

 blood-red when touched or wounded. 



Agaricus (Inocybe) haemactus, Berk. & Cke., Grev., xi. p. 70-; 

 Cke., Illustr., pi. 390. 



On lawns, &c. 



Pileus about an inch broad, umber, margin pallid, clad 

 with long, darker fibrils, the obtuse disc darkest, and some- 

 what scaly ; stem nearly 2 in. long, 3-4 lines thick, aerugi- 

 nous at the base, the colour penetrating through the flesh. 

 Everywhere slowly changing to blood-red when wounded. 

 In some respects agreeing with J. calamistrata, but not 

 equarrose. (Berk. & Cooke.) 



