192 FUNGUS-FLORA. 



Our largest species of Inocybe, Inol perlata, which approaches 

 the present species in size, differs in the darker pileus and 

 smooth spores. 



Inocybe phaeocephala. Bull. ? 



Pileus 12 in. across, subcampauulate, rarely flattened and 

 iirnbonate, fuliginous, becoming brownish, smooth ; gills 

 free, semilunate, very broad, yellowish bistre colour; stem 

 2-3 in. long, 2-3 lines thick, equal except the swollen base, 

 naked, straight, grey with brownish lines, white at the base, 

 isolid ; spores elliptical, smooth, 6 x 4 p,. 



Agaricus (Inocybe) phaeocephalus, Cke., Hdbk., p. 155 ; Cke., 

 Illustr., pi. 396. 



Agaricus phaeocephalus, Bulliard, Champ. Fr., t. 555, f. 1. 



On the ground in pine woods. 



Pileus 2-4 in. broad ; stem 3-5 in. high, 4-7 lines thick. 

 The spores are bright ferruginous red. (Cooke.) 



There appears to be a considerable difference of opinion as 

 to what Bulliard's figure really is, the above description 

 represents Dr. Cooke's view, the description being drawn up 

 from specimens found in pine woods in Scotland. 



Inocybe fastigiata. Schaeff. 



Pileus l|-2 in. across, 1 in. high, fleshy at the disc, conical 

 then campanulate, margin incurved when young, then 

 wavy, but sometimes regular, acute, longitudinally fibrillose 

 and cracked, rarely adpressedly squamulose, yellow-brown, 

 sometimes brownish; gills free, ventricose, crowded, rather 

 thick, 2 lines or more broad, yellow then olivaceous; stem 

 3-4 in. long, up to | in. thick, equal or slightly attenuated 

 at both ends, silkily fibrous or flocculose, apex almost naked, 

 pallid, solid, flesh fibrous, not rigid ; spores subglobose, 

 distinctly nodulose, 8-10 x 68 ( a; cystidia numerous, large. 



Agaricus fastigiatus, Schaeff., t. 26 ; Cke., Illustr., pi. 383 

 {spores wrong shape) ; Cke., Hdbk., p. 155. 



Among grass, &c. 



Somewhat resembling I. pyriodora in size and appearance, 

 the latter, however, is at once known by the smooth, pip- 

 ehaped spores, and the flesh becoming reddish when broken. 



Inocybe hiulca. Fr. 

 Pileus 1-2 in. across, flesh very thin except at the fleshy, 



