110 OUTLINES OF BRITISH FUNGOLOGY. 



In woods. Beech woods. Coed Cocli. 



582. A. (Inocybe) hsemaetus, B. and Cke. ; pileus 1 in., 

 umber, fleshy, compact, obtuse, campanulate, floccosely 

 fibrillose, disc subsquamulose, darker ; stem solid, smooth, 

 scarcely fibrillose, whitish above, verdigris-green at base, 

 nearly equal ; gills adnate, pallid, then clay-colour ; fiesh 

 everywhere turning blood-red when touched or broken. 



On lawn. 



583. A. (Inocybe) fasciatus, Ckc. and Mass. ; csespi- 

 tose; pileus 2-3 in., tawny rufous, at disc silky, clad with 

 minute darker squarrose scales ; flesh thin ; stem slender, 

 equal, or a little attenuated below, fibrillose, solid, reddish 

 within and without at the base, pallid above ; gills crowded, 

 attenuated in front, rounded behind or slightly sinuate, thin, 

 soft, pallid. 



On the ground. Kew. 



II. Laceri. — Pileus torn into scales or fibres, stem coloured, 

 jxder than jydeiis, fibrillose. 



584. A. (Inocybe) pyriodorus, P. (p. 153) ; 2-3 in. 

 Epping Forest. 



585. A. (Inocybe) incarnatus, Bres. ; pileus fleshy, 

 convex, campanulate, then expanded and gibbon*, or broadly 

 umbonate, fibrillose, then squamulose ; margin fimbriate, 

 yellowish, then rufescent or tinged with flesh-colour ; stem 

 solid, attenuated, somewhat rooting at base, fibrillose, rosy 

 flesh-colour, white and mealy at apex • flesh white, deep 

 red when broken ; gills crowded, sinuate, adnate, broad, 

 fringed at edge, whitish, greyish, cinnamon, then spotted 

 with red or wholly rufescent. 



In woods. Odour strong and persistent of pears. 



586. A. (Inocybe) scaber, Midi. (p. 153); \\ in. 



