(441) 
distinguished from the following genus mainly by its smaller 
size, thinner pileus, and slender stem. 
114. INOLOMA (Fries). Karst. Medd. Soc. Faun. FI. 
Fenn. 18: 7o. 1891. 
Putrescent, solitary: pileus thick, fleshy, dry, at first fibri- 
lose or squamose: lamellae adnate or adnexed: spores cin- 
namon: cortina of cobweb-like threads, fugacious: veil none 
or slight: stipe central, stout, fleshy, enlarged below, not per- 
Type, Corténardus opimus Fries. (Syll. 5: 923.) 
This is Cort*narzus § Inoloma, of the Sylloge. 
115. PHLEGMACIUM (Fries) Fayod, Ann. Sci. Nat. Bot. 
VII. 9: 375. 1889. 
Putrescent, solitary: pileus fleshy, usually thick, viscid: 
lamellae adnate or adnexed: spores cinnamon: cortina of 
cobweb-like threads, fugacious, attached above the middle of 
the stipe: veil none: stipe central, stout, somewhat elon- 
gated, fleshy, glabrous, dry. 
Type, Cortinarius saginus Fries. (Syll. 5: 895.) 
This includes Cortinarius § Phlegmacium, subsections Clz- 
ducht and Elasticz, of the Sylloge. To select the type it is 
necessary to go back to Fries, Systema Mycologicum, on 
which Fayod states that he bases the genus. He states that 
he knows 36 species that belong here, but he only mentions 
a few that he does not consider typical. 
116. BULBOPODIUM gen. nov. 
Putrescent, solitary: pileus thick, fleshy, viscid: lamellae 
adnate or adnexed: sporescinnamon: cortina of cobweb-like 
threads, attached to the bulbous base of the stipe: veil none: 
stipe central, short, stout, bulbous. 
Type, Cortinarius caerulescens Fries, Epicr. 265. 1838. 
(Syll. 5: 902.) 
This is Cortenartus § Phlegmacium, subsection Scaur7, of 
the Sylloge. It is one of the most clearly defined generic 
groups in the family. 
