( 300 ) 
bulbous, the bulb 2.5-3.5 cm. thick, smooth above, fibrillose 
below from the fragments of the cortina, apex cream-color, 
base reddish-brown, solid; flesh whitish, unchanging, taste 
and odor mild. 
Stanford University, California, December 4, rgo1, C. F. 
Baker, no. 
his eer well-marked species belongs to the sub- 
genus Phlegmacium, section Scaur?. 
Inocybe brunnescenS sp. nov. 
Pileus 3-7 cm., at first campanulate and subgibbous then 
obtusely expanded, bright shining-brown verging towar 
chestnut on the margin, the center paler, surface radiately 
fibrous, subglabrous but with a few minute floccose scales 
on the disc, margin even, occasionally splitting, at length 
revolute; lamellae subsinuate with a slightly decurrent tooth, 
subcrowded, broad, ventricose, edge erose, dark ochraceous- 
brown, edge often Wena h; spores smooth, elliptical, about 
IO xX 543 stipe 5-7 cm. x 8-12 mm., equal, smooth or with 
a few loose fibers, oe tinged with brown below, solid; 
flesh white, unchanging, taste and odor mild. 
Among decaying oak leaves, Stanford University, Cali- 
fornia, November 30, rgo1, C. F. Baker, no. 144. 
This species belongs to the Section Avmosae. In color 
it closely resembles the dried oak leaves among which it 
grows. 
Tubaria Eucalypti sp. nov. 
On decaying fruits of Eucalyptus; pileus fleshy, Cee 
mm., broadly convex to expanded, ochraceous-brown, be- 
coming paler on the disc with age, dry, minutely oinent bac 
especially on the margin when young, becoming glabrate, 
margin even, somewhat irregular; pele slightly decur- 
rent, somewhat crowded, rather broad, plane, dark cinna- 
mon, edge white ; ai ferruginous, elliptical, 6-7 X 3-443 
equal or somewhat enlarged above, 
silky, fibrillate below, o white mycelioid, pale brownish, 
cartilaginous, hollow; flesh thin, white, unchanging, taste 
and odor mi 
Stanford University, California, November 22, 1gor, C. 
F. Baker, no. 157. 
