Mas see . — A Monograph of the genus Inocybe , Kars ten. 469 
This species, as defined above, is the form accepted by European mycologists 
generally, and is represented in Roumeg., Fung. Gall., exs. 3814. In Brit. Fungus- 
Flora, ii, p. 183, the spores are incorrectly said to be smooth. 
(Berkeley’s type of I. sabuletorum examined.) 
mar itimo ides, Peck, 38 Rep. State Mus., p. 87; Sacc., Syll. v, p. 771. 
P. subconic or convex, dry, obtuse, densely squamulose, scales erect or fibrillose, 
minute, edge fibrillose, dusky brown, 1-2*5 cm. ; g. adnate, rounded behind, ventricose, 
whitish then brownish-ochre; s. equal, solid, fibrillose, paler than p., 2*5 cm. ; sp. 
ovate-oblong, very slightly nodulose, some practically smooth, 5-6 x 4*5-5 c. ven- 
tricose, 36-45 x 10-12 /x, scattered. 
Under trees. United States. 
(Peck’s type examined.) 
calospora, Qu 61 ., in Bres., Fung. Trid., i, p. 19, tab. 21 ; Sacc., Syll. v, p. 773 ; 
I. rigidipes , Peck, 51 Rep. State Mus., p. 289 (1897). 
P. convex or campanulate, then expanded and umbonate, fibrillose with darker 
squamules at the disc, yellowish-brown or tawny grey, edge paler, 1-5-2 -5 cm. ; g. 
sinuate, almost free, tawny-ochre or brownish ; s. slender, pale then reddish, or 
coloured like p., 4-5 cm. ; sp. globose, with numerous rather long, slender, cylindrical 
papillae, 10-1 2 /x ; c. not numerous, subcylindrical or slightly fusiform, 45-55 X 1 1-1 4 /x. 
On the ground in woods and shady places. France, Britain (Wothorpe), United 
States (Menands, Albany Co.). 
Peck noted the affinity of his species with /. calospora , but pointed out that the 
colour of his Fungus differed in being tawny grey. The two however appear to 
belong to the same species. The spores and cystidia are identical. 
(Type of Peck’s species examined.) 
stellatospora, Mass.; Ag. ( Hebeloma ) stellatosporus , Peck, 26 Rep. State Mus., 
p. 57 ; Sacc., Syll. v, p. 798. 
P. convex, rough with numerous squarrose scales, brown, 2-5 cm.; g. pallid 
then brown ; s. equal, scaly, colour of p., 5 cm. ; sp. subglobose, rather coarsely 
nodulose, 7-8 /x ; c. broadly fusiform, tapering into a long, slender pedicel, thin-walled, 
70-80 x 14-20 /x. 
On the ground in woods. United States (Croghan). 
Bears a close resemblance to /. mutata , but the persistent scales and rough 
spores distinguish it (Peck). 
(Peck’s type examined.) 
putilla, Bres., Fung. Trid., p. 81, tab. 88; Sacc., Syll. xi, p. 50 (written pusilla). 
P. conico-campanulate, then expanded and umbonate, fibrillosely-silky, then 
becoming torn into cracks, clay-colour or greyish-brown, or fuscous becoming pale, 
margin persistently lurid whitish, 1-5-3 cm. ; g- somewhat crowded, sinuato-adnate, 
whitish then greyish-tan, edge crenulate ; s. stuffed, very faintly tinged rose, white- 
fibrillose becoming glabrous, apex white scurfy, 3-4-5 cm. ; veil white, very evident 
when young; sp. coarsely nodulose, 8-10 x 6-7 /x ; c. fusiform, 60-70 x 15-20 /x ; 
flesh of stem tinged rose. Smell strong, earthy. 
On the ground under hazel, &c, Austria. 
Allied to I. perbrevis. 
It k 2 
