Mas see .■ — A Monograph of the genus Inocybe , Kars ten. 471 
an Inocyhe. No reference is made to the plant becoming red when broken, as 
insisted upon by other people. 
I. Trinii , Weinm., Bresadola, Fung, Trid., ii, p. 14, tab. 120, with a whole 
string of synonyms, and with s odore forti terreo J and smooth spores, is 
I. Godeyi , Gill. 
maritima, Karst, Hattsv., p. 457 (1879); Sacc., Syll. v, p. 771 (1887); Ag. 
(Ino.) maritimus , Cke., 111 ., ph 392; Ag. maritimus , Fries, Obs. Myc., ii, p. 41 
(1818). 
P. hygrophanous, convex then almost plane and umbonate, flocculosely fibrillose, 
subsquamulose, brownish mouse-colour or umber, paler and hoary when dry, 2-2-5 
cm. ; g. rounded and adnexed, then almost or quite free, broadish, grey then rusty ; s. 
solid, equal, straight, fibrillose, slightly paler than p., apex naked, 1*5-2 -5 cm. ; sp. 
irregularly oblong, apiculate, nodulose, 10-1 1 x 7-8 p ; c. ventricose, 45-55 x 12-18 p, 
not uncommon. 
Often caespitose. Damp sand on sea-shore, also on ground in woods. Sweden, 
Britain, Germany, Solomon Islands (Dr. Guppy). 
Distinguished by the umber hygrophanous pileus becoming pale and hoary when 
dry. Allied to I. lanuginosa. 
(Specimen from Fries examined.) 
umbrina, Bres., Fung. Trid., i, p. 50, pi. 55 ; Sacc., Syll. v, p. 772. 
P. convexo-campanulate, becoming almost plane and umbonate, chestnut- 
brown, somewhat viscid, fibrillosely woolly, then beautifully rimose, disc sometimes 
verruculose, 2-3*5 cm. ; g. sinuato-adnate, crowded, dingy citrine, then rufous- 
cinnamon, edge darker ; s. stuffed, then partly hollow, equal, base slightly bulbous, 
fibrillose, somewhat paler than p., apex obsoletely white-scurfy, 4-6 cm. ; sp. globose 
or irregularly oblong, coarsely nodulose, 7-8x5 -6/*; c. ventricose, 60-70 x 14-18. 
Greyish-brown veil very evident in the young plant. 
Gregarious or subcaespitose in pine woods. Austria. 
When young resembling I. carpta, and when old resembling I. asterospora, but 
distinct from both (Bres.). 
umboninota, Peck, 38 Rep. State Mus. ; Sacc., Syll. v, p. 780. 
P. broadly campanulate or expanded, prominently umbonate, rimoso-fibrillose, 
dusky brown, 3-5 cm. ; g. whitish, then rusty brown ; s. equal or the base very 
slightly thickened, solid, fibrillose, paler than the pileus, apex pruinose, 3-3-5 cm. ; 
sp. irregularly oblong, very slightly nodulose, 6 x 4-5-5 ; c. very slightly ventricose 
or subcylindrical, 50-60 x n-14 /*, abundant. 
On the ground among moss in woods. United States (Caroga). 
Differs from I. rimosa in the nodulose spores, and from I. asterospora in the 
very prominent umbo and different spores. 
(Peck's type examined.) 
rufoalba, Sacc., Syll. v, p. 787 ; Ag. (Ino.) rufoalbus, Pat. and Doass., Rev. Myc., 
1886, p. 26; Pat. Tab. Anal., fig. 548 (1886). 
P. convex, umbonate, brown, covered with a delicate white silky tomentum, 
which gives to the pileus a white appearance, except the umbo, which is always 
brown, up to 1 cm. ; g. almost free, reddish-brown ; s. slender, equal, reddish, covered 
