476 Massee. — A Monograph of the genus Inocybe , Karsten. 
P. conical or convex, sometimes expanded, generally umbonate, fibrillously 
squamulose, pale ochraceous, 2-3-5 cm. \ g- attached, emarginate, rather broad, 
whitish then brownish-yellow; s. equal, whitish, slightly fibrillose, solid, 2*5-5 cm. ; 
sp. pip-shaped, smooth, 8 x 4-5-5 ^ ; c. ventricose, 45-60 x 12-15 w, fairly 
abundant. 
On the ground in fields and by roadsides. United States (North Elba and 
West Albany). 
(Type from Peck examined.) 
cortinata, Roll., Bull. Soc. Myc., xvii, p. 117, pi. 3, f. 1 (1901). 
P. campanulate with a stout umbo, pale straw-colour, umbo rusty, at first 
minutely fibrilloso-striate then torn and deeper coloured, up to 4 cm. ; veil white, 
floccose, appendiculate ; g. adnato-decurrent, ventricose, whitish then brownish-ochre, 
edge paler, floccoso-serrulate ; s. stuffed, white, minutely fibrillosely striate, scurfy 
upwards, fragile, curved, flexuous, the imperfect ring fibrillose, white, median, 
cylindrical, base usually sub-bulbous, 6-8 cm. ; sp. pip-shaped, smooth, 8 x 4-5 n ; 
c. ventricose. 
Gregarious under pines. Belgium. 
Differs from /. vatricosa in the veil not being viscid. Perhaps a cortinate form 
of I. sindonia (Rolland). 
eutheles, Sacc., Syll. v, p. 776 ; Ag. (Ino.) euthelus , B. and Br., Ann. Nat. Hist., 
1865, pi. viii, f. 2 ; Cke., 111 ., pi. 386. 
P. campanulate then expanded and strongly umbonate, shining, silky, rather 
squamulose, pale fawn-colour, 2-5-5 cm.; g* broadly and abruptly adnate, narrowish, 
pallid, edge whitish, denticulate ; s. equal, slightly swollen at the very base, fibrous, 
solid, pallid or whitish, 4-8 cm. ; sp. elliptical, smooth, 9-10 x 5-5*5 /*; c. fairly 
abundant, stout, ventricose, 60-65 x 15-20 \i. Smell mealy. 
On the ground among pine leaves. Britain, France. 
/. pallidipes and /. eutheloides are closely allied to this species, which also bears 
a general resemblance to /. fastigiata, but differs in having smooth spores. The 
large upper figure and section in Cooke’s 111 . are copied from Berkeley’s original 
drawing, the other figures on the plate are not authoritative. 
(Berkeley’s type examined.) 
pallidipes, Ellis and Everh., Journ. Myc., v, p. 24 (1889); Sacc., Syll. ix, 
p. 96. 
P. conico- campanulate, then expanded and umbonate, light brown, fibrose- 
squamose, disc innately scaly, margin subrimose, 2-3 cm. ; g. broadly attached with 
a strong decurrent tooth, ascending at' first then ventricose, scarcely crowded, rather 
broad, pale cinnamon, edge paler and fimbriate; s. white, slightly narrowed and 
mealy above, loosely fibrillose below, sub-bulbous and with white tomentum at the 
base, solid, 2-5-5 cm - ; sp. pip-shaped, smooth, 8-9 x 5 p ; c. fusoid or subventricose, 
numerous, 40-50 x 14-18 fx. 
On the ground under filbert-trees. United States (Newfield, N.Y.). 
The disc of the pileus is carnose, and in wet weather rimose-squamose. Well 
marked by its conic-campanulate pileus and white stem , which remains white till the 
plant withers (E. and E.). 
