Mas see. — A Monograph of the genus Inocybe , Karsten. 477 
Very near to /. eutheles , if indeed distinct. Differing mainly in the broader gills 
having a strong ecurrent tooth. Also allied to I. eutheloides. 
(Specimen in Ellis and Everh., N. Amer. Fung., ser. ii, 2102, examined.) 
sambticina, Sacc., Syll. v, p. 782 ; Ag. (Ino.) sambucinus , Fries, Syst. Myc., i, 
р. 257 (1821); Fries, Icon. Sel., tab. 109, f. 2 ; Cke., 111 ., pi. 399. 
P. convex then expanded, obtuse or subumbonate, often wavy, silky-fibrillose, 
nearly glabrous and not cracking, white, often becoming tinged yellow, 5-8 cm. ; 
g. emarginate, slightly adnexed, broad, ventricose, whitish then dingy ochre ; s. stout, 
short, often curved, equal or thickened at the base, fibrillosely striate, white, solid, 
2 -5-3-5 cm . ; sp. elliptical, smooth, 9-12 x 6 /u; c. scattered, ventricose, 50-60 x 12- 
1 6 fx. Smell strong. 
Solitary. In dry pine woods, &c. Britain, France, Germany, Sweden. 
A stout Fungus, entirely white, the pileus often becoming yellowish with age. 
I. sindonia differs in the narrow gills, stuffed then hollow stem, and smaller 
spores. 
Clarkii, Sacc., Syll. v, p. 784; Cke., 111 ., pi. 429 b. 
P. campanulate, obtuse, whitish, silky-fibrillose, 2-3 cm. ; g. adnexed, rather 
distant, broadish, pallid, margin white; s. equal or slightly thickened at the base, 
solid, white, 3-5 cm.; sp. elliptical, smooth, 8-10 x 5-6 /1 ; c. scattered, ventricose, 
55-65 X 12-16 fi, some thinner. 
On the ground in shady places. Britain. 
Allied to I. sindonia, but separated by the solid stem, persistently pale gills, and 
larger spores. 
(Type specimen examined.) 
corydalina, Qu£l., Jur. et Vosg., iii, p. 115; Soc. Bot. Fr., xxiv, t. 5, f. 10; 
Sacc., Syll. v, p. 766. 
P. campanulate then expanded, fibrillose, white, the prominent umbo glaucous- 
green, 4-6 cm. ; g. adnate, emarginate, brown, edge white ; s. fragile, white ; sp. pip- 
shaped, smooth, 8-10 x5f! c. ventricose, 50-60 x 12-15 p. Smell strong, like 
Corydalis cava. Flesh white, sometimes tinged lilac. 
Woods. France. 
(Specimen from Qudlet examined.) 
Var. roseola , Pat., Ann. Tab. Fung., no. 553. 
Pileus entirely green ; flesh tinged rosy when cut. 
France. 
geophylla, Karst., Hattsv., p. 464 ; Sacc., Syll. v, p. 784 ; Ag. (Ino.) geophyllus, 
Fries, Epicr., p. 176 ; Cke., 111 ., pi. 401. 
P. conical then expanded and umbonate, minutely fibrillose, satiny and shining, 
often cracking, pure white, sometimes tinged yellow when old, 1-5-3 cm . ) g- almost 
free, rather broad, ventricose, crowded, pale then becoming dingy clay-colour; 
s. stuffed, satiny, apex minutely floccose, white, equal, base slightly thickened, often 
rather flexuous, 4-7 cm. ; sp. elliptical, slightly apiculate, smooth, 7-9 x 4-5 n ; 
с. fairly abundant, ventricose, 45-60 x 10-16 Smell earthy. 
On the ground in woods, &c. Britain, Ireland, France, Germany, Sweden, 
Switzerland, Italy, Austria, Holland, Russia, United States. 
