Mas see. — A Monograph of the genus Inocybe , Kars ten. 489 
yellow then olive ; s. solid, soft, equal, fibrillosely scaly (not squarrose), apex paler, 
4-5 cm., colour of p. ; sp. pip-shaped, smooth, 10-12 x 7 /x ; c. ventricose, scattered, 
70-85 x 14-16 /x 
Damp pine woods amongst Sphagnum , &c. Britain, Ireland, France, Sweden. 
Most nearly allied to /. dulcamara , which differs in the umbonate pileus with an 
olive tinge. 
(Specimen in Herb. Kew. determined by Klotzsch accepted as typical. This 
agrees with Qudlet’s conception of the species.) 
Bongardi, Karst., Hattsv., p. 458 ; Ag. Bongardi , Weinm., Hymeno- et Gastero- 
Mycetes Imp. Rossica Obs., p. 190 (1836). 
P. campanulate then expanded, obtusely umbonate, whitish with a rufescent or 
yellowish tinge, covered with darker fibrillose squamules, 3-7 cm. ; g. arcuato-adnate, 
crowded, ventricose, broad, whitish then olive-cinnamon, finally dusky cinnamon, 
edge eroded ; s. solid, equal, stuffed, straight, very tough, almost smooth, colour of p., 
apex with white meal, 5-8 cm. ; sp. pip-shaped, smooth, 8-10 x 5-6 fx ; c. ventricose, 
scattered, 50-65 x 12-16 /x. Flesh reddish when cut. Smell pleasant, like ripe pears. 
In woods. Britain, Russia. 
The above is the diagnosis given by Weinmann, so far as macroscopic structure 
is concerned. I have collected specimens in England agreeing admirably with the 
above, which differs very materially from the diagnosis given by Fries (Hym. Eur., 
p. 229), and also from his figures (Icon. Sel., tab. 107). 
If Fries’ Fungus is in reality the same species as Weinmann’s, it is a marked 
variety, differing more especially in the following points. Pileus darker in colour and 
more distinctly squarrosely scaly; flexuous stem; gills not arcuate. 
t+t Gills tinged violet. 
cincinnata, Karst., Hattsv., p. 456 (1879); Bres., Fung. Trid., i, p. 47, pi. 51, 
f. 2 (1881); Sacc., Syll. v, p. 764; Ag. cincinnatus , Fries, Syst. Myc., i, p. 256 
(1821); Ag. ( Ino .) alienellus , Britz., Derm., p. 154, fig. 19 ; Ino. alienella , Sacc., Syll. 
v, p. 764. 
P. convex then expanded, obtuse or obsoletely umbonate, dusky brown, disc 
with more or less squarrose floccose squamules, margin fibrillose, 1*5-3 cm v g.adnexed, 
seceding, crowded, ventricose, brownish- violet ; s. solid, rigid, slender, fibrillosely 
squamulose, apex tinged violet at first, then discoloured, 3-4 cm. ; sp. pip-shaped, 
smooth, 8-12 x 5-6 /x ; c. subcylindrical or slightly ventricose, fairly abundant, 60- 
Sox 14-18 /x. Flesh white except apex of stem, which is lilac at first. 
On the ground in woods. Britain, France, Germany, Sweden, Austria, Bavaria, 
Holland. 
Superficially more or less resembles several species. /. ohscura differs in the 
non-squamulose stem, and gills olive at first. I. fulvella has nodulose spores. 
IV. Cystidia absent. 
* Stem whitish or pallid. 
t Gills brownish , ochraceous or cinnamon. 
perlata, Sacc., Syll. v, p. 774 ; Ag. (Ino.) perlatus, Cke., Grev., xv, p. 40 ; Cke., 
111., pi. 960. 
