Mas see. — A Monograph of the genus Inocybe , Kars ten. 499 
somewhat crowded. Stem 2-3' long., 2-3" thick. Spores pale rusty-ochre ! Odour 
pleasant ! ' 
The above is Weinmann’s description of his species, which differs very materially 
from that given by Fries and copied by Saccardo. 
strigieeps, Sacc., Syll. v, p. 791 ; Ag. (Ino.) strigicep Fries, Epicr., p. 183; 
Ripartites strigieeps , Karst., Hattsv., p. 478. 
P. obtusely convex then expanded, rufescent, strigose from the presence of 
long fibrils, silky, edge at first involute, ciliate with long deflexed fibrils, dry, 1-2 cm.; 
g. adnato-decurrent, crowded, becoming brownish ; s. stuffed, white, everywhere 
villose, 4-6 cm. 
Among fallen leaves in beech woods. Sweden, Holland. 
capucina, Karst, Hattsv., 458; Sacc., Syll. v, 772 ; Ag. (Ino.) capucinus, Fries, 
Vet. Akad. Fork, 1873, v > P- 57 Fries, Icon. Set, tab. 108, f. 2. 
P. conico-campanulate, acute but not umbonate, dusky brown, paler towards the 
margin, everywhere fibrillosely scaly, 2-5-5 cm.; g. sinuato-adnate, base broad and 
gradually narrowing towards the margin, brown; s. solid, short, equal, fibrillose, 
brownish but paler than p., 2*5 cm. Flesh white. 
On the ground under alders. Sweden. 
A section of the pileus is almost exactly an equilateral triangle. 
The plant figured by Patouillard under the above name (Tab. Anal. Fung., no, 
529) is obviously not the species of Fries, yet Saccardo has added to Fries’ diagnosis 
of I. capucina the spore measurements of Patouillard’s plant. 
? pollicaris, Karsten, Symb. ad Myc. Fenn., xi, in Meddel. Soc. pro. Faun, et 
Flor. Fenn., ix, p. 68 (1882); Sacc., Syll. v, p. 763. 
P. rather fleshy, campanulate then expanding muricate with squarrose squamules, 
brownish-bay, scarcely 1 cm.; g. adnexed, crowded, ventricose, brownish-cinnamon 
(blackish when dry) ; s. equal, floccosely and squarrosely squamulose, colour of p., 
scarcely 3 cm. ; sp. broadly elliptical, brownish, 3-5 x 2-3 
In a hothouse. Finland. 
Karsten places this species in the genus Inocybe with a query, but gives no reasons 
for so doing. 
squarrosula, Sacc., Syll. xi, p. 50 ; Clypeus squarrosula , Karst., Symb. Myc. 
Fenn., xxxii, p. 7. 
P. convexo-plane, obtuse, fibrillose, fuscous, disc with squarrose squamules, 
darker, 1-2 cm.; g. crowded, subventricose, brownish, white-crenulate ; s. equal, 
brownish squamulose, 2-3 cm,; sp. 10 x 7-8 /jl .. 
On pine trunks. Finland. 
gomphodes, Sacc., Syll. v, p. 786 ; Ag. (Ino.) gomphodes^ Kalchbr., Grev., viii, 
p. 152, tab. 142, f. 8. 
P. campanulate with a pronounced globose umbo, fibrillose, brownish, 1-5-2 cm. ; 
g. ascending and almost free, narrow, greyish umber; s. stuffed, subequal, pallid 
rufous, base slightly bulbous and surrounded with white mycelium. 
New South Wales (Richmond River). 
Readily distinguished by the globose umbo nearly the size of a pea, perched on 
the top of the campanulate pileus^ 
M m 
