. British fungi (hymenomycetes). Basidiomycetes; Fungi -- Great Britain. 238 XXI. Agaric us (Inocybe) lanngi- nosus. One-fourth natural size. inocybe. Subgenus XX. INOCYBE (ft, fibre; KvM, head). Fr. Syst. Myc. i. p. 254. Universal veil somewhat fibrillose, concrete with the cuticle of the pileus, often free at the margin, in the form of a cor- tina. Gills somewhat sinuate (but they occur also adnate and in two species decurrent), changing colour, but not cinnamon-pulverulent. Spores often rough, but in others even, more or less fuscous-ferruginous. Fr. Hym. Eur. p. 226. Inocybe (wi
. British fungi (hymenomycetes). Basidiomycetes; Fungi -- Great Britain. 238 XXI. Agaric us (Inocybe) lanngi- nosus. One-fourth natural size. inocybe. Subgenus XX. INOCYBE (ft, fibre; KvM, head). Fr. Syst. Myc. i. p. 254. Universal veil somewhat fibrillose, concrete with the cuticle of the pileus, often free at the margin, in the form of a cor- tina. Gills somewhat sinuate (but they occur also adnate and in two species decurrent), changing colour, but not cinnamon-pulverulent. Spores often rough, but in others even, more or less fuscous-ferruginous. Fr. Hym. Eur. p. 226. Inocybe (with Hebelomd) corresponds with Tricholoma. Inocybe and Hebe- loma have some common features, but they are really very distinct. Inocybe is readily distinguished by the silky- fibril lose covering of the pileus, which never has a distinct pellicle, by the veil which is continuous and homo- geneous with the fibrils of the pileus, and by the ferruginous- fuscous spores. All grow on the ground. They are (mostly) strong-smelling (commonly nauseous). None are edible. The position of Inocybe among Dermini is not satisfactory. It forms a very natural group of itself, and is, in many respects, not properly allied to Dermini. It might form a distinct genus in- termediate between the Agarici and the Cortinarii. I. Squarrosi (squarrose). Pileus at the first squarrose, somewhat fuscous, and stem scaly of the same colour. II. Laceri (torn). Pileus torn into scales or fibres (not split into cracks) ; stem coloured, paler than the pileus, fibrillose. III. Rimosi (cracked). Pileus longitudinally fibrous, soon cracked and here and there adpressedly scaly; stem -whitish, slightly tinged with the colour of the pileus, fibrillose. Many of them become yellow when old. IV. Velutini (velvety). Pileus not cracked, the cuticle fibrillose-ivoven, be- coming even or adpressedly scaly, disc even; stem polished, smooth, whitish, mealy at the apex. V. Viscidi (viscid). Pileus becoming even, viscid (with one e
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