BULLETIN 
TORREY BOTANICAL CLUB. 
New Species of Fungi. 
By Cuas. H. PEcK. 
AMANITOPSIS VELOSA. 
Pileus at first subglobose, then campanulate or nearly plane, 
generally bearing patches of the remains of the whitish felty or 
tomentose volva, elsewhere glabrous, becoming sulcate-striate on 
the margin, buff or orange-buff, flesh compact, white; lamellae 
close, reaching the stem, subventricose, pale cream color; stem 
firm, at first tomentose and attenuated at the top, then nearly 
equal, stuffed, white or whitish, closely sheathed at the base by 
the thick volva; spores globose, .0004 to .0005 in. broad. 
Pileus 2 to 4 in. broad ; stem 3 to 4 in. long, 3 to 4 lines thick. 
Under oak trees. Pasadena, California. April. A. J. Mc- 
Clatchie. 
This fungus is closely related to Amanifopsts vaginata, from 
which it may be separated by the more adherent remains of the 
thicker volva which sometimes cover the whole surface of the 
pileus, and by the thicker lamellae which are somewhat adnate to 
the stem and terminate with a decurrent tooth. 
TRICHOLOMA SEMIVESTITUM. 
Pileus thin, expanded, centrally depressed or subumbilicate, 
glabrous, blackish-brown, the margin decurved or involute ; lamel- 
_lae close, emarginate, often dentate or eroded on the edge, whitish 
tinged with blue; stem short, solid, usually slightly thickened at 
the base, the lower part clothed with a tawny-brown tomentum, 
the upper part brown; spores broadly elliptical or subglobose, — 
uninucleate, .00016 to .0002 in. long, .00016 broad. 
