New Species of Fungi 
By CHARLES H. Peck 
Lepiota eriophora 
Pileus thin, dry, broadly convex or nearly plane, densely 
Squamose with brown rather compact and sometimes pointed 
woolly scales, flesh white; lamellae thin, narrow, close, free, 
whitish, becoming darker with age or in drying ; stem equal, hol- 
low, clothed with brown tomentum; spores minute, 4 » long, 
2—2.5 # broad, often adhering together in small groups or masses 
and then appearing like unequal angular spores. 
Pileus about 2.5 cm. broad; stem 2-3 cm. long, 2-3 mm. 
thick. 
West Virginia. C.G. Lloyd. This species resembles ZL. felina 
and L. fuscosguamea, from both of which it differs in its smaller 
spores and more dense and paler tomentose veil. 
Marasmius subpilosus 
Pileus thin, even or faintly rugulose in the center, striate on 
the margin, pruinosely pubescent, convex or nearly plane, some- 
times slightly umbilicate, whitish, often tinged with yellow or 
brown in the center; lamellae rather broad, ventricose, adnate, 
subsinuate, white, the edge minutely ciliate ; stem slender, tough, 
stuffed or hollow, pruinosely pubescent, grayish tomentose at the 
base, reddish brown, white at the top. 
Pileus 1-2 cm. broad ; stem 2.5—5 cm. long, 0.5—1 mm. thick. 
Among fallen leaves and twigs in moist woods. Near Moscow 
Mountains, Idaho. Autumn. L.F. Henderson. This species is 
well marked by the pubescence of the pileus and stem but the 
hairs are so minute and thinly placed that to the naked eye they 
appear like a mere pruinosity, but under a strong lens they are 
readily seen and also the cilia of the edge of the lamellae. 
Pholiota fulvosquamosa 
Pileus fleshy, rather thin, convex becoming nearly plane, dry, 
adorned with numerous appressed tawny or brownish fibrillose 
scales, concentrically cracked about the disk, flesh white, becom- 
ing brownish where cut, taste and odor of radishes ; lamellae nar- 
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