388 NORTH AMERICAN FLORA [VoLUME 9 
with pink, the taste mild: lamellae decurrent, subdistant, whitish: spores ellipsoid, 7.5 X 5 p: 
stipe rather long, flexuous, equal or nearly so, glabrous, white, solid, 4-8 cm. long, 4-8 mm. 
thick. 
Type LocaLity: Port Jefferson, Long Island, New York. 
Hasirat: Among fallen leaves in woods. 
DISTRIBUTION: Known only from the type locality. 
ILLUSTRATIONS: Bull. N. Y. State Mus. 67: pl. M, f. 1-6. 
11. Camarophyllus squamulosus (Ellis & Ev.) Murrill. 
Hygrophorus squamulosus Ellis & Ev. Proc. Acad. Phila. 1893: 440. 1894. 
Pileus fleshy, fragile, hemispheric to convex-expanded, 3-4 cm. broad; surface light-orange, 
tomentose-squamose, not viscid, margin paler: lamellae emarginate-adnate with a decurrent 
tooth, subcrowded, unequal, broad, light-yellow, the edges obtuse, the imterspaces rugose: 
spores oblong-ellipsoid, hyaline, 5-6 X 3-3.5 u: stipe light-orange, thick, often compressed 
and incurved, subfarinose at the apex, slightly tapering upward, 5 cm. long, 5-7 mm. thick. 
Type LocaLity: Newfield, New Jersey. 
Hasirat: Swampy woods among mosses. . 
DISTRIBUTION: Known only from the type locality. 
12. Camarophyllus Cantharellus (Schw.) Murrill. 
Agaricus (Omphalia) Cantharellus Schw. Schr. Nat. Ges. Leipzig 1: 88. 1822. 
Hygrophorus Caniharellus Fries, Epicr. Myc. 329. 1838. 
Hydrocybe Cantharellus Murrill, Mycologia 3: 196. 1911. 
Pileus thin, convex to umbilicate, gregarious, 1.5-2.5 cm. broad; surface glabrous or 
minutely squamulose, not viscid, orange, varying to red or yellow: lamellae rather broad, 
distant, arcuate, very decurrent, whitish or yellowish, sometimes tinged with red: spores 
ellipsoid, smooth, hyaline, 7.5-10 X 5-6 w: stipe slender, fragile, glabrous, stuffed or hollow, 
red, orange, or yellow, 2.5-7.5 cm. long, 2-4 mm. thick. 
TYPE LOCALITY: North Carolina. 
Hasrrat: Damp soil or decayed wood in woods or open places. 
; DISTRIBUTION: Maine to Alabama and west to Minnesota; Bermuda and at high elevations in 
amaica, 
In,ustrations: Ann. Rep. N. Y. State Mus. 54: pl. 76, f. 8-20. 
ExsiccatTt: Ellis & Ev. N. Am. Fungi 19/0. 
13. Camarophyllus albipes (Peck) Murrill. 
Hygrophorus albipes Peck, Bull. Torrey Club 25: 323. 1898. 
Pileux convex, 1.5 cm. broad; surface glabrous, grayish-brown, margin strongly decurved: 
context white; lamellae very decurrent, subdistant, narrow, arcuate, whitish, becoming darker 
with age: spores subglobose, 5-6.5 uw: stipe slender, glabrous, white, solid, tapering downward, 
2.5-3.5 em. long, 3-5 mm. thick. 
TYPE LOCALITY: Massachusetts. 
DISTRIBUTION: Maine and Massachusetts. 
14. Camarophyllus recurvatus (Peck) Murrill. 
Hygrophorus recurvatus Peck, Bull. N. Y. State Mus. 157: 28. 1912. 
Pileus fleshy at the center, thin toward the margin, convex, becoming plane or concave 
by the margin curving upward, often lacerate on the margin, 1.2-2.4 cm. broad; surface grayish- 
brown when moist, subalutaceous and even when dry, glabrous, often more highly colored at 
the center than on the margin, which is striatulate when moist: context white; lamellae sub- 
ventricose, distant, venosely connected, decurrent, whitish: spores broadly ellipsoid or sub- 
globose, 6-8 X 4-6 u: stipe fragile, equal, stuffed or hollow, fibrous, easily: splitting, subpruinose, 
white or whitish, 2-4 em. long, 2-4 mm. thick. 
TYPE LOCALITY: Canandaigua, New York. 
Hasitat: On lawns. 
DISTRIBUTION: New York. 
