390 



THE AGARICACEAE OF MICHIGAN 



occur, some of which have been given names, especially the forms 

 near C. cinnamomeus. 



Section I. Universal veil more or less manifest, evanescent 



*Gills at first violaceous or purplish., 



391. Cortinarius caninus Fr. 



Syst. Myc, 1821. 



Illustrations: Kicken, Die Blatterpilze, PI. 40, Fig. 5. 

 .Marshall, The Mushroom Book, PL 31, op. p. 85, 1905. 



"PILEUS G-10 cm. broad violaceous-fulvous, soon beautifully 

 rusty-fulvous to almost orange-fulvous, micaceous-glistening, often 

 almost zoned on margin by the remains of the veil, sometimes scaly- 

 cracked, campanulate-convex, obtuse, thin, compact on disk. 

 FLESH pallid, tinged lilac. GILLS lilac-clay color at first, soon 

 watery-cinnamon, at length cinnamon-fulvous, emargiuate, broad, 

 subdistant. STEM 7-10 cm. long, 10-20 mm. thick, pallid, at length 

 rusly-iibrillose, narrowed upwards, elastic, stuffed then hollow, at 

 first almost girdled by a pallid veil. SPORES globose, 8-9 x 7-8 

 micr. BASIDIA 30 x 9-10 micr. ODOR and TASTE mild." 



The description is adapted from Ricken. It has beeu reported 

 several times from this country but I have never recognized it. Ex- 

 cept in size it seems to approach some of the forms of C. anomalus 

 closely. Saccardo and Stevenson give slightly longer spores. Miss 

 Marshall's plant had a disagreeable odor. 



392. Cortinarius anomalus Fr. 



Syst. Myc, 1821. 



Illustrations: Fries, Icones, PL 154, Fig. 2. 



Cooke, 111., I'l. 77G. (PL 850 as C. lepidopus Cke.) 

 Gillet, Champignons de France, No. 192 (as var. protcus). 

 Kicken, Die Blatterpilze, PL 47, Fig. 1. 



PILEUS 2-5 cm. broad, hemispherical-convex then sub-expanded, 

 obtuse, even, covered when young by an interwoven appressed gray 

 silkmess, becoming pale fulvous-alutaceous when expanded, some- 

 times tinged at first with a violaceous-grayish tinge, at length glisten- 



