68 [Assembly 



mose or strigose-hairy appearance. The color of the pileus is often 

 paler toward the base than it is on tlie margin. 



Claudopus variabilis, Fr. 

 Variable Agaric. 



Agaricus variaMlis, Pers. Agai'icus sessilis, Bull. Agaricus niveus, 



Sow. 



Pileus thin, one-half to one inch broad, at first resupinate, then 

 reflexed, sessile or with a very short stem, tomentose, white ; lamellae 

 rather broad, thin, radiating from a lateral or an eccentric jjoint, dis- 

 tant, white becoming pink; spores even, elliptical, .00025 to .0003 in. 

 long, about half as broad. 



Decaying wood and dead branches. Adirondack mountains. July 

 to Octol)er. Buffalo. G. W. Clinton. 



A small and not common species. The thin pileus is often attached 

 to its place of growth by white tomentose filaments, and the point to 

 which the lamellas converge is also sometimes tomentose. 



Claudopus depluens, Fr. 



Eainy Agaric. 



Agaricus depluens, Batsch. 



Pileus thin, one-half to one inch broad, at first resupinate, then 

 reflexed, variable in form, sessile or with a short stem, slightly silky- 

 tomentose especially toward the base, white or whitish, sometimes 

 slightly tinged with pink; lamellae broad, subdistant, whitish, becom- 

 ing pink; spores angulafed, .0004 to .0004:5 in. long, .0003 broad, 

 usually containing a single large nucleus. 



Decaying wood. Catskill mountains, Gausevoort and Sterling. 

 July and August. 



This species, like the preceding one, which it closely resembles and 

 from which it is separated by the character of the spores, is very 

 variable. In our specimens the pileus is white, but it is sometimes 

 described as tinged with red or gray. It is also said to grow upon the 

 ground and on mosses, but our specimens grew upon decaying wood. 

 In both these particulars they agree with the figure of the species in 

 Mycological Illustrations. 



Claudopus Greigensis, Ph. 

 Greig Agaric. 



Pileus very thin, convex, five to ten lines broad, hygrophanous, 

 grayish-cinnamon color and striatulate when moist, silky-fibrillose 

 when dry ; lamella^ subdistant, scarcely reaching the stem, grayish 

 becoming dingy-pink; stem short, about one line long, solid, curved, 

 fibrillose below, with an abundant white radiating mycelium at the 

 base; spores angulated, .00035 to .00045 in. long, .0003 broad, usually 

 containing a single large nucleus. 



Much decayed wood. Greig. September. 



This species is intermediate between the preceding and the follow- 

 ing one, but it is more closely related to the latter, from which it is 

 distinguished by the striatulate pileus and free lamellce. 



