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Thelephora Willeyi, Clinton. 
Pileus funnel-formed, thin, smooth, obscurely zoned, white, the margin 
entire or laciniately toothed and lobed; hymenium smooth, concolorous; stem 
central, equal, solid, white. 
Plant 1'-1.5' high, pileus 6”-12” Ea stem .5’-1" thick. 
Ground in woods. Buffalo, G. W. Clinton. Lowville. September. 
Sometimes the pileus is split on one side down to the stem. 
Stereum radiatum, Peck. 
Resupinate or slightly reflexed, suborbicular, blackish-brown ; hymenium 
uneven, marked with thick corrugations or ridges radiating from the center, 
cinnamon color. 
Old hemlock logs. Catskill Mountains. June. 
Corticium bicolor,» Peck. 
Thin, membranaceous, resupinate, flaccid, smooth, separable from the matrix, — 
under surface greenish-yellow, upper surface white. 
Rotten wood. .Center. October. 
Clavaria pusilla, Peck. 
Stem slender, solid, rather tough, much and irregularly branched ; branches 
unequal, divergent, tips acute. 
Plant scarcely 1' high, yellowish. 
Ground under spruce and balsam trees. North Elba. Septem- 
ber. 
Clavaria clavata, Peck. 
Simple, straight, clavate, obtuse, smooth, not hollow, yellow when fresh, 
rugose-wrinkled and orange colored when dry. 
Plant 4’-6” high. 
Damp shaded banks by roadsides. Sandlake. June. 
The surface of the ground where it grows is covered by a stratum 
of green confervoid filaments. The species is related to C. mucida. 
Tremella colorata, Peck. 
Plant gregarious, swollen subglobose or irregular soft pulpy and raisin- 
colored when moist, externally black and internally brownish-pink when dry ; 
filaments colored in the mass; spores globose, colored like the hymenium 
when mature, .0005'-.0007' in diameter. 
Bark of dead ash trees. Tyre. September. 
