20 NEW YORK STATE MUSEUM 
Hebeloma palustre Peck, n. sp. 
Pileus thin, convex, glabrous, viscid, yellowish or buff, sometimes 
tinged with red in the center; flesh whitish; lamellae plane, slightly 
sinuate, minutely crenulate on the edge, close, brownish ferruginous ; 
stem equal, hollow, silky, pruinose at the top, whitish ; spores brown- 
ish-ferruginous. Pileus 1.5-2.5 cm broad; stem 2-4 cm long, 1-2 
mm thick. 
Gregarious or subcespitose. Wet places in the margin of woods. 
Remsen, Oneida county, August 5, 1911. C. H. Peck. 
The viscidity of the pileus is very tenacious. 
Mycena polygramma (Bull.) Fr. 
Vaughns, Washington county, S. H. Burnham, June 12, 1913. 
The specimens seem to agree with the description of this species 
fairly well except that the stem does not seem to be distinctly striate 
as in that species, and merely the margin of the pileus is striate. 
Mr Burnham also remarks that the specimens seem to revive some- 
what upon being moistened which is a characteristic of Marasmius. 
The amount of revival which they show, is scarcely sufficient to 
connect them closely with Marasmius. 
Marasmius bellipes Morgan. 
According to Dr L. H. Pennington, Professor Peck’s Maras- 
mius glabellus belongs to this species. The New York State 
collections are numerous, among them being Ithaca (Atkinson), 
Lyndonville (Fairman), Rensselaer, Saratoga, Albany, Essex, 
Hamilton and Warren counties (Peck). 
Marasmius delectans Morgan. 
Vaughns, Washington county, S. H. Burnham, August 1912. The 
species has also been collected at Ticonderoga and at Bolton by 
Professor Peck, and reported by him as Marasmius calopus 
Fr. in the Thirty-first Annual Report, page 36. 1879. 
Pyropolyvorus everhartii (Ellis & Gal.) Murrill 
On oak near Round Lake, Saratoga county. C. H. Peck, August 
1909. The specimens were doubtfully referred by Professor Peck 
to P. igniarius, to which it bears some resemblance. 
