REPORT OF THE STATE BOTANIST 1914 99 
same wound about 8 feet from the ground. Some refer it to P. 
igevis B. & C. i 
Panus rudis Fr. On stumps of deciduous trees, usually reported 
HeLentinus lecontei. 
RHODOSPORAE 
Pluteus admirabilis Pk. On mossy logs in woods. 
Pluteus cervinus Fr. On stumps of birch etc. 
Pluteus granularis Pk. On logs in conifer woods. 
Pluteus longistriatus Pk. On decayed log. 
Entoloma griseum Pk. Among moss under balsam trees. 
Entoloma cyaneum Pk. In mixed woods of pine, spruce and 
birch. The vinaceous color of the typical plant was almost entirely 
lacking, but the other characters were normal. 
Entoloma rhodopolium Fr. In open woods of spruce, hillsides. 
Entoloma salmoneum Pk. On moss and ground in conifer woods. 
Entoloma sericatum Britz. In mixed woods. This species has 
the habit and size of E. rhodopolium, but differs in possessing 
a distinct farinaceous odor and in the narrow gills. The gills are 
never cinereous. (See Agaricaceae of Michigan.) 
Ientoloma strictius Pk. In swamps, often about base of stumps. 
Clitopilus albogriseus Pk. In mixed woods. . 
Clitopilus woodianus Pk. In a cedar and birch swamp. 
Leptonia asprella Fr. In moist places, cedar and birch swamp. 
Leptonia formosa Fr. Under pine in mosses. 
Lepionia grisea Pk. In moist places, cedar swamp. 
Leptonia lampropoda Fr. On mosses under balsam and spruce. 
Nolanea conica Pk. Among mosses in conifer swamps. 
Nolanea fuscogrisellus Pk. On mosses under conifers. 
Nolanea mammosa Fr. In cedar swamp. 
Eccilia mordax Atk. In frondose woods. 
Clandopus nidulans Fr. On decayed wood, in birch, beech and 
spruce forest. 
OCHROSPORAE 
Paxillus involutus Fr. In conifer woods. 
Paxillus rhodoxanthus Schw. On the ground in open conifer 
hillsides. 
Pholiota adiposa Fr. On living beech trunk. 
Pholiota aggericola Pk. Among debris on the ground in mixed 
woods. This was formerly called P. indecens and P. ag- 
gérata. Pk. 
