IOO NEW YORK STATE MUSEUM 
Pholiota caperata Fr. Under balsam and spruce. 
Pholiota confragosa Fr. On decayed logs. 
Phohiota limonella Pk. On and around the base of yellow birch 
trunks. 
Pholiota marginata Fr. On rotten wood. 
Pholiota spectabilis Fr. On trunk of living yellow birch tree. 
Pholiota squarrosoides Pk. On trunk of living maple tree. 
Pholiota lutea Pk. On decaying beech log. Caespitose. It differs 
from P. spectabilis in its darker mature gills which are chest- 
nut-bay color (Ridg.). The stems become fuscous-ferruginous and 
are clavate at base. Gills narrow. Flesh etc. yellow. The pileus 
and stem are not squamose nor distinctly viscid and in this respect 
differ from P. aurivella Fr. and P. limonella PkKj whee 
are also said to grow on beech. Spores 7-8 by 5—5™% micr. 
Hebeloma firmum Fr. Under spruce. Spores 10-12 by 5-6 
micr. 
Hebeloma longicaudum Fr. On sphagnum, under balsam and 
spruce. 
Inocybe calamistrata Fr. In deep moss under balsam trees. 
Inocybe cookei Bres. Under balsam trees etc. 
Inocybe excoriata Pk. In mixed woods. 
Inocybe geophylla Fr. In cedar swamps etc. on moss. 
Inocybe infelix Pk. In open places, roadsides ete. 
Inocybe nodulospora Pk. Under spruce and balsam trees. 
Spores 7-11 by 6-7 micr. and therefore smaller than those of 
I. lanuginosa (Fr.) Bres. which are said to measure 11-15 by 
8-9 micr. 
Inocybe subochracea Burt. In moist places in woods. 
Inocybe umboninota Pk. In woods. 
Inocybe violacea Fr. On the ground under conifer trees. Al- 
ways distinct and constant. 
Flammula alnicola Fr. On decayed wood, in swamps. 
Flammula mixta Fr. Among mosses on the ground, under 
conifers. Known by its large spores, measuring 10-13 by 6-7 micr. 
Flammula sapinea Fr. On decayed spruce logs. 
Flammula spumosa Fr. On sticks etc. in swamps. 
Naucoria semiorbicularis Fr. Roadsides and fields. 
‘Naucoria temulenta Fr. On black soil in conifer swamps. 
Galera hypnorum Fr. On mosses. 
Galera sphagnorum Fr. On sphagnum. 
Crepidotus versutus Fr. On decayed wood. 
Cortinarius alboviolaceus Fr. Among debris of forests, under 
conifers and birch. 
