REPORT OF THE STATE BOTANIST I9II 79 



4 Plant terrestrial 5 



4 Plant lignatile 6 



5 Pileus reddish or brick red, spores 8-10 fi long sinopica 



5 Pileus reddish or brick red, spores 6-8 ^u, long sinopicoides 



6 Pileus glabrous, lamellae white eccentrica 



6 Pileus virgate and dotted, lamellae not white ectypoides 



7 Dry pileus white 8 



7 Dry pileus not white 9 



8 Lamellae 6 mm broad tuba 



8 Lamellae less than 6 mm broad adirondackensis 



9 Lamellae yellowish or pale ochraceous gilva 



9 Lamellae white or whitish splendens 



9 Lamellae reddish inversa 



Clitocybe catina Fr. 



BOWL SHAPE CLITOCYBE 

 Sylloge V, p. 1 74 



Pileus fleshy but thin toward the margin, plane becoming- infundi- 

 buliform, flaccid, dry, glabrous, white becoming tinged with pink or 

 tan color in rainy weather, flesh white, odor agreeable ; lamellae 

 moderately close, decurrent, white ; stem stuft'ed or solid spongy 

 within, elastic, slightly thickened at the base, white ; spores ellipsoid, 

 6-8 X 4-5 fi. 



Pileus 4-5 cm broad ; stem 4-7 cm long, 6-9 mm thick. 



In or near woods. Adirondack mountains. August. Found but 

 once. 



The specimens were yoimg but apparently belong here and are 

 admitted with some hesitation. Related to Clitocybe 

 infundibuliformis (Schaeff.) Fr. but easily distinguished by 

 its white color. The spore dimensions here given are taken from 

 American specimens. 



Clitocybe maxima (G. & Tvl.) Fr. 



LARGE CLITOCYBE 

 Sylloge V, p. 165 



Pileus fleshy in the center, thin toward the margin, broadly 

 infundibuliform, subumbonate, dry, pale tan color or whitish; 

 lamellae close, soft, long decurrent, whitish ; stem attenuated up- 

 wards, fibrillose, solid, whitish ; spores subglobose, 4-6 x 3-4 fi. 



Pileus 10-30 cm broad ; stem 5-10 cm long, 12-25 mm thick. 



Woods and grassy places. Adirondack and Catskill mountains. 

 July and August. Not common. 



Remarkable for and at once recognized by its large size. 



