REPORT OF THE STATE BOTANIST I9II 81 



This Species closely resembles Clitocybe sinopica Fr. 

 and probably has been taken for a small vernal form of that species. 

 It may be separated from it by its wet mossy habitat, its smaller size 

 and specially by its smaller spores. These are more or less obovate 

 and pointed at one end. The farinaceous odor and taste is some- 

 times wanting as in C . i n c i 1 i s Fr. but it has not the crenate 

 margin nor the hollow stem of that species. 



Clitocybe eccentrica Pk. 



ECCENTRIC CLITOCYBE 

 Torr. Bot. Club Bui. 25, p.321 



Pileus very thin, umbilicate or subinfundibuliform, glabrous, 

 Vi'atery white and shining when moist, white when dry, the thin 

 margin often lobed, irregular or deeply cleft on one side ; lamellae 

 narrow, close, decurrent, white ; stem slender, tough, solid, glabrous, 

 strigosely hairy at the base, often eccentric, white, long branching 

 strands of white mycelium often permeating the matrix ; spores 

 4-5 X 2.5-3 f^- 



Pileus 2.5-5 cm broad ; stem 2.5-4 cm long, 2-4 mm thick. 



Gregarious or cespitose. Much decayed wood, Essex, Warren 

 and Wayne counties. July to October. 



Clitocybe ectypoides Pk. 



ECTYPOID CLITOCYBE 

 N. Y. State Mus. Rep't 24, p.6r 



Pileus fleshy but thin, broadly umbilicate or infundibuliform, with 

 a spreading margin, finely virgate and squamulose punctate, the 

 blackish points on the radiating fibrils, moist, grayish or grayish 

 yellow ; lamellae close, narrow, decurrent, some of them forked, 

 yellowish; stem equal, firm, solid, colored like the pileus, with a 

 white mycelium at the base ; spores broadly ellipsoid, 5-8 x 4-5 fi. 



Pileus 2.5-5 cm broad ; stem 2-3 cm long, 2-4 mm thick. 



Gregarious or cespitose. Decaying wood in woods. July to Sep- 

 tember. Common in mountainous districts. 



Clitocybe tuba Fr. 



TRUMPET CLITOCYBE 

 Sylloge V, p. 1 75 

 Pileus thin, convex or nearly plane, umbilicate, even on the 

 inargin, whitish when moist, shining white when dry, flesh white; 



