REPORT OF THE STATE BOTANIST I9O4 I9 



D. R. Sumstine, Kittanning Pa. 

 Grifola sumstinei Murrill i Pholiota luteofolia Pk. 



Hydnum earleanum Sumst. \ Pleurotus umbonatus Pk. 



C. Thorn, Storrs Ct. 

 Craterellus taxophilus Thorn 



C. Thai, Milwaukee Wis. 

 Cortinarius heliotropicus Pk. 



H. L. Ward, Milwaukee Wis. 

 Lepiota acutesquaniosa Weinm. 



J. E. Weaver, Rochester 

 Lentinus lepideus Fr. 



D. O. Wickham, Hotel Champlain 

 Clavaria pistillaris L. J Clitocybe multiceps Pk. 



Geaster minimus Schw. 



D. B. Young, Albany 

 Morchella deliciosa Fr. 



SPECIES NOT BEFORE REPORTED 

 Amanita crenulata Pk. 



Among fallen leaves in woods. Port Jefferson. August. In 

 our specimens the pileus is more yellow and its margin more dis- 

 tinctly striate than in the type specimens. The mealiness at the 

 top of the stem and the fiocculent edge of the lamellae in some of 

 the specimens are also yellowish. 



Amanita lignophila Atk. ined. 

 Decaying wood in woods beyond Forest Home near Ithaca. 

 G F Atkinson. A rare species similar in size and shape to 

 A m a n J t a m a p p a but separable from it by the grayish 

 brown color of the pileus, the solid stem and the thicker mem- 

 brane of its volva. The spores are globose, granular within and 

 .0003-. 0004 of an inch in diameter, 



Amanita radicata Pk. 



Sandy ^soil in woods and open places. Port Jefferson, Suffolk co. 

 August. In our specimens the warts of the pileus are smaller 

 than in the typical form. 



Arenaria leptoclados Guss. 

 Wet rocky-! places near Little Falls. October. J. V. Haberer. 

 This is A. serpyllifolia var. t e n u i o r Koch of Synop- 

 tical Flora of North America, fasc. 2 p. 239. Introduced. 



