REPORT OF THE STATE BOTANIST I906 73 



and without striations ; lamellae thin, distant, decurrent, persistently 

 white ; stem short, even, glabrous, white ; spores subglobose, .0003- 

 .0004 of an inch long, .00024-.0003 broad. 



Pileus 2-4 inches broad ; stem 1-2 inches long', 4-6 lines thick. 



Woods. Saratoga county. Rare. 



The specimens referred to this species have the white color of 

 the lamellae more persistent than in any of the preceding species 

 and the lamellae are less crowded than in the short stem russula. 

 Nevertheless they have a pale yellowish hue in the dried state and 

 are scarcely as wide apart as the description of the species w^ould 

 indicate, but the disagreement is so slight that it is not sufficient 

 cause for a separation of our plant. 



Furcatae Fr. 



I'ileus conii)act, firm, even on the thin margin, the thin pellicle 

 closely adnate; lamellae unequal, some of them forked, commonly 

 narrowed toward each end. 



The thin !)ut even margin vvith acute edge and the forked lamellae 

 are the notable characters of this subgenus. The lamellae do not 

 show decided changes in color v/ith age or in drying, as in most 

 species of the preceding subgenus. In some species the pellicle is 

 separable on the margin. 



KEY TO THE Sl'E':iES 



Pileus green, olive-green or purple or these intermingled i 



Pileus whitish tinged with yellow or reddish yellow basifurcata 



I Lamellae becoming 3'ellowisli with age olivascens 



T I amellae persistently white or whitish 2 



2 Lamellae subdistant furcata 



2 Lamellae close, many forked variata 



Russula basifurcata Pk 



PALE CAP RUSSULA 

 State Mus. Rep't 38. 1885. p. 90. 



Pileus firm, convex, unlbilicate, becoming subinfundibuliform, gla- 

 brous, slightly viscid when moist, the pellicle separable on the 

 even margin only, dingy white, often tinged with yellow or red- 

 dish yellow, flesh white, taste mild, then bitterish ; lamellae close, 

 narrowed toward the base, adnate or slightly emarginate, many 

 of them forked at or near the base,, a few short ones intermingled, 

 white becoming yoilowish ; stem firm, solid, becoming spongy 



