154 ROCHESTER ACADEMY OF SCIENCE. [June 27, 



HYMENOMYCETE.^f: OF ORLEANS COUNTY, N. Y., 



By Dr. Charles E. Fairman. 



The following Hynienomycetere or Fleshy Fungi, comprising 

 Mushrooms, Toadstools, Shelf Fungi and allied forms were mostly 

 collected at Lyndonville, N. Y. I have given the reference to the 

 Reports of Professor Peck when I have found that the species under 

 consideration had been previously listed in the Reports, so far as I 

 have been able to discover. The species listed number 126. In my 

 paper on Fungi of Western New York in Proceedings of the Roch- 

 ester Academy of Science, Vol. I, Aug., 1890, the number of Hyme- 

 nomycete^e was given as 96. The number has been brought up to 

 126 by subsequent collections. 



FUNGACE^. 

 I. FUNGI SUPERIORES. 



HYMENOMYCETE.E. 



Fam. I. AGARICINEiE. 



Sect. I. LEUCOSPORi^. 



Amanita Pers. 



1. Amanita pantherina D'C. Peck Bull. N. Y. S. M. Vol. I. 

 No. 2, page 25. Panther mushroom. 



Thin dry woods and maple groves. Lyndonville, Aug., Sept. 



2. Amanita nivalis Peck. 33d Rep. Snow white Amanita. 

 Woods. Lyndonville, Sept., 1889. 



The European mycologists consider A. nivalis, Grev. to be only 

 a white variety of A vaginata, Bull. We have both forms in this 

 country and they are probably distinct. If" the European mycologists 

 are correct in their identification of Greville's plant then our plant will 

 stand as Amaniia nivalis, Peck, not of Greville. 



3. Amanita phalloides Fr. Pk. 23 Rep., p. 69. Phallus-like 

 Amanita. Woods. Lyndonville, July, 1890. 



Lepiota Fr. 



4. Lepiota procera Scop. Pk. 23 Rep., p. 71, 35 Rep., p. 152. 

 Parasol mushroom. Common in woods, pastures, and by roadsides. 

 July, Oct. Lyndonville. 



