- 100 TWENTY-SEVENTH REPORT ON THE STATE MUSEUM. 
CLAVARIA SPATHULATA 2. Sp. 
Simple, pale yellow; club compressed, spatulate, taper- 
ing into the slender slightly furfuraceous stem. 
Plant scarcely more than two lines high. ’ 
Dead branches of hickory trees, Carya alba. Greenbush. 
Oct. (Plate 2, figs. 20 and 21.) 
The color is like that of Spathularia flavida. 
TYPHULA GYRANS £7. 
Decaying leaves, twigs and stems in damp places. Sand- 
lake, Portville, Forestburgh and Adirondack Mts. Aug. 
and Sept. 
TYPHULA FILICINA 2. Sp. 
White; club thickened, obovate or elliptical, obtuse, 
erect; stem rather stout, short, pubescent, usually slightly 
thickened toward the base, arising from a chestnut-colored 
sclerotium., 
Plant 1’—2” high. 
Dead stems of ferns, Osmunda cinnamomea, in damp 
places. Forestburgh. Sept. (Plate 1, figs. 29 and.30.) 
This is a smaller but comparatively stouter plant than the 
preceding, easily distinguished by its shorter club and 
stem. 
TREMELLA ENATA B. & C. 
Dead oak branches. Forestburgh. Sept. 
TREMELLA STIPITATA 2. Sp. 
Head small, tremelloid, subglobose or irregular, glabrous, 
more or less uneven with gyrose convolutions, yellow, often 
changing to orange or reddish-brown in drying; stem dis- 
tinct, firm, dry, solid, nearly equal, yellow, often tinged 
with brown at the base, rarely throughout its whole extent, 
sometimes divided at the top into two branches, each bear- 
ing a head; spores subelliptical, with a slight oblique api- 
culus at one end, .00033’ long. 
Plant 5’—10” high. 
Decaying wood in swamps. Forestburgh. Sept. (Plate 
2, figs. 22 and 28.) 
The texture of the stem is very unlike that of the head. 
The color of the stem generally fades to whitish or pallid in 
drying. The stem is sometimes slightly recurved at the top 
and appears to penetrate the receptacle as in the genus 
