4() THIRTIETH REPORT ON THE STATE MUSEUM. 
AGARICUS (PLUTEUS) LONGISTRIATUS 2. Sp. 
Pileus thin, convex, then expanded, dry, striate to the disk, 
cinereous, the disk darker and minutely roughened with hairs 
or squamules ; lamellz broad, at length ventricose, free, white, 
then flesh-colored ; stem equal, glabrous, white ; spures orbicu- 
lar, .0003’ in diameter. 
Plant 2’ high, pileus 1’-1.5’ broad, stem 1” thick. 
Decaying wood. Albany. July. 
AGARICUS (PHOLIOTA) ANGUSTIPES 2. Sp. . 
Pileus hemispherical, then convex or expanded, at first 
brown, then fading to ochraceous-brown or subalutaceous and 
becoming minutely squamulose with appressed dot-like scales ; 
lamelle narrowed outwardly, emarginate, whitish or dull 
cream color; stem stuffed, tapering downward, whitish or cin- 
ereous, roughened with darker scales which at first form a 
crenate annulus at the upper part; spores brownish-ferru- 
ginous, subelliptical, .0003’ long, .00018’ broad ; flesh white. 
Plant ceespitose, 2’-3’ high, pileus 1.5’-2.5’ broad, stem 2’-3” 
thick. 
In pastures about old stumps. Schenevus, Otsego county. 
September. ; 
The pileus is sometimes irregular from being crowded in its 
growth. The taste is unpleasant and the scales of the stem are 
somewhat evanescent. 
AGARICUS (PHOLIOTA) TNDECENS 2. sp. 
Pileus convex, then expanded or centrally depressed, smooth, 
rather brittle, hygrophanous, pale-fuscous and usually striatu- 
late on the margin when moist, alutaceous inclining to ochrace- 
ous when dry; lamelle close, emarginate with a decurrent 
tooth, pale-brown, becoming cinnamon-brown ; stem equal or 
slightly tapering upward, silky-fibrillose, hollow, annulate, 
pallid, the thin membranaceous annulus sometimes evanescent; 
spores unequally elliptical, .0005’-.0006’ long, .00025’-.0003’ 
broad. 
Plant gregarious or ceespitose, 1'-2’ high, pileus 1’-2’ broad, 
stem 1’-2” thick. 
Ground in bushy pastures. North Greenbush. September. 
It resembles somewhat A. Aggericola Pk., but it is smaller, 
paler, not viscid and has longer spores. The edge of the lamel- 
lee is sometimes eroded. — 
