132 THIRTY-FIFTH REPORT ON THE STATE MUSEUM. 
AGARICUS Pascuts, Pers. 
Woods. East Berne. August. Sometimes the freshly broken 
plant has a slight odor of meal. 
AGARICUS SINUATUS, 7. 
Woods. East Berne. August. 
AGARICUS FASTIBILIS, Fr. 
Thin woods. Albany. October. The plant here noticed is a 
white variety, approaching var. alba, but with a short stem. 
The spores are almost ochraceous. ‘The drops of moisture on the 
lamelle at length dry up and leave brownish stains or granules 
resembling those on the stem and tubes of Boletus granulatus. 
AGARICUS ALNICOLA, /’r. 
In low swampy woods about the base of alders. Sandlake. 
October. 
AGARICUS (GALERA) SULCATIPES, 2. Sp. 
Pileus thin, ovate, then conical or subcampanulate, hygroph- 
anous, chestnut-colored and generally striatulate on the margin 
when moist, becoming paler when dry ; lamelle ascending, sub- 
distant, adnate, whitish, becoming ferruginous-cinnamon, stem 
slender, straight or flexuous, equal, hollow, rather tenacious, 
striate-sulcate, silky, floccose-pruinose toward the base, white, 
often tinged with blue or green at the base; spores elliptical, fer- 
ruginous-cinnamon, -00025—-0003' long, -00016’ broad. 
Plant gregarious, 1-5—3’high, pileus 5’— 8” broad, stem 1” — 
thick. 
Woods. East Berne. August. 
The plants were found growing on a bed of buckwheat bran. 
The stem is white and almost shining; striate and silky above, 
and pulverulent or floccose-pruinose at the base, where it generally 
assumes a greenish-blue color if handled when moist. When dry 
the stem is distinctly furrowed. The pileus fades in drying to 
subochraceous or subalutaceous. The lamellae are sometimes 
white on the edge. 
AGARICUS (CREPIDOTUS) HHRENS, 2. sp. 
Pileus convex, sessile, cuneiform or dimidiate, glabrous, hy- 
grophanous, viscid and striatulate on the margin when moist, 
white or whitish when dry; lamelle moderately close, narrow, 
tapering toward each end, subcinereous, then brownish; spores 
elliptical, pale-ferruginous, -0003’ long, +0002’ broad. 
Pileus 4’—12” long and broad. 
Decaying wood. Albany. September. 
