NEW SPECIES OF FUNGI. et 
flesh white; aculei white; stem short, solid, central or eccentric, 
white ; spores subglobose, .00016 to .0002 in. in diameter. 
Plant 1 to 2 in. high, pileus 1 to 1.5 in. broad, stem 3 to 5 lines 
thick. 
Ground in thin woods. Sandlake. June and July. 
The species is closely allied to Hydnum repandum, with which it 
appears to have been united by some authors, but its small size, 
white color and smaller spores appear to me to make it worthy of 
specific distinction. It is quite unlike Hydnwn candidum. The 
pileus is often irregular and lobed on the margin. 
Clavaria divaricata, 
Stem short, small, whitish, much branched ; branches widely 
spreading, -terete, even or slighty longitudinally wrinkled, more or 
less curved, pale-ochraceous, the ultimate ones tapering outward and 
terminating in one or more acute points ; spores .0004 to .0005 in, 
long, .0002 to .00025 broad. 
Tufts 2 to 4 in. high, and nearly as broad. 
Woods. Sandlake. August. 
This is a rare species, and is remarkable for and easily distin- 
guished by its divaricate branches which give to the plant a very 
spreading, strageling aspect. 
The following species were described in the Thirty-second Report 
of the State Museum, but owing to the limited edition and the 
incomplete manner (without plates) of the publication of that Report 
it has been thought best to repeat these descriptions here. 
. 
Clitocybe subhirta. 
Pileus at first convex, then expanded or slightly depressed, tomen- 
tose-hairy and pale-yellow or buff, becoming subglabrous and whitish 
with age, the margin incurved ; lamellz close, adnate or decurrent, 
whitish or pale yellow ; stem subequal, stuffed or hollow, whitish ; 
spores subglobose or broadly elliptical, .0002 to .00025 in. long. 
Plant 1 to 3 in. high, pileus 1 to 3 in. broad, stem 2 to 4 lines thick. 
Woods. Brewerton. September. 
The species belougs to the section DiscirorMgs, and is near Clhito- 
cybe subalutacea, but distinct from it and all its other allies by the 
hairy pileus. Sometimes the hairs are more conspicuous on the mar- 
gin than on the disk. 
