REPORT OF THE STATE BOTANIST. 89 
Agaricus (Psilocybe) czrulipes, 2. sp. 
Pileus thin, subcampanulate, then convex and obtuse or obtusely 
umbonate, glabrous, hygrophanous, slightly viscid, watery brown and 
striatulate on the margin when moist, yellowish or subochraceous when 
dry, the disk sometimes brownish ; lamellz at first ascending, close, 
adnate, grayish-tawny, becoming ferruginous-brown, whitish on the 
edge ; stem slender, equal, flexuous, tenacious, hollow or containing a 
separable pith, slightly fibrillose, pruinose at the apex, bluish, some- 
times whitish at the apex; spores elliptical, .oc03 to .coo4 in. long, 
-00016 to .coo2 broad. 
Plant single or czspitose, 1 to 1.5 in. high, pileus 5 to ro lines broad, 
stem scarcely 1 line thick. 
Decaying wood. South Ballston. Aug. 
The species is easily recognized by the peculiar blue color of the 
stem. Sometimes the pileus also assumes a blue color where bruised. 
Corprinus lagopus, /7. 
Decaying wood and vegetable mold in woods. South Ballston. Sept. 
Cortinarius multiformis, /7. 
Pine woods. Karner. Oct. 
Cortinarius decoloratus, /7. 
Pine woods. Karner. Oct. 
Cortinarius (Dermocybe) aureifolius, x. sp. 
Pileus convex, then plane or slightly depressed, densely fibrillose- 
tomentose, sometimes slightly squamulose, especially on the disk, cin- 
namon-brown; lamellz rather broad, moderately close, subventricose, 
rounded behind, adnexed, yellow, becoming yellowish-cinnamon , stem 
short, solid, equal, fibrillose, yellow, brownish within; spores oblong, 
.00045 to .0005 in. long, .ooo16 to .ooo2 broad; flesh of the pileus 
yellow or pallid, odor like that of radishes. 
Plant gregarious, 1 to 1.5 in. high, pileus 8 to 15 lines broad, stem 2 
to 3 lines thick. : 
Sandy soil in thin pine woods. Karner. Oct. 
The species resembles C’ ct2mamomeus in color, but its short stem, 
longer spores and different habit easily distinguish it. Its general ap- 
pearance is similar to that of some species of Inocybe. 
Hygrophorus purpurascens, /’. 
Sandy soil under pine trees. Karner. Oct. 
In our specimens the pileus is fibrillose rather than squamulose, the 
stem is slightly mealy at the apex, not roughened with purplish squa- 
mules, and there is a webby veil which, in the young plant, conceals 
the lamellz and forms a slight but evanescent annulus. Should these 
differences between our specimens and the species to which we have 
referred them be constant, it may be necessary to separate our plant 
as a distinct species. 
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