Mo. £15.].9 75 
PANICUM CRUS-GALILI, L. 
The form with dense panicles of awnless flowers is common in 
wet places about Warsaw, Wyoming county. 
BOTRYCHIUM LANCEOLATUM, Angst. 
Cascadeville, Adircndack mountains. June. 
OMPHALIA UMBELLIFERA, L. 
Not rare in the Adirondack mountains. Variety abiegnus 
grows on soft decayed wood of coniferous trees, and has a pale 
yellow pileus. Variety alpinus grows among mosses and on 
muck soil composed of decomposed vegetable matter. It usually 
occurs at high altitudes. It was plentiful in June on the summit 
of Mt. Marcy. In it the pilens and lamelle are bright yellow. 
PHOLIOTA MYCENOIDES, Fr. 
In thin woods at Conklingville a form was found having the 
pileus rugose. ; 
LENZITES SEPIARIA, Fr. 
A -resupinate form, var. dentifera, occurs on spruce in the 
Adirondack mountains, in which form the lamelle anastomose, 
and are more or less toothed or lacerated, resembling an Irpex 
more than a Lenzites. 
POLYPORUS VOLVATUS, Pk. 
This singular species developes in May and June in the Adiron- 
dack mountains. When young it is slightly viscid. It is especially 
subject to the attacks of insects. In July most of the specimens 
will be found to be infested by them. 
CREPIDOTUS HZERENS, Pk. 
Fine specimens ot this rare species were found on ash and but- 
ternut near Sprakers. The pileus is sometimes slightly floccose- 
squamulose. The tough viscid pellicle is separable, and in drying 
the moisture disappears from the disk first, from the thin margin 
last. 
HYDNUM GRAVEOLENS, Delast. 
A singular Hydnum was found at Elizabethtown, in which the 
pileus was very uneven and everywhere coated with a whitish 
villosity or tomentum. It has the peculiar odor of H. graveolens, 
to which species we have referred it as variety énwequale. 
