64 FORTY-FIRST ANNUAL REPORT ON THE. ame hi Nes 
Fallen leaves of pine. Catskill mountains. September. “Dialga 
The species belongs to the Basidipes and is closely related to MM ~ 
saccharifera, from which it is separated because of its larger size, more 
numerous closer adnate lamellae and pure white color. The glands 
occur in every part of the plant and cause it to appear as if slightly 
sticky or viscid when pressed between the fingers. They are not 
visible to the naked eye, but under a lens they appear like minute 
globular shining particles. In the dried state the specimens assume 
a slight yellowish tint. 
Entoloma sericeum, Bull. 
Sandy pastures. West Albany. June. e 
Entoloma flavoviride, 2. sp. 
Pileus thin, at first broadly conical, then convex or subconcave by 
the upcurving of the margin, dingy yellowish-green, slightly silky and 
shining when dry; lamellz broad, subdistant, ventricose, free or 
slightly adnexed, dingy or cinereous; stem equal, hollow, fibrous-. _ 
_ striate, whitish; spores angular, uninucleate, .00045 to .0005 in. long, 
.0003 to .0004 broad. ! | 
Pileus 6 to 12 lines broad; stem 1 to 2.5 in. long, 1 to 2 lines thick. 
Low swampy woods. Karner. August. 
- The color of the pileus is a peculiar dingy yellowish-green or olive- 
green by which the species is easily recognized. 
Clitopilus erythrosporus, ne sp. ‘ 
Pileus thin, hemispherical or strongly convex, glabrous or merely 
pruinose, grayish-incarnate, flesh whitish with an incarnate tint, taste 
farinaceous; lamelle narrow, crowded, arcuate, strongly decurrent, 
colored like the pileus; stem equal or slightly tapering upward, hol- 
low, slightly pruinose at the top, colored like the pileus; spores ellip- 
tical, rosy-red, .0002 in. long, .00012 to .00016 broad. 
Pileus 1 to 2 in. broad; stem 1 to 1.5 in. long, 2 to 3 lines thick. 
Decayed wood and among fallen leaves in woods. Catskill moun-_ 
tains and Menands. September and October. 
The species is easily recognized by its peculiar uniform color, its 
narrow, crowded and very decurrent lamelle and its bright rosy-red 
spores. : 
Clitopilus conissans, n. sp. , 
Pileus thin, convex, glabrous, pale alutaceous, often dusted by the 
copious spores; lamellz close, adnate, reddish-brown; stem slender, 
brittle, hollow, white; spores narrowly elliptical, bright rosy red, .0003 B 
in. long, .00016 broad. . 
