[Vol. 1 

 336 ANNALS OF THE MISSOURI BOTANICAL GARDEN 



cinereous and rugose when moist, the obsciu-e crowded irregular 

 wrinkles abundantly anastomosing, nearly even and paler when 

 dry; spores broadly elliptical or subglobose, 6-7| x 4^-5 /x. 



Fructification 5-7| cm. high; pileus 2|-5 cm. broad, 4 mm. 

 thick. 



On ground in woods. Ontario and New York to Illinois. 

 August to October. Rare. 



The specimens of this species have the same coloration as 

 those of C. cornucopioides but differ from the latter in having a 

 shorter and more funnel-shaped pileus, and smaller spores. 

 Moffatt reported C. duhius as abundant at Glencoe, Illinois. 



Specimens examined: 

 Ontario: Belleville, /. Macoun, 228 (in Coll. N. Y. State). 

 New York: Adirondack Mts., C. H, Peck, type (in Coll. N. 



Y. State). 

 Michigan: Sailor's Encampment, Univ. of Wis. Herb., 46. 



8. C. lutescens Pers. ex Fries, Epicr. 532. 1838. 



Plate 17. fig. 20. 



MeruUus lutescens Pers. Syn. Fung. 489. 1801; Albertini 

 & Schweinitz, Consp. Fung. 234. 1805. Cantharellus lutescens 

 Fries, Syst. Myc. i: 320. 1821. MeruUus xanthopus Pers. 

 Myc. Eur. 2: 19. pi 13. f. 1. 1825. 



Illustrations: Vaillant, Botan. Paris, pi. 11. /. 9, 10. 

 Schffiffer, Icon. Fung, pi i57. Bolton, Hist. Fung, pi 105. f. 2.. 

 Persoon, Myc. Eur. 2: pi 13. f. 1. Hennings, in Engl. & 

 Prantl, Nat. Pflanzenfam. (i.l**): 129. /. 70 //.Stevenson, 

 Brit. Hym. 2:259. 



Fructifications solitary to cespitose; pileus thin, somewhat 

 membranaceous, varying from convex and umbilicate to tubi- 

 form or funnel-shaped, often pervious, yellowish brown to 

 fuscous, with margin often lobed or irregular; stem flexuous, 

 cylindric, hollow, yellow, drying ochraceous buff, often hairy at 

 the base; hymenium remotely ribbed, even or rugose- wrinkled, 

 yellow, drying cadmium-yellow to ochraceous buff; spores 

 even, 10-12 x 6-8 ^i. 



Fructifications 2^-5 cm. high; pileus l|-3 cm. broad, stem 

 lJ-4 cm. long, 2-4 mm. thick. 



On moist ground in woods and swamps. Newfoundland to 

 North Carolina and westward to Michigan. August to October. 



