86 Forty-third Annual Report on the 



The species appears to dififer from P. cruentata Mont, in having the 



pores and subiculum of one uniform yellowish or subochraceous color, 



which changes where bruised or in drying to a dull red or subincar- 



nate hue. 



Solenia fasciculata, Fers. 



On old pilei of Folyporus piceinus. Sevej. July. 



Stemonitis Morgani, Pk. 



Fine large specimens of this species were found on an -alder trunk, 



near Catskill. June. 



Septoria Violse, West. 



Var. oligocai'pa. Spots small, white; perithecia few, black. Living 

 leaves of Viola blanda. Sevey. July. 



Geoglossum luteum, Pk. 

 Var. fumosum. Club smoky yellow, less compressed; stem dingy, 

 scarcely squamulose. 



Mossy banks, Adirondack mountains. August. , 



Cenangium balsameum, Pk. 



Var. abietinuvi. Receptacles smaller than in the type, externally 

 clothed with a yellowish-green pulverulence when young, naked and 

 black when old; spores subclavate. 



Dead branches of hemlock, Tauga Ganadennis. Whitehall. August. 

 Gelatinosporiutn abietinura was associated with it. 



Sphserotheca pruinosa, G. & P. 

 The typical form was found on leaves of Rhus glabra. Specimens 

 have now been found on living leaves of the staghorn sumach, Rhus 

 typhina. In these the mycelium is a little more dense. Plattsburgh. 

 August. 



(E.) 



NEW YORK SPECIES OF ARMILLARIA. 



Armillaria, F7\ 



Hymenophorura continuous with the stem. No universal veil; 



partial veil forming an annulus, sometimes only indicated by the 



scales which adorn the stem and terminate above in the form of a 



ring. Spores white. 



This genus is separated from Amanita and Lepiota by the absence 

 of a universal veil and by the lamellae which are attached to the 

 stem. The three sections, in which the species were grouped by 

 Fries, closely correspond respectively to the three genera Tricholoma, 



