Supplement 



(Plate CLXXXV.) 



Amanita Morrisii Pk. Rep., 1909: 42. Pileus fleshy, subcampan- 

 ulate becoming broadly convex, viscid when moist, glabrous, even on 

 the margin, with a separable pelli- 

 cle, dark grayish brown or blackish 

 brown, becoming a little paler with 

 age and with the escape of moisture. 

 Flesh white. Lamellae thin, close, 

 narrow, rounded behind, slightly ad- 

 nexed, white. Stem equal or slightly 

 tapering upward, slightly bulbous at 

 the base, solid or stuffed, slightly 

 floccose, sometimes grayish and 

 striate at the top, usually white, an- 

 nulus double, radiately striate above, 

 whitish buff beneath, the slight volva 

 soon breaking into fragments and 

 disappearing or occasionally partly 

 adhering to the lower part of the 

 stem. Spores subglobose or broadly 

 ellipsoid, 8-10x6 8/*. 



Pileus 5 locm. broad; stem, 

 8 I4cm. long, i2-2Omm. thick. 



In black vegetable mold among mosses, 

 chusetts. September. Peck. 



Undoubtedly POISONOUS. 



V-2 nat 



Natick swamp, Massa- 



Amanita multisquamosa Pk. Rep., 1899: 840. Pileus convex, 

 becoming nearly plane, even but slightly striate on the margin, adorned 

 with numerous angular, erect, persistent but separable warts, white or 

 white with a brown or brownish center. Flesh white. Lamellae close, 

 free, white. Stem equal, glabrous, stuffed with a webby pith or hollow, 

 bulbous at the base, white ; annulus white, persistent, the bulb more or 

 less margined above by the remains of the volva. Spoi'es subglobose 

 or broadly elliptic, .0003 to .OOOJ. of an inch long, .00024 to -0003 

 broad. 



Pileus 2 to 4 inches broad; stem 1.5 to 4 inches long, 3 to 6 lines 

 thick. Woods and groves. Albany, Rensselaer and Suffolk counties, 

 New York, July. 



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