Supplement 



(Plate CXC.) 



and includes it under his rubric of " Edible Fungi." He remarks that 

 the flesh has no decided odor and that it is sometimes acrid and some- 

 times mild. 



Tricholoma unifactum Pk. Rep., 1905 : 36. Pileus fleshy but thin, 

 convex, often irregular, sometimes eccentric from its crowded mode of 

 growth, whitish. Flesh whitish, taste mild. Lamellae thin, narrow, 

 close, rounded behind, slightly ad- 

 nexed, sometimes forked near the 

 base, white. Stem equal or thicker 

 at the base, solid, fibrous, white, 

 united at the base in a large fleshy 

 mass. Spores white, subglobose, 

 .00016 to .0002 of an inch broad. 



Pileus 12 inches broad ; stem 

 12 inches long, 35 lines thick. 



Under hemlock trees. Horicon, 

 Warren county, New York. July. 



The united tricholoma belongs to 

 the section Guttata and is closely 

 related to the northern tricholoma 

 (Tric/wloma boreale} and to the 

 whitish tricholoma (Tricholoma al- 

 belluin}. From the former it is 

 separated by its different color, mode 

 of growth and lack of odor ; and 

 from the latter by its color, the ab- y 2nat 

 sence of spots on the cap and by its 

 smaller subglobose spores. The stem and gills are white, the cap is; 

 nearly so. It has a watery white appearance when moist. The plants 

 grow in clusters, several stems arising from a large whitish fleshy mass, 

 by which character it is at once distinguished from all our other species 

 of Tricholoma. 



The taste is mild and there is no decided odor. The flesh is tender 

 and of excellent flavor when properly cooked. Peck. 



Clitocybe adirondackensis Pk. Rep., 1900: 174. Adirondack 

 Clitocybe. Pileus thin, convex or nearly plane and umbilicate, or 



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