COLLATERAL READING 



As indicated in the inti'oduction of this circular, only a few of the 

 more common muslu'ooms that appear iji our fields and forests are 

 here discussed. To obtain more complete information on the hun- 

 dreds of other species the student may encounter, reference should 

 be made to one or more of the various mushroom manuals or mono- 

 gi-aphic works on the subject that have appeared in this country. A 

 selected hst of these follows. Though many of these are no longer in 

 print, most of them can be consulted in lil^raries or in some instances 

 purchased in second-hand book stores. Several of the more lecent 

 works are still available from the publishers. 



(1) Atkinson, G. F. 



1911. MUSHROOMS, EDIBLE, POISONOUS, ETC. Ed. 3, 323 pp., illus. New 



York. 



(2) Christensen, C. M. 



1943.- common edible mushrooms. 124 pp., illus. Minneapolis, Minn. 



(3) COKER, W. C. 



1923. THE CLAVARIAS OF THE UNITED STATES AND CANADA. 209 pp., 



illus. Chapel Hill, N. C. 



(4) — and Beers, A. H. 



1943. THE BOLETACEAE OF NORTH CAROLINA. 96 pp., iUuS. Chapel Hill, 



N. C. 



(5) ■ and Couch, J. N. 



1928. THE GASTEROMYCETES OF THE EASTERN UNITED STATES AND CANADA. 



201 pp., illus. Chapel Hill, N. C. 



(6) Graham, V. O. 



1944. MUSHROOMS OF THE GREAT LAKES REGION. ChicagO Acad. Sci. 



Spec. Pub. 5, 390 pp., illus. 



(7) Gijssow, H. T., and Odell, W. S. 



1927. MUSHROOMS AND TOADSTOOLS . . . 274 pp., illus. Ottawa. 



(8) Hard, M. E. 



1908. the mushroom, edible and otherwise: its habitat and its 

 TIME OF GROWTH. 609 pp., lUus. Coluiiibus, Ohio. 



(9) Kaupfman, C. H. 



1918. THE agaricaceae of MICHIGAN. ]Mich. Geol. and Biol. Survev 

 Pub. 26, Biol. Ser. 5, 923 pp., illus. [2 v.] 



(10) Krieger, L. C. C. 



1920. common MUSHROOMS OF THE UNITED STATES. Natl. Geog. Mag. 

 37: [387]-439, illus. 



(11) 



1935. A POPULAR GUIDE TO THE HIGHER FUNGI (MUSHROOMS) OF NEW 



YORK STATE. N. Y. State Mus. Handb. 11, 538 pp., illus. 



(12) McIlvaine, C, and Macadam, R. K. 



1912. TOADSTOOLS, MUSHROOMS, FUNGI, EDIBLE AND POISONOUS: OjNE 



THOUSAND AMERICAN FUNGI. 749 pp., iUus. IndianapoUs, Ind. 



(13) Marshall, N. L. 



1901. THE MUSHROOM BOOK . . . 167 pp., iUus. New York. 



(14) MURRILL, W. A. 



1916. EDIBLE AND POISONOUS MUSHROOMS ... 76 pp., illus. New 



York. 

 (151 P.-vTTERsoN, F. W., and Charles, V. K. 



1915. mushr(K)ms and other common FUNGI. U. S. Dept. Agr. Dept. 



Bui. 175, 64 pp., illus. 



(16) Thomas, W. 8. 



1928. FIELD BOOK OF COMMON GILLED MUSHROOMS . . . 332 pp., illllS. 



New York and London. 



(17) Underwood, L. M. 



1899. .MOULDS, MILDEWS, .\ND MUSHROOMS . . . 236 pp., illuS. NeW 



York. 



(18) White, E. A. 



1905. A preliminary report on tHE HYMENIALES of CONNECTICUT. 



Conn. State Geol. and Nat. Hist. Survev Bui. 3, 81 pp., illus. 



(19) 



1910. second REPORT OF THE HYMENIALES OF CONNECTICUT. Conn. 



State Geol. and Nat. Hist. Survey Bui. 15, 70 pp., illus. 

 58 



