LACTARIAE OF THE UNITED STATES 38 
infundibuliform, yellowish to ochraceous or even reddish-yellow, 
zoneless, or subzonate or conspicuously zonate, viscid when moist, 
6-15 cm. broad, margin at first involute and tomentose, then 
spreading and plane or upturned and nearly or quite naked ; gills 
whitish or pale-yellowish, sometimes forking close to the stem, 
cro wded, adnate or slightly decurrent, thin ; stem of the same color 
as the pileus or paler, with brighter-colored elliptical or orbicular 
scrobiculate spots, equal, glabrous, hollow, 3-7 cm. long, 1-2 cm. 
thick ; spores white, minutely echinulate, 6.5—7 и x 8-10 4; latex 
white, quickly changing to sulphur-yellow, acrid. Suspicious. 
Нав.: In moist woods. July to November. 
DISTRIB.: New York, Peck; Vermont, Frost; Connecticut, 
Earle ; Alabama, Ват. 
Плозт.: Вапа, Champ. Nice, AJ. 18. f. 3-6, Britz. Lact. f. 
1; Cooke, Br. Fungi, ai, 977 ; Gillet, Champ. Fr. 2/. 154 [392]; 
Hahn, Der Pilze-Sammler, ed. 2. f. 27; Krombh. Abbild. ai 58. 
f. 1-6 ; Lorinser, Essb. und Gift. Schwàm. 2/. 9. f. 6; Lucand, 
Champ. Fr. A. 971; Pat. Tab. Analyt. ai 409; Schaeff. Fung. 
Bav. Icon. AX. 227. 
DISTINGUISHING FIELD-MARKS: Тһе yellowish, more or less 
zonate pileus, the coarse rather conspicuous tomentum on the 
margin of the young pileus, the bright-colored scrobiculate spots 
on the stem, and the rapid change in the color of the latex from 
white to sulphur-yellow. Тһе plants are large and the margin 
becomes glabrous in the mature plant. 
Lactaria scrobiculata is commonly described by European 
writers as azonate. But Fries in Monogr. 2: 153, says “vulgo 
azonus, interdum vero conspiciuntur zonae" Маззее and Stevenson 
also describe it as sometimes zonate. The Alabama specimens are 
conspicuously zonate in the dried state, while the Connecticut 
specimens are zonate or subzonate. When the plants are grow- 
ing in the open they fade more or less and this may account in 
part for the difference in zonation. 
13. ГАСТАВТА RESIMA (Fr.) Fr. Epicr. 336. 1838. [As Lacta- 
rius.] — Schrót. in Cohn, Krypt.-Fl. Schles. 3: 542. 1880 
Agaricus resimus Fr. Hym. Eur. 472. 1821. 
Pileus fleshy, firm, deeply umbilicate with the margin involute, 
at length infundibuliform with the margin arched or spreading, 
whitish, soon faintly tinged with yellow, darker in the center, 
