лаа TS ын адас сылы сынса ааа дын 
LACTARIAE ОЕ THE UNITED STATES 53 
Island by Bennett, New Jersey by Ellis, Ohio by Morgan, Wis- 
consin by Bundy, Minnesota by Johnson, and from California by 
Harkness & Moore. I have seen only the Ellis specimens, in Ellis 
& Everhart, N. Am. Fungi, second series 7916, and they do not 
resemble Z. sonaria. The species is closely related to Г. 7изшза 
Fr., from which it differs in the firmer flesh, the unspotted stem, and 
the white spores. It is regarded by some as poisonous. 
VIII. TRIVIALES 
The triviales are characterized by the slimy-viscid glabrous 
pileus having the margin naked, and by acrid white latex. The 
latex does not change color, but in some species it stains the flesh 
or gills a pale dull gray-green. Г. trivialis seems to be the most 
widely distributed species. 
Synopsis of species 
Pileus red 28. Lactaria hysgina. 
Pileus not red. 
Azonate ; wounds of the gills becoming greenish. 
Pileus gray to putty-colored, spores yellow. 26. Lactaria trivialis. 
Pileus sepia, spores white. 29. Lactaria mucida. 
Zonate ; wounds of gills not changing color. 
Pileus gray, zoned with raw-umber, fading to gray. 27. Lactaria circellata. 
26. LACTARIA TRIVIALIS (Fr.) Fr. Epicr. 337. 1838. [As Lac- 
tarius.]— Schrót. in Cohn, Krypt.-Fl. Schles. 3: 538. 1889 
Agaricus trivialis Fr. Obs. Myc. 1: бр авт 
Lactarius deflexus Lindblad, Monogr. Lact. Suec. 8. 1855. 
Pileus fleshy, firm, depressed in the center with the margin 
arched, then plane to infundibuliform, plum-colored or smoke-gray, 
tinted with livid when young, fading, becoming putty- colored (377. 
г. Г) to snuff-brown (303. 2. 7), ог center darker with lilac tints 
(106), azonate, viscid, glabrous, up to 15 cm. broad, margin even, 
thin edge involute for some time, pruinose at first; gills cream- 
colored to yellowish, some forking, close, slightly decurrent, 5—7 
mm. broad; stem cream-yellow, nearly equal but often inflated, 
glabrous, smooth, becoming hollow, 4-12 cm. long, 1-2 cm. thick ; 
unchanging, acrid. 
Нав: In mixed or deciduous woods. July to September. 
DISTRIB.: New York, Peck, Burlingham 3, 1905; Vermont, 
Burlingham, Frost; New Hampshire, Р. Wilson ; Connecticut, 
