﻿10 
  BULLETIN 
  N. 
  T. 
  STATE 
  MUSEUM. 
  

  

  resume 
  the 
  bright-red 
  hue 
  of 
  the 
  fresh 
  plant. 
  Often 
  several 
  basidia 
  

   grow 
  from 
  the 
  same 
  filament. 
  

  

  Kussula 
  albida. 
  

  

  Pileus 
  thin, 
  broadly 
  convex, 
  then 
  expanded 
  or 
  depressed, 
  gla- 
  

   brous, 
  viscid 
  when 
  moist, 
  white, 
  sometimes 
  slightly 
  tinged 
  with 
  yel- 
  

   low, 
  the 
  spreading 
  or 
  erect 
  margin 
  at 
  length 
  slightly 
  and 
  narrowly 
  

   tuberculose-striate, 
  flesh 
  white 
  ; 
  lamellae 
  adnate 
  or 
  subdecurrent, 
  

   moderately 
  close, 
  some 
  of 
  them 
  forked 
  near 
  the 
  stem, 
  white, 
  the 
  

   interspaces 
  venose 
  ; 
  stem 
  nearly 
  equal, 
  glabrous, 
  stuffed 
  or 
  hollow, 
  

   white 
  ; 
  spores 
  white, 
  minutely 
  rough, 
  subglobose 
  or 
  broadly 
  ellipti- 
  

   cal, 
  .00035 
  in. 
  long, 
  .0003 
  in. 
  broad 
  ; 
  taste 
  mild 
  or 
  bitterish. 
  

  

  Plant 
  1 
  to 
  3 
  in. 
  high, 
  pileus 
  1 
  to 
  2.5 
  in. 
  broad, 
  stem 
  3 
  to 
  6 
  lines 
  

   thick. 
  

  

  Woods. 
  Sandlake. 
  Jnly 
  and 
  August. 
  

  

  This 
  Russula 
  belongs 
  to 
  the 
  section 
  Feagiles. 
  It 
  may 
  be 
  distin- 
  

   guished 
  from 
  white 
  forms 
  of 
  Russula 
  emetica 
  by 
  its 
  adnate 
  or 
  slightly 
  

   decurrent 
  lamellae 
  and 
  by 
  its 
  milder 
  taste. 
  

  

  Kussula 
  uucialis. 
  

  

  Pileus 
  thin, 
  convex, 
  then 
  expanded 
  or 
  centrally 
  depressed, 
  viscid 
  

   when 
  moist, 
  glabrous 
  or 
  very 
  minutely 
  rivulose-granulose, 
  red 
  or 
  

   pinkish-red, 
  the 
  margin 
  obscurely 
  tuberculose-striate, 
  flesh 
  white 
  ; 
  

   lamellae 
  moderately 
  close, 
  narrowed 
  toward 
  the 
  stem, 
  at 
  which 
  a 
  few 
  

   of 
  them 
  are 
  sometimes 
  forked, 
  adnate 
  or 
  slightly 
  emarginate, 
  white, 
  

   the 
  interspaces 
  venose 
  ; 
  stem 
  equal, 
  glabrous, 
  stuffed 
  or 
  spongy 
  

   within, 
  white 
  or 
  reddish 
  ; 
  spores 
  white, 
  globose, 
  rough, 
  .0003 
  to 
  

   .00035 
  in. 
  in 
  diameter 
  ; 
  taste 
  mild. 
  

  

  Plant 
  1 
  to 
  1.5 
  in. 
  high, 
  pileus 
  1 
  to 
  1.5 
  in. 
  broad, 
  stem 
  2 
  to 
  4 
  lines 
  

   thick. 
  

  

  Thin 
  woods. 
  Sandlake. 
  June 
  and 
  July. 
  

  

  A 
  small 
  species, 
  generally 
  about 
  1 
  in. 
  high, 
  with 
  the 
  pileus 
  about 
  

   the 
  same 
  in 
  breadth. 
  Like 
  the 
  preceding 
  species, 
  to 
  which 
  it 
  is 
  

   closely 
  related, 
  it 
  belongs 
  to 
  the 
  white-spored 
  group 
  of 
  the 
  section 
  

   Fragiles, 
  a 
  group 
  to 
  which 
  Europe 
  contributes 
  but 
  a 
  single 
  mild 
  

   species. 
  The 
  color 
  of 
  the 
  pileus 
  is 
  nearly 
  uniform 
  and 
  generally 
  a 
  

   pale- 
  red 
  or 
  pinkish-red. 
  The 
  lamellae 
  in 
  the 
  fresh 
  plant 
  are 
  white, 
  

   but 
  in 
  the 
  dried 
  specimens 
  they 
  are 
  pallid. 
  

  

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  albidum. 
  

  

  Pileus 
  fleshy, 
  thin, 
  convex 
  or 
  nearly 
  plane, 
  subpruinose, 
  white, 
  

  

  