﻿12 
  BULLETIN 
  N. 
  Y. 
  STATE 
  MUSEUM. 
  

  

  Collybia 
  cremoracea, 
  ' 
  

  

  Pileus 
  thin, 
  submembranous, 
  convex 
  or 
  campanulate, 
  obtuse, 
  dry, 
  

   slightly 
  silky, 
  dingy 
  cream-colored, 
  the 
  margin 
  sometimes 
  wavy 
  ; 
  

   lamellae 
  broad, 
  ventricose, 
  emarginate, 
  with 
  a 
  decurrent 
  tooth, 
  

   whitish 
  ; 
  stem 
  slender, 
  equal, 
  slightly 
  silky, 
  stuffed 
  or 
  hollow, 
  pallid 
  

   or 
  colored 
  like 
  the 
  pileus 
  ; 
  spores 
  subglobose 
  or 
  broadly 
  elliptical, 
  

   about 
  .00025 
  in. 
  long, 
  .0002 
  in. 
  broad. 
  

  

  Plant 
  1.5 
  to 
  2 
  in. 
  high, 
  pileus 
  6 
  to 
  12 
  lines 
  broad, 
  stem 
  1 
  to 
  2 
  lines 
  

   thick. 
  

  

  Thin 
  woods. 
  Gansevoort. 
  Auo-ust. 
  

  

  The 
  species 
  belongs 
  to 
  the 
  section 
  L^vipedes. 
  

  

  Collybia 
  liygrophoroides, 
  

  

  Plate 
  2. 
  Figs. 
  23-26. 
  

  

  Pileus 
  subcorneal, 
  then 
  convex 
  or 
  expanded, 
  smooth, 
  hygrophanous, 
  

   reddish 
  or 
  yellowish-red 
  when 
  moist, 
  paler 
  when 
  dry; 
  lamellae 
  broad, 
  

   subdistant, 
  rounded 
  behind 
  or 
  deeply 
  emarginate, 
  eroded 
  on 
  the 
  

   edge, 
  whitish 
  ; 
  stem 
  subequal, 
  striate, 
  stuffed 
  or 
  hollow, 
  whitish 
  ; 
  

   spores 
  subelliptical, 
  .0002 
  to 
  .00025 
  in. 
  long, 
  .00016 
  in. 
  broad. 
  

  

  Plant 
  subcaespitose, 
  2 
  to 
  3 
  inches 
  high, 
  pileus 
  1 
  to 
  1.5 
  inches 
  broad, 
  

   stem 
  2 
  to 
  3 
  lines 
  thick. 
  

  

  Decaying 
  half-buried 
  wood. 
  Knowersville. 
  May. 
  

  

  The 
  \ 
  r 
  oung 
  pileus 
  resembles 
  that 
  of 
  Hygrophorus 
  conicus, 
  both 
  in 
  

   shape 
  and 
  in 
  color. 
  When 
  dry 
  it 
  becomes 
  pallid 
  or 
  subochraceous. 
  

   The 
  species 
  belongs 
  to 
  the 
  section 
  Tephrophan^e. 
  

  

  Mycena 
  luteopalleiis. 
  

  

  Pileus 
  submembranous, 
  convex, 
  glabrous, 
  striatulate 
  on 
  the 
  margin 
  

   when 
  moist, 
  bright-yellow, 
  paler 
  when 
  dry 
  ; 
  Lamellae 
  subdistant, 
  

   slightly 
  arcuate, 
  yellow 
  ; 
  stem 
  equal 
  or 
  slightly 
  tapering 
  upward, 
  

   smooth, 
  hollow, 
  yellow, 
  furnished 
  at 
  the 
  base 
  with 
  yellow 
  hairs 
  and 
  

   .fibrils. 
  

  

  Plant 
  scattered 
  or 
  caespitose, 
  about 
  2 
  in. 
  high, 
  pileus 
  3 
  to 
  6 
  lines 
  

   broad, 
  stem 
  about 
  1 
  line 
  thick. 
  

  

  Among 
  fallen 
  leaves 
  in 
  woods. 
  Adirondack 
  mountains. 
  August. 
  

  

  It 
  resembles 
  Hygrophorus 
  parvulus 
  in 
  color, 
  but 
  it 
  is 
  readily 
  dis- 
  

   tinguished 
  from 
  that 
  species 
  by 
  its 
  subcaespitose 
  mode 
  of 
  growth, 
  its 
  

   proportionately 
  longer 
  and 
  more 
  slender 
  stem 
  and 
  the 
  yellow 
  hairs 
  at 
  

   its 
  base. 
  

  

  