REPORT OF THE STATE BOTANIST I9II IO3 



when dry, slightly squamulose with superficial subfascicnlate whitish 

 fibrils, the margin sometimes appearing slightly and fugaciously 

 appendiculate with these fibrils ; lamellae broad, subdistant, adnate, 

 grayish or cinereous, becoming brown or blackish brown, white on 

 the edge; stem slender, hollow, fragile, floccosely pruinose, white; 

 spores brown, 8x5^. 



Pileus 1.2-2 cm broad; stem 3-7 cm long, 2 mm thick. 



Decaying wood in woods. Ulster co. September. Rare. 



The superficial fibrillose and evanescent squamules of the pileus 

 are similar to those on the pileus of Psilocybe canofaciens 

 Cke. but the white stem of our plant at once distinguishes it from 

 that species. The specific name has reference to the white fibrils 

 of the pileus which suggest the white hairs of olcl age. 



Psilocybe semilanceata Fr. 



LIBERTY CAP PSILOCYBE 

 Sylloge V, p.1051 



Pileus thin, acutely conic or convex, obtuse or sometimes um- 

 bonate or cuspidate, viscid and striatulate on the margin when moist, 

 pale yellow or pallid when dry, the margin incurved ; lamellae sub- 

 distant, adnate, brown becoming purplish brown ; stem equal, tough, 

 stuffed, flexuous, shining, whitish or pallid; spores 12-16 x 8-10 /u. 



Pileus 1.2-2 cm broad; stem 5-7 cm long, 2-3 mm thick. 



Gregarious. Pastures and rich grassy places. Autumn. Albany 

 CO. Rare. 



Very variable in the shape of the pileus, ranging from acutely 

 conic to broadly convex. and from obtuse to almost cuspidate. It is 

 classed as poisonous by M. C. Cooke. 



Psilocybe clivensis B. & Br. 



HILLY PSILOCYBE 



Sylloge V, p. 1055 



Pileus thin, convex or hemispheric, even, atomate, pale brown or 



pale ochraceous, rarely almost white, striate on the margin ; lamellae 



widely sinuate, adnexed, subdistant, brown; stem equal, hollow, 



silky above, white or whitish ; spores 8-10 x 4-5 /^. 



Pileus 1-2 cm broad ; stem ^-y cm long, 1.5-2 mm thick. 

 On the ground or on decaying wood lying on the ground. Ulster 

 CO. September. Rare. Found but once. 



