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- REPORT OF THE STATE BOTANIST 1908 53 
Entoloma scabrinellum Pk. 
SLIGHTLY SCABROUS ENTOLOMA 
N. Y. State Mus. Rep’t 33, p.19 
Pileus thin, convex or nearly plane, papillate or with a small 
umbo, minutely scabrous, dark brown, the thin incurved margin 
slightly surpassing the lamellae; lamellae broad, close, rounded 
behind, ventricose, adnexed, floccose on the edge, whitish becom- 
ing pink; stem equal, fibrillose, pruinose at the top, paler than the 
pileus; spores irregular, uninucleate, .0003—.0004 of an inch long, 
,0002-.0003 broad. 
Pileus 6-10 lines broad; stem about 1 inch long and 1 line thick. 
Shaded gravelly soil. Wading River, Suffolk co. September. 
A rare species, found but once. Its hairy roughness is scarcely 
visible to the naked eye. 
Entoloma flavoviride Pk. 
YELLOWISH GREEN ENTOLOMA 
N. Y. State Mus. Rep’t 41, p.64 
Pileus thin, broadly conic becoming convex, sometimes concave 
by the upcurving of the margin, yellowish green, slightly silky 
and shining; lamellae broad, subdistant, ventricose, slightly ad- 
nexed or free, cinereous becoming pinkish; stem equal, hollow, 
fibrillose striate, whitish; spores angular, uninucleate, .00045-—.0005 
of an inch long, .0003—.0004 broad. 
Pileus 6-12 lines broad; stem 1—2.5 inches long, 1-2 lines thick. 
Low swampy woods. Karner, Albany co. August. 
The species is readily recognized by its peculiar yellowish green 
pileus. 
Entoloma dysthales Pk. 
STUNTED ENTOLOMA 
N. Y. State Mus. Rep’t 32, p.28 
Pileus thin, submembranaceous, subconic becoming convex or 
expanded, obtuse, furfuraceous or squamulose, striate, brown 
becoming paler with age; lamellae broad, subdistant, ventricose, 
brown or grayish brown, becoming flesh color; stem slender, equal, 
hollow, squamulose, brownish; spores irregular, oblong-elliptic, 
