5c NEW YORK STATE MUSEUM 
Entoloma sericeum Fr. 
SILKY ENTOLOMA. MEADOW ENTOLOMA 
Pileus fleshy but thin, convex becoming nearly plane, sometimes 
minutely umbilicate, glabrous, hygrophanous, brownish when 
moist,. paler silky and shining when dry, incurved on the margin, 
odor and taste farinaceous; lamellae rather broad, subdistant, ad- 
nexed, grayish becoming salmon color; stem short, equal, hollow, 
fibrillose, colored like or paler than the pileus; spores subglobose, 
angular, .0003-.0004 of an inch long, .00024—.0003 broad. 
Pileus 1-2 inches broad; stem 1-2 inches long, 1—2 lines thick. 
Meadows and pastures. West Albany. June. Very rare. 
Found but once. 
Entoloma grayanum Pk. 
GRAY ENTOLOMA 
N. Y. State Mus. Rep’t. 24, p.64 
Pileus fleshy, convex becoming nearly plane, often wavy or 
irregular on the margin, glabrous, hygrophanous, watery white 
or yellowish white when moist, shining and whitish when dry; 
lamellae close, adnexed, whitish becoming pink; stem equal, firm, 
solid, white; spores subglobose, angular, .oco03 of an inch in 
diameter. 
Pileus 1.5—2 inches broad; stem 2-3 inches long, 3-5 lines thick. 
Old wood roads and pastures. Rensselaer and Essex counties. 
August to October. Not common. 
Entoloma rhodopolium Fr. 
ROSY ENTOLOMA 
Pileus thin, fleshy, fragile, subcampanulate, nearly plane or 
slightly depressed in the center, fibrillose when young, soon 
glabrous, hygrophanous, brownish and striatulate on the margin 
when moist, silky, shining and livid isabelline when dry, flesh 
white; lamellae subdistant, sinuate, adnate, white becoming rosy; 
stem equal or tapering upward, hollow, pruinose or mealy at the top, 
white; spores angular, .0003-.0004 of an inch long, .00024—.0003 
broad. 
Pileus 1.5—3 inches broad; stem 1.5-4 inches long, 2-3 lines thick. 
Woods. Albany county and Adirondacks. August and Sep- 
tember. 
