1 8 NEW YORK STATE MUSEUM 



Cladonia bacillaris (Del.) Nyl. 

 Decaying wood. Adirondacks. July. Mrs C. W. Harris. 



Cladonia delicata (Ehrh.) Fl. 



Decaying wood. Near Chilson lake, Essex co. August. Mrs 

 C. W. Harris. Sand Lake, Rensselaer co. C. H. Peck. This was 

 formerly reported as a variety of Cladonia squamosa, 

 but it is now deemed worthy of specific distinction. 



Clavaria ornatipes n. sp. 



Clubs 1-2 inches tall, gregarious, sparingly branched ; stem slender 

 hairy, fuscous or brown, the branches irregular, terete, whitish, 

 grayish or cinereous, the tips acute or obtuse ; spores broadly elliptic 

 or subglubose, .0003-.00045 of an inch long, .00024-.0003 broad.^ 



In low swampy woods, usually among mosses. Sand Lake. 



In New York State Museum Report 24, page 82 this was referred 

 to Clavaria trie hop us Pers. After seeing specimens of 

 it from other localities and finding it constantly differing from the 

 descriptions of that species, which is called " snowy white " and is 

 much branched, it has seemed to us to be distinct. 



Clitocybe subcyathiformis Pk. 



In damp places under shrubs. Karner. October. For the 

 description of this species see article on '' Edible Fungi." 



Clitopilus subplanus n. sp. 



Pileus thin, broadly convex or nearly plane, slightly depressed in 

 the center or distinctly umbilicate, glabrous, whitish or grayish 

 white, flesh white; lamellae thin, close, adnate or slightly decurrent, 

 dingy flesh colored; stem slender, glabrous, terete or compressed, 

 stuffed or hollow, colored like the pileus ; spores flesh colored, angu- 

 lar, uninucleate, .0004-.0005 of an inch long, 00024-.0003 broad. 



Pileus 1-1.5 inches broad; stem 1-1.5 inches long, 1-2 lines thick. 



Among fallen leaves and decaying vegetable matter in woods. 

 Sand Lake, Rensselaer co. and Gansevoort, Saratoga co. July and 

 August. 



This is closely related to Clitopilus carneoalbus With, 

 from which I have separated it because of the more umbilicate 



^ Latin descriptions of this and other new species may be found in the last chapter of 

 this report. 



