24 Thirty-second Report of the State Museum. 



(4.) 



PLANTS NOT BEFORE REPORTED. 



Glaucium luteum /Scop. , 



Shore of Fort Pond Bay, Montauk Point. E. 8. Miller. 



Alliaria officinale DC. 



Hunter's Point, Westchester County. Addison Brown. 



Hypericum adpressum Bart. 



Between Sag Harbor and East Hampton. Miller. 



Aster nemoralis Ait. 



Long island and Hitchings Pond, Adirondack Mountains. Brown. 



Plantago Rugelii Decaisne. 



Not uncommon about Albany, but often confused with Plantago major. 



GeNTIANA PUBERULA Mx. 



Buffalo G. W. Clinton. 



POTAMOGETON CRISPUS L. 



Keuka Lake, Yates County. 8. H. Wright. 



Chantransia violacea Ktz. 



Wet rocks in rapid streams. Sprakers. June. 



This alga forms soft mats or cushions of a dark-red or purplish color on 

 rocks kept wet by rapidly flowing water. 



Zygnema insigne Hassel. 



Standing water in ditches. North Greenbush. June. 



Glceotrichia Pisum Thuret. 



Floating and submerged leaves of water plants. Brewerton. Sept. 



MlCROMITRIUM AUSTINII 8ullw. 



Ground. Rockland County. C. F. Austin. 

 Agaricus (Amanita) spretus n. sp. % 



Pileus subovate, then convex or expanded, smooth or adorned with a few 

 fragments of the volva, substriate on the margin, whitish or pale-brown ; 

 lamellae close, reaching the stem, white ; stem equal, smooth, annulate, 

 stuffed or hollow, whitish, finely striate at the top from the decurrent lines of 

 the lamellae, not bulbous at the base, but the volva rather large, loose, sub- 

 ochreate ; spores elliptical, generally with a single large nucleus, .0004'- 

 .0005' long, .00025'-.0003 / broad. 



Plant 4-6' high, pileus 3-5' broad, stem 4"-6 7 thick. 



Ground in open places. Sandlake and Gansevoort. Aug. 



This species belongs to the Phalloidean section, and is related to A. por- 

 phyrins and A. recutitus. The margin of the pileus is generally clearly, 

 though sometimes obsoletely, striate. The absence of a bulbous base sepa- 

 rates it from A. mappa. 



