﻿46 
  TWENTY-NINTH 
  KEPOKT 
  ON 
  THE 
  STATE 
  MUSEUM. 
  

  

  behind 
  and 
  appearing 
  like 
  coarse 
  papillae, 
  when 
  dry 
  suffused 
  with 
  a 
  

   dull 
  tawny 
  bloom; 
  spores 
  elliptical, 
  colorless, 
  .0003' 
  long. 
  

   Dead 
  branches 
  of 
  beech. 
  Greig. 
  September. 
  

  

  CoRTICnjM 
  STTLPHURETTM 
  Ft. 
  

  

  Decaying 
  wood. 
  Buffalo. 
  Clinton. 
  

  

  Exobasidium 
  Cassandra 
  n. 
  sp. 
  

  

  Gall 
  a 
  suborbicular 
  thickened 
  portion 
  of 
  the 
  leaf, 
  generally 
  con- 
  

   cave 
  above, 
  convex 
  below, 
  two 
  to 
  four 
  lines 
  in 
  diameter, 
  red 
  or 
  

   yellow, 
  at 
  length 
  white 
  pruinose 
  on 
  the 
  lower 
  surface 
  ; 
  spores 
  oblong, 
  

   colorless, 
  variable 
  in 
  size, 
  .0002-.0005' 
  long. 
  

  

  Living 
  leaves 
  of 
  Cassandra 
  calyculata. 
  Buffalo. 
  Clinton. 
  Sand- 
  

   lake. 
  July. 
  Perhaps 
  this 
  is 
  only 
  a 
  form 
  of 
  F. 
  Vaccinii. 
  

  

  Melanogaster 
  ambig-ttus 
  Tul. 
  

  

  Clay 
  banks. 
  Ponghkeepsie. 
  Gerard. 
  

  

  Phallus 
  D^emonum 
  Ft. 
  

  

  Shaded 
  ground. 
  Albany. 
  September. 
  

  

  This 
  is 
  placed 
  by 
  some 
  in 
  a 
  genus 
  Dictyophora. 
  

  

  Ltcoperdon 
  constellatttm 
  Ft. 
  

  

  Fallen 
  leaves 
  under 
  trees. 
  Oneida. 
  Warm. 
  August. 
  

  

  This 
  is 
  a 
  fine 
  species, 
  having, 
  if 
  possible, 
  a 
  more 
  shaggy 
  appearance 
  

   than 
  L. 
  pedicellatum 
  and 
  L. 
  separans. 
  The 
  spinous 
  processes 
  are 
  

   either 
  straight 
  or 
  curved. 
  The 
  color 
  is 
  a 
  cervine 
  brown, 
  and 
  

   scarcely 
  changes 
  in 
  drying. 
  (Plate 
  2, 
  figs. 
  13 
  and 
  14.) 
  

  

  LVCOPERDON 
  COLORATUM 
  n. 
  Sp. 
  

  

  Peridium 
  sub-globose 
  or 
  obovate, 
  subsessile, 
  six 
  to 
  ten 
  lines 
  in 
  

  

  diameter, 
  radicating, 
  yellow 
  or 
  reddish-yellow, 
  membranaceous, 
  

  

  roughened 
  with 
  minute 
  granular 
  or 
  furfuraceons 
  w 
  r 
  arts 
  ; 
  capillitium 
  

  

  and 
  spores 
  pale, 
  the 
  latter 
  globose, 
  . 
  00016'-. 
  00O2' 
  in 
  diameter. 
  

  

  Ground 
  in 
  bushy 
  places. 
  Sandlake. 
  August. 
  

   The 
  species 
  is 
  remarkable 
  for 
  the 
  pale 
  color 
  of 
  the 
  capillitium 
  and 
  

   the 
  yellow 
  hue 
  of 
  the 
  peridium. 
  

  

  Chondrioderma 
  MicHELn 
  Lib. 
  

  

  Fallen 
  leaves, 
  grass 
  and 
  twigs. 
  West 
  Albany. 
  September. 
  

   (Plate 
  1, 
  figs. 
  4^6.) 
  

  

  Badhamia 
  htalina 
  Pel's. 
  (Didymium 
  simulans 
  Howe.) 
  

   Ailanthus 
  bark. 
  Yonkers. 
  Howe. 
  

  

  