150 NEW YORK STATE MUSEUM 



Pileus 3-5 lines broad; stem 1.5-2 inches long, .5 of a line thick. 



Among mosses in pastures. Westport. . October. A slight webby veil 

 is manifest on the margin of the young pileus, but it soon disappears. 

 In dried specimens the pileus is more distinctly striate than in fresh 

 ones. Related to G. mycenopsis." 



Galera reticulata n. sp. 



Pileus thin, fragile, hemispheric or campanulate, obtuse, glabrous, 

 hygrophanous, cinnamon color when moist, creamy yellow or buff when 

 the moisture has escaped, rugosely reticulate, flesh white or whitish; 

 lamellae narrow, close, ascending, yellowish, becoming bright ferruginous; 

 stem slender, equal, hollow, slightly pruinose, striate at the top, white ; 

 spores ferruginous, elliptic, .0003 of an inch long, .ooor6-.ooo2 broad. 



Pileus 5-12 lines broad; stem 1-2.5 i^^ches long, 1-2 lines thick. 



Mossy ground. Ithaca. November. Prof. G. F. Atkinson. In color 

 and general appearance this species is not very dissimilar to G. t e n e r a , 

 but it is easily separated by its rugosely reticulate pileus, its more narrow 

 lamellae and its smaller spores. The ornamentation of the pileus may be 

 the result of numerous small pits or depressions in its surface 

 or of the anastomosing of slight ridges on its surface. G. pubes- 

 c e n s Gill, and G. m o r c h e 1 1 o i d e s De Brond, have the pileus 

 reticulate, but in the former both it and the stem are pubescent and in 

 the latter it is brownish orchraceous and the stem is squamulose, all of 

 which characters are absent from our plant. 



Cortinarius maculipes n. sp, 



Pileus fleshy, convex, becoming nearly plane, glabrous but covered 

 with a tenacious gluten, bay red, becoming paler with age, flesh whitish; 

 lamellae thin, close, rounded behind, slightly adnexed, whitish, becom- 

 ing brownish cinnamon ; stem equal or slightly tapering upward, subradi- 

 cating, solid or stuffed, silky fibrillose, squamose spotted, sometimes 

 slightly annulate; spores elliptic, .0003-. 0004 of an inch long, .0002-.00024 

 broad. 



Pileus 1.5-2.5 inches broad; stem 2-3 inches long, T)-^ ^i^es thick. 



Among mosses in woods. Westport. October. The species belongs 

 to the tribe Phlegmacium. Its prominent characters are the dark colored 

 pileus smeared with tenacious gluten, the pale young lamellae and the 

 spotted stem. The spots are formed by the separation of the webby 

 brown fibrils that at first coat the stem. They resemble those of the 

 stem of A r miliaria tnegalopus Bres. 



