﻿REPORT 
  OF 
  STATE 
  BOTANIST, 
  1 
  897 
  289 
  

  

  the 
  former 
  by 
  the 
  adnexed 
  lamellae 
  and 
  from 
  the 
  latter 
  by 
  its 
  

   smoother 
  pileus 
  and 
  solid 
  stem. 
  The 
  pileus 
  is 
  silky 
  rather 
  than 
  

   villous. 
  

  

  Pholiota 
  marginella 
  n. 
  sp, 
  

  

  Plate 
  B, 
  fig. 
  12-20. 
  

  

  Pileus 
  fleshy^ 
  convex 
  becoming 
  nearly 
  plane, 
  glabrous, 
  hygro- 
  

   phanous^ 
  yellowish 
  red 
  or 
  subferruginous 
  when 
  young 
  or 
  moist, 
  

   then 
  commonly 
  striatulate 
  on 
  the 
  margin, 
  yellowish 
  buff 
  or 
  whitish 
  

   when 
  dry, 
  the 
  young 
  margin 
  slightly 
  silky 
  with 
  the 
  whitish 
  fibrils 
  

   of 
  the 
  veil; 
  lamellae 
  close, 
  thin, 
  adnexed, 
  minutely 
  eroded 
  on 
  the 
  

   edge, 
  whitish, 
  becoming 
  dark 
  ferruginous; 
  stem 
  flexuous, 
  subequal, 
  

   fibrillose, 
  pruinose 
  or 
  mealy 
  above 
  the 
  slight 
  evanescent 
  annulus, 
  

   stuffed 
  or 
  hollow, 
  pallid 
  or 
  whitish, 
  sometimes 
  with 
  a 
  white 
  mycelioid 
  

   tomentum 
  at 
  the 
  base; 
  spores 
  elliptic, 
  .00024 
  to 
  .0003 
  in. 
  long, 
  

   ,00016 
  to 
  .0002 
  broad. 
  

  

  Pileus 
  I 
  to 
  2 
  in. 
  broad; 
  stem 
  2 
  to 
  4 
  in. 
  long, 
  2 
  to 
  4 
  lines 
  thick. 
  

  

  Single 
  or 
  caespitose 
  on 
  decaying 
  wood. 
  North 
  Elba. 
  June. 
  

  

  The 
  species 
  is 
  related 
  to 
  P. 
  marginata, 
  from 
  which 
  it 
  differs 
  in 
  its 
  

   paler 
  color, 
  even 
  or 
  merely 
  striatulate 
  margin, 
  adnexed 
  lamellae 
  and 
  

   uniformly 
  colored 
  stem. 
  In 
  drying 
  the 
  moisture 
  first 
  disappears 
  

   from 
  the 
  center 
  of 
  the 
  pileus. 
  

  

  Inocybe 
  rigidipes 
  n. 
  sp, 
  

  

  Pileus 
  thin, 
  convex 
  or 
  subcampanulate, 
  becoming 
  expanded, 
  um- 
  

   bonate, 
  squamulose, 
  striate 
  on 
  the 
  margin 
  when 
  dry, 
  tawny 
  gray; 
  

   lamellae 
  broad, 
  subdistant, 
  narrowed 
  behind, 
  slightly 
  adnexed, 
  

   tawny 
  ochraceous, 
  commonly 
  whitish 
  on 
  the 
  edge; 
  stem 
  rather 
  

   slender, 
  flexuous, 
  rigid, 
  firm, 
  solid, 
  slightly 
  pruinose, 
  colored 
  like 
  

   the 
  pileus; 
  spores 
  globose, 
  echinate, 
  .0005 
  in. 
  broad. 
  

  

  Pileus 
  6 
  to 
  12 
  lines 
  broad; 
  stem 
  1.5 
  to 
  2.5 
  in. 
  long, 
  about 
  i 
  line 
  

   thick. 
  

  

  Damp 
  clayey 
  ground 
  in 
  shaded 
  places. 
  Menands, 
  Albany 
  county. 
  

   August. 
  

  

  When 
  dried 
  specimens 
  are 
  soaked 
  in 
  water 
  the 
  shriveled 
  stems 
  

   recover 
  the 
  plump 
  condition 
  of 
  the 
  fresh 
  state. 
  The 
  spores 
  are 
  

   similar 
  to 
  those 
  of 
  Inocybe 
  calospora, 
  but 
  they 
  are 
  a 
  little 
  larger. 
  The 
  

  

  