﻿REPORT 
  OF 
  STATE 
  BOTANIST, 
  1 
  897 
  29I 
  

  

  brown 
  when 
  moist, 
  whitish 
  when 
  dry; 
  lamellae 
  thin, 
  close, 
  wider 
  

   behind, 
  adnate 
  or 
  decurrent, 
  often 
  wavy, 
  branched 
  or 
  even 
  anasto- 
  

   mosing, 
  brownish 
  ferruginous; 
  stem 
  firm, 
  hollow, 
  tapering 
  down- 
  

   ward, 
  clothed 
  with 
  grayish 
  white 
  fibrils; 
  spores 
  broadly 
  elliptic, 
  

   .0003 
  in. 
  long, 
  .00024 
  broad. 
  

  

  Pileus 
  6 
  to 
  12 
  lines 
  broad; 
  stem 
  i 
  to 
  2 
  in. 
  long, 
  i 
  to 
  2 
  lines 
  thick. 
  

  

  Dung 
  in 
  old 
  roads 
  in 
  woods. 
  Connery 
  pond. 
  North 
  Elba. 
  August. 
  

  

  The 
  irregular 
  character 
  of 
  the 
  pileus 
  and 
  lamellae 
  give 
  this 
  plant 
  

   a 
  deformed 
  appearance. 
  

  

  Deconica 
  semistriata 
  ??. 
  sp, 
  

  

  Pileus 
  thin 
  except 
  on 
  the 
  prominent 
  broadly 
  umbonate 
  disk, 
  gla- 
  

   brous, 
  somewhat 
  wavy 
  on 
  the 
  margin 
  and 
  striate 
  to 
  the 
  umbo, 
  gray- 
  

   ish 
  brown, 
  paler 
  when 
  dry 
  and 
  less 
  distinctly 
  striate^ 
  the 
  broad 
  

   umbo 
  yellowish; 
  lamellae 
  broad, 
  distant 
  or 
  subdistant_, 
  adnate 
  or 
  

   slightly 
  decurrent, 
  purplish 
  brown, 
  whitish 
  on 
  the 
  edge; 
  stem 
  equal, 
  

   firm, 
  short, 
  slightly 
  floccose-fibrillose, 
  stuffed 
  with 
  a 
  whitish 
  pith_, 
  

   colored 
  like 
  the 
  pileus; 
  spores 
  compressed, 
  suborbicular, 
  .00025 
  to 
  

   .0003 
  in. 
  long, 
  .00025 
  broad. 
  

  

  Pileus 
  4 
  to 
  5 
  lines 
  broad; 
  stem 
  8 
  to 
  10 
  lines 
  long, 
  .5 
  line 
  thick. 
  

  

  Damp 
  ground 
  in 
  woods. 
  Gansevoort. 
  July. 
  

  

  Easily 
  distinguished 
  by 
  the 
  broad 
  convex 
  umbo-like 
  disk 
  and 
  the 
  

   widely 
  striate 
  margin. 
  

  

  Gomphidius 
  vinicolor 
  n. 
  sp. 
  

  

  Pileus 
  thick^ 
  fleshy, 
  convex 
  or 
  nearly 
  plane, 
  viscid, 
  dark 
  red, 
  l^e- 
  

   coming 
  blackish 
  in 
  drying; 
  lamellae 
  distant, 
  decurrent, 
  olive 
  brown 
  

   or 
  blackish 
  when 
  mature; 
  stem 
  subequal, 
  glabrous, 
  solid, 
  vinous 
  

   red, 
  paler 
  within; 
  spores 
  oblong-fusiform, 
  .0007 
  to 
  .0008 
  in. 
  long, 
  

   .00024 
  to 
  .0003 
  broad. 
  

  

  Pileus 
  I 
  to 
  2.5 
  in. 
  broad; 
  stem 
  1.5 
  to 
  2.5 
  in. 
  long, 
  2 
  to 
  4 
  lines 
  

   thick. 
  

  

  Under 
  pine 
  trees. 
  Lake 
  Mohonk. 
  October. 
  

  

  This 
  species 
  is 
  closely 
  related 
  to 
  Gomphidius 
  roseus, 
  from 
  which 
  it 
  

   differs 
  in 
  the 
  color 
  of 
  the 
  stem, 
  lamellae 
  and 
  flesh. 
  The 
  gluten 
  of 
  

   the 
  pileus 
  becomes 
  blackish 
  in 
  drying 
  and 
  sometimes 
  separates 
  in 
  a^ 
  

   radiating 
  manner, 
  revealing 
  the 
  reddish 
  color 
  of 
  the 
  surface 
  of 
  the 
  

  

  