﻿18 
  NEW 
  YORK 
  STATE 
  MUSEUM 
  

  

  becoming 
  brownish 
  cinnamon 
  ; 
  stem 
  nearly 
  equal, 
  bulbous 
  or 
  nar- 
  

   rowed 
  at 
  the 
  base, 
  long 
  or 
  short, 
  solid, 
  fibrous, 
  white; 
  spores 
  

   oblong, 
  even, 
  .0005-.0006 
  of 
  an 
  inch 
  long, 
  .00024-.0003 
  broad. 
  

  

  Pileus 
  1-2.5 
  inches 
  broad; 
  stem 
  1-2 
  inches 
  long, 
  3-6 
  lines 
  thick. 
  

   Sandy 
  shores 
  of 
  Sodus 
  bay 
  and 
  Lake 
  Ontario. 
  October. 
  E. 
  B. 
  

   Burbank. 
  Communicated 
  by 
  B. 
  C. 
  Williams. 
  

  

  Related 
  to 
  I. 
  sambucina 
  from 
  which 
  it 
  differs 
  in 
  the 
  

   fibrillose 
  margin 
  of 
  the 
  cap, 
  in 
  the 
  darker 
  color 
  of 
  the 
  mature 
  

   lamellae, 
  in 
  the 
  larger 
  spores 
  and 
  in 
  its 
  habitat. 
  From 
  Hebe- 
  

   loma 
  colvini, 
  which 
  also 
  grows 
  in 
  sandy 
  soil, 
  it 
  differs 
  in 
  

   its 
  whitish 
  color, 
  longer 
  spores 
  and 
  solid 
  stem. 
  Its 
  mycelium 
  

   binds 
  together 
  a 
  mass 
  of 
  sand 
  which 
  forms 
  a 
  somewhat 
  bulbous 
  

   base 
  to 
  the 
  stem. 
  Mr 
  Burbank 
  says 
  that 
  it 
  occurred 
  in 
  great 
  

   abundance 
  in 
  October 
  and 
  that 
  it 
  is 
  edible. 
  

  

  Inocybe 
  squamosodisca 
  n. 
  sp. 
  

  

  PLATE 
  0, 
  FIG. 
  10-13 
  

  

  Pileus 
  fleshy, 
  firm, 
  convex, 
  dry, 
  fibrillose 
  on 
  the 
  margin, 
  rimose 
  

   squamose 
  in 
  the 
  center, 
  ochraceous 
  buff, 
  flesh 
  whitish 
  or 
  yellowish 
  

   white; 
  lamellae 
  rather 
  broad, 
  moderately 
  close, 
  adnate, 
  pale 
  

   ochraceous, 
  becoming 
  darker 
  with 
  age; 
  stem 
  short, 
  firm, 
  equal, 
  

   solid, 
  fibrillose, 
  colored 
  like 
  the 
  pileus; 
  spores 
  elliptic, 
  even, 
  

   .0003-.0004 
  of 
  an 
  inch 
  long, 
  .0002.00024 
  broad. 
  

  

  Pileus 
  1-2 
  inches 
  broad; 
  stem 
  about 
  1 
  inch 
  long, 
  2-3 
  lines 
  thick. 
  

   Gregarious. 
  Under 
  pine 
  trees. 
  Shore 
  of 
  Sacandaga 
  lake. 
  August. 
  

  

  The 
  scales 
  of 
  the 
  pileus 
  are 
  flat 
  and 
  spotlike 
  and 
  are 
  formed 
  by 
  

   the 
  cracking 
  of 
  the 
  cuticle. 
  

  

  Isaria 
  brachiata 
  (Batsch) 
  Schum. 
  

   On 
  decaying 
  Tremellodon 
  gelatinosum. 
  Van 
  

   Etten. 
  October. 
  W. 
  O. 
  Barbour. 
  

  

  Iva 
  xanthiifolia 
  (Fres.) 
  Nutt. 
  

   Waste 
  places 
  in 
  the 
  northern 
  part 
  of 
  Albany. 
  August. 
  Intro- 
  

   duced 
  from 
  the 
  west 
  but 
  growing 
  freely 
  here. 
  

  

  Lactarius 
  subvelutinus 
  n. 
  sp. 
  

   Pileus 
  fleshy, 
  firm, 
  convex 
  or 
  nearly 
  plane, 
  subumbilicate, 
  dry, 
  

   minutely 
  velvety 
  or 
  pruinose 
  velvety, 
  sometimes 
  rugose, 
  golden 
  

   tawny, 
  flesh 
  white, 
  milk 
  white, 
  taste 
  mild; 
  lamellae 
  narrow, 
  

  

  