176 FORTY-FOUJRTH UePORT ON THE STATE MuSEUM 



deeply emarginate, adnexed, yellowish; stem equal, hollow, glabrous, 

 pallid; spores .00025 in. long, .00016 broad. 



Pileus about 5 lines broad; stem 1 in. long, about 1 line thick. 



Woods. Otsego county. July. 



Agaricus hordus, Rep. 25, p. 73, and Agaricus prcefoliatus, Rep. 

 32, p. 55, are both referable to Gollyhia platyphylla, Fr. as large 

 fleshy-stemmed forms. 



Agaricus multipunctus, Rep. 25, p. 73, is scarcely distinct from 

 Glitocybe decora Fr. and is therefore omitted here. 



Agaricus Schumacheri, Rep. 24, p. 60, proves to be a form of 

 Glitocybe nehularis Batsch. 



Agaricus limonium, Rep. 26, p. 52, is referable to Gollyhia 

 scorzonerea Batsch. 



Agaricus lacunosus, Rep. 26, p. 51, has a very tough substance and 

 must be referred to CoUybia. 



Agaricus rubescentifoliu's, Rep. 39, p. 38, has also been shown by 

 later observations to be a species of CoUybia and now stands as 

 Gollyhia ruhescentifolia. 



(F) 



FUNGI OF MARYLAKD 



The fungi recorded in the following pages have been found in 

 Maryland, and most of them have been illustrated and described in 

 a large manuscript volume by Mary E. Banning of Baltimore, 

 Maryland. This volume she has most generously donated to the 

 New York State Museum, and it has been made the basis of the fol- 

 lowing enumeration. Nearly all the species represented in the vol- 

 ume belong to the larger fleshy fungi and are included among the 

 Hymenomycetes and Gasteromycetes. Of these, 14 have been 

 described as new species and these descriptions have been here 

 transcribed for publication that they may thereby be made more 

 accessible to students of mycology. Remarks have also been freely 

 quoted from the volume when they seemed to have especial interest 

 or scientific value. The name of each species is followed by the 

 name of the locality where it was found, except in the case of very 

 common ones, and by the number of the plate on which it is 

 figured. In some instances different forms or varieties of one 

 species are figured on different plates. The old subgenera 

 of the former genus Agaricus are here raised to generic rank, accord- 

 ing to the plan of Sylloge Fungbrum. 



