﻿I04 
  NEW 
  YORK 
  STATE 
  MUSEUM 
  

  

  lute 
  with 
  age, 
  flesh 
  whitish 
  or 
  yellowish; 
  lamellae 
  close, 
  adnate 
  or 
  

   slightly 
  decurrent, 
  often 
  crisped 
  or 
  wavy 
  toward 
  the 
  stem, 
  about 
  

   three 
  lines 
  wide, 
  ochraceous; 
  stem 
  equal 
  or 
  thickened 
  toward 
  the 
  

   base, 
  fleshy-fibrous, 
  solid, 
  elastic, 
  fibrillose, 
  colored 
  like 
  the 
  pileus, 
  

   brighter 
  yellow 
  within; 
  spores 
  subelliptical, 
  ochraceous, 
  .0004 
  in. 
  

   long, 
  .00024 
  broad. 
  

  

  Caespitose; 
  pileus 
  4 
  to 
  6 
  in. 
  broad; 
  stem 
  3 
  to 
  4 
  in. 
  long, 
  8 
  to 
  12 
  lines 
  

   thick. 
  

  

  About 
  the 
  base 
  of 
  trees. 
  Westchester 
  county. 
  October. 
  Basset 
  

   Jones. 
  

  

  This 
  is 
  a 
  large 
  and 
  showy 
  species. 
  The 
  stems 
  are 
  sometimes 
  united 
  

   at 
  the 
  base 
  into 
  a 
  solid 
  mass. 
  The 
  young 
  lamellae 
  are 
  probably 
  yel- 
  

   low, 
  but 
  I 
  have 
  seen 
  only 
  mature 
  specimens. 
  

  

  Flammula 
  rigida 
  //. 
  sj>. 
  

  

  Pileus 
  thin, 
  rather 
  firm 
  and 
  rigid, 
  convex 
  becoming 
  nearly 
  plane 
  or 
  

   centrally 
  depressed, 
  sometimes 
  wavy 
  on 
  the 
  margin, 
  glabrous, 
  hygro- 
  

   phanous, 
  rusty-tawny 
  or 
  subferruginous 
  when 
  moist, 
  bufif 
  or 
  grayish- 
  

   bufif 
  when 
  dry, 
  flesh 
  concolorous 
  ; 
  lamellae 
  moderately 
  close, 
  adnate, 
  

   creamy 
  white, 
  becoming 
  rusty 
  tan 
  color 
  or 
  subferruginous; 
  stem 
  equal 
  

   or 
  nearly 
  so, 
  tough, 
  slightly 
  striate, 
  colored 
  like 
  the 
  pileus, 
  with 
  a 
  

   compact 
  white 
  tomentum 
  on 
  the 
  lower 
  part 
  or 
  at 
  the 
  base; 
  spores 
  

   broadly 
  elliptical, 
  .0003 
  ^o 
  .00035 
  in. 
  long, 
  .00016 
  to 
  .0002 
  broad. 
  

  

  Pileus 
  I 
  to 
  1.5 
  in. 
  broad; 
  stem 
  i 
  to 
  2 
  in. 
  long, 
  1.5 
  to 
  3 
  lines 
  thick. 
  

  

  Chip 
  dirt 
  about 
  an 
  old 
  .lumber 
  camp. 
  Adirondack 
  mountains. 
  

   September. 
  

  

  The 
  plants 
  are 
  gregarious 
  and 
  by 
  their 
  mycelium 
  they 
  adhere 
  

   closely 
  to 
  chips 
  and 
  fragments 
  of 
  wood 
  from 
  which 
  they 
  grow 
  and 
  

   which 
  are 
  usually 
  pulled 
  up 
  with 
  them 
  when 
  they 
  are 
  gathered. 
  

  

  Inocybe 
  unicolor 
  ;/. 
  sj>. 
  

   Pileus 
  at 
  first 
  conical 
  or 
  very 
  convex, 
  becoming 
  expanded 
  or 
  

   broadly 
  convex, 
  firm, 
  tomentose-squamulose, 
  pale-ochraceous 
  or 
  

   grayish-ochraceous, 
  flesh 
  white; 
  lamellae 
  broad, 
  subdistant, 
  some- 
  

   what 
  ventric^-^e, 
  pale-ochraceous 
  when 
  yovmg, 
  tawny-brown 
  when 
  

   old; 
  stem 
  sleiider, 
  equal, 
  firm, 
  flexuose, 
  solid, 
  squamulose, 
  colored 
  

  

  