REPORT OF THE STATE BOTANIST I9IO 81 



sence of the hygrophanous character of the pileus, its smaller size 

 and more fragile nature and its different habitat lead me to keep it 

 separate. 



Velutina 



Pileus silky or streaked with innate fibrils, souietimes glabrous. 



The characters of this section, as given in Sylloge, would strictly 

 admit only species having a silky or fibrillose pileus, but inasmuch 

 as species like H y p h o 1 o m a a t r i c h u m Berk, and 

 H. c a s t a n o p h y 1 1 u m Berk., of which the pileus is described 

 as glabrous, have been admitted to it, we have extended the defini- 

 tion to include glabrous species which in other respects belong here. 

 The species of the section generally have the color of the spores 

 darker than in the preceding sections. Therefore the color of the 

 mature lamellae is almost or quite black and the spore print on 

 white paper appears black or nearly so. On this account the 

 species are liable at first sight to be referred to the black spored 

 series. The shape and size of the spores are in some cases im- 

 portant characters in distinguishing closely related species. 



KEY TO THE SPECIES 



Pileus persistently hairy squamose or fibrillose i 



Pileus partly or wholly glabrous 2 



I Plant cespitose, spores 8-io x 5-6 // lacrymabundum 



I Plant gregarious, spores 10-12 x 6-8 // ' rigidipes 



2 Pileus even, the cuticle often rimose. . .' boughtoni 



2 Pileus rugose or radiately wrinkled 3 



3 Pileus tawny, spores rough rugocephalum 



3 Pileus brown, spores smooth ■ delineatum 



Hypholoma lacrymabundum Fr. 



' .WEEPING HYPHOLOMA 



Sylloge V, p. 1033 



Pileus fleshy, convex, obtuse, persistently squamose with dark 

 brown or blackish hairy tufts, not hygrophanous, often irregular 

 from its crowded tufted mode of growth, brown or tawny brown, 

 flesh whitish; lamellae moderately close, adnate or subsinuate, 

 whitish becoming purplish brown, almost black when fully mature, 

 whitish on the edge, often beaded with tearlike drops of moisture 

 in damp weather; stem equal or nearly so, fibrillose or squamose, 

 hollow, whitish, pallid or brownish; spores purplish brown, 8-10 n- 

 long, 5-6 p- broad. 



