﻿206 BERKELEY AND CURTIS'S COMMENTARY 



100. Agaricus siccus, Schwein. ! This resembles very closely Marasmius hcema- 

 tocephalus, Mont., but the upper half of the stem has a transparent appearance, and 

 there is a cottony tuft at the base. The appearance of the stem is very much like 

 that of A. cohcerens. Schweinitz' description of it does not accord very well with the 

 specimens. 



147. A. petaloides, Bull. Certainly not the plant of Bulliard, though similar in 

 habit. It is Panus angustatus, Berk, in Hook. Lond. Journ. vi. 318. 



152. A. stypticus, Bull. =Panus stipticus, Fr. 



154. A. algidus, Fr.= A. atrocceruleus, Fr. 



159. "A. applicatus, Batsch. epigmus" Probably a distinct species. 



162. A. niger, Schwein. ! A larger species than A. applicatus, very dark and 

 with somewhat of the habit of Xerotus. 



229. A. depluens, Batsch. 



230. A. violaceo-fulvus, Schwein. Apparently A. pvnsitus, Fr. Certainly not a 

 Crepidotus. 



267. Favolus alveolarius, Fr.=Potypoi-us Boucheanus, Fr. 



268. F. abnormis, Schwein., marked " Favus membranaceus" in the Herbarium, 

 has the hymenium of Glaoporus, of which it may be a resupinate form. 



269. Lentinus Schweinitzii, Fr. 



278. Cantharellus aurantiacus, Fr. In the fragments we possess of what 

 Schweinitz assigned to this species, the gills or folds are far broader than in any 

 European specimens. We consider the name, therefore, as very doubtful. The 

 species has not yet occurred in S. Carolina. 



281. C. lutescens, Fr. 



282. C. cinereus, Fr. 



284. C. odoratus, Schwein. l = Craterellus odoratus, Fr. 

 286. C. cinnabarinus, Schwein . ! = Hygrophorus cinnabar inus, Fr. 

 , 287. C. floccosus, Schwein. ! C. Canadensis, Kl. is apparently the same species, 



289. C. crispus, Fr. This seems to be a common species in the Northern States, 

 but has not yet been detected in the Southern. 



290. C. incarnatus, Schwein. ! More properly a Merulius, and evidently allied 

 to M. tremellosus. Authentic specimens exist in the Herbarium of Sir Win. Hooker. 

 Not an uncommon species in the Carolinas. 



