, .WIS OF MONROE COUNTY. 109 



163. P. comosa Pk. Pittsford, not tested. 



164. P. vermiflua Pk. ( Pk. 1903). — wormy. Under an apple tree, Pitts- 



ford, not tested. 



165. P. diirus Bolt. — d tints, hard. Rochester, edible. 



Inocybe. 



Gr. — a liber; Gr. — a head. 



166. Inocybe modesta Pk. A new species discovered by the writer in the 



Pittsford cemetery, with small modest brown pileus and stem. Not 

 edible. 



167. I. geopliylla (Sow.) Fr. Rochester, not edible. 



168. I. geophylla var. purpurea, not edible. A pretty purple variety found 



by the writer in woods, Pittsford. 



169. I. Lorillardiana Murrill. Rochester, not edible. 



Hebeloma Fr. 



Hebe, youth; loma. a fringe. 



170. Hebeloma fastibile Fr. — fastidibilis, loathsome, (from the smell). 



Rochester, Pittsford, not edible. 



171. H. crustiliniforme Bull. — crustulum, a small pie; forma, form. Roch- 



ester, not edible. 



172. H. sp. — a species found by the writer in Alendon, said by Dr. Murrill 



to be new. 



Flammula Fr. 



Flamma, a flame (In reference to the bright colors of many of the species). 



173. Flammula aliiicola Fr. — alnus, alder; colo, to inhabit. Near a hedge, 



Pittsford, edible. 



174. F. decuriTiis Pk. Monroe Co. Not tested. 



175. F. suipluirea Pk. ( Pk. 1911) Monroe Co. Not tested. 



Naucoria Fr. 



Nauaim, a nut shell. 



176. >"auCoria semi-orbicularis Bull. — half round. Lawns, Rochester, Pitts- 



ford, common, edible. 



177. N. platysperma Pk. — phitys, broad; spcrma, a seed. Lawns, Pittsford, 



edible. 



178. X. pediades Fr. Gr. — a plain. Rochester, edible. 



