110 
GOR DOR. Tbe. Ew ee 
BY CHAS. H. PECK, STATE BOTANIST. 
The following list of FUNGI is based upon specimens collected by Hon. 
GEORGE W. CLINTON and identified chiefly by me. Many of the species are 
represented in the Herbarium of the State Cabinet of Natural History by speci- 
mens contributed by Judge CLINTON, and have been specially noticed in the 
Annual Reports of the Regents of the University on the condition of the Cab- 
inet. In view of this fact references are given to places in those Reports where 
the species have been mentioned. 
The rapid progress made in the development of mycological science within 
the few years just past requires numerous changes in nomenclature. The sy- 
nonymy incident to the changes, and, in a few instances, to errors of identifica- 
tion, has been given in the list and in a few cases extended even beyond its 
connection with the Reports mentioned. Co Eve 
SUB-ORDER 7. HY MENOMYCETES:; 
640. AGARICUS, L. 
§ 1. AMANITA, Fr. 
1664. A. vaginatus, Bull. Reg. Rep. 23, p. 69. 
Woods. 
1665. A. phalloides, Fr.. Reg. Rep. 23, p. 69. 
Woods. 
DBE PIOT AMES: 
1666. A. procerus, Scop, Reg. Rep. 23, p. 71. 
Woods and fields. 
1667. A. Friesii, Lasch. Reg. Rep. 26, p. 49. 
Woods. 
1668. A. acutesquamosus, Weinm. - Reg. Rep. 23, p. 71. 
In a grapery. In the second edition of Epicrisis, Fries makes 
this a subspecies of the preceding, and indeed the American 
specimens of the two forms run suspiciously near to each 
other. 
1669. A. cristatus, Fr. Reg. Rep. 23, p. 72. 
In a grapery, Feb. and March. 
1670. A. Americanus, Pk. Reg. Rep. 23, p. 71. 
Grassy ground, rarely on stumps. 
1671. A. cepzstipes, Sow. Reg. Rep. 27, p. 92. 
Tan bark in Hon. William G. Fargo’s greenhouse. 
1672. var. luteus, Fr. 
With the typical form. 
