REPORT OF THE STATE BOTANIST 1 904 



2 I 



Pileus 1-3 inches broad; stem 3-4 inches long, 6-8 lines thick. 

 Woods. Port Jefferson. August. This species grows with 



B. rubropunctus, from which it is easily separated by its 

 dry pileus, smaller tubes and stouter stem. This is large in pro- 

 proportion to the size of the pileus. In both the scabrously dotted 

 stem is suggestive of Boletus scaber, but both are separ- 

 able from that species by the yellow color of the tubes and the dif- 

 ferent dots of the stem. 



Botrychium tenebrosum A. A. Eaton 

 Deerfield, Oneida co. July. J. V. Haberer. This is one of 

 the smallest of the grape ferns. 



Bryum pendulum Schp. 

 Clayville. Oneida co. B. D. Gilbert. 



Cladonia verticillata Hoffm. 

 Adirondack mountains. Formerly considered a variety of 



C. gracilis, but now deemed worthy of specific distinction. 



Clavaria botrytoides n. sp. 



Ground in woods. Port Jefferson. August. Edible. .For de- 

 scription of the species see the article on edible fungi. 



Clavaria xanthosperma n. sp. 



Stem very short, firm, solid, divided into numerous branches, 

 white, sometimes becoming red where wounded, ultimate branches 

 short, blunt or obtusely dentate at the apex, the axils rounded, 

 the whole plant white, becoming yellowish or cream-colored with 

 age; spores pale yellow, oblong, .0005-. 0006 of an inch long, .00016- 

 .0002 broad, slightly and obliquely pointed at one end. 



Woods. Smithtown, Suffolk co. August. 



It forms tufts about 2 inches high. 



Collybia amabilipes Pk. 



Dead trunks. Near Ithaca. June. G. F. Atkinson. Readily 

 distinguished byjits tawny, velvety stem. 



Convolvulus repens L. 



Shushan, Washington co. August. F. Dobbin. This species 

 may be distinguished from C. spithamaeus by its long 

 trailing or twining stems and by the rounded basal lobes of its 

 leaves. 



