Tennessee and Kentucky Fungi 



165 



Jnocybe destricta Fr. 



Inocybe geophila Fr. 



Inocybe pallidipes E. & E. 



Inocybe praetervisa Quel. 



Inocybe rimosa Fr. 



Inocybe subochracea var. Burtii 



Inocybe trechispora Berk. 



Lactarius alpinus Pk. 



Lactarius cinereus Pk. 

 **Lactarhis corrugis Pk. 

 ** Lactarius griseus Pk. 



Lactarius lignyotus Fr. 

 ** Lactarius piperatus Fr. 



Lactarius Peckii Burl. 



Lactarius subdulcis Fr. 



Lactarius subpurpureus Fr. 



Lactarius theiogahis Fr. 



Lactarius trivialis Fr. 



Lactarius volemus Fr. 



Lepiota acutae squamosa Fr. 



Lepiota adnatifolia Pk. 



Lepiota asperula Atk. 

 *Lepiota cepaestipes Fr. 



Lepiota clypeolaria Fr. 



Lepiota granosa Morg. 



Leptonia lampropoda Fr. 

 *Marasmius resinostis Fr. 

 **Marasmius siccus Schw. 



Mycewa cohaerens Fr. 



Myc^wa epipterygia Fr. 



*Afj»c^wa Leaiana B. & C. 



Afyc^wa sanguinolenta Fr. 



Nolanea dysthales (Pk.). 

 **Panus angustatus Berk. 

 **Pamis stipticus Fr. 



Panaeolus solidipes Pk. 

 **Paxillus corrugatus Atk. 



Paxillus panuoides Fr. 



Paxillus rhodoxanthus Schw. 



Pholiota aggericola Pk. 



Pholiota flammans Fr. 



Pholiota lutea Pk. 

 **Pholiota squarrosoides Pk. 

 *Pleurotus applicatus Fr. 



**Pleurotus sapidus Fr. 

 **Pluteus cervinus Fr. 



Pluteus nanus Fr. 

 **Psalliota placomyces Pk. 

 **Psathyrella disseminata Fr. 



Russula delica Fr. 

 **Russula emetica Fr. 

 **Russula fragilis Fr. 



Russula foetens Fr. 



Russula fiavida Frost. 



Russula flava Romell. 



Russula ochrophylla Pk. 



Russula squalida Pk. 

 *Russnla uncialis Pk. 



Russula variata Banning. 



Russula virescens Fr. 



Russula ochroleucoides sp. nov. 



Pileus 6-12 cm. broad, large, rigid, convex, soon expanded plane, varying 

 straw-yellow to pale-ochraceous, usually dull-ocher to reddish-ocher toward 

 center, pellicle adnate, soon dry and pulverulent to subrimose, even on the 

 obtuse margin ; flesh thick, compact, white, unchanging or slightly sordid in 

 age; gills adnexed or free, rather narrow, rounded and broader in front, white 

 or whitish, close to subdistant, shorter ones intermingled, often forked behind, 

 intervenous ; stem 4-6 cm. long, 1.5-2 cm. thick, short, rigid, equal or taper- 

 ing slightly downward, white, glabrous or subpruinose, spongy-solid ; spores 

 even or minutely rough, 7-9 fi (inch apiculus), white in mass ; cystidia very few ; 

 basidia about 40 X 9 ^ ', taste tardily and slightly bitterish-acrid to disagreeably 

 bitter; odor faintly aromatic or none. 



Gregarious, on the ground in woods of deciduous trees. Infrequent. 

 Elkmont, Tennessee, and Ann Arbor, Michigan. This seems to be a rather 

 rare species and was found only three times. Although similar to R. ochro- 

 leuca in colors, it departs widely by belonging to the Rigidae, near R. virescens. 



**Schizophyllum commune Fr. 



