Murrill: Clitocybe in North America 
277 
States from Maine to North Carolina and west to Michigan. C. 
odora and C. virens are still kept distinct at Paris, probably fol- 
lowing the opinion of Fries, but in England and America the two 
are considered synonyms. The specimens, descriptions, and illus- 
trations everywhere agree, so far as I have examined them. The 
plant appears each season in the New York Botanical Garden 
among dead leaves in the edges of deciduous woods. Owing to 
its brilliant coloring and agreeable odor, it is decidedly attractive 
when young and fresh, but it is apt to fade with age and become 
confused with other species, {pi. 7(5(5). 
CoLLYBiA AQUOSA ADNATiFOLiA Bull. N. Y. State Mus. 2 : 25. 
1887 
Peck states in his 49th report that this variety is probably a 
Clitocybe. 
Tricholoma cell-are Banning & Peck; Peck, Ann. Rep. N. Y. 
State Mus. 44:179 (67). 1891 
This name was published by Peck without description or com- 
ment, although Miss Banning’s manuscript drawing and notes 
are quite complete. The lamellae being decurrent, the plant is a 
Clitocybe; or, if it grows on wood, a Monadelphus. 
• 
Tricholoma Sienna (Peck) Sacc. Syll. Fung. 5:137. 1887 
Agaricus {Tricholoma) Sienna Peck, Ann. Rep. N. Y. State 
Mus. 24: 60. 1872. 
Described from specimens collected on the ground in woods 
at Greig, New York, and apparently not reported since. A good 
drawing accompanies the types at Albany, and there is little 
doubt that this species is only a rather large form of Clitocybe 
sinopica. 
WESTERN SPECIES OF CLITOCYBE 
The genus Clitocybe is abundantly represented on the Pacific 
coast, where the author in 1911 discovered many novelties. The 
following 21 new species from Washington, Oregon, and Cali- 
