i7« 
The Ohio Naturalist. 
[Vol. X, No. 8, 
color than R. virescens, ranging from green or greenish to 
ochraceous. Dr. Kauffman* suggests that Hard’s figure (150) 
is of this species rather than R. virescens as labeled and I am 
inclined to agree. July to September. 
Russula subsordida, Peck. The whole plant becomes smoky- 
brown when old and the flesh changes to that color when cut or 
broken. Pileus glabrous, viscid when young, at first whitish, 
lamellae close, adnate. It is separated from R. sordida, Peck, 
by its viscid pileus; from R. nigricans, (Bull.) Fr., by the close 
lamellae, and from R. densifolia, Seer , by the flesh not becom- 
ing reddish when wounded. September. 
Russula flavida, Frost. Pileus and stipe yellow, lamellae 
white; pileus dry and mealy; lamellae close, adnate; stem solid. 
I take this to be the plant described by Morgan as R. lutea, Fr. 
The latter has a viscid pileus, a white stipe and the lamellae are 
yellow or ochraceous. August and September. 
Russula mariae, Peck. Pileus dry, dark crimson or purplish, 
minutely pulverulent or glaucous; lamellae close, adnate, whitish 
to yellowish ; stipe solid, a little paler than pileus or nearly white. 
July. Determination confirmed byMiss Burlingham. 
Russula earlei, Peck. Pileus glutinous, straw-colored or 
paler, margin even; lamellae thick, distant, adnate; stipe white. 
Rather easily distinguished by the pale, glutinous pileus and the 
distant gills August. 
Clitocybe eccentrica, Peck. Pileus umbilicate or somewhat 
infundibuliform, hygrophanous, white or whitish, margin lobed, 
split or irregular; lamellae white or yellowish, close, narrow, 
decurrent ; stipe often eccentric, becoming hollow. Growing 
on much decayed log. August. Identified by C. H. Peck. 
Crepidotus cinnabarinus, Peck. Pileus sessile, minutely 
tomentose or pulverulent, cinnabar-red; lamellae rather broad, 
reddish-flocculent on the edge; spores ferruginous. Readily 
recognized from the color. On old stump in woods. Coll. 
A. T. Cox. July. Bull. Torr. Bot. Cl. 22: 489. 
Galera crispa, Longyear. Pileus conic-campanulate, margin 
becoming crenulated and upturned; lamellae slightly adnexed, 
close, rather narrow, much crisped; stipe fragile, somewhat bul- 
bous. In grass on University campus. June to August. Bot. 
Gaz. 28: 272. 
Agaricus abruptibulbus, Peck. The pileus is usually white or 
yellowish but our specimens were tawny-yellow even when fresh. 
The stipe has a flattened bulb by which the plant may be dis- 
tinguished from its nearest allies. The double annulus is another 
distinctive character. August. Coll. Master Hugh Fink. Iden- 
tified by C. H. Peck. This plant was first named Agaricus 
abruptus, Peck. 
* C. H. Kauffman, Michigan Species of Russula, Eleventh Report of 
Michigan Academy of Science, pp. 57-91. 
Miami University, Oxford, Ohio. 
