Nov. 1905 ] North America?i Species of Marasmius 
243 
98. MARASMIUS HINNULEUS B. & C. Fungi Cub. 
II 5 * 
Pileus subconic, sulcate, glabrous, shining, fulvescent. Stipe 
pellucid, glabrous, concolorous, attached by a strigose base. La¬ 
mellae thick, distant, adnexed. 
Growing on dead leaves. Pileus 8-9 mm. in diameter, the 
stipe 2-3 cm. in height. 
99. MARASMIUS PHAEUS B. & C. Fungi Cub. 130. 
Pileus thin, sphaeric, dark-colored. Stipe opaque, brown, at¬ 
tached by a spongy base, at the summit pellucid and black. La¬ 
mellae few, concolorous with the pileus. 
Growing on old bark. Pileus 8 mm. in diamater, the stipe 1-2 
cm. in height. 
100. MARASMIUS HYPOPHAEUS B. & C. Fungi 
Cub. 129. 
Pileus thin, subglobose, at length plicate-sulcate, blood red 
to rufous. Stipe rigid, opaque, striate umber; the base orbicular, 
byssoid-rugose. Lamellae few, thick, brown or blackish, reaching 
the stipe. 
Growing on dead wood. Pileus 12 mm. in diamater, the 
stipe 2 cm. in height. 
101. MARASMIUS SANGUINEUS Cooke & Massee, 
Grev. XVII. 59. 
Pileus convex, membranaceous, blood-red, glabrous, even. 
Stipe long, glabrous, pallid. Lamellae few, very distant, ventri- 
cose, adnexed, concolorous with the pileus. 
Growing on old leaves in woods; Dominica. Pileus 1-1.5 
cm. in diameter, the stipe 4 cm. long. 
102. MARASMIUS FULVICEPS Clements, Bot. Sur¬ 
vey IX. 1896. 
Pileus convex-campanulate, afterward convex or nearly ex- 
planate, membranaceous, strongly radiate-sulcate, wrinkled, gla¬ 
brous, umbonate, tawny-ferruginous. Stipe medullose, flexuous, 
even, shining, brown, paler at the apex. Lamellae distant, ad¬ 
nexed, dark ochroleucous; spores fusoid, hyaline, 18-20 x 5 mic. 
Growing on dead leaves. Pileus 5-15 mm. in diameter, the 
stipe 4-6 cm. long and 1 mm. thick. 
b'. Lamellae white or pallid. 
103. MARASMIUS TENER B. & C. Proc. Am. Acad. 
1862. 
At first all white, by dryness umber. Pileus hemispheric, 
striate, finely pulverulent. Stipe at length glabrous, shining, at¬ 
tached by a small floccose base. Lamellae rather broad, adnate. 
Growing on dead branchlets and on rotten wood. Related to 
M. androsaceus. 
