REPORT OF THE STATE BOTANIST 
97 
author of the species claims that the scales of its pileus are more per¬ 
sistent, but these are commonly persistent in undoubted L. procera . 
Lepiota Miamensis Morg. 
Thin woods and heathy places. Fulton Chain, Herkimer county. 
August. 
Our specimens differ slightly from the typical form in being 
smaller and in having the pileus sometimes umbonate. This is 6 to 
12 lines broad and the stem is 12 to 18 lines long in our specimens. 
Lepiota rugoso-reticulata Lorin. 
Open mossy or heathy places. Sand Lake, Rensselaer county, 
Saranac Lake, Franklin county, and Karner, Albany county. 
This species resembles L. amianthina in color, but in size and shape 
and in the attachment of the lamellae it approaches L. granulosa. Its 
distinguishing characters are its rugose or rugose-reticulated pileus 
and its strong odor. This is unpleasant and resembles that of vege¬ 
table mold or mossy humus. The surface of the pileus is commonly 
radiately wrinkled and the rugosity is usually more pronounced in 
the center of the pileus than toward or on the margin. Specimens 
sometimes occur that have the surface of the pileus even. The flesh 
is white when dry and the lamellae are white. The stem is yellowish 
within but it has a white pith or is hollow. It is pale ochraceous 
below the slight or evanescent annulus. The pileus also is of this 
color and both are granulose. The margin of the pileus is often 
appendiculate with the remains of the veil. 
Tricholoma ionides Bull 
Grassy ground and lawns. Gouverneur. Sept. Mrs. Anthony. 
The specimens are smaller than the typical form, the pileus being one 
inch or less in diameter. 
Clitocybe virens Scop. 
Thin woods. Selkirk, Albany county. Aug. This species, like 
C. odora, has an agreeable fragrance, but it may be distinguished from 
that plant by its thin pileus and thin narrow crowded white lamellae. 
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