Toadstools, mushrooms, fungi, edible and poisonous; one thousand American fungi

146. Plate XXXVIII, p. 147.) =Pileus= 1–2 in. and more broad, somewhat

2753 words  |  Chapter 61

pale yellowish, _compactly fleshy especially at the disk, thin toward the margin_, convex then flattened, _almost top-shaped_ from the stem being thickened upward, even, smooth, moist (but not viscous) in rainy weather, when dry often rimosely incised, here and there split regularly round. =Flesh= firm, white. =Stem= 1½-2 in. long, ½ in. and more thick, _stuffed_, internally spongy, externally polished-evened and firmer, _attenuated downward_, even, smooth, naked. =Gills= _remarkably decurrent_, at _first arcuate, then extended in the form of an inverted cone_, very distant, thick, firm, brittle, connected by veins at the base, very broad in the middle, of the same color as the pileus. _Fries._ Very protean. Veil none. The flesh of the pileus is formed as it were of the stem dilated upward. The typical form resembles the Cantharelli. _Everywhere becoming light yellow-tawny_, but varying with the stem and gills pale-white. In pastures. Common. _Stevenson._ =Spores= 6×4µ _Cooke_; 6–10×4–6µ _K._ Common over the United States. West Virginia, 1881, North Carolina, 1890, Pennsylvania, 1887, Mt. Gretna, 1897–1898. _McIlvaine._ Gregarious, and often in tufts, sometimes in partial rings. An exceedingly variable species. White, buff, smoky, pinkish colors are common. The cap shapes are also diverse. The margins of some are incurved; of others repand. The weather seems to have much to do with their shapes. M.C. Cooke says: “It requires careful cooking, as it is liable to be condemned as tough, unless treated slowly, but it is a great favorite abroad.” He calls them “Buff Caps.” All fungi are the better for slow cooking. The H. pratensis in all its forms is excellent, but particularly so in croquettes and patés. =H. virgin´eus= Fr.—_virgo_, a virgin. (Plate XXXVII, fig. 6, p. 146.) _Wholly white._ =Pileus= fleshy, convex then plane, _obtuse_, moist, _at length depressed_, cracked into patches, floccose when dry. =Stem= _curt, stuffed, firm_, attenuated at the base, externally becoming even and naked. =Gills= decurrent, distant, rather thick. _Fries._ =Flesh= sometimes equal, sometimes abruptly thin. Commonly confounded with H. niveus, but it is more difficult to distinguish it from white forms of H. pratensis. It is distinguished chiefly by its smaller stature, by the color being constantly white, sometimes becoming pale, by the _obtuse pileus_ being scarcely turbinate, _at length cracked into patches and floccose when dry_, and by the gills being thinner, etc. In pastures. Common. _Stevenson._ =Spores= 12×5–6µ _Cooke_. Tastes like M. oreades. _M.J.B._ Delicious broiled or stewed. _Cooke._ “Mony littles make muckle,” says the Scotch proverb. It applies well to the brave little toadstool looking through the first grass of lawns for the coming of spring, and coming again in the autumn, defiant of early frosts. Small though it be, its numbers soon fill the basket. The “Ivory Caps” are plentiful, and extend their haunts to the woods, where thick mold or grassy places abound. =H. ni´veus= Fr.—_niveus_, snow-white. (Plate XXXVII, fig. 7, p. 146.) Wholly white. =Pileus= scarcely reaching 1 in. broad, _somewhat membranaceous_, and without a more compact disk, hence truly _umbilicate_, bell-shaped then convex, smooth, striate and viscid when moist, not cracked when dry. =Flesh= thin, everywhere equal, white, hygrophanous. =Stem= 2 in. or a little more long, 1–2 lines thick, _tubed_, _equal_, even, smooth, tense and straight. =Gills= decurrent, _distant_, _thin_, scarcely connected by veins, arcuate, quite entire. Thinner, _tougher_, and later than H. virgineus, etc. Being hygrophanous the pileus is shining white when dry. Very tender forms occur. In pastures. _Stevenson._ =Spores= 7×4µ _Cooke_. The H. niveus, H. virgineus, “Ivory Caps” as M.C. Cooke calls them, are pretty and plentiful in some sections. In the West Virginia mountains, along grass-grown road-sides, their purity and exquisite perfume attracted me in 1881. I have them and a few others to thank for seducing me into becoming a mycophagist. I think of them affectionately. I have seldom met with them since. They are found on lawns and in pastures and on grassy edges of woods, early in spring and late in autumn. =H. boreal´is= Pk.—northern. =Pileus= thin, convex or expanded, smooth, moist, white, sometimes striatulate. =Gills= arcuate-decurrent, distant, white. =Stem= smooth, equal or tapering downward, stuffed, white. =Plant= 2 in. high. =Pileus= 8–12 lines broad. =Stem= 1 line thick. Ground in woods. Croghan and Copake. September and October. The species is related to H. niveus but the pileus is not viscid. _Peck_, 26th Rep. N.Y. State Bot. Found at Mt. Gretna, Pa., October 20, 1898, ground in mixed woods. The cap is white, silky, smooth, _not_ viscid. Stem likewise. A neat species pleasant in every way. ** _Gills ventricose, adnate, etc_. =H. dis´tans= Berk.—distant (of the gills). =Pileus= about 2 in. broad, white, with a silky luster, here and there stained with brown, somewhat fleshy, plane or depressed, viscid. =Stem= white above, _gray_ below, and attenuated, not spotted. =Gills= decurrent, _few_, _very distant_, somewhat ventricose, pure white then tinged with ash-color, interstices obscurely wrinkled. Often umbilicate. Remarkable for the few and distant gills. _Stevenson._ =Spores= 10×8µ _Cooke_. Caps white, shaded to light pinkish-brown toward center. Gills very distant. Leaves adhere to cap. Specimens tested were of mild, pleasant flavor. =H. sphæro´sporus= Pk. =Pileus= fleshy and thick in the center, sub-obconic, convex, obtuse or slightly umbonate, whitish, inclining to reddish-brown, the margin incurved. =Flesh= firm, white. =Gills= rather broad, subdistant, adnate or slightly decurrent, white. =Stems= tufted, flexuous, solid, glabrous, often slightly thickened at the base, colored like the pileus. =Spores= globose, 6–8µ broad. =Pileus= 6–12 lines broad. =Stem= 1–2 in. long, 2–3 lines thick. Iowa. October. Communicated by C. McIlvaine. The fresh plant is said to have no decided odor, but when partly dried it emits a slight but rather unpleasant odor. It belongs apparently to the section Camarophyllus, and is related to Hygrophorus Peckii. _Peck_, Torr. Bull., Vol. 22, No. 12. Received by the writer from Hon. Thomas Updegraff, MacGregor, Iowa, and forwarded to Professor Peck as a new species. The fungus has but slight taste and is without odor when fresh. It is probably edible. Not received in sufficient quantity to test. III.—HYGRO´CYBE. * _Gills decurrent._ =H. cera´ceus= Fr.—_cera_, wax. =Pileus= about 1 in. broad, _waxy-yellow, shining_, slightly fleshy, thin, but slightly firm, convexo-plane, obtuse, slightly pellucid-striate, viscid. =Stem= 1–2 in. and more long, about 2 lines thick, _hollow_, often _unequal_, flexuous and at length compressed, even, smooth, of the same color as the pileus, never darker at the apex. =Gills= _adnato-decurrent, broad, almost triangular_, distinct, yellow. _Fries._ Fragile; easily distinguished from others by its waxy (not changeable) color. _Stevenson._ =Spores= 8×6µ _Cooke_. Eaten in Germany. Found at Angora and Kingsessing, Philadelphia, 1887. August to October. Open grassy places in woods, and in pastures. Scattered and in troops. Excellent. Stew slowly. =H. cantharel´lus= Schw. _Gr_—a small vase. (Plate XXXVII, fig. 5, p. 146.) =Pileus= thin, convex, at length umbilicate or centrally depressed, minutely squamulose, moist, bright red, becoming orange or yellow. =Gills= distant, subarcuate, decurrent, yellow, sometimes tinged with vermilion. =Stem= smooth, equal, subsolid, sometimes becoming hollow, concolorous, whitish within. =Height= 2–4 in., breadth of pileus 6–12 lines. =Stem= 1–2 lines thick. Swamps and damp shaded places in fields or woods. July to September. Common. _Peck_, 23d Rep. N.Y. State Bot. Var. _fla´va_. Pileus and stem pale yellow. Gills arcuate, strongly decurrent. Var. _fla´vipes_. Pileus red or reddish. Stem yellow. Var. _fla´viceps_. Pileus yellow. Stem red or reddish. Var. _Ro´sea_. Has the pileus expanded and the margin wavy scalloped. Swamps. Sandlake. _Peck_, 23d Rep. Common in the Adirondack region, and throughout Pennsylvania and New Jersey, in all its varieties. The resemblance to H. miniatus in color is great, but there is a marked difference in the gills, which extend further down the thinner stem. It is tougher, and takes longer to cook. It has a flavor of its own which is enjoyed by some and condemned by others. =H. cocci´neus= Schaeff.—of a scarlet color. (Plate CXXXVI, fig. 6, p. 508.) =Pileus= 1–2 in. and more broad, _at first bright scarlet, then soon changing color and becoming pale_, slightly fleshy, convex, then plane and often unequal, _obtuse_, at first viscid and even, _smooth_, not floccose-scaly. =Flesh= of the same color as the pileus. =Stem= 2 in. long, 3–4 lines thick, _hollow_, then _compressed_ and rather even, not slippery, _scarlet upward, always yellow at the base_. =Gills= wholly adnate, _decurrent with a tooth_, plane, distant, connected by veins, watery-soft as if fatty, when full grown _purplish at the base, light yellow in the middle, glaucous at the edge_. _Fries._ Flesh of the pileus descending into the gills and forming a trama of the same color. Fragile. Varying in stature, easily mistaken for some of the following species which are of the same color. Pileus at length becoming yellow. _Stevenson._ =Spores= 10–12×6µ _Cooke_; 7×4µ _Morgan_. Edible. _Cooke_, _Peck_. In woods and pastures. In troops. Common in West Virginia, Pennsylvania, New Jersey. _McIlvaine._ Excellent when stewed for twenty minutes. (Plate XXXIX.) [Illustration: HYGROPHORUS FLAVO-DISCUS. About two-thirds natural size. ] =H. fla´vo-dis´cus= Frost—_flavus_, yellow; _discus_, disk. =Pileus= convex or plane, smooth, glutinous, white with a pale-yellow or reddish-yellow disk. =Flesh= white. =Gills= adnate or decurrent, subdistant, white, sometimes with a slight flesh-colored tint, the inter-spaces sometimes veiny. =Stem= subequal, solid, glutinous, white, sometimes slightly stained with yellow. =Spores= elliptical, 6–8×4µ. =Plant= 2–3 in. high. =Pileus= 1–3 in. broad. =Stem= 2–8 lines thick. Pine woods. West Albany. November. This, like H. fuligineus, has a short white space at the top of the stem, free from the viscidity that exists elsewhere. It resembles in many respects Hygrophorus speciosus, which has the pileus red, fading to yellow with advancing age. Perhaps the three may yet prove to be forms of one very variable species, for the most conspicuous differences between them consist in the colors of the pileus. The constancy with which the three styles of coloration has thus far been maintained indicates a specific difference, but color alone is not generally regarded as having any specific value. _Peck_, 35th Rep. N.Y. State Bot. =Spores= 6.4–7.6×4µ _Peck_. I find this very good but its dirty pellicle should be peeled before using. _Peck_, in letter, 1896. Mr. Hollis Webster writes of H. flavo-discus (Yellow Sweet Bread) in Bull. No. 45, of the Boston Mycological Club, 1897: “This is a mushroom worth going a long way to get. It is abundant in rich woods under pines in certain localities, and is a great favorite with those who know it. It is easily prepared and requires little cooking.” I have eaten enjoyably of it since 1881. Plentiful in the Jersey pines, in West Virginia and Pennsylvania, and equal to any toadstool of its size. (Plate XL.) [Illustration: HYGROPHORUS FULIGINEUS. About one-half natural size. ] =H. fuligi´neus= Frost—resembling soot. =Pileus= convex or nearly plane, glabrous, very viscid or glutinous, grayish-brown or soot-color, the disk often darker or almost black. =Gills= subdistant, adnate or decurrent, white. =Stem= solid, viscid or glutinous, white or whitish. =Spores= elliptical, 7–9×5µ. The Sooty hygrophorous resembles the Club-stemmed clitocybe in the color of its cap, but in nearly every other respect it is different. When moist the cap is covered with an abundant gluten which when dry gives it a shining appearance as if varnished. The color varies from grayish-brown to a very dark or sooty-brown with the central part usually still darker or almost black, but never with an umbo. The flesh and the gills are white. The stem also is white or but slightly shaded toward the base with the color of the cap. It is variable in length and shape, being long or short, straight or crooked, everywhere equal in thickness or tapering toward the base. It is glutinous and unpleasant to handle. The cap is 1–4 in. broad, the stem 2–4 in. long, and 4–8 lines thick. The plants grow either singly or in tufts. In the latter case the caps are often irregular from mutual pressure. The plants occur early in October and November, in pine woods or woods of pine and hemlock intermixed. This mushroom is tender and of excellent flavor, but its sticky and often dirty covering should be peeled before cooking. _Peck_, 49th Rep. N.Y. State Bot. Found at Angora, near Philadelphia, August 1, 1897. Densely cespitose. Raw it tastes like dead leaves. Tender and of fine flavor when cooked. =H. minia´tus= Fr.—_minium_, red lead. (Plate XXXVII, fig. 4, p. 146.) =Pileus= thin, fragile, at first convex, becoming nearly plane, glabrous or minutely squamulose, often umbilicate, generally red. =Gills= distant, adnate, yellow, often tinged with red. =Stem= slender, glabrous, colored like the pileus. =Spores= elliptical, white, 8µ long. =Cap= ½-2 in. broad. =Stem= 1–2 in. long, 1–2 lines thick. _Peck_, 48th Rep. N.Y. State Bot. Var. _lutes´cens_. Pileus yellow or reddish-yellow. Stem and gills yellow. Plant often cespitose. _Peck_, 41st Rep. N.Y. State Bot. =Spores= 10×6µ _Cooke_; elliptical, white. Grows where it pleases and abundantly throughout the land. In wet weather I have found it in July and late in autumn. Professor Peck says: It is scarcely surpassed by any mushroom in tenderness of substance and agreeableness of flavor. The gunner for partridges will not shoot rabbits; the knowing toadstool seeker will pass all others where H. miniatus abounds. ** _Gills adnexed, etc._ =H. puni´ceus= Fr.—blood-red. =Pileus= 2–4 in. broad, glittering blood-scarlet, in dry weather and when old becoming pale especially at the disk, slightly fleshy for its breadth, at first bell-shaped, obtuse, commonly repand or lobed, very irregular, even, smooth, viscid. =Flesh= of the same color, fragile. =Stem= 3 in. long, ½-1 in. thick, solid when young, at length hollow, very stout (not compressed), ventricose (attenuated at both ends), striate, and for the most part squamulose at the apex, when dry light yellowish or of the same color as the pileus, always white and often incurved at the base. =Gills= ascending, ventricose, 2–4 lines broad, thick, distant, white-light yellow or yellow and often reddish at the base. _Fries._ The largest of the group and very handsome. It certainly differs from H. coccineus, for which it is commonly mistaken, in stature, in the adnexed gills, and in the white base of the striate stem. The attachment of the gills varies, but from the form of the pileus they ascend to the base of the cone and appear free. In pastures. _Stevenson._ =Spores= 8×5µ _Cooke_. Edible. _Cooke._ No harm would come of confusing it with the vermilion mushroom—H. miniatus Pk. =H. con´icus= Fr.—conical. =Pileus= thin, submembranaceous, fragile, smooth, conical, generally acute, sometimes obtuse, the margin often lobed. =Gills= rather close and broad, subventricose, narrower toward the stem, free, terminating in an abrupt tooth at the outer extremity, scarcely reaching the margin, yellow. =Stem= equal, fibrous-striate, yellow, hollow. =Height= 3–6 in., breadth of pileus 6–12 lines. =Stem= 1–2 lines thick. Ground in woods and open places. North Elba and Center. August to October. The color of the pileus is variable. I have taken specimens with it pale sulphur-yellow and others with it bright red or scarlet. The plant turns black in drying. _Peck_, Rep. 23, New York State Bot. =Spores= 10×7µ _Cooke_; 10×6µ _Morgan_. An old-time cure-all had medicinal virtues proportionate to its offensiveness. Old-time writers, contrariwise, gave every toadstool a bad name which changed color or displeased their noses. The pretty little Hygrophorus conicus, for these reasons, has, until now, been under the ban of suspicion. M.C. Cooke, in his handy book, Edible and Poisonous Mushrooms, was the first to lighten its sentence and make it a sort of ticket-of-leave culprit. The writer has frequently eaten it, and is glad to vouch for its harmlessness and testify to its eminent respectability. =H. chloroph´anus= Fr. _Gr_—greenish-yellow. =Pileus= 1 in. broad, commonly bright sulphur-yellow, sometimes, however, scarlet, not changing color, somewhat membranaceous, very fragile, at first convex, then plane, obtuse, orbicular and lobed, and at length cracked, smooth, viscid, striate. =Stem= 2–3 in. long, 2–3 lines thick, hollow, equal, round, rarely compressed, wholly even, smooth, viscid when moist, shining when dry, wholly unicolorous, rich light yellow. =Gills= emarginato-adnexed, very ventricose, with a thin decurrent tooth, thin, distant, distinct. _Fries._ Very much allied to H. conicus, but never becoming black, and otherwise certainly distinguished by its convex, obtuse, striate pileus, by its even and viscous stem, and by its emarginato-free, thin, somewhat distant, whiter gills. Like H. ceraceus in appearance. In grassy and mossy places. Common. August to October. _Stevenson._ =Spores= 8×5µ _Cooke_; 8µ _Q._ Received from E.B. Sterling, Trenton, N.J., August, 1897. Open grassy woods. But three specimens were tested. They were in every way agreeable. [Illustration: Grouped by F.D. Briscoe—Studies by C. McIlvaine. PLATE XLI.] FIG. PAGE. FIG. PAGE.

Chapters

1. Chapter 1 2. Introduction xv 3. 6. Gyromitra esculenta 546 4. 3. strobiliformis 19 5. 7. prolifera (section) 126 6. 4. Amanita rubescens 21 7. 3. Lentinus lepideus 230 8. 6. humile 81 9. 11. infundibuliformis 100 10. 2. multiceps, var. 94 11. 4. fusipes 116 12. 7. niveus 153 13. 4. volemus 180 14. 7. puellaris 208 15. 5. brevipes 219 16. 2. cervinus var. 245 17. 5. prunulus (section) 255 18. 4. subsquarrosa 275 19. 5. armillatus 323 20. 5. campester 332 21. 5. rhodoxanthus (section) 394 22. 4. solidipes (section) 385 23. 3. castaneus 472 24. 5. crassipes 452 25. 4. pallidus 429 26. 4. scaber areolatus 461, 27. 5. edulis 445 28. 1. Boletus indecisus 468 29. 2. Polyporus sulphureus 485 30. 7. Trametes gibbosa 31. 9. Cantharellus lutescens 218 32. 3. Clavaria pistillaris (dark var.) 524 33. 3. formosa 520 34. 2. echinatum 568 35. INTRODUCTION 36. 8. GILLS EMARGINATE, ALSO ADNATE AND HAVING DECURRENT TOOTH. 37. 15. GILLS DECURRENT; CAP UMBILICATE. 38. 5. RING FIBRILLOSE. 39. 10. VOLVA FRIABLE, DISAPPEARING. 40. 2. AMANITA PHALLOIDES (WHITE 7 5. AMANITA FROSTIANA, 16 41. 3. AMANITA PHALLOIDES (BROWN 7 6. GYROMITRA ESCULENTA, 546 42. 2. AMANITA RUBESCENS AND 21 43. 3. AMANITA STROBILIFORMIS, 19 44. 18. Plate XII, fig. 4, p. 32.) =Pileus= about 4 in. broad, 45. 2. AMANITOPSIS VAGINATA, 29 6. MYCENA PROLIFERA, 126 46. 3. AMANITOPSIS NIVALIS, 29 7. MYCENA PROLIFERA 126 47. 4. AMANITOPSIS STRANGULATA, 30 48. 2. LEPIOTA NAUCINOIDES, 45 4. AMANITA RUBESCENS, 21 49. 1. Armillaria mellea, 55 3–4. Lentinus 230 50. 2. Armillaria mellea var. 56 51. 4. TRICHOLOMA TERREUM, 71 52. 4. CLITOCYBE 108 9. CLITOCYBE ODORA, 90 53. 6. CLITOCYBE MAXIMA 99 11. CLITOCYBE 100 54. 7. CLITOCYBE NEBULARIS, 85 55. 1. CLITOCYBE MULTICEPS, 95 2. CLITOCYBE MULTICEPS, 95 56. 2. COLLYBIA PLATYPHYLLA 114 4. COLLYBIA FUSIPES, 116 57. 1. HYGROPHORUS PRATENSIS (WHITE 5. HYGROPHORUS 58. 2. HYGROPHORUS PRATENSIS (COLORED 6. HYGROPHORUS VIRGINEUS, 59. 3. HYGROPHORUS PRATENSIS (AFTER 7. HYGROPHORUS NIVEUS, 60. 4. HYGROPHORUS MINIATUS, 159 61. 146. Plate XXXVIII, p. 147.) =Pileus= 1–2 in. and more broad, somewhat 62. 2. LACTARIUS INDIGO, 171 4. LACTARIUS VOLEMUS, 180 63. 4. RUSSULA SORDIDA, 190 64. 3. CRATERELLUS 508 65. 1. PLUTEUS CERVINUS, 243 2. PLUTEUS CERVINUS, 245 66. 2. CLITOPILUS ABORTIVUS 256 5. CLITOPILUS PRUNULUS 255 67. 3. CLITOPILUS ABORTIVUS 258 68. 7. Stem longer than the width of the zoneless C. albogriseus 69. 7. Stem shorter than the width of the commonly C. micropus 70. 11. Stems not cespitose, hollow C. Seymourianus 71. 1. _Pileus not hygrophanous._ 72. 2. _Pileus hygrophanous._ 73. 1. Spores angulated. C. depluens 74. 2. Pileus striatulate when C. Greigensis 75. 2. Pileus not striatulate C. byssisedus 76. 2. PHOLIOTA CAPERATA, 270 4. PHOLIOTA SUBSQUARROSA, 275 77. 1. CORTINARIUS 318 4. CORTINARIUS TURMALIS, 309 78. 2. CORTINARIUS VIOLACEUS, 314 5. CORTINARIUS 323 79. 3. CORTINARIUS OCHRACEUS, 319 80. 1892. In woods. September to frost. _McIlvaine._ 81. 2. AGARICUS SILVICOLA, 343 5. AGARICUS CAMPESTER 332 82. 3. AGARICUS PLACOMYCES, 345 83. 2. HYPHOLOMA PERPLEXUM, 354 4. GOMPHIDIUS RHODOXANTHUS, 394 84. 1. Stem solid or stuffed, flesh whitish, gills sublateritium 85. 2. Cap yellow or tinged with tawny, stem yellow, fasciculare 86. 2. Cap brick-red, stem ferruginous, gills green, elæodes 87. 3. Cap red or brick-red, with a yellow margin; gills perplexum 88. 4. Gills yellow, becoming gray, neither green nor epixanthum 89. 2. COPRINUS MICACEUS, 378 4. PANAEOLUS SOLIDIPES 385 90. 3. Pileus soon red-squamose B. pictus 91. 1. Tubes yellowish with reddish, or 92. 2. Stem lacunose-reticulated and 93. 4. Tubes free, or if adnate then 94. 4. Tubes adnate, not stuffed when 95. 6. Tubes free or nearly so, 96. 7. Stem spongy within, soon cavernous 97. 11. Tubes yellowish or stuffed when 98. 11. Tubes whitish, not stuffed. (p. 459.) Versipelles 99. 1. Stem dotted both above and below the 100. 13. Pileus adorned with tufts of hairs or 101. 14. Stem whitish or yellowish-white 102. 17. Pileus some other color B. collinitus 103. 22. Taste acrid or peppery B. piperatus 104. 2. BOLETUS SUBAUREUS, 414 105. 3. BOLETUS FULVUS, 465 106. 1. Tubes free, with red mouths B. auriflammeus 107. 2. Stem pallid, with a circumscribing red B. glabellus 108. 2. Stem yellow, sometimes with red stains B. 109. 6. Pileus reticulated with subcutaneous brown B. dictyocephalus 110. 8. Stem yellowish, streaked with brown B. innixus 111. 3. BOLETUS RUBROPUNCTUS, 429 112. 1. Flesh or tubes changing to blue where 2 113. 6. Tube mouths minute B. spadiceus 114. 3. BOLETUS ILLUDENS, 439 115. 1. Stem red in the depressions, tubes tinged with B. Morgani 116. 1. Stem pale-yellow, tubes not greenish B. Betula 117. 9. Pileus gray or grayish-black, stem straight B. griseus 118. 3. Tubes tinged with green or becoming green where 6 119. 8. Stem even, brownish-red B. decorus 120. 1898. _McIlvaine._ 121. 7. Pileus reddish-tawny or brown B. Sullivantii 122. 2. Margin of the pileus B. versipellis 123. 3. Stem scabrous or B. scaber 124. 4. Pileus dark-brown B. sordidus 125. 1. Stem slender, generally less than four B. 126. 3. Tubes round, white B. 127. 4. Taste mild B. 128. 4. Taste bitter B. felleus 129. 1898. The stem of some specimens spreads at the top. The pileus is often 130. 1. BOLETUS INDECISUS, 468 2–3–4. BOLETUS FELLEUS, 460 131. 1. Pileus granulated B. Murray 132. 1. FISTULINA HEPATICA, 477 2. POLYPORUS SULPHUREUS, 485 133. 2. POLYSTICTUS VERSICOLOR. } About natural 134. 4. POLYPORUS PERENNIS AND } 135. 7. TRAMETES GIBBOSA. } 136. 1897. =Cap= and =stem= dark brown. =Spines= darker. =Stem= swelling 137. 2. PEZIZA COCCINEA, 559 7. CRATERELLUS SINUOSUS, 510 138. 3. PEZIZA AURANTIA, 557 8. CRATERELLUS 509 139. 5. HYPOMYCES LACTIFLUORUM, 562 140. 2. CLAVARIA AUREA, 520 141. 1. CLAVARIA FUSIFORMIS, 523 3. CLAVARIA PISTILLARIS 524 142. 2. CLAVARIA PISTILLARIS 524 143. 1894. The mass was 2 in. in diameter. Separating them was taking the 144. 1. PHALLUS. Page 571. 145. 2. MUTINUS. Page 575. 146. 3. CLATHRUS. 147. 4. SIMBLUM. 148. 5. LATERNEA. 149. 1. POLYPLOCIUM. 150. 2. BATARREA. 151. 3. MYRIOSTOMA. 152. 4. GEASTER. Page 580. 153. 5. ASTRÆUS. 154. 6. MITREMYCES. 155. 7. TYLOSTOMA. Page 582. 156. 8. CALVATIA. Page 582. 157. 9. LYCOPERDON. Page 589. 158. 10. BOVISTELLA. Page 608. 159. 11. CATASTOMA. Page 609. 160. 12. BOVISTA. Page 610. 161. 13. MYCENASTRUM. Page 613. 162. 1. Having washed and cleansed them from the earth which is apt to 163. 2. MORELLES A L'ITALIENNE.—Having washed and dried, divide them across, 164. Introduction, xv

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