Historic, archived document Do not assume content reflects current scientific knowledge, policies, or practices. UNITED STATES DEPARTMENT OF AGRICULTURE BULLETIN No. 175 Contribution from the Bureau of Plant Industry WM. A. TAYLOR, Chief Washington, D. C. April 29, 1915 MUSHROOMS AND OTHER COMMON FUNGI By FLORA W. PATTERSON, Mycologist, and VERA K. CHARLES Assistant Mycologist, Office of Pathological Collections and Inspection Work CONTENTS Page Introduction . . - +, 1 | Gasteromycetes - wher Morphological eaniare of ushruoms Phallaceze (Stinkhorn phapet Soe and Certain other Fungi APN g Pols Lycoperdacee . . Descriptions of Species . . . .. . Sclerodermacee . - Agaricacee ... 2 nen en Nidulariacez (Bird’s-Nest Fung) Polyporacez (Pore aia). 3 MCE aes Ascomycetes Hydnacee ... Is Ge Poisonous or Susnerted Mimhcodnat Tremellacez (Jelly angi): ° Glossary . . Clavariacez (Coral Fungi) . - Recipes for Cooking Vaskieaaihe Sehstn Reference Books Useful to the aiaaious WASHINGTON GOVERNMENT PRINTING OFFICE 1915 Phat eh ied + Pa is 4 . Kok ~ “se; Ks bani + : ee Se 4309 il a B Uda TIN Oa THE USDEPARTENT OF AICTE. No. 175 . Contribution from the Bureau of Plant Industry, Wm. A. Taylor, Chief. e April 29, 1915. MUSHROOMS AND OTHER COMMON FUNGI. By Ftora W. Parrerson, Mycologist, and Vera K. CHarues, Assistant Mycologist, Office of Pathological Collections and Inspection Work. CONTENTS. Page Page PEG URIIOM an cts Bm Bae Fe ee an le GastenomyCebleSa.couacece coaecer Cn ee eens 47 Morphological structure of mushrooms and Phallaceee (stinkhorn fungi) -........... 47 Goneam other fampi so: ose 222-5. :22- 1. 3 Ts yi COPCl Gace s. -are scieie csr Sobers steaee 48 Wescriptions Of Species... .-2........-..-..- 4 Sclorodermacesss< SU425 Sc ee eee 52 PROAPIEACCEE See ee eet) Sire RIS So 5 Nidulariacee (bird’s-nest fungi).......-- 52 Polyporaceze (pore fungi).........- Le SARA 30), Ascomycetesas sont sbcpijaiss ae tees ieee 54 12 ar eS Sad Se Se 43 | Poisonous or suspected mushrooms.....-...- 56 Tremellaceze (jelly fungi) ................--.. AAS I GIOSSALY wo oe SOS See noe oe oss Sas ee AO Clavariaceze (coral fungi)....-........-..-... 46 | Recipes for cooking mushrooms.......--..--- 58 Reference books useful to the amateur.-...... 64 INTRODUCTION. The desirability of a Government publication for free distribution by the aid of which the amateur collector may distinguish poisonous and edible species of fungi is suggested by the present-day tendency to popularize science, the increased general interest in nature-study subjects, and the special interest manifested in the subject of mush- rooms. f The writers make no claim to originality or to the contribution of new and interesting observations on the subject of mycology, but if this bulletin furnishes the amateur collector or nature student with a means of identifying certain common species and differentiating poisonous and edible varieties its purpose will be attained. The keys to aid in locating the genus or species are only intended and applicable for use with the species described. Questions of rela- tionship are sometimes necessarily sacrificed for the sake of rendering identifications easier for the amateur. There has been no effort to include the descriptions of a large number of species, but a few have been selected from each of the most familiar genera. The descriptions are brief and plainly written, the object being to mention the salient features or the distinctive characters of a particular fungus and to avoid as far as possible the 73431°—Bull. 175—15—1 2 BULLETIN 175, U. S. DEPARTMENT OF AGRICULTURE. use of technical terms or statements which would require for verifi- cation the assistance of a compound microscope. By referring to the appended glossary and with the aid of a hand lens, the amateur collector can expect to recognize a large number of the fungi described in these pages. | For some years certain foreign Governments ts been endegyor- ing to teach their citizens the food value of mushrooms. All over France, but especially in Paris, exhibits are given of desirable species. In Rouen during the season, daily lectures, illustrated by many fresh specimens, are prepared for the benefit of the country residents. In the elementary schools of Saxony systematic instruction is given to families and children, and a permanent exhibit of specimens is also maintained. To judge from the statements of early authors, for many centuries wild mushrooms have been eagerly collected and eaten, especially in Germany, France, and Italy. Perhaps the only recorded voice of absolute protest came from the ancient Hindus, who considered those who ate mushrooms, “‘whether springing from the ground or growing on a tree, fully equal in guilt to the slayers of Brahmins.”’ Although early history records the use of mushrooms and the high esteem in which they were held by the ancients, it is true that their nutritive value has been greatly exaggerated sad): is not high and that they are not as life sustaining as meat, in spite of the frequent assertions of enthusiastic mycophagists to the contrary. The mushroom most commonly grown and employed for canning is Agaricus campestris, but not all canned mushrooms are of the cultivated variety. In France there has been established a large business in preserving wild species in that manner, and they have for some time been for sale here. Tons of dried wild mushrooms are also imported from China. Too emphatic a statement can not be made as to the absolute impossibility of ‘‘telling the difference between mushrooms and toad- stools’? by any of the so-called ‘‘tests.”’ The only way to discriminate between edible and injurious fungi is by studying each species from a botanical point of view. By paying strict attention to certain constant features, as pointed out by an expert, the acquaintance of several species may readily be acquired during each season. It is well to look with suspicion upon every mushroom which is not positively known to be edible. The absolute necessity of eating mushrooms when perfectly fresh can not be too strongly emphasized. In collecting mushrooms the plants should not be pulled from the ground by the stem, but they should be lifted out of the earth by the aid of a knife or pointed stick. By this means the form of the base of the stem, a feature of great importance in specific identification, \ MUSHROOMS AND OTHER COMMON FUNGI. 8 can be determined and the presence or absence of a volva demon- strated. Careful notes of prominent features should always be made at the immediate time of collection, as some characters are extremely transient. If the opinion of an expert is required, such notes should accompany the specimens. If possible, several of each species should be collected in order to show variation. The plants should be separately wrapped in paper, paraffin preferred (not tissue or raw cotton), and all placed in a wooden box if to be sent by mail. MORPHOLOGICAL STRUCTURE OF MUSHROOMS AND CERTAIN OTHER FUNGI. The parts common to most mushrooms and certain other fungi are the cap and the stem. The cap, or pileus, is the apical, fleshy part which on its lower surface bears gills in Agaricacez, pores in Poly- poracez, and teeth in Hydnacex. The stem, or stipe, is present in many genera and is normally central; but it may be abbreviated or wholly absent, in which case the plant is said to be sessile, or resupi- nate if attached by the back, and the attachment may be excentric (not centrally attached) or lateral. The shape of the cap is described as umbilicate when it has a.central depression, infundibuliform when funnel shaped, and umbonate when it has a central elevation. The margin may be involute (rolled in) or revolute (rolled out), repand (wavy), etc. The spores, the microscopic bodies analogous to seeds, are developed from the hymenium or spore-bearing tissue, which covers the surface of the gills in Agaricacez, covers the teeth in Hydnacee, and lines the pores in Polyporacee. The gills, or lamellez, are the thin, bladelike, radiating structures borne on the lower surface of the cap. Their color is generally determined by the color of the spores. The method of attachment to the stem is various, and they are described as adnate when attached squarely to the stem, adnexed when reaching the stem but not attached by the entire width, free when not reaching the stem, sinuate or emarginate when notched or curved at the junction with the stem, and decurrent when extending down the stem. The gills are said to be attenuate when their ends are narrowed to a sharp point, acute when they terminate in a sharp angle, obtuse when the ends are rounded, arcuate when arched, and ventricose when broadened at the middle. In the early stages of development the margin of the cap lies against the stipe. In certain genera, as Amanita, Lepiota, Agaricus, and others, a thin veil is present, uniting the margin of the cap and the stem. This structure, known as the veil, consists of fibers grow- ing from the margin of the cap and the outer layers of the stem. It, or a portion of it, may persist as a firm movable or nonmovable annulus (ring), as in the genus Lepiota, or in the form of remnants 4 BULLETIN 175, U. S. DEPARTMENT OF AGRICULTURE. attached to the margin of the cap, as present in Hypholoma appen- diculatum. The volva, or universal veil, is the term applied to the membranous envelope which in some genera entirely incloses the cap and stem. In certain species it ruptures at maturity, leaving a cup-shaped base, while often a portion adheres to the pileus in the form of warts or | scales. DESCRIPTIONS OF SPECIES. In this paper the general plan has been to give a description of the class or family, then a key to assist in the identification of the species herein discussed, and lastly descriptions of the individual genera or species. pages indicated. Agaricus arvensis. ----- 32 Agaricus campestris.... 32 Agaricus placomyces... 32 Agaricus rodmani...... 33 Agaricus silvicola. ...-- 33 Agaricus subrufescens.. 33 Amanita caesarea...-.. 7 Amanita muscaria .--.- 7 Amanita phalloides.... 8 Amanita rubescens.... 8 Amanita solitaria....-- 9 Amanita strobiliformis. 9. Amanita verna.......- 9 Amanitopsis farinosa... 9 Amanitopsis vaginata.. 10 Armillaria mellea.....- 12 Armillaria nardosmia .. 12 Armillaria ventricosa .. 12 Boletus bicolor....-.-... 38 Boletus chrysenteron .. 38 Boletus edulis......-...- 39 Boletus felleus.......- 39 Boletus granulatus. .... 39 Boletus luteus.....--.- 39 Bovista pila: [2/52 < - 50 Bulgaria inquinans.... 54 Bulgaria ruta_ 2. -2- =< 54 Calvatia cyathiformis.. 50 Calvatia gigantea.....- 50 Cantharellus auranti- CUS as He cs melee S 14 Cantharellus cibarius.. 14 Catastoma circumscis- SUM soe s cece ieee 51 Claudopus nidulans.... 27 Clavaria pistillaris..... 46 Clitocybe amethystina. 14 Clitocybe dealbata..... 14 Clitocybe illudens..... 15 Clitocybe laccata....-- 15 Clitocybe monadelpha. 15 Clitocybe multiceps ... 15 Clitocybe ochropur- pureed. ses eee 15 Collybia butyracea.... 18 Collybia dryophila....- 18 Collybia platyphylla... 18 Collybia radicata ..-...- 19 Collybia velutipes..-.. 19 Coprinus atramentarius. 35 Coprinus comatus....-- 36 Coprinus fimetarius.... 36 Coprinus micaceus. . - - - 36 Cortinarius cinnamo- MOUS 2 ee oes eee 30 Cortinarius lilicinus.... 30 Cortinarius sanguineus. 31 Cortinarius violaceus... 31 Crucibulum vulgare ... 53 Cyathus stercoreus..-... 53 Cyathus striatus......- 53 Cyathus vernicosus-.-.. 53 Daedalea quercina..... 42 Dictyophora duplicata. 48 Dictyophoraravenelii.. 48 Entoloma grayanum... 28 Exidia glandulosa ---.. 45 Fistulina hepatica.../. 42 Fomes applanatus --- - - 40 Fomes lucidus ....---- 40 Galera tenera .-...-:-- 31 Geaster hygrometricus - 51 Guepinia spathularia .. 46 Gyromitra esculenta... 55 Hirneola auricula-judae 45 Hydnum coralloides... 43 Hydnum erinaceum... 43 Hydnum imbricatum.. 44 Descriptions of the following species will be found on the Hydnum repandum.... 44 Hydnum septentrionale 44 Hygrophorus chrysodon 24 Hygrophorus coccineus. 24 Hygrophorus conicus... 24 Hygrophorus eburneus. 24 Hygrophorus hypothe- JUSS LSA 24 Hypholoma appendicu- lattes Saco eee 34 Hypholoma perplexum 35 Hypholoma sublateriti- Gm tt 2 30 Ithyphallusimpudicus. 48 Irpex fusco-violaceus.. 44 Lactarius chelidonium. 20 Lactarius deceptivus... 21 Lactarius deliciosus.... 21 Lactarius fumosus-.... 21 Lactarius indigo.....-. 21 Lactarius piperatus.... 22 Lactarius torminosus... 22 Lactarius volemus...-. 22 Lentinus lecomtei----.- 26 Lentinus lepideus .--.- 26 Leotia chlorocephala... 55 Leotia lubrica.-.....-- 55 Lepiota americana. ...- 10 Lepiota morgani..-..-..- 10 Lepiota naucina.....-- 11 Lepiota procera .....-- 11 Lepiota rachodes.....- 11 Lycoperdon gemmatum 49 Lycoperdon pyriforme. 49 Marasmius cohaerens... 25 Marasmius oreades.....- 25 Marasmius rotula...... 25 Merulius lacrymans.... 43 Morchellaesculenta.... 55 MUSHROOMS AND OTHER COMMON FUNGI. 5 Mutinus caninus....... 48 | Pholiota squarrosa....- 30 | Russula rubra......... 23 Mutinus elegans....... 48 | Pleurotus ostreatus .... 13 | Russula virescens... ... 23 Mycena epipterygia.... 19 | Pleurotussapidus...... 13 | Scleroderma geaster.... 52 Mycena galericulata... 20 | Pleurotus serotinus.... 13 | Scleroderma vulgare... 52 Mycena polygramma... 20 | Pleurotus ulmarius.... 13 | Sparassis crispa.......- 46 Mycena pura.........- 20 | Pluteus cervinus .....- 27 | Strobilomyces strobila- Naucoria semiorbicula- Poelyports: betulinusie 41 Waveeusesc- 5... 65-5. - 40) Lh 5 Gee 31 | Polyporus frondosus ... 41 | Stropharia semiglobata. 34 Omphalia campanella.. 16 | Polyporus gilvus ...... 41 | Tremella frondosa .-..- 45 Panaeolus retirugis .... 37 | Polyporus sulphureus.. 41 | Tremellodon gelatino- Panus stipticus........ 26 | Polystictus cinnabari- BUM Se eriooc enema 46 Paxillus atro-tomento- TRIS ep Heres eane es Sia 41 | Tricholoma equestre... 16 2 Ten ee Re aa 28 | Polystictus pergamenus 41 | Tricholoma nudum.... 17 Paxillus involutus. -... 28 | Polystictus versicolor .. 42 | Tricholoma personatum 17 Paxillus rhodoxanthus. 29 | Psathyrella disseminata 36 | Tricholoma russula .... 17 Pholiota adiposa......- 29 | Russula emetica.....-- 22 | Tricholoma terreum ... 17 Pholiota caperata....-.- 29 | Russula ochrophylla... 23 | Urnula craterium.....- 55 Pholiota marginata .... 29 ' Russula roseipes.....-- 23 ' Volvaria bombycina... 27 AGARICACE.. The classification for the genera of Agaricacez discussed in this bulletin is based upon the color of the spores. It is generally a com- paratively easy matter to form an opinion regarding the color of the spores, but if any difficulty is experienced a spore print may be made. The process is very simple, and the results are quite satisfactory. The stem is removed from the specimen from which a print is desired and the cap placed face down on a piece of paper of contrasting color, covering it with a tumbler. When the spores are mature they will fall in radiating lines on the paper. If a permanent spore print is desired, an alcoholic spray of white shellac may be employed. This is prepared by making a saturated solution of white shellac and then diluting it 50 per cent with alcohol. Key to Agaricacex. WHITE-SPORED AGARICS. Plants soft or more or less fleshy, soon decaying, not reviving well when moistened: ‘Ring or volva or both present— Wolva-audsnimesbothspresent. 3... 22222). 2 eke 8 AMANITA. peianpresent, Ting ADSeNL... . 2. ess. =e eo ttle easthat. oo AMANITOPSIS. Volva absent, ring present— SPUR RROS MOM SLOTN jo sisi. o/s/Ae oie - sibtsincyerge Hoe hjaeee Ss LEPIOTA. cuulsiauached-to: the stem.:...0..2.-.4-2e6624-5.2 4.6. ARMILLARIA. Ring and volva both absent— Sree Cenbric OT laterals) ois pissin sli sec eel Gaiscio bh PLEUROTUS. Stem central— Gills decurrent— Bigee lant AG OMKe Orked os vaio oon). Secon) 35.0122 CANTHARELLUS. Edge thin, stem fibrous outside......-.....-.-.-- CLITOCYBE. Edge thin, stem cartilaginous outside. ........... OMPHALIA. Gills sinuate, general structure fleshy. ...........-..-. TRICHOLOMA. Gills adnate! or adnexed— Cap rather fleshy, margin incurved when young...CoLLyBia. 1See the Glossary, pp. 56 to 58, for definitions of the technical terms. 6 BULLETIN 175, U. $8. DEPARTMENT OF AGRICULTURE. Plants soft or more or less fleshy, etc.—Continued. Ring and volva both absent—Continued. Stem central—Continued. Gills adnate or adnexed—Continued. bell. shaped..i5 322 AGS Bae area, MyYcENA Cap fleshy, gills very rigid and brittle, stem stout— > Milk: present... ites SU ro rare s Bae hE So LACTARIUS. Milk absent ic. S225 1a Cun oe TEE EEE eee RUSSULA. Gills various, often decurrent, adnate or only adnexed, edge thin, thick at junction of cap, usually distant, WARY nek EE ca cje See eo sap OR en ee HyYGROPHORUS. Plants coriaceous, tough, fleshy or membranaceous, reviving when moistened: Stem generally central, substance of the cap noncontinuous with that of the stem, gills thin, often connected by veins or ridges. . MARASMIUS. Stem central, excentric, lateral, or absent, substance of the cap continuous with that of the stem— Edge of gills toothed or serrate. --.\.:...5.....----2-.2--42- LENTINUS. Edge of gills not teothed\or serrate’. -22<)2 5.2 1 PANUS. Edge of gills split into two lamine and revolute. .........ScHIZOPHYLLUM. Plants.corky or woody, pills radiating? 2s ob Sh eod es ae AA ee LENZITES. ROSY-SPORED AGARICS. Stem excentric or absent and pileus lateral ..................-... CLAUDOPUS. Stem central: Volva'present,/annulus wanting: |. 21.22.0228 S220 2 OEE VOLVARIA. Volva and annulus absent— Cap easily separating from the stem, gills free............. PLUTEUS. Cap confluent with the stem, gills sinuate...............-- ENTOLOMA. OCHER-SPORED AGARICS (SPORES YELLOW OR BROWN). Gills easily separable from the flesh of the cap: Margin of the cap incurved, gills more or less decurrent forked or connected with veinlike reticulations....................- PAXILLUS. Gills not easily separable from the flesh of the cap: Universal, veil present, arachnoid 229-222 te. Eee 2 ee CoORTINARIUS. Universal veil absent— Ring present.) io ociene at ae ie re ee PHOLIOTA. Ring absent— Stem central— Captured int. 52. 50222 33.3.2 eee ee NAUCORIA. Cap not turned in......-..-: LY ES BER GALERA. Stem excentric’ or NONEC== . 222-242 eee CREPIDOTUS. BROWN-SPORED AGARICS. Cap easily separating from the stem, gills usually fre 2o22 GE DEN AGARICUS. Cap not easily separating from the stem, gills attached: Ring present... 52.5 eb 3 oe jes Se eae ee ee STROPHARIA. ° Ring absent, veil remaining attached to the margin of the cap. . HyPHoLoMaA. BLACK-SPORED AGARICS. Gills deliquescing, cap thin, ring present in some species..-.......- CoPRINUS. Gills not deliquescing: Margin of cap striate, gills not variegated...........-.--.----- PSATHYRELLA. Margin of cap not striate, gills variegated. ............-----.-- PANAEOLUS., ee MUSHROOMS AND OTHER COMMON FUNGI. 7 AMANITA. The genus Amanita is easily recognized among the white-spored agarics in typical species or early stages by the presence of a volva and a veil. Young plants are completely enveloped by the volva, and the manner in which it ruptures varies according to the species. The volva may persist in the form of, a basal cup, as rings or scales on a bulblike base, or it may be friable and evanescent. The cap is fleshy, convex, then expanded. The gills are free from the stem, which is different in substance from the cap and readily separable from it. This is a most interesting genus, on account of the great beauty of color and texture of many of its species and the fact that it contains the most poisonous of all mushrooms. While there are some edible species in the genus, the safest policy for the amateur is to avoid all mushrooms of the genus Amanita. Amanita caesarea. Czsar’s mushroom. Cap ovate to hemispherical, smooth, with prominently striate margin, reddish or orange becoming yellow; gills free, yellow; stem cylindrical, only slightly enlarged at the base, attenuated upward, flocculose, scaly below the annulus, smooth above; ring membranaceous, large, attached from its upper margin; stem and ring nor- mally orange or yellowish, in small or depauperate specimens sometimes white; flesh white, yellow under the skin, and usually yellow next to the gills; volva large, dis- tinct, white, saclike. Cap 24 to 4 or more inches broad; stem 3 to 5inches long. (PI. I, fig. 1.) This species is variously known as Cesar’s agaric, royal agaric, orange Amanita, etc. It has been highly esteemed as an article of diet since the time of the early Greeks. It is particularly abundant during rainy weather and may occur solitary, several together, or in definite rings. Although this species is edible, great caution should always be used in order not to confound it with Amanita frostiana, which is poisoncus. The points of difference of these two species are conveniently compared as follows: Species. Cap. Gills. Stem. Volva. Amanita caesarea..| Orange, smooth, oc- | Yellow.........--- SVellowi. eee White, sometimes casionally with a z breaking up into few fragments of soft, fluffy masses. volva as patches. Amanita frostiana.| Yellow, smooth or | Yellow or tinged | Whiteor yellow...| Yellow, sometimes with yellowish with yellow. breaking up into scales. fluffy, yellow frag- ments. Amanita muscaria. The fly Amanita. (Very poisonous.) Cap globose, convex, and at length flattened, at maturity margin sometimes slightly striate; flesh white, sometimes yellow under the pellicle; remnants of the volva persisting as scattered, floccose, or rather compact scales, color subject to great varia- ation, ranging from yellow to orange, or blood red, gills white or yellowish, free but reaching the stem; stem cylindrical, at first stuffed, later hollow, upper part torn into loose scales, bulb prominent, generally marked by concentric scales forming irregular ridges; ring typically apical, lacerated, lax, large. 8 BULLETIN 175, U. S. DEPARTMENT OF AGRICULTURE. Cap 33 to 54 inches broad, stem 4 to 6incheslong. (PI. I, fig.3;from V. K. Chesnut.) Amanita muscaria may be found during the summer and fall, occurring singly, or in small associations, or in patches of considerable size. It grows in cultivated soil, partially cleared land, and in woods or roadsides. It does not demand a rich soil, but rather exhibits a preference for poor ground. The color is an exceedingly variable - character, the plants being brighter colored when young and fading as they mature. The European plant possesses more gorgeous colors than the American form. ~ This is a very poisonous species, and it has been the subject of many pharmaco- logical and chemical investigations. Its chief poisonous principle is muscarine, although a second poisonous element is believed to be present, as atropine does not entirely neutralize the effect of injections of Amanita muscaria in animals. This species has been responsible for many deaths, and numerous cases of severe illness have been caused by persons mistaking Amanita muscaria, the poisonous species, for Amanita caesarea, the edible species. While typical specimens of these two species possess distinguishing characters, as already shown, it is again recommended to shun all Amanite. In Siberian Russia the natives make several uses of Amanita muscaria. Preserved in salt it is eaten, though probably more as a condiment than as a main article of diet; a decoction is popular as an intoxicant, and deaths are reported upon good authority as resulting from a ‘‘muscaria orgy.”’ Amanita phalloides. Death cup. (Deadly poisonous.) Cap white, lemon, or olive to umber, fleshy, viscid when moist, smooth or with patches or scales, broadly oval, bell shaped, convex, and finally expanded, old speci- mens sometimes depressed by the elevation of the margin; gills free, white; stem generally smooth and white, in dark varieties colored like the cap but lighter, solid downward, bulbous, hollow, and attenuated upward; ring superior, reflexed, gener- ally entire, white. The large, free volva, its lower portion closely adherent to the bulb, and the large ring are of assistance in distinguishing this species. Cap 3 to 4inches broad; stem 3 to5incheslong. (PI. I, fig. 2.) This species and its forms are subject to great variation in color, ranging from white, pale yellow, and olive to brown. Amanita phalloides is a very cosmopolitan plant and one of very common occurrence. It is the most dangerous of all mushrooms, for no antidote to overcome its deadly effect is known. It exhibits no special preference as regards habitat and is found growing in woods or cultivated land from summer to late autumn. When fresh itis without scent, but a peculiarly sickening odor is present in drying plants. Amanita rubescens. Cap oval to convex, nearly expanded when old, covered with numerous, unequal, thin, floccose, grayish scales, which are noticeably persistent in dry weather, surface smooth or very faintly striate; stem cylindrical, tapering above, bulb prominent, suffused reddish; ring membranaceous, large, fragile; volva persisting as floccose scales on the cap or present as loose fragments on the bulb. Cap 4 to 5 inches broad; stem 4 to 5 inches long, about 1 inch thick. (PI. II, fig. 4.) This species occurs quite abundantly in the late summer or early fall. It is often found in patches, but it may also appear singly. The European form is sometimes regarded as poisonous, but the American form of Amanita rubescens is considered edible. Again the advice to the amateur is to avoid all Amanitae. Dr. W. W. Ford, of Johns Hopkins Hospital, who conducted extensive experiments concerning the poisonous principle in certain Amanitae, states that the American form of this species is not poisonous to man. Bul. 175, U. S. Dept. of Agriculture. PLATE I. Fiag. 1.—AMANITA CAESAREA. Fic. 2.—AMANITA PHALLOIDES. (POISONOUS.) Fic. 3.—AMANITA MUSCARIA. (POISONOUS.) Bul. 175, U. S. Dept. of Agriculture. PLATE Il. VIP es Fic. 2.—GALERA TENERA. (EDIBLE.) Fic. 3.—COLLYBIA RADICATA. (EDIBLE.) Fia, 4.—AMANITA RUBESCENS. Bul. 175, U. S. Dept. of Agriculture. PLATE III. FIG. 1.—AMANITOPSIS VAGINATA. (EDIBLE.) FiG. 2.—AMANITA STROBILIFORMIS. PLATE IV. Bul. 175, U. S. Dept. of Agriculture. (EDIBLE. ) Fic. 1.—LEPIOTA AMERICANA. (EDIBLE.) —CORTINARIUS VIOLACEUS. Fia. 2 PLATE V. Bul. 175, U. S. Dept. of Agriculture. ( 3719103) VNIONVWN VLOIda7] \\WANTAY) Alay i © \i\ o “Old ("SNONOSIOd) ‘INVOYOW VLOIdSaq—'"| “old PLATE VI. Bul. 175, U. S. Dept. of Agriculture. (EDIBLE.) LEPIOTA PROCERA. Bul. 175, U. S. Dept. of Agriculture. PLATE VII. Fic. 1.—PLEUROTUS OSTREATUS. (EDIBLE.) FIG. 2.—LEPIOTA RACHODES. (EDIBLE.) PLATE VIII. Bul. 175, U. S. Dept. of Agriculture (agiqg) 'VHdISQVNOW ABADOLIID—'S ‘Old (‘a79g10g) ‘VATIAW vINVTIWYYy— } “‘SI4 ‘eS MUSHROOMS AND OTHER COMMON FUNGI. 9 Amanita solitaria. Cap when young hemispherical, later convex to expanded, margin even, somewhat elevated when old, scales flaky or floccose and of a sticky, farinaceous character, easily rubbed off, chalky white; gills white or cream, free or attached by only the upper inner angle; stem when young mealy or scaly, equal, solid or stuffed, with a bulb of the same character which prolonged into a rootlike process penetrates into the soil a considerable distance; ring torn, often adhering as fragments to the margin of the cap and gills; volva breaking up into scales which finally disappear. Cap 3 to 6 inches broad; stem 4 to 6 inches long, one-half to 1 inch thick. (Pl. II, fig. 1.) A comparative discussion of this species is to be found under Amanita strobiliformis. Amanita strobiliformis. Cap convex or nearly plane, white, sometimes cinereous or yellowish on the disk, with large angular, pyramidal warts, which are adnate and mostly persistent; margin extending slightly beyond the gills, sometimes bearing fragments of the ring, which is large and lacerated; gills broad, rounded behind, whitish; stem thick, equal or tapering above, solid, floccose scaly, white, bulb very large with concentric-marginate ridges and corresponding furrows, somewhat pointed below. Cap 3 to 10 inches broad; stem 3 to 8 inches long, 1 to2 inches thick. (PI. ITI, fig. 2.) There is some uncertainty as to the identity of Amanita strobiliformis and A. solitaria as they occur in America, but as this bulletin has for its object the popular treatment of the subject, the desire is to call attention to the differences of Amanita solitaria and A. strobiliformis as generally recognized by the collector and not their systematic posi- tion as determined by mycologists. Amanita solitaria does not always occur solitary, as its name suggests, but is more readily separated from A. strobiliformis by its long rooting base and conic scales than by its method of growth. While these differences are present in typical specimens, it must be remembered that many intermediate forms may occur, thus making the separation of the two species extremely difficult. Amanita verna. Destroying angel. Cap white, smooth, viscid when moist, convex then expanded, margin even; gills free and white; stem stuffed, or hollow in age, bulbous, sheathed at the base by the membranous volva; ring reflexed, forming a wide collar. By most authorities Amanita verna is considered a mere form of A. phalloides, as it has no constant morphological characters and is only separated by the pure white color and its generally more slender form. Because of its exceedingly poisonous nature it is popularly known as the ‘‘destroying angel.” AMANITOPSIS. By some mycologists Amanitopsis is considered a subgenus of Amanita, from which, however, it differs m the absence of a veil and a ring. The volva is ample and persistent, and the gills are com- pletely free from the stem, which is readily separable from the cap. Great care must be observed in collecting species of this genus for food in order not to collect specimens of Amanita from which the ring has disappeared. Amanitopsis farinosa. (Edible.) Cap gray or grayish brown, convex, becoming almost plane or depressed in the center, thin with deeply striate margin, nearly covered with a grayish powder which is readily rubbed off; gills whitish, free; stem hollow or stuffed, whitish, enlarged at base, subbulbous, with flocculent, pulverulent volva which may soon disappear. 10 BULLETIN 175, U. 8. DEPARTMENT OF AGRICULTURE. Cap 1 to 14 inches broad; stem 1 to 2 inches long, 2 to 3 lines thick. This is an interesting little species of rather infrequent occurrence. The farinose, or mealy, character of the cap isthe most striking specific feature. It appears bordering roadsides or in open woods during the summer and early fall months. : Amanitopsis vaginata. (Edible.) Cap thin and fragile, ovate to bell shaped, or expanded, sometimes umbdnate, gray, - mouse colored, or brown, smooth, shining, margin deeply striate; gills white, free; stem smooth or mealy, hollow or stuffed, not bulbous, tapering above; volva con- spicuous, soft, sheathing but free, often remaining in the ground, being easily separable from the stem. Cap 12 to 4 inches broad; stem 34 to 7 inches long. (PI. III, fig. 1; from G. F. Atkinson.) This is a very common and widely distributed species, occurring from the Pacific to the Atlantic. It is remarkable for great variation in size and color, ranging from 2 to 10 inches broad and varying from gray or umber to tawny. Because of these variations some authorities recognize several varieties. Amanitopsis vaginata grows in woods, shaded situations, or lawns. It is considered an excellent edible species, but is too easily confused with an Amanita to be recom- mended for an article of diet. LEPIOTA. The genus Lepiota may be distinguished from Amanita and Amani- topsis by the presence of a ring and the absence of avolva. The cap is generally scaly or granular, and the stem is fleshy and easily separa- ble from the cap, in which it leaves a cuplike depression. The gills are usually free and are white when young, but certain species are pink or green when mature. The ring may be fixed or free, and when the plant is young it is readily seen, but before maturity it may have disappeared. The genus contains some of the finest edible species as well as some extremely dangerous ones. Lepiota americana. (Edible.) Cap ovate, then convex, expanded, umbonate, the umbo and scales reddish brown; flesh white, becoming reddish if cut or bruised; gills white, ventricose, close, free; stem white, hollow, smooth, swollen near the base; ring rather large and delicate, and consequently it may disappear in old age. Cap 2 to 4 inches broad; stem 2 to 4 inches long, 3 to 5 linesthick. (PI. IV, fig. 1.) This mushroom is of wide geographic distribution and grows singly or in clusters, often at the base of stumps, sometimes on sawdust piles, and again on grassy lawns. The plants are white when young, with the exception of the umbo and the scales, but in drying become smoky red. Sometimes they are erect, but frequently more or less ascending. Lepiota americana may be easily recognized by the peculiarity of turning red when bruised or old. Lepiota morgani. Green gill. (Poisonous.) Cap fleshy, globose when young, expanded to plane or slightly depressed, not umbo- nate, white with a yellowish or brownish cuticle, which breaks up into scales except in the center; flesh white, changing to reddish or yellowish on being cut or bruised; gills close, lanceolate, remote, white becoming green; stem firm, smooth, hollow, subbulbous, tapering upward, white with brownish tinge; ring large, movable. Cap 5 to 9 or even 12 inches broad; stem 6 to 9 inches long, 4 to 8 lines thick. (PLY; fig. 1) | MUSHROOMS AND OTHER COMMON FUNGI. 14 Great care should be taken to avoid this species. Many instances of poisoning are well substantiated, and extreme inconvenience and serious illness have resulted from eating very small pieces of the uncooked mushroom. The gills are slow in assuming the green tinge characteristic of this species, but after being allowed to remain in ordinary room temperature the color is quite noticeable. This fungus occurs mostly on grassy places, such as lawns and parks, during the summer months, frequently* forming large ‘‘fairy rings.”’ Lepiota naucina. Smooth Lepiota. Cap smooth, rarely minutely scaly, white or smoky, almost globose when young, then convex, expanding, and becoming somewhat gibbous; flesh white; gills free from the stem, crowded, white, becoming smoky pink when old; stem rather stout, enlarged below, nearly hollow or loosely stuffed; ring adhering to the stem. Cap 14 to 3 inches broad; stem 2 to 3 inches long, 4 to 8 lines thick. (PI. V, fig. 2; from C. G. Lloyd.) Prof. Peck describes and discusses a form closely allied to Lepiota naucina which he calls L. naucinoides, the differences consisting in the smoother cap and the shape of the spores. This latter character, being a microscopic feature, isof no practical assist- ance to the amateur. These two forms are both edible, but extreme caution must be used in order not to collect poisonous or deadly white Amanitae for specimens of Lepiota before the pink tinge of the gills is apparent. Lepiota procera. Parasol mushroom. (Edible.) Cap ovate, then expanded with a distinct, smooth, brown umbo, cuticle early breaking up into brown scales showing the white flesh; gills broad, crowded, white, free, and distant from the stem; stem tubular, long, bulbous, generally scaly or spotted, its substance distinct and free from the cap, in which a cavity is left by its removal; ring large and thick, readily movable when old. Cap 3 to 6 inches broad; stem 5 to 12 inches long, about 6 lines thick. (PI. VI; from C. G. Lloyd.) This very attractive and graceful species may be collected in pastures, lawns, gardens, thin woods, or roadsides. It occurs singly or scattered, appearing during summer and early fall, and is considered an excellent edible species. Lepiota rachodes. (Edible.) Cap fleshy, fragile when mature, globose, expanded or depressed, not umbonate, at first covered with a rigid, continuous, bay-brown cuticle, which remains entire at the center, elsewhere reticulated with cracks or separated into loose scales; flesh white, quickly changing to saffron red upon being cut or broken; gills white, crowded, broad in the center and narrowing toward each end, distant from the stem; stem stout, whitish, hollow, smooth in young plant, bulbous; ring thick, movable, with scales on the under side. Cap 2 to 5 inches broad; stem 2 to 4 inches long, about 5 lines thick. (PI. VII, fig. 2; from C. G. Lloyd.) This species is closely related to Lepiota procera, of which it is sometimes considered only a variety. It differs in its stouter habit, absence of an umbo, and in the change- able flesh, which becomes tinged with red when broken. ARMILLARIA. The genus Armillaria is another white-spored agaric having a ring and no volva. The gills are attached to the stem and are sinuate or more or less decurrent. The substance of the stem and cap is con- tinuous and firm. This genus may be distinguished from Amanita 12 BULLETIN 175, U. 8. DEPARTMENT OF AGRICULTURE. and Lepiota by the continuity of the substance of the stem and cap, and it is further differentiated from Amanita by the absence of a volva. It contains several edible species. Armillaria mellea. Honey-colored mushroom. (Edible.) Cap oval to convex and expanded, sometimes with a slight elevation; smooth, or. adorned with pointed dark-brown or blackish scales, especially in the center, honey color to dull reddish brown, margin even or somewhat striate when old; gills adnate or decurrent, white or whitish, sometimes with reddish brown spots; stem elastic, spongy, sometimes hollow, smooth or scaly, generally whitish, sometimes gray or yellow above the ring, below reddish brown. Cap 14 to 6 inches broad; stem 2 to 6 inches long, one-half to three-fourths inch thick. (Pl. VIII, fig. 1; from W. A. Kellerman.) This species is extremely common and variable. It generally occurs in clusters about the base of rotten stumps and is often a serious parasite of fruit trees. Both ring and stem are subject to marked variations. The former may be thick, or thin, or en- tirely absent, and the latter uniform in diameter or bulbous. The species is edible, though not especially tender or highly flavored. On account of the great variation in color, surface of the cap, and shape of the stem, several forms of Armillaria mellea have been given varietal distinction. The following varieties as distinguished by Prof. Peck may be of assistance to the amateur: Armillaria mellea var. flava, with yellow or reddish yellow cap. Armillaria mellea var. radicata, with a tapering root. Armillaria mellea var. albida, with white or whitish cap. Armillaria nardosmia. (Edible.) Cap fleshy, firm and thick at the center, thin toward the margin, whitish with brown spots, cuticle becoming squamulose; flesh white; gills whitish, crowded, slightly emarginate; stem stout, fibrous, sheathed by the brown velvety veil. Cap about 3 inches broad; stem 14 to 24 inches long. This plant resembles a short-stemmed Lepiota, but is more robust than species of that genus. Itis found on the ground in woods, especially in the sandy soil of conifers. Its strong taste and smeM of almonds disappear in cooking. Armillaria ventricosa. Cap fleshy, convex or nearly plane, smooth, shining white, margin thin and involute; flesh whitish; gills narrow and close, decurrent, sometimes dentate or denticulate on the edge, whitish; stem thick and short, ventricose, abruptly pointed at the base; ring lacerated and membranaceous. Cap 4 to 7 inches broad; stem 2 to 3 inches long, ventricose portion 1 to 2 inches broad. (Pl. IX.) This is a coarse, conspicuous fungus. It was first described as Lentinus on account of the serrate character of the gills mentioned in the above description. This species was collected in Alabama and described by Prof. Peck in 1896; since that date several collections have been made in the District of Columbia, but it is not generally ile as having a wide distribution. PLEUROTUS. The genus Pleurotus is chiefly distinguished among the white-spored agarics by the excentric stem or resupinate cap. The stem is fleshy and continuous with the substance of the cap, but it is subject to great variation in the different species and may be excentric, lateral, or en- MUSHROOMS AND OTHER COMMON FUNGI. oe tirely absent. The gills are decurrent or sometimes adnate, edge acute. Most of the species grow on wood, buried roots, or decayed stumps. This genus corresponds to Claudopus of the pink-spored and Crepi- dotus of the brown-spored forms. : Pleurotus ostreatus. Oyster mushroom. (Edible.) (¥® Cap either sessile or stipitate, shell shaped or dimidiate, ascending, fleshy, soft, » a R smooth, moist, in color white, cream, grayish to brownish ash; stem present or absent (if present, short, firm, elastic, ascending, base hairy); gills white, decurrent, some- what distant, anastomosing behind to form an irregular network. Cap 3 to 5 inches broad; mostly cespitose imbricated. (Pl. VII, fig. 1.) A very fine edible species, growing on limbs or trunks of living or dead trees, of cosmopolitan distribution, appearing from early summer until late fall. Pleurotus sapidus. (Edible.) This species very closely resembles Pleurotus ostreatus and is distinguished from it by the lilac-tinged spores, a character difficult or impossible for the amateur to detect. From the mycophagist’s point of view, these two species are equally attractive. Pleurotus serotinus. (Edible.) Cap fleshy, compact, convex or nearly plane, dimidiate reniform, suborbicular, edge involute, finally wavy, smooth, yellowish green, sooty olive, or reddish brown, in wet weather with a viscid pellicle; gills close, distinct, whitish or yellowish, minutely tomentose or squamulose with blackish points. ! Cap 1 to 3 inches broad. In general appearance this fungus resembles Claudopus nidulans, but is separated from it by the color of the spores, Pleurotus belonging to the section of white-spored agarics and Claudopus to the rosy-spored species. The plants grow on dead branches or trunks and are gregarious or imbricate. Pleurotus serotinus is edible but not particularly good, its chief recommendation being the lateness of its occurrence in the fall, when other more tempting species have disappeared. Pleurotus ulmarius. (Edible.) Cap fairly regular, although inclined to excentricity, convex, margin incurved, later plane, horizontal, even, smooth, white or whitish, at disk shades of tan or brown; flesh white, tough; gills broad, rather distant or rounded behind; stem more or less excentric, curved, ascending, firm, solid, elastic, thickened, and tomentose at the base. Cap 3 to 5 inches broad; stem 2 to 3 inches long. This species occurs abundantly on dead elm branches or trunks or growing from wounds of living trees. Though exhibiting a special fondness for this host, it is not confined to elm trees. It is readily distinguished from Pleurotus ostreatus by the long stem and by the emarginate or rounded gills. It is considered an excellent edible species and occurs abundantly in the fall. CANTHARELLUS. In the genus Cantharellus the cap is fleshy or submembranaceous, continuous with the stem, and has the margin entire, wavy, or lobed. The gills are decurrent, thick, narrow, blunt, foldlike, irregularly forked, and connected by netlike veins. The two species here dis- cussed are of common occurrence. 14 BULLETIN 175, U. S. DEPARTMENT OF AGRICULTURE. Cantharellus aurantiacus. False chanterelle. Cap fleshy, soft, somewhat silky, shape variable, convex, plane or infundibuli- form, margin wavy or lobed, inrolled when young, later simply incurved, dull orange or brownish, especially in the center; flesh yellowish; gills rather thin, decurrent, forked, dark orange; stem spongy, fibrous, colored like the cap, larger at the base than at the apex. Plant 1 to 3 inches in height; cap 1 to 3 inches broad. This plant is more slender and the gills are thinner than those of Cantharellus cibarius, from which it can be readily distinguished. The taste is generally mild, but sometimes slightly bitter. Foreign and American mycophagists do not agree in regard to the edibility of the species. It is common on the ground or on very rotten logs. » Cantharellus cibarius. The chanterelle. (Edible.) Cap fleshy, thick, smooth, irregularly expanded, sometimes deeply depressed, opaque egg yellow, margin sometimes wavy; flesh white; gills decurrent, thick, narrow, branching or irregularly connected, same color as cap; stem short, solid, expanding into a cap of the same color. Plant 2 to 4 inches in height; cap 2 to 3 inches broad. (PI. X, fig. 2.) ; An agreeable odor of apricots may be observed, especially in the dried plants of this species, but its absence need not be construed as affecting the validity of an iden- tification established by other characters. The chanterelle has long been considered one of the most highly prized edible mushrooms. The remark of a foreign mycologist is recalled that ‘‘The chanterelle is included when the most costly dainties are sought for state dinners.’’ It is a common summer species found in open woods and grassy places. CLITOCYBE. The white-spored genus Clitocybe contains many species, and some of them possess definite generic characters which render identifica- tion easy, while others are extremely difficult to recognize. The cap is generally fleshy, later in some species concave to infundibuliform, thinner at the margin, which is involute. The gills are adnate or decurrent. The stem is externally fibrous, tough, not readily separ- able from the flesh of the cap. The gills in Clitocybe are never sinu- ate, a character separating it from Tricholoma, with which it agrees in having a fibrous stem. Clitocybe amethystina. (Edible.) Cap at first hemispherical, later broadly convex or nearly plane, sometimes de- pressed in the center and umbilicate, hygrophanous, violaceous when moist, grayish or grayish white when dry, often striate on the margin when young; gills violaceous, rather thick, subdistant, adnate or slightly decurrent; stem slender, fibrillose, rigid, straight or flexuose, stuffed, later hollow, paler than the moist cap. Cap 1 to 2 inches broad; stem 2 to 3 inches long. This species is edible, but slightly tough. Its characters are quite constant, and it should be recognized by the violaceous color of the cap when moist, the grayish hue when dry, and the persistent violaceous color of the gills. Clitocybe dealbata. (Edible.) Cap convex, then plane, finally revolute and undulate, dry, even, smooth, some- what shining; flesh thin, dry, white; gills adnate, crowded, scarcely decurrent, white; stem equal, erect or ascending, stuffed, wholly fibrous, apex subpruinose. 1 Berkeley. MUSHROOMS AND OTHER COMMON FUNGI. 15 Cap 1 to 14 inches broad; stem about 1 inch long. This species is edible, common, and of quite wide distribution, occurring in grass and woodlands. The ivory top is quite distinctive. Clitocybe illudens. (Poisonous.) Cap fleshy, convex or expanded, then depressed, sometimes with a small umbo, saffron yellow, in age becoming sordid or brownish; gills broad, distant, unequally decurrent; stem solid, firm, smooth and tapering toward the base, ascending, curved, rarely erect, color same as cap. Cap 4 to 6inches broad; stem 5 to8incheslong. (PI. X, fig.1; from M. A. Williams.) This is a very striking fungus both on account of its color and the large clumps it forms about stumps or decaying trees. It is often irregular in form, from the crowded habit of growth. On account of the phosphorescence which renders it conspicuous at night, it is commonly known as the jack-o’-lantern. While not considered poisonous, it produces illness and is to be carefully avoided. It may be found from August to October. . Clitocybe laccata. (Edible.) Cap thin, convex or later expanded, even or slightly umbilicate, smooth or scurfy, hygrophanous when moist, dull reddish yellow; gills adnate, notched or decurrent, pinkish; stem slender, equal, fibrillose, purple, base clothed with a white tomentum. Cap one-half to 2 inches broad; stem | to sometimes 5 inches long. (PI. XI, fig. 2.) In Clitocybe laccata the flesh is thin, of poor flavor, and inclined to be tough. It has a wide geographic range, is common, and extremely variable in form and character of habitat. Clitocybe monadelpha. (Edible.) Cap fleshy, convex, then depressed, at first smooth, later scaly, honey colored to pallid-brownish or reddish; gills short, decurrent, flesh colored; stem elongated, twisted, crooked, fibrous, tapering at the base, pallid brownish. Cap 1 to3 inches broad; stem3to7incheslong. (PI1.VIII, fig. 2; from C. G. Lloyd.) This species bears a resemblance to Armillaria mellea, but may be distinguished from it by the absence of a ring and the decurrent gills. The plants are edible, but soon become water soaked and uninviting. They grow in large clusters in grass or about roots or stumps and are to be found from spring until late fall. Clitocybe multiceps. (Edible.) Cap convex, fleshy, firm, thin except on the disk, slightly moist in wet weather, whitish, grayish, or yellowish gray, in young plants sometimes quite brown; flesh white, taste mild; gills white, close, adnate or somewhat decurrent; stem equal or little thickened, solid or stuffed, elastic, firm, somewhat pruinose at the apex. Cap 1 to 3 inches broad; stem 2 to 4 inches long. (Pl. XI, fig. 1.) This species is subject to great variation in size, color, shape of gills, texture, and taste. Sometimes the gills are very slightly sinuate, reminding one of the genus Tricholoma. Clitocybe multiceps appears abundantly in the spring and autumn, grow- ing in dense clusters often hidden by the grass or stubble. It is edible and by many considered very good. Clitocybe ochropurpurea. Cap subhemispherical to flat, in age upturned and irregular, pale yellow or yellowish tan, slightly changing to purple, smooth or somewhat hairy; gills adnate or decurrent, thick, broader behind, purple; stem solid, equal or swollen in center, conspicuously fibrous, paler in color than the pileus. Cap 2 to 4 inches broad; stem 24 to5incheslong. (Pl. XII, fig. 2.) 16 BULLETIN 175, U. S. DEPARTMENT OF AGRICULTURE. - This species is very common in the summer and autumn and exhibits a decided preference for clayey soil.. It occurs in grassy places or open woods, either solitary or in small clusters. Clitocybe ochropurpurea is edible and though tough is said to be excellent when well cooked. OMPHALIA. In the genus Omphalia the cap is generally thin, at first umbilicate, - but later funnel shaped, with the margin either incurved or straight. The stem is cartilaginous, its flesh being continuous with that of the pileus but differing in character. Species of Omphalia are common on rotten wood on hilly slopes and ‘especially abundant in damp weather. Some species are extremely small. The genus is closely related to Mycena and Collybia, but it is sepa- rated from them by the character of the gills, which are decurrent from the first. Omphalia campanella. (Edible.) .Cap campanulate, sometimes expanded, umbilicate, smooth, hygrophanous, rusty yellow, slightly striate; gills narrow, arcuate, yellow, connected by veins, decurrent; stem slender, horny, smooth, hollow, brown, paler at apex, hairy at base. Cap 4 to 8 lines broad; stem may be 1 inch long and scarcely 1 line thick. (Pl. XII, figs 1) This little fungus may be found during the summer and fall. It is very common and widely distributed, growing on rotten logs in clusters or tufts, and exhibits a pref- erence for coniferous wood. It is edible, tender, and of a fairly good flavor. TRICHOLOMA. The genus Tricholoma is large and contains both edible and poison- ous species, most of which are autumnal and terrestrial. The cap . _ is fleshy, convex, never truly umbilicate or umbonate. A volva and ring are wanting. The gills are attached to the stem and sinuate, the degree depending upon the particular species. It has a fleshy- fibrous stem, generally short and stout, the flesh of which is con- tinuous with that of the cap. Tricholoma equestre. (Edible.) Cap convex becoming expanded, margin incurved at first, then slightly wavy, viscid, sometimes scaly, pale yellowish with a greenish or brownish tinge; flesh white or slightly yellow; gills sulphur yellow, crowded, rounded behind, and almost free; stem stout, solid, pale yellow, or white. Cap 2 to 3 inches broad; stem 1 to 2 inches long, one-half to three-fourths inch thick. (PISXATE figh 1 Pr XV: fig. '3.) This species has a fairly wide geographical distribution and occurs very abundantly in Virginia, Maryland, and the District of Columbia from the middle of November until about Christmas. It is to be found in pine woods, where it forms irregular or incomplete fairy rings. The plants exert considerable force in pushing their way out of the ground and through the dense mat of needles, which often adhere so closely to the caps that slight elevations are the only indications of the presence of the mush- rooms. Tricholoma equestre is a very excellent edible species and is delicious when fried or made into soup. The latter resembles turkey soup, but possesses a more delicate flavor. : Bul. 175, U. S. Dept. of Agriculture. FiG. 1.—ARMILLARIA VENTRICOSA (YOUNG SPECIMEN). Fic. 2.—ARMILLARIA VENTRICOSA (MATURE SPECIMEN). PLATE |X. Bul. 175, U. S. Dept. of Agriculture. PLATE X. Fic. 1.—CLITOCYBE ILLUDENS. (POISONOUS.) Fic. 2.—CANTHARELLUS CIBARIUS. (EDIBLE.) - Bul. 175, U. S. Dept. of Agriculture. Fic. 1.—CLITOCYBE MULTICEPS. Fig. 2.—CLITOCYBE LACCATA. (EDIBLE. ) (EDIBLE.) PLATE X\I. PLATE XII. ept. of Agriculture. S.D (EDIBLE. ) FiG. 1.—OMPHALIA CAMPANELLA. : - (EDIBLE. ) FIG. 2.—CLITOCYBE OCHROPURPUREA. Bul. 175, U. S. Dept. of Agriculture. (EDIBLE. ) Fig. 2.—URNULA CRATERIUM. (EDIBLE. ) Fig. 1.—TRICHOLOMA EQUESTRE. PLATE XIII. (EDIBLE. ) FIG. 3.—AGARICUS CAMPESTRIS. Bul. 175, U. S. Dept. of Agriculture. PLATE XIV. FIG. 1.—TRICHOLOMA PERSONATUM. (EDIBLE.) Fia@. 2.—TRICHOLOMA TERREUM. (EDIBLE.) ‘| ET | eri | \a i \- a * Fic. 3.—TRICHOLOMA EQUESTRE, SHOWING HABITAT. (EDIBLE.) Bul. 175, U. S. Dept. of Agriculture. PLATE XV. Fia. 1.—COLLYBIA BUTYRACEA. (EDIBLE.) Fic. 2.—COLLYBIA DRYOPHILA. (EDIBLE.) Fia@. 3.—COLLYBIA VELUTIPES. (EDIBLE.) Bul. 175, U. S. Dept. of Agriculture. PLATE XVI. ace eee Fic. 1.—COLLYBIA PLATYPHYLLA, TWO PLANTS AND SECTION OF CAP SHOWING BROAD GILLS. (EDIBLE.) Fic. 2.—COLLYBIA PLATYPHYLLA, SHOWING HABITAT. (EDIBLE.) ee me ne me alana — a in . o ee ec , -_— MUSHROOMS AND OTHER COMMON FUNGI, Lé Tricholoma nudum. (Edible.) Entire plant at first violaceous, becoming paler and sometimes reddish; cap con- vex, then expanded and sometimes depressed, moist, smooth, margin incurved, thin, naked, flesh colored, comparatively thin, but firm and solid; gills crowded, rounded behind, and somewhat decurrent if cap is depressed, violet, but later may be reddish; . stem equal, stuffed, violaceous, becoming pale. Cap 2 to 3 inches broad; stem 2 to 3 inches long, one-half inch thick. Edible, very good; according to all authorities, the more delicate flavor of young plants makes them preferable to those in which the color changes have taken place; on rich ground among leaves. Tricholoma personatum. (Edible.) Cap convex, expanded, slightly depressed, fleshy, moist, pale tan, tinged gray or violet, young plants may be entirely violet, margin downy, involute; flesh whitish; gills crowded, rather broad, rounded behind , nearly free, violaceous, ihe to dull reddish brown; stem stout, subbulbous, siete, solid, colored like cap or lighter. Cap 2 to 5 inches broad; stem 14 to 24 inches long, peal to three-fourths inch thick. (Pl. XIV, fig. 1.) Tricholoma personatum is to be found quite commonly in the late summer and fall months on the ground in the woods and open places. One of the most acceptable edible species. Tricholoma personatum and T. nudum are often confusing to the amateur, but may be separated from each other by the fact that in 7. nudum the margin of the cap is naked and thinner than in 7. personatum. Tricholoma russula. (Edible.) Cap convex, later plane, and sometimes depressed in center, granular, viscid in damp weather, red or flesh colored, becoming lighter at the margin, which is involute and in young plants downy; flesh white or tinged with red under the cuticle, taste mild; gills rounded or somewhat decurrent, rather distant, white, later becoming red spotted; stem solid, white, stained with red dots, or squamules. Cap 3 to 5 inches broad;. stem 1 to 3 inches long, one-half to three-fourths inch thick. This species is to be found in mixed woods and hilly slopes from August until after frost. It may occur solitary, but often is found in patches. Edible and reported of fine flavor. There is frequently a sharp line of demarcation which appears like a well-defined ridge between the gills and the substance of the stem. Tricholoma terreum. (Edible.) Cap fleshy, convex, or nearly plane, sometimes umbonate, innately fibrillose, floc- cose or scaly, grayish brown or mouse colored; flesh white or light gray; gills sub- distant, adnexed, white or ash colored; stem solid or hollow. Cap 1 to 3 inches broad; stem 1 to 2 inches long. (Pl. XIV, fig. 2.) This species grows on the ground in mixed or coniferous woods. Itis found abun- dantly from September to November and much later in Virginia, Maryland, and the District of Columbia. Tricholoma terreum frequently occurs in association with T. equestre, appearing in abundance when the season has been too dry for a good run of T’. equestre. COLLYBIA. : In the genus Collybia the volva and veil are both wanting, and the cap is fleshy, usually thin with incurved margin. The gills are free, notched or sinuate, membranaceous, and soft; the stem is cartilagi- 73431°—Bull. 175—15——2 18 BULLETIN 175, U. S. DEPARTMENT OF AGRICULTURE. nous or hollow, with a cartilaginous bark, and differs in substance from the cap. Mycena and Collybia both have cartilaginous stems, but in young plants of Collybia the margin of the cap is inrolled, while in Mycena it 1s straight and closely applied to the stem. Species of Collybia are to be found in woods on rotten stumps, on decayed leaves, and on lawns. A strong alkaline or rancid odor is peculiar to some species, and the presence of such a character should be noted while collections are fresh. Many species are edible. Collybia butyracea. Cap reddish brown, dark in center, becoming pale toward the margin, convex, then expanded, somewhat umbonate, smooth, even, dry but feeling oily; flesh soft, buttery, whfte or flesh colored; gills thin, crowded, slightly adnexed, edge notched, white, never spotted; stem cartilaginous, striate, hollow or stuffed, reddish, generally smooth, but may be downy, attenuated upward. Cap 2 to 3 inches broad; stem 2 to 3 inches long. (Pl. XV, fig. 1; from Geological and Natural History Survey of Connecticut.) Collybia butyracea may be distinguished from C. dryophila, by the variable color of the dark, umbonate, greasy-looking cap, the somewhat uneven edges of the gills, and the upward-tapering stem. Itis found solitary or gregarious in woods, especially under coniferous trees, and it is reported to be edible. Collybia dryophila. Cap convexo-plane, sometimes depressed in center, smooth, tan or reddish bay brown, margin even or sometimes irregular, incurved when young; flesh white, thin; gills narrow, crowded, almost free, or with a decurrent tooth, white or pale; stem smooth, cartilaginous, hollow, yellowish or reddish, base sometimes enlarged. Cap 1 to 3 inches broad; stem 1 to 3 inches long, 2 to 4 lines thick. (PI. XV, fig. 2.) The species is common, usually found in woods, but sometimes in lawns and open places, and is subject to variations difficult to definitely describe. One peculiarity occasionally observed is the development of certain abnormal outgrowths of the cap tissue. Collybia dryophila is reported to be edible by American mycophagists, but one for- eign authority has cited a case of illness which followed its use. Collybia platyphylla. Broad-gilled Collybia. (Edible.) Cap convex, then expanded plane, brown or grayish, streaked with dark fibrils, watery when moist, margin upturned in wet weather or when old; flesh white; gills broad, distant, deeply emarginate, white, soft, broken or cracked when old; stem whitish, stuffed, striate, sometimes powdered at the apex, bluntly rooted. Cap 3 to 4 inches broad; stem 3 to 4 inches long, 6 lines thick. (Pl. XVI, figs. 1 and 2.) This quite common species is one of the large mushrooms found in the early spring and continuously until autumn. In common with several species of this genus, it- presents numerous variations and abortive growths; hence, its identification 1s some- times puzzling. The abundant, cordlike rooting mycelium may assist in its recogni- tion. It grows either solitary or gregarious on ground containing decaying wood and among leaves near old stumps. MUSHROOMS AND OTHER COMMON FUNGI, 19 Collybia radicata. Rooting Collybia. (Edible.) ‘Cap convex to nearly plane, distinctly umbonate, often wrinkled, especially near the umbo, grayish brown or almost white, glutinous when moist, margin incurved when young, sometimes upturned when mature; flesh thin, white; gills white, broad, .ventricose, distant, adnexed, sometimes notched behind; stem smooth, striate, grooved or mealy, straight, slightly twisted, same color as the cap, but generally paler, slightly tapering upward, and with a long, rooting base. Cap 14 to 3 inches broad; stem 4 to 8 inches long, 3 to 5 lines thick. (PI. II, fig. 3.) The ‘‘rooted Collybia” may be found in woods or on shaded grassy places, either singly or in groups. It is readily recognized by the distinctive character of the gills and by the tapering, pointed root, which often greatly exceeds the stem in length. It has always been reported as edible and possessing a sweet, delicate flavor until recently, when collections of distinctly bitter plants were made in New York. Collybia velutipes. (Edible.) . Cap convex, soon plane, sometimes irregular and excentric, smooth, viscid, tawny yellow, with margin probably lighter than the disk; flesh thick in the center, thin at the margin, soft, watery, white or yellowish; gills broad, rather distant, unequal, tawny or light yellow, rounded behind and slightly adnexed; stem tough, cartilaginous, densely velvety villose, deep umber becoming black, equal or slightly enlarged at base, hollow or stuffed. Cap 1 to 3 inches broad; stem 1 to 3 inches long, 2 to 4 lines thick. (Pl. XV, fig. 3; from C. G. Lloyd.) : The velvety-stemmed Collybia is readily recognized by its dark villose stem and viscid cap, which in wet weather may even appear to have a thick, glutinous coat. It grows on ground which contains decaying wood, on stumps, or even on living trees where the mycelium may have gained entrance through a wound. In such instances it assumes a semiparasitic habit and considerable injury to the tree may result. While Collybia velutipes is reported as occurring in every month of the year, it is especially a cold-weather species. MYCENA. In the genus Mycena the cap is thin, conic or bell shaped, and usually streaked with longitudinal lines. In some species it is blunt or umbonate when expanded. The margin is at first straight and closely applied to the stem. The gills are adnate or adnexed, and in some species there is a slight decurrent tooth. The plants are small, brittle, and often possess a strong alkaline odor or an odor of radishes, which frequently disappears in drying. As the odor is not permanent, the collector should promptly note the _ character when the specimens are fresh. One species not here de- seribed is bitter. Mycena epipterygia. Cap conic or bell shaped, rather obtuse, gray, viscid, skin peeling off readily when moist, margin striate, sometimes notched; gills whitish or gray, tinged with red or blue, decurrent by a tooth; stem tough, hollow, flexuous or straight, yellowish or same color as cap, viscid when moist, villose at base. Cap one-half to 1 inch broad; stem 2 to 4 inches long, perhaps less than J line thick. These little plants are widely distributed and grow either solitary or in clusters on the ground or on branches among moss and dead leaves. They are devoid of the alka- jine odor possessed by a number of the other species of this genus. The subject of their edibility appears not to have received attention. 20 BULLETIN 175, U. S. DEPARTMENT OF AGRICULTURE. Mycena galericulata. (Edible.) Cap conical, bell shaped, umbonate when expanded, dry and smooth, brownish gray, striate to the umbo; gills white to flesh colored, adnate, slightly decurrent, rather distant, unequal, connected by veins; stem hollow, rigid, polished, villose at base. Cap three-fourths inch to 14 inches broad; stem 1 to 3 inches long, 2 lines thick. (Pl. XVII, fig. 1; from F. E. Clements.) This is an extremely variable species. Authors sometimes recognize three varie- ties, longipes, expansus, and calopus. The variety longipes is distinguished by the extreme length of the stem, the variety expansus by the breadth and expansion of its cap, and calopus, the most attractive variety, by the chestnut-colored stem. The plants are common and often abundant, generally growing in clusters united by the downy hairs of the base of the stems. Both caps and stems of young plants are re- ported edible and as possessing a delicate flavor. Mycena polygramma. Cap conical, bell shaped, umbonate when expanded, smooth, grayish brown, mar- gin striate; gills narrow, white, adnate, and _ slightly Heeurent: stem tough, hollow, shining, striate or sulcate, paler than the cap, villose at base. Cap three-fourths to 1 inch ae stem about 5 inches long and 1 line thick. This species closely resembles ieee galericulata and has the same general habit of growth, the main point of difference being its long, tough, shining striate or parallel- grooved stem. Mycena pura. Cap conical, bell shaped, or convex and expanded, obtusely umbonate, smooth or sometimes rugose in the center, rose colored, purple, or lilac, margin finely striate; gills broad, adnate to sinuate when old, entirely white or colored like the cap and white on the edge, which is sometimes wavy; stem white when young, later colored hike the cap and lighter at apex, straight or ascending, hollow, smooth or slightly vil- lose at base. Cap three-fourths inch to 14 inches broad; stem 2 to 3 inches long, | to 2 lines thick. This species is common, widely distributed, and may be collected in moist woods or open grassy places. The entire plants are of an almost uniform color and have a strong odor of radishes. LACTARIUS. The distinguishing feature of the genus Lactarius is the presence of a white or colored milk, especially in the gills. The entire plant is brittle and inclined to rigidity. The fleshy cap is more or less de- pressed and frequently marked with concentric zones. The gills are often somewhat decurrent, but in certain species are adnate or ad- nexed, unequal in length, and often forked. The stem is stout, rigid, central, or slightly excentric. Lactarius chelidonium. (Edible.) Cap firm, convex and depressed in the center, glabrous, slightly viscid when moist, ; grayish yellow or tawny, at length stained bluish or greenish, generally zonate, mar- gin involute at first and naked; gills narrow, crowded, sometimes forked, and some- times joining to form reticulations, adnate or slightly decurrent, saffron yellow to salmon; stem short, nearly equal, hollow, colored like the cap. Cap 2 to 24 inches broad; stem 1 to 13 inches long, about one-half inch thick. (PI. OVI, fies 2.) MUSHROOMS AND OTHER COMMON FUNGI. 21 This species is closely related to Lactarius deliciosus, to which in flavor and sub- stanceitisscarcely inferior. Itis paler than that species and the milk is saffron yellow ratherthanorange. The plantsarefragileand when wounded turn blue, and later green, They are to be found especially in dry localities in the vicinity of pine woods in September and October. | Lactarius deceptivus. (Edible.) Cap fleshy, convex umbilicate, then expanded and centrally depressed, somewhat infundibuliform, white or whitish, margin at first involute, covered with a dense soft cottony tomentum, filling the space between the margin and the stem, finally spread- ing or elevated and more or less fibrillose; gills whitish or cream colored, rather broad, distant or subdistant, adnate or decurrent, forking; stem solid, nearly equal, pruinose- pubescent. Cap 24 to 54 inches broad; stem three-fourths inch to 3 inches long. (Pl. XVII, fig. 3.) Lactarius deceptivus is found in woods and open places from July to September. It is coarse, but fairly good after its peppery taste is lost by cooking. Lactarius deliciosus. (Edible.) Cap convex, but depressed in the center when quite young, finally funnel shaped, smooth, slightly viscid, deep orange, yellowish or grayish orange, generally zoned, margin naked, at first involute, unfolding as the plant becomes infundibuliform; flesh soft, pallid; gills crowded, narrow, often branched, yellowish orange; stem equal or attenuated at the base, stuffed, then hollow, of the same color as the cap except that it is paler and sometimes has dark spots. Cap 2 to 5 inches broad; stem | to 2 inches long, 1 inch thick. This fungus is distinctive, on account of its orange color and the concentric zones of light and dark orange on the cap and because of the saffron red or orange milk. A peculiarity of the plant is that it turns green upon bruising and in age changes from the original color togreenish. Lactarius deliciosusis widely distributed and of common occurrence, appearing on the ground in woods, solitary or in patches, from June or July to October. As the name indicates, it is considered a delicious species, and that it has a preeminent claim to the name is unchallenged. Even by the ancients it was considered ‘‘food for the gods.”’ Lactarius fumosus. (Suspicious.) Cap convex, plane or slightly depressed, snuff brown or coffee colored, dry gla- brous or pruinose, very smooth, margin entire or sometimes wavy; flesh white, chang- ing to reddish when wounded; gills subdistant, adnate, or slightly decurrent, white then yellow, becoming pinkish or salmon where bruised; stem nearly equal or slightly tapering downward, stuffed, then hollow, colored like the cap. Cap 2 to 3 inches broad; stem 14 to 24 inches long, about 6 lines thick. This species varies considerably in size, color, and closeness of the gills. The dis- tinguishing features for field identification are the coffee-colored cap and the change- able color of the flesh and gills. Its use should be strictly avoided, as it closely resem- bles Lactarius fuliginosus, a poisonous species. These two species, L. fumosus and L. fuliginosus, are sometimes considered identical.’ Lactarius indigo. (Edible.) Cap at first umbilicate and the margin involute, later cap depressed or infundibuli-. form and margin elevated, indigo blue with a silvery gray luster, zonate, fading in age, becoming greenish and less distinctly zoned, milk abundant and dark blue; gills crowded, indigo blue, changing to greenish in age; stem short, nearly equal, hollow. 1 Burlingham, Gertrude S. Study of the Lactarie of the United States. Memoirs, Torrey Botanical Club, v. 14, no. 1, p. 84, 1908. 22 BULLETIN 175, U. S. DEPARTMENT OF AGRICULTURE. Cap 2 to 5 inches broad; stem 1 to 2 inches long. (Pl. XVIII, fig. 2.) Lactarius indigo is easily recognized by its striking blue color. It occurs in mixed or coniferous woods in summer and autumn. Though not particularly abundant, several plants are generally found in fairly close range of one another. Lactarius piperatus. Pepper cap. (Edible.) Cap fleshy, thick, convex, umbilicate, when mature funnel shaped, eveh, smooth, zoneless, margin involute when young; flesh white; gills narrow, crowded, edge obtuse, in some forms arcuate, and then extended upward, white, reported with occa- sional yellow spots; stem equal or tapering below, thick, white, sometimes pruinose. Cap 34 to 5 inches broad, sometimes reported considerably larger; stem 1 to 2 inches long. (Pl. XVIII, fig. 1; from G. F. Atkinson.) The milk in the ‘‘pepper cap” is abundant, white, unchangeable, and extremely acrid, to which character is due the specific name. This species is very common and abundant from June to October. Lactarius torminosus. (Poisonous.) Cap convex then depressed, surface viscid when young or moist, yellowish red or ochraceous with pink shades, margin involute when young, persistently tomentose hairy; gills crowded, narrow, often tinged with yellow or flesh color; stem cylin- drical or slightly tapering at the base, hollow, whitish. Cap 2 to 34 inches broad; stem 14 to 3 inches long, 4 to 8 lines thick. (Pl. XVIII, fig. 3; from G. F. Atkinson.) . According to some authors this species is injurious only when raw. Itis cooked and eaten in Sweden. In Russia it is enjoyed dressed with oil and vinegar or itis pre- served by drying. Lactarius volemus. (Edible.) Cap convex, nearly plane or slightly depressed, glabrous, dry, azonate, brownish terra cotta, somewhat wrinkled when old; gills adnate or slightly decurrent, close, whitish, becoming sordid or brownish when bruised; stem more or less equal, firm, solid, glabrous, colored like the cap or paler; milk white, abundant, and mild, becom- ing thick when exposed to the air. Cap 2 to 5 inches broad; stem 1 to 4 inches long, 4 to 10 lines thick. (Pl. XIX, fig. 1.) This species is considered delicious, and is quite common from midsummer to frost on semicleared or sprout land. RUSSULA. The genus Russula is similar in form, brittleness, and general appearance to Lactarius, from which it differs only in the absence of milk. The species are very abundant in the summer, extending into the fall months. Most species of Russula are regarded as edible, but several are known to be poisonous. It is advisable to abstain from eating any red forms until perfectly familiar with the different species. Russula emetica. (Poisonous.) Cap oval to bell shaped, becoming flattened or depressed, smooth, shining, rosy to dark red when old, fading to tawny, sometimes becoming yellow, margin finally furrowed and tuberculate; flesh white, but reddish under the separable pellicle; gills nearly free, somewhat distant, shining white; taste very acrid; stem stout, spongy-stuffed, fragile when old, white or reddish. Cap 3 to 4 inches broad; stem 24 to 4 inches long. -* MUSHROOMS AND OTHER COMMON FUNGI, 23 Russula emetica is a handsome plant of wide distribution found during summer and autumn on the ground in woods or open places. Although some enthusiastic mycopha- gists testify to its edibility, it is best to consider the species poisonous. Russula ochrophylla. Cap convex, becoming nearly plane or very slightly depressed in the center, when old purple or purplish red, margin even, sometimes faintly striate when old; flesh white, purplish under the cuticle; gills adnate, entire, a few forked at the base, inter- spaces somewhat venose, at first yellowish, ochraceous buff when mature, powdery from the spores; stem mostly equal, solid or spongy within, rosy or red, paler than the cap. Cap 2 to 4 inches broad; stem 24 to 3 inches long. Russula ochrophylla may be found growing singly or in small patches on the ground in woods, mostly under trees, according to Prof. Peck, especially under oak trees. In Virginia, Maryland, and the District of Columbia it is abundant in July and August and is to be found less frequently in September and the first part of October. Russula roseipes. (Edible.) Cap convex, sometimes plane or slightly depressed, at first viscid, then dry and faintly striate on the margin, rosy red, frequently modified by pink or ochraceous shades; gills moderately close, ventricose, more or less adnate, whitish becoming yellow; stem stout, stuffed or somewhat hollow, white tinged with red. Cap 1 to 2 inches broad; stem’14 to 3 inches long. This species grows on the ground in mixed, but generally coniferous, woods. It appears in the late summer and autumn and is reported excellent, though, as already stated, the amateur should be cautious and avoid all red species of this genus. Russula rubra. Cap convex, flattened, finally depressed, dry, pellicle absent, polished, cinnabar red, becoming tan when old; flesh white, reddish under the cuticle; gills adnate, somewhat crowded, whitish then yellowish, often red on the edge; stem stout, solid, varying white orred. Cap 24 to 4 inches broad; stem 2 to 3 inches long, about 1 inch thick. This species is extremely acrid, and, as there are conflicting opinions concerning its edibility, it is best for the amateur to refrain from collecting it. It is found in woods on the ground in summer and autumn. Russula virescens. (Edible.) Cap at first rounded, then expanded, when old somewhat depressed in the center, dry, green, the surface broken up into. quite regular, more or less angular areas of deeper color, margin straight, obtuse, even; gills adnate, somewhat crowded, equal or forked; stem equal, thick, solid or spongy, rivulose, white. Cap 34 to 5 inches broad; stem about 2 inches long. (Pl. XIX, fig. 2.) This fungus is noticeable on account of the color and areolate character of the cap. In Virginia, Maryland, and the District of Columbia it occurs commonly either solitary or in small patches, but not in very great abundance, from July to September, but it has been found from June through the entire summer and into October. The species is edible and of good flavor. HYGROPHORUS. In the genus Hygrophorus the cap is viscid, moist, or hygrophanous, and the flesh is continuous with that of the stem. ‘The gills are gen- erally distant, adnexed, adnate or decurrent, thick with acute edge, watery, and of waxy consistency. Hygrophorus is closely related to Cantharellus, the gills of which are blunt and forked but never waxy. 24 BULLETIN 175, U. 8. DEPARTMENT OF AGRICULTURE. In Hygrophorus the cap is sometimes regular but often plicate or folded and the margin irregular, wavy, or lobed. The genus is com- prised of many attractive species, some of which are conspicuous because of their bright colors. Hygrophorus chrysodon. (Edible.) Cap fleshy, convex, then expanded, margin involute when young, viscid, shining when dry, white, with scattered golden squamules; gills white, distant, decurrent; stem stuffed, soft, nearly equal, white, with minute yellow squamules, more numer- ous toward the apex, where they are often arranged in the form of a ring. Cap 2 to 3 inches broad; stem 2 to 3 inches long. This plant is easily recognized on account of the golden. granules on the cap and stem. It grows on the ground in woods or open situations in the late summer and fall, but is not of very common occurrence. Hygrophorus coccineus. (Edible.) ~ Cap convexo-plane, obtuse, hygrophanous, smooth, scarlet, becoming yellowish in age, fragile, generally unequal; gills adnate, decurrent with a tooth, distant, con- nected by veins, light yellow in the middle, purplish at the base when mature; stem hollow then compressed, base always yellow, scarlet upward. Cap 1 to 2 inches broad; stem about 2 inches long. This species occurs in moist places and on mossy banks. Hygrophorus conicus. (Edible.) Cap strikingly conical, yellow, orange, scarlet, margin often lobed; gills free or adnate, rather loose and broad, yellow; stem equal, hollow, fibrous striate, yellow or scarlet. Cap one-half to 1 inch broad; stem 3 to 5 inches long. This is a very attractive little fungus on account of its bright color and symmetrical conical cap. A very distinctive character is the blackening of the fungus in drying. It occurs on the ground in rich woods and in damp places near streams from August to September or later. Hygrophorus eburneus. (Edible.) Cap fleshy, sometimes thin, again moderately thick, convex to expanded, smooth, white, exceedingly glutinous, margin involute when young, later wavy; gills de- current, distant, veined at the base; stem unequal, spongy to stuffed, sometimes hollow, glutinous, attenuated toward the base. Cap 1 to 3 inches broad; stem quite variable in length. This species possesses a fair flavor and mild odor, but is of rather tough consistency. It occurs in woods and pastures in the fall, September to October. Hygrophorus hypothejus. (Edible.) Cap convex, somewhat depressed, at first covered with an olivaceous slime, after its disappearance ash colored, pale yellow, orange, or often rufescent; flesh thin, white, becoming light yellow; gills decurrent, distant, whitish or pallid, later yellow or flesh colored; stem equal, viscid, stuffed, becoming hollow, paler than the cap. Cap 1 to 14 inches broad; stem 2 or more inches long. This is an interesting little species, occurring late in the fall in pine woods. The partial veil is floccose, but early fugacious, and is of such a transitory character that it is of very little value to the amateur in identifying the species. It is edible, though not especially adapted to cooking, but when dried it is nutty and fairly palatable. Bul. 175, U. S. Dept. of Agriculture. PLATE XVII. Fia@. 1.—MYCENA GALERICULATA. (EDIBLE.) WL. ME } te Fig. 2.—LACTARIUS CHELIDONIUM. (EDIBLE.) FiG. 3.—LACTARIUS DECEPTIVUS. (EDIBLE.) ul. 175, U. S. Dept. of Agriculture. PLATE XVIII. FiG. 2.—LACTARIUS INDIGO. FiG. 3.—LACTARIUS TORMINOSUS. (EDIBLE. ) (POISONOUS. ) 4 Bul. 175, U. S. Dept. of Agriculture. Fig. 2.—RUSSULA VIRESCENS. Fic. 3.—MARASMIUS OREADES. (EDIBLE. ) (EDIBLE. ) PLATE XIX. te we ad fe ia t, “a # ‘ 2 9 Bul. 175, U. S. Dept. of Agriculture. FiG. 1.—LENTINUS LEPIDEUS. Fig. 2.—CLAUDOPUS NIDULANS. PLATE XX. e Bul. 175, U. S. Dept. of Agriculture. Fia..1.—VOLVARIA BOMBYCINA. Fic. 2.—PAXILLUS RHODOXANTHUS. (EDIBLE.) PLATE XXlI. U. S. Dept. of Agriculture. PLATE XXIl. (EDIBLE.) Fia. 2.—COPRINUS COMATUS. (EDIBLE.) Fig, 1.—PLUTEUS CERVINUS, Bul. 175, U. S. Dept. of Agriculture. PLATE XXIII. Fic. 1.—PHOLIOTA ADIPOSA. (EDIBLE.) Fig. 2.—PHOLIOTA ADIPOSA, GROWING FROM A WOUND IN A LIVING TREE (EDIBLE.) PLATE XXIV. |. 175, U. S. Dept. of Agriculture. Bu (EDIBLE.) Fia. 1.—CORTINARIUS LILICINUS. : cat — | po aie 94 » + 4 ¥ > a“) e (EDIBLE.) HOLIOTA SQUARROSA. p Fie. 2.— MUSHROOMS AND OTHER COMMON FUNGI. 25 MARASMIUS. The plants of the genus Marasmius are thin, tough, and membra- naceous, never decaying, but drying up and shriveling. When mois- tened they again expand and assume their original form, a character peculiar to this genus. The gills are variously attached and often narrow, distant, and connected by prominent anastomosing veins. The stem is cartilaginous or horny and continuous with the cap, but of a different texture. Most of the species grow upon wood or leaves and some have an odor of garlic or onions. Marasmius is closely related to Collybia, Lentinus, and Panus. Certain species have been described as belong- ing to Collybia and are especially difficult of identification. The majority of the species of Marasmius have a central stem, while the stem in Lentinus and Panus is variable, being central, excentric, lateral, or absent. Marasmius species are also much smaller than those of the genera mentioned. Marasmius cohaerens. Cap fleshy, convex to plane, sometimes umbonate, tan to chestnut, perhaps darker in the center; margin wavy, striate when damp; gills narrow, crowded, adnate, but notched, tan colored; stem hollow, shining, color same as cap, darker and slightly enlarged toward the base, rooting. Cap one-half to 1 inch broad; stem 2 to 4 inches long, 14 lines thick. The species grows on the ground or on rotten logs in dense clusters, as many as 20 being closely bound together by a growth of hairs at the base of the stems. It is not common but is widely distributed. It has been identified by some collectors as a member of the genus Mycena, by others as a Collybia. Marasmius oreades. Fairy-ring fungus. (Edible.) Cap convex, then plane and slightly umbonate, tough, smooth, brownish buff, later cream colored, margin when moist may be striate; gills broad, free, distant, unequal, creamy white; stem tough, solid, equal, villose in the upper part, smooth at the base. Cap 1 to 2 inches broad; stem 2 to 3 inches long, 1} lines thick. (Pl. XIX, fig. 3.) This is a popular edible species and once learned should always be recognized. It may be preserved for winter use by drying and is also well adapted for pickling. Marasmius rotula. The collared mushroom. Cap white or pale yellowish and darker at the disk, papery, deeply furrowed, smooth umbilicate; margin crenate; gills the color of the cap, broad, distant, attached to a collar which surrounds the stem; stem threadlike, smooth, shining, hollow, blackish. Cap one-fourth to one-half inch broad; stem 1 to 14 inches long. Commonly found on leaves and twigs in forests. The species can be at once recog- nized by the gills being attached to a collar free from the stem. LENTINUS. In the genus Lentinus the plants are tough, leathery, corky, becom- ing hard and almost woody when old. The cap is generally irregular in form, usually depressed, often scaly or velvety. The gills are slightly or deeply decurrent, unequal, thin with margin notched or 96 - BULLETIN 175, U. S. DEPARTMEN1 OF AGRICULTURE. serrate. Some species are sessile; in others a stem is present which is central, excentric, or lateral. The serrate gills are a constant generic character and serve to sepa- rate Lentinus from Panus, which has entire gills. Common on dead — or rotten wood. | » Lentinus lecomtei. Hairy Lentinus. (Edible.) Cap variable, funnel shaped, regular or irregular, tawny or reddish brown, hairy or strigose, margin incurved; gills pallid, narrow, crowded, edges scarcely at all serrate; stem central, excentric, or lateral, generally tawny and hairy when young, sometimes becoming smooth with age. . Cap 2 to 4 inches broad; stem usually 1 to 14 inches long. Authorities differ as to the classification of Lentinus lecomtet. According to some it more properly belongs to the genus Panus. It is widely distributed and grows upon wood. The plants when young are edible and have a fine flavor. ' Lentinus lepideus. Scaly Lentinus. (Edible.) Cap convex, becoming more or less depressed and irregular, tan to yellow, with dark scales; gills decurrent, broad, crowded, sinuate, white; stem central or excentric, whitish, hairy or scaly, solid, equal, or tapering at the base. Cap 2 to 4 inches broad, often larger, stem about 1 inch long. (Pl. XX, fig. 1; from F. E. Clements.) This is a widely distributed species and very common, especially upon pine, oak, and decaying stumps. When young and tender it is edible, and even when old is recommended for use in soup. PANUS. Plants of the genus Panus closely resemble those of Lentinus, from which they differ in the character of the edge of the gills. In Panus the gills are normally entire, while in Lentinus the gills are serrate. The only difficulty in using this character as a means of generic separa- tion is the fact that in drying out the margin of the gills may be torn or ruptured. Some authors have considered these genera identical. Panus stipticus. Bitter Panus. Cap pale cinnamon to grayish, kidney shaped, scurfy, tough; gills not decurrent, thin, narrow, crowded, connected by veins; stem short, lateral, solid, ascending pruinose. Cap one-half to 1 inch broad. This little species is common on stumps, shriveling in dry and expanding in wet weather. It is characterized by a pronounced astringent taste, which is very un- pleasant in its effect on the mouth and throat, and is considered poisonous. CLAUDOPUS. The genus Claudopus is easily recognized among the rosy-spored agarics by the cap being excentric, lateral, or resupinate. The stem may be rudimentary or obsolete and the gills sinuate or decurrent. The plants grow upon wood in an inverted position and thus the gills are directed upward. Claudopus resembles Pleurotus and Crepidotus in habit, but differs in the color of the spores. MUSHROOMS AND OTHER COMMON FUNGI, 27 Claudopus nidulans. Cap suborbicular or kidney shaped, sessile or narrowed behind into a stemlike base, caps often overlapping, yellow or buff, downy, ‘hairy or Bealy toward the siaAlnnte margin; gills broad, rather close, orange yellow. Cap 1 to 3 inches broad. (Pl. XX, fig. 2; source of photograph unknown. ) Claudopus nidulans is widely distributed and is to be found in the fall, growing on decaying branches, wood, etc. It is easily recognized from its shelving and some- times resupinate habit, yellow or buff cap, and orange yellow gills. Itisedible. The taste is said to be mild and pleasant, but the substance tough. VOLVARIA. The genus Volvaria is distinguished by the universal veil, which, becoming ruptured, remains as a large loose cup at the base of the stem, and by the absence of aring. ‘The stem is easily separable from the cap and the gills are usually free, rounded behind, at first white, but later pink. The genus is comparable to Amanitopsis among the white-spored agarics in having a volva but no ring. Species of Volvaria grow in rich woods, on leaf mold or rotten wood, and on richly manured ground. Volvaria bombycina. Cap globose, bell shaped, later convex and sometimes subumbonate, white, silky when young, smooth at the apex, sometimes scaly when old; flesh white; gills ventricose, free, not reaching the margin, edge sometimes toothed; stem white, solid, smooth, tapering from base to apex; volva large, membranaceous, tough, somewhat viscid. Cap 3 to 8 inches broad; stem 3 to 6 inches long, 6 lines thick. (Pl. XXTI, fig. 1.) This species is widely distributed, but nowhere common. It is found on fallen or living trees of various species. PLUTEUS. The genus Pluteus may be recognized among the rosy-spored agarics by its symmetrical cap, central stem distinct from the cap, and free salmon-colored gills. In addition to these features, the absence of a volva and ring will assist in the determination of the species of this genus. These plants are usually found growing upon wood. Pluteus cervinus. (Edible.) Cap at first bell shaped, later convex and expanded to almost plane, fleshy, generally smooth but with radiating fibrils, or sometimes more or less scaly, light brown, grayish brown, or sooty; margin entire; flesh white; gills broad, ventricose, unequal, free, white becoming flesh colored; stem color of cap, paler above, firm, solid, fibrillose or subglabrous, nearly equal but slightly tapering above. Cap 2 to 5inches broad; stem 2 to 5 inches long, 3 to 6 lines thick. (Pl. XXII, fig. 1; from C. G. Lloyd.) Pluteus cervinus occurs intermittently from spring to early fall. It issues from the base of decaying stumps or logs and sometimes appears in great abundance on sawdust piles. It is edible, and when young is tender and of good flavor. 28 BULLETIN 175, U. S. DEPARTMENT OF AGRICULTURE. ENTOLOMA. The genus Entoloma is another rosy-spored agaric in which a volva and an annulus are absent. “The cap is somewhat fleshy and the mar- gin incurved, especially when young. ‘The gills are adnate, adnexed, - or sinuate. : In form Entoloma corresponds to Tricholoma of the white-spored, — Hebeloma of the ocher-spored, and Hypholoma of the brown-spored species. The edible quality of the species of this genus is variable. Several are reported as edible, while severe poisoning has followed the use of at least four species. Entoloma grayanum. Cap fleshy, convex, frequently wavy or irregular, hygrophanous, dull, watery yel- low when moist, smooth, shining, and nearly white when dry; gills flesh colored, plane, close; stem equal, firm, solid, white. Plant about 3 inches high; cap 14 to 2 inches broad. This species grows on the ground and is sometimes gregarious. PAXILLUS. In the genus Paxillus the plants are symmetrical or excentric, with a persistently incurved margin. The membranaceous gills are easily separable from the cap and frequently fork and unite, producing a poroid appearance in contrast with the usual platelike gills of agaries. Paxillus atro-tomentosus. Cap fleshy, compact, tough, convex, becoming plane or depressed, reddish brown, dry, often tomentose, margin thin, strongly involute; flesh white; gills adnate, decurrent, ferked near the base, often reticulate, sometimes forming pores; stem stout, solid, generally excentric, covered with thick dark-brown or black tomentum. Cap 3 to 5 inches broad; stem 3 to 4 inches long, one-half to 1 inch thick. This plant is to be found in pine woods, during the late summer and autumn. It is easily recognized because of the stout, black, tomentose stem and mostly irregular cap with incurved margin. Though the species may not be poisonous, its edibility has been questioned, and therefore it is wise to avoid its use. Paxillus involutus. (Edible.) Cap compact, fleshy, convexo-plane, depressed, viscid when moist, tawny, ochra- ceous, perhaps olive or reddish brown, margin downy and strongly involute; flesh pallid, changing to reddish brown if bruised; gills crowded, decurrent, arcuate when young, branched, anastomosing, forming pores behind; stem solid, firm, color of the cap, sometimes slightly excentric. Cap 2 to 4 inches broad; stem 2 to 3 inches long, about one-half inch thick. Paxillus involutus is a summer and autumnal species. It grows on the ground or on. wood, often frequenting grassy or mossy, swampy places in open woods. There isa certain similarity between this plant and Cantharellus, and on account of this resem- blance Pazillus involutus is often spoken of as the brown chanterelle; but unlike the true chanterelle its edibility is not to be highly recommended, as the flesh is dry, coarse, and rather tasteless. >> MUSHROOMS AND OTHER COMMON FUNGI, 29 Paxillus rhodoxanthus. (Edible.) Cap convex, when expanded plane or perhaps slightly depressed, reddish yellow or brown, densely tomentose, often becoming cracked and showing the yellowish flesh ; gills deeply decurrent, forked, and connected by anastomosing veins, some shade of yellow; stem with many small, dark dots, paler than the cap, deep yellow at the base. Plant 2 to 4 inches tall; cap 1} to 3 inches broad. (Pl. XXI, fig. 2; from G. F. Atkinson.) This species is also described as Gomphidius rhodoxanthus. Discussion of its synon- ymy is given by Prof. Atkinson." PHOLIOTA. The genus Pholiota is distinguished among the ocher-spored agarics by the presence of an annulus which is membranaceous or friable in character, never cobwebby as in Cortinarius, and it may be persistent or fugacious. The cap is more or less fleshy, yellowish, tawny, and sometimes scaly. The gills are adnate or slightly decurrent by a tooth. Species of Pholiota can be distinguished from brown forms of Cor- tinarius by the cobwebby veil of the latter. Pholiota adiposa. (Edible.) Cap firm, fleshy, subconical, to convex, glutinous when moist, yellowish, brown in center, often torn into dark scales, margin incurved; flesh thick at center, spongy, yellowish; gills close, adnate, sometimes notched, yellowish to rust color; stem firm, whitish to yellow, viscid, clothed with brownish scales below the slight, floccose ring. Cap 2 to 4 inches broad; stem 2 to 4 inches long, 4 to 6 lines thick. (Pl. XXIII.) This species, commonly known as the ‘ ‘fatty Pholiota,’’ forms large clusters in the fall, on trunks or crotches of trees or on stumps. It isa rather showy fungus, easily attracting attention because of its tufted habit of growth, yellow color, and conspicuous scales. Pholiota adiposa is considered edible by American authorities, and it is sub- stantial and of fairly good flavor. The season is mostly confined to the fall months. With this particular species it is preferable to peel the cap preparatory to cooking. Pholiota caperata. (Edible.) Cap fleshy, yellow to yellow-brown, ovate, obtuse or plane when expanded, viscid when moistgsometimes covered with whitish tufts; gills adnate, crowded, narrow, may be serrate, yellowish brown; stem stout, solid, sometimes slightly enlarged at base, white and shining, scaly above the ring; ring membranaceous, broad. Cap 24 to 4 inches broad; stem 3 to 5 inches long, one-half to over 1 inch thick. This fungus appears in the fall quite abundantly in certain localities. The specific name refers to the wrinkled character of the pileus, a prominent and constant feature of the plant. It is edible, slightly acrid when raw, but fairly good when cooked. Pholiota marginata. (KEdible.) Cap convex, then expanded, obtuse to plane, smooth, hygrophanous, slightly fleshy, tan when dry, honey colored when moist, margin striate; gills adnate, crowded, narrow, when mature reddish brown; stem hollow, equal, smooth , or slightly fibril- lose; color same as the cap, whitish velvety at base; ring often distant from apex of stem, soon disappearing. 1 Atkinson, G. F. Studies of American Fungi; Mushrooms, Edible, Poisonous, etc.,ed. 2, New York, 1903, p. 167. 30 BULLETIN 175, U. S. DEPARTMENT OF AGRICULTURE. Cap one-half to 1 inch broad; stem 1 to 2 inches long, about 2 lines thick. This attractive little fungus appears principally in the fall, but it may occur sparingly during the summer. It grows singly or clustered on rotten stumps or logs and is edible and of excellent quality. | : Pholiota squarrosa. (Edible.) Cap yellowish brown, clothed with dark persistent scales, dry, convex, then flat- tened, perhaps obtusely umbonate or gibbous; flesh light yellow; gills crowded, — narrow, adnate with a decurrent tooth, pale olive, then rust colored; stem stuffed, yellowish brown, with dense, dark recurved scales below the ring, much thinner at base than apex; ring near the apex, generally floccose, seldom membranaceous and entire. Cap 2 to 5 inches broad; stem 3 to 6 inches long. (Pl. XXIV, fig. 2; from C. G. Lloyd.) This species occurs in many localities from the last of June until frost, growing on trunks of trees and stumps. It is conspicuous because of the large clusters and promi- nent scales on both cap and stem. The fungus is good, raw or cooked, and by some authorities is considered excellent. CORTINARIUS. The genus Cortinarius is easily recognized when young among the ocher-spored agarics by the powdery gills and by the cobwebby veil, which is separable from the cuticle of the cap. In mature plants the remains of the veil may often be observed adhering to the margin of the cap and forming a silky zone on the stem. Cortinarius contains many forms which are difficult of specific determination. Many species are edible, some indifferent or unpleasant, and others positively injurious. The colors are generally conspicuous and often very beautiful. Most of the species occur in the autumn. Cortinarius cinnamomeus. (Edible.) Cap rather thin, conic campanulate, when expanded almost plane, but sometimes umbonate, yellow to bright cinnamon colored, with perhaps red stains, smooth, silky from innate, yellowish fibrils, sometimes concentric rows of scales near the margin; flesh yellowish; gills yellow, tawny, or red, adnate, slightly sinuate and decurrent by a tooth, crowded, thin, broad; stem equal, stuffed then hollow, yellowish, fibril- lose. Cap 1 to 24 inches broad; stem 2 to 4 inches long, 3 to 4 lines thick. @ This is a very common and widely distributed species, particularly abundant in mossy coniferous woods from summer until fall. The color of the gills is an extremely variable character, ranging from brown or cinnamon to blood red. A form possessing gills of the latter color is known as Cortinarius cinnamomeus var. semisanguineus. This species and variety are edible and considered extremely good. © Cortinarius lilicinus. (Edible.) Cap firm, hemispherical, then convex, minutely silky, lilac colored; gills close, violaceous changing to cinnamon; stem solid, stout, distinctly bulbous, silky fibrillose, whitish with a lilac tinge. Cap 2 to 3 inches broad; stem 2 to 4 inches long. (Pl. XXIV, fig. 1.) This is a comparatively rare but very beautiful mushroom and an excellent edible species. MUSHROOMS AND OTHER COMMON FUNGI. 31 Cortinarius sanguineus. (Edible.) Cap convex, then plane, or perhaps slightly umbonate or depressed, blood red, silky or squamulose; flesh paler reddish; gills crowded, entire, adnate, dark blood red; stem stuffed or hollow, sometimes attenuated at the base, dark as the cap and fibrillose, containing a red juice. Cap 1 to 14 inches broad; stem 2 to 3 inches long. This species is much less common in its occurrence than Cortinarius cinnamomeus, but is distinctive because of its entire blood-red color. Cortinarius violaceus. (Edible. ) Cap convex, when expanded almost plane, dry with hairy tufts or scales, dark violet; flesh somewhat violaceous; gills distant, rather thick and broad, rounded or deeply notched at apex of stem, narrowed at margin of cap, at first violaceous, later brownish cinnamon; stem fibrillose, solid, bulbous, colored like cap. Cap 2 to 4 inches broad; stem 3 to 5 inches long. (PI. IV, fig. 2; from M. E. Hard.) This very attractive species is at first a uniform violet, but with age the gills assume a cinnamon hue. The plants appear in woods and open places during the summer and fall, generally solitary, but often in considerable numbers. It is esteemed as one of the best edible species. NAUCORIA. Considerable variation is to be observed among species of the genus Naucoria, but distinguishing generic characters are the more or less fleshy cap, at first conical or convex, with involute margin, and the cartilaginous stem, which is hollow or stuffed. The gills are free or adnate, but never decurrent. Naucoria semiorbicularis. (Edible.) Cap hemispherical, convex to expanded, smooth, even, slightly viscid when moist, corrugated or cracked when dry and old, tawny, rust colored; gills adnate, sometimes notched, crowded, pale, then rust colored; stem tough, slender, straight, equal, smooth, hollow, with a free fibrous tube, pale reddish brown, darker at the base. Cap 1 to 2 inches broad; stem 3 to 4 inches long. This is one of the most common and widely distributed species. It is among the first to appear in the spring and continues until autumn, being particularly abundant in wet weather. It is edible, easily cooked, and said to possess an excellent flavor. GALERA. The plants of the genus Galera are slender and fragile. The cap is regular, thin, more or less membranaceous, conic or bell shaped, often striate, especially when moist, margin straight, never incurved, asin Naucoria. The gills are adnate or adnexed. The stem is some- what cartilaginous, hollow, and polished. Galera tenera. (Edible.) Cap cone or bell shaped, rust colored when damp, ochraceous when dry, sometimes atomate, hygrophanous, membranaceous, smooth, but striate, when damp; gills cin- namon, broad, ascending adnate; stem slender, fragile, smooth, sometimes striate, mealy above, paler than cap. 52 BULLETIN 175, U. S. DEPARTMENT OF AGRICULTURE. Cap 5 lines to three-fourths inch broad; stem 2 to4incheslong. (PI. II, fig. 2; from F. E. Clements.) This little fungus is very common in lawns or in richly manured places, where it appears early in the spring and persists until frost. It exhibits considerable variation in size and color, the latter ranging from light tan to brown and depending upon con-. ditions of humidity. The species is small but tender and can be preserved for winter use by drying. : AGARICUS. The genus Agaricus is characterized by brown or blackish spores with a purplish tinge and by the presence of a ring. The cap is mostly fleshy and the gills are free from the stem. The genus is closely related to Stropharia, but separated from it by the free gills and the noncontinuity of the stem and the cap. The species of Agari- cus occur in pastures, meadows, woods, and manured ground. All are edible, but certain forms are of especially good flavor. Bright colors are mostly absent and white or dingy brown shades predomi- nate. Agaricus arvensis. Horse or field mushroom. (Edible.) Cap convex, bell shaped, then expanded, when young floccose or mealy, later smooth, white or yellowish; flesh white; gills white to pink, at length blackish brown, free, close, may be broader toward the stem; stem stout, hollow or stuffed, may be slightly bulbous, smooth; ring rather large, thick, the upper part white, membrana- ceous, the lower vellowiah and radially split. Cap 3 to 5 inches broad; stem 2 to 5 inches high, 4 to 10 lines fice Agaricus arvensis is to be found in fields, pastures, and waste places. It is:closely related to the ordinary cultivated mushroom, but differs in its larger size and double ring. It is an excellent edible species, the delicacy of flavor and texture largely depending, like other mushrooms, upon its age. Agaricus campestris. Common or cultivated mushroom. (Edible.) Cap rounded, convex, when expanded nearly plane, smooth, silky floccose or squamulose, white or light brown, squamules brown, margin incurved; flesh white, firm; gills white in the button stage, then pink, soon becoming purplish brown, dark brown, or nearly black, free from the stem, rounded behind, subdeliquescent; stem white, subequal, smooth or nearly so; veil sometimes remaining as fragments on the margin of cap; ring frail, sometimes soon disappearing. Cap 14 to 4 inches broad; stem 2 to 3 inches long, 4 to 8 lines thick. (Pl. XIII, fig. 3.) This is the most common and best known of all the edible mushrooms. It isa spe- cies of high commercial value, lending itself to very successful and profitable artificial cultivation. It is cosmopolitan in its geographical distribution, being as universally known abroad asin America. It is cultivated in caves, cellars, and in especially con- structed houses; but it also occurs abundantly in the wild state, appearing in pastures, grassy places, and richly manured ground. The only danger in collecting it in the wild form is in mistaking an Amanita for an Agaricus; however, this danger may be obviated by waiting until the gills are decidedly pink before collecting the mush- rooms. Agaricus placomyces. Flat-cap mushroom. (Edible.) Cap thin, at first broadly ovate, convex or expanded and flat in age, whitish, adorned with numerous minute, brown scales, which become crowded in the center, forming a large brown patch; gills close, white, then pinkish, finally blackish brown; veil ty MUSHROOMS AND OTHER COMMON FUNGI. 30 broad; ring large. In the early stages, according to Prof. Atkinson, a portion of the veil frequently encircles the stipe like a tube, while a part remains still stretched over the gills. This condition is well illustrated in Plate X XV, figure 1. Stem smooth, stuffed or hollow, bulbous, white or whitish, the bulb often stained with yellow. Cap 2 to 4 inches broad; stem 3 to 5 inches long, one-fourth to one-half inch thick. (Pl. XXV, fig. 1.) This species frequents hemlock woods, occurring from July to September. Agaricus rodmani. (Edible.) Cap firm, rounded, convex, then nearly plane, white, becoming subochraceous, smooth or cracked into scales on the disk, margin decurved; flesh white; gills nar- row, Close, white, changing to pink and blackish brown; stem solid, shert, whitish, smooth, or perhaps mealy, squamulose above the ring; ring double, sometimes appear- ing as two collars with space between. Cap 2 to 4 inches broad; stem 2 to 3 inches long, 6 to 10 lines thick. Agaricus rodmani may easily be mistaken for Agaricus campestris, but can be dis- tinguished by the thicker, firmer flesh, narrower gills, which are nearly white when young, and peculiar collar, which appears double. This species grows on grassy eround, often springing from crevices of unused pavements or between the curbing and the walk. Itis to be found principally from May to July. Agaricus silvicola. (Edible.) Cap convex, expanded to almost plane, sometimes umbonate, smooth, shining, white, often tinged with yellow, sometimes with pink, especially in the center; flesh white or pinkish; gills thin, crowded, white, then pink, later dark brown, distant from stem, generally narrowed toward each end; stem long, bulbous, stuffed or hollow, whitish, sometimes yellowish below; ring membranaceous, sometimes with broad floccose patches on the under side. Cap 3 to 6 inches broad; stem 4 to 6 inches long, 4 to 8 lines thick. Agaricus silvicola has been known under various names, at one time being considered merely a variety of Agaricus arvensis. By Peck 1 it has been recognized as a distinct species, A. abruptibulbus: A discussion of the nomenclature of this species may be found in McIlvaine and Macadam.? Agaricus subrufescens. (Edible.) Cap at first deeply hemispherical, becoming convex or broadly expanded, silky, fibrillose, and minutely or obscurely squamulose, whitish, grayish, or dull reddish brown, usually smooth and darker on the disk; flesh white, unchangeable; gills at first white or whitish, then pinkish, finally blackish brown; stem rather long, often somewhat thickened or bulbous at the base, at first stuffed, then hollow, white; the annulus flocculose or floccose squamose on the lower surface. Two additional char- acters of assistance in identification are the mycelium, which forms slender branching rootlike strings, and the almondlike flavor of the flesh. Cap 3 to 4 inches broad; stem 24 to 4 inches long. (Pl. XXVI.) The plants often grow in large clusters of 20 to 30 or even 40 individuals. They occur in the wild state and have also been reported as a volunteer crop in especially prepared soil. Specimens collected in the vicinity of Washington, D. C., were found growing near the river on a rocky slope rich in leaf mold. Agaricus subrufescens is considered a very excellent edible species. 1Peck, ©. H. Report of the State botanist, 1904. New York State Museum, Bulletin 94, p. 36, 1905. 2 McIlvaine, Charles, and Macadam, R. K. Toadstools, Mushrooms, Fungi, Edible and Poisonous; One Thousand American Fungi. Rev.ed., Indianapolis, [1912], p. 728. 73431°—Bull. 175—15——3 34 BULLETIN 175, U. S. DEPARTMENT OF AGRICULTURE. STROPHARIA. The genus Stropharia is easily recognized among the purple-spored agarics, and is distinguished from Agaricus by its usually adnate gills and the continuity of the flesh of the cap and stem. A ring is always” present in young plants, but often absent at maturity. The edibility of species of this genus is a disputed point among mycophagists. Stropharia semiglobata. Cap rounded, then hemispherical, thick at center, becoming thin toward the even margin, light yellow, viscid when moist; gills broad, adnate, unequal, when young light brown, later purplish brown or blackish; stem slender, hollow, even or slightly bulbous, smooth, yellowish, but paler at apex, where striate markings from the gills may be present, viscid; ring viscous, incomplete, formed by the remains of the glutinous veil, which soon disappears. Cap 1 to 14 inches broad; stem 2 to 3 inches long, 2 to 3 lines thick. (PI. XXV, fig. 2.) This species is remarkable for the uniformly hemispherical cap. It occurs commonly on dung or in well-manured ground. Opinions differ regarding its edibility, and it is consequently safe to refrain from collecting the species. HYPHOLOMA. The spores of the genus Hypholoma are purple brown. The mar- gin of the cap is incurved in the young condition. The veil generally adheres by fragments to the margin of the cap, rarely forming a distinct ring. The gills are attached to the stem and sometimes are emargi- nate. The stem is fleshy and continuous with the substance of the cap. Hypholoma shows a close relationship to Agaricus and Stro- pharia, differing from both in the absence of a distinct ring, and it further differs from Agaricus, in which genus the stem and cap are noncontinuous. The plants of this genus generally occur in clusters or clumps, arising from decayed wood on or under the ground. Hypholoma appendiculatum. (Edible.) Cap rather thin, ovate, then expanded until somewhat flattened, when damp dark brown, tawny when dry, slightly wrinkled and atomate; flesh white; gills crowded, somewhat adnate, white, at length purplish brown; stem white, hollow, equal, smooth, pruinose at apex; veil white, delicate, attached to the margin of the cap for a short time. Cap 2 to 3 inches broad; stem 2 to 3 inches long, 2 to 3 lines thick. (Pl. XXVII, fig. 2; from G. F. Atkinson.) Specimens of this species may be collected in the late spring, in summer, and fre- quently in the early fall. The plants are fragile and hygrophanous, scattered, clus-. tered, or densely tufted. They grow on rotten logs, stumps, or sometimes on the ground, arising mostly from rotten wood beneath the surface. This species is tender and possesses excellent esculent qualities. Drying and pre- serving for winter use have been recommended, as the flavor is retained to a remark- able degree. MUSHROOMS AND OTHER COMMON FUNGI, 35 Hypholoma perplexum. (Edible.) Cap convex, expanding to nearly plane, sometimes umbonate, smooth, reddish or brownish red, margin yellowish; flesh white or whitish; gills thin, close, rounded at inner extremity, first pale yellow then greenish, later purplish brown; stem equal, hollow, fibrillose, yellowish above, reddish brown below. Cap 1 to 3 inches broad; stem 2 to 3 inches long, 2 to 4 lines thick. Hypholoma sublateritium and LH. perplecum are very closely related and by some authorities the latter is regarded as only a variety of H. sublateritium, while certain mycologists consider the two speciesidentical. Prof. Peck states that H. perplecum may be distinguished by its smaller size, more hollow stem, the yellow-greenish and purplish tints of the gills, and the absence of a bitter flavor. Like H. sublateritium, this species occurs abundantly in the fall about stumps or logs, often continuing until freezing weather. The plants grow in clusters and the caps are frequently discolored by the falling spores, Hypholoma sublateritium. (Edible.) Cap conical, becoming almost plane, fleshy, firm, smooth, but with fine, silky fibers, brick red, sometimes tawny, margin of lighter color; flesh white or yellowish; gills narrow, crowded, adnate, sometimes decurrent by a tooth, creamy when young, purplish olivaceous, sometimes with a sooty tinge when mature; stem firm, stuffed, attenuated downward, smooth or fibrillose, scaly, light yellowish, rust colored below; veil at first white, becoming dark, and may for a time adhere to the margin of the cap. Cap 2 to 3 inches broad; stem 3 to 4 inches long, 3 to 5 lines thick.. (Pl. XX VII, fig. 1; from G. F. Atkinson.) This species appears very abundantly in the fall, producing large clusters around rotten stumps or decayed prostrate logs. The European form of this plant is reported as bitter and regarded as poisonous. The American form has been frequently eaten, although it has little to recommend it as a delicacy. Catsup has been made from it, but the success of the experiment was doubtless due more to the addition of condi- ments than to the flavor of the mushrooms. COPRINUS. The genus Coprinus is easily recognized by the black spores and the close gills, which at maturity dissolve into an inky fluid. The stem is hollow, smooth, or fibrillose. The volva and ring are not generic characters, but are sometimes present. The plants are more or less fragile and occur on richly manured ground, dung, or rotten tree trunks. The genus contains species of excellent flavor and delicate consistency. Coprinus atramentarius. Inky cap. (Edible.) Cap ovate, slightly expanding, silvery to dark gray or brownish, smooth, silky or with small scales, especially at the center, often plicate and lobed with notched mar- gin; gills broad, *ventricose, crowded, free, white, soon changing to pinkish gray, then becoming black and deliquescent; stem smooth, shining, whitish, hollow, attenuated upward, readily separating from the cap; ring near the base of stem, evanescent. Cap 1} to 4 inches broad; stem 2 to 4 inches long, 4 to 6 lines thick. (Pl. XXVIII.) This species appears from spring to autumn, particularly after rains. It grows singly or in dense clusters on rich ground, lawns, gardens, or waste places. It has long been esteemed asan edible species. Coprinus atramentarius differs from C. coma- tus in the more or less smooth, oval cap and the imperfect, basal, evanescent ring. 36 BULLETIN 175, U. S. DEPARTMENT OF AGRICULTURE. Coprinus comatus. Shaggy mane. (Edible.) Cap oblong, bell shaped, not fully expanding, fleshy at center, moist, cuticle separat- ing into scales that are sometimes white, sometimes yellowish or darker, and show the white flesh beneath, splitting from the margin along the lines of the gills; gills broad, crowded, free, white, soon becoming pink or salmon colored and changing to purplish black just previous to deliquescence; stem brittle, smooth or fibrillose, hollow, thick, . attenuated upward, sometimes slightly bulbous at base, easily separating from the cap; ring thin, movable. Cap usually 14 to 3 inches long; stem 2 to 4 inches long, 4 to 6 lines thick. (Pl. XXII, fig. 2.) This species has a wide geographical distribution and is universally enjoyed by mycophagists. The fungus is very attractive when young, often white, again showing gray, tawny, or pinkish tints. It appears in the spring and fall, sometimes solitary, sometimes in groups, on lawns, in rich soil, or in gardens. Coprinus fimetarius. Cap at first cylindrical, later conical to expanded, margin splitting, revolute or up- turned, grayish to bluish black, surface at first covered with white scales, finally smooth; gills black, narrow; stem fragile, white, squamulose, hollow, but solid and bulbous at the base. Cap 1 inch or more across, stem 3 or more inches high. (Pl. XXIX, fig. 1.) This is a very common and abundant species on manure or rich soil and occurs from spring to winter. It is edible and considered excellent. Coprinus micaceus. Mica inky cap. Cap ovate, bell shaped, light tan to brown, darker when moist or old, often glistening from minute, micalike scales, margin closely striate, splitting, and revolute; gills narrow, crowded, white, then pink before becoming black; stem slender, white, hollow, fragile, often twisted. Cap 1 to 2 inches broad; stem 2 to 4 inches long and 2 to 3 lines thick. (Pl. XXX, fig. 1; from Geological and Natural History Survey of Connecticut.) This glistening little species occurs very commonly at the base of trees or springing from dead roots along pavements, or more uncommonly on prostrate logs in shady woods. The plants appear in great profusion in the spring and early summer, and more sparingly during the fall. Coprinus micaceus is a very delicious mushroom and lends itself to various methods of preparation. PSATHYRELLA. The species comprising the genus Psathyrella are all fragile, having thin membranaceous, striate caps. When young the margin of the cap lies against the stem, but never extends beyond the gills, which are sooty black and not mottled lke those of Panaeolus. | Psathyrella disseminata. (Edible.) Cap thin, oval to bell shaped, yellowish, gray or grayish brown, minutely scaly, becoming smooth, sulcate or plicate, margin entire; gills broad, adnate, white, then gray, later black; stem hollow, slender, fragile. Cap about one-half inch broad; stem 1 to 14 inches long, 1 to 14 lines thick. (PI. XXIX, fig. 2; source of photograph unknown.) This is a delicate little species, appearing on decaying wood or about old roots of © trees. It occurs from May until frost, often intermittently from the same center. The species is edible, but has too little substance to render it a popular article of diet. ae er trenermenemns PLATE XXV. , U.S. Dept. of Agriculture. 3 ‘VLVFOIDINAS VINVHdOULS—'S “DIS - (aqgidq) “SAOAWOOV Id SNOIYVOY—' | “SI PLATE XXVI. Bul. 175, U. S. Dept. of Agriculture. (EDIBLE.) AGARICUS SUBRUFESCENS. Fig. 1.— (EDIBLE.) SHOWING HABITAT. 3 Fic. 2.—AGARICUS SUBRUFESCENS Bul. 175, U. S. Dept. of Agriculture. FiG. 1.—HYPHOLOMA SUBLATERITIUM. Fic. 2.—HYPHOLOMA APPENDICULATUM. (EDIBLE.) (EDIBLE.) PLATE XXVII. PLATE XXVIII. (‘a7g1dq) "SMIYUVLNAWVYLVY SNNIYdOD Bul. 175, U. S. Dept. of Agriculture. PLATE XXIX. > FiG. 1.—COPRINUS FIMETARIUS. (EDIBLE.) FiG. 2.—PSATHYRELLA DISSEMINATA. (EDIBLE.) Bul. 175, U. S. Dept. of Agriculture. PLATE XXX. Fic. 1.—COPRINUS MICACEUS. (EDIBLE.) Fic. 2.—PANAEOLUS RETIRUGIS. (EDIBLE.) Bul. 175, U. S. Dept. of Agriculture. PLATE XXXI. FIG. 1.—FISTULINA HEPATICA. (EDIBLE.) Fig. 2.—BOLETUS FELLEUS. Bul. 175, U. S. Dept. of Agriculture. PLATE XXXII. FiG. 1.—HYDNUM ERINACEUM. (EDIBLE.) Fic. 2.—STROBILOMYCES STROBILACEUS. é a ¥ MUSHROOMS AND OTHER COMMON FUNGI. 87 PANAEOLUS. In the genus Panaeolus the cap is slightly fleshy and the margin nonstriate, always extending beyond the gills, which are gray and mottled from the falling of the black spores. The stem is without a ring and polished. The two nearest related genera are Psathyrella and Coprinus. From the first Panacolus is separated by the non- striate margin of the cap and from Coprinus by the nondeliquescent gills. Panaeolus retirugis. (Edible.) Cap ovate, conic, slightly expanding, almost hemispherical, cream to tan colored, becoming grayish and dark smoky, viscid in wet weather, irregularly marked with anastomosing wrinkles; remnants of veil, which is prominent and firm in young plants, adhering as fragments on margin of mature caps; gills rather broad, ascending, adnexed, grayish to violet black; stem color of cap, darker in lower part, hollow, smooth, granulate, may be slightly bulbous. Cap three-fourths inch to 14 inches broad; stem 2 to 4 inches long, 2 to 3 lines thick. (Pl. XXX, fig. 2.) This species is to be found on dung or on richly manured lawns. Itseldom occurs in sufficient quantity to be cooked alone, but the flavor is pleasant and readily imparted to other mushrooms. The appendiculate character of the veil is of assistance in dis- tinguishing this species from others of the genus: POLYPORACE/: (pore fungi). Members of the family Polyporaceex are characterized by the pro- duction of a poriferous fructification. In Agaricaceee the spores are developed on gills, while in Polyporacez they are formed in nu- merous more or less minute tubes on the lower surface of the fruit- ing body (hymenophore). The tubes may be short or clongated, the mouths (pores) round, angular, or compressed.1_ In some genera the hymenium is wrinkled and the tubes are reduced to mere pits. Great variation is also to be observed in the consistency of the fruit- ing body; it may be woody, fleshy, coriaceous, or subgelatinous. The key that follows will aid in distinguishing the genera of Peles racee discussed in this paper. Key to Polyporacex. Hymenophore normally pileate, sometimes with resupinate forms: Stratum of tubes easily separable from the hymenophore, stem central— INERT PRO A aes cam Ah ale Sa te ee ee BoLetvs. eemmnetent tEOCHPCALCS Y= Se Spe eee ee ee le oe STROBILOMYCES. Stratum of tubes distinct from the hymenophore, but not separa- ble from it— : Tubes in several layers, woody, perennial.................-FoMEs. Tubes not stratose— OSL RG es 2 OS i eit ir an ee ee POLYPORUS. PA Pennie Bed ee ade 2 bse ete ee yest el oo aisles 4 POLYSTICTUS. Cap Meshy, tubes cromded:,.....< 2) oe 2 se8o et ag se es- 2 FISTULINA. 1 The tubes and contour of the mouths may be readily determined by the aid of a small hand lens. 38 BULLETIN 175, U. S. DEPARTMENT OF AGRICULTURE. Hymenophore sessile, corky, tubes sinuous and labyrinthiform....... DAEDALEA. Hymenophore reflexed, resupinate or amorphous, subgelatinous, bymentam plicate Or rugose POTOUSs = 22% -- 2 5. een eee MERULIUS. BOLETUS. In general appearance, namely, the pileate and stipitate character of the plants, the species of the genus Boletus resemble members of __ the Agaricacee. The important difference is the fact that the spores, ¥ instead of being developed on gills, are borne in numerous small tubes, which are closely crowded but easily separable from one another and from the hymenophore. Most of the plants of this genus are terrestrial, but occasionally they are to be found growing upon wood. Some species are edible and considered exceedingly good, while others are extremely dan- gerous. The phenomenon of changing color on exposure to air exhibited by certain species is not a character peculiar to either poisonous or edible varieties. % Key to species of Boletus. Surface of hymenium yellow, orange, or greenish. Ring present: Cap, yellow = - -... Panaeolus campanulatus. Panus papilionaceus. Panus stypticus. Pholiota autumnalis. Pleurotus olearius. Psilocybe foenisecii. Russula emetica. Russula foetens. Russula fragilis. Russula nigricans. Russula nitida. Russula queletii. Scleroderma bovista. Stropharia aeruginosa. Stropharia semiglobata. Tricholoma sulphureum. Tricholoma tigrinum. Tricholoma venenatum. Volvaria gloiocephala. GLOSSARY. Ad’nate, closely attached, as gills to stipe. Adnexed’, gills reaching the stem but not adnate to it. Anas’tomosing, united by running to- gether irregularly, as of gills or veins with each other. An’nulate, having a ring. An/’nulus, the ring on the stem of a mushroom formed by the separation of the veil from the margin of the cap. A’pex, in mushrooms, the extremity of the stem nearest the gills. Ap’ical, relating to the apex or top. Appendic’ulate, having an appendage hanging in small fragments. Arach/’noid, cobweblike. Are’olate, divided into little areas or patches. Ascend’ing, rising somewhat obliquely upward or curving. As’ci, plural of ascus. Ascomyce’tes, group of fungi in which the spores are produced in saclike cells called asci. As’cus, microscopic sacklike cell in which spores, generally eight, are de- veloped. At/omate, sprinkled with minute par- ticles. Atten’uate, becoming gradually nar- rowed or smaller. Ax’is, the central line of growth, stipe, stalk, ete. Azo’nate, without zones or circular bands of different color. Basid’ium, an enlarged cell upon which spores are borne. ; Basid’/iomyce’tes, a group of fungi which has its spores produced upon basidia. Bifur’cated, divided into two forks or branches. Bul’bous, applied to stem of a mush- room with bulblike swelling at the base. Campan/ulate, bell shaped. Car’nose, fleshy. Cartilag’inous, gristly, firm, and tough. Cen’timeter (cm.) the hundredth part of a meter, equal to 0.3937 of an inch. MUSHROOMS AND OTHER COMMON FUNGI, Ces’pitose, growing in tufts or clumps. Cla’vate, club shaped. Co’mate, hairy. Coria’ceous, of a leathery texture. Cor’neous, of a horny texture. Cor’rugated, having a wrinkled appear- ance. Cor’tex, an outer rindlike layer. Cre’nate, notched at the edge, notches blunt, not sharp as in a serrated edge. Cu‘ticle, skinlike layer on the outer sur- face of cap and stem. Cyath‘iform, cup shaped. Decid’uous, falling off at maturity. Decur’rent, applied to gills which are prolonged down the stem. Deliques’cent, relating to mushrooms which become liquid. Den’tate, toothed. Dimor’phic, existing in two distinct forms. Dis’coid, disk shaped, of.a circular, flat form. Dis’tant, applied to gills which are not close. Divar’icate, diverging widely. Eccen’ tric, same as excentric. Echin’ulate, beset with short bristles. Emar’ginate, when gills are notched or scooped out at junction with stem. Excen/’tric, not central. Exoperid’ium, outer layer of the peri- dium. Expan/’ded, spread out, as the pileus (cap) from convex to plane. Farina/ceous, mealy. Far‘inose, covered with a white, mealy powder. — ‘ Fi’/brillose, appearing to be covered or composed of minute fibers. Fi’brous, clothed with small fibers. Fim/’briate, fringed. Fis’sured, cleft or split. Flabel’liform, fan shaped. Floc’cose, downy, woolly. Fo’veolate, marked with minute pits or depressions. Free, said of gills not attached to the stem. Fur’cate, forked. Gibbous, swollen at one side. Gla’brous, smooth. Gleba, spore-bearing tissue in Gastromy- cetes. 57 Gran/ular, covered with or composed of granules. Grega/rious, growing together in num- bers in the same locality. Gut’tula, a small drop or droplike par- ticle. Hab/‘itat, natural place of growth of a plant. Hirsute’, hairy with stiff hairs. Hoar’y, covered with short, grayish-white hairs. Hygromet/’ric, readily absorbing and retaining moisture. Hygroph’anous, watery when moist, opaque when dry. Hyme/’nium, the fruit-bearing surface. Im/bricate, overlapping like shingles. Immar’ginate, without a well-defined margin, Incised’, having marginal slits or notches. Indu’sium, in phalloids, a veil hanging beneath the pileus (cap). Inflexed’, bent inward. Infundib’uliform, funnel shaped. In’nate, adhering by growth. In’volute, rolled inward. Lac’cate, as if varnished or coated with wax. Lacin‘iate, cut into jagged edges. Lan/ceolate, tapering to both ends. La/tex, thick, milky juice. Lactif’erous, applied to tubes contain- ing latex. Line, one-twelfth of an inch. Mac’ulate, spotted. Mar’ginate, having a border. Ma/trix, the substance upon or in which a fungus grows. Mi’cron, one one-thousandth of a milli- meter, represented by the Greek letter mu (#) following the number. Millimeter (mm.) the thousandth part of a meter, nearly one twenty-fifth of an inch; 25.4 mm. = 1 inch. Mu’ricate, rough, with short, hard points. Obo’vate, broad end upward or toward the apex. Paraph’yses, slender threadlike struc- tures growing with the asci. Par’tial, said of a veil clothing the stem and reaching to the edge of the cap but not extending beyond it. Pec’tinate, toothed like a comb. dense, well-defined 58 Pel‘licle, a thin skin. Perid’ium, the coat of certain plants, as for example, puffballs; may be single or double. Pi/leate, having a cap or pileus. Pi‘leus, cap of a fungus. Pi/lose, covered with hairs; furry. Pli’cate, folded like a fan. Pi‘lei, plural of pileus. Plane, applied to gills with even edge. Plu’mose, feathery. Po’roid, porelike. Pru’inose, covered with a bloom or powder. Pubes’cent, covered with soft, hairs, downy. Pul’vinate, cushion shaped. Punce’tate, dotted with points. Reflexed’, turned back. Resu’pinate, attached to the matrix by the back, the hymenium facing out- ward. Retic’ulate, marked with cross lines like the meshes of a net. Rev’olute, rolled backward or upward. Rhi’zomorphs, long, branching or anas- tomosing, rootlike cords of mycelium produced by many fungi. Rim/‘ulose, covered with little cracks. Ring, annulus, a part of the veil adhering in the form of a ring to the stem of an agaric. Ri’vose, marked with furrows which do not run in parallel directions. Ru/’gose, wrinkled. Sap‘id, agreeable to the taste. Sca/brous, rough on the surface. Sca’riose, thin, dry, membranaceous; applied to a shriveled membrane. Sclero’tium, a hard, compact mass of mycelium, the resting stage of certain fungi. Scrobic’ulate, marked with small pits. short BULLETIN 175, U. S. DEPARTMENT OF AGRICULTURE. Se’riate, arranged in rows. Seri’ceous, silky. Ser’rate, saw toothed. Se’tose, bristly. Sin/uate, wavy, as the margin of gills. Si/nus, a rounded inward curve. Spor’ophore, the fruiting body of a fungus. Squa’mous, scales. Stipe, stem of a mushroom. Stri’ate, marked with Sapa or radiat-. ing lines. Stri’gose, rough with stiff hairs. Stuffed, said of a stem filled with mate- rial of a different texture from its walls. Sul’cate, grooved, marked with furrows. Tes’sellated, checkered in a regular manner. Tomen/’tose, densely pubescent with matted wool. Trun’cate, cut squarely off. Tu’bercle, wartlike excrescence. Tur’binate, top shaped; an inverted cone. Umbil/icate, with a central depression. Um/bo, central elevation. Un/cinate, hooked; forming a hook. Un/dulate, wavy. Univer’sal, said of the veil or volva which entirely envelopes the fungus when young. Vag’inate, sheathed. Ve/nate, veined, intersected by swollen wrinkles below and on the sides. © Ven/tricose, swollen in the middle. Ver’nicose, appearing as if varnished. Vil/lose, covered with long, weak hairs. Vis’cid, moist and sticky. Vis’cous, gluey. Zo’nate, marked with concentric bands of color. covered with appressed RECIPES FOR COOKING MUSHROOMS. According to the views of many persons, mushrooms are best cooked simply, with butter, pepper, and salt only for seasoning. The addition of various condiments impairs the delicate mushroom flavor. However, tastes vary, and the opportunity of choice or experiment is herewith rendered available by selections which may be made from the recipes which follow. All have been either tried oe ee ree ; MUSHROOMS AND OTHER COMMON FUNGI, 59 by the writers or selected from the printed directions of capable authorities. The general statement can be made that mushrooms may be pre- pared for the table in any way which would be suitable for oysters. The caps should be carefully washed, gill side down; peeling may be required to remove adherent foreign matter, but otherwise it is unnecessary and involves a considerable waste of time and loss of flavor. Unless they are extremely tough, the stems should not be discarded, but cut into small bits and stewed, or, after long boiling, even if tough, run through a sieve and made into a soup or sauce. Wild mushrooms should be cooked soon after collection, as they are in that way much better preserved than if kept uncooked, even in a refrigerator. Some thin, juicy, wild varieties, as species of Coprinus, may require cooking but 5 to 10 minutes, while thicker, tough plants may require 30 to 40 minutes, and some mushrooms which never become tender by stewing may be excellent if fried. Judgment, a most essential qualification for a good cook, will usually assist in the selection of a method suited to the species in hand and in deciding the length of time necessary for its cooking. DEvVILED MusHROoMS. Chop or break into small pieces 1 quart of mushrooms seasoned with pepper and salt; prepare 1 pint of bread crumbs; mix the mashed yolks of 2 hard-boiled eggs with 2 raw ones and stir into 1-cup of milk or cream. Put a layer of crumbs in the bottom of a baking pan or dish, then a layer of mushrooms, scatter over bits of butter, our on a part of the cream and egg mixture, and continue until the dish is full, aving bread crumbs with butter for the top layer. Closely covered, bake 20 minutes in a hot oven; then uncover for about 5 mjnutes, or sufficiently long for the top to be well browned. Ii preferred, water and lemon juice may be substituted for milk or cream. Frrep MusHrooms. Beat the yolk of an egg with a tablespoonful of water, and season with pepper and salt. In this, dip each cap and then dip into fine cracker crumbs or corn meal. Have butter or cooking oil very hot in a frying pan. Fry slowly on each side 5 minutes. A sauce can be made by thickening the butter or 011 with flour and add- ing milk or cream. If desired, serve on toast. A smooth, thin tomato sauce is also excellent. FRICASSEED MUSHROOMS. Peel and remove the stems from large mushrooms. Make a forcemeat by chopping the white meat of a cold roast chicken fine with a few small mushrooms and moisten- ing it with chicken stock. Grease a pudding dish and lay the large mushrooms, tops down, in this. Fill the mushrooms and the space between them with the forcemeat. Sprinkle bits of butter over all. Pour in enough of the chicken stock to make the contents of the dish very moist, lay a few waferlike slices of bacon on top of the scallop, and bake, covered, in a hot oven for 15 minutes; uncover, and cook for 5 minutes longer. Serve in the dish in which they were cooked. (Marion Harland’s Cookbook, p. 460.) Bakep MusHROoMS. Peel and stem large mushrooms. Line a deep baking dish with thin slices of toast, each of which has been dipped for an instant in seasoned beef stock. Fill the dish with layers of mushrooms, sprinkling each layer with salt, paprika, and bits of butter. When the dish is full, pour over all a gill of stock, and bake, covered, for 20 minutes; uncover, and cook for 5 minutes before sending to the table. (Marion Harland’s Cookbook, p. 213.) 60 BULLETIN 175, U. S. DEPARTMENT OF AGRICULTURE. BRoILED SWEETBREADS WITH MUSHROOMS. Blanch the sweetbreads and cut them in half, lengthwise. Grease a small gridiron, lay the split sweetbreads on this, and broil over a clear fire, turning frequently and watching carefully lest they scorch. When done, lay on rounds of crustless toast, _rub thoroughly with butter; salt and pepper to taste and cover with minced mush- rooms fried in butter. (Marion Harland’s Cookbook, p. 121.) OYSTERS WITH MUSHROOMS. Drain about 25 oysters, put them into a hot pan with a teaspoonful of butter and toss them until they are plumped and ruffled on both sides. Then place them in a hot dish. To the oyster liquor add the juice of half a pint of chopped mushrooms and enough milk tomakeapint. Thicken this with a tablespoonful of flour moistened with a little milk and cook 3 minutes; stir in the mushrooms and cook 2 minutes longer; add a hali teaspoonful of salt, a half teaspoonful of lemon juice, a teaspoonful of onion juice, the beaten yolks of 2 eggs, and a heaping tablespoonful of butter. Put in the oysters and as soon as the preparation reaches the boiling point turn into ahot dish. (Marion Harland’s Cookbook, p. 150.) MusHROOMS WITH Bacon. Fry the bacon, and on removing it from the frying pan keep hot; cook the mush- rooms on each side in the ‘‘fryings”; serve on a platter with the strips of bacon arranged as a border. Several species are good prepared in this manner, but it is one especially well suited to Agaricus campestris. MusHrooms BAKED WITH TOMATOES. In a baking dish arrange small round slices of buttered toast; upon each piece place a rather thin slice of peeled tomato, salted and peppered; upon each slice of tomato place a fine, thick mushroom, gill side up; in the center of each mushroom put a generous piece of butter; season with pepper and salt. Cover the dish and bake in a hot oven 10 minutes; then uncover and bake for an additional 5 to 10 minutes, as the mushrooms appear to require. PEPPERS STUFFED WITH MUSHROOMS. Cut the stem end of the peppersand carefully remove all seeds and the white mem- brane; chop or break the mushrooms into small pieces, season with pepper and salt, press firmly into the peppers, and put a good-sized lump of butter on top of each. The water adhering to the mushrooms after washing will furnish sufficient moisture for their cooking. Arrange the peppers on end in a baking dish, having water with salt, pepper, and butter poured into the depth of about an inch. Place the dish in a hot oven, cook covered 15 minutes; then uncover and baste and cook for 10 to 15 minutes longer, or until the peppers are perfectly tender. An addition of chopped cooked chicken or veal to the mushrooms is a pleasing variation. MusHROOMS AND CHEESE. Butter a baking dish, place in layers mushrooms broken in small pieces, bread crumbs, grated cheese, salt, pepper, and bits of butter; continue until dish is filled, | letting the top layer be a thin sprinkling of cheese. Cover and cook in oven for 20 minutes; remove cover for 5 minutes before serving. MusHRoomMs A LA POULETTE. Stew the mushrooms in cream; remove from the fire and stir in the beaten yolks of two eggs. Return to the fire to let the eggs thicken; then serve at once. (Helen Cramp. Universal Cookbook, p. 172.) MusHRoom PIE. Various species are good prepared in the form of pie. Ordinary pastry crust may be used or a rich biscuit dough is well adapted for the purpose. The mushrooms should be previously stewed, and to the liquor should be added milk or cream, & little thickening, butter, pepper, and salt. MUSHROOMS AND OTHER COMMON FUNGI, 61 CREAM OF MusHROOM SOUP. Stew caps and stems cut in small pieces for an hour or longer; run through a colander, add cream or milk, thicken with flour, add butter, salt, and pepper. Pour in bouillon cups and serve with whipped cream on top. ; SALADS. For salads many mushrooms can be used raw (after being peeled), especially species of Coprinus and Clavaria and all puffballs. Tougher plants can be stewed, drained, and chilled before adding the dressing, which may be either a mayonnaise or French dressing of oil with vinegar or lemon juice. Serve on lettuce. MusHROOM PATTIES. Cut the mushrooms into small pieces, cook slowly in butter until tender, add cream or milk, pepper, and salt, and thicken with flour. Fill the reheated patty shells. UNDER THE GLASS CovER, OR BELL, WITH CREAM. With a small biscuit cutter, cut rounds from slices of bread; they should be about 24 inches in diameter and about half an inch in thickness. Cut the stems close to the gills from fresh mushrooms; wash and wipe the mushrooms. Put a tablespoonful of butter in a saucepan; when hot, throw in the mushrooms, skin side down; cook just a moment, and sprinkle with salt and pepper. After the rounds of bread have been slightly toasted, arrange them in the bottom of a bell dish and heap the mush- rooms on them; put a little piece of butter in the center; cover over the bell, which is either of glass, china, or silver; stand them in a baking pan, and then in the oven for 20 minutes. While these are cooking, mix a tablespoonful of butter and one of flour in a saucepan, add either a half pint of milk or a gill of milk and a gill of chicken stock; stir until it boils, then add a half teaspoonful of salt and a dash of pepper. When the mushrooms have been in the oven the allotted time, bring them out; lift the cover, pour over quickly a little of this sauce, cover again, and send them at once to the table. MusHROOMS IN PAPER BaGs. Cut the stems close, sprinkle lightly with salt, and lay in a well-greased bag together with a big teaspoonful of butter rolled in flour and half a cupful of rich cream. Seal and cook 12 minutes in a hot oven. (Hmma Paddock Telford. Standard Paper-Bag Cookery, p. 93.) SUGGESTIONS FOR CERTAIN SPECIES. ARMILLARIA MELLEA. While not one of the best edible species, it is excellent fried and served on toast and also is quite good stewed. CANTHARELLUS CIBARIUS (CHANTERELLE STEW). This mushroom, being of rather tough consistency, requires long and slow cooking. ““Cut the mushrooms across and remove the stems; put them into a closely covered saucepan, with a little fresh butter, and sweat them until tender at the lowest possi- ble temperature. A great heat always destroys the flavor.’’—Mrs. Hussey. (W. Hamilton Gibson. Our Edible Toadstools and Mushrooms and How to Distinguish Them, p. 310.) COPRINUS. Species of Coprinus are very delicate, and Coprinus micaceus is considered the most digestible of all mushrooms. They are good steamed 5 minutes and served with butter and white sauce. Species of Coprinus are also delicious baked with cheese. Butter a baking dish and put in a layer of mushrooms, bread crumbs, cheese grated (or cut in small pieces), and season with pepper and salt. Repeat the process once or twice according to the amount to be prepared, adding a few small lumps of butter to the last layer. Bake 15 to 20 minutes. 62 BULLETIN 175, U. S. DEPARTMENT OF AGRICULTURE. FISTULINA HEPATICA. The beefsteak fungus should be sliced across the grain and soaked in salt water, the length of time varying probably with its age. The slices should be wiped dry and broiled or fried, then dressed with butter, salt, and pepper. The fungus may be used raw for salad, dressed to suit the taste of the collector, stewed, or made into soup. The suggestion of its use as the foundation for a beef- steak pie is apparently worthy of experiment, as the resemblance to a good steak, in flavor if not in texture, is quite remarkable. MARASMIUS OREADES. The fairy-ring fungus is especially popular stewed and served with a brown sauce as an accompaniment to beefsteak. The species dries easily and even those dried naturally in the open may be revived by soaking and prepared for the table. 2 Fairy-ring pickles can be made after being packed in jars by having highly spiced vinegar heated to the scalding point poured over them. They are ready for the table in about two weeks. MORCHELLA ESCULENTA. All morels are delicious. Probably the best manner of preparing them is stuffed with a force meat made of chopped cooked chicken or veal, with moistened bread or cracker crumbs seasoned simply with salt and pepper. The stalks should be split to permit the stuffing, and then tied together before the morels are baked. In the covered baking dish there should be a very small quantity of water. PLEUROTUS OSTREATUS (MOCK OYSTERS). Take small specimens of Plewrotus ostreatus or cut from large tender ones pieces the size and shape of oysters. Dip them in the beaten yolk of an egg to which a tablespoon- ful of water has been added, and roll in cracker crumbs or corn meal. Season with salt and pepper. Fry in either deep fat, melted butter, or oil. PUFFBALLS. Never use puffballs unless the inner part is perfectly white when sliced. They should be peeled and can then be dressed raw for a salad, stewed with cream, and served either in patty shells, or on toast, or fried. When fried simply in melted butter or oil, they are fine; or the slices may be dipped in egg and cracker meal before being placed in the frying pan. A cream dressing is a delicious addition to fried puffballs. TRICHOLOMA EQUESTRE. This species is most excellent fried; also creamed and served as patties. A unique way of serving it is in a soup made with water, pepper, and salt, which will deceive any person into believing he is enjoying a dish of extremely fine turkey broth. After straining—for it must be a clear soup—add a small amount of butter. TRICHOLOMA TERREUM. Fine for patties and makes a most excellent soup, especially if celery is boiled with the chopped mushrooms; strain, and add butter, pepper, and salt. PRESERVING WiLtp MusHROOMS. Requests for instructions in regard to canning mushrooms are frequently received. The following directions, compiled by the Office of Experiment Stations from Bulletin No. 98 of the Oregon Agricultural Experiment Station, describe methods of canning and drying alike applicable to cultivated or wild species. The author, E. F. Pernot, states that mushrooms ‘‘may be canned as easily as fruit and much easier than some vegetables.’ The buttons ranging in size from the smallest to those with the cup breaking from the stem are the most desirable for canning, as they remain firm and white after being heated. When sufficient buttons are gathered they are cleaned by peeling or by wiping with a cloth, removing any soiled spots or earth which may have adhered to them. The stems are cut off, leaving from one-half to 1 inch attached to the cap. They may then be placed in a granite-iron kettle and heated without water until i, ia an aR MUSHROOMS AND OTHER COMMON FUNGI, 63 shrinkage ceases, after which they are placed in cans that have previously been cleaned and scalded, and the liquor poured over them, completely filling the can. If glass cans are used, after filling they are placed in any kind of vessel provided with a cover and containing a small quantity of hot water. A sheet of asbestos or a thin layer of excelsior is placed in the boiler to prevent the glass from coming in contact with the bottom. The caps are placed loosely on the cans and with steamer cover in place the water allowed to simmer for half an hour. Upon removing the cover from the steamer the can covers are immediately screwed down as tightly as possible; then the cans are put away to cool, upside down , in order to detect any leak. If all are perfectly sealed, allow them to stand until the next day at the same time, when they are again heated in the same manner, except that the time must be prolonged to one hour, because the contents of the cans are cold. Again the third day repeat this operation, which will complete the sterilization, and the mushrooms will be found to be as nearly like the fresh article as it is possible to have them. They keep well and do not deteriorate either in consistency or in flavor. The cans must be kept sealed throughout the operation. “Tf desired, the mushrooms may be stewed in milk or prepared in any manner for the table and then canned in the manner described. When the can is opened they require heating only before serving. When tin cans are used they are handled in the same manner as glass ones, except that the lid should be soldered as soon as the can is filled, leaving the vent open until after heating the first time; then the vent should be immediately closed with a drop of solder while the can is hot, thus forming a partial vacuum that takes up the expansion caused by subsequent heatings. MuSsHROOMS IN OIL. After boiling for about 10 minutes, drain and pack the mushrooms in a jar, filling it with melted butter or oil. Seal and keep in a cool place. Although this method seems expensive it in reality is not, because if the mushrooms are tightly packed the butter used will simply furnish the amount required for seasoning in their final preparation for the table. MusHROOM CATSUP. One pint mushroom liquor. One-fourth ounce green ginger root. One-half ounce peppercorns. One-fourth ounce cloves. One-fourth ounce allspice. One blade mace; salt. Wash and look over the mushrooms carefully; put them in an earthen jar with alternate layers of salt. Let stand for 24 hours in a comparatively warm place; put through a fruit press and add the ginger root cut into small piers Measure the liquor; add peppercorns and simmer for 40 minutes; then add the spices and boil for 15 minutes. Take from the fire and cool; strain through a cloth, bottle, and seal. (Helen Cramp. Universal Cookbook, p. 387.) Place mushrooms in an earthen jar and sprinkle salt over them, stirring so that all receive the salt; allow them to stand for 12 hours; then mash and strain through a cloth. For every quart of the liquid add half a teaspoonful of ground ginger and half a teaspoonful of black pepper. Boil the liquid in a granite-iron kettle until it is re- duced not less than one-third. Prepare the bottles by cleaning and thoroughly boiling them and their corks; then fill to the neck with hot catsup, cork tightly, and when the cork has dried and before they are cold, dip the cork and about half an inch of the bottle neck into hot canning wax, previously melted ina cup or can. It is advisable to use rather small-sized bottles, so that the contents may be used before remaining open toolong. (H.F.Pernot, Oregon Agricultural Experiment Station, Bulletin No. 98.) Driep MusHROOMS. A good use to make of the older mushrooms is to dry them. This may be done after they have been peeled or cleaned by placing them upon boards or drying racks, only one deep, and exposing them to the sun and air. Beginning with the cap side down, they should be turned over every day and must not be left out during the night, as they absorb moisture very rapidly. They may also be dried upon wooden traysina warmroom. When dried by either method until they feel dry to the touch finish them in the oven and while brittle grind them into a fine powder with a spice mill, or even a coffee mill will answer the purpose. The powder should at once be placed in well-stoppered, dry bottles, or fruit jars well sealed, and kept in a warm, 64 BULLETIN 175, U. S. DEPARTMENT OF AGRICULTURE. dry place. Mushrooms that are wet can not be successfully dried. The best are those which grow and are gathered dry. . Mushroom powder keeps very well, and it is one of the most delicious flavoring condiments of the kitchen. If milk is used in making meat gravy or other dishes the flavor is much more pronounced. The mushrooms may also be dried in the manner described, and used whole by first soaking them before preparing the various dishes; they are practically the same as fresh ones, with the exception of being somewhat tough. The flavor is fully as strong ss in om ones. (E£. F. Pernot, Oregon Agricultural Experiment Station, Bulletin No. 98. REFERENCE BOOKS USEFUL TO THE AMATEUR. ATKINSON, G. F. 1903. Studies of American Fungi; Mushrooms, Edible, Poisonous, etc.... ed. 2, New York, 323 p., illus., pl. (partly col.). CLEMENTS, F. E. 1910. Minnesota Mushrooms. Minneapolis, 169 p., illus., 4 col. pl. (Minnesota Plant Studies, IV.) Grsson, W. H. 1903. Our Edible Toadstools and Mushrooms and How to Distinguish Them... New York and London, 337 p., illus., 37 pl. (29 col.). Harp, M. E. [c1908.] The Mushroom, Edible and Otherwise, Its Habitat and Its Time of Growth ... Columbus, Ohio, 609 p., illus. Luoyp, C. G. 1898-. Mycological Writings. Cincinnati. McILvaINneé, CHARLES, and Macapaw, R. K. (c1912.] Toadstools, Mushrooms, Fungi, Edible and Poisonous; One Thousand American Fungi, rev. ed., Indianapolis, 749 p., illus., pl. (partly col.). MarsHa.., Nina L. 1905. The Mushroom Book... New York, 170 p., illus., pl. (partly col.). Masses, G. E. [1911?] British Fungi, with a Chapter on Lichens. London, 551 p., illus., 40 col. pl. Morean, A. P. 1889-92. North American Fungi. Jn Jour. Cinn. Soc. Nat. Hist., v. 11, p. 141- 149, pl. 3, 1889; v. 12, p. 8-22, 163-172, pl. 1-2, 16, 1889-90; v. 14, p. 5-21, 141-148, pl. 1-2, 5, 1891-92. Peen, 0. 1. 1869-1912. Annual Report of the [New York] State Botanist, 1868-1911. Pub- lished in Annual Report, New York State Museum, v. 22-65. Reports for 1898 and 1901-1911 were first published as Museum Bulletins 25, 54, 67, 75, 94, 105, 110, 122, 131, 139, 150, 157. WuitE, E. A. 1905. A Preliminary Report on the Hymeniales of Connecticut. Hartford, 81 p., 40 pl. (Connecticut State Geological and Natural History Survey, Bulletin 3.) ADDITIONAL COPIES OF THIS PUBLICATION MAY BE PROCURED FROM THE SUPERINTENDENT OF DOCUMENTS GOVERNMENT PRINTING OFFICE WASHINGTON, D. C. AT 30 CENTS PER COPY Vv on