Excerpt from Bulletin of the New York State Museum, Vol. 1: Natural History, May 1887
Trieholoma infantilis.
Pileus thin, convex or nearly plane, even, minutely silky, moist in wet weather, reddish-gray, the margin when young incurved and whitish; lamellae subdistant, plane or slightly veiitricose, often eroded on the edge, whitish; stem short, equal or tapering upward, hollow, slightly silky, colored like the pileus or a little paler; spores broadly elliptical, .0003 to .00035 in. long, .0002 to .00025 broad, often containing a shining nucleus.
Plant gregarious, pileus 4 to 12 lines broad, stem 1 to 1.5 in. high, 1 to 2 lines thick.
Gravelly soil in fields. Sandlake. June.
This is a very small species belonging to the section Sericella and related to Tricholoma c?lata, from which it is distinguished by its different color and the absence of an umbilicus from the pileus. This is sometimes papillate, and both it and the stem imbibe moisture. The latter is fleshy-fibrous, and its cavity is very small. In the larger specimens the margin of the pileus is often wavy, and the edge of the lamellae eroded. Trieholoma Hebeloma, a closely allied species, may be distinguished by its more conical pileus, slender habit and smaller spores.
Clitocybe basidiosa.
Pileus rather thin, convex, then expanded and umbilicate or centrally depressed, glabrous, hygrophanous, grayish-brown and striatulate on the margin when moist, dingy-white or grayish-white when dry, flesh whitish; lamellae arcuate or nearly plane, thick, distant, adnate or slightly decurrent, whitish with a violaceous tint; stem equal or slightly thickened above, glabrous, firm, whitish or pallid; spores subglobose, .00016 to .0002 in. long, basidia elongated, .0024 in. long, bearing spicules .0003 in. long.
Plant single or caespitose, 1 to 2 in. high, pileus 16 to 18 lines broad, stem 1 to 2 lines thick.
Woods and swamps. Sandlake and East Berne. August.
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