238 The Philippine Journal of Science 1914 
of Elfvingia elmeri Murr.), For. Bur. 19258 Curran, January, 1910, on 
Albizzia retusa. CULION, Merrill 3570, December, 1902, on decaying portion 
of a living tree. MINDANAO, Lake Lanao, Camp Keithley, Clemens s. n., 
July, 1907. PoLiLLo, Bur. Sci. 10526, 10554 McGregor, October-November, 
1909. 
Collections of this species have been made in Cameroon and in the Fiji 
Islands. 
FOMES ROSEO-ALBUS (Jungh.) Bres. in Hedwigia 53 (1912) 57. 
Polyporus roseo-albus Jungh. Plant. Jav. Crypt (1845) 43. 
Fomes mortuosus Fr. Nov. Symb. Myc. (1851) 64. 
Polyporus endapalus Berk. in Journ. Linn. Soc. 13 (1878) 1638. 
Polyporus caliginosus Berk. in Journ. Linn. Soc. 16 (1878) 46. 
Coriolopsis copelandi Murr. in Bull. Torr. Bot. Club. 35 (1908) 392. 
Polystictus copelandi Sacc. & Trot. Syll. Fung. 21 (1912) 322. 
Luzon, Province of Bataan, Lamao, Copeland 147, February, 1904: 
Province of Rizal, Bosoboso, Bur. Sci. 1214 Ramos, July, 1906. MINDANAO, 
District of Davao, Copeland 714, March 28, 1904 (Type number of Corio- 
lopsis copelandi Murr.) ; Lake Lanao, Camp Keithley, Bur. Sci. 21819, 21820, 
21821 Clemens, June, 1907. 
This is a rather common species of Fomes in the Philippines and Murrill’s 
Coriolopsis copelandi must be referred to it without question. 
Reported from Malacca and other portions of the Asiatic tropics. 
FOMES SPADICEUS (Berk.) Cooke in Grevillea 14 (1886) 20. 
Polyporus spadiceus Berk. in Ann. Nat. Hist. I 3 (1839) 388. 
Pyropolyporus fastuosus Murr. in Bull. Torr. Bot. Club 34 (1907) 479. 
LuzON, Province of Bataan, For. Bur. 19283 Curran, December, 1909; 
Lamao, For. Bur. 15585 Curran, November, 1908: Province of Nueva Ecija, 
Cabanatuan, Bur. Sci. 5240 McGregor, September, 1908. MINDANAO, Zam- 
boanga, For. Bur. 8972 Whitford & Hutchinson, January, 1908. 
Curran 19288, named by Murrill, Pyropolyporus fastuosus (Lév.) Murr., 
proves, on an examination of the material of the same collection retained 
in the herbarium of the Bureau of Science, to be not Fomes fastuosus Lév., 
but F. spadiceus (Berk.) Cooke, or, according to Murrill’s classification, 
should have been called Pyropolyporus spadiceus (Berk.). It differs from 
F. fastuosus in that the context is yellow-brown instead of brown, and is 
much thinner. The pore layers are also thinner and the top has a slightly 
dull velvety appearance rather than being shiny-velvety. There is an evi- 
dent relationship between this species and Polystictus spadiceus (Jungh.) 
Fries. 
Previously collected in India. 
FOMES SUBCHINONEUS (Murr.) comb. nov. 
Tyromyces subchioneus Murr. in Bull. Torr. Bot. Club 35 (1908) 406. 
Polyporus subchioneus Sacc. & Trott. Syll. Fung. 21 (1912) 278. 
MINDANAO, District of Davao, Mount Apo, Copeland 1074, April 20, 1904 
(Cotype of Tyromyces subchioneus Murr.) 
This species should be transfered to Fomes rather than Polyporus as 
was done by Saccardo and Trotter. The cotype specimen preserved in 
the herbarium of the Bureau of Science shows the presence of three distinct 
pore layers. 
So far, only reported from the Philippines. 
