306 DECADES OF FUNGI. 
punctiform, and not radiating from the centre. There is no 
species of that genus with which it can be confounded. 
It certainly is very near to the foregoing species, but the 
pores seem to me to be of a different nature, not to mention 
the difference of habit, Mr. Lea also distinguished them, 
which has confirmed me in my conclusions, which have been 
formed after much deliberation, I ought, however, to state, 
that Dr. Montagne, to whom I showed two of the specimens, 
was inclined to think that they were different states of one 
species, : S656 
— 84. Cyclomyces Greeneii, n. sp. pileo spongioso-suberoso 
orbiculari undulato sublobato zonato tomentoso cinnamomeo . 
marginem versus tenuem lineato; stipite centrali obeonico | 
concolore; lamellis demum subcinereis. (Tab. XI.) Amongst - 
dead leaves. Tewkesbury, Massachusets. B. D. Greene, | 
Esq. 
. Pileus above 31 inches in diameter rather thin except in 
the centre orbicular slightly lobed and undulated, here and — 
there irregularly tuberculate concentrically zoned of a rich 
ferruginous cinnamon, clothed with short velvety down, which 
vanishes in parts towards the margin, where it is m 
with little linear grooves and raised lines, interspersed with — 
minute fascicles of down ; substance rather soft, marked with 
concentric circles ; margin very aeute. Stem obconical, obtuse, — 
about 14 inch high, and 2 of an inch thick, compressed and 
suleate where it joins the pileus, minutely velvety or | 
pruinose, of the same colour with the pileus; gills 
concentrically rather narrow, nearly entire, imbricati 
erisped and rigid when dry, at length subcinereous, interstices 
even and without any traces of dissepiments. - - i 
- A most interesting addition to the beautiful genus Cyclo 
myces which consisted before of a single species only. 47° 
pileus is very like that of Polyporus tabuleformis. Itis vety — 
brittle when dry. TEC aS 
Tab. XI. Cyclomyces Greeneii, nat. size. Jf. l. Portion 
of the underside, showing the gills ; magnified. Io 
— 85, Hydnum flabelliforme, n. sp. imbricatum coriaceum, pilel* 
