166 DECADES OF FUNGI. 



This species is very close to T. tepJiroleuca^ but there is no cinereous 

 tint about the pores, the walls of which are not so rigid, and aboTC all, 

 their edge is prolonged into a toothed membrane. 



^ 



T. ozonioideSy Berk, 



IIab. On charred wood. Leebong, 6000 feet. (Dr. Hooker.) 



A resupiuate form, with the margin narrowly reflected, and scarcely 



so thickly covered with strigose fascicles of hairs as in more perfectly 



developed specimens. 



* 



B^edalea sanguinea^ Klotzsch. 

 Hab. On dead wood. East Nepal. (Dr. Hooker.) 



« 



Z), temiisy Berk. 



Hab. On dead wood. 



(D 



444. D. Emodensis, n. s. ; ligneo-pallens ; pileo dimidiate crassiusculo 

 subvelutino postice demum laccc\to-polito j siuubus oblongis brevibus. 



Hab. On dead wood. Leebong. (Dr. Hooker.) 



Pileus 4-5 inches across, 2| or more long, dimidiate or subflabelli- 

 form, pale wood-coloured, rather thick, zoned, more or less velvety, at 

 length slightly laccate behind ; margin acute. Hymenium rather darker 

 than the pileus ; pores mostly oblong, about -^ of an inch across, vary- 

 ing considerably in length 3 dissepiments rigid ; edge obtuse. 



This species is always more or less velvety, sometimes densely, some- 

 times however nearly smooth, and is veiy distinct from every form of 

 Lenzites repanda^ with which it ought not to be confounded, though, 

 like other similar Fungi, it varies considerably. 



445. Cyclomyce^ inrbinatits, n. s. ; pileo turbinato deorsum cum sti- 

 pite radicato extus ferrugineo-spongioso confluente. 



Hab. On decayed wood, Nunklow. (Dr. Hooker.) 



Pileus about an inch broad, turbinate, hollowed out above, with the 

 margin expanded, minutely velvety, ferruginous. Stem attenuated down- 

 wards, rooting, clothed with dense, spongy, fexTUginous pubescence, li 

 inch high, half an inch thick in the middle ; laminae narrow. 



There are but two specimens of this curious production, neither of 

 which is in a satisfactory state. The colours are nearly those of Foltf- 

 porus ohlectans^ from which the concentric laminae and peculiar rooting 

 stems at once separate it. Both the specimens seem to have been at- 

 tached below through their whole length. 

 Hexagonia WigMii^ Klotzsch. 



Hab. Soaue river, Behar. (Dr. Hooker.) 



