LONGYEAM ON MICHIGAN FUNGr. 123 



llymenochsete rubiginosa Lev. On limbs and logs. M. A. C. 



Hymenochiete tabacina Lev. On limbs. Woods. M. A. C. 



Peniophora cinerea Pers. (Hicks 170, 171.) 



Peniopliora cinerescens (Schw.) Sacc. On dead trunks. M. A. C- 



Peniophora quercina Fr. (Hicks 198.) 



Peniophora vehitina Fr. (Hicks 180.) 



Solenia anomala Pers. On dead trunks and branches. 



Solenia anomaloides Pk. n. sp. Described in Bull. Torr. Bot. Club, June, 1898, 

 as follows: "Densely cespitose, tufts 2-6 mm. broad; cups stipitate, cyathiform, 

 one-fourth to one-half a line broad, externally clothed with an appressed villosity, 

 grayish ochraceous or subcervine, whitish within, the margin incurved; spores 

 oblong- or cylindrical. 10-12. .5 microns on bark of dead plum tree, February. 



Stereum candidum Schw. (Hicks.) 



Stereum complicatum Fr. On dead timber. 



Stereum curtisii Berk. On stumps and logs. 



Stereum frustulosum Fr. Common on rotting logs of oak. 



Stereum hirsutum Fr. Common on dead timber. 



Stereum ochraceoflavum Schw. On decaying timber. Mis. Dec. 1896, Dr. Beal. 



Stereum purpureum Pers. Common on dead timber. 



Stereum sericeum Schw. (Hicks.) 



Stereum spadiceum Pers. Lewiston, Beardslee. 



Stereum subpileatum B. & C. Chandlers, on oak log, July, 1897. 



Stereum striatum Fr. Very common on trunks and branches of carpinus. 



Stereum versicolor Schwartz. Plentiful on decaying stumps and logs. 



Stereum versiforme Pk. 



Thelephora anthocephala Fr. Woods. M. A. C, June, 1901. Found once. 



Thelephora laciniata Pers. Common on naked soil. 



Thelephora michenera B. & C. (Hicks 82.) 



Thelephora pedicillata Schw. (Hicks.) 



Thelephora Schweinitzii Pk. Common on ground in woods. 



Thelephora terrestris Ehrh. (Hicks 72.) 

 Family Clavariese. 



Clavaria albida Pk. Woods. Greenville. Sept., Barlow. 



Clavaria aurea Schaeff. Woods. Not common. Summer. 



Clavaria cinerea Bull. Woods. Not common. 



Clavaria cristata Holwsk. Woods. Not plentiful. Summer. 



Clavaria densissima Pk. n. sp. Named from a specimen collected by Barlow at 

 'Greenville, Oct., 1901. Bui. Torr. Bot. Club, Feb., 1903, p. 98. 



Clavaria fusiformis Sow. In cedar swamps. Rare. Lewiston, Beardslee. 



Clavaria inequalis Mill. var. (Hicks.) 



Clavaria leucotephra B. & C. Woods. Common. Summer. 



Clavaria muscoides Linn. In wet places, yellow, irregularly branched. Lewis- 

 ton, Beardslee. 



Clavaria pinophila Pk. Woods. Plentiful. Summer and autumn. 



Clavaria pistillaris. Once found at Port Huron. October. 



Clavaria pyxidata Pers. Decaying logs. Not rare. Summer. 

 Family Tremellineae. * 



Calocera cornea Fr. On wood. Summer and autumn. 



Dacryomyces fragiformis (Pers.) Nees. Decaying limbs and sticks. Common. 



Ditiola radicata Fr. (Hicks 319.) 



Exidia albida Brefeld. Decaying wood. Common. 



Exidia glandulosa Fr. Decaying wood. Common. 



Exidia recisa Fr.? (Hicks 21.) 



Guepinia spathularia Fr. Decaying wood. Not rare. 



Nsematelia nucleata Fr. (Hicks.) 



Tremella intumescens Sm. Common on decaying limbs. 



Tremella mesenterica Retz. Not uncommon on decaying wood. 

 Order Gasteromyceteaj. 



Bovista pila B. & C. Fields and pastures. Common. Summer and autumn. 



Bovista plumbea Pers. Lawns and pastures. Abundant. Summer and autumn. 



Catastoma circumscissa (B. & C.) Morgan. Sandy pastures. Not rare. Summer. 



Catastoma subterranea. Sandy pastures. Not common. Summer. 



Cyathus vernicosus D. C. On soil and decaying vegetable matter. Very com- 

 mon. Summer. 



Geaster hygrometricus Pers. Common. 



Geaster minimus Schw. Open grassy places. Common. Spring. 



