White : Mt. Desert Fungi 554 



POLYPORUS LEUCOPHAEUS Moilt. 

 POLYPORUS PERENNIS (L.) Fr. 

 POLYPORUS PICIPES Fr. 



PoLYPORUS PERGAMENUS Fr. Very common. 

 PoLYPORUS ScHWEiNiTZii Fr. Plentiful. 



POLYPORUS SCHWEINITZII DUALIS Peck. 



PoLYPORUS SPLENDENS Peck. [P. oblectaus of Ricker's list, but 

 that species is not likely American.) 



PoLYPORUS SULFUREUS (Bull.) Fr. 



PoLYPORUS VERSICOLOR (L.) Fr. Very common in all localities. 



PoLYPORUS VAPORARIUS Fr. 



Lenzites sepiaria Fr. 



Trametes ciNNABARiNA (Jacq.) Fr. 



* Trametes rubescens Fr. 



Family Boletaceae 



Boletixus pictus Peck. Common in damp places, Sphag- 

 num, etc. 



* Boletus albus Peck. Only one plant seen. 

 Boletus Americanus Peck. Common in damp places. 

 Boletus chromapes Frost. Fairly common but scattered, 



rarely more than one plant in a locality. 



* Boletus cyanescens Bull. Common. 



* Boletus edulis Bull. Plentiful. 



* Boletus edulis clavipes Peck. Common. 



* Boletus felleus Bull. Rather scarce. 

 Boletus granulatus albipes Peck. Plentiful. 



* Boletus miniato-olivaceus sensibilis Peck. Common. 



* Boletus ornatipes Peck. Very common in woods. 



* Boletus piperatus Bull. Common in woods and by road- 

 sides. 



* Boletus purpureus fumosus Peck, var. nov. Pileus convex, 

 velvety, smoky brown, flesh creamy-yellow, changing- to bluish- 

 green where wounded ; tubes depressed about the stem, yellowish- 

 green, the mouths small, brownish-red, the dissepiments slightly 

 Recurrent on the stem, changing to greenish-blue where wounded ; 

 stem tapering upward, yellow above, colored like the pileus below, 

 bright yellow within, changing to bluish-green where wounded ; 

 spores lo ft long, 5// broad. 



