TAB. CCLXXXVIII. 



BOLETUS suBEROSus ? Linn. 



1 CAN find no plant that fo well accords with Ln- 

 naeus's defcription as this. The figures quoted for 

 his plant by our Englifli authors, I am confident, belong 

 to other fpecies. It has certainly a more cork-like 

 texture than any other with which I am acquainted. 

 I do not exactly comprehend what Linnseus meant by 

 poris acutis (pores acute). I fufpedt it to be white when 

 perfectly frefli. 



T A B. CCLXXXIX. 



BOLETUS HYBRIDUS. 



X HIS Boletus has many charailers in common with 

 the B. lachrymans and B. MeduUa-panis. It is generally 

 found growing horizontally under rotten floors at- 

 tached by its back, fpreading in large patches, forming 

 more or left broad ramifications, often inofculating, 

 of a cottony fubftancc like the above mentioned, which 

 are commonly known by the name of Dry-rot. The 

 pores (which are feldom feen) are long, tubular, and 

 cylindrical, by which it is diftinguiflied from the other 

 two. 



TAB. CCXC. 



AURICULARIA corrugata- 



■ TREMELLOIDES. Bull. 29O. 



PEZIZA TREMELLOIDES. With. 344. 



TREMELLA corrugata. Relb.^c^Z. 



Very common on decayed gate-pofls, old hewn 

 trunks, Sec. attached by the back in large maffes, form- 

 ing a pileus in a fimilar manner to A. refiexa. The 

 under furface is light-brown, becoming darker, fome- 

 times purplifli, and more corrugated when it gets 

 older. The fubftance is at firft gelatinous, inclining 

 to cartilaginous, but dries hard and horny. The 

 under fide refembles in fome refpedls Feziza auricn- 

 laria of Withering. 



