“304 CRYPTOGAMIA. FUNGI. Boletus. Stem central. 
: (1) Tuses Wuire. 
by the white and the yellow Reticularia of Bulliard. " ‘Schaf. 
fer’s pl. 121 is cited by Mr. Hudson as the B, subtomentosus of 
Linnzus, which see. 
Pool dam, Edgbaston. 6th Aug. 1791. 
subfus’cus. Box. (Scumrr.) Tubes white, very short: pileus light 
brown, regularly convex: stem pale brown: root 
conical, 
Scheff. 130, may serve to give some idea of it, though it is 
not the plant. 
Tusss white, 7 of an inch in length, pretty firmly fixed to the 
pileus. Pores white or brownish white, very minute. 
Pireus light brown, smooth, uniform, clothy to the touch, con- 
vex, 4 or 5 inches over. Flesh very white. 
Stem pale brown, covered with a beautiful white net-work over 
its whole surface, 3 inches high, and 2 inches diameter. 
Root conical. 
_ . Much like the Bol. elephantinus in its habit, but differs in 
the colour of its tubes, stem, and pileus, as well as in the form 
of the latter. No part of it changes’colour on exposure to the 
air. 
Edgbaston Park, under the large oak near the wall of the 
square stew. Sept. 
cyanes'cens, Bon. Tubes white, brownish with age: pileus brown, 
convex, very fleshy: stem brown, rounded at the 
base. 
Bull. 369. 
Tues dirty white, {of an inch long, not decurrent. Pores 
small, nearly all alike. . 
Pitevs brown, convex, very fleshy, from 5 to 8 inches over. 
Flesh white, changing to fine blue when exposed to the 
air. 
Stem brown below, white above; 2 to 3 inches high, 1 4 to 
near 2 inches diameter, cylindrical upwards, the lower 
part rounded and egg-shaped. Bui. 
Observed by Dr. Sibthorpe in the walks of Magdalen Col- — 
lege, Oxford. Sept. 
polypo’rus, Bot. Tubes white and very short: pileus brown, irregu- 
lar: flesh very thin: stem brown, rarely central. 
Bull. 409, = 
Tuses where longest about 1-10th of an inch, in some places 
not 1-20th, Pores yellowish white, circular, so small as 
hardly to be perceptible to the naked eye. 
