. 
CRYPTOGAMIA. FUNGL TB Stem lateral. 
(2) Tupes Y¥LLowiIsH. 
Fil. = 1196 and also 899-Scheff. 101 and {od Bull. 114 
~Bolt, 77—Batsch. 41—Sterb. 13, and possibly 14, 
Tubes sls ‘nearly white, slanting. Pores large, whitish, ane 
, gular, varying much in size, 
Pitevs, buff, adorned with feather-like scales of a deeper 
~ dye, sometimes with a tinge of red, semi-circular, or 
fan-shaped, from 5 to. 14 Anches over. . Flesh whitey 
firm, elastic, 
Srem_ lateral, ee aS aie within, from. 1 to 2 inches 
long, and as much in breadth. 
It has a rank fungous smell, and is apt to abound with mag- 
ots. 
9 On the stumps of various kinds of trees; much crowded to- 
gether. In the rick yard, Edgbaston, on the stump of an ash, 
; Jane. 
(2) Tues yellowish: 
* fox" ‘Pores ‘yellowish : pileus dirty yellow : z. ‘stem dark 
brown, branched.. : 
sy 
\ 
rangiferi”= 
nus, ¥ 
e ‘Phil. trans. abr. x. pl. 20. cg 109, at hs 705-Blackt. fron 
tispiece-Bolt. 138. 
Tuses decurrent, dirty yellow, ragged at the ream: 
Pireus an expansion of the stem, dirty yellow, oblong, about 2 
.__. dnches 
STEM ‘dark echt 12 to 3 inches high, thick as a swan’s quill, 
often with one or more lateral branches, splitting at the 
“end into several horn-shaped branches, v with yellow tops, 
~*~" or else” expanding into the pileus. ‘Root a congeries of 
brown substances as large as hasle nuts. Borron.—The 
whole plant bears a resemblance to the palmated branch. 
ing horns of the larger species of deer. Professor Mar- 
tyn, who first published an’ account of it, says, that his 
plant was 2 feet high. It was of a dusky redcolour, in- — 
clining to black; the pores and the tips of the horns vl 
a.cream.colour,., oi 
Both Mr. Martyn’s and ‘Mr. Bolton’s Ha were found af: 
fixed to a log of wood in a cellar. 
Bot. (Buit.) Tubes buff sides, segs pi- 
ae deep buff to chesnut, hollowed in the middle, 
$e ad. waved atthe edge, 
Bal 46. Bol. elegans, the Pi ete fd sc pilenss 3 th. 445 
2 Qythe buff pileus ¥ ib. 360, an ald plant, which: f it 
iy awas not Sar the deciirvence of the pores on the stem awou 
calce’olus. 
