104 DECADES OF FUNGI. 
Has. On the under-side of fallen trunks and limbs of the Tulip 
Tree. North Carolina. 
Effused for many inches and completely surrounding the smaller 
branches, broadly reflexed ; margin membranaceous, but rigid, obscurely 
zoned, dirty white, slightly silky; but by no means hairy or bristly. 
Pores middle-sized; about 2, of inch broad, soon broken down into 
obtuse lamellar processes, extending to the margin where they are 
shallow and more distant. 
Allied-to P. pinsitus, of which at first we were inclined to think it a 
variety, but differing in its nearly smooth pileus and the singularly 
decomposed pores. 
219. P. salmonicolor, Berk. and Curt.; resupinatus crassus mycelio 
mucedineo am rotundis rubellis demum elongatis purpureo- 
fuscis. Curt., 
Has. On rm zin logs. Santee River, South Carolina. Mr. 
Ravenel. 
Effused, resupinate, several inches broad, thin near the margin, 
thick in the centre, of a rich salmon-colour, at length brown. Myce- 
lium white, mucedinous. Pores rounded, small, at length torn and 
angular. When fresh this appears to be very tender and easily in- 
jured, in which state it becomes dark purple brown, with a resinous 
aspect. 
Apparently the same species occurs in Sir W. J. Hooker’s Herbarium 
under the name of P. spissus, so marked by Schweinitz, but he sent a 
very different thing under that name to Fries. It does not appear to 
be closely allied to any described species. Its nearest affinities are 
with P. purpureus, Fr., and P. rhodellus, Fr., or better with P. carneo- 
fuscus. P 
220. P.cremor, Berk. and Curt.; resupinatus, albus; margine ob- 
soleto poris parvis subrotundis, dissepimentis crassis, acie obtusissima. 
Has. On decayed oak branches and frequently on the dises from 
whence twigs have been broken off. South Carolina. 
Resupinate, white, about an inch broad, consisting almost entirely 
of tubes. Margin obsolete. Pores small, round or slightly sinuated, 
their edge very obtuse. 
A distinct but not very remarkable species, allied most to P. vulgaris, 
but differing in its thick dissepiments and the obtuse edge of the pores. 
