REPORT ©F THE STATE BOTANIST JQI4 87 
Tremella sp. Parasiticon Aleurodiscus amorphus. Ex- 
cept in color, which is whitish, it seems close to T. versi- 
color Pk. 
Tremella mycetophila Pk. Parasitic on Collybia dryo- 
phila. 
Naematelia encephala Fr. On decayed wood. 
Dacryomyces deliquescens Fr. On decayed wood. 
Dacryomyces corticoides E..& E. On sticks. 
Calocera viscosa Fr. On the ground under conifers. 
THELEPHORACEAE 
Thelephora anthocephala Fr. On the ground among conifer 
needles. 
Thelephora laciniata Fr. Growing interwoven with debris of 
sticks, conifer needles and humus. 
Thelephora palmata Fr. On the ground, under balsam and spruce. 
Known by its strong fetid odor. 
Thelephora terrestris Fr. Forming large, expanded masses on 
moss and humus. 
Stereum sanguinolentum Fr. Resupinate, on spruce logs, bleed- 
ing where bruised if fresh, the wounds turning blackish. The 
resupinate habit, its host, and its testure separate it from S. 
spadiceum. 
Stereum tuberculosum Fr. On spruce and hemlock logs and 
stumps. 
Stereum curtisii Berk. On dead maple branches. 
Hymenochaete avellana Fr. On dead branches of maple and 
other deciduous trees. 
Hymenochaete cinnamomea Fr. On birch bark. 
Hymenochaete ferruginosa Fr. On log of deciduous tree. 
Hymenochaete tabacina Fr. On dead branches of deciduous tree. 
Hymenochaete rubiginosa. On sticks. 
Peniophora incarnata Fr. On dead alder branches. 
Peniophora cinerea Fr. On maple twigs. 
Coniophora puteana Fr. On bark of decayed hemlock wood. 
Aleurodiscus amorphus Fr. On dead branches of the balsam fir ; 
abundant. 
HYDNACEAE 
Irpex tulipifera Schw. On dead branches of Prunus 
serotina. 
Hydnum caput-ursi Fr. On trunks and logs of beech. 
