REPORT OF THE BOTANIST. 67 
Lenzires viauis Peck. 
Pileus coriaceous, sessile, dimidiate or elongated, sometimes 
confluent, obscurely zoned, subtomentose, brown or grayish-brown, 
the margin cinereous; lamelle thin, abundantly anastomosing, 
pallid, cinereous-pruinose on the edge when fresh. 
Pileus 6’-12” broad. ; 
Old railroad ties. North Greenbush and Center. October. 
This is not as bright colored as L. sepiaria, nor so distinctly 
zoned ; the lamelle are closer, thinner and more anastomosing, 
forming pores toward the outer margin almost as in the genus 
Polyporus. 
Bouetus PrreRATus Aull. 
Ground in open woods. Lowville and Bethlehem. September 
and October. 
BoLeEtTus CHRYSENTERON /7. 
Ground in open woods. Worcester and Memphis. July and 
August. 
Botertus patiipus Fost. 
Pileus soft, viscid when moist, smooth, pale alutaceons ;_ tubes 
plane, attached, sometimes slightly depressed around the stem, 
small, subangular, pale yellow, slightly changing color when 
wounded; stem subequal, smooth, solid, pallid; spores .00045 x 
.00022 in. 
Plant 2-5’ high, pileus 24’ broad, stem 4-6” thick. 
Ground in woods. North Greenbush. August. 
It is allied to B. seaber, from which its plane yellowish tubes 
and smooth stem will separate it. 
Borrrus ampirporus Peck. 
Pileus broadly convex or expanded, sometimes slightly umbo- 
nate, dry, squamulose-tomentose, pinkish-brown ; tubes convex, 
attached or slightly decurrent, very large, angular, compound, yel- 
low; stem equal, solid, yellowish-brown, paler at the top and 
marked by the decurrent walls of the tubes; flesh whitish tinged 
with yellow, unchangeable ; spores pale ochraceous with a greenish 
tinge, .00035 x .00016 in. 
Plant 3-5’ high, pileus 3-4’ broad, stem 3’—6” thick, 
Low mossy ground in woods. North Elba and Sandlake. 
August and September. 
Formerly I erroneously referred this plant to B. subtomento- 
