REPORT OF THE BOTANIST. 47 
RADULUM ORBICULARE FY. . 
Decaying wood and bark of deciduous trees. Slingerlands 
and Mechanicsville. October. 
PHLEBIA MERISMOIDES FA’. 
Decaying wood. Indian Lake. October. 
This species is apparently very close to P. radiata. Our 
specimens are referred to it because of their pale color and more 
strigose margin. 
GRANDINIA VIRESCENS 2. Sp. 
Effused, thin, separable from the matrix, soft, greenish, 
becoming darker with age ; granules minute, hemispherical, not 
crowded ; spores broadly elliptical or suborbicular, .0002’ long. 
Decaying wood. Oneida. Warne. September. 
Remarkable for its beautiful color. 
GRANDINIA RUDIS 7. Sp. 
Effused, thin, soft, pulverulent-tomentose, tawny-brown, the 
hymenium at length granulose ; spores globose, rough, .0003— 
.0004' in diaméter. 
Decaying wood and ground in deep shaded places. North 
Greenbush. October. 
It is allied to G. coriaria Pk. in texture and in the character 
of the spores, but it differs in color and habit. The whole plant 
is of one uniform hue. 
THELEPHORA SPECIOSA FY. 
Providence, Saratoga county. August. 
But a single specimen was found and in it the tips of the 
branches are not fimbriate; otherwise the characters are well 
shown. 
HYMENOCHATE AGGLUTINANS Hillis. 
Trunks and branches of living alder trees. Sandlake and 
Adirondack Mts. July and November. 
HYMENOCH ATE SPRETA 2. Sp. 
Effused, adnate, somewhat uneven, thick, ferruginous, beset 
with rather long slender acute sete, at length cracking into 
frustulate-areole. 
Decorticated wood. Helderberg Mts. October. 
This quite closely resembles some forms of H. corrugata, but 
its bright color and thicker substance, which shrinks more in 
drying so that the matrix is revealed through the chinks, and 
the areas become as it were frustules, indicate a distinct species. 
