: Tare Pi s Me 
el ight, Goblein tacliee: iach tace: afly-teven Aue: ‘thielaioes a ' pileu = 
- about one ‘inch. ‘From ‘this it will be seen that the dried plants are onl 
| about half their size when fresh. The flesh resembles in color and texture 
that ef P. sulphureus, to which the species is allied, but it is a little harde ae 
The dried plants have a decided and peculiar odor. nos . 
-Poxrrorvs (ANODERMEL) WEINMANNI F’, 
s Decaying hemlock trunks. Pine Hill. Sept. 
bet. The whole plant sometimes acquires a reddish hue in drying. The silva 
___ is two or three inches broad. A tendency to form narrow zones on the mar- 
gin is manifest. be 
_ Potyporus (INODERMEI) PLANUS PX. c 
rE. Pileus Eis coriaceous, plane,, suborbicular, about 1’ broad, sometim 
% piwelored: variegated ae narrow darker glabrous zones, margin whitish; 
‘pores minute, obtuse, short, subrotund, whitish or pallid; flesh pallid. 
Dead branches. North Greenbush. 
i es This has the colors of P. scwtellatus, but the thin plane pileus aud short a E 
s pores are so unlike that species that J am compelled to regard it as distinet. ng 
the 
in 
_ Poryporus Seba aies suBIcULOsUS PA. 
times slightly labyrinthiform, cinereo-ferruginous, ferruginous-brown a 
bruised, the dissepiments when young whitish and pruinose-villose. 
Creeping over mosses, decaying wood, and even stones, in sheltered places. 
+ Copake. Oct. BP 
The patches are several inches in extent. The pores have a paler hue than 
the subiculum, but they become darker when bruised. i 
Potyports (RESUPINATI) SEMITINCTUS PA. 
Subiculum thin, soft, cottony, separable from the matrix, whitish, more ° 
less tinged with lilac, sometimes forming branching creeping threads; por 
very short, unequal, whitish or pale cream-color, the dissepiments at first « 
wt tuse, then thinner, toothed on the edge. ‘ 
Under surface of maple chips. Griffins. Sept. z 
i This is a soft, delicate species, with merulioid pores, similar to those 0 
a _ P. violaceus. The lilac stains appear on the subiculum only. 
~ PoLyrorus (RESUPINATI) INDURATUS PK. 7 
Effused, hard, determinate, 1-2” thick, inseparable from the eis 
almost wholly composed of minute subrotund vesicular pores, yellowish . 
ane __ pale-ochre, the surface slightly pruinose and tinged with flesh-color ; the ne 
-Jowish mycelium or subiculum penetrating the matrix. 
ie Decaying wood. Oneida. H. A. Warne. : 
aM This species is remarkable for the peculiar character of the pores he H 
Tike form little cells or cavities instead of tubes, so that in whatever direction the. " 
mass is cut or broken, the section appears equally porous. Perhaps this 
character will necessitate the formation of a new genus. 
