STATE MusEumM oF NATURAL HISTORY. Cd. 
grayish, tinged with flesh color when mature, becoming dingy or 
brownish where wounded; stem minutely scurfy, often irregular or 
flexuous, reticulated at the top, pallid without and within; spores 
oblong, brownish flesh color, .0005 to .0006 in. long, .00016 broad. 
Pileus 3 to 4 in. broad; stem 2 to 4 in. long, 4 to 6 lines thick. 
Oak woods.’ Menands. August. 
lt belongs to the tribe Hyporhodii. It has the general appearance 
of B. modestus, but the tubes are not at all yellow. It differs from 
B. alutarius in color and in having the stem reticulated at the top, not 
secrupose. Its mild taste will separate it from any form of B. felleus. 
Boletus albellus, n. sp. 
Pileus convex, soft, glabrous, whitish, flesh white, unchangeable; 
tubes convex, free or nearly so, small, subrotund, whitish, not chang- 
ing color when wounded; stem glabrous or minutely furfuraceous, 
substriate, bulbous or thickened at the base, whitish; spores brownish- 
ochraceous, .00055 to .00065 in. long, .0002 to .00025 broad. 
Pileus 1 to 2 in. broad; stem 1 to 2 in. long, 3 to 6 lines thick. 
Woods. Sandlake. August. 
Closely related to B. scaber, of which it may possibly prove to be 
a dwarf form; but it is easily distinguished by its smooth or only 
slightly scurfy stem without any appearance of the colored dot-like 
squamules which are a constant and characteristic feature of that 
species. 
Polyporus flavovirens, B and R. 
Ground in woods. Selkirk. August. 
Our specimens agree very well with the description of P. flavovirens, 
except that they are smaller and the dry plant is not tough and 
fibrous. ‘They are to this extent doubtful. 
Polyporus rimosus, Berk. 
Trunks of locust, Robinia pseudacacia. Flatbush, L. I. Rev. J. L. 
Zabriskie. 
Polyporus mutans, w. sp. 
Resupinate rather thick, tough, following the inequalities of the 
wood; pores minute, rotund, short, buff-yellow or cream color, becom- 
ing dingy red or dull incarnate where wounded, the subiculum 
fibrous, changing color like the pores, the whole plant assuming an 
incarnate hue when dried. 
Decaying wood of deciduous trees. Selkirk. August. 
Sometimes a narrow, reflexed obtuse margin of a yellowish-brown 
‘color is formed. The pores are often oblique. The species appears 
_ to be quite distinct by reason of its peculiar colors. 
