78 Forry-FIRST ANNUAL REPORT ON THE 
Polyporus pineus, n. sp. 
Resupinate, irregular from the inequalities of the matrix, rather 
tender but separable from the matrix, the thin subiculum and margin 
whitish, sometimes tinged with yellow; pores rather large, angular, 
unequal, two to three lines long, often oblique and lacerated, dingy 
whitish, becoming blackish where bruised or wounded, the whole 
plant becoming blackish or blackish-brown in drying. 
Wood and bark of pine. Selkirk. August. 
The species is apparently allied to P. obliquus, but the pores can not 
be described as very small, nor has our plant an “erect crested 
margin.” It has a distict subiculum on which the pores are formed 
and by reason of which the plant is separable from the matrix. 
Merulius Ravenelii, Berk. 
Bark of prostrate trunks of spruce, Abies nigra. Adirondack moun- 
tains. July to September. 
This fungus varies in hue from flesh color to dark smoky red or 
brownish-red. The pores are at first shallow with obtuse folds or | 
dissepiments, but with age these become thinner and the pores deeper 
so that the plant might easily be taken for a Polyporus. Its pure 
white margin contrasts conspicuously with its dark waxy hymenium. 
The specimens labeled Merulius serpens in Ravenel’s Exsiceati, Vol. 
IV, 9, belong to this species. . 
Merulius himantioides, Fr: 
Prostrate trunks of hemlock. Catskill mountains. September. 
The color of the hymenium resembles that of JL lacrymans, but the 
subiculum is very different. The fungus is soft, tender and mem- 
branous, and by confluence becomes widely effused. The subiculum 
is sometimes studded with drops of a reddish color, and is composed 
in part of branching strings of mycelium. 
Hydnum fasciatum, n. sp. 
Pileus thin, coriaceous, nearly plane, umbilicate, blackish-brown, 
adorned with three to seven narrow elevated scabrous, tawny-gray 
concentric zones; aculei short, decurrent, ferruginous-brown; stem _ 
short, slender, tough, tawny-gray or blackish; spores subglobose, ~ 
rough, .00016 in. broad. 
Pileus 6 to 12 lines broad; stem 4 to 6 lines long. 
Naked ground in woods. Catskill mountains. September. 
The specimens were past maturity when collected, and the colors of 
young plants may vary somewhat from those here given. The species — 
