8 NATURAL HISTORY BULLETIN. 



1. D.«DALEA UNicoLOR [Biilliard) Juries. 



Pileus leathery, tough, flexible, villous-strigose, ashy zonate,, 

 the zones concolorous; pores labyrinthine, flexuous, acute, at 

 length lacerate, dentate; lamellce white, sometimes yellowish. 



Very common everywhere on all sorts of stumps and logs, 

 railway ties, bridge timbers, etc. Older specimens yellow, 

 concentrically furrowed, generally imbricated and even resu- 

 pinate reflexed. N. A. F. 924. 



2. DyEDALEA PALLiDo-FULVA Berkeley. 



Pileus suberose, four cm long b}' eight or more wide, 

 dimidiate, sub-shining, rugose, azonate, pallid; hymenium pale 

 fulvous; pores narrow, one half a millimetre wide, straight, 

 here and there sinuate. 



Very common on stumps and logs of various species. On 

 railroad ties common. Seems to be the same as Lcnzites 

 z'ialis Pk. N. A. F. 703. Specimens generally smooth, but 

 often rough and exhibiting obscure zonations; becoming dark 

 with age. More or less imbricate and laterally concrescent. 

 Half an inch to an inch long b}' an inch or two wide. 



3. D.EDALEA CONFRAGOSA PerSOOH. 



Pileus sessile, dimidiate or resupinate, convex, corky-leath- 

 ery or woody, more or less rough, rosy-brown with some- 

 what more deeply tinted zones; within wood color, becoming 

 brown; pores at first trametoid then lab3a-inthiform, gray 

 passing to brown or fuscous, hymenium convex. 



On dead stems of Cratcegus, fallen branches of willow and 

 other deciduous trees, common. A very handsome finished- 

 looking fungus, varying considerably in color, degree of rough- 

 ness, etc., generally very symmetrical, centrally attached and 

 with an even margin, sometimes imbricated, two or three 

 together. Includes Lenzites cratcegus, L. cooket, L. corrugata 

 L. hicolor. Almost any Deedalea seems to take on with age 

 lenzitoid characters. N. A. F. 1928. 



