1914] 
OVERHOLTS—THE РОГУРОКАСЕЖ OF OHIO 147 
3. L. saepiaria Fries, Epicr. Syst. Myc. 407. 1838. 
Dedalea sepiaria Fr. Obs. Мус. т: 105. 1815. 
Plants annual, sessile, often imbricate; pileus dimidiate or 
reniform, 1-5 x 2-7 x 0.3-1 cm., coriaceous to corky, bright 
yellowish red to dark ferruginous, often lighter or discolored with 
age, strigose-tomentose, zonate, margin thin; context fulvous 
to ferruginous, floccose to soft-corky, not more than 3 mm. 
thick; hymenium usually lamellate, the lamelle about 1 mm. 
apart, 2-5 mm. broad, rarely anastomosing, fulvous to rusty 
brown; spores cylindrical, smooth, white, 2.7-4 x 2-10.2 и. 
Always found on dead wood of coniferous trees. Frequent. 
Easily distinguished from the preceding species by the deeper 
color throughout and by the more distant lamelle that rarely 
anastomose. 
CYCLOMYCES Kunz. & Fries, Linnea 5: 512. 1830. 
Plants annual, terrestrial and stipitate in our species, coria- 
ceous, fuscous or cinnamon-colored; context brownish, some- 
times rusty brown, floccose to fibrous; hymenium poroid at 
first but soon breaking up into concentric lamelle. 
The genus is distinct from all others in the concentric arrange- 
ment of the lamelle. 
т. С. Greenei Berk. Hooker’s Lond. Jour. Bot. 4: 306. 1845. 
Pileus stipitate, circular in outline, usually depressed on 
бор, 2.5-9 em. broad, 0.5-2 em. thick, coriaceous when fresh, 
rigid when dry, yellowish brown to rusty or purplish brown, 
tomentose at first but becoming glabrous, more or less zonate, 
margin thin and acute; context fulvous to cinnamon-brown, 
soft floccose to fibrous or somewhat friable, thin at the margin, 
thicker next the stipe; tubes 5-8 mm. long, soon breaking up 
to form brownish concentric lamellz; stipe central or subcentral, 
expanding above into the pileus, velvety, somewhat spongy, 
2-7 em. long, 0.7-2 cm. thick, fulvous to rusty brown in color. 
On the ground in woods. Rare. 
The species was reported from Ohio by Hard but I think has 
not otherwise been collected. For illustration see Hard, Mush- 
rooms f. 360-61. 
