OTHER SPECIES OF FISTULINA. There have been four other "new 

 species " discovered in the United States. There is evidence of but one, which 

 is about the usual proportion of these finds. This one is scantily known to me, 

 and is called Fistulina pallida, and I think well illustrated by Atkinson. 



SPECIMENS IN OUR COLLECTION. 



Europe, France: N. Patouillard, Victor Dupain, C. G. Lloyd; Sweden: C. G. 

 Lloyd; Italy: Rev. L. Badet. 



America, New Jersey : E. B. Sterling; Pennsylvania: C. G. Lloyd. 



LENTODIUM SQUAMULOSUM (Figs. 222 and 223). The 

 genus L,entodium is held by every mycologist, except its author, 

 to be something abnormal. Professor Morgan, however, always 



Fig. 222. 

 Lentodium squamulosum (natural size). 



maintained to the last conversation I had with him that it was a 

 distinct and good genus. It is the general impression that L,en- 

 todium squamulosum is a metamorphosed form of Lentinus tigrinus. 

 It was so referred by Berkeley sixty years ago, and it will so impress 

 most any one who will study the question. 9 



9Since this article has been written we have received a pamphlet from G. R. Lyman which 

 takes the grounds that Lentodium squamulosum is autonomous. It is the first published en- 

 dorsement of Morgan's views that we have noticed. 



