ZENKER, DR. G., Kamerun, (No. 7): 



Fayolus, I think unnamed. Teste Bresadola, it is Favolus prin- 

 ceps and Polyporus megaloporus, all three of which have the same and very 

 peculiar cystidia, but appear to me to differ in other respects. 



CROSSLAND, CHARLES, from locality unknown: 



Polystictus, I believe unnamed, though it is close to perennis. It 

 was referred by Cooke to cinnamomeus; surely an error. 



GONO, M., Japan, (Nos. 8, 9, and 12): 



Trametes (or Daedalea) I believe unnamed, close to Trametes 

 sepium. It is referred by Bresadola to styracina of Hennings, which ac- 

 cording to my photograph seems different to me. 



GONO, M., Japan, (No. 6): 

 Not developed. 



LUJA, EDOUARD, Congo Beige, (No. 20): 

 Trametes unnamed. 



LUJA, EDOUARD, Congo Beige: 

 Hexagona Pobeguini. 



LUJA, EDOUARD, Congo Beige: 



Hexagona dermatiphora, recently published in Mycological Notes. 



RICK, REV. J., Brazil: 



Fomes sulcatus as named by Cooke from Venezuela. This has 

 been referred to hornodermus of Africa and the East, but I think it differs 

 in large pores, more punk-like context, and in the context turning dark 

 when cut. 



KIRTIKAR, COL. K. R., India, (No. 9) : 



Polystictus acutus of Cooke. Compared with the type = (teste 

 Bresadola) floccosus of Junghuhn. 



LUJA, EDOUARD, Congo Beige: 



Polystictus caperatus. Not so strongly zoned as usual. 



YOSHINAGA, T., Japan: 



Polystictus, close to versicolor. 



NOTE 5. It develops that Polyporus osseus of Europe occurs in the fnit- 

 It is not recorded, I think, hence was not compiled in X. A. K. I Imvo known it many 

 years, having collected it years ago in the Adirondacks ; but I never had a name for it 

 until recently when I sent it to Bresadola. The European plant in white. Our plant 

 a grayish surface, but I think is the saim- as the European. I do not think that pueu 

 can be entered in any of Fries' sections. It is a "new genus" in fact. I would 

 it in a section "Petaloides-Imbricatus." 



NOTE 6. The species common with us, which is now generally known M Pnu 

 rudis, and which was previously known as Lentinus Lecomptei for so man 

 or absent from Western Europe, but seems to be common in Eastern AIJ 

 I have it abundantly from several correspondents in Austria I note 

 distributed three times in Knl.enhorst's Exsic. (Nos. 212, 1207. and 2403) 

 Swainsonii, Lev. and Panus Hoffmann!, Pries, is given as a sy 



