niveus. Type in Polyporus cover. It is undeterminable, a white, 

 Poria or more probably the resupinate portion of some Polyporus. 



obovatus. Only a small fragment remains of the type in Box 

 20.* I judge it is the same plant as rasipes of Berkeley and very 

 close to laceratus but not the same. 



pellucida. Type in Box 21. I believe this is a rare species. The 

 hymenium is rose color and is pubescent under a lens. The micro- 

 scope shows the slender hairs hyaline and slightly incrusted. The 

 pores are large and shallow. For me it is a Polystictus in the same 

 section as dermatodes. It does not appear to me to be pellucid. 



pustulosus (as Favolus). No types found by me and the figure 

 cited was not published. From the description it is evidently a Laschia 

 and probably the same as Holtermann figured as Laschia javanicus. 

 I think Hennings has also named it. In the sense of Leveille (speci- 

 men in Patouillard's herbarium) it is Hexagona Miquelii, but Leveille 

 got a great many things wrong. 



punctatus. No type found. 



roseo-alba. Type in Box n.* A subresupinate Polyporus or per- 

 haps a Fomes, most probably the same as carneus in the original sense 

 of Nees. I think it is quite different from the plant we have in the 

 United States which we know as Polyporus (or Fomes) carneus, 

 rarely forgetting to add the "Nees" though there exists not the slightest 

 evidence that our American plant ever grew in Java. 



spadiceus. Type in cover, also in Box 49*=Polystictus tabacinus. 

 The figure that Junghuhn gave appears smooth but the plant is densely 

 tomentose. The shape is also unusual as the plant is usually dimidiate. 



spathulatus (as Laschia). Type in Box 127.* It is a Favolus. 

 The types are in very poor condition. 



tropicus. Type in Box 170.* It is a Polyporus (not a Fomes 

 I think) belonging to the section Ganodermma. The spores, which are 

 typically those of this section, are distinctly rough. 



umbilicatus. Type in Polyporus cover. It has been stated by Fries ( 

 to be the same as arcularius and it so appears to me. 



venulosus. Type in cover. I think it is a good species of Poly- 

 stictus. Dimidiate, thin, white, with a glabrous but rugulose surface. 

 Context white. Pores small. 



