YASUDA, PROF. A., Japan: 



Xylaria hypoxylon. Hydnum (should be renamed). (See Note 251.) 

 Lycoperdon umbrinum. Polyporus pubetatis Polyporus scaurus. (See 



Note 252). 



NOTE 228. Polyporus aduncus. Pileus dimidiate, 1 cm. thick, unicolorous, brown. 

 buriace with coarse, brown, hispid hairs. Context brown. Pores small, round, brown. Setae 

 few, large, 8-10 x 60-75 n.ic. deep colored, with peculiar, hooked points. Spores hyaline 

 smooth. 4 x 5-6 mic. not guttulate. To the eye the plant resembles Polyporus cuticularis 

 frr-m which it differs entirely in microscopic features. The latter are same exactly as the 

 rare Polyporus lepormus from which the plant differs in its coarse, strigose surface. It 

 grew on roots of pine tree. The habitat and the specimen in a general way suggest 

 Polyporus Si-!-,\veinitzn which does not have these peculiar setae. 



Specimen from E. K. Abbott, Cal. 



NOTE 229. Hydnum velutinum, from the Boston Mycological Club, Mass This is 

 a common plant in our country, discovered by Peck to be a new species and called Hydnum 

 spongiosipon. It is also frequent in Southern Europe where it is known as Hydnum 

 velutinum ascribed to Fries, although there is no possibility of it being the plant originally 

 described by Fries, nor the figures that Fries cites. We use the name applied to the 

 plant in France though should we cite an authority it would be "French, erroneous tradi- 

 tions." 



NOTE 2SO.-Cordyceps Robertsii from George Brown, New Zealand. At the time we 

 wrote our pamphlet on Australian Cordyceps we had no specimen, this being the first 

 we have received. The perithecia are brown, easily rubbed off the axis, and measure 

 225 x 450 mic. The spores are tardily broken into secondary spores, and are mostly 

 entire in the asci. The secondary spores are about 2V> x 2% mic. 



231. Paurocotylis pila, from George Brown, New Zealand. This is the second 

 collection we have gotten from Mr. Brown (Compare Lye. Australia, page 42). It is 

 a very ample collection with fine specimens 3-4 cm. in diameter. There has been some doubt 

 of the proper classification of the genus Paurocotylis, and it is included in Lycoperdaceae 

 in Sac-cardo. The original figure in Flora, New Zealand, is quite inaccurate. The spores 

 are borne not as shown by Berkeley on pedicels but in asci. There is a young specimen 

 in this lot with the spores still all in asci. The ascus is hyaline, and measures 7 x 40 mic, 

 with eight globose spores in a row. The walls of the asci disappear in the ripening of the- 

 plant to which no doubt is due the erronoues view that Berkeley had. The plant should* 

 be included in Tnberaceae but I judge frcm the specimen they are not hypogeal. 



NOTE 232. Polyporus dryadeus, from Dr. J. B. Cleland, Australia. This grew on 

 Eucalyptus and is the first specimen known from Australia. It appears at first to the 

 eye a little different from the European plant, surface with a pale, more pronounced crust 

 but microscopic features agree exactly. There is an indication on the specimen of a 

 myeelisl core, a feature only known on the related species, Polyporus corruscans in 

 Europe. 



NOTE 233. Polyporus portentosus, sent by J. B. Cleland, Australia. I believe this 

 specimen i.i portontosus though it is somewhat doubtful. I have the plant from Geo. K. 

 Hinsby, which agrees exactly with the type at Kew. The tissue of the pores is white, 

 same as the cor.text. In Mr. Cleland's specimen the pores are discolored. The cuticle 

 of the type is thin but distinct. The surface of the Cleland specimen is similar as to 

 color but d->.* not have a distinct cuticle. Spores allantoid, 1^x7 in the Cleland specimen. 

 Not found by me in the previous specimens. 



NOTE 234. Bovistella aspera (from I. B. Pole Evans, South Africa), (Myc. Notes, 

 pag-e 25), Bovista aspera, as named by Leveille. This collection agrees with the original 

 excepting the color of erleba is more olive, duo no doubt to being younger, and most of the 

 spores are exactly same, viz. globose, 4-5 mic. smooth, with slender pedicels. There are 

 a few spores however, mixed with the normal ones of a type I never saw before in a 

 puff-ball. They have no slender pedicel, but taper to the base on the order of some 

 Puccinia spores. T am at a loss to explain why a. few spores should take this aberrant 

 form for it is contrary to our ideas of the way spores are borne on the basidia. 



, NOTE 235.- Polyporus dryadeus. The color of the spores. For a long time I had the 

 impression that Polyporns dryadeus had colored spores and kept the specimens on the 

 sholf ir. the section with colored spores. Then Prof. Long came along and in conversation 

 assured me that the spores were hyaline, and that he had noted the white spore deposits 

 on leaves, etc., in the vicinity of the growing plant. Then I found hyaline spores in my 

 specimens and moved them to the section with white spores. I have just gotten this 

 plant from C. N. Forbes, Hawaii, with abundant pale colored spores, and on ^re-examini-ng 

 the European material I find while most of the spores are hyaline (probab v immature) 

 occasionally I rote a faint indication of color. I think the truth is they are hyaline when 

 young, but fairtly colored when mature. 



NOTE 236. Tylostomn Leveilleanum, from C. N. Forbes, Hawaii. Gaudichaud made 

 two voyages around the world, as botanical collector. The first in Uranie 1817-1820 and 

 the (few) fur.p:i were worked up by Persoon and published 1826 in the account of the 

 JKotany of the voyage. They were the only foreign fungi that Persoon ever published. 



5 



