[Vol. 1 

 214 ANNALS OF THE MISSOURI BOTANICAL GARDEN 



slightly wrinkled hymenium. As in the otherwise very different 



T, caryophyllea, large specimens sometimes resemble a double 



flower from the great number of small pileoli and lobes present 



in the center. Schweinitz described the species as sometimes 



having dimidiate pilei, but I have seen no such specimens. My 



collection assumed a disagreeable odor in drying but no such 



odor has been noted by others. 

 Specimens examined: 



Exsiccati: Ell. & Ev., N. Am. Fungi, 1110, and Fun. CoL, 1593, 

 in both under the name T. caespitulans. 



Vermont: Lake Dunmore, E, A. Burt. 



New Jersey: Newfield, J. B. Ellis (in Mo. Bot. Gard. Herb., 

 5155), also in the exsiccati cited. 



Pennsylvania: Bethlehem, Schweinitz, type (in Herb. Schw.); 

 Michener, 1604 (in Curtis Herb, and in Kew Herb.), the 

 cotype and type respectively of T. tephroleuca; Trexlertown, 

 W. Herhst, 43, C. G. Lloyd and W. Herbst, 2866, 3088 

 (both in Lloyd Herb.) ; N. M. Glatfelter (in Mo. Bot. Gard. 

 Herb., 42561). 



Dist. of Columbia: Washington, F. J. Braendle, comm. by C. H. 

 Peck. 



North Carolina: G. F. Atkinson (in Cornell Univ. Herb., 23253); 

 Asheville, H. C, Beardslee; Schweinitz cited North Caro- 

 lina as a station. 



South Carolina: Caesar's Head, Ravenel, one of the types (in 

 Curtis Herb, and Kew Herb.) of T. tephroleuca. 



Ohio: C. G. Lloyd, 4OOO. 



Illinois: Glen Ellen, E. T. and S. A. Harper, 669. 



14. T. albido-brunnea Schw. Trans. Am. Phil. Soc. N. S. 

 4:166. 1834. Plate 5. fig. 13. 



Stereum Micheneri B. & C. Grevillea i : 162. 1873 (in part).- 

 Stereum spongiosum Massee, Jour. Linn. Soc. Bot. 27: 172. 

 18S9.-Thelephora odorifera Peck, Rep. N. Y. State Mus. 44: 

 132 (22). 1891. 



Type: in Herb. Schweinitz. 



Pileus sessile or with very short stem, coriaceous, spongy when 

 dry, uniformly cinnamon-buff or with the older portions chest- 

 nut-brown, sometimes assuming mesopod form when encircling 

 small twigs or shrubs, sometimes effuso-reflexed, usually dimidi- 



