176 
CoRIOLUS PROLIFICANS (Fr.) Murrill. Very destructive to fallen 
timber. 
CoRIOLUS PUBESCENS (Schum.) Murrill. 423, 758, 1046. One 
beech log was covered with milk-white sporophores which 
threw down a distinctly cream-colored spore-print, while an- 
other beech log nearby bore avellaneous sporophores which 
were thinner and yielded no spore-print, possibly because 
immature. 
CORIOLUS VERSICOLOR (L.) Quél. Very destructive both to 
living and dead timber. 
DAEDALEA CONFRAGOSA (Bolt.) Pers. 325. An interesting and 
very variable species. 
ELFVINGIA FOMENTARIA (L.) Murrill. A common and con- 
spicuous species. 
ELFVINGIA MEGALOMA (Lév.) Murrill. 376. A very common 
and conspicuous species. 
FoMES POPULINUS (Schw.) Cooke. 302, 900. On sugar maple 
trunks and stumps. 
Fomes roseus (Alb. & Schw.) Cooke. 841. Common on 
coniferous logs. 
FoOMES UNGULATUS (Schaeff.) Sacc. A very common and con- 
spicuous species. 
FOMITIPORIA PEREFFUSA Murrill. z59. This species sometimes 
covers the entire under surface of deciduous logs. This speci- 
men grew underneath a beech log. 
FOMITIPORIA PRUNICOLA Murrill. 378. Common on standing 
trunks of Prunus pennsylvanica. 
FUSCOPORIA FERRUGINOSA (Schrad.) Murrill. S2z. On decidu- 
ous logs. 
GLOEOPHYLLUM HIRSUTUM (Schaeff.) Murrill. 14, 742, 742V. 
Common on coniferous stumps and logs. Also found on a 
dead spot caused by borers in a trunk of Prunus pennsylvanica 
growing at the edge of coniferous woods. 
HAPALOPILUS RUTILANS (Pers.) Murrill. 333. Collected once, 
on birch. 
HEXAGONA STRIATULA (Ell. & Ev.) Murrill. 392, 365, 374. On 
beech and maple logs. 
