REVISION OF THE NORTH AMERICAN HYDNACEAE 171 
son’s original account supplemented by a reéxamination of the type 
which was generously loaned me for the purpose. Professor At- 
kinson describes the odor when fresh as that “of a perspiring 
darkey.”’ 
6. Phellodon fasciatus (Peck) 
Hydnum fasciatum Peck, Rept. №. Y. State Mus. Nat. Hist. at: 
78. 1888 
Plants terrestrial, mesopodous, gregarious, sometimes confluent, 
small, zonate; pileus thin, spreading nearly plane, umbilicate, 
almost round, 1.5-3 cm. wide; surface “blackish brown with several 
narrow, elevated, scabrous, tawny-gray, concentric zones”; sub- 
stance fibrous, tough, thin; stem short, slender, tough, tawny 
gray or blackish, 1-1.5 cm. long, 2-3 mm. wide; teeth short, 
decurrent, ferruginous-brown; sp bglobose, tuberculate, about 
4 и wide. . 
Нав. : On ground іп woods. Sept. 
Rance: New York, Peck. 
The type specimens are in the New York State Herbarium at 
Albany. The original collection made in the Catskills is the only 
one known, although the plants are clearly marked and not in- 
conspicuous. It would appear to be a rare species. The species 
is evidently closely related to P. tomentosus (L.) but is clearly 
distinguished from that species by its peculiar sharply defined 
zonations and its darker color. 
7. Phellodon tomentosus (L.) 
Hydnum tomentosum L. Sp. Pl. 2: 1178. 1753. Not H. tomen- 
tosum Schrader, Spic. Fl. Germ. 177. 1704. 
Hydnum cyathiforme Schaeffer, Fung. Bav. et Pal. 4: 93. I 763. 
Not А. cyathiforme Bulliard, Hist. des Champ. de la France, · 
398. %701. 
Hydnellum cyathiforme Karsten, Medd. Soc. Faun. et Fl. Fenn. 5: 
27. 1870. TET 
Phellodon cyathiformis Karsten, Rev. Myc. 3: 10. 1881. 
Calodon cyathiformis Quélet, Ench. Fung. 191. I 886. 
Plant terrestrial, mesopodous, gregarious, confluent, small, 
zonate ; pileus plane to depressed, occasionally subinfundibuliform, 
Nearly round, 1-2 cm. wide, often confluent into crust-like layers, 
sometimes several decimeters wide ; surface radiately fibrous-striate, 
