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Phlebia. 



cinnabarina, Schwein. Cincinnati. 

 Craterellus. 



lutescens, Fr. Waynesville, Aug. 31, 1844, with Can- 



tharellus cibarius. 

 Thelephora. 



palmata, Fr. Moist woods, amongst dead leaves. 



Cincinnati, Sept. 24. 

 pallida, Schwein. Dry woods, on the ground. Waynes- 

 ville, Aug. 4, 1844. 

 cuticularis, N. Sp. In the moist cavity of a dead tree, 



attached to the wood, twigs, &c. Waynesville, Aug. 



23, 1844.^ 

 corrugata, Fr. On dead Beech. Cincinnati, March 



14, 1842. 

 albo-marginata, Schwein, Mss. On bark of dead But- 



tonwood. Cincinnati, March 19, 1842.^ 

 Stereum. 



fasciatum, Fr. Ohio. 



lobatum, Fr. On a large Beech trunk. Cincinnati, 



Oct. 1842. 



too, in the Juan Fernandez species is more distinct and the whole fungus 

 more luxuriant. 



'■ Thelephora cuticui4ris : imbricata, coriaceo-moUis, brunneo-purpuras- 

 cens ; pileoUs inaequabilibus, rugosis, depresso-sericeis ; hymenio sublsevi. pul- 

 verulento. Imbricated ; pilei three-quarters of an inch long, laterally con- 

 fluent, uneven, rugged, brown inclining to purple, with a pale margin, of a soft 

 coriaceous consistence ; surface soft clothed with matted down, not distinctly 

 pubescent; zoneless;- hymenium concave, nearly even, not setulose ; smell 



strong and unpleasant. One specimen, gathered apparently in a different 



locality, consists of a mass of pilei running one into the other with but little 

 distinct hymenium. Allied to Thelephora terrestris. 



'' Thelephora albo siARGiifATA : latissime confluenti-effusa, rarius breviter 

 reflexa, umbrina, centro pruinosa, margine albo-tomentoso. At first consist- 

 ing of distinct, orbicular patches, which soon become confluent ; umber, vel- 

 vety, but by no means bristly, clothed with a white bloom, in the centre quite 

 even, or irregularly rugose, sometimes reflexed, in which case the pileus is 

 brown and silky ; margin white, tomentose, not fimbriate. This was dis- 

 tributed under the name of T. arida, but more perfect specimens show that 

 .it is a fine and very distinct species. It is possible that T. albo-badia may be 

 a synonym, for I do not find the name adopted above from Sir W. J. Hooker's 

 Herbarium in Schweinitz's list. 



