04 BULLETIN OF THE NEW YORK STATE MUSEUM. 
odor is sometimes perceptible in our plant. It sometimes 
grows on much decayed wood. Its mycelium is white. 
Boletus subaureus Px. 
PALE-GOLDEN BOLETUS 
Rep. 39, p. 42 (in part) Bull. N. Y. S. Mus. 2, p. 63 (in part). 
Pileus convex or nearly plane, viscose, pale-yellow, some- 
times adorned with darker spots, the young margin slightly 
grayish-tomentose, flesh pale-yellow ; tubes smadl/ or medium, 
somewhat angular, adnate or subdecurrent, pale-yellow be- 
coming dingy-ochraceous ; stem equal, stou¢, glandular-dot- 
ted, yellow wzthout and wzthen, spores oblong or subfusi- 
form, ochraceo-ferruginous, .0003 to .0004 in. long, .o0016 
broad. 
Pileus 2 to 4 in. broad; stem 1.5 to 2.5 in. long, 4 to 6 
lines thick. 
Thin woods and open places. New York, Peck. North 
Carolina, (G/ Guzizs: 
This plant might almost be considered a stout variety of 
the preceding, but in addition to its thicker pileus and 
stouter stem, it has smaller tubes of a clearer yellow color 
and the exuding drops are yellow, not whitish as in that 
species. In habit it appears more like B. granulatus, from 
which it is distinct in color. 
Boletus hirtellus wn. sp. 
Hairy BoLetus 
Boletus subaureus Rep. 39, p. 42 (in part). Bull. N.Y. S. Mus. 2, p. 63 (in part). 
Pileus broadly convex, soft, viscose, golden-yellow, 
adorned with small tufts of hatrs or fibrils, flesh pale- 
yellow; tubes adnate, medium size, angular, becoming 
dingy-ochraceous ; stem subczespitose, equal, stout, glandu- 
