a IOBK SI a i i: mi sn m 



Boletus multipunctus n. Bp. 

 PLATS K. PIG. L9 22 



I»,l, us fleshy, convex or nearly plane, dry, brownish ocher, 

 lometimes with a Blight reddish tint, the central part adorned 

 with many minute slightly darker areolate spots or dots, flesh 

 whitish, taste mild; tubes small, adnate or depressed about the 

 st. -in. rentricose in the muss, the mouths subrotund, at first 

 whitish, becoming greenish yellow; stem equal or tapering 

 upward, pallid, Bolid, fibrous striate; spores dark olive green, 

 oblong, L5 .0006 of an inch long, .00016-0)002 broad. 



Pileus -°> •" inches broad; stem 3-5 inches long, 4-8 lines thick. 

 In woods. Bolton. August. 



The Bpecies belongs to the seetion Edules. It was not found 

 in sufficient quantity for testing its edibility but it is probably 



edible. 



Fistulina pallida B. & R. 



Pittsford, Monroe co. July. F. S. Boughton. These speci- 

 mens correspond to the description of F. pallida except iD 

 their larger Bise. They are distinct from P. fir ma Pk. in 



their darker color and de.urrent tubi 



Poria myceliosa n. Bp. 



Bnbicnlnm membranaceous, separable from the matrix, con- 

 nected with white branching strands of mycelium which per- 

 meate the soft decayed wood, or with radiating ribs which run 

 through the broad sterile fimbriate white margin; pores very 

 short, subrotund angular or Bubflexuous, the dissepiments thin, 

 aoute, dentate or slightly lacerate, pale yellow: spores minute, 

 subglobose, .00008 .00012 of an inch broad. Round Lake Sar- 

 atoga co. August. 



This fangUS forms patches several indies in extent on much 



decayed wood of hemlock, it follows the inequalities of the 



surface mi which it grows. It is scarcely more than half a line 

 thick. The pores develop from the cemer toward the margin 

 and a1 Arot are mere concavities in the Bubiculum. The species 

 is apparently related to P. tenuis Bchw., from which it 



