﻿EEPORT 
  OF 
  THE 
  BOTANIST. 
  45 
  

  

  flesh 
  white, 
  unchangeable 
  ; 
  spores 
  oblong, 
  mostly 
  narrowed 
  toward 
  

   one 
  end, 
  .0004-.0005' 
  long. 
  

  

  Plant 
  3-4:' 
  high, 
  pileus 
  3-4' 
  broad, 
  stem 
  6"-10" 
  thick. 
  

  

  Woods. 
  Sandlake. 
  August. 
  

  

  Boletus 
  Peokii 
  Frost 
  n. 
  sp. 
  

  

  Pileus 
  dry, 
  firm, 
  minutely 
  tomentulose, 
  red, 
  fading 
  to 
  buff-brown, 
  

   the 
  margin 
  usually 
  retaining 
  its 
  color 
  longer 
  than 
  the 
  disk 
  ; 
  tubes 
  

   nearly 
  plane, 
  adnate 
  or 
  slightly 
  decurrent, 
  yellow, 
  turning 
  blue 
  when 
  

   wounded 
  ; 
  stem 
  equal 
  or 
  subventricose, 
  strongly 
  reticulated, 
  red, 
  yel- 
  

   low 
  at 
  the 
  top 
  ; 
  spores 
  ochraceous-brown, 
  oblong, 
  .00035'-:0004' 
  long. 
  

  

  Plant 
  3'-4' 
  high, 
  pileus 
  2'-3' 
  broad, 
  stem 
  3"-6" 
  thick. 
  

  

  Ground 
  in 
  deciduous 
  woods. 
  Sandlake. 
  August. 
  

  

  The 
  stem 
  is 
  generally 
  brighter 
  colored 
  than 
  the 
  pileus 
  and 
  retains 
  

   its 
  color 
  longer. 
  The 
  species 
  should 
  be 
  referred 
  to 
  the 
  Calopodes. 
  

  

  Boletus 
  geiseus 
  Frost 
  n. 
  sp. 
  

  

  Pileus 
  dry, 
  firm, 
  nearly 
  smooth, 
  gray 
  or 
  grayish 
  black 
  ; 
  tubes 
  nearly 
  

   plane, 
  adnate, 
  sometimes 
  slightly 
  depressed 
  around 
  the 
  stem, 
  small, 
  

   unequal, 
  subrotund, 
  white 
  ; 
  stem 
  whitish 
  or 
  yellowish, 
  strongly 
  reticu- 
  

   lated, 
  often 
  abruptly 
  narrowed 
  and 
  yellow 
  at 
  the 
  base; 
  flesh 
  whitish 
  

   or 
  gray 
  ; 
  spores 
  ochraceous-brown, 
  oblong, 
  .0004-.0005' 
  long. 
  

  

  Plant 
  3'-4' 
  high, 
  pileus 
  2'-4' 
  broad, 
  stem 
  6"-12" 
  thick. 
  

  

  Deciduous 
  woods. 
  Sandlake. 
  August. 
  

  

  The 
  plants 
  have 
  a 
  rather 
  strong 
  unpleasant 
  odor. 
  The 
  color 
  of 
  the 
  

   pileus 
  is 
  variable, 
  but 
  it 
  is 
  generally 
  some 
  shade 
  of 
  gray. 
  The 
  reticu- 
  

   lations 
  of 
  the 
  stem 
  are 
  finer 
  at 
  the 
  top, 
  coarser, 
  elongated 
  and 
  some- 
  

   what 
  compound 
  toward 
  the 
  base, 
  but 
  in 
  the 
  dried 
  specimens 
  the 
  finer 
  

   reticulations 
  at 
  the 
  top 
  of 
  the 
  stem 
  are 
  the 
  most 
  distinct, 
  the 
  others 
  

   becoming 
  obsolete. 
  My 
  esteemed 
  friend, 
  Mr. 
  Frost, 
  finds 
  a 
  form 
  

   which 
  he 
  considers 
  a 
  variety 
  of 
  this 
  species, 
  differing 
  from 
  the 
  type 
  

   in 
  having 
  the 
  tubes 
  flesh 
  and 
  stem 
  yellow. 
  

  

  GuEPINIA 
  HELVELLOIDES 
  DC. 
  

  

  Decayed 
  wood 
  partly 
  buried. 
  Oneida. 
  Warne. 
  

  

  Mr. 
  Warne 
  remarks 
  that 
  he 
  has 
  found 
  it 
  in 
  but 
  one 
  limited 
  locality, 
  

   four 
  or 
  five 
  feet 
  square, 
  and 
  that 
  its 
  color 
  when 
  fresh 
  is 
  a 
  very 
  beauti- 
  

   ful 
  reddish-brown. 
  

  

  Phlebia 
  pileata 
  n. 
  sp. 
  

  

  Pilei 
  coriaceous, 
  effuso-reflexed, 
  more 
  or 
  less 
  imbricated 
  and 
  later- 
  

   ally 
  confluent, 
  concentrically 
  sulcate, 
  zonate, 
  subtomentose, 
  purplish- 
  

   brown 
  ; 
  hymenium 
  a 
  little 
  paler, 
  usually 
  stained 
  with 
  red 
  or 
  orange 
  

   on 
  the 
  margin, 
  the 
  folds 
  crowded, 
  radiating, 
  frequently 
  interrupted 
  

  

  