﻿ON SCHWEINITZ'S SYNOPSIS FUNGORUM, 207 



291. C. confluens, Schwein. \=Merulius edrimn, Fr. 



292. C. spathularia, Schwein. ! == Guepinia spathular la, Fr. 



293. C. cupressi, Schwein. ! This is no Fungus, but a curious gall on the leaves 

 of Taxodium. It appears to be a common production in the United States. 



298. C. cupularis, Fr. Our specimens of this are imperfect. 



299. C. fasciculatus, Schwein. ! This is properly a Cyphella. There is a species 

 in our collections to which we gave the name of Cyphella fasciculata before we knew 

 that the plant of Schweinitz belonged to that genus, exactly agreeing in habit, but of 

 a paler and more washy tint, perhaps from being exposed to the weather. 



300. C. olivaceus, Schwein. ! There is but a single specimen of this in the 

 Herbarium, and it is arranged there under Merulius. At the time of our examination 

 we referred this to Paxlllus panuoides, Fr., but it may perhaps be P. Curtisii, Berk. 



302. Scrtzophyllum commute, Fr. (Hook. Herb.) 



315. '"Boletus (non FLOccopus.)"=i?. strobilaceus, Scop. {Strobilomyces, Berk.) 



323. Polyporus fuliginosus, Fr., more properly fullgineus. 



326. P. leptocephalus, Fr. Nearly destroyed, but is P. brumalis or arcularius. 



328. P. rufescens, Fr., marked by Schweinitz P. cinnamomeus. It is certainly 

 not P. rufescens, but a state of his own P. connatus, of which he considered P. cinna- 

 momeus, P., a synonym. 



329. P. Schweinitzii, Fr. P. tabulceformis, Berk., is confounded with this. . 



330. P. connatus, Schwein. ! A fine authentic specimen remains in the collection 

 at Kew, and others exactly agreeing with it were sent by the late Mr. Lea from 

 Ohio. These, however, run so gradually into P. perennis, that there is some doubt 

 about the stability of the species, notwithstanding the enormous difference in the size 

 of the pores. Fries informs us that this is P. parvulus, Klotsch. P. connatus, Fr. 

 and Weinman is a totally different species. 



331. P. radicatus, Schwein. Specimens of this very distinct species, with the 

 pileus varying from 11 inch to 5 inches across, and the stem from Ik to 9 inches long 

 and J to 1£ inch thick, were sent from Ohio by Mr. Lea. Allied certainly, as 

 Schweinitz himself hints, to such species as P. ciliatus, Fr., though immensely larger. 



332. P. varius. Fr. 



333. P. radius, P. A form of P. varius, Fr., growing to a large size, with the stem 



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