Murrill: Light-colored Resupinate Polypores 87 



1989 ; New Hampshire, Underwood; New York, Murrill 2708, 

 Shear; New Jersey, Ellis. 



53. Poria Dodgei sp. nov. 



Widely effused, continuous, inseparable, thick; margin con- 

 spicuous, but narrow in age, appressed, membranous, pale-rosy- 

 isabelline ; context membranous, rosy-fulvous ; hymenium even, 

 somewhat glistening, rosy-isabelline to rosy-fulvous; tubes rigid, 

 quite regular, angular, rosy- fulvous within at maturity, 2-4 to a 

 mm., reaching 5 mm. in length, edges thin, subentire ; spores 

 elongate, smooth, hyaline, 5.5 x 2.5 /x. 



Type collected on a decayed coniferous log at Krohns Lake, 

 near Algoma, Wisconsin, by B. 0. Dodge. 



54. Poria incarnata (Alb. & Schw.) Cooke, Grevillea 14: 112. 



1886 



Boletus incarnatus Alb. & Schw. Consp. Fung. 250. 1805. 

 Polyporus incarnatus Fries, Syst. Myc. 1: 379. 1821. 



I have good specimens from Sweden and Trent, the latter col- 

 lected by Bresadola on dead trunks of larch. Specimens from 

 Florida sent to Ellis by Calkins and determined by Cooke as this 

 species were compared by me with material at Upsala and found 

 to be distinct. Underwood, while at Kew, studied plants from 

 South Carolina in this connection and said that they seemed the 

 same as specimens from Sweden. Poria Dodgei is nearly related. 



55. Poria undata (Pers.) Bres. Ann. Myc. 1: 78. 1903 



Polyporus undatus Pers. Myc. Eur. 2 : 90. pi. 16, f. j. 1825. 

 Polyporus cinctus Berk. Outl. Brit. Fungol. 250. i860. 

 Polyporus subliberatus Berk. & Curt. Jour. Linn. Soc. 10: 318. 

 1868. 



Polyporus Broomei Rab. Fungi Eur. 2004. 1876. 



Polyporus odorus Peck, Ann. Rep. N. Y. State Mus. 38: 92. 



1885. Not P. odorus Sommerf. Suppl. Fl. Lapp. 275. 1826 ; 



Fries, Elench. Fung. 1 : 90. 1828. 

 Poria nigrescens Bres. Atti Accad. Roverto III. 3 : 83. 1897. 



This species, so common in America, is usually labeled u Poria 



