156 



Mycologia 



Boletus Bakeri Tracy & Earle, PL Baker, i : 23. 1901. De- 

 scribed from specimens collected in moist aspen thickets in Colo- 

 rado, at an elevation of 9000 ft. Too near C. crassus to be 

 recognized as distinct without the discovery of better characters. 



Boletus cubensis Berk. & Curt. Jour. Linn. Soc. 10 : 304. 1868. 

 Known only from plants collected on the ground in Cuba by 

 Wright. The types at Kew are pressed flat and show little 

 except the squamulose, spotted character of the surface and the 

 copious spores, which are oblong-ellipsoid, smooth, yellowish- 

 brown, 17-21 X 7/*. Although probably distinct, it is highly 

 desirable to get additional information from fresh specimens be- 

 fore incorporating it into the genus. A Ceriomyces cubensis has 

 already been published by Patouillard for a plant in a different 

 group of fungi. 



Boletus dictyocephalus Peck, Bull. N. Y. State Mus. 2: 111. 

 1889. Described from notes and a single specimen collected 

 by C. J. Curtis in North Carolina. Type not found. 



Boletus eccentricus Peck, Bull. Torrey Club 27: 18. 1900. 

 Described from notes and drawings made by Mcllvaine from 

 specimens collected in grassy places in woods at Mt. Gretna, 

 Pennsylvania. Types destroyed. 



Boletus fulvus Peck, Bull. Torrey Club 27: 19. 1900. Not 

 Boletus fulvus Scop. Described from notes and drawings made 

 by Mcllvaine from twenty or thirty specimens collected on and 

 about an old stump near Philadelphia, Pennsylvania. Types de- 

 stroyed. 



Boletus guadalupensis Pat. Bull. Soc. Fr. 16: 177. 1900. De- 

 scribed from specimens collected by Duss in Guadeloupe. Types 

 not seen. 



Boletus ignoratus Banning; Peck, Ann. Rep. N. Y. State Mus. 

 44: 73. 1891. Described from specimens collected near Balti- 

 more,Maryland, by Miss M. E. Banning, who prepared a large 

 manuscript volume, handsomely illustrated, on the fleshy fungi of 

 Maryland, which she donated to the New York State Museum. 

 Types not found. 



Boletus leptocephalus Peck, Bull. Torrey Club 25: 371. 1898. 

 Not Boletus leptocephalus Jacquin. Described from specimens 

 collected by Earle in dry pine woods in Alabama. Too near C. 



