28 
Mycologia 
or subangular, smooth, pale-ochraceous, 4-5 fx . ; stipe none, point 
of attachment white, strigose. 
Type collected on dead orange branches at Hope Gardens, Ja- 
maica, October 31, 1902, F. S. Earle S3 4- The dried specimens 
much resemble those of C. Dussii, but the pileus is white instead 
of yellow and the spores “only half as large as in that species. 
6. Crepidotus Dussii Pat. Bull. Soc. Myc. Fr. 18: 173. 1902 
Pileus 3-5 mm. broad, orbicular, chrome-yellow, glabrous ; 
lamellae broad, distant, yellowish-brown ; spores ovoid, smooth, 
8-9 X 6/4. T)-pes examined in the herbarium of Patouillard. 
Baines-Jaunes, Guadeloupe, Duss 411; Deux-Choux, Martin- 
ique, Duss 1414. 
7. Crepidotus bicolor sp. nov. 
Pileus thin, rather firm, sessile, dimidiate or flabelli form, usually 
narrowed behind, the base not strigose, convex or applanate above, 
gregarious, 5-8 mm. broad ; surface dry, glabrous or subglabrous, 
testaceous to latericious, margin undulate, somewhat sulcate with 
age or on drying ; lamellae radiating from the point of attachment, 
broad, distant, ventricose, ochraceous-ferruginous ; spores globose 
or subglobose, smooth, ochraceous under a microscope, 6-7 /i. 
Type collected on dead wood in British Honduras in 1906, 
Morton E. Peck. Very similar in form to specimens of Crepi- 
dotus croceosanguineus Mont, collected in Chile by Gay (type) 
and in Ecuador by Lagerheim, but in that species the colors are 
reversed, the surface being yellow and the lamellae dark-red. 
8. Crepidotus pyrrhus (Berk. & Curt.) Sacc. Syll. Fung. 5: 
879. 1887 
A. {Crepidotus) pyrrhus Berk. & Curt. Jour. Linn. Soc. 10; 291. 
1868. 
Described from Wright’s collections on dead wood in Cuba. 
His no. 38 is the type, and this is represented at Kew by two 
sporophores with globose or subglobose, echinulate, ochraceous- 
fulvous spores 4-5.5 /x. Lower down on the same sheet are three 
sporophores of no. 380, which with no. 59 represent Berkeley’s 
var. leiospora, having, according to him, smooth spores. Speci- 
