MYCOLOGICAL NOTES 
0. G, LLOYD 
Page 921 
or any 
•'•’ond I have seen. It 
a rare plant* It 
FAVOLUS JUNGKUHNII FROM DR. OH* BERNARD, JAVA (Fig* 1648 )*- 
Eighty years ago this was named from a specimen found in the island 
of Bantam by Junghuhr. ana still preserved in good condition at 
Leiden* Hot another specimen ever reached Europe from Java 
other country and this from Dr. Bernard is the s 
must not be inferred necessarily that it is such __ A ._ 
is only an evidence of the relatively scanty collections that have 
been made in Java when only two specimens c-f this peculiar species 
have been collected in eighty years. Favolus Junghunnii is quite 
different from every other Favolus, The marked, raised, scabrous 
striations on the upper surface, as shown in our photograph (Fig*1648) 
we do not know in connection with any other species* The pores are 
rather small and firm. Under the microscope they have hyaline, 
glandular cystidia that are rare in other species. Dr. Bernard's 
specimen is exactly the same plant as I saw at Leiden. 
IRPEX [TRICOLOR FROM TAKEWO HEMMI, JAPAN (Fig, 1649).- This 
for me is the Irpex form of the common Daedalea unicolor although 
it appears so different that ordinarily one would hardly see the 
connection. Daedalea unicolor i« 
o rather uniform in Europe and 
America. This irpicoid fern was collected some years ago around 
Berlin by our friend, the late Dr 
(at that time 
Magnus* He sent it to Fries 
a very old man) who thought it a new species of Hydnum 
related to Hydnum strigosum, Dr. Magnus also sent it to Kars ten win 
called it a new genus and named it Phyllodontia Magnusii. It did not 
take much provocation for Karsten to discover a new genus. Hennings 
called it Daedalea unicolor var. hydnoidea* We present (Pig,1650) 
the lower surface of the Berlin plant which is the same as the Japa¬ 
nese and the upper surface of the Japanese plant (Fig. 1649) which 
is more strongly pubescent than the German plant. Compare Myc. Notes- 
page 451, 
In Europe it is equally rare 
saw was at Berlin misnamed 
aw it and sc states. 
GUEPINIA PEZIZA FROM D. TJ* WEtS, MASSACHUSETTS (Fig. 1651).- 
Ever since we have been working on the subject we have known Guepinia 
Peziza scantily. We have an old scanty collection from E* B* Ster¬ 
ling, Ner/ Jersey, and we made one collection in Florida of two little 
cups. That is as far as we know it in America, although it is re¬ 
corded by Peck, Morgan and McClatchie. 
in the museums* The best collection we 
‘'Bacryomyces contorta. Fries’ 7 , Fries never 
It is not included in the exhaustive work of Brefeld. Schroett 
reports that he found it but once and then scantily, 
Guepinia Peziza is usually a concave cup with a short, 
recurved stalk, and a discoid hymenium on the under side. The 
is clear yellow but those I got in Florida tend toward brown* 
The impression I had from the illustrations, until I collected 
and from the descriptions and the separate specimens I had seen, was 
that it was a pezizoid plant with the cup face up. That is a mistake 
as shown by these specimens from Mr, Weis. If growing near the top 
of the limb the stipe curves over bringing the hymenium under. Our 
photograph (Fig. 1651) showing the cup faces is the under side of 
the limb* The basidia of Guepinia are o.f the usual forked form of 
this group of plants. The spores are 7 X 14, pale colored, curved, 
septate in germination. Tulasne gave a fine illustration and dis¬ 
section of the plant but his figure qf its habits is an error as 
often 
color 
it, 
