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6 9 7 . l e n z i t e s fla c c id a . Fr. “ Flaccid Lenzites.”
Pileus coriaceous, thin, flaccid, unequal, hairy, zoned, pallid •
margin of the same colour; gills broad, crowded, straight, u j
equal and branched, wbite, becoming pallid.—Fr. Epicr v 406
Bull. t. 394. Bolt.t. 158.
On stumps.
r ^ ™P®reeptible gradations into L. letnlina. Pilens thin
(scarcely 1 lin. thick), hairy, strigose, at first whitish, then dingy, with zones
of the same colour. Gills never anastomosing. gy, wiin zones
L e n z ite s s e p ia iia . Fr. “ 6 9 8 . Chocolate Lenzites.”
Pileus coriaceous, hard, zoned, strigoso-tomentose, rough
bright-brown ; margin yellowish ; gills rather thick, branched’
anastomosing, yellowisb.—Dr. Epicr.p. 407. Ann. N .II. no. 337.
Sow.t. 418. Schoeff.t.76. B u x b .y .t.6 . Vaill. 1.1, f . 1-3. Doeda-
lea sepiaria, Eng. F l.p , 132.
On fir wood. ^United States.]
Pileus 2-3 in. broad, dimidiate, elongated, often confluent, deeply zoned
s tn oso-lacunose, of a noh deep-chocolate ; margin paler, sometimes white’
substance coriaceous, librous, of a fine oohre or rhubarb cohmr oecasionallv
entirely resupinate. Hymenium composed of brownish plates tolerably
pOTes!-A/? J A ? sligfitly branched, or interrupted so as to for J
6 9 9 . L e n z ite s a b ie tin a . Fr. “ L arch Lenzites.”
Pileus coriaceous, thin, effuso-reflexed, clothed with umber
down, at length becoming smootb and wbitisb ; gills deourrent
simple, unequal, pruinose or glaucescent, brownish.—Dr Evicr
4 42,/. 2 ,/. 541,/ . I . Eng. F I .y . p. 132. Vent.i.
On deals. Glasgow. [United States.]
-"J"® nmber and in age becomes quite smooth, and the gills
S e r J. A.
Order I I . P O L T P O R E I .
Hymenium lining tbe cayity of tubes or pores, which are
sometimes broken up into teeth or concentric plates.—Dr. Berk.
Outl. p. 229.
^ Hymenium inferior, lining the cavity of tubes or pores, which are at first
sinuous. Pores sometimes broken up into wavy or lahyrinthiform oonoen-
trio (not radiating) lamime, or teeth ; when young, and the hymenium is
sinuous, pores are present in the margin.
Hymenium lining tubes, regular—
Trama none.
Tubes separating from the hymenophore
and from each other, terrestrial
Tubes adhering to the hymenophore
and to each other, terrestrial.
Trama present.
Trama dissimilar in substance (and
often in colour) from the hymenophore,
generally epiphytal . . .
Trama the same in substance and colour
with the hymenophore, epi-
. p h y t a l ..............................................
Bymenmm lining tubes, irregular—
Tubes forming deep lahyrinthiform depressions —
plant w o ody......................................................
Tubes incomplete, reduced to shallow sinuous
_ folds ; plant waxy............................................
Hymenium at first papillose, papillæ at length elongating
and forming tubes—
Plant submemhranaceous and resupinate . . .
Plant fle sh y ...............................................................
B o l e tu s .
S t eo b ilom t o e s .
POLTPOEUS.
T e am e t e s .
Dædalea.
M e e u l iu s .
P o e o t h b l ium ;
F is t u l in a .
Gen. 18. b o l e t u s , Fr.
Fig. 62.
Hymenium quite distinct from
tbe smootb bymenopbore; trama
none, tbe tubes easily separating
from tbe bymenopbore, and from
eacb otber; flesby, putrescent, te rrestrial
fungi, baying centralstems.
{Fig. 62.)
A clearly defined genus, with many
handsome species, including some that
are poisonous, and many that are esculent.
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