rugmous within ; pores large, nearly round or oblong, yellow
or reddish brown.—Dr. Epicr.p. 489. Fl. Boruss. t. 380. Corda.
A n l.t. I I .f.7 5 ,n o .3 6 ,3 1 . DZ. exs. ii. «o. 118. Bail. t . 3 1 .
On pine trunks. Eare. [Low. Carolina.]
Odour faint j perennial.
822. T r am e te s su a v e o le n s . Fr. “ Sweet-scented Trametes.”
Pileus corky, ratber soft, pulvinate, villous, zoneless, wbite •
pores round, rather large, obtuse, brownisb-white.— F r Epicr
p. 491. Kromhh. t. 4, f . 2b. Fl. Dan.t. 1849. Tratt. Austr. f. 4
Fchl. exs. no. 1365. Bot. Zeit. (1859), 1.1 1 , / . 29. Sow. t. 228.
Sterb. t. 27, D . Dædalea suaveolens, Eng. F l. y .p . 133.
On willows, limes, &c.
Easily distinguished by its odour (when young), which resembles aniseed.
Wtate at first, then rufescent, zoned and scabrous, within dingy straw colour.
—Tries. Spores white, oval, or pip-shaped, '00035 X '00018 iu.
8 2 3 . T r am e te s odora. Fr. “ Small-pored Trametes.”
Pileus corky,_ elastic, uneven, becoming smooth, zoneless,
palhd ; pores minute, round, equal, wbitish-ocbre.—F r Evicr
p . 491. Bolt. t.l6 2 .
On willows. Rare.
Very nearly related to T. sumeolens. It has the same smell. Spores white
oval, or pip-shaped, -00012 X -00022 in. opuiebwnue,
8 2 4 . T r am e te s g ib h o sa . Fr. “ Gibbous Trametes.”
Dirty white. Pileus corky, villous, obsoletely zoned, expanded
behind, gibbous; pores linear, straight, equa l—Dr
Epicr.p. 492. Bisch. f.3 4 2 b . Fchl. exs. no. 1364. F l.D a n .t.
Fuss. ii. t. 4. Dædalea qiihosa, Enq. F l. y. p.
lo3. Strauss. Sturm, t. 5.
On gate posts, &c. Sept. Rare.
. corky hard, elastic, zones convex and tuber-
culated, dirty white beautiiully velvety, when old cinereous, and green from
^ rT to b b J “ ’ obtuse or subacute, often projecting at the base and
I w " J I“;* mjariably so, substance white, pores linear, mostly
narrow!’p a f e 'to n .J i J. i . “ ’
(Fig, 66, reduced, with section and spores.)
Gen. 2 2 . DÆ D A Ï.EA , Fr. Epicr.
Hymenophore descending
into the trama
without any change;
pores, when fully
formed, torn, toothed,
or labyrintbiform.
{Fig. 67.)
Hymenophore descending
unchanged into the
trama, which is firmer
than in Trametes. Pores,
when fully formed, laby-
rinthiform, lacerated, and
toothed. In habit the
species resemble Trametes,
but they are inodorous,
andmust not be confounded
with the species of Polygons
that have elongated
curved pores.— W. G. S.
Fig. 67.
8 2 5 . Dædalea q u e tc in a . P. “ Oak Dædalea.”
Pallid wood colour. Pileus corky, rugulose, uneven, zoneless,
becoming smootb, of tbe same colour w ithin; hymenium
first porous, then broken into contorted or gill-like labyrinthi-
form sinuses; edge obtuse.—F r .E p ic r .p . 492. Lenz. f . 28,29.
S o w .t.181. Bolt. t.7 3 . B u l l.t.352. Berh. Outl.1.19. f . 5. Eng.
F I .y .p .l3 1 . B a il.t.3 1 . Fchl.exs.no. 1362. Gard. Chron.{I860)
p . 576,fig. Bisch.f. 3329. Kromh. t . 5 , f . l , 2. Price,f. 20. Vent.
f. 60./. 1,2. Grev.t. 238.
On oak stumps, &c. Common.
Perennial. Pileus 5-6 in. broad, sessile, dimidiate, of a pale, woody appearance,
smooth, marked with concentric, raised, or depressed zones and
Uttle, radiating wrinkles, the margin in well-grown specimens thin, but in
ill-developed individuals swollen and blunt; gills of the same colour as the
pileus, with sometimes a slight shade of pink, woody, thick, sinuous,
branched, and anastomosing, so as to form long, wavy pores, a line or more
broad. Sometimes the whole plant is resupinate or decurrent, and the partitions
elongated into tooth-like processes.—A7. J. B.
(Fig. 67, reduced, with section and spores.)
8 2 6 . Dædalea confra g o sa . P . “ Willow Dædalea.”
Pileus corky, coriaceous, ratber convex, rougb, subzonate,
self-coloured, reddish-brown, somewbat ferruginous witbin ; hy-
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