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Lloyd Mycological Writings V4.pdf - MykoWeb

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STEREUM MINIMUM (Fig. 556). Very small, 4-6 mic., white,<br />

petaloid, to a reduced base. Surface minutely tomentose. Hymenium<br />

uneven with ridges.<br />

This is a little English species collected scantily in Scotland on<br />

birch. On account of the ribbed hymenium, it was put in Cladoderris,<br />

which is a tropical genus and does not occur in temperate regions.<br />

It has only the faintest suggestion of Cladodeiris, and there is no<br />

warrant for so classing it. Stevenson, British Fungi, has a cut on<br />

page 266 (reproduced, Fig. 556).<br />

Flo. 556 Fig. 557<br />

Stereum minimum. Stereum quisquiliare.<br />

STEREUM QUISQUILIARE (Fig. 557). Also a very small,<br />

white, spathulate species known only from types Cuba. It is thinner,<br />

more stipitate, and evidently of more fleshy texture than the preceding.<br />

There are only four little specimens, and one of them seems<br />

to be infundibuliform. The other three are spathulate.<br />

STEREUM ALBOSTIPATUM. Pileus, when fresh, white,<br />

somewhat hygrophanous, as it is "whiter" white when dry. Smooth,<br />

both surfaces, very thin, the margin often fimbriate. Stipe lateral,<br />

white, tomentose.<br />

This species I found in Samoa, but were it not tor my collecting<br />

notes I would not have known that it was white. The specimens now<br />

are brown. It grew gregariously on logs and stumps. Rarely, when<br />

growing in an erect position, the specimens were cup-shape, but I<br />

noted veiy few such. On comparison, I thought at first it was the<br />

same as Stereum decolorans from Cuba at Kew, but I note that the<br />

stem is more slender, its habits of growth are different (not imbricate),<br />

and the base of decolorans has no tomentose thickening.<br />

STEREUM DECOLORANS. Thin, smooth, spathulate to a<br />

reduced base or short lateral stipe. Color supposed to have been<br />

"white, drying ochraceous," but the specimens now are brown, and<br />

there are no collector's notes to indicate that they were ever white.<br />

They may have been. The plant grew evidently densely imbricate,<br />

caespitose. It is known only from the types at Kew.<br />

STEREUM VENUSTULUM. Very thin, with crenate edges, petaloid, with<br />

a short but distinct stipe. Color (now) reddish-brown bay. Glabrous even, the<br />

hymenium pruinose.<br />

This is known from Balansa, 3354, cotype. The collector's notes state "couleur<br />

blanche, but no one would suspect it now. It grew on rotten wood. This plant is<br />

36

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