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Lloyd Mycological Writings V4.pdf - MykoWeb

Lloyd Mycological Writings V4.pdf - MykoWeb

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SPORES COLORED. SETAE PRESENT.<br />

describing it, Ellis referred it to his "new genus" Mucronoporus, based<br />

on the setae, but the idea does not seem to infect anybody else.<br />

SPECIMENS. Many from United States.<br />

Compare praerimosus.<br />

FOMES SENEX (Fig. 598). Pileus applanate, sometimes<br />

quite large, with brown, rugulose surface without distinct crust.<br />

Context medium brown (Sedan brown). Pores very minute (100<br />

mic.), indistinctly stratified, the tissue concolorous with the context.<br />

Pore mouths darker brown, soft, velutinate to the touch. Setae<br />

very abundant, rather short and thick, projecting 12-14 mic. Spores<br />

scanty (hyaline when young no doubt), globose, 5 mic., deeply colored.<br />

This species came originally from Chili, but is rare in American tropics, and<br />

is not represented in the abundant collections at New York made in the West Indies<br />

and other parts of tropical America. It is extremely common in Africa and the<br />

East, and particularly in Java. The spores have been described as hyaline or substraw<br />

color, but I have seen them deeply colored in the type, and others which I<br />

259

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