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Lloyd Mycological Writings V4.pdf - MykoWeb

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PORES WITH THIN WALLS.<br />

One series, which we call Ponderosus, is heavy, hard, compact, with very<br />

minute, heavy pores, hardly visible to the eye. The microscope shows these pores<br />

50 mic. in diameter, with thick walls 250 mic. (Fig. 601). This series only occurs<br />

in the tropics and is unusual there.<br />

Fig. 601. Fig. 602.<br />

Section across the pores, ( X 12 )<br />

The other series is light in weight compared with the preceding, we judge<br />

about one-third as heavy. It has thin walled pores 120 mic. in diameter, with thin<br />

walls, only 60 mic. (Fig. 602). It is the common and only series in temperate regions,<br />

but is also common in the tropics.<br />

Most Fomes of this section Ganodermus do not have laccate crust, a character<br />

that is prevalent in the section Ganodermus of Stipitate Polyporus.<br />

The color of the pore mouths has never been held of any importance in classifying<br />

this group of plants. Still the difference between plants with white pore mouths<br />

and those with yellow pore mouths seems to us of some importance. It is usually<br />

constant in every specimen of the same collection. They are either all yellow or all<br />

white. And it is also geographic. In Europe only one rare species, Fomes laccatus,<br />

has yellow pore mouths, and it is a constant character of the species. In the Eastern<br />

United States the commonest of all common species, Fomes leucophaeus, has white<br />

pore mouths. On the Pacific Coast most<br />

specimens we received have yellowish<br />

pore mouths, and in the tropics we get specimens with deep yellow pore mouths.<br />

SECTION 73. FOMES-GANODERMUS.<br />

A. Pores with Thin Walls. Spores Smooth or Punctate.<br />

FOMES APPLANATUS. Pileus usually applanate, with a<br />

brown, rather soft crust when fresh. Context color dark brown (bay<br />

brown). Pores minute, with brown tissue and white mouths. Spores<br />

colored, obovate, 6x10, truncate at base, with smooth, punctate<br />

surface.<br />

This is a frequent species in Europe, and in various forms is cosmopolitan,<br />

and usually the commonest Fomes in any locality. The type form in Europe has a<br />

pileus often large, 1-1 > foot in diameter and 2 to 4 inches thick. It has a brown<br />

crust, which in the growing plant is soft so that it can be indented with the fingernail.<br />

The pore mouths are white, and amateur artists often etch by cutting the<br />

white surface, exposing the brown tissue beneath. Specimens of Fomes applanatus<br />

(and the form Fomes leucophaeus) often have the pileus covered with a dense coat<br />

.of brown spores. It is somewhat a mystery how they get there. That they are in<br />

part conidial has been demonstrated by sectioning the pileus layers, and we have<br />

seen abundant conidial spores attached to the hyphae. They are exactly the same<br />

in every respect as the spores one finds in the pores. But that they alone can account<br />

for such abundant spores as one often observes is difficult to believe.<br />

The early history of Fomes applanatus is somewhat obscure. , Sowerby<br />

con-<br />

fused it in the text with Fomes fomentarius, and Persoon first lists it as a variety<br />

of Fomes fomentarius. Schweinitz determined the American form as being Fomes<br />

263

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