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Lloyd Mycological Writings V4.pdf - MykoWeb

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Polyporus dictyopus.<br />

Polyporus Blanchetianus.<br />

Section Melanopus.<br />

POLYPORUS APUS.<br />

Context white.<br />

Polyporus immaculatus.<br />

NOTE 103. This is a pure, white plant of the tropics and well named. The eontext<br />

is soft, friable, pure white, and "chalky." The pores are pure white, minute, with a<br />

silky luster as turned to the light. Spores globose, 4 mic., smooth, hyaline. This is not<br />

a common plant in the tropics, though widely distributed. Of course, it has many names.<br />

Berkeley named it as above and also Trametes pura. He labeled a specimen in Hooker's<br />

herbarium Polyporus immaculatus, and under this name sent it to Paris, and the name<br />

was used by Patouillard, although never published by Berkeley. In addition, Polyporus<br />

verecundus is probab'y the same thing. Hennings got it from New Guinea and immedi-<br />

ately discovered it was a new species and called it the barbarous name Polyporus gogolensis.<br />

Murrill, from the American tropics, referred it to Polyporous leucomallus, which is wrong,<br />

we think, although the type is a little frustule, from which not much can be told. His<br />

two synonyms are both right. When he got the same plant from the Philippines, however,<br />

he discovered that it was a new species and called it Polyporus unguliformis.<br />

White species are all difficult, but this plant is so characteristic that we think no<br />

one should confuse it. It seems to be confined to the tropics.<br />

Section depallens.<br />

Polyporus lignosus.<br />

NOTE 104. Very thin form. This form was called Polystictus honduriensis by<br />

Murrill. It is a question if Polyporus zonalis is truly distinct from it.<br />

Section Dichrous.<br />

Polyporus adustus.<br />

The type form of Europe was not sent by Mr. Henri Perrier de la Bathie, but<br />

two related plants.<br />

Section Glceoporus.<br />

This section with gelatinous hymenium is held by many as a distinct<br />

genus. In temperate regions it is quite uniform, but in tropical countries<br />

it takes several color forms.<br />

Polyporus dichrous.<br />

NOTE 105. This species has a gelatinous hymenium, hence is by some placed in<br />

a separate genus, Gloeoporv.s. The type form with white flesh and purplish hymenium is<br />

a very common plant in the United States, but is rare in Europe. We have the type form<br />

also from Brazil, South Africa, and a similar, colored, but thinner plant from Japan. Mr.<br />

Henri Perrier de la Bathie does not send the type form.<br />

In the tropics Polyporus dichrous has usually much paler colored hymenium and<br />

was named Polyporus conchoides by Montagne, and a form with almost white hymenium<br />

is called Polyporus candidus. The form from Henri Perrier de la Bathie, Madagascar<br />

(named below), has a burnt umber hymenium, with no trace of the purple of the type form.<br />

Polyporus candidus.<br />

viz. the white form of conchoides (see above).<br />

5

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