. Synopsis of the British Basidiomycetes ; a descriptive catalogue of the drawings and specimens in the Department of botany, British museum. e; marg. barren, determinate, pubescent. At first orbicular, soon confluent. Hornbeam, privet, oak, oak chips in tanpits, squared oak timber, beech. 5^ in. Polyporus StevensiiB. & Br. Must not be confounded with 1553. 1657a. T. purpuraseens B. & Br. (from the hymenium becomingpurple).Sub. somewhat leathery, subtomentose, chestnut. T. rigid,becoming purple. Po. small. Dead willow, f in. LXVII. DjEDALEA Pers. (From the Cretan labyrinth made by Da


. Synopsis of the British Basidiomycetes ; a descriptive catalogue of the drawings and specimens in the Department of botany, British museum. e; marg. barren, determinate, pubescent. At first orbicular, soon confluent. Hornbeam, privet, oak, oak chips in tanpits, squared oak timber, beech. 5^ in. Polyporus StevensiiB. & Br. Must not be confounded with 1553. 1657a. T. purpuraseens B. & Br. (from the hymenium becomingpurple).Sub. somewhat leathery, subtomentose, chestnut. T. rigid,becoming purple. Po. small. Dead willow, f in. LXVII. DjEDALEA Pers. (From the Cretan labyrinth made by Da^dalos—in reference to the intricate, labyrinthine pores.) Agreeing with Ira metes, except in the firmer and sometimesthicker dissepiments of the pores, which, when fully grown areirregularly sinuous or labyrinthine, the floccose substance of the hardpileus descending unchanged into the trama. (Fig. 82.) Inodorous. Species 1658—1666 Corky-woody, dimidiate, sessile. 1658—1661 366 POLYPORACEiE Dadalea Coriaceous, dimidiate, sessile. Resupinate. Resupinate or effuso-reflexed, of uncertain affinity. 1662, 1663 1664, 1665 1666. Fig. 82.—Dcedalea quercina Pers. One-half natural , upper surface ; B, lower surface ; c, section. 1658. D. quercina Pers. (from its habitat—oak, quercus) a b c. P. somewhat zoned, rugulose, uneven, somewhat smooth, buff-brown, darker behind. T. long. Po. at first simple, thenlabyrinthine, edge obtuse, whitish-salmon. Flesh pale sienna. Single or imbricate ; perennial. Sometimes on squared timber. in. Sometimes resupinate. Occurs in peat-beds in the eastern countiesand in the lake-side pile-dwellings of Switzerland and Italy. 1659. D. aurea Fr. (from its golden colours; aurum, gold) a c. P. somewhat zoned, rugulose, uneven, coarsely velvety, orange-or yellowish-brown. T. somewhat long. Po. simple thensublabyrinthine, opaque sienna-orange. Flesh sienna-white. Single to imbricate. Dead oak. 2§ in. Pores usually rounder than 1658. 166


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