Comprehensive Description
provided by North American Flora
Funalia villosa (Sw.) Murrill, Bull. Torrey Club 32 : 356. 1905
Boletus villosus S-^ . Prodr. 148. 1788.— Sw. Fl. Ind. Dec. 3: 1923. 1806. Favohts villosus Fries, Syst. Myc. 1 : 344. 1821. Polyporus villosus Fries, Bpicr. Myc. 475. 1838.
Pileus effused-reflexed, imbricate, laterally connate, coriaceous, the refiexed portion 2-3X3-6X0.3-0.8 cm.; surface villose, spuriously and opaquely zoned, grayishwhite, becoming umbrinous to ferruginous behind with age; margin thin, acute, concolorous, undulate to lobed : context pallid, very thin, membranous, fibrous, scarcely a mm. thick ; tubes slender, 5-7 mm. long, isabelline within, mouths very variable in size and shape, 0.5-2 mm. broad, circular to angular or slightly daedaleoid, edges thin, entire to toothed, grayish-isabelline, pale rose-tinted when fresh : spores oblong-allantoid, smooth, hyaline, scanty, 6-8 X2-4/i ; hyphae 2-2.5^.
Type locality : Jamaica.
Habitat : Dead deciduous and coniferous wood. Distribution : Florida, Louisiana, and tropical America. PJxsiCCATi : KlHs & Ev. N. Am. Fungi 25*^7.
- bibliographic citation
- William Alphonso MurrilI, Gertrude Simmons BurIingham, Leigh H Pennington, John Hendly Barnhart. 1907-1916. (AGARICALES); POLYPORACEAE-AGARICACEAE. North American flora. vol 9. New York Botanical Garden, New York, NY
Comprehensive Description
provided by North American Flora
Coriolus pinsitus (Fries) Pat. Tax. Hym^n. 94. 1900
Polyporus pinsitus Vri^s, Elench. Fung. 95. 1828.
Polyporus gibberulosus I,^v. Ann. Sci. Nat. III. 5: 139. 1846. (Type from Surinam.)
Polyporus tenerl^^w. Ann. Sci. Nat. III. 5; 139. 1846. (Type from Guadeloupe.)
Polysiictus umbonatus Fries, Nov. Symb. 87. 1851. (Type from Mexico.)
Hexagona Friestana Speg. Anal. Soc. Ci. Argent. 17: 69. 1884. (iS'pe from Paraguay.)
Polysiictus jamaicensis v. 'H.&nn. Hedwigia 37 : 280. 1898. (Type from Jamaica.)
Pileus thin, flexible, confluent-effused, sessile, dimidiate or fiabelliform, often umbonate-af&xed, 2-4 X 3-7 X 0.1 cm. ; surface isabelline to pale-cinereous, glistening, multizonate velvety-hirsute; margin thin, undulate to lobed, sterile, inflexed on drying : context white membranous, tough ; tubes short, white to discolored within, less than 1 mm. long, mouths hexagonal, very regular, 2-3 to a mm., edges thin, denticulate, white to discolored, often becoming fuliginous : spores oblong, globose, smooth, hyaline, 6-7 X 3 /^ ; hyphae 3-5 ^ ; cystidia none.
Type locality : Brazil.
Habitat : Dead wood.
Distribution : Southern Florida and Mexico to Brazil.
- bibliographic citation
- William Alphonso MurrilI, Gertrude Simmons BurIingham, Leigh H Pennington, John Hendly Barnhart. 1907-1916. (AGARICALES); POLYPORACEAE-AGARICACEAE. North American flora. vol 9. New York Botanical Garden, New York, NY
Comprehensive Description
provided by North American Flora
Coriolus sericeohirsutus (Klotzsch) Murrill, Bull. Torrey
Club 32 : 651. 1906.
Polyporus sericeo-hirsulus KXotzsoh, I^innaea 8 : 483. 1833. Hexagonia sericea Fries, BJpicr. Myc. 497. 1838. Polysticius barbaiulus Fries, Nov. Symb. 87. 1851.
Pileus very thin, flexible, sessile, effused-confluent, sometimes wholly resupinate, conchate-reflexed, 0-3X2-6X0.05-0.1 cm.; surface conspicuously silky-villose to strigosehirsute, multizonate, pale-brown to hoary, with slightly darker zones; margin thin, entire or undulate, dentate or eroded with age : context thin, white, membranous, tough ; tubes shallow, 1-1.5 mm. deep, white to slightlj'discolored within, mouths hexagonal, irregular, very variable in' size, 0.3-1 mm. in diameter, edges thin, denticulate to dentate, white to discolored, sometimes becoming umbrinous : spores smooth, hyaline, thin-walled, pointed, 6X4^.
Type locality : Texas.
Habitat : Dead trunks and branches of red cedar. Distribution : Virginia to Florida and west to Missouri and Texas.
- bibliographic citation
- William Alphonso MurrilI, Gertrude Simmons BurIingham, Leigh H Pennington, John Hendly Barnhart. 1907-1916. (AGARICALES); POLYPORACEAE-AGARICACEAE. North American flora. vol 9. New York Botanical Garden, New York, NY