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Lloyd Mycological Writings V3.pdf - MykoWeb

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made the discovery independent of Berkeley's previous but obscure publication,<br />

and he gave an excellent account and figure of it, showing its polyporoid nature.<br />

This was about twenty-five years ago, and since that date the plant has been<br />

generally and correctly known to all mycologists. 30<br />

Fig. 370.<br />

Polyporus Pocula. From Japan.<br />

Forms.<br />

Fig. 371. (x6)<br />

Polyporus Pocula, var. longipes. from Brazil.<br />

This little plant seems very constant in America and the Japanese collection<br />

is exactly the same. The Australian form (only one collection known) has a<br />

more rugulose surface, but is essentially the same.<br />

Var. longipes. At Berlin there is a collection from Brazil (Fig. 371 x6)<br />

with a long stipe. It is only known from this collection.<br />

follows :<br />

Distribution. The distribution of Polyporus Pocula as far as known is as<br />

Frequent in the United States, having a preference for chestnut oak and<br />

sumac ; extending south and apparently frequent through Central America and<br />

northern South America.<br />

Brazil, a single collection (at Berlin)of a long-stemmed form (var. longipes).<br />

Japan, a fine collection (at Berlin).<br />

Australia, a single collection (at Kew). 31<br />

30 The history of its juggling is almost as long as its "new species" history. Any plant<br />

that departs as much as this from the usual habits of a Polyporus forms a "new genus," of<br />

course, but they have had much trouble to get a name for it. Fries, as previously stated,<br />

made a new genus for it, Enslinia in the Pyrenomycetes. Then a "Kew Index investigation"<br />

showed that Enslinia was a name for a phaenogamic genus, and it was changed to Porodiscus.<br />

Then they discovered that was something else, and they changed to Porodisculus. I<br />

have not heard of any juggle since.<br />

The specific name pendula rests only upon two vague suggestions of Schweinitz and a<br />

date dictionary shuffle of some alleged synonyms given by Fries. Although the name pendula<br />

is attributed to Schweinitz, he always called the plant "pocula" and maintained to the last<br />

that pendula was not only a different plant but a different genus. He preserved in his herbarium<br />

unquestioned specimens of Polyporus pocula, but none of "pendula." The latter name<br />

is only a date dictionary juggle of some alleged synonyms by Fries and originally had no<br />

historic value. It is not only contrary to the usage of a half century, but contrary to all<br />

published opinions of its author, Schweinitz.<br />

31 The distribution is given in North American Flora as "from Connecticut to Nicaragua."<br />

A little more thorough work in the museums of Europe would have extended the "distribution"<br />

to Brazil, Australia, and Japan.<br />

46

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