BERKELEY S TYPES OF FUNGI. 521 
more especially by the much larger, polygonal cells of the paren- 
chymatous ascophore. 
Pezza EvcarvPrr, Berk. in Hook. f. Fl. Tasm. vol. ii. p. 274, 
t. 183. fig. 13 (1860). (PI. XVI. fig. 23.) 
Gregarious, stipitate; ascophore 2-1 mm. across, rather fleshy, 
at first closed, then expanding until nearly or quite plane ; pale 
olive or tan, with a purple tinge; clothed externally with long 
bristle-like spines of a purple-brown colour, formed of a fascicle 
of septate hyphæ ; spines most abundant and longest at the 
margin, falling away with age and leaving the ascophore bald ; 
stem stout, 1-15 mm. long, often curved, ornamented at an early 
stage with scattered short spines; cortex parenchymatous, cells 
large; asci cylindrie-clavate, apex slightly narrowed ; spores 8, 
obliquely i-seriate, or inclined to become 2-seriate, hyaline, 
smooth, continuous, narrowly elliptic-oblong, often slightly curved, 
9-11 x3 u; paraphyses slender, slightly thickened upwards. 
Dasyscypha Eucalypti, Sace. Syll. viii. n. 1924. 
On dead leaves of Eucalyptus. Tasmania (Archer). On phyl- 
lodes of Acacia longifolia and on Casaurina: Victoria (Mrs. 
Martin). 
A very minute, but beautiful species. Should be placed in the 
genus Cyathicula, characterized by the spines or teeth of the 
margin consisting of a fascicle of hyphe. 
PEZIZA MONILIFERA, Berk. $ Curt. Cuban Fungi, n. 673, in 
Journ. Linn. Soc. (Bot.) vol. x. (1869) p. 367 ; Cooke, Mycogr. 
p. 86, fig. 158. (Pl. XVI. fig. 22.) 
Hemispherieal and umbilieate at first, gradually expanding 
until plane or slightly convex, margin often wavy, dise yellow, 
2-4 mm. across; externally and the margin minutely pubescent, 
hairs very delicate, septate, colourless, tapering towards the apex, 
50-80 x 5-6 u ; excipulum parenchymatous, cortical cells large ; 
asci cylindrical, apex rounded, not blue with iodine, wall thick ; 
spores 8, l-seriate, globose, hyaline, smooth, 15-16 p diameter ; 
paraphyses slender, apex clavate. 
Pyronemella monilifera, Sace. Syll. n. 794. 
On the ground. Cuba (Wright, n. 375); Lower Carolina 
(Ravenel, n. 3802). 
Resembling Peziza gemmea, Phillips, P. Archeri, Berk., and 
P. globifera, Berk. & Curt. in the small, hyaline, smooth, globose 
spores, but distinguished from all by the pilose exterior of the 
ascophore, 
