Lyeoperdacese 



Growing on the open prairies. Wisconsin, Brown; Iowa, McBride; Caivatia. 

 Nebraska, Wyoming, Webber; Kansas, Cragin; California, Harkness. 

 Feridium 1^-3 in. in diameter. Morgan. 



Not seen by writer. Doubtless edible. 



C. sigilla'ta Cragin adorned with figures. PeridillHl large, de- 

 pressed above, narrowed below into a stem-like base. Cortex very thin 

 and fragile, white, easily abraded; inner peridium subcoriaceous, with 

 a fragile rust-color brown lining, marked off above into polygonal areas 

 by lines of depression, at length breaking up into fragments and falling 

 away. Mass of spores and capillitium violet to dark-purple. Spores 

 globose, even, 3.5-4.5^ in diameter, with a long pedicel. 



Growing on the open prairie. Kansas, Cragin. Peridium 4-5 in. 

 in diameter. The species is well marked by the even pedicellate spores. 

 Morgan . 



C. CSela'ta Bull. carved in relief. (L. cceldtum Bull. ; L. bovista 

 Pers.) Peridium large, obovoid or top-shaped, depressed above, with 

 a stout thick base and a cord-like root. Cortex a thickish floccose 

 layer, with coarse warts or spines above, whitish then ochraceous or 

 finally brown, at length breaking up into areola which are more or less 

 persistent; inner peridium thick but fragile, thinner about the apex, 

 where it finally ruptures, forming a large irregular lacerate aperture. 

 Subgleba occupying nearly half the peridium, cup-shaped above and a 

 long time persistent; mass of spores and capillitium compact, farina- 

 ceous, greenish-yellow or olivaceous, becoming pale to dark-brown; the 

 threads very much branched, the primary branches two or three times 

 as thick as the spores, very brittle, soon breaking up into fragments. 

 Spores globose, even, 4-4.5/1. in diameter, sessile or sometimes with 

 a short or minute pedicel. 



Growing on the ground in fields and woods. 



Peridium 35 in. in diameter, sometimes larger. Morgan. 



Wisconsin, Brown; Minnesota, Johnson; Kansas, Kellerman ; L. 

 caelatum, New York, edible, Peck, 23d Rep. ; Indiana, good, H. I. 

 Miller. Common, West Virginia, wooded lanes, Mcllvaine. 



An excellent species. 



C. lliema'lis Bull. belonging to winter. Peridium obovoid or top- 

 shaped, depressed above, with a stout thick base and a cord-like root. 



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