362 Rev. M. J. Berkeley on British Fungi. 



183. S. mastoidea, Fr. Syst. Myc. vol. ii. p. 463. On dead 

 twigs of ash still remaining on the tree. King's ClifFe, Norths. 



184. S. vilis, Fr. Syst. Myc. vol. ii. p. 466. On rotten oak 

 wood, Morehay Lawn, Norths. 



185. S. lanata, Fr. Syst. Myc. vol. ii. p. 482. S. ossea, 

 Carm. MSS. Appin, Capt. Carmichael. 



186. S. epidermidis, Fr. ! Scler. Suec. n. 19. A common spe- 

 cies on the epidermis of Lonicerce, Sambucus, &c. It is, how- 

 ever, a matter of doubt whether it be not more properly a Ver- 

 rucaria. 



187- & epimyces, Fr. Syst. Myc. vol. ii. p. 499. On decayed 

 Thelephora comedens. Milton. 



188. S. arbuticola, Fr. Syst. Myc. vol. ii. p. 500. Common 

 in Scotland on Arbutus Uva Ursi, Mr. Churchill Babington. 



189. S. acuminata, Sow., Fr. Syst. Myc. vol. ii. p. 506. 

 Common on thistles. This is a very distinct species. Sp. acuta, 

 HofFm. has no asci, but the contents of the perithecia consist 

 of very minute subelliptic corpuscles. The plant figured by 

 Dr. Greville is not S. acuta, but S. coniformis, Fr. At least 

 the analysis belongs to that species, as M. Desmazieres has 

 very justly observed. S. acuminata has extremely long spo- 

 ridia, not septate as in S. coniformis. 



190. S. coniformis, Fr. Syst. Myc. vol. ii. p. 508. Common 

 in company with 8, acuta. 



191. S. cruciferarum, Fr. Syst. Myc. vol. ii. p. 525. Desm. ! 

 exs. 985. Common on Erysimum officinale. 



192. S. (Depazea) stemmatea, Fr. Syst. Myc. vol. ii. p. 528. 

 On Vaccinium Vitis Idcea. Scotland. Mr. Churchill Babington. 



S. (Depazea) Ribicola, Fr. 1. c. Very common on currant 

 leaves. Spores discharged in a little irregular mass, strongly 

 curved, larger than those which are common to the genus Cy- 

 tispora, obtuse at either end, containing a few nuclei. 

 Tab. XI. fig. 1. Spores highly magnified. 



193. S. (Depazea) pallor, n. s. Maculis pallidis, subro- 

 tundis; peritheciis sparsis, immersis, pallidis, epidermide supra 

 ostiolum obsoletum prominulo; sporis linearibus curvulis. 

 On living bramble shoots. May, 1838. King's Cliffe, Wood- 

 newton, Norths. This remarkable species forms subrotund, 

 sometimes confluent pale spots, sprinkled with little elevated 

 dark-bordered dots, which indicate the situation of the peri- 

 thecia. Perithecia extremely delicate, of a pale fawn-colour, 

 filled with linear slightly curved spores, much larger than 

 those in the genus Cytispora, some of which contain an ob- 

 scure row of nuclei. 



Tab. XI. fig. 2. a, b. Spores more or less magnified. 



