Crucibuluvi 



NIDULARIACEiE 



483 



the apex as a flat epiphragm. Peridiola numerous, attached to the 

 inner wall of the peridium by a long cord which originates from a 

 depression in a central nipple-like tubercle on the under side of the 

 peridiolum. (Fig. 136.) 



2092. C. vulgare Tul. (from its commonness ; vulgaris, common) a b c. 



Pe. thick, sienna- white, cinnamon or greyish, externally minutely 



tomentose, internally smooth and shining. Peri, circular, 



biconvex, pale ochreous or sienna-white. 



Rotten branches, planks, twigs, chips, cones, herbaceous stems, grass, rotten 

 straw, dead fern-fronds. Oct. -Nov. f x \ in. 



CXXI. NIDULARIA Bull. 

 (From a fancied resemblance to a nest, nidus) 



Peridium globose, consisting of a single membrane, at first closed 

 then opening by a more or less regular mouth or becoming irregularly 



Fig. 137. — a, Nidularia fiisi/ormis Tul. X %. B, sections showing peridiola em- 

 bedded in mucus. X 3. c, d, peridiolum and section. X 12. E, basidium with spores, 

 cystidium and the smaller cells of hymenial surface. X 660. 



ruptured, containing numerous peridiola enveloped in mucus, not 

 attached to inside by a funiculus. The mucus arises from dis- 

 integration of hyphae. (Fig. 137.) Species 2093 — 2095 



2093. N. pisiformis Tul. (from the pea-like shape ; J>isum, a pea, 



forma, shape) a b c. 



Pe. turbinate, strigose, tuberculose, splitting irregularly, cinnamon, 



pale buff or salmon. Peri, subrotund, biconvex, smooth, 



shining, brown. 



Gregarious or solitary. Dead branches, chips, leaves, pine, sometimes on the 



2 I 2 



