CHEILOSCYPHUS. 



[ 135 ] 



CHILODON. 



CHEILOSCYPHUS, Corda.— A genus 

 of Jimgermanme?e (Hepaticacese), founded 

 upon Junyermannia polyanthus, L., which is 

 not unfrequent in wet places. 



BiBL. Hooker, Brit. Jungerm. pi. 62; 

 Corda, in Sturm, Dtshl. Flor. ii. 19, 20. p. 

 35. pi. 9. 



CHEIROCEPHALUS. See Branchi- 



CHEIROSPORA, Fries.— A genus of 

 Melanconiei (Coniomycetous Fungi), grow- 

 ing upon the twigs of the beech. The myce- 

 lium spreads under the epidermis, and bm'sts 

 through in rounded or irregular, conical, 

 black pustules, 1-20" in diameter, which are 

 composed of a large number of fine filaments, 

 unequal in length and waved, each termina- 

 ting in a bunch of spores. The heads are 

 formed of chains of spores like a Penicillium, 

 when young, but crowded together more 

 densely as they become more fully developed 

 into a globular or oval head, about 1-/00"; 

 the spores about 1-4000". This genus cor- 

 responds to Stilbospora, Montague, Myrio- 

 cephalum, De Notaris, and, apparently, Hy- 

 peromyxa, Corda, but the latter is said to 

 have a mucous vesicle enclosing the head. 



C. hotryospora, Fr. On dead beech twigs. 

 Berk, and Broome, Ann. Nat. Hist. 2 ser. v. 

 455. (Fresenius finds a variety on the horn- 

 beam.) 



BiBL. Cheirospora, Fries, Summa Veyet. 

 508 ; Stilbospora, Fries, Syst. Mycolog. iii. 

 448 ; Montagne, Ann. des Sc. nat. 2 ser. vi. 

 338. pi. 18. fig. 5 ; Hyperomyxa, Corda, 

 Icones Fung. iii. fig. JS ; Montagne, Ann. 

 des Sc. nat. 2 ser. xx. 378 ; Myriocephalum, 

 De Notaris, Mem. Acad, di Torino, ser. 2. 

 vii. ; Fresenius, Beitr. zur Mvkologie, p. 39. 

 pi. 5. fi?s. 1-9 (2te Heft). 



CHELIDONIUM, L.— A genus of Papa- 

 veraceous plants, remarkable for the yellow 

 juice contained in the laticiferous canals. See 

 Latex. 



CHEMICAL REACTIONS. — Intro- 

 duction, p. xxxvii. 



CH EMISTRY.— The following works may 

 be consulted when a more detailed account 

 of the chemical properties of substances is 

 required than that for which we have space 

 in this work. 



General works ; large. — Berzelius, Lehrb. 

 d. Chem. ; Gmelin, Handbuch der Chemie 

 (translated in part by the Cavendish Society); 

 Brande, Manual, S^-c; Graham, Manual, ^-c; 

 Mitscherlich's Chemie. 



Small. — Gregory, Outlines, Sf-c; Lehmann, 

 Taschenbuch d. Theoret. Chem. ; quite ele- 



mentary, Stockhardt, Experimental Analysis 

 (Bohn's series). Fresenius, Jnl. z-. Chem. 

 Analys. (translated by Bullock) ; Will, Anl. 

 z. Ch. An. (translated by Hofmann) ; Rose, 

 Analyt. Chem. 



Organic chemistry in general. — Mulder, 

 Versuch, Sf-c. (translated by Johnston) ; 

 Lowig, Chem. d. Organ. Verb. ; also the 

 above general works. 



Animal chemistry. — Simon, Anthropo- 

 chemie (Sydenham Society) ; Lehmann, 

 Physiol. Chem. (Sydenham Society); Robin 

 and Verdeil, Traite d. Chim. Anat. et Phys. ; 

 Vogel, Anleit. z. Gebrauche d. Mikrosk.; 

 Heintz, Lehrbuch d. Zoochemie ; Scherer, 

 Chem. und Mikrosk. Untersuch. ^-c. ; Hofle, 

 Chem.und Mikrosk. am Krankenbette; Gorup- 

 Besanez, Zoochem. Analyse; Schmidt, Ent- 

 wurf ein. allg. Untersuchungsmethode, Sfc. ; 

 Funke, Atlas d. Phys. Chemie. 



Vegetable chemistry is treated in the 

 general works. 



The progress of chemistry is reported in 

 the Chemical Gazette. 



CHEYLETUS, Latr.-A genus of Arach- 

 nida, of the order Acarina, doubtfully referred 

 to the family Trombidina. 



Char. Palpi thick, resembling arms, and 

 falciform at the ends ; antennal forceps 

 (mandibles ?) flidactylous. 



C. eruditus. Found in books and museums. 

 Acarus eruditus, Schrank, Enum. Insect, 

 ylustrice, no. 1058 ; Latreille, Hist. nat. 

 Crust, et Ins. viii. 54. 



C. marginatus. Koch, Deutschl. Crust., 

 Myriap. and Ins., copied l3y Guerin, Iconogr. 

 Regn. Anim., Arach. pi. 5. f. 8. 



BiBL. Ut supra and Cuvier, Regne Animal, 

 the dateless edition (1853?); Gervais, 

 Walckenaer's Apteres, iii. 



CHILODON, Ehr.— A genus of Infu- 

 soria, of the family Trachelina. 



Char. Body covered with cilia; mouth 

 with teeth arranged in the form of a tube ; 

 fore part of the head produced into a broad 

 membranous or ear-like lip. 



The cilia form longitudinal rows. 



C. cucullulus (PI. 23. fig. 27«). Depressed, 

 oblong, colourless, rounded at the ends, 

 slightly auriculate or beaked anteriorly on 

 the right side ; aquatic and marine ; length 

 1-1120 to 1-140^ (P1.23. fig.275,side view.) 

 Contains a red globule (eye-spot ?). 



C uncinatus. De])ressed, oblong, rounded 

 at the ends, colom'less; narrowed and curved 

 anteriorly so as to appear hooked ; aquatic ; 

 length 1-430". 



C. aureus. Ovato-conical, turgid, golden- 



