SOLENIA, 143 



On mosses. About two lines across, wliitisli, the whole 

 plant dirty ochraceous when dry. 



Cyphella ocliroleuca. B. & Br. 



Yery pale ochraceous, memln-anaceons, -villous, cup-shaped, 

 margin becoming torn, sessile ; hymenium ochraceous ; 

 spores very pale ochraceous, elliptical, 6 x 4 yu. 



CyphAla orhroleuca, B. & Br., Berk., Outl., p. 277; Cke., 

 Hdbk., n. 948 ; Stev., Brit. Fung. 285. 



On dead bramble stems. Scattered, 1-li lines broad. 



SOLEXIA. Hoflfm. (fig. 8, p. 94.) 



Sporophore cylindrical, more or less contracted at the 

 mouth ; cavity everywhere covered with the hymenium ; 

 basidia tetrasporous. 



Solenia, Hoiimann, Deutschl. Fl., t. 8; Cooke, Hdbk. 1, ji. 

 329. 



The species are all minute, rarely exceeding 1 line in 

 height narrowly cj^liudrical and tubular, the tube being- 

 more or less contracted at the mouth, and internally every- 

 where covered with the hymenium. The species grow on 

 rotten wood, and are often densely crowded. Closely allied 

 to Cyphella, distinguished by the contracted mouth of the 

 tube and the crowded habit. At one time the species were 

 considered as Ijelonging to the genus Peziza, before the 

 microscope revealed the presence of basidia. Fries places 

 the genus in the Pohjporeae, but each tube in the present 

 genus is an individual or sporophore, and not simply a 

 hymenophore. The external hairs are in most species rough 

 with particles of lime. 



* Externally white. 



Solenia maxima. Mass. (u. sp.) 



Gregarious and subfasciculate, but not crowded ; subcy- 

 lindrical, slightly contracted at the base, externally villous, 

 with slender aseptate hyphae rough with minute particles of 

 lime, whitish or pale buff, about 1 line high ; spores ellip- 

 tical, minutely and obliquely apiculate, i) x 3 fx. 



On rotten wood. Forming patches l in. across. Distin- 

 guished by its large size. 



