330 FUNGUS-FLORA. 



VerticUlium ejnmyces, B. & Br., Ann. Xat. Ilist., n. 533, 

 t. vii. f. 15 ; Sacc, Syll., iv. n. 798. 

 On various species of decaying fungi. 



Verticillium. buxi. Aners. & Fleisch. 



Forming eifused, minutely pulverulent, . very pale rose- 

 coloured tufts ; sterile hyphae creeping, interlaced ; fertile 

 erect, main branches short, in opposite pairs or whorls of 

 three, secondary branchlcts similarly arranged ; conidia 

 elliptic-oblong, with a faint rosy tinge when mature, 

 6-10 X 3-4 /x. 



Verticillium huxi, Aners. & Fleisch. in Hedwigia, 18G7, 

 p. 9 ; Sacc, Syll., iv. n. 800. 



Not PeniciUium roseum, Cooke, as stated by Saccardo. 



On the under surface of fading and dead box leaves. 



Verticillium. lateritium. Berk. 



Forming broadly eifused velvety orange-red or vermilion- 

 coloured patches ; sterile hyphae dense, creeping septate, 

 fertile erect, primary and secondary branches in verticils, 

 the whorls becoming smaller upwards, giving the whole a 

 pyramidal outline; conidia, like the hyphae, pale red by 

 transmitter! light, elliptic-oblong, 4—6 x 3 /a. 



Verticillium lateritium, Berk., in Cke., Hdbk., p. 635 ; Sacc, 

 Syll., iv. n. 808. 



On various decaying vegetable substances. 



[Verticillium Vizei, B. & Br., in Yize, Microfungi, n. 247. 



According to Saccardo, who has examined a specimen in 

 Vize's exs., this is the imperfectly developed mycelium of 

 Oospora perpusilla, Sacc. In the Kew copy there is onl}' 

 mycelium, and that only in small quantity.] 



ACROSTALAGMUS. Corda. (figs. 6, 7, p. 358.) 



Yegetative hyphae creeping, septate ; fertile hyphae erect, 

 septate, primary branches in whorls that become smaller 

 upwards, secondary branches also whorled ; conidia aggre- 

 gated in clusters at the tips of the branchlets and involved 

 in mucus. 



Acrostalagmus, Corda, Icon. Fung., ii. p. 15; Sacc, Syll., iv- 

 p. 163. 



