. ascobolus; 1G1 



then olive, somewhat pellucid, becoming blackish olive when 

 old and dry, |— 1 mm. across, excipulum parenchymatous, 

 cortical cells, polygonal, large ; asci clavate, narrowed below 

 into a slender pedicel, 8-spored ; spores at first almost 

 1-seriate, then irregularly 2-seriate, rather narrowly elliptical, 

 violet then violet-brown or altogether brown, epispore with 

 irregularly anastomosing wrinkles, 1G-18 x 7— 8 /*.; para- 

 physes septate, becoming slightly and gradually thickened 

 upwards, hyaline, involved in pale yellow-green mucus. 



On horse and cow dung. 



Specimens in Pab.-Klotzsch, Herb. Myc, n. 107, examined. 



Ascobolus marginatus. Mass. Grew, vol. xxi. p. 100. 



Ascophore ses>ile, at first almost globose, then becoming 

 narrowed at the base, apex truncate, disc at length quite 

 plane, bounded by a slightly raised, blunt margin, soft and 

 pellucid, almost l^aline or with a slight tinge of olive, quite 

 glabrous ; J— 1 mm. across ; excipulum parenchymatous, cells 

 almost regularly hexagonal, 10-16 /x diameter; asci clavate, 

 apex slightly narrowed, pedicel short, slender, 8-spored, 

 slightly projecting above the surfaco of the disc at maturity, 

 spores irregularly 2-seriate, elliptical, ends rather acute, 

 continuous, epispore persistently smooth, pale rosy-violet, 

 then purple-brown, 15-16 X 6-7 //. ; paraphyses hyaline, 

 septate, about 2 fx thick, apex not thickened ; hypothecium 

 minutely parenchymatous. 



On dung of ass. 



Distinguished by the small size of the spores and bj^ the 

 epispore remaining perfectly smooth, and without marks or 

 lines at maturity. 



* 



Externally scurfy or granulated. 



Ascobolus furfuraceus. Pers., Tent. Meth., p. 25 ; 

 Phil., Brit. Disc, p. 290; Sacc, Syll., n. 2143. 



Ascophore 1-4 mm. across, globose then expanded, the disc 

 becoming plane then convex, pale yellowish green when 

 moist, the margin externally furfuraceous or scurfy, the disc 

 becoming studded with black points due to the dark-coloured 

 spores in the projecting asci; when old the disc becomes 

 blackish-brown and often depressed, the pale granular margin 



VOL. IV. m 



