44 PROCEEDINGS OF THE AMERICAN ACADEMY. 



late protrusions : the basal cell of the appendage slightly divergent, 

 several times as long as broad ; the external margin straight, the inner 

 strongly concave with a median blackish suffusion; the rest of the appen- 

 dage slightly curved, about eight or nine-celled, tapering slightly and 

 diverging strongly above the basal cell. The antheridial appendage and 

 the receptacle much as in C. mirabilis. Spores 85 X 5 fi. Perithecia 

 400-175 x 110-125 fi, the appendage about 290 //, its basal cell 70 X 26 

 and 36^. Total length to tip of perithecium 550-640 p. 



On the left inferior margin of the abdomen of Tropistemus nitidus 

 Sharp, Sharp Collection, No. 1177, and of T. chalybeus Cast., British 

 Museum, No. 772, Oaxaca, Mexico. 



Ceratomyces Braziliensis nov. sp. 



Dark amber brown. Perithecium somewhat inflated just above the 

 constricted base, the upper two-thirds broad and of about the same 

 diameter throughout; about forty-five wall-cells in each row, the tip 

 small, short, rather narrow, abruptly hunched externally, the hyaline 

 lips turned abruptly toward the base of the perithecial appendage, which 

 consists of a basal cell hardly differentiated from the wall-cell below it, 

 though somewhat longer, the portion above it erect, slender, stiff, slightly 

 curved outward, tapering but little, the subbasal cell bearing a charac- 

 teristic basal enlargement which projects toward the lip-cells and lies 

 just above them. The appendage and receptacle much as in C. mira- 

 bilis. Perithecium 650 X 95 ju (basal) X 87 ^ (distal). Appendage 

 185 ix, or more. Total length to tip of perithecium 800 p. 



On inferior thorax of Tropistemus nitens Cast. var. Rio de Janeiro. 

 Sharp Collection, No. 1181. 



KAINOMYCES nov. gen. 



"Receptacle much as in Zodiomyces, broad and flattened ; consisting of 

 a single basal cell and typical foot, above which the successive cells 

 become variably divided by longitudinal septa into transverse cell-rows 

 or tiers : the distal portion more or less definitely distinguished and con- 

 sisting of superposed cells, the lowest of which alone become longitu- 

 dinally divided, all producing laterally antheridial (?) branches : several 

 of the tiers immediately below this appendiculate portion growing out 

 laterally at right angles to the main axis of the receptacle on one or 

 both sides to form "perithecial branches" consisting of superposed cells 

 and terminated by solitary perithecia. The perithecium of peculiar 



