348 



TEEMELLINI. 



1. 15,/! 4. Corticium viscosum, Fr. Thelephora viscosa, Eng. Fl. v. 

 pAll. 



On dead wood. 



We find globose sporophores, bearing three or four elongated sterigmata, 

 and obloBEr, obliquely attached spores, which sometimes contain one or two 

 nuclei. — B. cb Br. 



1028. Tremella epigaea. B. S,' Br. " Ground Tremella." 



Effused, gelatinous, gyroso-plicate, white. — Ann. Nat. Hist. 

 ser.ii.t;o/. 2,p.266,7io. 373. i. 9,/. 3. Berh. Outl. p. 289. 



On the ground. Rare. Leigh wood, Bristol. 



Spreading over the naked soil, on which it forms a thin white stratum, 

 the surface of which is gyroso-plicate, and dusted with the white spores ; 

 the inner substance is very soft and gelatinous . — M. J. B. 



Gen. 50. 



EXZDIA, Fr. 



Tremulous, margined, fertile 

 above and granular, barren below. 

 —Berk. Outl. p. 289. (Fig. 95.; 



Fig. 95. 



1029. 



Exidia recisa. Fr. " Truncate Exidia." 



Very soft, truncate, plane, costate, 

 sub-repand, amber-brown, punctato- 

 scabrous beneath ; stem very short, 

 exceutric, oblique. — Fr. Fpicr.p. 590. 

 &turm. f. 13. Eng. Bot. Ed. ii. t. 1819. 

 Eng.Fl. Y.p. 218. Berk. Outl.p. 289. 

 Fig. 96. ^/sc/i./. 3399. Kl.exs.no.%^^. 



On dead branches of willows. Common. [Low. Carolina.] 

 About 1 in, broad j spores oblong, obtuse, curved. (Fig. 96.J 



