620 



SEPEDONIEI. 



1859. Sepedoniunx roseum. Fr. " Rosy Sepedonium." 



Flocci fleecy, white ; spores appendiculate, red. — Fr. S.M. iii. 

 pA^S. Eng.Fl.Y, p.^bO. Ann. N.H.no.n2. Tul. Carp.m. p. 



On decaying fungi. 



More superficial than *S^. chrysoqyerm.%i.m» Spores larger, globose, with a 

 broad pellucid border, and a thick blunt appendage. Tulasne states that 

 tliis constitutes the conidia of Iliipomyces Linkii, the perfect condition of 

 which has not yet been found in Britain. 



Gen. 257. 



FUSZSFORIUIVX, Link. 



Spores elongated, fusiform, 

 curyed, at length septate, form- 

 ing a gelatinous mass. — Berk. 

 Outl.p.'dbh. {Fig. 2^2.) 



1860. Fusisporiuxn bets. 



Desm. " Beet Fusisporium." 



Orange, effused in a tremel- 

 lose crust; flocci dense, branched, 

 scarcely septate ; spores very 

 Fig. 292. copious, fusiform, delicate, 



slightly curved, obscurely septate. — Ann. Sc. Nat. xix. t. 18,/. 2. 

 Berk. Ann. N.H. no. 246. Desm. exs. no. 305. Bon. 1. 12,/. 248. 

 FcJd. exs.no. 214. 



On decaying beet root. Apethorpe. 



1861. Fusisporium geozginae. Berk. " Dahlia Fusis- 



porium." 



Effused, gelatinous, reddish, roseate, or intense orange, thick; 

 spores fusiform, acute at each extremity, with several oil glo- 

 bules. — Klotsch. exs. no. 186. Berk. Ann. N.H. no. 247, F. rhizo- 

 philum. Corda. n.f. 15. 



On roots of Dahlia. Apethorpe. , 



Doubtfully distinct from F. letce. — Desm. 



1862. Fusisporium uduzti. Berk. " Moist Fusisporium." 



Broadly effused, tremelloid ; dirty orange ; flocci of the 

 hyphasma decumbent, slightly branched; spores long, curved, 

 3-5 septate, acute at either end. — Ann. N.H. no. 245, t. 14,/. 



28. 



