Fig. 4. S. LONGA. 



FORMS a black oblong ring, fmall, and penetrating, 

 or fixed to the depth of the bark (if I may fo call it) of 

 a piece of decaying reed. The top is lightifli in the 

 middle ; the infide is quite white. 



Fig. 5. S. GuTTA. 



BLACK, nearly conical, very minute, brittle, and 

 almoft folid. 



Fig. 6. S. LoNicERiE. 



ON the ftalk of woodbine ; black ; round or oval, 

 with a little nipple, inferted into the bark. 



Fig. 7. S. Corona. 

 SHAPED like a crown or cap ; indented towards the 

 middle with a little central roundilh protuberance ; 

 the infide grayifh. 



Fig. 8. S. Pisi. 

 FOUND by the Rev. William Kirby on pea-ftalks ; 

 round within the bark, or protruding outwards with 

 a conical point or mouth, giving it the form of an egg 

 with the point upwards. It covers the ftalk, &;c. 

 almoft all over in little fpots. 



TAB. CCCXCIV. 



Fig. I. SPHyERIA fusco marginata. 



OUNK about half-way in the bark of nettle-ftalks. 

 The upper part is elevated, or convex, with the mouth 

 in the centre ; black, encircled with a lightifli colour, 

 foftening into a brown. This was fent me from Bar- 

 ham, Suffolk, by the Rev. William Kirby. 



Fig. 1. S. NiDULA. 

 CLUSTERED in concave parts on the root of the 

 bean ; fmall, black, nearly round, the mouth forming 

 a fort of blunt point. 



