FRUITING OF MASTIGONEMA. 



127 



fruiting Rivularias. At the same time the peculiar arrangement 

 of the spores is remarkable, and it' the other species of Mastigo- 

 nema should be found to have the more common exclusively basal 

 arrangement of spores, I think it would afford good ground for 

 considering M. fertile as the type of a new genus. Moreover, the 

 filaments are not united into a distinct thallus, and also want the 

 apical hair of Mistigothrix, so that it is very probable that they 

 represent an undescribed genus. Until, however, the fructification 

 of the European species is elucidated, it seems best to forbear 

 multiplying names. 



HUNGARIAN FUNGI. 



The species figured in the first part of the new work by Kalch- 

 brenner, called "Icones Selects; Hymenomycetum Hungariaa," are — 



Ag. (Amanita) aureola. K. 

 Ag. (Amanita) cygnea. Sch. 

 Ag. (Lepiota) nympkarum. K. 

 Ag. (Lepiota) Schulzeri. Fr. 

 Ag. (Tricholoma) macrocephalus. Sch 

 Ag. (Tricholoma) psammopua. K. 

 Ag. (Tricholoma) arcyrius. K. 

 Ag. (Tricholoma) centurio. K. 

 Ag. (Tricholoma) tumulosus. K. 

 Ag. (Clitocybe) trullgeformis. Fr. 

 Ag. (Collybia) atramentosus. K. 



Ag. (Collybia) plumipea. K. 

 Ag. (Collybia) rancidus. Fr. 

 Ag. (Mycaena) caasiellus. K. 

 Ag. (Omphalia) cyanophyllus. Fr. 

 Ag. (Omphalia) recliim. Fr. 

 Ag. (Pleurotus) sapidus. Sch. 

 Ag. (Pleurotus) pardaus. Sch. 

 Ag. (Pleurotus) superbiens. Sch. 

 Ag. (Annularia) Fenzlii. Sch. 

 Ag. (Pluteus) patricius. Sch. 



The figures are well executed, and published at Pesth, by the 

 Athenaeum press. 



TORTULA INCLINATA. II. <J- Gr. 



In the last number of the " Journal of Botany," Mr. Henry 

 Boswell gives the description of this moss, together with a plate, 

 reproduced from the " Bryologia Eftropaea." It was recorded by 

 him in 1872, as found in Oxfordshire, and he expresses surprise 

 that it has not been met with elsewhere. 



Barbula inclinata. Scfavg.— Dioicus ; broadly tufted, tufts plane, 

 condensed. Stem short or taller, densely leafy. Leaves elongato- 

 linear, undulated in the margins, the nerve whitish on the back, 

 excurrent into a mucro ; the perichajtial longer, narrower, erect, 

 with a looser areolation. Fruit stalk tlexuose, often spirally twisted ; 

 capsule yellowish or fuscous, cernuous, oval-oblong, more or less 

 incurved and gibbous at the base. 



Habitat. — Gravelly and sandy ground near river banks, or dry 

 hills and subalpine calcareous situations. The short stems rarely 

 attaining an inch in length, the shorter, broader, and less curving 



