338 
nive’a, 
ef 
* 
% 
calycifor’- 
mus, 
trunca’ta. 
slightly concave, bordered, not dotted. 
CRYPTOGAMIA. FUNGI. Peziza. With a Stem. 
n. 398, according to Mr. Dickson fasc. ii, 28, On rotten wood 
and stumps of trees. [On the earth at the edges of sawpits, 
and at the bottom of gate posts. Mr. Knapp. | 
: A. Jan.—Dec. Retu.—Oct. Nov. Mr, Kwarr. 
PEZI’ZA. Plant concave: Seeds on the upper 
surface only: discharged by jerks. 
With a Stem. | 
P. Wholly white: stem slender: pileus glass-shaped. . 
Dicks. HAL. 2339, 
Mich. 86. 15. 
"The young Sey with their snow-white soft hairs contracted 
into a kind of globe resembling a Clathrus. Dicxson., Not 
pe epee hemp seed, thin as silk paper; and snow 
white. Mr. Sracxnovust. About 1-10th of an inch in height, 
and the pileus nearly as much in breadth. ; 
~ On trunks of dead trees. Dicxson.—Rotten wood and 
sticks. Retx.—[On moss on the trunks of apple trees; Powick, 
Worcester. Mr. StackHouse. Aug.—Sept. 
Var. 2. Stem as long as the height of the pileus, very dis- 
tinct from it: plant wholly white, hair less, . 
Growing in clusters on a rotten stick; Packington. 
ee Autumn, 
P. Glass-shaped, disc of the pileus tawny with a white 
border : stem white, thick. 
Hedw, stirp. li, 22. B-Batsch 135. 
Pileus at first convex, with age turning up. 
On the trunks of trees and on the fallen branches as. 
; utumn. 
P, White, conical, lopped, bordered. 
‘Stem scarcely distinct from the piles, Pileus white, 
At Packington, on moss, _ Autumn. 
T have-seen a beautihid drawing of another‘of this kind g2- 
thered at the same place, but later in the year, in which the p!- 
. leus had attained a yellow colour, and the border was studded 
with brown specks, I apprehend this to be the same plant in 
its more mature state, and the brown specks to be the fructl- 
[Ne 
shaped, lopped, the disc of the pileus white, 
4 
