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Tribe —BZoMYCEL. 
Baeomyces. 
B. rufus, D.C. On stones, Keswick (Mrs. Stanger.) Beside small streams 
near Asby ; and in Wastdale. 1879. 
B. roseus, Pers. Generally found upon the earth; rare. Keswick (Mrs. 
Stanger). Dent Hill road side, Cleator Moor; Alston Moor. 1878. 
Rare. 
B. placophyllus, Ach. Very rare. Keswick (Mrs. Stanger). 
B. icmadophilus, Ehrh. We have gathered remarkably fine specimens of 
this lichen on the fells about Alston. It grows upon the ground, 
but delights under the shelter of the overhanging heather, on the 
side of a turf-hole or old peat-bog. It is easily distinguished by its 
flat, delicate, flesh-coloured apothecia. Keswick (Mrs. Stanger). 
Alston Moor. 1877. 
Tribe—CLADONIEI. 
Pycnothelia papillaria, Duf. Borrowdale (Mrs. Stanger). Not common. 
Cladonia. 
©. pungens, Flk. Plentiful, road side near Moresby New Railway Station. 
Wall tops near Hensingham ; St. Bees; and Asby. Will be generally 
found throughout Cumberland, on bank sides and old wall tops. 
1879. Common. 
C. turgida, Hffm. Rare. Ennerdale. 1880. 
C. cervicornis, Scher. Common in wild rocky places. The laciniz are 
thickish, clustered, upright, blackish about the base. Podetia are 
short, and variously divided at the apex. Bowness Knot, Enner, 
dale ; Wastdale ; Keswick. 1879. 
C. cariosa, Flk. This is a rare species. The podetia are from half an inch 
to an inch high, with brown fruit ; more or less clothed with small 
scales about the base, and ribbed and channelled from the top 
downwards. It is distinguished from the forms of C. pyxidata 
only by turning yellow when touched with a solution of caustic 
potash. It grows upon the ground, or upon turfy wall-tops.* Gill- 
garron. 1880. 
C. delicata, Flk. Distinguished by the granular margins of the small and 
narrowly-divided leaflets, and the small, bare, flesh-coloured 
podetia. Not common. Near Strands, Wastdale. 1879, 
