76 TRANSACTIONS, NATURAL HISTORY SOCIETY OF GLASGOW. 
Kelvingrove Park is the only one to which anything like regular 
attention has been devoted, and of which a record has been kept. 
Should any one be disposed to take any of the other parks under 
his care, I shall gladly give what help I can in identifying 
species, and warmly welcome another worker in this interesting, 
but neglected field. 
The record for Kelvingrove extends to upwards of fifty species, | 
comprised in nineteen genera and fifteen subgenera—a number 
of the species being not at all common, four of them rare, and one 
yet unidentified, and which may prove to be new. 
A large proportion of these belong to the Hymenomycetes, and 
of these twenty-five are Agarics, representatives of about one-half 
the subgenera in the British lists. 
Of the Polypori there are six— Polyporus frondosus, Fr., however, 
being a disputed identification, one high authority maintaining 
that it is a form of P. giganteus, Fr. 
The only British Fistulina—/istulina hepatica, Fr.—has been 
found, and, of course, the ubiquitous Merulius lachrymans, Fr., 
had to be turned out of the Museum; while two Stereums and one 
Clavaria are in the record, along with Dacrymvyces stillatus, Nees, 
which closes our list of Hymenomycetes. 
Of the Gasteromycetes, the second great family, we have only 
three, each representative of a different order and genus—Phallus 
impudicus, Linn., Lycoperdon gemmatum, Fr., and Crucibulum 

vulgare, Tul. 
Of the third and fourth families we have no record—the Conio- 
mycetes and the Hyphomycetes ; but of the fifth, the Ascomycetes, 
we have two species of Peziza, one Enceelia, one Xylaria, and one 
Nectria. 
I append a complete list of species found in the park, identified 
by Professor King or myself, all those doubtful or unknown 
having been verified by Dr. Stevenson, Dr. Keith, or Dr. Cooke, 
but the following notes on a few which are uncommon or rare may 
be interesting :— 
Iistulina hepatica, Fr., appears in Mr. J. M. Campbell’s notes 
as having been found on an oak cut down on what is known as 
the Oak Walk. It was identified by some of the mycologists 
attending the British Association meeting in Glasgow in 1876. 
The same authorities found, and pointed out to Mr. Campbell, 

