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Subgenus 4. ENCCELIA.* Fr. 
Veil general, fugacious, furfuraceous, cups very hollow, from 
fleshy becoming coriaceous, firm or fragile; growing on bark, 
sub-erumpent, not innate but frecly developed. 
P. (Enccelia) furfuracea Fr. Leigh Woods, on sticks and 
branches. 
_P—— (Dermatea) dryina K. Leigh Woods, February, 1880. 
C. Bucknall, Le. iii., 9. 
Series I]. LACHNEA.F Fr. 
Veil distinct, decidedly villous, or pilose, persistent ; cup in 
consequence bristly or hairy, always closed when young ; substance 
waxy, firm, rarely fleshy. 
Subgenus 5. SARCOSCYPHAt Fr. 
Fleshy, veil villous. 
(Sarcoscypha) coccinea Jacg. Common on sticks partly 
buried in the ground. This beautiful species attracts attention 
by its brilliant scarlet colour. It has occurred at Batheaston 
pure white and also egg-yellow, February and March; com- 
mon on banks and borders of woods, &c. 
P— (Sarcoscypha) melastoma Sow. Portbury, near Bristol, on 
dead Ling, May, 1847. 
P. 
P (Sarcoscypha) hemispherica /Vigg. Common on the ground 
in woods, Batheaston. 
F (Sarcoscypha) hirta Schum. On the ground, Bowood. 
P. (Sarcoscypha) trechispora b. and Br. Annals Nat. Hist., 
Series I., Vol. xviii., p. 77. 
P—— (Sarcoseypha) umbrata Fv. Monkton Farleigh, Leigh Down, 
on clayey banks, sides of roads, &c. 
* Enccelia, from enkoilos, hollow within. 
+ Lachnea, from lachne, down. 
+ Sarcoscypha, from sarx, flesh, and skuphos, a cup. 
