155 
P 
(Sarcoscypha) coprinaria Coole. Grev., 1875, 91. Bath- 
easton, March, 1877. 
P (Sarcoscypha) hirta Schum. Bowood. 
P. (Sarcoscypha) vitellina P. Bowood. 
P— (Sarcoscypha) scutellata L. Box, Langridge, &c., on dead 
and rotten wood, common. 
(Sarcoscypha) stercorea P. Batheaston, &c., common on 
cow dung. 
P—— (Sarcoscypha) theleboloides 4A. and S. Batheaston, St. 
Catherine’s, on spent hops. This species occurred at Bath- 
easton of two colours, red and yellow, growing together and 
differing chiefly in colour; Dr. Cooke considers them specifi- 
cally different. The red form he names P. (Sarcoscypha) 
rubra. Cooke mycographia, fig. 152. 
(Sarcoscypha?) brunneola Desm. On beech mast. C. 
Bucknall, l.c., Vol. iii., p. 7. 
(Sarcoscypha) pellita P. Brockley Combe, May. C. 
Bucknall, lc. iii., 8. 
(Sarcoscypha) gregaria L?chm. Leigh Woods, Sept., 1881. 
C. Bucknall, Le. v., 6. 
Ls 
DP 
a 
» P 
Subgenus 6. DASYSCYPHA.* 
Waxy, dry, villous. 
_ P— (Dasyscypha) virginea Butsch. Very common on sticks, 
dead wood, &c. : 
= (Dasyscypha) nivea J’. St. Catherine’s, &c. This species 
is not easily distinguished from P. virginea, differing chiefly 
in the “nature of the down, less distinct stem, which is 
incrassated upwards.” Cooke. Handbook of British Fungi, 
p. 685. 
-P— (Dasyscypha) calycina Schum. Common on dead sticks of 
larch and firs ; a very pretty species. 
* Dasyscypha, from dasus, villous, and skuphos, a cup. 
