PART III. AIJBORETUM AND FRUTICETUM. 2601 



years in the water, as the wood was become soft and pulpy ; and it had evi- 

 dently been perforated by the Teredo (as some shells of these creatures were 

 found in the thickest part of the branch), before the barnacles took possession 

 of it. Barnacles are also found attached to other kinds of wood, particularly 

 to logs of mahogany, which from any accident have become adrift. The 

 fungi on the ^^bies are: ^garicus adhge'rens A. et S.. A. pristoides Fr. ; A. 

 iplachnoides Home, and A. perforans Hoffm., on the leaves ; A. Albertini Fr., 

 A. acerosus Fr., Merulius umbrinus Fr., Polyporus borealis Fr., P. fragilis 

 Fr., P. serialis Fr., P. stereoides Fr., P. benzoinus Wahl., P. odoratus Fr., 

 P. joseus Fr., P. unitus Pers., P. wiolaceus Fr., i/ydnum gelatinosum Scop. ; 

 H. coralloides Scop., also on beech ; H. minutum Schuvu, H. bicolor A. et S., 

 H. Agardhw Fr., Frpex spathulatus Fr., Thelephora conchata i^?-., T. abietina 

 Pers., T. umbrina A. et S., T. sterilis Fr., Clavaria apicultita Fr., Calocera 

 furcata Fr., Peziza ollaris Fr., P. sulfurata Fr., P. pygmge'a Fr., P. 

 caerulea £o/t., P. pilosa Schuvi., P. acuum Fr., P. porioides A. et S., P. 

 lutescens A. et S. ; P. versiformis Pers., and P. conigena Pers., and 

 b., on cones ; P. resinae Fr., P. lignyota Fr., Sarea difformis Fr., Bul- 

 garia nigrita Fr , Cenangium ferruginosum Fr., Stictis chrysophae^a Fr., 

 Exidia saccharina Fr., Sclerotium carneum Fr., SphaeVia Kunzei Fr., S. 

 de ormis Fr. ; S. strigosa Fr., also on pine ; S. resinae Fr. ; S. ^apinea 

 Fr., also, but smaller, on the pine ; Strigula abietina Fr., Phacidium Pinastri 

 Fr., P. «bietinum Schm., Hysteriura datinum Pers., Actidium hysterioides Fr., 

 Diderma stellare Schrad., D. minutum Fl. Dan., Didjmium tigrinum ScJirad., 

 Physarum fulvuin Fr., Stemonitis piimila Fr., S. physaroides A. et S., Dic- 

 tydium ambiguum Schrad., D. microcarpum Schrad., D. venosum Schrad., 

 Cribraria macrockr^a. Schrad., C. fulva Schrad., C. pyriformis i^r. ; C. argilkicea 

 Pers., also on pine; C. rubiginosa Pers., C. purpurea Fr., C. intricata Fr.., 

 C. aurantiaca Fr., C. tenella Fr., Arcyria nutans Fr., A. umbrina Schum.y 

 Trichia serotina Schrad. ; Perichae'na strobilina Fr., also on pine ; P. incarnata 

 Fr., Licea cylindrica Fr., L. fragiformis, Fr., L. variabilis Schrad., Chaeto- 

 mium pusillum Fr., Apiosporiuni ^bietis Kz., Isaria calva Fr., A'nthina cano- 

 fusca Fr., Ceratium porioides A. et S., Stilbum smaragdinum A. et S., Spo- 

 rocybe resinae Fr." 

 Page 2310. line 42., insert, before " In Stirlingshire : " " At Dupplin Castle 



it is 107 ft. high, with a trunk 3 ft. in diameter." 

 Kbies Smithikna. 2318. 1. 12., for " diameter," read " circumference." 

 A. cephalonica. 2325. Throughout the whole of this article, for " General 



Napier," read " Major-General C. J. Napier." 

 2328. 1. 18., after " Lady Bunbury," add : " who was then residing in Devon- 

 shire with another brother, Major-General G. T. Napier, now Go- 

 vernor of the Cape of Good Hope." 

 Vicea. 2329., after the paragraph headed " Desaiption," add : — 



" Remarks. In addition to the specific differences already given in p. 2105., 

 Professor Link (who calls this genus ^'bies) points out the following differ- 

 ences in the leaves, between it and the spruce fir : — ' The leaves do not grow 

 together, but are single, and have the usual form of single leaves ; the midrib 

 being only visible on the under side, and the upper side having a furrow down 

 the centre of the leaf. They are flat, and in two or more rows. In many 

 species, they are divided at the point. They are also of a very dark green 

 above, and have generally two strips of white on the under side, one on each 

 side of the midrib, which is not the case with the spruce.' (Abhand., &c., 



" The Highland Society, in their list of premiums for 1838, offer a medal 

 for the best account of the disease which has of late years attacked the stem, 

 larger branches, and occasionally the twigs, of the silver fir, somewhat re- 

 sembling the well-known rot of the larch ; with suggestions founded on expe- 

 rience, for checking the progress of the malady, or for preventing it. We had 

 not before heard of this disease." 

 T*icea pectindfa. 2332. 1. 24. from the bottom, add : " At Studley Park is a 



