76 TWENTY-SIXTH REPORT ON THE STATE MUSEUM. 
The color of this plant is almost the same as in S. ferruginea 
but the spores are much larger, surpassing even those of S. fusca. 
The habitat is peculiar. 
AROYRIA NuUTANS F7. 
Rotten wood. Richmondville. July. 
TricuiA RENIFomIs Peck. 
Peridia gregarious or clustered, sessile, subglobose or reniform, 
small, brown ; flocei few, short, sparingly branched ; spores glo- 
bose, minutely echinulate, yellow-ochre, sometimes tinged with 
green, .0005 in. in diameter. 
Dead bark of striped maple, Acer Pennsylvanicum. Portville. 
September. 
Licra cytinprica F?, 
Rotten wood. Worcester and Croghan. July and September. 
PrricH NA FLAVIDA Peck. 
Yellow throughout ; peridia crowded, clustered, sessile, varia- 
ble in size and shape, shining; flocci few, short, subnodulose, 
obtuse, sparingly branched; spores globose, echinulate, .00045 in. 
in diameter. 
Mosses. Sandlake. August. 
The mature peridia are sometimes wrinkled at the top. The 
bright golden yellow color renders the clusters conspicuous. 
PxHomMA BRuNNEOTINGCTUM B. & C. 
Inside of chestnut burrs. Buffalo. Clinton. 
SPH#ZRONEMA Macnoria n. sp. 
Perithecia scattered, erumpent, black, with a long firm spine-like 
ostiolum a line or more in length ; spores broadly elliptical or sub- 
globose, often with a single nucleus, colored when mature, .0004 
in. long. 
Dead branches of the cucumber tree, Magnolia acuminata. 
Portville. September. 
It has almost exactly the size and appearance of S. spine but 
the spores constitute a distinguishing character. 
Direpopia vuiearis Lev. 
Dead branches of locust trees. Buffalo. Clinton. 
