66 TWENTY-EIGHTH REPORT ON THE STATE MUSEUM. 
Little openings in the sand reveal the places where these 
plants lie concealed. 
PEZIZA OVILLA 7. Sp. 
Small, 1’-2” in diameter, at first closed and subglobose, 
then open, cup-shaped or concave, rather firm, minutely 
tomentose, whitish, the disk sometimes tinged with pink ; 
asci cylindrical; spores fusiform, large, one or two nucleate, 
.0013'-.0016’ long. 
Ground in woods. Sageville. August. 
PEZIZA CLANDESTINA Bull. 
Dead stems of raspberry, Rubus strigosus. Sandlake. 
June. 
PEZIZA HYALINA Pers. 
Decaying wood. Center. June. 
PEzIzZA CUCURBIT Ger. 
Squashes. Poughkeepsie. Gerard. 
PEZIZA CINEREA Batsch. 
Decaying wood. Worcester and Portville. July and 
September. 
PEZIZA CORNEOLA C. & P. 
Subgregarious, erumpent, soon naked, elevated, pitchy- 
black, coriaceous or horny; cups at first spheeroid, opening 
by a narrow paler mouth, opaque, subrugose, at length 
cup-shaped, margin inflexed, disk pallid tawny-gray ; asci 
clavate or cylindrical ; spores narrowly elliptical, binucle- 
ate, hyaline, .0004’—.0005’ long. - 
Decaying stems of herbs. North Greenbush. June. 
PEZIZA ATROCINEREA Cooke. 
Dead stems of Solidago. Albany. June. 
PEZIZA SUBATRA C. & P. 
Gregarious, erumpent, black, soft or waxy ; cups at first 
hemispherical, then open, smooth or slightly rugose, disk 
fuliginous, margin paler; asci subcylindrical ; spores cylin- 
drical, straight or curved, with two or three nuclei, .0006’ 
long. 
