REPORT OF THE BOTANIST. 69 
STICTIS PUPULA Fr. 
Dead poplarbranches. Center. October and November. 
STICTIS HYSTERINA F7. 
Decorticated pine branches. Guilderland. May. 
STICTIS QUERCINA 2. Sp. 
Amphigenons, scattered, minute, erumpent, the epidermis 
split into three or four blunt laciniz or teeth ; disk white ; 
asci subcylindrical; spores filiform, .0016’—-.0026’ long. 
Fallen oak leaves. Port Jervis. September. 
It is related to S. phacidioides, from which its amphige- 
nous habit and fewer blunt teeth will separate it. 
RuytismMA Urtica Fr. 
Dead nettle stems. Greenbush. May. Sterile. 
HYSTERIUM VIXVISIBILE Ger. 
Dead branches. Poughkeepsie. Gerard. 
Tam not fully satisfied that this is any thing more than a 
small variety of H. angustatwin. 
HYSTERIUM CLAVISPORUM C. & P. 
Dead stems of reeds, Phragmites communis. Buffalo. 
Clinton. Tyre. September. 
The spores are colored and multiseptate, and by their 
elavate form suggest the specific name. 
ilysTERIUM RovusseLit De Voi. 
Decaying wood. Tyre and Lake Pleasant. August and 
September. 
HySTERIUM MAGNOSPORIUM Ger. 
Decaying hickory wood. Poughkeepsie. Gerard. 
COLPOMA LACTEUM %. Sp. 
Perithecia scattered, erumpent, thin, black, the longitudi- 
nally ruptured epidermis closely appressed; disk plane, 
milk white ; asci subeylindrical or clavate; spores filiform, 
02’—.003’ long. 
Dead stems of Labrador tea, Zedum latifoliwm. Sand- 
lake. June. 
