62 THIRTIETH REPORT ON THE STATE MUSEUM. 
DERMATEA CARPINEA FY. 
Dead branches of Carpinus. Buffalo. Clinton. Albany. 
October. 
DERMATEA INCLUSA 2. SD. 
Minute, scattered, erumpent, sessile, closely surrounded by 
the ruptured epidermis, margined, the margin mealy or furfur- 
aceous, the disk plane or concave, subochraceous ; asci broad, 
oblong-cylindrical ; spores large, biseriate or crowded, oblong- 
elliptical, sometimes slightly curved, simple, colorless, .0011— 
.0014' long. 
Dead trunks of willows. Maryland. September. 
The cups scarcely rise above the ruptured epidermis that 
invests them. When moistened or crushed on the slide of the 
microscope the substance appears to be of a rhubarb color. 
The species therefore has some little relationship to Patellaria 
rhabarbarina. The spores sometimes contain a single large 
nucleus, sometimes three or four small ones and sometimes a 
mass of granular endochrome. 
PATELLARIA LEPTOSPERMA 2. SD. 
Black, stipitate; receptacle plane, the margin narrow or 
obliterated, about one line broad, externally subscabrous ; 
stem about one line high, scabrous, often longitudinally 
wrinkled when dry ; asci cylindrical or clavate ; spores biseri- 
ate, slender, elongated, cylindrical, multinucleate or obscurely 
multiseptate, .0016—.003' long; paraphyses very slender, fili- 
form, capitate. 
Dead bark of maple, Acer saccharinum. Oneida. Warne. 
Buffalo. Clinton. 
The number of the nuclei is from ten to sixteen. 
PATELLARIA LIGNYOTA FAY. 
Decaying wood. Angola. May. Clinton. 
TYMPANIS TURBINATA Scho. 
Dead stems of bush honeysuckle, Diervilla lrifida. Center. 
May. 
ASCOBOLUS VIRIDIS Curr. 
Alluvial soil. Albany. June. 
ASCOBOLUS CRENULATUS Karst. 
Cow dung. Oneida. Warne. Helderberg Mts. May. 
