276 INTRODUCTION TO THE STUDY OF FUNGI 



and external appearance find their place in sections widely 

 removed from each other, as the consequence of the septation, 

 or multiseptation, of the sporules. Thus we have, for instance, 

 Gloeosporium with continuous sporules in Hyalosporae ; with 

 filiform sporules, as Cylindrosporium, under Scoleco - allanto- 

 sporae ; with uniseptate sporules, as Marsonia, under the 

 Bidymosporae ; and with multiseptate sporules, as Septoglaeum, 

 under Hyalophragmiae. 



There remains but one small section to notice, and that is 

 the Dictyosporae, in which the sporules are divided in both 

 directions, so as to be muriform. Of the two genera, Stegano- 

 spormm is the analogue of Coryneum, having compact pulvinate 

 pustules, but with mm'iform, coloured sporules ; and Phrag- 

 motrichum, in which the sporules are concatenate, or in chains, 

 as in Myxormia and Seiridium, and is practically Seiridium 

 with the sporules septate in both directions. 



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Saccabdo, p. a. "Sylloge Sphaeropsidearum et Melanconiearum," in Syllogc 



Fungomm, vol. iii. Imp. 8vo. Padua, 1884. 

 Berlese, a. N., et Voglino. Un nuovo genere di Pirenomiceti d. Funghi 



Sferopsidei. Padua, 1866. 

 Crie, L. a. Recherclies sur Ics Pyrenoviycetes infirieurs du group de Bepazics. 



8vo. Paris, 1878. 

 CoRDA, J. C. Icones Fiingorum. Fol. 6 vols. Prague, 1837-54. 



AnUitung zum Stvdium der Mycologie. 8vo. Plates. Prague, 1842. 



BoNORDEN. Handhuch dcT Mycologie. 8vo. Plates. Stuttgart, 1851. 



Zur Kcnntniss der Coniomyecten m. Cryptomyceten. 4to. Halle, 1860. 



