USTILAGINACEAE 403 



p. 202 (1851).= Ustilago treubii, Solms, Ann. Gard. Bot. 

 Buitenzorg, vol. vi., 1887, p. 79, pi. ix. Spore-mass violet, 

 forming tubercles in the inflorescence, or causing the 

 formation of clustered, elongated, furrowed outgrowths 

 up to i in. long, and terminating in a capitate head con- 

 taining the spore-mass. Spores violet or lilac, smooth, 

 globose, or broadly elliptical, 5-6 /* diam. ; promycelium 

 short, continuous; secondary spores coalescing in pairs 

 before germination. 



Ustilago esculenta, P. Henn., Hedwigia^ 1895, P- I0 - 

 Spore-mass olive-brown, forming spherical or elongated 

 tubercles in the unexpanded inflorescence, which is de- 

 stroyed : at first covered by the whitish cuticle ; spores 

 subglobose, 7-9 X 6-8 //., brown, smooth. 



Ustilago sacchari, Rab., Isis, 1870. Spore-mass black ; 

 spores globose or angularly globose, 8-18 p diam., olive- 

 brown or rufous ; epispore thick, smooth. 



Tilletia, Tul. Spores isolated, formed by a swelling of 

 the tips of fertile hyphae, forming a powdery mass at 

 maturity ; promycelium bearing a terminal cluster of 

 elongated, cylindric-fusiform secondary spores, which after 

 conjugating in pairs either give origin to a curved spori- 

 dium, or protrude a delicate germ-tube. 



Tilletia tritici, Winter, Krypt. -Flora, i. p. no (1884). 

 Spore-mass produced in the ovary, blackish, with an olive 

 sheen, foetid; spores globose, brown, 17-22 ^ diam., 

 border 1-1-5 /* not paler; epispore furnished with ridges 

 anastomosing to form a rather large-meshed network, 

 meshes often variable in size and form. 



Tilletia levis, Kiihn, Rab., Fung. Eur., No. 1697 (1873). 



