288 OUTLI.VES OF BRITISH FUNGOLOGY. 



9. T. intumescens, Sni. ; subc?espitosc, rounded or conglo- 

 merate, soft, brown, when dry nearly black, obsoletely dotted, 

 lobed, somewhat tortuous. — Eng. Bot. t. 1870. 



On trunks of fallen trees. Not common. Apcthorpe, 

 Northamptonshire. Resembles very closely some Exidia. 



10. T. indecorata, Somm. ; sessile, rounded, moist, con- 

 vex, plicate, opaque, brown, nearly black, dingy. 



On willows, etc. Mossburnford, A. Jerdon. 



11. T. sarcoides, Sm. ; cffispitose, soft, viscid, flesh-co- 

 loured, inclining to purple, at first club-shaped, then com- 

 pressed, lobed and plicate. (Plate 2, fig. 7.) — Eiiy. Bot. 

 t. 2450. 



On old stumps. Very common. 



12. T. clavata, P. ; solitary, simple, incrassated, flesh-co- 

 loured, blackish at the base. — Pet's. Ic. Pict. t. 10. /. 1. 



On stumps. Rare. Appiu, Capt. Carmichael. 



13. T. tubercxilaria, B.; crumpent ; stem short, cjdindri- 

 cal ; head pileate, dirty- white, nearly black when dry. — 

 Tubercularia albida, B. in Eng. Fl. I. c. p. 354'. 



On fallen branches. Not uncommon. 



14. T. torta, Willd. ; minute, round, depressed, gyroso- 

 tuberculate, yellow or orange. 



On decorticated oak-branches. Very common. Two or 

 three lines across, 



15. T. versicolor, B. and Br. ; minute, orbiculai", orange, 

 at length brown. — Ann. of Nat. Hist. ser. 2. vol. xiii. p. 406. 



On Corticium nudum. In several localities. Minute, tear- 

 like, pale when young. 



IG. T. viscosa, P.; effused, resupinate, hyaline, at first 

 white, undulated. — Pers. Obs. ii. 18. Corticium viscosum, Fr. 



On dead wood. Not uncommon. This has the structure 

 of Tremella, as will be seen ])y the figure in Ann. of Nat. 

 Jl^t. xiii. t. 15. t 4. 



