326 OUTLINES OF BRITISH FUNGOLOGY. 



Spores compound, or arising from repeated division (tomi- 

 parous), very rarely redueed to a single cell. 



141. TORULA, P. 

 Spores tomiparous, simple. 



1. moiiilioides, Cd. On sticks. 



2. ovalispora, B. = Conoj)lea cinerea, P. On stumps. 



3. pulvillus, B. and Br. (no. 463). On bark. 



4. abbreviata, Cd.=p. sphceriafoi'mis, B. and Br. {no. 464). On de- 



corticated Finns sijlvestris. 



5. basicola, B. and Br. {no. 465, rcith a fig?). On dead Nemophila. 



6. Hysterioides, Cd. Fasc. If. 139 {?w. 751). On poles. 



7. cylindrica, B. On sticks. 



8. Eriophori, B. On dead F. ant/ustifolium. 



9. herbarum, Lk. On dead herbaceous stems. 



10. Graminis, Desm. {no. 134). On Carices. 



11. Plantaginis, Cd. {no. 252). On living Plantagines. 



12. Sporendouema, B. and Br. {no. 4:62)^:^Sj)orendone)na casei, Desm. 



On cheese and rats'-dung. 



142. BACTRIDIUM, Kze. 



Spores radiating, coloured or hyaline, oblong, multiseptate. 



1. flavum, K::e. On ehn-stumps. 



2. Helvellaj, B. and Br. {no. 816, tcith a fig.). On Fezlza testacea. 



3. atrovirens, B. On stumps. Anomalous. 



143. HELICOSPORIUM, Nees. 

 Parasitical. Spores filiform, articulated, spirally involute. 



1. vegetum, Nees {no. 229). On sticks. 



2. pulvinatum, Fr. On old chips. 



141. BISPORA, Cd. 

 Flocci tomiparous, moniliforin, composed of didynions 

 spores. 



