30 = Messrs. Berkeley and Broome on British Fungt. 
1726. Eutypa aspera, Fr. sub S. eutypa, b, Syst. Mye. 
i. p. 478.., 
On wood. Glamis, Rev. J. Stevenson, no. 880. 
1727. Spheria maculans, Desm. Exs. no. 1784. 
On stalks of dead Brassice. Perth, Dr. Buchanan White. 
Sporidia yellow, ‘0014-002 long, multiseptate. 
1728. S. Stevensont, B. & Br. Perithecus sparsis hice ilic 
congestis ovatis sursum attenuatis; ascis gracilibus; sporidiis 
uniseriatis, anguste ellipticis, 2-3-nucleatis. 
On dead wood. Glamis, Rev. J. Stevenson, no. 869. 
Sporidia :0002 inch long. 
* Chatospheria innumera, Tul. Sel. Fung. Carp. i. p. 253, 
tab. xxxill. SS. innumera, B. & Br. Out. p. 395. 
On dead wood. Rey. J. Stevenson. Glamis, no. 870. 
Sporidia -0003—-00035 inch long. 
1729. Cephalotheca sulfurea, Fuckel, Fung. Rhen. no. 2313. 
Peritheciis sparsis gregariis, globosis, villo sulfureo tectis, 
demum vertice glabris atrisque, denique totis glabris et mox 
diffractis ; sporidiis ovatis, hyphis ascigeris multiguttulatis. 
On a rotten board in Mr. Spencer Perceval’s grape-house, 
Clifton, April 1876. 
PuatE IV. fig. 8. a, plant im setw, magnified; b, dark rigid hairs and 
various threads ; c, structure of the perithecium ; d, sporangia ; e, sporidia; 
Ff, young perithecium produced within the old oue. 
The specific character given above is copied from Fuckel. 
The sporangia produced within the perithecia on the hypha are 
something quite different from anything which occurs in Sphe- 
riacet; and perhaps it is better to consider them as asci, though 
even then their mode of development is abnormal. Not less 
curious is the product of a new perithecium within the old one. 
The structure, too, of the perithecium is very singular. 
* Dothidea betulina, Fr. Syst. u. p. 554. 
Glamis, Rev. J. Stevenson, July 6, 1874. 
’ Stylospores uniseptate, ‘001 inch long. 
* Phacidium Vaccinit, Fr. Syst. 1. p. 575. 
Stylosporous state forming little crowded dark specks, 
containing Bacteria-like bodies, ‘00016 inch long. 
1730. Ascochyta metulespora, B. & Br. Maculis orbiculari- 
bus fuscis, peritheciis minutis pallidis, sporis metuleeformibus. 
On leaves of ash. Ballinluig, Rev. J. Stevenson, no. 908. 
The shape of the spores is singular, like that of the pieces of 
wood with which boys play called tipeats (bdtonnets Gall.). 
