174 Crossland: Recently Discovered Fungi in Yorkshire. 
S.W.—Luddenden Dean, near Halifax. Among grass. 
September, 19x2, ‘Nat. Hist. Sec., Halifax Sci. Soc.’ 
‘ Pileus slightly rugulose, brown then tan; gills uncinato- 
ventricose, whitish then tawny; stem striate, whitish saffron 
then umber; spores 10 p long. —‘Mass. Eur. Agar.’ p. 164. 
(To follow 488). 
AGARICUS BERNARDII Quel. ‘ Nat.’ p. 24-25. 
HYGROPHORUS PERSICINUS Beck. ‘ Nat.’ p. 24. 
PANUS FARINACEUS Schum, p. 365; Fr. Hym. Eur. p. 490. 
N.E.—Mulgrave Woods. On dead branch, F.F., 1912. 
Typr.—So far as we can learn, the variety only of this 
species—var. albido-tomentoso Cke. and Mass., has previously 
been found in Britain. The variety has been met with in 
Epping Forest, and at the Barnsley (Yorkshire) Fungus Foray, 
E8OF. ne Nats. Pe ee. 
CORTICIUM CONFINE Bourd, Galz. (Bull. Soc. Myc. France 
191m yp.420%. 
N.E.—Mulgrave Woods. On very soft rotting wood. 
eet“. 20: 
‘ Thin, irregularly effused, at first pure white and arachnoid, 
hymenium finally deep cream colour. Hymenium not con- 
tinuous but consisting of closely crowded granules or flocct, gwing 
the plant the appearance of a Grandinia to the naked eye ; margin 
pure white, byssoid; basal hyphae 2-4 »; often inflated at 
the septa with clamp connections ; basidia 3-5 » wide; spores 
subglobose, base pointed, 3-4 X 2-3 p» usually with one oil- 
drop.’ (To follow 1162). 
TOMENTELLA FERRUGINEA Schroet. (in Crypt. Flo. von. 
Schles I., p. 419). 
N.E.—Mulgrave Woods. On decaying wood, bark, ete. 
CNat.  janiys 1Ors, pg. 20s 
‘Effused, thin, loosely felted, deep rust-brown. Basal hyphae 
creeping, dark brown with a purple tinge, 5-8 p wide septa 
with clamp connections; basidia and subhymenial hyphae 
yellow-brown, basidia 10 p.wide, sterigma 4, curved, 8-gp long 
<1°5-2p at base; spores bright yellow-brown, globose, 8-10p 
diam. with numerous hyaline spines.’ [To precede 1210]. 
DIAPORTHE (TETRASTAGA) INSIGNIS Fckl. Symb. Myc. 
App. II, Tab. 36: 
N.E.—Mulgrave Woods. On Rubus fruticosus. ‘ Nat.’ 
January, 1913, p. 27. 
‘ Stromata effused, black or blackish-brown, circumscribed 
by a black line within, often confluent and covering the whole 
branch ; perithecia fairly large ; ostiola cylindrical, more or less 
emergent ; spores broadly fusiform, slightly curved, 4-guttulate, 
not constricted, ends obtuse, 12 X 4-5p.” 
Description after Winter. Sir H. C. Hawley, who examined 
the specimens remarks :— ‘My spore measurements differ 
Naturalist, 
