Crossland: Recently Discovered Fungi 1m Yorkshire. 175 
slightly—tr2- 13 X 35-4 (occasionally up to aX is 5p) slightly 
constricted.’ [To follow 1560]. 
MELANOMMA (TREMATOSPHARIA) PARADOXA Winter. 
N.E.—Mulgrave Woods. On oak wood. ‘ Nat.’ January, 
1913, Pp. 27. 
“ Perithecia emergent, almost superficial, zoned with small, 
distinct ostiola, smooth; asci narrowly clavate, 90-100 X 9-IOp. ; 
spores elongato-fusiform, one end much narrowed, 5-10 septate, 
not constricted, hyaline, 18-35 X 3'5p. 
Winter says in his type specimens the spores are not truly 
septate, but probably become so. Mine were multiguttulate, 
then with contents pseudo-septate. (Sir H. C. H.). [To 
follow 1618]. 
BELONIDIUM PuNncTuM (Rehm.) Rabhen.  Krypt. Flo. 
Ascom. p. 569; Niptera Punctum, Sacc. Syll. VIII. p. 485. 
N.E.—Broxa Moor, near Scarborough. On dead, dry 
leaves of Nardus stricta. T.B. Roe, Scarborough, July, Igt2. 
“ Minute, at first punctiform, globose, then sub-henuspherical, 
sessile, attached by a broad base ; disc concave, brown when moist, 
margin raised, blackish when dry, | 4-4 mm. diam.; excipulum 
minutely parenchymatous, brown, calls gradually elongating and 
narrowing towards the greenish-brown margin; asc clavate, 
8 spored, 55-60 X10-12p; spores hyaline, irregularly bi-servate, 
oblong, straight or slightly curved, binucleate, 2-celled, 15-18  4- 
455; paraphyses slender, apex slightly swollen, brownish.’ 
[To follow 1996]. 
SPOROTRICHUM ROSEUM Link, Obs. I., 33; Sacc. Syl. IV., 
p. 106: 5 Fung. Ital, ft. 747: 
S.W.—On rotting printed paper in damp cellar, Leeds. 
J. W. Taylor and W. D. Roebuck, December, Iogtt. 
‘ Tufts effused, rosy, sometimes confluent ; hyphae creeping, 
pale rose, vaguely branched, sparingly septate, here and there 
producing simple or bi-tri-fid branchlets ; conidia apical, ovoid, 
4X 3p, unguttulate, rosy. On damp paper, walls, earthen- 
ware jars, bladders, etc., in France, Belgium, Germany and 
ifaly: *°o Sace. Syl. TV. 
The Leeds specimens differ slightly from the above de- 
scription in being more of an ochraceous-rosy tint, and conidia 
3-4X 2-254 [To precede 2332]. 
TRICHOSPORIUM CHARTARUM Sacc. Rev. Myc. 1885 p. 224; 
Syl. Fung. IV., p. 294 (=Sporotrichum chartaceum Pers. Myc. 
Eur. £,°83. 
S.W.—On damp wall-paper, Mixenden, near Halifax, June, 
IgII ; on rotting printed paper in damp cellar, Leeds. J. W. 
Taylor and W. D. Roebuck, December, rg1r. 
‘Powdery, spots suborbicular, then confluent; hyphae 
vaguely branched ; conidia ellipsoid, 5-6 4p, olivaceo-fuscus. 
On damp, rotting paper, France, Germany, Italy.’ 
1913 April 1. 
