176 Crossland: Recently Discovered Fungi tn Yorkshire. 
The following description was taken from the Leeds and 
Halifax specimens :— Hyphae brown 2.5-3p thick, irregularly 
branched, ultimate branches at right angles, tips paler, slightly 
swollen and minutely asperate, conidia subglobose, smaller than 
type, 3-4°5X2°5-3°5p, brown. At first in tiny tufts a line 
across, spreading to patches 4-3 inch, often confluent. 
This species was first recorded as British, in Journal of 
Botany, February, 1912, p. 44, by W. B. Grove, as growing 
on damp brown paper, Birmingham, May, 1911. [To precede 
2378]. 
NEW TO YORKSHIRE. 
Twenty-two of the following forty species were all found, 
for the first time in Yorkshire, in Mulgrave Woods, in either 
Spring or Autumn, Ig12, and are included in the bald lists of 
additions, ‘ Nat.’, January, pp. 27-8. This note and arrange- 
ment is intended to save repetition of locality. The additions 
for other parts of the county follow. 
MYCENA RUBROMARGINATA Fr. 
Among rotting twigs. [To follow 210]. 
MYCENA COLLARIATA Fr. 
In woodland among scanty grass. [To follow 248]. 
INOCYBE SINDONIA Fr. 
In woodland among grass. [To precede 446]. 
NAUCORIA TRISCOPODA Fr. [To follow 486]. 
PoRIA HYMENOCYSTIS B.°and Br. 
On decaying wood. [To follow 1077]. 
CORTICIUM LACTESCENS Berk. 
On decorticated branches. [To precede 1163). 
CORTICIUM LAEVE (Pers). Thelephora laevis Pers. Syn. 
Meth. Fung. 1801, p. 575. 
On decaying wood. [To precede 1164]. 
The first Yorkshire record under this name. Berkeley, 
Cooke, and Stevenson each say in their works on British Fungi 
that C. laevisiscommon. This name is not included in Massee’s 
Mon. Thelephoreae Jour. Lin. Soc., nor in this author's 
Thelephoreae, Brit. Fung., but finds a place in his British 
Fungi (1911). ; 
FEMSJONSIA LUTEO-ALBA Fr. 
On fallen dead branches. [To precede 1261]. 
DIALONECTRIA (CALONECTRIA) PLOWRIGHTIANA Sacc. 
On dead stems of Arctium Lappa. {To follow 1463]. 
DIATRYPE CRUSTOSA Sacc. et Roum. 
On holly. To precede [1564]. 
PSILOSPHAERIA (Melanopsamma) POMIFORMIS (Pers.) 
On dead branches and wood. {To precede 1595]. 
STRICKERIA OBDUCENS (Fr.) Wint. 
On dead wood. [To follow 1602]. 
Naturalist, 
