726 Transactions of the Society. 



2. Spores tinged with olive or various shades of yellow. 



125. L. foetidum, Bon, Bot. Ztg., 1857, 629. — Shape variable, often 

 deformed, brown or bay, bristling with simple and angular spinose warts 

 which fall away leaving reticulate markings, becoming subumbonate 

 and dehiscing by a terminal mouth. Spores small, globose, smooth, 

 rufous-olive or greenish brown. 



Smell like Scleroderma vulgare. In woods. Europe. 



126. L. seulptum, Harkn. Bull. Calif. Acafl. Sc, Feb. 1885, p. 160, 

 pi. 1. — Subglobose or obovate, 8-15 cm. in diam., pure white. Outer 

 peridium very thick, forming pyramidal masses 2-4 cm. in breadth and 

 l|-3 in. in height, which are longitudinally grooved by many parallel 

 lines; in age dividing vertically into several segments which usually 

 remain attached at the apex : spore mass bright yellow, becoming 

 cinereous ; flocci yellow, 6-10 /* ; spores smooth, pale, 5-8 /a. 



Sierra Nevada, 6-8000 ft. 



127. L. Qunnii, Berk. Fl. Tasm., ii. 265. — Sessile, subglobose, with 

 very minute stellate warts. Columella short, spores bright olive, globose, 

 with long pedicels, 1/6000 in. diam. 



Olive, 1-2 in. diam. Tn pastures. Tasmania, Australia. 



128. L. golungense, Welw. & Curr., Fung. Angol., Trans. Linn. 

 Soc, xxvi. p. 289, t. 20, f. 13. — Peridium globose or obovate, clothed 

 with delicate fastigiate tomentum, springing from a dense mass of 

 mycelium ; capillitium and spores unknown. 



At the base of rotten trunks. West Africa, 



129. L. furfuraceum, Batsch, Elen., p. 145. — " Sessile, globose, 

 furfuraceo-squamose. — Mich., 97, f. 6." 



Europe. 



BIBLIOGRAPHY. 



Barla. — Barla, J. B., Les Champignons de Nice, 1859. 



Batsch, Elen. — Batsch, A., Elenchus Fungorum, 1783. 



Berk. Eng. FL— Berkeley, M. J., English Flora, v., Fungi, 1836. 



Berk. Outl.— Berkeley, M. J., Outlines of British Fungology, 1860. 



Berk. Fl. Tasm. — Berkeley, M. J., in Hooker's Flora Tasmanise, ii., 1860. 



Berk. Fung. Brazil. — Journal Linnean Soc, xv. p. 363. 



B. & Br., Fung. Ceylon. — Journal Linnean Soc, xi. p. 494 ; xiv. p. 29. 



B. & C, Cuban Fungi. — Fungi Cubenses, Journal Linnean Soc, x. pp. 280, 341. 



Bon. Bot. Ztg. — Bonorden in Botanische Zeitung. 



Bull. — Bulliard, P., Histoire des Champignons de la France, 1780-98. 



Cke. Hdbk.— Cooke, M. C, Handbook of British Fungi, 1871. 



Corda. — Corda, Icones Fungorum, 1837-54. 



D. R. & M.— Durieu and Montague, Flore d'Alge'rie, 1868. 



Nees. — Esenbeck, Nees von, Das System der Pilze, 1837. 



Fl. Dan.— Flora Danica, 1766-1876. 



Fries, S. M. — Fries, Elias, Systema Mycologicum, 1829. 



Fr. Sverig. Svamp. — Fries, B., Sveriges 8vampar, 1861. 



Hark. — Harkness, Bulletin of the Californiau Academy of Sciences, March 1885. 



Harz. — Harzer, C. F., Abbildungen der Pilze, 1842-5. 



Hussey. — Hussey, Mrs., Illustrations of British Mycology, 1847-55. 



Karst. — Karsten, P. A., Mycologia Fennica, 1876. 



Krombh. — Krombholz, Abbildungen der Schw'amme, 1831. 



Mich. — Micheli, P. A., Nova plantarum genera, 1729. 



Pabst. — Pabst, G., Cryptogamen Flora, 1876. 



Paul. — Paulet, Iconographie des Champignons, 1855. 



