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434 CYCLOCARPINE | CLADONIA 
Fr.). C. fimbriata var. carneo-pallida Nyl. Syn. i. p. 195 (1860) ; 
Cromb. in Grevillea xi. p. 112 & Monogr. i. p. 137. C. pyxidata 
var. carneopallida and var. ochrochlora Mudd Brit. Clad. pp. 11, 
14 (1865) (incl. forms). C. gracilis var. ochrochlora Leight. Lich. 
Fl. p. 63 (1871) ; ed. 3, p. 59. *Capitularia pyxidata vax. carneo- 
pallida Floerk. in Web. & Mohr Beitr. Nat. ii. p. 304 (1810). 
Cenomyces fimbriata var. carneopallida Ach. Syn. Lich. p. 258 
(1814) pro parte. 
Ezsicc. Johns. n. 291 (var. phyllostrota) ; Mudd Clad. nos. 
25, 26. 
Considered by Wainio (Clad. Univ. ii. p. 319) as a variety of 
C. fimbriata. It resembles the subsp. fibula in the form of the 
podetia and also C. gracilis in being partly corticate. Here also 
squamules are occasionally formed on the podetia (var. phyllostrota 
Floerk. tom. cit. p. 79; Mudd Brit. Clad. p. 15). Several forms 
recorded by Floerke (tom. cit. pp. 77 and 78) and cited by Mudd (tom. 
cit. pp. 14 and 15) as occurring in this country are: f. trwneata with 
the podetia dilated above and truncate; f. odontota with the seyphi, 
dentate at the margins; and f. paraphyonema with long podetia and 
proliferous scyphi. Mudd records two others, f. abortiva with some- 
what deformed podetia and f. ramosa glabrous and branched above. 
Hab. On decaying trunks and turfy soil.— Distr. Local and scarce 
throughout England.—B. M. Near Bodmin, Cornwall; Becky Falls, 
Devon; Amberley, Sussex; Snaresbrook, Epping Forest, Essex; 
Malvern, Worcestershire ; Dolgelly, Merioneth ; Cleveland, Yorkshire ; 
Windermere, Westmoreland; Ashgill, Cumberland; New Galloway, 
Kirkeudbrightshire; Barcaldine, Argyll; Loch Katrine, Perthshire ; 
S. of Fort William, Invernessshire. 
Form ceratodes Floerk. Clad. Comm. p. 77 (1828). Podetia 
short, rather swollen below, tapering upwards to subulate tips.— 
Cromb. in Grevillea xi. p. 112 & Monogr. i. p. 142. C. pyaidata 
var. ochrochlora £. ceratodes Mudd Brit. Clad. p, 14 (1865). 
Ezxsicc. Johns. n. 292 ; Mudd Clad. n. 23. 
Differs from the species in the ascyphous subulate podetia which 
are rarely branched, but sometimes squamulose. 
Hab. On decaying trunks and turfy ground in shady localities.— 
Distr. Apparently local and rare in S8.W. and N. England, and 
among the Central Scottish Grampians.—B. M. Near Bodmin, Corn- 
wall, Becky Falls, Devon; Lounsdale, Cleveland, Yorkshire ; Cum- 
berland; Rannoch, Perthshire; Loch Linnhe, Invernessshire. 
14. C. pityrea Fr. Nov. Sched. Crit. p. 21 (1826).—Primary 
thallus squamulose, often evanescent; the squamules small, 
rather thin, greyish-green, white beneath ; podetia with thin 
walls, rather short, corticate or entirely decorticate and granular- 
sorediate or with a few squamules, greyish-white, the scyphi 
narrow, irregularly formed, fimbriate and often proliferous at 
the margins (K —, CaCl —). Apothecia rather small, subpedi- 
cellate or sessile, on the edges of the scyphi or terminal on the 
branches, pale- or dark-brown ; paraphyses scarcely thickened at 
