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Dasyscypha acuum, Sacc. On scales of pine cones. 
D. puberula, Massee. On dry oak leaves. 
D. vitriola, Massee. On dry raspberry stems. 
D. clandestina, Fekl. On dead wood. A. 
D. dematiicola, Mass. On dead rose stems. A. 
Lachnea, Fries. 
L. stercorea, Gillet. On dung. Common. 
L. crucipila, Phil. On damp ground. P. 
L. scutellata, Gillet. On stumps, also on naked ground. A., Q. 
L. hemispherica, Gillet. On the ground under trees. A. 
L. erinacea, Saccardo. On rotten wood. A. 
Erinella, Quel. 
E. apala, Berk. On grass culms. 
Tapesia, Pers. 
T. fusca, Fckl. On dead bark. Q. 
T. aurata, Mass. On dead wood. A. 
T. sanguinea, Fckl. On pine wood. A. 
Chlorosplenium, Fries. 
C. aeruginosum, De Not. On branches of ash and oak. The 
wood on which this fungus grows is stained a deep verdigris-green 
colour, and was at one time used for the manufacture of fancy 
articles known as “Tunbridge ware." A., Q. 
C. discoideum, Mass. On an old trunk of Robinia Pseudacacia. 
The wood on which the fungus grows is stained green. A. 
Sclerotinia, Fckl. 
S. tuberosa, Fckl. Parasitic on the rhizome of Anemone 
nemorosa. A estructive parasite when it finds its way into a bed 
of anemon B. 
8. iliius Fckl. On dead leaves of sweet chestnut. 
S. Galanthi, Rehm. See Kew Bull., 1897, p.172. B. 
8. Sclerotiorum, Mass. On cabbage stalks. P. 
Ciboria, Fckl. 
C. pseudo-tuberosa, Saccardo. On fallen, decaying acorns. A. 
C. echinophila, Sacc. Inside fallen husks of horse-chestnut. Q. 
