ENDOTHIA PARASITICA AND RELATED SPECIES. 21 



the septum, hyaline with a gelatinous envelope, 7.5 to 10.5 by 3.5 to 5 /x, mostly 

 8 to 10 by 4 to 4.5 /x. 



Cultural chaeacters. — Cultures one month old on white corn meal show 

 small numerous, thickly scattered pycnidia and spore masses very similar to E. 

 parasitica. The mycelium is orange bufC to apricot orange. This species differs 

 from E. parasitica in culture, chiefly in the brighter color of its mycelium. 



Host. — Rotten logs and stumps of Elaeocarpus glandulifer. 



Type locality. — Hakgala, Ceylon. 



Geographical distribution. — Only known from Ceylon at present. One 

 other collection of this species. No. 290 G. H. K. T. [Thwaite], N. Eliya, 

 Ceylon, 6,000 feet, has been examined in the Kew Herbarium. 



Through the kindness of Mr. T. Fetch, of Peredeniya, the writers 

 have received two large collections of this fungus. Some of the 

 material was in a living condition and enabled the writers to obtain 

 pure cultures for comparison with the other species of Enclothia. 

 This species is closely related to E. parasitica, but is readily sepa- 

 rated by its larger ascospores and larger and more variable pycno- 

 spores and its nonparasitic habit. 



ENDOTHIA PARASITICA (Murr.) P. J. and H. W. And., 1912, in Phytopathology, v. 2, no. 6, p. 262 



Synonyms : 



Diaporthe parasitica Murrill, 1906, in Torreya, v. 6, no. 9, p. 189. 

 Valsonectria parasitica Rehm, 1907, Asc. Exs., no. 1710. 

 Valsonectria parasitica Rehm, 1907, in Ann. Mycol., v. 5, no. 3, p. 210. 

 Endotliia gyrosa var. parasitica Clint. 1912, in Science, n. s., v. 36, no. 989, 



p. 913. 

 Endotliia gyrosa (Schw.) Fckl. Hohnel, 1909, in Sitzber. K. Akad. Wiss. 

 [Vienna], Math. Naturw. KL, Abt. 1, Bd. 118, Heft 9, p. 1480. 

 Type specimen.— Herbarium N. Y. Bot. Garden, on Castanea dentata, Bronx 

 Park, New York City, Nov. 26, 1905, Coll. W. A. Murrill. 



Pycnidia. — Stromata corticular, slightly erumpent to truncate conical, usually 

 separate and gregarious, frequently confluent in more or less linear series 

 especially in old rimose bark, 0.75 to 3 mm. in diameter by 0.5 to 2.5 mm. 

 high, varying from capucine yellow when young to auburn when old and 

 weathered ; pycnidia consisting of irregular cavities in the stroma, 100 to 300 

 fi in diameter ; sporophores mostly simple, subclavate, acute at the apex, usually 

 12 to 20 by 1.5 fi, more elongated filaments sometimes reaching 50 fi or more 

 being frequently found among the normal sporophores ; pycnospores, oblong to 

 <:ylindric, rounded at the ends, 3 to 5 by 1.5 to 2, mostly 3.5 to 4.5 by 1.5 to 

 2 fi, pale yellowish in mass under the microscope ; old sppre tendrils coral red. 



Perithecia. — Stromata the same or similar to the pycnidial stromata ; peri- 

 thecia dark, membranous, globose to flask shaped, collapsing when dry, 5 to 50 

 or sometimes more in a stroma, 300 to 400 fi in diameter, irregularly arranged 

 in one to three layers and bearing slender necks projecting above the stroma, 

 300 to 600 fi, colored like the stroma on the outside and terminating in acute 

 . ostioles ; asci oblong elliptical to subclavate, nearly sessile, 30 to 60 by 7 to 9 fi, 

 mostly 40 to 50 by 8 /^ ; ascospores irregularly biseriate, ellipsoid, obtuse, some- 

 times constricted at the septum, hyaline, with a gelatinous envelope, 7 to 11 

 by 3.5 to 5 /i, mostly 8 to 9 by 4 to 4.5 fi. 



Cultural characters. — Cultures one month old on white corn meal have a 

 white to pale orange yellow surface mycelium and produce numerous minute 



