196 NEW OR NOTEWORTHY FUNGI, 
in the centre of each, at length broadly perforate; spermatia 
slender, cylindrical, flexuous, hyaline, continuous, 85-40 wx Bbw, 
On leaves of Dianthus barbatus, Rednal (Ws.), September. 
CYLINDRIUM (Bonorpen) Saco. 
Spores simple, elongate-cylindrical, concatenate, obtuse at each 
ii (1880). 
new genus, Septocylindrium, for them.” This has since been done, 
8. Cyiixprrum Corp mihi (nec Sacc.).—Fusidium cylindricum 
Corda, Icon. i. 8, pl. 1, fig. 52 (1887) ; non Fuckel, Symb. 871, nec 
alt 
rum. 
Tufts minute, white, confluent in small roundish patches ; 
chains of spores short, erect, frequently branched ; spores cylin- 
drical, truncate at each end, colourless, 20-22 px pe Tle 
246, f. 2). : 
but are undoubtedly identical. Saccardo’s C. Corde is a species 
Ital. fig. 995; see Mich. ii. 549) 
which is found on living, but faded leaves of Lapsana communis. 
The same habitat given by Fuckel (J. c.), which is also that of the 
Fusidium cylindricum recorded as British (Grev. iv. 120), shows 
that these must be referred to the Ramularia. It should be noted 
that all figures of Fusidium or Cylindrium like Corda’s (1. ¢.)} which 
show the spores loosely heaped on the surface of the leaf, do not 
represent the growing state, which is as I have drawn it, but as it 
looks when beaten down by the weather. 
PARASPORA, gen. nov. }{ 
Mucedinea, micronemea, saprophila. Spore septate, mycelio 
tenui repenti insidentes, fasciculate. : 
. tParaspora triseptata, sp. n. — P. alba, sporis oblongis, 
basi oblique apiculatis, hyalinis, triseptatis. (Tab. 246, f. 9). 
On dead (Wk.), mber. T 
{ mapa, side by side; cope, a spore. 
