376 FUNGUS-FLOE A. 



The species usually form more or less dry, loosely inter- 

 woven patches on rotten ■wood, colour various shades of 

 brown. 



Zygodesmus fuscus. Corda. 

 . Effused, hrown, somewhat crustaceous, surface velvetj' ; 

 hyphae branched, septate, reddish-brown, anastomosing and 

 interwoven ; conidia globose, echinulate, yellowish brown, 

 9-11 iL diameter, borne singly on short, slender, lateral 

 oonidiophores. 



Zygodesmus fuscus, Corda, Icon. Fung., iv. p. 26, f. 81 ; Sacc, 

 Syll., iv. n. 1370. 



On rotten wood, branches, &c. 



Saccardo says that an Italian specimen, agreeing with the 

 present species in habit differs from Corda's figure in having 

 basidia with four sterjgmata. 



Zygodesmus terrestris. B. & Br. (fig. 9, p. 358 ) 

 Effused, thin, brown, minutely velvety; conidia somewhat 



elliptical or lemon-shaped, echinulate at maturity, 12 X 8-9 jj,, 

 Zygodesmus terrestris, B. & Br., Ann. Nat. Hist., n. 1915; 



Sacc, Syll., iv. n. 1372. 

 On the naked ground. 



OEDEMIUM. Link. (fig. 26, p. 358.) 



Fertile hyphae rigid, opaque, simple or slightly branched, 

 with lateral or terminal, subglobose, rather large oonidio- 

 phores that bear numerous subglobose conidia. 



Oedemium, Ling, Sp. PI. Fung., i. p. 42 ; Sacc, Syll., iv. 

 p. 297. 



The structure of the fungi constituting the present genus 

 is not well understood. Berkeley considers, and perhaps 

 •correctly, the large lateral structures described above as 

 oonidiophores, to be the true conidia, and these are in most 

 species multicellular. 



Oedemium atrum. Link. (fig. 26, p. 358.) 

 Hyphae erect, simple or slightly branched septate, 

 blackish with a tinge of reddish-purple, opaque, densely 

 crowded and forming a thickish black, effused layer ; conidio- 



