246 



N. tristis, (Pers.) 



Spharia tristis^ Pers. Sytl. p. 87. 



Nitschkia tristis, Fckl. Symb. p. 165. 



Catlospharia, tristis, Sacc. Syll. 378. 



Exsicc. Rab. F. E. 632,— Plowr. Sph. Brit. 63.— Cke. V. Brit. 2d Sef. 269. 



Perithecia densely gregarious, superficial, depressed-globose, soon 

 collapsing to flat cup-shaped, coarsely wrinkled, black, without any 

 distinct ostiolum, ^-| mm. diam., seated on a scanty, black, pilose 

 subiculum. Asci clavate with a slender stipe, 8-spored, 40-45x8-9 //. 

 Sporidia lying irregularly in the asci, oblong or clavate-oblong, mostly 

 straight, 4-nucleate, hyaline, 9-11 x2-2| //. 



On bark, Carolina (Schw.), also Carolina and Maine (Berkeley). 



The specimen in Herb. Schw., 1413, labeled "Sphmria cupularis," 

 is this species, having the perithecia |-f mm. diam., and asci shorter 

 and broader than in S. cupularis. Whether this is the Sphmria 

 tristis, Tode, is doubtful. Persoon gives S. tristis, Tode, interroga- 

 tively as a synonym of his S. tristis. Both speak of the thin, tomen- 

 tose subiculum, but Tode says the perithecia are so small as to be 

 scarcely visible, which certainly does not apply to the species here 

 described as Nitschkia tristis, (Pers.) 



The specimen in Fungi Gallici, 1485, labeled Sphmria tristis, 

 Tode, is (in our copy) only a patch of black tomentum without any 

 perithecia. In the specc. issued by Cooke and Plowright the sporidia 

 are 7-9 x2-2J //, the contents often divided by a pseudoseptum across 

 the middle. 



Specc. on rotten maple from Ohio (Morgan, 976) have al)undant, 

 narrow-elliptical, hyaline sporidia? 6-8 x 3 fi, but no asci, and may be 

 the spermogonial stage of this species. 



N. eu6mphala, (B. & C.) 



Splusria euompkala, B. & C. Grev. IV, p. 141. 

 SphiEria craterella, B. & Rav. in Herb. Berk. 

 ByssQsphisria euomphala, in Cooke's Synopsis, 2603. 

 Botryospkaria euompkala, Sacc. Syll. 1784. 

 Exsicc. Rav. Fung. Car. IV, 54. 



Perithecia densely gregarious, about ^ mm, diam., or a little less, 

 spherical, minutely tubercular-roughened, soon collapsing. Asci cla- 

 vate. Sporidia elliptical, continuous, smoky-hyaline, or pale brown, 

 6-8 X 3|-4^ [ji. 



On bark of dead trunks of Fraxinus, So. Carolina (Ravenel). 



The perithecia are seated on a thin subiculum of creeping, septate 

 hyph£e, with which they are also mostly fringed at base. 



((BLOSPHiERIA, Sacc. 



Mycotheca Ven. Spec. p. 115 (etnend^d). 



Perithecia s^cattered, superficial or at first covered by the epi- 



