36 *■ ENDOSPORE^. [bADHAMIA. 



gatherings of the latter species; the length of the stalk is subject to 

 Ireat variation. B. dictyospora is the name given by Bostafinski 

 to the Appin specimen (K. 193), in which the spores are strongly 

 reticulated. British gatherings have more or less of this character, 

 with prominent warts isolated or confluent ; m most American 

 specimens and in that from Chevallier at Paris, which is given by 

 Eostafinski as the type of B. ruUginosa, the spores are minutely 

 spinulose. There are intermediate degrees of roughness in American 

 specimens which unite the two forms. 



ffab. In woods on fallen brushwood, etc.— a. Paris (Strassb. Herb.); 

 Philadelphia (L:B.M.10) ; Iowa (B. M. 815); S. Carolina (B. M. 

 406) ; New York (L.:B.M.10). ^. Leighton, Beds. (L:B.M.10) ; 

 Appin, Argyllshire (K. 193). 



SPECIES NOT MET WITH IN THE QUOTED COLLECTIONS. 



10. B. fasciculata Rest., Men., App., p. 2 (1876). Sporangia 

 globose, white, dehiscing irregularly, fugacious above, persistent 

 below ; stalks connected in clusters of 3 to- 6 or more, erect, tough, 

 dirty yellowish, attenuated upwards, thickened and dark at the 

 base; spores violet, smooth, 11 to 12 /a diam. — Physarum fasdcw- 

 latum Jungh., Fl. Crypt. Jav., p. 11, PI. II., fig. 8. 



Hah. On trunks of Pandanus, Java. 



11. B. affinis Rost., Mon., p. 143 (1873). Sporangia hemi- 

 spherical, flattened, piano -umbilicate beneath, stipitate, grejdsh 

 white ; sporangium-wall slightly rugose. Spores not clustered, 

 brownish violet, spinulose, 13 to 15 /x. 



Hob. On dead leaves and stems. Chili (Bertero). 



12. B. ovispora Eacib., in Rozpr. Mat.-Przyr. Akad. Krak., 

 xii., p. 72, tab. 4, fig. 2 (1884). Sporangia sessile, subglobose, 

 0'5 to 0'75 mm. broad; sporangium-wall with thick deposits of 

 lime, rough, fragile, the base yellow, the upper part colourless ; 

 capillitium with much lime, white, rigid, with large irregular 

 nodes. Columella none. Spores violet, smooth, ellipsoid, 14'5 

 to 16-5 X 7-5 to 8-3 fx. 



Hah. On the branches of Populus canescens, DC. Cracow, 



13. B. melanospora Speg., in Anal. Soc. Cient. Arg., x., p. 150 

 (1880). Sporangia sessile, densely crowded, globose, smooth, 

 greyish white, white after the dispersal of the spores. Columella 

 none. Capillitium forming a dense network with fusiform 

 thickenings in the middle, and flattened nodes. Spores clustered 

 or free, smooth, black, opaque, angular from mutual pressure, 

 \6 fj, diam. 



Hah. In decaying trunks of Cercus Peruvianus Mill. — Argentina. 



14. B. microcarpa Schroet., in Cohn, Crypt. Fl. Schlesien 

 vol. iii., pt. i., p. 131 (1889). Sporangia sessile, about 0-5 mm! 

 broad, occurring in small groups or rows, without a common hypo- 



