166 ENDOSPOBE^. [trICHIA. 



(1889), p. 344; Mass., Mon., p. 191. Trichia intermedia Mass., 

 in Journ. R. Micr. Soc. (1889), p. 341 ; Mass., Mon., p. 188. 

 Trichia pulchella E,ex, in Proc. Ac. Nat. Sc. Phil. (1893), p. 366. 



Plate LX., B. — d. elater, x 600 ; e. spore, x 600 (England). 



T. pulchella Rex differs from the usual developments of T. affinis 

 in the more scattered habit of growth of the sporangia ; the elaters 

 are narrow, being 3'5 to 4'6 ju diam. ; the spores have a border 1 ji wide 

 and are reticulated with narrow, minutely pitted raised bandsj pre- 

 senting from three to four meshes on the hemisphere ; it can hardly 

 be considered as having distinctive specific characters. The type 

 specimen of T. Kalbreyeri Mass., from Nfew Grranada (K. 1196), has 

 elaters 5 fi diam., with delicate longitudinal striae, and spores marked 

 with a rather close reticulation of broad, faintly pitted bands ; it 

 does not appear to differ from typical T. affinis. The type specimen 

 of T. intermedia Mass. from Scarborough has elaters 4 to 6 /i diam., 

 and is almost identical with de Bary's type of T. affinis in the 

 Strassburg Herbarium both in capillitium and spores. 



Hab. On dead wood. — Addington, Surrey (B. M. 362) ; Leicestershire 

 (B. M. 363) ; Heydon (B. M. 1115) and Wanstead, Essex (L:B.M.135) 

 Lyme Regis, Dorset (L:B.M.135) ; Ootterel, Cheshire (B. M. 1125) 

 Edinburgh (K. 1180) ; Germany (B. M. 785 and Strassb. Herb.) 

 Australia (L:B.M.135) ; Philadelphia (L:B.M.135) ; Iowa (B. M. 834) 

 S. Carolina (B. M. 959); Cuba (K. 1118); New Granada "(L:B.M. 135 

 '■"i; ChUi (Paris Herb.). 



4. T. persimilis Karst., in Not. Saellsk. pro Fauna et Flora 

 Fenn. Forh. (1868), p. 353. Plasmodium watery- white, in rotten 

 wood. Sporangia globose, crowded, seated on a common mem- 

 branous hypothallus, 0'5 to 0'8 mm. diam., brown or yellow- 

 brown, shining; capiUitium and spores in mass yellow or 

 yellow-brown. CapilKtium of cylindrical elaters, 4 to 6 ju. diam., 

 marked with about four closely set spiral bands, usually beset 

 with numerous short slender spines; the ends of the elaters 

 conical, acute, or with the spiral bands produced at the apex 

 into two or three diverging points; longitudinal striae incon- 

 spicuous. Spores yellow, or yellow-brown, 11 to 14 /* diam., with 

 the reticulation broken, or represented by irregular pitted warts, 

 border interrupted. — Trichia Jackii Host., Mon., p, 258 (1875) ; 

 Cooke, Myx. Brit., fig. 242; Mass., Mon., p. 188. Trichia proxir 

 mella Karst., in Bidr. Kann. Finl. Nat., xxxi,, p. 139; Mass., Mon., 

 p. 180. Trichi'a abrupta Cooke, in Ann. Lye. Nat. Hist. N. York, 

 xi., p. 404 ; Cooke, Myx. Brit., fig. 256 ; Mass., Mon., p. 187. 

 Trichia Balfourii Mass., in Journ. E. Micr. Soc. (1889), p. 339 ; 

 Mass., Mon., p. 186. Trichia sut/phwrea Mass., in Journ. R. 

 Micr. Soc. (1889), p. 339 ; Mass., Mon., p. 186. 



Plate LX., A.— ^. elater, x 600 ; \. spore, x 600 (England). 



A type specimen from Finland, from Dr. Karsten, agrees essentially 

 with the examples of T. Jackii Rost. in Strassb. Herb. ; the latter 

 name must therefore be dropped as being antedated. The occurrence 

 of the long spinous processes on the elaters, noted in the original 

 description of T. persimilis, is not a constant character. 



