62 BRITISH DISCOMYCETES. 
Cup 2 to 3 inches broad, 1} inches high, sack-shaped ; 
margin entire, but occasionally divided to the base on 
one side; externally dark olive green; hymenium dull 
ochery brown; the mycelium ferruginous. Very distinct 
from P. leporina. 
Name—From grandis, large. 
Heywood Forest, near Hereford! (Mr. C. B. Plowright). 
25. Peziza ochracea. Boud. 
Cup sessile, czespitose, entire, subflexuous, bright 
ochraceous, externally furfuraceous; asci cylindrical; 
sporidia 8, elliptic, biguttulate, hyaline, smooth; 
22—24 x 124; parapbyses linear, often divided at the 
summits into two or three short obtuse processes. 
Peziza ochracea—Boud. in Herb.; Cooke, “Mycogr.,” 
fig. 377; Pat. p. 170, £ 374, Aleuria ochracea—Gill, 
“Champ.,” p. 41, ¢ 1 
On the ground in beech woods. Spring. 
Cup 1 to 2 inches broad, fleshy at the base, densely 
cespitose; hymenium wrinkled; exterior coarsely fur- 
furaceous. The paraphyses are septate, and often branched 
at the top into two or three short processes. 
Name—Ochra, ochre; the colour of yellow ochre. 
The Wrekin, Salop! 
26. Peziza Ade. Sadler, 
Cup sessile, subczspitose, cochleate, irregular, be- 
‘ coming expanded; margin entire or lobed, reflexed; 
hymenium white, rosy white, violaceous, or ochraceus; 
asci cylindrical; sporidia 8, elliptic, biguttulate, smooth, 
13 x 74; paraphyses linear. 
Peziza Ade-—Sadler ; Cooke, “ Trans, Bot. Soc. Edin.,” 
1857, p. 45 (with figure) ; “Grevillea,” vi. t. 97, figs. 1-3. 
Peziza domiciliana—Cooke in Gard. Chron., 1877. 
Exs.—Cooke, “Fung. Brit.,” ed. ii. 649; Phil. “ Elv. 
Brit.,” No. 154. 
On damp walls, etc. 
Cup 4 an inch to 2 inches broad; dise variable in 
form and colour, but always thin and delicate. 
