268 BRITISH DISCOMYCETES. 
“Handbk.,” 2052 (in part). Pseudo-helotiwm hyalinum 
—Fekl, “Symb. Myco.,” p. 298. Helotiwm hyalinwm— 
Karst., “ Myco. Fenn,” p. 144. Lachnea hyalina—Gill, 
“Champ.,” p. 79. 
Exs.—Phil., “Elv. Brit.” 24; Rabh., “Fung. Eur.,” 
1615. 
On dead chips and stumps, and inside bark. 
Cups 200 to 800u broad. A minute, slender species, 
with exceedingly delicate hairs, which when dry do not 
easily revive with moisture. The cups assume a darker 
shade on drying, and “resemble minute grains of white 
sand scattered over the brown bark.” 
It is almost certain that at least two distinct species 
have been hitherto included under this name in herbaria, 
if not more. 
Name—Ayalinus, transparent. 
Ereall Hill! and Shelton! near Shrewsbury; Linwilg, 
N.B.! (Rev. Dr. Keith). 
58. Lachnella fugiens. Phil. 
Cups scattered, sessile, globose, then expanded, thin, 
white, villose; asci oblong-clavate or subfusiform; 
sporidia 4 to 8, oblong-linear or elliptic, straight or slightly 
curved, 7 X 2u. 
Peziza fugiens—Phil. in Bucknall’s “Fungi of the 
Bristol District” (“Proceedings of Bristol Nat. Soe.”), 
pt. iv. No. 800, t. iv. f. 2. 
On dead rushes in bogs. 
Cups 50 broad; asci 204 long, 5u broad; the hairs 
of the exterior very short, non-septate, colourless. 
Name—Fugiens, fleeting; from its ephemeral cha-. 
racter. 
Mangotsfield and Abbots Leigh, near Bristol! (Mr. 
Cedric Bucknall). 
59. Lachnella pwnctoidea. (Karst.) 
_ Cups gregarious, sessile or substipitate, sub-immar- 
ginate, nearly naked, convex, when dry plane or slightly 
