DERMATEA., 341 
whitish, externally minutely silky; asci subfusiform or 
clavate; sporidia 8, oblong or elliptic, with 3 to 4 distinct 
guttee, at length 1 to 3 pseudo-septate, 22—25 x 5y. 
Patellaria livida—B. and Br., “Ann. Nat. Hist.,” 
No. 775; Cooke’s “ Handbk.,” No. 2167. Patellaria 
constipata—Blox., MSS. ; ‘Cooke, “ Handbk.,” No. 
2176. 
Exs.—Cooke, “ Fung. Brit.,” No. 578. 
On fallen firs. December. 
Cups } to 4 a line broad; greyish-white when. scary. 
Name—Lividus, of a pale lead-colour. 
Gopsal Park, Leicestershire ! (Messrs. Berkeley ‘pad 
Broome). 
5. Dermatea Cerasi. (Pers.) 
Solitary or subezspitose, erumpent, at first tuber- 
culate, reddish clay-colour, then plane, blackish, with an 
elevated, subrepand margin, irregular; exterior rugose, 
sometimes sprinkled with a greenish meal; hymenium 
brownish or blackish; asci cylindraceo- clavate ; sporidia 
8, narrowly oblong, straight or slightly bent, ‘becoming 
pseudo-uniseptate, 20 X 54; paraphyses filiform, adherent, 
brown at the apices. 
Pyenidia intermixed with the above or separate, 
conical, coriaceous, furfuraceous, opening by a minute 
pore; stylospores narrowly fusiform, elongated, curved 
or flexuous, 3 to 5-septate, 40 x 2—3y; sterigmata fili- 
form, 20u long. 
Spermogonia smaller than the pycnidia; spermatia 
filiform, curved, 13 to 164; sterigmata filiform, branched, 
very short. 
Peziza Cerasi—Pers., “Tent. Disp. Meth..” p. 35; 
“Syn. Fung.,” p. 673; “Myco. Eur.,” i. p. 329; “Icon. 
Pict.,” t. 20,f.1; Grev., “Flo. Edin.,” p. 246. Cenangiuwm 
Cerasi—Fries, “Sys. Myco.,” ii. p. 180; “Eng. Flo.,” v. 
211; Berk, “Outl,” p. 374; Cooke, By “Handbk. a 
No. 2189; Gill, “Champ.,” p. 195. Dermatea Cerasi— 
De Not., “Disc.,” p. 18; Tul. “Select. Fung. Carp.,” iii 
p. 156, t. 19, f. 18-16. 
