PATELLARIA. 3865 
pseudo-6-septate, straight or curved, 25—45 x 4—7y; 
paraphyses filiform, slender. 
On dead wood of Lonicera. 
Cups 300 broad. 
Name—Lonicera, the genus to which the honey- 
suckle belongs; on honeysuckle. 
Darnaway, N.B.! 
12. Patellaria connivens. (Fries.) 
Gregarious, minute, innate; hymenium depressed, 
black or rufescent; margin thin; when dry compressed 
and difformed ; asci broadly clavate; sporidia 8, oblong- 
fusiform, 6 to 8-guttulate, at length pseudo-septate, 
1426 X 4-64; paraphyses filiform, very slender, 
branched from the base, abundant. 
Peziza connivens—Fries, “Sys. Myco.,” ii. p. 151; 
Nyl., “Pez. Fenn.,” p. 65; Karst “Mon. Pez.,” p. 167; 
Phil. and Plow., “Grevillea,” x. p. 69. Patellaria 
connivens—Karst., “ Myco. Fenn.,” 234. 
Exs.—Karst., “Fung. Fenn.,” 641. 
On dead wood of willow. Karsten says alder, poplar, 
and birch also. 
Cups about 500 to 800% broad. The wood is tinged 
from white to green on the spot where it grows. 
Name—Conniveo, to wink; from the closing up of 
the margin. 
Shrewsbury ! 
13. Patellaria subtectwm (nov. sp.). Cooke. 
Singly or in clusters, appearing first as black conical 
points emerging through the layers of bark, in which 
condition no fructification is seen; at length the conical 
points expand into lens-shaped or Lecidea-like discs, 
which are immarginate and black, about 4 of a line 
broad or less; substance soft and fragile; asci broadly 
clavate, narrowed into a slender stem; sporidia 8, 
oblong-elliptic, 3 to 4-guttulate, at length 1 to 3-septate, 
20—24 x 5—6u; paraphyses filiform, slender. Stylo- 
spores in the same hymenium, elongated, cylindrical, 5 to 
