

BOTANY 



LICHENACEI {continued) 



LICHENACEI {continue 



Pyrenodei {continued) 





Verrucaria chlorotica, Ach. 



Pyrenodei {continued) 



f. carpinea, Schaer. 4 





f. codonoidea, Leight. 6 



Verrucaria marina, Deak. 6 



— conoidea, Fr. 6 



— maura, Wahlb. 7 



— epidermidis, Ach. 7 



— mauroides, Schaer. 6 



var. analepta, Ach. 4 



— murina, Leight. 4, 6 



f. fallax, Nyl. 4 



— mutabilis, Borr. 5, 6 



var. cinereo-pruinosa, Schaer. 6 



— nigrescens, Pers. 6 



— fiiscella, Turn. 4 



— nitida, Weig. I, 5 



— gemmata, Ach. 6, 7 



— perminuta, Deak. 6 



— glabrata, Ach. 7 



f. nitidella, Deak. 5, 6 



var. dermatodes, Borr. 4 



— platypyrenia, Nyl. 6 



— glaucina, Ach. 7 



— polysticta, Borr. 4 



— hymenogonia, Nyl. 4 



— punctiformis, Ach. 4 



— immersa, Leight. 6 



— pyrenophora, Ach. 6 



— Integra, Nyl. 6 



— rugulosa, Borr. 6 



' — laevata, Ach. 6 



— rupestris, Schrad. 7 



— litoralis, Tayl. 6 



var. muralis, Ach. 4 



— margacea, 4, 6 



var. subalbicans, Leight. 4, 



var. papillosa, Ach. 6 



— SaWeii, Leight. I, 4 



var. acrotilla, Ach. 6 



— sublitoralis, Leight. I, 5 



FUNGI 



The following list is compiled from the records published in Jones 

 and Kingston's F/ora Devomensis (1829) and Kavenshzw's Botany of' Nor t A 

 Devon. To these have been added a list from the 'Transactions of the 

 British Mycological Sqciety, made during a visit of the Society to Exeter 

 and its neighbourhood, in 1901, for which the writer is indebted to the 

 kindness of Mrs. A. Montague, of Crediton, a well-known and accurate 

 mycologist. There has also been added a list of the fungi collected by 

 the late Mr. E. Parfitt, of Exeter, which the writer has been permitted 

 to see by the favour of Dr. H. Humphreys, of Torquay, the collection 

 having recently been presented to the museum of that town by Mrs. Vicary, 

 of Newton Abbot, into whose possession it had come some years ago. 

 There were originally twelve folio volumes of drawings illustrating these 

 fungi, made by Mr. Parfitt, but these cannot be traced as yet ; and as 

 many of the fleshy species are in bad condition, their identifications 

 cannot be confirmed, and are in such cases omitted from the list. With 

 the exception of districts 4 and 6 the fungal flora of Devon has been 

 very little investigated, and the list here given is therefore probably far 

 from an exhaustive one. 



The general arrangement followed in this list is that of Cooke's Hand- 

 book of British Fungi (1871), supplemented by Massee's British Fungus 

 Flora (1892-5), and Plowright's British Uredines and Ustilagineae (1889). 



HYMENOMYCETES HYMENOMYCETES {continued) 



Agaricini Agaricini {continued) 



Amanita adnata, W. G. Smith. 5 Amanita spissa, Fr. 4 



— junquillea, Qudl. 4 — Vittadini, Morett. 4 



— mappa, Fr. 4 Amanitopsis vaginata, Roze. 4 



— muscaria, Fr. i, 4, 6 Lepiota amianthina, Scop. 4 



— pantherina, Fr. 4 — Badhami, Berk. 4 



— phalloides, Fr. 4 — cepaestipes. Sow. 4 



— rubescens, Fr. 4 — cristata, A. and L. 4 



123 



