168 C. D. Sherbakoff 



5-septate, 44 per cent, 43 x 4.1 (31-54 x 3.9-5.2) m 



6-septate, 2 per cent, 49 x 4.3 (45-72 x 4-4.9) ju 



7-septate, 1 per cent, 60 x 4.8 (59-73 x 4.1-5.3) n 



8- and 9-septate, rare, 60-78 x 4.5-5.8^ (only a few measured) 



On hard lima-bean agar with 2 per cent glucose, culture seven days 

 old; conidia from aerial mycelium: 

 Conidia: 0- and 1-septate, 79 per cent 



3-septate, 15 per cent, 36 x 4.6 (33-41 x 4.3-4.7)/x 



4-septate, 5 per cent 



5-septate, 1 per cent, 54 x 4.7 (53-66 x 4.3-5.3) n 



On hard oat agar, culture twenty-eight clays old; conidia from a large 

 (3 millimeters in diameter) sporodochium: 

 Conidia: 1-septate, 3 per cent, about 28 x 3 (28-37 x 2.3-3) n 



2-septate, 1 per cent 



3-septate, 45 per cent, 39 x 3.3 (36-46 x 2.9-3.6) M 



4-septate, 16 per cent 



5-septate, 35 per cent, 51 x 3.5 (43-60 x 3-4) n 



Average of the above measurements for all non-sporodochial conidia: 

 Conidia: 0-septate, about 9 per cent, 11x3^ 



1-septate, about 11 per cent, 16.5x3.15/i 



2-septate, about 2 per cent 



3-septate, about 20 per cent, 32 x 4.1/z 



4-septate, about 8 per cent 



5-septate, about 41 per cent, 52 x 4.2^ 



6- to 9-septate, about 9 per cent, 45-84 x 4-5.8ju 



The organism when first isolated had large sporodochia (from 2 to 5 

 millimeters in diameter), and the substratum and mycelium near it were 

 from rose to pomegranate in color; later the color of mycelium and sub- 

 stratum faded and no sporodochia were produced at all; during the last 

 year its original characters — both color and sporodochia — reappeared. 

 Under just what influence loss of characters and their reappearance took 

 place the writer is unable to say, although it seems that a slightly acidi- 

 fied and relatively dry medium actually helped to bring the fungus to 

 the original conditions. 



