X 
Ord. IX. Tribe IT. 
FUNGI GASTEROMYCETES. 
1031 
16447 Perithecia somew. ov. rather wart, black cover, with strigose hairs of same col. Orifice rather lengthened 
/S Perithecia numerous seated on a little strigose villous crustaceous stalk 
*** Spherules without an evident orifice. 
16448 Gregarious obovate deep-black smooth tuberculated 
16449 Spher. minute solitary or somew. cluster, black ovate setoso-rugose mouthless, Spor. ovate in cylindr. tubes 
16450 Minute black scattered globose very rugose and tuberculated parasitic on the pileus of Polyporus abietinus 
16451 Scatter. Perith. ellipt. rounded depress, plaited lengthwise opaque black. Orifice hidden somew. compress. 
16452 Spher. black min. very numer. crowded roundish somew. tuberculated and often with a transverse furrow 
16453 Emerging prominent irregular brownish-black rufous brown internally, Orifices concealed 
16454 Tufted innate on the surface, Perithecia subglobose solid without orifice at first villous afterwards naked 
16455 Naked more or less crowd, ovate-glob, black shining, Perith. very small smooth at first without an orifice 
16456 Minute black scattered globose very wartv. Parasitic on the cap of Polyporus abietinus 
16457 Perithecia subglobose ovate tuberculate black covered with scattered hairs of the same color 
164.58 Stipit. compress, black transverse, striat. dilat. gradual, from stipes into an elongat. wedge-shap. peritheci. 
16439 Somewhat stalked dilated upwards striated across shining 
Division II. Cylisrorei. 
16460 Perithecia conico-subulate acute yellowish somewhat pellucid, Globule very pale 
16461 Spherules aggregated, Sporidia 3 or 4 times divided, Cirrhi often becoming effused 
16462 Cells impressed on the receptacle, Disk emerging blackish, Cirrhi yellow [with a cottony margin 
16463 Sporulifer. tendr. white simp. Spher. waved : when divid. horizontal, manifest under epider. Orifice black. 
16464 One or many-celled convex brownish-black somewhat umbonate in the centre 
16463 Generally many-celled roundish fiat brownish-testaceous, Orifices obsolete 
Division III. Phacidiacei. 
16466 Long, surrounding the culms whitish becoming dark-yellow at length rendered granular by the orifices 
16467 Epiphyll. round, conflu. convex cinereous-black: internally black with white cells. Orifices like granulat. 
16468 Epiphyllous subgregarious hemispherical smooth shining very black white within 
16469 On both sides of the leaf regularly scattered roundish black shining collapsed rugose and plaited 
16470 Plane orange-red, Sporules unequal globose 
16471 Plane pale fulvous 
16472 Epiphyllous somewhat angular and irregular in form subconfluent tuberculose black shining black within : 
the cellules white 
16473 Minute innate on the surface rugose plaited opening with many flexuose cracks 
16474 Orbicul. subhemispher. depressed black dehiscent in numer. acute segm. Disk pale greenish or yellowish 
16475 Four-sided small black or whitish spots on the leaf splitting in 4-5 acute segments. Disk dingy 
16476 Subimmersed crowded parallel linear black, Lips of the orifice tumid smooth. Disk linear 
16477 Collected on pale defined spots roundish elliptical black : the margin dei)ressed and paler 
16469 . K>473 16474 
16467 
16470 16476 
and Miscellaneous Particulars. 
16477 
2430. Phoma. Said by its author to be named in allusion to the pustular appearance of the plants, which 
are of a brownish color, and grow within the substance of leaves. 
2431. Dothidea. A genus which has been named from ^o^m, a tubercle, and ulog, similar, and appears to be 
very distinct. The species are numerous, growing upon plants ; many of them are innate and dark, a few 
colored. 
2432. Rhytisma. From pvri?, a wrinkle. R. corrugatum, the Lichen graniformis of English botany, is a 
gregarious, subcorneous, shining flatfish plant, referred to Lichens by Acharius, but considered by Fries and 
Ehrenberg to belong to Fungi. It is common upon the crusts of Lichens and upon dry wood. 
24t33. Phacidium. A name with the same meaning as Dothidea ; from <pix,Hts, and e/So?. Intermediate 
between Rhytisma and Hysterium, but differing from both in the manner of dehiscence. The species are 
somewhat innate, epiphytous, tolerably permanent, blackish, and with a kernel which becomes softish. 
2434. Hysterium. From vs-i^via-ii, penury, in allusion, perhaps, to the diseased and squalid appearance which 
trees attacked by this fungus assume. Minute plants, resembling Opegrapha, and like that genus, found 
occupying the bark of trees ; but destitute of a crust. 
3 U 4 
