14 
NEW BRITISH FUNGI. 
Fhlebia lirellosa, Pers. Myc. Eur. in. p. 2, t. 18, /. 2, 3. 
Resupinate, umber-grey, margin free, sinuosities very minute, 
linear, intermixed with pores. — B. fy Br. Ann. Nat. Hist ., No. 
1973. 
Penzance. 
Stereum vorticosum, Fr. Hym. Eur., 639. 
“Noble specimens of this very beautiful species, remarkable for 
its costate hymenium, were sent from Penzance by Mr. Ralfs.” — 
B. Br. Ann. Nat. Hist., No. 1973.* 
Corticium umbiinum, A. & S. Consp., 281. 
Effused, soft, fleshy, umber, villose beneath, circumference ra- 
diating, short, of the same colour ; hymenium tuberculose, then 
collapsing, pulverulent ferruginous. — Fr. Hym. Eur., 858. B. §• 
Br. Ann. Nat. Hist., No. 1974. 
On rotting spruce, &c. Penzance, &c. 
Corticium maculaeforme, Fr. Hym. Eur., 656. 
Orbicular, then confluent, indurated, thin, somewhat roseate, 
circumference similar, smooth; hymenium spuriously papillose, 
bluish grey pruinose. — FI. Ban., t. 1738,/. 2. B. ^ Br. Ann. Nat. 
Hist., No. 1975. 
On bark. Penzance. 
Clavaria pyxidata, Pers. Comm., t. 1 ,/. 1. 
Pallid, then clay colour, or reddish ; trunk thin, smooth, 
branched ; branches and branchlets all excavated in a cup-like 
manner at the apex ; margin of the cups proliferous. — Fr. Hym. 
Eur., 669. B. Br. Ann. Nat. Hist , No. 1976. 
On.wood. Penzance. 
Calocera corticalis, Fr. Hym. Eur., 681. Batsch,fig. 162. 
Csespitose, erumpent, soft, pellucid, pale flesh colour ; clubs 
subulate, distinct. — B. § Br. Ann. Nat. Hist., No. 1977. 
On bark. Penzance. 
Fenicillium macrosporum, B. fy Br. Ann. Nat. Hist., N 0 . 1978. 
Orange ; spores globose, large. 
On decaying Lactarius (J. D. C. Sowerby). 
Drawing in the British Museum Collection. 
Rhinotrichum ramosissimum, B. Sf Curt. 
Pale tan-coloured, flocci very much branched, articulate, the 
ultimate joints elongated and covered with spicules ; spores obo- 
vate, apiculate below. — North Amer. Fungi, No. 662. 
On rotten wood. Moffat, N.B. Dr. Bayley Balfour. 
This peculiar variety had the flocci in tufts so as to simulate 
exactly Trichia chrysosperma, with the peridia ruptured. 
Cercospora Bloxamii, B. # Br. Ann. Nat. Hist., No. 1979. 
Spots orbicular, pallid ; spores elongated, fusiform, acuminate at 
each end, multiseptate. 
On decaying leaves of turnips. 
Formerly distributed as Septo? ia Bloxami. 
