30 
NEW BRITISH LICHENS. 
a variety of L. metainorphea^ with spores 7-septate, 0,030-34 
m.m. long, 0,007-H m.m. 
In. fissures of rocks. Connemara, Galway (Larbalestier). 
Lecidea grisella f. meiosporiza. iV)/Z.— Thallus whitish or 
greyish-white, rimoso-diffract ; apothecia plane or convex, csesio- 
pruinose. 
On rocks and boulders. Scotland (Crombie) ; Ireland (Lar- 
balestier) ; occurs also in France. 
Arthonia cinnabarina f. cuspidans. 'Nyl . — Distinguished from 
the type by the apothecia being scarcely erythrinose, thinner, the 
apices of the divisions acuminate; spores smaller, 0,016-19 
m.m. long, 0,006-7 m.m. thick. 
On the bark of hollies. Ireland (Larbalestier) = Wright Cub. 
No. 123 a & b. 
Arthonia sapineti. Nijl. (=Rabenh. Lich. Eur. 575). — Suffi- 
ciently similar to A. atrofuscella, but differing in the thin section 
of apothecium, being subincolorous and K — (or obsoletely dark- 
greenish) ; spores 0,011-14 m.m. long, 0,006 m.m. thick. 
Connemara (Larbalestier), but with thallas macular, greenish. 
NEW JERSEY FUNGI. 
By M. C. Cooke and J. B. Ellis. 
( Continued from Vol. IV, p. 180.^ 
The following were chiefly collected in the neighbourhood of 
Newfield, New Jersey, by J. B. Ellis, who has already contributed 
many additions to the Fungi of the United States. The few speci- 
mens from Maine are indicated. 
2319. Nectria pulicaris. TuL — On corn stalks. 
2320. Sphaeria millegrana. Scliwz. — On oak chip. 
2321 . Nectria coccinea. Fr. — On Magnolia. 
2294. Hendersonia collapsa. C. ^ Ellis. 
Peritheciis sparsis, globosis, demum collapsis, cupul^formis, atris, 
erumpentibus ; sporis fusiformibus, triseptatis, hyalinis. 
On maple twigs. 
Spores 025 x '005, hyaline, triseptate, pointed at each end. 
Perithecia rather large, elevated, soon collapsed, and resembling a 
black Feziza (pi. 75, fig. 12). 
2322. Feziza (Dasyscypha) lachnoderxna. Berk. — See Grevillea, 
iv, pi. 66, fig. i. - On bark of fir. 
2323. Melanconium ramulorum. Corda. — {^M.hicolor,\iir. ramu- 
lorum.) 
On Magnolia. 
Spores ovate, or subglobose, slightly pointed at the base. 
