22 — 
Anthocerotaceae 
Anthoceros carolinianus Michx. (No. 46). On earth and logs. 
Anthoceros punctatus L. (No: 47). On sandy bank, earth, and logs. 
Highlands, N. J. 
ADDITIONS TO THE LICHEN-FLORA OF SOUTHERN CALIFORNIA.— 
NO. 10 
H. E. Hasse 
With the exceptions of those species published by Dr. A. Zahlbruckner in 
Annales Mycologici the writer is responsible for the descriptions of the follow- 
ing new species: 
Dermatocarpon heppioides A. Zahlbr. n. sp., 1 . c. X, 359. 1912. On rocks, 
Santa Monica Mts. 
Arthopyrenia (. Acrocordia ) sphaeroides (Wallr.) A. Zahlbr. Thallus effuse, 
smoothish, light gray with a faint yellowish dash. Apothecia dimidiate, dull 
black, hemispherical, at base thinly coated with thallus. Spores 8, colorless, 
bilocular, ellipsoid, 14/z to 16/* long, 6/1 to 8/j. thick. Spermatia acicular, straight 
or lightly curved at distal end, i6/jl long. Hym. gel. with I yellow. On oak, 
Catalina Island. 
Mycoporellum californicum A. Zahlbr. n. sp., 1 . c. X, 363. 1912. On Quercus 
agrifolia, Santa Monica Mts. 
Opegrapha hassei A. Zahlbr. n. sp., 1 . c. X. 365. 1912. Rocks, Catalina 
Island. 
Lecidea (. Biatora ) meiocarpa Nyl. Lich. Fr. Behr. p. 57; in Flora p. 577. 
1876. Northern and oriental Asia (Japan), in N. Amer. (Port Clarence), Europe. 
Not heretofore reported from the United States, it is believed. 
Lecanora lacustris (With.) Nyl. (L. cinerea lacustris Nyl. Lich. Scand. 55. 
1861.) Tuck. Syn. Li, N. Amer. I. 199. On schistose rocks, Santa Monica 
Mts.; Eastern N. A., but perhaps not before reported from the west coast. Au- 
thors mention as habitat “rocks often inundated,” which, however, does not hold 
good with our lichen whose “inundations” occur with us only during the brief 
rainy season. 
Rinodina dirinoides A. Zahlbr. n. sp. in litt. Thallus crustaceous, dull 
whitish, of thick convex cushion-like squamules with lobulate border, mealy, 
corticate above, attached to substratum by medullary hyphae, the cushions 1.5 
to 4 mm. wide. Apothecia mostly several on each cushion, appressed-sessile, 
1 to 1.8 mm. in width; disk flat-convex, dark but thickly pruinose and thus ap- 
pearing but little darker than the thallus; thallus with K. yellow, soon orange 
brown or dark safffron, C . Epithecium granulose, light yellowish brown; thecium 
colorless, 100 n to 112/x high; paraphyses strict, coherent, hypothecium pale straw 
color; asci inflated clavate, reaching up to the epithecium, 8-spored; spores bi- 
locular, blunt ellipsoid, 15^ to 24^ long, 8^ to 12^ thick, light umber brown, the 
loculi at first almost without color, in mature spores red-brown. Hym. gel. 
