- 7i — 
60. Frullania Nisquallensis Sulliv. 
(D) On trees, shrubs, etc. not abundant, Hamilton, Wash., March 11-20,. 
1904. (J 26) On trees, Oregon, Aug. 20. 1905. (497 in part) Bark of young 
spruce, bluffs below Cathlamet, Wash., Sept. 23, 1906. (515) On bark of 
tree trunks, chunks, sometimes on rocky face of wall, Cathlamet, Wash., 
abundant, Jan. 20, 1907. (410) On live hemlock, hills back of Rainier, Ore- 
gon, May 16, 1906. (806) Alders back of Wishkah River near Aberdeen, 
Wash., Nov. 10, 1908. Another specimen, same locality, March 13, 1909. 
A n thocerotaceae . 
61. Anthocerso Pearsoni M. A. Howe 
(407) On Pinus contort a, Clatsop Beach, Seaside, Oregon, Aug. 19, 
1905. ' 
62. Anthoceros punctatus L. 
On soil in Canon, Balch Creek Road, Portland, Oregon, July 3, 1905. 
Det. A. S. Foster. 
63. Anthoceros fusiformis Aust. 
Clay soil cuts, Carson Heights, Portland, Oregon, June, 1906. Det. Miss 
Clark, Highlands, New Jersey. 
LICHEN NOTES No. 11. 
Describing Parmelia endoxantha, a new species; Parmelia olivacea 
multisporum, a new combination; and three little known 
Parmelia species hitherto inadequately diagnosed. 
G. K. Merrill. 
Parmelia sulfur at a Nees et Flot. in Linnaea, 1834 p. 501. 
Reaction Kljl fulvescent, C+ but faintly. 
Thallus glaucescent, ashy-white or whitish, expanded, orbicular, loosely 
appressed, lobed, divisions irregularly developing with more or less recurved 
ascendant borders, peripherally the lobes rather more depressed and broader, 
with the margins entire or crenate; destitute of cilia, centrally thinly 
isidiose, rarely subglobose sorediate marginally; above somewhat shining^ 
or nearly opaque, and here and there complicate-rugulose ; within yellow or 
whitish-sulphureous ; below black and interruptedly short-rhizinose centrally, 
but broadly glabrous or yellowish-brown at the circumference. Apothecia 
cup-shaped, pedicellate, medium, disk yellowish- red, the margin faintly 
erose-crenulate. Spores 20-26 X 9-12/^ 
On trunks of forest trees. 
Examined from Tampico, Mexico, C. G. Pringle, and Island of Jamaica, 
Miss C. E. Cummings. Variously reported from our Southern States and 
the West Indian Islands. The species somewhat resembles P. cristiferc 
Tayl. and P. corralloidea (Mey & Flot.) Wain., and in its sorediate condi- 
tions is sufficiently like P . perlata of Tuckerman’s conception to be readily 
