RECENTLY DISCOVERED FUNGI IN 
YORKSHIRE— VII. 
i45 
C. CROSSLAND, 
Halifax. 
The present is the seventh supplementary list of newly dis- 
covered Fungi in Yorkshire, since the issue of the Yorkshire 
Fungus Flora. It consists of 55 species, bringing the total 
known county fungus flora at the end of the year 1913 to 
3,002. Of the 55 additions, six are new to Britain and one to 
England ; four of the former being met with in the Mulgrave 
district where were also 26 of the other additions. No species 
new to science were met with last year. The one new to 
England was found on the moors between Keighley and 
Cowling. Many have been already recorded in The Naturalist, 
January, 1914, pp. 15-16, and other places. The numbers 
in brackets following each specific name denote their sequence 
in the Flora. 
NEW TO BRITAIN. 
Naucoria weislandri Fr. [To follow 500]. 
N.E. — On the ground among short grass. Mulgrave 
Woods. F.F. Sep. 1913. ‘ Nat.’ 1914, p. 15. 
‘ Pileus expanded, obtuse, glabrous, tawny, cuticle cracked 
into areolae, hence the surface is crowded with minute dark, 
wart-like papillae', gills adnate, broad, dark rust ; stem filiform, 
almost naked, blackish.’ — ‘ Mass. Eur. Agaricacese,’ p. 167. 
Galera flexipes, Karst. [To follow 504]. 
N.E. — Among grass in open place. Mulgrave Woods. 
F.F. Sep. 1913. ' Nat.‘ 1914. p. 15. 
‘ Pileus campanulate, obtuse, rusty and slightly pellucidly 
striate, ochraceous when dry ; gills adnexed, crowded, pallid, 
then rusty, edge crenulate ; stem equal, fistulose, wavy, pallid, 
white-fibrillose, apex white-primrose ; spores, 10-12 X 5-6/A.’ — 
" Mass. Eur. Agar.’ p. 169. 
Peniophora glebulosa. [To precede 1179b 
N.E. — On decaying decorticated wood. Mulgrave. May, 
IQ13, Certe. E. M. Wakefield. 
Pleospora euonymi, Fckl. [To follow 1651]. 
‘ Gregarious, seated on pale spots as large as those of Pleospora 
herbarum, covered by the epidermis, round and depressed, 
mouth papilliform, black. Asci broad, cylindrical or oblong- 
cylindrical with short pedicel, 120-125 X 26//. ; spores 8, biseriate, 
oblong, broadest above the centre, constricted, ends rounded, septa 
7 transverse, and 2 imperfectly longitudinal, golden yellow, 
26-28 X 10-12/A. — (Trans, from Winter). 
N.E. — On fallen leaves of Euonymus sp., South Cliff, 
Scarborough, March, 1913. T. B. Roe. 
1914 May 1. 
