Bodge—Fungi from the Region of Ketvaunee Co.. Wis, 837 
% 
TREMEL LINE AE. 
Exidia glandulosa (Bull.) Fr. Common on old limbs and cord- 
wood, March to November, Algoma. 
TremeUa albida Hud. On wet stumps and logs, Blue Mounds, 
June; Detjens’ woods, September, Algoma. 
TremeUa foliacea Pers. On dead limbs, Perry’s swamp, Decem¬ 
ber, Algoma; cemetery woods, June, Madison. 
TremeUa frondosa Fr. Oh living tamarack, Ihlenfield’s woods, 
September, Algoma. 
Tremella fuciformis Berk. [TremeUa reticulata (Berk.) Farlow.] 
A large white, much-branched plant. On the ground, Runke’’s pasture, 
August, Algoma. 
Tremella intumescens Sm. Eng. Bot. Pinkish-watery when fresh, 
then tawny brown. The spores are oblong, curved. Very common on 
beech stumps after rains, Blahnik’s grove, August, Algoma. 
Tremella lutescens Pers. On old wood, Otto’s woods, June, Al¬ 
goma. Rare. 
Tremella mesenterica Retz. On oak bark, Mile Bluff, July, 
Mauston. 
Tremella mycetophila Pk. [Exobasidium mycetophila (Pk.) Burt.] 
On the pileus and stipe of Collyhia dryophila, Krohn’s Lake, August, 
Algoma. 
TremeUa sebacea Pers. On grass, July, Algoma. 
NaemateUa encephala Fr. This specimen consists of about a 
dozen curving folds forming a brain-like aggregation 7cm. across. The 
nucleus of each fold is tough, white, elastic, 0.5-1 cm. wide and 2 cm. 
high, sometimes branched. The nuclei of the folds run together into a 
common base of similar consistency. Each fold is covered with a firm 
gelatinous layer 1-1.5 cm. thick, which is about the color of boiled starch 
and not flesh-colored as described by Fries, Syst. Myc., p. 227. Neither 
is it reddish-brown until dry. When soaked in water the cluster of 
folds swells to its original size and assumes a whitish color. The max¬ 
imum size has been given as. 3-6 lines, Alb. & Schw., Cons. Fung., p. 301, 
but this may refer to a single fold. This cluster of folds is plainly a 
single plant. A section through the plant resembles a section through 
a brain. The external appearance is likewise brain-like. On living 
tamarack at a point where a stub of a dead limb protruded. Detjen’s 
woods, April 1, Algoma. 
Tremellodon gelatinosum (Scop.) Pers. Common on hemlock 
logs and stumps, Krohn’s Lake, August; Schmeiling’ woods, September, 
Algoma. 
