Dodge—Wisconsin Discomycetes. 
1041 
Acetabula sulcata (Pers.) Fckl. 
The apothecia are plane, not cupshaped, the stipes are long and 
deeply sulcate. Both characteristics are well brought out by Cooke, 
Mycog., pi. 47, fig. 185. One specimen from Blue Mounds, had a disk 
8 cm. broad with a stipe 8-9 cm. long, exceptionally large for the 
species. On the ground. Devil’s Lake, June 1909 (Harper); Blue 
Mounds, 1909 (Dodge); T. Nelson’s woods, Mauston, July 1909 (J. 
Dodge). 
Acetabula vulgaris Fckl. 
The species grows as large as 13 cm. broad and 10 cm. high in the 
rich black soil of “the bottoms” near Krohn’s Lake. Good figures of 
these forms are given by Rolland, Atlas Champ., pi. 118, fig. 278; 
Boudier, leones Mye., pi. 243, no. 155. Windsor road, Madison, June 
1905; Second lake, Madison, June 1905; Krohn’s lake, June 1905 
(Dodge); Sturgeon Bay. July 1905 (R. Allen); Milwaukee, 1905; 
Devil’s lake, June 1909. A small form sent to Dr. Rehm was deter¬ 
mined as Acetabula vulgaris var. minor (no. 475, Mauston, (Dodge). 
Macropodia Corium (Weberb.) Sacc. 
University drive, Madison, May 1904 (no. 415, Harper); University 
drive, June 1907 (Denniston). 
Macropodia macropus (Pers.) Fckl. 
This species is even more variable than the preceding in the form 
and size of the apothecia. Some have a stipe only 0.5 cm. long, in 
others the stipe is 6-8 cm. long, the spores being alike in both forms. 
Frequently parasitized by a species of Asterophora (Rehm vid.). Wau- 
besa, July 1903; East Madison, September 1903; Warner’s woods, Al¬ 
go ma, August 1904; C'randon, August 1905 (Neuman); Devil’s Lake, 
July 1905; Sturgeon Bay, July and August 1907 (R. Allen and Joli- 
vette); Fond du Lac, August 1907 (Cheney); West Superior, August 
1907 (Cheney); Devil’s Lake, June 1909; Mile Bluff, Mauston, June 
1909 (Dodge), Rehm vid.; Krohn’s lake, August 1909 (Dodge), Rehm 
vid. 
Macropodia platypodia (Boud). 
The spores are more fusoid than figured by Boudier, leones Myc., 
pi. 2)1, no. 6)7, otherwise the specimens are as he described. Crandon, 
August 1905 (Neuman). 
Frnula Craterium (Schw.) Fr. 
On decayed wood and on the ground, Madison, June 1889 (R. A. Har¬ 
per); Devil’s lake, June 1900; Madison, May 1902 (Harper).; Blue 
