1044 Wisconsin Academy of Sciences, Arts, and Letters. 
Galactinia subumbrina Bond. 
The spores are 10—11x17-20 mic., very coarsely warted, usually with 
two tubercles at one end as figured by Cooke, Mycog., pi. 108, fig. 885; 
Boudier, leones Myc., pi. 296, no. 80. Devil’s Lake July 1903; Blue 
Mounds, August 1903, September 1904; Milwaukee, July 1905; Ham- 
mersley’s drive, August 1906; Devil’s Lake, July 1907; campus, Madison, 
1907. 
Galactinia succosa (Berk.) Sacc. 
Cemetery woods, Madison, July 1905; campus, Madison, June 1909 
(Overton); Devil’s Lake, June 1909 (Harper); on the banks and beds 
of gullies in rocky ravines, Trumble’s woods, Mauston, June 1909 
(Dodge), Rehm vid.; Blue Mounds, August 1909. 
Pustularia Stevensoniana (Ellis) Rehm. Cf. Ascom. Lojk., p. 3. De¬ 
scription given in Rehm, Disc., p. 1019. 
This is a common form around Madison on rotten logs especially of 
poplar. Bresadola’s figures (Fungi Trid., pi. 190) of P. varia (Hedw.) 
Fr. f. terrestris, with the exception of the figure in the lower right 
hand corner, are excellent representations, so far as habit is concerned, 
of Wisconsin forms which I have included here. Maple Bluff, Madi¬ 
son, June 1903 (no. 343, R. A. and A. M. Harper), Rehm vid.; Nelson’s 
woods, August 1903; Cemetery woods, Madison, July 1905; Parfrey’s 
glen, September 1905; Blue Mounds, August 1903, 1904; Devil’s lake, 
July 1904, June 1909; Crandon, August 1905 (Neuman); Sturgeon 
Bay, August 1907 (R. Allen); Blueberry, September 1907; Milwaukee, 
October 1907; Dorward’s glen, June 1909; in lumber yards and cellars, 
June to August, Algoma, (Dodge), Rehm vid. 
Pustularia vesiculosa (Bull.) Rehm. 
“Covered celery fields,” Milwaukee, July 1905 (Wansok); Madison, 
June 1907, on horse dung; in pastured woods, Krohn’s Lake, Algoma, 
June (Dodge); on burned ground, Cemetery w'oods, Madison, May 
1909 (J. Dodge). Boudier, leones Myc., pi. 257, no. 62, represents ex¬ 
actly the external appearance of this last collection. Peziza umdrina 
Boud. is said to grow in burned places and is quite similar in its ex¬ 
ternal characters to those found here on burned ground. 
Tarzetta cinerascens Rehm. Ann. Myc., 2: 352, 1904. 
Apothecia gregarious, for the most part cyathiform, stipitate, but 
soon with the orbicular disk explanate, finally slightly convex, acutely 
margined, 0.5-1.5 cm. broad, stipe subcylindrical 1-3 mm. long, 0.5 
mm. thick, excipulum glabrous, parenchymatous at the base, yellowish, 
context prosenchymatous toward the margin, cinereous, drying yel- 
