Bodge—Wisconsin Biscomycetes. 1049 
Lachnea scutellata (L.) Gill. 
Port Wing, August 1897 (Cheney); Florence, 1899 (Riley); Madi¬ 
son, June 1903 ( no. 334, Harper), Rehm via.; Elm Grove, August 
1903; Blue Mounds, September 1903, July 1907; Rock Cut, May 1905; 
Devil’s Lake, June 1905; Fluno’s bluff, Mauston, June 1909; Schmeil- 
ing’s grove, Algoma, July 1905, August 1909 (Dodge), Rehm via.; 
Crandon, August 1905 (Neuman). 
Lachnea setosa (Nees.) Phill. 
Blue Mounds, August 1903 (R. A. and A. M. Harper), Rehm via.; 
Blue Mounds, August 1906; Madison, Vilas’ woods, October 1903 (Har¬ 
per); Alaska, June 1905 (Dodge). 
Lachnea stercorea (Pers.) Gill. 
The characteristic stellate hairs on the apothecium are figured by 
Cooke, Mycog., pi. 38, fig. 147-148; Boudier, leones, pi. 384. On cow 
dung, Stewart’s pasture, Mauston, June 1909 (J. Dodge), Rehm via. 
Lachnea umbrata (Fr.) Phill. 
On black clay soil, Blahnik’s swamp, Algoma, August 1909 (Dodge), 
Rehm via. 
Lachnea nmbrorimi (Fr.) Gill. 
La Chapelle, July 1897 (Cheney); Blue Mounds, June 1903 (R. A. 
& A. M. Harper), Rehm via., September 1908; Devil’s Lake, July 
1903 (Harper), September 1904, June 1905, June 1907 Eagle Heights, 
October 1904 (Denniston); Sturgeon Bay, August 1906 (R. Allen & Joli- 
vette); Trumble’s ravine, Mauston, June 1909 (Dodge), Rehm via. 
Sarcoscypha albovillosa Rehm ( Ann. Myc., 2: 33, 1904). 
Apothecia scattered, at first cyathiform, then stipitate, 0.5 cm. high, 
disk scarlet, 7 mm. broad, stipe cylindrical, 1-2 mm. thick, the exter¬ 
ior covered with white, somewhat blunt, septate, hyaline hairs, 10 mic. 
at the basal expansion, 300x4—7 mic. Asci cylindrical, truncate at the 
apex, about 300x15 mic., 8-spored. Spores ellipsoid, with one large 
central oil globule, epispore hexagonally reticulate, hyaline, 18—21x10— 
12 mic., monostichous. Paraphyses filiform, apex somewhat curved, 
with golden oil drops, colored blue by iodine, 3 mic., expanding to 5 
mic. at the apex On \the ground, Vilas’s woods, Madison, (Harper). 
“Near Aleuria RUenana Fckl., Symb. Myc., p. 325, pi. 5, fig. 1; Peziza 
splenaens Quel., Champ. Jura, p. 388, pi. 5, fig. 4.” 
The Wisconsin material agrees with what Boudier, (leones Myc., 
pi. 315), calls Peziza rutilans and is much nearer that species than it 
