128 
JOURNAL OF MYCOLOGY. 
[VOL. II, 
122. ScHizopiiYLLUM COMMUNE, Fi”—xlbuiidant here and all over 
the world. 
128. Cercospora ros.ecola, Pass.—Abundant on leaves of liuhiis 
villosus. 
124. Cercospora Smilacis, Thm.—On leaves of ISmilax. 
125. Panus stypticus, Fr.—Abundant on dead fallen wood. 
126. Panus dorsalis, 13osc.— Only seen on decayed pine logs 
occasionally. 
127. Trametes serpens, Fr.—1 found this elegant species mostly 
on dead limbs of Carpinus not yet fallen, and not abundantly. There 
seem to be forms which might be referred to T. rigida, T. sepium and also 
to P. Stevensii. A well-marked variety occurs sparingly on Vaccinum. 
128. Trametes hydnoides, Fr.— A very large species, in some 
respects resembling Polyporus licnoides, but covered with long hairs on 
upper side. Very scarce. 
129. Trametes serialis, Fh —Very rare. Beautiful. Some re¬ 
sembles P. niphodes, but pores smaller ; border sometimes lilac-tinged. 
130. Phlebia MERiSMoiDES. Fr.-On rotten limbs. Smooth form. 
181. Zy^godesmus indigoferus, E. & E.—On the under side of 
decayed bark. Common. 
132. Rosellinia aquila, Fr.—Abundant on fallen hickory limbs. 
133. Rosellinia mamm^:formis, Pers.—On decayed logs. Not 
abundant. 
134. Diatrype stigma, Iloffm.—Very common on decayed logs. 
Much like D. platystoma^ but the latter has more prominent ostiola. 
135. Diatrype tenuissima, Cooke.—On dead hickory limbs. Very 
abundant. Might be mistaken for Eutypa. 
136. Diatry’Pe tremellopiiora. Ell.—Very marked and different 
from P. disciformis, Fr., vide, Ellis, in American Naturalist. 
NEW FUNGI. 
. 1 . li. KLLIS AND DH. OKO. MAKTIN. 
Asterina purpurea, E. & M.—On living leaves of Oka Americana. 
near Jacksonville, Florida, winter of 1886. W. W. Calkins. Perithecia 
hypophyllous, convex-scutellate, scattered or gregarious, often collected 
along the midrib towards the base of the leaf, subastomous, of radiate- 
cellular structure, 130—150 y in diam., margined with a narrow fringe of 
blanched purplish-black hyphse, closely appressed to the surface of the 
leaf, which is stained of a reddish-purple tint for a little distance around : 
asci obovate, 30—35 x 18—22 y, 8-spored ; sporidia crowded, ovate-oblong 
or oblong-elliptical, 12—16 x 5—6/-t, hyaline, with the endochrome three 
times divided and often one of the cells with an imperfect longitudinal 
division. 
