CRYPTOGAMIA. FUNGI. Peziza. 
303 
P. calycifor'mis. Glass-shaped, disk of the pileus tawny with a white 
border; stem white, thick. 
Hedw. Stirp. ii. 22. B—Batsch 135. 
Pileus at first convex, with age turning up. 
(White-bordered Cupping Peziza. E.) On the trunks of trees, and on 
the fallen branches of firs. Autumn, 
P. trunca'ta. White, conical, lopped, bordered. 
Stem Scarcely distinct from the pileus. Pileus white, slightly concave, bor¬ 
dered, not dotted. 
(Truncated Peziza. E.) At Packington, growing on moss. Autumn. 
I have seen a beautiful drawing of another of this kind gathered at the same 
place, but later in the year, in which the pileus had attained a yellow 
colour, and the border was studded with brown specks. I apprehend this 
to be the same plant in its more mature state, and the brown specks to be 
the fructification. 
P. acetabulum. Stem short: pileus glass-shaped: angular on the 
outside ; with branching veins. 
Bull. 485. 4—( Sowerby 59. E.)— Vaill. 13.1— Mich. 86. 1. 
The largest of the genus; thin, brittle, smooth, transparent as wax. Stem. 
woody, brown, short, branching up the base of the pileus, solid, nearly 
half an inch long, and a quarter of an inch diameter. Pileus two or two 
inches and a half over, greatly cupped so as to resemble a goblet or bowl, 
three quarters to an inch and a quarter deep, waved at the edge, red 
brown within, pale brown without. Sometimes without the angular 
branchings from the root. Bulliard. Nearly allied to P. cochleata, the 
external veins and the regular form constituting the principal differences. 
It grows near Bungay, but is not so uncommon as the latter species. Mr. 
Woodward. 
(Veined Cup Peziza. E.) On decayed wood in hedges and woods, rare. 
(On the earth. Sowerby. E.) Sept.—May. 
P. stipita'ta. (Huds.) Stem cylindrical; pileus slightly concave; 
brown; hairy on the outside. 
( Grev. Scot. Crypt. 70. E.)— Sowerby 38— Bolt. 96— (FI. Dan . 1200. 
2. E.)— Schcejf. 167— Bull. 196. 
(Pileus hemispherical, (concave. E.) slightly hairy and verrucose, ash- 
coloured ; hymenium mouse-coloured, at length pale; stipes very long, 
incrassated below. Grev. E.) 
Bolton’s figure well as to its habit, but the hairiness on the outside 
not expressed. Mr. Woodward. Stem solid, brown, two to three inches 
high : thick as a crow or a goose quill, rather tapering upwards. Pileus 
thin, brittle, semi-transparent, brown, gently concave, woolly on the out¬ 
side, one to two inches over. 
(Hairy Peziza. P. stipitata. Huds. Bull. Sowerby. Willd. Helvella 
hispida Schseff. Bolt. P. Macropus. Pers. Grev. E.) Moist woods near 
Guildford. Huds. Woods below Highfield, three miles from Halifax. 
Bolt. Sept. 
P. tubero'sa. (Dicks.) Stem growing at the base to a blackish fun¬ 
gous tuberous substance : pileus nearly bell-shaped, brown with¬ 
out, paler within. 
