ISI 
CEdocephalum glomerulosum Sacc. Syll. Fung. Vol. IV., p. 47. 
Tufts gregarious, rose-coloured; fertile hyphae + mm. long, septate, 
cylindrical, slightly attenuated upwards, the apex terminating in a 
verrucose vesicle ; conidia large, ovate 25 x 12 , pallid rose-coloured, 
with an apiculate base, forming a subsphaerical head. 
Growing on Tubercularia and Sclerotia on branches of trees. 
Found in Mulgrave Woods, Yorkshire, September 1900. Mr. C. 
Crossland. 
Botrytis dichotoma Corda. Ic. Fung. I., p. 18, fig. 244. 
Tufts minute, fugacious, whitish cinnamon coloured; fertile 
hyphae erect, dichotomous, spreading, terminal branches, obtuse 
slightly curved inwards, colourless; spores numerous spherical, 
cinnamon-yellow. 
Found by Mr. Greenwood Pim on a decaying stem in his garden, 
Co. Dublin. Irish Nat., p. 98, 1900. 
It is to be regretted that Mr. Greenwood Pim did not complete 
the defective description of this interesting fungus. 
Fusicladium pyrinum Fckl. Symb. Myc., p. 357. 
Forming effused, velvety, rusty-brown spots ; mycelium spreading 
_ just under the cuticle, finally penetrating and blackening the tissue ; 
conidiophores upright, short, nodulose, irregular in form, denticulate 
at the tips, usually about 20 in height; conidia ovate-fusiform, 
15-30 ys by about 7 pw, one-celled, brownish-yellow, smooth, solitary, 
or two or more on the same conidiophore. 
Parasitic on the leaves and fruit of Pyrus communis, Worcester and 
Hereford. June 1900. Journal of the Royal Microscopical Society, 
1900, p. 424. 
Helminthosporium gramineum Rabenh. Herb. Myc. 332. 
Forming elongate pallid spots with a brown edge, fertile hyphae 
solitary or in clusters, erect, often angularly bent, brown; conidia 
yellowish-brown, straight, cylindrical, 1-5 septate, 50-100 x 14-20 p. 
On leaves of barley, from Hertfordshire. 
Aleuria albida Gillet. Discom. p. 36, with plate. 
Ascophores 2-3 cm. diam., disc concave, stem short, even, margin 
spreading, fleshy-cartilaginous (not fragile), pale wax yellow, exterior 
albo-furfuraceous of little heaps of loose, sub-globose, thick-walled 
detached cells ; asci cylindrical, apex sub-truncate 200-220 x 9-10 p, 
spores occupying less than half the space when mature, obliquely 
uniseriate, elliptic, hyaline, smooth, 10-12 x 7-8 w; paraphyses linear, 
or apex slightly swollen, septate, longer than the asci. 
Warehouse yard, Halifax, June 1895, and Sept. 1896. Collected 
by Mr. H. T. Soppitt. Mr. Crossland. Naturalist, Jan. 1900, p. 7. 
c 
