108 
Coniothyrium ribicolum P. Brun. Act. Soc. Linn. Bordeaux 1808, 
p. 14. 
Perithecia globose, subglobose or globose-conical, black : 
spores subglobose or subovoid, sooty-brown, simple, rarely 1-2 
guttulate, 3-4 x 2p. 
On dead branches of Ribes nigrum. 
The specimens collected by Mr. Rea on the 7th of June, 1906, 
in the garden of The Manor House Farm, Sheriff's Lench, Wor- 
cestershire, were growing on the twigs of Rzbes Grossularia and 
causing very great damage to the trees. The perithecia were 
developed below the epidermis, they are subglobose, more broad 
than deep, measuring about 140x 80pu. The spores are rather 
elliptical, broad at the ends, 4-6 x 2p. The differences from the 
type are too slight to justify the making of a new species. 
Cudonta confusa Bres. Fung. Trid. vol. IL, p. 67, pl. 179 and see 
pl. 15 hereof. 
Pileus fleshy, convex, often depressed at the centre, rugulose, 
margin involute, viscid, soon dry, at first pale cinnamon, then 
reddish brown or rufous, 7-12 mm. broad, covered with distant, 
radiating folds underneath. Stem stuffed then hollow, puz/- 
verudent, round, at length compressed towards the base, of the 
same colour as the pileus but becoming fuscous at the base with 
age, 2-3 cm. long, 1-2 mm. thick. Asci spindle or club-shaped, 
stalked 110-120 x 11-12p. Paraphyses thread-shaped, curved at 
the apex, 120-130x 2p. Ascospores crowded together, needle 
shaped, hyaline, multiguttulate, at length pseudo-septate, 30-35 
xX 2-2°Sp. 
In a broken circle under beeches near Tsuga Canadensis, The 
Hermitage, Dunkeld, Perthshire, 25th September, 1900, Mr. 
C. McIntosh. 
Easily distinguished from Cudonia circinans (Pers.) EpeDy 
the darker and more highly coloured pileus, the pulverulent 
stem which is generally sulcate in c¢rc7nans and its smaller size. 
Lachnea cinnabarina (Schw.) Mass. and Cross. 
On dry muddy deposits from old dye tanks, Hebden Bridge, 
September, 1905. Crossland and Needham. Naturalist, Jan., 
1906, p. 8. 
Lachnea gilva (Boud.) Sacc. Syl. 
On sandy ground, among moss, river side, Hebden oe 
September, 1905. Crossland and Needham, Loc. cit. pp. 9 
