il f
TOETTLACEI.
G YiaNOSFORIUM, Corda.
Mycelium very obscure ;
spores unicellular, arising apparently
from tbe matrix.—
Berh. Outl.p. 328.
( F i g .m )
1 4 5 3 . G ym no sp o zium a zu n d in is . Corda, “ Eeed Gym-
nosporium.”
Immersed, tben naked, livid ; spores oval, lens-shaped, or
rounded, margin depressed, diaphanous, livid-yellow; nuoletts
obovate or globose, brownisb.— Gorda. Icon, i i . / . l . Berh. Outl.
p . 328. Corda. Anl. t. B .f . 3. no. 8-11. Curr. Micr. Journ. 1857,
t. 8 ,/. 85-37.
On reeds. ( F f - 197•)
Gen. 1 6 3 .
Fig, 198.
AC ALYPTOSPORA, Desm.
Spores epiphytal, superficially innate,
didymous, stipitate, not collected
in heaps; stroma none.—
Desm. Ann. S .N . 1848, x .p . 342.
{Fig. 198.)
By some authors this genns is included
in Pucdnicei ; it is clearly intermediate between
Torulacei and Puccinicei,^ hut, as it
appears to us, more closely allied to the
former than the latter.
1 4 5 4 . A c a ly p to sp o za n e z v is e q u ia . Pesm.' “ Nerve
Acalyptospora.”
On both surfaces ; spores seriate along tbe nerves, red-brown,
shining, ovoid or oblong, obtuse, scarcely constricted; epispore
smootb ; stem thick, ratber long, fragile, colourless.—
Ann. Sc.Nat. 1848, x.)). 343. Ann. N .H . no. 1043.
On living and dead leaves of elm.
Looking like a short, ohtuse Puccinia with one to three septa, and a short
pellucid stem. In every stage of growth free. I t closely rese^Wes^a^gland.
—B.&Br. ^
d