rger nodules which are massed along the axis of the
cup to form the pseudo-columella here strongly developed. Mr. Lister
calls attention to these yellow flakes, and regards them as diagnostic.
European specimens show the capillitium yellow, sometimes throughout!
The nomenclature question is here somewhat difficult. Fries heads his
list of synonyms with _Peziza convivalis_ Batsch. Batsch simply
described Micheli's figure! Now there is nothing in Micheli's figure
(Pl. 86, Fig. 14) to enable one to say with certainty which craterium
Micheli had in mind, if craterium at all. Nor does Batsch help the
matter when he offers the description following: "Stipitata; acute
conica, patens; stipite subdistincto, lineari, brevi, valido. _Albicans.
In foliis hederae putridis._" (_Elenchus Fungorum_, Batsch, 1783, p.
121.) There is nothing definitive here but the one word "albicans"
quoted from Micheli. But this term is applicable the rather to _C.
minutum_, the cups of which whiten with weathering. It may be, as
insisted by Fries (_Syst. Myc._, III., p. 149), that Micheli drew
crateriums; but if so, we cannot determine which species.
The specific name here adopted was applied by Persoon probably to this
form; but Persoon likewise failed to distinguish the present species
from _C. minutum_ (see _Syn. Fung._, pp. 183, 184), and Fries, _op.
cit._, p. 153. Ditmar, _l. c._, leaves no doubt as to what he figures
and describes, and accordingly the name he first correctly uses is here
adopted.
Not common. New England, Pennsylvania, Ohio, North Carolina, Iowa,
Colorado, Washington, California; reported from Europe.
4. CRATERIUM CYLINDRICUM _Massee_.
PLATE XVI., Fig. 2.
1873. _Craterium minimum_ Berk. & C., _Grev._, II., p. 67.
1892. _Craterium cylindricum_ Massee, _Mon._, p. 268.
1894. _Craterium leucocephalum_ Ditm., List., _Myc._, p. 72, in part.
1899. _Craterium minimum_ Berk. & C., Macbr., _N. A. S._, p. 77.
1911. _Craterium leucocephalum_ var. _cylindricum_ List., _Mycetozoa,
2nd ed._, p. 97.
Sporangia closely gregarious, very small, .5 mu or less, slender,
cylindric, almost entirely white, stipitate, the peridium delicate,
transparent although calcareous nearly to the base, opening by a
dehiscence regularly circumscissile; stipe short, about one-third the
total height, clear orange-brown, somewhat furrowed, rising from an
indistinct hypothallus; capillitium very lax, physaroid, the calcareous
nodule
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