Introduction to the study of fungi : their organography, classification, and distribution for the use of collectors . d species the1 spon la. essentials are the same — an erect poly- morphous stroma, white and corky within, and a periphericalseries of immersed, or semi-immersed, perithecia, enclosingbrown continuous or unicellular sporidia. At first, andbefore the perithecia are fully formed, the apex of thestroma is usually pruinose, with pulverulent minute colourlessconidia. The species, with few exceptions, grow on rottenwood, in damp situations, in almost all the countries of theworld, whe


Introduction to the study of fungi : their organography, classification, and distribution for the use of collectors . d species the1 spon la. essentials are the same — an erect poly- morphous stroma, white and corky within, and a periphericalseries of immersed, or semi-immersed, perithecia, enclosingbrown continuous or unicellular sporidia. At first, andbefore the perithecia are fully formed, the apex of thestroma is usually pruinose, with pulverulent minute colourlessconidia. The species, with few exceptions, grow on rottenwood, in damp situations, in almost all the countries of theworld, wherever a timber tree can flourish and decay. InThamnomyces the stroma is reduced to long black threads,upon which the perithecia are clustered or scattered. InRhopalopsis the clubs are densely caespitose, with a short stem,or crowded upon a very much branched common stroma. InPoronia the stroma is almost pezizaeform (Fig. 96), with theperithecia immersed in the disc, whilst in Camillea the stromais subcylindrical and truncate, with the perithecia verticallyimmersed about the apex. In Daldinia the stroma is sub-. CA PS ULA R FUNGI—P YRENOM YCE TES 207


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Keywords: ., bookauthorcookemcm, bookcentury1800, bookdecade1890, bookyear1895