h 



145 



Nephrodhmi myriolepis, Acrostkhiim Eggcrsii and Lygodium 

 gracile are here described. 



Doassania, Cornu.— Revision of the Genus.—], B. De TonI 

 (Journ. Mycol., iv., pp. 13-19.) 

 Eleven species are recognized, five of them American. 



Flora Peoriana.~F rederick Brendel. (8vo, pp. 89, Peoria, 1 887.) 

 This is a very interesting essay on the results of thirty-five 

 ( years' observation on the vegetation of an area of about three 



f hundred square miles. It contains, besides the enumeration of 



835 Phanerogams and Pteridophytes, partial lists of Bryophytes 

 and Thallophytes, accounts of the geographical distribution of 



I 



the plants, a list of Illinois plants not found at Peoria, and much 

 other valuable information. 



Forest Trees of the far Northwest — Geo. M. Dawson. (Garden 

 and Forest, ?., pp. 58, 59.) 



L 



Forests of the South— The hard wood.— Karl Mohr. (Garden 

 and Forest, i.. pp. 34, 35.) 



Forests of Vancouver Island — John Macoun. (Garden and For- 

 est, i., pp. 46, 47.) 



Fungi from Western Kansas. — Notes on. — W. T. Swingle. (Journ, 



Mycol., iv., pp. 27-29.) A 

 Bartholomew in Rooks County. 



Fungi, Kajisas Paraxitir 



i bvM 



of together with their 



Host Plants. — W. A. Kellerman and M. A. Carleton. (Trans. 

 Kansas Acad. Sci., x., pp. SS-gg\ one plate.) 

 Two hundred and sixty-six species are enumerated ; the 

 spores of the PucctnicB are figured. 



Fungi—New Kansas.—]. B. Ellis and W. A. Kellerman. (Journ. 



Mycol., iv., pp. 26, 27.) 



Six new species in Vermicularia, ^cidium, Phleospora, 

 Septoria and Phyllosticta. 



Fungi ^ North American — Index of Habitats Centuries, XI to XX. 

 Compiled and published by W. C. Stevenson, Jr. pp. 4. 



Fungi^ Nova Scotian. — Additions to the List of—]. Somers. 

 (Proc. and Trans. Nova Scotian Inst, Nat. Sci., vii., pp. 18, 19.) 



1 



