172 



GEOGRAPHIC DISTRIBUTION 



Waite, G. P. Clinton and others, have made more or less exten- 

 sive collections. A considerable amount of this material is pre- 

 served in the herbarium of the Illinois State University at 

 Champaign, which is the only collection in the state. Besides a 

 few publications from the experiment station and in horticultural 

 reports on economic species, the publications relating to the state 

 flora are not extensive : 



Brendel. Flora Peoriana. Termeszetrajzi Fiizetek, 5 : 299- 

 405. 1882. (Separate, pp. 107.) 



Includes list of thirty-nine species of fungi. 



Burrill. The Uredineae of Illinois. A list of the species. 

 Proc. Am. Soc. Micros. 8; 93-102. 1885. (Separate, pp. 10.) 



A list of species of Illinois rusts. 



Burrill & Earle. Parasitic Fungi of Illinois, Part II. Bull. 

 Illinois State Lab. Nat. Hist. 2 : 387-432. 1887. 



Burrill [& Seymour]. Parasitic Fungi of Illinois, Part I. 

 Uredineae. Bull. Illinois State Lab. Nat. Hist. 2 : 141-255. 

 1885. 



Description of the Illinois rusts. 



New Species of Uredineae. Bot. Gaz. 9: 187-191. 



1884. 



Descriptions of thirteen Illinois species. 



Pammel. Some Mildews of Illinois. Jour. Mycol. 4 : 36-38 

 1888. 



Indiana. 



Comparatively little, also, is known of the fungus flora of this 

 state. Dr. J. N. Rose made a study of some of the mildews in 

 1886, and several studies on various parasitic forms were made by 

 H. L. Bolley, who collected in the vicinity of Lafayette. In 1893 a 

 state biological survey was organized and the present writer made 

 two reports while connected with the survey. 



The material collected in this period is in part in the herbarium 

 of the writer, and in part in the collection of the Division of Veg- 

 etable Pathology at Washington, which had employed E. M. Fisher 

 to collect parasitic fungi in Indiana. Other collections have 

 been made by E. W. Olive, Miss Lillian Snyder, and by Dr. J. 

 C. Arthur, who has had charge of the cryptogamic portion of the 

 survey since 1895. Perhaps 600 species have been reported from 



