I7 8 GEOGRAPHIC DISTRIBUTION 



Contains among other plants, a list of sixty-eight species of 

 fungi. 



Langlois. Catalogue provisoire des Plantes Phanerogames et 

 Cryptogames de la Basse Louisiane. 1887. 



A list of some 644 fungi collected in the state, 



Maine. 



A few fungi were collected early by Rev. Joseph Blake and E. 

 C. Bolles ; most of the later collections have been made by Pro- 

 fessor F. L. Harvey and his students. The unexplored portions 

 of Maine largely covered with forests ought to yield a rich harvest 

 when properly explored. 



Cooke. Decades of Maine Fungi. Proc. Portland Soc. Nat. 

 Hist, j: 179-185. /. g. 1862. 



Harvey. Contribution to the Pyrenomycetes of Maine, I. 

 Bull. Torrey Bot. Club, 23: 50-58. 1896. 



List of 122 species. 



Contribution to a Knowledge of the Myxomycetes of 

 Maine. Bull. Torrey Bot. Club, 23: 307-314. 1896 ; 24: 65- 

 71. 1897; 26: 320-324. 1899. 



Notes on 132 species found in the state. 



Contribution to the Gastromycetes of Maine. Bull. 

 Torrey Bot. Club, 24: 71-74. 1897. 



Notes on twenty-nine species. 



Harvey[& Knight. Cryptogams collected near Jackman, Maine, 

 August, 1895. Bull. Torrey Bot. Club, 24: 340-342. 1897. 



Includes list of fifty-one fungi. 



Maryland. 



Except a few notes on economic species and miscellaneous col- 

 lections made by the Washington botanists in the vicinity of that 

 city, the principal knowledge of the fungi of this State is due to 

 the work of Miss Banning, who has painted a large series and 

 presented them to the New York state collection at Albany. 



Banning. Notes on the Fungi of Maryland. Field and 

 Forest, 3: 42-4?. 59~ 6 3- 1877. 



Notes on Fungi. Bot. Gaz. 5: 5-10, 23. 1880. 



New Species of Fungi found in Maryland. Bot. Gaz. 

 6: 165, 166. 1881, 



