1 84 GEOGRAPHIC DISTRIBUTIOX 



Includes a very full list of the fungi. 



Appendix to the Catalogue of the Flora of Nebraska. 

 Trans. St. Louis Acad. Sci. 6: 1-47. 1892. 

 Includes numerous species of fungi. 



Nevada. 



Except a few species collected by H. W. Harkness in his Cali- 

 fornian work we know of no collections of fungi having been made 

 in Nevada. It is therefore practically a terra incognita, so far as 

 fungi are concerned. 



New Hampshire. 



Professor Farlow has spent many summers in the White Moun- 

 tain region and numerous other botanists have made longer or 

 shorter visits to the same region, but while many species have 

 been published from this region in our scattered literature, and 

 abundance of material exists in many collections, we can refer to 

 only a single paper bearing specifically on the flora of the state. 



Farlow. Notes on the Cryptogamic Flora of the White Moun- 

 tains. Appalachia, 3: 232-251. 1884. 



New Jersey. 



The study of New Jersey fungi was commenced by Mr. Ellis 

 in the seventies, and most that has been accomplished has been 

 due to his labors. The Philadelphia botanists, W. C. Stevenson, 

 Rex, and others have collected in the vicinity of that city ; the 

 New York city botanists, notably Gerard, have collected over the 

 areas adjacent to the Hudson river, and the botanist of the state 

 Experiment Station, Dr. Halsted, has collected largely, especially 

 among parasitic species, in which he was at one time assisted by 

 F. L. Stevens. But the greater part of the exploration has been 

 made by J. B. Ellis, and in addition to the following special local 

 literature, numerous species are scattered through Mr. Ellis' 

 writings, and many species distributed in his North American 

 fungi. were collected in the vicinity of his home. Probably two 

 thousand or more species are known from the state. 



Britton. Catalogue of Plants found in New Jersey. Report of 

 'State Geologist, 2: 27-642. 1889. 



