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GEOGRAPHIC DISTRIBUTION 



Macbride. A new Physarum from Colorado. Bull. Lab. Nat. 

 Hist. State Univ. Iowa 3 : 390. 1893. 



Peck. Colorado Fungi. Bot. Gaz. 3 : 34, 35. 1878. 



Descriptions of eleven species. 



Porter & Coulter. Synopsis of the Flora of Colorado. Misc. 

 Pub. U. S. Geol. Surv. of the Territories, 4 : 1-180. 1874. 



Includes list of eight fungi by C. H. Peck, with descriptions of 

 two new species. 



Connecticut. 



Some material was early collected by Charles Wright and later 

 collections have been made by Thaxter, Setchell, Sturgis, and by 

 the writer, who has spent several summers in the northwestern 

 portion of the state. Except for the publications of the state ex- 

 periment station, which, in the main, relate to species injurious 

 to cultivated plants, scarcely anything has been published on the 

 local fungus flora. 



Delaware. 



The flora of this State has been extensively collected by A. Com- 

 mons, who has in manuscript a long list of Delaware species, and 

 a considerable amount has been issued by Professor Chester in 

 the publications of the experiment station, relating especially to 

 the species injurious to fruit trees. Duplicates of most of Com- 

 mons' collections are in the Ellis herbarium. 



Florida. 



Collections in this State have been made by Martin, Ravenel, 

 Calkins, Webber, Swingle, Nash, Rolfs, and the writer. The 

 collections of Webber and Swingle are mainly in the collection of 

 the Division of Vegetable Pathology at Washington.* The others, 

 either in the originals or duplicates, are mainly in the collections 

 of the New York Botanical Garden. Several papers bear directly 

 on the Florida flora and numerous species appear singly in sepa- 

 rate publications : 



Calkins. Notes on Florida Fungi. Jour. Mycol. 2: 6, 7, 42, 

 53, 54, 70, 80, 81, 89-91, 104-106, 126-128. 1886. 



'" This collection should be mentioned among the prominent herbaria 

 of the country. It contains many foreign exsiccati and is particularly full 

 in species of parasitic fungi. 



