ZOOLOGY AND BOTANY, MICROSCOPY, ETC. 217 



KiiiEGEB, W. — Zwei neue sachsische Pilze. (Two new Saxon fungi.) 

 [Two species of microfungi are described.] 



Ann. Mycol., vii. (1909) p. 542. 



Lindner, P. — Catenularia fuliginea (Saito) ein Schulbeispiel zur Demonstration 

 der Sporenkettenbildung. Catenularia fuliginea, a school example for demon- 

 stration of spore-chain formation.) 



[Photographic figures, and notes as to the formation of the spores.] 



Bcr. Dcutsch. Bot. Gesell, xxvii. (1909) pp. 530-6 (1 pi.). 



Maestro, Cesar Sobrado — Datos para la Flora Micologica gallega. 

 [A list of fungi collected in November, mostly in Cataluna.] 



Bol. Hist. Nat., ix. (1909) pp. 491-4. 



Magnus, P. — Beitrag zur Kenntnis der parasitischen Pilze Agyptens. (Contri- 

 bution to the knowledge of the parasitic fungi of Egypt.) 



[The species described are chiefly Uredinea? ; there are no new species.] 



Hedivigia, xlix. (1909) pp. 93-9 (1 pi.). 

 Masse e, G. — Fungi exotici. IX. 



[Sixteen new species of Boletus are described, and Strobilomyccs paradoxus 

 sp. n., from Singapore.] Bull. Roy. Bot. Gard. Keiu, 1909, pp. 204-9. 



Moesz, G. — Gombak Budapestrb'l es kornyekerb'l. (I. Kdzlemenig.) (Fungi from 

 Budapest and the neighbourhood (first contribution). 

 [140 species are listed ; a number are new to science.] 



Beibl. Bot. Kozemenyek, 1909, heft 4-5, 31 pp. (1 pi.). 

 See also Ann. Mycol., vii. (1909) p. 560. 



M off att, W. S.— The Higher Fungi of the Chicago Region. Part I. The Hy- 

 menomycetes. 



[A large number of known species were collected.] 



Chicago Acad. Sci. Nat. Hist. Survey, Bull. No. vii. (1909) 

 pp. 1-156 (24 pis.) See also Ann. Mycol, vii. (1909) p. 560. 



N oel li, A. — Alcuni micromiceti dell' Ossola. (Some Micromycetes from Ossola.) 

 [A list of species, with notes on the development of many of the forms ; there 

 is one new species, Mollisia fagicola.~] 



Malpighia, xxiii. (1909) pp. 171-84 (lfig.). 



Patouillard, N. — Additions au catalogue des Champignons de la Tunisie. 



[Fungi observed or collected in Tunis and Algiers, including many rare and 

 some new species.] 



C.R. Congr. Soc. Sav., 1908 (Paris, 1909) pp. 242-56. 

 See also Ann. Mycol., vii. (1909) pp. 560-1. 

 Fetch, T. — New Ceylon Fungi. 



[A number of new fungi and two new Mycetozoa are described.] 



Ann. Roy. Bot. Gard. Peradcniya, Colombo, iv. (1909) pp. 299-307. 



See also Bot. Centralbl., cxiii. (1910) p. 19. 

 Rehm, H. — Ascomycetes exs. Fasc. 45. 



[Nos. Ib51 to 1S75 are listed ; several of them are new to science.] 



Ann. Mycol., vii. (1909) pp. 524-30. 

 ,, Ascomycetes novi. 



[Fifteen new species are described from North America ; from 

 South America there are nineteen, with one new genus, Phseo- 

 fabrsea.'] Tom. cit., pp. 531-42. 



Bitter, G. — Ammoniak und Nitrate als Stickstoffquelle fur Schimmelpilze. (Am- 

 monia and nitrates as a source of nitrogen for filamentous fungi.) 



[Culture experiments were made with a series of fungi, and results given. J 



Ber. Deutsch. Bot. Gesell, xxvii. (1910) pp. 582-88. 



Schroeder, Ec. Aug. — Ueber die Craterellus-Arten im allgemeinen und den 

 Craterellus nucleatus sp. n. im besonderen. (On Craterellus species generally 

 and on C. nucleatus in particular.) 



[The new species is good for eating ; it has been carefully described.] 



Centralbl Ges. Forstw., xxxiv. (1908) pp. 396-404 (1 fig.). 

 See also Hedivigia, Beibl. xlix. (1909) p. 64. 



April 20th, 1910 q 



