lyS 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, i: 179-185. /. p. 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 



IMaine. 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 ]\Iiss 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: 42-47, 59-63- 1877. 



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



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



6: 165, 166, 1881, 



