MISSOURI i8i 



Mississippi. 



All that is known of Mississippi fungi is due to Professors Tracy 

 and Earle who have collected extensively the parasitic species in 

 various parts of the state, notably the region of the gulf. The in- 

 teresting forms of the higher fungi everywhere abundant have 

 scarcely been touched. The following papers comprise some of 

 the results of the work already accomplished. 



Tracy and Earle. New Species of Parasitic Fungi. Bull. Tor- 

 rey Bot. Club, 22: 174-179. 1895. 



Includes twenty-one Mississippi species. 



New Species of Fungi from Mississippi. Bull. Torrey 



Bot. Club, 23: 205-211. 1896. 



Descriptions of twenty species. 



Mississippi Fungi. Bull. Miss. Agric. Exper. Sta. 34: 



1895. 



List of 353 species, largely parasitic. 



Mississippi Fungi. Bull. Miss. Agric. Exper. Sta. 38: 



1896. 



An additional list of eighty-five species. 



Missouri. 



Our knowledge of the fungi of this state is due partly to Pro- 

 fessor Tracy, who held a position for a time in the State Univer- 

 sity, to his student, B. T. Galloway, now Chief of the Division of 

 Vegetable Pathology at Washington, and Rev. C. H. Demetrio, 

 who collected in the eighties for Dr. Winter and later for Mr. Ellis. 

 Only a few papers have appeared, the other Missouri species being 

 described in scattered places. Later collections have been made 

 by the workers at the Missouri Botanic Garden at St. Louis. "^ 



Winter. Fungi novi Missourienses. Jour. Mycol. i: 121- 126. 

 1885. 



Descriptions of twenty -five new species. 



Winter & Demetrio. Beitrage zur Pilzflora von Missouri. 

 Hedwigia, 24 : 177-214. 1885. (Separate, pp. 37.) 



Galloway. Parasitic Fungi of Missouri. Bot. Gaz. 13 : 213. 

 1888. 



Summary of 362 species collected. 



* The herbarium of this institution contains the fungus collection of its 

 director, Dr. Trelease, and a considerable number of exsiccati. 



