LOUISIANA 



177 



Walters. Erysipheae of Riley County, Kansas. Trans. Kan- 

 sas Acad. Sci. 14: 200-204. PL /, 2. 1896. 

 Notes on sixteen species. 



Kentucky. 



Very little is known of the fungus flora of this State and prob- 

 ably not more than one hundred species have been reported. 

 Mr. Morgan made a single visit to the southern part of the State 

 and reported a series of interesting forms. Miss S. F. Price has 

 also collected a few species. The local literature, except inci- 

 dental references to parasitic species issued from the experiment 

 station, is confined to the two following papers : 



Ellis. New Fungi. Am. Nat. 16 : 810, 81 1. 1882. 



Describes seven species from Kentucky. 



Morgan. Kentucky Fungi. Bot. Gaz. 8: 156, 157. 1883. 



List of twenty-seven species of fungi. 



Louisiana. 



With the exception of a few species collected by Hale men- 

 tioned in Berkeley's Notices of North American Fungi, and a few 

 reported in the early seventies by Featherman, the greater part of 

 the fungi known from this state are those collected by Father 

 Langlois. These are mainly represented by duplicates in the 

 Ellis Herbarium. The swamps of the state ought to furnish a 

 rich field for fungi of the larger sorts, and the diverse floral cover- 

 ing the hosts for an extensive parasitic series. 



Ellis & Everhart. New Species of Fungi from various Locali- 

 ties. Jour. Mycol. 2 : 37-42, 87-89, 99-104. 1886. 



Descriptions of fifty-four species mostly from Louisiana. 



Ellis & Langlois. New Species of Louisiana Fungi. Jour. 

 Mycol. 6: 35-37. 1890. 



Descriptions of eighteen species. 



Featherman. Report of Botanical Survey of Southern and 

 Central Louisiana, 1871. 



Contains among other plants, a list of twenty-one species of 

 fungi. 



Third annual Report of the Botanical Survey of South- 

 west Louisiana, 1872. 

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