1 88 GEOGRAPHIC DISTRIBUTION 

 Synopsis of New York Uncinulae. Trans. Albany 



Inst. 7: 213-217. PI. 1872. 



Descriptions of new Species of Fungi. Bull. Buffalo 



Soc. Xat. Hist, i: 41-72. 1873. 



Descriptions of 142 species. 



North Carolina. 



As already noted a large amount of the early study of American 

 fungfi was undertaken in this state bv Schweinitz and Curtis. 

 Some species have been collected more recently by Professor G. F. 

 Atkinson and Gerald McCarthy, but beyond Curtis' long Ust of 

 nearly twenty-five hundred species, we know comparatively little 

 of the fungus flora of the state. With the diversity of elevation, 

 floral covering and chmate possessed by the state careful explo- 

 ration ought to increase this list greatly. 



Curtis. Geological and Natural History Survey of North Caro- 

 hna. Part 3, Botany. Pp. 156, Raleigh, 1867. 



Contains a list of 2392 fungi growing in the state, pp. 83-154. 



Schweinitz. Synopsis fungorum Carolinae Superioris. Schrif- 

 ten der naturf. Gesell. Leipzig, i: 20-131. PL i, 2. 1822, 

 (Also separate, pp. 105.) 



Enumeration of 1373 species, many of them new. 



Synopsis fungorum in America Boreali media degen- 



tium. Trans. Am. Phil. Soc. 4: 141-316. PL ig. 1834. 



Includes 3098 species of fungi, many from North Carolina, in- 

 cluding manv described as new. 



North Dakota. 



Beyond some work chiefly on species of economic importance 

 by Professor BoUey at the state experiment station at Fargo, 

 comparatively little field work has been done in the state. A. B. 

 Seymour collected a number of species on his journey in 1884 

 and his paper which belongs equally to Montana is the only one 

 we can cite as relating specially to the local flora : 



Seymour. List of Fungi collected in 1884 along the Northern 

 Pacific Railroad. Proc. Boston Soc. Nat. Hist, 24: 1 82-191. 

 1889. 



Includes notes on numerous North Dakota species. 



