200 GEOGRAPHIC DISTRIBUTION 



Cooke. Some exotic Fungi. Grevillea, 17 : 59-60. 1889. 

 Descriptions of fi\"e new species. 



Ellis & Kelsey. New West Indian Fungi. Bull, Torrey Bot. 

 Club, 24 : 207-209. 1897. 



Descriptions of six species from St. Croix, 



Hennings. Fungi jamaicenses. Hedwigia, 37: 277-282. 1898. 

 Thirty-three species, twelve new. 



v^ Hitchcock. List of Cryptogams collected in the Bahamas, 

 Jamaica and Grand Cayman. Rep. Mo. Bot. Card, g: 111-120. 

 1898. 



Thirty-one species mentioned, nine new. 



^ Massee. Some West Indian Fungi. Jour. Bot. 30: 161-164, 

 196-198. PL 321-323, 323. 1892. 



List of ninety-one species including eighteen species new. 

 Montagne. Troisieme centurie de Plantes cellulaires exotiques 

 ^ nouvelles. Fungi Cul3ensis, I. Ann. Sc. Nat. II. 17: 1 19-128. 

 1842. 



Forty new species from Cuba. 



^^ Rostrup. In Borgesen og Paulsen : Om Vegetation paa de 

 danskvestindiske Oer. Bot. Tidsskr. 22: 110-112, 1898. 

 List of thirty-one species from the Danish West Indies, 

 ^ Roussel. Enumeration des Champignons recoltes par M. T. 

 Husnot aux Antilles fran^aises en 1868. Bull, Soc. Linn. Norm. 

 Caen. II. 4: 217-225. 1868-9. 

 Y Sagra. Icones plantarum in Flora Cubana. Folio, Paris, 1863. 

 List of 116 species of fungi; pp, 47, 48 and plates 1 1- 17 illustrate 

 Cuban species. 



Swartz. Flora Indiae Occidentalis. 3: 1920-1939. 1806. 

 Includes nineteen species of fungi from Jamaica. 



It will be apparent to those who consider carefully the extensive 

 areas of our own country where mycological exploration has 

 scarcely been made, that at the threshold of the twentieth century, 

 we have really made only a beginning in the study of the extent 

 and distribution of the fungus flora of North America. 



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