NORTH AMERICAN TUNGI. 



Bot. Gaz. 



Arthur, Joseph Charles. 

 -• 13. A uew hirval EntomopMhora. 

 XI. 14-17. PI. 2. Jan. 188G. 



Describes aud figures Ent. Phytonomi on P. punctahis. 

 See iilso Jour. Myc. II. 3a, aud 4th liept. JV. Y. Agr. Exp. 

 Station. 'See next title. 



. , 14. Report of the Botanist to the New 



York Agricullural Experiment Station, ith Ann. 

 Rrpt. N. r. Agr. Exp. Station for 1885. 241-265. 

 Fig. 10. 1st edition, Rochester, issued 30 Jan. 

 1886 ; 2d edition, Albany, Dec. 1886. 



Contiiins accounts of Morthiera Mespili t. Cydoniae 

 Septoria Lactucae, Peronospora gnngUformis, Oidium 

 /ructigeniim, EntomopMhora Phytotiomi, pear blight, the 

 rotting of tomatoes, etc. The second edition has separate 

 paging, but is accompanied bj' a table referring to original 

 paging. 



Atkinson, Isaac Edmondson. Baltimore, Md. 

 23 Jan. 1846. 



15. The botanical relations of Trichophyton 

 tonsurans. N. Y. Med. Jour. XXVIII. 561-575 

 (1-17). Fig. 3. New York, Dec. 1878. 



Account of germination of spores and formation of cyst-like 

 cells. 



Austin, Coe Finch. Closter, N. J., 20 June, 

 1831. tCloster, N. J., 18 March, 1880. 

 -f 16. Agaricus with the odor of chlorine. Torr. 

 Bull. VI. 278, 279, and 298. Dec. 1878. 



Characters oi Agaricus chlorinosmua, Peck, with notes on 

 its odor. 



Bagnis, Carlo. 1854. fAisone, 6 Aug. 1879. 



17. Le ruccinie. 4°. pp.83. PI. 1-11. Rome. 

 1876. Ext. Att. Reals Acad. Lincei. 2 ser. 

 Vol. III. Part 2. 641-721. 



The author reduces the number of species of Puccinia to 

 61, and gives the sjnionyms of forms recognized by him, in- 

 cluding a number of American species. 



Bailey, Jacob "Whitman. Ward, Mass., 29 

 April, 1811. tWest Point, N. Y., 26 Feb. 1857. 



18. Curious microscopic fungus, Craterium py- 

 riforme. Am. Jour. Sci. Arts, XLII. 195. 1842. 



Reports finding this species on rocks at West Point. 

 Banning, Mary Elizabeth. Talbot Co., Md. 

 1332. 



19. Notes on the fungi of Maryland. Field and 

 Forest, III. 42-47, 59-63. Sept.— Oct. 1877. 



■i 20. Notes on Fungi. Bot. Gaz. V. 5-10, 



23. Jan.— Feb. 1880. 



General remarks on the occurrence and habit of a number 

 of species. 



•) 21. New species of fungi found in Mary- 

 land. Bot. Gaz. VI. 165, 166. Jan. 1881. 

 Characters of -1 Agarics. 



-f. 22. • Maryland Fungi. Bot. Gaz. VI. 200- 



202, 210-213. April— May, 1881. 

 Notes on a number of Hymenomycetes and Gasteromycetes. 

 Barnes, Charles Reid. Madison, Jefferson Co., 

 Indiana, 7 Sept. 18.58. See Botanical Gazette. 

 -(23. Oospores in Capsella. Bot. Gaz. IX. 194. 

 Dec. 1884. 

 Finds oospores of Cystopus candicJus in Capsella. 

 Bary, (Ileinrich) Anton DE. Frankfort-on-the- 

 Maiii, 26 Jan. 1831. 



24. Recherches sur le developperaent de quol- 

 ques champignons parasites. Memoire pour servir 

 de reponse a une question proposee par 1' Academic 

 des Sciences en 1861 et pour servir de supplement 

 aux travaux eur la question des generations dites 

 epontanees. Ann. Sci. Nat. Bot. 4 ser. XX. 5- 

 148 (1-144). PI. 1-13. 1863. 



Detailed account of oboervations on the stnieture and de- 

 velopment of Cystopnn, Pfrononporn, and different Vredineae 

 followed by an " Essai d'un synopsis des Perono.ipnree<i," 

 with full descriptions of all known species, including P. 



viticola from the United States. This monograph appeared 

 originally iu the Annales, aud is not a French translation from 

 the German as is sometimes stated in this comitry. 



25. Ueber den sogenannten Brenner 



(Pech) der Reben. Ann. der Oenologie, IV. 

 Heft 2 (1-3). 1873. 



Reprint only seen. A communication to the editor giving 

 an account of Uphaceloma ampelinum, with a note on the 

 Maemaspora ampelicida of Eugelmami in America. 



Other papers of interest, although not treating strictly of 

 North American fungi, are : " Die gegenwartig herrschende 

 Kartoffelkrankheit, ihre Ursache und ihre Verhiitung," 8°, 

 pp. 75, pi. 1, Leipzig, 1861; and " Researches into the nature 

 of the potato-fungus, Phytophthora infestans," 8°, pp. 33, 

 fig. 8, London, 1876; and Jour. Royal Agr. Soc. England, 

 XIL pait 1. 



Berkeley, Miles Joseph. Biggin, Parish 

 Oundle, Northampton, England, 1 April, 1803. 

 See Cooke, M. C, Curtis, M. A., Klotzsch, 

 F. J., Lea, T. G., de Seynes, J., Wyman, J. 



26. Descriptions of exotic fungi in the 



collection of Sir W. J. Hooker, from memoirs and 

 notes of J. F. Klotzsch, with additions and correc- 

 tions. Ann. Nat. Hist. III. 375-401. 1839. 



Review of species in Klotzsch's papers in Linnaea, VII. 

 193, and VIII. 478. Notes on 42 species from North America. 



27. Supplement to descriptions of exotic 



fungi in Annals of Natural History, vol. III. 322 

 and 375. Ann. Nat. Hist. VII. 451-454. 1841. 



Principally notes on species collected by Richardson in 

 British America, with descriptions of 3 new species. 



28. Descriptions of fungi collected by 



R. B. Hinds, Esq., principally in the islands of the 



Pacific. London Jour. Bot. I. 447-457 (1-11). 



PI. 14, 15. 1842, 



Enumerates 7 species from the Columbia River, Sitka, and 

 CaUfornia, and describes Polyporus Columbiensis. 



29. Notices of fungi in the herbarium of 



the British Museum. Ann. Mag. Nat. Hist. X. 



369-385. PI. 9-12. Jan. 1843. 



Contains a description of Polyporus Floridanus from 

 Florida, and also species from Jamaica. 



30. On Agaricus crinitus, L., and some 



allied species. Trans. Linn. Soc. XX. 109-112. 

 PI. 9. 18 Feb. 1845. 



Contains a description and figure of Lentinus tener. 



31. Decades of Fungi. London Jour. 



Bot. and Hooker's Jour. Bot. 



The following parts relate to North American species : 

 Nos. 74-100 iu London Jour. Bot. IV. 299-313 (35-49), pi. 

 11, 12, fig. 1-5, 1845, collected, with few exceptions, by T. G. 

 Lea in Ohio; pi. 11 represents Cyclomyces (ireeneii from 

 Massachusetts; — nos. 111-140, 1. c. VI. 312-326 (1-15), 1847, 

 all from Ohio, collected by Lea, are mostly Hymenomycetea 

 with a new genus Psilopezia ; —nos. 201-240, Hooker's Jour. 

 Bot. I. 97-104 (1-8), 234-239 (105-110), 1849, have the title 

 "North and South Carolina Fungi; by tlie Rev. M. J. 

 Berkeley and Rev. M. A. Curtis";— no. 485, 1. c. VI. 227 

 (2), 1854, describes Dothidea rorax from South Carolina. 

 The species given in the Decades are most of them to be 

 found also in Lea's Catalogue and Berkeley's Notices of 

 North American Fungi, q. v., and a few of the figures are in 

 Berkeley's Introduction to Cryptogamic Botany. See also 

 Cdbtis, M. a. 



32. On the white rust of cabbages. Jour. 



Royal Hort. Soc. III. 265-271. Aug. 1848. 



Gives a figure of conidia of Uredo ( Gystopua) Amaranthi, 

 Schweinitz. 



33. Indian Bread or Tuckahoe. Garden- 

 ers' Chronicle, p. 829. 16 Dec. 1848. 



Includes a note of Prof. EUet on the chemical properties of 

 tuckahoe. 



34. Enumeration of some fungi from St. 



Domingo. Ann. Mag. Nat. Hist. 2 ser. IX. 192- 

 203. PI. 8. March, 1852. 



Fungi collected by A. Sall6, including 67 species, of which 

 20 are new, and 1 new genus. Species may be expected to 

 occur in Florida. 



