LIST OF WOEKS ON NORTH AMERICAN FUNGI, 

 WITH THE EXCEPTION OF SCHIZOIklYCETES, PUBLISHED BEFORE 1887. 



By W. G. FARLOW and WILLIAM TRELEASE. 



The following list has been prepared from a card-catalogue of authors used in indexing the species of fangi found in the 

 TJnited States and the northern parts of North America. The list does not include works on Schizomycetes, as that group is 

 now studied prineipaUy by specialists, and includes forms the greater part of which belong rather to the department of medi- 

 cine than to botan}' proper, and the literature of the subject is already well indexed elsewhere. The present list aims to 

 include mainly works of greater or less value to working botanists, and it would be difficult and, perhaps, unnecessary to add 

 the very large number of papers of a popular and indefinite character relating to fungi not specifically named which are scat- 

 tered through the various agricultural, horticultural, and other journals. Neither has it been thought best to enumerate the 

 general and, to botanists, well-known treatises which include fungi as well as other orders of plants, unless special reference is 

 made to North American species, or unless they contain figures of our species not easily found elsewhere. As it is, the pres. 

 ent list, which is the first of the kind yet published, wiU show that the general belief of botanists not specially studying the 

 subject that very little has been written on North American mycologj' is by no means correct. The means for obtaining good 

 summaries of the current literature have, within the last few years, been much improved ; and, in order to complete the record 

 of the past as far as possible, botanists are requested to send con-ections of and additions to the present nst, which may be 

 issued in a supplement. Thanks are due to a number of authors who have kindly consented to revise the list of their works 

 for publication. 



Where the pages of reprints differ from the original they are put in parenthesis. The dates after authors' names indicate 



the date of birth, and death is indicated by a cross (t). 



W. G. FARLOW. 

 Cambbidge, February 23, 1887. 



I. Agricnltural Reports. 



For papers on fungi in the reports of the Department of 

 Agriculture up to the year 1876 consult the following : — 



A general index of the Agricultural Reports of 

 the Patent Office for twenty-five years from 1837- 

 1861, and of the Department of Agriculture for 



fifteen years from 1862-1876. 8°. pp. 225. 

 Washington. 1879. 

 Subsequent papers under authors' names. 



-^ 2. American Naturalist, The. Monthly, 

 illustr. Vol. I.-XX. March, 1867— Jan. 1887. 

 To be continued. 



Devoted to all branches of natural history. The first nine 

 volumes published at Salem, Mass., X.-XI. at Boston, XII.- 

 XX. at Philadelphia. For X.-XI. there was an associate 

 editor for botany, G. L. Goodale, and since 1881, XV., 

 C. E. Bessey. Articles on fungi given here under authors' 

 names. Reviews of mycological works by the editors. 



Andrews, Charles Lowell. 



3. Contributions to the Mycology of Massa- 

 chusetts. Proc. Boston Soc. Nat. Hist. V. pp. 

 321-323. April, 1856. 



Remarks on the study of fungi and their economical im- 

 portance, followed by a list of 36 species collected by the 

 author. 



4. Arctic Mannal. See Manual. 

 Arthur, Joseph Charles. Lowville, N. Y. 



11 Jan. 1850. See Bessey, C. E. See Botanical 



G.VZETTE. 



•/- 5. The interpretation of Schweinitzian 



and other early descriptions. Am. Nat. XVII. 77, 

 78. Jan. 1883. 



-f- 6. Descriptions of Iowa Uromyces. Bull. 



Minnesota Acad. Nat. Sci. II. 13-37. Minne- 

 apolis. Printed 31 May^ 1883. 



Descriptionsof 12 species, one of them new, U, acn/minatus, 

 with index of synonyms and host-plants. 



-f. 7. American Aecidia on Ranunculi. Bot. 



Gaz. IX. 177. Oct. 1884. 



Note on aecidia on Ranunculus abortivus and Anemone 

 nemorosa. 



i- 8. Preliminary list of Iowa Uredineae. 



Bull. Iowa Agr. College, Dept. of Botany. 151- 

 171. Nov. 1884. Issued Jan. 1885. 



Enumerates 134 species, and describes 8 new species with 

 index of host-plants. See no. 65. Names of new species in 

 Jour. Myc. I. 47. 



-j.. 9. Memorandum of Iowa Ustilagineae. 



Bull. Iowa Agr. College, Dept. of Botany. 172- 

 174. Nov. 1884. Issued Jan. 1885. 



Enumerates 25 species, of which 2 are new. This paper 

 and the preceding were subsequently issued together as a 

 separate paper with original paging. 



4, ro. Hollyhock disease and the cotton 



plant. Science, V. 2. Jan. 2, 1885. Also Jour. 

 Myc. I. 27. Feb. 1885. 



Reports experiments by Plowright to show that Puccinia 

 Malvacearum will not grow on the cotton plant. 



-HI. The Aeeidium of Adoxa. Bot. Gaz. 



X. 369. Sept. 1885. Also Jour. Myc. I. 141. 

 Nov. 1885. 

 States that Aecidium albescens is an annual. 



f 12. Report of the Botanist to the New 



York Agricultural Experiment Station. Zd 

 Annual Rept. N. Y. Agr. Exp. Station for 1884. 

 pp. 353-385. Fig. 6. 8° Albany. 



Notices of pear blight, Fusicladium pyrinum, F. dendriti- 

 eum, Morthiera Mespili, Podonphaera tridactyla, Sphae- 

 ropsis Gydoniae, Exoascus deformans, peach yellows, gum- 

 mosis, Gloeospormm, phom,oides, Ustilago segetum. Clematis 

 disease, etc. For Clematis disease see also Country Gentle- 

 man, 25 .lune, 1885. This report was distributed about 

 1 Sept. 1885. See Rev. in Bot. Centralblatt, XXIV. 335. 



