i8 



NORTH AMERICAN FUNGI. 



Hagen, Hermann August. 

 y 339. On the destruction of obnoxious insects by 

 yeast. Canadian Entomologist, Xll. 81-83. May, 

 1880. 



Supplemrntary to last-named paper, with notes on the 

 botanical relations o{ Entomoplithorae. 



.■ 340. Cordyceps Ravenelii on the larvae of 



Phyllophaga. Canadian Entomologist, XII. 89. 

 May, 1880. 



i 341. Experiments with yeast in destroying 



insects. Canadian Entomologist, XIV. 38, 39. 

 Feb. 1882. 



Gives ft letter from Tliomas IT. Tlart, relating his success 

 In applyinj,' yeast, from which certain conclusions are drawn. 



HalHer, Ernst. 



342. Coniothecium Stilesianum. Rept. N. Y, 



State Agr. Soc. for 18(37, XXVII. part 2, 1149, 



1150. 



A letter from Hallier, including an account of this fungus, 

 supposed to be the cause of Texas cattle fever. Also a letter 

 from Hallier on p. 1146. 



Halsey, Abraham. 



343. Remarks on certain entozoical fungi. Ann. 



Lye. Nat. Hist. New York, I. 125, 126. April, 



1824. 



Notice of exotic forms and brief reference to Isaria 

 Spfiingum, Schw. 



Halsted, Byron David. Venice, Cayuga Co., 

 N. Y., 7 June, 1852. 



344. Our common moulds. Pop. Sci. Month. 

 IX. 398-409. Fig. 13. Aug. 1876. 



345. Injurious and other fungi. Trans. 



Mass. Hort. Soc. for 1877. Part 1. pp. 28-44. 



PI. 1-3. Read 27 Jan. 1877. 



Brief account of several common diseases of fungi, wheat 

 blight, grape mould, black knot, etc. 



346. Fungi injurious to farmers. Regis- 

 ter of Rural Affairs, VIII. 181-187. Fig. 5. 

 Also in Rept. Connecticut Board Agr. for 1881. 



347. The white mildews. Am. Pomolog. 



Soc. Session 1883, pp._87-89. 



An account of several species of Perisporiaceae and the 

 harm done by them. 



348. 



How fungi live in winter. Pop. Sci. 



Month. XXVI. 611-620. Fig. 1-12. March, 1885. 

 Account of resting condition of several species. 



S 349- A new Iowa Aecidium. Jour. Myc. 



II. 52. May, 1886. 



Description of Aecidium Phrymae. 



•f 350. Gym7iosporangium macropus on 



Pirvs coronaria. Bot. Gaz. XI. 190, 191. July, 

 1886. 



Account of open-air cultures made at Ames, Iowa, to show 

 the development of the aecidia of this species. See also paper 

 entitled "The wild crab apple" in Coutitry Gentleman, 

 21 Oct. 1886. 



■j 351. An interesting Peronospora. Bot. 



Gaz. XI. 272. PI. 8. Fig. a. b. Oct. 1886. 

 Account of P. graminicola in Iowa. 



^The following papers from the American Agriculturist, 

 Now York, should also be noted: "The American grape 

 mildew," 1879, p. 348, fig. 5; also in 3/ic/iigan Poinol. Hep. 

 1877, p. l.^t; — "What are fungi?" 1879, p. 268, fig. 4; — 

 "The Wheat Rust," 1879, p. 301, fig. 6; — "Ergot," 1879, 

 p. 388, fig. 8; — "Apple-leaf fungus," 1879, p. 468, fig. 5; — 

 "White Mildews," 1879, p. 508, fig. 4; — "Black Knot," 

 18.80. p. 2-2, fig. 6; — "Onion Smut," 1880, p. 104, fig. 3; — 

 "Lettuce Mould," 1880, p. 148, fig. 3; — " Elderberry fun- 

 mis," 1880, p. 2.34, fig. 1 ; — " The Corn Smut," 1880, p. 475, 

 fig. 4; — " Wheat, oat, ami barley smut," 1881, p. 404, fig. 3. 



Hanbnry, Daniel. 11 Sept. 1825. fLondon, 



24 Marcli, l,s75. See Cciirey, F. 



Harkness, Harvey AVilson. Pelham, Mass., 



25 May, 1821. See Cooke, M. C. See Ellis, 

 J. B. See Phillips, W. See Plowuight, C. B. 



352. A Foe to the Lumberman. Pacific 



Rural Press, XVII. 49. Fig. 2. 25 Jan. 1879. 



Account of a fungus, Daedalia vorax, which attacks the 

 wood oi Abies Douglasii. 



Fungi injurious to fruit-trees. Ann. 



353. 



Re2}t. State Board Hort. California, 1883. pp. 51- 

 59 (1-8). 



General account of diseases of plants caused by fungi, 

 with notices of Peridermium Harknessii, Daedalea vorax, 

 Sphaeria morbosa, Capnodium Citri, Phyllostictu circum- 

 scissa, and other fungi. 



i:354- 



New species of Californian Fungi. 



Bull. Cal. Acad. Sci. I. 29-47. Feb. 1884. 



Descriptions of 4 new genera, Camposporium, Trap- 

 osporium Theclospora, Cleistosoma, and 71 new species. 



-i- 355- 



Fungi of the Pacific Coast. Bull. 



Cal. Acad. Sci. I. 159-176, pi. 1, Feb. 1885 ; 1. c. 

 256-271 (1-16), 19 Nov. 1885. 



Part 1 gives an enumeration of 192 species, with hosts and 

 habitats, and descriptions of 10 new species and 2 new genera, 

 Dicranidion and 6-'eo/)ora, with plate of Zycopercfow sculp- 

 tiim. Part 2 is an enumeration of 171 species, with hosts, 

 localities, and notes, including one new species, Secotium 

 nubigenum, followed by a list of 50 species from the Harkness 

 herbarium, previously described in GreviUea, XIII. 111-114: 

 and XIV. 8-10. See no. 168. See Rev. Myc. VII. 253. 



N. B. The paper by this author on "White Mildew," read 

 before the San Francisco Micros. Soc, 5 April, 1877, was not 

 formally published, but distributed privately by the author. 

 In this paper an account is given of pycnidia in Erysiphe 

 Graminis. See also reviews of this paper by M. C. Cooke 

 in Greriilea, V. 154, and Gardeners' Chronicle, 1877, pp. 

 441 and 634. 



aiid Moore, J. P. 



-i- 356. Catalogue of the Pacific Coast Fungi. 

 Published under the direction of the California 

 Academy of Sciences. 8° pp. 46. Read 2 Feb. 



1880. 



An enumeration of 842 species of fungi from California, 

 with hosts and localities, and 2 from the Sandwich Islands. 

 One new species, Agaricus tridens, is described. This 

 Catalogue was issued separately, and did not appear in any 

 volume of the bulletins of the California Academy. Rev. in 

 Torr. Bull. VII. 58, and Pev. Myc. VII. 253. 



Hayden, Ferdinand Vandeveer. Westfield, 

 Mass., 7 Sept. 1829. 



357. Siitli Annual Report of the United States 

 Geological Survey of the Territories, embracing 

 portions of Montana, Idaho, Wyoming and Utah, 

 being a report of progress of the explorations for 

 the year 1872. 8°. pp. 844. Washington. 1873. 

 Botany by J. M. Coulter, pp. 747-792. 



Includes on last page a list of 10 fungi, with descriptions of 

 two new species, Peeiza vulcanalis and Sphaeria Coulteri, 

 by C. H. Peck. 



358. Hedwigia. Ein notizblatt fiir krypto- 

 gamische studien. Vol. I. -XXV. May, 1852 — 

 Jan. 1887. To be continued. 8°. Dresden. Illustr. 



Vol. I. extends from 1852-1857, and vol. II. fi-om 1858-1863. 

 Since that date there has been a volume annually. Until 

 Nov. 1878, the editor was L. Rabenhorst, and since then G. 

 Winter. With the exception of the first two volumes the 

 numbers appeared monthly until 1885, when the journal was 

 enlarged and the numbers issued bi-monthly, includes all 

 orders of cryptogams. Papers on American fungi, which are 

 given here under authors' names, hardly go back farther 

 than 1873. 



Henry, Aime. See Nees von Esenbeck, T. 

 F. L. 



Herald, Voyage of. See Seeman, B. 

 Hesse, R. 



359. Mikroscopische unterscheidungsmerkmale 

 dor tvpischen Lycoperdaceen genera. Pringhsheim 

 Jahi-b. X. 383-398. PI. 28, 29. 1876. 



Gives a figure of capillitium of Mitremyces luiescens, 

 Schw. 



