344 



A MANUAL OF THE ASPERGILLI 



Session, Tunis, pp. 601-603. 

 1913. Some one of the A. glau- 

 cus group 133 



A. gracilis Bainier, in Bui. Soc. My- 

 col. France 23: 92, PI. IX, figs. 

 11-14. 1907. In A. restrictus 



series 138 



var. exiguus Bainier & Sartory, in 

 Bull. Soc. Mycol. France 28: 47, 

 pi. 2. 1912. According to the 

 description this variety differs in 

 physiological characters slightly 

 from A. gracilis Bainier 140 



A. granulatus Mosseray, in La Cel- 

 lule XLIII: 249-50, pi. 3, figs. 25- 

 28. 1934. A member of the A. 

 niger group; in the Biourge Col- 

 lection 234 



A. granulosus Raper and Thorn, in 

 Mycologia 36: 565-568, fig. 4. 

 1944. In the A. ustus group. . . . 175 



A. gratioti Sartory, in Compt. Rend. 

 Acad. Sci. (Paris) 170: 523-524. 

 1920. Also in Champignons 

 parasites de l'homme et des 

 animaux, pp. 578-579. 1922. 

 Probably some member of the A. 

 fumigatus group 154 



A. Greconis Dodge, in Dodge Med. 

 Myc, p. 634. 1935 

 Syn. S. aurea Greco, q.v. 



A. griseus Link, in Sp. Plant. Ed. 4, 

 6(1): 69. 1824. Incorrectly cited 

 by Bonorden and Wehmer as 

 Link Obs. 1: 69. 1809. Name 

 also used by Fries and by Bonor- 

 den. Not identified. 



A. guegueni was figured inBiourge's 

 monograph of the Penicillia (La 

 Cellule t. 33, fasc. 1, pp. 7-330. 

 1923) as P. guegueni Plate XX. 

 He afterward distributed it as A. 

 guegueni. In A. restrictus series 139 



A. guttifer Mosseray, in La Cellule 

 XLIII: 235-236, pi. Ill, fig. 53- 

 57. 1934. In the Biourge Col- 

 lection 233 



A. gymnosardae Yukawa, in Jour. 

 Coll. Agr. Tokyo I: 362, PI. 18, 

 figs. 1-7. 1911. This fungus 

 was found by Yukawa under the 



name "awokabi" and is de- 

 scribed by him as essential to the 

 ripening of the tunafish prepara- 

 tion, "katsuobushi." The di- 

 mensions given are intermediate 

 between those of A . flavus and A . 

 oryzae, and closely approximate 

 those of A. pseudo-flavus. Al- 

 though we have cultures related 

 to these forms, we have not been 

 able to identify these intermedi- 

 ates except as members of the A. 

 flavus-oryzae group 266 



A. hageni Hallier, in Cattaneo Mico. 

 Corp. Urn. p. 123, PI. 6, fig. 8. 



Florentin 1892 146 



Syn. Otomyces Hageni Hallier, in 

 Zeitschr. Parasit. 1: 195. 1869. 

 2: 22, 233, and 259, PI. 5. 1870. 

 Not identifiable. 



A. halophilus Sartory, Sartory, and 

 Meyer, in Ann. Mycol. XXVIII: 

 362-363, PI. Ill, figs. 11-14. 

 1930. Probably some nonasco- 

 sporic member of the A. glaucus 

 group 118 



A. helicophorus nomen nudum at- 

 tached by Thaxter to a culture 

 that was found to belong with A. 

 ustus 174 



S. helva Bainier, in Bui. Soc. Bot. 

 France 28: 78. 1881. In A. 

 ochraceus group 281 



A. hennebergi Blochwitz, in Ann. 

 Mycol. 33: 238. 1935. Regarded 

 by Neill as one of the A. ochra- 

 ceus group. See A. wentii group. 249 



A. herbariorum, species name seems 

 to appear first as Mucor herbario- 

 rum in Primitiae Florae Holsa- 

 ticae by Fredericus Henricus 

 Wiggers, 1780, republished in 

 Facsimile edition No. 23 by W. 

 Junk. 1925. See A. glaucus 

 group 100 



Eurotium herbariorum ser. minor 

 Mangin, in Ann. des Sci. Nat., 

 Bot. (Ser. 9) 10: 365. 1909. See 

 A . mangini 127 



Eurotium herbariorum ser. major 

 Mangin, in Ann. Sci. Nat. Bot. 



