BY D. McALPINE. 457 



Puccinia prunoruin, Lk., on apricots and plums, the uredo- 

 or stylospore form occurring in the height of summer, and, 

 some time after, the teleutospores, 



Bailey — Second Supplement to Synopsis of the Queensland Flora, 

 p. 126, 1888. 



UromyC' s amy(j>hili, Cooke, on almond and peach leaves. 

 Halsted — Bulletin Iowa Agricultural College, 1888. 



Farley and Seymour — A provisional Host-Index of the Fungi of 

 the United States. Vol. i. p. 32, etc., 1888, and Vol. iii. 

 p. 197, 1890. 



Synonym}^ and Hosts of Puccinia 'prani given. 

 Plowright — British Uredine^ and Ustilaginete, p. 192, 1889. 



Puccinia pruni, Pers., on Prunus spinosa, P. domestical 

 and Khamnus catliarticus, 



Tryon Report on Insect and Fungus Pests, Brisbane, p. 97, 



&c., 1889. 



Uroniyces amygdali^ Cooke, a new fungus determined by 

 Dr. Cooke, on peach and almond leaves, Queensland. 



Brunk— Bordeaux Mixture for the Plum Leaf-blight. Journal 

 of Mycology, p. 38, 1889. 



Peach and plum trees affected with Puccinia pruni-spinosoi. 



Annual Report — State Board of Horticulture of California for 



1889. 



Earle — Experiments with Fungicides for Plant Diseases. Bull. 

 ii. Veg. Path. Sec. U.S.A., p. 38, 1890. 



Notices injury to peach and plum leaves from Bordeaux 

 Mixture applied for rust : Pucciitia j^rimi, Pers. 



Anderson — Notes on certain Uredinese and Ustilaginese. Journal 

 of Mycology, p. 125, 1890. 



Uroniyces aniygdali, Cooke, agrees in every particular with 

 Puccinia pruw^ Pers., on peach and plum hosts in the 

 United States. 



