1 
Dead stems of HLupatoriwm ageratoides in damp shaded places. 
Watkins Glen. September. 
The cups are a little longer than broad, and appear like some 
minute solenia. 
Rhytisma linearis, Peck. 
Linear, here and there interrupted or constricted, black ; asci broad, clavate, 
eight-spored ; spores very long, obtuse, strongly narrowed in the middle, 
involved in mucus, .002'-.003' long. 
Under surface of leaves of pine trees, Pinus Strobus. Guilder- 
land, Greenbush and Sandlake. June. 
It forms a thick black line on the under surface of the leaf, often 
extending the entire length. The spores appear to consist of two 
oblong parts connected by a narrow neck. 
Hypomyces polyporinus, Peck. 
Perithecia minute, ovate or subconical, seated on a pallid subiculum, smooth, 
yellowish, or pale amber; asci narrow, linear; spores fusiform, acuminate 
at each end, nucleate, .0006'-.0007' long. 
On Polyporus versicolor. Worcester and Croghan. July and 
September. 
Nectria Apocyni, Peck. 
Conidia. Subhemispherical or irregular, small, pale red; spores fusiform, 
straight, .0005'-.0006' long. 
Ascophore. Caespitose or scattered, dull red, perithecia minute, pale ochra- 
ceous, and subglobose when moist, dull red collapsed or laterally compressed 
and rough with minute whitish scales when dry ; spores biseriate, uniseptate, 
fusiform, nucleate, .00065'—-.0008' long. 
Base of dead stems of Apocynum cannabinum. North Green- 
bush. October. 
Nectria mycetophila, Peck. 
Perithecia crowded or scattered, minute, smooth, subglobose, pale yellow 
when young, then pinkish-ochre; ostiole minute, papillate, distinct, darker 
colored ; asci subclavate ; spores oblong, simple, .0005' x .00016'. 
Decaying fungi. New Scotland. October. 
