1 82 MEMOIRS OF THE NEW YORK BOTANICAL GARDEN 



Urediniospores occur rather freciuently In the telia, being most 

 abundant on C. Gunnisonii and C. longebarbatiis, broadly elHpsoid, 

 21-26 by 26-31 At; wall light golden brown, 2-2.5 M thick, sparsely 

 and finely echinulate, the pores indistinct, 5 or 6, scattered. 



On Alliaceae: 



Allium sp. Calochortus albus Dough, C. elegans Pursh, C. 



flavus Schult., C. Gunnisonii S. Wats., C. longebarbatus Dough, 



C. nudus S. Wats, and C. Nuttallii T. & G. 

 Type locality: Utah, on Calochortus Nuttallii. 

 Distribution: Nebraska to Washington and Mexico. 

 ExsicCATi: Ell. & Ev. Fungi Columb. 1953; Barth. N. Am. 



Ured. 12^,533, 622; Clements, Crypt. Form. Colo. 349; Garrett, 



Fungi Utah. go. 



4. AUodus Moreniana (D. & T.) comb. nov. 

 Puccinia Moreniana Dudley & Thompson, Jour. Myc. 10: 53. 



1904. 



Aecia unknown. 



Telia chiefly hypophyllous, scattered or sometimes grouped, 

 oval to oblong, tardily naked, ruptured epidermis conspicuous, 

 dark cinnamon-brown; teliospores oblong-elliptical, 20-24 by 

 33-50 jx, cells equal in size and shape; wall light cinnamon-brown, 

 uniformly about 2 ju thick, inconspicuously marked with longi- 

 tudinal rows of fine papillae; pedicel colorless, about the length of 

 spore. 



On Liliaceae: 



Dipterostemon capitatus (Benth.) R^^db. {Brodiaea capitata 



Benth.) 

 Type locality: Old Cement Mill, Searsville Lake, San Mateo 



County, California, on Brodiaea capitata. 

 Distribution: Known only from the type locality. 



Note. — Puccinia nodosa E. & H. occurs in the type collection 

 of A. Moreniana. The portion of this type in the Arthur herbar- 

 ium is fragmentary but it has the appearance of an AUodus. 



5. AUodus Carnegiana (Arth.) comb. nov. 



Puccinia Carnegiana Arth. Bull. Torrey Club 42: 587. 1915. 



Aecia amphigenous, gregarious, in roundish or oval groups; 

 aeciospores 23-27 by 24-34 /x; wall 2-3 11 thick. 



Telia amphigenous, scattered or arising about or within the 

 secondary aecia, oval or oblong, rupturing by a longitudinal 



