184 MEMOIRS OF THE NEW YORK BOTANICAL GARDEN 



Telia amphigenous, scattered or sometimes confluent, oval to 

 linear, tardily naked, darlc cliestnut to chocolate-brown, ruptured 

 epidermis conspicuous; teliospores very broadly ellipsoid, 38-45 

 by 43-58 m; wall dark chestnut-brown, uniformly 5-7 m thick, 

 smooth; pedicel colorless, usually deciduous, often laterally at- 

 tached, up to 100 ju long. 



0)1 Liliaceae: 



Hookera pulchella Salisb. {Brodiaea congesta Smith, Dichelo- 



stemma congestiim Kunth.) 

 Type locality: Bingen, West Klickitat Co., Washington, on 



Dichelostemma congestiim. 

 Distribution: Washington and Oregon. 

 ExsiccATi: Barth. N. Am. Ured. ijg, 1541. 



Note. — A. subangidata frequently occurs together with A. 

 Dichelostemmae on the same host. 



8. Allodus claytoniata (Schw.) Arth. Result. Sci. Congr. Bot. 



Vienne 345. 1906 

 Caeoma (Aecidium) claytoniatum Schw. Trans. Am. Phil. Soc. II. 



4: 294. 1832. 

 Puccinia Mariae-Wilsoni G. W. Clinton, Bull. Buffalo Soc. Nat. 



Sci. 1: 166. 1873. 

 Dicaeoma claytoniatum Kuntze, Rev. Gen. 3^: 466. 1898. 

 Puccinia claytoniata Peck, Bull. N. Y. State Mus. 6: 226. 1899. 



Aecia amphigenous, regularly scattered, often over large areas 

 and covering entire leaf and petiole; aeciospores 13-21 by 18-23 ju; 

 wall 1-1.5 M thick. 



Telia chiefly hypophyllous, often thickly scattered, sometimes 

 confluent, small, roundish, tardily naked, cinnamon-brown, pul- 

 vinate, ruptured epidermis noticeable, teliospores elliptical to 

 terete, sometimes angular, 18-27 by 30-48 ^u; wall light cinna- 

 mon-brown, 1.5-2 ju thick, apex often thickened up to 7 m by a 

 hyaline papilla, evenly and finely verrucose; pedicel colorless, 

 short. 



On Portulacaceae: 



Claytojiia asarifolia Bong. {Montia asarijolia Howell), Clay- 



tonia caroliniana Michx., Claytonia siberica L. {Montia siberica 



Howell), and Claytonia virginica L. 

 Type locality: New York, on Claytonia virginica. 

 Distribution: New England to W. Virginia and the Pacific 



Coast. 



