JACKSON: UREDINALES OF OREGON 2351 
firming Bubak’s contention. This species should not be confused 
with P. punctata Lk. (cf. 156) which occurs on the same host from 
this region. 
62. PUCCINIA ANGELICAE (Schum.) Fckl. Symb. Myc. 52. 1869. 
(Not P. Angelicae E.& E. 1884.) 
Uredo Angelicae Schum. Enum. PI. Saell. 2: 233. 1803. 
Puccima Archangelicae Blytt, Christiania Vid. Selsk. Forhandl. 
Nos.6:.51. . 1896: 
Bullaria Angelicae Arth. Résult Sci. Congr. Bot. Vienne 346. 
1906. 
On UMBELLIFERAE: 
Angelica genufleca Nutt.—Woodburn, Clackamas Co., Sept. 1885, 
Thomas Howell. 
Angelica Lyalliat Wats.?—Larch Mt., Multnomah Co., Aug. Io, 
1910, 2613. 
This species is evidently rare in North America having been 
reported otherwise only from a single collection from Washington on 
A. genuflexa and one from New York on A. atropurpurea. It is a 
brachy-form though pycnia have not been seen in American collec- 
tions. This species has smooth teliospores and is easily separable 
from Puccinia Ellisit (cf. 98) on the same hosts from our region, which 
has verrucose spores. 
63. PUCCINIA ANOMALA Rost. Thiimen, Flora 1877: 92. 1877. 
Puccinia straminis simplex WKoern. Land. u. Forstw. Zeit. no. 50. 
1865. 
Puccinia Hordes Otth. Mitt. Nat. Ges. Bern. 1870: 114. 1871. 
(Not P. Hordei Fckl. 1860.) 
Puccinia simplex Erikss. & Henn. Getreideroste 238. 1896. (Not 
P. simplex Peck. 1881.) 
Aecidium Ornithogalum Bubak, Ann. Myc. 3: 223. 1905. 
On Poaceae: II, III. 
Hordeum montanense Schribn.—Corvallis, July 26, 1914, 1414. 
Hordeum murinum L.—Corvallis, July 8, 1914, G. B. Posey, 1354. 
Hordeum nodosum L.—Corvallis, July 26, 1914, 3257. 
Hordeum vulgare L.—Corvallis, July 6, 1914, 1683, Aug. 13, 1914, 
1091, 1708. 
This, the leaf rust of barley, is evidently very common in Oregon, 
much more so than the collections listed above would indicate. It is 
evidently not abundant in America except on the Pacific coast. In 
the Arthur herbarium, specimens on wild barleys are represented only 
from Oregon, California and Utah. On the cultivated barley speci- 
mens are at hand only from California, Iowa and Wisconsin. It is 
