192 Illinois State Lahoratonj of Natural History. 



mostly broadly ovate, oborate or elliptical^ little constricted, 

 apex usually slightly thickened or apiculate, smooth or minute- 

 ly roughened, 21-25 by 32-r)() /*, commonly about 39 f*. long; 

 pedicel hyaline, rather fragile, from less than one to one and a 

 half times the length of the spore, sometimes more or less lat- 

 eral. 



Spots brown and indefinite, sometimes none; sori mostly hj'po- 

 phyllous, sometimes amphigenous, orbicular, oblong or irregular, scat- 

 tered or crowded, sometimes confluent, prominent, at first covered by 

 the epidermis and then of a peculiar lead-color, blackish when exposed ; 

 spores obovate or elliptical, obtuse, slightly constricted at the septum, 

 minutely rough, .0012-.0016 of an inch long, .0008-.001 of an inch broad, 

 the pedicel very short, colorless. — Peck, Bot. Gaz., Vol, VI., p. 228. 



On Phlox divaricata: Adams, June 30, 5358. 



The description by Peck is from specimens collected in 

 Utah. During the same year, but believed to be later, DeThii- 

 men sent out Century XXI of his Mycotheca Universalis, con- 

 taining, wdth No. 32, a description, with specimens from Idaho, 

 on Gilia, under the name of P. Wilcoxiana. By comparison 

 of authentic specimens these prove to be specifically indistin- 

 guishable, as well as those of Ellis' North American Fungi, 

 No. 1044 — however, the latter bears the varietal name of 

 pJilogina. This last has a different nuclear spot in each seg- 

 ment, and the epispore is more distinctly roughened. The Illi- 

 nois specimens on Fldox are very nearly smooth, and do not 

 have this round segmental spot, hence are more like the typi- 

 cal specimens of Peck in these respects. They are somewhat 

 more irregular in shape than any of the others, and the pedicel 

 more often obliquely produced. 



P. convolvuli, Cast. 



I. Hypogenous. Spots small, distinct, or sparingly con- 

 fluent, brown; tecidia irregularly clustered or sometimes subcir- 

 cinate, short, small, pseudoperidium fragile, becoming powdery 

 soon after opening, spores subglobose or elliptical, epispore thin, 

 tuberculate, 16-18 by 18-25 {*■', spermagonia f ew, central, above. 

 { yfJcidium cahjstegim. Desm., .Ij. diibinm, Clint.) 



II., III. Amphigenous, more common beneath; sori 

 rounded or angular, long covered by the epidermis; uredosori 



