REPORT OF THE STATE BOTANIST. 99 
and generally a little thicker toward one end. In size they are .o006 to 
.0009 in. long, .0003 to .o004 broad. Fuckel considers the species as the 
stylosporous condition of Zrochila Salicis, Tul. It is very unlike Gle- 
osporium salicinium, Pk., which is rather a Septogloeum, though the 
septa are obscure. 
Marsonia Quercus, 2. sp. 
Spots angular or suborbicular, whitish or reddish-gray, definite, nucleus 
hypophyllous; spores oblong or subcylindrical, straight or curved, 
slightly constricted in the middle, obscurely uniseptate, colorless, .o005 
to .0006 in. long, .ooor to .oo016 broad, oozing out and forming a red- 
dish or reddish-amber colored tendril or mass. 
Living leaves of Quercus ilicifolia. Karner. Aug. 
Pestalozzia monochetoidea, S. ¢ L. 
Dead stems of nine-bark, Spirwa opulifolia. West Albany. Apr. 
Ramularia Dierville, 2. sp. 
- Plate 1, figs. 16-18. 
Spots suborbicular, whitish or cinereous with a dark-brown margin, 
definite ; flocci amphigenous, minute, tufted ; spores cylindrical, color- 
less, .0005 to .oo1 in. long, .00008 to .ooo16 broad. 
Living leaves of Diervilla trifida Adirondack mountains. June. 
Ramularia multiplex, 2. sp. 
Spots large, sometimes occupying the whole leaf, red or greenish- 
yellow, becoming brown when old, the lower surface, and sometimes 
both surfaces, frosted by the fungus; flocci and spores whitish or sub- 
cinereous, the latter very variable, subglobose elliptical, oblong or cylin- 
drical, .o0016 to .oo2 in. long, .00016 to.coo2 broad, sometimes catenu- 
late. 
Living leaves of cranberry, Vacciniwm Oxycoccus. Caroga. July. 
Ramularia_Prini, . sp. 
Plate 1, figs. 19-21. 
Spots small, suborbicular, cinereous or whitish, with a brown margin, 
definite: spores hypophyllous, oblong or subfusiform, colorless, .o005 
to .0009 in. long, .00016 to .oo02 broad. 
Living leaves of Jlex verticillata. Caroga. July. 
The spores are tufted, but so minute that they are scarcely visible to 
the naked eye. This and the two preceding species are referred to the 
genus Ramularia with some hesitation. The hyphe are minute and ob- 
scure, and I have seen no septate spores, but in other respects they ap- 
pear to belong here. ‘The next species, which rarely has uniseptate 
spores, forms a connecting link between these and the succeeding one. 
Ramularia Oxalidis, Yari. 
Plate 1, figs. 13-15. 
Living leaves of wood sorrel, Ozalis acetosella, Adirondack moun- 
tains, June. 
