#1 
No. 115.] BT 
composed of erect fibres. Though dry, it is not very tough. The 
spores are oblong or subfusiform .0005 to .0007 inch long, .0002 
broad. 
HYMENOCHZETE TENUIS, N. sp. 
Resupinate, very thin, even, forming elongated, more or less 
confluent, dark ferruginous patches, concolorous on the determinate 
margin, inseparable, rimose; sete acute, .0012 to .0025 inch long. 
Decorticated wood of arbor-vitee, Zhuja occidentalis. Cascade- 
ville. June. 
CLAVARIA KROMHBHOLZII, Fr. 
Open woods. Brewerton and Adirondack mountains. September. 
PHYLLOSTICTA LYCOPERSICI, N. sp. 
Spots large, suborbicular, cinereous; perithecia minute, brown 
or blackish, opening by a single or sometimes by two pores ; spores 
abundant, oblong or elliptical, .00025 to .0003 inch long, .0001 
to .00012 broad. 
Fruit of tomato, ZLycopersicum esculentum. Menands, Albany 
county. July. 
oe PHYLLOSTICTA PHASEOLINA, Sacc. , 
Leaves of cultivated bean, Phaseolus vulgaris. Menands. 
September. 
_ PHYLLOSTICTA CARYZA, N. sp 
Spots large, irregular, often confluent, at first yellowish, then 
brown, sometimes becoming grayish in the center; perithecia 
minute, .004 inch broad, punctate, epiphyllous; spores irregularly 
elliptical, .0002 inch long, .00008 broad. ¢ 
Living leaves of hickory, Carya alba. Piffard. August. 
PHYLLOSTICTA PHOMIFORMIS, Sacc. 
Living leaves of white oak, Quercus alba. Sandlake, Rensselaer 
county. September. 
p 
PHYLLOSTICTA TUMORICOLA, N. sp. 
Spots suborbicular, arid, pallid with a reddish or reddish-brown 
margin, apparently caused by insects; perithecia amphigencus or 
epiphyllous minute, .005 to .007 inch broad, depressed, brownish ; 
spores oblong or narrowly elliptical, colorless, .0004 to .0005 inch 
long, .0002 to .00025 broad. 
Living gall-spotted leaves of white oak, Quercus alba. Karner. 
October. In P. phomiformis the spores are much larger than in 
