60 [ ASSEMBLY, 
APOSPHZERIA CONICA, Sacc. 
Decaying oak wood. Piffard. August. 
CYTOSPORA GRANDIS, N. sp. 
Pustules large,two to three lines broad, ellipsoid or suborbicular, 
sear-like, ferruginous from the ruptured bark; loculi numerous; 
speres minute, curved, .0002 inch long, 
Dead bark of sumach, Rhus typhina. Gansevoort. September. 
HAPLOSPORELLA PINI, N. sp. 
Perithecia valsoid, czespitose, three to five in a cluster, sunk in 
the inner bark, erumpent ; spores globose or subelliptical, colored, 
.0005 to .0006 inch long. 
Dead bark of white pine, Pinus Strobus. Elizabethtown. June. 
DIPLODIA PAUPERCULA, B. & Br. 
Dead branches of elder, Sambucus Canadensis. Adirondack 
mountains. June. 
DIPLODIA ASPARAGI, N. sp. 
Perithecia gregarious, subglobose, minute, opening by a-papillate 
pore, black; spores elliptical, colored, .0008 to .001 inch long, 
.0005 broad. 
Dead stems of asparagus. Menands. October. 
STAGONOSPORA CHENOPODII, N. sp. 
Spots few, large, brown or yellowish-brown; perithecia minute, 
.004 to .005 inch broad, black; spores oblong, obtuse, biseptate or 
triseptate, constricted at the septa, colorless, .0008 to .001 inch 
long, .0003 to .0004 broad. 
Living leaves of goose-foot, Chenopodium album. Menands. 
August. 
SEPTORIA STACHYDIS, R. & D.- 
Living leaves of hedge nettle, Stachys aspera. Port Kent. June. 
SEPTORIA FUSCA, N. sp. 
Spots blackish-brown, indefinite, occupying the lobes of the 
leaves or their margins; perithecia epiphyllous, black; spores 
filiform, straight, slightly curved or flexuous, .0016 to .002 inch long. 
Living or languishing leaves of wormwood, Artemisia vulgaris. 
Port Henry. June. 
It differs from S. Artemisiw in its indefinite spots and longer 
spores. 
