80 SUMMARY OF CURRENT RESEARCHES RELATING TO 



take up other points in the science of yeasts : their culture, physiology, 

 spore-formation, etc. H. Will, of Munich, treats of the chemistry of 

 the cells and their contents : cell-wall, nucleus, vacuoles, granules, etc. 



Bainier, G. — Sur deux Penicillitun. (On two species of Penicillium.) 



Bull. Soc. Mycol. France, xxi. (1905) pp. 126-30 (1 pi.). 



Bergamasco, G. — Basidiomiceti ed Ascomiceti. (A list of 51 fungi collected by 

 the author in the spring of 1905 in the wood of the Camaldoli.) 



Nuov. Ciorn. Bot. Ital., xii. (1905) pp. 652-6. 



Blytt, Axel. — Norges Hymen omycetes. (Norwegian Hymenomycetes examined 

 and finished after the death of the author, by E. Rostrup.) 



[The number of species is 1197. There are several new to science.] 



Vidensk. Selbsk. Skr. I. Math. Naturw. CI., No. 6, 1904 

 (Christiana, 1905) pp. 1-164. See also Bot. Centralbl. 



^xcix. (1905) p. 504. 



Brumpt, E. — Sur le Mycetomea grains noirs. maladie produite par une Mucedinee 

 du genre Madurella n.g. (On the mycetomy of black grains, a disease produced 

 by a mould of a new genus, Madurella.) 



C.R. Soc. Biol., 1905, pp. 997-8. See also 

 Bot. Centralbl., xcix. (1905) p. 469. 



Bubak, Pr., & J. E. Rabat — Mykologische Beitrage III. (Mycological con- 

 tributions.) 



[Diagnoses of 19 new species of micro- 

 fungi from Bohemia.] 



Hedwigia, xliv. (1905) pp. 350-8. 



„ „ ,, „ Viertes Beitrag zur Pilzflora von Tirol. (Fourth 



contribution to thefungus flora of the Tyrol.) 



[Diagnoses of new species are given, and 



critical notes on many of the forms 



recorded.] 



Oester. Bot. Zeitschr., lv. (1905) pp. 73-9, 



181-6, 239-45 (1 pi.). 



Chelohowski, S. — Rosa maczna agrestu. (Gooseberry mildew.) (Polish.) 



[An account of the further spread of this fungus, 

 Sphcerotheca mors-uvcs.'] 



Wszechfoviat (Weltall). Warschaw, 1905, 



No. 29, pp. 452-5. See also Bot. 



Centralbl, xcix. (1905) p. 486. 



„ ,, Trufle Warszawskie. (The truffles of Warsaw.) 1 



[The author found the so-called truffles were Rhizo- 

 pogon and Scleroderma.'] 



Tom. cit., No. 33, pp. 525-6. See also 

 Bot. Centralbl., xcix., pp. 486-7. 



Clinton, G. P. — The TJstilagineae or Smuts of Connecticut. 



[A discussion of the life-history of smuts, and descriptions of species that 

 occur in the region. With a list of hosts and 7 pages of figures.] 



Conn. State Geol. Nat. Hist. Survey, Bull. v. (1905) pp. 1-43. 

 See also Bot. Centralbl., xcix. (1905) p. 487. 



Copeland, E. B. — New Species of Edible Philippine Fungi. 



[Diagnoses in English of the various species of Coprinus, Psalliota, and 

 Lepiota.'} Depart, of the Interior, Bureau of Gov. Lab., 



Manila, 1905, pp. 141-6 (3 pis.). 



Costantin & Lucet — Recherches sur quelques Aspergillus pathogenes. (Re- 

 searches on some pathogenic species of Aspergillus.) 



Ann. Sci. Nat., ser. 9, ii. (1905) pp. 119-71 (1 pi.). 



