34 



NORTH AMERICAN FUNGI. 



ADDENDA. 



Bail, Theodor. See NEES VON ESENBECK, 

 T. F. L. 



Bischoff, Gottlieb Wilhelm. Durkheim, 1797. 

 f Heidelberg, 11 Sept. 1854. 



646. Lehrbuch der botanik. 8. Vol. I.-III., 

 and supplement. Stuttgart. 1834-1840. 



Portion of " Naturgeschichte der drei Reiche." The plates 

 which belong to this work form a separate quarto, the index 

 being in vol. II. PL 7, fig. 173, represents Mitremycea 

 cinnabarinus. 



Brendel, F. Add to title no. 76 : List of species 

 also given in the Pharmacist, XV. 263-2G8, 291- 

 299. July, Aug. 1882. ' 



Catesby, Mark. 1680. f^ondon, 23 Dec. 1749. 



647. The natural history of Carolina, Florida, 

 and the Bahama Islands. f. Vol. I., II. Lon- 

 don. 1731-43. 2d ed. 1754. 3d ed. 1771. 



Vol. I. pi. 36, has a figure called " fungoides capitulo in- 

 torto, Toad stool," not recognizable. 



Copeland, Robert Morris. 



648. Edible fungi. Atlantic Monthly, XXXI. 

 223-229. Feb. 1873. 



Popular article on the subject, without special reference to 

 American species. 



Crozier, Arthur Alger. Georgetown, Ottawa 

 Co., Mich., 22 Sept. 1856. 



649. Notes on black-knot. Bot. Gaz. X. 368, 

 369, Sept. 1885 ; and Jour. Myc. I. 142. 



Remarks on the date of the ripening of the spores in this 

 species. 



Duggan, J. R. See SEDGWICK, W. T. 

 Hubbard, Henry Guernsey. Detroit, Mich., 

 6 May, 1850. 



650. Insects affecting the orange. Report on 

 the insects affecting the culture of the orange and 



other plants of the Citrus family, with practical 

 suggestions for their control or extermination, 

 made, under the direction of the Entomologist, by 

 H. G. Hubbard. U. S. Dept. Agr. Division of 

 Entomology. 8. pp. x. 227. PI. 14. Washing- 

 ton. 1885. 



In the introduction, pp. 1-4, pi. 2, is a notice of die-back, 

 bark-fungus, foot-rot, aud smut, due to the growth of fungi. 



Osborn, Herbert. 



651. An epidemic disease of Caloptenus differ- 

 entialis. Am. Nat. XVII. 1286, 1287. Dec. 1883. 



Account of a disease caused by Entomophthora Calopteni, 

 Bessey, with a note by C. V. Riley. Paper first read before 

 the Iowa Academy of Science, 27 Sept. 1883. See title no. 63, 

 where p. 1286, which belongs to present title, is incorrectly 

 cited. 



Ott, Isaac. Northampton Co., Pa., 30 Nov. 

 1847. 



652. Poisonous mushrooms. Jour, of Nervous 

 and Mental Diseases, IV. 48-53. Chicago. Jan. 



1877. 



A general account of the toxicological action of fungi, in- 

 cluding experiments on the action of muscarin, especially 

 those of Smiedeberg. 



Pech. 



653. Catalogue of the United States plants in the 

 Department of Agriculture. 



The above is the title of a very rare pamphlet found in a 

 few libraries. It has no value except as a literary and bo- 

 tanical curiosity. The author was at one time employed as 

 botanist at the United States Agricultural Department, and 

 prepared a list of plants, pp 27, which was distributed as a 

 circular, but was never printed in any government publi- 

 cation. It is said to have been suppressed in consequence of 

 the very numerous errors it contains. On pp. 26, 27 is a list of 

 72 fungi, apparently from Missouri, 31 of them said to be new 

 species. There is no title-page, and the date, which is not 

 printed but written, is Nov. 1, 1866. 



CORRIGENDUM. 



In place of the note following title no. 174, substitute the 

 following title : 



174*. Icones Fungorum hucusque cognitorum. 

 Abbildungen der pilze und schwaemme. f. Vol. 

 I.-VI. Prague. 1837-1854. 



A work with figures and descriptions of many species of 

 fungi. Vol. VI., published after Corda's death, was edited 



by J. B. Zobel, and contains a small number of species from 

 North America. A considerable part of the edition of the 

 first five volumes was destroyed in the great fire at Prague, 

 and complete sets of the original edition are now very rare. 

 The remaining copies of vol. VI. were purchased by R. 

 Friedlaender & Sohn, of Berlin, who have reproduced the 

 first five volumes by photo-lithography, and most copies now 

 offered for sale have only the sixth volume of the original 

 edition. 



