Bonorden (4) in 1851 claims to have found another fruit rot 

 fungus which he calls Monilia cinorea and describee it as follows: 



Mo nil i a cinerea rt; Komrat auf faulenden Fruchten vor und hat graue 

 Hyphen und unregelmtssig - elliptische Sporen. Bildet kleine graua, 

 etwas briunliche BtJschel oder RHufchen deren Mycelium in den Fruchten 

 (Kirschen) eehr leicht beobachtet werden Kann, wenn man seine perpendi- 

 kulflre Schnitte da von unter das Mikroskop bringt. Das Mycelium becteht 

 aus artikulirten Fa* den, welche eich fie tig in den Zellen der Frucht ver- 

 breiten und mit epitxen, nicht septirten, im Inneren KBrnigen, frei in 

 die Zellen hineinragenden Faden endigen. 



The above may be translated as follows: 



Monilia cinerea Mine; habitat on decaying fruits. Hyphae gray; 

 spores irregularly elliptical; eporodochia small, gray, somewhat brownish; 

 mycelium from which sporodochia are produced is readily seen in vertical 

 sections of the fruit (cherries). Mycelium of septate filaments which 

 spread, branching in the cells of the fruit, and end in free filaments 

 containing granular contents within the cells. 



Saccardo (5) in 1886 mentions the three species of Monilia. 

 fructigena. laxa and cineroa and besides these gives two varieties of 

 M. fructigfma. var. gyconophila and var. Candida. 



?:'onilia fructipena Pers. Oidium fructipenum Link, Torula fructigena 

 Pers. caespitulis compaetiusculis, pulvinatis, saepe circinantibus 

 confluentibusque, tomentosis, albidis dein carneo^ochraceis, hyphis 

 fasciculatis breve ramosis; conidiis longe ramoso-catenulatis, ovoideis 

 v. oblongis 25 10-2 e hyalino carneolis. 



