73 



Caryospora callicarpa (Curr.) Fckl. — Orient on rose galls; determined by Dr. 

 I'airman. 



Diatrype minima E. & E. — On Cleihra alnifolia at Circeni)ort; determined by 

 Prof. Dcarncss. 



D. suhjerruginea B. & Rav.^ — ^Ciit( lioj^iie on Quercus Prinus; determined by 

 Prof. Dcarness. 



Diatrypella decorala Nitsch. — On Beliila populifolia at Greenport; determined 

 by Prof. Dearness. 



D. nigro-annulala (Grev.) Nitsch. — On Alnus incana at Southold; determined 

 by Prof. Dcarness. 



Diaporthe binoculata (Ell.) Sacc, var. Clelhrae var. nov. — Described by Prof. 

 Dearness in Mycol. 16: 158. July 1924. "On dead stems 

 of Clethra alnifolia L., Greenport, N. Y.; April 1923. Roy 

 Latham: 1055." 



D. gallophila Ell. — -Orient on rose galls; determined by Dr. Fairman. 



D. phomaspora (C. & E.) E. & E. — On Myrica carolinensis at Orient; deter- 

 mined by Dr. Fairman. 



Dichaena strumosa Fr. — Laurel on Quercus veliUina; determined by Prof. 

 Dearness. 



Dothidea Baccharidis Cke. — Prof. Dearness in Mycol. 16: 154-155. July 1924 

 says, "Examination of a collection of branches of Baccharis 

 halimifolia L. made by Roy Latham, Orient, N. Y., May 1923, 

 enables me to enlarge the description of Dothidea Baccharidis 

 Cke. in Grev. XI: 108 and the addendum in Ell. & Evht., 

 N. Am. Pyr., p. 612. 



The asci, p.sp., are 120 X io-iIm surrounded by long linear 

 paraphyses some of them twice the length of the asci. Most 

 but not all the sporidia are distinctly larger in the upper cell." 



Eriosphaeria alligata (Fr.) Sacc. — Prof. Dearness in Mycol. 16: 156. July 

 :• . 1924 says, "An Eriosphaeria on decaying Sassafras trunk; 



Orient, N.Y., Jan. 1923. Roy Latham: 415. This fungus 

 grew on the rotten wood under the loosened bark. It meets in 

 large part the requirements of the description of Eriosphaeria 

 alligata in Syst. Myc. 2: 445 and Syll. 1: 597. It has the yel- 

 lowish, bi-nucleate, constricted sporidia and the deciduous 

 ostiolum of the flat or umbilicate perithecium. It differs in the 

 perithecia not being distinctly collabescent and possibly in some- 

 times having a dense subiculum. The most conspicuous feature 

 in this collection is the red, rough, flat surface of the perithecia 

 with the brown hyphal appendages, 200 X 4-5 M- Asci 75- 

 90 u; paraphyses numerous, branching, longer than the asci. 

 Sporidia i -septate; monostichous or in some of the asci sub- 

 biseriate, 15-21 X 4.5-6 m- 



Another collection, at Orient, Feb., 1924, was under the 

 loosened bark of Sambuciis sp." 



Erysiphe Galeopsidis DC.— Mattituck on Scutellaria galericulata; determined 

 by Prof. Dearness. 



