14 T'ransactions. 
members of each family differs somewhat from that of Puccinia as given 
in Part 1, p. 620; the differences are discussed under the descriptions of 
of specimens for comparative purposes; Dr. E. J. Butler (Director, Bureau 
of Mycology, Kew) and Mr. E. W. Mason (of the Imperial Bureau), for 
Mr. C. C i 
(Department of Agriculture, Melbourne), for material for comparative 
purposes, loan of many type specimens, and for literature references ; and 
J 
The following publications have proved very useful, particularly in 
giving the geographical range of species, genera, and families; I have 
of the New Zealand Flora (T. F. Cheeseman). 
awings were made with the aid of a camera lucida, from spores 
mounted in 50 per cent. lactic acid - water solution. Drawings are all to 
the same scale, unless otherwise specified, and have all been reduced the 
nt 
ПІ. PUCCINIACEAE (continuatio). 
Teleutosori compacted or pulverulent, naked or covered by the epidermis. 
Teleutospores one- to many-celled, free, borne on distinct pedicels ; epispore 
coloured or hyaline, smooth, or variously sculptured, with one or more 
germ-pores in each cell. Basidia external. 
Tribe PHRAGMIDEAE, 
Teleutospores in pulvinate, dark-coloured sori... -- 5. Phragmidium. 
Teleutospores in yellow fibrils .. s е .. 6. Hamaspora, 
5. PHRAGMIDIUM Link. 
Link., Ges. Nat. Freunde Berlin Mag., vol. 7, p. 30, 1815. 
Hypodermium Link. Lc, p. 26. A Fr., Obs. Myc., vol. 1, p. 225, 1815. 
Epitea Fr., Syst. Myc., vol. 3, р. 510, 1832. Lecythea Lev., Ann. Sci. Nat., 
ser. Ш, vol. 8, p. 373, 1847. Earlea Arth., Res. Sci. Congr. Bot. Vienne, 
p. 341, 1906. 
