1 Hi 



Septoria Oenothera West. On Oenothera biennis, HaJTodsburg, August 

 7. 1915. 



Septoria polygonorum Desm. On Polygonum persicaria, July 29, 1915. 

 This fungus was very common and very destructive to its lu>si throughout 

 the summer. Ii varies slightly from the description a> follows: Spots 

 2 to '■') linn, in diameter. Leaf fades to yellow, curls, dries on t be plant or falls 

 to the ground. Some spores exceed 25 microns in Length. 



Septoria rubi West. On cultivated raspberries. September, 1912. Also 

 common on blackberries. 



Septoria scrophulariae Pk. On Scrophularia nodosa or marylandica. 

 Summer of 1911. Sutton. 



Septoria verbaseicola B. & C. On Verbascum blattaria, autumn of 1912. 



Sphaeropsis asiminae E. & E. On dead twigs of Asimina triloba, Boone 

 county, December, 1913. Ramsey. 



Melanconiales. 



Cyhndrosporium capsellae E. & E. On leaves of Capsella bursa-pastoris, 

 1911. Sutton. 



Cyhndrosporium padi Karst. On Prunus serotina, summer of 1911. 



Sutton. 



GloeosjDorium caryae Ell. & Dear. Common on leaves of Carya alba, 

 Harrodsburg, August 7, 1915. 



Gloeosporium intermedium Saec, var. poinsettiae Saec. On dead stems 

 of Poinsettia pulcherrima, greenhouse, March 16, 1915. Plants grown from 

 Florida stock. 



Marsonia juglandis (Lib.) Saee. On leaves of Juglans cinerea, Helmsburg, 

 Brown county, July, 1912; Unionville, Monroe county, October 3, 1914. 

 On leaves of Juglans nigra, Unionville, October 3, 1914. On leaves of Juglans 

 sieboldiana, Campus, October 5, 1915. 



Marsonia martini Saec. & Ell. On leaves of Quercus acuminata, 1 farrods- 

 burg, July 7, 1915. 



Pestalozzia f unerea Desm. On leaves of Hammamelis virginiana, ( !ampus, 

 October 5, 1915. 



Hyphomycetes. 



Cercospora ampelopsidis Pk. On living leaves of Ampelopsis quinque- 

 folia, October 5, 1915. The eonidiophores of this fungus measure 30 to 112 

 by 5 to 6 microns and are 2 to 4 septate; the spores are 25 to 125 by 6 to S 



