24 NEW YORK STATE MUSEUM 



or oblong, often substellately lobed by confluence, erumpent, black, 

 context whitish ; asci obovate or subglobose ; spores ovate or oblong, 

 continuous, at length uniseptate, hyaline, 12-15 /^- long, 6-8 p- 

 thick. 



Upper surface of leaves of Labrador tea. Ledum g r o e n - 

 landicum Oeder. Fine, St Lawrence co. August. 



Remarkable and very distinct by its subglobose asci. 



Maculae orbiculares, griseo-albidae, margine brunneo vel pur- 

 pureo-brunneo circumdatae ; perithecia epiphylla, pauca, elliptica 

 oblongave, saepe confluentia et substellatim lobata, erumpentia, 

 atra, contexta albida ; asci obovati subglobosive ; sporae ovatae 

 oblongaeve, continuae, demum uniseptatae, hyalinae, 12-15 ^ ^-8 ij- 



Biatora coarctata (Sm.) Nyl. 



On nodules in drifting sand. Karner, Albany co. November. 

 S. H. Burnham. ^ 



Calvatia craniiformis (Schw.) Morg. 

 Ground. Orient Point, Suffolk co. November. R. Latham. 



Camelina microcarpa Andrz. 



Grain fields. Bergen, Genesee co. June. This plant was 

 erroneously reported as Camelina sativa (L.) Crantz. 

 Specimens of the true C. sativa with broader seed vessels have 

 been collected in oat fields near Orient Point by R. Latham and 

 contributed by him to the herbarium. 



Cercospora phlogina n. sp. 



Spots orbicular or nearly so, .5-1 cm broad, sometimes con- 

 fluent, blackish brown, usually with a small grayish center on the 

 upper surface; hyphae epiphyllous, densely tufted, flexuous or 

 irregular, 30-40," long, commonly aseptate, slightly colored; spores 

 oblong or slightly narrowed toward the apex, 2-4-septate, 35-60 

 // long, 3-4/^ thick. 



Leaves of cultivated phlox. Floral Park, Nassau co. June. 

 F. C. Stewart. 



This species is related to C. omphacodes E. & H., but 

 it differs in the characters of the spots, the position of the fungus 

 and the thicker spores with fewer septa. 



Maculae suborbiculars, .5-1 cm latae, aliquando confluentes, 

 fuscoatrae, in centro supra griseae ; hyphae epiphyllae, dense caes- 



