REPORT OF THE STATE BOTANIST I909 10, 



SPECIES NOT BEFORE REPORTED 

 Ascochyta solani-nigri Diedicke 

 Living leaves of tgg plant, Solanum melon gena L. 

 Ithaca. October. H. H. Whetzel. 



Agropyrum tenerum Vasey 



Brownsville, Jefferson co. and Adirondack mountains. June and 

 July. Formerly confused with Agropyrum violaceum 

 Lange. 



v Belonidium glyceriae n. sp. 



Receptacle I— 1.5 mm broad, gregarious, sessile, plane or convex, 

 glabrous or merely papillate on the under side, pale yellow ; asci 

 subclavate or subfusiform, obtuse, 120-130 x 14-18 p- ; spores ob- 

 long or subcylindric, straight or slightly curved, 3-septate, often 

 4-nucleate, crowded or biseriate, 35-40 x 4-5 //, paraphyses filiform. 



Dead culms of Glyceria nervata (Willd.) Trin. Lyn- 

 donville, Orleans co: June. C. E. Fairman. 



Receptaculum 1— 1.5 mm latum, gregarium, sessile, planum con- 

 vexumve, extus glabrum seu papillatum, flavidum ; asci subclavati 

 vel subfusiformes, obtusi, 120-130 x 14-18 ,« ; sporae oblongae vel 

 subcylindraceae, rectae vel leviter curvae, 3-septatae, saepe 4-nu- 

 cleatae, confertae vel distichae, 35-40 x 4-5 //, paraphyses filiformes. 



Biatora cupreo-rosella (Nyl.) Tuckm. 



Limestone rocks. Pine Island, Orange co. November. C. F. 

 Austin. 



Bidens tenuisecta Gray 



Field near Rochester. August. Miss F. Beckwith. Probably a 

 recent introduction from the West. 



Boletus viridarius Frost 

 Grassy places near pine trees. Poughkeepsie. September and 

 October. Miss H. L. Palliser. For description of this species see 

 article on " Edible fungi " in another part of this report. 



Bromus altissimus Pursh 

 Rathbone, Steuben co. and North Greenbush, Rensselaer co. Au- 

 gust to October. Formerly confused with Bromus cili- 

 a tu s L. 



