REPORT OF THE STATE BOTANIST I917 49 



Diatrypella missouriensis E. & E. 



On dead branches of Corylus. West Albany. C. H. Pock. 

 November (as Diatrypella frostii (Peck) Sacc). The 

 narrow, relatively few-spored asci and the other characters appear 

 to distinguish this from D . frostii, the typical form of which 

 is found on Acer. 



Dinemasporium hispidulum (Schrad.) Sacc. 



On dead and decorticated shoots of Sambucus canaden- 

 sis. North Greenbush. C. H. Peck, June. Also collected by 

 Peck on decayed wood of Ulmus at Menands, and on shoots of 

 Viburnum dentatum at West Albany. 



Dinemasporium robiniae Gerard 

 D. acerinura Peck 



Poughkeepsie, on decorticated wood of Robin i a pseudo- 

 acacia, W. R. Gerard (cotype material). Albany, on decorti- 

 cated wood, of Ulmus americana, C. H. Peck. Buffalo, on 

 decorticated wood of Acer, G. W. Clinton (type of D . aceri- 

 num Peck, 26th Rep't, p. Jj). Bethlehem, on decorticated wood 

 of Ulmus, C. H. Peck (asD. hispidulum var.) . North Green- 

 bush on decorticated wood of Populus deltoides, C. H. 

 Peck (as D . acerinum). Petersburg on decorticated wood of 

 Acer, C. H. Peck (as D. robiniae). Carlton, Orleans county, 

 on dead, decorticated branches of Rhus toxicodendron, 

 C. E. Fairman, March 1, 1888 (as D. acerinum Pk.). 



The spores of D. robiniae Gerard are generally but not 

 invariably smaller than the others cited. No other difference 

 appears. The Albany collection on Ulmus has many spores larger 

 than any seen in the so-called D . acerinum. It has also the 

 longest pycnidial bristles, but it grades into D . acerinum and 

 into the type of D. robiniae. A careful comparison of the 

 material cited above would seem to indicate that D . acerinum 

 is but a mere form, and not a constant form, of D . robiniae. 



Diplodia sarmentorum Fr. 



D. petiolaris Peck 



In 1872 Doctor Peck described a Diplodia petiolaris on 



what he supposed to be fallen petioles of Fraxinus. An examination 



of the type material reveals the fact that he must have erred in the 



determination of the host which proves to be fragments of the dead 



