State Museum of Natural History 



41 



C. J. Sprague, Boston, Mass. 



Hirneola Auricula-Judae Berk. 



E. W. Hoi way, Decorah, Iowa. 

 iEcidium Periclymeni D. G. | iEcidium Xanthoxyli 



M. 



albescens Gi'ev. 



Ph. 



J. B. Ellis, Newfield, N. J. 



Sporidesmium Rauii Ellis. 



Cercospora grapliioides Ellis. 



Menispora glauconigra G. & E. 



Dendryphiura Harknessii Ellis. 



Penicillium repens C. & E. 



Zygodesmus bicolor 0. & E. 



Rev. H. Wibbe, Oswego, N. Y. 



Coreopsis discoidea. . . T. & G. I Eleocharis quadrangulata. 



Lamium maculatum L. 



Geo. Martin, M. D., Westchester, Pa. 



Helicosporium auratum Ellis. 



H. thysanopliornm E. & H. 



Gonytrichum subroseum Ellis. 



Arthrosporium compositum . . . Ellis. 

 Ascomyees anomalus E. & H. 



B. Br. 



Agaricus laccatus Scop. 



A. subockraceus Ph. 



A. sapineus Fr. 



Lenzites sepiaria Fr. 



Trametes hydnoides Fr. 



Polyporus sanguineus Fr. 



Stereum complicatum ... Fr. 



Peridermium Pini GJiev. 



Uromyces Martinii Far. 



Cryptosporium acicolum Thum. 



Meliola ampliitriclia Fr. 



Capnodium elongatum B. & D. 



J. D. Trask, M. D., Astoria, N. Y. 

 Agaricus spectabilis Fr. 



H. W. Harkness, M. D., Sacramento, Cal 



Daedalea vorax Harh. 



Monilia Ellisii . . Harh. 



Helicosporium Mulleri Gd. 



Rkinotrichuin repens Preuss. 



Trickaeguni atrum Preuss. 



Coniothecium irregulare Ph. 



Zygodesmus granulosus Ph. 



Z. atroruber Ph. 



Patellaria indigotica ... G- & P. 



Hypoxylon discretum Schw. 



Prof. W. G. Farlow, Cambridge, Mass. 



Podisoma macropus Schw. 



P. clavariseforme D. G. 



P. f uscum Duby. 



Gymnosporangium biseptatum Ellis. 

 Basidiospora entospora Gornu. 



(4) 



PLANTS NOT BEFORE REPORTED. 



Triosteum angustifolium, L. Manhasset and Grlen Cove, Long 

 Island. /. Coles. 



Coreopsis discoidea, T. & G. Borders of Lily pond near Oswego. 

 Rev. J. H. WiUe. to 



Lamium maculatum, L. Roadsides west of Oswego. Wibbe. 



Potamogeton rufescens, Schrad. Edmonds ponds, Adirondack 

 mountains. July. A few plants were found growing in water one to 

 two feet deep, but most of them grow where it was three or four feet 

 deep. In the latter the leaves are more distant than in the former. A 

 few of the lower ones are obtuse, the others are acute. They are 

 [Assem Doc. 127.] 6 



