﻿REPORT 
  OF 
  THE 
  DIRECTOR 
  1C;I2 
  

  

  35 
  

  

  Crataegus 
  leptopoda 
  6\ 
  

  

  C. 
  livingstoniana 
  S. 
  

  

  C. 
  macera 
  »S\ 
  

  

  C. 
  procera 
  S. 
  

  

  Creonectria 
  ochroleuca 
  (Schw.) 
  Seav. 
  

  

  Diaporthe 
  castaneti 
  Nits. 
  

  

  Diatrypella 
  favacea 
  (Fr.) 
  Ces. 
  & 
  

  

  DcNot. 
  

   Didymella 
  asterinoides 
  (E. 
  & 
  E.) 
  

  

  Rehni 
  

   Dothidea 
  baccharidis 
  Cke. 
  

   Escholtzia 
  californica 
  Cham. 
  

   Flammula 
  graveolens 
  Pk. 
  

   Helicopsis 
  punctata 
  Pk. 
  

   Heliomyces 
  pruinosipes 
  Pk. 
  

   Helminthosporium 
  fuscum 
  Fckl. 
  

   Hydnum 
  laevigatum 
  Sw. 
  

   H. 
  subcrinale 
  Pk. 
  

  

  Hygrophorus 
  ruber 
  Pk. 
  

   Inocybe 
  radiata 
  Pk. 
  

   Lenzites 
  trabea 
  (Pers.) 
  Fr. 
  

   Leptonia 
  euchlora 
  (Lasch.) 
  Fr. 
  

   Macrophoma 
  juniperina 
  Pk. 
  

   Malus 
  glaucescens 
  S. 
  

   Mycena 
  flavifolia 
  Pk. 
  

   M. 
  splendidipes 
  Pk. 
  

  

  Opegrapha 
  herpetica 
  Ach. 
  

   Penicillium 
  hypomycetes 
  Sacc. 
  

   Pestalozzia 
  truncata 
  Lev. 
  

   Phialea 
  anomala 
  Pk. 
  

   Phoma 
  asclepiadea 
  E. 
  & 
  E. 
  

   P. 
  semiimmersa 
  Sacc. 
  

  

  Phyllosticta 
  mahoniaecola 
  Pass. 
  

   P. 
  rhoicola 
  E. 
  & 
  E. 
  

  

  Placodium 
  camptidium 
  Tuck. 
  

   Pleurotus 
  tessulatus 
  (Bull.) 
  Fr. 
  

   Polyporus 
  dryadeus 
  (Pers.) 
  Fr. 
  

   Puccinia 
  urticae 
  (Schum.) 
  Lagerh. 
  

   Riccardia 
  sinuata 
  (Dicks.) 
  Limpr. 
  

   Russula 
  ballouii 
  Pk. 
  

   Septoria 
  margaritaceae 
  Pk. 
  

   Silene 
  dichotoma 
  Ehrh. 
  

   Tricholoma 
  latum 
  Pk. 
  

   T. 
  piperatum 
  Pk. 
  

  

  T. 
  subpulverulentum(F^rj.) 
  

  

  Urophlyctis 
  major 
  Schroet. 
  

   Vermicularia 
  hysteriiformis 
  Pk. 
  

   Verrucaria 
  muralis 
  Ach. 
  

   V. 
  papularis 
  Fr. 
  

  

  Vicia 
  hirsuta 
  (L.) 
  S\ 
  F. 
  Gray. 
  

   Zygodesmus 
  avellanus 
  Sacc. 
  

  

  VI 
  

   REPORT 
  OF 
  THE 
  STATE 
  ENTOMOLOGIST 
  

  

  The 
  State 
  Entomologist 
  reports 
  that 
  the 
  past 
  season 
  was 
  note- 
  

   worthy 
  because 
  of 
  the 
  superabundance 
  of 
  the 
  common 
  apple 
  

   tent 
  caterpillar 
  in 
  the 
  Hudson 
  and 
  Mohawk 
  valleys 
  and 
  on 
  the 
  

   borders 
  of 
  the 
  Adirondack^. 
  The 
  pests 
  were 
  so 
  numerous 
  that 
  

   most 
  of 
  the 
  wild 
  cherries 
  on 
  the 
  roadside 
  were 
  defoliated 
  and 
  

   many 
  orchards 
  severely 
  injured. 
  There 
  were 
  records 
  of 
  local 
  

   damage 
  here 
  and 
  there 
  by 
  the 
  allied 
  forest 
  tent 
  caterpillar; 
  in 
  several 
  

   sections 
  extended 
  tracts 
  were 
  stripped 
  of 
  foliage. 
  There 
  is 
  at 
  

   least 
  a 
  fair 
  probability 
  of 
  this 
  insect 
  being 
  more 
  abundant 
  another 
  

   season 
  and 
  possibly 
  causing 
  serious 
  injury 
  locally. 
  The 
  green 
  maple 
  

   worm, 
  so 
  numerous 
  last 
  year, 
  attracted 
  no 
  attention 
  the 
  past 
  season. 
  

  

  Petroleum 
  compounds 
  as 
  insecticides. 
  Dead 
  and 
  dying 
  trees 
  

   in 
  several 
  Greene 
  county 
  orchards 
  which 
  had 
  been 
  sprayed 
  the 
  

   preceding 
  autumn 
  with 
  a 
  commercial 
  preparation 
  of 
  petroleum, 
  

  

  