106 UROMYCES 
containing no teleutospores; it appears probable that these belong to 
U. Kabatianus, which will no doubt be found in many places, if looked for. 
DISTRIBUTION: a few places in Europe and Asia Minor. 
19. Uromyces Alchemille Lév. 
 Uredo Alchemillae Pers. Obs. Mye. i. 98. 
Uromyces Alchemillae Lévy. Ann. Sci. Nat. 3, viii. 371 (1847). Plowr. 
Ured. p. 187, Sacc. Syll. vii. 558. Sydow, Monogr. ii. 196. 
Fischer, Ured. Schweiz, p. 44, f. 34. 
U. intrusa Cooke, Handb. p. 519; Micr. Fung. p. 213. 
Trachyspora Alchemillae Fckl. Bot. Zeit. xix. 250. Arthur, N. Amer. 
Fl. vii. 178. 
Uredospores. Sori hypophyllous, radially arranged, occupy- 
ing néarly the whole leaf-surface, rounded or elongated, often 
confluent and covered by large fragments of the torn epidermis, 
then pulverulent, orange, yellowish or even whitish; spores 
ellipsoid to oblong, faintly echinulate, orange or yellowish, 
16—25 x 14—21 p. 
Fig. 59. U. Alchemillae. Teleutospores on A. vulyarix. 
Leleutospures. Sori hypophyllous, scattered, rarely con- 
fluent, minute, round, pulverulent, brown; spores globose to 
obovoid or oblong, not thickened above, coarsely warted, brown, 
26—40 x 20—80 uw; epispore 2—24 w thick; pedicels hyaline, 
very deciduous, short or rather long; teleutospores are also 
formed in the uredo-sori. 
On.Alchemilla vulgaris. Common. Uredospores, April— 
June; teleutospores, July—October. (Fig. 59.) 
The mycelium perennates in the rhizome and grows up with the young 
leaves, causing them to stand more erect, making them paler and con- 
spicuous, but smaller and often deformed. The separate teleuto-sori are 
