390 EXCLUDED SPECIES 
PUCCINIA CLANDESTINA Carm. in Berk. Engl. Fl. v. 365, “on Scabiosa 
succisa”; Plowr. Ured. p. 185. 
Perhaps the host-plant was mistaken; no Puccinia on 
Scabiosa is known. 
XENODOCHUS cURTUS Cooke, Micr. Fung. p. 201. Plowr. Ured. p. 228. 
Not a Uredine, but may be a species of Hyphomycetes. 
Ectp1uM BaRBARE Cooke, Grevillea, x. 115. Plowr. Ured. p. 265. 
This record depends, so far as this country is concerned, on 
a single leaf which was sent to M. C. Cooke by a correspondent, 
who informed him (on the authority of another person) that 
the leaf belonged to Burbarea praecox, But on examination 
the leaf is.seen to be one of the radical leaves of Lapsana 
communis, of which it has the peculiar hairs, and the fungus is 
obviously Acidium Lapsanae. The true 4. Barbareae is quite 
different. The leaf is preserved in the Kew Herbarium. 
/JECIDIUM INCARCERATUM B. et Br. Plowr. Ured. p. 267. 
Plowright’s suspicion that this is merely Doassansia Sagit- 
turiae (on Sagittaria sagittefulia) is perfectly correct. 
ZECIDIUM PSEUDO-COLUMNARE J. Kiihn. 
Recorded in Plowright, Ured. p. 271, on “Abies pectinata, 
nordmanniana, amabilis, cephalonica. Lyme Regis, Mr Munro.” 
Nothing else seems to be known of this as British ; most likely 
the specimens belonged to Calyptospora Goeppertiana, or were 
introduced on imported plants. 4. pseudo-columnare differs 
from the ecidium of C. Goeppertiana in having oblong white 
spores which are larger, more irregular in form, unevenly warted 
or even smooth at the end (see Hedwigia, 1885, xxiv. 108). 
UrEpo OXALIDIS. 
There is a specimen bearing this name in the Herbarium of 
the British Museum, on leaves of Oxalis Acetosella (W. Phillips, 
July 31, 1880) from “Orton”; and a similar one, part of the 
same gathering, in the Kew Herbarium, from Orton Longueville, 
Hunts. (Rev. M. J. Berkeley, August, 1880). Both these are 
not Uredines, but show marks probably of insect-bites. 
