NORTH AMERICAN FUNGI. 15 
Farlow, William Gilson. 
271. Onion Smut, an essay presented to the 
Massachusetts Society for Promoting Agriculture, 
pp. 15,-pl. 1, and fig. 5. Boston. 1877. Extr. 
24th Rept. Mass. Board Agr. for 1876. Part 2. 
pp- 164-176. fe 
Account of Urocystis Cepulae, and damage done by it in 
New England, with a note on Papulaspora sepedonivides. 
Rey. in Grevillea, V.158; and Gard. Chron. 1877. pp. 441 
and 634. es 
272. —— Notes on some common diseases 
caused by fungi. Bull. Bussey Inst. Il. 106-114. 
Pi. 1. 1877. 
Notes on Sphaeria morbosa, Urocystis Cepulae, etc., with 
account of Uncinula spiralis and its action, with figures. 
Rev. in Jour. Roy. Hort. Soc. V. new ser. 69-71. Plate also 
given in Rural ew - Yorker. 30 Jan. 1886. 
273. Diseases of fruit-bearing trees. 25th 
Rept. Mass. Board Agr. for 1877. pp. 218-233 
(1-16). Fig. 7. 1878. 
Popular account of black-knot of plums, grape moulds, et¢., 
with figures from author’s previous papers. 
274. On the synonymy of some species of 
Uredineae. Proc. Amer. Acad. Arts and Sci. 
Boston, XIII. (V. n. 8.) 251, 252 (262, 263). 1878. 
Read Feb. 1878. 
Notes on latu 
R laria on R 
California. 
original. 
275. —— Diseases of forest trees. 
Mass. Hort. Soc. for 1879. Part 1. 
1879. ! 
Abstract of popular lecture. Substance given in Bot. Gaz. 
IV. 244. 
e of a Uromy on Brizopyrumy 
and a Puccinia on Malvastrum, in 
By a misprint, pages of reprint differ from 
Trans. 
pp. 44-46. 
276. —— The Gymmnosporangia or cedar ap- 
ples of the United States. Annwersary Memoirs 
Soc. Nat. Hist. Boston. pp. 1-38 Pl. 1, 2. 
1880. 
Description of the Gymmosporangia and Roesteliae of the 
United States, with account of cultures made to show the 
connection of the species of the two genera.’ One hundred re- 
prints“issued. As, paper is hard to obtain, consult follow- 
ing reviews. Bot. Gaz. VI. 209; Am. Nat. XV.471; Torr. 
Bull. VIII. 71; Grevillea, IX. 138.” / 
277. —— Unusual habitat of a Coprinus. 
Torr. Bull. VIII. 67. June, 1881. 
Notes the occurrence of C.'stercorarius on water contain- 
ing algae. 
278. Notes on Gymnosporangia. 
Bull. VIII. 85-87. Aug. 1881. 
New localities of Gymnosporangia and Calyptospora. 
279. Notes on some species in the 3d and 
1lth centuries of Ellis’s North American Fungi. 
Proc.-Am. Acad. Arts and Sci. Boston, XVIII. 
(X. n. 8.) 65-85. 1883. Issued July, 1883. 
Critical notes on several Peronosporae, Uredineae, and 
Ezxoasci of this series, with descriptions of 7 new species, one 
from Bermuda, preceded by general remarks on nomen- 
clature of Uredineae. Rev. in Bot. Gaz. VIII. 302. 
280. Note on Phallus togatus, Kalchb. 
Bot. Gaz. VIII. 258, 259. July, 1883. 
Notes, on the nomenclature of the Bien cenieas of the 
United States. P. togatus, Kalchbr., referred to P. dupli- 
catus, Bosc. See KALCHBRENNER, K. 
281. Notes on some Ustilagineae of the 
United States. Bot. Gaz. VIII. 271-278 (1-7). 
Aug. 1883. 
General notes on '‘Ustilagineae of the United States, with 
opsis of species of the genus Zntyloma in the United 
States, with descriptions of 4 new species, and description of 
Doassansia Epilobii. 
Torr. 
282. Additional note on Ustilagineae. 
Bot. Gaz. VIII. 318. Oct. 1883. i 
Notes on the Doassansia and other speci tioned in | hark 
283. —— Enumeration of the Peronosporeae of 
the United States. Bot. Gaz. VIII. 305-315, 327- 
337. Oct., Nov. 1883. 
Descriptions and synonymy of 35 species known in this 
country, 5 new species, with Bet of hosts. See no. 285. 
284. Notes on the cryptogamic flora of 
the White Mountains. Appalachia, III. 232-251. 
Jan. 1884. 
Enumeration of 108 fungi, pp. 237-251, 8 new species de- 
scribed, including 3 given also in Bot. Gaz. VIII. 275-277. 
Critical notes on several of the species, including an account 
of the Peridermia of the White Mountains. pp. 239-243. 
Rev. in Rev. Myc. VI. 129. 
285. Additions to the Peronosporeae of 
the United States. Bot. Gaz. TX. 37-40. March, 
1884. 3 
Two species and one variety new to the United States, with 
new poets for 18 species enumerated in paper above. See 
no. 283. / 
286. ——- Maladies des morues séches. Rev. 
Myc. VI. 197-199. Pl. 49. Fig.1,2. July, 1884. 
Description of Sarcina’ Morrhuae and Oidium (Torula) 
lvinatum, with figure. See also foot-note in Rev. Myc. 
I. 17, for correction. 
287. Notes on a fungus parasitic.on species 
of Potamogeton. Trans. Field-Naturdlists’ Club, 
Ottawa, II. 127-129 (1-3). 1884. 
Notes on Doassansia Farlowii received from Dr. J. 
Fletcher. 
288. —— Notes onfungi. Bot. Gaz. X. 219- 
221. Feb. 1885. | 
Remarks, with ti f stat ts in papers here 
numbered 279 and 281. 
289. —— Notes on some species of Gymno- 
sporangium and Chrysomyza of the United States. 
Proc. Am. Acad. Arts and Sci. Boston, XX. (XIL. 
n. s.) 311-323. 1885. Read 11 Feb. 1885. 
Summary of cultures of spores of Gymnosporangia made 
by author up to date, with additional remarks on the Perider- 
mia and Chrysomyxae of the White Mountains and other 
localities. Rev. in Jour. Myc. I. 45. , 
290. The Synchytria of the United States. 
Bot. Gaz. X. 235-245. Pl. 4. March, 1885. 
Synopsis of species in the United States, two of them 
new. 
291. —— Notes on some injurious fungi of 
California. Bot. Gaz..X. 346-348, Oct. 1885; 
and Proc. Am. Ass. Adv. Sci. XXXIV. 300-303. 
Also in Proc. Soc. Prom. Agr. Sci. 1885. pp. 
29-31. 
Account of Per a Hyoscyami and Pu Mal. 
vastri in California. 
292. Vegetable parasites of codfish. Bul. 
U. S. Fish Comm. VI. 1-4. Fig. 2. 1886. 
no ee 
293. Development of Roesteliae from 
Gymnosporangia. Bot. Gaz. XI. 189, 190. July, 
1886. : " 
Preliminary report. See next title. 
294. The development of the Gymnos- 
porangia of the United States. Bot. Gaz. XI. 
234-241. Sept. 1886. 
Paper read at the meeting of the Am. Ass. Adv. Bci. at 
Buffalo, N. Y., Aug. 1886, giving results of cultures made by 
B. D. Halsted and R. Thaxter, etc. Abstr. in Proc. Am. 
Asso. Adv. Sci. XXXV. 254. The paper by Thaxter, not 
here included, issued Jan. 1887, in Proc. Am. Acad. Boston. 
295. On a supposed disease of roses 
caused by afungus. Proc. 7th Ann. Meeting Soc. 
Prom. Agr. Sct. pp. 24,25. Columbus,O. 1886. 
Read at the meeting at Buffalo in August; issued in No- 
vember. Leptothyrium chromospermum, Peck, on roses, 
‘said to be the spores of a Pilobolus, and Gymnosporium 
last-named paper. 
luis and Holway, considered to be spores 
of some ascomycetous fungus. 
