BIBLIOGRAPHY OF 1884 : CRYPTOGAMIC BOTANY. 



339 



Dr. Lediard. Cumberland, Northumberland. 



Salmon Disease. Journ. of Microsc. and Nat. Sci., April, iii. 122-126. 



A descriptive account of the fungus which attacks Salmon in the Eden and 

 the Tweed. 



F. Arnold Lees. Yorkshire. 

 Lastrea cristata near Thorne: its discoverer and its history. Nat., May, 

 ix, 164-166. 



A review of the Yorkshire records and their recorders. 

 Manchester Cryptogamic Society. 



Derbysh., Yorksh., Cumb., Chesh., Lancasli. 

 Eeports of Meetings. Nat., Feb., March, April, and June, ix. 124, 140, 154, 197-8. 

 Records of cryptogamia found in Derbyshire, Yorkshire, Cumberland, 

 Lancashire, and Cheshire. 

 [Manchester] Lower Mosley Street Schools Natural History Society. 

 Report, October, 1884, pp. 15. Yorkshire. 

 Notes on plants collected at Malham and Gordale on the 22nd J une. 

 W. H. Pearson. 



New British Hepaticse. Journ. Bot., August, xxii. 249. Cumberland. 



Enumeration of several hepaticae and mosses either new to England or to 

 Cumberland, or very rare. 

 W. Phillips and Charles B. Plowright. Yorkshire, Lincolnshire. 



New and Rare British Fungi. Grevillea, Dec, xiii. 51-52. 



Ranmlai'ia hellebori Fckl. on Helleborus, 1884, Mr. Soppett. Urocystis 

 Kornicke, on the leaves of Carex glauca, Mr. Soppett, November, 1884. 

 Pticcinia Schrcetriana Plow, and Magnus (3ecidiospores = ^<r/^//z^;// Jacobcca; 

 Grev.) Skegness, 1883. 



J. E. R[OBSON]. 



Scarlet Fungi. Young Nat., May, v. 143. Yorkshire, Durham. 



Peziza coccinea in Yorkshire and Durham. 

 J. E. Rowntree. 



York. Nat. Hist. Journ., June 15th, viii. 95. Yorkshire. 



May 1 8th, Adder's Tongue with two ' tongues,' on Hob Moor. 

 P. Sewell. 



Morchella crassipes. Nat. Hist. Journ., June 15th, viii. 95. Yorkshire. 

 Found in sandy field by Esk, near Whitby. 

 Sheffield Naturalists' Club. Yorkshire, Derbyshire, Lincolnshire. 



List of Plants presented by the Sheffield Naturalists' Club to the Sheffield 

 Public Museum. 13th Rep. Sheff. Nat. Club, pp. 13-20. 



This long list of plants gives localities and dates ; all were mounted by the 

 late Amos Carr, by whom they were collected in Derbyshire. Yorkshire, and 

 Lincolnshire. 



W. G. Smith. Lancashire, Westmoreland, Yorkshire. 



Disease of Lily of the Valley. Gard. Chron., July 5th, p. 12. 



The plant was extremely abundant on one of the small islets of Windermere, 

 where Mr. Thomas Hebden found it badly infested with ALcidmui conval- 

 lari(Z Schum., new to Britain. Mr. Smith describes and figures the fungus. 

 An editorial note states that Mr. Plowright mentions its occurrence near 

 Scarborough. With the Windermere ALcidium was found an abundance of 

 Puccinia betoiiicce DC. 

 W. G. Smith. 



Hydnum corralloides [sic]. Gard. Chron., November 8th, p. 588. Notts. 



Found growing on a felled Beech near Tuxford, by Mr. W\ Gain. The 

 largest example was 8 inches in diameter. The fungus grew last year on the 

 same stump. 

 Oct. 1885. 



