100 
CHARLES THOM AND MARGARET B. CHURCH 
A. ageni. This name is cited by Lindt, Arch. Exp. Path. Pharm. 
25: 265. 1889, as taken from Saccardo's Sylloge. Search for this 
reference leads to the conclusion that in this citation A. Hageni was 
made to read A. ageni. 
A. aviarius Peck, N. Y. State Museum Rept. 44: 25. pi, 4. figs. 
9-12. 1891. The description of this form leads to the belief that 
the organism was some strain of A . fumigatus. 
A. bronchialis Blumentritt, Ber. Deutsch. Bot. Ges. 19: 442-446. 
pi. 22. figs. 1-6. 1901; also ibid. 23: 419-427. pi. 19. figs. 1-3-6-7- 
8-19-23. 1905. This colony is described as floccose in contrast to 
the commoner forms of A. fumigatus which are velvety or produce 
very little aerial mycelium. Close relationship to A. fumigatus is 
evident. 
A. calyptratus Oudemans, Arch. Neerl. II. 7: 283. pi. 13. 1902. 
Conidial chains forming a black column are reported by Oudemans 
but the mass is figured as brown, thus possibly A. terreus, or a species 
of Haplographium. 
5. carnea van Tieghem, Sur le developpment de quelques Ascomy- 
cetes, Bull. Soc. Bot. France 24: 103. 1877. Saccardo, Sylloge 4: 
74, and Wehmer, Monogr. : 127. The conidia are given as flesh-color 
without other data. 
A. cervinus Massee, Kew Bull. Misc. Inf. 4: 158. 1914. A fawn- 
colored species from African soil with morphology close to A. fumi- 
gatus. A culture with closely similar characters was contributed by 
Dr. J. R. Johnston from Porto Rico soil (3522.36). 
A. fischeri Wehmer, Centralbl. Bakt. II. 18: 390-2. fig. 5. 1907. 
The conidial morphology reported is not different from A. fumigatus. 
Perithecia are described, see p. 93. 
A. fiavescens Wreden, Compt. Rend. Acad. Sci. Paris 65: 368- 
371. 1867. Also, St. Petersb. Med. Zeitschr. 13: 133-184. 1867. 
This species has been regarded as related to A . flavus but the conidia 
described are 2-3 ^ in diameter and the upper parts of the stalks are 
described as yellowed. This establishes a strong probability that it 
was some strain of A. nidulans. 
A. flavo-viridescens Hanzawa, Journ. Coll. Agr. Tohoku Imp. 
Univ. Sapporo 4: 232-3. pi. 21. figs. 1-4. 191 1. The description 
by Hanzawa suggests a closer relationship to A. versicolor than to 
A. nidulans as judged by our cultures of both groups. 
A. fumigatoides Bainier & Sartory, Bull. Soc. Myc. France 25: 112. 
pi. 5. 1909. The conidial apparatus described is hardly distinguish- 
