BIBLIOGRAPHY AND NEW SPECIES 
OF PHILIPPINE FUNGI^ 
Paul W. Graff2 
In 1906, Ricker,® of the United States Department of Agri- 
culture, in his article entitled, “ A List of Known Philippine 
Fungi,” appended a bibliography which, while lacking in titles 
by about one third, was still of interest to one interested in that 
locality. Since that date the number of articles on the region 
has greatly increased and the numbers of types of both genera 
and species is so large that this paper is published with the hope 
that it may be an aid to those interested in the fungi of the 
Pacific islands, especially the Philippines and their neighbors. 
It has been the endeavor to include in this enumeration all pub- 
lications on Philippine fungi, so far as the writer has been able 
to locate them, appearing prior to January, 1916. In the short 
note under each title will be found a list of such species as are de- 
scribed as new ; the name given being that used by the author of 
each paper. This is deemed more useful than to endeavor to 
make them conform to any one system of classification. Prac- 
tically all of these references may now be found in the library 
of the Bureau of Science at IManila. 
1820 
Ehrenberg, C. G. Fungos a viro clarissimo Adelberto de 
Chamisso de Boncourt, sub auspiciis Romanzoffianis in itinere 
circa terrarum globum collectos, in Nees ab Essenbeck’s Horae 
Physicae Berolinenses, pp. 79-104, pi. 17-20, fig. 1-17. 
On the visit of the Romanzoff Expedition to the Philippines 
with Chamisso as botanist a number of plants were collected but 
among them only one fungus is reported. This is described as 
1 Published with the permission of the Director of the Bureau of Science, 
Manila, P. I. 
2 Contribution from the Botanical Section of the Biological Laboratory, 
Bureau of Science, Manila, P. I. 
3 Philip. Journ. Sci. i: Suppl. 277-294. 
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