806 Wisconsin Academy of Sciences, Arts, and Letters . 
A LIST OF FUNGI, CHIEFLY SAPROPHYTES, FROM 
THE REGION OF KEWAUNEE COUNTY, 
WISCONSIN. 
Bernard O. Dodge. 
The following list of fungi collected mainly in Kewaunee 
County, Wisconsin, is based on specimens collected from 1904 
to 1908. The mycological bora of this region has not been 
hitherto investigated, and this list forms a contribution to the 
fungus flora of the state. 
Kewaunee County, lying as it does in the glaciated area 
along the shore of Lake Michigan in the northeastern part of 
the state, has a somewhat different flora from that prevailing in 
Juneau County -where several of the collections noted here were 
made. The glacial moraines rise perhaps a hundred feet above 
the lake level and, where wooded, are well covered with groves 
of maple and beech. The low or swampy areas between the 
moraines are especially characterized by their dense growths of 
white cedar, black ash, and alder. “Blahnik’s woods” is one of 
the many places in this vicinity where one passes quickly from 
the pastured hardwood groves down through the tamarack, hem¬ 
lock, and cedar into the alders and finally out into the heath 
swamps. Oak, which is so common in Juneau County, is no 
longer found in the vicinity of Algoma, although it is fairly 
common at Bed Biver, Little Sturgeon, and beyond Kohlberg. 
The wild hay marshes along the Ahnapee river are especially 
favorable for collecting JBoleti in October and November. Even 
in the driest seasons, species of Discomycetes are plentiful in 
“Perry’s swamp” or in the “black ash swamp” when few fungi 
are to be found elsewhere. Following the cow paths or “wood 
