July, 1883.] 
NEW LITERATURE. 
71 
NEW LITERATURE. 
BY W. A. KEEEERMAN. 
“The Fungi of Warwickshire.” By W. B. Grove and J. E. Bagnall. 
Midland Naturalist, May and June, 1888. 
“New British Fungi.” By M. C. Cooke, Grevillea, June, 1888. 
“Exotic Agarics.” By M. C. Cooke. 1. c. 
“Australasian Fungi.” By M. C. Cooke. 1. c. 
“British Pyrenomycetes, continued.” By G. Massee. 1. c. 
“Some Exotic Fungi.” By M. C. Cooke. 1. c. 
“A Supplemental List of Works on North American Fungi.” 
By W. G. Farlow. (Supplemental to No. 25.) No. 31, Bibliographical 
Contributions, Library of Harvard University, pp. 1-9. 
Includes list of works issued before 1887, addenda and corrigenda (pp.* 
2) and list of works published in 1887 (pp. 5). Dr. Farlow does not pro¬ 
pose to continue the work and hopes some other person will undertake 
the task hereafter. 
Report on the experiments made in 1887 in the treatment of the Downy 
Mildew and the Black Rot of the Grape Vine, with a chapter on the 
apparatus for applying remedies for these diseases. By F. Lamson 
Scribner, Bulletin No. 5, Dept, of Agriculture, Section of Vegetable 
Pathology, pp. 113. 
Report of the section of Vegetable Pathology in Report of Department 
of Agriculture, 1887. 
Prof. Scribner gives an account with copious, good figures and bibli¬ 
ographical references, of the following species : Sphierella Fragarise, 
Sacc.; Fusicladium dendriticum; Gloeosporium fructigenum, Berk. (?); 
Uromyces Betoe, Pers.; Puccinia Prunispinosse, Pers. ; Cercospora 
gossypina, Cke.; Gloeosporium venetum, Speg.; Gloeosporium Lindemu- 
tliianum; Macrosporium Catalpse and Phyllosticta Catalpse; Actinonema 
Rosie; Phragmidium mucronatum, Winter; Pliragmidium speciosum, 
Fr. ; Sphrerotheca mors-uvie, Ustilago Zese-Mays and Puccinia Maydis, 
Carr. 
CORRECTIONS. 
On page 55 (last Number), tenth line from the top, erase “simple; 
conidia subglobose, hyaline, 1—II 
Page 56, last line of description of Peziza glagosa, for “80” read “8.” 
Page 59, for “Fourteenth” Annual Report read “Fortieth.”. 
