Journal of Mycology 
VOLUME lO-MARCH 1904 
Morgan — A New Melogramma. 49 
Cockerell — Some Fungi Collected in New Mexico. 49 
Dudley and Thompson — Notes on Californian Uredinese and De¬ 
scriptions of New Species.. 52 
Kbllerman — Ohio Fungi, Fascicle IX . 55 
Kellerman — Minor Mycological Notes. Ill. 62 
Kellerman — Index to Uredineous Culture Experiments, Concluded 64 
Kellerman — Notes from Mycological Literature. IX. 81 
Kellerman —Elementary Mycology. 90 
Editor’s Notes. 96 
A NEW MELOGRAMMA. 
A. P. MORGAN. 
Melogramma patens Morgan n. sp.—Stroma depressed- 
pulvinate, cinereous then black, the surface mammillate by the nu¬ 
merous subjacent perithecia. Perithecia, small, ovoid, papillate, 
lying in a single layer. Asci cylindric, with a short stalk, octo- 
sporous, paraphysate, 120-130 x 7-9 mic.; spores fusiform, slightly 
curved, 3-septate, yellow-brown, 18-22 x 6-7 mic. 
Growing on dead branches of Carpinus americana, Preston, 
Ohio, 1896. Stromata gregarious, seated on the inner bark and 
erumpent through the periderm, 2-3 mm. in diameter, contain¬ 
ing from 50 to more than 100 perithecia. 
The nearest relative to this species appears to be Melogramma 
caucasicus Jaczewski. The common Melogramma vagans DeNot. 
grew along with it on the same branches, sometimes mingled 
together, but the difference between them is perfectly obvious to 
the naked eye. 
SOME FUNGI COLLECTED IN NEW MEXICO. 
T. D. A. COCKERELL. 
For several years I have been preparing a catalogue of the 
fungi of New Mexico; but it is still hardly more than a frag¬ 
ment, and I do not suppose I shall ever be able to make it any¬ 
thing better, now that I have moved to Colorado. It contains, 
however, some records which seem worth publishing, as additions 
