672 Wisconsin Academy of Sciences, Arts, and Letters. 
“ Notes” 111:258, as Euryachora ulmea (Schw.) Rehm is refer¬ 
red to Gnomonia by Theissen and Sydow. Yon Thuemen refer¬ 
red it to this genus in Flora, 1878, p. 178, and Gnomonia ulmea 
(Schw.) Thuem. was given in Saccardo’s Sylloge Fungorum 
1: 570 in the section Dubiae. Klebahn has shown that PJileos- 
pora ulmi (Fr.) Wallr. which Fuckel thought to be a conidial 
state of this fungus is really connected with Mycosphaerella. 
A form of Phyllactinia corylea (Pers.) Karst, occurs at Madi¬ 
son and in Buffalo county near Arcadia on Quercus velutina 
in which a profuse superficial mycelium is developed. 
According to Theissen and Sydow Physalospora ambrosiae 
Ell. & Evht. as given in the provisional list is Plnyllachora am¬ 
brosiae (B. & C.) Sacc. (Ann. My col. 13: 556). 
Gnomonia caryae F. A. Wolf has been collected at Madison 
on leaves of Carya ovata that had borne Gloeosporium caryae 
Ell. & Dearn. the previous year. It occurred both on leaves 
lying on the ground and those wintered in a wire cage. We 
find the ascospores about 2/*, thick. 
Montagnella heliopsidis (Schw.) Sacc. is referred to the genus 
Rosenscheldia by Theissen and Sydow (Ann. My col. 13:649). 
Plnyllachora junci (Fr.) Fckl. is referred to their genus En- 
dodothella by Theissen and Sydow (Ann. Mycol. 13:586). On 
the following page they refer to a collection of Endodothella 
strelitziae (Cke.) Theiss. & Syd. on Strelitzia angusta made at 
Madison by Trelease. 
The record of Exoascus cerasi (Fckl.) Sacc. in “Notes” II, 
p. 97 seems to have been due to an error. No Wisconsin speci¬ 
men of this species is in the herbarium. 
The name Stagonospora smilacis (E. & M.) Sacc. was used in 
the provisional list to designate the fungus that causes orbicular, 
sordid-arid, purple or brown bordered spots on leaves of Smilax. 
As usually collected the pycnidia contain continuous sporules 
varying in different specimens from oblong-fusoid and up to 21a 
long to broad oval or subglobose. This is usually distributed 
as Phyllosticta smilacis Ell. & Mart, which it doubtless is. As 
the leaf tissue included in the spot usually disintegrates I as¬ 
sume that the sporules seldom reach maturity on the host and 
