REPORT OF THE STATE ENTOMOLOGIST 1907 133 
Specimens in the State Herbarium from Tort Edward (Professor 
Peck) as above, Catskill mountains (Peck) “club broader and 
more abrupt,’ and Felt House, Lewis co. (Peck) labeled E. 
fagineum. 
Collected at Normansville (Mr Gillett), Gravel pond near 
Grafton, and Catskill. - IN Ys 
lagers “lh, TOrRrUGCIMEUiM” Is CRGeMIiy 2 Ship yy Com- 
fusion with the old specific name of the host. 
OKA WKiMmew in LA Sime ina Iba io, 2 
Schweinitz ’34, no. 2806 IN Cog IPA. 
Placed by de Schweinitz (and by Persoon ’22: no..16) in the 
section with capitate trichomes. Described by Persoon from 
Fagus sylvatica; his description seems more applicable to 
the following than the preceding as he says: “in foliis’ . 
magis versus marginem superiorem. Ab initio album.” Loew, 
however, (Vienna 1885) describes it as “ausnahmslos auf der 
unteren seite der Blatter,’ (of F. sylvatica). I do not know 
which form de Schweinitz had before him; he does not name the 
host, but the latter is assumedly our native species. 
*66 A whitish or golden yellow to brown erineum on the upper 
side of the leaf between or following the veins. Trichomes capi- 
fale. eriaps al LomnOn 10,105. : 
Garman ’92, no. 10, fig. 5 IN Jal, IMiea, 
Specimens from Blackhead mountain at 1850 feet in the Cats- 
kills, from Catskill, and near Grafton. INS, 
This may be compared with the Erineu.n nervisequum 
of Persoon ’22, no. 22, Loew ’85, p.456, occurring on the European 
species of beech. 
Fagus sylvatica (European beech) 
67 A frosty, white erineum in large patches on the under side of 
the leaf. Trichomes spherically capitate. : 
Jarvis ’07, p.62, fourth sp., pl.B, fig. 4 Ont. 
This agrees closely with Loew’s description of Erineum 
fagineum [Verhandlung der k.k. zool.-bot. Gesellschaft in 
Wien, 1885, p.456]; see under no. 6514. Probably identical with 
our no. 65, and possibly Jarvis cited the exotic beech by an over- 
sight, as he says it is “ very common.” 
