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+This eBook, including all associated images, markup, improvements,
+metadata, and any other content or labor, has been confirmed to be
+in the PUBLIC DOMAIN IN THE UNITED STATES.
+
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+the "Copyright How-To" at https://www.gutenberg.org.
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+Project Gutenberg (https://www.gutenberg.org) public repository for
+eBook #63416 (https://www.gutenberg.org/ebooks/63416)
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-Project Gutenberg's Rust, Smut, Mildew, & Mold, by Mordecai Cubitt Cooke
-
-This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere in the United States and most
-other parts of the world at no cost and with almost no restrictions
-whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or re-use it under the terms of
-the Project Gutenberg License included with this eBook or online at
-www.gutenberg.org. If you are not located in the United States, you'll have
-to check the laws of the country where you are located before using this ebook.
-
-Title: Rust, Smut, Mildew, & Mold
-
-Author: Mordecai Cubitt Cooke
-
-Release Date: October 9, 2020 [EBook #63416]
-
-Language: English
-
-Character set encoding: UTF-8
-
-*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK RUST, SMUT, MILDEW, & MOLD ***
-
-
-
-
-Produced by deaurider, Barry Abrahamsen, and the Online
-Distributed Proofreading Team at https://www.pgdp.net (This
-file was produced from images generously made available
-by The Internet Archive)
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
- RUST, SMUT, MILDEW, & MOULD.
-
-
-
-
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
-
-
-
- LONDON:
- GREAT QUEEN STREET,
- LINCOLN’S-INN FIELDS, W.C.
-
-
-
-
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
-
-[Illustration:
-
- Plate VII.
- W. West imp.
-]
-
-
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
-
- Rust, Smut, Mildew, & Mould.
-
-
- ---------------------
-
-
-
- AN INTRODUCTION TO THE STUDY
-
-
- OF
-
-
- MICROSCOPIC FUNGI.
-
-
-
-
- BY
-
-
- M. C. COOKE,
-
- AUTHOR OF “A PLAIN AND EASY ACCOUNT OF BRITISH FUNGI,” “INDEX
- FUNGORUM BRITANNICORUM,” “A MANUAL OF BOTANIC TERMS,”
- “A MANUAL OF STRUCTURAL BOTANY,” ETC.
-
-
-
-
- Third Edition,
- WITH NEARLY 300 FIGURES BY J. E. SOWERBY.
-
-
-
-
- LONDON:
- ROBERT HARDWICKE, 192, PICCADILLY.
- 1872.
-
-
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
-
-
-
- BY THE SAME AUTHOR.
-
-THE BRITISH FUNGI: A Plain and Easy Account of British Fungi: with
-especial reference to the Esculent and other Economic Species.
-Illustrated with Coloured Plates of 40 Species. 2nd Edition. Fcap. 8vo.,
-price 6s.
-
-“The author is a thorough mycophagist, well acquainted with the peculiar
-features by which the most remarkable of the edible kinds of Fungi may
-be known.”—GARDENERS’ CHRONICLE.
-
-“A very readable volume upon the lowest and least generally understood
-race of plants. For popular purposes the work could not have been better
-done.”—ATHENÆUM.
-
- -------
-
-INDEX FUNGORUM BRITANNICORUM: A Complete List of Fungi found in the
-British Islands to the Present Date. Arranged so as to be applicable
-either as a Check-List or for Herbarium Labels. Royal 8vo., price 2s.
-6d.
-
- Also the same Work, printed on only one side, for Herbarium Labels.
- Part I. HYMENOMYCETES, 1s. Part II. GASTEROMYCETES, CONIOMYCETES,
- and HYPHOMYCETES, 1s. Part III. ASCOMYCETES, 1s.
-
- --------------
-
- London: ROBERT HARDWICKE, 192, Piccadilly.
-
-
-
-
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
-
-
-
- PREFACE TO SECOND EDITION.
-
-
-THE first edition of this Work having for some time been out of print,
-and the demands of the public encouraging the publisher to proceed with
-a new edition, I have added, in a second Appendix, descriptions of all
-the species discovered in Britain since 1865, so far as they relate to
-the Orders included in this volume. The success which has attended the
-sale of this Work, and the number of fresh observers it has brought into
-the field, has greatly tended to the necessity for a second Appendix. A
-larger number of observers, over a still more extended area, will, it is
-hoped, add further to our list; by increasing the number of known
-species. Hitherto one great cause of the paucity of students of Fungi in
-this country, especially of the Microscopic forms, has been the want of
-text-books on the subject, containing descriptions of the species, with
-figures illustrative of the genera. Although this little volume only
-partly supplies that want, by including the species found on living
-plants alone, it has already proved of service; this and its companion
-volume, “Introduction to British Fungi,” being (with but one exception)
-the only books on Fungi which have passed into a second edition in this
-country; a fact which appears to prove that they have succeeded in
-furnishing a desideratum, and in giving an impetus to the study. It is
-hoped that similar results will follow the publication of this new
-edition.
-
- M. C. COOKE.
-
-
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
-
-
-
- CONTENTS.
-
-
- CHAP. PAGE
-
- I. CLUSTER-CUPS 1
-
- II. SPERMOGONES 22
-
- III. DI-MORPHISM 33
-
- IV. MILDEW AND BRAND 45
-
- V. COMPLEX BRANDS 67
-
- VI. SMUTS 77
-
- VII. COMPLEX SMUTS 90
-
- VIII. RUSTS 95
-
- IX. RUSTS (continued) 110
-
- X. WHITE RUSTS 124
-
- XI. MOULDS 138
-
- XII. WHITE MILDEWS OR BLIGHTS 162
-
- XIII. SUGGESTIONS 179
-
- APPENDIX, CLASSIFICATION, AND 189
- DESCRIPTIONS OF FUNGI CONTAINED
- IN THIS VOLUME
-
- APPENDIX II. 223
-
- Index 239
-
-
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
-
-
-
- MICROSCOPIC FUNGI.
-
- -------
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER I.
-
- _CLUSTER-CUPS._
-
-
-IN these latter days, when everyone who possesses a love for the
-marvellous, or desires a knowledge of some of the minute mysteries of
-nature, has, or ought to have, a microscope, a want is occasionally felt
-which we have essayed to supply. This want consists in a guide to some
-systematic botanical study, in which the microscope can be rendered
-available, and in which there is ample field for discovery, and ample
-opportunity for the elucidation of facts only partly revealed. Fungi,
-especially the more minute epiphyllous species, present just such an
-opportunity as many an ardent student would gladly take advantage of;
-one great obstacle to the pursuit being hitherto found in the absence of
-any hand-book to this section of the British Flora, embracing the
-emendations, improvements, and additions of the past twenty-seven years
-(the period at which the fifth volume of the “English Flora” made its
-appearance). It would be incompatible with our object, and beyond our
-limits, to introduce an entire mycological flora to our readers in these
-pages; but we hope to communicate such information as will serve to
-prepare the way still more for such an additional Flora, should it ever
-be produced, and render the demand still wider and more general for such
-an extension of our botanical literature. It is true that one work has
-of late years issued from the press on this subject, but notwithstanding
-its utility to scientific men as a record of species, it is practically
-useless to those we address, from the absence of all specific
-descriptions of microscopic fungi.
-
-Let not the reader imagine, from what we have just stated, that it is
-our intention to burden him with a dry series of botanical descriptions;
-as much of this as we deem essential to render the book available to the
-botanical student, we have preferred to add in the form of an Appendix.
-Useful as these may be to some, we hope to be enabled to furnish for
-others something more; and although we at once disclaim any intention of
-including all the microscopic, or even the epiphytal fungi, in our
-observations, yet we trust, by a selection of common and typical species
-for illustration, and by an adherence to certain well-defined groups and
-sections, to demonstrate that the microscopist will find an eligible
-field for his observations in this direction, and the botanical student
-may gain some knowledge of their generic and specific distinctions.
-
-It is exceedingly difficult to give a logical definition of what
-constitutes a fungus. It is no less difficult to furnish a popular
-description which shall include all and nothing more. If, for example,
-we particularize the spots and markings on the leaves and stems of
-herbaceous plants, so commonly met with from early spring till the fall
-of the last leaf, and even amongst the dead and decaying remains of the
-vegetation of the year, we may include also such spots and marks as
-result from insect depredations or diseased tissue. It is not always
-easy, with a cursory observation under the microscope, to determine
-whether some appearances are produced by fungi, insects, or organic
-disease: experience is the safest guide, and until we acquire that we
-shall occasionally fail.
-
-If we take a stroll away from the busy haunts of men, though only for a
-short distance,—say, for example (if from London), down to New
-Cross,—and along the slopes of the railway cutting, we shall be sure to
-find the plant called the goatsbeard (_Tragopogon pratensis_) in
-profusion. In May or June the leaves and unopened involucres of this
-plant will present a singular appearance, as if sprinkled with
-gold-dust, or rather, being deficient in lustre, seeming as though some
-fairy folk had scattered over them a shower of orange-coloured chrome or
-turmeric powder. Examine this singular phenomenon more closely, and the
-poetry about the pixies all vanishes; for the orange powder will be seen
-to have issued from the plant itself. A pocket lens, or a Coddington,
-reveals the secret of the mysterious dust. Hundreds of small orifices
-like little yellow cups, with a fringe of white teeth around their
-margins, will be seen thickly scattered over the under surface of the
-leaves. These cups (called _peridia_) will appear to have burst through
-the epidermis of the leaf and elevated themselves above its surface,
-with the lower portion attached to the substratum beneath. In the
-interior of these cup-like excrescences, or _peridia_, a quantity of the
-orange-coloured spherical dust remains, whilst much of it has been shed
-and dispersed over the unoccupied portions of the leaves, the stems, and
-probably on the leaves of the grass or other plants growing in its
-immediate vicinity. These little cups are fungi, the yellow dust the
-spores,[1] or ultimate representatives of seed, and the epiphytal plants
-we have here found we will accept as the type of the group or order to
-which we wish to direct attention (Plate I. figs. 1-3).
-
-
-[Illustration:
-
- Plate I.
- W. West imp.
-]
-
-
-Footnote 1:
-
- Protospores they should be called, because, in fact, they germinate,
- and on the threads thus produced the true spores, or fruit, are borne.
-
-Amongst the six families into which fungi are divided, is one in which
-the spores are the principal feature, as is the aurantiaceous dust in
-the parasite of the goatsbeard. This family is named _Coniomycetes_,
-from two Greek words, meaning “dust-fungi.” This group or family
-includes several smaller groups, termed orders, which are analogous to
-the natural orders of flowering plants. Without staying to enumerate the
-characteristics of these orders, we select one in which the spores are
-enclosed in a distinct peridium, as in our typical plant they are
-contained within the cups. This order is the _Æcidiacei_, so called
-after _Æcidium_, the largest and most important of the genera included
-within this order.
-
-The _Æcidiacei_ are always developed on living plants, sometimes on the
-flowers, fruit, petioles, or stems, but most commonly on the leaves:
-occasionally on the upper surface, but generally on the inferior. The
-different species are distributed over a wide area; many are found in
-Europe and North America, some occur in Asia, Africa, and Australia.
-When the cryptogamic plants of the world shall have been as widely
-examined and as well understood as the phanerogamic plants have been, we
-shall be in a better position to determine the geographical distribution
-of the different orders of fungi. In the present incomplete state of our
-knowledge, all such efforts will be unsatisfactory.
-
-But to return to the goatsbeard, and its cluster-cups. The little fungus
-is called _Æcidium tragopogonis_, the first being the name of the genus,
-and the last that of the species. Let us warn the young student against
-falling into the error of supposing because in this, and many other
-instances, the specific name of the fungus is derived from the plant, or
-one of the plants, upon which it is found, that therefore the species
-differs with that of the plant, and that, as a rule, he may anticipate
-meeting with a distinct species of fungus on every distinct species of
-plant, or that the parasite which he encounters on the living leaves of
-any one plant is _necessarily_ specifically distinct from those found on
-all other plants. One species of _Æcidium_, for instance, may hitherto
-have been found only on one species of plant, whereas another _Æcidium_
-may have been found on five or six different species of plants. The
-mycologist will look to the specific differences in the parasite without
-regard to the identity or distinctness of the plant upon which it is
-parasitic.
-
-Before the _Æcidium_ breaks through the epidermis, the under surface of
-the leaves of the goatsbeard will appear to be covered with little
-elevations or pustules, paler at the apex; these soon become ruptured,
-and the fungus pushes its head through the opening, at the same time
-bursting by radiating fissures. The teeth thus formed resemble those of
-the peristome of some mosses. All around the orifice of the peridium the
-teeth become recurved, and the orange spores are exposed, crowded
-together within. At first, and while contained within the peridium,
-these spores are concatenate or chained together, but when dispersed
-they are scattered singly about the orifice, often mixed with the
-colourless cells arising from the partial breaking up of the teeth of
-the peridium.
-
-Let us pause for a moment in our examination of the individual cups, to
-ascertain their manner of distribution over the leaves. In this instance
-they are scattered without any apparent order over the under surface,
-but generally thickest towards the summit of the leaves; occasionally a
-few are met with on the upper surface. Sometimes two or three touch at
-the margins, but we have never met with them truly confluent; generally
-there is a space greater than the width of the cups around each, the
-stratum or subiculum from whence they arise is scarcely thickened, and
-there are no spots or indications on the opposite surface. If a leaf be
-taken fresh and the cuticle stripped off, which it will sometimes do
-very readily, the orifices through which the _Æcidium_ has burst will
-appear in irregular holes. If a section be made of one or two of the
-fungi _in situ_, they will be seen to spring from beneath the cuticle,
-the peridium to be simple, and rounded at the base, the spores clustered
-at the bottom, and the fringe to be a continuation of its cellular
-substance.
-
-The spores in this species are orange, subglobose, sometimes angular,
-and indeed very variable both in size and form, though the majority are
-comparatively large. Each of these bodies is, doubtless, capable of
-reproducing its species, and if we compute 2,000 cluster-cups as
-occurring on each leaf, and we have found half as many more on an
-ordinary-sized leaf, and suppose each cup to contain 250,000 spores,
-which again is below the actual number, then we shall have not less than
-five hundred millions of reproductive bodies on one leaf of the
-goatsbeard to furnish a crop of parasites for the plants of the
-succeeding year. We must reckon by millions, and our figures and
-faculties fail in appreciating the myriads of spores which compose the
-orange dust produced upon one infected cluster of plants of
-_Tragopogon_. Nor is this all, for our number represents only the actual
-protospores which are contained within the peridia; each of these on
-germination may produce not only one but many vegetative spores, which
-are exceedingly minute, and, individually, may be regarded as embryos of
-a fresh crop of cluster-cups. And this is not the only enemy of the kind
-to which this unfortunate plant is subject, for another fungus equally
-prolific often takes possession of the interior of the involucre wherein
-the young florets are hid, and converts the whole into a mass of
-purplish black spores even more minute than those of the _Æcidium_, and
-both these parasites will be occasionally found flourishing on the same
-plant at the same time (Plate V. figs. 92-94).
-
-Naturally enough, our reader will be debating within himself how these
-spores, which we have seen, are shed in such profusion, can enter the
-tissues of the plants which give subsequent evidence of infection; in
-fact, how the yellow dust with which the goatsbeard of to-day is covered
-will inoculate the young plants of next year. If one or two of these
-spores are sprinkled upon the piece of the cuticle which we have
-recommended to be removed from the leaf for examination, it will be seen
-that they are very much larger than the stomata or breathing-pores which
-stud the cuticle: hence it is clear that they cannot gain admittance
-there. There remains but one other portal to the interior of the
-plant—namely, the spongioles, or extremities of the roots. Here another
-difficulty arises; for the spores are as large as the cells through
-which they have to pass. This difficulty may be lessened when we
-remember that what are termed the spores which are discharged from the
-cups are not the true spores, but bodies from which smaller seed-like
-vesicles are produced; yet, even then there will be much need of an
-active imagination to invent hypotheses to cover the innumerable
-difficulties which would encounter their passage through the vessels of
-the infected plants. The Rev. M. J. Berkeley proved many years ago that
-the spores of bunt, for example, may be caused to infect all the plants
-the seeds of which had been placed in contact with them; but this
-affection did not necessarily accrue from the absorption of the spores,
-or the ultimate sporidia produced after three or four generations. It is
-possible that the granular or fluid contents of the spores may be
-absorbed by the plant, and as a result of this absorption, become
-inoculated with the virus, which at length breaks out in fungoid
-growths. Much has been done to elucidate this mystery of inoculation,
-but much also remains a mystery still. There is no doubt that the
-inoculation takes place at an early age,[2] probably in the seeds of
-many plants; in others it may be conveyed with the moisture to the
-roots; but the spores themselves have certainly not yet been traced
-traversing the tissues of growing plants.
-
-Footnote 2:
-
- Dr. de Bary has lately shown that in many similar instances the
- seed-leaves are inoculated. It will be necessary to refer more
- particularly to his experiments hereafter.
-
-If, instead of going in search of goatsbeard and its attendant fungus,
-we turn our steps northward and enter one of the Highgate or Hampstead
-woods, where the pretty little wood-anemone (_Anemone nemorosa_)
-flourishes abundantly, and turn up the radical leaves, one by one, and
-examine their under-surfaces, we shall at length be rewarded by finding
-one covered with similar cluster-cups to those we have been describing
-as occurring on the goatsbeard, but far less commonly. Leaf after leaf
-will be found covered with the brown spots of another fungus called
-_Puccinia anemones_, with which nearly every plant will be more or less
-infected in the spring of the year; and at length, if we persevere, the
-anemone cluster-cup (_Æcidium leucospermum_) will be our reward (Plate
-I. figs. 4-6). The specific name will suggest one point of difference
-between the two fungi, as in this instance the spores are white, and
-somewhat elliptic. Probably this species is not common, as we have found
-it but seldom, though often in search of it. A nearly allied species has
-been found on _Anemones_ in gardens, having but few large teeth about
-the orifice, though not constantly four, as the name would indicate (_Æ.
-quadrifidum_).
-
-A walk through almost any wood, in the spring of the year, will reward
-the mycologist with another cluster-cup (_Æcidium_), in which the
-peridia are scattered over the whole surface of the leaf. This will be
-found on the wood spurge, giving a sickly yellowish appearance to the
-leaves, on the under surface of which it is found. By experience one may
-soon learn to suspect the occurrence of parasites of this nature on
-leaves, from the peculiar exhausted and unhealthy appearance which they
-assume as the spores ripen, and which will spare the labour of turning
-over the leaves when there are no distinct spots on the upper surface.
-_Æ. Euphorbiæ_ is found on several species of _Euphorbium_ or spurge,
-but we have always found it most abundantly on the wood spurge in the
-Kentish woods between Dartford and Gravesend. The spores in this species
-are orange, and externally it bears considerable resemblance to the
-goatsbeard cluster-cup, but the spores are rather smaller and paler, the
-teeth are less distinct and persistent, the subiculum is more thickened,
-and the peridia are more densely crowded.
-
-There is another group of species belonging to the same genus of fungi
-in which the arrangement of the peridia is different. One of the first
-of our native wild flowers, in making its appearance after the departure
-of frost and snow, is the little yellow celandine (_Ranunculus
-ficaria_).
-
- “Ere a leaf is on the bush,
- In the time before the thrush
- Has a thought about her nest,
- Thou wilt come with half a call,
- Spreading out thy glossy breast
- Like a careless Prodigal;
- Telling tales about the sun
- When we’ve little warmth, or none.”
-
-And one of the earliest parasitic fungi in spring is an _Æcidium_ which
-flourishes on its glossy leaves. So common is _Æcidium ranunculacearum_
-on this species of _Ranunculus_, that it can scarcely have escaped the
-eye of any one who has taken the trouble to examine the plant. It
-appears in patches on the under surface of the leaves or on their
-petioles, in the latter case swelling and distorting them. Sometimes
-these patches are nearly circular, at others of very irregular form, and
-varying in size from less than one-twelfth of an inch to half an inch in
-diameter. It is found on several species of _Ranunculus_, as _R. acris_,
-_bulbosus_, and _repens_, but most commonly on _R. ficaria_. The leaf is
-thickened at the spot occupied by the parasite, and generally without
-indication on the opposite surface. Sometimes one spot, at others
-several, occur on the same leaf. The peridia are densely crowded
-together, often arranged in a circinate manner, _i.e._, like a
-watch-spring, or the young frond of a fern. The spores are orange, but
-slightly varying in tint on different species of _Ranunculus_ (Plate II.
-figs. 12-14). One of the smaller clusters, when collected before the
-spores are dispersed, or the teeth of the peridium discoloured, mounted
-dry as an opaque object, makes a very excellent slide for an inch or
-half-inch objective; and the same may be said of many others of the same
-genus.
-
-Less common than the foregoing is the species of _Æcidium_ which attacks
-the violet. The sweetest of flowers as well as the earliest, in despite
-both of its odour and its humility, becomes a victim to one or more of
-the ubiquitous race of fungi. Thickened spots at first appear on the
-leaves; the petioles, or flower stem, or even the calyx, become swollen
-and distorted; and at length the cluster-cup breaks through. The spots
-on the leaves upon which the peridia are scattered are yellowish,
-generally larger than the clusters on the pilewort, and seldom with more
-than one spot on each leaf. The peridia, or cups, are irregularly
-distributed over the spots, not crowded together as in the last species;
-and the teeth are large, white, and distinct. The spores are at first
-orange, but at length become brownish. This species may be found in
-spring, as late as June, most commonly on the dog-violet, but also on
-other species of _Viola_.
-
-It is not a very desirable occupation to search a bed of nettles, and
-turn over the individual leaves to look for minute fungi. A very pretty
-_Æcidium_ is nevertheless far from uncommon in such a habitat.
-Fortunately it occurs very often on the petioles of the leaves and on
-the stem, distorting them very much; and in such situations flourishing,
-apparently, more vigorously than when occupying the under surface of the
-leaves (Plate I. fig. 10). In the latter situation the clusters of
-peridia are small, seldom exceeding a dozen in a spot, but several spots
-may be found on the same leaf. On the stem they are clustered around for
-upwards of an inch in length, and their bright orange colour in such a
-situation renders them very conspicuous objects. The peridia are always
-closely packed together upon a thickened base, and offer but slight
-variations from the forms already enumerated, save that they widen
-slightly at the mouth, so as to become nearly campanulate. The spores
-are orange, and very profuse.
-
-During the past summer we noticed, for the first time, a very pretty
-little species of cluster-cup (_Æcidium_) on the wood sanicle (_Sanicula
-Europæa_) in Darenth wood. It was far from uncommon, and we believe it
-to be specifically distinct from its nearest ally, found on the earthnut
-leaves, and those of some other umbelliferous plants. The little cups
-are in small clusters of four or five together, on the under surface and
-on the petioles; they are small, but the teeth are relatively large,
-white, and distinct. The spores are of a pallid, yellowish colour, and
-not so profuse as in the last species. A darker spot on the upper
-surface of the leaf generally indicates their presence. This species was
-found many years ago by Carmichael at Appin, and called by him _Æcidium
-saniculæ_; but we find no notice of its occurrence since, though it
-seems to be far from uncommon at Darenth, and probably elsewhere, should
-the sanicle be common also.
-
-Recently we found the bedstraw cluster-cup (_Æcidium galii_) on the
-great hedge bedstraw (_Galium mollugo_), and as it has not been figured
-before, we have included it amongst our illustrations (Plate II. figs.
-15-17). Though very insignificant when occurring on the small leaves of
-the yellow bedstraw (_Galium verum_), it is a prominent object on the
-above-named species.
-
-We received, for the first time, in July, 1864, from Mr. Gatty, student
-at Winchester, a portion of a plant of _Thesium humifusum_ (which is by
-no means common in Britain), covered with beautiful cluster-cups of a
-species never before recorded as occurring in this country (Plate III.
-figs. 50, 51) named _Æcidium Thesii_, but which is far from uncommon on
-the Continent. It occurred in this instance on the Downs, in the
-vicinity of Winchester.
-
-It is unnecessary here to refer to other allied species of _Æcidium_,
-except one to be presently noticed, since we have, at the end of the
-volume, enumerated and given descriptions of all the species hitherto
-found in Britain. Suffice it to say that the Buckthorn cluster-cups on
-the alder buckthorn (_Rhamnus frangula_), is usually very common in the
-Highgate and Hornsey woods, and on the common buckthorn (_Rhamnus
-catharticus_) in the neighbourhood of Dartford, in Kent. That on the
-honeysuckle we have found but very rarely. On the gooseberry and
-red-currant leaves, commonly in some years and rarely in others; whilst
-a few of those described we have never collected. The species on
-different composite plants is subject to great variation, and on most
-may be found in the autumn; one variety only, on the leaves of _Lapsana
-communis_, we have met with in the spring.
-
-Very few years ago farmers generally believed that the cluster-cups of
-the berberry (_Berberis vulgaris_), were productive of mildew in corn
-grown near them; this opinion even received the support of Sir J. Banks,
-but no fungi can be much more distinct than those found on corn crops
-and this species on the leaves of the berberry. In this instance the
-cups are much elongated, and cylindrical, the clusters vary much in
-size, and the spots on the upper surface of the leaf are reddish,
-bright, and distinct. The teeth are white and brittle, and the orange
-spores copious (Plate I. figs. 7-9).
-
-There are scarcely any of the epiphyllous fungi forming equally handsome
-or interesting objects for low powers of the microscope, than the genus
-to which attention has just been directed; and they possess the
-advantage of being readily found, for that locality must be poor indeed
-which cannot furnish six species during the year. We have found half of
-the number of described species within little more than walking distance
-of the metropolis, within a period of little more than three months, and
-should be glad to hear of the occurrence of any of the rest.
-
-We have three species of fungi very similar in many respects to the
-foregoing, but differing in others to such an extent as to justify their
-association under a different genus and name. The hawthorn is a bush
-familiar to all who love the “merry month of May,” but it may be that
-its parasite has been unnoticed by thousands. If, for the future, our
-readers will bear this subject in their minds when they stand beneath a
-hawthorn hedge, they may become acquainted with clusters of singular
-brown pustules on the leaves, petioles, and fruit well worthy of more
-minute examination (Plate II. fig. 22). They scarcely claim the name of
-cups, and their lacerated and fringed margins rather resemble the pappus
-crowning the fruits of some composite plants than the cups of _Æcidium_.
-The peridia are very long, and split down throughout their length into
-thread-like filaments of attached cells; these gradually fall away and
-break up into their component parts till but short portions remain
-attached to the base of the peridia. These cells are elongated and
-marked on the surface with waved lines, forming in themselves pretty
-objects for a high power of the microscope (Plate II. figs. 23, 24). If
-the teeth of _Æcidium_ resemble the peristome of some mosses, such as
-_Splachnum_; the threads of this species of _Rœstelia_, except in not
-being twisted, somewhat resemble the peristomes of other mosses of the
-genus _Tortula_. The spores in this species are less conspicuous, being
-of a light brown, and the whole plant, from its modest hue, may be
-readily passed over without attracting attention unless occurring in
-abundance.
-
-The leaves of pear-trees afford a second species of this genus
-sufficiently distinct to commend it to our notice. Sometimes it is very
-common, at others but few examples are to be met with. The clusters
-occur on the under surface, and consist of half-a-dozen or less of large
-peridia, pointed at the apex and swelling in the middle so as to become
-urn-shaped (Plate II. figs. 20, 21). These vessels or thecæ split into
-numerous threads or laciniæ, which remain united together at the apex.
-Like the species already noticed, this is brown and inconspicuous except
-on account of its size, for it is the largest of all that we have had
-occasion to notice.
-
-The third species occurs on the under surface of the leaves of the
-mountain-ash. The peridia are clustered on a rusty orange-coloured spot
-which is visible on the upper surface (Plate II. figs. 18, 19). They are
-long and cylindrical, with an evident tendency to curvature; the mouth
-is serrated, but not split up into threads, as in the species found on
-the hawthorn. There will often be found instead of well-developed
-peridia, what at one time were regarded as abortive peridia, forming a
-thickened orange or rust-coloured spot, studded with minute elevated
-points. These spots are clusters of spermogones, which organs are
-described in detail in our second chapter. The clusters and spores are
-of a brighter reddish-brown than in either of the other species. All are
-remarkably distinct, and perhaps the most curious and interesting of any
-that we have passed in review. To botanists, the species found on the
-hawthorn is known as _Rœstelia lacerata_, that on pear-leaves as
-_Rœstelia cancellata_, and the one on the leaves of the mountain-ash as
-_Rœstelia cornuta_.
-
-Dr. Withering observed the spore-spots on the leaves of the
-mountain-ash, but was evidently puzzled to account for them. He writes
-(in his Arrangement of British Plants), “The spots on the leaves of
-_Sorbus aucuparia_ consist of minute globules intermixed with wool-like
-fibres. On examining many of them in different states, I at length found
-a small maggot in some of the younger spots, so that the globules are
-probably its excrement, and the fibres, the woody fibres of the plant
-unfit for its food.” We now-a-days smile at such simple and singular
-conjectures. It affords evidence of the manner in which the speculations
-of one generation become follies in the next.
-
-Only two species of cluster-cups are described in Withering’s Flora
-under the genus _Lycoperdon_: one of these is now called _Æcidium
-compositarum_, and is found on various composite plants; the other
-includes the species found on the wood-anemone and that on the
-moschatel, and also probably a species of _Puccinia_ on the wood-betony.
-
-To render this chapter more complete, though of less importance to the
-microscopist, we may allude to the other two genera comprised within
-this order. _Peridermium_ is the name of one genus which contains two
-British species found on the leaves and young shoots of coniferous
-trees. In this genus the peridium bursts irregularly, and does not form
-cups, or horns, or fringed vessels. The most common species is found on
-the needle-shaped leaves of the Scotch fir (Plate II. fig. 27), and also
-on the young twigs, in the latter instance larger and more prominent
-than in the former. The elongated peridia burst irregularly at their
-apices without forming teeth (fig. 28).
-
-In the genus _Endophyllum_, as its name implies, the peridium is
-imbedded within the substance of the succulent leaves. The only species
-we possess is found rarely upon the common house-leek.
-
-We have derived much pleasure in viewing the astonishment and delight
-exhibited by friends to whom we have personally communicated specimens
-of the little fungi we have enumerated for examination under the
-microscope; and we recommend with confidence this group of parasitic
-plants, unfortunately so little known, as well worthy of the attention
-of all who are interested in the minute aspects of nature, and who can
-recognize the hand—
-
- “That sets a sun amidst the firmament,
- Or moulds a dew-drop, and lights up its gem.”
-
-
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER II.
-
- _SPERMOGONES._
-
-
-IN addition to their spore-bearing spots, lichens have for some time
-been known to possess other organs, termed _spermogones_, which are
-probably concerned more or less in the reproductive process. The first
-intimation of the existence of similar bodies in the entophytal fungi
-originated with M. Unger in 1833, but it was left to Dr. de Bary and the
-Messrs. Tulasne, twenty years later, to examine and determine
-satisfactorily the nature and value of the spermogones of the Uredines.
-It was at first believed that the smaller pustules—which sometimes
-precede, and sometimes accompany, the cluster-cups and some other allied
-fungi—were distinct species developed simultaneously therewith, or
-members of a new genus, which, under the name of _Æcidiolum
-exanthematum_, found a place in the mycologic system.
-
-Without staying to trace the stages through which the elucidation of
-their true nature proceeded, it will suffice for our purpose to tell
-what is now known of these secondary organs; to accomplish which we must
-stand greatly indebted to the independent researches of Messrs. de Bary
-and Tulasne. It has been demonstrated that both these bodies, namely,
-the primary organs or cluster-cups, and the secondary organs or
-spermogones, are developed from the same mycelium; but the value of the
-latter is still undetermined. If they possess any fecundative power, the
-process has not been traced; or if they are in themselves reproductive,
-they have not at present been seen to germinate. Their uses, therefore,
-in the economy of the parasitic plant of which they are now known to
-form a part is still a mystery, and they remain valueless in the
-determination of genera and species. Any speculation which might regard
-them as male organs would be premature, and without support in fact.
-Hitherto only some species of the genera described in the foregoing
-chapter, and others belonging to genera not hitherto named, have been
-ascertained to possess spermogones. Of the former are the _Rœsteliæ_,
-some species of _Æcidium_, as those of _Euphorbia_, &c., and
-_Peridermium Pini_.
-
-These spermogones are of a very simple structure—very delicate, indeed;
-so much so, that they will scarcely bear preparation for demonstration.
-De Bary states that they originate from plain, delicate, inarticulate
-threads, about half the thickness of the mycelium (the root-like
-branching fibres which form the fundamental stratum of fungoid growths),
-which are developed in large quantities, and closely packed together.
-These threads are compacted together so as to form an outer enveloping
-integument or peridium, which is either globular or hemispherical (or in
-some instances elongated), more or less immersed, and at length opening
-at the apex (fig. 153) by a regularly formed minute ostiolum. The inner
-wall of the peridium is covered with a thick forest of simple filaments
-standing on end. From the summit of these filaments or sterigmata, the
-spermatia are borne. These are either isolated or associated together in
-strings or chaplets, are exceedingly minute, of an ovoid or oblong
-shape, and are produced in such numbers as to fill the cavity of the
-spermogone. Besides these, a viscid fluid is secreted, in which the
-spermatia are immersed, and which is expelled with them from the orifice
-of the peridium. According to the density of this fluid, or the
-hygrometric state of the atmosphere, it appears sometimes in drops, and
-sometimes oozing out in threads or cirrhi from the spermogones. To
-compare minute things with gigantic, as a recent author has observed, it
-resembles the lava issuing from the crater of a volcano. The colour of
-this spermatiferous matter is commonly orange, but in some instances
-brown, though not constantly of the same colour as the spores produced
-from the same mycelium. This gelatinous substance is dissolved away from
-the granular bodies which are immersed in it, by adding a little water
-upon the slide on which the mass is placed for examination. The
-granules, or spermatia, then exhibit those peculiar movements which have
-been observed in the similar bodies in lichens, and fitly described as
-“a sort of oscillating motion, as of a body attached at one extremity.”
-The cause of this motion is at present uncertain, vibratile ciliæ, to
-which similar movements are referred, being altogether absent; but
-probably, as De Bary believes, the cause may be found in the influence
-of exosmose.
-
-The largest spermatia yet examined (those of _Peridermium Pini_) have a
-length equal to 1/2500 of an inch, but their width seldom exceeds
-1/100000 of an inch, whilst in others their length does not exceed the
-width of those just named.
-
-Messrs. Tulasne affirm that all these corpuscles, as well as the
-mucilaginous fluid, evolve an appreciable odour, resembling that of the
-pollen of the willow. M. Léveillé compares the odour to that of orange
-flowers, and M. de Bary to that of the evening primrose.
-
-
- SPERMOGONES
-
-[Illustration:
-
- FIG. 1.—_Æcidium grossulariæ_. _c._ Cluster-cups. _s._ Spermogones.
-]
-
-[Illustration:
-
- FIG. 2.—Section of ripe spermogones of _Æcidium Euphorbiæ_. _s._
- Spermatia. _a._ Sterigmatæ bearing spermatia (_De Bary_).
-]
-
-
-The spermogones do not always appear like pustules on the surface of the
-leaves, for sometimes their presence is only indicated by minute
-depressed punctures which are scarcely visible; generally, however, they
-may be recognized by an obtuse, or otherwise a pointed, protuberance
-that surmounts them. The margin of the orifice is sometimes furnished
-with short hairs, but is more frequently ornamented with a pencil of
-long hairs, which are stiff and erect, and of the colour of the enclosed
-spermatia.
-
-In many of the species of _Æcidium_ the cups are disposed in a more or
-less regular circle, the centre of which is occupied by a group of
-spermogones; at the same time, the corresponding spot on the opposite
-surface of the leaf will frequently be found also occupied by other
-spermogones—in some instances in greater number than on the same surface
-of the leaf on which the cups are seated. This is the case in the
-_Æcidium_ which is found upon the leaves of the coltsfoot, and that of
-the honeysuckle.
-
-Very bright orange-coloured spots may be observed in autumn (we have
-encountered them often in August and September) upon the leaves of pear
-trees, and which are covered with little tubercles, at first of the same
-colour, but ultimately becoming brown. These pustules are so many
-spermogones belonging to _Rœstelia cancellata_, a kind of cluster-cup
-found in the same localities. These spots have long since been noticed,
-and regarded as connected with the _Rœstelia_, but in what manner has
-until recently been unknown. The Rev. M. J. Berkeley noticed them in the
-English Flora in 1836, or at least the granulations on the upper
-surfaces of the leaves bearing _R. cancellata_, _R. cornuta_, and _R.
-lacerata_, and called them abortive pseudoperidia. Before this (in 1804)
-they had been observed by Rebentisch. An examination of one of these
-spots under a low power of the microscope, and afterwards a section of
-one or more of the pustules, cut with a sharp razor, and viewed with a
-higher power, will give an idea of the nature of the bodies we are
-attempting to describe. During the past summer we have noticed very
-similar orange spots on leaves of the berberry containing spermogones on
-both surfaces, and these appeared before any cups had been found on that
-plant. In this instance no cups were produced from the spots on the
-leaves examined, and which were carefully noticed at intervals until
-they withered and fell.
-
-In some instances, as in _Rœstelia cornuta_, which is found on the
-leaves of the mountain-ash, the cups are produced on the lower, but the
-spermogones almost exclusively on the upper surface.
-
-The spermogones of _Peridermium Pini_ are white, few in number, and are
-developed, not only in the spring, but sometimes reappear in the autumn
-upon the same leaves that produced them at the commencement of the year.
-
-In such instances as those of the _Æcidium_ of the spurge, and also the
-goatsbeard, in which the cluster-cups are arranged in no appreciable
-order, the spermogones are scattered amongst them, and even in some
-instances appear on different leaves. The spermogones are common on the
-wood spurge in spring, scattered over both surfaces of the leaves before
-the cluster-cups make their appearance, and gradually these latter are
-developed amongst them, commencing from the apex of the leaves and
-proceeding in the order of their development towards the base. In this
-instance the spermogones are bright yellow, as are afterwards the cups
-and spores of the _Æcidium_. In most instances the appearance of the
-spermogones precedes that of the sporiferous organs, but the latter
-follow sufficiently speedy for perfect development before the decadence
-of the spermogones takes place.
-
-After the expulsion of the spermatia and the fluid which accompanies
-them, the whole mass dries up; and where many spermogones have been
-clustered together in the same spot a brown homogeneous crust is formed
-upon the epidermis; where they are produced singly, a brownish
-incrustation is visible about the mouth of each spermogone.
-
-Re-agents applied to the spermogones whilst in full vitality indicate
-the presence of a considerable amount of a protein substance, which,
-with sugar and sulphuric acid, produces a deep purple red colour.
-
-From what we have already stated of the method of occurrence of these
-organs, the following is the only order, apparently, preserved in their
-development, although no definite rules can at present be affirmed. The
-spore spots of cluster-cups are generally found upon the under surfaces
-of the leaves on which they are produced, and the spermogones are most
-numerous on the upper. When both the cluster-cups and the spermogones
-appear in the same group on the same surface, the spermogones commonly
-occupy the centre, and the cups are arranged in a circular manner about
-them. In other, and fewer instances, both organs stand together
-indiscriminately upon the same surface.
-
-The spermogones are also developed centrifugally, at least so far as at
-present observed, for when they are produced in a cluster the central
-one first opens and discharges its contents, and thus the development
-proceeds outwards from the centre to the circumference. When the
-spermogones are scattered, as in those of _Euphorbia_, they are first
-observed at the apex of the leaf, whence they are developed in
-succession towards the base. The latter should be sought for on the
-young plants of the wood spurge in March or April, at which time we have
-found them abundant at Darenth wood, near Dartford.
-
-It must not be concluded, from the fact that we have not yet adverted to
-spermogones in connection with other fungi, that they are peculiar to
-the _Æcidiacei_. Such is by no means the case. As we have hereafter
-described other genera and species in which spermogones occur, it would
-be out of place to enter upon further details here. Let it suffice
-therefore that we state that they have been found in members of the
-genera, _Aregma_, _Triphragmium_, _Puccinia_, _Lecythea_, _Trichobasis_,
-and _Uredo_, but they have been found much more generally in _Rœstelia_
-and _Æcidium_ than in any other genus.
-
-As comparatively little is yet known of these bodies, a fair field is
-open to the enterprising microscopist, with time at his disposal, and a
-good store of perseverance, to win for himself renown in the discovery
-of fresh facts, and the elucidation of some of the mysteries which yet
-enshroud these interesting organisms. From the foregoing pages he will
-learn the direction in which his researches should tend, and he may be
-assured that every new fact is of importance when carefully ascertained.
-
-
-[Illustration:
-
- Plate II.
- W. West imp.
-]
-
-
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER III.
-
- _DI-MORPHISM._
-
-
-BEFORE entering further and more fully upon the subject of this volume,
-it may be advisable to attempt an explanation of a phenomenon of no
-uncommon occurrence in many groups of Fungi, and which is termed
-_di-morphism_.
-
-In the Uredines, or uredo-like fungi, as well as other of the
-_Coniomycetes_ (in which the spores are the principal feature), the same
-fungus appears under two or more distinct forms, not necessarily mere
-differences of age, but so distinct that they have been regarded (and
-some are so still) as different species belonging to different genera,
-often far removed from each other, and bearing different names. One
-plant, for instance, sprinkled over the under surface of a rose-leaf,
-like turmeric powder, has its mycelium, or root-like threads,
-penetrating the tissue, whilst bearing above its spherical
-golden-coloured spores. Its vegetative system is complete, and,
-apparently, its reproductive also; hence it seems to claim recognition
-as a perfect plant, and under the name of _Uredo Rosæ_ was so
-recognized, until microscopical investigation determined otherwise. Thus
-it has been discovered that certain dark brown spots which appear later
-in the season are produced upon the same mycelium, and are indeed
-aggregations of more perfect and complex fruits of the same plant.
-Before this point was satisfactorily decided, the brown spores, which
-are borne on long stalks, and are themselves septate or divided
-(apparently or really) by transverse partitions into a complex fruit,
-received the name of _Puccinia Rosæ_. At this period, _Uredo Rosæ_ and
-_Puccinia Rosæ_, or the yellow fungus and the dark brown fungus, were
-believed to be distinct and different plants; now, on the contrary, they
-are believed to be different forms of fruit produced by the same plant;
-_i.e._, an instance of di-morphism. _Aregma mucronatum_, Fr., is the
-present scientific name of what is regarded as the perfect fungus,
-whilst the uredo-form either bears the name of _Lecythea Rosæ_, Lev., or
-by some mycologists is rejected altogether as a spurious species.
-
-During the summer it is not uncommon to find the leaves of some grasses,
-of the hop, of roses, and many other plants, covered with a kind of
-white mould, which appears under the microscope as a multitude of small
-transparent colourless cellules, generally attached to each other in a
-moniliform or beaded manner. These moulds were long known under the
-generic name of _Oidium_, to which genus the vine disease was also
-referred. More minute investigation and more careful examination proved
-that these moulds were not in themselves perfect plants, but merely
-conditions of other fungi of a higher order, little differing it is true
-in external appearance to the naked eye, but offering material
-differences in structure under the microscope. Upon the white mould-like
-threads, spherical bodies are produced in the autumn, containing little
-sacs or asci filled with spores; and in this condition the plants are
-arranged under the genus _Erysiphe_, whilst the species of _Oidium_
-which represented their imperfect condition, are excluded from the
-system. Here, again, we have examples of _di-morphism_.
-
-In the Journal of the Microscopical Society, Mr. F. Currey has detailed
-several instances of di-morphism which have fallen within his
-experience. In one instance he has shown that a small simple spored
-fungus, termed _Cryptosporium Neesii_, Ca., is only a state or condition
-of a fungus with compound fruit, belonging to the _Sphœria_ section of
-ascigerous fungi, called _Valsa suffusa_, Fr. Both plants are exactly
-alike externally, but the perithecium, or flask-like receptacle
-containing the fructification, in one instance only holds naked spores,
-and in the other the spores are contained in little elongated vesicular
-bags or asci, which are packed within the perithecium.
-
-Whilst writing this, one of the most wonderful books in a book-producing
-age lies beside us; it is the second volume of a work on fungi, by the
-brothers Tulasne; and this, as well as its predecessor, is devoted to
-this very subject of a multiplicity of form in the fructification of
-these plants. Illustrated by the most exquisite of engravings which art
-has ever produced, it also unfolds many a page in the history of these
-organisms, for which mycologists were not altogether unprepared. In
-noticing this work, one of our most eminent authors on mycological
-subjects quotes as an example _Dothidia ribis_, Fr., one of our most
-common fungi, which occurs in the form of little black shields on dead
-twigs of currants and goose-berries. Here we have, he says, naked spores
-(_conidia_) growing on the external cells of the stroma; we have naked
-spores of a second kind (_stylospores_) produced in distinct cysts
-(_pycnides_); we have minute bodies of a third kind (_spermatia_)
-produced again in distinct cysts, resembling very closely similar bodies
-in lichens; and we have a third kind of cysts, containing the usual
-sporidia in sausage-shaped hyaline sacs (_asci_). Even here, however, we
-have not done with marvels; for if the stylospores are placed in water,
-they produce in the course of twenty-four hours conidia of a second
-order, exactly analogous to those which arise on the germination of the
-spores of the rusts and mildews which affect our cereals and other
-plants.
-
-Further reference is also made to three species of moulds, which M.
-Tulasne has shown to be only varied forms of the mycelium of a species
-of _Sphœria_ common to various plants; these moulds having been hitherto
-regarded as fungi perfect in themselves.
-
-In the Uredines, to which much of this volume is devoted, the genera
-known as _Lecythea_ and _Trichobasis_ are by some mycologists excluded
-altogether, as containing only species which are mere forms of more
-highly-developed uredines, such as _Puccinia_, _Aregma_, and others. On
-the other hand, they are retained by those who possess a lingering doubt
-whether both forms may not be distinct, though developed from the same
-pustule. As the two forms are distinct in appearance, it will better
-answer our present purpose to treat them separately, notwithstanding the
-belief that, in a scientific point of view, the evidence is all in
-favour of their union.
-
-In fungi of this kind the mycelium, or delicate root-like threads,
-consists of thin filaments, which are spread through all parts of the
-plant occupied by the parasite, traversing the intercellular passages,
-but rarely perforating and entering the cells. This compacted and
-interwoven mycelium forms a kind of cushion beneath each pustule, on
-which the fruits of the parasite rest. By the increase of this cushion
-and the swelling of the fruit, the epidermis which covers them is
-distended, and ultimately ruptured, so that, when ripened, the spores
-escape. It must be remembered that the fruit is of from two to four
-kinds. Small bodies, called _spermatia_, which are derived from the
-spermogones, and which have not yet been known to germinate;
-_Stylospores_, produced either singly, or in bead-like, or moniliform,
-strings, and which either precede or are associated with the true
-spores; _Spores_, sometimes simple, but often complex; and _Sporidia_,
-or secondary sporules, which are produced on the germinating threads of
-the true spores.
-
-The various genera of these endophytes owe their distinctions to the
-form, or mode of development of their true spores. In one instance these
-spores are united in pairs, or divided by a septum, so that they are
-two-celled: these are named _Puccinia_. In another instance the spores
-are one-celled, and at first borne upon a stalk or peduncle, from which
-they are detached in ripening: such are called _Trichobasis_. It is
-unnecessary here to indicate all the variations to illustrate the fact
-that the generic distinctions are based upon the characters of the true
-spores. How unsatisfactory such a mode will appear, when subjected to
-experience day by day, a botanist would suspect. In the same pustule,
-resting upon the same cushion of mycelium, the spores of an _Aregma_
-will be found with those of a _Lecythea_, and those of a _Puccinia_ with
-_Trichobasis_. More than this has even been affirmed. The alternation of
-generations, known to students in the animal world, is here repeated in
-the vegetable. Dr. de Bary declares that certain data appear to indicate
-that _Æcidium_ constitutes not a genus by itself, but are organs in the
-development of some other germs and species, possessing its spermogonia,
-its _Æcidium_; its _Uredo_, and its spores, properly speaking; whilst in
-others the _Uredo_-form the _Puccinia_-form, and the _Æcidium_-form may
-alternate. It is not our intention to enter deeply upon the discussion
-of this subject, of so little interest to the beginner, and so out of
-place in an introduction to the study. That forms and conditions are
-multifarious, and that an entire revision of the classification is
-inevitable, are facts which do not require many words to establish.
-Already it is to be feared that in this brief chapter we have said too
-much, and must recommend its perusal again, when the names and
-characters of the genera alluded to have been rendered more familiar.
-
-It could scarcely have been permitted that the student should go far
-without being cautioned that there is such a thing as di-morphism in
-microscopic fungi; and the explanation of such a phenomenon must
-presuppose a certain amount of knowledge which, thus far, the reader
-could not have acquired. Hence an anomaly, to escape from which an
-ultimate return to the subject will be necessary.
-
-In a recent account of Dr. de Bary’s experiments,[3] an interesting
-history is given of the development of a rust-like fungus, which is
-common on many plants of the pea and bean tribe. As it may serve to
-illustrate some of the preceding, as well as subsequent, remarks on
-development, an abstract shall close this chapter.
-
-Footnote 3:
-
- De Bary—“Annales des Sciences Naturelles,” ser. 4, vol. xx.
-
-The spores of this species (_Uromyces appendiculatus_) are oboval cells,
-terminated by a rounded point, provided with a deep brown, smooth,
-_epispore_, or outer coating, and a distinct, but colourless
-_endospore_, or inner coating. These enclose a granular matter, which
-surrounds what has been termed the nucleus, but which appears to be a
-vacuole. At the top of the epispore is a pore which is characteristic of
-the genus. The spores are supported on a colourless, or slightly-tinted
-pedicel of considerable length (Plate VII. fig. 150). By means of this
-pedicel, the spores are attached to the fostering plant, on which they
-form pustules or sori of a blackish colour, and variable extent. These
-spores are ripened towards the end of summer or beginning of autumn.
-During winter they remain in a state of repose, but in the following
-spring the faculty of germination developes itself. At this period, when
-moistened or placed on a humid soil, they germinate at the end of a few
-days. The spore then emits a curved and obtuse tube, which soon ceasing
-to elongate itself, gives origin to three or four sporidia, of a
-reniform or kidney shape. When cultivated on moistened glass, these
-sporidia also emit a short, thin, slender tube, which produce in turn
-secondary sporidia. Here vegetation ends in the artificial culture above
-indicated.
-
-When the sporidia are sown upon the epidermis of a favourable plant, the
-germ-tube being emitted, penetrates the wall of any approximate cellule,
-swells and increases into a cylindrical tube equal in thickness to the
-original sporidia, and therefore four or five times the diameter of the
-germ-tube before it entered the cellule. The contents of the sporidia
-and external portion of its germ-tube pass into the portion within the
-cellule, and then these external portions perish, and all evidence of
-the entry is obliterated, except a very minute point at which the tube
-remains attached to the inner surface of the wall of the cellule. The
-enclosed tube soon elongates, divides, and becomes branched. These
-branches perforate the inner walls of the epidermis, and pass into the
-intercellular spaces of the parenchyma to become mycelium. This takes
-place within 24 hours. A few days afterwards the mycelium is spread
-through the parenchyma. At length the surface of the same spots which
-had been sown in the first instance with the sporidia, become of a
-whitish tint, rapidly increasing and intensifying. Three days after,
-little protuberances appear on the surface of the white spots. These are
-of an orange colour, and many of them are surmounted by a little drop of
-mucilaginous fluid. These are _spermogones_. Their number daily
-increases, and a little time after appear numerous large globular
-protuberances intermingled with them. These soon rupture the epidermis,
-and take the orange colour and cylindrical form of cluster-cups
-(_Æcidium_). At length the summit of the peridia opens to allow the
-escape of the _stylospores_. It is easy to assure oneself that the
-spermogones and cluster-cups proceed from the mycelium of the sporidia
-which had been sown. During several days the length and number of the
-peridia of the _Æcidium_ continue to increase. One month after sowing,
-brownish or blackish points make their appearance upon the whitish
-spots, around, or intermingled with the cluster-cups. These increase
-rapidly in number and magnitude. Examined by the microscope, they
-present the ordinary fructification of _Uromyces_, mingled with
-stylospores. Thus the mycelium of the cluster-cups engenders at the end
-of its vegetation fruits equal in all points to those from whence they
-are in the first instance derived.
-
-The stylospores of the cluster-cups possess the irregular, globular form
-and structure of their congeners. They are filled with orange granular
-matter, and provided with a colourless, finely-punctated epispore. When
-these stylospores are sown on the moistened epidermis of a favourable
-plant, the germ-tube at first creeps along the surface, but as soon as
-its extremities find a stomate, it enters it and elongates itself in the
-air-cavity below the orifice, receives the contents of the original
-stylospore and exposed portion of its tube, then separates itself from
-those parts, which become dispersed. The active part increases and
-ramifies, and produces a mycelium which spreads through the
-intercellular passages of the parenchyma. At the end of from six to
-eight days, the whitish spots appear on the surface of the fostering
-plant, and indicate that the fructification of the parasite is about to
-commence. The epidermis is elevated and broken, and little brown
-pustules appear through the openings. These are the _stylospores_ of
-_Uredo_, which are produced in immense quantities, and soon cover the
-pustules with a deep brown dust. Later, the formation of the stylospores
-is arrested, and the true germinating spores appear in the same
-pustules.
-
-The stylospores of _Uredo_ are borne singly at the top of short
-filaments. On arriving at maturity they detach themselves. They are of a
-globular form, with a reddish-brown epispore, provided with little
-pointed prominences, and three pores at equal distances. After maturity
-they germinate in precisely the same manner as the stylospores of the
-cluster-cups. They enter only through the stomata of the epidermis. The
-pulvinules are identical with those which the stylospores of _Æcidium_
-originate, and they also produce true spores at the end of their
-vegetation. No other fruit arises from them. These organs, therefore,
-always reproduce the same form to which they owe their origin. The
-result of these investigations shows that the bean rust (_Uromyces
-appendiculatus_), besides spermogones, possesses four sorts of
-reproductive organs, which all serve to propagate the species, but that
-one alone of them produces it in a form always identical, whilst the
-others present well-marked alternations of generation. Hence it is
-concluded that there are,
-
-I. _Spores_ which produce in germinating the promycelium, and
-
-II. _Sporidia._—These give place to a mycelium, which bears afterwards—
-
-III. _Æcidium._—Particular organs which engender stylospores, and which
-produce—
-
-IV. _Uredo_, the second form of the stylospores, and later spores (No.
-I.), which are always associated with _Uredo_ in the same pustule. The
-spores and stylospores of _Uredo_ come also upon the old mycelium, which
-has previously produced _Æcidium_. The _Uredo_ stylospores always
-produce _Uredo_, and true spores.
-
-
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER IV.
-
- _MILDEW AND BRAND._
-
-
-DR. WITHERING’S “Arrangement of British Plants” in 1818 reached its
-sixth edition. This is less than half a century ago, and yet the whole
-number of species of Fungi described in that edition was only 564, of
-which three hundred were included under the old genus _Agaricus_. Less
-than eighty of the more minute species of Fungi, but few of which
-deserve the name of microscopic, were supposed to contain all then known
-of these wonderful organisms. Since that period, microscopes have become
-very different instruments, and one result has been the increase of
-Withering’s 564 species of British Fungi to the 2,479 enumerated in the
-“Index Fungorum Britannicorum.” By far the greater number of species
-thus added depend for their specific, and often generic characters, upon
-microscopical examination. The proportion which the cryptogamic section
-bears to the phanerogamic in our local Floras before 1818, now almost
-involuntarily causes a smile. Even such authors as were supposed to pay
-the greatest possible respect to the lower orders of plants could never
-present an equal number of pages devoted to them, as to the higher
-orders. Relhan, for instance, only occupies one-fifth of his “Flora
-Cantabrigiensis,” and Hudson one-fourth of his “Flora Anglica,” with the
-Cryptogamia. At the present time, it will be seen that, with a liberal
-allowance for “hair-splitting,” the number of British species of
-flowering plants scarcely exceeds three-fourths of the number of Fungi
-alone, not to mention ferns, mosses, algæ and lichens, and yet we have
-no “Flora” which contains them, and but a minority of our botanists know
-anything about them. If we need excuse for directing attention to some
-of the most interesting of these plants, let the above remarks suffice
-in lieu of formal apology.
-
-“Mildew” is just one of those loose terms which represent no definite
-idea, or a very different one to different individuals. Talk of _mildew_
-to a farmer, and instantly he scampers mentally over his fields of
-standing corn in search of the brown lines or irregular spots which
-indicate the unwelcome presence of _Puccinia graminis_, known to him,
-and to generations of farmers before him, as “mildew.” Try to convince a
-Norfolk farmer that anything else is “mildew,” and he will consider you
-insane for your pains. Speak of _mildew_ in your own domestic circle,
-and inquire of wives, or daughters, or servants, what it means, and
-without hesitation another, and even more minute species of fungus,
-which attacks damp linen, will be indicated as the true mildew, to the
-exclusion of all others; and with equal claims to antiquity. Go to
-Farnham, or any other hop-growing district, and repeat there your
-question,—What is _mildew_?—and there is every probability that you will
-be told that it is a kind of mould which attacks the hop plant, but
-which differs as much from both the mildew of the farmer and the
-laundry-maid as they differ from each other. The vine-grower has his
-mildew, the gardener his mildewed onions, the stationer his mildewed
-paper from damp cellars, the plasterer his mildewed walls, and in almost
-every calling, or sphere in life, wherever a minute fungus commits its
-ravages upon stock, crop, or chattels, to that individual owner it
-becomes a bug-bear under the name of “mildew.” Reluctantly this vague
-term has been employed as a portion of the title to this chapter, but it
-must be limited in its application to the “mildew of corn,” known to
-botanists as _Puccinia graminis_, and _not_ to include the numerous
-other microscopic Fungi to which the name of _mildew_ is often applied.
-
-The origin of this term and its true application may undoubtedly be
-traced to _mehl-thau_, “meal dew.” A singular proof of the ignorance
-which prevails in regard to all the fungal diseases of corn, may be
-found in the fact that at least one of our best etymological
-dictionaries states that the _mildew_ in corn is the same as the _ergot_
-of the French. Had the writer ever been a farmer, he would have known
-the difference; had he ever seen the two, he could scarcely have made
-such a mistake. It is barely possible for him ever to have heard the
-ergot of grain called by the name of _mildew_.
-
-How long this disease has been known, is an unsolved problem. About the
-middle of the last century a tract was published on this subject in
-Italy, but this was probably not even the first intimation of its
-fungoid character. Before such conclusion had been arrived at, men may
-have struggled in the dark, through many generations, to account for a
-phenomenon with which they were doubtless familiar in its effects. In
-1805, Sir Joseph Banks published his “Short Account,” illustrated by
-engravings from the inimitable drawings of Bauer, whereby many in this
-country learnt, for the first time, the true nature of _mildew_.
-
-
-[Illustration:
-
- Plate III.
- W. West imp.
-]
-
-
-With a view to the clearer understanding of these parasites in the
-phases of their development, let us select one, and we cannot do better
-than adhere to that of the wheat and other graminaceous plants. A fine
-day in May or June dawns upon our preparations for a stroll, far enough
-into the country to find a wheat-field. Even now, with the area of the
-metropolis constantly widening, and banishing farmers and wheat fields
-farther and farther from the sound of Bow-bells, a corn field may be
-reached by a good stiff walk from Charing-Cross, or a six-penny ride at
-the most, in nearly any direction. Having reached the field, it may be
-premised that a walk into it of less than twenty yards will be sure to
-reward you with the fungus we are in quest of. Look down at the green
-leaves, especially the lower ones, and you will soon find one apparently
-grown rusty. The surface seems to be sprinkled with powdered red ochre,
-and grown sickly under the operation. Pluck it carefully, and examine it
-with a pocket lens. Already the structure of a healthy leaf is familiar
-to you, but in the present instance the cuticle is traversed with
-numerous longitudinal cracks or fissures, within which, and about their
-margins, you discern an orange powder, to which the rusty appearance of
-the leaf is due. Further examination reveals also portions in which the
-cuticle is distended into yellowish elongated pustules, not yet
-ruptured, and which is an earlier stage of the same disease. This is the
-“rust” of the agriculturist, the _Trichobasis rubigo-vera_ of botanists,
-the first phase of the corn mildew.
-
-To know more of this parasite, we must have recourse to the microscope;
-having therefore collected a few leaves for this purpose, we return
-homewards to follow up the investigation. We will not stay to detail the
-processes of manipulation, since these will not offer any deviation from
-the ordinary modes of preparation and examination of delicate vegetable
-tissues.
-
-The vegetative system of the “rust,” and similar fungi, consists of a
-number of delicate, simple, or branched threads, often intertwining and
-anastomosing, or uniting one to the other by means of lateral
-branchlets. These threads, termed the mycelium, penetrate the
-intercellular spaces, and insinuate themselves in a complete network,
-amongst the cells of which the leaf, or other diseased portion of the
-plant, is composed. High powers of the microscope, and equally high
-powers of patience and perseverance, are necessary to make out this part
-of the structure. We may regard the whole mycelium of one pustule, or
-spore-spot, as the vegetative system of one fungal plant. At first this
-mycelium might have originated in a number of individuals, which
-afterwards became confluent and combined into one for the production of
-fruit, that is to say, an indefinite number of points in the vicinity of
-the future mycelium developed threads; and these, in the process of
-growth, interlaced each other, and ultimately, by means of transverse
-processes, became united into one vegetative system, in which the
-individuality of each of the elementary threads became absorbed, and by
-one combined effort a spore-spot, or cluster of fruit, was produced. In
-the first instance a number of minute, transparent, colourless cellules
-are developed from the mycelium: these enlarge, become filled with an
-orange-coloured endochrome, and appear beneath the cuticle of the leaf
-as yellowish spots. As a consequence of this increase in bulk, the
-cuticle becomes distended in the form of a pustule over the yellow
-cellules, and at length, unable longer to withstand the pressure from
-beneath, ruptures in irregular, more or less elongated fissures (Plate
-VII. fig. 141), and the yellow bodies, now termed _spores_ (whether
-correctly so, we do not at present inquire), break from their short
-pedicels and escape, to the naked eye presenting the appearance of an
-orange or rust-coloured powder. In this stage the spores are globose, or
-nearly so, and consist of but one cell Plate VII. figs. 142, 144). It
-will afford much instructive amusement to examine one of these ruptured
-pustules as an opaque object under a low power, and afterwards the
-spores may be viewed with a higher power as a transparent object. The
-difference in depth of tint, the nearly colourless and smaller immature
-spores, and the tendency in some of the fully matured ones to elongate,
-are all facts worthy of notice, as will be seen hereafter.
-
-A month or two later in the season, and we will make another trip to the
-cornfield. Rusty leaves, and leaf-sheaths, have become even more common
-than before. A little careful examination, and, here and there, we shall
-find a leaf or two with decidedly brown pustules intermixed with the
-rusty ones, or, as we have observed several times during the past
-autumn, the pustules towards the base of the leaf orange, and those
-towards the apex reddish-brown. If we remove from the browner spots a
-little of the powder, by means of a sharp-pointed knife, and place it in
-a drop of water or alcohol on a glass slide, and after covering with a
-square of thin glass, submit it to examination under a quarter-inch
-objective, a different series of forms will be observed. There will
-still be a proportion of subglobose, one-celled, yellow spores; but the
-majority will be elongated, most with pedicels or stalks, if they have
-been carefully removed from the leaf, and either decidedly two-celled,
-or with an evident tendency to become so. The two cells are separated by
-a partition or dissepiment, which divides the original cell transversely
-into an upper and lower cell, with an external constriction in the plane
-of the dissepiment (Plate IV. fig. 59). These bilocular or two-celled
-spores are those of the “corn mildew” (_Puccinia graminis_), which may
-be produced in the same pustules, and from the same mycelium, as the
-“corn rust,” but which some mycologists consider to be a distinct
-fungus, others only a modification or stage of the same fungus. After an
-examination of the different forms in the allied genera to which these
-chapters are devoted, we shall be able with less of explanation and
-circumlocution to canvass these two conflicting opinions.
-
-Let us proceed, for the third and last time, to our cornfield, when the
-corn is nearly or fully ripe, or let us look over any bundle of straw,
-and we shall find blackish spots, from the size of a pin’s head to an
-inch in length, mostly on the sheaths of the leaves, often on the culm
-itself. This is the fully developed _mildew_, and when once seen is not
-likely afterwards to be confounded with any other parasite on straw
-(fig. 57). The drawings of Bauer have already been alluded to. Bauer was
-botanical draughtsman to George III., and his exquisite drawings, both
-of the germination of wheat and the fungi which infest it, are marvels
-of artistic skill. A reduced figure from part of one of his drawings is
-given (Plate IV. fig. 58), exhibiting a tuft of the bilocular spores of
-_Puccinia graminis_ bursting through a piece of wheat straw. These
-closely-packed tufts or masses of spores, when examined with a common
-lens, seem, at first, to resemble the minute sorus of some species of
-fern; but when seen with higher powers, the apparent resemblance gives
-place to something very different. The tufts consist of multitudes of
-stalked bodies, termed spores, which are constricted in the middle and
-narrowed towards either extremity. The partition, or septum, thrown
-across the spore at the constriction, separates it into two portions,
-each of which consists of a cell-wall enclosing an inner vesicle filled
-with the endochrome (fig. 59) or granular contents, in which a nucleus
-may often be made out. This species of _Puccinia_ is very common on all
-the cereals cultivated in this country, and on many of the grasses. A
-variety found on the reed was at one time considered a distinct species;
-but the difference does not seem sufficient to warrant a separation.
-However near some other of the recognized species may seem to
-approximate in the form of the spores, a very embryo botanist will not
-fail to observe the distinctive features in the spores of the corn
-mildew, and speedily recognize them amongst a host of others; subject,
-as they may be, to slight deviations in form, resulting either from
-external pressure, checks in development, or other accidental
-circumstances, or the variations of age.
-
-There is no doubt in the minds of agriculturists, botanists, _savans_,
-or farm-labourers, that the mildew is very injurious to the corn crop.
-Different opinions may exist as to how the plants become inoculated, or
-how infection may be prevented or cured. Some have professed to believe
-that the spores, such as we have seen produced in clusters on wheat
-straw, enter by the stomata, or pores, of the growing plant, “and at the
-bottom of the hollows to which they lead they germinate and push their
-minute roots into the cellular texture.” Such an explanation, however
-plausible at first sight, fails on examination, from the fact that the
-spores are too large to find ingress by such minute openings. It is
-improbable that the _spores_ enter the growing plant at all. The
-granular contents of the spores may effect an entrance either through
-the roots or by the stomata, or the globose bodies produced upon the
-germination of the spores may be the primary cause of infection. We are
-not aware that this question has been satisfactorily determined. It is
-worthy of remembrance by all persons interested in the growth of corn,
-that the mildew is most common upon plants growing on the site of an old
-dunghill, or on very rich soil. As the same _Puccinia_ is also to be
-found on numerous grasses, no prudent farmer will permit these to
-luxuriate around the borders of his fields, lest they should serve to
-introduce or increase the pest he so much dreads.
-
-The germination of the spores of the corn mildew is a very interesting
-and instructive process, which may be observed with a very little
-trouble. If the spores be scraped from the sori of the preceding year
-(we are not sure that those of the current year will succeed), and kept
-for a short time in a damp atmosphere under a glass receiver, minute
-colourless threads will be seen to issue both from the upper and lower
-divisions of the spores. These will attain a length several times that
-of the spores from whence they spring. The extremities of these threads
-ultimately thicken, and two or three septæ are formed across each,
-dividing it into cells, in which a little orange-coloured endochrome
-accumulates. From the walls of each of these cells, or joints, a small
-pedicel, or spicule, is produced outwards, the tip of which gradually
-swells until a spherical head is formed, into which the orange-coloured
-fluid passes from the extremities of the threads.[4] A quantity of such
-threads, bearing at their summits from one to four of these
-orange-coloured, spherical, secondary fruits, supply a beautiful as well
-as interesting object for the microscope. When matured, these globose
-bodies, which Tulasne has called _sporidia_, fall from the threads, and
-commence germinating on their own account. It is not impossible that the
-sporidia, in this and allied genera, may themselves produce a third and
-still more minute fruit, capable of diffusion through the tissues of
-growing plants, or gaining admission by their stomata. Nothing of the
-kind, however, has yet been of certainty discovered.
-
-Footnote 4:
-
- Similar in all essential particulars to the germination of _Aregma_
- (Plate III. fig. 45).
-
-Forty other species of _Puccinia_ have been recorded as occurring in
-Great Britain, to all of which many of the foregoing remarks will also
-apply—viz., such as relate to their two-celled spores being found
-associated with, and springing from, the same mycelium as certain
-orange-coloured one-celled spores; and also the main features of the
-germinating process.
-
-
-[Illustration:
-
- Plate IV.
- W. West imp.
-]
-
-
-A very singular and interesting species is not uncommon on the more
-delicate grasses, being found chiefly confined to the leaves, and
-produced in smaller and more rounded, or but slightly elongated, patches
-(Plate IV. fig. 60). We have met with it plentifully amongst the turf
-laid down in the grounds of the Crystal Palace at Sydenham, and also on
-hedge-banks and in pastures. The spores are rather smaller than those of
-_Puccinia graminis_, but, like them, much elongated, slightly
-constricted, and borne on persistent peduncles. The most prominent
-distinction may be found in the apices of the spores, which, in this
-instance, are not attenuated, but crowned with a series of little
-spicules, or teeth, whence the specific name of _coronata_ has been
-derived (Plate IV. fig. 62).
-
-The Labiate family of plants and its ally the Scrophulariaceæ are also
-subject to the attacks of several kinds of Brand, a name, by the bye,
-often applied locally to the corn mildew and other similar parasites,
-and which may have originated in the scorched or _burnt_ appearance
-which the infected parts generally assume. In the former natural order
-the different kinds of mint, the ground-ivy, the wood-sage, and the
-betony, and in the latter, the water figwort and several species of
-veronica, or speedwell, are peculiarly susceptible; and on most a
-distinct species of _Puccinia_ is found. To provide against doubt which
-the less botanical of our readers may possess of the meaning or value of
-the term _Puccinia_, which has already occurred two or three times in
-this chapter, a brief explanation may be necessary, which more
-scientific readers will excuse.
-
-In botany, as in kindred sciences, acknowledged species have their
-trivial, or specific name, generally derived from the Latin. In the last
-species referred to, this was _coronata_, meaning _crowned_, in
-reference to the coronated apex of the fruit. Any indefinite number of
-species with some features in common are associated together in a group,
-which is termed a _genus_, and the term prefixed to the specific name of
-each species constituting that genus is its generic name, also commonly
-derived from the Latin or Greek. In this instance it is _Puccinia_,
-derived from the Greek _puka_, meaning _closely packed_, singularly
-applicable to the manner in which the spores are packed together in the
-pustules. The common features, or generic distinctions, of this genus,
-are uniseptate spores borne on a distinct peduncle.
-
-In returning to the species found on Labiate plants, let us suppose
-ourselves to have strolled towards Hampstead Heath, and south of the
-road leading from Hampstead to Highgate, near certain conspicuous and
-well-known arches, built for a purpose not yet attained, are two or
-three muddy ponds nearly choked up with vegetation. Some fine autumnal
-afternoon, we must imagine ourselves to have reached the margin of the
-most northern of these ponds, and amidst a thick growth of reeds,
-sedges, and other water-loving plants, to have found the water-mint in
-profusion and luxuriance, with every leaf more or less occupied, on its
-under surface, with the yellow spores of a species of rust
-(_Trichobasis_) mixed with the browner septate spores of the mint brand
-(_Puccinia Menthæ_). This is common also on the horse-mint and
-corn-mint; we have found it on the wild basil and wild thyme, and once
-only on marjoram. Having collected as many leaves as we desire, and
-returned to home and the microscope, we proceed to examine them in the
-same manner as we have already examined the mildew, and as a result of
-such proceeding arrive at the following conclusions:—The pustules are
-small and round, never elongated as in the corn mildew, and generally
-confined to the under surface of the leaves (Plate IV. fig. 69). The
-spores are subglobose, slightly constricted, and the two cells nearly
-two hemispheres, with their flat surfaces turned towards each other
-(fig. 70). The form delineated in figure 75 is that of the sorus of many
-of the epiphytal brands, the centre being occupied by the closely-packed
-spores, surrounded to a greater or less extent by the remains of the
-ruptured epidermis.
-
-Although the species of Puccinia (_P. glechomatis_) found on the leaves
-of the ground-ivy is said to be very common, we sought it in vain
-amongst every cluster of that plant met with during last summer and
-autumn, until, nearly despairing of finding it at all, we at last
-encountered a plot of ground-ivy covering the ground to the width of two
-or three yards, and in length eight or ten, nearly every plant being
-attacked by the _brand_. This was in the corner of a pasture, and the
-only time we found infected plants. The fungus, however, may be as
-common as the plant in other localities. The pustules on the leaves are
-larger than those of the mints, and also confined to the inferior
-surface (fig. 73). The spores are elliptic and but slightly constricted;
-the apex is often pointed, though not always so much as in our figure
-(fig. 74).
-
-Of other species found on allied plants we have not considered it
-necessary to give figures, or write much. The betony brand (_P.
-Betonicæ_, DC.) does not seem to be common enough to be readily found by
-any one desiring to examine it for himself; and the same may be said of
-the figwort brand (_P. Scrophulariæ_, Lib.), the wood-sage brand (_P.
-Scorodoniæ_, Lk.), and the speedwell brand (_P. Veronicarum_, DC.); all
-of these are, however, characterized by a distinct feature, or features,
-which have been considered of sufficient importance to constitute a
-separate species.
-
-We have had occasion to refer incidentally to the brand found on the
-under surface of the leaves of the wood-anemone (_P. Anemones_, P.).
-This is one of the earliest and commonest species. Go wherever the
-wood-anemone abounds, in any of the woods lying immediately to the north
-of the metropolis, or any of the woods in Kent, and from March to May it
-will not be difficult to find attenuated, sickly-looking leaves, with
-the under surface covered with the pustules of this brand, looking so
-like the sori of some fern (fig. 65) that it _has_ been, and still _is_,
-sometimes considered as such. In Ray’s “Synopsis” (3rd edition, 1724),
-it is described in company with the maidenhair and wall-rue ferns; a
-figure is given of it in the same work (t. iii. fig. 1), and it is
-stated,—“this capillary was gathered by the Conjuror of Chalgrave.”
-When, afterwards, it was better understood, and the spots came to be
-regarded as true parasitic fungi, it still for a long time continued to
-bear the name, not even yet quite forgotten, of the Conjuror of
-Chalgrave’s fern.
-
-An examination of the spores, both collectively in the pustules, and
-separately under a high power, will not fail to convince any one who has
-examined only the species we have already alluded to, that this parasite
-on the anemone (_P. Anemones_) is a true _Puccinia_, and a most
-interesting one. The two cells of the spores are nearly spherical, and
-the constriction is deeper and more positive than in any of the
-preceding. Moreover, the surface of the spore is minutely and
-beautifully echinulate, or covered with erect spines (Plate IV. fig.
-66). Some few other of the species found in Britain have echinulate
-spores, but those are not common like the present. One word of caution
-to the amateur in search of the _Puccinia_ on the anemone. It will be
-fruitless looking for it on the large foliaceous bracts of the
-flower-stalk, since these may be turned up carefully, till the back
-aches with stooping, ere a solitary pustule will be found; but the true
-leaves, proceeding from the rhizomes, are certain soon to afford you
-specimens.
-
-Everybody knows the dandelion, but it is not every one who has noticed
-the fungi found upon its leaves. These are most commonly of two kinds,
-or probably the unilocular and bilocular forms of the same species: the
-latter we have found in the month of May, and the former in August and
-September. The lower leaves of young seedlings have generally rewarded
-us with the best specimens of the septate-fruited brand (_Puccinia
-variabilis_, Grev.). The pustules occur on both sides of the leaf, and
-are very small and scattered (fig. 82). The spores are singularly
-variable in form: sometimes both divisions are nearly equal in size;
-sometimes the upper, and sometimes the lower, division is the smallest;
-occasionally the septum will be absent altogether; and more rarely, the
-spores will contain three cells. From the very variable character of the
-spores (fig. 83), the specific name has been derived.
-
-No species in the entire genus makes so prominent an appearance as the
-one found on the radical leaves of the spear thistle (_Carduus
-lanceolatus_). This latter plant is exceedingly abundant, and so is its
-parasite (_Puccinia syngenesiarum_, Lk.). From the month of July till
-the frosts set in we may be almost certain of finding specimens in any
-wood. The leaves have a paler roundish spot, from one-twelfth to
-one-fourth of an inch in diameter, on the upper surface, and a
-corresponding dark brown raised spot on the under surface, caused by an
-aggregation of pustules, forming a large compound pustule, often partly
-covered with the epidermis. The individual pustules are small, but this
-aggregate mode of growth gives the clusters great prominence, and
-therefore they are not easily overlooked (Plate IV. fig. 63). Although
-not confined to this species of thistle, we have not yet found this
-_Puccinia_ on any other plant. The spores are elliptical, rather
-elongated, constricted, and without spines (fig. 64).
-
-Other species of _Puccinia_ are found on Composite plants, but with none
-of these is the present fungus likely to be confounded, if regard be had
-to its peculiar habit. The leaves, for instance, of the common knapweed
-(_Centaurea nigra_) are often sprinkled with the small pustules of the
-centaury brand (_Puccinia compositarum_, Sch.); these generally occupy
-the under surface of the lower radical leaves (fig. 67); occasionally a
-few of the pustules appear on the upper surface. We have not often found
-this fungus in the neighbourhood of London on the leaves of the
-knapweed, but, on the other hand, we have encountered it very commonly
-on those of the saw-wort (_Serratula tinctoria_). The spores are oval,
-scarcely constricted, and not attenuated in either direction (fig. 68).
-Other Composite plants than those above named are liable to attacks from
-this parasite.
-
-In our school-days we remember to have spent many a stray half-hour
-digging for “earthnuts,” under which name we, as well as our elders and
-betters, knew the tubers of _Bunium flexuosum_. Not then, nor for many
-years after, did we notice, or regard if we did notice, the distorted
-radical leaves and leaf-stalks, and the blackish-brown spots, which
-reveal the cause in the presence of a brand, or parasitic fungus, of
-this genus (_Puccinia Umbelliferarum_, DC.), which is extremely common
-on this, as well as some other allied plants. If any spot is searched
-where this plant grows in any profusion, before the flowering stalks
-have made their appearance above the surrounding grass, this _Puccinia_
-will be readily found by the twisted, contorted, sickly appearance of
-the infested leaves (fig. 71), the petioles of which are often swollen
-and gouty in consequence. The sporidia are shortly stalked, and
-generally very much constricted (fig. 72). The species found on the
-stems of the hemlock, and also that on Alexanders (_Smyrnium
-Olusatrum_), are distinct; the spores of the latter being covered with
-tubercles or warts (figs. 55, 56). During a botanical ramble through
-Darenth Wood in April of the year just passed away, in some parts of
-which the sanicle abounds, we found the bright glossy leaves of this
-singular and interesting plant freely sprinkled with the pustules of a
-_Puccinia_ (_P. Saniculæ_, Grev.), which is not at all uncommon on this,
-but has not hitherto been found on any other plant. Dr. Greville, of
-Edinburgh, was the first to describe this, as well as many other of our
-indigenous minute Fungi. For many years he has toiled earnestly and
-vigorously at the lower cryptogams, as evidenced by his “Scottish
-Cryptogamic Flora,” published in 1823; and yet his continual additions
-to the records of science show him to be earnest and vigorous still.
-
-We have by no means exhausted the catalogue of Fungi belonging to this
-genus found in Britain, nor even those commonly to be met with; but the
-fear of prolixity, and the desire to introduce a description of other
-forms into the space still remaining to us, prompt us to dismiss these
-two-celled brands with but a brief allusion to such as we cannot
-describe. Box-leaves are the habitat of one species, and those of the
-periwinkle (Plate VI. fig. 132) of another. One vegetates freely on the
-leaves of violets through the months of July and August, and another
-less frequently on the enchanter’s nightshade. Several species of
-willow-herb (_Epilobium_) are attacked by one _Puccinia_ (Plate IV.
-figs. 78, 79), and a single species by another. Plum-tree leaves,
-bean-leaves, primrose leaves, and the half-dead stems of asparagus, have
-their separate and distinct species, and others less commonly attack the
-woodruff, bedstraw (Plate VIII. figs. 172, 173), knotgrass, ragwort, and
-other plants less common, more local, or, to the generality of the
-non-botanical, but imperfectly known.
-
-We have found, not uncommonly in the autumn, the scattered pustules of a
-brand on the stems and leaves of the goat’s-beard, occupying the places
-which were scarred with the remains of cluster-cups that had flourished
-on the same spots a month or two previously (Plate IV. fig. 76). The
-pustules are by no means minute, but elongated and bullate; the spores
-beautifully studded with warts (Plate IV. fig. 77). This species cannot
-certainly be identical with _Puccinia compositarum_ (Schlecht), _P.
-syngenesiarum_ (Lk.), or _P. tragopogonis_ (Corda). In none of these do
-the spores appear to be warted, and the habits of both the latter are
-different. Its nearest associate appears to be _P. centauriæ_ (Corda),
-at least in the fruit, and whilst the form and character of these organs
-are considered of any value in the determination of species, smooth
-spores cannot be associated, we think, with tuberculate or echinulate
-spores under the same name.
-
-In the spores of the species to which attention has been more specially
-directed we have types of the principal forms. In the “corn-mildew” they
-are elongated, and tapering towards either end; in the “coronated brand”
-the apex is crowned with spicular processes; in the “wind-flower brand”
-the entire spores are echinulate; in the “mint brand” they are globose;
-in the “composite brand” elliptic; in the “earth-nut brand,” nearly cut
-in two at the septum; and in the “dandelion brand,” so variable in form
-that no two are precisely alike. On the other hand, all are
-characterized by a transverse septum dividing each spore into two cells.
-
-
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER V.
-
- _COMPLEX BRANDS._
-
-
-FROM the twin-spored genus we pass to another, in which the spores are
-usually divided into three cells, and which, from this cause, has been
-named _Triphragmium_. Only one species has hitherto been found in this
-country, and _that_ not very commonly, on the leaves of the
-meadow-sweet, _Spiræa ulmaria_ (Plate III. fig. 47). Externally, it much
-resembles, in the size and character of the pustules, many of the
-above-named brands, but when seen under the microscope this similarity
-disappears. In general outline the spores are nearly globose, and
-externally papillose. In one species, found on the Continent, but not
-hitherto in Great Britain, the spores are covered with curious
-long-hooked spines, by means of which they adhere tenaciously to each
-other. In germination, the spores of _Triphragmium_ do not offer any
-noteworthy deviation from those of _Puccinia_,[5] and the chief interest
-of our indigenous species lies in the three-celled form of its spores
-(fig. 48), to which occasionally those of _Puccinia variabilis_
-approximate, and may be regarded as the link which unites the two
-genera.
-
-Footnote 5:
-
- Mr. Currey has only seen the tips of the germinating threads swell,
- and become septate, each of the joints thus formed falling off and
- germinating without producing spherical sporidia; whilst Tulasne
- figures globular sporidia, as will be seen in our fig. 49, reduced
- from the figure by Tulasne.—(_Vide_ Currey, in “Quarterly Journal of
- Microscopical Science,” 1857, pp. 117, &c.)
-
-The old story of “Eyes and no Eyes” is too often literally true, not
-only with the children it was written to amuse and instruct, but also
-with children of a larger growth who scorn such baby tales, and disdain
-such baby morals. Out of more than a thousand indigenous species of
-microscopic fungi, of which there is generally some evidence afforded of
-their presence visible to the naked eye, how few are there of the
-millions that inhabit our island who can count twenty species that they
-have ever seen; still fewer that have noticed one hundred. Amongst the
-twenty species known to the few will probably be included one which
-appears in autumn in prominent black spots, the size of a large pin’s
-head, or half a turnip seed, with the flat face downwards, sprinkling
-the under surface of blackberry leaves (fig. 39); with larger, reddish,
-purplish, or reddish-brown spots on the upper to indicate the presence
-of the fungus beneath. Just at the time when blackberries are ripe,
-these spots are in perfection on the leaves, and _their_ eyes must have
-been sadly at fault who could ever have gathered their own blackberries
-without seeing the discoloured leaves. The coloured spots on the face of
-the leaf are due to the diseased state of the tissues caused by the
-parasite on the opposite surface. As much of the leaf as contains two or
-three of the black pustules should be removed carefully with a knife or
-sharp scissors, and submitted to microscopical examination; each will be
-seen to consist of a dense tuft of blackish, elongated, stalked bodies,
-clustered as in fig. 44, but much more numerously and closely packed
-together. These are the spores of the blackberry brand (_Aregma
-bulbosum_, Fr.). A few of these spores should be removed on the point of
-a sharp penknife, placed on a glass slide with a drop of distilled water
-or alcohol, covered with thin glass, and then viewed with a quarter-inch
-objective. Each spore has a stalk longer than itself, thickened below,
-and containing a yellow granular core. The spore itself is much longer
-than in any of the _Pucciniæ_, of a dark brown colour, and apparently
-divided by several transverse partitions into three, four, or more
-cells, the whole surface being covered with minute warts or prominences
-(Plate III. fig. 41).
-
-In 1857, Mr. F. Currey investigated the structure of these spores, and
-the results of these experiments were detailed in the “Quarterly Journal
-of Microscopical Science.” One conclusion arrived at was, that “the idea
-of the fruit consisting of sporidia united together and forming a chain,
-is certainly not in accordance with the true structure. The sporidia are
-not united to one another in any way, but, although closely packed for
-want of space, they are in fact free in the interior of what may be
-called a sporangium or ascus.” To arrive at this conclusion, careful
-examination was necessary, and new modes of manipulation essential. The
-details of one method employed were to the following effect:—A
-sufficient number of spores were removed on the point of a lancet, and
-placed on a slide in a drop of alcohol. Before the spirit was quite
-evaporated, two or three drops of strong nitric acid were added, and the
-whole covered with thin glass. The slide was then warmed over a
-spirit-lamp, the acid not being allowed to boil, but only gradually
-heated to boiling point. By this means the fruit was found to consist of
-an outer membrane, nearly transparent, and studded with tubercles; that
-this membrane enclosed a number of cells which constituted the apparent
-joints, and which were naturally flattened at either end by mutual
-pressure. When the outer membrane was dissolved or ruptured, these cells
-escaped, and became detached from each other. The cells, thus set free,
-exhibited a brownish or yellow ring around a paler area, in the interior
-of which an inner cell was visible, sometimes globular, often irregular
-in shape. The examination of the ring was not entirely satisfactory; it
-appeared to be sometimes marked with concentric lines having the
-appearance of wrinkles. The inner cell had granular contents and a
-central nucleus. When perfectly free they were spherical in form, with a
-distinct membrane of their own; and colourless, except when acted upon
-by reagents. The means employed to determine the existence of these
-cells was to soak the spores in muriatic acid; then, upon pressure of
-the glass cover, the outer membrane and ringed cells were ruptured, and
-the inner cell escaped (Plate III. fig. 46).
-
-Germination may be induced in these spores by keeping them in a moist
-atmosphere (fig. 45); but the mode does not differ from that described
-above as occurring in the “corn mildew.” Mr. Currey writes:—“I know no
-microscopical object of greater beauty than a number of fruits of
-_Phragmidium_ in active germination.” By _Phragmidium_ he means the
-_Aregma_ of this work, of which _Phragmidium_ is a synonyme.
-
-Well may the reader remark on arriving thus far, “Does all this
-examination and detail refer to the fruit borne in the little blackish
-spots on bramble leaves, which I have hitherto overlooked?” Ay, and to
-several similar spots on other plants. Examine carefully the raspberry
-leaves in your garden, and you will probably find similar, but smaller,
-pustules also on the under surface (Plate III. fig. 42). We say
-_probably_, because none of our British species seem to be equally
-uncommon with this. During the past year we examined hundreds of plants,
-and did not find a single pustule. This species was named by Dr.
-Greville _Aregma gracilis_, which name it still continues to bear (fig.
-43). Such a fate will not await you if you should proceed in the autumn
-to some chalky district where the burnet is common. Go, for instance, to
-Greenhithe or Northfleet, on the North Kent Railway, in August or
-September, where the burnet is plentiful, and the leaves will present
-the appearance of having been peppered beneath, from the number of
-minute pustules of the burnet brand scattered over the under surface
-(fig. 30, upper leaflets). Or if you prefer collecting nearer home,
-visit some neighbouring garden, if your own does not contain many roses,
-and the leaves will be found equally prolific in an allied species (fig.
-36). Should gardens and roses be alike unattainable, any bank or wood
-will furnish the barren strawberry (_Potentilla fragariastrum_), and
-during the latter part of the summer, or in autumn, another species of
-_Aregma_ will not be uncommon on the under surface of the leaves (fig.
-33). All these species will be found accompanied by the orange spores of
-species of _Lecythea_, which some mycologists consider to be distinct
-fungi, and others to be merely forms or conditions of _Aregma_. These
-spores are represented in Plate III. figs. 31, 34, 37, and 40. From the
-magnified figures of the spores of the different species of _Aregma_
-(figs. 32, 35, 38, 41, and 43), it will be apparent that they have all
-certain features in common, _i.e._, cylindrical spores containing from
-three to seven cells. This may be called the _generic_ character, common
-to all the species of the genus _Aregma_. Again, each species will be
-observed to possess its own distinct features, which may be termed its
-_specific_ character. In one, the apex of the spores will be obtuse, in
-another acutely pointed, in another bluntly pointed, &c. In one species
-the number of cells will usually be four, in another five or six, in
-another seven or eight. The stem in one species will be slender and
-equal, in another thickened or bulbous. So that in all there will be
-some permanent peculiarity for each not shared by the others.
-
-One other form of brand (_Xenodochus carbonarius_), presenting, it is
-believed by some, generic differences from all that we have as yet
-noticed, remains to be briefly alluded to. This form appears to be very
-uncommon in this country, but, when found, is parasitic on the leaves of
-the great burnet (_Sanguisorba officinalis_), a plant of local
-distribution. The parasite appears to the naked eye in small tufts or
-pustules resembling those of an _Aregma_, but, when microscopically
-examined, the cells of the spores are found to be numerous, indeed,
-considerably more than in the most complex _Aregma_ (fig. 29). This,
-however, seems to be the only distinction, for the cells are free in the
-interior of the investing membrane, and in all points of structure, in
-so far as it has been examined, identical with _Aregma_. Whether it is
-logical to consider a four-celled spore an _Aregma_, and a seven-celled
-spore an _Aregma_, and exclude a ten or twelve-celled spore from the
-same genus on account of the number of its cells, does not appear to us
-clearly answerable in the affirmative.
-
-During the course of this and the preceding chapter we have passed
-rapidly through four genera of parasitic fungi so nearly allied, that
-one is almost led to doubt the validity of the generic distinctions.
-These may be presented briefly thus:—
-
- Spores two-celled PUCCINIA.
-
- Spores three-celled TRIPHRAGMIUM.
-
- Spores four to AREGMA.
- seven-celled
-
- Spores many-celled XENODOCHUS.
-
-It has been seen that the habit, mode of growth, germination, and
-structure, except in the number of cells, scarcely differ; but it is not
-our province here to enter upon the discussion of such a subject.
-
-The association of one-celled, orange-coloured spores with the brown two
-or more celled spores passed in review is another feature worthy of a
-passing notice, and which opens a field for discussion. It is generally
-admitted that these two forms are the production of the self-same
-mycelium or vegetative system, but it is not so generally admitted that
-they are but two forms or phases of the fruit of the same plant. It is
-not at all uncommon in the history of mycology to find two forms which
-were for a long time considered to be distinct plants producing
-different forms of fruit, and which bore different names, and were
-located in different genera, at length proved to be only the self-same
-plant in different conditions, and ending in one name being expunged
-from the list. Such a fate probably awaits, at no distant date, the
-orange spores which precede or accompany the species in the present
-genera. Already Tulasne and some others accord them no place in their
-system.
-
-It may be added, for the benefit of any who wish to pursue the study of
-this interesting branch of Cryptogamic Botany, that the leaves of the
-plants containing the parasitic fungi now noticed may be collected and
-preserved by drying between folds of blotting-paper, or the leaves of a
-book, and will retain their character, with the exception of colour in
-the orange forms, so as to be eligible for examination at any period of
-the year for twenty years to come. Each species, when dry, may be
-transferred to an old envelope, and labelled outside with the name, date
-of collection, and locality; and one hundred such envelopes will
-constitute a miniature herbarium in a very small compass.
-
-
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER VI.
-
- _SMUTS._
-
-
-ONE of the fungal diseases of corn long and widely known has obtained
-amongst agriculturists different appellations in different localities.
-In some it is the “smut,” in others it is respectively “dust-brand,”
-“bunt-ear,” “black-ball,” and “chimney-sweeper,” all referring, more or
-less, to the blackish soot-like dust with which the infected and
-abortive ears are covered. This fungus does not generally excite so much
-concern amongst farmers as the other affections to which their
-corn-crops are liable. Perhaps it is not really so extensively
-injurious, although it entirely destroys every ear of corn upon which it
-establishes itself. Wheat, barley, oats, rye, and many grasses are
-subject to its attacks, and farmers have been heard to declare that they
-like to see a little of it, because its presence proves the general
-excellence of the whole crop. No one who has passed through a field of
-standing corn, after its greenness has passed away, but before it is
-fully ripe, can have failed to notice, here and there, a spare,
-lean-looking ear, completely blackened with a coating of minute dust
-(Plate V. fig. 98). If he has been guilty of brushing in amongst the
-corn, it will still be remembered how his hands and clothing became
-dusted with this powder; and if at the time he should have been clad in
-sombre black, evidence will have been afforded—in the rusty-looking tint
-of the powder when sprinkled upon his black continuations—that, however
-sooty this powder might appear whilst still adhering to the ears of
-corn, it has an evident brown tint when in contact with one’s clothes.
-This powder, minute as it is, every granule of it constitutes a spore or
-protospore capable of germination, and ultimately, after several
-intermediate stages, of reproducing a fungus like the parent of which it
-formed a part. During the growth of the plant its virulent contents flow
-like a poison through the innermost tissues, and at length attack the
-peduncle or axis of the spikelets of the ear, raising up the essential
-organs and reducing them to a rudimentary state. Brongniart, who made
-this species the special subject of observation, states that the fleshy
-mass which is occupied by the fungus consists entirely of uniform
-tissue, presenting large, almost quadrilateral cavities, separated by
-walls, composed of one or two layers of very small cells filled with a
-compact homogeneous mass of very minute granules, perfectly spherical
-and equal, slightly adhering to each other, and at first green,
-afterwards free or simply conglomerate towards the centre of each mass,
-and of a pale rufous hue; at length the cellular walls disappear, the
-globules become completely insulated, and the whole mass is changed into
-a heap of powder, consisting of very regular globules, perfectly alike,
-black, and just like the reproductive bodies of other fungi (Plate V.
-fig. 99). A scientific botanist of some repute, M. Unger, published a
-work in Vienna during the year 1823, in which he sought to prove that
-this, and allied species of fungi, were not fungi at all, but merely
-broken up cells, or disruptured and altered conditions of certain
-portions of the diseased plants. The most satisfactory refutation of
-this theory may be found in the fact that the spores of the smut can be
-seen to germinate under favourable conditions, and produce fruit,
-whereas, if they were only the ordinary cells of the plant broken up by
-disease, fructification would not take place.
-
-The spores in this species are exceedingly minute. It has been
-ascertained that forty-nine of them would be contained within a space
-the one-hundred-and-sixty-thousandth part of a square inch; hence one
-square inch of surface would contain little less than eight millions.
-These myriads of spores are shed from the ears, and nothing remains but
-the barren matrix in which they were borne when the farmer proceeds to
-gather in his crops. At that time he sees no more of the “smut,” all
-remembrance of it for the time is gone, his only thought is to stack his
-corn in good condition. But the millions of spores are dispersed, ten
-millions at least for every ear that has been “smutted,”—and will they
-not many of them reappear next year, and thus year after year, with as
-much certainty as the grain upon which they are parasitic?
-
-Like many of the parasitic fungi, so destructive in the farm and the
-garden, this species belongs to the family in which the spores are the
-distinctive feature. After many botanical changes, the “smut” is at
-length regarded as a fixed resident in the genus _Ustilago_; with the
-specific name of _segetum_, which latter signifies “standing corn;” it
-is therefore the _Ustilago_, or _smut of the standing corn_. The
-characters of the genus are, chiefly, that the spores are simple and
-deeply seated, springing from delicate threads, or in closely-packed
-cells, ultimately breaking up into a powdery mass. Fifteen members of
-this genus have been described as British. One of these (_U. maydis_)
-attacks the maize or Indian corn grown in this country in a similar
-manner as the common smut attacks wheat or barley; but as maize is not
-an established crop with us, a more minute description of this species
-is unnecessary; the spores are figured in Plate V. fig. 108. Another
-species (_U. hypodytes_) makes its appearance at first beneath the
-sheaths of the leaves surrounding the stems of grasses (fig. 100), and
-ultimately appears above and around them as a purplish-black dust (fig.
-101). The seeds of sedges, the leaves and stems of certain definite
-species of grass, the flowers of scabious (Plate VI. figs. 123-125), the
-receptacles of the goatsbeard, the anthers of the bladder campion, and
-other allied plants, and the seeds of the Bistort family, are all
-liable, more or less, to the attacks of one or other of the residue of
-the fifteen species of _Ustilago_ already referred to as indigenous to
-Britain.
-
-
-[Illustration:
-
- Plate V.
- W. West imp.
-]
-
-
-Although we do not profess to teach practical men how to grow good corn,
-or how they shall get rid of, or keep clear from, the many foes to which
-their crops are exposed, yet a suggestion may be offered, based upon the
-facts obtained in our botanical researches, supported by the analogy of
-allied circumstances. In this instance the extreme minuteness and
-profusion of the spores would evidently render all the corn liable to
-the attachment of, perhaps only two or three, spores to the seed coat.
-Some ears of corn in nearer proximity to the smutted ears may be covered
-with spores which yet remain invisible to the naked eye, and when these
-grains are mixed with others in the heap, the chances are not much in
-favour of any handful not becoming charged with spores. If the majority
-of these were not redeemed from destruction by the many changes,
-shiftings, rubbings, and scrubbings to which the seed corn is liable
-between the time of its reaping and the period of its sowing, we might
-expect a very large crop of “smutted” corn. Under ordinary circumstances
-we can scarcely imagine that the loss arising from infected ears would
-repay much special labour to prevent it, only that to a large extent the
-precautions taken to cleanse the seed corn from the spores of one fungus
-will also avail for another, and while cleaning it of the spores of
-“smut,” those of “bunt” will also be removed. The facts that we rely
-upon chiefly as indicating the remedy are that the spores are only
-superficially in contact with the seed corn, and that they are of less
-specific gravity, causing them to float on the surface of any fluid in
-which the corn may be immersed. Again, the spores of many species of
-fungi will not germinate after saturation with certain chemical
-solutions. One of the most successful and easy of application is a
-strong solution of Glauber’s salts, in which the seed corn is to be
-washed, and afterwards, whilst still moist, dusted over with quick-lime.
-The rationale of this process consists in the setting free of caustic
-soda by the sulphuric acid of the Glauber’s salt combining with the
-lime, and converting it into sulphate of lime. The caustic soda is fatal
-to the germination of the spores of “bunt,” and probably also of “smut;”
-although, as already intimated, except in cases where these affections
-of the corn are very prevalent, we shall be informed by the
-agriculturist that the cost of labour in the prevention will not be
-compensated in the cure.
-
-Experience has also taught us that many fungi flourish in proportion to
-the wetness of the season, or dampness of the locality. A wet year is
-always exceedingly prolific in fungi, and a dry season correspondingly
-barren, at least in many kinds, whilst others, as the experience of 1864
-has convinced us, are exceedingly common. In a field or wood the
-mycologist reaps his richest harvest of mycological specimens in the
-lowest and dampest spots, in swamps, ditches, and ill-drained nooks.
-This is a fact worth knowing as much by the farmer as the amateur
-botanist in search of specimens for his herbarium.
-
-One of the most unmistakable species of “smut” is that which infests the
-goatsbeard, on which we have already described an _Æcidium_. Generally
-about the same time as the cluster-cups make their appearance on the
-leaves, some of the unopened flower-heads of this plant will be found
-considerably altered in appearance by the shortening of the segments of
-the involucre, and at length by the whole inflorescence being invested
-with a copious purplish-black dust. If, by any means, the lobes of the
-involucre are any of them separated, the enclosed dust escapes,
-blackening the fingers and clothing of the collector, as if it were soot
-(Plate V. fig. 92). A little of this dust submitted to the microscope
-will be found to consist of myriads of small globose spores, nearly
-uniform in size and shape; and if a higher power be employed, each of
-these will appear to have a papillose or minutely granulated surface.
-The florets, dwarfed in size and contorted, or the remains of them, are
-embedded in the mass of spores (fig. 93), and if one or two of these are
-removed and placed under a good one-inch objective, every part will be
-found covered with adhering spores, to the apparent exhaustion of its
-substance. Of course, the florets are never developed when subjected to
-the attack of “smut.” The whole plant assumes a faded, sickly
-appearance, even before the spores are fully ripened. We would recommend
-our readers, if they collect one of the infected flower-heads, to put it
-into a box or paper by itself, for if placed in the box with other
-specimens it will so sprinkle them with its black powder as to render
-them nearly useless for microscopic examination: everywhere the
-microscope will detect, where the unaided eye failed to recognize a
-trace, the ubiquitous spores of _Ustilago receptaculorum_ (Plate V. fig.
-94).
-
-In the fenny districts of the eastern counties a species of “smut”
-called _Ustilago typhoides_ attacks the stems of reeds, forming thick
-swollen patches of several inches in length (fig. 128), sometimes
-occupying the whole space between two joints or nodes, and lying beneath
-the sheath of the leaves. The spores in this species are larger than in
-the species which attacks the culms of grasses in a similar manner
-(Plate VI. fig. 129).
-
-There are not many features in the rest of the species of this genus of
-sufficient interest to the general reader or microscopist to render it
-advisable to furnish any detailed account of them. We may, however, note
-that in a species found on the leaves of the common cock’s-foot grass
-the spores are large, obovate, and rough, with minute granules (figs.
-117, 118). This species is known botanically as _Ustilago_ _salveii_,
-and externally bears considerable resemblance, except in the size and
-colour of the spores (fig. 119), to another species much more common,
-and which occurs on the leaves of _Poa aquatica_ and _P. fluitans_. The
-last-named species forms long parallel sori, extending often for several
-inches along the leaves of the aquatic grasses just named, giving them a
-very singular appearance (Plate V. figs. 105, 106). The spores are small
-(fig. 107), not being more than one-fourth the length of the last
-species, and smooth, whilst those are minutely granulated.
-
-An interesting species occurs, very rarely, on the stems of such grasses
-as _Aira cæspitosa_ and _A. aquatica_. The sori are in bands at regular
-distances apart (Plate VI. fig. 120), each band being composed of a
-number of short parallel sori (fig. 121). The spores are not more than
-one-third of the size of those in _U. longissima_.
-
-Sedges are also subject to attack from other species of smut; one of
-these (_U. olivacea_) appears to convert the seeds into a fine
-olive-coloured dust (Plate VI. fig. 126), which gives to the fruit a
-similar appearance to that presented by corn when attacked by _Ustilago
-segetum_. Another species, which also absorbs the seeds, becomes
-hardened and consolidated more than in any other species, and, though
-larger than the normal seeds, still retaining their form (figs. 109,
-110). This is _Ustilago urceolorum_, the spores of which are also
-figured (fig. 111).
-
-The beaksedge (_Rhyncospora alba_) suffers from an allied species which
-affects it in a similar manner (Plate V. figs. 96, 97), but is not
-equally common. The spores of _Ustilago utriculosa_, found on different
-species of _Polygonum_, instead of being granulated, are reticulated on
-the surface (Plate VI. figs. 114, 116). The chief interest attaching to
-_Ustilago antherarum_ consists in its habitat, for it is developed in
-the anthers of the flowers of the bladder campion, and other plants of
-the same natural order. The anthers are much swollen and distorted by
-this parasite, which is not uncommon, though easily overlooked unless
-specially sought after (Plate V. figs. 102-104). A list of all the
-British species will be found at the close of this volume. It will be
-noted that as in the genus _Æcidium_ the prevailing colour of the spores
-is orange, so in the genus _Ustilago_ it is black, with a purplish or
-violaceous tinge.
-
-Four diseases in wheat of fungal origin are known and recognized in the
-popular language of the farm as “mildew,” “rust,” “smut,” and “bunt.”
-Sometimes one and sometimes another is most prevalent, and he is an
-exceedingly fortunate individual who can walk through his fields and
-find only one of them, especially if that one should be sparingly
-distributed. It has been our good fortune to dwell much amongst
-cornfields, and the terror of the word “mildew” to a farmer’s ears is
-not unfamiliar in our reminiscences of the past, ere we discarded the
-much-loved country to become a dweller in town. The subject of our
-present remarks inspired no such alarm in the districts of our
-experience, but in some seasons and localities it is certainly one of
-the “pests of the farm.” Under the different appellations of “bunt,”
-“pepper brand,” “bladder brand,” and sometimes “smut,” this infection is
-very generally known. Externally there is no appearance, except to the
-practised eye, that anything is wrong. There is no black impalpable dust
-about the ears as in the true “smut,” no red withered leaves or spotted
-stem as in the “rust” and “mildew,” and no stunted growth or
-malformation, evident to the casual glance, by which the insidious foe
-can be recognized; but stealthily and secretly the work is accomplished,
-and until the “bunted” grains make their appearance in the sample, the
-disease may, perchance, be unchallenged.
-
-Externally the “bunted” grain is plumper, and whilst the corn is still
-green these will be of a brighter green than the rest (Plate V. fig.
-84). When broken, the farinaceous interior will be found replaced by a
-minute black dust of a very fœtid, unpleasant odour, and greasy to the
-touch (fig. 85). This powder constitutes the spores of the “bunt” mixed
-with myceloid threads. It may happen that much of the corn in a field is
-“bunted,” and the discovery not made till the wheat is being ground for
-flour; then the odour and colour will speedily decide the produce to be
-unfit for human food. We have not the least doubt that “bunted” corn,
-when ground with flour, is injurious in proportion to its extent, whilst
-at the same time we can scarcely conceive an intelligent miller grinding
-up a sample containing any large proportion of “bunted” grains in
-ignorance of the fact.
-
-If we break open a grain of wheat infested with the “stinking rust” or
-“bunt,” and then place some of the powder in a drop of water on a glass
-slide, and submit this to the microscope, first using the half-inch
-power, then the quarter, or fifth, and finally an eighth or tenth, we
-shall find that this minute dust consists of myriads of globose brown
-bodies termed spores, which possess certain reproductive functions.
-These spores will be found mixed with a number of delicate branched
-threads, to which they are attached by a short stalk or pedicel, visible
-with the higher powers (fig. 86). The surface of the spores you will
-also observe to be beautifully reticulated. These features just
-described as visible in the “bunt” are the characteristics of the genus
-to which it belongs (_Tilletea_), and of which it is the only British
-species. An allied species infests the Sorghum or durra, a grain but
-little cultivated in Europe, but found extensively in Africa and Asia,
-and also apparently found on the _Bajra_ of India.
-
-The interesting experiments of the Rev. M. J. Berkeley on the
-germination of “bunt” spores have been already alluded to. They were
-undertaken shortly after the outbreak of the potato disease, to
-ascertain, if possible, the mode by which the minute spores of fungi
-inoculate growing plants; and although at that time only a bare
-suspicion of the nature of the bodies resulting from the germination of
-“bunt” spores was entertained, succeeding examinations in the same
-direction have brought to light extraordinary facts, and manifested the
-progress of the successive developments of four generations. The spores
-of “bunt” are larger than those of the different species of “smut,” and
-reticulated on the surface (Plate V. fig. 86). When these are made to
-germinate a kind of stem is protruded (fig. 87), upon which small
-clusters of elongated thread-like spores of the second generation, or
-sporidia, are produced (fig. 88). After a time these spores conjugate,
-or become united by short transverse processes in the same manner as has
-been observed in some of the lower forms of Algæ (fig. 89). The
-conjugated spores in the next stage germinate and produce a third kind
-of fruit, different from either of the preceding, and constituting a
-third generation (fig. 90). These in turn germinate and produce a fourth
-order of reproductive organs (fig. 91), so that in the process of growth
-the “bunt” spores evidently pass through four generations. Hence, as one
-result, the number of germinating bodies is greatly increased, as well
-as their power of inflicting injury in a corresponding diminution in
-size. There are still many points in the history of the growth and
-development through successive generations of the “bunt” spores, but
-enough is known, on the one hand, to show that this is a true vegetative
-parasite, and not merely a diseased condition of the tissues of the
-wheat plant, and on the other that it is perfectly distinct from all the
-phases of the other and similar parasitic fungi which affect the wheat
-crop.
-
-
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER VII.
-
- _COMPLEX SMUTS._
-
-
-SOME of the microscopic fungi are the most unpromising and uninteresting
-objects to the naked eye which could well be imagined. No one would
-suppose that the black dust so profusely shed in such genera as
-_Ustilago_ and _Polycystis_ could be better than as much soot; unless he
-has learnt by experience not to judge by appearances, but to suspend
-judgment until examination. The axiom will sooner or later force itself
-upon all who examine minute objects with the microscope, that all
-organic nature, whether animal or vegetable, increases in interest in
-proportion to the magnifying power. Seen by the unaided eye, _moulds_
-are all nearly alike, and they seem to be “moulds” and nothing more.
-“Smuts,” again, sometimes attack one organ, and sometimes another, with
-very little variation in colour; and “rusts” are all “only rusts” with a
-paler or more intense rusty tint, until the marvellous combination of
-lenses, so appropriately named a _microscope_, unfolds a new world, and
-exposes its new inhabitants unparalleled in the old world of larger
-life, in form, habit, development, and mystery.
-
-A very interesting, though small group of fungi, allied to the
-preceding, are included botanically under the genus called _Polycystis_,
-in allusion to the many cells of which the spores are composed.[6] In
-the most recent work on British Fungi, approximating to a Flora—viz.,
-“Berkeley’s Outlines”—only three species are recorded, whilst the most
-common, at least around London, is omitted in error; for it could
-scarcely have been unknown as indigenous to this country. This last is
-the crow-foot smut (_Polycystis pompholygodes_, Lev.), found on the
-leaves and petioles of the common creeping buttercup (_Ranunculus
-repens_), distorting them very much, and also occurring on the
-wood-anemone and some other Ranunculaceous plants. The leaves and their
-footstalks, when attacked, become swollen, as if blistered at first, and
-ultimately burst in an irregular manner, exposing a mass of blackish
-soot-like dust (Plate IX. fig. 183), which on examination will be found
-to consist of the many-celled spores alluded to (Plate IX. fig. 184).
-Each of these spores appears to have a transparent outer membrane,
-either enclosing an unequal number, from two or three to five or six,
-distinct cells, compressed together into a spherical form by the outer
-integument, or the interior is divided by septa into as many cells. Each
-of these divisions contains a dark brownish endochrome, or
-cell-contents. As may be anticipated, the spores in all the species
-associated in this genus are interesting objects for the microscope. The
-species on the buttercup may be found through the summer and autumn on
-_Ranunculus repens_, especially whenever that plant is met with in very
-damp situations. We have seldom found the plant in any profusion without
-its attendant fungus.
-
-Footnote 6:
-
- Rabenhorst has proposed _Urocystis_ as the name of this genus, on the
- ground that _Polycystis_ was priorly applied to a genus of Algæ.
-
-Another species of these many-celled smuts is not uncommon in gardens,
-on the sweet violet, attacking the footstalks of the leaves more
-commonly than the leaves themselves, and swelling and contorting them
-(Plate IX. fig. 185). In general structure the spores are very similar
-to those of the last species, save that the cells are smaller, and a
-larger number are collected together (Plate IX. fig. 186). So far as we
-have yet examined the spores of this and the preceding species, they
-appear to consist of separate and distinct vesicles (probably spores),
-contained within a hyaline sac or outer membrane, and _not_ to be a
-single spore divided into cells by numerous septa.
-
-A species of equal interest (_Polycystis Colchici_, Tul.) is found on
-the autumnal crocus, or meadow-saffron (_Colchicum autumnale_). The
-spores approach nearer to those of the last than of the prior species.
-
-A fourth species occurs on the leaves of rye (Plate IX. fig. 187),
-forming elongated parallel blackish lines (_Polycystis parallela_, B. &
-Br.). It has also been found on the leaves of some grasses, but does not
-appear to be very common.
-
-Many similar features are possessed by the two members of a genus named
-_Tubercinia_, which have been found in this country. One of the species
-is parasitic upon a plant which we who inhabit southern England never
-meet with, but which is not uncommon in Scotland, _i. e._, _Trientalis
-Europæa_. The parasite attacks the leaves about the month of September,
-forming bullate or blistered patches one-eighth to one-sixth of an inch
-broad, containing a mass of black spores (Plate III. fig. 52). These
-spores are irregularly globose, large, and opaque, consisting of a
-number of distinct cells (Plate III. fig. 53). Never having seen other
-than dried specimens—kindly communicated by Dr. Dickie of Aberdeen, the
-discoverer of this species—we cannot add much to its history beyond the
-published description by the Rev. M. J. Berkeley.
-
-The other species occurs on potatoes, and is, during some seasons,
-common in all parts of Great Britain. The spores are curious, being
-composed of a number of cells arranged in the form of a hollow sphere,
-with one or two apertures communicating with the interior (Plate III.
-fig. 54). They are generally attached by a delicate thread. This
-species, sometimes confounded with the potato scab, was first described
-by Mr. Berkeley, about the time of the appearance of the “potato
-disease,” with which, however, it is in no way connected.
-
-Thus it will be seen that, inasmuch as we have complex brands in which
-the number of cells are considerably increased, so have we “complex
-smuts” in which, instead of one cell, we have many. In the last instance
-the two genera associated together in this chapter agree. The spores in
-both are distinctly cellular, but in the last genus far more opaque and
-consolidated than in the first. Whilst it may be doubted whether the
-compound spores of _Polycystis_ are anything more than a number of
-individual spores with a gregarious habit, invested with an outer
-membrane, such a hypothesis cannot (as far as our individual
-examinations extend), be made to include _Tubercinia_. No doubt has yet
-been thrown on the genuine character of either of these genera. No
-_Uredo_ or _Æcidium_, no _Trichobasis_ or _Puccinia_ has been
-ascertained or suspected to appear as a prior or subsequent form. In
-their supposed integrity they offer an interesting study, and in their
-development a good subject for investigation.
-
-
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER VIII.
-
- _RUSTS._
-
-
-UNFORTUNATELY, this group of fungi contains species but too well known
-for their ravages amongst graminaceous plants, especially the cereals.
-“Corn rust,” as it is generally called, has a reputation little better
-than mildew, and it really deserves no better, for it is only another
-form of that pest of the farm, from the mycelium of which the
-corn-mildew is at length developed. There are two species very closely
-allied (doubtless only forms of the same species with different spores)
-which attack the leaves and culms of growing corn, and, bursting through
-the cuticle in the manner represented in Plate VII. fig. 141
-(magnified), give a peculiar rusty appearance to the plant, as
-represented in Plate VII. fig. 140. One of these corn-rusts is
-botanically named _Trichobasis rubigo-vera_ (Lev.), or the “true rust
-_Trichobasis_;” the latter, which is the generic name, being a compound
-of two Greek words (_thrix_, a hair, and _basis_, a foundation), on
-account of the spores being at first furnished at their base with a
-short, thread-like peduncle, which at length falls away (Plate VII. fig.
-142). The other Corn rust is _Trichobasis linearis_, or “line-like
-_Trichobasis_,” because the sori or pustules are linear, or lengthened
-out like a line; the spores nearly double the length of those of the
-other Corn rust (Plate VII. fig. 144), and not so bright in colour. By
-intermediate forms these two rusts pass insensibly the one into the
-other, so that it is sometimes difficult to distinguish them. Both have
-the spores clustered together in the pustules, at first (Plate VII. fig.
-143) attached by their peduncles, but they soon become free, and are
-scattered like rust-powder over the plant. Adverting to the attack of
-rust upon the wheat crops to an unusual extent a few years since, the
-Rev. M. J. Berkeley wrote as follows:—
-
- We have seen rust more prevalent in white wheats, especially in
- the variety called Russian white, which has red smooth chaff,
- than we ever remember it. It is, however, confined to particular
- spots; and while in one field not a single leaf is free,
- insomuch that a person walking through the wheat is completely
- painted with the spores, of a fine rust-red; an adjoining field,
- separated only by a hedge, has not a rusty leaf. So long,
- however, as the rust is confined to the leaf, it is, we believe,
- perfectly harmless. The grain swells in spite of it, and the
- only effect is that the flag dies a little earlier, which is not
- undesirable when it is too luxuriant. If, however, it gets to
- any extent upon the chaff, much more if it attacks the seed
- itself, as is sometimes the case, it is very mischievous.
-
-
-[Illustration:
-
- Plate VI.
- W. West imp.
-]
-
-
- There is, indeed, a notion that rust is merely a form of mildew,
- and this may be true; but if so, it is a harmless form. The true
- rust (_T. rubigo-vera_), if a form of mildew, preserves its own
- characters to the end, and merely presents a second form of
- fruit, a circumstance which is exceedingly common amongst the
- lower fungi. It may exist in company with the mildew, but it
- also more frequently is developed without a trace of mildew
- intermixed. As far, then, as its immediate effects upon the
- plant go, it may be treated as a distinct parasite, though
- advanced botanists may look upon it as offering a case of what
- they call dualism, which may be easily understood on a
- comparison with such plants as marigold and orache, which
- produce seeds of two different forms. Its ultimate effects may,
- indeed, be injurious, as, if it be really a second form of
- mildew, it is capable of propagating that pest. The case is
- quite different with _Trichobasis linearis_, which is in fact
- merely the young state of the mildew. When once that supposed
- species makes its appearance, it is quite certain that there
- will be mildew to a greater or less extent. While the spores of
- the one remain unaltered, though intermixed with the true
- bipartite spores of the mildew, the other exhibits every
- intermediate state of form and colour.
-
-M. Tulasne, to whom we have already alluded as a high authority on this
-subject, is of opinion that all the species enumerated in this group or
-genus, are mere conditions of other species, and therefore excludes it
-altogether. Another genus (_Lecythea_), for the same reason, has shared
-the same fate.
-
-It must not be forgotten that twenty-eight species of rust belonging to
-this genus are now recorded as occurring in Great Britain. Some of these
-have yellow or yellowish spores; the rest have the spores of a decidedly
-brown colour. One of the most attractive of the yellow-spored species is
-that which appears on the groundsel (_T. Senecionis_), and a good notion
-of its external appearance may be gained from our figure (Plate VII.
-fig. 145). It is not always to be found without searching closely, for
-in some localities we have found it very sparingly, whilst elsewhere—as,
-for instance, on Wandsworth Common—we have met with it as soon or as
-late as there were groundsel leaves for it to grow upon. No spot or
-change in the appearance of the upper surface of the leaves indicates
-the presence of the parasite beneath; this is, however, often betrayed
-by the golden-yellow streaks which appear on the stem. Many a time and
-oft the boys in the semi-rural districts about town have marvelled and
-questioned each other concerning the reason why, in gathering
-“groundsel” for the little bird at home, we should be so particular, and
-pass so many promising plants, plucking here and there a leaf, and
-seldom collecting one which they consider eligible for the purpose.
-Collectors of minute fungi must expect to overhear occasionally even
-hints touching their sanity from those who, without the remotest idea of
-their mission, think they must be slightly “wrong in the head” to gaze
-so narrowly and intently, amongst nettles, groundsel, grass, or dry
-leaves, and only take an occasional fragment of a rotten stick, or two
-or three sickly leaves, carefully deposit them in their wallet, hat, or
-pocket, and then “move on.”
-
-It will be unnecessary to repeat what has been stated in a former
-chapter on spermogones. It will be remembered that these organs are
-found developed in connection with some of the species of the present
-genus, as well as with the cluster-cups, or _Æcidiacei_. They consist
-externally of small conical elevations, pierced at the apex, which
-contain minute, cellular, linear bodies called spermatia, invested with
-a kind of mucous substance, that over-flows with them from the orifice
-of the spermogone, like lava from the crater of a miniature volcano. The
-rust in company with which they have been found most plentifully, is
-that which covers the under surface of the leaves of the commonest of
-all thistles (_Cnicus arvensis_). The external form of one of these
-spermogones is figured Plate VII. fig. 153. The rust possesses, when
-fresh, a peculiar odour, which is said to resemble that of
-orange-flowers; whence was derived its name of “sweet-smelling rust”
-(_Trichobasis suaveolens_, Lev.). M. Tulasne writes:—“With respect to
-this species, it is, in my opinion, but the first form of a _Puccinia_,
-analogous to _P. Compositarum_, D.C.: the spermogones with which it is
-mixed being very abundant, it ought to be placed with that _Puccinia_. I
-should, perhaps, retain some doubts upon the legitimacy of this
-relationship, if it had not been my fortune to meet on another species
-of the same kind (_Puccinia Anemones_, P.) spermogones perfectly
-characterized, and in which the colour, habit, and position would not
-allow me to hesitate an instant in attributing them to the _Puccinia_.”
-In this species of rust the whole under surface of the leaf is covered
-with a purplish-brown dusty coating of the spores, from the numerous
-pustules which are produced (Plate VII. fig. 151). The plants, when
-attacked, have a paler and more sickly appearance; the leaves have a
-tendency to fold backwards at their margins, and thenceforth their
-growth seems to be determined. Sowerby, in his “British Fungi,”
-says:—“Two or three sorts of flies are occasionally found dead on this
-plant at the time of the fungus being upon it, which is after wet
-weather in the summer, or early in autumn; being apparently tempted by
-its flavour, they over-eat themselves, or else are destroyed by some
-poison.” This rust has spores resembling, in general characters, those
-of the yellow-spored series Plate VII. fig. 152).
-
-We have not thought it necessary to give figures of many species, partly
-on account of the uncertainty existing in many minds whether they ought
-to be regarded as species, and whether they will long claim a place in
-the British Flora; and partly on account of the similarity which exists
-between them, at least so far as they are of interest to the
-microscopist only.
-
-During the autumn of last year, whilst on a botanical excursion through
-a portion of Epping Forest, the “great bog” became a centre of some
-interest. Bogs are generally attractive spots to those who are in search
-of microscopic organisms. On this occasion the chief objects of interest
-were the small brown pustules (Plate VIII. fig. 168) with which the
-upper surface of a large number of the leaves of the pennywort
-(_Hydrocotyle vulgaris_) were sprinkled. These pustules were brown,
-orbicular, regular, and in habit seemed to resemble rather those of most
-of the _Pucciniæ_ than of a _Trichobasis_. The large, vigorous, and
-healthy leaves were less affected. Microscopical examination, at first
-incomplete, led us to the conclusion that it was a species of _Uredo_,
-which had been met with in France (_Uredo Hydrocotyles_, Mont.); but a
-re-examination, to which we were prompted by Mr. Currey, led to the
-conclusion that it belonged rather to the present genus; but it can
-scarcely be associated with any species already described,
-notwithstanding its apparent affinity with the brown rust found on
-umbelliferous plants, in which the pustules are invariably developed on
-the _under_ surface. Under these circumstances, we have called it the
-Pennywort rust (_Trichobasis Hydrocotyles_), whilst still doubtful
-whether it is not the same fungus as that described by Montagne, with
-whose description it agrees in everything, except what is implied by the
-generic name. It should not be forgotten, that the work in which
-Montagne first described this species was published when the genus
-_Uredo_ embraced the present genus, which was separated from it by
-Leveille twelve years later; and it is possible that this species was
-included in a more recent work by the same author, in error and without
-re-examination, under the old name. An examination of authentic
-specimens of Montagne’s plant would settle the point; but we know of no
-published collection which contains it. The characteristic difference
-between the two genera lies in the presence of a peduncle in the early
-stage of _Trichobasis_ Plate VIII. fig. 169), and its absence in all
-stages of _Uredo_. Without wandering further into a subject which has
-not the merit of being very popular, let us away to some green lane in
-search of violets, and having found them, take a little of the brown
-dust from one of the small pustules on the leaves, upon the point of a
-penknife; place this, with a drop of water, upon a glass slide, and make
-a record of what we observe.
-
-The field is covered with the myriad spores of a rust of a nearly
-spherical shape, brownish in colour, and here and there one with a short
-transparent colourless stalk or pedicel. This is the violet rust
-(_Trichobasis Violarum_, B.), very common all through the summer and
-autumn, generally on the under surface of the leaves of violets, in
-woods and hedgerows. Should it so happen that the spores when placed
-under the microscope are found to be two-celled, it will prove that
-instead of a rust, or _Trichobasis_, being under examination, a brand,
-or _Puccinia_, has been found, which is almost equally common, and which
-may, without such a test, be easily mistaken for a rust. According to
-the theory of di-morphism, this is the higher form or complete fruit of
-the same fungus, which in its simple-celled state is called _Trichobasis
-Violarum_.
-
-A similar circumstance may befall the student in examining the rust of
-labiate plants (_Trichobasis Labiatarum_, Lev.), which occurs on
-different species of mint, especially the water-mint, about the month of
-August. We have found a few of the two-celled spores of the _Puccinia_
-imbedded in the pustules of this rust almost constantly, whilst the
-one-celled spores are not uncommon in the pustules of what is regarded
-as the true mint brand (_Puccinia Menthæ_, P.).
-
-In spring the young leaves of the periwinkle (_Vinca major_) will, in
-some situations, become thickened considerably, and ultimately browned
-on both faces with the pustules of a rust (_Trichobasis Vincæ_), which
-though covered with a conidioid dust are often very tardy in bursting
-the epidermis. It is almost impossible, after the pustule is ruptured,
-to find one in which the bilocular spores of _Puccinia_ (fig. 132) are
-not largely intermingled with the unilocular spores of the “rust” (Plate
-VI. fig. 131). Later in the season by two or three months, other leaves
-of the same plants will be found occupied by the smaller and more widely
-scattered pustules of _Puccinia Vincæ_, in which the unilocular spores
-of the “rust” will seldom be found. In this instance the leaves are
-scarcely thickened, and the colour of the spores is much darker. The
-under surface of the leaves is commonly alone occupied, and
-corresponding paler spots on the upper surface indicate the presence of
-the parasite beneath.
-
-The garden and field bean is liable in some seasons to become quite
-rust-coloured in consequence of the profusion of spores with which the
-leaves and stems are covered, from the bean rust (_Trichobasis Fabæ_,
-Lev.), which in like manner is considered as the simple stage or form of
-the bean brand (_Puccinia Fabæ_, Lk.). If the legumes are also examined,
-a few pustules will sometimes be found on them. Beans thoroughly
-infected with this rust or brand are seldom of much service in either
-field or garden.
-
-Beetroot, or mangold wurzel, is another example of garden and field
-produce which is subject to a similar visitation. This rust often has
-very red spores when produced on red varieties of beet. During
-September, 1863, it (_Trichobasis Betæ_, Lev.) was sent us on the leaves
-of the wild beet (_Beta maritima_).
-
-All the species of _Polygonum_ are exceedingly subject to the attacks of
-the Persicaria rust (_Trichobasis Polygonorum_, B.), which nearly covers
-the leaves, till the entire plants seem to be smothered in Scotch snuff.
-If it were allowable to affirm of any plants that they are martyrs to
-parasitism, such might be said of the Persicarias and their allies.
-
-
-[Illustration:
-
- Plate VIII.
- W. West imp.
-]
-
-
-Sedges are subject to the attacks of a rust much resembling the corn
-rust. When it occurs on some species of _Carex_, the upper surface of
-the leaf has corresponding pale spots, and the pustules themselves are
-surrounded by a yellowish margin. This species (_Trichobasis caricina_)
-is far from uncommon (Plate VIII. figs. 170, 171). The sedge-like plants
-belonging to the genus _Luzula_ have also their own species of rust
-(_Trichobasis oblongata_), the spores of which are deeper in colour than
-in the sedge rust (Plate VII. figs. 158, 159).
-
-Amongst the remaining species of _Trichobasis_ (the reader must pardon
-our using the generic name, as we have no equivalent), that found on the
-leaves of various composite plants is the most common (_Trichobasis
-Cichoracearum_, Lev.). It occurs on some thistles, on the saw-wort,
-dandelion, several species of hawkweed, and similar plants. The pustules
-are small and more diffused than in the species found on _Cnicus
-arvensis_, and they as often appear on the upper as on the lower
-surfaces of the leaves.
-
-On umbelliferous plants three species are recorded; one with yellow
-spores (_Trichobasis Petroselini_, B.); another with a blistered habit,
-and brown, ovate, or oblong spores (_T. Umbellatarum_, Lev.); and a
-third with tawny, obovate, or egg-shaped spores (_T. Heraclei_, B.),
-which is found solely on the cow-parsnip. The species of _Puccinia_
-corresponding to some of these species of _Trichobasis_ are known, but,
-in other cases, probability, or speculation if you please, occupies the
-place of knowledge.
-
-During the month of September, 1864, it was our good fortune to spend a
-week in revisiting the scenes of our boyhood, and exploring the minute
-botany of one of the marshy districts of East Norfolk. One day of the
-seven, memorable to us for the discovery of three specimens of a large
-Boletus (_B. cyanescens_),[7] not found, to our knowledge, since the
-days of Sibthorpe, was further enriched by a species of _Trichobasis_,
-new to Britain, and apparently uncommon on the Continent. This rust was
-found on the leaves of the “grass of Parnassus” (_Parnassia palustris_)
-on a narrow strip of marsh near Irstead church. It was sought in vain
-elsewhere. The leaves were scarcely changed in appearance, except by the
-presence of the pustules. There were no discoloured spots, but the
-pustules appeared sometimes plentifully, more often scattered, on both
-surfaces of the leaves: they were small, of a bright brown, with oval
-spores; the latter were, in their early stages, shortly stalked. We have
-called this species _Trichobasis Parnassiæ_. It is possibly the same as
-published by Westendorp in his “Herbier Cryptogamique Belge” as _Uredo
-Parnassiæ_, but we know of no copy which we can consult, and have failed
-in discovering any other species to which we can refer it. It is
-certainly a _Trichobasis_ and not an _Uredo_, according to the present
-limitation of the latter genus.
-
-Footnote 7:
-
- Two of these specimens were found at the bottom of a hedge-bank,
- amongst grass, by the side of the road leading from Neatishead-street
- to Irstead Rectory, and the third in a similar position by the Norwich
- road, two hundred yards from the turning which leads to
- Neatishead-street.
-
-Although the evidence against the retention of the species of _Lecythea_
-(as the genus is named) amongst Fungi as true species, on the ground of
-di-morphism, is even stronger than against the group just illustrated,
-we cannot pass them altogether in silence, especially in a popular
-treatise. Those who are residents in town, and yet possess their little
-plot of garden-ground, with only two or three pet roses, may have had
-the misfortune of seeing them smothered with a yellow blight. This
-golden visitation, unwelcome as it is, may afford a subject for the
-microscope, and for a small space in this chapter. At first there will
-not appear to be any important difference between the spores of the
-yellow series of the last genus and those of the present; but a closer
-examination will reveal one important distinction, viz., the presence of
-colourless elongated, abortive spores. The species are not so numerous
-by half as those of _Trichobasis_, even when three anomalous forms are
-included, which species are included by some mycologists in two other
-genera. One very common rust of this group has already been alluded to
-(Plate II. fig. 37), and which is known botanically as _Lecythea Rosæ_.
-A similar one is found on the bramble, and another on the burnet. All
-these three species are produced at first on spots which are afterwards
-more or less occupied by the long, many-celled spores of the dark brown
-brands called _Aregma_ or _Phragmidium_, between which and the simple
-yellow spores of the rust almost every intermediate form may often be
-found in the same pustule. Thus, from the same mycelium as that of the
-rose rust, the rose brand is afterwards developed; whilst from the nidus
-of the bramble rust (Plate III. fig. 40) the bramble brand is also at
-length produced; and the successor to the burnet rust (Plate III. fig.
-31) is the burnet brand. Besides these, a rust belonging to the same
-genus may be found on the leaves of the poplar, the spurge, and the
-common valerian, and two or three species on willows. It can scarcely
-have escaped notice, that the goat-willow is almost constantly afflicted
-with a rust on the under surface of the leaves (Plate VIII. fig. 160).
-This species will again come under notice as the summer spores of a
-truly dimorphous species.
-
-One of the rusts separated by some botanists from this genus is found
-(possibly most commonly) on the leaves of the raspberry; but during the
-past autumn we have met with it plentifully on the upper surface of the
-leaves of one or two species of bramble, and have never seen it growing
-on the raspberry, although in all descriptions of the species that is
-stated to be its habitat. Even to the naked eye this is so distinct,
-that no one could well confound it with any other. It appears very late
-in the autumn, and the spots are scattered at some distance apart from
-each other (Plate VIII. fig. 162); each spot or pustule forming a ring
-(Plate VIII. fig. 163 enlarged) encircling a cluster of spermogones
-which occupy the centre.
-
-Another rejected species (_Lecythea Lini_, Lev.) occurs on the little
-purging flax (_Linum catharticum_), forming small pustules on the leaves
-(Plate VIII. fig. 165); these burst irregularly, and remain surrounded
-by the remains of the ruptured epidermis (Plate VIII. fig. 166). The
-yellowish spores are subglobose (Plate VIII. fig. 167), and in the first
-instance concatenate, or chained together like a necklace, which
-circumstance has been taken advantage of to place it, with one or two
-other species, in a separate genus.
-
-We cannot claim for the species brought into notice in the present
-chapter any attractive features resulting from singularity of form,
-complexity of structure, or delicate tracery, whereby they might commend
-themselves to mere “searchers after curiosities,” or be recommended from
-friend to friend as “sensation” objects for the microscope. They _do_
-possess an interest and a value, but such as would not be appreciated by
-those who seek to pass an idle half-hour by gazing at some new thing.
-
-
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER IX.
-
- _RUSTS._
-
-
-A QUARTER of a century ago, and all the fungi enumerated in the
-preceding and in the present and following chapters would have been
-arranged under three genera, called respectively _Æcidium_, _Puccinia_,
-and _Uredo_. Under the last-named genus all the species illustrated in
-the present chapter, beside many others, would have found “a habitation
-and a name.” There are still a few which bear the old generic name, and,
-if only out of respect, we shall grant them the first place.
-
-Let the first bright day in May witness the student beside a cluster of
-plants of _Mercurialis perennis_, which it will not be difficult to find
-in many localities, and, on turning up the lower leaves, he will meet
-with our first illustration of a genuine _Uredo_, in the form of yellow
-confluent patches, with a powdery surface (Plate VII. fig. 133). This
-will be _Uredo confluens_. By the way, the generic name is in itself
-suggestive, which it always should be in all instances, but
-unfortunately is not; it is derived from the Latin word _uro_, “I burn,”
-and is peculiarly applicable in instances where the leaves acquire a
-blistered, burnt, or scorched appearance, occasioned by the presence of
-the fungus. The microscopical features of the spores of this genus are,
-briefly, a more or less spherical form, without any pedicel or footstalk
-Plate VII. fig. 134). These spores are at first produced each in a
-separate cell, but when ripe become free, and are at times with
-difficulty distinguished from such forms as _Trichobasis_, unless the
-pedicels in the early stage of the latter genus are regarded.
-
-A rare species in Britain is the oak-leaf rust (_Uredo Quercus_), in
-which the sori or pustules are minute, and at first yellow, but
-afterwards orange. It occurs on the under surface of the leaves, and
-was, we believe, first found in this country by Mr. D. Stock, in the
-neighbourhood of Bungay, nearly five-and-twenty years since. That
-gentleman informs us that it was not at all uncommon, but always
-appeared on the young shoots which had sprung up from the trunks or
-roots of trees that had been cut down. We are uncertain whether it has
-been found by any one since that time in this country, although it is
-not uncommon in France.
-
-The leaves of the common sorrel are often sparely sprinkled with the
-pustules of a rust (_Uredo bifrons_, Grev.), which derives its specific
-name from the fact that the pustules, which appear on both surfaces of
-the leaves, are often opposite to each other Plate VII. fig. 137). These
-pustules are generally seated on a discoloured spot (Plate VII. fig. 138
-enlarged), and are surrounded by the remains of the ruptured epidermis.
-The spores are globose and brown Plate VII. fig. 139). We have not met
-with any other _Uredine_ on the sorrel leaves, though one having a
-similar appearance to the naked eye is not uncommon on several species
-of dock.
-
-The fern rust (_Uredo Filicum_), which occurs on the under surface of
-the fronds of two or three species of ferns, we have never met with, and
-do not think that it can be considered common. It has been found in the
-West of England, on _Cystopteris_, and Sowerby collected it, probably
-not very far from London.
-
-One of the most common is the rust found on the leaves of the
-enchanter’s nightshade (_Circæa lutetiana_), sometimes nearly covering
-the under surface with its tawny snuff-coloured spores Plate VII. fig.
-135). The plant on which it is found is rather local, but the rust
-(_Uredo Circææ_) seems to abound wherever the plant on which it is
-parasitic flourishes. Another fungus of a very similar external
-appearance may be collected, more rarely, from the leaves of the same
-plant; but in this the spores are two-celled, or divided by a transverse
-partition. This fact is mentioned to guard against disappointment,
-should the spores be found to differ from the characters of this
-section, and to show that the microscope is essential to the study of
-fungi. The spores of the true Uredo are globose and without any
-partition Plate VII. fig. 136).
-
-
-[Illustration:
-
- Plate IX.
- W. West imp.
-]
-
-
-We may also observe that a very interesting species may be found on
-several species of St. John’s-wort (_Hypericum_), but especially on the
-under surface of the leaves of the Tutsan, covering them with its
-golden-coloured spores (Plate VIII. fig. 174). Another occurs on the
-leaves of some of the wild garlics (_Allium_); one is not uncommon on
-some of the stitchworts; another on saxifrages; another on willow-herbs
-(_Epilobium_), and one on the leaves of the cowberry. All of these have
-yellowish spores. A species with brown spores occurs on sea-lavender
-(_Statice_). Space to write on our own part, and patience to read on the
-part of others, induce us to dismiss all these species with the bare
-allusion to them and the plants on which they may be found. Some of them
-may occur in one locality and some in another, and enough has perhaps
-been said to enable any one to place any that he may find in the proper
-genus, if not with the scientific name.
-
-From the numerous instances we have met with of persons wholly
-disinterested in the subject, collecting and making inquiries concerning
-the bright orange patches next to be referred to, we are led to conclude
-that most persons have, at least, seen them. These patches of
-orange-coloured powder burst through the cuticle, and appear on the
-young branches of wild roses, extending sometimes for two or three
-inches in length Plate VII. fig. 147), and form one of the most
-beautiful and obtrusive of the dust-like fungi. It is not confined to
-roses; but the meadow-sweet, on which it is also found, does not grow in
-localities where its parasite is so liable to meet the gaze of the
-ordinary wayfarer. The habit of this rust is more or less that of those
-which are associated with it. The pustules are not small and orbicular
-as in most instances in other groups (except _Polycystis_), but are
-large and irregular, and generally but few together or single. The
-spores are variously coloured, and have peduncles, or footstalks, of a
-greater or less length. In the rose rust these spores are profuse, but
-the peduncle is short (Plate VII. fig. 148).
-
-Plants of the pea and bean tribe are liable to be attacked by one of
-these rusts, and in this instance the spores are so characteristic that
-no one could well confound them with any other. Externally it appears as
-an irregular brownish pustule, breaking through the epidermis and filled
-with an impalpable powder, not unlike a pinch of “brown rappee” snuff.
-The spores are ovoid, with a very long peduncle, whence its name
-(_Uromyces appendiculata_). It appears on a great variety of plants, but
-from the peculiarity of the spores Plate VII. fig. 150), is easily
-recognized. Our figure represents it on the leaf of a vetch (Plate VII.
-fig. 149). Almost at the commencement of this volume (Chap. III.) we had
-occasion to refer in detail to some experiments made by De Bary on the
-spores of this species. In the remarks then made occurs a recommendation
-of reperusal, which would obviate any repetition here.
-
-An allied species, and a beautiful one, is to be found on the stinking
-iris (_Iris fœtidissima_), and another on the under surface of the
-leaves of primroses.
-
-The pilewort (_Ranunculus ficaria_) we have already seen attacked by one
-species of microscopic fungi, and we have now to record the occurrence
-of another. Some plants appear to be destined both alive and dead to
-become the prey of others. The common nettle, for instance, as if in
-retribution for the annoyance it often occasions on account of its
-stinging propensities, has not less than twenty different species of
-minute fungi, to say nothing of coleopterous and lepidopterous insects,
-which make a home, sometimes upon its green leaves, and sometimes on its
-dead stems. We might almost state that it has a flora and a fauna of its
-own. The pilewort, too, has many foes; but these are fewer in number,
-and mostly attack the living plant. The cluster-cups have been already
-noticed; some do not fall within the limits of this volume, but one,
-which is found in May and June, belongs to the present genus. It appears
-like a purplish-brown powder bursting through blistered spots on the
-leaves and footstalks Plate VII. fig. 156). The spores are small, and
-are, of course, provided with pedicels Plate VII. fig. 157).
-
-The under surface of the leaves of the white Dutch clover are often
-sprinkled with black spots, which are nearly round and very numerous.
-These are so many clusters of fungi belonging to a different section, in
-which the threads are the important feature. But another parasite is
-also found on leaves of the same plant, in which the pustules are far
-less numerous and regular, and are often found on the petiole as well as
-the leaf, distorting them and twisting them in various directions Plate
-VII. fig. 154). This is the clover rust (_Uromyces apiculata_, Lev.),
-which is a parasite on numerous plants, being found also on the great
-water-dock and other kinds of dock. The spores are ovoid and brown, with
-a short peduncle (Plate VII. fig. 155). A very beautiful species occurs
-on the leaves of the ladies-mantle (_Alchemilla_), but hitherto we have
-not been fortunate enough to collect it.
-
-It can scarcely be too great an assumption to suppose that every one is
-acquainted with the goat-willow (_Salix caprea_), or that every
-schoolboy knows the birch (_Betula alba_). It may be proceeding a step
-too far to affirm that all who know these trees well enough to
-distinguish the one from the other, will have observed the under
-surfaces of the leaves of both sprinkled with a golden dust, during the
-summer months, and which are the spores of a parasitic fungus. So common
-is this orange-coloured powder on leaves of the trees above-named, that
-we can hardly believe any one to have had a branch of either in his hand
-and not observed it, provided any leaves adorned the branch in question.
-What this parasite is, and what its associates, it is our province to
-endeavour to explain. Our figure (Plate VIII. fig. 160) represents a
-leaf of the sallow or goat-willow, with the under surface exhibiting
-yellow patches, consisting of spores, which are magnified in the next
-figure (Plate VIII. fig. 161). This exceedingly common rust is termed
-_Lecythea caprearum_, Lev., when in the condition figured; but in
-reality this is only the summer stage, bearing the summer fruit of
-_Melampsora salicina_, which latter attains its mature development on
-the same leaves in the succeeding winter (Plate IX. fig. 191) or early
-spring. Of course this latter remark applies to the fallen leaves, for
-at this period all the willows and other deciduous trees are bare. But
-the leaves, before they fall, give evidence of the parasite at work; and
-if the collected decaying mass of rubbish at the base of sallow bushes
-be examined about March, these leaves will be found bearing upon them
-mature heaps of elongated, wedge-shaped spores, closely packed side by
-side (Plate IX. fig. 192), and which, whilst still adherent, may often
-be found in active germination, as represented in an allied species at
-the bottom of our plate (Plate IX. fig. 197). This phenomenon consists
-in the production of cylindrical tubes, more or less elongated, from the
-upper extremity (rarely from the base) of the prismatic spores. These
-tubes are straight or twisted, simple or forked, and each of them
-becomes divided by transverse septa into four unequal cells towards
-their apex, from each of which is produced a spicule bearing a
-sporidium, or spherical secondary fruit, in the same manner as in the
-genera _Puccinia_ and _Aregma_. It should be observed, that the winter
-spores of this rust are borne on the opposite surface of the leaves to
-the summer spores: for whilst the latter are developed from the under
-surface, the former are found on the upper. This being also an instance
-of di-morphism, the summer condition, when spherical spores are
-produced, should not be regarded as a distinct plant, and the name of
-_Lecythea caprearum_ does not merit retention in the list of fungi.
-
-There are five species of this interesting group, or genus, found in
-Great Britain, to the residue of which we may only briefly allude. It
-has already been stated that, in summer, the yellow spores of a rust are
-found on the under surface of birch-leaves. These must be sought on the
-young twigs or suckers, proceeding from the stumps of trees which have
-been cut down: pale discoloured spots on the upper surface of the leaves
-indicate the presence of the rust beneath. This is the _Uredo betulina_
-of old authors (begging their pardons, for some of them still live), the
-_Lecythea longicapsula_ of more recent times, and the summer spores of
-_Melampsora betulina_, according to M. Tulasne and his disciples. When
-fresh, it is reputed to exhale a faint odour, as of the primrose. During
-the winter and spring months the wedge-like spores of the second crop
-are matured on the fallen leaves (Plate IX. figs. 189, 190), and these
-are capable of a speedy germination, and the production of secondary
-reproductive bodies, as in the willow rust above alluded to.
-
-Probably, also, the similar rust on the poplar (Plate IX. figs. 195,
-196), or on the aspen, may be met with under like conditions; _i.e._,
-the summer spores, which are yellow and spherical, on the living leaves,
-and the brown permanent masses of winter spores on the fallen and
-decaying leaves. The sole remaining British species is not uncommon on
-leaves of the common spurge in gardens, and whilst the yellow
-pulverulent spores occur on the upper, it will not be improbable that
-black permanent spots will be found on the lower leaves (Plate IX. figs.
-193, 194), enclosing closely-packed, rudimentary, elongated or
-wedge-shaped cellules of the winter spores.
-
-Any one may make himself acquainted with the genus _Coleosporium_ with
-but little trouble, which the acquisition will more than compensate. A
-summer stroll into any locality in which the common coltsfoot can be
-found, will be certain to prove sufficient. Let the spot selected be any
-station on the North Kent Railway, for those who reside in town, or even
-a trip to the Crystal Palace and a stroll in the grounds, and when the
-well-known leaves of the coltsfoot are descried, the under surface of
-the first leaf will doubtless give proof of the presence of the fungus
-in question, by the orange spores amongst its dense woolly hairs.
-Sometimes the leaf is almost covered beneath with the bright
-orange-coloured dust. This is the coltsfoot rust (_Coleosporium
-tussilaginis_, Lev., Plate VIII. fig. 180), which may serve as a type of
-the rest. It may be observed that a species of cluster-cup, or
-_Æcidium_, with spores of nearly the same colour, is also to be found on
-the leaves of the same plant; but in this case the upper surface of the
-leaf has also corresponding purplish spots, and, what is of still more
-importance, the spores are seated in small fringed cups. The rust is
-common till the wintry frosts have set in, and is far more conspicuous
-than the cluster-cups. A kind of di-morphism prevails in all the species
-of this genus. Some of the pustules resolve themselves into a kind of
-powder, whilst others remain entire and solid. Generally there is the
-largest proportion of globose, dust-like, free spores, produced in the
-earliest developed fungi, whilst they become more rare towards the close
-of the season. The permanent spore-spots consist of obovate cellules
-placed side by side, each of which is divided transversely by three or
-four septa, and is filled with an orange-red endochrome (Plate VIII.
-fig. 181); the exterior being enveloped in a kind of mucous layer. The
-arrangement of spores when packed together in the pustule is shown in
-Plate VIII. fig. 182, from an allied species. When these spores
-germinate, which they do with great readiness, each division emits a
-long tube, which generally remains simple and undivided, and from its
-extremity is produced a reproductive body of an obovate or nearly
-kidney-shape. These filaments are about 1/120th of an inch in length, of
-a colourless transparent membrane, along which the orange-red contents
-of the spores pass into the newly-formed sporidia, or reproductive
-bodies by which they are terminated. Most of these reniform sporidia
-disengage themselves from the filaments on which they are produced, and
-either elongate themselves into a simple and uniform filament, or swell
-at the extremity as if to reproduce a second spore. If the newly-formed
-sporidia do not become free, they increase the length of their primitive
-filament, which by a frequent repetition of the process becomes a tube
-swelling out at unequal distances.
-
-
-[Illustration:
-
- Plate X.
- W. West imp.
-]
-
-
-The summer spores, or pulverulent spores of the first generation, which
-are analogous to the Uredospores of _Aregma_, are also capable of
-germination, for, if placed in favourable circumstances, they will
-develop very long filiform processes, which either remain simple or
-become more or less branched, but always nearly uniform in their
-diameter. M. Tulasne states that he has observed this germination many
-times, though we have been less fortunate.
-
-Of the six species of this genus known to occur in Great Britain, the
-majority may be commonly met with. That very widely-diffused plant, the
-wood cow-wheat (_Melampyrum pratense_), known well to all amateur
-botanists for its pertinacity in drying black, and presenting anything
-but an inviting appearance to claim for it a place in the herbarium—also
-becomes the matrix for the development of a member of this genus;
-_i.e._, the cow-wheat rust (_Coleosporium Rhinanthacearum_, Lev.), and
-which is found on other allied plants, as the little eyebright
-(_Euphrasia officinalis_), &c. (Plate VIII. fig. 176). In colour and
-habit it resembles the last-named species, and its free, echinulate
-spores (Plate VIII. fig. 177) form a pretty object for the microscope.
-
-Another equally common species is found inhabiting the leaves of the
-sow-thistles (_Sonchus arvensis_ and _S. oleraceus_), and in the autumn
-may generally be found on either of those plants, presenting the
-appearance delineated in our plate (Plate VIII. fig. 178). The permanent
-spores resemble in many points those of the first species, as will be
-seen from the figure from De Bary’s treatise on this subject (Plate
-VIII. fig. 179). This is certainly one of the most showy of uredinous
-fungi, and could not be well overlooked.
-
-The butter-bur rust (_Coleosporium petasites_, Lev.) and the Campanula
-rust (_Coleosporium Campanulæ_, Lev.) are found, the former on the
-leaves of the butter-bur, and the latter on those of the harebell and
-other _Campanulæ_, less frequently. We have, however, indicated
-sufficient, since their great similarity in unprofessional eyes will
-furnish, in one or two species, all that is desirable for the
-microscopist.
-
-Unless some similar plan to the following be adopted for examining the
-species of this genus, it may result in disappointment; for the slight
-attachment of the joints to each other will otherwise present only a
-mass of simple echinulate cellules, if a portion be only removed from
-the leaf on the point of a lancet. This method consists in making a thin
-vertical section of a pustule in which the spores are contained; by this
-means the arrangement of the fruit and the mucedinous threads from
-whence they proceed may be observed. Any person possessed of the
-cardinal virtues of microscopy—patience and perseverance—will be
-rewarded in this instance; whilst those who are deficient will lose an
-object worthy of the virtues they dare not boast. But few instances have
-occurred in this and the preceding chapters in which the exercise of any
-great ingenuity or application has been called for; the most juvenile or
-truest tyro at the microscope may see for himself much of what has been
-indicated, whilst a few opportunities have occurred for more practised
-manipulists to prove that they are neither juveniles nor tyros.
-
-
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER X.
-
- _WHITE RUSTS._
-
-
-ALLUSION has already been made to the important memoir recently
-published by Dr. de Bary. “White rusts” occupy a conspicuous position in
-that memoir, and the experiments therein detailed, with the conclusions
-arrived at, will be largely drawn upon in furnishing the present
-chapter. Whilst believing that we have fairly represented the views, and
-faithfully narrated the story of research, if not literally, but denuded
-of some technicality, yet in such manner as to convey the sense of our
-author, we claim no originality or merit save for the garb in which it
-appears, without addition, stricture, or confirmation of our own.
-
-What is the external appearance presented by the “white rust” of
-cabbages, and allied cruciferous plants, is soon told. During summer and
-autumn it occupies the surface of the leaves and stems of the
-shepherd’s-purse (_Capsella bursa-pastoris_), with elongated narrow
-white spots like streaks of whitewash (Plate X. fig. 198), and later in
-the season the leaves of cauliflowers and cabbages become ornamented
-with similar patches, arranged in a circular manner (Plate X. fig. 199),
-forming spots as large as a sixpence. Wherever these spots appear, the
-plant is more or less deformed, swollen, or blistered, even before the
-parasite makes its appearance at the surface. These white pustules have
-a vegetative system of ramifying threads which traverse the internal
-portion of the plants on which they are found: these threads constitute
-what is termed the _mycelium_. Not only when the plant is deformed and
-swollen with its undeveloped parasite do we meet with the threads of
-mycelium in its internal structure, but also in apparently healthy
-portions of the plant, far removed from the evidently infected spots.
-These threads are unequal in thickness, much branched, and often with
-thick gelatinous walls filled with a colourless fluid. They creep
-insidiously along the intercellular passages, and are provided with
-certain appendages in the form of straight thread-like tubes, swollen at
-their tips into globular vesicles (Plate X. fig. 204). These threads do
-not exceed in length the diameter of the mycelium which bears them. The
-appendages communicate in their interior with the mycelium, and contain
-within them the same fluid, which at length becomes more watery, and the
-terminal vesicles have their walls thickened, so as to resemble, on a
-casual observation, granules of starch. Dr. de Bary conceives that these
-appendages serve a similar purpose to the tendrils or suckers of
-climbing phanerogamic plants; _i.e._, to fix the mycelium to the cells
-which are to supply the parasite with nourishment. As these appendages
-are always present, it is easy to discover the mycelium wherever it
-exists amongst the tissues of an affected plant.
-
-The white pustules already alluded to contain the fruit of the parasite.
-Bundles of clavate or club-shaped tubes are produced upon the mycelium
-beneath the epidermis of the infested plant, forming a little tuft or
-cushion, with each tube producing at its apex reproductive cells,
-designated “conidia.” These conidia appear to be produced in the
-following manner:—The tips of the clavate tubes generate them in
-succession. At first a septum, or partition, divides from the lower
-portion of the tube a conidium cell; this becomes constricted at the
-septum and assumes a spherical shape, at length only attached by a short
-narrow neck. Beneath this again the same process is repeated to form
-another and another conidium in succession, until a bead-like string of
-conidia surmount each of the tubes from which they are produced (Plate
-X. fig. 200). At length the distended epidermis above is no longer able
-to bear the pressure of the mass of engendered conidia within, and is
-ruptured irregularly, so that the conidia, easily separating from each
-other at the narrow neck, make their escape.
-
-As long since as 1807, M. Prevost described the zoospores, or moving
-spores, of these conidia, and his observations were confirmed by Dr. de
-Bary three years since, and are now adverted to by him again in further
-confirmation. If the conidia (white spherical bodies ejected from the
-pustules of the “white rust”) are sown in a drop of water on a glass
-slide, being careful to immerse them entirely, they will rapidly absorb
-the water and swell; soon afterwards a large and obtuse papilla,
-resembling the neck of a bottle, is produced at one of the extremities.
-At first vacuoles are formed in the contents of each conidium; as these
-disappear, the whole protoplasm (granular substance filling the
-conidium) becomes separated by very fine lines of demarcation, into from
-five to eight polyhedric portions, each with a faintly coloured vacuole
-in the centre. These portions are so many _zoospores_. Some minutes
-after the internal division, the papilla swells and makes itself an
-opening, through which the zoospores are expelled one by one, without
-giving any signs of movement of their own. They take a flat disk-like or
-lenticular form, and group themselves about the opening, whence they
-have been expelled, in a globular mass. Soon, however, they begin to
-move, vibratile ciliæ show themselves, and by means of these appendages
-the entire globule oscillates, the zoospores disengage themselves from
-each other, the mass is broken up, and each zoospore swims off on its
-own account (Plate X. fig. 208).
-
-The free zoospores are of the form of a planoconvex lens, obtuse at the
-edge. Beneath the plane face, out of the centre, and towards that point
-of the margin which during the movement of the zoospore is foremost, is
-a disk-shaped vacuole, with two ciliæ of unequal length attached to its
-margin; the shorter cilia is directed forwards, and the longer in the
-opposite direction, during the evolutions of the zoospores.
-
-The zoospores are produced within from an hour and a half to three hours
-after the sowing of the conidia in water. They are never absent if the
-conidia are fresh, or even a month old, but beyond this period their
-artificial generation is very uncertain. This little experiment is a
-very simple and interesting one, and may be performed by any one who
-will take the trouble to follow out these instructions.
-
-From this simple experiment, let us turn for a moment to the plant in
-its natural condition when affected by the white rust. If, after rain or
-dew, when the little drops of moisture hang like pearls about the sickly
-pallid leaves of the shepherd’s-purse, bespattered with the white
-pustules of the rust, we collect and examine a drop of water from the
-immediate neighbourhood of one of the pustules, we shall commonly find
-empty conidia and zoospores in different stages of development.
-
-
-[Illustration:
-
- Plate XI.
- W. West imp.
-]
-
-
-Water alone seems to be essential to them, and for this the conidia may
-remain unchanged for a month, and literally burst into activity at the
-first gentle shower, till the whole surface of the plant is swarming
-with zoospores. We may no longer doubt that a true vegetable produces
-from itself bodies endowed with active motion, resembling low forms of
-animal life, and yet in themselves not animalcules, as some would
-suggest, but essentially vegetable, as we shall hereafter demonstrate.
-To scientific men this is not new, except as regards fungi, for in algæ
-such bodies have long been recognized.
-
-A second kind of reproductive organs are described by Dr. de Bary; and
-if future examinations confirm his observations, as they doubtless will,
-this feature is an important one. It is true that M. Caspary long since
-detected similar bodies in moulds (allied to that which produces the
-potato disease), but he only knew _them_ in a limited sense compared
-with what De Bary has revealed. These fruits are hidden amid the tissues
-of the plant on which the “white rust” is parasitic, and only betray
-their presence by the coloration of those tissues. To these bodies it is
-proposed to give the name of “oogonia” and “antheridia,” on account of
-their presumed sexuality, the “oogonia” representing the female, and the
-“antheridia” the male organs.
-
-The oogonia are large spherical or ovoid cells, with a thickish membrane
-containing a granular protoplasm, or formative fluid. They are produced
-either terminally or laterally upon the threads of the mycelium, from
-which they are separated by septa or partitions.
-
-The antheridia are somewhat blunt-shaped or obovate cellules,
-considerably smaller than the oogonia, with slightly thickened walls,
-and containing a finely granular protoplasm. These are produced upon
-branches of the mycelium which do not bear oogonia. The obtuse
-extremities of these branches, which are to be developed as antheridia,
-are applied to the surface of the growing oogonia, to which they adhere,
-become distended, assume their obovate form, and by the formation of a
-septum at their base, their contents are isolated from those of the
-threads of the mycelium, and thus the antheridia are perfected.
-
-When these bodies have attained their full dimensions, the large
-granules which are contained in the oogonium accumulate at its centre,
-and form an irregular, somewhat spherical mass, which is called by De
-Bary a _gonosphere_. This gonosphere having been formed, a straight tube
-shoots out from the antheridium which perforates the wall of the
-oogonium, passes through the fluid which surrounds the gonosphere,
-elongating itself until it touches that body. From this period a
-membrane begins to be formed about the gonosphere, which thenceforth
-maintains a regular spheroidal form. It may be observed that the
-extremity of the tube which proceeds from the antheridium does not open,
-and the fecundation, if such it be, is produced solely by contact. After
-this contact of the two bodies, the gonosphere acquires a new name, and
-is called an “oospore.” The membrane which at first invests this organ
-is very thin, but by deposits from the surrounding fluid it attains to a
-greater thickness, and is at length of a yellowish-brown colour, having
-its surface studded with large obtuse warts (Plate X. fig. 206). One of
-these warts, larger than the rest, forms a kind of thick sheath around
-the fecundating tube.
-
-The oospores do not give evidence of any appreciable change for some
-months. For instance, those collected by De Bary in June did not attain
-their ulterior development until the commencement of December. The
-method adopted was as follows:—Parts of the plants containing ripe
-oospores were preserved in the dried state. When examination was
-considered desirable, the portion to be employed was immersed in water
-for a day or two; it was then placed on a humid soil, or mould covered
-with blotting-paper. The tissues enclosing the oospores were decomposed,
-and at the end of from four to eight days their germination might be
-observed when placed in a drop of water. This method again corresponds
-with the ordinary processes by which the plant naturally decays on
-exposure to the influences of the atmosphere, and the oospores germinate
-under the favour of a shower of rain.
-
-If the oospore, after the decay of the tissues, is isolated and placed
-in a drop of water, the brown investing membrane will be seen to rupture
-irregularly, and its contents (enclosed in a transparent inner membrane)
-issuing from the orifice. As in the case of the conidia, this body at
-first contains vacuoles, and is afterwards divided into polyhedric
-portions; these pass into zoospores, which congregate at the centre into
-a globular mass (Plate X. fig. 207). They afterwards separate, and for
-some minutes float about in the vesicle in which they were generated.
-Ultimately the membrane ruptures, and the zoospores swim about in water
-just as those produced from the conidia had done. The number contained
-in each oospore is considerable, and may be estimated at not less than
-one hundred.
-
-The zoospores, whether produced from conidia or from oospores, appear to
-be the same. The movements of both in the water last from two to three
-hours; then they cease, the ciliæ disappear, and the zoospores remain at
-rest, taking meanwhile a globular form. Afterwards these spores (for
-having ceased all motion they are no longer zoospores) emit a thin tube
-from some portion of their surface, such tube attaining a length of from
-two to ten times that of the spore whence it proceeds. The extremity of
-these tubes swells and forms a kind of cell, into which the contents of
-the spore pass through the medium of the tube (Plate X. fig. 209).
-
-Thus far, and thus far only, has Dr. de Bary been enabled to trace the
-development of the zoospores in a drop of water. Another series of
-experiments was instituted by this mycologist having especial reference
-to the parasitism of the “white rust.” He made numerous observations to
-ascertain whether the spores, or the germinating tubes, entered by the
-roots of growing plants, and satisfied himself that they did not. Plants
-of garden-cress, mustard, and shepherd’s-purse had their roots immersed
-in water impregnated with zoospores. After one or two days, though the
-surfaces of the roots were covered with zoospores that had emitted their
-germinating tubes in all directions, none had penetrated or showed the
-least tendency to penetrate the epidermis. Other plants were planted in
-flowerpots and watered at the roots with water charged with zoospores,
-and for two days the pots were left standing in the water similarly
-charged, then the plants were removed, cultivated in the ordinary
-manner, grew up healthy, and gave no signs of the white rust. Care had
-been taken that neither stems nor leaves should come in contact with
-water containing zoospores.
-
-If a drop of water thus charged is placed on the surface of a living
-leaf of the shepherd’s-purse, for instance, and left at rest for a few
-hours and examined minutely at the end of that period, they will be
-found to have germinated. Let the epidermis be removed carefully and
-placed on a glass slide and submitted to the microscope. Many zoospores
-will be found to have produced from that point of their surface which is
-nearest to one of the stomata, or pores of the leaf, its slender tube,
-and to have thrust it through those openings, with the swollen extremity
-resting in the air-cavity situated beneath the pore. If many days, or
-even weeks, are allowed to pass, and the leaf is examined again, or
-another leaf similarly treated, and kept in a living and vigorous
-condition by remaining attached to the parent plant, still no further
-change or advance will be observed, the germs will appear fresh, and
-still in the same condition. Hence it is concluded that plants are not
-infected through the medium of their leaves.
-
-If the cotyledons, or seed-leaves, are watered with similar impregnated
-water, a different result has been observed to take place. The
-germination of the tubes till their entrance at the stomata is the same;
-but, having entered, the swollen extremity elongates, becomes branched,
-and takes all the appearance of mycelium such as we at first described.
-If the infected plant endures through the winter, the mycelium endures
-with it, to recommence vegetating in the spring.
-
-The experiments which Dr. de Bary performed were all upon plants of the
-common garden-cress. It will be unnecessary to repeat all the details of
-these, as given in the memoir recently published on the subject, but it
-will suffice to give a summary of results. In two series of plants
-cultivated at different periods from good seeds, one hundred and five
-plants which, had not received the water impregnated with zoospores upon
-their cotyledons vegetated without any indications of the parasite.
-Amongst the eighteen plants which were inoculated by watering the
-cotyledons, four only were not attacked by the parasite, fourteen bore
-the “white rust.” In six of these it did not extend beyond the
-cotyledons; in the others it also appeared on the stems and leaves.
-
-From these experiments it may be deduced that plants are not infected by
-spores of the parasite entering at the roots, or by their leaves, but
-that inoculation takes place through the medium of the cotyledons, or
-seed-leaves; that the agents in this inoculation are the zoospores
-produced either from the conidia or the oospores; that they do not enter
-the stomata or pores themselves, but thrust out a germinating tube, into
-the extremity of which the contents of the zoospores pass; that when
-these tubes have entered the stomata of the cotyledons they branch and
-ramify, becoming a true mycelium, from which fruitful parasites are
-developed; that if a plant so infested lives through the winter, the
-parasite lives with it, to vegetate again in the spring.
-
-The immense number of zoospores capable of being produced from a single
-infested plant is almost beyond calculation. It is easy for a million of
-conidia to be developed from such a plant, each producing from five to
-eight zoospores, besides a large number of oospores, each containing a
-hundred zoospores. It can scarcely be considered marvellous that the
-white rust should be so common on plants favourable to its development,
-the marvel being rather that any plant should escape.
-
-
-[Illustration:
-
- Plate XII.
- W. West imp.
-]
-
-
-Until recently it was doubtful whether more than one or two species of
-_Cystopus_ (white rust) were known. It is now certain that we have three
-in Great Britain, and three or four others are found elsewhere. Of the
-British species one is found on many cruciferous plants, as the
-shepherd’s-purse, garden-cress, mustard, radish, and plants of the
-cabbage kind. This is the _Cystopus candidus_. Another occurs on the
-goat’s-beard, salsify, and scorzonera, which is called _Cystopus
-cubicus_. Both have great external resemblances, but both possess
-specific internal differences. In the Goat’s-beard rust (Plate X. fig.
-201) the terminal conidia in the bunches or fascicles of conidia which
-are produced within the pustules are spheroidal, large, and of a
-yellow-brown tint, whilst the residue are cylindrical, smaller (Plate X.
-fig. 202), and more or less compressed. In the crucifer rust the conidia
-are all equal in the pustules and globose. The oospores in the former of
-these are subglobose and the warts on their surface are solid; whilst in
-the latter the oospores are truly globose, and the warts on the surface
-are hollow (Plate X. fig. 210). The third species is the Sandspurry
-white rust (_Cystopus Lepigoni_), which was found on the common
-sandspurry (_Spergularia rubra_) by Mr. R. G. Keeley, in Swanscombe
-Marshes (September, 1864). Of the other species it is not improbable
-that one or two may yet be found in this country. Without attempting to
-indicate their microscopic differences, it may be serviceable to name
-the species of phanerogamic plants on which they are likely to be found.
-The Purslane white rust (_Cystopus Portulacæ_, D. C.) should be sought
-on the purslane, which, though of limited cultivation, is exceedingly
-liable to attack from this parasite, and the Thistle white rust
-(_Cystopus spinulosus_, D. By.) may probably be met with on the leaves
-of the common thistle (_Cnicus arvensis_) or some of its allies.
-
-Considerable interest is now attached to these parasites, which, as far
-as we at present know, differ materially in their reproduction from the
-other dust-like or uredinous fungi with which they have long been
-associated. Dr. de Bary proposes the union of these with the mould-like
-fungi of the genus _Peronospora_, to which the mould infesting the
-potato belongs, so as to constitute by themselves a group apart from the
-genera with which both have heretofore been associated. Whether his
-views will be accepted by mycologists time will speedily prove. Under
-any circumstances, microscopical and botanical science will reap
-considerable benefit from his researches.
-
-
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER XI.
-
- _MOULDS._
-
-
-TWENTY years since, and some of these little pests were altogether
-unknown, whilst others were only recognized and partly understood by a
-few scientific men. During the period to which we have alluded more than
-half the present species contained in the genus _Peronospora_ had never
-been observed, and amongst these the most devastating of its tribe, the
-associate and undoubted cause of the potato disease.
-
-Parasitic fungi are far more numerous, both in individuals and species,
-than most persons are aware, and cultivated plants of all kinds are more
-or less subject to their ravages. Some are more susceptible than others,
-of which the corn and grass tribe, or _Graminaceæ_, as they are termed
-by botanists, is an example. Not less than thirty species have been
-recorded upon plants of this natural order, and of these nearly one-half
-are found upon the living plants. Upon the potato plant, again, no less
-than ten different kinds of fungi have been described; whilst upon other
-and more fortunate plants only one or two parasites of this nature
-establish themselves.
-
-
- Plate XIII.
-
-[Illustration:
-
- 262.—TURNIP MOULD.
- _Peronospora parasitica._
-]
-
-[Illustration:
-
- 263.—ONION MOULD.
- _Peronospora Schleideniana._
-]
-
-
-It will be sufficient for our present purpose to state that one of the
-six families into which fungi are divided for scientific purposes is
-called _Hyphomycetes_, a name compounded of two Greek words signifying
-“thread” and “mould,” or “fungus,” and is applied to this group because
-the thread-like filaments of which they are largely composed are the
-most prominent feature. In this family there are again a number of
-smaller groups called orders, having an equal value to the natural
-orders of flowering plants; and one of these orders, called _Mucedines_,
-has the fertile threads perfectly distinct from the mycelium or spawn.
-These threads are sometimes simple and sometimes branched; they may be
-articulated or without articulations or septa, short or long, erect or
-creeping, hyaline or whitish, mostly free from colour, and are not
-coated with a distinct membrane. The spores are generally simple,
-sometimes solitary, at others in pairs, or strung together like beads
-for a necklace. Amongst all this variety of arrangement there is order,
-for these are but features, or partly the features, of the different
-genera of which the _Mucedines_ are composed. One of the genera is
-termed _Peronospora_, and to this the parasitic fungus of the potato,
-and some others to which we shall have occasion to refer, belong. In
-this genus the threads are generally branched, but without
-articulations. The spores, or seed-like bodies, are of two kinds; one
-kind is borne on the tips of the branches; and the other kind, which is
-larger and globose, is borne upon the creeping mycelium or spawn. All
-the members of this genus with which we are acquainted are parasitic on
-living plants, inducing in them speedy decay, but preceding that decay
-of which they are themselves the cause. Hence we have deemed it the more
-advantageous course both for writer and reader to associate together the
-different species of this particular genus of parasitic moulds in one
-chapter, rather than bring together the different kinds of fungi,
-belonging perhaps to widely separated genera, but all associated with,
-or parasitic upon, the same plant. The botanical student will thank us
-for following this plan, and the general reader will labour under no
-disadvantage, in this instance at least, from the similarity of the
-diseases produced in the plants infested.
-
-It has been recently proposed to associate the genera _Peronospora_ and
-_Cystopus_ together in one group, under the name of _Peronosporei_; but
-with the discussion of this subject we have nothing to do in this
-volume. Having announced this fact, we shall continue to notice them in
-the several positions heretofore accorded to them.
-
-The mycelium (root-like fibres) in this genus greatly resembles that
-described for the “white rusts,” though neither so thick, nor is the
-membrane so gelatinous as in that genus. In some instances the mycelium
-is confined to the inter-cellulary passages; but in most cases they also
-perforate the cells of the plant which nourishes them. The sucker-like
-bodies already described in _Cystopus_ are often found produced on the
-mycelium of _Peronospora_, but occasionally they appear to be absent,
-especially in the mould causing the potato disease.
-
-From the mycelium erect threads are produced, upon which one form of
-fruit, which may be termed “acrospores,” is borne. These filaments are
-sometimes single, and sometimes in small tufts or fascicles. In some
-instances they are considerably branched, so as to present a dendroidal
-or tree-like appearance; in others they are nearly simple, being only
-surmounted by short spicules; or, in one instance, quite simple, and
-only surmounted by a single acrospore. The branching habit is by far the
-most common.
-
-Each ultimate branch in the ramification of the fertile filaments
-engenders a single acrospore. Its extremity, at first thin and pointed,
-swells in the form of a globular vesicle, which soon takes the
-elliptical or ovate shape of the perfected acrospore, and at length
-separates itself from the branch that supports it.
-
-In all instances the acrospores have a similar structure, but with
-minute differences in form, &c., which have their importance in the
-determination of species. In most cases the apex of the acrospore is
-obtuse, and the entire body has a violet tint, more or less deep; in
-some it is completely colourless. These acrospores, when placed in
-favourable conditions, will germinate, and, in fact, comport themselves
-in the manner of true spores.
-
-During the year 1861, Dr. de Bary published an account[8] of the
-discovery by him of zoospores, similar to those already described in
-connection with the conidia of the “white rusts,” produced from the
-acrospores of the mould which originates the potato disease. In the same
-author’s memoir of 1864, already quoted, the observations there made are
-confirmed. When the acrospores of the potato mould and the parsnip mould
-are sown in water upon a glass slide, their contents become divided, and
-vacuoles are formed, as already described in _Cystopus_; these parts are
-expelled through an apical orifice, and, when free, take the form of
-perfect zoospores, and commence swimming about in the fluid surrounding
-them.
-
-Footnote 8:
-
- Die gegenwartig herrschende Kartoffelkrankheit, ihre Ursache und ihre
- Verhütung. Von Dr. A. de Bary. Leipsig: 1861.
-
-These zoospores are oval, or semi-oval, with a structure resembling that
-of the “white rusts,” save that the two ciliæ, or vibratile hairs,
-proceed from the same point. The number of zoospores from each acrospore
-of the potato mould is stated to be from six to sixteen, and in the
-parsnip mould from six to fourteen. Their ultimate development is the
-same as has already been described. In the potato mould, the production
-of the zoospores is much favoured by the exclusion of light.
-
-Another mode of germination in the acrospores of the potato mould has
-been observed by the same eminent mycologist. This results when the
-spores are sown upon a humid body, or on the _surface_ of a drop of
-water. The acrospore emits from its summit a simple tube, the extremity
-of which swells into an oval vesicle; into this the contents pass, and
-it isolates itself by a partition from the germ-tube. Thus it becomes a
-duplicate of the acrospore from whence it was derived. This secondary
-body has also the power of producing a tertiary cellule in a similar
-manner. Both the second and third cellule, when _immersed_ in water,
-produce zoospores in the ordinary manner, as above described.
-
-Yet another and a third mode of germination is described by the same
-author, in which the acrospore emits from its apex a germ-tube, which
-elongates considerably; and into this long and tortuous tube the
-contents of the acrospore pass, and accumulate at the opposite
-extremity.
-
-The germ-tubes, produced in the manner last described, when developed on
-the surface of a favourable plant, perforate the cells of the epidermis,
-or enter by the stomata. In the case of the potato mould, the germ-tubes
-enter by the stomata; but in the majority of species the germ-tubes do
-not enter by the natural pores of the leaves upon which the acrospores
-are sown, but perforate the cellules, and thus effect admission into the
-tissues of the plant, where they extend, ramify themselves, and become a
-mycelium. This mycelium originates branched threads, bearing acrospores
-at the tips of their branchlets, and in many species of _Peronospora_
-another kind of reproductive body upon the threads of the mycelium
-itself. To these bodies we must briefly address ourselves.
-
-This last kind of reproductive organs (not yet positively found in the
-potato mould) appear to be wholly analogous to the oogonia of the “white
-rusts” already described, producing oospores in like manner. Dr. de Bary
-avows with regret that his numerous efforts to observe the germination
-of these oospores were unsuccessful. Nevertheless, he considers that the
-perfect resemblance between them and the oospores of the “white rusts”
-will justify him in concluding that the germination in both is very
-similar. It will be unnecessary to repeat here the observations already
-made on the growth and development of oogones and zoospores. What has
-been advanced respecting these organs in _Cystopus_ will apply also to
-_Peronospora_.
-
-
- Plate XIV.
-
-[Illustration:
-
- 264.—POTATO MOULD.
- _Peronospora infestans._
-]
-
-[Illustration:
-
- 265.—LETTUCE MOULD.
- _Peronospora gangliformis._
-]
-
-
-POTATO MOULD.—Towards the close of the summer of 1845, in the course of
-a few weeks, every one became aware of the fact that a new disease had
-appeared which threatened the entire destruction of the potato crop.
-Until then it seemed to have been almost, although not entirely unknown.
-It first appeared in the Isle of Wight about the middle of August, and a
-week afterwards had become general in the South of England, and the next
-week there were but few sound samples of potatoes in the London market.
-Early in September the disease had commenced its ravages in Ireland, and
-shortly afterwards it was discovered in Scotland. With the same rapidity
-it seems to have spread throughout Europe and North America, or at least
-the western portion of the former and the northern districts of the
-latter. It must not be imagined, however, that the Isle of Wight was the
-centre from which this disease spread over such an extended area and
-with such alarming rapidity. From this spot it doubtless made its first
-appearance that year amongst our own crops, but there is not the least
-doubt of its existence both on the continent of Europe and in North
-America in the previous year, and the farmers of Belgium had noted its
-appearance in the province of Liège as far back as 1842 and 1843. Other
-diseases had been observed affecting the potato crop before, and one
-which was also associated with a parasitic fungus had made its
-appearance in 1815. It is also exceedingly probable that, in a milder
-form, the murrain was present with us a year or two before it broke out
-to such an alarming extent. A correspondent to the _Gardeners’
-Chronicle_, in 1844, notices it in the Isle of Thanet, and another
-testifies to its occurrence in districts of Ireland for two or three
-years previous to its general outbreak. The description of the disease
-in Canada, in 1844, contained in a letter addressed to Dr. Bellingham,
-and quoted by the Rev. M. J. Berkeley,[9] leaves no doubt of its
-identity:—“During the months of July and August (1844), we had repeated
-and heavy showers, with oppressive heat, and an atmosphere strongly
-charged with electricity. Towards the close of the month of August I
-observed the leaves to be marked with black spots, as if ink had been
-sprinkled over them. They began to wither, emitting a peculiar,
-offensive odour; and before a fortnight the field, which had been
-singularly luxuriant, and almost rank, became arid and dried up, as if
-by a severe frost. I had the potatoes dug out during the month of
-September, when about two-thirds were either positively rotten,
-partially decayed and swarming with worms, or spotted with
-brownish-coloured patches, resembling flesh that had been frost-bitten.
-These parts were soft to the touch, and upon the decayed potatoes I
-observed a whitish substance like mould.”
-
-Footnote 9:
-
- Journal of Horticultural Society of London, vol. i. p. 11.
-
-Although this disease made its first appearance, in the middle of
-August, 1845, in the Isle of Wight, it had already appeared in Belgium
-in the same year, a month previously; and although it may have been
-noticed in other British localities in 1844, it was known in Canada and
-in St. Helena in the same year to a far greater extent, and in Liège as
-early as 1842. There are, therefore, good grounds for believing that the
-European centre was Belgium; but if M. Boussingault was correct in
-stating that “this malady is well known in rainy years at Bogota, where
-the Indians live almost entirely on potatoes,” then it is not of
-European but American origin, and is probably derived from districts not
-far remote from those whence Europe first received the potato itself.
-
-It would occupy too much space to detail the different theories and
-opinions relative to the causes of this disease to which 1845 and
-subsequent years gave birth. Suffice it to say, that the lapse of years
-has silently proved the majority of these to have been fallacious. All
-such as imputed to peculiar electric conditions, a wet season, or other
-meteorological influences, the disease which has re-appeared under
-different conditions and influences, and in seasons remarkable for
-dryness, are manifestly refuted; whilst its mycological origin has
-continued to gain adherents, and the gradual accumulation of fresh facts
-has almost placed it beyond dispute not only that the potato disease is
-accompanied by, but results from, fungal growth. Unfortunately, this
-disease has been so prevalent, more or less, during the past eighteen
-years, that few have been without the opportunity of making themselves
-acquainted with its external appearance. To this may be added the minute
-and exact account of its development, as recorded by that excellent
-mycologist and careful observer, the Rev. M. J. Berkeley, in 1846, and
-to which, even now, nothing of importance can be supplemented or
-abstracted:—“The leaves began suddenly to assume a paler, and at length
-a yellowish tint, exhibiting here and there discoloured spots. More or
-less coinciding with these spots, on the reverse of the leaves, appeared
-white mealy patches, consisting of a minute mould, proceeding, either
-singly or in fascicles, from the stomata, and arising from an abundant
-branched mycelium creeping in every direction through the loose tissue
-beneath the cuticle. The upper surface rarely, if ever, exhibits the
-mould, it being almost physically impossible for its delicate threads to
-penetrate the closely-packed cells which, being arranged side by side,
-leave scarcely any intercellular passages. The mould, in a few hours
-from its first piercing the apertures of the stomata, perfects its
-fruit, and in so doing completely exhausts the matrix, which in
-consequence withers. No sooner have a number of the leaves been
-attacked, than the stem itself is subject to change, becoming spotted
-here and there with dark brown patches, in which the cells are mostly
-filled with a dark grumous mass, without exhibiting any mucedinous
-filaments; though, occasionally, I have ascertained their presence. Very
-rarely fructifying but dwarfed specimens of the mould occur upon it. The
-stem now rapidly putrefies, the cuticle and its subjacent tissue become
-pulpy, and separate when touched from the woody parts beneath. The whole
-soon dries up, and in many instances exhibits in the centre the black,
-irregular fungoid masses which are known under the name of _Sclerotium
-varium_, and which are believed to be the mycelium of certain moulds in
-a high state of condensation.
-
-“If the tubers are now examined, the greater part will often be found
-smaller than usual, especially if the disease has commenced at an early
-stage of growth; but in their natural condition, while here and there a
-tuber, particularly if it has been partially exposed, exhibits traces of
-disease. The surface is, however, soon marked with livid patches,
-commencing generally about the eyes, or at the point of connection with
-the fructifying shoots: these rapidly acquire a spotted appearance, the
-spots being rather waved, and assuming often a more or less concentric
-arrangement. Sometimes—especially on the smoother kinds of tuber—two or
-more regular systems of concentric spots are exhibited on the same
-tuber. The skin now withers, and is easily separated; the spots become
-depressed and of a yellowish tinge; and if the tubers be laid in a moist
-place, in a day or two—sometimes in a few hours—the same mould which
-destroyed the leaves springs from them, piercing the cuticle from
-within, yet not scattered, as on the leaves, but forming a conspicuous
-white tuft. If a section of the diseased tuber be made on the first
-symptoms of the disease, little brownish or rusty specks are found in
-the cellular tissue, confined, with very rare exceptions, to the space
-between the cuticle and the sac, if I may so call it, of spiral vessels
-and their accompanying tissue, which, springing from the subterranean
-branches, pass into the tuber, making their way to the several buds
-disposed on the surface. These spots consist at first of a quantity of
-discoloured cells, mixed more or less with others in a healthy
-condition. The grains of fecula are for a long time perfectly healthy;
-the cells themselves, so far from being looser, are more closely bound
-together than in the more healthy portions. The rusty spots soon exhibit
-a darker tint, spreading in every direction and becoming confluent; they
-at length extend beyond the barrier of vascular tissue, and attack the
-central mass. The tuber, meanwhile, assumes a disagreeable smell,
-decomposes more or less rapidly, other Fungi establish themselves on the
-surface, or in the decaying mass, which emits a highly fetid odour,
-resembling that of decaying agarics; the union of the cells is
-dissolved, animalcules or mites make their appearance, till at last the
-whole becomes a loathsome mass of putrescence.”
-
-The form of the mould itself is represented (fig. 264) as exhibited
-under the microscope, with the nodose swellings of the branches, and
-spores attached to the tips. These acrospores are filled with a granular
-mass, from which, as hereafter described, zoospores are produced. The
-branching dendroidal threads of this fungus proceed from a creeping
-mycelium or spawn of entangled filaments which interpenetrates the
-matrix, upon which it establishes itself. Upon these threads spherical
-bodies were long since observed by Dr. Payen, and, under the name of
-_Artotrogus_, described by Dr. Montagne as a new species of fungus. Dr.
-de Bary failed to detect oospores on the mycelium of this mould,
-although the organs found by Payen in some sort resemble them. De Bary
-sought in vain, also, for the spherical bodies described by the author
-above named. It has been calculated that one square line of the under
-surface of the leaves is capable of producing 3,270 acrospores, each of
-which yields at least six zoospores, sometimes double that number; thus
-we have 19,620 reproductive bodies from that small space. The mycelium
-from the zoospores is capable of penetrating the cellular tissue in
-twelve hours, and, when established there, it bursts through the stomata
-of the leaves, and fruit is perfected in from fifteen to eighteen hours.
-Since the zoospores are perfected and ready to germinate in twenty-four
-hours from their being placed in water, it becomes almost impossible to
-calculate the myriads of fungi that may be produced from a single
-centre. Dr. de Bary has also demonstrated that the brown spots so
-characteristic of the disease are the result of the action of the spores
-or zoospores. By placing a quantity of spores in a drop of water on the
-leaves, stems, and tubers under a glass sufficiently air-tight to
-prevent evaporation, he produced the brown spots, and traced their
-progress from the earliest stages.
-
-There are a few practical conclusions which may be drawn from these
-discoveries. In the first place, it is clearly shown by the production
-of the spots that the fungus is capable of _causing_ the disease, a fact
-which has been disputed, but now placed beyond doubt. The inference is,
-that not only is it capable of producing, but is really the cause of the
-potato murrain. With bodies so minute and active as the zoospores, there
-can no longer be difficulty in accounting for their penetrating the
-tissues of the plant. They are most active and productive in wet
-weather, especially when it is also warm. Moisture appears to be
-essential, and a dry season the greatest enemy to the spread of the
-disease. That bodies so minute and subtle should have baffled all
-efforts to destroy or eradicate, is not now surprising. Whether any
-method will be found to contend successfully with it, is now more
-doubtful than ever. A careful reperusal of the old facts by the aid of
-this new light will tend to the elucidation of much of the mystery in
-which the subject has been involved. All who have hitherto been
-sceptical of the mycological source of one of the greatest pests of
-modern times should study M. de Bary’s pamphlet.
-
-
- Plate XV.
-
-[Illustration:
-
- 266.—PEA MOULD.
- _Peronospora Viciæ._
-]
-
-[Illustration:
-
- 267.—ANEMONE MOULD.
- _Peronospora pygmæa._
-]
-
-
-The potato mould has been judiciously named _Peronospora infestans_, or,
-as it was at first called, _Botrytis infestans_; but on a revision of
-the genera _Botrytis_ and _Peronospora_, it was transferred to the
-latter genus, in which it remains. Three names were given to it, within
-a short period of each other, by different mycologists, in ignorance of
-its having already received a name. The one we have adopted appears to
-have the priority, at least of publication, and was given by Dr.
-Montagne. That of _Botrytis devastatrix_ was given by Madame Libert, and
-_Botrytis fallax_ by M. Desmazières. The principal feature in this
-species seems to consist in the branches becoming alternately thickened
-and constricted, so as to resemble a moniliform string or necklace of
-little bladders or vesicles. The branches are also more erect than in
-the allied species, and the spores are solitary on the tips or from the
-sides of the branches, and not in pairs or clusters, and the tips are
-simple, and not bifid or trifid, as in most of its allies. It need
-scarcely be remarked, that a high power of the microscope is necessary
-to make out the distinctive features of the different members of this
-genus, and that to the naked eye they only appear as a minute whitish
-mould. As already stated, this little fungus makes its first appearance
-on the under surface of the leaves, especially the lower ones, of the
-potato plant, and afterwards attacks the stem, and ultimately the tuber.
-For examination it is better to select the leaves soon after the fungus
-makes its appearance.
-
-TURNIP MOULD.—Since the advent of the potato murrain a similar disease
-has been witnessed, though more limited in its extent, amongst Swedish
-turnips, commencing in little waved irregular lines following the course
-of the vessels, around which spots are formed by the deposition of dark
-granules in the same manner as in the potato. In this instance, the
-leaves apparently are first attacked in a similar manner by a species of
-mould or _Peronospora_ allied to the one already described, but which
-has been long known as parasitic upon cruciferous plants, to which the
-turnip belongs. This species, termed _Peronospora parasitica_, is white
-in all stages of its growth. It is much more branched, and the branches
-are comparatively shorter than in the potato mould, and the tips of the
-branches are bifid (fig. 262). The acrospores are very large and
-globose, features also which distinguish this mould from the last. A
-short time since we were called to witness a bed of splendid
-cauliflowers, which had, up to that time, been the pride of their
-cultivator; but, alas! their glory was threatened with speedy
-annihilation, for in nearly every instance the lower leaves had become
-more or less covered on their upper surface with yellow spots, and
-beneath glaucous with the mould we have been describing. The diseased
-leaves were all immediately removed, but we fear without success,
-although no positive information has since reached us. The almost
-unnatural vigorous green of the leaves, prior to the appearance of the
-mould, is not at all an uncommon occurrence: this phenomenon has been
-noticed in the ears of corn, in which every grain was soon afterwards
-filled with spores of bunt.
-
-This species was at one time believed to be parasitic on the “white
-rust,” from which circumstance its specific name was derived. More
-precise examination proves that it sometimes occurs where no white rust
-is present, and therefore its parasitism is imaginary. The suckers in
-this species are large and penetrate the cells, often entirely filling
-them. This feature is sufficient to distinguish the mycelium of the
-mould from that of the “rust.” The turnip mould occurs on many
-cruciferous plants, and especially on the shepherd’s-purse, as well as
-upon the different varieties of cabbage and its more immediate allies.
-
-ONION MOULD.—Another disease, produced by fungi of the same genus, makes
-its appearance upon young onion plants in the spring. The mould is
-called _Peronospora Schleideniana_, and has many features in common with
-those already described. In this instance the threads are greyish and
-erect, with alternate branches, not divided by transverse septa, and the
-spores are obovate, attenuated towards their base (fig. 263). This
-mould, in some years, is very common and destructive, by preventing the
-young plants which are attacked from coming to perfection. It is not
-confined to the onion, but appears on other allied species of _Allium_
-(to which the onion belongs). The threads form large patches or blotches
-on the leaves, and sometimes cover them entirely. It very much resembles
-the turnip mould, from which the form of the spores considerably
-differs. This is the same species as that described by Caspary, and
-afterwards by Berkeley, under the name of _P. destructor_.
-
-_Lettuce Mould._—A very similar mould (_Peronospora gangliformis_) is
-sometimes very common in spring on the under surface of the leaves of
-the cultivated lettuce, appearing in definite white mouldy spots. By
-reference to the figure of a portion of a thread magnified (fig. 265),
-it will be seen that the peculiar form of the tips of the branchlets
-evidences the distinctness of this species.
-
-The oospores are small, globose, and of a yellowish-tawny colour. This
-mould is by no means confined to lettuces, but has also been found on
-species of ragwort, sow-thistle, nipplewort, endive, and other composite
-plants; and has from time to time received numerous names, which it is
-unnecessary to enumerate.
-
-TARE MOULD.—The under surface of the leaves of tares, and sometimes also
-of peas, is liable to attack from an allied species of mould
-(_Peronospora Viciæ_). In the spring of 1846 it appeared amongst vetches
-in some districts to such an extent as at one time to threaten the
-destruction of the crops; but a succession of dry weather at once
-abridged its power and limited its mischief. Mouldy vetches and mouldy
-peas are, especially in moist seasons, evils to which the agriculturist
-knows his crops to be subject; he may not know, however, that this kind
-of mould (fig. 266) is of so near a kin to that which has acquired such
-wide-spread fame in connection with the potato. Another species of
-fungus attacks the garden pea in damp seasons, forming small depressed
-brownish spots on the leaves and pods; but this is quite distinct from
-the mould, though probably not less injurious.
-
-The fertile threads are produced in dense clusters, each many times
-branched, and bearing elliptic acrospores obtuse at their apices, and of
-a violaceous tint (fig. 266). The oospores are beautifully reticulated
-and of a yellowish-brown colour (Plate X. fig. 212).
-
-Trefoil and some other allied plants are attacked by another species,
-characterized by Dr. de Bary as _Peronospora trifoliorum_, which we have
-found rather plentifully in some localities on lucern.
-
-THE PARSNIP MOULD (_Peronospora nivea_, Ung.) is found on many
-umbelliferous plants; but its attacks upon the parsnip are most to be
-deplored, because it injures and ultimately destroys an article of human
-food. The plants infested with this parasite are first attacked in the
-leaves, but afterwards the roots become spotted and diseased in a
-similar manner to the potatoes attacked by its congener. The disease has
-not hitherto been so general with the former as the latter; but in some
-districts it has been far from uncommon.
-
-The fertile threads are collected in bundles, erect, and not so much
-branched as in many other species. The acrospores are subglobose or
-ovoid, and papillate at their apices. This species is sometimes called
-_P. umbelliferarum_, and sometimes _P. macrospora_. Generally speaking
-the average humidity of a season but little affects the production of
-parasitic fungi. In a dry season, like that of 1864, we found as many
-species, and these as flourishing and numerous in individuals, as in a
-proverbially wet year. Such is not the case, however, with the moulds
-under notice, or such fungi as are reproduced through the medium of
-zoospores: these are undoubtedly less common in a very dry season; but
-it must be remembered that a single shower is sufficient for the
-development of zoospores, and occasional showers or heavy dews will
-speed them on their course of destruction as readily almost as
-continuous moisture. The large fungi, on the contrary, become very
-limited in numbers when the weather is unusually dry.
-
-SPINACH MOULD.—Spinach is likewise liable to suffer from the
-establishment of a mould upon the under surface of the leaves:
-unfortunately this is not unfrequent, and has been known in England
-certainly for the last fifty or sixty years, since it was figured by
-Sowerby in his “British Fungi” as many years since. We have lately seen
-a bed of spinach, utterly destroyed by this fungus; whilst on another,
-not twenty yards apart, not a spotted leaf could be found. This mould is
-the _Peronospora effusa_ of botanists; it occurs also on some species of
-goosefoot (Plate X. fig. 215), and probably on knotgrass. To the naked
-eye it appears in pale purplish-grey patches, which, when examined
-microscopically, are found to consist of dense bundles of branched
-threads, bearing ellipsoid acrospores, the membranes of which have a
-violaceous tint. The oogonia produced upon the mycelium vary
-considerably in size. The oospores are of the character delineated in
-our plate (Plate X. fig. 214).
-
-Hitherto all the species of mould to which we have had occasion to refer
-have been found infesting plants more or less employed as food; but
-there remain one or two other species to which we must make special
-reference. One of these affects the most universal of favourites amongst
-flowers: this is the rose mould. Attention was directed to this mould,
-and it was described for the first time under the name of _Peronospora
-sparsa_, in the columns of the _Gardeners’ Chronicle_, in 1862. It
-occurred on a quantity of potted rose-plants in a conservatory.
-Irregular pale brownish discoloured spots appeared on the upper surface
-of the leaves; these extended rapidly, and in a short time the leaves
-withered and shrivelled up, and ultimately the whole plant perished. A
-delicate greyish mould was to be seen by the aid of a lens, scattered
-over the under surface of the leaves. By the microscope, the branched
-threads, having the tips furnished with subelliptic spores, were
-revealed, and an ally of the potato mould found revelling amongst the
-roses.
-
-During the winter of 1863-4, we found the leaves of several species of
-dock occupied by a mould which appears to be a very low form of
-_Peronospora_. Its presence was indicated by brownish orbicular spots,
-on which the fertile threads occurred in small bundles. These threads
-were generally simple, but occasionally forked, bearing rather large
-elliptical acrospores _attached obliquely_ to the tips of the threads
-(fig. 269). In consequence of this peculiarity, we have named the
-species, which does not appear to have been noticed before, _Peronospora
-obliqua_. It is clearly very distinct from another species found on dock
-leaves by Corda.
-
-Of the remaining British species, one (_P. Arenariæ_) is found on the
-leaves of the three-veined sandwort (fig. 268); another attacks the red
-corn-poppy, a third is found on the common nettle, one on the brooklime,
-another on the wood-anemone (fig. 267), and another on the figwort.
-
-Doubtless all the species in this genus are possessed of the third means
-of reproduction, by zoospores, as discovered in the potato mould, not
-only from the acrospores, but also from the oospores.
-
-
- Plate XVI.
-
-[Illustration:
-
- 268.—SANDWORT MOULD.
- _Peronospora Arenariæ._
-]
-
-[Illustration:
-
- 269.—DOCK MOULD.
- _Peronospora obliqua._
-]
-
-
-The fearful rapidity with which this method enables them to multiply
-themselves may account for their widely spreading and devastating power.
-No other genus of fungi can parallel this in the number of species
-injurious to the field or the garden, or in which the injuries inflicted
-are so great and irremediable.
-
- * * * * *
-
-N.B.—Since the foregoing chapter was in type, the Rev. M. J. Berkeley
-informs us that both Mr. Broome and himself have examined the mould on
-dock-leaves, to which we have given the name of _Peronospora obliqua_,
-and have come to the conclusion that it is truly a member of that genus,
-and not hitherto described; but they are also of opinion that it is the
-same mould as one described by Dr. Montagne as _Ascomyces Rumicis_. We
-concur with them in thinking it deficient in the important
-characteristics of _Ascomyces_, and therefore retain its proposed name
-of _P. obliqua_.
-
-
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER XII.
-
- _WHITE MILDEWS OR BLIGHTS._
-
-
-NOTWITHSTANDING the inconvenience to ourselves of calling very different
-fungi by the same common name of “mildew,” the popular mind does not
-recognize the inconvenience, since it scarcely troubles itself to
-inquire whether they are not all the same thing. In obedience to this
-custom, we again write of “mildew,” or “blight,” as it is called in some
-districts, but of a very different kind to that which is so detrimental
-to growing crops of corn. In the present instance it is our intention to
-illustrate a group of fungi which are exceedingly common, and which
-differ greatly in appearance and structure from any to which we have had
-occasion to allude. To obtain a general knowledge of these forms let our
-reader proceed at once to a clump of rank grass; if it is his fortune to
-dwell in the country, the walk of a few yards will suffice. Let him
-examine this clump more carefully, perhaps, than he has been accustomed
-to do, and we venture to predict that he will find some of the leaves
-covered with what appears to be a dirty white mould, or mildew (Plate
-XI. fig. 235). One of these leaves should be collected as carefully and
-conveyed to the microscope as speedily as possible, taking care not to
-touch, or brush it against any other object so as to disturb the
-arrangement of the delicate little threads upon its surface. If a small
-portion, say about an inch, is cut from this leaf with a sharp pair of
-scissors, and laid upon a slide, or pinned down upon a strip of sheet
-cork, so as to keep it flat, and then submitted to examination under the
-microscope, with an inch power, a beautiful forest of crystalline
-vegetation will be observed. If the examiner on this occasion should not
-possess a binocular microscope we are sorry for him, because in that
-case he will not see all that is to be seen under the greatest
-advantages. If we ever truly enjoy looking through such an instrument,
-it is on an occasion like this, when a low power is all that is needed,
-and the object is required to be seen in relief. It is scarcely possible
-to convey an adequate idea of the beauty of such a scene as the
-microscope reveals upon this fragment of grass-leaf. Little bundles of
-delicate threads, clear and crystalline, are seated upon a slender
-branching mycelium. These threads, sometimes erect, sometimes drooping,
-flexuous, or prostrate, are composed of numerous roundish or spherical
-cells attached to each other in a moniliform or bead-like manner (fig.
-236). These easily separate from each other. Let a portion of the
-threads be removed from the leaf on the point of a lancet and laid upon
-a glass slide, with a thin cover over them. Submit this object to a
-quarter-inch power, as a drop of water is let fall at the edge of the
-cover and insinuates itself, by capillary attraction, between the two
-plates of glass. So soon as it touches the moniliform threads, the
-disunion commences, and almost before they are enveloped in the fluid,
-two spherules will scarce remain attached to each other. This delicate
-little mould on the grass leaf at one time bore the name of _Oidium
-monilioides_. It is now regarded only as a condition of another minute
-fungus, to which attention will shortly be directed.
-
-The vine disease, so fearfully destructive on the Continent, and not
-altogether unknown in this country, is another of these incomplete
-fungi. From an individual who at the time of its first discovery in the
-south of England took considerable interest in the subject, it was
-called _Oidium Tuckeri_, which name it continued to bear, both here and
-abroad, until, with many others, probably nearly all of the same genus,
-it was found to be only a barren state of what is called by mycologists
-an _Erysiphe_. The real discoverer of this mildew was undoubtedly the
-Rev. M. J. Berkeley, who has successfully devoted a long life to the
-study of these minute organisms, through evil and through good report,
-and when that study was beset with more difficulties, and received less
-encouragement than at present. If, towards the autumn, we should again
-collect some whitened, mouldy, or mildewed grass-leaves, similar in
-appearance to those mentioned above, and carefully look at them with a
-pocket lens, little black points, almost as small as a pin-point, or
-more resembling the full stop with which, this sentence closes, will be
-found scattered over the white threads. The aid of the microscope must
-be again sought to make out the structure of the little black dots.
-Closely nestling upon the mycelium, the little points will prove to be
-spherical brownish, conceptacles, surrounded with transparent floccose
-appendages. Many other species are far more beautiful than that of the
-grass-leaf, as will be seen by reference to our plate. The variation
-consists chiefly in the form of the appendages which spring from the
-conceptacle and surround it in a radiating (as in figs. 219, 222, 225,
-and 230), or in a more or less confused and entangled manner (as in
-figs. 216, 240, 245, and 251). The surface of the conceptacle is
-minutely reticulated, and its base is attached to the mycelium. When
-first formed, these globose conceptacles are almost colourless; they
-afterwards acquire a yellow colour, and are ultimately of a deep brown.
-The appendages are seldom at all coloured. Within the conceptacle are
-contained from one to several transparent obovoid sacs, or spore-cases,
-called _sporangia_, enclosing a definite number of spores (figs. 218,
-224, 228, &c.), which vary in different species. In the hazel mildew,
-for instance, there are two spores in each _sporangium_; in the willow
-mildew four; in the maple mildew eight; in the grass mildew, and some
-others, numerous. The tips of the appendages are variable, and often
-elegant (figs. 227, 231, 233, 234, and 247), sometimes simple and at
-others symmetrically branched. All the species occur on the still living
-and green parts of plants, especially the leaves, and are therefore
-truly parasitic. A pocket lens will show whether any conceptacles are
-present on any suspicious leaf which may be collected, but high powers
-of the microscope are essential for their complete examination. It is
-during autumn, when vegetation begins to languish, that we shall be most
-successful in searching for specimens. They will then be found almost
-everywhere, and the white mycelium forms an object too conspicuous for
-them to be readily overlooked. Botanically, nearly all the species were
-at one period included in one genus, under the name of _Erysiphe_, a
-name derived from the Greek, and signifying “mildew;” at the present
-time they are distributed through several genera, the chief distinctions
-of which are based upon the form of the appendages. Though personally
-disposed to question the generic value of such distinctions, it would be
-imprudent to adopt any other names here than those to be found in recent
-English works on fungi.
-
-The first species in our enumeration is found on cultivated roses. What
-a deplorable picture does a favourite rose-bush present when attacked by
-this mildew! The leaves blistered, puckered, and contorted; their
-petioles and the peduncles and calyces of the flowers swollen,
-distorted, and grey with mould; and the whole plant looking so diseased
-and leprous that it needs no mycologist to tell that the rose is
-mildewed. The conceptacle in this species is minute, and contains but
-one sporangium, which is one of the characters of the genus in which it
-is now included, and a more justifiable distinction than the
-ramifications of the appendages. The mycelium is rather profuse, and the
-threads or appendages which spring from the conceptacle are simple and
-floccose (fig. 216). The sporangium contains eight ovate spores. This
-species (_Sphærotheca pannosa_, Lev.), in its oidioid or conidiiferous
-form, was for some time known under the name of _Oidium leucoconium_.
-
-An allied species constitutes the hop-mildew, a visitation with which
-some of our Kentish friends are too familiar. This is not a prejudiced
-species in the choice of its habitation, since it is found on many other
-plants, where it flourishes with equal vigour. The meadow-sweet, burnet,
-scabious, teasle, dandelion, and other composite plants, plantain, and
-plants of the cucumber family, all suffer more or less from its roving
-disposition. The mycelium of whitish threads is even more conspicuous
-than in the last species, but the conceptacles are often not to be found
-at all. These are also very minute and most common on the under surface
-of the leaves. The appendages, or fulcra, are simple, floccose (fig.
-217), and coloured. The sporangia are found singly in each conceptacle,
-and each, sporangium contains eight spores.
-
-An autumnal stroll amongst hazel-bushes, when the nuts are ripe, will
-lead, if the nuts are not a greater attraction, to the discovery of
-whitish, patches on the under surface of the leaves, caused by the
-mycelium of the hazel mildew (_Phyllactinia guttata_, Lev.). These
-patches are less distinct and conspicuous than in many other species,
-but the little blackish dots of the conceptacles may be distinguished by
-sharp eyes without the use of the lens. Though possessing a decided
-preference for the hazel, this species is also found on the green leaves
-of the hawthorn, ash, elm, birch, sallow, beech, oak, and hornbeam. The
-conceptacles are larger than in the two preceding species, and somewhat
-depressed above. The appendages are few (fig. 219), radiating, rigid,
-and acicular, or like needles. Each conceptacle contains eight or more
-sporangia, and each sporangium has from two to four spores (fig. 220).
-This species being very common, its conceptacles large, and produced
-copiously, and its appendages distinct, it will prove a good type with
-which the student of these fungi may commence his examinations. This is
-the only representative which we possess of the genus established by M.
-Leveille for such of the _Erysiphei_ as have the conceptacle depressed,
-and the appendages rigid and simple; by which features it is
-distinguished from genuine species of _Erysiphe_.
-
-Two species, also common, having many features agreeing with each other,
-are found on the leaves of the maple and the willow. The willow blight
-(_Uncinula adunca_, Lev.) is found irrespectively on various species of
-poplar and willow (fig. 221). In size and external appearances, to the
-unaided eye, it seems scarcely to differ from the preceding, but more
-minute examination will show that in the appendages there is an
-appreciable difference. Still rigid, but no longer aciculate, the tips
-bent or curved like a little hook, or curled upon themselves (fig. 223),
-radiating and numerous (fig. 222), and at length tending upwards. Many
-sporangia are contained within each conceptacle, each of which is
-furnished with four spores. The amateur must not be disappointed, if, on
-examining mature conceptacles with a view to the discovery of the
-sporangia, he finds only free spores. The investing membrane is very
-delicate, and disappears generally as the spores are matured.
-
-The “blight” or “mildew” which occurs on the common hedge-maple, as well
-as on sycamore leaves, is exceedingly conspicuous when occurring on the
-former plant. The whole bush often presents a hoary appearance as if
-sprinkled with powdered chalk. In the spring, the under surface of the
-leaves of the same plant are liable to become hoary from another cause.
-The whiteness occurs in patches, has often a pinkish or violaceous tint,
-and glistens like hoar-frost. This affection of the leaves was, at one
-time, believed to be produced by a fungus which was called _Erineum
-acerinum_, but now it is regarded as a diseased state of the tissues. In
-the maple mildew, both surfaces of the leaves are alike affected, and
-the little, dark, point-like conceptacles will be found studded over
-both. It is not uncommon to meet with very white leaves, caused by the
-mycelium, but which bear no fruit. The appendages in this species are
-shorter than in the last (fig. 225), and the tips are bifid (fig. 226),
-or divided into two short branches, each of which is bifid, and uncinate
-or hook-shaped (fig. 227). The conceptacles contain not less than eight
-sporangia, each of which encloses eight spores.
-
-Amongst the parasites that prey upon the much abused berberry (which has
-been charged in turn with producing the mildew in corn), is one which
-causes the green leaves to assume a chalky appearance (fig. 229), though
-less conspicuously than in the maple blight. This parasite is the
-berberry mildew (_Microsphæria berberidis_, Lev.). In such localities as
-the writer has met with the berberry suffering from mildew, he has
-invariably found a larger proportion of leaves with the barren mycelium
-than of those on which the conceptacles were developed. Perhaps in other
-localities this may not be the case. The appendages, as will be seen on
-reference to our plate, differ materially from any of those to which we
-have referred; indeed, this genus (or sub-genus) has the most elaborate
-and beautiful forms in these appendages of any of the Erysiphei. A
-figure is given of the tip of a fulcrum from a continental species (_M.
-Ehrenbergii_, Lev.), not yet found in this country (fig. 233). In the
-berberry blight the appendages are straight at the base, but afterwards
-become forked, each fork being again forked, and these yet again
-branched in a similar manner (fig. 230); so that a complex dichotomous
-tip is formed to each of the appendages (fig. 231). Each conceptacle
-contains about six sporangia, and each sporangium contains from six to
-eight spores (fig. 232).
-
-The common gooseberry is also liable to a visitation from an allied
-species, in many respects closely similar, but differing in having the
-tips of the appendages more branched, and the extremities of the
-ultimate branchlets are not entire and attenuated, as in the berberry
-mildew; but divided into two toothlike processes. The conceptacles in
-this species contain from four to eight sporangia, each of which has
-four or five spores.
-
-In England, the leaves of the guelder-rose, and in France (perhaps also
-in this country) those of the alder, nourish a parasite belonging to
-this division. This “blight” possesses so much in common with others to
-which allusion has been made, that it will scarcely be necessary to
-describe it in detail. A figure of the tip of one of the appendages of
-the variety found on the alder is given in the Plate XI. fig. 234.
-
-We have found another species which had not been before noticed in this
-country (_M. Hedwigii_, Lev.), on the leaves of the mealy guelder-rose
-in the vicinity of Darenth Wood, near Dartford, in Kent. The mealy
-character of the leaves of this plant, and the minute size of the
-conceptacles of the parasite, render it difficult to find; indeed, it
-could not be noticed unless it were sought for, as we sought it, lens in
-hand. It only occurs on the under surface of the leaves: the mycelium is
-very web-like and fugacious, the conceptacles minute, globose, and
-scattered (fig. 243). Four sporangia, each containing but four spores
-(fig. 244), are enclosed in each conceptacle, which is surrounded by a
-few appendages (about six) thrice dichotomous, and thickened at the tips
-of the ultimate branches, which are incurved (fig. 247).
-
-The species of true _Erysiphe_ are distinguished botanically from the
-foregoing by the floccose character of the appendages, in which feature
-they accord with the species found on the rose and the hop, but from
-which they differ in the conceptacles containing numerous sporangia
-instead of only one, as in those species.
-
-One of the most common and conspicuous of these is found on the leaves
-and leaf-like stipules of the garden pea. Every leaf in a crop will
-sometimes suffer, and the gardener, to his great mortification, finds
-that the mildew is more prolific than his peas. The leaves become sickly
-and yellow as the mycelium of the fungus spreads over them, when they
-present a peculiar appearance, as if growing beside a chalky road in dry
-dusty weather, and had become covered with comminuted chalk. Soon the
-conceptacles appear, profusely scattered over the white threads, like
-grains of gunpowder (fig. 237), and after a brief struggle for existence
-the pea and its parasite die together. In this species (_Erysiphe
-Martii_, Lev.), the appendages are nearly transparent, short, and much
-interwoven with the mycelium (fig. 238), the globose sporangia
-containing from four to eight spores (fig. 239). It is not confined to
-peas, although that habitat has been here given for it, because it is so
-common upon them. Beans, melilot, St. John’s-wort, some umbelliferous
-plants, and the meadow-sweet, have all been found affected.
-
-The species found on grasses, especially the cocksfoot, has been already
-alluded to. The conceptacles contain from twenty to twenty-four ovate
-sporangia, each enclosing eight spores. The appendages and mycelium are
-much interwoven.
-
-Another of these “white mildews,” not only on account of its frequency
-of occurrence on certain plants, but also from the numerous species of
-phanerogamous plants on which it is found (fig. 240), may be truly
-designated “common” (_Erysiphe communis_, Lk.); many kinds of crow-foot,
-especially _Ranunculus acris_, are subject to its parasitism. It is
-found also on other plants of the same natural order, on the
-rest-harrow, trefoils, enchanter’s nightshade, bindweed, and knotgrass.
-There are from four to eight sporangia in each conceptacle, containing
-from four to eight spores (fig. 241). In this species, more especially,
-M. Tulasne found curious sucker-like processes developed on the threads
-of the mycelium (fig. 242): their office may probably be only that of
-attachment.
-
-Of the other species found in Britain an enumeration will suffice, since
-they contain no feature of interest to the microscopist; and all the
-members of this section are far less beautiful than those in other
-genera (especially _Microsphæria_).
-
-The leaves of the dogwood or cornel (figs. 245, 246) are the home of one
-species (_E. tortilis_, Lk.), and the burdock of another (_E.
-Montagnei_, Lev.). Both of these, in addition to the above, have
-sporangia which contain more than two spores. There are also two species
-in which only two spores are contained in each sporidium. One of these
-(_E. Linkii_, Lev.) is found on both surfaces of the leaves of the
-mugwort (figs. 248, 249); the other (_E. lamprocarpa_, Lev.) occurs on
-salsafy, scorzonera, weasel-snout, and plantain (figs. 250, 251).
-
-These complete the _Erysiphei_; but there are allied species of too much
-interest not to be noticed in connection with them. Three very singular
-fungi are found on damp straw and paper; two on the former and one on
-the latter. Of the species occurring on straw, the most common one is
-figured, natural size, in our plate (fig. 257); but from this no idea
-can be formed of its structure, which in some points resembles an
-_Erysiphe_. The conceptacles are thin and brittle, and are clothed
-externally with long dark-coloured branched hairs (figs. 258, 259). The
-conceptacle contains long narrow sporangia, each enclosing dark, almost
-black, lemon-shaped sporidia. For low powers this is a very interesting
-object. The minute structure affords no feature of popular interest.
-This fungus (which bears the name of _Chætomium elatum_) is common on
-old straw, thatch, reeds, matting, &c., resembling small brown tufts of
-hair, visible to the naked eye.
-
-Paper much exposed to damp will occasionally develop a similar
-“bristle-mould,” surrounded by a yellowish spot (_Chætomium chartarum_,
-Ehrb.); but it is not so common as the last. In habit and structure it
-is very similar (figs. 252, 253).
-
-In 1838, the Rev. M. J. Berkeley announced the discovery by him of a
-singular production, for which he was unable to find a fitting location
-in any genus then established, and for which he accordingly
-characterized a new one, under the name of _Ascotricha_. This new
-species of paper mildew was found by him on some printed paper in a box.
-It somewhat resembles the other species above alluded to, at a casual
-glance; but more minute examination will reveal its differences. The
-author to whom we are indebted for this species thus describes its
-development. At first it appears as a minute branched mould interspersed
-with globose brownish conidia. As it advances in growth, globose black
-peridia become visible amongst the threads, clothed with and supported
-by alternately branched obscurely-jointed filaments, the branches of
-which generally form an acute angle with the stem (fig. 254). The
-ramification of these is very peculiar, the stem and main shaft of each
-sub-division being almost constantly shortened and surmounted by the
-branches given off near its apex; this, again, is often abbreviated and
-another branchlet given off, which again surpasses it; and occasionally
-the same circumstance takes place a third time. The apices are clavate
-and colourless; the rest of the filaments, when viewed by transmitted
-light, brown, even, and pellucid: a few globose conidia are usually
-attached to them (fig. 255). The conceptacle is thin, black to the naked
-eye, of an olive-brown under the microscope, filled with a mass of
-linear extremely transparent asci (fig. 256), each containing a single
-row of broadly elliptic chocolate sporidia. These have a paler border;
-sometimes the colour entirely vanishes, either from age or abortion, and
-there is only a minute globose nucleus or more probably a vesicle of
-air, in the centre; occasionally they become so transparent that the
-globular bodies alone are visible. After the conceptacles burst, several
-are frequently collected together into an irregular linear body, which
-consists principally of the conglomerated sporidia.
-
-One other very common and troublesome little fungus (_Eurotium
-herbariorum_) will for the present close our examples. This is found
-creeping over dried plants preserved in herbaria, on decaying fruit,
-preserves, and various other substances, sometimes animal as well as
-vegetable, but chiefly the latter. To the naked eye it appears as a
-myriad of little yellow spherical bodies, of the size of very small
-pins’ heads, resting upon fine cobweb-like threads (fig. 260). When
-magnified, the surface of the conceptacles is seen to be reticulated
-(fig. 261). In the interior the sporidia are borne, contained also, as
-in the former instance, in asci. It has been considered _probable_, but
-as yet not fully proved, that this mildew is a compound fruited
-(ascigerous) condition of an equally common mould (_Aspergillus_).
-
-Dr. Shortt, of Chingleput, in a recent report on the growth and
-production of Indian Cotton, remarks that the plants are subject to the
-attacks of a kind of mildew. He writes:—“They appear in the form of
-rounded fibres or thallus, shooting up in the air, having the lamina of
-the leaf as a base, and feeling villous to the touch. The small fibrillæ
-that form the nap appear shooting up as sharp projections when seen by
-the naked eye; under the microscope they are found to consist of pointed
-tubes, interspersed here and there with minute granular cells. It first
-attacks either the upper surface of the petioles, or the margins of the
-leaf, gradually extending over the lamina, and matting together the
-whole leaf into a greyish-white, felty mass. At first it attacks the
-young shoots and tender leaves, preventing them from expanding. The
-extension of the parasite deprives the plant of its juices, and
-eventually either destroys or renders it sterile. The spores seem to be
-derived from the atmosphere, and finding the plant in a state fit to
-receive them, from either the results of excessive cultivation, or from
-the effects of heat and want of moisture rendering it unhealthy, and
-thus favouring the reception of the spores of the fungi. Another variety
-speckles the leaves with whitish dots. These remain separate, but the
-lamina is covered with them, and in time the leaf changes colour,
-becomes yellowish, and eventually dies away. This is evidently the
-disease called _Bunt_, or some variety of it, as it is seated beneath
-the epidermis, and eventually the spores escape. Under the microscope
-they seem to consist of small dark cells or spots attached to a
-thread-like mycelium.”
-
-The writer seems certainly to have made a mistake in its affinities, and
-on the faith of the above quotation we should be more disposed to regard
-it as an _Erysiphe_. It is to be hoped that specimens of the affected
-leaves will be forwarded to this country for examination.
-
-
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER XIII.
-
- _SUGGESTIONS._
-
-
-IF, in offering a few practical suggestions, we either repeat ourselves,
-or communicate common-place hints, those who may know already all we
-shall essay to tell them will please to pardon and pass on.
-
-All the information essential under this head relates to collecting,
-examining, and preserving microscopic fungi.
-
-Collecting does not differ, except in the objects themselves, from any
-other botanical collecting. Those who attempt it must be prepared to
-sacrifice their kid gloves and patent-leather boots, to put on
-waterproofs and perseverance, and come home sometimes disappointed. The
-requisites for good work are but few, and easily supplied. A strong
-knife, a pocket lens, and a box or leather bag, will be all that is
-really essential. But where shall we go—and when? Hedge-banks, the sides
-of ditches, borders of woods, anywhere, if the plants are to be found on
-which the fungi are parasitic. We flatter ourselves on being rather
-successful in collecting, and our favourite localities have always been
-the dampest places in woods, railway-banks, and waste places. It is a
-great mistake to endeavour to go over a large tract of ground. We have
-spent a whole day in a little chalkpit, which had fallen into disuse,
-and grown wild. Fifty yards into a wood is as much, as we attempt, when
-alone; and a spot six yards square has afforded us occupation for hours.
-It is better to examine a small space thoroughly than to scamper on,
-mile after mile, and find nothing.
-
-When? is as much to be noted as where! All the year round we shall be
-sure of finding something of interest. As soon as the last patch of
-winter’s snow has melted from the ground, and green leaves begin to
-unfold themselves, the search may begin. Cluster-cups (_Æcidium_) will
-be the earliest forms encountered. On the leaves of _Lapsana communis_,
-and the pilewort, these will be found before the majority of plants have
-burst their buds. Henceforth, other forms will gradually appear, until
-May or June. One or two species of _Puccinia_ will be seen in April or
-May, but from that period until autumn, species of _Trichobasis_ will be
-common. In June and July the smuts belonging to the genus _Ustilago_ are
-most plentiful, and from August to October _Puccinia_ and its allied
-genera will have the ascendant; so that from March to October there is
-continually succeeding each other some species of parasitic fungus
-belonging to the Uredines. From October to March need be no more a
-season of repose from the search of these minute plants than from March
-to October. So long as the ground is not covered with snow there will
-always be something to find on dead leaves, rotten sticks, &c., when
-there is not a green leaf to be seen. But these belong to a section to
-which we have studiously avoided all reference in the foregoing pages.
-
-General instructions will not always apply; but in most instances, the
-lowest and earliest leaves, in which vitality appears to decline, will
-be most likely to suffer from the attacks of fungi. This rule must not
-be too stringently applied; the species of _Æcidium_, for instance, will
-generally be found on vigorous green leaves.
-
-Having found a plant infected with some rust or brand, and by means of a
-pocket lens assured yourself that it is such, although the power is
-insufficient to tell what it is, collect as many leaves as you are
-likely to require; place them flat one upon the other, to prevent their
-curling up at the edges, should the weather be hot, and yourself far
-from home, and lay them in your box; or if you should take in preference
-an old book with stiff covers, place them separately between the leaves
-of your book, and they will be in still better condition, if you desire
-to preserve them. Arrived at home with the results of your trip, proceed
-at once to lay them between folds of blotting-paper, submit them to a
-gentle pressure, and change the papers daily until your leaves are dry,
-not forgetting to keep a scrap of paper with each collection, stating
-date and locality, to which, after microscopical examination, the name
-may be added. When thoroughly dry, your leaves may be preserved for
-reference in old envelopes, with the particulars endorsed on the
-outside. Fungi on leaves will generally be examined to the greatest
-advantage in the fresh state, but if too much pressure is not employed
-in the drying, it will not be difficult even in that condition to make
-out their characteristic features. Care must be taken, by changing their
-position, that moulds of other kinds do not establish themselves upon
-the specimens in drying, or that when dried they do not fall a prey to
-_Eurotium herbariorum_.
-
-If it is intended to add these leaves to your herbarium, or to form a
-special herbarium for them, they should be mounted on white paper, first
-by affixing one or two leaves by means of thin glue to a paper about
-four inches square, on which the name, date, and locality may be
-written, and attaching several of these _species_-papers to a larger or
-_genus_-paper, or by devoting each larger paper to a species, adding in
-future other varieties, and enclosing all the _species_-papers of the
-same genus within a folded sheet, on which the name of the genus is
-written.
-
-We have adopted, for our own herbarium, the “foolscap” size. A sheet of
-paper receives within its fold the specimens of a single species; these
-are affixed to the right-hand page, when the sheet is open, and a small
-envelope is attached by its face to the same page at the bottom, in
-which loose specimens are kept for minute and special examination, or as
-duplicates. When the sheet is folded, the specific name is written at
-the right-hand lower corner, or, what is better, a strip containing that
-name and its number is cut from a copy of the “Index Fungorum,” kept for
-the purpose, and gummed in its place. The remainder of this page, which
-is of white cartridge paper, is occupied with memoranda referring to the
-species enclosed, sketches of the spores, synonyms, references to
-descriptions, &c. All the species-papers of each genus are placed
-together within a sheet of brown paper, half an inch larger in each
-direction, with the name of the genus written at the left-hand corner. A
-piece of millboard, the size of the covers when folded, separates each
-order.
-
-When a leaf, or other portion of a plant, is to be examined under the
-microscope, with the view of determining the genus and species of its
-parasite, it may be fastened with small pins to a piece of sheet cork,
-two or three inches square, and about one-eighth of an inch in
-thickness, such as used for lining entomological cabinets, and so placed
-under a lens that it may easily be brought into focus, and both hands
-left at liberty; or a dissecting microscope may be used for the purpose.
-From one of the pustules the spores may be removed on the sharp point of
-a penknife, and placed in a drop of water on a glass slide. A thin glass
-cover is placed over the drop of water, and the slide is submitted to
-examination. For further satisfaction it will often be found necessary
-to make carefully a thin section of a pustule, and place this under the
-microscope, a more troublesome but also much more satisfactory method.
-Reference to the Appendix will soon determine the name and position of
-the fungus, provided it belongs to the section to which this volume is
-devoted.
-
-If it is thought desirable to mount the spores as permanent objects,
-there is no obstacle to such a proceeding. The spores of the different
-species of _Aregma_, of _Triphragmium_, and many of the _Pucciniæ_, will
-be worth the trouble. We have tried several media, and only adopted
-Glycerine or Balsam; either of these, especially the former, if the
-greater difficulty of securely closing can be overcome, will answer the
-purpose.
-
-It should be remarked that in the examination of moulds, such as those
-of the genus _Peronospora_, included in this work, if any fluid be
-added, the acrospores are immediately disconnected from the threads, and
-float in the medium; so that if their mode of attachment or arrangement
-would be studied, that must be achieved without the addition of any
-fluid whatever.
-
-The best methods of observing germination, the production of zoospores,
-&c., have been detailed already.
-
-Thus do we arrive at the close of the task which we had set ourselves to
-perform. This fragment of a history of microscopic fungi goes forth to
-plead for students, and prepare the path for somewhat more complete. Is
-it not a shame that more than two thousand species of plants (never mind
-how minute, how insignificant) should be known to exist, and constitute
-a flora, in a nation amongst the foremost in civilization, and yet be
-without a complete record? It is nevertheless true that hundreds of
-minute organisms, exquisite in form, marvellous in structure, mysterious
-in development, injurious to some, linked with the existence of all, are
-known to flourish in Britain without a history or description, in the
-language of, or produced in, the country they inhabit. It is also true
-that the descriptions, by which they should be known, of hundreds of the
-rest lie buried in a floating literature whence the youthful and ardent
-student needs, not only youth and ardour, but leisure and perseverance
-unlimited to unearth them. This, however, by the way; we may be too
-great dotards on our native land, and foolish in our desire to see her
-in advance, and not in the rear in scientific attainments, pursuits, and
-productions of other and, perhaps, less favoured nations.
-
-Already we fear that some of our readers will have thought our story of
-rust, brand, and mildew interminable, and looked anxiously for the
-close. On the other hand, we would flatter ourselves into the belief
-that some have made a new acquaintance with these minute and mysterious
-forms, and would fain know more. The groups of fungi which we have
-endeavoured to illustrate have, with but few exceptions, one feature in
-common, _i.e._, that they are parasitic on living plants. These
-constitute but a small portion of the microscopical species found in
-this country. To the elegant forms of mould which inhabit decaying
-vegetable substances no allusion has been made. These constitute a fairy
-flora of forests and gardens with features as varied, and fruits as
-multiform, as those of the trees and flowers of the earth. The numerous,
-and often marvellous, phases of low life developed upon dead leaves and
-rotten sticks, would in description occupy a far greater space than we
-have devoted to our subject. Yet, for all these, we have not spared so
-much as a passing word. The treasures still left unopened are far richer
-than even those we have revealed. The gates of another world have been
-thrown open, but we have scarcely passed the threshold. A minutely and
-elaborately illuminated page of the book of Nature has been turned, and
-we have only perused a single line. We might traverse the primeval
-forests of the new world, and explore the unknown regions of the old,
-and not encounter so much to excite our admiration, or cause our wonder,
-as lies about our feet at home; marvels which we tread beneath our feet,
-or kick from our path, because they appear to be only rotten sticks,
-withered grass, and decaying leaves. All this may appear as the dream of
-an enthusiast, or the ravings of one on whom the moon has shone too
-often. When Columbus spoke of a new world beyond the seas, which he
-longed to seek and explore, some believed him duped, and others called
-him mad. We write of no chimerical El Dorado, we speak of no
-undiscovered world, and yet we seem to allude to wonders still unknown,
-because so few have had the courage to venture upon the journey for
-themselves.
-
-In sober earnestness, however, let us commend this pursuit to all who
-possess a microscope and leisure to use it. It may be for a time the
-“pursuit of knowledge under difficulties,” on account of the condition
-of our literature on this special subject; but many workers will produce
-more readers, and good books will come when there are more to purchase
-and appreciate. It is not improbable that in more cases than have come
-under our own observation, microscopists wearied of diatoms and allied
-forms, or deeming themselves in possession of all that is novel or
-interesting in this direction, are seeking for a new field of labour,
-and a new subject to kindle up a new enthusiasm. To these we have
-advised, and to any more such we continue to advise, that fungi should
-have a fair trial. If variety is desired, here they will have at least
-2,000 species for a knowledge of which the microscope is essential. If
-they thirst for discovery, let them be assured that here also the
-earnest worker is sure to meet with such a reward. Or if they would
-acquaint themselves with the manifestations of Divine power as developed
-in the most minute of created things, let them follow such observers as
-Tulasne and De Bary, and seek the “why and the wherefore” of the
-phenomena of mycetal life.
-
-If there should still be any hesitation whether there is in this pursuit
-sufficient of the element of variety, for those who do not desire to
-pursue the subject into its deepest scientific recesses, to render it
-available for them, let them go to a good public library, such as that
-of the British Museum, and inquire for the large illustrated work by
-Corda, entitled “Icones Fungorum,” or the more recent volumes by Tulasne
-(Selecta Fungorum Carpologia), and examine the figures of microscopic
-fungi in either of those works, and decide for themselves.
-
-
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
-
-
- APPENDIX A.
-
- ----------
-
- CLASSIFICATION & DESCRIPTIONS OF FUNGI CONTAINED IN THIS VOLUME.
-
- -------
-
-
- =ÆCIDIACEI=.
-
- Peridium elongated—
-
- separating in threads _Rœstelia_.
-
- rupturing irregularly _Peridermium_.
-
- Peridium abbreviated, or _Æcidium_.
- semi-immersed
-
- Peridium immersed _Endophyllum_.
-
-
- RŒSTELIA, _Reb._
-
- _Peridium_ elongated, at length opening by lateral fissures, or a
- terminal lacerated mouth. _Spermogonia_ on the opposite surface,
- on the same or on different leaves.
-
-=Rœstelia cancellata=, Reb. PEAR-LEAF RŒSTELIA; spots yellow, then red,
-prominent; peridia split to the base into laciniæ, which remain united
-at the apex.—On Pear leaves. Not very common. Autumn. (Plate II. figs.
-20, 21.)
-
-=Rœstelia cornuta=, Tul. HORN-LIKE RŒSTELIA; spots rusty-brown; peridia
-cylindrical, slightly curved, yellowish-brown; spores greyish, at length
-brown.—On the under surface of the leaves of Mountain-Ash. Not common.
-August. (Plate II. figs. 18, 19.)
-
-=Rœstelia lacerata=, Tul. LACERATED RŒSTELIA; peridia clustered in
-tufts, brown, elongated, splitting to the base in segments; spores light
-brown.—On the under surface of the leaves, and on the petioles and fruit
-of the Hawthorn. Not uncommon. May to July. (Plate II. figs. 22, 26.)
-
-
- PERIDERMIUM, _Chev._
-
- _Peridium_ elongated, at length bursting irregularly. _Spermogonia_
- scattered, conspicuous.
-
-=Peridermium Pini=, Chev.; peridia oblong, scattered, large; spores
-orange, abundant; spermogonia vernal or autumnal, or both; spermatia
-large, white.—On leaves and young branches of Scotch Fir. Common in
-Scotland, occasional in England. Summer. (Plate II. figs. 27, 28.)
-
-=Peridermium elatinum=, Lk.; simple, immersed; peridia elliptic, pallid;
-sporidia orange.—On Silver Fir, altering both foliage and ramification.
-Not common.
-
-
- ÆCIDIUM, _Pers._
-
- _Peridium_ seldom elongated, opening by a terminal mouth, surrounded
- by a fringe of recurved teeth, or when short bursting
- irregularly. _Spores_ disposed in chains. _Spermogonia_ on the
- same or the opposite surface, clustered or scattered, central or
- intermixed.
-
- SECT. I.—_Peridia scattered_ (_not collected in tufts or clusters_).
-
-=Æcidium leucospermum=, DC. WHITE-SPORED CLUSTER-CUPS; spots yellowish;
-peridia scattered, often covering the whole under surface; spores white,
-ovate.—On both sides of the leaves of the wood-anemone. Common. June.
-(Plate I. figs. 4-6.)
-
-=Æcidium quadrifidum=, DC. FOUR-LOBED CLUSTER-CUPS; spots brownish;
-peridia scattered, occupying almost the entire under surface; spores
-brown, subglobose.—On the under side of leaves of Anemone in gardens.
-(Lobes at the mouth of the peridium not constantly four.) April to May.
-
-=Æcidium albescens=, Grev. MOSCHATEL CLUSTER-CUPS; leaf blistered,
-whitish, scattered; peridia white, split into a few large teeth; spores
-yellowish-white.—On leaves and petioles of _Adoxa moschatellina_. Not
-uncommon. April.
-
-=Æcidium Epilobii=, DC. WILLOW-HERB CLUSTER-CUPS; spots obliterated;
-peridia scattered, at length oval, wider above; spores orange, at length
-brown.—On the under side of leaves of _Epilobium montanum_, _E.
-hirsutum_, and _E. palustre_, rarely on the upper. Common. June to
-August.
-
-=Æcidium Thesii=, Desv. BASTARD-TOADFLAX CLUSTER-CUPS; spots
-obliterated; peridia scattered or biseriate; short, cylindrical, margin
-irregularly toothed, erect; spores yellowish, then dingy.—On _Thesium
-humifusum_. Downs near Winchester. July, 1864. Chipstead, Surrey, Oct.
-14, 1864. (Plate III. figs. 50, 51.)
-
-=Æcidium Soldanellæ=, Hornsch. SOLDANELLA CLUSTER-CUPS; spots
-obliterated; peridia solitary, scattered over the inferior surface;
-spores orange.—On the under surface of the leaves of _Soldanella
-alpina_.
-
-=Æcidium Tragopogonis=, Pers. GOATSBEARD CLUSTER-CUPS; spots
-obliterated; peridia scattered, torn, wider above; spores orange, at
-length black.—On stems, leaves, and involucres of common Goatsbeard.
-Very common. May to June. (Plate I. figs. 1-3.)
-
-=Æcidium Euphorbiæ=, Pers. SPURGE CLUSTER-CUPS; spots obliterated, leaf
-thickened; peridia scattered or crowded, distinct; spores orange.—On the
-under surface of the leaves of Spurge. Common. May to June.
-
-
- SECT. II. _Peridia in tufts or clusters._
-
- α. _Elongatæ._
-
-=Æcidium Berberidis=, Pers. BERBERRY CLUSTER-CUPS; spots roundish,
-bright red; subiculum thickened; peridia in subrotund or oval patches,
-often elongated; spores orange.—On leaves, peduncles, and fruit of the
-common Berberry. Common. May to July. (Plate I. figs. 7-9.)
-
-=Æcidium Thalictri=, Grev. MEADOW-RUE CLUSTER-CUPS; collected in
-roundish clusters; peridia oblong; spores bright orange.—On _Thalictrum
-alpinum_. Not uncommon in Scotland.
-
-=Æcidium crassum=, Pers. BUCKTHORN CLUSTER-CUPS; spots yellow-brown,
-subiculum thickened; peridia crowded into a roundish heap, at first
-globose, yellow, at length open; spores orange.—On _Rhamnus catharticus_
-and _R. frangula_. Common.
-
-=Æcidium Periclymeni=, DC. HONEYSUCKLE CLUSTER-CUPS; spots variegated,
-yellow and brown, subiculum thickened; peridia sometimes elongated, in
-roundish or effused heaps; spores orange.—On the under surface of
-Honeysuckle leaves. Not common. June to August.
-
-
- β. _Poculiformæ._
-
-=Æcidium Calthæ.= Grev. MARSH-MARIGOLD CLUSTER-CUPS; aggregate; peridia
-somewhat campanulate, with numerous minute marginal teeth; spores bright
-orange, subglobose or oval.—On leaves and petioles of _Caltha
-palustris_. Margin of peridia pale and brittle. Rare. Spring.
-
-=Æcidium Ranunculacearum=, DC. CROWFOOT CLUSTER-CUPS; spots obliterated,
-subiculum thickened; peridia in irregular heaps, densely crowded
-together; spores orange.—On leaves of various _Ranunculaceæ_; very
-common on _R. Ficaria_, not uncommon on _R. repens_, more rarely on _R.
-acris_ and _R. bulbosus_. Spring. (Plate II. figs. 12-14.)
-
-=Æcidium Galii=, Pers. BEDSTRAW CLUSTER-CUPS; spots linear or oblong,
-obscurely brown; peridia scattered, rarely aggregate, dentate, whitish;
-spores white.—On the leaves of _Galium verum_ and _G. mollugo_. (Plate
-II. figs. 15-17.)
-
-I am doubtful whether the _Æcidium_ on _Galium mollugo_ is really this
-species.—(_M. C. C._)
-
-=Æcidium Bunii=, DC. PIG-NUT CLUSTER-CUPS; spots obliterated, subiculum
-thickened; peridia in irregular subrotund or oval heaps; spores
-orange.—On _Bunium bulbocastanum_ and _Pimpinella saxifraga_. Spring.
-
-=Æcidium Valerianacearum=, Dub. VALERIAN CLUSTER-CUPS; hypogenous,
-rarely cauline, spots on a thickened subcircular or oblong base; peridia
-scattered, more or less crowded, cup-shaped, tawny, margin erect,
-denticulate; spores dirty-yellow.—On _Valeriana officinalis_ and _V.
-dioica_. North Britain.
-
-=Æcidium Asperifolii=, Pers. BORAGE CLUSTER-CUPS; clusters subrotund, on
-a slightly thickened subiculum; peridia scattered; spores
-yellowish-white.—On leaves of various _Boragineæ_. Summer. The parts of
-the leaves on which it occurs are rendered concave on one side and
-convex on the other.
-
-=Æcidium Grossulariæ=, DC. GOOSEBERRY CLUSTER-CUPS; spots yellow, bright
-red on the opposite side, with a yellow border; peridia crowded in
-roundish heaps, at length brown, and surrounded with a brown area;
-spores orange.—On leaves and fruit of Gooseberry and Currant. Common.
-May to June.
-
-=Æcidium Urticæ=, DC. NETTLE CLUSTER-CUPS; spots obliterated, subiculum
-thickened; peridia disposed in elongated or subrotund heaps, at first
-subglobose, then gaping; spores orange.—On leaves and stems of Nettles,
-distorting them very much. Common. June. (Plate I. figs. 10, 11.)
-
-=Æcidium Behenis=, DC. BLADDER-CAMPION CLUSTER-CUPS; spots yellow, brown
-on opposite side; peridia somewhat circinating, in subrotund heaps;
-spores brown.—On _Silene inflata_. Not common. Some of the peridia are
-short and open, others larger and closed.
-
-=Æcidium Orobi=, DC. BITTER-VETCH CLUSTER-CUPS; spots yellow, effused;
-peridia scattered and disposed in small heaps; spores at length
-white.—On stems and leaves of _Orobus tuberosus_. Scotland.
-
-
- γ. _Subimmersæ._
-
-=Æcidium Compositarum=, Mart. COMPOSITE CLUSTER-CUPS; spots purplish,
-subrotund, confluent above; peridia crowded, in orbicular patches, or
-circinating, on the under surface; spores orange, oval.
-
-Var. _a._ _Taraxaci_, Grev.; clusters small, scattered.—On leaves of the
-Dandelion. June to July.
-
-Var. _b._ _Prenanthis_, Pers.; spots circular or irregular, purplish;
-subiculum incrassated.—On leaves of Hawkweed (_Hieracium paludosum_).
-Summer.
-
-Var. _c._ _Tussilaginis_, Pers.; clusters round, on a thickened base;
-peridia circinating.—On the under surface of leaves of Coltsfoot and
-Butter-bur. Common. Autumn.
-
-Var. _d._ _Jacobæa_, Grev.; pustular, soon becoming agglomerated,
-numerous, depressed; peridia splitting into short, brittle,
-yellowish-white teeth.—On leaves of _Senecio Jacobæa_ and _Sonchus
-arvensis_. June to August.
-
-Var. _e._ _Lapsani_, Purt.; spots purplish, irregular, confluent, on
-both sides of the leaves; peridia amphigenous, in irregular patches or
-scattered, not prominent, teeth numerous, minute, reflexed; spores
-yellow, oval.—On both surfaces of the leaves of _Lapsana communis_.
-April. Not uncommon.
-
-=Æcidium Saniculæ=, Carm. SANICLE CLUSTER-CUPS; spots purplish, slightly
-incrassated, small, scattered, roundish; peridia in small circulate
-clusters, hypogenous, and on the petioles, at first hemispherical, at
-length open, margin with from 4 to 6 spreading lobes; spores yellowish,
-elliptical.—On the under surface of the leaves and on the petioles of
-_Sanicula Europæa_. Not uncommon. May and June.
-
-=Æcidium Violæ=, Schum. _Violet Cluster-Cups_; spots yellowish; peridia
-in irregular heaps, seriate and scattered; spores orange, at length
-brown.—On leaves, petioles, and sepals of Violets. Common. May and June.
-
-=Æcidium Poterii=, Cooke. BURNET CLUSTER-CUPS; spots obliterated,
-clusters subrotund or elongated; peridia hypogenous and on the petioles,
-circinating or scattered, immersed, margin irregularly fringed with
-numerous minute teeth, soon falling away; spores yellowish, oval.—On the
-under surface of the leaflets and on the petioles of _Poterium
-Sanguisorba_. Rare. May and June. Dartford Brent, Kent.
-
-=Æcidium Geranii=, DC. CRANESBILL CLUSTER-CUPS; spots yellow and purple;
-peridia in circinating clusters; spores yellow, at length brown.—On the
-under surface of leaves of _Geranium pratense_ and _G. dissectum_. Not
-common.
-
-=Æcidium Menthæ=, DC. MINT CLUSTER-CUPS; spots obliterated; subiculum
-thickened; peridia scattered, emersed, or aggregate immersed; spores
-orange, elliptic.—On various Mints. Common.
-
-=Æcidium Scrophulariæ=, DC. FIGWORT CLUSTER-CUPS; spots yellowish;
-peridia in roundish circinate clusters (rarely scattered) on the under
-surface; spores whitish, becoming tawny.—On the leaves of _Scrophularia
-aquatica_. Thame and Sydenham, Oxon.
-
-=Æcidium Pedicularis=, Lobosch. RED-RATTLE CLUSTER-CUPS; spots
-obliterated, subiculum thickened; peridia thickly and irregularly
-clustered, subimmersed; spores dirty, pallid orange.—On petioles,
-leaves, and stems of _Pedicularis palustris_. Not common.
-
-=Æcidium Primulæ=, DC. PRIMROSE CLUSTER-CUPS; spots obliterated; peridia
-solitary, scattered, and crowded, hypogenous; spores whitish-yellow.—On
-the under surface of leaves of Primroses. Not common. May.
-
-=Æcidium rubellum=, Pers. DOCK CLUSTER-CUPS; spots purple; peridia
-circinating, centre free; spores yellowish-white.—On leaves of Dock and
-Sorrel. Not uncommon in moist localities. May and June.
-
-=Æcidium Ari=, Berk. WAKE-ROBIN CLUSTER-CUPS; spots round, confluent;
-peridia circinating, not crowded, central ones abortive.—On leaves of
-_Arum maculatum_. Not common. June and July.
-
-=Æcidium Dracontii=, Schwein. ARUM CLUSTER-CUPS; spots pallid,
-extensively scattered over the leaves, sometimes nearly covering them;
-peridia large, scattered, abundant, disposed without order on the spots;
-spores orange.—On _Arum triphyllum_, in gardens. Melbury, 1863 (_Rev. M.
-J. B._) A North American species.
-
-=Æcidium Allii=, Grev. GARLIC CLUSTER-CUPS; spots pale; peridia
-circinating, not contiguous; spores yellowish.—On leaves of broad-leaved
-Garlic (_Allium ursinum_). June and July.
-
-
- ENDOPHYLLUM, _Lév._
-
-_Peridium_ enclosed within the substance of the leaf, bursting
-irregularly.
-
-=Endophyllum Sempervivi=, Lév.; peridia immersed, elliptic or roundish;
-spores ochraceous, becoming brownish.—On leaves of Houseleek.
-
-
- PUCCINIÆI.
-
- _a._ _Spores stipitate._
-
-
- Spores multiseptate—
- moniliform _Xenodochus_.
- cylindrical _Aregma_.
- biseptate _Triphragmium_.
- uniseptate _Puccinia_.
-
- _b._ _Spores immersed in gelatine._
-
- Stroma tremelloid and expanded _Gymnosporangium_.
- clavate or club-shaped _Podisoma_.
-
- XENODOCHUS, Schl.
-
- Spores multiseptate, moniliform, breaking up into many distinct
- articulations.—_Berk. Outl._, pp. 328.
-
-=Xenodochus carbonarius=, Schl. BURNET CHAIN-BRAND; scattered, in small
-tufts, hypogenous; spores curved or straight, composed of from 5 to 15
-articulations; obtuse at one extremity, slightly attenuate at the
-other.—On Burnet. Very rare. (Plate III. fig. 29.)
-
-
- AREGMA, Fr.
-
- Spores cylindrical, multiseptate, scarcely moniliform, borne on a
- long peduncle.—_Berk. Outl._, p. 329.
-
-=Aregma mucronatum=, Fr. ROSE BRAND; hypogenous, scattered over the
-leaves in minute tufts; spores 5- to 7-septate, terminal joint
-mucronate; peduncles incrassated below, fusiform.—On leaves of various
-Roses. Autumn. Frequent. (Plate III. fig. 38.)
-
-=Aregma acuminatum=, Fr. BURNET BRAND; hypogenous, scattered in minute
-tufts; spores multiseptate, terminal joint acuminate; peduncles
-equal.—On Burnet leaves. July. Common. (Plate III. fig. 32.)
-
-=Aregma bulbosum=, Fr. BRAMBLE BRAND; hypogenous, with a dull red stain
-on the upper surface; spores in large tufts, 4-septate, terminal joint
-apiculate; peduncles incrassated, and bulbous at the base.—On Bramble
-leaves. Autumn. Very common. (Plate III. fig. 41.)
-
-=Aregma gracile=, Berk. RASPBERRY BRAND; hypogenous, scattered, in small
-tufts; spores 7- to 9-septate, the terminal joint apiculate; peduncles
-slender.—On Raspberry leaves. Autumn. (Plate III. fig. 43.)
-
-=Aregma obtusatum=, Fr. STRAWBERRY BRAND; hypogenous, scattered, in
-minute tufts; spores multiseptate, terminal joint obtuse; peduncles
-equal.—On leaves of barren Strawberry. Autumn. Common. (Plate III. fig.
-35.)
-
-
- TRIPHRAGMIUM, Lk.
-
- Spores trilocular, septa mostly vertical and horizontal.—_Berk.
- Outl._, p. 332.
-
-=Triphragmium Ulmariæ=, Lk. MEADOW-SWEET BRAND; spots obliterated; sori
-at first subrotund, covered with the epidermis; at length, when the
-cuticle has vanished, effuse; spores brown, subturbinate, divided by a
-vertical dissepiment, shortly pedicellate.—On leaves of Meadow-sweet,
-_Spiræa ulmaria_. Autumn. (Plate III. fig. 48.)
-
-
- PUCCINIA, Pers.
-
- Spores uniseptate, supported on a distinct peduncle.—_Berk. Outl._,
- p. 329.
-
-=Puccinia graminis=, Pers. CORN MILDEW; spots pale, diffuse; sori
-linear, confluent, amphigenous; spores at length black, clavate, very
-slightly constricted.—On the leaves and culms of corn and grass. Autumn.
-Very common, and injurious to corn. (Plate IV. figs. 57-59.)
-
-Var. _β. Arundinis_, Grev. Sori broad; spores more constricted and with
-longer peduncles.—On the leaves and sheaths of reeds. Very common.
-
-=Puccinia striola=, Lk. SEDGE MILDEW; spots pallid; sori linear,
-crowded, distinct, subconvex; spores at length black, oblong and
-slightly constricted, or obovate, and not constricted.—On Sedges,
-Rushes, &c. Autumn. Common.
-
-=Puccinia coronata=, Cd. CORONATED MILDEW; spots pallid; sori linear,
-short, crowded, not confluent, surrounded by the ruptured epidermis;
-spores shortly pedicellate, pallid; the apex surrounded by obtuse
-radiating teeth.—On various Grasses. Autumn. Not uncommon. (Plate IV.
-figs. 60-62.)
-
-=Puccinia truncata=, B. and Br. IRIS BRAND; spots obliterated; sori
-oblong, brown, surrounded by the scarious epidermis; spores
-obovate-oblong, even, attenuated below, upper cell abruptly truncate.—On
-_Iris fœtidissima_. Autumn.
-
-=Puccinia Asparagi=, DC. ASPARAGUS BRAND; spots none; sori
-reddish-brown, generally on the stems, scattered and crowded, surrounded
-by the ruptured epidermis; spores oblong, obtuse, constricted; peduncle
-white, long, thread-like.—On dead stems of _Asparagus_. Autumn.
-
-=Puccinia Polygonorum=, Lk. POLYGONUM BRAND; spots yellowish; sori
-minute, crowded into orbicular patches; spores brown-black,
-obovate-oblong, frequently constricted, with the upper joint globose.—On
-the under surface of the leaves of various species of _Polygonum_.
-Autumn. Common.
-
-=Puccinia vaginalium=, Lk. KNOTGRASS BRAND; spots none; sori hypogenous,
-subrotund or oblong, at first surrounded by the ruptured epidermis;
-spores brown, obtusely ovate; pedicels long, filiform.—On leaves and
-stems of Knotgrass, _Polygonum aviculare_. Autumn.
-
-=Puccinia Thesii=, Chaill. BASTARD-TOADFLAX BRAND; cauline and
-amphigenous; sori blackish-brown, small, roundish, or oblong, convex,
-scattered or aggregate, surrounded by the ruptured epidermis; spores
-ovate, obtuse, scarcely constricted; pedicels elongated.—On _Thesium
-humifusum_, in company with _Æcidium Thesii_. Chipstead, Surrey, Oct.
-14, 1864. (_A. Grugeon._)
-
-=Puccinia Primulæ=, Grev. PRIMROSE BRAND; hypogenous, deep brown,
-solitary, scattered, or concentric and subconfluent spores
-obovate-oblong, slightly constricted.—On Primrose leaves. Not common.
-
-=Puccinia Veronicarum=, DC. VERONICA BRAND; spots yellowish; sori
-subglobose, aggregate, or circinating, central one large; spores brown,
-obovate-oblong, more or less constricted.—On the under surface of the
-leaves of several species of _Veronica_. Not common.
-
-=Puccinia Glechomatis=, DC. GROUND-IVY BRAND; spots brownish; sori
-subrotund, scattered, hypogenous; spots brown, rather short,
-subelliptic, scarcely at all constricted.—On leaves of Ground-Ivy,
-_Glechoma hederacea_. September and October. Not uncommon. (Plate IV.
-figs. 73, 74.)
-
-=Puccinia Menthæ=, Pers. MINT BRAND; spots obliterated; sori varying in
-size, hypogenous, subrotund, scattered; spores at length black,
-subglobose, or angular; peduncles short.—On leaves of Mint, Wild Thyme,
-Marjoram, &c. Autumn. Common. (Plate IV. figs. 69, 70.)
-
-=Puccinia Scorodoniæ=, Lk. WOOD-SAGE BRAND; spots obliterated; sori
-small, confluent in subrotund patches, hypogenous; spores cinnamon;
-peduncles very long.—On leaves of Wood-sage. Darenth Wood. Not common.
-
-=Puccinia Scrophulariæ=, Lib. FIGWORT BRAND; spots pallid; sori
-subrotund, oblong, or linear and confluent, surrounded by the ruptured
-epidermis; spores very much crowded, subglobose or oval, brownish,
-plicate, but not truly septate; pedicels elongated.—On _Scrophularia
-aquatica_. Penzance. Very rare.
-
-=Puccinia Betonicæ=, DC. BETONY BRAND; spots obliterated; sori
-hypogenous, subrotund, aggregate, surrounded by the ruptured epidermis;
-spores very pale-brown, short, obovate, elliptic; peduncles short.—On
-_Stachys Betonica_. Rare.
-
-=Puccinia Vincæ=, Berk. PERIWINKLE BRAND; spots yellowish; sori
-hypogenous, scattered, subrotund, surrounded by the ruptured epidermis;
-spores brown, oblong, slightly constricted, lower cell rather
-attenuated; peduncle very short.—On leaves of _Vinca major_. (Plate VI.
-fig. 132.) Autumn. Not uncommon.
-
-=Puccinia Campanulæ=, Carm. CAMPANULA BRAND; spots apparently none; sori
-large, irregular, crowded, for a long time covered with the epidermis,
-at length surrounded by it; spores oblong-ovate, or slightly
-constricted; peduncles very short.—On _Campanulæ_. Not common.
-
-=Puccinia clandestina=, Carm. SCABIOUS BRAND; spots yellowish; sori very
-minute, distinct, but collected together in great numbers, dark brown;
-epidermis evanescent; spores oblong, very slightly constricted,
-pedunculate.—On _Scabiosa succisa_. Not common.
-
-=Puccinia Compositarum=, Sch. COMPOSITÆ BRAND; spots obliterated or
-whitish; sori small, subrotund, generally hypogenous, encircled with the
-ruptured epidermis; spores brown, oval, scarcely constricted.—On the
-leaves of _Centaureæ_, &c. Autumn. Common. (Plate IV. figs. 67, 68.)
-
-=Puccinia Syngenesiarum=, Lk. THISTLE BRAND; spots obliterated; sori
-minute, collected in oval blackish-brown, raised spots, covered with the
-epidermis; spores brown; peduncles very short.—On the leaves of
-Thistles. Autumn. Common. (Plate IV. figs. 63, 64.)
-
-=Puccinia glomerata=, Grev. RAGWORT BRAND; spots pale; sori roundish,
-depressed, often confluent; spores oblong, very variable; peduncles
-short.—On leaves of Ragwort, _Senecio Jacobæa_. Not common.
-
-=Puccinia variabilis=, Grev. VARIABLE BRAND; sori amphigenous, minute,
-roundish, surrounded by the ruptured epidermis, nearly black; spores
-variable, obtuse, cells often subdivided; peduncle very short.—On leaves
-of Dandelion. Summer and Autumn. Not uncommon. (Plate IV. figs. 82, 83.)
-
-=Puccinia Valantiæ=, Pers. CROSSWORT BRAND; spots obliterated; sori
-small, subrotund, scattered or crowded; spores pale-brown, obovate,
-attenuated below, the upper segment globular, easily separating.—On
-_Galium cruciatum_. Autumn. Not common.
-
-=Puccinia Galiorum=, Lk. BEDSTRAW BRAND; spots obliterated; sori
-hypogenous, partly covered with and surrounded by the ruptured
-epidermis, scattered; spores brown.—On the leaves of several species of
-_Galium_ and _Asperula odorata_. Not uncommon. (Plate VIII. figs. 172,
-173.)
-
-=Puccinia Umbelliferarum=, DC. PIG-NUT BRAND; spots obliterated; sori
-small and scattered, subrotund, surrounded by the remains of the
-ruptured epidermis; spores brown, broadly elliptic, much constricted;
-peduncle short.—On various _Umbelliferæ_. Common. (Plate IV. figs. 71,
-72.)
-
-=Puccinia Ægopodii=, Lk. GOUTWEED BRAND; spots brown; sori minute,
-subrotund and elongated, surrounded by the ruptured epidermis, often
-circinating, and forming roundish patches; spores brown; peduncles very
-short.—On _Ægopodium podagraria_.
-
-=Puccinia Saniculæ=, Grev. SANICLE BRAND; orbicular, variable in size,
-blackish-brown, scattered, rather confluent; spores very obtuse;
-peduncles somewhat elongated.—On _Sanicula Europæa_. Not uncommon.
-Summer and Autumn.
-
-=Puccinia bullaria=, Lk. HEMLOCK BRAND; spots obliterated; sori
-subrotund or oblong, covered with the epidermis; spores brown, peduncle
-short, nearly obsolete.—On dry stems of _Conium maculatum_ and other
-_Umbelliferæ_. August and Sept.
-
-=Puccinia Smyrnii=, Cd. ALEXANDER’S BRAND; spots obliterated; sori
-hypogenous, large, solitary, scattered, brown; spores ovoid, obtuse,
-verrucose, slightly constricted, minutely pedicellate.—On _Smyrnium
-olusatrum_. (Plate III. figs. 55, 56.)
-
-=Puccinia Anemones=, Pers. ANEMONE BRAND; spots obliterated; sori
-subrotund, surrounded by the ruptured epidermis, scattered, aggregate,
-and confluent; spores brown, very much constricted, consisting of two
-nearly globose portions, echinulate; peduncles very short.—On various
-species of _Anemone_. Very common on _Anemone nemorosa_. April and May.
-(Plate IV. figs. 64, 65.)
-
-=Puccinia Calthæ=, Lk. MARSH-MARIGOLD BRAND; spots brownish; sori small,
-subrotund, convex, surrounded by the ruptured epidermis, scattered;
-spores obovate, attenuated below, slightly constricted; peduncle very
-short.—On leaves of Marsh Marigold. Spring. Rare.
-
-=Puccinia Noli-tangeris=, Corda. BALSAM BRAND; spots irregular,
-confluent, brownish; sori gregarious, reddish-brown; spores oblong,
-obtuse or attenuated, distinctly apiculate, brown; peduncles
-rudimentary. On leaves of _Impatiens noli-tangere_. Gathered at Albury,
-Surrey, by the Rev. L. Jenyns.—(_M. J. B._)
-
-=Puccinia Violarum=, Lk. VIOLET BRAND; spots yellowish; sori hypogenous,
-small, crowded, covered with the epidermis, then surrounded by it;
-spores brown, elliptic or broadly elliptic, slightly constricted.—On
-Violets. Autumn. Common.
-
-=Puccinia Lychnidearum=, Lk. LYCHNIS BRAND; spots yellowish; sori
-subrotund or oblong, unequal, scattered, rarely confluent; spores white,
-at length brown, elongated, oblong, slightly constricted.—On leaves and
-stems of _Lychnidæ_, _Sagina procumbens_. Autumn. Common.
-
-=Puccinia umbilici=, Guep. PENNY-WORT BRAND; seated on pallid spots;
-sori round, convex, compact, at length confluent in large orbicular
-patches; spores subglobose, not constricted, shortly pedicellate.—On
-_Cotyledon umbilicus_. Penzance, Guernsey, Corwen, N. Wales. _W.
-Pamplin._ (Plate IV. figs. 80, 81.)
-
-=Puccinia Rhodiolæ=, B. and Br. STONECROP BRAND; spots orbicular, brown;
-sori minute, crowded; spores shortly pedicellate, articulations
-depressed, sometimes spuriously subdivided.—On leaves of _Sedum
-Rhodiola_. Summer. Not common.
-
-=Puccinia Saxifragarum=, Schl. MOSCHATEL BRAND; spots obliterated; sori
-subrotund, scattered, crowded and confluent, when young surrounded by
-the epidermis; spores red-brown, rather short, oblong, slightly
-constricted.—On both surfaces of the leaves of _Adoxa moschatellina_.
-Not uncommon. Summer.
-
-=Puccinia Chrysosplenii=, Grey. GOLDEN-SAXIFRAGE BRAND; sori of various
-sizes, few together and confluent, pale brown; spores long, somewhat
-waved, much attenuated at either extremity; peduncle elongated.—On the
-under surface of the leaves of _Chrysosplenium oppositifolium_. Rare.
-
-=Puccinia Epilobii=, DC. WILLOW-HERB BRAND; spots pale; sori hypogenous,
-subrotund, crowded; epidermis evanescent; spores effuse, cinnamon,
-broadly elliptic, strongly constricted; peduncles very short.—On the
-leaves of _Epilobium palustre_. Not common.
-
-=Puccinia pulverulenta=, Grev. GREAT WILLOW-HERB BRAND; sori hypogenous,
-dark brown, scattered or subconfluent, open concentric; spores minute,
-obovate, slightly constricted, lower cell rather attenuated; peduncle
-not very short.—On the leaves of _Epilobium montanum_ and _E. hirsutum_.
-August and September. Common. (Plate IV. figs. 78, 79.)
-
-=Puccinia Circææ=, Pers. NIGHTSHADE BRAND; spots obliterated; sori
-minute, semiglobose, crowded into subrotund patches, occasionally
-confluent, generally covered with the epidermis; spores brown, oblong,
-often acute, sometimes obtuse; peduncles long, thick.—On the leaves of
-_Circæa lutetiana_ and _C. alpina_. Autumn. Not common.
-
-=Puccinia Prunorum=, Lk. PLUM-TREE BRAND; spots obliterated; sori
-hypogenous, subrotund scattered, epidermis obliterated; spores brown,
-peduncles very short.—On the leaves of Plum-trees. September and
-October. Very common.
-
-=Puccinia Fabæ=, Lk. BEAN BRAND; spots none; sori subrotund, or
-elongated, surrounded by the ruptured epidermis; spores at length black,
-ovato-globose; peduncle slender.—On Beans. August and September. Not
-uncommon.
-
-=Puccinia Buxi=, DC. BOX BRAND; spots none; sori subrotund, convex,
-scattered; spores brown, oblong, rather strongly constricted, lower cell
-slightly attenuated; peduncle very long.—On both surfaces of Box-leaves.
-April and May. Not uncommon.
-
-
- GYMNOSPORANGIUM, DC.
-
- Peduncles extremely long, agglutinated by gelatine into a tremelloid
- expanded mass. Spores uniseptate.
-
-=Gymnosporangium Juniperi=, Lk.; forming a soft gelatinous, irregular,
-orange mass; spores ovate or subelliptic, filled with subglobose
-granules.—On living twigs of _Juniperus communis_.
-
-
- PODISOMA, _Lk._
-
- Peduncles extremely long, agglutinated by gelatine into a common stem,
- spreading out above into a _clavariæform_ mass; spores mostly
- uniseptate.—_Berk. Outl._, p. 331.
-
-=Podisoma Juniperi=, Fr.; orange, clavariæform, somewhat branched;
-stroma simple; spores very long, lanceolate, filled with elliptic
-granules.—On living branches of _Juniperus communis_. Not common.
-
-=Podisoma foliicolum=, B.; epiphyllous, brown-black masses, subglobose,
-subelliptic, or irregular, consisting of radiating, crowded, very
-slender, agglutinated filaments, each bearing an elliptic or clavate,
-very obtuse spore, 3- to 5-septate.—On living leaves of _Juniperus
-communis_. Rare.
-
-=Podisoma Sabinæ=, Fr.; red-brown, tuberculiform and clavate, simple;
-stroma obliterated; spores obovate, uniseptate.—On living branches of
-_Juniperus Sabinæ_. April. Not uncommon.
-
-
- =CÆOMACEI=.
-
- Simple and free.
- Without appendages,
- Springing from delicate threads. _Tilletia_.
- Produced in separate cells.—
- Deeply seated, pulverulent, } _Ustilago_
- generally nearly black }
- Superficial, yellow or brown _Uredo_.
- Not enclosed in separate cells _Lecythea_.
- With appendages,
- Deciduous _Trichobasis_.
- Permanent _Uromyces_.
- Compound.
- Irregular _Polycystis_.
- Subglobose or shell-shaped _Tuburcinia_.
-
- Spores of two orders—
- 1. Spherical } _Coleosporium_.
- 2. Cylindrical, septate }
- 1. Spherical } _Melampsora_.
- 2. Wedge-shaped, compact }
- 1. Concatenate, exposed } _Cystopus_.
- 2. Spherical, concealed }
-
-
- TILLETIA, _Tul._
-
- Spores spherical, reticulated, proceeding from delicate branched
- threads.
-
-=Tilletia caries=, Tul. BUNT; included within the germen; spores
-spherical, rather large, black.—On wheat, filling the grains with
-dark-coloured spores, fetid when crushed. Autumn. Very common. (Plate V.
-figs. 84-91.)
-
-
- USTILAGO, _Link._
-
- Plant deeply seated. Spores simple, springing from delicate threads,
- or in closely-packed cells, ultimately breaking up into a
- powdery mass.—_Berk. Outl._, p. 335.
-
-_Ustilago segetum_, Ditm. CORN SMUT; produced on the receptacle and
-rachis; epidermis soon ruptured; spores loose, minute, globose,
-black.—On the ears of corn and grasses. Autumn. Very common. (Plate V.
-figs. 98, 99.)
-
-=Ustilago urceolorum=, Tul. SEDGE SMUT; produced on the glumes and
-utricles; epidermis soon bursting; spores in a compact mass, afterwards
-breaking up, globose, rather large, granulated.—Surrounding the seed of
-various _Carices_; as, _Carex prœcox_, _stellulata_, _recurva_, and
-_pseudo-cyperus_. Autumn. Not uncommon. (Plate VI. figs. 109-111.)
-
-=Ustilago longissima=, Tul. ELONGATED SMUT; produced on the leaves in
-linear, long, parallel, dirty-olive patches; epidermis bursting
-longitudinally; spores globose, breaking up into minute granules,
-olive-black.—On leaves of _Poa aquatica_ and _fluitans_. Summer. Common.
-(Plate V. figs. 105-107.)
-
-=Ustilago olivacea=, Tul. OLIVE SMUT; infesting the enlarged receptacle;
-epidermis soon bursting; spores olive-green, powdery, minute, mixed with
-filaments.—On _Carex riparia_. Not common. (Plate VI. figs. 126, 127.)
-
-=Ustilago hypodytes=, Fr. GRASS-CULM SMUT; produced on the culms beneath
-the sheaths, afterwards exposed; spores minute, subglobose,
-brownish-black.—On the culms of various Grasses. Summer. Sometimes not
-uncommon. (Plate V. figs. 100, 101.)
-
-=Ustilago Maydis=, Corda. MAIZE SMUT; produced on the stems, germens,
-&c.; epidermis at length bursting; spores spherical, minute,
-brownish-black, surface covered with echinulate warts.—On stems, &c., of
-_Zea mays_. (Plate V. fig. 108.)
-
-=Ustilago Montagnei=, Tul. BEAKSEDGE SMUT; produced on the seeds;
-epidermis bursting; spores slightly angular, small, dark-coloured,
-intermixed sparingly with fragile filaments.—On seeds of _Rhyncospora
-alba_. Not common. (Plate V. figs. 96, 97.)
-
-=Ustilago typhoides=, B. and Br. REED SMUT; prodded on the stems of
-reeds, forming thick bullate patches several inches long, occupying
-whole internodes, covered by their sheath; spores globose, rather
-large.—On stems of _Arundo phragmitis_. Autumn. Not uncommon. (Plate VI.
-figs. 128, 129.)
-
-=Ustilago Salveii=, B. and Br. COCKSFOOT SMUT; produced on the leaves,
-forming elongated parallel sori on the upper surface; spores obovate,
-rather large, rough with minute granules.—On leaves of _Dactylis
-glomerata_ and other Grasses. Not common. (Plate VI. figs. 117-119.)
-
-=Ustilago grammica=, B. and Br. BANDED SMUT; forming little transverse
-bands consisting of short parallel black lines, 1/12 of an inch or more
-in length; spores globose, very minute.—On stems of _Aira aquatica_ and
-_A. cæspitosa_. Uncommon. (Plate VI. figs. 120-122.)
-
-=Ustilago vinosa=, Tul. OXYRIA SMUT; produced on the swollen
-receptacles; spores roundish, very small, and minutely papillose,
-separately pellucid, in clusters, violaceous.—On the receptacles of
-_Oxyria reniformis_. Uncommon.
-
-=Ustilago utriculosa=, Tul. UTRICLE SMUT; produced in the germen and
-perigonium; epidermis soon ruptured; spores effuse, minute, globose,
-purple-black.—On _Polygonum hydropiper_ and other _Polygona_. Autumn.
-Not uncommon. (Plate VI. figs. 112-116.)
-
-=Ustilago flosculorum=, Fr. FLORET SMUT; produced within the florets;
-spores minute, purplish-brown.—On the florets of _Scabiosa arvensis_.
-Not common. (Plate VI. figs. 123-125.)
-
-=Ustilago receptaculorum=, Fr. GOATSBEARD SMUT; produced within the
-receptacles; spores ovate, minute, reticulated, violet-brown, nearly
-black, very profuse, filling the receptacle.—On the receptacles of
-Goatsbeard. June, July. Common. (Plate V. figs. 92-95.)
-
-=Ustilago antherarum=, Fr. ANTHER SMUT; produced on the anthers and
-germens; spores subglobose, effuse, violet.—On the anthers of _Silene
-inflata_, &c. (Plate V. figs. 102-104.)
-
-
- UREDO, _Lév._
-
- _Stroma_ composed of little irregular cells forming a lentiform disk,
- whose surface is covered with many layers of cells, each of
- which encloses a spore; _spores_ simple, always without any
- appendage.—_Berk. Outl._, p. 331.
-
- -------
-
- * _Spores more or less yellow._
-
-=Uredo Potentillarum=, DC. POTENTILLA UREDO; spots yellowish; sori
-subrotund and oval, bullate, aggregate, open, confluent; spores
-subglobose, subcoherent, orange.—On various _Rosaceæ_. Common.
-
-=Uredo Saxifragarum=, DC. SAXIFRAGE UREDO; spots pallid; sori subrotund
-and oval, raised, scattered and aggregate on the under surface;
-epidermis ruptured, persistent; spores subglobose, yellow.—On various
-_Saxifrages_.
-
-=Uredo Filicum=, Desm. FERN UREDO; spots yellowish; sori subrotund,
-bullate, scattered and aggregate on the under surface; epidermis at
-length bursting; spores subglobose, yellow.—On Ferns (_Cystopteris_,
-&c.) Not common.
-
-=Uredo pustulata=, P. WILLOW-HERB UREDO; spots yellowish; sori
-subrotund, minute, closed, scattered and confluent on both surfaces;
-spores globose, yellow.—On _Epilobium palustre_.
-
-=Uredo Hypericorum=, DC. ST. JOHN’S-WORT UREDO; spots yellowish; sori
-subrotund, small, bullate, distinct, scattered on the under surface;
-epidermis at length bursting; spores subglobose, cohering, orange.—On
-various _Hyperica_. August. Not uncommon. (Plate VIII. figs. 174, 175.)
-
-=Uredo Caryophyllacearum=, Johnst. STITCHWORT UREDO; spots yellowish;
-sori subglobose, scattered and aggregate, minute, generally on the under
-surface; epidermis closed; spores oval, at length yellow.—On various
-_Caryophyllaceæ_. Autumn.
-
-=Uredo Quercus=, Brond. OAK-LEAF UREDO; on the under surface; sori
-yellow, then orange, minute, ovate, and orbicular, slightly prominent,
-scattered, solitary or agglomerated into minute patches, surrounded by
-the ruptured epidermis; spores subglobose, pellucid, not cohering.—On
-Oak-leaves. September. Not common.
-
-=Uredo porphyrogenita=, Kze. BIRD-CHERRY UREDO; spots purplish; sori
-subrotund, small, aggregate, hypogenous; epidermis at length ruptured;
-spores coherent, subglobose.—On leaves of _Prunus Padus_. Scotland,
-1863. (_Rev. M. J. Berkeley._)
-
-=Uredo Vacciniorum=, P. BILBERRY UREDO; spots yellow-brown; sori
-subrotund, minute, aggregate, and scattered, on the under surface of the
-leaves; epidermis seldom ruptured; spores ovoid, yellowish.—On
-_Vaccinium Myrtillus_ and _V. vitis-idæa_. Scotland.
-
-=Uredo confluens=, DC. MERCURY UREDO; on the under surface, depressed,
-yellow, oblong, concentric, at length confluent; spores nearly oval.—On
-_Mercurialis perennis_ and _M. annua_. May, June. Common. (Plate VII.
-figs. 133, 134.)
-
-=Uredo Alliorum=, DC. GARLIC UREDO; spots obliterated; sori linear,
-oblong, and oval, on both surfaces; spores ovoid or subglobose, yellow
-or whitish.—On various species of _Allium_. Common.
-
-
- * * _Spores brown._
-
- =Uredo Statices=, Desm. SEA-LAVENDER UREDO; sori few and scattered,
- orbicular or oval; spores sessile, globose, brown.—On various
- species of _Statice_.
-
-=Uredo Circææ=, A. & S. NIGHTSHADE UREDO; sori minute, crowded,
-subrotund, slightly confluent, on the under surface; spores irregular,
-ovate, small, ochraceous.—On leaves of _Circæa lutetiana_. June, July.
-Common. (Plate VII. figs. 135, 136.)
-
-=Uredo bifrons=, Grev. TWIN-FACED UREDO. On both surfaces of the leaves,
-often opposite, scattered, round, light brown, girt with the remains of
-the epidermis; spores globose.—On Sorrel leaves (_Rumex acetosa_ and _R.
-acetosella_). July, September. Common. (Plate VII. figs. 137-139)
-
-
- LECYTHEA, _Lév._
-
- _Stroma_ surrounded or sprinkled with elongated abortive spores.
- _Spores_ free, invested with their mother-cell, or
- concatenate.—_Berk. Outl._, p. 334.
-
-
- * _Spores free._
-
-=Lecythea Ruborum=, Lév. BRAMBLE RUST. Spots pale, brown or purple on
-the opposite side, sometimes depressed above; sori subrotund, aggregate;
-epidermis soon bursting; spores globose or subglobose, echinulate,
-bright ochraceous-yellow.—On the under surface of Bramble leaves. July
-and August. Very common. (Plate II. fig. 40.)
-
-=Lecythea Rosæ=, Lév. ROSE RUST; spots yellow, small, scattered; spores
-sub-oval, sometimes minutely pedicellate, orange.—On Rose-leaves. July,
-September. Extremely common. (Plate II. fig. 37.)
-
-=Lecythea Poterii=, Lév. BURNET RUST; spots obliterated, rufous on the
-opposite side; sori subrotund, scattered, minute on the under surface;
-epidermis bursting; spores subglobose, often pedicellate, intense
-orange; barren spores pale, cylindrical, and slightly curved.—On
-_Poterium Sanguisorba_. Summer. Common. (Plate III. fig. 31.)
-
-=Lecythea Populina=, Lév. POPLAR RUST; hypogenous; sori yellow, roundish
-or oblong, surrounded by the ruptured epidermis; spores copious,
-elongated or ovate.—On Poplar and Birch leaves. Summer. Common.
-
-=Lecythea Euphorbiæ=, Lév. SPURGE RUST; spots obliterated; sori
-subrotund, small, scattered, surrounded by the ruptured epidermis;
-barren spores pyriform or subglobose, pedicellate; fertile spores
-subglobose, orange.—On the under surface of the leaves of various
-species of _Euphorbia_, especially _E. helioscopia_ and _E. peplus_.
-August. Very common.
-
-=Lecythea epitea=, Lév. TAWNY WILLOW RUST; sori roundish, scattered, at
-first tawny, at length growing pale, surrounded by the ruptured
-epidermis; spores subrotund and pyriform.—On the under surface of
-Willow-leaves.
-
-=Lecythea mixta=, Lév. ORANGE WILLOW RUST; spots yellow; sori subrotund,
-aggregate, confluent, effuse, permanently surrounded by the ruptured
-epidermis; spores oblong and pyriform, orange.—On both surfaces of the
-leaves of Willows.
-
-=Lecythea Saliceti=, Lév. COMMON WILLOW RUST; spots yellowish; sori
-subrotund, solitary, or in circles, surrounded by the ruptured
-epidermis; barren spores subglobose and pedicellate or pyriform; fertile
-spores subglobose, orange.—On the under surface of Willow-leaves.
-Autumn. Common.
-
-=Lecythea Baryi=, Berk. DE BARY’S RUST; sori few; cystidia with an
-abrupt globose head; spores subglobose.—On leaves of _Brachypodium
-pennatum_. Very rare.
-
-=Lecythea Valerianæ=, Berk. VALERIAN RUST; spots yellowish; sori
-subrotund, small, confluent, sometimes circinating; epidermis at length
-bursting; spores reddish-brown, subglobose or clavate, shortly
-pedicellate.—On _Valeriana officinalis_. August.
-
-
- * * _Spores invested._
-
-=Lecythea gyrosa=, Berk. RINGED RUST; spots obliterated; sori minute,
-confluent, and forming a small distinct ring; epidermis bursting; spores
-globose and elongato-pyriform, yellow or pale.—On the upper surface of
-Raspberry and Bramble leaves, forming a more or less perfect ring with
-the centre unoccupied. September. (Plate VIII. figs. 162-164.)
-
-
- * * * _Spores concatenate._
-
-=Lecythea Capræarum=, Berk. SALLOW RUST; spots obliterated, yellow on
-the opposite side; sori varied in form, here and there confluent,
-surrounded by the ruptured epidermis; barren spores subglobose and
-pyriform, pedicellate; fertile spores subglobose, dirty yellow.—On the
-under surface of the leaves of Sallows. June to August. Very common.
-(Plate VIII. figs. 160, 161.)
-
-=Lecythea Lini=, Berk. FLAX RUST; spots yellowish; sori subrotund,
-scattered, surrounded by the ruptured epidermis; spores globose or
-pyriform, sometimes pedicellate.—On _Linum catharticum_. July. Not
-uncommon. (Plate VIII. figs. 165-167.)
-
-
- TRICHOBASIS, _Lév._
-
- _Spores_ free; attached at first to a short peduncle, which at length
- falls away.—_Berk. Outl._, pp. 332.
-
-
- * _Spores yellow._
-
-=Trichobasis rubigo-vera=, Lév. ROUND CORN RUST; spots yellow, heaps
-oval, scattered, generally on the upper surface; epidermis at length
-bursting longitudinally; spores subglobose, reddish-brown, easily
-dispersed.—On Grasses and Corn. Throughout the Summer. Very common.
-(Plate VII. figs. 140-142.)
-
-=Trichobasis linearis=, Lév. LONG CORN RUST; spots yellow-brown. Sori
-elliptic, then elongated and linear; epidermis bursting; spores oblong
-or globose, yellow.—On leaves and sheaths of Corn and Grasses. Summer.
-Common. Plate VII. figs. 143, 144.)
-
-=Trichobasis Glumarum=, Lév. GLUME RUST; sori minute, round, scarcely
-convex, subgregarious, often confluent. Spores globose or subovoid,
-orange, not pedicellate; epispore smooth.—On the glumes of Cereals.
-August.
-
-=Trichobasis Symphyti=, Lév. COMFREY RUST; Sori minute, very numerous,
-scattered, roundish, then confluent; epidermis ruptured, scarcely
-conspicuous around the margin; spores subglobose, pallid orange.—On
-Comfrey.
-
-=Trichobasis Pyrolæ=, B. WINTERGREEN RUST; spots yellowish-brown on the
-opposite side; sori globose, minute, scattered or aggregate, on the
-under surface; epidermis generally closed; spores subglobose, yellow.—On
-_Pyrola rotundifolia_, &c.
-
-=Trichobasis Petroselini=, B. PARSLEY RUST; spots yellowish; sori
-subrotund and oval, confluent, on both surfaces; epidermis at length
-ruptured; spores globose or subglobose, occasionally obsoletely
-pedicellate, pale yellow.—On various _Umbelliferæ_.
-
-=Trichobasis Senecionis=, B. GROUNDSEL RUST; spots obliterated; sori
-solitary or regularly crowded, subrotund and oval, on the under surface,
-surrounded by the ruptured epidermis; spores subglobose, orange.—On
-various species of Groundsel. July. Very common. Plate VII. figs. 145,
-146.)
-
-=Trichobasis Caricina=, B. SEDGE RUST; spots red; sori oval, minute,
-scattered, surrounded by the ruptured epidermis; spores subglobose,
-reddish, then brown.—On _Carex pendula_, _C. pseudo-cyperus_, &c. June
-to August. Common. (Plate VIII. figs. 170, 171.)
-
-
- * * _Spores brown._
-
-=Trichobasis oblongata=, B. LUZULA RUST; spots oblong, often confluent,
-yellow-brown; sori elliptic, on both surfaces; epidermis closed; spores
-brown, obtuse at either extremity.—On _Luzulæ_. May to July. (Plate VII.
-figs. 158, 159.)
-
-=Trichobasis Scillarum=, B. HYACINTH RUST; spots oblong or subrotund,
-crowded into patches; epidermis bursting longitudinally; spores
-rubiginous, obovate, shortly pedunculate.—On the Wild Hyacinth, &c.
-
-=Trichobasis Cichoracearum=, Lév. HAWKWEED RUST; on both sides of the
-leaf, dark, fuscous, minute, round, scattered: spores globose, rarely
-minutely pedicellate.—On Thistles and Hawkweed. July to September.
-Common.
-
-=Trichobasis Artemisiæ=, B. MUGWORT RUST; spots obliterated, brownish on
-the opposite side; sori subglobose and oval, minute, scattered, on both
-surfaces; epidermis soon ruptured; spores subglobose, brownish.—On
-_Artemisia vulgaris_, &c. Not common.
-
-=Trichobasis Labiatarum=, Lév. MINT RUST; spots yellowish and brown;
-sori subrotund, scattered, subaggregate, on the under surface; epidermis
-ruptured; spores subglobose, brown.—On various _Labiatæ_. August to
-September. Common.
-
-=Trichobasis Lychnidearum=, Lév. CHICKWEED RUST; spots pallid yellowish;
-sori subrotund plane, scattered on the under surface, cinnamon, at
-length brownish; epidermis ruptured; spores globoso-ovoid, sessile, or
-shortly pedicellate.—On _Caryophyllaceæ_. Summer and Autumn.
-
-=Trichobasis Umbellatarum=, Lév. HEMLOCK RUST; spots yellowish; sori
-subrotund and ovate, scattered, on the under surface, surrounded by the
-ruptured epidermis; spores ovate, oval, and oblong in the same heap,
-brown.—On _Conium maculatum_, _Apium graveolens_, and other
-_Umbelliferæ_. August and September.
-
-=Trichobasis Heraclei=, B. HOGWEED RUST; on the under surface,
-scattered, sometimes subconfluent, roundish, light brown, girt by the
-remains of the epidermis; spores obovate, with a very short peduncle.—On
-_Heracleum spondylium_. June and July.
-
-=Trichobasis Hydrocotyles=, Cooke. FLUKEWORT RUST; without definite
-spots; sori chiefly on the upper, sometimes on the under surface,
-scattered, variable, roundish, erumpent, surrounded by the ruptured
-epidermis; spores subglobose, at length brown; epispore rough with
-minute tubercles.—On _Hydrocotyle vulgaris_. Epping, July to September,
-1863 and 1864. (Plate VIII. figs. 168, 169.)
-
-=Trichobasis Betæ=, Lév. BEET-LEAF RUST; spots yellow; heaps subrotund
-and oval, scattered and concentric, on the upper surface; epidermis at
-length bursting; spores subglobose, shortly pedicellate, brown.—On the
-leaves of Beet. August and September. Common.
-
-=Trichobasis Fabæ=, Lév. BEAN RUST; spots obliterated; sori subrotund
-and oval; bullate, scattered and aggregate, surrounded by the ruptured
-epidermis; spores ovoid, brown.—On Beans. August and September. Common.
-
-=Trichobasis Galii=, Lév. BEDSTRAW RUST; spots yellowish; sori
-subrotund, aggregate, closed; spores globose, reddish.—On _Galium
-verum_, _saxatile_, &c. July and August.
-
-=Trichobasis suaveolens=, Lév. THISTLE RUST; spots obliterated, yellow
-on the opposite side; sori subrotund, nearly plane, scattered, at length
-confluent, on the under surface, surrounded by the ruptured epidermis;
-spores globose, brown.—On leaves of Thistles, frequently covering the
-whole under surface. Summer. Common. (Plate VII. figs. 151-153.)
-
-=Trichobasis Polygonorum=, B. KNOTGRASS RUST; spots red-yellow, widely
-effused; sori subrotund, scattered, sometimes forming a ring, epidermis
-at length bursting; spores somewhat obovate, brown.—On _Polygonum
-aviculare_, _amphibium_, and other species. July to September. Common.
-
-=Trichobasis Vincæ=, B. PERIWINKLE RUST; spots yellowish; sori small,
-subrotund, and oval, on the under surface, surrounded by the ruptured
-epidermis; spores oval, rather ovoid, brown.—On leaves of _Vinca major_.
-May and June. (Plate VI. fig. 130, 131.)
-
-=Trichobasis Geranii=, B. GERANIUM RUST; spots yellowish; sori
-subrotund, nearly plane, scattered or confluent; spores subglobose,
-brown.—On various species of Geranium.
-
-=Trichobasis Violarum=, B. VIOLET RUST; spots yellowish; sori subrotund,
-scattered, generally on the under surface; epidermis ruptured,
-persistent; spores subglobose, brown.—On leaves and petioles of Violets.
-July. Not uncommon.
-
-=Trichobasis Parnassiæ=, Cooke. GRASS OF PARNASSUS RUST; on both
-surfaces of the leaves; sori at first bullate, at length rupturing the
-epidermis, scattered, often confluent; spores globose or nearly so,
-rather large, tawny brown.—On _Parnassia palustris_. Irstead, Norfolk.
-September, 1864.
-
-=Trichobasis Epilobii=, Berk. WILLOW-HERB RUST; spots yellowish; sori
-subrotund, scattered, surrounded by the ruptured epidermis, often on the
-under surface; spores subglobose, brown.—On _Epilobium montanum_, &c.
-June and July.
-
-=Trichobasis Rhamni=, Cooke. BUCKTHORN RUST; seated on definite
-yellowish spots; sori occurring only on the under surface of the leaves,
-scattered or collected in clusters, very minute, roundish, or oblong;
-spores at length rusty brown, subglobose.—On _Rhamnus catharticus_.
-Selsdon, Surrey. September 16, 1864. (_A. Grugeon._)
-
-
- UROMYCES, _Lév._
-
- _Spores_ unilocular, attached permanently to a decided peduncle of
- greater or less length.—_Berk. Outl._, p. 333.
-
-=Uromyces Alliorum=, DC. GARLIC RUST; spots obliterated, sori linear,
-oblong, or oval, amphigenous; spores subglobose, yellow.—On species of
-_Allium_.
-
-=Uromyces Ulmariæ=, Lév. GOLDEN RUST; broad, pulverulent, on the under
-surface of leaves, nerves, and petioles; spores numerous, subglobose,
-bright reddish-orange.—On _Spiræa Ulmariæ_, Roses, &c. Common. (Plate
-VII. figs. 147, 148.)
-
-=Uromyces appendiculata=, Lév. LONG-STEMMED RUST; spots yellowish-brown,
-sori subrotund and oval, confluent, nearly plane, on the under surface.
-Epidermis bursting, spores ovoid, brown, with a long peduncle.—On
-_Leguminosæ_ and other plants. August and September. (Plate VII. figs.
-149, 150.)
-
-=Uromyces apiculosa.=, Lév. SHORT-STEMMED RUST: spots yellow or brown,
-sori subrotund, scattered, surrounded by the ruptured epidermis; spores
-ovoid, brown, shortly pedunculate.—On dock and various other plants.
-August and September. Common. (Plate VII. figs. 154, 155.)
-
-=Uromyces Limonii=, Lév. SEA-LAVENDER RUST; epiphyllous, sori bullate,
-scattered or disposed in rings; spores ovate.—On _Statice limonia_.
-
-=Uromyces Ficariæ=, Lév. PILEWORT RUST; spots yellowish, sori scattered,
-aggregate, confluent, and expanded; epidermis ruptured; spores ovoid,
-brown.—On _Ranunculus Ficaria_. May and June. Common. (Plate VII. figs.
-156, 157.)
-
-=Uromyces Primulæ=, Lév. PRIMROSE RUST; spots yellowish, sori subrotund
-and oval, aggregate, on the under surface; epidermis at length bursting;
-spores ovoid, brown.—On Primroses.
-
-=Uromyces intrusa=, Lév. LADY’S-MANTLE RUST; on the under surface,
-scattered, or partially aggregate, reddish-brown, rounded, somewhat
-prominent, minute, very unequal; spores roundish or oval.—On _Alchemilla
-vulgaris_.
-
-=Uromyces Iridis=, Lév. IRIS RUST; on the under, rarely on the upper,
-surface; spots yellow, sori small, pale red-brown, oblong and linear,
-scattered or aggregate, scarcely convex; epidermis bullate, rarely
-bursting longitudinally; spores globose or broadly elliptic, pale brown,
-pellucid.—On _Iris fœtidissima_. August to September. Not uncommon.
-
-
- POLYCYSTIS, _Lév._
-
- _Spores_ irregular, consisting of several cells.—_Berk. Outl._, p.
- 334.
-
-=Polycystis Colchici=, Tul. MEADOW-SAFFRON SMUT; sori elongated,
-bursting irregularly; spores smooth or slightly papillose.—On leaves of
-Meadow-Saffron. Not common.
-
-=Polycystis Violæ=, B. and Br. VIOLET SMUT; sori scattered, elongated,
-on both surfaces of the leaves and petioles; spores more or less
-globose, consisting of several cells surrounded by a common irregular
-crust.—On leaves and petioles of Violets. August. Common. (Plate IX.
-figs. 185, 186.)
-
-=Polycystis pompholygodes=, Lév. BUTTERCUP SMUT; sori varied in form,
-bullate, epidermis inflated, at first entire, then bursting irregularly,
-its remains surrounding the clusters; spores copious, subglobose, black,
-opaque or pellucid.—On _Ranunculus repens_ and other _Ranunculaceæ_.
-Summer. Very common. (Plate IX. figs. 183, 184.)
-
-=Polycystis parallela=, B. and Br. RYE SMUT; sori very long, linear,
-epidermis bursting longitudinally, spores globose, with several
-projecting nodules, dark brown.—On culms and sheaths of Rye and on the
-leaves of Carices. (Plate IX. figs. 187, 188.)
-
-
- TUBURCINIA, _Fr._
-
- _Plant_ deeply seated; _spores_ multicellular, subglobose, or
- conchiform. _Berk. Outl._, p. 335.
-
-=Tuburcinia scabies=, B. POTATO SMUT; spores globose composed of minute
-cells forming together a hollow globe with one or more lacunæ, generally
-attached laterally by a slender thread, olive. On Potatoes. Common.
-(Plate III. fig. 54.)
-
-=Tuburcinia Trientalis=, B. and Br. TRIENTALIS SMUT; sori two lines
-broad, bullate, containing a black mass of rather irregular depressed
-subglobose spores, which are very opaque and distinctly cellular.
-Hyphasma white, branched, creeping, delicate.—On leaves of _Trientalis
-Europæa_. August and September. Scotland. (Plate III. figs. 52, 53.)
-
-
- COLEOSPORIUM, _Lév._
-
- _Spores_ cylindrical, septate, some separating at the joints, some of
- a different nature, persistent.—_Berk. Outl._, p. 333.
-
-=Coleosporium Tussilaginis=, Lév. COLTSFOOT RUST; on the under surface,
-prominent, crowded, generally forming circles, becoming very confluent;
-spores numerous, sub-ovate, orange-yellow.—On _Tussilago Farfara_.
-Summer. Common. (Plate VIII. figs. 180, 181.)
-
-=Coleosporium pingue=, Lév. TAWNY ROSE RUST; spots obliterated, sori
-effuse, on the nerves and petioles of the leaves; spores ovoid,
-yellowish-brown.—On Roses, &c.
-
-=Coleosporium Petasitis=, Lév. BUTTERBUR RUST; on the under surface,
-minute, depressed, spreading, somewhat aggregate, subconfluent,
-irregular in form; spores oval, orange, or orange-red.—On _Tussilago
-Petasites_. Autumn. Common.
-
-=Coleosporium Campanulæ=, Lév. CAMPANULA RUST; spots obliterated, brown
-on the opposite side, sori irregular, confluent, plane, on the under
-surface; spores subglobose, cohering, yellow, at length pale. On leaves
-of various Campanulæ. September and October.
-
-=Coleosporium Sonchi-arvensis=, Lév. SOW-THISTLE RUST; on the under
-surface, depressed, irregular in form, scattered, partially confluent;
-spores ovate, reddish orange.—On _Sonchus oleraceus_ and _arvensis_.
-Summer. Common. (Plate VIII. figs. 178, 179.)
-
-=Coleosporium Rhinanthacearum=, Lév. COW-WHEAT RUST; spots none or
-subferruginous; sori irregular, confluent, on the under, rarely on both
-surfaces; spores subglobose, compact, golden-yellow.—On _Euphrasia
-officinalis_, _Bartsia odontites_, _Melampyrum arvense_, &c. August and
-September. Common. (Plate VIII. figs. 170, 177.)
-
-
- MELAMPSORA, _Cast_.
-
- Spores of two orders, crowded into a dense compact mass, with or
- without a covering, wedge-shaped. _Berk. Outl._, p. 333.
-
-=Melampsora Euphorbiæ=, Cast. Hypophyllous; sori of summer spores
-golden-yellow, scattered, distinct, sometimes cauline; spores small,
-subglobose; sori of perfect spores becoming black, small, roundish,
-spores prismatic, membrane thickened above, dark brown.—On leaves and
-stems of _Euphorbia helioscopia_, _E. exigua_, and other species of
-spurge. Common. (Plate IX. figs. 193, 194.)
-
-=Melampsora Populina=, Lév. Hypophyllous, epiphyllous, or amphigenous,
-at first yellow or orange; summer spores obovate-oblong, attenuated or
-truncate, echinulate; paraphyses obovate, capitate or claviform,
-abundant in fully-ripened sori; sori of perfect spores at first tawny
-yellow, becoming black during the winter, swelling in the spring, and
-becoming of a cinnamon-colour, hypophyllous, roundish, or oblong; spores
-prism-shaped, 5-6 together, yellowish, smooth.—On leaves of _Populus
-nigra_. Common. Spores perfected in February. (Plate IX. figs. 195,
-196.)
-
-=Melampsora Tremulæ=, Tul. Hypophyllous; sori of summer spores
-punctiform, prominent, or papillæform, numerous; spores tawny-yellow,
-elliptical or obovate; paraphyses slender; sori of perfect spores
-scattered, at length blackish; spores elongated, compressed, attenuated
-downwards, yellowish.—On leaves of _Populus tremula_. Common. Spores
-perfected during the winter.
-
-=Melampsora Betulina=, Desm. Hypophyllous; sori of summer spores bright
-yellow or orange, oblong, cylindrical, or obovate, truncate at the base,
-echinulate; paraphyses encircling or intermixed, obovate, smooth,
-hyaline; sori of perfect spores confluent, of an obscure brown in the
-winter, becoming of a bright orange when mature; spores elongated,
-attenuated below, polygonal, ochraceous.—On leaves of _Betula alba_.
-Common. Spores perfected in January and February. (Plate IX. figs. 189,
-190.)
-
-=Melampsora Salicina=, Lév. Epiphyllous or hypophyllous; sori, or heaps
-of summer spores, scattered, pale orange, bright orange, or cinereous;
-spores ovato-globose, paraphyses capitate, rarely obovate; sori of
-perfect spores epiphyllous, scattered or aggregate, at first
-yellowish-tawny, then brownish, at length nearly black, bullate; spores
-oblong, closely packed, and laterally compressed.—On _Salix viminalis_
-and _S. capræa_. Common. Spores perfected in February. (Plate IX. figs.
-191, 192.)
-
-
- CYSTOPUS.
-
- Receptacle consisting of thick branched threads; conidia concatenate,
- at length separating; oospores deeply seated on the mycelium.
-
-=Cystopus candidus=, Lév. CRUCIFER WHITE RUST; conidia equal, globose;
-membrane equal, ochraceous; oospores subglobose, epispore
-yellowish-brown, with irregular obtuse warts; warts solid.—On
-Shepherd’s-purse, Cabbages, and other Cruciferæ. Summer. Very common.
-(Plate X. figs. 198-200, 205-207.)
-
-=Cystopus cubicus=, Str. GOATSBEARD WHITE RUST; conidia unequal;
-terminal cell sterile, larger than the rest; membrane thickened,
-ochraceous, rarely yellowish; fertile cells shortly cylindrical;
-membrane hyaline; oospores globose; epispore brown, verrucose; warts
-hollow, round, or irregular.—On goatsbeard, salsify, and scorzonera.
-Summer and autumn. Common. (Plate X. figs. 201, 202, 210.)
-
-=Cystopus Lepigoni=, De By. SANDWORT WHITE RUST; conidia unequal;
-terminal cell sterile, globose; membrane thickened; fertile cells
-subglobose or cylindrical; membrane hyaline; oospores globose; epispore
-brown, tubercles minute, irregular, very convex, often resembling
-spines.—On _Spergutaria rubra_. Swanscombe Marshes, September, 1864.
-(_R. G. Keeley._)
-
-
- PERONOSPOREI, De By.
-
- PERONOSPORA, _Casp._
-
- Parasitic threads mostly inarticulate. Spores of two kinds:—1.
- Acrospores on the tips of the branchlets; 2. Oospores large,
- globose, on the creeping mycelium.
-
-=Peronospora infestans=, Mont. POTATO MOULD; threads of mycelium
-slender, always destitute of suckers; fertile threads thin, gradually
-attenuated upwards, with one to five branches, one or more inflated
-vesicles near the apices of the branches; branches either simple or with
-short branchlets; acrospores ellipsoid or ovoid; apex furnished with a
-prominent papilla.—On leaves, stems, and tubers of the Potato, causing
-the potato-murrain. Very common since 1845. (Plate XIV. fig. 264.)
-
-=Peronospora nivea=, Ung. (_P. macrospora_, B.). PARSNIP MOULD; threads
-of mycelium stout, often torulose; suckers numerous, vesicular, obovate;
-fertile threads fasciculate, dwarfish, tapering or subulate, or once or
-twice shortly bifurcate, rarely trifurcate, with one to four horizontal
-branches near the summit, once, twice, or three times bifurcate;
-acrospores subglobose or ovoid, with an obtuse papilla at the apex.—On
-various _Umbelliferæ_. Common and variable.
-
-=Peronospora pygmæa=, Ung. (_P. curta_, Berk.). ANEMONE MOULD; threads
-of mycelium thickened, often constricted and varicose; suckers minute,
-obovate, or pear-shaped; fertile threads fasciculate (2-5 or more),
-simple above or divided at the apex into 2-4 short simple branches, or
-shortly twice dichotomous, or all simple, obtuse, surmounted by 2-4
-short spicules; acrospores ovoid or ellipsoid, variable in size; apices
-broadly and obtusely papillate.—On Wood-anemone. Not uncommon. (Plate
-XV. fig. 267.)
-
-=Peronospora gangliformis=, Berk. LETTUCE MOULD; threads of the mycelium
-stout, now and then torulose; suckers vesicular, obovate or clavate;
-fertile threads 2-6 times dichotomous, sometimes trichotomous; stems and
-primary branches slender, dilated or inflated above; the ultimate ramuli
-inflated at the apex into a turbinate or subglobose vesicle bearing from
-2-8 subulate processes or spicules; acrospores minute, subglobose;
-apices with broad depressed papillæ, produced on the spicular processes,
-On Lettuces and other _Compositæ_. Frequent. (Plate XIV. fig. 265.)
-
-=Peronospora parasitica=, Pers. CABBAGE MOULD; threads of the mycelium
-thickened and much branched; suckers numerous, branched; branches
-clavate, obtuse; fertile threads thick, soft, flexile, equal or unequal,
-5-8 times dichotomous, rarely trichotomous; branches always repeatedly
-trifurcate; acrospores broadly elliptical, very obtuse at the apex,
-white.—On Cabbages, Shepherd’s-purse, and other Cruciferæ, sometimes in
-company with _Cystopus candidus_. Summer and autumn. Common. (Plate
-XIII. fig. 262.)
-
-=Peronospora Viciæ=, Berk. PEA MOULD; fertile threads densely cæspitose,
-erect, equal, rarely unequal, 6-7-8 times dichotomous; ultimate ramuli
-shortly subulate, acute; acrospores ellipsoid, very obtuse at the apex,
-obtuse or slightly acute at the base; membrane with a violaceous
-tint.—On Tares, Peas, &c. Frequent. (Plate XV. fig. 266; Plate X. fig.
-212.)
-
-=Peronospora Arenariæ=, Berk. SANDWORT MOULD; fertile threads slender,
-6-7 times equally, rarely unequally, dichotomous; branches spreading;
-ultimate ramuli slender, acute, subulate, nearly erect; acrospores
-broadly elliptical, oftentimes very obtuse, small; membrane scarcely
-violaceous.—On _Arenaria serpyllifolia_ and _A. trinervis_.—June. (Plate
-XVI. fig. 268; Plate X. fig. 211.)
-
-=Peronospora effusa=, Grev. SPINACH MOULD; fertile threads fasciculate,
-short, thick, 2-6, rarely 7 times dichotomous above; acrospores broadly
-ellipsoid, sometimes very obtuse; membrane with a violaceous tint. On
-Spinach, Goosefoot, and some other allied plants. Spring and autumn. Not
-uncommon. (Plate X. figs. 214, 215.)
-
-=Peronospora Urticæ=, Casp. NETTLE MOULD; fertile threads small, loosely
-4-6 times dichotomous; branches flexuose, ultimate ramuli subulate,
-arcuate, often deflexed; acrospores large, broadly ovoid or subglobose,
-distinctly pedicellate; apices very obtuse; membrane violaceous.—On
-leaves of the common Nettle.
-
-=Peronospora trifoliorum=, De By. CLOVER MOULD; fertile threads
-cæspitose, equally or unequally 6-7 times dichotomous, rarely
-trichotomous; ultimate branches subulate, acute, slightly curved;
-acrospores ellipsoid, very obtuse; membrane with a slightly violaceous
-tint; oospores large; epispore brown.—On Lucern (_Medicago sativa_).
-Highgate and Hampstead, 1864.
-
-=Peronospora grisea=, Ung. VERONICA MOULD; fertile threads erect,
-fasciculate, grey, 5-7 times regularly dichotomous; branches gradually
-attenuated; primary oblique erect; others spreading, flexuose; ultimate
-mostly unequal, slightly arcuate; acrospores ellipsoid or ovoid, obtuse;
-membrane pale and dirty violet.—On leaves of _Veronica beccabunga_. May,
-1846. (Plate X. fig. 213.)
-
-=Peronospora arborescens=, Berk. POPPY MOULD; fertile threads slender,
-erect, 7-10 times dichotomous above; branches more or less flexuose,
-squarrose, spreading, gradually attenuated; ultimate ramuli shortly
-subulate, more or less arcuate; acrospores very small, subglobose;
-membrane scarcely violaceous.—On the Corn Poppy. June. Common.
-
-=Peronospora Schleideniana=, De By. (_P. Destructor_, B.) ONION MOULD;
-fertile threads robust, erect, not septate, branched alternately;
-ultimate ramuli forked and uncinate or divaricate; acrospores seated on
-the tips of the ultimate ramuli, obovoid or nearly pear-shaped,
-attenuated at the base; membrane of a dirty violet-colour.—On the leaves
-of various species of _Allium_. Often plentiful. (Plate XIII. fig. 263.)
-
-=Peronospora violacea=, Berk. SCABIOUS MOULD; fertile threads branched;
-acrospores sub-elliptical, violet-coloured. All that is known of this
-species is contained in the following note from the Rev. M. J.
-Berkeley:—“It grew on the petals of the common scabious. I have not
-found it again, and have either lost or mislaid my specimens. You may
-describe it as _læte violacea_; _floccis ramosis_; _sporis
-subellipticis_, _violaceis_. It is probably the _Farinaria_ on Scabious
-of Sowerby.” (M. J. B.)
-
-=Peronospora sordida=, Berk. FIGWORT MOULD; forming broad, irregular,
-dirty, pallid spots on the under surface of the leaves; fertile threads
-loosely dichotomous above; tips forked, unequal; acrospores obovate,
-apiculate.—On leaves of _Scrophularia_. Jedburgh.
-
-=Peronospora sparsa=, Berk. ROSE MOULD; fertile threads scattered, by no
-means torulose, ultimate branches scarcely uncinate, dichotomous, pallid
-grey; acrospores sub-elliptical.—On the under side of rose-leaves in
-conservatories.
-
-=Peronospora obliqua=, Cooke. DOCK MOULD; threads of the mycelium
-slender; fertile threads fasciculate, erect, simple, rarely bifurcate,
-attenuated upwards; acrospores large, ellipsoid, attached obliquely near
-the base.—On the under surface of dock leaves. Winter and spring.
-Probably not uncommon. Brownish circular spots on the leaves indicate
-the presence of this mould, which is so minute that it might otherwise
-be overlooked. (Plate XVI. fig. 269.)
-
-
- =Erysiphei=.
-
- _Conceptacle with one sporangium._
- Appendages floccose _Sphærotheca_.
-
- _Conceptacle with many sporangia._
- Appendages needle-shaped, rigid _Phyllactinia_.
- Appendages hooked _Uncinula_.
- Appendages dichotomous _Microsphæria_.
- Appendages floccose _Erysiphe_.
-
-
- SPHÆROTHECA, _Lév._
-
- Mycelium arachnoid; perithecia globose, containing a single globose
- sporangium; appendages numerous, floccose.—_Berk. Outl._, p.
- 404.
-
-=Sphærotheca pannosa=, Lév. ROSE BLIGHT; mycelium thickened, woolly,
-felted, persistent; conceptacles minute, globose, scattered; appendages
-floccose, white; sporangium many-spored.—On the branches, calyces,
-petioles, and leaves of Roses. Very common. (Plate XI. figs. 217, 218.)
-
-=Sphærotheca Castagnei=, Lév. HOP BLIGHT; on both surfaces; mycelium
-effuse, web-like, commonly evanescent; conceptacles minute, scattered,
-globose; appendages numerous, short, flexuose above; sporangium
-many-spored.—On the leaves of the Hop, Meadow-sweet, and various other
-plants. Common. (Plate XI. fig. 216.)
-
-
- PHYLLACTINIA, _Lév._
-
- Perithecia hemispherical, at length depressed, seated on a persistent
- or evanescent membranaceo-granular receptacle; appendages
- straight, rigid, acicular, at length bent back.—_Berk. Outl._,
- p. 404.
-
-=Phyllactinia guttata=, Lév. HAZEL BLIGHT; amphigenous; mycelium
-web-like, often evanescent; conceptacles large, scattered,
-hemispherical, at length depressed; appendages hyaline, rigid, simple;
-sporangia 4-20, containing 2-4 spores.—On the leaves of Hawthorn, Hazel,
-Ash, Elm, Alder, Beech, Birch, Oak, Hornbeam, and various other plants.
-Common. (Plate XI. figs. 219, 220.)
-
-
- UNCINULA, _Lév._
-
- Mycelium floccose; perithecia globose; appendages rigid, simple, bifid
- or dichotomous, uncinate, at length bent upwards.—_Berk. Outl._,
- p. 404.
-
-=Uncinula adunca=, Lév. WILLOW BLIGHT; mycelium variable; conceptacles
-scattered or gregarious, minute; appendages simple; sporangia 8-12,
-sub-pyriform, containing 4 spores.—On the leaves of Willows, Poplars,
-Birch, &c. Not uncommon. (Plate XI. figs. 221-224.)
-
-=Uncinula bicornis=, Lév. MAPLE BLIGHT; amphigenous; mycelium web-like,
-effuse, evanescent, or like a membrane and persistent; conceptacles
-large, hemispherical, at length depressed; appendages simple, bifid or
-dichotomous, uncinate; sporangia 8, sub-pyriform, containing 8
-spores.—On the leaves of Maples. Common. (Plate XI. figs. 225-228.)
-
-
- MICROSPHÆRIA, _Lév._
-
- _Mycelium_ arachnoid; appendages straight, dichotomous; branchlets
- swelling at the tip, or filiform.—_Berk. Outl._, p. 404.
-
-=Microsphæria Hedwigii=, Lév. MEALY GUELDER-ROSE BLIGHT; hypophyllous;
-mycelium web-like, evanescent; conceptacles minute, globose, scattered;
-appendages few, very little longer than the diameter of the
-conceptacles; sporangia 4, ovate, containing 4 spores.—On leaves of
-mealy Guelder-rose. Near Greenhithe, Kent.
-
-=Microsphæria penicillata=, Lév. GUELDER-ROSE BLIGHT; amphigenous;
-mycelium web-like, effuse, evanescent; conceptacles scattered, minute,
-globose; appendages 8-12, equal to the diameter of the conceptacle;
-sporangia 4, ovate, rostrate, containing 8 spores.—On leaves of
-Guelder-rose and Alder. Probably not uncommon. (Plate XI. fig. 234.)
-
-=Microsphæria Mougeotii=, Lév. TEA-TREE BLIGHT; amphigenous; mycelium
-web-like, oftentimes persistent; conceptacles minute, scattered or
-gregarious, globose, at length depressed; appendages loosely
-dichotomous; sporangia 12-16, on a short pedicel, 2-spored.—On leaves of
-_Lycium barbarum_. Near Dartford, Kent. October, 1864.
-
-=Microsphæria Berberidis=, Lév. BERBERRY BLIGHT; amphigenous; mycelium
-web-like, oftentimes persistent; conceptacles scattered or gregarious,
-globose, minute; appendages few (5-10); branchlets long, divaricate,
-obtuse at their apices; sporangia 6, ovate, containing 6-8 spores.—On
-leaves of the common Berberry. Autumn. Frequent. (Plate XI. figs.
-229-232.)
-
-=Microsphæria grossulariæ=, Lév. GOOSEBERRY BLIGHT; amphigenous;
-mycelium web-like, fugacious or persistent; conceptacles scattered or
-gregarious, globose, minute; appendages 10-15, vaguely dichotomous,
-ultimate branchlets bidentate; sporangia 4-8, ovate, containing 4-5
-spores.—On Gooseberry-leaves. Autumn. Frequent.
-
-
- ERYSIPHE, _Hedw._
-
- Mycelium arachnoid; appendages floccose, simple or irregularly
- branched.—_Berk. Outl._, p. 404.
-
- * _Sporangia 2-spored._
-
-=Erysiphe Linkii=, Lév. MUGWORT BLIGHT; amphigenous; mycelium web-like;
-fugacious or persistent; conceptacles minute, globose, scattered,
-emersed; appendages white, interwoven with the mycelium; sporangia 8-20,
-pyriform, with elongated pedicels.—On leaves of Mugwort. Autumn.
-Frequent. (Plate XII. figs. 248, 249.)
-
-=Erysiphe lamprocarpa=, Lév. COMPOSITE BLIGHT; amphigenous; mycelium
-web-like, fugacious or persistent; conceptacles minute, globose,
-scattered, or gregarious; appendages coloured, interwoven with the
-mycelium; sporangia 8-16, shortly pedicellate.—On leaves of Salsify,
-Scorzonera, Plantain, &c. Autumn. Not uncommon. (Plate XII. figs. 250,
-251.)
-
-
- ** _Sporangia 3-8-spored._
-
-=Erysiphe graminis=, D.C. GRASS BLIGHT; amphigenous or epiphyllous;
-mycelium effuse, floccose, persistent; conceptacles large, gregarious or
-disseminated, hemispherical, at length depressed and semi-immersed;
-appendages simple or interwoven with the mycelium; sporangia 20-24,
-ovate, pedicellate, with 8 spores.—On leaves of Grasses. Autumn.
-Frequent. (Plate XI. figs. 235, 236.)
-
-=Erysiphe Martii=, Lk. PEA BLIGHT; amphigenous; mycelium web-like, very
-often evanescent, globose; appendages short, interwoven with the
-mycelium; sporangia 4-8, globose, pedicellate, with 4-8 spores.—On
-leaves of Peas, Beans, _Umbelliferæ_, and other plants. Autumn. Very
-common. (Plate XI. figs. 237-239.)
-
-=Erysiphe Montagnei=, Lév. BURDOCK BLIGHT; amphigenous or hypophyllous;
-mycelium web-like, evanescent; conceptacles minute, globose, gregarious
-or scattered; appendages distinct from the mycelium; sporangia 8, ovate,
-rostrate, with 2-3 spores.—On leaves of Burdock. Not uncommon.
-
-=Erysiphe tortilis=, Lk. CORNEL BLIGHT; hypophyllous; mycelium web-like,
-effuse, evanescent; conceptacles minute, globose; appendages ten times
-as long, free from the mycelium, flexuose; sporangia 4, ovate, rostrate,
-with 4 spores.—On leaves of the common Dogwood. Autumn. Frequent. (Plate
-XII. figs. 245, 246.)
-
-=Erysiphe communis=, Schl. BUTTERCUP BLIGHT; hypophyllous; mycelium
-effuse, web-like, evanescent or persistent; conceptacles minute,
-globose, scattered or gregarious; appendages short; sporangia 4-8,
-ovate, rostrate, with 4-8 spores.—On leaves of various _Ranunculaceæ_,
-_Leguminosæ_, and other plants. Autumn. Very common. (Plate XI. figs.
-240-242.)
-
-
- CHÆTOMIUM, _Kze._
-
- Perithecium thin, brittle, mouthless; sporangia linear, containing
- dark lemon-shaped spores. _Berk. Outl._, p. 405.
-
-=Chætomium elatum=, Kze. STRAW-BRISTLE MOULD; perithecium sub-ovate,
-base radiato-fibrose, hairs of the vertex very long, interwoven,
-branched; spores broadly elliptic, apiculate at either end.—On
-mouldering straw, reeds, matting, &c. Very common. (Plate XII. figs.
-257-259.)
-
-=Chætomium chartarum=, Ehb. PAPER-BRISTLE MOULD; perithecium subglobose,
-black, surrounded by a bright yellow spot; spores subglobose.—On paper.
-Stibbington, Hants. Rare. (Plate XII. figs. 252, 253.)
-
-=Chætomium glabrum=, B. This species has never been described. It was
-recorded, by name only, in Berkeley’s Outlines, and, the specimens being
-mislaid, that gentleman is unable to describe it completely and
-correctly. “It grew abundantly on straw, and differed from _Chætomium
-elatum_ in being perfectly free from hairs.”—(_M. J. B._)—On damp straw.
-
-
- ASCOTRICHA, _Berk._
-
- Perithecium thin, free, mouthless, seated on loose, branched,
- conidiiferous threads; sporangia linear, containing dark
- elliptic spores.—_Berk. Outl._, p. 405.
-
-=Ascotricha chartarum=, B. PAPER MILDEW; perithecium thin, olive-brown,
-seated on radiating flocci; sporangia linear, numerous; spores broadly
-elliptic, chocolate-coloured.—On white printed paper in a deal
-candle-box. King’s Cliffe. (Plate XII. figs. 254-256.)
-
-
- EUROTIUM, _Link._
-
- Perithecia reticulated, vesicular, coloured, attached to mucedinous
- threads; sporangia delicate.—_Berk. Outl._, p. 405.
-
-=Eurotium herbariorum=, Lk. HERBARIUM MOULD; perithecium spherical,
-sub-depressed, yellow, seated upon radiating expanded, branched,
-intricate flocci.—On plants in herbaria, and various decaying
-substances. Very common. (Plate XII. figs. 260, 261.)
-
-
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
-
- APPENDIX B.
-
- -------
-
-
-The following species, belonging to those sections of Microscopic Fungi
-which are included in this volume, have been found in Britain since the
-publication of the preceding Appendix:—
-
-=Peridermium columnare=, Alb. and Schw. Simple, slender, naked,
-cylindrical, elongated, lacerated at the apex, white; sporidia
-orange.—On _Picea_. Watcombe, near Torquay. September, 1867. (_E.
-Parfitt._)
-
- * * * * *
-
-=Æcidium Orchidearum=, Fiedl. ORCHIS CLUSTER-CUP; spots large, pallid,
-orbicular or elongated; peridia circinating, semi-immersed; spores
-golden-yellow.—On _Orchis latifolia_. Dilham, Norfolk. June, 1866.
-
- * * * * *
-
-=Puccinia discoidearum=, Link. SOUTHERNWOOD BRAND; spots obliterated;
-sori subrotund, minute, surrounded by the ruptured epidermis; sporidia
-brown, oblong or ovoid, somewhat rhomboidal, with both cells attenuated,
-and triangular; peduncles elongated.—On _Artemisia maritima_. Swanscombe
-Marshes. 1865.
-
-=Puccinia Virgaureæ=, Lib. GOLDEN-ROD BRAND; spots orbicular, pallid,
-then yellowish; sori blackish-brown, minute, punctiform, shining,
-clustered, nearly stellate, convex; sporidia oblong, subconstricted,
-yellowish-brown above, attenuated and yellowish-white below; peduncles
-short.—On leaves of _Solidago virgaurea_. Shere, Surrey. July and
-August, 1865. (_Dr. Capron._)
-
-=Puccinia difformis=, Kunze. GOOSEGRASS BRAND; spots yellowish; sori
-variable, compact, often in rings; epidermis bullate; sporidia obovate,
-obtuse, on short pedicels, brown.—On leaves of _Galium aparine_. July,
-1866. Shere and Darenth Usually occurring on or near spots previously
-occupied by _Æcidium_.
-
-=Puccinia Apii=, Corda. CELERY BRAND; sori large, confluent, red-brown,
-powdery; spores oblong, constricted, brown; epispore smooth, thick;
-pedicels short, attenuated.—On leaves of Celery. Autumn, 1866, 1867.
-
-=Puccinia Asari=, Kunze. ASARABACCA BRAND; spots obliterated; sori
-small, subglobose, crowded or circinating, ultimately confluent,
-surrounded by the ruptured epidermis, usually forming a large, roundish,
-convex, pulverulent mass; sporidia brown, elliptic, constricted.—On
-leaves of _Asarum Europæum_. Bettws-y-coed, N. Wales. July, 1866.
-
-=Puccinia Mœhringiæ=, Fuckel. It is very doubtful whether this deserves
-to rank as a species distinct from _P. Lychnidearum_, Lk. I think not.
-The sporidia are rather shorter than in the last-named species, and the
-pedicels are very long; otherwise it does not appear to differ from the
-typical form.—On _Mœhringia trinervis_. Near Worcester. June, 1867.
-(_Dr. Holl._)
-
-=Puccinia fallens=, Cooke. VETCH BRAND; sori few and small, scattered,
-intermixed with pustules of _Trichobasis_; sporidia obovate, on rather
-long pedicels, of a tawny colour, and slightly constricted at the
-septum; epispore smooth.—On leaves of _Vicia sepium_. Liverpool. Autumn,
-1865. (_R. McLeod._)
-
- * * * * *
-
-=Uredo Orchidis=, Mart. ORCHIS UREDO; amphigenous; spots reddish-brown;
-sori subrotund, arranged in circles, often confluent; sporidia
-subglobose, golden-yellow.—On _Listera ovata_ and _Orchis latifolia_.
-Crosby, near Liverpool. May, June, 1865. (_R. G. McLeod._)
-
-=Uredo Empetri=, D.C. CROWBERRY UREDO; hypogenous; spots obliterated;
-sori oval, scattered: the epidermis at first convex, afterwards ruptured
-and concave; sporidia ovoid or subglobose, bright yellow.—On _Empetrum
-nigrum_. Near Llanderfel, N. Wales. May, 1865.
-
-=Uredo Euonymi=, Mart. SPINDLE UREDO; spots yellowish; sori roundish,
-circinating, often confluent; epidermis erumpent; sporidia ovoid and
-slightly coherent, tawny-yellow.—On leaves of _Euonymus Europæus_.
-Darenth Wood, Kent. August, 1864. Rare.
-
-=Uredo Tropæoli=, Desmz. NASTURTIUM UREDO: hypogenous; spots
-pale-yellow; sori minute, roundish, scattered or confluent; sporidia
-ovoid or subglobose, orange.—On leaves of _Tropæolum aduncum_. Shere.
-October, 1865. (_Dr. Capron._)
-
- * * * * *
-
-=Trichobasis fallens=, Cooke. CLOVER RUST; spots obliterated; sori
-amphigenous, numerous, scattered, subrotund, brown, surrounded by the
-remains of the ruptured epidermis; spores sub-ovate; pedicels short,
-hyaline, evanescent; epispore verrucose. _Uredo fallens_, Desmz.—On
-leaves of Clover, &c. September. Not uncommon.
-
- * * * * *
-
-=Uromyces graminum=, Cooke. COCKSFOOT RUST; epiphyllous; sori oblong or
-confluent and linear, convex, black and shining, so as easily to be
-confounded on casual observation with _Dothidea graminis_, at length
-bursting longitudinally; sporidia subglobose or ovate, tawny, with
-hyaline pedicels of variable length.—On leaves of _Dactylis glomerata_.
-Shere. October, 1865. (_Dr. Capron._)
-
-=Uromyces concentrica=, Lév. Described at p. 208 as _Trichobasis
-Scillarum_, B.; but it appears to be a good _Uromyces_, and has been
-placed in that genus by Lévielle.
-
-=Uromyces sparsa=, Lév. SANDWORT RUST; spots pallid; sori subrotund and
-oval, amphigenous and cauline; epidermis erumpent; sporidia ovoid,
-brownish; peduncles thickened, short.—On _Spergularia rubra_. Swanscombe
-Marshes. June, 1865.
-
-=Uromyces Polygoni=, Fuckel. KNOTGRASS RUST; cauline; sori elongated and
-confluent, convex, surrounded by the remains of the ruptured epidermis;
-sporidia subglobose or globose, smooth, yellowish-brown; pedicels very
-long, thickened, hyaline, persistent. _Capitularia Polygoni_, Rabh.—On
-the stems of _Polygonum aviculare_. October. Common.
-
- * * * * *
-
-=Cystopus spinulosus=, De Bary. THISTLE (WHITE) RUST; conidia in time
-much elongated; sori erumpent on both surfaces of the leaves, white;
-oospores globose; epispore brown; tubercles minute, solid, very
-prominent, often acute and spinulose.—On Thistles. Bungay, Suffolk.
-September, 1865.
-
- * * * * *
-
-=Peronospora candida=, Fuckel. PRIMROSE MOULD; densely cæspitose, white;
-threads erect, dichotomously branched; ultimate branchlets short,
-spreading; sporidia ovate.—On leaves of Primrose. Near Corwen, N. Wales.
-July, 1866.
-
-
- The following genus is entirely new to Britain. Its position is
- next to _Microsphæria_ at page 219.
-
-
- PODOSPHÆRA, _Kunze_.
-
-Mycelium effuse, web-like, evanescent; conceptacles sphærical,
-containing one subglobose 8-spored sporangium; spores ovate; appendages
-few, dichotomous, thickened at their extremities, hyaline.
-
-=Podosphæra Kunzei=, Lév. PLUM BLIGHT; amphigenous; conceptacles minute,
-scattered, globose; appendages three times the length of the diameter of
-the conceptacles.—On leaves of _Prunus domestica_. Shere, Surrey. Sept.,
-1865. (_Dr. Capron._)
-
-=Podosphæra clandestina=, Lév. HAWTHORN BLIGHT; amphigenous;
-conceptacles minute, globose, scattered; appendages (8-10) equal in
-length to the diameter of the conceptacles; branches short and rounded
-at their extremities.—On leaves of the Hawthorn. Upper Holloway.
-October, 1864; Shere, Surrey, September, 1865. (_E. C._)
-
- * * * * *
-
-=Uncinula Wallrothii=, Lév. SLOE BLIGHT; amphigenous; mycelium web-like,
-evanescent; conceptacles minute, scattered; sporanges 12-16,
-pear-shaped, 6-spored; appendages numerous, twice the length of the
-diameter of the conceptacles.—On leaves of the Sloe, _Prunus spinosa_.
-Shere, Surrey. October, 1865. (_Dr. Capron._)
-
- * * * * *
-
-=Microsphæria comata=, Lév. SPINDLE BLIGHT; hypophyllous; mycelium
-web-like, fugacious; conceptacles scattered, minute, globose; sporanges
-8, ovate, with a beak-like termination at their base, 4-spored;
-appendages few, six times the length of the diameter of the
-conceptacles.—On _Euonymus Europæus_. Shere, Surrey. August, 1865. (_Dr.
-Capron._)
-
- * * * * *
-
-=Erysiphe horridula,= Lév. BORAGE BLIGHT; amphigenous; mycelium
-web-like, sometimes persistent; conceptacles minute, globose, scattered
-or clustered; sporanges 20-24, oblong-ovate, attenuated downwards,
-containing 3-4 spores; appendages short, flexuose, and bent upwards.—On
-leaves of _Lycopsis arvensis_. Shere. October, 1865. (_Dr. Capron._)
-
- * * * * *
-
-=Chætomium murorum=, Corda. WALL BRISTLE-MOULD; gregarious, glaucous,
-then blackish; perithecium globose, brown; hairs circinate, erect,
-septate, pulverulent; spores oblong, yellowish. On plaster. Rare. (_M.
-J. B._)
-
-
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
-
-
-
- ADDENDA.
-
- -------
-
-[The following species have been added to the British Flora since the
- publication of the Appendix.]
-
-=Æcidium Parnassiæ=, Grav. PARNASSIA CLUSTER-CUPS; hypophyllous; spots
-pallid; peridia in subrotund patches, irregularly disposed,
-tawny-yellow, between urceolate and concave; the margin thick and nearly
-entire; spores pallid. _Duby. Bot. Gall._ ii. p. 904.—On leaves of
-_Parnassia palustris_, near Glasgow. (_Dr. Greville._) The original
-specimen is in the Edinburgh Herbarium.
-
-=Æcidium Statices=, Desm. SEA-LAVENDER CLUSTER-CUPS; hypophyllous; spots
-subrotund, or confluent and irregular, purple; peridia in subrotund
-circinating clusters, sometimes irregularly disposed on the nerves and
-petioles; urceolate; margin lacerated, white; spores orange. _Desm.
-Exs._ No. 132. _Cooke, Exs._ No. 444.—On leaves and petioles of
-_Statices_. June, July. Fleetwood, 1859 (_Rev. A. Bloxam_). Walney
-Island, Lancashire, 1871 (_C. Bailey_). Near Basingstoke, 1871 (_R. S.
-Hill_). Near Chichester, 1872 (_F. V. Paxton_).
-
-=Chætomium funicolum=, Cooke. TWINE BRISTLE-MOULD; perithecia scattered,
-sub-ovate, black; hairs of the vertex very long, dichotomous or simple,
-erect, slender, acute, black; sporidia lemon-shaped, dingy brown.—On
-twine suspended in a vessel containing water at the British Museum. (_W.
-Carruthers, F.R.S._) March, 1872. This species is most closely allied to
-_C. elatum_, but much smaller and neater. It is wholly black, and
-without the fibrous base of _C. elatum_. The hairs are more delicate,
-not having half the diameter, and the sporidia are scarcely more than
-half as long or broad. A species of _Polyactis_ afterwards made its
-appearance on the same mycelium on some portion of the twine left behind
-with a few immature perithecia.
-
-
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
-
-
-
- EXPLANATION OF PLATES.
-
- -------
-
-
- Plate fig.
-
- I. 1. Goatsbeard with its cluster-cups (_Æcidium
- Tragopogonis_).
-
- 〃 2. Fragment of same, slightly magnified.
-
- 〃 3. Section of cluster-cup, further magnified.
-
- 〃 4. Leaf of wood-anemone with its cluster-cups
- (_Æcidium leucospermum_).
-
- 〃 5. Portion of same, slightly magnified.
-
- 〃 6. Anemone cluster-cups, further magnified.
-
- 〃 7. Leaf of Berberry with cluster-cups (_Æcidium
- Berberidis_).
-
- 〃 8. Cluster of cups from the Berberry, as seen with a
- lens.
-
- 〃 9. Cluster-cups of Berberry, magnified.
-
- 〃 10. Nettle-stem distorted by growth of cluster-cups
- (_Æcidium Urticæ_).
-
- 〃 11. Nettle cluster-cups, magnified.
-
- II. 12. Leaf of Pilewort with groups of cluster-cups
- (_Æcidium Ranunculacearum_).
-
- 〃 13. Group of cluster-cups from Pilewort, as seen with
- a lens.
-
- 〃 14. Section of Pilewort cluster-cups, magnified.
-
- 〃 15. Bedstraw cluster-cups (_Æcidium Galii_) on the
- Great Hedge Bedstraw.
-
- 〃 16. Tip of leaflet with cluster of cups, viewed
- through a lens.
-
- 〃 17. Bedstraw cluster-cup from same, magnified.
-
- 〃 18. Leaflets of Mountain-ash with horn-shaped
- cluster-cups (_Rœstelia cornuta_).
-
- 〃 19. Group of Mountain-ash cluster-cups, magnified.
-
- 〃 20. Pear-leaf with its cluster-cups (_Rœstelia
- cancellata_).
-
- 〃 21. Cluster-cup from the same, magnified.
-
- 〃 22. Leaves and fruit of Hawthorn with lacerated
- cluster-cups (_Rœstelia lacerata_).
-
- 〃 23. Elongated cells forming the walls of the
- cluster-cups, × 250.
-
- 〃 24. Single cell, more highly magnified, with its
- parallel striæ.
-
- 〃 25. Cluster-cups from fruit of Hawthorn, magnified.
-
- 〃 26. Section of same, further magnified.
-
- 〃 27. Fir-leaves bearing cluster-cups (_Peridermium
- Pini_).
-
- 〃 28. Isolated cup of same, magnified.
-
- III. 29. Many-jointed fruit of Burnet chain-brand
- (_Xenodochus carbonarius_), magnified.
-
- 〃 30. Leaflets of Burnet with rust on the lower, and
- brand (_Aregma acuminatum_) on the upper
- leaflets.
-
- 〃 31. Spores of Burnet rust (_Lecythea Poterii_) × 230.
-
- 〃 32. Fruit of Burnet brand (_Aregma acuminatum_).
-
- 〃 33. Leaf of Barren Strawberry with rust and brand
- intermixed.
-
- 〃 34. Spores of Barren Strawberry rust × 230.
-
- 〃 35. Fruit of Strawberry brand (_Aregma obtusatum_) ×
- 300.
-
- 〃 36. Leaflet of Rose with its rust and brand
- intermixed.
-
- 〃 37. Spores of Rose rust (_Lecythea Rosæ_) × 230.
-
- 〃 38. Fruit of Rose brand (_Aregma mucronatum_) × 300.
-
- 〃 39. Leaflet of Bramble, with its rust and brand
- intermixed.
-
- 〃 40. Spores of Bramble rust (_Lecythea Ruborum_) × 230.
-
- 〃 41. Fruit of Bramble brand (_Aregma bulbosum_) × 300.
-
- 〃 42. Leaflet of Raspberry with its brand.
-
- 〃 43. Fruit of Raspberry brand (_Aregma gracile_) × 230.
-
- 〃 44. Cluster of fruits of Rose brand (_Aregma
- mucronatum_) × 230.
-
- 〃 45. Fruit of Bramble brand (_Aregma bulbosum_) in
- active germination, with sporidia at the tips of
- the threads × 300.
-
- 〃 46. Fruit of Bramble brand (_Aregma bulbosum_)
- ruptured, with inner cell escaping × 250 (_F.
- Currey_).
-
- 〃 47. Portion of leaflet of Meadow-sweet with its brand.
-
- 〃 48. Spores of Meadow-sweet brand (_Triphragmium
- ulmariæ_) × 300.
-
- 〃 49. Spore of Meadow-sweet brand (_Triphragmium
- ulmariæ_) in germination, with sporidia borne on
- the germ-tubes × 300 (_Tulasne_).
-
- 〃 50. Sprig of _Thesium humifusum_ bearing
- Bastard-toadflax cluster-cups (_Æcidium
- Thesii_).
-
- 〃 51. Portion of leaf of same, with cluster-cups,
- enlarged.
-
- 〃 52. Leaflet of _Trientalis Europæa_ with its smut
- (_Tuburcinia Trientalis_).
-
- 〃 53. Spores of the same × 320.
-
- 〃 54. Spores of Potato smut (_Tuburcinia scabies_) ×
- 320. (_Berkeley._)
-
- 〃 55. Leaflet of Alexanders (_Smyrnium olusatrum_) with
- its brand.
-
- 〃 56. Spores of Alexanders brand (_Puccinia Smyrnii_) ×
- 320.
-
- IV. 57. Wheat-straw attacked by mildew (_Puccinia
- graminis_).
-
- 〃 58. Cluster of spores of corn-mildew, magnified
- (_Bauer_).
-
- 〃 59. Single spore of corn-mildew (_Puccinia graminis_)
- × 300.
-
- 〃 60. Portion of blade of grass with coronated mildew
- (_Puccinia coronata_).
-
- 〃 61. Portion of same enlarged, showing the pustules, or
- sori.
-
- 〃 62. Spore of coronated mildew (_Puccinia coronata_) ×
- highly.
-
- 〃 63. Portion of leaf of Spear-thistle with its brand
- (_Puccinia syngenesiarum_).
-
- 〃 64. Spores of Thistle brand (_Puccinia syngenesiarum_)
- × 320.
-
- 〃 65. Leaf of Wood-anemone with brand (_Puccinia
- anemones_).
-
- 〃 66. Spore of Anemone brand (_Puccinia anemones_) ×
- 320.
-
- 〃 67. Leaf of _Centaurea nigra_ with brand.
-
- 〃 68. Spores of Composite-brand (_Puccinia
- compositarum_) × 320.
-
- 〃 69. Leaf of Mint with Mint brand (_Puccinia menthæ_).
-
- 〃 70. Spore of Mint brand (_Puccinia menthæ_) × 350.
-
- 〃 71. Portion of leaf of Earth-nut with brand (_Puccinia
- umbelliferarum_).
-
- 〃 72. Spore of Earth-nut brand (_Puccinia
- umbelliferarum_) × 320.
-
- 〃 73. Leaf of Ground-ivy with its brand (_Puccinia
- Glechomatis_).
-
- 〃 74. Spore of Ground-ivy brand (_Puccinia Glechomatis_)
- × 320.
-
- 〃 75. Pustule of brand surrounded by the ruptured
- epidermis, magnified.
-
- 〃 76. Portion of leaf and stem of Goatsbeard with brand.
-
- 〃 77. Spores of the same × 320.
-
- 〃 78. Portion of leaf of Willow-herb with its brand
- (_Puccinia pulverulenta_).
-
- 〃 79. Spores of Willow-herb brand (_Puccinia
- pulverulenta_) × 320.
-
- 〃 80. Leaf of Pennywort with brand (_Puccinia
- umbilici_).
-
- 〃 81. Spores of Pennywort-brand (_Puccinia umbilici_) ×
- 320.
-
- 〃 82. Portion of leaf of Dandelion with its brand.
-
- 〃 83. Spores of Variable-brand (_Puccinia variabilis_) ×
- 320.
-
- V. 84. Grain of Wheat infected with Fœtid smut
- (_Tilletia caries_).
-
- 〃 85. Longitudinal section of the same.
-
- 〃 86. Spores of Fœtid smut (_Tilletia caries_) mixed
- with delicate branching threads × 320.
-
- 〃 87. Spores of Fœtid smut in germination × highly.
-
- 〃 88. Sporidia of the first order borne on the
- germinating tubes of the fœtid smut (_Tilletia
- caries_) × highly.
-
- 〃 89. Sporidia of the first order, showing their
- transverse connection, × highly.
-
- 〃 90. Sporidia of the first order, producing sporidia of
- the second order, × highly.
-
- 〃 91. Sporidium of the second order in active
- germination.
-
- 〃 92. Deformed flower-head of Goatsbeard infested with
- smut (_Ustilago receptaculorum_).
-
- 〃 93. Floret removed, sprinkled with spores of the smut,
- enlarged.
-
- 〃 94. Spores of Goatsbeard smut (_Ustilago
- receptaculorum_) × 460.
-
- 〃 95. The same in active germination × 460 (_Tulasne_).
-
- 〃 96. Beaksedge (_Rhyncospora alba_) with its smut
- (_Ustilago Montagnei_).
-
- 〃 97. Spores of _Ustilago Montagnei_ × 460.
-
- 〃 98. Ear of Barley infected with smut (_Ustilago
- segetum_).
-
- 〃 99. Spores of Corn-smut (_Ustilago segetum_) × 460.
-
- 〃 100. Grass with its smut (_Ustilago hypodytes_).
-
- 〃 101. Spores of Grass-smut (_Ustilago hypodytes_).
-
- 〃 102. Flowers of Bladder-campion with anther smut
- (_Ustilago antherarum_).
-
- 〃 103. Anther distorted by smut (_Ustilago antherarum_).
-
- 〃 104. Spores of Anther smut (_Ustilago antherarum_) ×
- 460.
-
- 〃 105. Portion of leaf of water grass with Elongated smut
- (_Ustilago longissima_).
-
- 〃 106. Pustule of same, enlarged.
-
- 〃 107. Spores of Elongated smut (_Ustilago longissima_) ×
- very highly.
-
- 〃 108. Spores of Maize smut (_Ustilago maydis_) × 460.
-
- VI. 109. Sedge (_Carex recurva_) with Sedge smut (_Ustilago
- urceolorum_).
-
- 〃 110. Single fruit covered with the smut.
-
- 〃 111. Spores of Sedge smut (_Ustilago urceolorum_) ×
- 460.
-
- 〃 112. Flower of _Polygonum persicaria_ distorted by
- Utricle smut (_Ustilago utriculosa_).
-
- 〃 113. Section of the same (_Tulasne_).
-
- 〃 114. Inflorescence of _Polygonum hydropiper_ with
- Utricle smut (_Ustilago utriculosa_).
-
- 〃 115. Section of infected flower of _Polygonum
- hydropiper_.
-
- 〃 116. Spores of Utricle smut (_Ustilago utriculosa_) ×
- 460.
-
- 〃 117. Leaf of Cocksfoot, grass with smut (_Ustilago
- Salveii_).
-
- 〃 118. Portion of leaf, showing pustules, × slightly.
-
- 〃 119. Spores of Cocksfoot smut (_Ustilago Salveii_) ×
- 320.
-
- 〃 120. Grass stem with Banded smut (_Ustilago grammica_).
-
- 〃 121. Portion of same, showing arrangement of the
- pustules, × slightly.
-
- 〃 122. Spores of banded smut (_Ustilago grammica_) × 320.
-
- 〃 123. Inflorescence of Scabious with Floret smut
- (_Ustilago flosculorum_).
-
- 〃 124. Floret occupied by the smut.
-
- 〃 125. Spores of Floret smut (_Ustilago flosculorum_) ×
- 320.
-
- 〃 126. Sedge (_Carex riparia_) attacked by Olive smut
- (_Ustilago olivacea_).
-
- 〃 127. Spores of Olive smut (_Ustilago olivacea_) × 460.
-
- 〃 128. Reed stem with smut (_Ustilago typhoides_).
-
- 〃 129. Spores of Reed smut (_Ustilago typhoides_) × 320.
-
- 〃 130. Leaf of Periwinkle with its rust (_Trichobasis
- vincæ_).
-
- 〃 131. Spores of Periwinkle rust (_Trichobasis vincæ_) ×
- 320.
-
- 〃 132. Spores of Periwinkle brand (_Puccinia vincæ_) ×
- 320.
-
- VII. 133. Leaf of Mercury with its rust (_Uredo confluens_).
-
- 〃 134. Spores of Mercury rust (_Uredo confluens_) × 320.
-
- 〃 135. Leaf of Enchanter’s Nightshade with its rust.
-
- 〃 136. Spores of Nightshade rust (_Uredo Circææ_) × 320.
-
- 〃 137. Leaf of Sorrel with Twin-faced rust (_Uredo
- bifrons_).
-
- 〃 138. Pustule of Twin-faced rust seated on a coloured
- spot × slightly.
-
- 〃 139. Spores of the same rust × 320.
-
- 〃 140. Leaf of Wheat with Corn rust (_Trichobasis
- rubigo-vera_).
-
- 〃 141. Pustules of the same rust × slightly.
-
- 〃 142. Spores of Round corn rust × 320.
-
- 〃 143. Tuft of spores of Elongated corn rust
- (_Trichobasis linearis_) magnified.
-
- 〃 144. Spores of Elongated corn rust (_Trichobasis
- linearis_) × 320.
-
- 〃 145. Leaf of Groundsel with its rust (_Trichobasis
- Senecionis_).
-
- 〃 146. Spores of Groundsel rust (_Trichobasis
- Senecionis_) × 320.
-
- 〃 147. Wild Rose with Golden rust (_Uromyces Ulmariæ_).
-
- 〃 148. Spores of Golden rust × 320.
-
- 〃 149. Leaf of Vetch with Long-stemmed rust (_Uromyces
- appendiculata_).
-
- 〃 150. Spores of the same × 460.
-
- 〃 151. Leaf of Common thistle with Sweet-smelling rust
- (_Trichobasis suaveolens_).
-
- 〃 152. Spores of Sweet rust (_Trichobasis suaveolens_) ×
- 320.
-
- 〃 153. Spermogone of Sweet rust, from common thistle, ×
- highly (_De Bary_).
-
- 〃 154. Clover leaf with Short-stemmed rust (_Uromyces
- apiculosa_).
-
- 〃 155. Spores of Short-stemmed rust × 320.
-
- 〃 156. Leaf of Pilewort with its rust (_Uromyces
- Ficariæ_).
-
- 〃 157. Spores of Pilewort rust (_Uromyces Ficariæ_) ×
- 320.
-
- 〃 158. Portion of leaf of _Luzula_ with Oblong rust
- (_Trichobasis oblongata_).
-
- 〃 159. Spores of Oblong rust (_Trichobasis oblongata_) ×
- 320.
-
- VIII. 160. Leaf of Sallow with its rust (_Lecythea
- capræarum_).
-
- 〃 161. Spores of Sallow rust (_Lecythea capræarum_) ×
- 320.
-
- 〃 162. Bramble leaf with Ringed rust (_Lecythea gyrosa_).
-
- 〃 163. Pustule of Ringed rust (_Lecythea gyrosa_) ×
- slightly.
-
- 〃 164. Spores of Ringed rust (_Lecythea gyrosa_) × 320.
-
- 〃 165. Purging Flax with its rust (_Lecythea Lini_).
-
- 〃 166. Pustule of the same × slightly.
-
- 〃 167. Spores of Flax rust (_Lecythea Lini_) × 320.
-
- 〃 168. Leaf of Flukewort with its rust (_Trichobasis
- hydrocotyles_).
-
- 〃 169. Spores of _Trichobasis hydrocotyles_ × 320.
-
- 〃 170. Portion of leaf of Sedge with its rust
- (_Trichobasis caricina_).
-
- 〃 171. Spores of Sedge rust (_Trichobasis caricina_) ×
- 320.
-
- 〃 172. Whorl of leaves of Hedge Bedstraw with Bedstraw
- brand (_Puccinia Galii_).
-
- 〃 173. Spores of Bedstraw brand (_Puccinia Galii_) × 320.
-
- 〃 174. Leaf of Tutsan with St. John’s-wort rust (_Uredo
- hypericorum_).
-
- 〃 175. Spores of St John’s-wort rust (_Uredo
- hypericorum_) × 320.
-
- 〃 176. Leaves of Cow-wheat with its rust (_Coleosporium
- rhinanthacearum_).
-
- 〃 177. Spores of Cow-wheat rust (_Coleosporium
- rhinanthacearum_) × 320.
-
- 〃 178. Portion of leaf of Sow-thistle with its rust
- (_Coleosporium sonchi-arvensis_).
-
- 〃 179. Spores of Sow-thistle rust × highly (_De Bary_).
-
- 〃 180. Portion of Coltsfoot leaf with its rust
- (_Coleosporium Tussilaginis_).
-
- 〃 181. Spores of Coltsfoot rust × highly.
-
- 〃 182. Group of spores of Coltsfoot rust _in situ_ ×
- highly (_Tulasne_).
-
- IX. 183. Leaf of Buttercup with Buttercup smut (_Polycystis
- pompholygodes_).
-
- 〃 184. Fruit of Buttercup smut (_Polycystis
- pompholygodes_) × 460.
-
- 〃 185. Violet leaf distorted by Violet smut (_Polycystis
- Violæ_).
-
- 〃 186. Fruit of Violet smut (_Polycystis Violæ_) × 460.
-
- 〃 187. Portion of Rye-leaf with Rye smut (_Polycystis
- parallela_).
-
- 〃 188. Fruit of Rye smut (_Polycystis parallela_) ×460.
-
- 〃 189. Dead Birch leaf with Birch wedge-rust (_Melampsora
- betulina_).
-
- 〃 190. Winter spores of (_Melampsora betulina_) × 460.
-
- 〃 191. Portion of Sallow leaf with Willow wedge-rust
- (_Melampsora salicina_).
-
- 〃 192. Winter spores of _Melampsora salicina_ × 460.
-
- 〃 193. Leaves of Spurge with Spurge wedge-rust
- (_Melampsora Euphorbiæ_).
-
- 〃 194. Winter spores of _Melampsora Euphorbiæ_ × highly.
-
- 〃 195. Portion of Poplar-leaf with Poplar wedge-rust
- (_Melampsora populina_).
-
- 〃 196. Winter spores of _Melampsora populina_ × 460.
-
- 〃 197. Winter spores of _Melampsora betulina_ in active
- germination—_a_ sporidia × 466 (_Tulasne_).
-
- X. 198. Fruit of Shepherd’s-Purse with White rust
- (_Cystopus candidus_).
-
- 〃 199. Portion of Cabbage-leaf with White rust (_Cystopus
- candidus_).
-
- 〃 200. Conidia of White rust (_Cystopus candidus_) × 360.
-
- 〃 201. Portion of Goatsbeard-leaf with White rust
- (_Cystopus cubicus_).
-
- 〃 202. Conidia of Goatsbeard white rust (_Cystopus
- cubicus_) × 360.
-
- 〃 203. Portion of Mycelium producing the first of a chain
- of conidia × 400.
-
- 〃 204. Mycelium of White rust with sucker-like processes
- × 360.
-
- 〃 205. Mycelium of White rust with nascent oogonia × 360.
-
- 〃 206. Oogonium of Crucifer white rust (_Cystopus
- candidus_) × 400 (_De Bary_).
-
- 〃 207. The same, further advanced, ruptured, with
- zoospores, × 400.
-
- 〃 208. Free zoospores of White rust, with their ciliæ, ×
- 400 (_De Bary_).
-
- 〃 209. Resting zoospores in germination × 400 (_De
- Bary_).
-
- 〃 210. Oogonium of Goatsbeard white rust (_Cystopus
- cubicus_) × 400 (_De Bary_).
-
- 〃 211. Oogonium of Sandwort mould (_Peronospora
- arenariæ_) × 400 (_De Bary_).
-
- 〃 212. Oogonium of Pea mould (_Peronospora viciæ_) × 400
- (_De Bary_).
-
- 〃 213. Oogonium of Veronica mould (_Peronospora grisea_)
- × 400 (_De Bary_).
-
- 〃 214. Oogonium of Spinach mould (_Peronospora effusa_) ×
- 400 (_De Bary_).
-
- 〃 215. Leaf of Goosefoot with mould (_Peronospora
- effusa_).
-
- XI. 216. Conceptacle of Hop mildew (_Sphærotheca
- castagnei_) × 80.
-
- 〃 217. Conceptacle of Rose blight (_Sphærotheca pannosa_)
- × 80.
-
- 〃 218. Sporangium of _Sphærotheca pannosa_ × highly.
-
- 〃 219. Conceptacle of Hazel blight (_Phyllactinia
- guttata_) × 80.
-
- 〃 220. Sporangium of _Phyllactinia guttata_ × highly.
-
- 〃 221. Portion of leaf of Willow with Willow blight
- (_Uncinula adunca_).
-
- 〃 222. Conceptacle of Willow blight (_Uncinula adunca_) ×
- 80.
-
- 〃 223. Tip of one of the appendages × highly.
-
- 〃 224. Sporangium of Willow blight (_Uncinula adunca_) ×
- highly.
-
- 〃 225. Conceptacle of Maple blight (_Uncinula bicornis_)
- × 80.
-
- 〃 226. Tip of one of the appendages of _Uncinula
- bicornis_ × highly.
-
- 〃 227. Furcate tip of one of the appendages of the Maple
- blight (_Uncinula bicornis_) × highly.
-
- 〃 228. Sporangium of _Uncinula bicornis_ × highly.
-
- 〃 229. Leaf of Berberry with Berberry blight
- (_Microsphæria Berberidis_).
-
- 〃 230. Conceptacle of Berberry blight × 80.
-
- 〃 231. Tip of one of the appendages of Berberry blight
- (_Microsphæria Berberidis_) × highly.
-
- 〃 232. Sporangium of Berberry blight × highly.
-
- 〃 233. Tip of appendage of a continental species of
- blight (_Microsphæria Ehrenbergii_) × highly
- (_Léveillé_).
-
- 〃 234. Tip of appendage of Alder blight (_Microsphæria
- penicillata_) × highly.
-
- 〃 235. Portion of Grass leaf with blight (_Oidium
- monilioides_).
-
- 〃 236. Tuft of conidia of _Oidium monilioides_ × 120.
-
- 〃 237. Leaflet of Garden Pea with Pea blight (_Erysiphe
- Martii_).
-
- 〃 238. Conceptacle of Pea blight (_Erysiphe Martii_) ×
- 80.
-
- 〃 239. Sporangium of _Erysiphe Martii_ × highly.
-
- 〃 240. Conceptacle of Buttercup blight (_Erysiphe
- communis_) × 80.
-
- 〃 241. Sporangium of _Erysiphe communis_ × highly.
-
- 〃 242. Sucker from the mycelium of _Erysiphe communis_,
- magnified.
-
- XII. 243. Conceptacle of Mealy Guelder-rose blight
- (_Microsphæria Hedwigii_) × 80.
-
- 〃 244. Sporangium of same, containing spores, × highly.
-
- 〃 245. Conceptacle of Cornel blight (_Erysiphe tortilis_)
- × 80.
-
- 〃 246. Sporangium of same, containing spores, × highly.
-
- 〃 247. Tip of appendage of _Microsphæria Hedwigii_ ×
- highly.
-
- 〃 248. Sporangium of Mugwort blight (_Erysiphe Linkii_),
- containing spores, × highly.
-
- 〃 249. Conceptacle of Mugwort blight (_Erysiphe Linkii_)
- × 80.
-
- 〃 250. Sporangium and spores of Plantain blight
- (_Erysiphe lamprocarpa_) × highly.
-
- 〃 251. Conceptacle of Plantain blight (_Erysiphe
- lamprocarpa_) × 80.
-
- 〃 252. Conceptacle of Paper bristle-mould (_Chætomium
- chartarum_) magnified.
-
- 〃 253. Sporidium of the same, further magnified.
-
- 〃 254. Conceptacle of Paper mildew (_Ascotricha
- chartarum_) magnified (_Berkeley_).
-
- 〃 255. Portion of thread of same with conidia, further
- magnified (_Berkeley_).
-
- 〃 256. Sporangium of same, containing spores
- (_Berkeley_).
-
- 〃 257. Piece of straw with Bristle mould (_Chætomium
- elatum_).
-
- 〃 258. Conceptacle of same, slightly magnified.
-
- 〃 259. Section of same, further magnified.
-
- 〃 260. Dead leaf over-run with Herbarium mildew
- (_Eurotium herbariorum_).
-
- 〃 261. Conceptacles of the same, seated on their
- mycelium, magnified.
-
- XIII. 262. Fertile thread of Turnip mould (_Peronospora
- parasitica_).
-
- 〃 263. Fertile thread of Onion mould (_Peronospora
- Schleideniana_).
-
- XIV. 264. Fertile thread of Potato mould (_Peronospora
- infestans_).
-
- 〃 265. Fertile thread of Lettuce mould (_Peronospora
- gangliformis_).
-
- XV. 266. Fertile thread of Pea mould (_Peronospora Viciæ_).
-
- 〃 267. Fertile thread of Anemone mould (_Peronospora
- curta_).
-
- XVI. 268. Fertile thread of Sandwort mould (_Peronospora
- arenariæ_).
-
- 〃 269. Fertile thread of Dock mould (_Peronospora
- obliqua_) × 320.
-
-
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
-
-
-
- INDEX.
-
-
- PAGE
-
- Acrospores, 141
- Æcidiacei, 189
- _Æcidiolum exanthematum_, 22
- _Æcidium_, 5
- —— (Descriptions), 190
- —— _Euphorbiæ_, 11
- —— _Galii_, 15
- —— _leucospermum_, 11
- —— _quadrifidum_, 11
- —— _Ranunculacearum_, 12
- —— _Saniculæ_, 15
- —— _Thesii_, 15
- —— _Tragopogonis_, 5
- Alternation of Generations, 38
- Anemone brand, 60
- —— cluster-cups, 10
- Anther smut, 85
- Antheridia, 129
- Appendages or fulcra, 165
- APPENDIX, 189
- _Aregma bulbosum_, 69
- —— (Descriptions), 195
- —— _gracilis_, 71
- —— _mucronatum_, 34
- —— _obtusatum_, 73
- _Artotrogus_, 151
- Asci, 35
- _Ascomyces Rumicis_, 161
- _Ascotricha chartarum_, 175
- —— (Descriptions), 221
-
- Bean rust, 104
- Bedstraw cluster-cups, 15
- Beet rust, 104
- Berberry cluster-cups, 16
- Berberry mildew, 170
- Birch rust, 118
- —— wedge-rust, 118
- Blackberry brand, 68
- Bladder brand, 86
- Blight, Berberry, 170
- —— Burdock, 174
- —— Crowfoot, 173
- —— Dogwood, 174
- —— Gooseberry, 171
- —— Guelder-rose, 171
- —— Hazel, 168
- —— Hop, 169
- —— Indian Cotton, 177
- —— Maple, 167
- —— Mealy Guelder-rose, 172
- —— Mugwort, 174
- —— Pea, 173
- —— Plantain, 174
- —— Rose, 166
- —— Salsify, 174
- —— Willow, 169
- _Boletus cyanescens_, 106
- _Botrytis devastatrix_, 153
- —— _fallax_, 153
- —— _infestans_, 153
- Bramble brand, 68
- Brand, Anemone, 60
- —— Bladder, 86
- —— Bramble, 68
- —— Burnet chain, 73
- —— Centaury, 63
- —— Complex, 67
- —— Dust, 76
- —— Earth-nut, 64
- —— Goatsbeard, 65
- —— Ground-ivy, 59
- —— Meadow-sweet, 67
- —— Mint, 58
- —— Pepper, 86
- —— Periwinkle, 103
- —— Raspberry, 71
- —— Sanicle, 64
- —— Strawberry, 72
- —— Thistle, 62
- Bristle-moulds, 175
- Buckthorn cluster-cups, 16
- Bunt, 86
- Bunt, germination, 87
- Burdock blight, 174
- Burnet chain-brand, 73
- Butter-bur rust, 122
- Buttercup blight, 173
- —— cluster-cups, 12
-
- Cabbage rust, 136
- Campanula rust, 123
- Centaury brand, 63
- _Chætomium_ (Descriptions), 221
- —— _elatum_, 175
- Classification, 189
- Clover rust, 116
- CLUSTER-CUPS, 2
- Cluster-cup, Anemone, 10
- —— Bedstraw, 15
- —— Berberry, 16
- —— Buckthorn, 16
- —— Buttercup, 12
- —— Fir-tree, 20
- —— Goatsbeard, 3
- —— Hawthorn, 17
- —— Houseleek, 21
- —— Mountain-Ash, 19
- —— Nettle, 14
- —— Pear-tree, 18
- —— Sanicle, 14
- —— Spurge, 11
- —— Violet, 13
- Cocksfoot smut, 83
- _Coleosporium_, 119
- —— _Campanulæ_, 122
- —— (Descriptions), 212
- —— _petasites_, 122
- —— _tussilaginis_, 120
- _Coleosporium sonchi-arvensis_, 122
- —— _Rhinanthacearum_, 122
- Collecting fungi, 179
- Coltsfoot rust, 120
- COMPLEX BRANDS, 67
- Complex smuts, 90
- Composite rust, 105
- Conceptacles, 165
- Conidia, 126
- _Coniomycetes_, 5
- Conjurer of Chalgrave’s fern, 61
- Corn mildew, 48
- —— mildew, germination, 55
- —— rust, 49, 52, 95
- —— smut, 79
- Cornel blight, 174
- Coronated mildew, 56
- Cotton blight in India, 177
- Cow-parsnip rust, 105
- Cow-wheat rust, 122
- Crowfoot blight, 173
- Crucifer white rust, 136
- _Cryptosporium Neesii_, 35
- _Cystopus_, 124, 136
- —— _candidus_, 136
- —— _cubicus_, 136
- —— (Descriptions), 214
- —— _Lepigoni_, 136
-
- Dandelion parasites, 61
- De Bary’s experiments, 129
- Descriptions, 189
- DI-MORPHISM, 33
- Diseases of wheat, 85
- Dock mould, 160
- Dogwood blight, 174
- _Dothidea ribis_, 36
- Dust-brand, 76
-
- Earth-nut brand, 64
- Elongated corn rust, 95
- —— smut, 84
- Enchanter’s Nightshade rust, 112
- _Endophyllum_, 20
- —— (Descriptions), 194
- Endospore, 40
- Epispore, 40
- _Erineum acerinum_, 170
- _Erysiphe communis_, 173
- —— (Descriptions), 220
- —— _lamprocarpa_, 174
- —— _Linkii_, 174
- —— _Martii_, 173
- —— _Montagnei_, 174
- —— _tortilis_, 174
- _Eurotium_ (Descriptions), 222
- —— _herbariorum_, 177
- Examining fungi, 183
-
- Fern rust, 112
- Fungi, species of, 45
-
- Generations, alternation of, 38
- Genus and species, 58
- Germination of mildew, 55
- —— of pea rust, 40
- Goatsbeard cluster-cups, 3
- —— smut, 82
- —— white rust, 136
- Goat-willow rust, 116
- Golden-rose rust, 113
- Gonosphere, 130
- Gooseberry blight, 171
- Ground-ivy brand, 59
- Groundsel rust, 97
- Guelder-rose blight, 171
- _Gymnosporangium_ (Descriptions), 201
-
- Hawthorn cluster-cups, 17
- Hazel blight, 168
- Herbarium mould, 177
- —— of fungi, 182
- Hop disease, 167
- Hyphomycetes, 139
-
- Inoculation, 9
- Iris rust, 115
-
- _Lecythea_, 107
- —— _capræarum_, 117
- —— (Descriptions), 206
- —— _Lini_, 108
- —— _longicapsula_, 118
- —— _Rosæ_, 34, 107
- Lettuce mould, 156
- Line-like rust, 95
- Long-stemmed rust, 114
- Luzula rust, 104
-
- Maple blight, 169
- Meadow-saffron smut, 92
- Meadow-sweet brand, 67
- Mealy Guelder-rose blight, 172
- _Melampsora betulina_, 118
- —— (Descriptions), 213
- —— _salicina_, 117
- Mercury rust, 110
- Microscopic examination, 183
- —— fungi collecting, 179
- Microscopic preserving, 182
- _Microsphæria Berberidis_, 170
- —— (Descriptions), 219
- —— _Ehrenbergii_, 171
- —— _Hedwigii_, 172
- Mildew and brand, 45
- —— what is it?, 46
- Mint brand, 58
- —— rust, 102
- Monthly calendar of fungi, 180
- Moulds, 138
- Mould, Dock, 160
- —— Lettuce, 156
- —— Onion, 155
- —— Parsnip, 157
- —— Potato, 144
- —— Rose, 159
- —— Spinach, 158
- —— Tare, 156
- Mountain-ash cluster-cups, 19
- Mounting fungi, 184
- Mugwort blight, 174
- Mycelium, 23
-
- Nettle cluster-cups, 14
- Nightshade rust, 112
- Number of species, 45
-
- Oak-leaf rust, 111
- _Oidium_, 34, 162
- —— _leucoconium_, 167
- —— _monilioides_, 162
- —— _Tuckeri_, 164
- Onion mould, 155
- Oogonia, 129
- Oospores, 131
- Origin of mildew, 47
-
- Parsnip mould, 157
- Pea blight, 173
- Pear tree cluster-cups, 18
- Pea and bean rust, 114
- Pearust, germination of, 40
- Pennywort rust, 100
- _Peridermium_, 20
- —— (Descriptions), 189
- _Peridium_, 4
- _Perithecium_, 35
- Periwinkle brand, 103
- —— rust, 103
- Persicaria rust, 104
- _Peronospora_, 138
- —— (Descriptions), 215
- —— _destructor_, 156
- —— _effusa_, 159
- —— _gangliformis_, 156
- —— _infestans_, 153
- —— _macrospora_, 158
- —— _nivea_, 157
- —— _obliqua_, 160
- —— _Schleideniana_, 155
- —— _sparsa_, 159
- —— _Trifoliorum_, 157
- —— _Umbelliferarum_, 158
- —— _Viciæ_, 156
- Pepper brand, 86
- _Phragmidium_, 71
- _Phyllactinia_ (Descriptions), 218
- —— _guttata_, 168
- Pilewort rust, 115
- _Podisoma_ (Descriptions), 201
- _Polycystis_, 91
- —— (Descriptions), 211
- —— _pompholygodes_, 91
- —— _Violæ_, 92
- Potato disease, 144
- —— mould, 142, 144
- —— smut, 93
- Preserving fungi, 182
- _Puccinia_ (Descriptions), 196
- —— _Anemones_, 60
- —— _Compositarum_, 63
- —— _coronata_, 57
- —— _glechomatis_, 59
- —— _graminis_, 25
- —— _Menthæ_, 58
- —— _Rosæ_, 34
- —— _Saniculæ_, 64
- —— _Syngenesiarum_, 62
- —— _Umbelliferarum_, 64
- —— _variabilis_, 62
- —— _vincæ_, 103
- Purslane white rust, 137
-
- Raspberry brand, 71
- Reed smut, 83
- _Rœstelia_ (Descriptions), 189
- —— _cancellata_, 19
- —— _cornuta_, 19
- —— _lacerata_, 19
- Rose blight, 166
- —— mould, 107
- —— rust, 159
- _Rusts_, 95, 110
- Rust, Bean, 104
- —— Beet, 104
- —— Birch, 118
- —— Butter-bur, 122
- —— Cabbage, 124
- —— Campanula, 123
- —— Clover, 116
- —— Coltsfoot, 120
- —— Composite, 105
- —— Corn, 49, 95
- —— Cow-parsnip, 105
- —— Cow-wheat, 122
- —— Fern, 112
- —— Flax, 109
- —— Goatsbeard, 136
- —— Goat-willow, 116
- —— Golden-rose, 113
- —— Grass of Parnassus, 106
- —— Groundsel, 97
- —— Iris, 115
- —— Long-stemmed, 114
- —— Luzula, 104
- —— Mercury, 110
- —— Mint, 102
- —— Nightshade, 112
- —— Oak-leaf, 111
- —— Pea and Bean, 114
- —— Pennywort, 100
- —— Periwinkle, 103
- —— Persicaria, 104
- —— Pilewort, 115
- —— Rose, 107
- —— St.-John’s-wort, 113
- —— Sandspurry, 136
- —— Sedge, 104
- —— Sorrel, 111
- —— Sow-thistle, 122
- —— Stinking, 87
- —— Sweet-smelling, 99
- —— Thistle, 99
- —— Twin-faced, 111
- —— Umbellifer, 105
- —— Violet, 102
- Rye smut, 92
-
- Sandspurry white rust, 136
- Sanicle brand, 64
- —— cluster-cups, 14
- Sedge rust, 104
- —— smut, 84
- Smuts, 76
- Smut, Anther, 85
- —— Cocksfoot, 83
- —— Complex, 90
- —— Corn, 79
- —— Crowfoot, 91
- —— Elongated, 84
- —— Goatsbeard, 82
- —— Grass, 79
- —— Maize, 79
- —— Meadow-saffron, 92
- —— Potato, 93
- —— Reed, 83
- —— Rye, 92
- —— Sedge, 84
- —— Trientalis, 93
- —— Violet, 92
- St.-John’s-wort rust, 113
- Sow-thistle rust, 122
- Specific names, 57
- Spermatia, 24
- SPERMOGONES, 22, 98
- _Sphærotheca_ (Descriptions), 218
- —— _Castagnei_, 167
- —— _pannosa_, 167
- Spinach mould, 158
- Sporangium, 165
- Sporidia, 38
- Spurge cluster-cups, 11
- Sterigmata, 24
- Stinking rust, 87
- Strawberry brand, 72
- Stylospores, 38, 42
- Suckers, 125, 141
- SUGGESTIONS, 179
- Sweet-smelling rust, 99
-
- Tare mould, 156
- Thistle brand, 62
- Thistle white rust, 137
- _Tilletia caries_, 87
- —— (Descriptions), 202
- _Trichobasis Betæ_, 104
- —— _caricina_, 104
- —— _Cichoracearum_, 105
- —— (Descriptions), 207
- —— _Fabæ_, 104
- —— _hydrocotyles_, 100
- —— _Labiatarum_, 102
- —— _linearis_, 95
- —— _oblongata_, 105
- —— _Parnassiæ_, 106
- —— _Petroselini_, 105
- —— _Polygonorum_, 104
- —— _rubigo-vera_, 49, 95
- —— _Senecionis_, 97
- —— _suaveolens_, 99
- —— _Umbellatarum_, 105
- —— _Violarum_, 102
- Trientalis smut, 93
- _Triphragmium_ (Descriptions), 196
- —— _Ulmariæ_, 67
- _Tuburcinia_, 93
- —— (Descriptions), 212
- Tulasne on Fungi, 35
- Twin-faced rust, 111
-
- _Uncinula adunca_, 169
- —— _bicornis_, 169
- —— (Descriptions), 218
- Uredines, 33
- _Uredo Betulina_, 118
- —— _bifrons_, 111
- —— _Circææ_, 112
- —— _confluens_, 110
- —— (Descriptions), 204
- —— _Filicum_, 112
- —— _hydrocotyles_, 101
- —— _Hypericorum_, 113
- —— _Parnassiæ_, 106
- —— _Quercus_, 111
- —— _Rosæ_, 33
- _Urocystis_, 91
- _Uromyces apiculata_, 116
- —— _appendiculata_, 40, 114
- —— (Descriptions), 210
- —— _Ficariæ_, 115
- —— _Ulmariæ_, 114
- _Ustilago antherarum_, 85
- —— (Descriptions), 202
- —— _longissima_, 84
- —— _maydis_, 79
- —— _olivacea_, 84
- —— _receptaculorum_, 83
- —— _Salveii_, 84
- —— _segetum_, 79
- —— _typhoides_, 79, 83
-
- _Valsa suffusa_, 35
- Vine disease, 164
- Violet cluster-cups, 13
- Violet smut, 92
-
- Wedge-rust, Birch, 118
- —— Willow, 117
- Wheat diseases, 85
- —— mildew, 53
- White mildews or blights, 162
- _White rusts_, 124
- White rust, Cabbage, 129, 136
- —— Crucifer, 136
- —— Goatsbeard, 136
- —— Purslane, 137
- —— Sandspurry, 136
- Willow blight, 169
- —— wedge-rust, 117
-
- _Xenodochus carbonarius_, 73
- —— (Descriptions), 195
-
- Zoospores, 126
-
-
- --------------------------------------------------
-
- WYMAN AND SONS, PRINTERS, GREAT QUEEN STREET, LONDON, W.C.
-
-
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
-
-
-
- ● Transcriber’s Notes:
- ○ A link to the Index was added to the Table of Contents.
- ○ The Table of Contents entry for the first Appendix has no
- identifier. Clicking on the page number will take you to Appendix
- A.
- ○ The Table of Contents references Appendix II. This is should have
- been a reference Appendix B. Clicking on the page number for
- Appendix II will take you to Appendix B.
- ○ The image of SPERMOGONES (Fig 1.) on page 25 has been rotated to
- make the letter identifications more legible.
- ○ On page 40 there is a reference to fig. 150, but nothing in that
- figure is labeled 150.
- ○ On page 56, in the footnote, there is a reference to fig. 45 on
- Plate II. This was corrected to Plate III.
- ○ On page 67 there is a reference to fig. 47 on Plate II. This was
- corrected to Plate III.
- ○ On page 69 there are references to figs. 47 and 41 on Plate II.
- This was corrected to Plate III.
- ○ On page 79 there is a reference to figs. 123—125 on Plate IV. This
- was corrected to Plate VI.
- ○ On page 216 there is a reference to fig. 268 on Plate VII. This
- was corrected to Plate XVI.
- ○ Missing or obscured punctuation was silently corrected.
- ○ Typographical errors were silently corrected.
- ○ Inconsistent spelling and hyphenation were made consistent only
- when a predominant form was found in this book.
- ○ Text that was in italics is enclosed by underscores (_italics_);
- text that was bold by “equal” signs (=bold=).
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of Rust, Smut, Mildew, & Mold, by
-Mordecai Cubitt Cooke
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-<pre>
-
-Project Gutenberg's Rust, Smut, Mildew, & Mold, by Mordecai Cubitt Cooke
-
-This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere in the United States and most
-other parts of the world at no cost and with almost no restrictions
-whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or re-use it under the terms of
-the Project Gutenberg License included with this eBook or online at
-www.gutenberg.org. If you are not located in the United States, you'll have
-to check the laws of the country where you are located before using this ebook.
-
-Title: Rust, Smut, Mildew, & Mold
-
-Author: Mordecai Cubitt Cooke
-
-Release Date: October 9, 2020 [EBook #63416]
-
-Language: English
-
-Character set encoding: UTF-8
-
-*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK RUST, SMUT, MILDEW, & MOLD ***
-
-
-
-
-Produced by deaurider, Barry Abrahamsen, and the Online
-Distributed Proofreading Team at https://www.pgdp.net (This
-file was produced from images generously made available
-by The Internet Archive)
-
-
-
-
-
-
-</pre>
-
-
-<div class='figcenter id001'>
-<img src='images/cover.jpg' alt='' class='ig001' />
-<div class='ic001'>
-<p><span class='small'>The cover image was created by the transcriber and is placed in the public domain.</span></p>
-</div>
-</div>
-<div class='pbb'>
- <hr class='pb c000' />
-</div>
-<div>
- <h1 class='c001'>RUST, SMUT, MILDEW, &amp; MOULD.</h1>
-</div>
-<div class='pbb'>
- <hr class='pb c002' />
-</div>
-
-<div class='nf-center-c0'>
-<div class='nf-center c002'>
- <div><span class='small'>LONDON:</span></div>
- <div><span class='small'>GREAT QUEEN STREET,</span></div>
- <div><span class='small'>LINCOLN’S-INN FIELDS, W.C.</span></div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<div class='pbb'>
- <hr class='pb c002' />
-</div>
-<div id='frontis' class='figcenter id002'>
-<img src='images/frontis.jpg' alt='' class='ig001' />
-<div class='ic001'>
-<p>Plate VII.<br />W. West imp.</p>
-</div>
-</div>
-<div class='pbb'>
- <hr class='pb c003' />
-</div>
-
-<div class='nf-center-c0'>
-<div class='nf-center c003'>
- <div><span class='c004'>Rust, Smut, Mildew, &amp; Mould.</span></div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<hr class='c005' />
-
-<div class='nf-center-c0'>
- <div class='nf-center'>
- <div class='c003'><span class='c006'>AN INTRODUCTION TO THE STUDY</span></div>
- <div class='c003'>OF</div>
- <div class='c003'><span class='xxlarge'>MICROSCOPIC FUNGI.</span></div>
- <div class='c002'>BY</div>
- <div class='c003'><span class='xlarge'>M. C. COOKE,</span></div>
- <div class='c000'><span class='small'>AUTHOR OF “A PLAIN AND EASY ACCOUNT OF BRITISH FUNGI,” “INDEX</span></div>
- <div><span class='small'>FUNGORUM BRITANNICORUM,” “A MANUAL OF BOTANIC TERMS,”</span></div>
- <div><span class='small'>“A MANUAL OF STRUCTURAL BOTANY,” ETC.</span></div>
- <div class='c002'><span class="blackletter">Third Edition,</span></div>
- <div><b><span class='large'>WITH NEARLY 300 FIGURES BY J. E. SOWERBY.</span></b></div>
- <div class='c002'><span class='large'>LONDON:</span></div>
- <div><span class='large'>ROBERT HARDWICKE, 192, PICCADILLY.</span></div>
- <div><span class='large'>1872.</span></div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<div class='pbb'>
- <hr class='pb c003' />
-</div>
-<div class='sans'>
-
-<div class='nf-center-c0'>
-<div class='nf-center c002'>
- <div>BY THE SAME AUTHOR.</div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-</div>
-<p class='drop-capa0_3_0_7 c007'><span class='large'>THE BRITISH FUNGI</span>: A Plain and Easy Account of
-British Fungi: with especial reference to the Esculent and other Economic
-Species. Illustrated with Coloured Plates of 40 Species. 2nd Edition.
-<i>Fcap. 8vo.</i>, <i>price</i> 6<i>s.</i></p>
-<p class='c008'>“The author is a thorough mycophagist, well acquainted with the peculiar
-features by which the most remarkable of the edible kinds of Fungi may be
-known.”—<span class='sc'>Gardeners’ Chronicle.</span></p>
-
-<p class='c008'>“A very readable volume upon the lowest and least generally understood
-race of plants. For popular purposes the work could not have been better
-done.”—<span class='sc'>Athenæum.</span></p>
-
-<hr class='c009' />
-
-<p class='drop-capa0_3_0_7 c010'><span class='large'>INDEX FUNGORUM BRITANNICORUM</span>: A Complete
-List of Fungi found in the British Islands to the Present Date. Arranged
-so as to be applicable either as a Check-List or for Herbarium Labels. <i>Royal
-8vo.</i>, <i>price</i> 2<i>s.</i> 6<i>d.</i></p>
-
-<div class='nf-center-c0'>
- <div class='nf-center'>
- <div>Also the same Work, printed on only one side, for Herbarium Labels.</div>
- <div>Part I. <span class='sc'>Hymenomycetes</span>, 1<i>s.</i> Part II. <span class='sc'>Gasteromycetes</span>, <span class='sc'>Coniomycetes</span>,</div>
- <div>and <span class='sc'>Hyphomycetes</span>, 1<i>s.</i> Part III. <span class='sc'>Ascomycetes</span>, 1<i>s.</i></div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<hr class='c011' />
-
-<div class='nf-center-c0'>
- <div class='nf-center'>
- <div>London: ROBERT HARDWICKE, 192, Piccadilly.</div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<div class='pbb'>
- <hr class='pb c002' />
-</div>
-<div class='chapter'>
- <h2 class='c012'>PREFACE TO SECOND EDITION.</h2>
-</div>
-<p class='drop-capa0_3_0_65 c013'>THE first edition of this Work having for some time been
-out of print, and the demands of the public encouraging
-the publisher to proceed with a new edition, I have added, in a
-second Appendix, descriptions of all the species discovered in
-Britain since 1865, so far as they relate to the Orders included
-in this volume. The success which has attended the sale of this
-Work, and the number of fresh observers it has brought into the
-field, has greatly tended to the necessity for a second Appendix.
-A larger number of observers, over a still more extended area,
-will, it is hoped, add further to our list; by increasing the
-number of known species. Hitherto one great cause of the
-paucity of students of Fungi in this country, especially of the
-Microscopic forms, has been the want of text-books on the subject,
-containing descriptions of the species, with figures illustrative
-of the genera. Although this little volume only partly
-supplies that want, by including the species found on living
-plants alone, it has already proved of service; this and its
-companion volume, “Introduction to British Fungi,” being
-(with but one exception) the only books on Fungi which have
-passed into a second edition in this country; a fact which
-appears to prove that they have succeeded in furnishing a
-desideratum, and in giving an impetus to the study. It is
-hoped that similar results will follow the publication of this
-new edition.</p>
-<div class='c014'>M. C. COOKE.</div>
-<div class='pbb'>
- <hr class='pb c003' />
-</div>
-<div class='chapter'>
- <h2 class='c012'>CONTENTS.</h2>
-</div>
-<table class='table0' summary=''>
-<colgroup>
-<col width='13%' />
-<col width='76%' />
-<col width='10%' />
-</colgroup>
- <tr>
- <td class='c015'><span class='small'>CHAP.</span></td>
- <td class='c016'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='c017'><span class='small'>PAGE</span></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c015'>I.</td>
- <td class='c016'><span class='sc'>Cluster-Cups</span></td>
- <td class='c017'><a href='#ch01'>1</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c015'>II.</td>
- <td class='c016'><span class='sc'>Spermogones</span></td>
- <td class='c017'><a href='#ch02'>22</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c015'>III.</td>
- <td class='c016'><span class='sc'>Di-morphism</span></td>
- <td class='c017'><a href='#ch03'>33</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c015'>IV.</td>
- <td class='c016'><span class='sc'>Mildew and Brand</span></td>
- <td class='c017'><a href='#ch04'>45</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c015'>V.</td>
- <td class='c016'><span class='sc'>Complex Brands</span></td>
- <td class='c017'><a href='#ch05'>67</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c015'>VI.</td>
- <td class='c016'><span class='sc'>Smuts</span></td>
- <td class='c017'><a href='#ch06'>77</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c015'>VII.</td>
- <td class='c016'><span class='sc'>Complex Smuts</span></td>
- <td class='c017'><a href='#ch07'>90</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c015'>VIII.</td>
- <td class='c016'><span class='sc'>Rusts</span></td>
- <td class='c017'><a href='#ch08'>95</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c015'>IX.</td>
- <td class='c016'><span class='sc'>Rusts</span> (continued)</td>
- <td class='c017'><a href='#ch09'>110</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c015'>X.</td>
- <td class='c016'><span class='sc'>White Rusts</span></td>
- <td class='c017'><a href='#ch10'>124</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c015'>XI.</td>
- <td class='c016'><span class='sc'>Moulds</span></td>
- <td class='c017'><a href='#ch11'>138</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c015'>XII.</td>
- <td class='c016'><span class='sc'>White Mildews or Blights</span></td>
- <td class='c017'><a href='#ch12'>162</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c015'>XIII.</td>
- <td class='c016'><span class='sc'>Suggestions</span></td>
- <td class='c017'><a href='#ch13'>179</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c015'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='c016'><span class='sc'>Appendix, Classification, and Descriptions of Fungi contained in this volume</span></td>
- <td class='c017'><a href='#app1'>189</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c015'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='c016'><span class='sc'>Appendix II.</span></td>
- <td class='c017'><a href='#app2'>223</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c015'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='c016'>Index</td>
- <td class='c017'><a href='#idx'>239</a></td>
- </tr>
-</table>
-<div class='pbb'>
- <hr class='pb c003' />
-</div>
-
-<div class='nf-center-c0'>
-<div class='nf-center c002'>
- <div><span class='pageno' id='Page_1'>1</span><span class='xlarge'>MICROSCOPIC FUNGI.</span></div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<hr class='c009' />
-<div class='chapter'>
- <h2 id='ch01' class='c012'>CHAPTER I.<br /> <br /><em class='gesperrt'><span class='small'>CLUSTER-CUPS.</span></em></h2>
-</div>
-<p class='drop-capa0_3_0_65 c013'>IN these latter days, when everyone who possesses
-a love for the marvellous, or desires a knowledge
-of some of the minute mysteries of nature, has,
-or ought to have, a microscope, a want is occasionally
-felt which we have essayed to supply.
-This want consists in a guide to some systematic
-botanical study, in which the microscope can be
-rendered available, and in which there is ample
-field for discovery, and ample opportunity for the
-elucidation of facts only partly revealed. Fungi,
-especially the more minute epiphyllous species,
-present just such an opportunity as many an
-ardent student would gladly take advantage of;
-one great obstacle to the pursuit being hitherto
-found in the absence of any hand-book to this
-section of the British Flora, embracing the emendations,
-improvements, and additions of the past
-twenty-seven years (the period at which the fifth
-volume of the “English Flora” made its appearance).
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_2'>2</span>It would be incompatible with our object,
-and beyond our limits, to introduce an entire
-mycological flora to our readers in these pages;
-but we hope to communicate such information as
-will serve to prepare the way still more for such
-an additional Flora, should it ever be produced,
-and render the demand still wider and more
-general for such an extension of our botanical
-literature. It is true that one work has of late
-years issued from the press on this subject, but
-notwithstanding its utility to scientific men as a
-record of species, it is practically useless to those
-we address, from the absence of all specific descriptions
-of microscopic fungi.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>Let not the reader imagine, from what we have
-just stated, that it is our intention to burden him
-with a dry series of botanical descriptions; as much
-of this as we deem essential to render the book
-available to the botanical student, we have preferred
-to add in the form of an Appendix. Useful
-as these may be to some, we hope to be enabled
-to furnish for others something more; and
-although we at once disclaim any intention of
-including all the microscopic, or even the epiphytal
-fungi, in our observations, yet we trust, by a selection
-of common and typical species for illustration,
-and by an adherence to certain well-defined groups
-and sections, to demonstrate that the microscopist
-will find an eligible field for his observations in
-this direction, and the botanical student may gain
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_3'>3</span>some knowledge of their generic and specific distinctions.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>It is exceedingly difficult to give a logical definition
-of what constitutes a fungus. It is no less
-difficult to furnish a popular description which shall
-include all and nothing more. If, for example, we
-particularize the spots and markings on the leaves
-and stems of herbaceous plants, so commonly met
-with from early spring till the fall of the last leaf,
-and even amongst the dead and decaying remains
-of the vegetation of the year, we may include also
-such spots and marks as result from insect depredations
-or diseased tissue. It is not always easy,
-with a cursory observation under the microscope,
-to determine whether some appearances are produced
-by fungi, insects, or organic disease: experience
-is the safest guide, and until we acquire that
-we shall occasionally fail.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>If we take a stroll away from the busy haunts of
-men, though only for a short distance,—say, for
-example (if from London), down to New Cross,—and
-along the slopes of the railway cutting, we
-shall be sure to find the plant called the goatsbeard
-(<i>Tragopogon pratensis</i>) in profusion. In May or
-June the leaves and unopened involucres of this
-plant will present a singular appearance, as if
-sprinkled with gold-dust, or rather, being deficient
-in lustre, seeming as though some fairy folk had
-scattered over them a shower of orange-coloured
-chrome or turmeric powder. Examine this singular
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_4'>4</span>phenomenon more closely, and the poetry about
-the pixies all vanishes; for the orange powder will
-be seen to have issued from the plant itself. A
-pocket lens, or a Coddington, reveals the secret of
-the mysterious dust. Hundreds of small orifices
-like little yellow cups, with a fringe of white teeth
-around their margins, will be seen thickly scattered
-over the under surface of the leaves. These cups
-(called <i>peridia</i>) will appear to have burst through
-the epidermis of the leaf and elevated themselves
-above its surface, with the lower portion attached
-to the substratum beneath. In the interior of
-these cup-like excrescences, or <i>peridia</i>, a quantity
-of the orange-coloured spherical dust remains,
-whilst much of it has been shed and dispersed over
-the unoccupied portions of the leaves, the stems,
-and probably on the leaves of the grass or other
-plants growing in its immediate vicinity. These
-little cups are fungi, the yellow dust the spores,<a id='r1' /><a href='#f1' class='c018'><sup>[1]</sup></a>
-or ultimate representatives of seed, and the epiphytal
-plants we have here found we will accept
-as the type of the group or order to which we
-wish to direct attention (<a href='#i004'>Plate I.</a> figs. 1-3).</p>
-<div id='i004' class='figcenter id003'>
-<img src='images/i004.jpg' alt='' class='ig001' />
-<div class='ic001'>
-<p>Plate I.<br />W. West imp.</p>
-</div>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote c019' id='f1'>
-<p class='c010'><span class='label'><a href='#r1'>1</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>Protospores they should be called, because, in fact, they
-germinate, and on the threads thus produced the true spores,
-or fruit, are borne.</p>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c008'>Amongst the six families into which fungi are
-divided, is one in which the spores are the principal
-feature, as is the aurantiaceous dust in the
-parasite of the goatsbeard. This family is named
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_5'>5</span><i>Coniomycetes</i>, from two Greek words, meaning
-“dust-fungi.” This group or family includes
-several smaller groups, termed orders, which are
-analogous to the natural orders of flowering plants.
-Without staying to enumerate the characteristics
-of these orders, we select one in which the spores
-are enclosed in a distinct peridium, as in our typical
-plant they are contained within the cups. This
-order is the <i>Æcidiacei</i>, so called after <i>Æcidium</i>, the
-largest and most important of the genera included
-within this order.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>The <i>Æcidiacei</i> are always developed on living
-plants, sometimes on the flowers, fruit, petioles, or
-stems, but most commonly on the leaves: occasionally
-on the upper surface, but generally on the
-inferior. The different species are distributed over
-a wide area; many are found in Europe and North
-America, some occur in Asia, Africa, and Australia.
-When the cryptogamic plants of the world shall
-have been as widely examined and as well understood
-as the phanerogamic plants have been, we
-shall be in a better position to determine the
-geographical distribution of the different orders of
-fungi. In the present incomplete state of our
-knowledge, all such efforts will be unsatisfactory.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>But to return to the goatsbeard, and its cluster-cups.
-The little fungus is called <i>Æcidium tragopogonis</i>,
-the first being the name of the genus, and
-the last that of the species. Let us warn the young
-student against falling into the error of supposing
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_6'>6</span>because in this, and many other instances, the
-specific name of the fungus is derived from the
-plant, or one of the plants, upon which it is found,
-that therefore the species differs with that of the
-plant, and that, as a rule, he may anticipate meeting
-with a distinct species of fungus on every
-distinct species of plant, or that the parasite which
-he encounters on the living leaves of any one plant
-is <i>necessarily</i> specifically distinct from those found
-on all other plants. One species of <i>Æcidium</i>, for
-instance, may hitherto have been found only on one
-species of plant, whereas another <i>Æcidium</i> may
-have been found on five or six different species of
-plants. The mycologist will look to the specific
-differences in the parasite without regard to the
-identity or distinctness of the plant upon which it
-is parasitic.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>Before the <i>Æcidium</i> breaks through the epidermis,
-the under surface of the leaves of the
-goatsbeard will appear to be covered with little
-elevations or pustules, paler at the apex; these
-soon become ruptured, and the fungus pushes its
-head through the opening, at the same time
-bursting by radiating fissures. The teeth thus
-formed resemble those of the peristome of some
-mosses. All around the orifice of the peridium
-the teeth become recurved, and the orange spores
-are exposed, crowded together within. At first,
-and while contained within the peridium, these
-spores are concatenate or chained together, but
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_7'>7</span>when dispersed they are scattered singly about the
-orifice, often mixed with the colourless cells arising
-from the partial breaking up of the teeth of the
-peridium.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>Let us pause for a moment in our examination of
-the individual cups, to ascertain their manner of
-distribution over the leaves. In this instance they
-are scattered without any apparent order over the
-under surface, but generally thickest towards the
-summit of the leaves; occasionally a few are met
-with on the upper surface. Sometimes two or
-three touch at the margins, but we have never
-met with them truly confluent; generally there is
-a space greater than the width of the cups around
-each, the stratum or subiculum from whence they
-arise is scarcely thickened, and there are no spots
-or indications on the opposite surface. If a leaf
-be taken fresh and the cuticle stripped off, which
-it will sometimes do very readily, the orifices
-through which the <i>Æcidium</i> has burst will appear
-in irregular holes. If a section be made of one or
-two of the fungi <i>in situ</i>, they will be seen to
-spring from beneath the cuticle, the peridium to
-be simple, and rounded at the base, the spores
-clustered at the bottom, and the fringe to be a
-continuation of its cellular substance.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>The spores in this species are orange, subglobose,
-sometimes angular, and indeed very variable
-both in size and form, though the majority are
-comparatively large. Each of these bodies is,
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_8'>8</span>doubtless, capable of reproducing its species, and
-if we compute 2,000 cluster-cups as occurring on
-each leaf, and we have found half as many more on
-an ordinary-sized leaf, and suppose each cup to
-contain 250,000 spores, which again is below the
-actual number, then we shall have not less than
-five hundred millions of reproductive bodies on
-one leaf of the goatsbeard to furnish a crop of
-parasites for the plants of the succeeding year.
-We must reckon by millions, and our figures and
-faculties fail in appreciating the myriads of spores
-which compose the orange dust produced upon one
-infected cluster of plants of <i>Tragopogon</i>. Nor is
-this all, for our number represents only the actual
-protospores which are contained within the peridia;
-each of these on germination may produce not
-only one but many vegetative spores, which are
-exceedingly minute, and, individually, may be
-regarded as embryos of a fresh crop of cluster-cups.
-And this is not the only enemy of the kind
-to which this unfortunate plant is subject, for
-another fungus equally prolific often takes possession
-of the interior of the involucre wherein the
-young florets are hid, and converts the whole into
-a mass of purplish black spores even more minute
-than those of the <i>Æcidium</i>, and both these parasites
-will be occasionally found flourishing on the
-same plant at the same time (<a href='#i080'>Plate V.</a> figs. 92-94).</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>Naturally enough, our reader will be debating
-within himself how these spores, which we have
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_9'>9</span>seen, are shed in such profusion, can enter the
-tissues of the plants which give subsequent
-evidence of infection; in fact, how the yellow
-dust with which the goatsbeard of to-day is
-covered will inoculate the young plants of next
-year. If one or two of these spores are sprinkled
-upon the piece of the cuticle which we have
-recommended to be removed from the leaf for
-examination, it will be seen that they are very
-much larger than the stomata or breathing-pores
-which stud the cuticle: hence it is clear that they
-cannot gain admittance there. There remains but
-one other portal to the interior of the plant—namely,
-the spongioles, or extremities of the roots.
-Here another difficulty arises; for the spores are
-as large as the cells through which they have to
-pass. This difficulty may be lessened when we
-remember that what are termed the spores which
-are discharged from the cups are not the true
-spores, but bodies from which smaller seed-like
-vesicles are produced; yet, even then there will
-be much need of an active imagination to invent
-hypotheses to cover the innumerable difficulties
-which would encounter their passage through the
-vessels of the infected plants. The Rev. M. J.
-Berkeley proved many years ago that the spores of
-bunt, for example, may be caused to infect all the
-plants the seeds of which had been placed in
-contact with them; but this affection did not
-necessarily accrue from the absorption of the
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_10'>10</span>spores, or the ultimate sporidia produced after
-three or four generations. It is possible that the
-granular or fluid contents of the spores may be
-absorbed by the plant, and as a result of this
-absorption, become inoculated with the virus,
-which at length breaks out in fungoid growths.
-Much has been done to elucidate this mystery of
-inoculation, but much also remains a mystery still.
-There is no doubt that the inoculation takes place
-at an early age,<a id='r2' /><a href='#f2' class='c018'><sup>[2]</sup></a> probably in the seeds of many
-plants; in others it may be conveyed with the
-moisture to the roots; but the spores themselves
-have certainly not yet been traced traversing the
-tissues of growing plants.</p>
-
-<div class='footnote c020' id='f2'>
-<p class='c010'><span class='label'><a href='#r2'>2</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>Dr. de Bary has lately shown that in many similar instances
-the seed-leaves are inoculated. It will be necessary to refer
-more particularly to his experiments hereafter.</p>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c008'>If, instead of going in search of goatsbeard and
-its attendant fungus, we turn our steps northward
-and enter one of the Highgate or Hampstead
-woods, where the pretty little wood-anemone
-(<i>Anemone nemorosa</i>) flourishes abundantly, and
-turn up the radical leaves, one by one, and examine
-their under-surfaces, we shall at length be rewarded
-by finding one covered with similar
-cluster-cups to those we have been describing as
-occurring on the goatsbeard, but far less commonly.
-Leaf after leaf will be found covered with the
-brown spots of another fungus called <i>Puccinia
-anemones</i>, with which nearly every plant will be
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_11'>11</span>more or less infected in the spring of the year;
-and at length, if we persevere, the anemone
-cluster-cup (<i>Æcidium leucospermum</i>) will be our
-reward (<a href='#i004'>Plate I.</a> figs. 4-6). The specific name
-will suggest one point of difference between the
-two fungi, as in this instance the spores are white,
-and somewhat elliptic. Probably this species is
-not common, as we have found it but seldom,
-though often in search of it. A nearly allied
-species has been found on <i>Anemones</i> in gardens,
-having but few large teeth about the orifice, though
-not constantly four, as the name would indicate
-(<i>Æ. quadrifidum</i>).</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>A walk through almost any wood, in the spring
-of the year, will reward the mycologist with
-another cluster-cup (<i>Æcidium</i>), in which the
-peridia are scattered over the whole surface of
-the leaf. This will be found on the wood spurge,
-giving a sickly yellowish appearance to the leaves,
-on the under surface of which it is found. By
-experience one may soon learn to suspect the
-occurrence of parasites of this nature on leaves,
-from the peculiar exhausted and unhealthy appearance
-which they assume as the spores ripen, and
-which will spare the labour of turning over the
-leaves when there are no distinct spots on the
-upper surface. <i>Æ. Euphorbiæ</i> is found on several
-species of <i>Euphorbium</i> or spurge, but we have
-always found it most abundantly on the wood
-spurge in the Kentish woods between Dartford
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_12'>12</span>and Gravesend. The spores in this species are
-orange, and externally it bears considerable resemblance
-to the goatsbeard cluster-cup, but the
-spores are rather smaller and paler, the teeth
-are less distinct and persistent, the subiculum is
-more thickened, and the peridia are more densely
-crowded.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>There is another group of species belonging to
-the same genus of fungi in which the arrangement
-of the peridia is different. One of the first
-of our native wild flowers, in making its appearance
-after the departure of frost and snow, is the
-little yellow celandine (<i>Ranunculus ficaria</i>).</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c021'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>“Ere a leaf is on the bush,</div>
- <div class='line in1'>In the time before the thrush</div>
- <div class='line in1'>Has a thought about her nest,</div>
- <div class='line in1'>Thou wilt come with half a call,</div>
- <div class='line in1'>Spreading out thy glossy breast</div>
- <div class='line in1'>Like a careless Prodigal;</div>
- <div class='line in1'>Telling tales about the sun</div>
- <div class='line in1'>When we’ve little warmth, or none.”</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c022'>And one of the earliest parasitic fungi in spring is
-an <i>Æcidium</i> which flourishes on its glossy leaves.
-So common is <i>Æcidium ranunculacearum</i> on this
-species of <i>Ranunculus</i>, that it can scarcely have
-escaped the eye of any one who has taken the
-trouble to examine the plant. It appears in patches
-on the under surface of the leaves or on their
-petioles, in the latter case swelling and distorting
-them. Sometimes these patches are nearly circular,
-at others of very irregular form, and varying
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_13'>13</span>in size from less than one-twelfth of an inch to half
-an inch in diameter. It is found on several species
-of <i>Ranunculus</i>, as <i>R. acris</i>, <i>bulbosus</i>, and <i>repens</i>, but
-most commonly on <i>R. ficaria</i>. The leaf is thickened
-at the spot occupied by the parasite, and generally
-without indication on the opposite surface. Sometimes
-one spot, at others several, occur on the
-same leaf. The peridia are densely crowded together,
-often arranged in a circinate manner, <i>i.e.</i>,
-like a watch-spring, or the young frond of a fern.
-The spores are orange, but slightly varying in tint
-on different species of <i>Ranunculus</i> (<a href='#i032'>Plate II.</a> figs.
-12-14). One of the smaller clusters, when collected
-before the spores are dispersed, or the teeth
-of the peridium discoloured, mounted dry as an
-opaque object, makes a very excellent slide for an
-inch or half-inch objective; and the same may be
-said of many others of the same genus.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>Less common than the foregoing is the species
-of <i>Æcidium</i> which attacks the violet. The sweetest
-of flowers as well as the earliest, in despite both of
-its odour and its humility, becomes a victim to one
-or more of the ubiquitous race of fungi. Thickened
-spots at first appear on the leaves; the petioles, or
-flower stem, or even the calyx, become swollen
-and distorted; and at length the cluster-cup breaks
-through. The spots on the leaves upon which the
-peridia are scattered are yellowish, generally larger
-than the clusters on the pilewort, and seldom with
-more than one spot on each leaf. The peridia, or
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_14'>14</span>cups, are irregularly distributed over the spots, not
-crowded together as in the last species; and the
-teeth are large, white, and distinct. The spores
-are at first orange, but at length become brownish.
-This species may be found in spring, as late as
-June, most commonly on the dog-violet, but also
-on other species of <i>Viola</i>.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>It is not a very desirable occupation to search a
-bed of nettles, and turn over the individual leaves
-to look for minute fungi. A very pretty <i>Æcidium</i>
-is nevertheless far from uncommon in such a habitat.
-Fortunately it occurs very often on the petioles of
-the leaves and on the stem, distorting them very
-much; and in such situations flourishing, apparently,
-more vigorously than when occupying the under surface
-of the leaves (<a href='#i004'>Plate I.</a> fig. 10). In the latter
-situation the clusters of peridia are small, seldom
-exceeding a dozen in a spot, but several spots may
-be found on the same leaf. On the stem they are
-clustered around for upwards of an inch in length,
-and their bright orange colour in such a situation
-renders them very conspicuous objects. The peridia
-are always closely packed together upon a thickened
-base, and offer but slight variations from the forms
-already enumerated, save that they widen slightly
-at the mouth, so as to become nearly campanulate.
-The spores are orange, and very profuse.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>During the past summer we noticed, for the first
-time, a very pretty little species of cluster-cup
-(<i>Æcidium</i>) on the wood sanicle (<i>Sanicula Europæa</i>) in
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_15'>15</span>Darenth wood. It was far from uncommon, and we
-believe it to be specifically distinct from its nearest
-ally, found on the earthnut leaves, and those of some
-other umbelliferous plants. The little cups are in
-small clusters of four or five together, on the under
-surface and on the petioles; they are small, but
-the teeth are relatively large, white, and distinct.
-The spores are of a pallid, yellowish colour, and not
-so profuse as in the last species. A darker spot on
-the upper surface of the leaf generally indicates
-their presence. This species was found many years
-ago by Carmichael at Appin, and called by him
-<i>Æcidium saniculæ</i>; but we find no notice of its
-occurrence since, though it seems to be far from
-uncommon at Darenth, and probably elsewhere,
-should the sanicle be common also.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>Recently we found the bedstraw cluster-cup
-(<i>Æcidium galii</i>) on the great hedge bedstraw
-(<i>Galium mollugo</i>), and as it has not been figured
-before, we have included it amongst our illustrations
-(<a href='#i032'>Plate II.</a> figs. 15-17). Though very insignificant
-when occurring on the small leaves of the
-yellow bedstraw (<i>Galium verum</i>), it is a prominent
-object on the above-named species.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>We received, for the first time, in July, 1864,
-from Mr. Gatty, student at Winchester, a portion
-of a plant of <i>Thesium humifusum</i> (which is by no
-means common in Britain), covered with beautiful
-cluster-cups of a species never before recorded as
-occurring in this country (<a href='#i048'>Plate III.</a> figs. 50, 51)
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_16'>16</span>named <i>Æcidium Thesii</i>, but which is far from uncommon
-on the Continent. It occurred in this instance
-on the Downs, in the vicinity of Winchester.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>It is unnecessary here to refer to other allied
-species of <i>Æcidium</i>, except one to be presently
-noticed, since we have, at the end of
-the volume, enumerated and given descriptions
-of all the species hitherto found in Britain.
-Suffice it to say that the Buckthorn cluster-cups
-on the alder buckthorn (<i>Rhamnus frangula</i>),
-is usually very common in the Highgate
-and Hornsey woods, and on the common buckthorn
-(<i>Rhamnus catharticus</i>) in the neighbourhood
-of Dartford, in Kent. That on the honeysuckle we
-have found but very rarely. On the gooseberry
-and red-currant leaves, commonly in some years
-and rarely in others; whilst a few of those described
-we have never collected. The species on
-different composite plants is subject to great variation,
-and on most may be found in the autumn;
-one variety only, on the leaves of <i>Lapsana communis</i>,
-we have met with in the spring.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>Very few years ago farmers generally believed
-that the cluster-cups of the berberry (<i>Berberis vulgaris</i>),
-were productive of mildew in corn grown
-near them; this opinion even received the support
-of Sir J. Banks, but no fungi can be much more
-distinct than those found on corn crops and this
-species on the leaves of the berberry. In this
-instance the cups are much elongated, and cylindrical,
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_17'>17</span>the clusters vary much in size, and the spots
-on the upper surface of the leaf are reddish, bright,
-and distinct. The teeth are white and brittle, and
-the orange spores copious (<a href='#i004'>Plate I.</a> figs. 7-9).</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>There are scarcely any of the epiphyllous fungi
-forming equally handsome or interesting objects
-for low powers of the microscope, than the genus
-to which attention has just been directed; and they
-possess the advantage of being readily found, for
-that locality must be poor indeed which cannot
-furnish six species during the year. We have
-found half of the number of described species
-within little more than walking distance of the
-metropolis, within a period of little more than
-three months, and should be glad to hear of the
-occurrence of any of the rest.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>We have three species of fungi very similar in
-many respects to the foregoing, but differing in
-others to such an extent as to justify their association
-under a different genus and name. The
-hawthorn is a bush familiar to all who love the
-“merry month of May,” but it may be that its
-parasite has been unnoticed by thousands. If, for
-the future, our readers will bear this subject in their
-minds when they stand beneath a hawthorn hedge,
-they may become acquainted with clusters of singular
-brown pustules on the leaves, petioles, and
-fruit well worthy of more minute examination (<a href='#i032'>Plate II.</a>
-fig. 22). They scarcely claim the name of cups,
-and their lacerated and fringed margins rather
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_18'>18</span>resemble the pappus crowning the fruits of some
-composite plants than the cups of <i>Æcidium</i>. The
-peridia are very long, and split down throughout
-their length into thread-like filaments of attached
-cells; these gradually fall away and break up into
-their component parts till but short portions
-remain attached to the base of the peridia. These
-cells are elongated and marked on the surface with
-waved lines, forming in themselves pretty objects for
-a high power of the microscope (<a href='#i032'>Plate II.</a> figs. 23, 24).
-If the teeth of <i>Æcidium</i> resemble the peristome of
-some mosses, such as <i>Splachnum</i>; the threads of
-this species of <i>Rœstelia</i>, except in not being twisted,
-somewhat resemble the peristomes of other mosses
-of the genus <i>Tortula</i>. The spores in this species
-are less conspicuous, being of a light brown, and
-the whole plant, from its modest hue, may be
-readily passed over without attracting attention
-unless occurring in abundance.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>The leaves of pear-trees afford a second species
-of this genus sufficiently distinct to commend it to
-our notice. Sometimes it is very common, at others
-but few examples are to be met with. The clusters
-occur on the under surface, and consist of half-a-dozen
-or less of large peridia, pointed at the apex
-and swelling in the middle so as to become urn-shaped
-(<a href='#i032'>Plate II.</a> figs. 20, 21). These vessels or
-thecæ split into numerous threads or laciniæ, which
-remain united together at the apex. Like the
-species already noticed, this is brown and inconspicuous
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_19'>19</span>except on account of its size, for it is the
-largest of all that we have had occasion to notice.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>The third species occurs on the under surface
-of the leaves of the mountain-ash. The peridia
-are clustered on a rusty orange-coloured spot
-which is visible on the upper surface (<a href='#i032'>Plate II.</a>
-figs. 18, 19). They are long and cylindrical, with
-an evident tendency to curvature; the mouth is
-serrated, but not split up into threads, as in the
-species found on the hawthorn. There will often
-be found instead of well-developed peridia, what at
-one time were regarded as abortive peridia, forming
-a thickened orange or rust-coloured spot, studded
-with minute elevated points. These spots are
-clusters of spermogones, which organs are described
-in detail in our second chapter. The clusters and
-spores are of a brighter reddish-brown than in
-either of the other species. All are remarkably
-distinct, and perhaps the most curious and interesting
-of any that we have passed in review. To
-botanists, the species found on the hawthorn is
-known as <i>Rœstelia lacerata</i>, that on pear-leaves as
-<i>Rœstelia cancellata</i>, and the one on the leaves of
-the mountain-ash as <i>Rœstelia cornuta</i>.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>Dr. Withering observed the spore-spots on the
-leaves of the mountain-ash, but was evidently
-puzzled to account for them. He writes (in his
-Arrangement of British Plants), “The spots on
-the leaves of <i>Sorbus aucuparia</i> consist of minute
-globules intermixed with wool-like fibres. On
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_20'>20</span>examining many of them in different states, I at
-length found a small maggot in some of the
-younger spots, so that the globules are probably
-its excrement, and the fibres, the woody fibres of
-the plant unfit for its food.” We now-a-days smile
-at such simple and singular conjectures. It affords
-evidence of the manner in which the speculations of
-one generation become follies in the next.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>Only two species of cluster-cups are described in
-Withering’s Flora under the genus <i>Lycoperdon</i>:
-one of these is now called <i>Æcidium compositarum</i>,
-and is found on various composite plants; the other
-includes the species found on the wood-anemone
-and that on the moschatel, and also probably a
-species of <i>Puccinia</i> on the wood-betony.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>To render this chapter more complete, though of
-less importance to the microscopist, we may allude
-to the other two genera comprised within this order.
-<i>Peridermium</i> is the name of one genus which
-contains two British species found on the leaves
-and young shoots of coniferous trees. In this
-genus the peridium bursts irregularly, and does not
-form cups, or horns, or fringed vessels. The most
-common species is found on the needle-shaped
-leaves of the Scotch fir (<a href='#i032'>Plate II.</a> fig. 27), and also
-on the young twigs, in the latter instance larger
-and more prominent than in the former. The
-elongated peridia burst irregularly at their apices
-without forming teeth (fig. 28).</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>In the genus <i>Endophyllum</i>, as its name implies,
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_21'>21</span>the peridium is imbedded within the substance
-of the succulent leaves. The only species we
-possess is found rarely upon the common house-leek.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>We have derived much pleasure in viewing the
-astonishment and delight exhibited by friends to
-whom we have personally communicated specimens
-of the little fungi we have enumerated for examination
-under the microscope; and we recommend
-with confidence this group of parasitic plants,
-unfortunately so little known, as well worthy of the
-attention of all who are interested in the minute
-aspects of nature, and who can recognize the
-hand—</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c021'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>“That sets a sun amidst the firmament,</div>
- <div class='line in1'>Or moulds a dew-drop, and lights up its gem.”</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<div class='pbb'>
- <hr class='pb c003' />
-</div>
-<div class='chapter'>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_22'>22</span>
- <h2 id='ch02' class='c012'>CHAPTER II.<br /> <br /><em class='gesperrt'><span class='small'>SPERMOGONES.</span></em></h2>
-</div>
-<p class='drop-capa0_3_0_65 c013'>IN addition to their spore-bearing spots, lichens
-have for some time been known to possess other
-organs, termed <i>spermogones</i>, which are probably
-concerned more or less in the reproductive process.
-The first intimation of the existence of
-similar bodies in the entophytal fungi originated
-with M. Unger in 1833, but it was left to Dr. de
-Bary and the Messrs. Tulasne, twenty years later,
-to examine and determine satisfactorily the nature
-and value of the spermogones of the Uredines.
-It was at first believed that the smaller pustules—which
-sometimes precede, and sometimes accompany,
-the cluster-cups and some other allied fungi—were
-distinct species developed simultaneously
-therewith, or members of a new genus, which,
-under the name of <i>Æcidiolum exanthematum</i>, found
-a place in the mycologic system.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>Without staying to trace the stages through
-which the elucidation of their true nature proceeded,
-it will suffice for our purpose to tell what
-is now known of these secondary organs; to
-accomplish which we must stand greatly indebted
-to the independent researches of Messrs. de Bary
-and Tulasne. It has been demonstrated that both
-these bodies, namely, the primary organs or cluster-cups,
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_23'>23</span>and the secondary organs or spermogones,
-are developed from the same mycelium; but the
-value of the latter is still undetermined. If they
-possess any fecundative power, the process has not
-been traced; or if they are in themselves reproductive,
-they have not at present been seen to
-germinate. Their uses, therefore, in the economy
-of the parasitic plant of which they are now known
-to form a part is still a mystery, and they remain
-valueless in the determination of genera and
-species. Any speculation which might regard
-them as male organs would be premature, and
-without support in fact. Hitherto only some
-species of the genera described in the foregoing
-chapter, and others belonging to genera not
-hitherto named, have been ascertained to possess
-spermogones. Of the former are the <i>Rœsteliæ</i>,
-some species of <i>Æcidium</i>, as those of <i>Euphorbia</i>,
-&amp;c., and <i>Peridermium Pini</i>.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>These spermogones are of a very simple structure—very
-delicate, indeed; so much so, that they
-will scarcely bear preparation for demonstration.
-De Bary states that they originate from plain,
-delicate, inarticulate threads, about half the thickness
-of the mycelium (the root-like branching
-fibres which form the fundamental stratum of
-fungoid growths), which are developed in large
-quantities, and closely packed together. These
-threads are compacted together so as to form an
-outer enveloping integument or peridium, which is
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_24'>24</span>either globular or hemispherical (or in some instances
-elongated), more or less immersed, and at
-length opening at the apex (fig. 153) by a regularly
-formed minute ostiolum. The inner wall of
-the peridium is covered with a thick forest of
-simple filaments standing on end. From the
-summit of these filaments or sterigmata, the
-spermatia are borne. These are either isolated or
-associated together in strings or chaplets, are
-exceedingly minute, of an ovoid or oblong shape,
-and are produced in such numbers as to fill the
-cavity of the spermogone. Besides these, a viscid
-fluid is secreted, in which the spermatia are immersed,
-and which is expelled with them from the
-orifice of the peridium. According to the density
-of this fluid, or the hygrometric state of the atmosphere,
-it appears sometimes in drops, and sometimes
-oozing out in threads or cirrhi from the
-spermogones. To compare minute things with
-gigantic, as a recent author has observed, it
-resembles the lava issuing from the crater of a
-volcano. The colour of this spermatiferous matter
-is commonly orange, but in some instances brown,
-though not constantly of the same colour as the
-spores produced from the same mycelium. This
-gelatinous substance is dissolved away from the
-granular bodies which are immersed in it, by
-adding a little water upon the slide on which the
-mass is placed for examination. The granules, or
-spermatia, then exhibit those peculiar movements
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_25'>25</span>which have been observed in the similar bodies in
-lichens, and fitly described as “a sort of oscillating
-motion, as of a body attached at one extremity.”
-The cause of this motion is at present uncertain,
-vibratile ciliæ, to which similar movements are
-referred, being altogether absent; but probably,
-as De Bary believes, the cause may be found in
-the influence of exosmose.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>The largest spermatia yet examined (those of
-<i>Peridermium Pini</i>) have a length equal to 1/2500 of
-an inch, but their width seldom exceeds 1/100000 of
-an inch, whilst in others their length does not
-exceed the width of those just named.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>Messrs. Tulasne affirm that all these corpuscles,
-as well as the mucilaginous fluid, evolve an appreciable
-odour, resembling that of the pollen of the
-willow. M. Léveillé compares the odour to that of
-orange flowers, and M. de Bary to that of the
-evening primrose.</p>
-
-<div class='nf-center-c0'>
-<div class='nf-center c003'>
- <div><span class='large'>SPERMOGONES</span></div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<div class='figcenter id004'>
-<img src='images/i027a.jpg' alt='' class='ig001' />
-<div class='ic001'>
-<p><span class='sc'>Fig. 1.</span>—<i>Æcidium grossulariæ</i>. <i>c.</i> Cluster-cups. <i>s.</i>&nbsp;Spermogones.</p>
-</div>
-</div>
-<div class='figcenter id005'>
-<img src='images/i027b.jpg' alt='' class='ig001' />
-<div class='ic001'>
-<p><span class='sc'>Fig. 2.</span>—Section of ripe spermogones of <i>Æcidium Euphorbiæ</i>. <i>s.</i> Spermatia. <i>a.</i> Sterigmatæ bearing spermatia (<i>De Bary</i>).</p>
-</div>
-</div>
-<p class='c023'>The spermogones do not always appear like
-pustules on the surface of the leaves, for sometimes
-their presence is only indicated by minute
-depressed punctures which are scarcely visible;
-generally, however, they may be recognized by an
-obtuse, or otherwise a pointed, protuberance that
-surmounts them. The margin of the orifice is
-sometimes furnished with short hairs, but is more
-frequently ornamented with a pencil of long hairs,
-which are stiff and erect, and of the colour of the
-enclosed spermatia.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'><span class='pageno' id='Page_26'>26</span>In many of the species of <i>Æcidium</i> the cups are
-disposed in a more or less regular circle, the centre
-of which is occupied by a group of spermogones; at
-the same time, the corresponding spot on the
-opposite surface of the leaf will frequently be found
-also occupied by other spermogones—in some
-instances in greater number than on the same surface
-of the leaf on which the cups are seated. This is
-the case in the <i>Æcidium</i> which is found upon the
-leaves of the coltsfoot, and that of the honeysuckle.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>Very bright orange-coloured spots may be observed
-in autumn (we have encountered them often
-in August and September) upon the leaves of pear
-trees, and which are covered with little tubercles,
-at first of the same colour, but ultimately becoming
-brown. These pustules are so many spermogones
-belonging to <i>Rœstelia cancellata</i>, a kind of cluster-cup
-found in the same localities. These spots have
-long since been noticed, and regarded as connected
-with the <i>Rœstelia</i>, but in what manner has until
-recently been unknown. The Rev. M. J. Berkeley
-noticed them in the English Flora in 1836, or at least
-the granulations on the upper surfaces of the leaves
-bearing <i>R. cancellata</i>, <i>R. cornuta</i>, and <i>R. lacerata</i>,
-and called them abortive pseudoperidia. Before this
-(in 1804) they had been observed by Rebentisch.
-An examination of one of these spots under a low
-power of the microscope, and afterwards a section
-of one or more of the pustules, cut with a sharp
-razor, and viewed with a higher power, will give an
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_29'>29</span>idea of the nature of the bodies we are attempting
-to describe. During the past summer we have
-noticed very similar orange spots on leaves of the
-berberry containing spermogones on both surfaces,
-and these appeared before any cups had been found
-on that plant. In this instance no cups were produced
-from the spots on the leaves examined, and
-which were carefully noticed at intervals until they
-withered and fell.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>In some instances, as in <i>Rœstelia cornuta</i>, which
-is found on the leaves of the mountain-ash, the
-cups are produced on the lower, but the spermogones
-almost exclusively on the upper surface.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>The spermogones of <i>Peridermium Pini</i> are white,
-few in number, and are developed, not only in the
-spring, but sometimes reappear in the autumn upon
-the same leaves that produced them at the commencement
-of the year.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>In such instances as those of the <i>Æcidium</i> of the
-spurge, and also the goatsbeard, in which the
-cluster-cups are arranged in no appreciable order,
-the spermogones are scattered amongst them, and
-even in some instances appear on different leaves.
-The spermogones are common on the wood spurge
-in spring, scattered over both surfaces of the leaves
-before the cluster-cups make their appearance, and
-gradually these latter are developed amongst them,
-commencing from the apex of the leaves and proceeding
-in the order of their development towards
-the base. In this instance the spermogones are
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_30'>30</span>bright yellow, as are afterwards the cups and spores
-of the <i>Æcidium</i>. In most instances the appearance
-of the spermogones precedes that of the sporiferous
-organs, but the latter follow sufficiently speedy for
-perfect development before the decadence of the
-spermogones takes place.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>After the expulsion of the spermatia and the fluid
-which accompanies them, the whole mass dries up;
-and where many spermogones have been clustered
-together in the same spot a brown homogeneous
-crust is formed upon the epidermis; where they are
-produced singly, a brownish incrustation is visible
-about the mouth of each spermogone.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>Re-agents applied to the spermogones whilst in
-full vitality indicate the presence of a considerable
-amount of a protein substance, which, with sugar
-and sulphuric acid, produces a deep purple red colour.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>From what we have already stated of the method
-of occurrence of these organs, the following is the
-only order, apparently, preserved in their development,
-although no definite rules can at present be
-affirmed. The spore spots of cluster-cups are
-generally found upon the under surfaces of the
-leaves on which they are produced, and the spermogones
-are most numerous on the upper. When
-both the cluster-cups and the spermogones appear
-in the same group on the same surface, the spermogones
-commonly occupy the centre, and the
-cups are arranged in a circular manner about
-them. In other, and fewer instances, both
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_31'>31</span>organs stand together indiscriminately upon the
-same surface.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>The spermogones are also developed centrifugally,
-at least so far as at present observed, for
-when they are produced in a cluster the central one
-first opens and discharges its contents, and thus the
-development proceeds outwards from the centre to
-the circumference. When the spermogones are
-scattered, as in those of <i>Euphorbia</i>, they are first
-observed at the apex of the leaf, whence they are
-developed in succession towards the base. The
-latter should be sought for on the young plants of
-the wood spurge in March or April, at which time
-we have found them abundant at Darenth wood,
-near Dartford.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>It must not be concluded, from the fact that we
-have not yet adverted to spermogones in connection
-with other fungi, that they are peculiar to the
-<i>Æcidiacei</i>. Such is by no means the case. As we
-have hereafter described other genera and species
-in which spermogones occur, it would be out of
-place to enter upon further details here. Let it
-suffice therefore that we state that they have been
-found in members of the genera, <i>Aregma</i>, <i>Triphragmium</i>,
-<i>Puccinia</i>, <i>Lecythea</i>, <i>Trichobasis</i>, and <i>Uredo</i>,
-but they have been found much more generally in
-<i>Rœstelia</i> and <i>Æcidium</i> than in any other genus.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>As comparatively little is yet known of these
-bodies, a fair field is open to the enterprising
-microscopist, with time at his disposal, and a good
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_32'>32</span>store of perseverance, to win for himself renown
-in the discovery of fresh facts, and the elucidation
-of some of the mysteries which yet enshroud these
-interesting organisms. From the foregoing pages
-he will learn the direction in which his researches
-should tend, and he may be assured that every new
-fact is of importance when carefully ascertained.</p>
-<div id='i032' class='figcenter id003'>
-<img src='images/i032.jpg' alt='' class='ig001' />
-<div class='ic001'>
-<p>Plate II.<br />W. West imp.</p>
-</div>
-</div>
-<div class='pbb'>
- <hr class='pb c003' />
-</div>
-<div class='chapter'>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_33'>33</span>
- <h2 id='ch03' class='c012'>CHAPTER III.<br /> <br /><em class='gesperrt'><span class='small'>DI-MORPHISM.</span></em></h2>
-</div>
-<p class='drop-capa0_3_0_65 c013'>BEFORE entering further and more fully upon
-the subject of this volume, it may be advisable
-to attempt an explanation of a phenomenon of no
-uncommon occurrence in many groups of Fungi,
-and which is termed <i>di-morphism</i>.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>In the Uredines, or uredo-like fungi, as well as
-other of the <i>Coniomycetes</i> (in which the spores are
-the principal feature), the same fungus appears
-under two or more distinct forms, not necessarily
-mere differences of age, but so distinct that they
-have been regarded (and some are so still) as
-different species belonging to different genera,
-often far removed from each other, and bearing
-different names. One plant, for instance, sprinkled
-over the under surface of a rose-leaf, like turmeric
-powder, has its mycelium, or root-like threads,
-penetrating the tissue, whilst bearing above its
-spherical golden-coloured spores. Its vegetative
-system is complete, and, apparently, its reproductive
-also; hence it seems to claim recognition as a
-perfect plant, and under the name of <i>Uredo Rosæ</i>
-was so recognized, until microscopical investigation
-determined otherwise. Thus it has been discovered
-that certain dark brown spots which appear later
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_34'>34</span>in the season are produced upon the same mycelium,
-and are indeed aggregations of more perfect and
-complex fruits of the same plant. Before this
-point was satisfactorily decided, the brown spores,
-which are borne on long stalks, and are themselves
-septate or divided (apparently or really) by transverse
-partitions into a complex fruit, received
-the name of <i>Puccinia Rosæ</i>. At this period, <i>Uredo
-Rosæ</i> and <i>Puccinia Rosæ</i>, or the yellow fungus and
-the dark brown fungus, were believed to be distinct
-and different plants; now, on the contrary,
-they are believed to be different forms of fruit
-produced by the same plant; <i>i.e.</i>, an instance of
-di-morphism. <i>Aregma mucronatum</i>, Fr., is the
-present scientific name of what is regarded as the
-perfect fungus, whilst the uredo-form either bears
-the name of <i>Lecythea Rosæ</i>, Lev., or by some
-mycologists is rejected altogether as a spurious
-species.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>During the summer it is not uncommon to find
-the leaves of some grasses, of the hop, of roses,
-and many other plants, covered with a kind of
-white mould, which appears under the microscope
-as a multitude of small transparent colourless
-cellules, generally attached to each other in a
-moniliform or beaded manner. These moulds were
-long known under the generic name of <i>Oidium</i>, to
-which genus the vine disease was also referred.
-More minute investigation and more careful
-examination proved that these moulds were not in
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_35'>35</span>themselves perfect plants, but merely conditions of
-other fungi of a higher order, little differing it is
-true in external appearance to the naked eye, but
-offering material differences in structure under the
-microscope. Upon the white mould-like threads,
-spherical bodies are produced in the autumn, containing
-little sacs or asci filled with spores; and in
-this condition the plants are arranged under the
-genus <i>Erysiphe</i>, whilst the species of <i>Oidium</i> which
-represented their imperfect condition, are excluded
-from the system. Here, again, we have examples
-of <i>di-morphism</i>.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>In the Journal of the Microscopical Society, Mr.
-F. Currey has detailed several instances of di-morphism
-which have fallen within his experience.
-In one instance he has shown that a small simple
-spored fungus, termed <i>Cryptosporium Neesii</i>, Ca.,
-is only a state or condition of a fungus with compound
-fruit, belonging to the <i>Sphœria</i> section of
-ascigerous fungi, called <i>Valsa suffusa</i>, Fr. Both
-plants are exactly alike externally, but the perithecium,
-or flask-like receptacle containing the
-fructification, in one instance only holds naked
-spores, and in the other the spores are contained in
-little elongated vesicular bags or asci, which are
-packed within the perithecium.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>Whilst writing this, one of the most wonderful
-books in a book-producing age lies beside us; it
-is the second volume of a work on fungi, by the
-brothers Tulasne; and this, as well as its predecessor,
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_36'>36</span>is devoted to this very subject of a multiplicity
-of form in the fructification of these plants.
-Illustrated by the most exquisite of engravings
-which art has ever produced, it also unfolds many
-a page in the history of these organisms, for which
-mycologists were not altogether unprepared. In
-noticing this work, one of our most eminent
-authors on mycological subjects quotes as an
-example <i>Dothidia ribis</i>, Fr., one of our most
-common fungi, which occurs in the form of little
-black shields on dead twigs of currants and goose-berries.
-Here we have, he says, naked spores
-(<i>conidia</i>) growing on the external cells of the
-stroma; we have naked spores of a second kind
-(<i>stylospores</i>) produced in distinct cysts (<i>pycnides</i>);
-we have minute bodies of a third kind (<i>spermatia</i>)
-produced again in distinct cysts, resembling very
-closely similar bodies in lichens; and we have a
-third kind of cysts, containing the usual sporidia
-in sausage-shaped hyaline sacs (<i>asci</i>). Even here,
-however, we have not done with marvels; for if
-the stylospores are placed in water, they produce in
-the course of twenty-four hours conidia of a second
-order, exactly analogous to those which arise on
-the germination of the spores of the rusts and
-mildews which affect our cereals and other
-plants.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>Further reference is also made to three species
-of moulds, which M. Tulasne has shown to be only
-varied forms of the mycelium of a species of
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_37'>37</span><i>Sphœria</i> common to various plants; these moulds
-having been hitherto regarded as fungi perfect in
-themselves.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>In the Uredines, to which much of this volume
-is devoted, the genera known as <i>Lecythea</i> and
-<i>Trichobasis</i> are by some mycologists excluded
-altogether, as containing only species which are
-mere forms of more highly-developed uredines,
-such as <i>Puccinia</i>, <i>Aregma</i>, and others. On the
-other hand, they are retained by those who possess
-a lingering doubt whether both forms may not be
-distinct, though developed from the same pustule.
-As the two forms are distinct in appearance, it will
-better answer our present purpose to treat them
-separately, notwithstanding the belief that, in a
-scientific point of view, the evidence is all in favour
-of their union.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>In fungi of this kind the mycelium, or delicate
-root-like threads, consists of thin filaments, which
-are spread through all parts of the plant occupied
-by the parasite, traversing the intercellular passages,
-but rarely perforating and entering the cells.
-This compacted and interwoven mycelium forms a
-kind of cushion beneath each pustule, on which the
-fruits of the parasite rest. By the increase of this
-cushion and the swelling of the fruit, the epidermis
-which covers them is distended, and ultimately
-ruptured, so that, when ripened, the spores escape.
-It must be remembered that the fruit is of from
-two to four kinds. Small bodies, called <i>spermatia</i>,
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_38'>38</span>which are derived from the spermogones, and
-which have not yet been known to germinate;
-<i>Stylospores</i>, produced either singly, or in bead-like,
-or moniliform, strings, and which either precede or
-are associated with the true spores; <i>Spores</i>, sometimes
-simple, but often complex; and <i>Sporidia</i>, or
-secondary sporules, which are produced on the
-germinating threads of the true spores.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>The various genera of these endophytes owe
-their distinctions to the form, or mode of development
-of their true spores. In one instance these
-spores are united in pairs, or divided by a septum,
-so that they are two-celled: these are named <i>Puccinia</i>.
-In another instance the spores are one-celled,
-and at first borne upon a stalk or peduncle,
-from which they are detached in ripening: such
-are called <i>Trichobasis</i>. It is unnecessary here to
-indicate all the variations to illustrate the fact that
-the generic distinctions are based upon the characters
-of the true spores. How unsatisfactory
-such a mode will appear, when subjected to experience
-day by day, a botanist would suspect. In
-the same pustule, resting upon the same cushion of
-mycelium, the spores of an <i>Aregma</i> will be found
-with those of a <i>Lecythea</i>, and those of a <i>Puccinia</i>
-with <i>Trichobasis</i>. More than this has even been
-affirmed. The alternation of generations, known
-to students in the animal world, is here repeated in
-the vegetable. Dr. de Bary declares that certain
-data appear to indicate that <i>Æcidium</i> constitutes
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_39'>39</span>not a genus by itself, but are organs in the development
-of some other germs and species, possessing
-its spermogonia, its <i>Æcidium</i>; its <i>Uredo</i>, and its
-spores, properly speaking; whilst in others the
-<i>Uredo</i>-form the <i>Puccinia</i>-form, and the <i>Æcidium</i>-form
-may alternate. It is not our intention to
-enter deeply upon the discussion of this subject, of
-so little interest to the beginner, and so out of
-place in an introduction to the study. That forms
-and conditions are multifarious, and that an entire
-revision of the classification is inevitable, are facts
-which do not require many words to establish.
-Already it is to be feared that in this brief chapter
-we have said too much, and must recommend its
-perusal again, when the names and characters of
-the genera alluded to have been rendered more
-familiar.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>It could scarcely have been permitted that the
-student should go far without being cautioned that
-there is such a thing as di-morphism in microscopic
-fungi; and the explanation of such a phenomenon
-must presuppose a certain amount of knowledge
-which, thus far, the reader could not have acquired.
-Hence an anomaly, to escape from which an ultimate
-return to the subject will be necessary.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>In a recent account of Dr. de Bary’s experiments,<a id='r3' /><a href='#f3' class='c018'><sup>[3]</sup></a>
-an interesting history is given of the
-development of a rust-like fungus, which is common
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_40'>40</span>on many plants of the pea and bean tribe. As it
-may serve to illustrate some of the preceding, as
-well as subsequent, remarks on development, an
-abstract shall close this chapter.</p>
-
-<div class='footnote c020' id='f3'>
-<p class='c010'><span class='label'><a href='#r3'>3</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>De Bary—“Annales des Sciences Naturelles,” ser. 4, vol. xx.</p>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c008'>The spores of this species (<i>Uromyces appendiculatus</i>)
-are oboval cells, terminated by a rounded
-point, provided with a deep brown, smooth, <i>epispore</i>,
-or outer coating, and a distinct, but colourless
-<i>endospore</i>, or inner coating. These enclose a
-granular matter, which surrounds what has been
-termed the nucleus, but which appears to be a
-vacuole. At the top of the epispore is a pore
-which is characteristic of the genus. The spores
-are supported on a colourless, or slightly-tinted
-pedicel of considerable length (<a href='#frontis'>Plate VII.</a> fig. 150).
-By means of this pedicel, the spores are attached to
-the fostering plant, on which they form pustules
-or sori of a blackish colour, and variable extent.
-These spores are ripened towards the end of
-summer or beginning of autumn. During winter
-they remain in a state of repose, but in the following
-spring the faculty of germination developes
-itself. At this period, when moistened or placed
-on a humid soil, they germinate at the end of a
-few days. The spore then emits a curved and
-obtuse tube, which soon ceasing to elongate itself,
-gives origin to three or four sporidia, of a reniform
-or kidney shape. When cultivated on moistened
-glass, these sporidia also emit a short, thin,
-slender tube, which produce in turn secondary
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_41'>41</span>sporidia. Here vegetation ends in the artificial
-culture above indicated.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>When the sporidia are sown upon the epidermis
-of a favourable plant, the germ-tube being emitted,
-penetrates the wall of any approximate cellule,
-swells and increases into a cylindrical tube equal in
-thickness to the original sporidia, and therefore
-four or five times the diameter of the germ-tube
-before it entered the cellule. The contents of the
-sporidia and external portion of its germ-tube pass
-into the portion within the cellule, and then these
-external portions perish, and all evidence of the
-entry is obliterated, except a very minute point at
-which the tube remains attached to the inner surface
-of the wall of the cellule. The enclosed tube
-soon elongates, divides, and becomes branched.
-These branches perforate the inner walls of the
-epidermis, and pass into the intercellular spaces of
-the parenchyma to become mycelium. This takes
-place within 24 hours. A few days afterwards
-the mycelium is spread through the parenchyma.
-At length the surface of the same spots which had
-been sown in the first instance with the sporidia,
-become of a whitish tint, rapidly increasing and
-intensifying. Three days after, little protuberances
-appear on the surface of the white spots. These
-are of an orange colour, and many of them are
-surmounted by a little drop of mucilaginous fluid.
-These are <i>spermogones</i>. Their number daily increases,
-and a little time after appear numerous large
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_42'>42</span>globular protuberances intermingled with them.
-These soon rupture the epidermis, and take the
-orange colour and cylindrical form of cluster-cups
-(<i>Æcidium</i>). At length the summit of the peridia
-opens to allow the escape of the <i>stylospores</i>. It is
-easy to assure oneself that the spermogones and
-cluster-cups proceed from the mycelium of the
-sporidia which had been sown. During several
-days the length and number of the peridia of the
-<i>Æcidium</i> continue to increase. One month after
-sowing, brownish or blackish points make their
-appearance upon the whitish spots, around, or
-intermingled with the cluster-cups. These increase
-rapidly in number and magnitude. Examined by
-the microscope, they present the ordinary fructification
-of <i>Uromyces</i>, mingled with stylospores.
-Thus the mycelium of the cluster-cups engenders
-at the end of its vegetation fruits equal in all points
-to those from whence they are in the first instance
-derived.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>The stylospores of the cluster-cups possess the
-irregular, globular form and structure of their
-congeners. They are filled with orange granular
-matter, and provided with a colourless, finely-punctated
-epispore. When these stylospores are
-sown on the moistened epidermis of a favourable
-plant, the germ-tube at first creeps along the
-surface, but as soon as its extremities find a stomate,
-it enters it and elongates itself in the air-cavity
-below the orifice, receives the contents of the original
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_43'>43</span>stylospore and exposed portion of its tube, then
-separates itself from those parts, which become
-dispersed. The active part increases and ramifies,
-and produces a mycelium which spreads through
-the intercellular passages of the parenchyma. At
-the end of from six to eight days, the whitish spots
-appear on the surface of the fostering plant, and
-indicate that the fructification of the parasite is
-about to commence. The epidermis is elevated
-and broken, and little brown pustules appear
-through the openings. These are the <i>stylospores</i>
-of <i>Uredo</i>, which are produced in immense quantities,
-and soon cover the pustules with a deep
-brown dust. Later, the formation of the stylospores
-is arrested, and the true germinating spores
-appear in the same pustules.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>The stylospores of <i>Uredo</i> are borne singly at the
-top of short filaments. On arriving at maturity
-they detach themselves. They are of a globular
-form, with a reddish-brown epispore, provided with
-little pointed prominences, and three pores at equal
-distances. After maturity they germinate in precisely
-the same manner as the stylospores of the
-cluster-cups. They enter only through the stomata
-of the epidermis. The pulvinules are identical with
-those which the stylospores of <i>Æcidium</i> originate,
-and they also produce true spores at the end of
-their vegetation. No other fruit arises from them.
-These organs, therefore, always reproduce the same
-form to which they owe their origin.
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_44'>44</span>The result of these investigations shows that the
-bean rust (<i>Uromyces appendiculatus</i>), besides spermogones,
-possesses four sorts of reproductive organs,
-which all serve to propagate the species, but
-that one alone of them produces it in a form always
-identical, whilst the others present well-marked
-alternations of generation. Hence it is concluded
-that there are,</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>I. <i>Spores</i> which produce in germinating the promycelium,
-and</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>II. <i>Sporidia.</i>—These give place to a mycelium,
-which bears afterwards—</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>III. <i>Æcidium.</i>—Particular organs which engender
-stylospores, and which produce—</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>IV. <i>Uredo</i>, the second form of the stylospores,
-and later spores (No. I.), which are always associated
-with <i>Uredo</i> in the same pustule. The spores
-and stylospores of <i>Uredo</i> come also upon the old
-mycelium, which has previously produced <i>Æcidium</i>.
-The <i>Uredo</i> stylospores always produce <i>Uredo</i>, and
-true spores.</p>
-<div class='pbb'>
- <hr class='pb c003' />
-</div>
-<div class='chapter'>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_45'>45</span>
- <h2 id='ch04' class='c012'>CHAPTER IV.<br /> <br /><em class='gesperrt'><span class='small'>MILDEW AND BRAND.</span></em></h2>
-</div>
-<p class='drop-capa0_3_0_65 c013'>DR. WITHERING’S “Arrangement of British
-Plants” in 1818 reached its sixth edition. This
-is less than half a century ago, and yet the whole
-number of species of Fungi described in that edition
-was only 564, of which three hundred were included
-under the old genus <i>Agaricus</i>. Less than eighty of
-the more minute species of Fungi, but few of which
-deserve the name of microscopic, were supposed to
-contain all then known of these wonderful organisms.
-Since that period, microscopes have become
-very different instruments, and one result has
-been the increase of Withering’s 564 species of
-British Fungi to the 2,479 enumerated in the
-“Index Fungorum Britannicorum.” By far the
-greater number of species thus added depend for
-their specific, and often generic characters, upon
-microscopical examination. The proportion which
-the cryptogamic section bears to the phanerogamic
-in our local Floras before 1818, now almost involuntarily
-causes a smile. Even such authors as were
-supposed to pay the greatest possible respect to the
-lower orders of plants could never present an equal
-number of pages devoted to them, as to the higher
-orders. Relhan, for instance, only occupies one-fifth
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_46'>46</span>of his “Flora Cantabrigiensis,” and Hudson
-one-fourth of his “Flora Anglica,” with the Cryptogamia.
-At the present time, it will be seen that,
-with a liberal allowance for “hair-splitting,” the
-number of British species of flowering plants
-scarcely exceeds three-fourths of the number of
-Fungi alone, not to mention ferns, mosses, algæ
-and lichens, and yet we have no “Flora” which
-contains them, and but a minority of our botanists
-know anything about them. If we need excuse for
-directing attention to some of the most interesting
-of these plants, let the above remarks suffice in lieu
-of formal apology.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>“Mildew” is just one of those loose terms which
-represent no definite idea, or a very different one
-to different individuals. Talk of <i>mildew</i> to a
-farmer, and instantly he scampers mentally over
-his fields of standing corn in search of the brown
-lines or irregular spots which indicate the unwelcome
-presence of <i>Puccinia graminis</i>, known to him,
-and to generations of farmers before him, as “mildew.”
-Try to convince a Norfolk farmer that anything
-else is “mildew,” and he will consider you
-insane for your pains. Speak of <i>mildew</i> in your
-own domestic circle, and inquire of wives, or
-daughters, or servants, what it means, and without
-hesitation another, and even more minute species
-of fungus, which attacks damp linen, will be indicated
-as the true mildew, to the exclusion of all
-others; and with equal claims to antiquity. Go to
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_47'>47</span>Farnham, or any other hop-growing district, and
-repeat there your question,—What is <i>mildew</i>?—and
-there is every probability that you will be told
-that it is a kind of mould which attacks the hop
-plant, but which differs as much from both the
-mildew of the farmer and the laundry-maid as they
-differ from each other. The vine-grower has his
-mildew, the gardener his mildewed onions, the
-stationer his mildewed paper from damp cellars,
-the plasterer his mildewed walls, and in almost
-every calling, or sphere in life, wherever a minute
-fungus commits its ravages upon stock, crop, or
-chattels, to that individual owner it becomes a bug-bear
-under the name of “mildew.” Reluctantly
-this vague term has been employed as a portion
-of the title to this chapter, but it must be limited
-in its application to the “mildew of corn,” known
-to botanists as <i>Puccinia graminis</i>, and <i>not</i> to include
-the numerous other microscopic Fungi to which the
-name of <i>mildew</i> is often applied.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>The origin of this term and its true application
-may undoubtedly be traced to <i>mehl-thau</i>, “meal
-dew.” A singular proof of the ignorance which
-prevails in regard to all the fungal diseases of corn,
-may be found in the fact that at least one of our
-best etymological dictionaries states that the <i>mildew</i>
-in corn is the same as the <i>ergot</i> of the French.
-Had the writer ever been a farmer, he would have
-known the difference; had he ever seen the two,
-he could scarcely have made such a mistake. It
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_48'>48</span>is barely possible for him ever to have heard the
-ergot of grain called by the name of <i>mildew</i>.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>How long this disease has been known, is an
-unsolved problem. About the middle of the last
-century a tract was published on this subject in
-Italy, but this was probably not even the first intimation
-of its fungoid character. Before such conclusion
-had been arrived at, men may have struggled
-in the dark, through many generations, to account
-for a phenomenon with which they were doubtless
-familiar in its effects. In 1805, Sir Joseph Banks
-published his “Short Account,” illustrated by engravings
-from the inimitable drawings of Bauer,
-whereby many in this country learnt, for the first
-time, the true nature of <i>mildew</i>.</p>
-<div id='i048' class='figcenter id006'>
-<img src='images/i048.jpg' alt='' class='ig001' />
-<div class='ic001'>
-<p>Plate III.<br />W. West imp.</p>
-</div>
-</div>
-<p class='c023'>With a view to the clearer understanding of these
-parasites in the phases of their development, let us
-select one, and we cannot do better than adhere to
-that of the wheat and other graminaceous plants.
-A fine day in May or June dawns upon our preparations
-for a stroll, far enough into the country to find
-a wheat-field. Even now, with the area of the
-metropolis constantly widening, and banishing
-farmers and wheat fields farther and farther from
-the sound of Bow-bells, a corn field may be reached
-by a good stiff walk from Charing-Cross, or a six-penny
-ride at the most, in nearly any direction.
-Having reached the field, it may be premised that a
-walk into it of less than twenty yards will be sure
-to reward you with the fungus we are in quest of.
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_49'>49</span>Look down at the green leaves, especially the lower
-ones, and you will soon find one apparently grown
-rusty. The surface seems to be sprinkled with
-powdered red ochre, and grown sickly under the
-operation. Pluck it carefully, and examine it with
-a pocket lens. Already the structure of a healthy
-leaf is familiar to you, but in the present instance
-the cuticle is traversed with numerous longitudinal
-cracks or fissures, within which, and about their
-margins, you discern an orange powder, to which
-the rusty appearance of the leaf is due. Further
-examination reveals also portions in which the
-cuticle is distended into yellowish elongated
-pustules, not yet ruptured, and which is an earlier
-stage of the same disease. This is the “rust” of
-the agriculturist, the <i>Trichobasis rubigo-vera</i> of
-botanists, the first phase of the corn mildew.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>To know more of this parasite, we must have
-recourse to the microscope; having therefore collected
-a few leaves for this purpose, we return
-homewards to follow up the investigation. We
-will not stay to detail the processes of manipulation,
-since these will not offer any deviation from
-the ordinary modes of preparation and examination
-of delicate vegetable tissues.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>The vegetative system of the “rust,” and similar
-fungi, consists of a number of delicate, simple, or
-branched threads, often intertwining and anastomosing,
-or uniting one to the other by means of
-lateral branchlets. These threads, termed the
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_50'>50</span>mycelium, penetrate the intercellular spaces, and
-insinuate themselves in a complete network, amongst
-the cells of which the leaf, or other diseased portion
-of the plant, is composed. High powers of the
-microscope, and equally high powers of patience
-and perseverance, are necessary to make out this
-part of the structure. We may regard the whole
-mycelium of one pustule, or spore-spot, as the
-vegetative system of one fungal plant. At first
-this mycelium might have originated in a number
-of individuals, which afterwards became confluent
-and combined into one for the production of fruit,
-that is to say, an indefinite number of points in the
-vicinity of the future mycelium developed threads;
-and these, in the process of growth, interlaced each
-other, and ultimately, by means of transverse processes,
-became united into one vegetative system,
-in which the individuality of each of the elementary
-threads became absorbed, and by one combined
-effort a spore-spot, or cluster of fruit, was produced.
-In the first instance a number of minute, transparent,
-colourless cellules are developed from the
-mycelium: these enlarge, become filled with an
-orange-coloured endochrome, and appear beneath
-the cuticle of the leaf as yellowish spots. As a
-consequence of this increase in bulk, the cuticle
-becomes distended in the form of a pustule over the
-yellow cellules, and at length, unable longer to
-withstand the pressure from beneath, ruptures in
-irregular, more or less elongated fissures (<a href='#frontis'>Plate VII.</a>
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_51'>51</span>fig. 141), and the yellow bodies, now termed <i>spores</i>
-(whether correctly so, we do not at present inquire),
-break from their short pedicels and escape, to the
-naked eye presenting the appearance of an orange
-or rust-coloured powder. In this stage the spores
-are globose, or nearly so, and consist of but one
-cell <a href='#frontis'>Plate VII.</a> figs. 142, 144). It will afford much
-instructive amusement to examine one of these
-ruptured pustules as an opaque object under a low
-power, and afterwards the spores may be viewed
-with a higher power as a transparent object. The
-difference in depth of tint, the nearly colourless and
-smaller immature spores, and the tendency in some
-of the fully matured ones to elongate, are all facts
-worthy of notice, as will be seen hereafter.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>A month or two later in the season, and we will
-make another trip to the cornfield. Rusty leaves,
-and leaf-sheaths, have become even more common
-than before. A little careful examination, and, here
-and there, we shall find a leaf or two with decidedly
-brown pustules intermixed with the rusty ones, or,
-as we have observed several times during the past
-autumn, the pustules towards the base of the leaf
-orange, and those towards the apex reddish-brown.
-If we remove from the browner spots a little of the
-powder, by means of a sharp-pointed knife, and
-place it in a drop of water or alcohol on a glass
-slide, and after covering with a square of thin glass,
-submit it to examination under a quarter-inch
-objective, a different series of forms will be
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_52'>52</span>observed. There will still be a proportion of subglobose,
-one-celled, yellow spores; but the majority
-will be elongated, most with pedicels or stalks, if
-they have been carefully removed from the leaf, and
-either decidedly two-celled, or with an evident
-tendency to become so. The two cells are separated
-by a partition or dissepiment, which divides the
-original cell transversely into an upper and lower
-cell, with an external constriction in the plane of
-the dissepiment (<a href='#i056'>Plate IV.</a> fig. 59). These bilocular
-or two-celled spores are those of the “corn mildew”
-(<i>Puccinia graminis</i>), which may be produced in the
-same pustules, and from the same mycelium, as the
-“corn rust,” but which some mycologists consider
-to be a distinct fungus, others only a modification or
-stage of the same fungus. After an examination of
-the different forms in the allied genera to which
-these chapters are devoted, we shall be able with
-less of explanation and circumlocution to canvass
-these two conflicting opinions.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>Let us proceed, for the third and last time, to
-our cornfield, when the corn is nearly or fully ripe,
-or let us look over any bundle of straw, and we
-shall find blackish spots, from the size of a pin’s
-head to an inch in length, mostly on the sheaths of
-the leaves, often on the culm itself. This is the
-fully developed <i>mildew</i>, and when once seen is not
-likely afterwards to be confounded with any other
-parasite on straw (fig. 57). The drawings of Bauer
-have already been alluded to. Bauer was botanical
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_53'>53</span>draughtsman to George III., and his exquisite
-drawings, both of the germination of wheat and
-the fungi which infest it, are marvels of artistic
-skill. A reduced figure from part of one of his
-drawings is given (<a href='#i056'>Plate IV.</a> fig. 58), exhibiting
-a tuft of the bilocular spores of <i>Puccinia graminis</i>
-bursting through a piece of wheat straw. These
-closely-packed tufts or masses of spores, when
-examined with a common lens, seem, at first, to
-resemble the minute sorus of some species of fern;
-but when seen with higher powers, the apparent
-resemblance gives place to something very different.
-The tufts consist of multitudes of stalked
-bodies, termed spores, which are constricted in the
-middle and narrowed towards either extremity.
-The partition, or septum, thrown across the spore
-at the constriction, separates it into two portions,
-each of which consists of a cell-wall enclosing an
-inner vesicle filled with the endochrome (fig. 59) or
-granular contents, in which a nucleus may often be
-made out. This species of <i>Puccinia</i> is very common
-on all the cereals cultivated in this country,
-and on many of the grasses. A variety found on
-the reed was at one time considered a distinct
-species; but the difference does not seem sufficient
-to warrant a separation. However near some other of
-the recognized species may seem to approximate in
-the form of the spores, a very embryo botanist will
-not fail to observe the distinctive features in the
-spores of the corn mildew, and speedily recognize
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_54'>54</span>them amongst a host of others; subject, as they
-may be, to slight deviations in form, resulting
-either from external pressure, checks in development,
-or other accidental circumstances, or the
-variations of age.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>There is no doubt in the minds of agriculturists,
-botanists, <i>savans</i>, or farm-labourers, that the mildew
-is very injurious to the corn crop. Different
-opinions may exist as to how the plants become
-inoculated, or how infection may be prevented or
-cured. Some have professed to believe that the
-spores, such as we have seen produced in clusters
-on wheat straw, enter by the stomata, or pores, of
-the growing plant, “and at the bottom of the hollows
-to which they lead they germinate and push
-their minute roots into the cellular texture.” Such
-an explanation, however plausible at first sight,
-fails on examination, from the fact that the spores
-are too large to find ingress by such minute openings.
-It is improbable that the <i>spores</i> enter the
-growing plant at all. The granular contents of
-the spores may effect an entrance either through
-the roots or by the stomata, or the globose bodies
-produced upon the germination of the spores may
-be the primary cause of infection. We are not
-aware that this question has been satisfactorily
-determined. It is worthy of remembrance by all
-persons interested in the growth of corn, that the
-mildew is most common upon plants growing on
-the site of an old dunghill, or on very rich soil.
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_55'>55</span>As the same <i>Puccinia</i> is also to be found on
-numerous grasses, no prudent farmer will permit
-these to luxuriate around the borders of his fields,
-lest they should serve to introduce or increase the
-pest he so much dreads.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>The germination of the spores of the corn mildew
-is a very interesting and instructive process,
-which may be observed with a very little trouble.
-If the spores be scraped from the sori of the preceding
-year (we are not sure that those of the
-current year will succeed), and kept for a short time
-in a damp atmosphere under a glass receiver,
-minute colourless threads will be seen to issue both
-from the upper and lower divisions of the spores.
-These will attain a length several times that of the
-spores from whence they spring. The extremities
-of these threads ultimately thicken, and two or
-three septæ are formed across each, dividing it
-into cells, in which a little orange-coloured endochrome
-accumulates. From the walls of each of
-these cells, or joints, a small pedicel, or spicule, is
-produced outwards, the tip of which gradually
-swells until a spherical head is formed, into which
-the orange-coloured fluid passes from the extremities
-of the threads.<a id='r4' /><a href='#f4' class='c018'><sup>[4]</sup></a> A quantity of such threads,
-bearing at their summits from one to four of these
-orange-coloured, spherical, secondary fruits, supply
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_56'>56</span>a beautiful as well as interesting object for the
-microscope. When matured, these globose bodies,
-which Tulasne has called <i>sporidia</i>, fall from the
-threads, and commence germinating on their own
-account. It is not impossible that the sporidia, in
-this and allied genera, may themselves produce a
-third and still more minute fruit, capable of diffusion
-through the tissues of growing plants, or
-gaining admission by their stomata. Nothing of
-the kind, however, has yet been of certainty discovered.</p>
-
-<div class='footnote c020' id='f4'>
-<p class='c010'><span class='label'><a href='#r4'>4</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>Similar in all essential particulars to the germination of
-<i>Aregma</i> (<a href='#i048'>Plate III.</a> fig. 45).</p>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c008'>Forty other species of <i>Puccinia</i> have been
-recorded as occurring in Great Britain, to all of
-which many of the foregoing remarks will also
-apply—viz., such as relate to their two-celled spores
-being found associated with, and springing from,
-the same mycelium as certain orange-coloured one-celled
-spores; and also the main features of the
-germinating process.</p>
-<div id='i056' class='figcenter id003'>
-<img src='images/i056.jpg' alt='' class='ig001' />
-<div class='ic001'>
-<p>Plate IV.<br />W. West imp.</p>
-</div>
-</div>
-<p class='c023'>A very singular and interesting species is not
-uncommon on the more delicate grasses, being
-found chiefly confined to the leaves, and produced
-in smaller and more rounded, or but slightly elongated,
-patches (<a href='#i056'>Plate IV.</a> fig. 60). We have met with
-it plentifully amongst the turf laid down in the
-grounds of the Crystal Palace at Sydenham, and
-also on hedge-banks and in pastures. The spores
-are rather smaller than those of <i>Puccinia graminis</i>,
-but, like them, much elongated, slightly constricted,
-and borne on persistent peduncles. The most
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_57'>57</span>prominent distinction may be found in the apices of
-the spores, which, in this instance, are not attenuated,
-but crowned with a series of little spicules,
-or teeth, whence the specific name of <i>coronata</i> has
-been derived (<a href='#i056'>Plate IV.</a> fig. 62).</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>The Labiate family of plants and its ally the
-Scrophulariaceæ are also subject to the attacks of
-several kinds of Brand, a name, by the bye, often
-applied locally to the corn mildew and other similar
-parasites, and which may have originated in the
-scorched or <i>burnt</i> appearance which the infected
-parts generally assume. In the former natural
-order the different kinds of mint, the ground-ivy,
-the wood-sage, and the betony, and in the latter,
-the water figwort and several species of veronica,
-or speedwell, are peculiarly susceptible; and on
-most a distinct species of <i>Puccinia</i> is found. To
-provide against doubt which the less botanical of
-our readers may possess of the meaning or value of
-the term <i>Puccinia</i>, which has already occurred two
-or three times in this chapter, a brief explanation
-may be necessary, which more scientific readers
-will excuse.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>In botany, as in kindred sciences, acknowledged
-species have their trivial, or specific name, generally
-derived from the Latin. In the last species referred
-to, this was <i>coronata</i>, meaning <i>crowned</i>, in reference
-to the coronated apex of the fruit. Any indefinite
-number of species with some features in common
-are associated together in a group, which is
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_58'>58</span>termed a <i>genus</i>, and the term prefixed to the specific
-name of each species constituting that genus is its
-generic name, also commonly derived from the
-Latin or Greek. In this instance it is <i>Puccinia</i>,
-derived from the Greek <i>puka</i>, meaning <i>closely
-packed</i>, singularly applicable to the manner in
-which the spores are packed together in the pustules.
-The common features, or generic distinctions,
-of this genus, are uniseptate spores borne on
-a distinct peduncle.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>In returning to the species found on Labiate
-plants, let us suppose ourselves to have strolled
-towards Hampstead Heath, and south of the road
-leading from Hampstead to Highgate, near certain
-conspicuous and well-known arches, built for a purpose
-not yet attained, are two or three muddy
-ponds nearly choked up with vegetation. Some
-fine autumnal afternoon, we must imagine ourselves
-to have reached the margin of the most northern of
-these ponds, and amidst a thick growth of reeds,
-sedges, and other water-loving plants, to have
-found the water-mint in profusion and luxuriance,
-with every leaf more or less occupied, on its under
-surface, with the yellow spores of a species of rust
-(<i>Trichobasis</i>) mixed with the browner septate spores
-of the mint brand (<i>Puccinia Menthæ</i>). This is common
-also on the horse-mint and corn-mint; we
-have found it on the wild basil and wild thyme,
-and once only on marjoram. Having collected as
-many leaves as we desire, and returned to home
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_59'>59</span>and the microscope, we proceed to examine them
-in the same manner as we have already examined
-the mildew, and as a result of such proceeding
-arrive at the following conclusions:—The pustules
-are small and round, never elongated as in the corn
-mildew, and generally confined to the under surface
-of the leaves (<a href='#i056'>Plate IV.</a> fig. 69). The spores are subglobose,
-slightly constricted, and the two cells nearly
-two hemispheres, with their flat surfaces turned towards
-each other (fig. 70). The form delineated in
-figure 75 is that of the sorus of many of the epiphytal
-brands, the centre being occupied by the
-closely-packed spores, surrounded to a greater or
-less extent by the remains of the ruptured
-epidermis.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>Although the species of Puccinia (<i>P. glechomatis</i>)
-found on the leaves of the ground-ivy is said to be
-very common, we sought it in vain amongst every
-cluster of that plant met with during last summer
-and autumn, until, nearly despairing of finding it
-at all, we at last encountered a plot of ground-ivy
-covering the ground to the width of two or three
-yards, and in length eight or ten, nearly every plant
-being attacked by the <i>brand</i>. This was in the
-corner of a pasture, and the only time we found
-infected plants. The fungus, however, may be as
-common as the plant in other localities. The pustules
-on the leaves are larger than those of the
-mints, and also confined to the inferior surface
-(fig. 73). The spores are elliptic and but slightly
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_60'>60</span>constricted; the apex is often pointed, though not
-always so much as in our figure (fig. 74).</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>Of other species found on allied plants we have
-not considered it necessary to give figures, or write
-much. The betony brand (<i>P. Betonicæ</i>, DC.) does
-not seem to be common enough to be readily found
-by any one desiring to examine it for himself;
-and the same may be said of the figwort brand
-(<i>P. Scrophulariæ</i>, Lib.), the wood-sage brand
-(<i>P. Scorodoniæ</i>, Lk.), and the speedwell brand
-(<i>P. Veronicarum</i>, DC.); all of these are, however,
-characterized by a distinct feature, or features, which
-have been considered of sufficient importance to
-constitute a separate species.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>We have had occasion to refer incidentally to the
-brand found on the under surface of the leaves of
-the wood-anemone (<i>P. Anemones</i>, P.). This is one
-of the earliest and commonest species. Go wherever
-the wood-anemone abounds, in any of the woods
-lying immediately to the north of the metropolis,
-or any of the woods in Kent, and from March
-to May it will not be difficult to find attenuated,
-sickly-looking leaves, with the under surface covered
-with the pustules of this brand, looking so like the
-sori of some fern (fig. 65) that it <i>has</i> been, and
-still <i>is</i>, sometimes considered as such. In Ray’s
-“Synopsis” (3rd edition, 1724), it is described in
-company with the maidenhair and wall-rue ferns; a
-figure is given of it in the same work (t. iii. fig. 1),
-and it is stated,—“this capillary was gathered by
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_61'>61</span>the Conjuror of Chalgrave.” When, afterwards,
-it was better understood, and the spots came to be
-regarded as true parasitic fungi, it still for a long
-time continued to bear the name, not even yet
-quite forgotten, of the Conjuror of Chalgrave’s fern.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>An examination of the spores, both collectively
-in the pustules, and separately under a high power,
-will not fail to convince any one who has examined
-only the species we have already alluded to,
-that this parasite on the anemone (<i>P. Anemones</i>) is
-a true <i>Puccinia</i>, and a most interesting one. The
-two cells of the spores are nearly spherical, and the
-constriction is deeper and more positive than in
-any of the preceding. Moreover, the surface of the
-spore is minutely and beautifully echinulate, or covered
-with erect spines (<a href='#i056'>Plate IV.</a> fig. 66). Some few
-other of the species found in Britain have echinulate
-spores, but those are not common like the present.
-One word of caution to the amateur in search of
-the <i>Puccinia</i> on the anemone. It will be fruitless
-looking for it on the large foliaceous bracts of the
-flower-stalk, since these may be turned up carefully,
-till the back aches with stooping, ere a solitary
-pustule will be found; but the true leaves,
-proceeding from the rhizomes, are certain soon to
-afford you specimens.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>Everybody knows the dandelion, but it is not
-every one who has noticed the fungi found upon its
-leaves. These are most commonly of two kinds,
-or probably the unilocular and bilocular forms of
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_62'>62</span>the same species: the latter we have found in the
-month of May, and the former in August and
-September. The lower leaves of young seedlings
-have generally rewarded us with the best
-specimens of the septate-fruited brand (<i>Puccinia
-variabilis</i>, Grev.). The pustules occur on both
-sides of the leaf, and are very small and scattered
-(fig. 82). The spores are singularly variable in
-form: sometimes both divisions are nearly equal
-in size; sometimes the upper, and sometimes the
-lower, division is the smallest; occasionally the
-septum will be absent altogether; and more rarely,
-the spores will contain three cells. From the very
-variable character of the spores (fig. 83), the
-specific name has been derived.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>No species in the entire genus makes so prominent
-an appearance as the one found on the radical
-leaves of the spear thistle (<i>Carduus lanceolatus</i>).
-This latter plant is exceedingly abundant, and so
-is its parasite (<i>Puccinia syngenesiarum</i>, Lk.). From
-the month of July till the frosts set in we may be
-almost certain of finding specimens in any wood.
-The leaves have a paler roundish spot, from one-twelfth
-to one-fourth of an inch in diameter, on the
-upper surface, and a corresponding dark brown
-raised spot on the under surface, caused by an
-aggregation of pustules, forming a large compound
-pustule, often partly covered with the epidermis.
-The individual pustules are small, but this aggregate
-mode of growth gives the clusters great prominence,
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_63'>63</span>and therefore they are not easily overlooked
-(<a href='#i056'>Plate IV.</a> fig. 63). Although not confined to
-this species of thistle, we have not yet found this
-<i>Puccinia</i> on any other plant. The spores are elliptical,
-rather elongated, constricted, and without
-spines (fig. 64).</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>Other species of <i>Puccinia</i> are found on Composite
-plants, but with none of these is the present fungus
-likely to be confounded, if regard be had to its
-peculiar habit. The leaves, for instance, of the
-common knapweed (<i>Centaurea nigra</i>) are often
-sprinkled with the small pustules of the centaury
-brand (<i>Puccinia compositarum</i>, Sch.); these generally
-occupy the under surface of the lower radical
-leaves (fig. 67); occasionally a few of the pustules
-appear on the upper surface. We have not often
-found this fungus in the neighbourhood of London
-on the leaves of the knapweed, but, on the other
-hand, we have encountered it very commonly on
-those of the saw-wort (<i>Serratula tinctoria</i>). The
-spores are oval, scarcely constricted, and not attenuated
-in either direction (fig. 68). Other Composite
-plants than those above named are liable to
-attacks from this parasite.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>In our school-days we remember to have spent
-many a stray half-hour digging for “earthnuts,”
-under which name we, as well as our elders and
-betters, knew the tubers of <i>Bunium flexuosum</i>.
-Not then, nor for many years after, did we notice,
-or regard if we did notice, the distorted radical
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_64'>64</span>leaves and leaf-stalks, and the blackish-brown spots,
-which reveal the cause in the presence of a brand,
-or parasitic fungus, of this genus (<i>Puccinia Umbelliferarum</i>,
-DC.), which is extremely common on this,
-as well as some other allied plants. If any spot is
-searched where this plant grows in any profusion,
-before the flowering stalks have made their appearance
-above the surrounding grass, this <i>Puccinia</i>
-will be readily found by the twisted, contorted,
-sickly appearance of the infested leaves (fig. 71),
-the petioles of which are often swollen and gouty in
-consequence. The sporidia are shortly stalked, and
-generally very much constricted (fig. 72). The
-species found on the stems of the hemlock, and also
-that on Alexanders (<i>Smyrnium Olusatrum</i>), are distinct;
-the spores of the latter being covered with
-tubercles or warts (figs. 55, 56). During a botanical
-ramble through Darenth Wood in April of the year
-just passed away, in some parts of which the
-sanicle abounds, we found the bright glossy leaves
-of this singular and interesting plant freely sprinkled
-with the pustules of a <i>Puccinia</i> (<i>P. Saniculæ</i>, Grev.),
-which is not at all uncommon on this, but has not
-hitherto been found on any other plant. Dr. Greville,
-of Edinburgh, was the first to describe this,
-as well as many other of our indigenous minute
-Fungi. For many years he has toiled earnestly
-and vigorously at the lower cryptogams, as evidenced
-by his “Scottish Cryptogamic Flora,”
-published in 1823; and yet his continual additions
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_65'>65</span>to the records of science show him to be earnest
-and vigorous still.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>We have by no means exhausted the catalogue
-of Fungi belonging to this genus found in Britain,
-nor even those commonly to be met with; but the
-fear of prolixity, and the desire to introduce a
-description of other forms into the space still remaining
-to us, prompt us to dismiss these two-celled
-brands with but a brief allusion to such as we cannot
-describe. Box-leaves are the habitat of one species,
-and those of the periwinkle (<a href='#i096'>Plate VI.</a> fig. 132) of
-another. One vegetates freely on the leaves of violets
-through the months of July and August, and another
-less frequently on the enchanter’s nightshade. Several
-species of willow-herb (<i>Epilobium</i>) are attacked
-by one <i>Puccinia</i> (<a href='#i056'>Plate IV.</a> figs. 78, 79), and a single
-species by another. Plum-tree leaves, bean-leaves,
-primrose leaves, and the half-dead stems of asparagus,
-have their separate and distinct species, and
-others less commonly attack the woodruff, bedstraw
-(<a href='#i104'>Plate VIII.</a> figs. 172, 173), knotgrass, ragwort, and
-other plants less common, more local, or, to the generality
-of the non-botanical, but imperfectly known.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>We have found, not uncommonly in the autumn,
-the scattered pustules of a brand on the stems and
-leaves of the goat’s-beard, occupying the places
-which were scarred with the remains of cluster-cups
-that had flourished on the same spots a month or two
-previously (<a href='#i056'>Plate IV.</a> fig. 76). The pustules are by
-no means minute, but elongated and bullate; the
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_66'>66</span>spores beautifully studded with warts (<a href='#i056'>Plate IV.</a> fig.
-77). This species cannot certainly be identical with
-<i>Puccinia compositarum</i> (Schlecht), <i>P. syngenesiarum</i>
-(Lk.), or <i>P. tragopogonis</i> (Corda). In none of these
-do the spores appear to be warted, and the habits
-of both the latter are different. Its nearest associate
-appears to be <i>P. centauriæ</i> (Corda), at least in the
-fruit, and whilst the form and character of these
-organs are considered of any value in the determination
-of species, smooth spores cannot be associated,
-we think, with tuberculate or echinulate spores under
-the same name.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>In the spores of the species to which attention
-has been more specially directed we have types of
-the principal forms. In the “corn-mildew” they
-are elongated, and tapering towards either end; in
-the “coronated brand” the apex is crowned with
-spicular processes; in the “wind-flower brand” the
-entire spores are echinulate; in the “mint brand”
-they are globose; in the “composite brand” elliptic;
-in the “earth-nut brand,” nearly cut in two at the
-septum; and in the “dandelion brand,” so variable
-in form that no two are precisely alike. On the
-other hand, all are characterized by a transverse
-septum dividing each spore into two cells.</p>
-<div class='pbb'>
- <hr class='pb c003' />
-</div>
-<div class='chapter'>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_67'>67</span>
- <h2 id='ch05' class='c012'>CHAPTER V.<br /> <br /><em class='gesperrt'><span class='small'>COMPLEX BRANDS.</span></em></h2>
-</div>
-<p class='drop-capa0_3_0_65 c013'>FROM the twin-spored genus we pass to another,
-in which the spores are usually divided into three
-cells, and which, from this cause, has been named
-<i>Triphragmium</i>. Only one species has hitherto been
-found in this country, and <i>that</i> not very commonly,
-on the leaves of the meadow-sweet, <i>Spiræa ulmaria</i>
-(<a href='#i048'>Plate III.</a> fig. 47). Externally, it much resembles,
-in the size and character of the pustules, many of
-the above-named brands, but when seen under the
-microscope this similarity disappears. In general
-outline the spores are nearly globose, and externally
-papillose. In one species, found on the Continent,
-but not hitherto in Great Britain, the spores are
-covered with curious long-hooked spines, by means
-of which they adhere tenaciously to each other. In
-germination, the spores of <i>Triphragmium</i> do not
-offer any noteworthy deviation from those of <i>Puccinia</i>,<a id='r5' /><a href='#f5' class='c018'><sup>[5]</sup></a>
-and the chief interest of our indigenous
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_68'>68</span>species lies in the three-celled form of its spores
-(fig. 48), to which occasionally those of <i>Puccinia
-variabilis</i> approximate, and may be regarded as the
-link which unites the two genera.</p>
-
-<div class='footnote c020' id='f5'>
-<p class='c010'><span class='label'><a href='#r5'>5</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>Mr. Currey has only seen the tips of the germinating threads
-swell, and become septate, each of the joints thus formed falling
-off and germinating without producing spherical sporidia; whilst
-Tulasne figures globular sporidia, as will be seen in our fig. 49,
-reduced from the figure by Tulasne.—(<i>Vide</i> Currey, in “Quarterly
-Journal of Microscopical Science,” 1857, pp. 117, &amp;c.)</p>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c008'>The old story of “Eyes and no Eyes” is too often
-literally true, not only with the children it was
-written to amuse and instruct, but also with children
-of a larger growth who scorn such baby tales,
-and disdain such baby morals. Out of more than a
-thousand indigenous species of microscopic fungi,
-of which there is generally some evidence afforded
-of their presence visible to the naked eye, how few
-are there of the millions that inhabit our island who
-can count twenty species that they have ever seen;
-still fewer that have noticed one hundred. Amongst
-the twenty species known to the few will probably
-be included one which appears in autumn in prominent
-black spots, the size of a large pin’s head, or
-half a turnip seed, with the flat face downwards,
-sprinkling the under surface of blackberry leaves
-(fig. 39); with larger, reddish, purplish, or reddish-brown
-spots on the upper to indicate the presence
-of the fungus beneath. Just at the time when
-blackberries are ripe, these spots are in perfection
-on the leaves, and <i>their</i> eyes must have been sadly
-at fault who could ever have gathered their own
-blackberries without seeing the discoloured leaves.
-The coloured spots on the face of the leaf are due
-to the diseased state of the tissues caused by the
-parasite on the opposite surface. As much of the
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_69'>69</span>leaf as contains two or three of the black pustules
-should be removed carefully with a knife or sharp
-scissors, and submitted to microscopical examination;
-each will be seen to consist of a dense tuft of
-blackish, elongated, stalked bodies, clustered as in
-fig. 44, but much more numerously and closely
-packed together. These are the spores of the blackberry
-brand (<i>Aregma bulbosum</i>, Fr.). A few of
-these spores should be removed on the point of a
-sharp penknife, placed on a glass slide with a drop
-of distilled water or alcohol, covered with thin glass,
-and then viewed with a quarter-inch objective.
-Each spore has a stalk longer than itself, thickened
-below, and containing a yellow granular core. The
-spore itself is much longer than in any of the <i>Pucciniæ</i>,
-of a dark brown colour, and apparently
-divided by several transverse partitions into three,
-four, or more cells, the whole surface being covered
-with minute warts or prominences (<a href='#i048'>Plate III.</a> fig. 41).</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>In 1857, Mr. F. Currey investigated the structure
-of these spores, and the results of these experiments
-were detailed in the “Quarterly Journal of
-Microscopical Science.” One conclusion arrived at
-was, that “the idea of the fruit consisting of sporidia
-united together and forming a chain, is
-certainly not in accordance with the true structure.
-The sporidia are not united to one another in any
-way, but, although closely packed for want of space,
-they are in fact free in the interior of what may be
-called a sporangium or ascus.” To arrive at this
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_70'>70</span>conclusion, careful examination was necessary, and
-new modes of manipulation essential. The details
-of one method employed were to the following
-effect:—A sufficient number of spores were removed
-on the point of a lancet, and placed on a slide in a
-drop of alcohol. Before the spirit was quite evaporated,
-two or three drops of strong nitric acid
-were added, and the whole covered with thin glass.
-The slide was then warmed over a spirit-lamp, the
-acid not being allowed to boil, but only gradually
-heated to boiling point. By this means the
-fruit was found to consist of an outer membrane,
-nearly transparent, and studded with tubercles;
-that this membrane enclosed a number of cells
-which constituted the apparent joints, and which
-were naturally flattened at either end by mutual
-pressure. When the outer membrane was dissolved
-or ruptured, these cells escaped, and became detached
-from each other. The cells, thus set free,
-exhibited a brownish or yellow ring around a paler
-area, in the interior of which an inner cell was
-visible, sometimes globular, often irregular in shape.
-The examination of the ring was not entirely satisfactory;
-it appeared to be sometimes marked with
-concentric lines having the appearance of wrinkles.
-The inner cell had granular contents and a central
-nucleus. When perfectly free they were spherical
-in form, with a distinct membrane of their own;
-and colourless, except when acted upon by reagents.
-The means employed to determine the
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_71'>71</span>existence of these cells was to soak the spores in
-muriatic acid; then, upon pressure of the glass cover,
-the outer membrane and ringed cells were ruptured,
-and the inner cell escaped (<a href='#i048'>Plate III.</a> fig. 46).</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>Germination may be induced in these spores by
-keeping them in a moist atmosphere (fig. 45); but
-the mode does not differ from that described above
-as occurring in the “corn mildew.” Mr. Currey
-writes:—“I know no microscopical object of greater
-beauty than a number of fruits of <i>Phragmidium</i> in
-active germination.” By <i>Phragmidium</i> he means
-the <i>Aregma</i> of this work, of which <i>Phragmidium</i> is
-a synonyme.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>Well may the reader remark on arriving thus
-far, “Does all this examination and detail refer to
-the fruit borne in the little blackish spots on bramble
-leaves, which I have hitherto overlooked?” Ay,
-and to several similar spots on other plants. Examine
-carefully the raspberry leaves in your garden,
-and you will probably find similar, but smaller,
-pustules also on the under surface (<a href='#i048'>Plate III.</a> fig. 42).
-We say <i>probably</i>, because none of our British species
-seem to be equally uncommon with this. During
-the past year we examined hundreds of plants, and
-did not find a single pustule. This species was
-named by Dr. Greville <i>Aregma gracilis</i>, which name
-it still continues to bear (fig. 43). Such a fate will
-not await you if you should proceed in the autumn
-to some chalky district where the burnet is common.
-Go, for instance, to Greenhithe or Northfleet, on the
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_72'>72</span>North Kent Railway, in August or September,
-where the burnet is plentiful, and the leaves will
-present the appearance of having been peppered
-beneath, from the number of minute pustules of the
-burnet brand scattered over the under surface
-(fig. 30, upper leaflets). Or if you prefer collecting
-nearer home, visit some neighbouring garden, if
-your own does not contain many roses, and the
-leaves will be found equally prolific in an allied
-species (fig. 36). Should gardens and roses be
-alike unattainable, any bank or wood will furnish
-the barren strawberry (<i>Potentilla fragariastrum</i>),
-and during the latter part of the summer, or
-in autumn, another species of <i>Aregma</i> will not
-be uncommon on the under surface of the leaves
-(fig. 33). All these species will be found accompanied
-by the orange spores of species of <i>Lecythea</i>,
-which some mycologists consider to be distinct
-fungi, and others to be merely forms or conditions
-of <i>Aregma</i>. These spores are represented in <a href='#i048'>Plate III.</a>
-figs. 31, 34, 37, and 40. From the magnified
-figures of the spores of the different species of
-<i>Aregma</i> (figs. 32, 35, 38, 41, and 43), it will be
-apparent that they have all certain features in
-common, <i>i.e.</i>, cylindrical spores containing from
-three to seven cells. This may be called the <i>generic</i>
-character, common to all the species of the genus
-<i>Aregma</i>. Again, each species will be observed to
-possess its own distinct features, which may be
-termed its <i>specific</i> character. In one, the apex of
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_73'>73</span>the spores will be obtuse, in another acutely pointed,
-in another bluntly pointed, &amp;c. In one species the
-number of cells will usually be four, in another five
-or six, in another seven or eight. The stem in one
-species will be slender and equal, in another thickened
-or bulbous. So that in all there will be some
-permanent peculiarity for each not shared by the
-others.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>One other form of brand (<i>Xenodochus carbonarius</i>),
-presenting, it is believed by some, generic differences
-from all that we have as yet noticed, remains to be
-briefly alluded to. This form appears to be very
-uncommon in this country, but, when found, is
-parasitic on the leaves of the great burnet (<i>Sanguisorba
-officinalis</i>), a plant of local distribution. The
-parasite appears to the naked eye in small tufts or
-pustules resembling those of an <i>Aregma</i>, but, when
-microscopically examined, the cells of the spores are
-found to be numerous, indeed, considerably more
-than in the most complex <i>Aregma</i> (fig. 29). This,
-however, seems to be the only distinction, for the
-cells are free in the interior of the investing membrane,
-and in all points of structure, in so far as it
-has been examined, identical with <i>Aregma</i>. Whether
-it is logical to consider a four-celled spore an <i>Aregma</i>,
-and a seven-celled spore an <i>Aregma</i>, and exclude a
-ten or twelve-celled spore from the same genus on
-account of the number of its cells, does not appear
-to us clearly answerable in the affirmative.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>During the course of this and the preceding
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_74'>74</span>chapter we have passed rapidly through four genera
-of parasitic fungi so nearly allied, that one is almost
-led to doubt the validity of the generic distinctions.
-These may be presented briefly thus:—</p>
-
-<table class='table1' summary=''>
-<colgroup>
-<col width='55%' />
-<col width='44%' />
-</colgroup>
- <tr>
- <td class='c024'>Spores two-celled</td>
- <td class='c025'><span class='sc'>Puccinia</span>.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c024'>Spores three-celled</td>
- <td class='c025'><span class='sc'>Triphragmium</span>.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c024'>Spores four to seven-celled</td>
- <td class='c025'><span class='sc'>Aregma</span>.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c024'>Spores many-celled</td>
- <td class='c025'><span class='sc'>Xenodochus</span>.</td>
- </tr>
-</table>
-
-<p class='c008'>It has been seen that the habit, mode of growth,
-germination, and structure, except in the number
-of cells, scarcely differ; but it is not our province
-here to enter upon the discussion of such a subject.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>The association of one-celled, orange-coloured
-spores with the brown two or more celled spores
-passed in review is another feature worthy of
-a passing notice, and which opens a field for discussion.
-It is generally admitted that these two
-forms are the production of the self-same mycelium
-or vegetative system, but it is not so generally
-admitted that they are but two forms or phases
-of the fruit of the same plant. It is not at all
-uncommon in the history of mycology to find two
-forms which were for a long time considered to be
-distinct plants producing different forms of fruit,
-and which bore different names, and were located
-in different genera, at length proved to be only the
-self-same plant in different conditions, and ending
-in one name being expunged from the list. Such
-a fate probably awaits, at no distant date, the orange
-spores which precede or accompany the species in
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_75'>75</span>the present genera. Already Tulasne and some
-others accord them no place in their system.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>It may be added, for the benefit of any who wish
-to pursue the study of this interesting branch of
-Cryptogamic Botany, that the leaves of the plants
-containing the parasitic fungi now noticed may be
-collected and preserved by drying between folds of
-blotting-paper, or the leaves of a book, and will
-retain their character, with the exception of colour
-in the orange forms, so as to be eligible for examination
-at any period of the year for twenty years to
-come. Each species, when dry, may be transferred
-to an old envelope, and labelled outside with the
-name, date of collection, and locality; and one
-hundred such envelopes will constitute a miniature
-herbarium in a very small compass.</p>
-<div class='pbb'>
- <hr class='pb c003' />
-</div>
-<div class='chapter'>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_76'>76</span>
- <h2 id='ch06' class='c012'>CHAPTER VI.<br /> <br /><em class='gesperrt'><span class='small'>SMUTS.</span></em></h2>
-</div>
-<p class='drop-capa0_3_0_65 c013'>ONE of the fungal diseases of corn long and
-widely known has obtained amongst agriculturists
-different appellations in different localities.
-In some it is the “smut,” in others it is
-respectively “dust-brand,” “bunt-ear,” “black-ball,”
-and “chimney-sweeper,” all referring, more
-or less, to the blackish soot-like dust with which
-the infected and abortive ears are covered. This
-fungus does not generally excite so much concern
-amongst farmers as the other affections to which
-their corn-crops are liable. Perhaps it is not really
-so extensively injurious, although it entirely destroys
-every ear of corn upon which it establishes itself.
-Wheat, barley, oats, rye, and many grasses are
-subject to its attacks, and farmers have been heard
-to declare that they like to see a little of it, because
-its presence proves the general excellence of the
-whole crop. No one who has passed through a field
-of standing corn, after its greenness has passed
-away, but before it is fully ripe, can have failed to
-notice, here and there, a spare, lean-looking ear,
-completely blackened with a coating of minute dust
-(<a href='#i080'>Plate V.</a> fig. 98). If he has been guilty of brushing
-in amongst the corn, it will still be remembered how
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_77'>77</span>his hands and clothing became dusted with this
-powder; and if at the time he should have been clad
-in sombre black, evidence will have been afforded—in
-the rusty-looking tint of the powder when
-sprinkled upon his black continuations—that, however
-sooty this powder might appear whilst still
-adhering to the ears of corn, it has an evident brown
-tint when in contact with one’s clothes. This
-powder, minute as it is, every granule of it constitutes
-a spore or protospore capable of germination,
-and ultimately, after several intermediate stages, of
-reproducing a fungus like the parent of which it
-formed a part. During the growth of the plant its
-virulent contents flow like a poison through the
-innermost tissues, and at length attack the peduncle
-or axis of the spikelets of the ear, raising up the
-essential organs and reducing them to a rudimentary
-state. Brongniart, who made this species the
-special subject of observation, states that the fleshy
-mass which is occupied by the fungus consists
-entirely of uniform tissue, presenting large, almost
-quadrilateral cavities, separated by walls, composed
-of one or two layers of very small cells filled with
-a compact homogeneous mass of very minute granules,
-perfectly spherical and equal, slightly adhering
-to each other, and at first green, afterwards
-free or simply conglomerate towards the centre of
-each mass, and of a pale rufous hue; at length the
-cellular walls disappear, the globules become completely
-insulated, and the whole mass is changed
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_78'>78</span>into a heap of powder, consisting of very regular
-globules, perfectly alike, black, and just like the
-reproductive bodies of other fungi (<a href='#i080'>Plate V.</a> fig. 99).
-A scientific botanist of some repute, M. Unger, published
-a work in Vienna during the year 1823, in
-which he sought to prove that this, and allied
-species of fungi, were not fungi at all, but merely
-broken up cells, or disruptured and altered conditions
-of certain portions of the diseased plants.
-The most satisfactory refutation of this theory may
-be found in the fact that the spores of the smut can
-be seen to germinate under favourable conditions,
-and produce fruit, whereas, if they were only the
-ordinary cells of the plant broken up by disease,
-fructification would not take place.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>The spores in this species are exceedingly minute.
-It has been ascertained that forty-nine of them
-would be contained within a space the one-hundred-and-sixty-thousandth
-part of a square inch; hence
-one square inch of surface would contain little less
-than eight millions. These myriads of spores are
-shed from the ears, and nothing remains but the
-barren matrix in which they were borne when the
-farmer proceeds to gather in his crops. At that
-time he sees no more of the “smut,” all remembrance
-of it for the time is gone, his only thought
-is to stack his corn in good condition. But the
-millions of spores are dispersed, ten millions at
-least for every ear that has been “smutted,”—and
-will they not many of them reappear next year,
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_79'>79</span>and thus year after year, with as much certainty as
-the grain upon which they are parasitic?</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>Like many of the parasitic fungi, so destructive
-in the farm and the garden, this species belongs to
-the family in which the spores are the distinctive
-feature. After many botanical changes, the “smut”
-is at length regarded as a fixed resident in the
-genus <i>Ustilago</i>; with the specific name of <i>segetum</i>,
-which latter signifies “standing corn;” it is therefore
-the <i>Ustilago</i>, or <i>smut of the standing corn</i>. The
-characters of the genus are, chiefly, that the spores
-are simple and deeply seated, springing from delicate
-threads, or in closely-packed cells, ultimately
-breaking up into a powdery mass. Fifteen members
-of this genus have been described as British.
-One of these (<i>U. maydis</i>) attacks the maize or
-Indian corn grown in this country in a similar
-manner as the common smut attacks wheat or
-barley; but as maize is not an established crop
-with us, a more minute description of this species
-is unnecessary; the spores are figured in <a href='#i080'>Plate V.</a>
-fig. 108. Another species (<i>U. hypodytes</i>) makes its
-appearance at first beneath the sheaths of the leaves
-surrounding the stems of grasses (fig. 100), and
-ultimately appears above and around them as a
-purplish-black dust (fig. 101). The seeds of sedges,
-the leaves and stems of certain definite species of grass,
-the flowers of scabious (<a href='#i096'>Plate VI.</a> figs. 123-125), the
-receptacles of the goatsbeard, the anthers of the
-bladder campion, and other allied plants, and the
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_80'>80</span>seeds of the Bistort family, are all liable, more or
-less, to the attacks of one or other of the residue
-of the fifteen species of <i>Ustilago</i> already referred to
-as indigenous to Britain.</p>
-<div id='i080' class='figcenter id007'>
-<img src='images/i080.jpg' alt='' class='ig001' />
-<div class='ic001'>
-<p>Plate V.<br />W. West imp.</p>
-</div>
-</div>
-<p class='c023'>Although we do not profess to teach practical
-men how to grow good corn, or how they shall get
-rid of, or keep clear from, the many foes to which
-their crops are exposed, yet a suggestion may be
-offered, based upon the facts obtained in our
-botanical researches, supported by the analogy of
-allied circumstances. In this instance the extreme
-minuteness and profusion of the spores would evidently
-render all the corn liable to the attachment
-of, perhaps only two or three, spores to the seed
-coat. Some ears of corn in nearer proximity to
-the smutted ears may be covered with spores which
-yet remain invisible to the naked eye, and when
-these grains are mixed with others in the heap, the
-chances are not much in favour of any handful not
-becoming charged with spores. If the majority of
-these were not redeemed from destruction by the
-many changes, shiftings, rubbings, and scrubbings
-to which the seed corn is liable between the time of
-its reaping and the period of its sowing, we might
-expect a very large crop of “smutted” corn.
-Under ordinary circumstances we can scarcely
-imagine that the loss arising from infected ears
-would repay much special labour to prevent it, only
-that to a large extent the precautions taken to
-cleanse the seed corn from the spores of one fungus
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_81'>81</span>will also avail for another, and while cleaning it of
-the spores of “smut,” those of “bunt” will also be
-removed. The facts that we rely upon chiefly as
-indicating the remedy are that the spores are only
-superficially in contact with the seed corn, and that
-they are of less specific gravity, causing them to
-float on the surface of any fluid in which the corn
-may be immersed. Again, the spores of many
-species of fungi will not germinate after saturation
-with certain chemical solutions. One of the most
-successful and easy of application is a strong solution
-of Glauber’s salts, in which the seed corn is to
-be washed, and afterwards, whilst still moist, dusted
-over with quick-lime. The rationale of this process
-consists in the setting free of caustic soda by the
-sulphuric acid of the Glauber’s salt combining with
-the lime, and converting it into sulphate of lime.
-The caustic soda is fatal to the germination of the
-spores of “bunt,” and probably also of “smut;”
-although, as already intimated, except in cases
-where these affections of the corn are very prevalent,
-we shall be informed by the agriculturist that
-the cost of labour in the prevention will not be compensated
-in the cure.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>Experience has also taught us that many fungi
-flourish in proportion to the wetness of the season,
-or dampness of the locality. A wet year is always
-exceedingly prolific in fungi, and a dry season correspondingly
-barren, at least in many kinds, whilst
-others, as the experience of 1864 has convinced us, are
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_82'>82</span>exceedingly common. In a field or wood the mycologist
-reaps his richest harvest of mycological
-specimens in the lowest and dampest spots, in
-swamps, ditches, and ill-drained nooks. This is a
-fact worth knowing as much by the farmer as the
-amateur botanist in search of specimens for his
-herbarium.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>One of the most unmistakable species of “smut”
-is that which infests the goatsbeard, on which we
-have already described an <i>Æcidium</i>. Generally
-about the same time as the cluster-cups make their
-appearance on the leaves, some of the unopened
-flower-heads of this plant will be found considerably
-altered in appearance by the shortening of the segments
-of the involucre, and at length by the whole
-inflorescence being invested with a copious purplish-black
-dust. If, by any means, the lobes of the involucre
-are any of them separated, the enclosed dust
-escapes, blackening the fingers and clothing of the
-collector, as if it were soot (<a href='#i080'>Plate V.</a> fig. 92). A little
-of this dust submitted to the microscope will be found
-to consist of myriads of small globose spores, nearly
-uniform in size and shape; and if a higher power
-be employed, each of these will appear to have a
-papillose or minutely granulated surface. The
-florets, dwarfed in size and contorted, or the remains
-of them, are embedded in the mass of spores (fig. 93),
-and if one or two of these are removed and placed
-under a good one-inch objective, every part will be
-found covered with adhering spores, to the apparent
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_83'>83</span>exhaustion of its substance. Of course, the florets
-are never developed when subjected to the attack
-of “smut.” The whole plant assumes a faded,
-sickly appearance, even before the spores are fully
-ripened. We would recommend our readers, if they
-collect one of the infected flower-heads, to put it
-into a box or paper by itself, for if placed in the
-box with other specimens it will so sprinkle them
-with its black powder as to render them nearly
-useless for microscopic examination: everywhere
-the microscope will detect, where the unaided eye
-failed to recognize a trace, the ubiquitous spores of
-<i>Ustilago receptaculorum</i> (<a href='#i080'>Plate V.</a> fig. 94).</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>In the fenny districts of the eastern counties a
-species of “smut” called <i>Ustilago typhoides</i> attacks
-the stems of reeds, forming thick swollen patches
-of several inches in length (fig. 128), sometimes
-occupying the whole space between two joints or
-nodes, and lying beneath the sheath of the leaves.
-The spores in this species are larger than in the
-species which attacks the culms of grasses in a
-similar manner (<a href='#i096'>Plate VI.</a> fig. 129).</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>There are not many features in the rest of the
-species of this genus of sufficient interest to the
-general reader or microscopist to render it advisable
-to furnish any detailed account of them. We may,
-however, note that in a species found on the leaves
-of the common cock’s-foot grass the spores are large,
-obovate, and rough, with minute granules (figs. 117,
-118). This species is known botanically as <i>Ustilago</i>
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_84'>84</span><i>salveii</i>, and externally bears considerable resemblance,
-except in the size and colour of the spores
-(fig. 119), to another species much more common,
-and which occurs on the leaves of <i>Poa aquatica</i> and
-<i>P. fluitans</i>. The last-named species forms long
-parallel sori, extending often for several inches along
-the leaves of the aquatic grasses just named, giving
-them a very singular appearance (<a href='#i080'>Plate V.</a> figs. 105,
-106). The spores are small (fig. 107), not being more
-than one-fourth the length of the last species, and
-smooth, whilst those are minutely granulated.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>An interesting species occurs, very rarely, on
-the stems of such grasses as <i>Aira cæspitosa</i> and
-<i>A. aquatica</i>. The sori are in bands at regular distances
-apart (<a href='#i096'>Plate VI.</a> fig. 120), each band being
-composed of a number of short parallel sori (fig.
-121). The spores are not more than one-third of
-the size of those in <i>U. longissima</i>.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>Sedges are also subject to attack from other
-species of smut; one of these (<i>U. olivacea</i>) appears
-to convert the seeds into a fine olive-coloured dust
-(<a href='#i096'>Plate VI.</a> fig. 126), which gives to the fruit a similar
-appearance to that presented by corn when attacked
-by <i>Ustilago segetum</i>. Another species, which also absorbs
-the seeds, becomes hardened and consolidated
-more than in any other species, and, though larger
-than the normal seeds, still retaining their form
-(figs. 109, 110). This is <i>Ustilago urceolorum</i>, the
-spores of which are also figured (fig. 111).</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>The beaksedge (<i>Rhyncospora alba</i>) suffers from
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_85'>85</span>an allied species which affects it in a similar manner
-(<a href='#i080'>Plate V.</a> figs. 96, 97), but is not equally common.
-The spores of <i>Ustilago utriculosa</i>, found on different
-species of <i>Polygonum</i>, instead of being granulated,
-are reticulated on the surface (<a href='#i096'>Plate VI.</a> figs. 114,
-116). The chief interest attaching to <i>Ustilago antherarum</i>
-consists in its habitat, for it is developed in
-the anthers of the flowers of the bladder campion,
-and other plants of the same natural order. The
-anthers are much swollen and distorted by this
-parasite, which is not uncommon, though easily
-overlooked unless specially sought after (<a href='#i080'>Plate V.</a>
-figs. 102-104). A list of all the British species will
-be found at the close of this volume. It will be noted
-that as in the genus <i>Æcidium</i> the prevailing colour
-of the spores is orange, so in the genus <i>Ustilago</i> it
-is black, with a purplish or violaceous tinge.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>Four diseases in wheat of fungal origin are
-known and recognized in the popular language of
-the farm as “mildew,” “rust,” “smut,” and
-“bunt.” Sometimes one and sometimes another
-is most prevalent, and he is an exceedingly fortunate
-individual who can walk through his fields
-and find only one of them, especially if that one
-should be sparingly distributed. It has been our
-good fortune to dwell much amongst cornfields, and
-the terror of the word “mildew” to a farmer’s ears
-is not unfamiliar in our reminiscences of the past,
-ere we discarded the much-loved country to become
-a dweller in town. The subject of our present
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_86'>86</span>remarks inspired no such alarm in the districts of
-our experience, but in some seasons and localities
-it is certainly one of the “pests of the farm.”
-Under the different appellations of “bunt,” “pepper
-brand,” “bladder brand,” and sometimes “smut,”
-this infection is very generally known. Externally
-there is no appearance, except to the practised eye,
-that anything is wrong. There is no black impalpable
-dust about the ears as in the true “smut,”
-no red withered leaves or spotted stem as in the
-“rust” and “mildew,” and no stunted growth or
-malformation, evident to the casual glance, by which
-the insidious foe can be recognized; but stealthily
-and secretly the work is accomplished, and until
-the “bunted” grains make their appearance in the
-sample, the disease may, perchance, be unchallenged.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>Externally the “bunted” grain is plumper, and
-whilst the corn is still green these will be of a brighter
-green than the rest (<a href='#i080'>Plate V.</a> fig. 84). When broken,
-the farinaceous interior will be found replaced by a
-minute black dust of a very fœtid, unpleasant odour,
-and greasy to the touch (fig. 85). This powder
-constitutes the spores of the “bunt” mixed with
-myceloid threads. It may happen that much of
-the corn in a field is “bunted,” and the discovery
-not made till the wheat is being ground for flour;
-then the odour and colour will speedily decide the
-produce to be unfit for human food. We have not
-the least doubt that “bunted” corn, when ground
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_87'>87</span>with flour, is injurious in proportion to its extent,
-whilst at the same time we can scarcely conceive an
-intelligent miller grinding up a sample containing
-any large proportion of “bunted” grains in ignorance
-of the fact.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>If we break open a grain of wheat infested with
-the “stinking rust” or “bunt,” and then place
-some of the powder in a drop of water on a glass
-slide, and submit this to the microscope, first using
-the half-inch power, then the quarter, or fifth, and
-finally an eighth or tenth, we shall find that this
-minute dust consists of myriads of globose brown
-bodies termed spores, which possess certain reproductive
-functions. These spores will be found
-mixed with a number of delicate branched threads,
-to which they are attached by a short stalk or
-pedicel, visible with the higher powers (fig. 86).
-The surface of the spores you will also observe to
-be beautifully reticulated. These features just
-described as visible in the “bunt” are the characteristics
-of the genus to which it belongs (<i>Tilletea</i>),
-and of which it is the only British species. An
-allied species infests the Sorghum or durra, a grain
-but little cultivated in Europe, but found extensively
-in Africa and Asia, and also apparently found
-on the <i>Bajra</i> of India.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>The interesting experiments of the Rev. M. J.
-Berkeley on the germination of “bunt” spores
-have been already alluded to. They were undertaken
-shortly after the outbreak of the potato
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_88'>88</span>disease, to ascertain, if possible, the mode by which
-the minute spores of fungi inoculate growing
-plants; and although at that time only a bare
-suspicion of the nature of the bodies resulting from
-the germination of “bunt” spores was entertained,
-succeeding examinations in the same direction
-have brought to light extraordinary facts, and
-manifested the progress of the successive developments
-of four generations. The spores of “bunt” are
-larger than those of the different species of “smut,”
-and reticulated on the surface (<a href='#i080'>Plate V.</a> fig. 86).
-When these are made to germinate a kind of stem
-is protruded (fig. 87), upon which small clusters of
-elongated thread-like spores of the second generation,
-or sporidia, are produced (fig. 88). After
-a time these spores conjugate, or become united
-by short transverse processes in the same manner
-as has been observed in some of the lower forms
-of Algæ (fig. 89). The conjugated spores in the
-next stage germinate and produce a third kind of
-fruit, different from either of the preceding, and
-constituting a third generation (fig. 90). These
-in turn germinate and produce a fourth order of
-reproductive organs (fig. 91), so that in the process
-of growth the “bunt” spores evidently pass
-through four generations. Hence, as one result,
-the number of germinating bodies is greatly increased,
-as well as their power of inflicting injury
-in a corresponding diminution in size. There are
-still many points in the history of the growth and
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_89'>89</span>development through successive generations of the
-“bunt” spores, but enough is known, on the one
-hand, to show that this is a true vegetative parasite,
-and not merely a diseased condition of the tissues
-of the wheat plant, and on the other that it is
-perfectly distinct from all the phases of the other
-and similar parasitic fungi which affect the wheat
-crop.</p>
-<div class='pbb'>
- <hr class='pb c003' />
-</div>
-<div class='chapter'>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_90'>90</span>
- <h2 id='ch07' class='c012'>CHAPTER VII.<br /> <br /><em class='gesperrt'><span class='small'>COMPLEX SMUTS.</span></em></h2>
-</div>
-<p class='drop-capa0_3_0_65 c013'>SOME of the microscopic fungi are the most
-unpromising and uninteresting objects to the
-naked eye which could well be imagined. No one
-would suppose that the black dust so profusely
-shed in such genera as <i>Ustilago</i> and <i>Polycystis</i>
-could be better than as much soot; unless he has
-learnt by experience not to judge by appearances,
-but to suspend judgment until examination. The
-axiom will sooner or later force itself upon all who
-examine minute objects with the microscope, that
-all organic nature, whether animal or vegetable,
-increases in interest in proportion to the magnifying
-power. Seen by the unaided eye, <i>moulds</i> are
-all nearly alike, and they seem to be “moulds”
-and nothing more. “Smuts,” again, sometimes
-attack one organ, and sometimes another, with
-very little variation in colour; and “rusts” are all
-“only rusts” with a paler or more intense rusty
-tint, until the marvellous combination of lenses, so
-appropriately named a <i>microscope</i>, unfolds a new
-world, and exposes its new inhabitants unparalleled
-in the old world of larger life, in form, habit, development,
-and mystery.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>A very interesting, though small group of fungi,
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_91'>91</span>allied to the preceding, are included botanically
-under the genus called <i>Polycystis</i>, in allusion to the
-many cells of which the spores are composed.<a id='r6' /><a href='#f6' class='c018'><sup>[6]</sup></a> In
-the most recent work on British Fungi, approximating
-to a Flora—viz., “Berkeley’s Outlines”—only
-three species are recorded, whilst the most
-common, at least around London, is omitted in
-error; for it could scarcely have been unknown as
-indigenous to this country. This last is the crow-foot
-smut (<i>Polycystis pompholygodes</i>, Lev.), found
-on the leaves and petioles of the common creeping
-buttercup (<i>Ranunculus repens</i>), distorting them
-very much, and also occurring on the wood-anemone
-and some other Ranunculaceous plants. The leaves
-and their footstalks, when attacked, become swollen,
-as if blistered at first, and ultimately burst in an
-irregular manner, exposing a mass of blackish
-soot-like dust (<a href='#i112'>Plate IX.</a> fig. 183), which on examination
-will be found to consist of the many-celled
-spores alluded to (<a href='#i112'>Plate IX.</a> fig. 184). Each of
-these spores appears to have a transparent outer
-membrane, either enclosing an unequal number,
-from two or three to five or six, distinct cells,
-compressed together into a spherical form by the
-outer integument, or the interior is divided by
-septa into as many cells. Each of these divisions
-contains a dark brownish endochrome, or cell-contents.
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_92'>92</span>As may be anticipated, the spores in all
-the species associated in this genus are interesting
-objects for the microscope. The species on the
-buttercup may be found through the summer and
-autumn on <i>Ranunculus repens</i>, especially whenever
-that plant is met with in very damp situations.
-We have seldom found the plant in any profusion
-without its attendant fungus.</p>
-
-<div class='footnote c020' id='f6'>
-<p class='c010'><span class='label'><a href='#r6'>6</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>Rabenhorst has proposed <i>Urocystis</i> as the name of this
-genus, on the ground that <i>Polycystis</i> was priorly applied to a
-genus of Algæ.</p>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c008'>Another species of these many-celled smuts is
-not uncommon in gardens, on the sweet violet,
-attacking the footstalks of the leaves more commonly
-than the leaves themselves, and swelling and
-contorting them (<a href='#i112'>Plate IX.</a> fig. 185). In general
-structure the spores are very similar to those of
-the last species, save that the cells are smaller,
-and a larger number are collected together (<a href='#i112'>Plate IX.</a>
-fig. 186). So far as we have yet examined the
-spores of this and the preceding species, they
-appear to consist of separate and distinct vesicles
-(probably spores), contained within a hyaline sac
-or outer membrane, and <i>not</i> to be a single spore
-divided into cells by numerous septa.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>A species of equal interest (<i>Polycystis Colchici</i>,
-Tul.) is found on the autumnal crocus, or meadow-saffron
-(<i>Colchicum autumnale</i>). The spores approach
-nearer to those of the last than of the prior
-species.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>A fourth species occurs on the leaves of rye
-(<a href='#i112'>Plate IX.</a> fig. 187), forming elongated parallel
-blackish lines (<i>Polycystis parallela</i>, B. &amp; Br.). It
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_93'>93</span>has also been found on the leaves of some grasses,
-but does not appear to be very common.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>Many similar features are possessed by the two
-members of a genus named <i>Tubercinia</i>, which have
-been found in this country. One of the species
-is parasitic upon a plant which we who inhabit
-southern England never meet with, but which is
-not uncommon in Scotland, <i>i. e.</i>, <i>Trientalis Europæa</i>.
-The parasite attacks the leaves about the month of
-September, forming bullate or blistered patches
-one-eighth to one-sixth of an inch broad, containing
-a mass of black spores (<a href='#i048'>Plate III.</a> fig. 52).
-These spores are irregularly globose, large, and
-opaque, consisting of a number of distinct cells
-(<a href='#i048'>Plate III.</a> fig. 53). Never having seen other than
-dried specimens—kindly communicated by Dr.
-Dickie of Aberdeen, the discoverer of this species—we
-cannot add much to its history beyond the
-published description by the Rev. M. J. Berkeley.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>The other species occurs on potatoes, and is,
-during some seasons, common in all parts of Great
-Britain. The spores are curious, being composed
-of a number of cells arranged in the form of a
-hollow sphere, with one or two apertures communicating
-with the interior (<a href='#i048'>Plate III.</a> fig. 54). They
-are generally attached by a delicate thread. This
-species, sometimes confounded with the potato
-scab, was first described by Mr. Berkeley, about
-the time of the appearance of the “potato disease,”
-with which, however, it is in no way connected.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'><span class='pageno' id='Page_94'>94</span>Thus it will be seen that, inasmuch as we have
-complex brands in which the number of cells are
-considerably increased, so have we “complex smuts”
-in which, instead of one cell, we have many. In
-the last instance the two genera associated together
-in this chapter agree. The spores in both are
-distinctly cellular, but in the last genus far more
-opaque and consolidated than in the first. Whilst
-it may be doubted whether the compound spores of
-<i>Polycystis</i> are anything more than a number of
-individual spores with a gregarious habit, invested
-with an outer membrane, such a hypothesis cannot
-(as far as our individual examinations extend), be
-made to include <i>Tubercinia</i>. No doubt has yet
-been thrown on the genuine character of either of
-these genera. No <i>Uredo</i> or <i>Æcidium</i>, no <i>Trichobasis</i>
-or <i>Puccinia</i> has been ascertained or suspected to
-appear as a prior or subsequent form. In their
-supposed integrity they offer an interesting study,
-and in their development a good subject for investigation.</p>
-<div class='pbb'>
- <hr class='pb c003' />
-</div>
-<div class='chapter'>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_95'>95</span>
- <h2 id='ch08' class='c012'>CHAPTER VIII.<br /> <br /><em class='gesperrt'><span class='small'>RUSTS.</span></em></h2>
-</div>
-<p class='drop-capa0_3_0_65 c013'>UNFORTUNATELY, this group of fungi contains
-species but too well known for their
-ravages amongst graminaceous plants, especially
-the cereals. “Corn rust,” as it is generally called,
-has a reputation little better than mildew, and it
-really deserves no better, for it is only another form
-of that pest of the farm, from the mycelium of
-which the corn-mildew is at length developed.
-There are two species very closely allied (doubtless
-only forms of the same species with different spores)
-which attack the leaves and culms of growing corn,
-and, bursting through the cuticle in the manner
-represented in <a href='#frontis'>Plate VII.</a> fig. 141 (magnified), give
-a peculiar rusty appearance to the plant, as represented
-in <a href='#frontis'>Plate VII.</a> fig. 140. One of these corn-rusts
-is botanically named <i>Trichobasis rubigo-vera</i> (Lev.),
-or the “true rust <i>Trichobasis</i>;” the latter, which is
-the generic name, being a compound of two Greek
-words (<i>thrix</i>, a hair, and <i>basis</i>, a foundation), on
-account of the spores being at first furnished at
-their base with a short, thread-like peduncle, which
-at length falls away (<a href='#frontis'>Plate VII.</a> fig. 142). The
-other Corn rust is <i>Trichobasis linearis</i>, or “line-like
-<i>Trichobasis</i>,” because the sori or pustules are linear,
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_96'>96</span>or lengthened out like a line; the spores nearly
-double the length of those of the other Corn rust
-(<a href='#frontis'>Plate VII.</a> fig. 144), and not so bright in colour.
-By intermediate forms these two rusts pass insensibly
-the one into the other, so that it is sometimes
-difficult to distinguish them. Both have the spores
-clustered together in the pustules, at first (<a href='#frontis'>Plate VII.</a>
-fig. 143) attached by their peduncles, but they soon
-become free, and are scattered like rust-powder
-over the plant. Adverting to the attack of rust
-upon the wheat crops to an unusual extent a few
-years since, the Rev. M. J. Berkeley wrote as
-follows:—</p>
-
-<p class='c026'>We have seen rust more prevalent in white wheats, especially
-in the variety called Russian white, which has red smooth chaff,
-than we ever remember it. It is, however, confined to particular
-spots; and while in one field not a single leaf is free,
-insomuch that a person walking through the wheat is completely
-painted with the spores, of a fine rust-red; an adjoining
-field, separated only by a hedge, has not a rusty leaf. So long,
-however, as the rust is confined to the leaf, it is, we believe,
-perfectly harmless. The grain swells in spite of it, and the
-only effect is that the flag dies a little earlier, which is not
-undesirable when it is too luxuriant. If, however, it gets to any
-extent upon the chaff, much more if it attacks the seed itself,
-as is sometimes the case, it is very mischievous.</p>
-<div id='i096' class='figcenter id006'>
-<img src='images/i096.jpg' alt='' class='ig001' />
-<div class='ic001'>
-<p>Plate VI.<br />W. West imp.</p>
-</div>
-</div>
-<p class='c027'>There is, indeed, a notion that rust is merely a form of mildew,
-and this may be true; but if so, it is a harmless form. The
-true rust (<i>T. rubigo-vera</i>), if a form of mildew, preserves its own
-characters to the end, and merely presents a second form of
-fruit, a circumstance which is exceedingly common amongst the
-lower fungi. It may exist in company with the mildew, but it
-also more frequently is developed without a trace of mildew
-intermixed. As far, then, as its immediate effects upon the plant
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_97'>97</span>go, it may be treated as a distinct parasite, though advanced
-botanists may look upon it as offering a case of what they call
-dualism, which may be easily understood on a comparison with
-such plants as marigold and orache, which produce seeds of
-two different forms. Its ultimate effects may, indeed, be injurious,
-as, if it be really a second form of mildew, it is capable
-of propagating that pest. The case is quite different with
-<i>Trichobasis linearis</i>, which is in fact merely the young state of
-the mildew. When once that supposed species makes its
-appearance, it is quite certain that there will be mildew to a
-greater or less extent. While the spores of the one remain
-unaltered, though intermixed with the true bipartite spores of
-the mildew, the other exhibits every intermediate state of form
-and colour.</p>
-
-<p class='c022'>M. Tulasne, to whom we have already alluded as
-a high authority on this subject, is of opinion that
-all the species enumerated in this group or genus,
-are mere conditions of other species, and therefore
-excludes it altogether. Another genus (<i>Lecythea</i>),
-for the same reason, has shared the same fate.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>It must not be forgotten that twenty-eight species
-of rust belonging to this genus are now recorded
-as occurring in Great Britain. Some of these have
-yellow or yellowish spores; the rest have the spores
-of a decidedly brown colour. One of the most
-attractive of the yellow-spored species is that which
-appears on the groundsel (<i>T. Senecionis</i>), and a
-good notion of its external appearance may be
-gained from our figure (<a href='#frontis'>Plate VII.</a> fig. 145). It is
-not always to be found without searching closely,
-for in some localities we have found it very sparingly,
-whilst elsewhere—as, for instance, on Wandsworth
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_98'>98</span>Common—we have met with it as soon or as
-late as there were groundsel leaves for it to grow
-upon. No spot or change in the appearance of the
-upper surface of the leaves indicates the presence
-of the parasite beneath; this is, however, often
-betrayed by the golden-yellow streaks which appear
-on the stem. Many a time and oft the boys in the
-semi-rural districts about town have marvelled and
-questioned each other concerning the reason why,
-in gathering “groundsel” for the little bird at
-home, we should be so particular, and pass so many
-promising plants, plucking here and there a leaf,
-and seldom collecting one which they consider
-eligible for the purpose. Collectors of minute
-fungi must expect to overhear occasionally even
-hints touching their sanity from those who, without
-the remotest idea of their mission, think they must
-be slightly “wrong in the head” to gaze so narrowly
-and intently, amongst nettles, groundsel,
-grass, or dry leaves, and only take an occasional
-fragment of a rotten stick, or two or three sickly
-leaves, carefully deposit them in their wallet, hat,
-or pocket, and then “move on.”</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>It will be unnecessary to repeat what has been
-stated in a former chapter on spermogones. It will
-be remembered that these organs are found developed
-in connection with some of the species of the
-present genus, as well as with the cluster-cups, or
-<i>Æcidiacei</i>. They consist externally of small conical
-elevations, pierced at the apex, which contain
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_99'>99</span>minute, cellular, linear bodies called spermatia, invested
-with a kind of mucous substance, that over-flows
-with them from the orifice of the spermogone,
-like lava from the crater of a miniature volcano.
-The rust in company with which they have been
-found most plentifully, is that which covers the
-under surface of the leaves of the commonest of
-all thistles (<i>Cnicus arvensis</i>). The external form of
-one of these spermogones is figured <a href='#frontis'>Plate VII.</a>
-fig. 153. The rust possesses, when fresh, a peculiar
-odour, which is said to resemble that of orange-flowers;
-whence was derived its name of “sweet-smelling
-rust” (<i>Trichobasis suaveolens</i>, Lev.). M.
-Tulasne writes:—“With respect to this species, it
-is, in my opinion, but the first form of a <i>Puccinia</i>,
-analogous to <i>P. Compositarum</i>, D.C.: the spermogones
-with which it is mixed being very abundant,
-it ought to be placed with that <i>Puccinia</i>. I should,
-perhaps, retain some doubts upon the legitimacy
-of this relationship, if it had not been my fortune
-to meet on another species of the same kind (<i>Puccinia
-Anemones</i>, P.) spermogones perfectly characterized,
-and in which the colour, habit, and position
-would not allow me to hesitate an instant in attributing
-them to the <i>Puccinia</i>.” In this species of
-rust the whole under surface of the leaf is covered
-with a purplish-brown dusty coating of the spores,
-from the numerous pustules which are produced
-(<a href='#frontis'>Plate VII.</a> fig. 151). The plants, when attacked,
-have a paler and more sickly appearance; the leaves
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_100'>100</span>have a tendency to fold backwards at their margins,
-and thenceforth their growth seems to be
-determined. Sowerby, in his “British Fungi,”
-says:—“Two or three sorts of flies are occasionally
-found dead on this plant at the time of the
-fungus being upon it, which is after wet weather in
-the summer, or early in autumn; being apparently
-tempted by its flavour, they over-eat themselves,
-or else are destroyed by some poison.” This rust
-has spores resembling, in general characters, those
-of the yellow-spored series <a href='#frontis'>Plate VII.</a> fig. 152).</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>We have not thought it necessary to give figures
-of many species, partly on account of the uncertainty
-existing in many minds whether they ought
-to be regarded as species, and whether they will
-long claim a place in the British Flora; and partly
-on account of the similarity which exists between
-them, at least so far as they are of interest to the
-microscopist only.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>During the autumn of last year, whilst on a
-botanical excursion through a portion of Epping
-Forest, the “great bog” became a centre of some
-interest. Bogs are generally attractive spots to
-those who are in search of microscopic organisms.
-On this occasion the chief objects of interest were
-the small brown pustules (<a href='#i104'>Plate VIII.</a> fig. 168) with
-which the upper surface of a large number of the
-leaves of the pennywort (<i>Hydrocotyle vulgaris</i>) were
-sprinkled. These pustules were brown, orbicular,
-regular, and in habit seemed to resemble rather
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_101'>101</span>those of most of the <i>Pucciniæ</i> than of a <i>Trichobasis</i>.
-The large, vigorous, and healthy leaves were less
-affected. Microscopical examination, at first incomplete,
-led us to the conclusion that it was a species
-of <i>Uredo</i>, which had been met with in France
-(<i>Uredo Hydrocotyles</i>, Mont.); but a re-examination,
-to which we were prompted by Mr. Currey, led to
-the conclusion that it belonged rather to the present
-genus; but it can scarcely be associated with
-any species already described, notwithstanding its
-apparent affinity with the brown rust found on
-umbelliferous plants, in which the pustules are invariably
-developed on the <i>under</i> surface. Under
-these circumstances, we have called it the Pennywort
-rust (<i>Trichobasis Hydrocotyles</i>), whilst still
-doubtful whether it is not the same fungus as that
-described by Montagne, with whose description it
-agrees in everything, except what is implied by
-the generic name. It should not be forgotten,
-that the work in which Montagne first described
-this species was published when the genus <i>Uredo</i>
-embraced the present genus, which was separated
-from it by Leveille twelve years later; and it is
-possible that this species was included in a more
-recent work by the same author, in error and
-without re-examination, under the old name. An
-examination of authentic specimens of Montagne’s
-plant would settle the point; but we know of no
-published collection which contains it. The characteristic
-difference between the two genera lies in
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_102'>102</span>the presence of a peduncle in the early stage of
-<i>Trichobasis</i> <a href='#i104'>Plate VIII.</a> fig. 169), and its absence
-in all stages of <i>Uredo</i>. Without wandering further
-into a subject which has not the merit of
-being very popular, let us away to some green
-lane in search of violets, and having found them,
-take a little of the brown dust from one of the
-small pustules on the leaves, upon the point of a
-penknife; place this, with a drop of water, upon a
-glass slide, and make a record of what we observe.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>The field is covered with the myriad spores of a
-rust of a nearly spherical shape, brownish in colour,
-and here and there one with a short transparent
-colourless stalk or pedicel. This is the violet rust
-(<i>Trichobasis Violarum</i>, B.), very common all through
-the summer and autumn, generally on the under
-surface of the leaves of violets, in woods and
-hedgerows. Should it so happen that the spores
-when placed under the microscope are found to be
-two-celled, it will prove that instead of a rust, or
-<i>Trichobasis</i>, being under examination, a brand, or
-<i>Puccinia</i>, has been found, which is almost equally
-common, and which may, without such a test, be
-easily mistaken for a rust. According to the theory
-of di-morphism, this is the higher form or complete
-fruit of the same fungus, which in its simple-celled
-state is called <i>Trichobasis Violarum</i>.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>A similar circumstance may befall the student in
-examining the rust of labiate plants (<i>Trichobasis
-Labiatarum</i>, Lev.), which occurs on different species
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_103'>103</span>of mint, especially the water-mint, about the month
-of August. We have found a few of the two-celled
-spores of the <i>Puccinia</i> imbedded in the pustules of
-this rust almost constantly, whilst the one-celled
-spores are not uncommon in the pustules of what
-is regarded as the true mint brand (<i>Puccinia Menthæ</i>,
-P.).</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>In spring the young leaves of the periwinkle
-(<i>Vinca major</i>) will, in some situations, become
-thickened considerably, and ultimately browned on
-both faces with the pustules of a rust (<i>Trichobasis
-Vincæ</i>), which though covered with a conidioid dust
-are often very tardy in bursting the epidermis. It
-is almost impossible, after the pustule is ruptured,
-to find one in which the bilocular spores of <i>Puccinia</i>
-(fig. 132) are not largely intermingled with the
-unilocular spores of the “rust” (<a href='#i096'>Plate VI.</a> fig. 131).
-Later in the season by two or three months, other
-leaves of the same plants will be found occupied
-by the smaller and more widely scattered pustules
-of <i>Puccinia Vincæ</i>, in which the unilocular spores of
-the “rust” will seldom be found. In this instance
-the leaves are scarcely thickened, and the colour of
-the spores is much darker. The under surface of
-the leaves is commonly alone occupied, and corresponding
-paler spots on the upper surface indicate
-the presence of the parasite beneath.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>The garden and field bean is liable in some seasons
-to become quite rust-coloured in consequence
-of the profusion of spores with which the leaves
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_104'>104</span>and stems are covered, from the bean rust (<i>Trichobasis
-Fabæ</i>, Lev.), which in like manner is considered
-as the simple stage or form of the bean
-brand (<i>Puccinia Fabæ</i>, Lk.). If the legumes are
-also examined, a few pustules will sometimes be
-found on them. Beans thoroughly infected with
-this rust or brand are seldom of much service in
-either field or garden.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>Beetroot, or mangold wurzel, is another example
-of garden and field produce which is subject to a
-similar visitation. This rust often has very red
-spores when produced on red varieties of beet.
-During September, 1863, it (<i>Trichobasis Betæ</i>, Lev.)
-was sent us on the leaves of the wild beet (<i>Beta
-maritima</i>).</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>All the species of <i>Polygonum</i> are exceedingly
-subject to the attacks of the Persicaria rust (<i>Trichobasis
-Polygonorum</i>, B.), which nearly covers the
-leaves, till the entire plants seem to be smothered
-in Scotch snuff. If it were allowable to affirm of
-any plants that they are martyrs to parasitism, such
-might be said of the Persicarias and their allies.</p>
-<div id='i104' class='figcenter id008'>
-<img src='images/i104.jpg' alt='' class='ig001' />
-<div class='ic001'>
-<p>Plate VIII.<br />W. West imp.</p>
-</div>
-</div>
-<p class='c023'>Sedges are subject to the attacks of a rust much
-resembling the corn rust. When it occurs on some
-species of <i>Carex</i>, the upper surface of the leaf has
-corresponding pale spots, and the pustules themselves
-are surrounded by a yellowish margin. This
-species (<i>Trichobasis caricina</i>) is far from uncommon
-(<a href='#i104'>Plate VIII.</a> figs. 170, 171). The sedge-like plants
-belonging to the genus <i>Luzula</i> have also their own
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_105'>105</span>species of rust (<i>Trichobasis oblongata</i>), the spores of
-which are deeper in colour than in the sedge rust
-(<a href='#frontis'>Plate VII.</a> figs. 158, 159).</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>Amongst the remaining species of <i>Trichobasis</i>
-(the reader must pardon our using the generic
-name, as we have no equivalent), that found on
-the leaves of various composite plants is the most
-common (<i>Trichobasis Cichoracearum</i>, Lev.). It
-occurs on some thistles, on the saw-wort, dandelion,
-several species of hawkweed, and similar plants.
-The pustules are small and more diffused than in
-the species found on <i>Cnicus arvensis</i>, and they as
-often appear on the upper as on the lower surfaces
-of the leaves.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>On umbelliferous plants three species are recorded;
-one with yellow spores (<i>Trichobasis Petroselini</i>,
-B.); another with a blistered habit, and
-brown, ovate, or oblong spores (<i>T. Umbellatarum</i>,
-Lev.); and a third with tawny, obovate, or egg-shaped
-spores (<i>T. Heraclei</i>, B.), which is found
-solely on the cow-parsnip. The species of <i>Puccinia</i>
-corresponding to some of these species of
-<i>Trichobasis</i> are known, but, in other cases, probability,
-or speculation if you please, occupies the
-place of knowledge.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>During the month of September, 1864, it was
-our good fortune to spend a week in revisiting the
-scenes of our boyhood, and exploring the minute
-botany of one of the marshy districts of East Norfolk.
-One day of the seven, memorable to us for
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_106'>106</span>the discovery of three specimens of a large Boletus
-(<i>B. cyanescens</i>),<a id='r7' /><a href='#f7' class='c018'><sup>[7]</sup></a> not found, to our knowledge, since
-the days of Sibthorpe, was further enriched by a
-species of <i>Trichobasis</i>, new to Britain, and apparently
-uncommon on the Continent. This rust was found
-on the leaves of the “grass of Parnassus” (<i>Parnassia
-palustris</i>) on a narrow strip of marsh near
-Irstead church. It was sought in vain elsewhere.
-The leaves were scarcely changed in appearance,
-except by the presence of the pustules. There were
-no discoloured spots, but the pustules appeared
-sometimes plentifully, more often scattered, on both
-surfaces of the leaves: they were small, of a bright
-brown, with oval spores; the latter were, in their
-early stages, shortly stalked. We have called this
-species <i>Trichobasis Parnassiæ</i>. It is possibly the
-same as published by Westendorp in his “Herbier
-Cryptogamique Belge” as <i>Uredo Parnassiæ</i>, but we
-know of no copy which we can consult, and have
-failed in discovering any other species to which we
-can refer it. It is certainly a <i>Trichobasis</i> and not
-an <i>Uredo</i>, according to the present limitation of the
-latter genus.</p>
-
-<div class='footnote c020' id='f7'>
-<p class='c010'><span class='label'><a href='#r7'>7</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>Two of these specimens were found at the bottom of a
-hedge-bank, amongst grass, by the side of the road leading from
-Neatishead-street to Irstead Rectory, and the third in a similar
-position by the Norwich road, two hundred yards from the
-turning which leads to Neatishead-street.</p>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c008'>Although the evidence against the retention of
-the species of <i>Lecythea</i> (as the genus is named)
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_107'>107</span>amongst Fungi as true species, on the ground of
-di-morphism, is even stronger than against the
-group just illustrated, we cannot pass them altogether
-in silence, especially in a popular treatise. Those
-who are residents in town, and yet possess their
-little plot of garden-ground, with only two or three
-pet roses, may have had the misfortune of seeing
-them smothered with a yellow blight. This golden
-visitation, unwelcome as it is, may afford a subject
-for the microscope, and for a small space in this
-chapter. At first there will not appear to be any
-important difference between the spores of the
-yellow series of the last genus and those of the
-present; but a closer examination will reveal one
-important distinction, viz., the presence of colourless
-elongated, abortive spores. The species are not so
-numerous by half as those of <i>Trichobasis</i>, even when
-three anomalous forms are included, which species
-are included by some mycologists in two other
-genera. One very common rust of this group has
-already been alluded to (<a href='#i032'>Plate II.</a> fig. 37), and
-which is known botanically as <i>Lecythea Rosæ</i>. A
-similar one is found on the bramble, and another on
-the burnet. All these three species are produced
-at first on spots which are afterwards more or less
-occupied by the long, many-celled spores of the
-dark brown brands called <i>Aregma</i> or <i>Phragmidium</i>,
-between which and the simple yellow spores of the
-rust almost every intermediate form may often be
-found in the same pustule. Thus, from the same
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_108'>108</span>mycelium as that of the rose rust, the rose brand is
-afterwards developed; whilst from the nidus of the
-bramble rust (<a href='#i048'>Plate III.</a> fig. 40) the bramble brand
-is also at length produced; and the successor to the
-burnet rust (<a href='#i048'>Plate III.</a> fig. 31) is the burnet brand.
-Besides these, a rust belonging to the same genus
-may be found on the leaves of the poplar, the spurge,
-and the common valerian, and two or three species
-on willows. It can scarcely have escaped notice,
-that the goat-willow is almost constantly afflicted
-with a rust on the under surface of the leaves
-(<a href='#i104'>Plate VIII.</a> fig. 160). This species will again come
-under notice as the summer spores of a truly
-dimorphous species.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>One of the rusts separated by some botanists from
-this genus is found (possibly most commonly) on
-the leaves of the raspberry; but during the past
-autumn we have met with it plentifully on the upper
-surface of the leaves of one or two species of bramble,
-and have never seen it growing on the raspberry,
-although in all descriptions of the species that is
-stated to be its habitat. Even to the naked eye
-this is so distinct, that no one could well confound
-it with any other. It appears very late in the
-autumn, and the spots are scattered at some distance
-apart from each other (<a href='#i104'>Plate VIII.</a> fig. 162);
-each spot or pustule forming a ring (<a href='#i104'>Plate VIII.</a>
-fig. 163 enlarged) encircling a cluster of spermogones
-which occupy the centre.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>Another rejected species (<i>Lecythea Lini</i>, Lev.)
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_109'>109</span>occurs on the little purging flax (<i>Linum catharticum</i>),
-forming small pustules on the leaves (<a href='#i104'>Plate VIII.</a>
-fig. 165); these burst irregularly, and remain surrounded
-by the remains of the ruptured epidermis
-(<a href='#i104'>Plate VIII.</a> fig. 166). The yellowish spores are
-subglobose (<a href='#i104'>Plate VIII.</a> fig. 167), and in the first
-instance concatenate, or chained together like a
-necklace, which circumstance has been taken advantage
-of to place it, with one or two other species,
-in a separate genus.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>We cannot claim for the species brought into
-notice in the present chapter any attractive features
-resulting from singularity of form, complexity of
-structure, or delicate tracery, whereby they might
-commend themselves to mere “searchers after
-curiosities,” or be recommended from friend to
-friend as “sensation” objects for the microscope.
-They <i>do</i> possess an interest and a value, but such
-as would not be appreciated by those who seek
-to pass an idle half-hour by gazing at some new
-thing.</p>
-<div class='pbb'>
- <hr class='pb c003' />
-</div>
-<div class='chapter'>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_110'>110</span>
- <h2 id='ch09' class='c012'>CHAPTER IX.<br /> <br /><em class='gesperrt'><span class='small'>RUSTS.</span></em></h2>
-</div>
-<p class='drop-capa0_3_0_65 c013'>A QUARTER of a century ago, and all the fungi
-enumerated in the preceding and in the present
-and following chapters would have been
-arranged under three genera, called respectively
-<i>Æcidium</i>, <i>Puccinia</i>, and <i>Uredo</i>. Under the last-named
-genus all the species illustrated in the present
-chapter, beside many others, would have found
-“a habitation and a name.” There are still a few
-which bear the old generic name, and, if only out of
-respect, we shall grant them the first place.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>Let the first bright day in May witness the
-student beside a cluster of plants of <i>Mercurialis
-perennis</i>, which it will not be difficult to find in
-many localities, and, on turning up the lower
-leaves, he will meet with our first illustration of
-a genuine <i>Uredo</i>, in the form of yellow confluent
-patches, with a powdery surface (<a href='#frontis'>Plate VII.</a>
-fig. 133). This will be <i>Uredo confluens</i>. By the
-way, the generic name is in itself suggestive,
-which it always should be in all instances, but
-unfortunately is not; it is derived from the Latin
-word <i>uro</i>, “I burn,” and is peculiarly applicable
-in instances where the leaves acquire a blistered,
-burnt, or scorched appearance, occasioned by the
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_111'>111</span>presence of the fungus. The microscopical features
-of the spores of this genus are, briefly, a more or
-less spherical form, without any pedicel or footstalk
-<a href='#frontis'>Plate VII.</a> fig. 134). These spores are at first
-produced each in a separate cell, but when ripe
-become free, and are at times with difficulty distinguished
-from such forms as <i>Trichobasis</i>, unless
-the pedicels in the early stage of the latter genus
-are regarded.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>A rare species in Britain is the oak-leaf rust
-(<i>Uredo Quercus</i>), in which the sori or pustules are
-minute, and at first yellow, but afterwards orange.
-It occurs on the under surface of the leaves, and
-was, we believe, first found in this country by Mr.
-D. Stock, in the neighbourhood of Bungay, nearly
-five-and-twenty years since. That gentleman informs
-us that it was not at all uncommon, but
-always appeared on the young shoots which had
-sprung up from the trunks or roots of trees that
-had been cut down. We are uncertain whether it
-has been found by any one since that time in this
-country, although it is not uncommon in France.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>The leaves of the common sorrel are often
-sparely sprinkled with the pustules of a rust
-(<i>Uredo bifrons</i>, Grev.), which derives its specific
-name from the fact that the pustules, which appear
-on both surfaces of the leaves, are often opposite
-to each other <a href='#frontis'>Plate VII.</a> fig. 137). These pustules
-are generally seated on a discoloured spot (<a href='#frontis'>Plate VII.</a>
-fig. 138 enlarged), and are surrounded by the
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_112'>112</span>remains of the ruptured epidermis. The spores are
-globose and brown <a href='#frontis'>Plate VII.</a> fig. 139). We have
-not met with any other <i>Uredine</i> on the sorrel
-leaves, though one having a similar appearance
-to the naked eye is not uncommon on several
-species of dock.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>The fern rust (<i>Uredo Filicum</i>), which occurs on
-the under surface of the fronds of two or three
-species of ferns, we have never met with, and do not
-think that it can be considered common. It has
-been found in the West of England, on <i>Cystopteris</i>,
-and Sowerby collected it, probably not very far
-from London.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>One of the most common is the rust found on
-the leaves of the enchanter’s nightshade (<i>Circæa
-lutetiana</i>), sometimes nearly covering the under surface
-with its tawny snuff-coloured spores <a href='#frontis'>Plate VII.</a>
-fig. 135). The plant on which it is found is rather
-local, but the rust (<i>Uredo Circææ</i>) seems to abound
-wherever the plant on which it is parasitic flourishes.
-Another fungus of a very similar external appearance
-may be collected, more rarely, from the leaves
-of the same plant; but in this the spores are two-celled,
-or divided by a transverse partition. This
-fact is mentioned to guard against disappointment,
-should the spores be found to differ from the
-characters of this section, and to show that the
-microscope is essential to the study of fungi. The
-spores of the true Uredo are globose and without
-any partition <a href='#frontis'>Plate VII.</a> fig. 136).</p>
-<div id='i112' class='figcenter id008'>
-<img src='images/i112.jpg' alt='' class='ig001' />
-<div class='ic001'>
-<p>Plate IX.<br />W. West imp.</p>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c023'><span class='pageno' id='Page_113'>113</span>We may also observe that a very interesting
-species may be found on several species of St.
-John’s-wort (<i>Hypericum</i>), but especially on the
-under surface of the leaves of the Tutsan, covering
-them with its golden-coloured spores (<a href='#i104'>Plate VIII.</a>
-fig. 174). Another occurs on the leaves of some
-of the wild garlics (<i>Allium</i>); one is not uncommon
-on some of the stitchworts; another on saxifrages;
-another on willow-herbs (<i>Epilobium</i>), and one on the
-leaves of the cowberry. All of these have yellowish
-spores. A species with brown spores occurs on
-sea-lavender (<i>Statice</i>). Space to write on our own
-part, and patience to read on the part of others,
-induce us to dismiss all these species with the
-bare allusion to them and the plants on which
-they may be found. Some of them may occur in
-one locality and some in another, and enough has
-perhaps been said to enable any one to place any
-that he may find in the proper genus, if not with
-the scientific name.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>From the numerous instances we have met with
-of persons wholly disinterested in the subject,
-collecting and making inquiries concerning the
-bright orange patches next to be referred to, we
-are led to conclude that most persons have, at
-least, seen them. These patches of orange-coloured
-powder burst through the cuticle, and appear on
-the young branches of wild roses, extending sometimes
-for two or three inches in length <a href='#frontis'>Plate VII.</a>
-fig. 147), and form one of the most beautiful and
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_114'>114</span>obtrusive of the dust-like fungi. It is not confined
-to roses; but the meadow-sweet, on which it is
-also found, does not grow in localities where its
-parasite is so liable to meet the gaze of the ordinary
-wayfarer. The habit of this rust is more or less
-that of those which are associated with it. The
-pustules are not small and orbicular as in most
-instances in other groups (except <i>Polycystis</i>), but
-are large and irregular, and generally but few
-together or single. The spores are variously coloured,
-and have peduncles, or footstalks, of a
-greater or less length. In the rose rust these
-spores are profuse, but the peduncle is short (<a href='#frontis'>Plate VII.</a>
-fig. 148).</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>Plants of the pea and bean tribe are liable to
-be attacked by one of these rusts, and in this instance
-the spores are so characteristic that no one
-could well confound them with any other. Externally
-it appears as an irregular brownish pustule,
-breaking through the epidermis and filled with an
-impalpable powder, not unlike a pinch of “brown
-rappee” snuff. The spores are ovoid, with a very
-long peduncle, whence its name (<i>Uromyces appendiculata</i>).
-It appears on a great variety of plants, but
-from the peculiarity of the spores <a href='#frontis'>Plate VII.</a> fig.
-150), is easily recognized. Our figure represents
-it on the leaf of a vetch (<a href='#frontis'>Plate VII.</a> fig. 149).
-Almost at the commencement of this volume
-(<a href='#ch03'>Chap. III.</a>) we had occasion to refer in detail to
-some experiments made by De Bary on the spores
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_115'>115</span>of this species. In the remarks then made occurs
-a recommendation of reperusal, which would obviate
-any repetition here.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>An allied species, and a beautiful one, is to be
-found on the stinking iris (<i>Iris fœtidissima</i>), and
-another on the under surface of the leaves of
-primroses.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>The pilewort (<i>Ranunculus ficaria</i>) we have already
-seen attacked by one species of microscopic fungi,
-and we have now to record the occurrence of another.
-Some plants appear to be destined both alive and
-dead to become the prey of others. The common
-nettle, for instance, as if in retribution for the
-annoyance it often occasions on account of its
-stinging propensities, has not less than twenty
-different species of minute fungi, to say nothing
-of coleopterous and lepidopterous insects, which
-make a home, sometimes upon its green leaves, and
-sometimes on its dead stems. We might almost
-state that it has a flora and a fauna of its own.
-The pilewort, too, has many foes; but these are
-fewer in number, and mostly attack the living
-plant. The cluster-cups have been already noticed;
-some do not fall within the limits of this volume,
-but one, which is found in May and June, belongs
-to the present genus. It appears like a purplish-brown
-powder bursting through blistered spots on
-the leaves and footstalks <a href='#frontis'>Plate VII.</a> fig. 156).
-The spores are small, and are, of course, provided
-with pedicels <a href='#frontis'>Plate VII.</a> fig. 157).</p>
-
-<p class='c008'><span class='pageno' id='Page_116'>116</span>The under surface of the leaves of the white
-Dutch clover are often sprinkled with black spots,
-which are nearly round and very numerous. These
-are so many clusters of fungi belonging to a
-different section, in which the threads are the
-important feature. But another parasite is also
-found on leaves of the same plant, in which the
-pustules are far less numerous and regular, and
-are often found on the petiole as well as the leaf,
-distorting them and twisting them in various directions
-<a href='#frontis'>Plate VII.</a> fig. 154). This is the clover rust
-(<i>Uromyces apiculata</i>, Lev.), which is a parasite on
-numerous plants, being found also on the great
-water-dock and other kinds of dock. The spores
-are ovoid and brown, with a short peduncle (<a href='#frontis'>Plate VII.</a> fig. 155). A very beautiful species occurs on
-the leaves of the ladies-mantle (<i>Alchemilla</i>), but
-hitherto we have not been fortunate enough to
-collect it.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>It can scarcely be too great an assumption to
-suppose that every one is acquainted with the goat-willow
-(<i>Salix caprea</i>), or that every schoolboy
-knows the birch (<i>Betula alba</i>). It may be proceeding
-a step too far to affirm that all who know
-these trees well enough to distinguish the one from
-the other, will have observed the under surfaces of
-the leaves of both sprinkled with a golden dust,
-during the summer months, and which are the
-spores of a parasitic fungus. So common is this
-orange-coloured powder on leaves of the trees
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_117'>117</span>above-named, that we can hardly believe any one
-to have had a branch of either in his hand and not
-observed it, provided any leaves adorned the branch
-in question. What this parasite is, and what its
-associates, it is our province to endeavour to explain.
-Our figure (<a href='#i104'>Plate VIII.</a> fig. 160) represents
-a leaf of the sallow or goat-willow, with the under
-surface exhibiting yellow patches, consisting of
-spores, which are magnified in the next figure
-(<a href='#i104'>Plate VIII.</a> fig. 161). This exceedingly common
-rust is termed <i>Lecythea caprearum</i>, Lev., when in
-the condition figured; but in reality this is only the
-summer stage, bearing the summer fruit of <i>Melampsora
-salicina</i>, which latter attains its mature
-development on the same leaves in the succeeding
-winter (<a href='#i112'>Plate IX.</a> fig. 191) or early spring. Of
-course this latter remark applies to the fallen leaves,
-for at this period all the willows and other deciduous
-trees are bare. But the leaves, before they fall,
-give evidence of the parasite at work; and if the
-collected decaying mass of rubbish at the base of
-sallow bushes be examined about March, these
-leaves will be found bearing upon them mature
-heaps of elongated, wedge-shaped spores, closely
-packed side by side (<a href='#i112'>Plate IX.</a> fig. 192), and which,
-whilst still adherent, may often be found in active
-germination, as represented in an allied species at
-the bottom of our plate (<a href='#i112'>Plate IX.</a> fig. 197). This
-phenomenon consists in the production of cylindrical
-tubes, more or less elongated, from the upper
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_118'>118</span>extremity (rarely from the base) of the prismatic
-spores. These tubes are straight or twisted, simple
-or forked, and each of them becomes divided by
-transverse septa into four unequal cells towards their
-apex, from each of which is produced a spicule
-bearing a sporidium, or spherical secondary fruit,
-in the same manner as in the genera <i>Puccinia</i> and
-<i>Aregma</i>. It should be observed, that the winter
-spores of this rust are borne on the opposite surface
-of the leaves to the summer spores: for whilst
-the latter are developed from the under surface, the
-former are found on the upper. This being also an
-instance of di-morphism, the summer condition,
-when spherical spores are produced, should not be
-regarded as a distinct plant, and the name of
-<i>Lecythea caprearum</i> does not merit retention in the
-list of fungi.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>There are five species of this interesting group,
-or genus, found in Great Britain, to the residue of
-which we may only briefly allude. It has already
-been stated that, in summer, the yellow spores of a
-rust are found on the under surface of birch-leaves.
-These must be sought on the young twigs or
-suckers, proceeding from the stumps of trees which
-have been cut down: pale discoloured spots on the
-upper surface of the leaves indicate the presence of
-the rust beneath. This is the <i>Uredo betulina</i> of old
-authors (begging their pardons, for some of them
-still live), the <i>Lecythea longicapsula</i> of more recent
-times, and the summer spores of <i>Melampsora betulina</i>,
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_119'>119</span>according to M. Tulasne and his disciples. When
-fresh, it is reputed to exhale a faint odour, as of the
-primrose. During the winter and spring months
-the wedge-like spores of the second crop are
-matured on the fallen leaves (<a href='#i112'>Plate IX.</a> figs. 189,
-190), and these are capable of a speedy germination,
-and the production of secondary reproductive
-bodies, as in the willow rust above alluded to.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>Probably, also, the similar rust on the poplar
-(<a href='#i112'>Plate IX.</a> figs. 195, 196), or on the aspen, may be
-met with under like conditions; <i>i.e.</i>, the summer
-spores, which are yellow and spherical, on the living
-leaves, and the brown permanent masses of winter
-spores on the fallen and decaying leaves. The sole
-remaining British species is not uncommon on
-leaves of the common spurge in gardens, and
-whilst the yellow pulverulent spores occur on the
-upper, it will not be improbable that black permanent
-spots will be found on the lower leaves
-(<a href='#i112'>Plate IX.</a> figs. 193, 194), enclosing closely-packed,
-rudimentary, elongated or wedge-shaped cellules of
-the winter spores.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>Any one may make himself acquainted with the
-genus <i>Coleosporium</i> with but little trouble, which
-the acquisition will more than compensate. A
-summer stroll into any locality in which the common
-coltsfoot can be found, will be certain to prove
-sufficient. Let the spot selected be any station on
-the North Kent Railway, for those who reside in
-town, or even a trip to the Crystal Palace and a
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_120'>120</span>stroll in the grounds, and when the well-known
-leaves of the coltsfoot are descried, the under surface
-of the first leaf will doubtless give proof of the
-presence of the fungus in question, by the orange
-spores amongst its dense woolly hairs. Sometimes
-the leaf is almost covered beneath with the bright
-orange-coloured dust. This is the coltsfoot rust
-(<i>Coleosporium tussilaginis</i>, Lev., <a href='#i104'>Plate VIII.</a> fig. 180),
-which may serve as a type of the rest. It may be
-observed that a species of cluster-cup, or <i>Æcidium</i>,
-with spores of nearly the same colour, is also to be
-found on the leaves of the same plant; but in this
-case the upper surface of the leaf has also corresponding
-purplish spots, and, what is of still more
-importance, the spores are seated in small fringed
-cups. The rust is common till the wintry frosts have
-set in, and is far more conspicuous than the cluster-cups.
-A kind of di-morphism prevails in all the
-species of this genus. Some of the pustules resolve
-themselves into a kind of powder, whilst others
-remain entire and solid. Generally there is the
-largest proportion of globose, dust-like, free spores,
-produced in the earliest developed fungi, whilst they
-become more rare towards the close of the season.
-The permanent spore-spots consist of obovate
-cellules placed side by side, each of which is divided
-transversely by three or four septa, and is filled with
-an orange-red endochrome (<a href='#i104'>Plate VIII.</a> fig. 181);
-the exterior being enveloped in a kind of mucous
-layer. The arrangement of spores when packed
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_121'>121</span>together in the pustule is shown in <a href='#i104'>Plate VIII.</a>
-fig. 182, from an allied species. When these spores
-germinate, which they do with great readiness, each
-division emits a long tube, which generally remains
-simple and undivided, and from its extremity is
-produced a reproductive body of an obovate or
-nearly kidney-shape. These filaments are about
-1/120th of an inch in length, of a colourless transparent
-membrane, along which the orange-red
-contents of the spores pass into the newly-formed
-sporidia, or reproductive bodies by which they are
-terminated. Most of these reniform sporidia disengage
-themselves from the filaments on which they
-are produced, and either elongate themselves into
-a simple and uniform filament, or swell at the
-extremity as if to reproduce a second spore. If the
-newly-formed sporidia do not become free, they
-increase the length of their primitive filament,
-which by a frequent repetition of the process
-becomes a tube swelling out at unequal distances.</p>
-<div id='i120' class='figcenter id009'>
-<img src='images/i120.jpg' alt='' class='ig001' />
-<div class='ic001'>
-<p>Plate X.<br />W. West imp.</p>
-</div>
-</div>
-<p class='c023'>The summer spores, or pulverulent spores of the
-first generation, which are analogous to the Uredospores
-of <i>Aregma</i>, are also capable of germination,
-for, if placed in favourable circumstances, they will
-develop very long filiform processes, which either
-remain simple or become more or less branched,
-but always nearly uniform in their diameter. M.
-Tulasne states that he has observed this germination
-many times, though we have been less fortunate.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'><span class='pageno' id='Page_122'>122</span>Of the six species of this genus known to occur
-in Great Britain, the majority may be commonly
-met with. That very widely-diffused plant, the
-wood cow-wheat (<i>Melampyrum pratense</i>), known
-well to all amateur botanists for its pertinacity in
-drying black, and presenting anything but an
-inviting appearance to claim for it a place in the
-herbarium—also becomes the matrix for the development
-of a member of this genus; <i>i.e.</i>, the
-cow-wheat rust (<i>Coleosporium Rhinanthacearum</i>,
-Lev.), and which is found on other allied plants,
-as the little eyebright (<i>Euphrasia officinalis</i>), &amp;c.
-(<a href='#i104'>Plate VIII.</a> fig. 176). In colour and habit it
-resembles the last-named species, and its free,
-echinulate spores (<a href='#i104'>Plate VIII.</a> fig. 177) form a
-pretty object for the microscope.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>Another equally common species is found inhabiting
-the leaves of the sow-thistles (<i>Sonchus arvensis</i>
-and <i>S. oleraceus</i>), and in the autumn may generally
-be found on either of those plants, presenting the
-appearance delineated in our plate (<a href='#i104'>Plate VIII.</a>
-fig. 178). The permanent spores resemble in many
-points those of the first species, as will be seen
-from the figure from De Bary’s treatise on this
-subject (<a href='#i104'>Plate VIII.</a> fig. 179). This is certainly one
-of the most showy of uredinous fungi, and could
-not be well overlooked.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>The butter-bur rust (<i>Coleosporium petasites</i>, Lev.)
-and the Campanula rust (<i>Coleosporium Campanulæ</i>,
-Lev.) are found, the former on the leaves of the
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_123'>123</span>butter-bur, and the latter on those of the harebell
-and other <i>Campanulæ</i>, less frequently. We have,
-however, indicated sufficient, since their great similarity
-in unprofessional eyes will furnish, in one or
-two species, all that is desirable for the microscopist.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>Unless some similar plan to the following be
-adopted for examining the species of this genus,
-it may result in disappointment; for the slight
-attachment of the joints to each other will otherwise
-present only a mass of simple echinulate
-cellules, if a portion be only removed from the leaf
-on the point of a lancet. This method consists in
-making a thin vertical section of a pustule in which
-the spores are contained; by this means the arrangement
-of the fruit and the mucedinous threads from
-whence they proceed may be observed. Any person
-possessed of the cardinal virtues of microscopy—patience
-and perseverance—will be rewarded in
-this instance; whilst those who are deficient will
-lose an object worthy of the virtues they dare not
-boast. But few instances have occurred in this and
-the preceding chapters in which the exercise of any
-great ingenuity or application has been called for;
-the most juvenile or truest tyro at the microscope
-may see for himself much of what has been
-indicated, whilst a few opportunities have occurred
-for more practised manipulists to prove that they
-are neither juveniles nor tyros.</p>
-<div class='pbb'>
- <hr class='pb c003' />
-</div>
-<div class='chapter'>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_124'>124</span>
- <h2 id='ch10' class='c012'>CHAPTER X.<br /> <br /><em class='gesperrt'><span class='small'>WHITE RUSTS.</span></em></h2>
-</div>
-<p class='drop-capa0_3_0_65 c013'>ALLUSION has already been made to the important
-memoir recently published by Dr. de
-Bary. “White rusts” occupy a conspicuous position
-in that memoir, and the experiments therein
-detailed, with the conclusions arrived at, will be
-largely drawn upon in furnishing the present chapter.
-Whilst believing that we have fairly represented
-the views, and faithfully narrated the story
-of research, if not literally, but denuded of some
-technicality, yet in such manner as to convey the
-sense of our author, we claim no originality or
-merit save for the garb in which it appears, without
-addition, stricture, or confirmation of our own.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>What is the external appearance presented by
-the “white rust” of cabbages, and allied cruciferous
-plants, is soon told. During summer and
-autumn it occupies the surface of the leaves and
-stems of the shepherd’s-purse (<i>Capsella bursa-pastoris</i>),
-with elongated narrow white spots like
-streaks of whitewash (<a href='#i120'>Plate X.</a> fig. 198), and later
-in the season the leaves of cauliflowers and cabbages
-become ornamented with similar patches,
-arranged in a circular manner (<a href='#i120'>Plate X.</a> fig. 199),
-forming spots as large as a sixpence. Wherever
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_125'>125</span>these spots appear, the plant is more or less deformed,
-swollen, or blistered, even before the parasite
-makes its appearance at the surface. These
-white pustules have a vegetative system of ramifying
-threads which traverse the internal portion of
-the plants on which they are found: these threads
-constitute what is termed the <i>mycelium</i>. Not only
-when the plant is deformed and swollen with its
-undeveloped parasite do we meet with the threads
-of mycelium in its internal structure, but also in
-apparently healthy portions of the plant, far removed
-from the evidently infected spots. These
-threads are unequal in thickness, much branched,
-and often with thick gelatinous walls filled with a
-colourless fluid. They creep insidiously along the
-intercellular passages, and are provided with certain
-appendages in the form of straight thread-like
-tubes, swollen at their tips into globular vesicles
-(<a href='#i120'>Plate X.</a> fig. 204). These threads do not exceed
-in length the diameter of the mycelium which bears
-them. The appendages communicate in their interior
-with the mycelium, and contain within them
-the same fluid, which at length becomes more
-watery, and the terminal vesicles have their walls
-thickened, so as to resemble, on a casual observation,
-granules of starch. Dr. de Bary conceives
-that these appendages serve a similar purpose to
-the tendrils or suckers of climbing phanerogamic
-plants; <i>i.e.</i>, to fix the mycelium to the cells which
-are to supply the parasite with nourishment. As
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_126'>126</span>these appendages are always present, it is easy to
-discover the mycelium wherever it exists amongst
-the tissues of an affected plant.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>The white pustules already alluded to contain the
-fruit of the parasite. Bundles of clavate or club-shaped
-tubes are produced upon the mycelium beneath
-the epidermis of the infested plant, forming
-a little tuft or cushion, with each tube producing
-at its apex reproductive cells, designated “conidia.”
-These conidia appear to be produced in the following
-manner:—The tips of the clavate tubes generate
-them in succession. At first a septum, or
-partition, divides from the lower portion of the
-tube a conidium cell; this becomes constricted at
-the septum and assumes a spherical shape, at
-length only attached by a short narrow neck.
-Beneath this again the same process is repeated
-to form another and another conidium in succession,
-until a bead-like string of conidia surmount each
-of the tubes from which they are produced (<a href='#i120'>Plate X.</a>
-fig. 200). At length the distended epidermis
-above is no longer able to bear the pressure of the
-mass of engendered conidia within, and is ruptured
-irregularly, so that the conidia, easily separating
-from each other at the narrow neck, make their
-escape.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>As long since as 1807, M. Prevost described the
-zoospores, or moving spores, of these conidia, and
-his observations were confirmed by Dr. de Bary three
-years since, and are now adverted to by him again
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_127'>127</span>in further confirmation. If the conidia (white
-spherical bodies ejected from the pustules of the
-“white rust”) are sown in a drop of water on a
-glass slide, being careful to immerse them entirely,
-they will rapidly absorb the water and swell; soon
-afterwards a large and obtuse papilla, resembling
-the neck of a bottle, is produced at one of the
-extremities. At first vacuoles are formed in the
-contents of each conidium; as these disappear, the
-whole protoplasm (granular substance filling the
-conidium) becomes separated by very fine lines
-of demarcation, into from five to eight polyhedric
-portions, each with a faintly coloured vacuole in
-the centre. These portions are so many <i>zoospores</i>.
-Some minutes after the internal division, the papilla
-swells and makes itself an opening, through which
-the zoospores are expelled one by one, without
-giving any signs of movement of their own. They
-take a flat disk-like or lenticular form, and group
-themselves about the opening, whence they have
-been expelled, in a globular mass. Soon, however,
-they begin to move, vibratile ciliæ show themselves,
-and by means of these appendages the entire
-globule oscillates, the zoospores disengage themselves
-from each other, the mass is broken up,
-and each zoospore swims off on its own account
-(<a href='#i120'>Plate X.</a> fig. 208).</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>The free zoospores are of the form of a planoconvex
-lens, obtuse at the edge. Beneath the
-plane face, out of the centre, and towards that
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_128'>128</span>point of the margin which during the movement
-of the zoospore is foremost, is a disk-shaped
-vacuole, with two ciliæ of unequal length attached
-to its margin; the shorter cilia is directed forwards,
-and the longer in the opposite direction, during the
-evolutions of the zoospores.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>The zoospores are produced within from an hour
-and a half to three hours after the sowing of the
-conidia in water. They are never absent if the
-conidia are fresh, or even a month old, but beyond
-this period their artificial generation is very uncertain.
-This little experiment is a very simple
-and interesting one, and may be performed by any
-one who will take the trouble to follow out these
-instructions.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>From this simple experiment, let us turn for a
-moment to the plant in its natural condition when
-affected by the white rust. If, after rain or dew,
-when the little drops of moisture hang like pearls
-about the sickly pallid leaves of the shepherd’s-purse,
-bespattered with the white pustules of the
-rust, we collect and examine a drop of water from
-the immediate neighbourhood of one of the pustules,
-we shall commonly find empty conidia and zoospores
-in different stages of development.</p>
-<div id='i128' class='figcenter id010'>
-<img src='images/i128.jpg' alt='' class='ig001' />
-<div class='ic001'>
-<p>Plate XI.<br />W. West imp.</p>
-</div>
-</div>
-<p class='c023'>Water alone seems to be essential to them, and
-for this the conidia may remain unchanged for a
-month, and literally burst into activity at the first
-gentle shower, till the whole surface of the plant is
-swarming with zoospores. We may no longer
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_129'>129</span>doubt that a true vegetable produces from itself
-bodies endowed with active motion, resembling low
-forms of animal life, and yet in themselves not
-animalcules, as some would suggest, but essentially
-vegetable, as we shall hereafter demonstrate. To
-scientific men this is not new, except as regards
-fungi, for in algæ such bodies have long been
-recognized.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>A second kind of reproductive organs are described
-by Dr. de Bary; and if future examinations
-confirm his observations, as they doubtless will,
-this feature is an important one. It is true that
-M. Caspary long since detected similar bodies in
-moulds (allied to that which produces the potato
-disease), but he only knew <i>them</i> in a limited sense
-compared with what De Bary has revealed. These
-fruits are hidden amid the tissues of the plant on
-which the “white rust” is parasitic, and only
-betray their presence by the coloration of those
-tissues. To these bodies it is proposed to give the
-name of “oogonia” and “antheridia,” on account
-of their presumed sexuality, the “oogonia” representing
-the female, and the “antheridia” the male
-organs.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>The oogonia are large spherical or ovoid cells,
-with a thickish membrane containing a granular
-protoplasm, or formative fluid. They are produced
-either terminally or laterally upon the threads of
-the mycelium, from which they are separated by
-septa or partitions.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'><span class='pageno' id='Page_130'>130</span>The antheridia are somewhat blunt-shaped or
-obovate cellules, considerably smaller than the
-oogonia, with slightly thickened walls, and containing
-a finely granular protoplasm. These are
-produced upon branches of the mycelium which
-do not bear oogonia. The obtuse extremities of
-these branches, which are to be developed as
-antheridia, are applied to the surface of the growing
-oogonia, to which they adhere, become distended,
-assume their obovate form, and by the
-formation of a septum at their base, their contents
-are isolated from those of the threads of the
-mycelium, and thus the antheridia are perfected.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>When these bodies have attained their full
-dimensions, the large granules which are contained
-in the oogonium accumulate at its centre, and form
-an irregular, somewhat spherical mass, which is
-called by De Bary a <i>gonosphere</i>. This gonosphere
-having been formed, a straight tube shoots out
-from the antheridium which perforates the wall
-of the oogonium, passes through the fluid which
-surrounds the gonosphere, elongating itself until
-it touches that body. From this period a membrane
-begins to be formed about the gonosphere,
-which thenceforth maintains a regular spheroidal
-form. It may be observed that the extremity of the
-tube which proceeds from the antheridium does not
-open, and the fecundation, if such it be, is produced
-solely by contact. After this contact of the
-two bodies, the gonosphere acquires a new name,
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_131'>131</span>and is called an “oospore.” The membrane which
-at first invests this organ is very thin, but by
-deposits from the surrounding fluid it attains to
-a greater thickness, and is at length of a yellowish-brown
-colour, having its surface studded with large
-obtuse warts (<a href='#i120'>Plate X.</a> fig. 206). One of these
-warts, larger than the rest, forms a kind of thick
-sheath around the fecundating tube.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>The oospores do not give evidence of any appreciable
-change for some months. For instance,
-those collected by De Bary in June did not attain
-their ulterior development until the commencement
-of December. The method adopted was as follows:—Parts
-of the plants containing ripe oospores
-were preserved in the dried state. When examination
-was considered desirable, the portion to be
-employed was immersed in water for a day or two;
-it was then placed on a humid soil, or mould
-covered with blotting-paper. The tissues enclosing
-the oospores were decomposed, and at the end of
-from four to eight days their germination might
-be observed when placed in a drop of water. This
-method again corresponds with the ordinary processes
-by which the plant naturally decays on
-exposure to the influences of the atmosphere, and
-the oospores germinate under the favour of a
-shower of rain.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>If the oospore, after the decay of the tissues,
-is isolated and placed in a drop of water, the
-brown investing membrane will be seen to rupture
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_132'>132</span>irregularly, and its contents (enclosed in a transparent
-inner membrane) issuing from the orifice.
-As in the case of the conidia, this body at first
-contains vacuoles, and is afterwards divided into
-polyhedric portions; these pass into zoospores,
-which congregate at the centre into a globular
-mass (<a href='#i120'>Plate X.</a> fig. 207). They afterwards separate,
-and for some minutes float about in the vesicle in
-which they were generated. Ultimately the membrane
-ruptures, and the zoospores swim about in
-water just as those produced from the conidia had
-done. The number contained in each oospore is
-considerable, and may be estimated at not less than
-one hundred.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>The zoospores, whether produced from conidia
-or from oospores, appear to be the same. The
-movements of both in the water last from two to
-three hours; then they cease, the ciliæ disappear,
-and the zoospores remain at rest, taking meanwhile
-a globular form. Afterwards these spores (for
-having ceased all motion they are no longer zoospores)
-emit a thin tube from some portion of their
-surface, such tube attaining a length of from two
-to ten times that of the spore whence it proceeds.
-The extremity of these tubes swells and
-forms a kind of cell, into which the contents of
-the spore pass through the medium of the tube
-(<a href='#i120'>Plate X.</a> fig. 209).</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>Thus far, and thus far only, has Dr. de Bary
-been enabled to trace the development of the
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_133'>133</span>zoospores in a drop of water. Another series of
-experiments was instituted by this mycologist
-having especial reference to the parasitism of the
-“white rust.” He made numerous observations to
-ascertain whether the spores, or the germinating
-tubes, entered by the roots of growing plants, and
-satisfied himself that they did not. Plants of
-garden-cress, mustard, and shepherd’s-purse had
-their roots immersed in water impregnated with
-zoospores. After one or two days, though the surfaces
-of the roots were covered with zoospores that
-had emitted their germinating tubes in all directions,
-none had penetrated or showed the least tendency
-to penetrate the epidermis. Other plants were
-planted in flowerpots and watered at the roots with
-water charged with zoospores, and for two days the
-pots were left standing in the water similarly
-charged, then the plants were removed, cultivated
-in the ordinary manner, grew up healthy, and gave
-no signs of the white rust. Care had been taken
-that neither stems nor leaves should come in contact
-with water containing zoospores.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>If a drop of water thus charged is placed on the
-surface of a living leaf of the shepherd’s-purse, for
-instance, and left at rest for a few hours and examined
-minutely at the end of that period, they
-will be found to have germinated. Let the epidermis
-be removed carefully and placed on a glass
-slide and submitted to the microscope. Many
-zoospores will be found to have produced from that
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_134'>134</span>point of their surface which is nearest to one of the
-stomata, or pores of the leaf, its slender tube, and
-to have thrust it through those openings, with the
-swollen extremity resting in the air-cavity situated
-beneath the pore. If many days, or even weeks,
-are allowed to pass, and the leaf is examined again,
-or another leaf similarly treated, and kept in a
-living and vigorous condition by remaining attached
-to the parent plant, still no further change or
-advance will be observed, the germs will appear
-fresh, and still in the same condition. Hence it is
-concluded that plants are not infected through the
-medium of their leaves.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>If the cotyledons, or seed-leaves, are watered
-with similar impregnated water, a different result
-has been observed to take place. The germination
-of the tubes till their entrance at the stomata is the
-same; but, having entered, the swollen extremity
-elongates, becomes branched, and takes all the
-appearance of mycelium such as we at first
-described. If the infected plant endures through
-the winter, the mycelium endures with it, to recommence
-vegetating in the spring.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>The experiments which Dr. de Bary performed
-were all upon plants of the common garden-cress.
-It will be unnecessary to repeat all the details of
-these, as given in the memoir recently published on
-the subject, but it will suffice to give a summary of
-results. In two series of plants cultivated at different
-periods from good seeds, one hundred and
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_135'>135</span>five plants which, had not received the water
-impregnated with zoospores upon their cotyledons
-vegetated without any indications of the parasite.
-Amongst the eighteen plants which were inoculated
-by watering the cotyledons, four only were not
-attacked by the parasite, fourteen bore the “white
-rust.” In six of these it did not extend beyond
-the cotyledons; in the others it also appeared on
-the stems and leaves.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>From these experiments it may be deduced that
-plants are not infected by spores of the parasite
-entering at the roots, or by their leaves, but that
-inoculation takes place through the medium of the
-cotyledons, or seed-leaves; that the agents in this
-inoculation are the zoospores produced either from
-the conidia or the oospores; that they do not enter
-the stomata or pores themselves, but thrust out a
-germinating tube, into the extremity of which the
-contents of the zoospores pass; that when these
-tubes have entered the stomata of the cotyledons
-they branch and ramify, becoming a true mycelium,
-from which fruitful parasites are developed; that
-if a plant so infested lives through the winter, the
-parasite lives with it, to vegetate again in the
-spring.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>The immense number of zoospores capable of
-being produced from a single infested plant is
-almost beyond calculation. It is easy for a million
-of conidia to be developed from such a plant, each
-producing from five to eight zoospores, besides a
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_136'>136</span>large number of oospores, each containing a hundred
-zoospores. It can scarcely be considered
-marvellous that the white rust should be so common
-on plants favourable to its development, the
-marvel being rather that any plant should escape.</p>
-<div id='i136' class='figcenter id011'>
-<img src='images/i136.jpg' alt='' class='ig001' />
-<div class='ic001'>
-<p>Plate XII.<br />W. West imp.</p>
-</div>
-</div>
-<p class='c023'>Until recently it was doubtful whether more than
-one or two species of <i>Cystopus</i> (white rust) were
-known. It is now certain that we have three in
-Great Britain, and three or four others are found
-elsewhere. Of the British species one is found on
-many cruciferous plants, as the shepherd’s-purse,
-garden-cress, mustard, radish, and plants of the
-cabbage kind. This is the <i>Cystopus candidus</i>.
-Another occurs on the goat’s-beard, salsify, and
-scorzonera, which is called <i>Cystopus cubicus</i>. Both
-have great external resemblances, but both possess
-specific internal differences. In the Goat’s-beard
-rust (<a href='#i120'>Plate X.</a> fig. 201) the terminal conidia in the
-bunches or fascicles of conidia which are produced
-within the pustules are spheroidal, large, and of a
-yellow-brown tint, whilst the residue are cylindrical,
-smaller (<a href='#i120'>Plate X.</a> fig. 202), and more or less compressed.
-In the crucifer rust the conidia are all
-equal in the pustules and globose. The oospores
-in the former of these are subglobose and the warts
-on their surface are solid; whilst in the latter the
-oospores are truly globose, and the warts on the
-surface are hollow (<a href='#i120'>Plate X.</a> fig. 210). The third
-species is the Sandspurry white rust (<i>Cystopus
-Lepigoni</i>), which was found on the common sandspurry
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_137'>137</span>(<i>Spergularia rubra</i>) by Mr. R. G. Keeley, in
-Swanscombe Marshes (September, 1864). Of the
-other species it is not improbable that one or two
-may yet be found in this country. Without attempting
-to indicate their microscopic differences,
-it may be serviceable to name the species of
-phanerogamic plants on which they are likely to
-be found. The Purslane white rust (<i>Cystopus Portulacæ</i>,
-D. C.) should be sought on the purslane,
-which, though of limited cultivation, is exceedingly
-liable to attack from this parasite, and the Thistle
-white rust (<i>Cystopus spinulosus</i>, D. By.) may probably
-be met with on the leaves of the common
-thistle (<i>Cnicus arvensis</i>) or some of its allies.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>Considerable interest is now attached to these
-parasites, which, as far as we at present know,
-differ materially in their reproduction from the
-other dust-like or uredinous fungi with which they
-have long been associated. Dr. de Bary proposes
-the union of these with the mould-like fungi of the
-genus <i>Peronospora</i>, to which the mould infesting
-the potato belongs, so as to constitute by themselves
-a group apart from the genera with which
-both have heretofore been associated. Whether
-his views will be accepted by mycologists time will
-speedily prove. Under any circumstances, microscopical
-and botanical science will reap considerable
-benefit from his researches.</p>
-<div class='pbb'>
- <hr class='pb c003' />
-</div>
-<div class='chapter'>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_138'>138</span>
- <h2 id='ch11' class='c012'>CHAPTER XI.<br /> <br /><em class='gesperrt'><span class='small'>MOULDS.</span></em></h2>
-</div>
-<p class='drop-capa0_3_0_65 c013'>TWENTY years since, and some of these little
-pests were altogether unknown, whilst others
-were only recognized and partly understood by a
-few scientific men. During the period to which
-we have alluded more than half the present species
-contained in the genus <i>Peronospora</i> had never been
-observed, and amongst these the most devastating
-of its tribe, the associate and undoubted cause of
-the potato disease.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>Parasitic fungi are far more numerous, both in
-individuals and species, than most persons are
-aware, and cultivated plants of all kinds are more
-or less subject to their ravages. Some are more
-susceptible than others, of which the corn and
-grass tribe, or <i>Graminaceæ</i>, as they are termed
-by botanists, is an example. Not less than thirty
-species have been recorded upon plants of this
-natural order, and of these nearly one-half are
-found upon the living plants. Upon the potato
-plant, again, no less than ten different kinds of
-fungi have been described; whilst upon other and
-more fortunate plants only one or two parasites of
-this nature establish themselves.</p>
-
-<div class='nf-center-c0'>
-<div class='nf-center c003'>
- <div>Plate XIII.</div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<div id='i138a' class='figcenter id012'>
-<img src='images/i138a.jpg' alt='' class='ig001' />
-<div class='ic001'>
-<p>262.—<span class='sc'>Turnip Mould.</span><br /><i>Peronospora parasitica.</i></p>
-</div>
-</div>
-<div id='i138b' class='figcenter id013'>
-<img src='images/i138b.jpg' alt='' class='ig001' />
-<div class='ic001'>
-<p>263.—<span class='sc'>Onion Mould.</span><br /><i>Peronospora Schleideniana.</i></p>
-</div>
-</div>
-<p class='c023'>It will be sufficient for our present purpose to
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_139'>139</span>state that one of the six families into which fungi
-are divided for scientific purposes is called <i>Hyphomycetes</i>,
-a name compounded of two Greek words
-signifying “thread” and “mould,” or “fungus,”
-and is applied to this group because the thread-like
-filaments of which they are largely composed
-are the most prominent feature. In this family
-there are again a number of smaller groups called
-orders, having an equal value to the natural orders
-of flowering plants; and one of these orders, called
-<i>Mucedines</i>, has the fertile threads perfectly distinct
-from the mycelium or spawn. These threads are
-sometimes simple and sometimes branched; they
-may be articulated or without articulations or septa,
-short or long, erect or creeping, hyaline or whitish,
-mostly free from colour, and are not coated with
-a distinct membrane. The spores are generally
-simple, sometimes solitary, at others in pairs, or
-strung together like beads for a necklace. Amongst
-all this variety of arrangement there is order, for
-these are but features, or partly the features, of the
-different genera of which the <i>Mucedines</i> are composed.
-One of the genera is termed <i>Peronospora</i>,
-and to this the parasitic fungus of the potato, and
-some others to which we shall have occasion to
-refer, belong. In this genus the threads are
-generally branched, but without articulations. The
-spores, or seed-like bodies, are of two kinds; one
-kind is borne on the tips of the branches; and the
-other kind, which is larger and globose, is borne
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_140'>140</span>upon the creeping mycelium or spawn. All the
-members of this genus with which we are acquainted
-are parasitic on living plants, inducing in them
-speedy decay, but preceding that decay of which
-they are themselves the cause. Hence we have
-deemed it the more advantageous course both for
-writer and reader to associate together the different
-species of this particular genus of parasitic moulds
-in one chapter, rather than bring together the
-different kinds of fungi, belonging perhaps to
-widely separated genera, but all associated with,
-or parasitic upon, the same plant. The botanical
-student will thank us for following this plan, and
-the general reader will labour under no disadvantage,
-in this instance at least, from the similarity
-of the diseases produced in the plants infested.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>It has been recently proposed to associate the
-genera <i>Peronospora</i> and <i>Cystopus</i> together in one
-group, under the name of <i>Peronosporei</i>; but with
-the discussion of this subject we have nothing
-to do in this volume. Having announced this fact,
-we shall continue to notice them in the several
-positions heretofore accorded to them.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>The mycelium (root-like fibres) in this genus
-greatly resembles that described for the “white
-rusts,” though neither so thick, nor is the membrane
-so gelatinous as in that genus. In some
-instances the mycelium is confined to the inter-cellulary
-passages; but in most cases they also
-perforate the cells of the plant which nourishes
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_141'>141</span>them. The sucker-like bodies already described in
-<i>Cystopus</i> are often found produced on the mycelium
-of <i>Peronospora</i>, but occasionally they appear to be
-absent, especially in the mould causing the potato
-disease.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>From the mycelium erect threads are produced,
-upon which one form of fruit, which may be
-termed “acrospores,” is borne. These filaments are
-sometimes single, and sometimes in small tufts or
-fascicles. In some instances they are considerably
-branched, so as to present a dendroidal or tree-like
-appearance; in others they are nearly simple, being
-only surmounted by short spicules; or, in one
-instance, quite simple, and only surmounted by a
-single acrospore. The branching habit is by far
-the most common.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>Each ultimate branch in the ramification of the
-fertile filaments engenders a single acrospore. Its
-extremity, at first thin and pointed, swells in the
-form of a globular vesicle, which soon takes the
-elliptical or ovate shape of the perfected acrospore,
-and at length separates itself from the branch that
-supports it.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>In all instances the acrospores have a similar
-structure, but with minute differences in form, &amp;c.,
-which have their importance in the determination
-of species. In most cases the apex of the acrospore
-is obtuse, and the entire body has a violet tint,
-more or less deep; in some it is completely colourless.
-These acrospores, when placed in favourable
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_142'>142</span>conditions, will germinate, and, in fact, comport
-themselves in the manner of true spores.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>During the year 1861, Dr. de Bary published an
-account<a id='r8' /><a href='#f8' class='c018'><sup>[8]</sup></a> of the discovery by him of zoospores,
-similar to those already described in connection
-with the conidia of the “white rusts,” produced
-from the acrospores of the mould which originates
-the potato disease. In the same author’s memoir
-of 1864, already quoted, the observations there
-made are confirmed. When the acrospores of the
-potato mould and the parsnip mould are sown in
-water upon a glass slide, their contents become
-divided, and vacuoles are formed, as already described
-in <i>Cystopus</i>; these parts are expelled through
-an apical orifice, and, when free, take the form
-of perfect zoospores, and commence swimming
-about in the fluid surrounding them.</p>
-
-<div class='footnote c020' id='f8'>
-<p class='c010'><span class='label'><a href='#r8'>8</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>Die gegenwartig herrschende Kartoffelkrankheit, ihre
-Ursache und ihre Verhütung. Von Dr. A. de Bary. Leipsig:
-1861.</p>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c008'>These zoospores are oval, or semi-oval, with a
-structure resembling that of the “white rusts,”
-save that the two ciliæ, or vibratile hairs, proceed
-from the same point. The number of zoospores
-from each acrospore of the potato mould is stated
-to be from six to sixteen, and in the parsnip mould
-from six to fourteen. Their ultimate development
-is the same as has already been described. In
-the potato mould, the production of the zoospores
-is much favoured by the exclusion of light.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'><span class='pageno' id='Page_143'>143</span>Another mode of germination in the acrospores
-of the potato mould has been observed by the same
-eminent mycologist. This results when the spores
-are sown upon a humid body, or on the <i>surface</i>
-of a drop of water. The acrospore emits from its
-summit a simple tube, the extremity of which
-swells into an oval vesicle; into this the contents
-pass, and it isolates itself by a partition from the
-germ-tube. Thus it becomes a duplicate of the
-acrospore from whence it was derived. This
-secondary body has also the power of producing a
-tertiary cellule in a similar manner. Both the
-second and third cellule, when <i>immersed</i> in water,
-produce zoospores in the ordinary manner, as above
-described.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>Yet another and a third mode of germination
-is described by the same author, in which the
-acrospore emits from its apex a germ-tube, which
-elongates considerably; and into this long and
-tortuous tube the contents of the acrospore pass,
-and accumulate at the opposite extremity.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>The germ-tubes, produced in the manner last
-described, when developed on the surface of a
-favourable plant, perforate the cells of the epidermis,
-or enter by the stomata. In the case of the potato
-mould, the germ-tubes enter by the stomata; but
-in the majority of species the germ-tubes do not
-enter by the natural pores of the leaves upon which
-the acrospores are sown, but perforate the cellules,
-and thus effect admission into the tissues of the
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_144'>144</span>plant, where they extend, ramify themselves, and
-become a mycelium. This mycelium originates
-branched threads, bearing acrospores at the tips
-of their branchlets, and in many species of <i>Peronospora</i>
-another kind of reproductive body upon the
-threads of the mycelium itself. To these bodies we
-must briefly address ourselves.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>This last kind of reproductive organs (not yet
-positively found in the potato mould) appear to be
-wholly analogous to the oogonia of the “white
-rusts” already described, producing oospores in
-like manner. Dr. de Bary avows with regret that
-his numerous efforts to observe the germination of
-these oospores were unsuccessful. Nevertheless,
-he considers that the perfect resemblance between
-them and the oospores of the “white rusts” will
-justify him in concluding that the germination in
-both is very similar. It will be unnecessary to
-repeat here the observations already made on the
-growth and development of oogones and zoospores.
-What has been advanced respecting these organs
-in <i>Cystopus</i> will apply also to <i>Peronospora</i>.</p>
-
-<div class='nf-center-c0'>
-<div class='nf-center c003'>
- <div>Plate XIV.</div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<div id='i144a' class='figcenter id014'>
-<img src='images/i144a.jpg' alt='' class='ig001' />
-<div class='ic001'>
-<p>264.—<span class='sc'>Potato Mould.</span><br /><i>Peronospora infestans.</i></p>
-</div>
-</div>
-<div id='i144b' class='figcenter id015'>
-<img src='images/i144b.jpg' alt='' class='ig001' />
-<div class='ic001'>
-<p>265.—<span class='sc'>Lettuce Mould.</span><br /><i>Peronospora gangliformis.</i></p>
-</div>
-</div>
-<p class='c023'><span class='sc'>Potato Mould.</span>—Towards the close of the summer
-of 1845, in the course of a few weeks, every
-one became aware of the fact that a new disease
-had appeared which threatened the entire destruction
-of the potato crop. Until then it seemed to
-have been almost, although not entirely unknown.
-It first appeared in the Isle of Wight about the
-middle of August, and a week afterwards had become
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_145'>145</span>general in the South of England, and the
-next week there were but few sound samples of
-potatoes in the London market. Early in September
-the disease had commenced its ravages in
-Ireland, and shortly afterwards it was discovered in
-Scotland. With the same rapidity it seems to have
-spread throughout Europe and North America, or
-at least the western portion of the former and the
-northern districts of the latter. It must not be
-imagined, however, that the Isle of Wight was the
-centre from which this disease spread over such an
-extended area and with such alarming rapidity.
-From this spot it doubtless made its first appearance
-that year amongst our own crops, but there
-is not the least doubt of its existence both on the
-continent of Europe and in North America in the
-previous year, and the farmers of Belgium had
-noted its appearance in the province of Liège as
-far back as 1842 and 1843. Other diseases had
-been observed affecting the potato crop before, and
-one which was also associated with a parasitic
-fungus had made its appearance in 1815. It is
-also exceedingly probable that, in a milder form,
-the murrain was present with us a year or two
-before it broke out to such an alarming extent.
-A correspondent to the <i>Gardeners’ Chronicle</i>, in
-1844, notices it in the Isle of Thanet, and another
-testifies to its occurrence in districts of Ireland for
-two or three years previous to its general outbreak.
-The description of the disease in Canada, in 1844,
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_146'>146</span>contained in a letter addressed to Dr. Bellingham,
-and quoted by the Rev. M. J. Berkeley,<a id='r9' /><a href='#f9' class='c018'><sup>[9]</sup></a> leaves no
-doubt of its identity:—“During the months of
-July and August (1844), we had repeated and
-heavy showers, with oppressive heat, and an atmosphere
-strongly charged with electricity. Towards
-the close of the month of August I observed
-the leaves to be marked with black spots, as if ink
-had been sprinkled over them. They began to
-wither, emitting a peculiar, offensive odour; and
-before a fortnight the field, which had been singularly
-luxuriant, and almost rank, became arid and
-dried up, as if by a severe frost. I had the potatoes
-dug out during the month of September, when
-about two-thirds were either positively rotten, partially
-decayed and swarming with worms, or spotted
-with brownish-coloured patches, resembling flesh
-that had been frost-bitten. These parts were soft
-to the touch, and upon the decayed potatoes I
-observed a whitish substance like mould.”</p>
-
-<div class='footnote c020' id='f9'>
-<p class='c010'><span class='label'><a href='#r9'>9</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>Journal of Horticultural Society of London, vol. i. p. 11.</p>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c008'>Although this disease made its first appearance,
-in the middle of August, 1845, in the Isle of Wight,
-it had already appeared in Belgium in the same
-year, a month previously; and although it may
-have been noticed in other British localities in
-1844, it was known in Canada and in St. Helena in
-the same year to a far greater extent, and in Liège
-as early as 1842. There are, therefore, good
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_147'>147</span>grounds for believing that the European centre was
-Belgium; but if M. Boussingault was correct in
-stating that “this malady is well known in rainy
-years at Bogota, where the Indians live almost
-entirely on potatoes,” then it is not of European
-but American origin, and is probably derived from
-districts not far remote from those whence Europe
-first received the potato itself.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>It would occupy too much space to detail the
-different theories and opinions relative to the causes
-of this disease to which 1845 and subsequent years
-gave birth. Suffice it to say, that the lapse of
-years has silently proved the majority of these to
-have been fallacious. All such as imputed to peculiar
-electric conditions, a wet season, or other
-meteorological influences, the disease which has
-re-appeared under different conditions and influences,
-and in seasons remarkable for dryness,
-are manifestly refuted; whilst its mycological
-origin has continued to gain adherents, and the
-gradual accumulation of fresh facts has almost
-placed it beyond dispute not only that the potato
-disease is accompanied by, but results from, fungal
-growth. Unfortunately, this disease has been so
-prevalent, more or less, during the past eighteen
-years, that few have been without the opportunity
-of making themselves acquainted with its external
-appearance. To this may be added the minute
-and exact account of its development, as recorded
-by that excellent mycologist and careful observer,
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_148'>148</span>the Rev. M. J. Berkeley, in 1846, and to which,
-even now, nothing of importance can be supplemented
-or abstracted:—“The leaves began suddenly
-to assume a paler, and at length a yellowish
-tint, exhibiting here and there discoloured spots.
-More or less coinciding with these spots, on the
-reverse of the leaves, appeared white mealy patches,
-consisting of a minute mould, proceeding, either
-singly or in fascicles, from the stomata, and arising
-from an abundant branched mycelium creeping in
-every direction through the loose tissue beneath
-the cuticle. The upper surface rarely, if ever,
-exhibits the mould, it being almost physically impossible
-for its delicate threads to penetrate the
-closely-packed cells which, being arranged side by
-side, leave scarcely any intercellular passages. The
-mould, in a few hours from its first piercing the
-apertures of the stomata, perfects its fruit, and in
-so doing completely exhausts the matrix, which in
-consequence withers. No sooner have a number
-of the leaves been attacked, than the stem itself is
-subject to change, becoming spotted here and there
-with dark brown patches, in which the cells are
-mostly filled with a dark grumous mass, without
-exhibiting any mucedinous filaments; though, occasionally,
-I have ascertained their presence. Very
-rarely fructifying but dwarfed specimens of the
-mould occur upon it. The stem now rapidly putrefies,
-the cuticle and its subjacent tissue become
-pulpy, and separate when touched from the woody
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_149'>149</span>parts beneath. The whole soon dries up, and in
-many instances exhibits in the centre the black,
-irregular fungoid masses which are known under
-the name of <i>Sclerotium varium</i>, and which are
-believed to be the mycelium of certain moulds in
-a high state of condensation.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>“If the tubers are now examined, the greater part
-will often be found smaller than usual, especially
-if the disease has commenced at an early stage of
-growth; but in their natural condition, while here
-and there a tuber, particularly if it has been
-partially exposed, exhibits traces of disease. The
-surface is, however, soon marked with livid patches,
-commencing generally about the eyes, or at the
-point of connection with the fructifying shoots:
-these rapidly acquire a spotted appearance, the
-spots being rather waved, and assuming often a
-more or less concentric arrangement. Sometimes—especially
-on the smoother kinds of tuber—two or
-more regular systems of concentric spots are exhibited
-on the same tuber. The skin now withers,
-and is easily separated; the spots become depressed
-and of a yellowish tinge; and if the tubers be laid
-in a moist place, in a day or two—sometimes in a
-few hours—the same mould which destroyed the
-leaves springs from them, piercing the cuticle from
-within, yet not scattered, as on the leaves, but
-forming a conspicuous white tuft. If a section of
-the diseased tuber be made on the first symptoms
-of the disease, little brownish or rusty specks are
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_150'>150</span>found in the cellular tissue, confined, with very rare
-exceptions, to the space between the cuticle and
-the sac, if I may so call it, of spiral vessels and
-their accompanying tissue, which, springing from
-the subterranean branches, pass into the tuber,
-making their way to the several buds disposed on
-the surface. These spots consist at first of a quantity
-of discoloured cells, mixed more or less with
-others in a healthy condition. The grains of fecula
-are for a long time perfectly healthy; the cells
-themselves, so far from being looser, are more
-closely bound together than in the more healthy
-portions. The rusty spots soon exhibit a darker
-tint, spreading in every direction and becoming
-confluent; they at length extend beyond the barrier
-of vascular tissue, and attack the central mass.
-The tuber, meanwhile, assumes a disagreeable smell,
-decomposes more or less rapidly, other Fungi establish
-themselves on the surface, or in the decaying
-mass, which emits a highly fetid odour, resembling
-that of decaying agarics; the union of the cells is
-dissolved, animalcules or mites make their appearance,
-till at last the whole becomes a loathsome
-mass of putrescence.”</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>The form of the mould itself is represented
-(fig. 264) as exhibited under the microscope, with
-the nodose swellings of the branches, and spores
-attached to the tips. These acrospores are filled
-with a granular mass, from which, as hereafter
-described, zoospores are produced. The branching
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_151'>151</span>dendroidal threads of this fungus proceed from a
-creeping mycelium or spawn of entangled filaments
-which interpenetrates the matrix, upon
-which it establishes itself. Upon these threads
-spherical bodies were long since observed by Dr.
-Payen, and, under the name of <i>Artotrogus</i>, described
-by Dr. Montagne as a new species of fungus. Dr.
-de Bary failed to detect oospores on the mycelium
-of this mould, although the organs found by Payen
-in some sort resemble them. De Bary sought in
-vain, also, for the spherical bodies described by
-the author above named. It has been calculated
-that one square line of the under surface of the
-leaves is capable of producing 3,270 acrospores,
-each of which yields at least six zoospores, sometimes
-double that number; thus we have 19,620
-reproductive bodies from that small space. The
-mycelium from the zoospores is capable of penetrating
-the cellular tissue in twelve hours, and,
-when established there, it bursts through the
-stomata of the leaves, and fruit is perfected in
-from fifteen to eighteen hours. Since the zoospores
-are perfected and ready to germinate in twenty-four
-hours from their being placed in water, it
-becomes almost impossible to calculate the myriads
-of fungi that may be produced from a single centre.
-Dr. de Bary has also demonstrated that the brown
-spots so characteristic of the disease are the result
-of the action of the spores or zoospores. By
-placing a quantity of spores in a drop of water
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_152'>152</span>on the leaves, stems, and tubers under a glass
-sufficiently air-tight to prevent evaporation, he produced
-the brown spots, and traced their progress
-from the earliest stages.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>There are a few practical conclusions which may
-be drawn from these discoveries. In the first
-place, it is clearly shown by the production of the
-spots that the fungus is capable of <i>causing</i> the
-disease, a fact which has been disputed, but now
-placed beyond doubt. The inference is, that not
-only is it capable of producing, but is really the
-cause of the potato murrain. With bodies so
-minute and active as the zoospores, there can no
-longer be difficulty in accounting for their penetrating
-the tissues of the plant. They are most
-active and productive in wet weather, especially
-when it is also warm. Moisture appears to be
-essential, and a dry season the greatest enemy to
-the spread of the disease. That bodies so minute
-and subtle should have baffled all efforts to destroy
-or eradicate, is not now surprising. Whether any
-method will be found to contend successfully with
-it, is now more doubtful than ever. A careful
-reperusal of the old facts by the aid of this new
-light will tend to the elucidation of much of the
-mystery in which the subject has been involved.
-All who have hitherto been sceptical of the mycological
-source of one of the greatest pests of modern
-times should study M. de Bary’s pamphlet.</p>
-
-<div class='nf-center-c0'>
-<div class='nf-center c003'>
- <div>Plate XV.</div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<div id='i152a' class='figcenter id016'>
-<img src='images/i152a.jpg' alt='' class='ig001' />
-<div class='ic001'>
-<p>266.—<span class='sc'>Pea Mould.</span><br /><i>Peronospora Viciæ.</i></p>
-</div>
-</div>
-<div id='i152b' class='figcenter id017'>
-<img src='images/i152b.jpg' alt='' class='ig001' />
-<div class='ic001'>
-<p>267.—<span class='sc'>Anemone Mould.</span><br /><i>Peronospora pygmæa.</i></p>
-</div>
-</div>
-<p class='c023'>The potato mould has been judiciously named
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_153'>153</span><i>Peronospora infestans</i>, or, as it was at first called,
-<i>Botrytis infestans</i>; but on a revision of the genera
-<i>Botrytis</i> and <i>Peronospora</i>, it was transferred to the
-latter genus, in which it remains. Three names were
-given to it, within a short period of each other,
-by different mycologists, in ignorance of its having
-already received a name. The one we have adopted
-appears to have the priority, at least of publication,
-and was given by Dr. Montagne. That of <i>Botrytis
-devastatrix</i> was given by Madame Libert, and
-<i>Botrytis fallax</i> by M. Desmazières. The principal
-feature in this species seems to consist in the
-branches becoming alternately thickened and constricted,
-so as to resemble a moniliform string or
-necklace of little bladders or vesicles. The branches
-are also more erect than in the allied species, and
-the spores are solitary on the tips or from the sides
-of the branches, and not in pairs or clusters, and
-the tips are simple, and not bifid or trifid, as in
-most of its allies. It need scarcely be remarked,
-that a high power of the microscope is necessary
-to make out the distinctive features of the different
-members of this genus, and that to the naked eye
-they only appear as a minute whitish mould. As
-already stated, this little fungus makes its first
-appearance on the under surface of the leaves,
-especially the lower ones, of the potato plant, and
-afterwards attacks the stem, and ultimately the
-tuber. For examination it is better to select the
-leaves soon after the fungus makes its appearance.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'><span class='pageno' id='Page_154'>154</span><span class='sc'>Turnip Mould.</span>—Since the advent of the potato
-murrain a similar disease has been witnessed,
-though more limited in its extent, amongst
-Swedish turnips, commencing in little waved
-irregular lines following the course of the vessels,
-around which spots are formed by the deposition
-of dark granules in the same manner as in the
-potato. In this instance, the leaves apparently are
-first attacked in a similar manner by a species of
-mould or <i>Peronospora</i> allied to the one already
-described, but which has been long known as
-parasitic upon cruciferous plants, to which the
-turnip belongs. This species, termed <i>Peronospora
-parasitica</i>, is white in all stages of its growth. It
-is much more branched, and the branches are comparatively
-shorter than in the potato mould, and
-the tips of the branches are bifid (fig. 262). The
-acrospores are very large and globose, features
-also which distinguish this mould from the last. A
-short time since we were called to witness a bed of
-splendid cauliflowers, which had, up to that time,
-been the pride of their cultivator; but, alas! their
-glory was threatened with speedy annihilation, for
-in nearly every instance the lower leaves had
-become more or less covered on their upper surface
-with yellow spots, and beneath glaucous with the
-mould we have been describing. The diseased
-leaves were all immediately removed, but we fear
-without success, although no positive information
-has since reached us. The almost unnatural
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_155'>155</span>vigorous green of the leaves, prior to the appearance
-of the mould, is not at all an uncommon
-occurrence: this phenomenon has been noticed in
-the ears of corn, in which every grain was soon
-afterwards filled with spores of bunt.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>This species was at one time believed to be parasitic
-on the “white rust,” from which circumstance
-its specific name was derived. More precise examination
-proves that it sometimes occurs where no
-white rust is present, and therefore its parasitism is
-imaginary. The suckers in this species are large
-and penetrate the cells, often entirely filling them.
-This feature is sufficient to distinguish the mycelium
-of the mould from that of the “rust.” The turnip
-mould occurs on many cruciferous plants, and
-especially on the shepherd’s-purse, as well as upon
-the different varieties of cabbage and its more
-immediate allies.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'><span class='sc'>Onion Mould.</span>—Another disease, produced by
-fungi of the same genus, makes its appearance
-upon young onion plants in the spring. The mould
-is called <i>Peronospora Schleideniana</i>, and has many
-features in common with those already described.
-In this instance the threads are greyish and erect,
-with alternate branches, not divided by transverse
-septa, and the spores are obovate, attenuated
-towards their base (fig. 263). This mould, in some
-years, is very common and destructive, by preventing
-the young plants which are attacked from
-coming to perfection. It is not confined to the
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_156'>156</span>onion, but appears on other allied species of <i>Allium</i>
-(to which the onion belongs). The threads form
-large patches or blotches on the leaves, and sometimes
-cover them entirely. It very much resembles
-the turnip mould, from which the form of the spores
-considerably differs. This is the same species as
-that described by Caspary, and afterwards by
-Berkeley, under the name of <i>P. destructor</i>.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'><i>Lettuce Mould.</i>—A very similar mould (<i>Peronospora
-gangliformis</i>) is sometimes very common in
-spring on the under surface of the leaves of the cultivated
-lettuce, appearing in definite white mouldy
-spots. By reference to the figure of a portion of a
-thread magnified (fig. 265), it will be seen that the
-peculiar form of the tips of the branchlets evidences
-the distinctness of this species.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>The oospores are small, globose, and of a yellowish-tawny
-colour. This mould is by no means confined
-to lettuces, but has also been found on species of
-ragwort, sow-thistle, nipplewort, endive, and other
-composite plants; and has from time to time
-received numerous names, which it is unnecessary
-to enumerate.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'><span class='sc'>Tare Mould.</span>—The under surface of the leaves of
-tares, and sometimes also of peas, is liable to attack
-from an allied species of mould (<i>Peronospora
-Viciæ</i>). In the spring of 1846 it appeared amongst
-vetches in some districts to such an extent as at
-one time to threaten the destruction of the crops;
-but a succession of dry weather at once abridged
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_157'>157</span>its power and limited its mischief. Mouldy vetches
-and mouldy peas are, especially in moist seasons,
-evils to which the agriculturist knows his crops to
-be subject; he may not know, however, that this
-kind of mould (fig. <a href='#i152a'>266</a>) is of so near a kin to that
-which has acquired such wide-spread fame in connection
-with the potato. Another species of fungus
-attacks the garden pea in damp seasons, forming
-small depressed brownish spots on the leaves and
-pods; but this is quite distinct from the mould,
-though probably not less injurious.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>The fertile threads are produced in dense clusters,
-each many times branched, and bearing elliptic
-acrospores obtuse at their apices, and of a violaceous
-tint (fig. <a href='#i152a'>266</a>). The oospores are beautifully reticulated
-and of a yellowish-brown colour (<a href='#i120'>Plate X.</a>
-fig. 212).</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>Trefoil and some other allied plants are attacked
-by another species, characterized by Dr. de Bary as
-<i>Peronospora trifoliorum</i>, which we have found rather
-plentifully in some localities on lucern.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'><span class='sc'>The Parsnip Mould</span> (<i>Peronospora nivea</i>, Ung.)
-is found on many umbelliferous plants; but its
-attacks upon the parsnip are most to be deplored,
-because it injures and ultimately destroys an article
-of human food. The plants infested with this
-parasite are first attacked in the leaves, but afterwards
-the roots become spotted and diseased in a
-similar manner to the potatoes attacked by its
-congener. The disease has not hitherto been so
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_158'>158</span>general with the former as the latter; but in some
-districts it has been far from uncommon.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>The fertile threads are collected in bundles, erect,
-and not so much branched as in many other species.
-The acrospores are subglobose or ovoid, and
-papillate at their apices. This species is sometimes
-called <i>P. umbelliferarum</i>, and sometimes <i>P. macrospora</i>.
-Generally speaking the average humidity
-of a season but little affects the production of
-parasitic fungi. In a dry season, like that of 1864,
-we found as many species, and these as flourishing
-and numerous in individuals, as in a proverbially
-wet year. Such is not the case, however, with the
-moulds under notice, or such fungi as are reproduced
-through the medium of zoospores: these are
-undoubtedly less common in a very dry season;
-but it must be remembered that a single shower is
-sufficient for the development of zoospores, and
-occasional showers or heavy dews will speed them
-on their course of destruction as readily almost as
-continuous moisture. The large fungi, on the
-contrary, become very limited in numbers when the
-weather is unusually dry.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'><span class='sc'>Spinach Mould.</span>—Spinach is likewise liable to
-suffer from the establishment of a mould upon the
-under surface of the leaves: unfortunately this is
-not unfrequent, and has been known in England
-certainly for the last fifty or sixty years, since it
-was figured by Sowerby in his “British Fungi”
-as many years since. We have lately seen a bed
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_159'>159</span>of spinach, utterly destroyed by this fungus; whilst
-on another, not twenty yards apart, not a spotted
-leaf could be found. This mould is the <i>Peronospora
-effusa</i> of botanists; it occurs also on some species
-of goosefoot (<a href='#i120'>Plate X.</a> fig. 215), and probably on
-knotgrass. To the naked eye it appears in pale
-purplish-grey patches, which, when examined microscopically,
-are found to consist of dense bundles
-of branched threads, bearing ellipsoid acrospores,
-the membranes of which have a violaceous tint.
-The oogonia produced upon the mycelium vary
-considerably in size. The oospores are of the
-character delineated in our plate (<a href='#i120'>Plate X.</a> fig.
-214).</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>Hitherto all the species of mould to which we
-have had occasion to refer have been found infesting
-plants more or less employed as food; but
-there remain one or two other species to which
-we must make special reference. One of these
-affects the most universal of favourites amongst
-flowers: this is the rose mould. Attention was
-directed to this mould, and it was described for the
-first time under the name of <i>Peronospora sparsa</i>,
-in the columns of the <i>Gardeners’ Chronicle</i>, in 1862.
-It occurred on a quantity of potted rose-plants in a
-conservatory. Irregular pale brownish discoloured
-spots appeared on the upper surface of the leaves;
-these extended rapidly, and in a short time the leaves
-withered and shrivelled up, and ultimately the
-whole plant perished. A delicate greyish mould
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_160'>160</span>was to be seen by the aid of a lens, scattered over
-the under surface of the leaves. By the microscope,
-the branched threads, having the tips
-furnished with subelliptic spores, were revealed,
-and an ally of the potato mould found revelling
-amongst the roses.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>During the winter of 1863-4, we found the leaves
-of several species of dock occupied by a mould
-which appears to be a very low form of <i>Peronospora</i>.
-Its presence was indicated by brownish orbicular
-spots, on which the fertile threads occurred in
-small bundles. These threads were generally
-simple, but occasionally forked, bearing rather large
-elliptical acrospores <i>attached obliquely</i> to the tips
-of the threads (fig. 269). In consequence of this
-peculiarity, we have named the species, which does
-not appear to have been noticed before, <i>Peronospora
-obliqua</i>. It is clearly very distinct from another
-species found on dock leaves by Corda.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>Of the remaining British species, one (<i>P.
-Arenariæ</i>) is found on the leaves of the three-veined
-sandwort (fig. <a href='#i160a'>268</a>); another attacks the
-red corn-poppy, a third is found on the common
-nettle, one on the brooklime, another on the
-wood-anemone (fig. <a href='#i152b'>267</a>), and another on the figwort.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>Doubtless all the species in this genus are
-possessed of the third means of reproduction, by
-zoospores, as discovered in the potato mould, not
-only from the acrospores, but also from the oospores.</p>
-
-<div class='nf-center-c0'>
-<div class='nf-center c003'>
- <div>Plate XVI.</div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<div id='i160a' class='figcenter id018'>
-<img src='images/i160a.jpg' alt='' class='ig001' />
-<div class='ic001'>
-<p>268.—<span class='sc'>Sandwort Mould.</span><br /><i>Peronospora Arenariæ.</i></p>
-</div>
-</div>
-<div id='i160b' class='figcenter id019'>
-<img src='images/i160b.jpg' alt='' class='ig001' />
-<div class='ic001'>
-<p>269.—<span class='sc'>Dock Mould.</span><br /><i>Peronospora obliqua.</i></p>
-</div>
-</div>
-<p class='c023'><span class='pageno' id='Page_161'>161</span>The fearful rapidity with which this method enables
-them to multiply themselves may account for their
-widely spreading and devastating power. No other
-genus of fungi can parallel this in the number of
-species injurious to the field or the garden, or
-in which the injuries inflicted are so great and
-irremediable.</p>
-
-<hr class='c028' />
-
-<p class='c008'>N.B.—Since the foregoing chapter was in type,
-the Rev. M. J. Berkeley informs us that both Mr.
-Broome and himself have examined the mould on
-dock-leaves, to which we have given the name of
-<i>Peronospora obliqua</i>, and have come to the conclusion
-that it is truly a member of that genus, and
-not hitherto described; but they are also of opinion
-that it is the same mould as one described by Dr.
-Montagne as <i>Ascomyces Rumicis</i>. We concur with
-them in thinking it deficient in the important
-characteristics of <i>Ascomyces</i>, and therefore retain
-its proposed name of <i>P. obliqua</i>.</p>
-<div class='pbb'>
- <hr class='pb c003' />
-</div>
-<div class='chapter'>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_162'>162</span>
- <h2 id='ch12' class='c012'>CHAPTER XII.<br /> <br /><em class='gesperrt'><span class='small'>WHITE MILDEWS OR BLIGHTS.</span></em></h2>
-</div>
-<p class='drop-capa0_3_0_65 c013'>NOTWITHSTANDING the inconvenience to
-ourselves of calling very different fungi by
-the same common name of “mildew,” the popular
-mind does not recognize the inconvenience, since
-it scarcely troubles itself to inquire whether they
-are not all the same thing. In obedience to this
-custom, we again write of “mildew,” or “blight,”
-as it is called in some districts, but of a very
-different kind to that which is so detrimental to
-growing crops of corn. In the present instance
-it is our intention to illustrate a group of fungi
-which are exceedingly common, and which differ
-greatly in appearance and structure from any to
-which we have had occasion to allude. To obtain
-a general knowledge of these forms let our reader
-proceed at once to a clump of rank grass; if it is
-his fortune to dwell in the country, the walk of a
-few yards will suffice. Let him examine this clump
-more carefully, perhaps, than he has been accustomed
-to do, and we venture to predict that he
-will find some of the leaves covered with what
-appears to be a dirty white mould, or mildew
-(<a href='#i128'>Plate XI.</a> fig. 235). One of these leaves should be
-collected as carefully and conveyed to the microscope
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_163'>163</span>as speedily as possible, taking care not to touch, or
-brush it against any other object so as to disturb
-the arrangement of the delicate little threads upon
-its surface. If a small portion, say about an inch,
-is cut from this leaf with a sharp pair of scissors,
-and laid upon a slide, or pinned down upon a strip
-of sheet cork, so as to keep it flat, and then submitted
-to examination under the microscope, with
-an inch power, a beautiful forest of crystalline
-vegetation will be observed. If the examiner on
-this occasion should not possess a binocular microscope
-we are sorry for him, because in that case he
-will not see all that is to be seen under the greatest
-advantages. If we ever truly enjoy looking through
-such an instrument, it is on an occasion like this,
-when a low power is all that is needed, and the
-object is required to be seen in relief. It is scarcely
-possible to convey an adequate idea of the beauty
-of such a scene as the microscope reveals upon this
-fragment of grass-leaf. Little bundles of delicate
-threads, clear and crystalline, are seated upon a
-slender branching mycelium. These threads, sometimes
-erect, sometimes drooping, flexuous, or prostrate,
-are composed of numerous roundish or
-spherical cells attached to each other in a moniliform
-or bead-like manner (fig. 236). These easily
-separate from each other. Let a portion of the
-threads be removed from the leaf on the point of a
-lancet and laid upon a glass slide, with a thin cover
-over them. Submit this object to a quarter-inch
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_164'>164</span>power, as a drop of water is let fall at the edge of
-the cover and insinuates itself, by capillary attraction,
-between the two plates of glass. So soon as
-it touches the moniliform threads, the disunion
-commences, and almost before they are enveloped
-in the fluid, two spherules will scarce remain attached
-to each other. This delicate little mould
-on the grass leaf at one time bore the name of
-<i>Oidium monilioides</i>. It is now regarded only as a
-condition of another minute fungus, to which attention
-will shortly be directed.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>The vine disease, so fearfully destructive on the
-Continent, and not altogether unknown in this
-country, is another of these incomplete fungi.
-From an individual who at the time of its first
-discovery in the south of England took considerable
-interest in the subject, it was called <i>Oidium
-Tuckeri</i>, which name it continued to bear, both
-here and abroad, until, with many others, probably
-nearly all of the same genus, it was found to be
-only a barren state of what is called by mycologists
-an <i>Erysiphe</i>. The real discoverer of this mildew
-was undoubtedly the Rev. M. J. Berkeley, who has
-successfully devoted a long life to the study of
-these minute organisms, through evil and through
-good report, and when that study was beset with
-more difficulties, and received less encouragement
-than at present. If, towards the autumn, we should
-again collect some whitened, mouldy, or mildewed
-grass-leaves, similar in appearance to those mentioned
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_165'>165</span>above, and carefully look at them with a
-pocket lens, little black points, almost as small as
-a pin-point, or more resembling the full stop with
-which, this sentence closes, will be found scattered
-over the white threads. The aid of the microscope
-must be again sought to make out the structure of
-the little black dots. Closely nestling upon the
-mycelium, the little points will prove to be spherical
-brownish, conceptacles, surrounded with transparent
-floccose appendages. Many other species
-are far more beautiful than that of the grass-leaf,
-as will be seen by reference to our plate. The
-variation consists chiefly in the form of the
-appendages which spring from the conceptacle
-and surround it in a radiating (as in figs. 219,
-222, 225, and 230), or in a more or less confused
-and entangled manner (as in figs. 216, 240, 245,
-and 251). The surface of the conceptacle is minutely
-reticulated, and its base is attached to the
-mycelium. When first formed, these globose conceptacles
-are almost colourless; they afterwards
-acquire a yellow colour, and are ultimately of a
-deep brown. The appendages are seldom at all
-coloured. Within the conceptacle are contained
-from one to several transparent obovoid sacs, or
-spore-cases, called <i>sporangia</i>, enclosing a definite
-number of spores (figs. 218, 224, 228, &amp;c.), which
-vary in different species. In the hazel mildew, for
-instance, there are two spores in each <i>sporangium</i>;
-in the willow mildew four; in the maple mildew
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_166'>166</span>eight; in the grass mildew, and some others,
-numerous. The tips of the appendages are variable,
-and often elegant (figs. 227, 231, 233, 234, and
-247), sometimes simple and at others symmetrically
-branched. All the species occur on the still
-living and green parts of plants, especially the
-leaves, and are therefore truly parasitic. A pocket
-lens will show whether any conceptacles are present
-on any suspicious leaf which may be collected, but
-high powers of the microscope are essential for
-their complete examination. It is during autumn,
-when vegetation begins to languish, that we shall
-be most successful in searching for specimens.
-They will then be found almost everywhere, and
-the white mycelium forms an object too conspicuous
-for them to be readily overlooked. Botanically,
-nearly all the species were at one period included
-in one genus, under the name of <i>Erysiphe</i>, a name
-derived from the Greek, and signifying “mildew;”
-at the present time they are distributed through
-several genera, the chief distinctions of which are
-based upon the form of the appendages. Though
-personally disposed to question the generic value of
-such distinctions, it would be imprudent to adopt
-any other names here than those to be found in
-recent English works on fungi.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>The first species in our enumeration is found on
-cultivated roses. What a deplorable picture does
-a favourite rose-bush present when attacked by this
-mildew! The leaves blistered, puckered, and contorted;
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_167'>167</span>their petioles and the peduncles and calyces
-of the flowers swollen, distorted, and grey with
-mould; and the whole plant looking so diseased
-and leprous that it needs no mycologist to tell that
-the rose is mildewed. The conceptacle in this species
-is minute, and contains but one sporangium,
-which is one of the characters of the genus in which
-it is now included, and a more justifiable distinction
-than the ramifications of the appendages. The mycelium
-is rather profuse, and the threads or appendages
-which spring from the conceptacle are simple
-and floccose (fig. 216). The sporangium contains
-eight ovate spores. This species (<i>Sphærotheca
-pannosa</i>, Lev.), in its oidioid or conidiiferous form,
-was for some time known under the name of <i>Oidium
-leucoconium</i>.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>An allied species constitutes the hop-mildew, a
-visitation with which some of our Kentish friends
-are too familiar. This is not a prejudiced species
-in the choice of its habitation, since it is found on
-many other plants, where it flourishes with equal
-vigour. The meadow-sweet, burnet, scabious,
-teasle, dandelion, and other composite plants, plantain,
-and plants of the cucumber family, all suffer
-more or less from its roving disposition. The mycelium
-of whitish threads is even more conspicuous
-than in the last species, but the conceptacles are
-often not to be found at all. These are also very
-minute and most common on the under surface of
-the leaves. The appendages, or fulcra, are simple,
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_168'>168</span>floccose (fig. 217), and coloured. The sporangia are
-found singly in each conceptacle, and each, sporangium
-contains eight spores.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>An autumnal stroll amongst hazel-bushes, when
-the nuts are ripe, will lead, if the nuts are not a
-greater attraction, to the discovery of whitish,
-patches on the under surface of the leaves, caused
-by the mycelium of the hazel mildew (<i>Phyllactinia
-guttata</i>, Lev.). These patches are less distinct and
-conspicuous than in many other species, but the
-little blackish dots of the conceptacles may be distinguished
-by sharp eyes without the use of the
-lens. Though possessing a decided preference for
-the hazel, this species is also found on the green
-leaves of the hawthorn, ash, elm, birch, sallow,
-beech, oak, and hornbeam. The conceptacles are
-larger than in the two preceding species, and somewhat
-depressed above. The appendages are few
-(fig. 219), radiating, rigid, and acicular, or like
-needles. Each conceptacle contains eight or more
-sporangia, and each sporangium has from two to
-four spores (fig. 220). This species being very
-common, its conceptacles large, and produced
-copiously, and its appendages distinct, it will
-prove a good type with which the student of these
-fungi may commence his examinations. This is
-the only representative which we possess of the
-genus established by M. Leveille for such of
-the <i>Erysiphei</i> as have the conceptacle depressed,
-and the appendages rigid and simple; by which
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_169'>169</span>features it is distinguished from genuine species
-of <i>Erysiphe</i>.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>Two species, also common, having many features
-agreeing with each other, are found on the leaves
-of the maple and the willow. The willow blight
-(<i>Uncinula adunca</i>, Lev.) is found irrespectively on
-various species of poplar and willow (fig. 221). In
-size and external appearances, to the unaided eye,
-it seems scarcely to differ from the preceding, but
-more minute examination will show that in the
-appendages there is an appreciable difference.
-Still rigid, but no longer aciculate, the tips bent
-or curved like a little hook, or curled upon themselves
-(fig. 223), radiating and numerous (fig. 222),
-and at length tending upwards. Many sporangia
-are contained within each conceptacle, each of
-which is furnished with four spores. The amateur
-must not be disappointed, if, on examining mature
-conceptacles with a view to the discovery of the
-sporangia, he finds only free spores. The investing
-membrane is very delicate, and disappears generally
-as the spores are matured.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>The “blight” or “mildew” which occurs on the
-common hedge-maple, as well as on sycamore
-leaves, is exceedingly conspicuous when occurring
-on the former plant. The whole bush often presents
-a hoary appearance as if sprinkled with
-powdered chalk. In the spring, the under surface
-of the leaves of the same plant are liable to become
-hoary from another cause. The whiteness occurs
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_170'>170</span>in patches, has often a pinkish or violaceous tint,
-and glistens like hoar-frost. This affection of the
-leaves was, at one time, believed to be produced by
-a fungus which was called <i>Erineum acerinum</i>, but
-now it is regarded as a diseased state of the tissues.
-In the maple mildew, both surfaces of the leaves
-are alike affected, and the little, dark, point-like
-conceptacles will be found studded over both. It
-is not uncommon to meet with very white leaves,
-caused by the mycelium, but which bear no fruit.
-The appendages in this species are shorter than in
-the last (fig. 225), and the tips are bifid (fig. 226),
-or divided into two short branches, each of which
-is bifid, and uncinate or hook-shaped (fig. 227). The
-conceptacles contain not less than eight sporangia,
-each of which encloses eight spores.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>Amongst the parasites that prey upon the much
-abused berberry (which has been charged in turn
-with producing the mildew in corn), is one which
-causes the green leaves to assume a chalky appearance
-(fig. 229), though less conspicuously than in
-the maple blight. This parasite is the berberry
-mildew (<i>Microsphæria berberidis</i>, Lev.). In such
-localities as the writer has met with the berberry
-suffering from mildew, he has invariably found a
-larger proportion of leaves with the barren mycelium
-than of those on which the conceptacles were
-developed. Perhaps in other localities this may not
-be the case. The appendages, as will be seen on
-reference to our plate, differ materially from any of
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_171'>171</span>those to which we have referred; indeed, this genus
-(or sub-genus) has the most elaborate and beautiful
-forms in these appendages of any of the Erysiphei.
-A figure is given of the tip of a fulcrum from a
-continental species (<i>M. Ehrenbergii</i>, Lev.), not yet
-found in this country (fig. 233). In the berberry
-blight the appendages are straight at the base,
-but afterwards become forked, each fork being
-again forked, and these yet again branched in a
-similar manner (fig. 230); so that a complex dichotomous
-tip is formed to each of the appendages
-(fig. 231). Each conceptacle contains about six
-sporangia, and each sporangium contains from six
-to eight spores (fig. 232).</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>The common gooseberry is also liable to a visitation
-from an allied species, in many respects closely
-similar, but differing in having the tips of the
-appendages more branched, and the extremities of
-the ultimate branchlets are not entire and attenuated,
-as in the berberry mildew; but divided into
-two toothlike processes. The conceptacles in this
-species contain from four to eight sporangia, each
-of which has four or five spores.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>In England, the leaves of the guelder-rose, and
-in France (perhaps also in this country) those of
-the alder, nourish a parasite belonging to this division.
-This “blight” possesses so much in common
-with others to which allusion has been made, that
-it will scarcely be necessary to describe it in detail.
-A figure of the tip of one of the appendages of the
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_172'>172</span>variety found on the alder is given in the <a href='#i128'>Plate XI.</a>
-fig. 234.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>We have found another species which had not
-been before noticed in this country (<i>M. Hedwigii</i>,
-Lev.), on the leaves of the mealy guelder-rose in the
-vicinity of Darenth Wood, near Dartford, in Kent.
-The mealy character of the leaves of this plant, and
-the minute size of the conceptacles of the parasite,
-render it difficult to find; indeed, it could not be
-noticed unless it were sought for, as we sought it,
-lens in hand. It only occurs on the under surface
-of the leaves: the mycelium is very web-like and
-fugacious, the conceptacles minute, globose, and
-scattered (fig. 243). Four sporangia, each containing
-but four spores (fig. 244), are enclosed in each
-conceptacle, which is surrounded by a few appendages
-(about six) thrice dichotomous, and thickened
-at the tips of the ultimate branches, which are
-incurved (fig. 247).</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>The species of true <i>Erysiphe</i> are distinguished
-botanically from the foregoing by the floccose
-character of the appendages, in which feature they
-accord with the species found on the rose and the
-hop, but from which they differ in the conceptacles
-containing numerous sporangia instead of only one,
-as in those species.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>One of the most common and conspicuous of these
-is found on the leaves and leaf-like stipules of the
-garden pea. Every leaf in a crop will sometimes
-suffer, and the gardener, to his great mortification,
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_173'>173</span>finds that the mildew is more prolific than his peas.
-The leaves become sickly and yellow as the mycelium
-of the fungus spreads over them, when they
-present a peculiar appearance, as if growing beside
-a chalky road in dry dusty weather, and had become
-covered with comminuted chalk. Soon the conceptacles
-appear, profusely scattered over the white
-threads, like grains of gunpowder (fig. 237), and after
-a brief struggle for existence the pea and its parasite
-die together. In this species (<i>Erysiphe Martii</i>,
-Lev.), the appendages are nearly transparent, short,
-and much interwoven with the mycelium (fig. 238),
-the globose sporangia containing from four to
-eight spores (fig. 239). It is not confined to peas,
-although that habitat has been here given for it,
-because it is so common upon them. Beans, melilot,
-St. John’s-wort, some umbelliferous plants, and the
-meadow-sweet, have all been found affected.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>The species found on grasses, especially the cocksfoot,
-has been already alluded to. The conceptacles
-contain from twenty to twenty-four ovate sporangia,
-each enclosing eight spores. The appendages and
-mycelium are much interwoven.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>Another of these “white mildews,” not only on
-account of its frequency of occurrence on certain
-plants, but also from the numerous species of
-phanerogamous plants on which it is found
-(fig. 240), may be truly designated “common”
-(<i>Erysiphe communis</i>, Lk.); many kinds of crow-foot,
-especially <i>Ranunculus acris</i>, are subject to its
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_174'>174</span>parasitism. It is found also on other plants of the
-same natural order, on the rest-harrow, trefoils,
-enchanter’s nightshade, bindweed, and knotgrass.
-There are from four to eight sporangia in each conceptacle,
-containing from four to eight spores (fig.
-241). In this species, more especially, M. Tulasne
-found curious sucker-like processes developed on
-the threads of the mycelium (fig. 242): their office
-may probably be only that of attachment.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>Of the other species found in Britain an enumeration
-will suffice, since they contain no feature of
-interest to the microscopist; and all the members
-of this section are far less beautiful than those in
-other genera (especially <i>Microsphæria</i>).</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>The leaves of the dogwood or cornel (figs. 245,
-246) are the home of one species (<i>E. tortilis</i>, Lk.),
-and the burdock of another (<i>E. Montagnei</i>, Lev.).
-Both of these, in addition to the above, have sporangia
-which contain more than two spores. There
-are also two species in which only two spores are
-contained in each sporidium. One of these (<i>E.
-Linkii</i>, Lev.) is found on both surfaces of the leaves
-of the mugwort (figs. 248, 249); the other (<i>E. lamprocarpa</i>,
-Lev.) occurs on salsafy, scorzonera,
-weasel-snout, and plantain (figs. 250, 251).</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>These complete the <i>Erysiphei</i>; but there are allied
-species of too much interest not to be noticed in
-connection with them. Three very singular fungi
-are found on damp straw and paper; two on the
-former and one on the latter. Of the species
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_175'>175</span>occurring on straw, the most common one is figured,
-natural size, in our plate (fig. 257); but from this
-no idea can be formed of its structure, which in
-some points resembles an <i>Erysiphe</i>. The conceptacles
-are thin and brittle, and are clothed externally
-with long dark-coloured branched hairs
-(figs. 258, 259). The conceptacle contains long
-narrow sporangia, each enclosing dark, almost
-black, lemon-shaped sporidia. For low powers
-this is a very interesting object. The minute structure
-affords no feature of popular interest. This
-fungus (which bears the name of <i>Chætomium
-elatum</i>) is common on old straw, thatch, reeds,
-matting, &amp;c., resembling small brown tufts of hair,
-visible to the naked eye.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>Paper much exposed to damp will occasionally
-develop a similar “bristle-mould,” surrounded by
-a yellowish spot (<i>Chætomium chartarum</i>, Ehrb.);
-but it is not so common as the last. In habit
-and structure it is very similar (figs. 252, 253).</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>In 1838, the Rev. M. J. Berkeley announced the
-discovery by him of a singular production, for
-which he was unable to find a fitting location in
-any genus then established, and for which he accordingly
-characterized a new one, under the name
-of <i>Ascotricha</i>. This new species of paper mildew
-was found by him on some printed paper in a box.
-It somewhat resembles the other species above
-alluded to, at a casual glance; but more minute
-examination will reveal its differences. The author
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_176'>176</span>to whom we are indebted for this species thus
-describes its development. At first it appears as
-a minute branched mould interspersed with globose
-brownish conidia. As it advances in growth, globose
-black peridia become visible amongst the
-threads, clothed with and supported by alternately
-branched obscurely-jointed filaments, the branches
-of which generally form an acute angle with the
-stem (fig. 254). The ramification of these is very
-peculiar, the stem and main shaft of each sub-division
-being almost constantly shortened and
-surmounted by the branches given off near its apex;
-this, again, is often abbreviated and another branchlet
-given off, which again surpasses it; and occasionally
-the same circumstance takes place a third
-time. The apices are clavate and colourless; the
-rest of the filaments, when viewed by transmitted
-light, brown, even, and pellucid: a few globose
-conidia are usually attached to them (fig. 255). The
-conceptacle is thin, black to the naked eye, of
-an olive-brown under the microscope, filled with
-a mass of linear extremely transparent asci (fig. 256),
-each containing a single row of broadly elliptic
-chocolate sporidia. These have a paler border;
-sometimes the colour entirely vanishes, either from
-age or abortion, and there is only a minute globose
-nucleus or more probably a vesicle of air, in the
-centre; occasionally they become so transparent
-that the globular bodies alone are visible. After
-the conceptacles burst, several are frequently collected
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_177'>177</span>together into an irregular linear body, which
-consists principally of the conglomerated sporidia.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>One other very common and troublesome little
-fungus (<i>Eurotium herbariorum</i>) will for the present
-close our examples. This is found creeping
-over dried plants preserved in herbaria, on
-decaying fruit, preserves, and various other substances,
-sometimes animal as well as vegetable,
-but chiefly the latter. To the naked eye it appears
-as a myriad of little yellow spherical bodies,
-of the size of very small pins’ heads, resting
-upon fine cobweb-like threads (fig. 260). When
-magnified, the surface of the conceptacles is seen to
-be reticulated (fig. 261). In the interior the sporidia
-are borne, contained also, as in the former
-instance, in asci. It has been considered <i>probable</i>,
-but as yet not fully proved, that this mildew is
-a compound fruited (ascigerous) condition of an
-equally common mould (<i>Aspergillus</i>).</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>Dr. Shortt, of Chingleput, in a recent report
-on the growth and production of Indian Cotton,
-remarks that the plants are subject to the
-attacks of a kind of mildew. He writes:—“They
-appear in the form of rounded fibres
-or thallus, shooting up in the air, having the
-lamina of the leaf as a base, and feeling villous to
-the touch. The small fibrillæ that form the nap
-appear shooting up as sharp projections when seen
-by the naked eye; under the microscope they are
-found to consist of pointed tubes, interspersed here
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_178'>178</span>and there with minute granular cells. It first
-attacks either the upper surface of the petioles, or
-the margins of the leaf, gradually extending over
-the lamina, and matting together the whole leaf
-into a greyish-white, felty mass. At first it attacks
-the young shoots and tender leaves, preventing
-them from expanding. The extension of the parasite
-deprives the plant of its juices, and eventually
-either destroys or renders it sterile. The spores
-seem to be derived from the atmosphere, and
-finding the plant in a state fit to receive them,
-from either the results of excessive cultivation, or
-from the effects of heat and want of moisture
-rendering it unhealthy, and thus favouring the
-reception of the spores of the fungi. Another
-variety speckles the leaves with whitish dots.
-These remain separate, but the lamina is covered
-with them, and in time the leaf changes colour,
-becomes yellowish, and eventually dies away. This
-is evidently the disease called <i>Bunt</i>, or some variety
-of it, as it is seated beneath the epidermis, and
-eventually the spores escape. Under the microscope
-they seem to consist of small dark cells or
-spots attached to a thread-like mycelium.”</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>The writer seems certainly to have made a
-mistake in its affinities, and on the faith of the
-above quotation we should be more disposed to
-regard it as an <i>Erysiphe</i>. It is to be hoped that
-specimens of the affected leaves will be forwarded
-to this country for examination.</p>
-<div class='pbb'>
- <hr class='pb c003' />
-</div>
-<div class='chapter'>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_179'>179</span>
- <h2 id='ch13' class='c012'>CHAPTER XIII.<br /> <br /><em class='gesperrt'><span class='small'>SUGGESTIONS.</span></em></h2>
-</div>
-<p class='drop-capa0_3_0_65 c013'>IF, in offering a few practical suggestions, we
-either repeat ourselves, or communicate
-common-place hints, those who may know already
-all we shall essay to tell them will please to pardon
-and pass on.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>All the information essential under this head
-relates to collecting, examining, and preserving
-microscopic fungi.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>Collecting does not differ, except in the objects
-themselves, from any other botanical collecting.
-Those who attempt it must be prepared to sacrifice
-their kid gloves and patent-leather boots, to put on
-waterproofs and perseverance, and come home
-sometimes disappointed. The requisites for good
-work are but few, and easily supplied. A strong
-knife, a pocket lens, and a box or leather bag,
-will be all that is really essential. But where shall
-we go—and when? Hedge-banks, the sides of
-ditches, borders of woods, anywhere, if the plants
-are to be found on which the fungi are parasitic.
-We flatter ourselves on being rather successful in
-collecting, and our favourite localities have always
-been the dampest places in woods, railway-banks,
-and waste places. It is a great mistake to endeavour
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_180'>180</span>to go over a large tract of ground. We have
-spent a whole day in a little chalkpit, which had
-fallen into disuse, and grown wild. Fifty yards
-into a wood is as much, as we attempt, when alone;
-and a spot six yards square has afforded us occupation
-for hours. It is better to examine a small
-space thoroughly than to scamper on, mile after
-mile, and find nothing.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>When? is as much to be noted as where! All
-the year round we shall be sure of finding something
-of interest. As soon as the last patch of
-winter’s snow has melted from the ground, and
-green leaves begin to unfold themselves, the search
-may begin. Cluster-cups (<i>Æcidium</i>) will be the
-earliest forms encountered. On the leaves of
-<i>Lapsana communis</i>, and the pilewort, these will
-be found before the majority of plants have burst
-their buds. Henceforth, other forms will gradually
-appear, until May or June. One or two species of
-<i>Puccinia</i> will be seen in April or May, but from
-that period until autumn, species of <i>Trichobasis</i>
-will be common. In June and July the smuts
-belonging to the genus <i>Ustilago</i> are most plentiful,
-and from August to October <i>Puccinia</i> and its
-allied genera will have the ascendant; so that from
-March to October there is continually succeeding
-each other some species of parasitic fungus belonging
-to the Uredines. From October to March need
-be no more a season of repose from the search of
-these minute plants than from March to October.
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_181'>181</span>So long as the ground is not covered with snow
-there will always be something to find on dead
-leaves, rotten sticks, &amp;c., when there is not a green
-leaf to be seen. But these belong to a section to
-which we have studiously avoided all reference in
-the foregoing pages.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>General instructions will not always apply; but
-in most instances, the lowest and earliest leaves,
-in which vitality appears to decline, will be most
-likely to suffer from the attacks of fungi. This
-rule must not be too stringently applied; the species
-of <i>Æcidium</i>, for instance, will generally be found
-on vigorous green leaves.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>Having found a plant infected with some rust
-or brand, and by means of a pocket lens assured
-yourself that it is such, although the power is
-insufficient to tell what it is, collect as many leaves
-as you are likely to require; place them flat one
-upon the other, to prevent their curling up at the
-edges, should the weather be hot, and yourself far
-from home, and lay them in your box; or if you
-should take in preference an old book with stiff
-covers, place them separately between the leaves
-of your book, and they will be in still better condition,
-if you desire to preserve them. Arrived at
-home with the results of your trip, proceed at once
-to lay them between folds of blotting-paper, submit
-them to a gentle pressure, and change the papers
-daily until your leaves are dry, not forgetting to
-keep a scrap of paper with each collection, stating
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_182'>182</span>date and locality, to which, after microscopical
-examination, the name may be added. When
-thoroughly dry, your leaves may be preserved for
-reference in old envelopes, with the particulars
-endorsed on the outside. Fungi on leaves will
-generally be examined to the greatest advantage
-in the fresh state, but if too much pressure is not
-employed in the drying, it will not be difficult even
-in that condition to make out their characteristic
-features. Care must be taken, by changing their
-position, that moulds of other kinds do not establish
-themselves upon the specimens in drying,
-or that when dried they do not fall a prey to <i>Eurotium
-herbariorum</i>.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>If it is intended to add these leaves to your
-herbarium, or to form a special herbarium for them,
-they should be mounted on white paper, first by
-affixing one or two leaves by means of thin glue
-to a paper about four inches square, on which the
-name, date, and locality may be written, and
-attaching several of these <i>species</i>-papers to a larger
-or <i>genus</i>-paper, or by devoting each larger paper
-to a species, adding in future other varieties, and
-enclosing all the <i>species</i>-papers of the same genus
-within a folded sheet, on which the name of the
-genus is written.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>We have adopted, for our own herbarium, the
-“foolscap” size. A sheet of paper receives within
-its fold the specimens of a single species; these
-are affixed to the right-hand page, when the sheet
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_183'>183</span>is open, and a small envelope is attached by its
-face to the same page at the bottom, in which loose
-specimens are kept for minute and special examination,
-or as duplicates. When the sheet is folded,
-the specific name is written at the right-hand lower
-corner, or, what is better, a strip containing that
-name and its number is cut from a copy of the
-“Index Fungorum,” kept for the purpose, and
-gummed in its place. The remainder of this page,
-which is of white cartridge paper, is occupied with
-memoranda referring to the species enclosed,
-sketches of the spores, synonyms, references to
-descriptions, &amp;c. All the species-papers of each
-genus are placed together within a sheet of brown
-paper, half an inch larger in each direction, with
-the name of the genus written at the left-hand
-corner. A piece of millboard, the size of the covers
-when folded, separates each order.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>When a leaf, or other portion of a plant, is to be
-examined under the microscope, with the view of
-determining the genus and species of its parasite,
-it may be fastened with small pins to a piece of
-sheet cork, two or three inches square, and about
-one-eighth of an inch in thickness, such as used
-for lining entomological cabinets, and so placed
-under a lens that it may easily be brought into
-focus, and both hands left at liberty; or a dissecting
-microscope may be used for the purpose. From
-one of the pustules the spores may be removed on
-the sharp point of a penknife, and placed in a drop
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_184'>184</span>of water on a glass slide. A thin glass cover is
-placed over the drop of water, and the slide is
-submitted to examination. For further satisfaction
-it will often be found necessary to make carefully
-a thin section of a pustule, and place this under the
-microscope, a more troublesome but also much
-more satisfactory method. Reference to the Appendix
-will soon determine the name and position
-of the fungus, provided it belongs to the section to
-which this volume is devoted.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>If it is thought desirable to mount the spores as
-permanent objects, there is no obstacle to such a
-proceeding. The spores of the different species of
-<i>Aregma</i>, of <i>Triphragmium</i>, and many of the <i>Pucciniæ</i>,
-will be worth the trouble. We have tried
-several media, and only adopted Glycerine or
-Balsam; either of these, especially the former, if
-the greater difficulty of securely closing can be
-overcome, will answer the purpose.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>It should be remarked that in the examination
-of moulds, such as those of the genus <i>Peronospora</i>,
-included in this work, if any fluid be added, the
-acrospores are immediately disconnected from the
-threads, and float in the medium; so that if their
-mode of attachment or arrangement would be
-studied, that must be achieved without the addition
-of any fluid whatever.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>The best methods of observing germination, the
-production of zoospores, &amp;c., have been detailed
-already.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'><span class='pageno' id='Page_185'>185</span>Thus do we arrive at the close of the task which
-we had set ourselves to perform. This fragment
-of a history of microscopic fungi goes forth to
-plead for students, and prepare the path for
-somewhat more complete. Is it not a shame that
-more than two thousand species of plants (never
-mind how minute, how insignificant) should be
-known to exist, and constitute a flora, in a nation
-amongst the foremost in civilization, and yet be
-without a complete record? It is nevertheless true
-that hundreds of minute organisms, exquisite in
-form, marvellous in structure, mysterious in
-development, injurious to some, linked with
-the existence of all, are known to flourish in
-Britain without a history or description, in the
-language of, or produced in, the country they
-inhabit. It is also true that the descriptions, by
-which they should be known, of hundreds of the
-rest lie buried in a floating literature whence the
-youthful and ardent student needs, not only youth
-and ardour, but leisure and perseverance unlimited
-to unearth them. This, however, by the way; we
-may be too great dotards on our native land, and
-foolish in our desire to see her in advance, and not
-in the rear in scientific attainments, pursuits, and
-productions of other and, perhaps, less favoured
-nations.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>Already we fear that some of our readers will
-have thought our story of rust, brand, and mildew
-interminable, and looked anxiously for the close.
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_186'>186</span>On the other hand, we would flatter ourselves into
-the belief that some have made a new acquaintance
-with these minute and mysterious forms, and
-would fain know more. The groups of fungi
-which we have endeavoured to illustrate have,
-with but few exceptions, one feature in common,
-<i>i.e.</i>, that they are parasitic on living plants. These
-constitute but a small portion of the microscopical
-species found in this country. To the elegant
-forms of mould which inhabit decaying vegetable
-substances no allusion has been made. These constitute
-a fairy flora of forests and gardens with
-features as varied, and fruits as multiform, as those
-of the trees and flowers of the earth. The numerous,
-and often marvellous, phases of low life
-developed upon dead leaves and rotten sticks,
-would in description occupy a far greater space
-than we have devoted to our subject. Yet, for all
-these, we have not spared so much as a passing
-word. The treasures still left unopened are far
-richer than even those we have revealed. The
-gates of another world have been thrown open,
-but we have scarcely passed the threshold. A
-minutely and elaborately illuminated page of the
-book of Nature has been turned, and we have
-only perused a single line. We might traverse
-the primeval forests of the new world, and explore
-the unknown regions of the old, and not encounter
-so much to excite our admiration, or cause our
-wonder, as lies about our feet at home; marvels
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_187'>187</span>which we tread beneath our feet, or kick from our
-path, because they appear to be only rotten sticks,
-withered grass, and decaying leaves. All this may
-appear as the dream of an enthusiast, or the ravings
-of one on whom the moon has shone too often.
-When Columbus spoke of a new world beyond the
-seas, which he longed to seek and explore, some
-believed him duped, and others called him mad.
-We write of no chimerical El Dorado, we speak
-of no undiscovered world, and yet we seem to
-allude to wonders still unknown, because so few
-have had the courage to venture upon the journey
-for themselves.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>In sober earnestness, however, let us commend
-this pursuit to all who possess a microscope and
-leisure to use it. It may be for a time the “pursuit
-of knowledge under difficulties,” on account
-of the condition of our literature on this special
-subject; but many workers will produce more
-readers, and good books will come when there are
-more to purchase and appreciate. It is not improbable
-that in more cases than have come under
-our own observation, microscopists wearied of
-diatoms and allied forms, or deeming themselves
-in possession of all that is novel or interesting in
-this direction, are seeking for a new field of labour,
-and a new subject to kindle up a new enthusiasm.
-To these we have advised, and to any more such
-we continue to advise, that fungi should have a
-fair trial. If variety is desired, here they will
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_188'>188</span>have at least 2,000 species for a knowledge of
-which the microscope is essential. If they thirst
-for discovery, let them be assured that here also
-the earnest worker is sure to meet with such
-a reward. Or if they would acquaint themselves
-with the manifestations of Divine power as developed
-in the most minute of created things, let
-them follow such observers as Tulasne and De
-Bary, and seek the “why and the wherefore” of
-the phenomena of mycetal life.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>If there should still be any hesitation whether
-there is in this pursuit sufficient of the element of
-variety, for those who do not desire to pursue the
-subject into its deepest scientific recesses, to
-render it available for them, let them go to a
-good public library, such as that of the British
-Museum, and inquire for the large illustrated work
-by Corda, entitled “Icones Fungorum,” or the
-more recent volumes by Tulasne (Selecta Fungorum
-Carpologia), and examine the figures of microscopic
-fungi in either of those works, and decide for
-themselves.</p>
-<div class='pbb'>
- <hr class='pb c003' />
-</div>
-<div class='chapter'>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_189'>189</span>
- <h2 id='app1' class='c029'>APPENDIX A.</h2>
-</div>
-<hr class='c030' />
-
-<div class='nf-center-c0'>
- <div class='nf-center'>
- <div><span class='large'>CLASSIFICATION &amp; DESCRIPTIONS OF FUNGI CONTAINED IN THIS VOLUME.</span></div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<hr class='c009' />
-<h3 class='c031'><b>ÆCIDIACEI</b>.</h3>
-<table class='table2' summary=''>
-<colgroup>
-<col width='70%' />
-<col width='30%' />
-</colgroup>
- <tr>
- <td class='c024'>Peridium elongated—</td>
- <td class='c025'>&nbsp;</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c032'>separating in threads</td>
- <td class='c025'><i>Rœstelia</i>.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c032'>rupturing irregularly</td>
- <td class='c025'><i>Peridermium</i>.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c024'>Peridium abbreviated, or semi-immersed</td>
- <td class='c025'><i>Æcidium</i>.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c024'>Peridium immersed</td>
- <td class='c025'><i>Endophyllum</i>.</td>
- </tr>
-</table>
-<h3 class='c031'><span class='sc'>Rœstelia</span>, <i>Reb.</i></h3>
-<p class='c033'><i>Peridium</i> elongated, at length opening by lateral fissures, or a
-terminal lacerated mouth. <i>Spermogonia</i> on the opposite
-surface, on the same or on different leaves.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'><b>Rœstelia cancellata</b>, Reb. <span class='sc'>Pear-leaf Rœstelia</span>; spots
-yellow, then red, prominent; peridia split to the base into laciniæ,
-which remain united at the apex.—On Pear leaves. Not very
-common. Autumn. (<a href='#i032'>Plate II.</a> figs. 20, 21.)</p>
-
-<p class='c008'><b>Rœstelia cornuta</b>, Tul. <span class='sc'>Horn-like Rœstelia</span>; spots
-rusty-brown; peridia cylindrical, slightly curved, yellowish-brown;
-spores greyish, at length brown.—On the under surface
-of the leaves of Mountain-Ash. Not common. August. (<a href='#i032'>Plate II.</a>
-figs. 18, 19.)</p>
-
-<p class='c008'><b>Rœstelia lacerata</b>, Tul. <span class='sc'>Lacerated Rœstelia</span>; peridia
-clustered in tufts, brown, elongated, splitting to the base in
-segments; spores light brown.—On the under surface of the
-leaves, and on the petioles and fruit of the Hawthorn. Not
-uncommon. May to July. (<a href='#i032'>Plate II.</a> figs. 22, 26.)</p>
-<div>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_190'>190</span>
- <h3 class='c031'><span class='sc'>Peridermium</span>, <i>Chev.</i></h3>
-</div>
-<p class='c033'><i>Peridium</i> elongated, at length bursting irregularly. <i>Spermogonia</i>
-scattered, conspicuous.</p>
-<p class='c008'><b>Peridermium Pini</b>, Chev.; peridia oblong, scattered,
-large; spores orange, abundant; spermogonia vernal or autumnal,
-or both; spermatia large, white.—On leaves and young branches
-of Scotch Fir. Common in Scotland, occasional in England.
-Summer. (<a href='#i032'>Plate II.</a> figs. 27, 28.)</p>
-
-<p class='c008'><b>Peridermium elatinum</b>, Lk.; simple, immersed; peridia
-elliptic, pallid; sporidia orange.—On Silver Fir, altering both
-foliage and ramification. Not common.</p>
-<h3 class='c031'><span class='sc'>Æcidium</span>, <i>Pers.</i></h3>
-<p class='c033'><i>Peridium</i> seldom elongated, opening by a terminal mouth, surrounded
-by a fringe of recurved teeth, or when short
-bursting irregularly. <i>Spores</i> disposed in chains. <i>Spermogonia</i>
-on the same or the opposite surface, clustered or
-scattered, central or intermixed.</p>
-<p class='c034'><span class='sc'>Sect. I.</span>—<i>Peridia scattered</i> (<i>not collected in tufts or clusters</i>).</p>
-<p class='c008'><b>Æcidium leucospermum</b>, DC. <span class='sc'>White-spored Cluster-Cups</span>;
-spots yellowish; peridia scattered, often covering the
-whole under surface; spores white, ovate.—On both sides of
-the leaves of the wood-anemone. Common. June. (<a href='#i004'>Plate I.</a>
-figs. 4-6.)</p>
-
-<p class='c008'><b>Æcidium quadrifidum</b>, DC. <span class='sc'>Four-lobed Cluster-Cups</span>;
-spots brownish; peridia scattered, occupying almost the
-entire under surface; spores brown, subglobose.—On the under
-side of leaves of Anemone in gardens. (Lobes at the mouth of
-the peridium not constantly four.) April to May.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'><b>Æcidium albescens</b>, Grev. <span class='sc'>Moschatel Cluster-Cups</span>;
-leaf blistered, whitish, scattered; peridia white, split into a few
-large teeth; spores yellowish-white.—On leaves and petioles of
-<i>Adoxa moschatellina</i>. Not uncommon. April.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'><b>Æcidium Epilobii</b>, DC. <span class='sc'>Willow-herb Cluster-Cups</span>;
-spots obliterated; peridia scattered, at length oval, wider above;
-spores orange, at length brown.—On the under side of leaves of
-<i>Epilobium montanum</i>, <i>E. hirsutum</i>, and <i>E. palustre</i>, rarely on the
-upper. Common. June to August.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'><b>Æcidium Thesii</b>, Desv. <span class='sc'>Bastard-toadflax Cluster-Cups</span>;
-spots obliterated; peridia scattered or biseriate; short,
-cylindrical, margin irregularly toothed, erect; spores yellowish,
-then dingy.—On <i>Thesium humifusum</i>. Downs near Winchester.
-July, 1864. Chipstead, Surrey, Oct. 14, 1864. (<a href='#i048'>Plate III.</a> figs.
-50, 51.)</p>
-
-<p class='c008'><span class='pageno' id='Page_191'>191</span><b>Æcidium Soldanellæ</b>, Hornsch. <span class='sc'>Soldanella Cluster-Cups</span>;
-spots obliterated; peridia solitary, scattered over the
-inferior surface; spores orange.—On the under surface of the
-leaves of <i>Soldanella alpina</i>.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'><b>Æcidium Tragopogonis</b>, Pers. <span class='sc'>Goatsbeard Cluster-Cups</span>;
-spots obliterated; peridia scattered, torn, wider above;
-spores orange, at length black.—On stems, leaves, and involucres
-of common Goatsbeard. Very common. May to June. (<a href='#i004'>Plate I.</a>
-figs. 1-3.)</p>
-
-<p class='c008'><b>Æcidium Euphorbiæ</b>, Pers. <span class='sc'>Spurge Cluster-Cups</span>;
-spots obliterated, leaf thickened; peridia scattered or crowded,
-distinct; spores orange.—On the under surface of the leaves of
-Spurge. Common. May to June.</p>
-<div class='chapter'>
- <h2 class='c035'><span class='sc'>Sect. II.</span> <i>Peridia in tufts or clusters.</i></h2>
-</div>
-
-<div class='nf-center-c0'>
-<div class='nf-center c003'>
- <div>α. <i>Elongatæ.</i></div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c008'><b>Æcidium Berberidis</b>, Pers. <span class='sc'>Berberry Cluster-Cups</span>;
-spots roundish, bright red; subiculum thickened; peridia in
-subrotund or oval patches, often elongated; spores orange.—On
-leaves, peduncles, and fruit of the common Berberry. Common.
-May to July. (<a href='#i004'>Plate I.</a> figs. 7-9.)</p>
-
-<p class='c008'><b>Æcidium Thalictri</b>, Grev. <span class='sc'>Meadow-Rue Cluster-Cups</span>;
-collected in roundish clusters; peridia oblong; spores bright
-orange.—On <i>Thalictrum alpinum</i>. Not uncommon in Scotland.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'><b>Æcidium crassum</b>, Pers. <span class='sc'>Buckthorn Cluster-Cups</span>;
-spots yellow-brown, subiculum thickened; peridia crowded into a
-roundish heap, at first globose, yellow, at length open; spores
-orange.—On <i>Rhamnus catharticus</i> and <i>R. frangula</i>. Common.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'><b>Æcidium Periclymeni</b>, DC. <span class='sc'>Honeysuckle Cluster-Cups</span>;
-spots variegated, yellow and brown, subiculum thickened;
-peridia sometimes elongated, in roundish or effused heaps; spores
-orange.—On the under surface of Honeysuckle leaves. Not common.
-June to August.</p>
-
-<div class='nf-center-c0'>
-<div class='nf-center c003'>
- <div>β. <i>Poculiformæ.</i></div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c008'><b>Æcidium Calthæ.</b> Grev. <span class='sc'>Marsh-Marigold Cluster-Cups</span>;
-aggregate; peridia somewhat campanulate, with numerous
-minute marginal teeth; spores bright orange, subglobose or oval.—On
-leaves and petioles of <i>Caltha palustris</i>. Margin of peridia
-pale and brittle. Rare. Spring.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'><b>Æcidium Ranunculacearum</b>, DC. <span class='sc'>Crowfoot Cluster-Cups</span>;
-spots obliterated, subiculum thickened; peridia in irregular
-heaps, densely crowded together; spores orange.—On leaves
-of various <i>Ranunculaceæ</i>; very common on <i>R. Ficaria</i>, not uncommon
-on <i>R. repens</i>, more rarely on <i>R. acris</i> and <i>R. bulbosus</i>.
-Spring. (<a href='#i032'>Plate II.</a> figs. 12-14.)</p>
-
-<p class='c008'><span class='pageno' id='Page_192'>192</span><b>Æcidium Galii</b>, Pers. <span class='sc'>Bedstraw Cluster-Cups</span>; spots
-linear or oblong, obscurely brown; peridia scattered, rarely aggregate,
-dentate, whitish; spores white.—On the leaves of <i>Galium
-verum</i> and <i>G. mollugo</i>. (<a href='#i032'>Plate II.</a> figs. 15-17.)</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>I am doubtful whether the <i>Æcidium</i> on <i>Galium mollugo</i> is
-really this species.—(<i>M. C. C.</i>)</p>
-
-<p class='c008'><b>Æcidium Bunii</b>, DC. <span class='sc'>Pig-nut Cluster-Cups</span>; spots
-obliterated, subiculum thickened; peridia in irregular subrotund
-or oval heaps; spores orange.—On <i>Bunium bulbocastanum</i> and
-<i>Pimpinella saxifraga</i>. Spring.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'><b>Æcidium Valerianacearum</b>, Dub. <span class='sc'>Valerian Cluster-Cups</span>;
-hypogenous, rarely cauline, spots on a thickened subcircular
-or oblong base; peridia scattered, more or less crowded,
-cup-shaped, tawny, margin erect, denticulate; spores dirty-yellow.—On
-<i>Valeriana officinalis</i> and <i>V. dioica</i>. North Britain.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'><b>Æcidium Asperifolii</b>, Pers. <span class='sc'>Borage Cluster-Cups</span>;
-clusters subrotund, on a slightly thickened subiculum; peridia
-scattered; spores yellowish-white.—On leaves of various <i>Boragineæ</i>.
-Summer. The parts of the leaves on which it occurs are
-rendered concave on one side and convex on the other.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'><b>Æcidium Grossulariæ</b>, DC. <span class='sc'>Gooseberry Cluster-Cups</span>;
-spots yellow, bright red on the opposite side, with a yellow border;
-peridia crowded in roundish heaps, at length brown, and
-surrounded with a brown area; spores orange.—On leaves and
-fruit of Gooseberry and Currant. Common. May to June.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'><b>Æcidium Urticæ</b>, DC. <span class='sc'>Nettle Cluster-Cups</span>; spots
-obliterated, subiculum thickened; peridia disposed in elongated
-or subrotund heaps, at first subglobose, then gaping; spores
-orange.—On leaves and stems of Nettles, distorting them very
-much. Common. June. (<a href='#i004'>Plate I.</a> figs. 10, 11.)</p>
-
-<p class='c008'><b>Æcidium Behenis</b>, DC. <span class='sc'>Bladder-Campion Cluster-Cups</span>;
-spots yellow, brown on opposite side; peridia somewhat
-circinating, in subrotund heaps; spores brown.—On <i>Silene inflata</i>.
-Not common. Some of the peridia are short and open, others
-larger and closed.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'><b>Æcidium Orobi</b>, DC. <span class='sc'>Bitter-Vetch Cluster-Cups</span>;
-spots yellow, effused; peridia scattered and disposed in small
-heaps; spores at length white.—On stems and leaves of <i>Orobus
-tuberosus</i>. Scotland.</p>
-
-<div class='nf-center-c0'>
-<div class='nf-center c003'>
- <div>γ. <i>Subimmersæ.</i></div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c008'><b>Æcidium Compositarum</b>, Mart. <span class='sc'>Composite Cluster-Cups</span>;
-spots purplish, subrotund, confluent above; peridia
-crowded, in orbicular patches, or circinating, on the under surface;
-spores orange, oval.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'><span class='pageno' id='Page_193'>193</span>Var. <i>a.</i> <i>Taraxaci</i>, Grev.; clusters small, scattered.—On leaves
-of the Dandelion. June to July.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>Var. <i>b.</i> <i>Prenanthis</i>, Pers.; spots circular or irregular, purplish;
-subiculum incrassated.—On leaves of Hawkweed (<i>Hieracium
-paludosum</i>). Summer.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>Var. <i>c.</i> <i>Tussilaginis</i>, Pers.; clusters round, on a thickened base;
-peridia circinating.—On the under surface of leaves of Coltsfoot
-and Butter-bur. Common. Autumn.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>Var. <i>d.</i> <i>Jacobæa</i>, Grev.; pustular, soon becoming agglomerated,
-numerous, depressed; peridia splitting into short, brittle, yellowish-white
-teeth.—On leaves of <i>Senecio Jacobæa</i> and <i>Sonchus
-arvensis</i>. June to August.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>Var. <i>e.</i> <i>Lapsani</i>, Purt.; spots purplish, irregular, confluent,
-on both sides of the leaves; peridia amphigenous, in
-irregular patches or scattered, not prominent, teeth numerous,
-minute, reflexed; spores yellow, oval.—On both surfaces of
-the leaves of <i>Lapsana communis</i>. April. Not uncommon.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'><b>Æcidium Saniculæ</b>, Carm. <span class='sc'>Sanicle Cluster-Cups</span>;
-spots purplish, slightly incrassated, small, scattered, roundish;
-peridia in small circulate clusters, hypogenous, and on the
-petioles, at first hemispherical, at length open, margin with from
-4 to 6 spreading lobes; spores yellowish, elliptical.—On the
-under surface of the leaves and on the petioles of <i>Sanicula
-Europæa</i>. Not uncommon. May and June.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'><b>Æcidium Violæ</b>, Schum. <i>Violet Cluster-Cups</i>; spots
-yellowish; peridia in irregular heaps, seriate and scattered;
-spores orange, at length brown.—On leaves, petioles, and sepals
-of Violets. Common. May and June.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'><b>Æcidium Poterii</b>, Cooke. <span class='sc'>Burnet Cluster-Cups</span>; spots
-obliterated, clusters subrotund or elongated; peridia hypogenous
-and on the petioles, circinating or scattered, immersed, margin
-irregularly fringed with numerous minute teeth, soon falling
-away; spores yellowish, oval.—On the under surface of the
-leaflets and on the petioles of <i>Poterium Sanguisorba</i>. Rare. May
-and June. Dartford Brent, Kent.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'><b>Æcidium Geranii</b>, DC. <span class='sc'>Cranesbill Cluster-Cups</span>;
-spots yellow and purple; peridia in circinating clusters; spores
-yellow, at length brown.—On the under surface of leaves of
-<i>Geranium pratense</i> and <i>G. dissectum</i>. Not common.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'><b>Æcidium Menthæ</b>, DC. <span class='sc'>Mint Cluster-Cups</span>; spots
-obliterated; subiculum thickened; peridia scattered, emersed, or
-aggregate immersed; spores orange, elliptic.—On various Mints.
-Common.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'><b>Æcidium Scrophulariæ</b>, DC. <span class='sc'>Figwort Cluster-Cups</span>;
-spots yellowish; peridia in roundish circinate clusters (rarely
-scattered) on the under surface; spores whitish, becoming tawny.—On
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_194'>194</span>the leaves of <i>Scrophularia aquatica</i>. Thame and Sydenham,
-Oxon.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'><b>Æcidium Pedicularis</b>, Lobosch. <span class='sc'>Red-rattle Cluster-Cups</span>;
-spots obliterated, subiculum thickened; peridia thickly
-and irregularly clustered, subimmersed; spores dirty, pallid
-orange.—On petioles, leaves, and stems of <i>Pedicularis palustris</i>.
-Not common.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'><b>Æcidium Primulæ</b>, DC. <span class='sc'>Primrose Cluster-Cups</span>;
-spots obliterated; peridia solitary, scattered, and crowded, hypogenous;
-spores whitish-yellow.—On the under surface of leaves
-of Primroses. Not common. May.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'><b>Æcidium rubellum</b>, Pers. <span class='sc'>Dock Cluster-Cups</span>; spots
-purple; peridia circinating, centre free; spores yellowish-white.—On
-leaves of Dock and Sorrel. Not uncommon in moist localities.
-May and June.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'><b>Æcidium Ari</b>, Berk. <span class='sc'>Wake-robin Cluster-Cups</span>; spots
-round, confluent; peridia circinating, not crowded, central ones
-abortive.—On leaves of <i>Arum maculatum</i>. Not common. June
-and July.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'><b>Æcidium Dracontii</b>, Schwein. <span class='sc'>Arum Cluster-Cups</span>;
-spots pallid, extensively scattered over the leaves, sometimes
-nearly covering them; peridia large, scattered, abundant, disposed
-without order on the spots; spores orange.—On <i>Arum triphyllum</i>,
-in gardens. Melbury, 1863 (<i>Rev. M. J. B.</i>) A North American
-species.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'><b>Æcidium Allii</b>, Grev. <span class='sc'>Garlic Cluster-Cups</span>; spots
-pale; peridia circinating, not contiguous; spores yellowish.—On
-leaves of broad-leaved Garlic (<i>Allium ursinum</i>). June and
-July.</p>
-<div class='chapter'>
- <h2 class='c035'><span class='sc'>Endophyllum</span>, <i>Lév.</i></h2>
-</div>
-<p class='c023'><i>Peridium</i> enclosed within the substance of the leaf, bursting
-irregularly.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'><b>Endophyllum Sempervivi</b>, Lév.; peridia immersed,
-elliptic or roundish; spores ochraceous, becoming brownish.—On
-leaves of Houseleek.</p>
-<div class='chapter'>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_195'>195</span>
- <h2 class='c035'>PUCCINIÆI.</h2>
-</div>
-
-<div class='nf-center-c0'>
-<div class='nf-center c003'>
- <div><i>a.</i> <i>Spores stipitate.</i></div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<table class='table3' summary=''>
-<colgroup>
-<col width='70%' />
-<col width='30%' />
-</colgroup>
- <tr>
- <td class='c024'>Spores multiseptate—</td>
- <td class='c025'>&nbsp;</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c032'>moniliform</td>
- <td class='c025'><i>Xenodochus</i>.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c032'>cylindrical</td>
- <td class='c025'><i>Aregma</i>.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c032'>biseptate</td>
- <td class='c025'><i>Triphragmium</i>.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c032'>uniseptate</td>
- <td class='c025'><i>Puccinia</i>.</td>
- </tr>
-</table>
-
-<div class='nf-center-c0'>
- <div class='nf-center'>
- <div><i>b.</i> <i>Spores immersed in gelatine.</i></div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<table class='table4' summary=''>
-<colgroup>
-<col width='70%' />
-<col width='30%' />
-</colgroup>
- <tr>
- <td class='c024'>Stroma tremelloid and expanded</td>
- <td class='c025'><i>Gymnosporangium</i>.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c032'>clavate or club-shaped</td>
- <td class='c025'><i>Podisoma</i>.</td>
- </tr>
-</table>
-<h3 class='c031'><span class='sc'>Xenodochus</span>, Schl.</h3>
-<p class='c033'>Spores multiseptate, moniliform, breaking up into many distinct
-articulations.—<i>Berk. Outl.</i>, pp. 328.</p>
-<p class='c008'><b>Xenodochus carbonarius</b>, Schl. <span class='sc'>Burnet Chain-Brand</span>;
-scattered, in small tufts, hypogenous; spores curved or straight,
-composed of from 5 to 15 articulations; obtuse at one extremity,
-slightly attenuate at the other.—On Burnet. Very rare.
-(<a href='#i048'>Plate III.</a> fig. 29.)</p>
-<h3 class='c031'><span class='sc'>Aregma</span>, Fr.</h3>
-<p class='c033'>Spores cylindrical, multiseptate, scarcely moniliform, borne on
-a long peduncle.—<i>Berk. Outl.</i>, p. 329.</p>
-<p class='c008'><b>Aregma mucronatum</b>, Fr. <span class='sc'>Rose Brand</span>; hypogenous,
-scattered over the leaves in minute tufts; spores 5- to 7-septate,
-terminal joint mucronate; peduncles incrassated below, fusiform.—On
-leaves of various Roses. Autumn. Frequent. (<a href='#i048'>Plate III.</a>
-fig. 38.)</p>
-
-<p class='c008'><b>Aregma acuminatum</b>, Fr. <span class='sc'>Burnet Brand</span>; hypogenous,
-scattered in minute tufts; spores multiseptate, terminal joint
-acuminate; peduncles equal.—On Burnet leaves. July. Common.
-(<a href='#i048'>Plate III.</a> fig. 32.)</p>
-
-<p class='c008'><b>Aregma bulbosum</b>, Fr. <span class='sc'>Bramble Brand</span>; hypogenous,
-with a dull red stain on the upper surface; spores in large tufts,
-4-septate, terminal joint apiculate; peduncles incrassated, and
-bulbous at the base.—On Bramble leaves. Autumn. Very
-common. (<a href='#i048'>Plate III.</a> fig. 41.)</p>
-
-<p class='c008'><b>Aregma gracile</b>, Berk. <span class='sc'>Raspberry Brand</span>; hypogenous,
-scattered, in small tufts; spores 7- to 9-septate, the terminal joint
-apiculate; peduncles slender.—On Raspberry leaves. Autumn.
-(<a href='#i048'>Plate III.</a> fig. 43.)</p>
-
-<p class='c008'><span class='pageno' id='Page_196'>196</span><b>Aregma obtusatum</b>, Fr. <span class='sc'>Strawberry Brand</span>; hypogenous,
-scattered, in minute tufts; spores multiseptate, terminal
-joint obtuse; peduncles equal.—On leaves of barren Strawberry.
-Autumn. Common. (<a href='#i048'>Plate III.</a> fig. 35.)</p>
-<h3 class='c031'><span class='sc'>Triphragmium</span>, Lk.</h3>
-<p class='c033'>Spores trilocular, septa mostly vertical and horizontal.—<i>Berk.
-Outl.</i>, p. 332.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'><b>Triphragmium Ulmariæ</b>, Lk. <span class='sc'>Meadow-sweet Brand</span>;
-spots obliterated; sori at first subrotund, covered with the epidermis;
-at length, when the cuticle has vanished, effuse; spores
-brown, subturbinate, divided by a vertical dissepiment, shortly
-pedicellate.—On leaves of Meadow-sweet, <i>Spiræa ulmaria</i>.
-Autumn. (<a href='#i048'>Plate III.</a> fig. 48.)</p>
-<h3 class='c031'><span class='sc'>Puccinia</span>, Pers.</h3>
-<p class='c033'>Spores uniseptate, supported on a distinct peduncle.—<i>Berk.
-Outl.</i>, p. 329.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'><b>Puccinia graminis</b>, Pers. <span class='sc'>Corn Mildew</span>; spots pale,
-diffuse; sori linear, confluent, amphigenous; spores at length
-black, clavate, very slightly constricted.—On the leaves and culms
-of corn and grass. Autumn. Very common, and injurious to
-corn. (<a href='#i056'>Plate IV.</a> figs. 57-59.)</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>Var. <i>β. Arundinis</i>, Grev. Sori broad; spores more constricted
-and with longer peduncles.—On the leaves and sheaths of reeds.
-Very common.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'><b>Puccinia striola</b>, Lk. <span class='sc'>Sedge Mildew</span>; spots pallid; sori
-linear, crowded, distinct, subconvex; spores at length black,
-oblong and slightly constricted, or obovate, and not constricted.—On
-Sedges, Rushes, &amp;c. Autumn. Common.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'><b>Puccinia coronata</b>, Cd. <span class='sc'>Coronated Mildew</span>; spots pallid;
-sori linear, short, crowded, not confluent, surrounded by the
-ruptured epidermis; spores shortly pedicellate, pallid; the apex
-surrounded by obtuse radiating teeth.—On various Grasses.
-Autumn. Not uncommon. (<a href='#i056'>Plate IV.</a> figs. 60-62.)</p>
-
-<p class='c008'><b>Puccinia truncata</b>, B. and Br. <span class='sc'>Iris Brand</span>; spots
-obliterated; sori oblong, brown, surrounded by the scarious
-epidermis; spores obovate-oblong, even, attenuated below,
-upper cell abruptly truncate.—On <i>Iris fœtidissima</i>. Autumn.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'><b>Puccinia Asparagi</b>, DC. <span class='sc'>Asparagus Brand</span>; spots none;
-sori reddish-brown, generally on the stems, scattered and crowded,
-surrounded by the ruptured epidermis; spores oblong, obtuse,
-constricted; peduncle white, long, thread-like.—On dead stems
-of <i>Asparagus</i>. Autumn.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'><span class='pageno' id='Page_197'>197</span><b>Puccinia Polygonorum</b>, Lk. <span class='sc'>Polygonum Brand</span>; spots
-yellowish; sori minute, crowded into orbicular patches; spores
-brown-black, obovate-oblong, frequently constricted, with the upper
-joint globose.—On the under surface of the leaves of various
-species of <i>Polygonum</i>. Autumn. Common.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'><b>Puccinia vaginalium</b>, Lk. <span class='sc'>Knotgrass Brand</span>; spots
-none; sori hypogenous, subrotund or oblong, at first surrounded
-by the ruptured epidermis; spores brown, obtusely ovate; pedicels
-long, filiform.—On leaves and stems of Knotgrass, <i>Polygonum aviculare</i>.
-Autumn.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'><b>Puccinia Thesii</b>, Chaill. <span class='sc'>Bastard-toadflax Brand</span>;
-cauline and amphigenous; sori blackish-brown, small, roundish,
-or oblong, convex, scattered or aggregate, surrounded by the
-ruptured epidermis; spores ovate, obtuse, scarcely constricted;
-pedicels elongated.—On <i>Thesium humifusum</i>, in company with
-<i>Æcidium Thesii</i>. Chipstead, Surrey, Oct. 14, 1864. (<i>A. Grugeon.</i>)</p>
-
-<p class='c008'><b>Puccinia Primulæ</b>, Grev. <span class='sc'>Primrose Brand</span>; hypogenous,
-deep brown, solitary, scattered, or concentric and subconfluent
-spores obovate-oblong, slightly constricted.—On Primrose leaves.
-Not common.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'><b>Puccinia Veronicarum</b>, DC. <span class='sc'>Veronica Brand</span>; spots
-yellowish; sori subglobose, aggregate, or circinating, central one
-large; spores brown, obovate-oblong, more or less constricted.—On
-the under surface of the leaves of several species of <i>Veronica</i>.
-Not common.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'><b>Puccinia Glechomatis</b>, DC. <span class='sc'>Ground-Ivy Brand</span>; spots
-brownish; sori subrotund, scattered, hypogenous; spots brown,
-rather short, subelliptic, scarcely at all constricted.—On leaves of
-Ground-Ivy, <i>Glechoma hederacea</i>. September and October. Not
-uncommon. (<a href='#i056'>Plate IV.</a> figs. 73, 74.)</p>
-
-<p class='c008'><b>Puccinia Menthæ</b>, Pers. <span class='sc'>Mint Brand</span>; spots obliterated;
-sori varying in size, hypogenous, subrotund, scattered; spores
-at length black, subglobose, or angular; peduncles short.—On
-leaves of Mint, Wild Thyme, Marjoram, &amp;c. Autumn. Common.
-(<a href='#i056'>Plate IV.</a> figs. 69, 70.)</p>
-
-<p class='c008'><b>Puccinia Scorodoniæ</b>, Lk. <span class='sc'>Wood-sage Brand</span>; spots
-obliterated; sori small, confluent in subrotund patches, hypogenous;
-spores cinnamon; peduncles very long.—On leaves of Wood-sage.
-Darenth Wood. Not common.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'><b>Puccinia Scrophulariæ</b>, Lib. <span class='sc'>Figwort Brand</span>; spots
-pallid; sori subrotund, oblong, or linear and confluent, surrounded
-by the ruptured epidermis; spores very much crowded, subglobose
-or oval, brownish, plicate, but not truly septate; pedicels
-elongated.—On <i>Scrophularia aquatica</i>. Penzance. Very rare.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'><span class='pageno' id='Page_198'>198</span><b>Puccinia Betonicæ</b>, DC. <span class='sc'>Betony Brand</span>; spots obliterated;
-sori hypogenous, subrotund, aggregate, surrounded by
-the ruptured epidermis; spores very pale-brown, short, obovate,
-elliptic; peduncles short.—On <i>Stachys Betonica</i>. Rare.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'><b>Puccinia Vincæ</b>, Berk. <span class='sc'>Periwinkle Brand</span>; spots yellowish;
-sori hypogenous, scattered, subrotund, surrounded by
-the ruptured epidermis; spores brown, oblong, slightly constricted,
-lower cell rather attenuated; peduncle very short.—On leaves of
-<i>Vinca major</i>. (<a href='#i096'>Plate VI.</a> fig. 132.) Autumn. Not uncommon.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'><b>Puccinia Campanulæ</b>, Carm. <span class='sc'>Campanula Brand</span>; spots
-apparently none; sori large, irregular, crowded, for a long time
-covered with the epidermis, at length surrounded by it; spores
-oblong-ovate, or slightly constricted; peduncles very short.—On
-<i>Campanulæ</i>. Not common.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'><b>Puccinia clandestina</b>, Carm. <span class='sc'>Scabious Brand</span>; spots
-yellowish; sori very minute, distinct, but collected together in
-great numbers, dark brown; epidermis evanescent; spores oblong,
-very slightly constricted, pedunculate.—On <i>Scabiosa succisa</i>. Not
-common.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'><b>Puccinia Compositarum</b>, Sch. <span class='sc'>Compositæ Brand</span>;
-spots obliterated or whitish; sori small, subrotund, generally
-hypogenous, encircled with the ruptured epidermis; spores brown,
-oval, scarcely constricted.—On the leaves of <i>Centaureæ</i>, &amp;c.
-Autumn. Common. (<a href='#i056'>Plate IV.</a> figs. 67, 68.)</p>
-
-<p class='c008'><b>Puccinia Syngenesiarum</b>, Lk. <span class='sc'>Thistle Brand</span>; spots
-obliterated; sori minute, collected in oval blackish-brown,
-raised spots, covered with the epidermis; spores brown; peduncles
-very short.—On the leaves of Thistles. Autumn.
-Common. (<a href='#i056'>Plate IV.</a> figs. 63, 64.)</p>
-
-<p class='c008'><b>Puccinia glomerata</b>, Grev. <span class='sc'>Ragwort Brand</span>; spots
-pale; sori roundish, depressed, often confluent; spores oblong,
-very variable; peduncles short.—On leaves of Ragwort, <i>Senecio
-Jacobæa</i>. Not common.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'><b>Puccinia variabilis</b>, Grev. <span class='sc'>Variable Brand</span>; sori amphigenous,
-minute, roundish, surrounded by the ruptured epidermis,
-nearly black; spores variable, obtuse, cells often subdivided;
-peduncle very short.—On leaves of Dandelion. Summer and
-Autumn. Not uncommon. (<a href='#i056'>Plate IV.</a> figs. 82, 83.)</p>
-
-<p class='c008'><b>Puccinia Valantiæ</b>, Pers. <span class='sc'>Crosswort Brand</span>; spots obliterated;
-sori small, subrotund, scattered or crowded; spores
-pale-brown, obovate, attenuated below, the upper segment
-globular, easily separating.—On <i>Galium cruciatum</i>. Autumn.
-Not common.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'><span class='pageno' id='Page_199'>199</span><b>Puccinia Galiorum</b>, Lk. <span class='sc'>Bedstraw Brand</span>; spots obliterated;
-sori hypogenous, partly covered with and surrounded by
-the ruptured epidermis, scattered; spores brown.—On the leaves
-of several species of <i>Galium</i> and <i>Asperula odorata</i>. Not uncommon.
-(<a href='#i104'>Plate VIII.</a> figs. 172, 173.)</p>
-
-<p class='c008'><b>Puccinia Umbelliferarum</b>, DC. <span class='sc'>Pig-nut Brand</span>; spots
-obliterated; sori small and scattered, subrotund, surrounded by
-the remains of the ruptured epidermis; spores brown, broadly
-elliptic, much constricted; peduncle short.—On various <i>Umbelliferæ</i>.
-Common. (<a href='#i056'>Plate IV.</a> figs. 71, 72.)</p>
-
-<p class='c008'><b>Puccinia Ægopodii</b>, Lk. <span class='sc'>Goutweed Brand</span>; spots brown;
-sori minute, subrotund and elongated, surrounded by the ruptured
-epidermis, often circinating, and forming roundish patches;
-spores brown; peduncles very short.—On <i>Ægopodium podagraria</i>.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'><b>Puccinia Saniculæ</b>, Grev. <span class='sc'>Sanicle Brand</span>; orbicular,
-variable in size, blackish-brown, scattered, rather confluent; spores
-very obtuse; peduncles somewhat elongated.—On <i>Sanicula
-Europæa</i>. Not uncommon. Summer and Autumn.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'><b>Puccinia bullaria</b>, Lk. <span class='sc'>Hemlock Brand</span>; spots obliterated;
-sori subrotund or oblong, covered with the epidermis;
-spores brown, peduncle short, nearly obsolete.—On dry stems of
-<i>Conium maculatum</i> and other <i>Umbelliferæ</i>. August and Sept.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'><b>Puccinia Smyrnii</b>, Cd. <span class='sc'>Alexander’s Brand</span>; spots obliterated;
-sori hypogenous, large, solitary, scattered, brown; spores
-ovoid, obtuse, verrucose, slightly constricted, minutely pedicellate.—On
-<i>Smyrnium olusatrum</i>. (<a href='#i048'>Plate III.</a> figs. 55, 56.)</p>
-
-<p class='c008'><b>Puccinia Anemones</b>, Pers. <span class='sc'>Anemone Brand</span>; spots obliterated;
-sori subrotund, surrounded by the ruptured epidermis,
-scattered, aggregate, and confluent; spores brown, very much
-constricted, consisting of two nearly globose portions, echinulate;
-peduncles very short.—On various species of <i>Anemone</i>. Very
-common on <i>Anemone nemorosa</i>. April and May. (<a href='#i056'>Plate IV.</a> figs.
-64, 65.)</p>
-
-<p class='c008'><b>Puccinia Calthæ</b>, Lk. <span class='sc'>Marsh-Marigold Brand</span>; spots
-brownish; sori small, subrotund, convex, surrounded by the ruptured
-epidermis, scattered; spores obovate, attenuated below,
-slightly constricted; peduncle very short.—On leaves of Marsh
-Marigold. Spring. Rare.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'><b>Puccinia Noli-tangeris</b>, Corda. <span class='sc'>Balsam Brand</span>; spots
-irregular, confluent, brownish; sori gregarious, reddish-brown;
-spores oblong, obtuse or attenuated, distinctly apiculate, brown;
-peduncles rudimentary. On leaves of <i>Impatiens noli-tangere</i>.
-Gathered at Albury, Surrey, by the Rev. L. Jenyns.—(<i>M. J. B.</i>)</p>
-
-<p class='c008'><span class='pageno' id='Page_200'>200</span><b>Puccinia Violarum</b>, Lk. <span class='sc'>Violet Brand</span>; spots yellowish;
-sori hypogenous, small, crowded, covered with the epidermis,
-then surrounded by it; spores brown, elliptic or broadly elliptic,
-slightly constricted.—On Violets. Autumn. Common.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'><b>Puccinia Lychnidearum</b>, Lk. <span class='sc'>Lychnis Brand</span>; spots
-yellowish; sori subrotund or oblong, unequal, scattered, rarely
-confluent; spores white, at length brown, elongated, oblong,
-slightly constricted.—On leaves and stems of <i>Lychnidæ</i>, <i>Sagina
-procumbens</i>. Autumn. Common.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'><b>Puccinia umbilici</b>, Guep. <span class='sc'>Penny-wort Brand</span>; seated on
-pallid spots; sori round, convex, compact, at length confluent in
-large orbicular patches; spores subglobose, not constricted, shortly
-pedicellate.—On <i>Cotyledon umbilicus</i>. Penzance, Guernsey, Corwen,
-N. Wales. <i>W. Pamplin.</i> (<a href='#i056'>Plate IV.</a> figs. 80, 81.)</p>
-
-<p class='c008'><b>Puccinia Rhodiolæ</b>, B. and Br. <span class='sc'>Stonecrop Brand</span>; spots
-orbicular, brown; sori minute, crowded; spores shortly pedicellate,
-articulations depressed, sometimes spuriously subdivided.—On
-leaves of <i>Sedum Rhodiola</i>. Summer. Not common.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'><b>Puccinia Saxifragarum</b>, Schl. <span class='sc'>Moschatel Brand</span>; spots
-obliterated; sori subrotund, scattered, crowded and confluent,
-when young surrounded by the epidermis; spores red-brown,
-rather short, oblong, slightly constricted.—On both surfaces of
-the leaves of <i>Adoxa moschatellina</i>. Not uncommon. Summer.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'><b>Puccinia Chrysosplenii</b>, Grey. <span class='sc'>Golden-saxifrage Brand</span>;
-sori of various sizes, few together and confluent, pale brown;
-spores long, somewhat waved, much attenuated at either extremity;
-peduncle elongated.—On the under surface of the leaves
-of <i>Chrysosplenium oppositifolium</i>. Rare.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'><b>Puccinia Epilobii</b>, DC. <span class='sc'>Willow-herb Brand</span>; spots
-pale; sori hypogenous, subrotund, crowded; epidermis evanescent;
-spores effuse, cinnamon, broadly elliptic, strongly constricted;
-peduncles very short.—On the leaves of <i>Epilobium palustre</i>.
-Not common.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'><b>Puccinia pulverulenta</b>, Grev. <span class='sc'>Great Willow-herb
-Brand</span>; sori hypogenous, dark brown, scattered or subconfluent,
-open concentric; spores minute, obovate, slightly constricted,
-lower cell rather attenuated; peduncle not very short.—On the
-leaves of <i>Epilobium montanum</i> and <i>E. hirsutum</i>. August and September.
-Common. (<a href='#i056'>Plate IV.</a> figs. 78, 79.)</p>
-
-<p class='c008'><b>Puccinia Circææ</b>, Pers. <span class='sc'>Nightshade Brand</span>; spots obliterated;
-sori minute, semiglobose, crowded into subrotund patches,
-occasionally confluent, generally covered with the epidermis;
-spores brown, oblong, often acute, sometimes obtuse; peduncles
-long, thick.—On the leaves of <i>Circæa lutetiana</i> and <i>C. alpina</i>.
-Autumn. Not common.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'><span class='pageno' id='Page_201'>201</span><b>Puccinia Prunorum</b>, Lk. <span class='sc'>Plum-tree Brand</span>; spots obliterated;
-sori hypogenous, subrotund scattered, epidermis obliterated;
-spores brown, peduncles very short.—On the leaves of
-Plum-trees. September and October. Very common.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'><b>Puccinia Fabæ</b>, Lk. <span class='sc'>Bean Brand</span>; spots none; sori subrotund,
-or elongated, surrounded by the ruptured epidermis; spores
-at length black, ovato-globose; peduncle slender.—On Beans.
-August and September. Not uncommon.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'><b>Puccinia Buxi</b>, DC. <span class='sc'>Box Brand</span>; spots none; sori subrotund,
-convex, scattered; spores brown, oblong, rather strongly
-constricted, lower cell slightly attenuated; peduncle very long.—On
-both surfaces of Box-leaves. April and May. Not uncommon.</p>
-<h3 class='c031'><span class='sc'>Gymnosporangium, DC.</span></h3>
-<p class='c036'>Peduncles extremely long, agglutinated by gelatine into a tremelloid
-expanded mass. Spores uniseptate.</p>
-<p class='c008'><b>Gymnosporangium Juniperi</b>, Lk.; forming a soft gelatinous,
-irregular, orange mass; spores ovate or subelliptic, filled
-with subglobose granules.—On living twigs of <i>Juniperus communis</i>.</p>
-<h3 class='c031'><span class='fss'>PODISOMA</span>, <i>Lk.</i></h3>
-<p class='c036'>Peduncles extremely long, agglutinated by gelatine into a common
-stem, spreading out above into a <i>clavariæform</i> mass;
-spores mostly uniseptate.—<i>Berk. Outl.</i>, p. 331.</p>
-<p class='c008'><b>Podisoma Juniperi</b>, Fr.; orange, clavariæform, somewhat
-branched; stroma simple; spores very long, lanceolate, filled with
-elliptic granules.—On living branches of <i>Juniperus communis</i>. Not
-common.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'><b>Podisoma foliicolum</b>, B.; epiphyllous, brown-black masses,
-subglobose, subelliptic, or irregular, consisting of radiating,
-crowded, very slender, agglutinated filaments, each bearing an
-elliptic or clavate, very obtuse spore, 3- to 5-septate.—On living
-leaves of <i>Juniperus communis</i>. Rare.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'><b>Podisoma Sabinæ</b>, Fr.; red-brown, tuberculiform and
-clavate, simple; stroma obliterated; spores obovate, uniseptate.—On
-living branches of <i>Juniperus Sabinæ</i>. April. Not uncommon.</p>
-<div>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_202'>202</span>
- <h3 class='c031'><b>CÆOMACEI</b>.</h3>
-</div>
-
-<div class='lg-container-l c000'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line in4'>Simple and free.</div>
- <div class='line in6'>Without appendages,</div>
- <div class='line in8'>Springing from delicate threads. <i>Tilletia</i>.</div>
- <div class='line in8'>Produced in separate cells.—</div>
- <div class='line in12'>Deeply seated, pulverulent, } <i>Ustilago</i></div>
- <div class='line in14'>generally nearly black }</div>
- <div class='line in12'>Superficial, yellow or brown <i>Uredo</i>.</div>
- <div class='line in8'>Not enclosed in separate cells <i>Lecythea</i>.</div>
- <div class='line in6'>With appendages,</div>
- <div class='line in12'>Deciduous <i>Trichobasis</i>.</div>
- <div class='line in12'>Permanent <i>Uromyces</i>.</div>
- <div class='line in4'>Compound.</div>
- <div class='line in12'>Irregular <i>Polycystis</i>.</div>
- <div class='line in12'>Subglobose or shell-shaped <i>Tuburcinia</i>.</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<div class='lg-container-l'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>Spores of two orders—</div>
- <div class='line in12'>1. Spherical } <i>Coleosporium</i>.</div>
- <div class='line in12'>2. Cylindrical, septate }</div>
- <div class='line in12'>1. Spherical } <i>Melampsora</i>.</div>
- <div class='line in12'>2. Wedge-shaped, compact }</div>
- <div class='line in12'>1. Concatenate, exposed } <i>Cystopus</i>.</div>
- <div class='line in12'>2. Spherical, concealed }</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<h3 class='c031'><span class='sc'>Tilletia</span>, <i>Tul.</i></h3>
-<p class='c036'>Spores spherical, reticulated, proceeding from delicate branched
-threads.</p>
-<p class='c008'><b>Tilletia caries</b>, Tul. <span class='sc'>Bunt</span>; included within the germen;
-spores spherical, rather large, black.—On wheat, filling the grains
-with dark-coloured spores, fetid when crushed. Autumn. Very
-common. (<a href='#i080'>Plate V.</a> figs. 84-91.)</p>
-<h3 class='c031'><span class='sc'>Ustilago</span>, <i>Link.</i></h3>
-<p class='c036'>Plant deeply seated. Spores simple, springing from delicate
-threads, or in closely-packed cells, ultimately breaking up
-into a powdery mass.—<i>Berk. Outl.</i>, p. 335.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'><i>Ustilago segetum</i>, Ditm. <span class='sc'>Corn Smut</span>; produced on the
-receptacle and rachis; epidermis soon ruptured; spores loose,
-minute, globose, black.—On the ears of corn and grasses. Autumn.
-Very common. (<a href='#i080'>Plate V.</a> figs. 98, 99.)</p>
-
-<p class='c008'><span class='pageno' id='Page_203'>203</span><b>Ustilago urceolorum</b>, Tul. <span class='sc'>Sedge Smut</span>; produced on the
-glumes and utricles; epidermis soon bursting; spores in a compact
-mass, afterwards breaking up, globose, rather large, granulated.—Surrounding
-the seed of various <i>Carices</i>; as, <i>Carex prœcox</i>, <i>stellulata</i>,
-<i>recurva</i>, and <i>pseudo-cyperus</i>. Autumn. Not uncommon.
-(<a href='#i096'>Plate VI.</a> figs. 109-111.)</p>
-
-<p class='c008'><b>Ustilago longissima</b>, Tul. <span class='sc'>Elongated Smut</span>; produced
-on the leaves in linear, long, parallel, dirty-olive patches; epidermis
-bursting longitudinally; spores globose, breaking up into
-minute granules, olive-black.—On leaves of <i>Poa aquatica</i> and
-<i>fluitans</i>. Summer. Common. (<a href='#i080'>Plate V.</a> figs. 105-107.)</p>
-
-<p class='c008'><b>Ustilago olivacea</b>, Tul. <span class='sc'>Olive Smut</span>; infesting the enlarged
-receptacle; epidermis soon bursting; spores olive-green, powdery,
-minute, mixed with filaments.—On <i>Carex riparia</i>. Not common.
-(<a href='#i096'>Plate VI.</a> figs. 126, 127.)</p>
-
-<p class='c008'><b>Ustilago hypodytes</b>, Fr. <span class='sc'>Grass-culm Smut</span>; produced on
-the culms beneath the sheaths, afterwards exposed; spores
-minute, subglobose, brownish-black.—On the culms of various
-Grasses. Summer. Sometimes not uncommon. (<a href='#i080'>Plate V.</a> figs.
-100, 101.)</p>
-
-<p class='c008'><b>Ustilago Maydis</b>, Corda. <span class='sc'>Maize Smut</span>; produced on the
-stems, germens, &amp;c.; epidermis at length bursting; spores
-spherical, minute, brownish-black, surface covered with echinulate
-warts.—On stems, &amp;c., of <i>Zea mays</i>. (<a href='#i080'>Plate V.</a> fig. 108.)</p>
-
-<p class='c008'><b>Ustilago Montagnei</b>, Tul. <span class='sc'>Beaksedge Smut</span>; produced
-on the seeds; epidermis bursting; spores slightly angular, small,
-dark-coloured, intermixed sparingly with fragile filaments.—On
-seeds of <i>Rhyncospora alba</i>. Not common. (<a href='#i080'>Plate V.</a> figs. 96, 97.)</p>
-
-<p class='c008'><b>Ustilago typhoides</b>, B. and Br. <span class='sc'>Reed Smut</span>; prodded on
-the stems of reeds, forming thick bullate patches several inches
-long, occupying whole internodes, covered by their sheath; spores
-globose, rather large.—On stems of <i>Arundo phragmitis</i>. Autumn.
-Not uncommon. (<a href='#i096'>Plate VI.</a> figs. 128, 129.)</p>
-
-<p class='c008'><b>Ustilago Salveii</b>, B. and Br. <span class='sc'>Cocksfoot Smut</span>; produced
-on the leaves, forming elongated parallel sori on the upper surface;
-spores obovate, rather large, rough with minute granules.—On
-leaves of <i>Dactylis glomerata</i> and other Grasses. Not common.
-(<a href='#i096'>Plate VI.</a> figs. 117-119.)</p>
-
-<p class='c008'><b>Ustilago grammica</b>, B. and Br. <span class='sc'>Banded Smut</span>; forming
-little transverse bands consisting of short parallel black lines,
-1/12 of an inch or more in length; spores globose, very minute.—On
-stems of <i>Aira aquatica</i> and <i>A. cæspitosa</i>. Uncommon. (<a href='#i096'>Plate VI.</a>
-figs. 120-122.)</p>
-
-<p class='c008'><span class='pageno' id='Page_204'>204</span><b>Ustilago vinosa</b>, Tul. <span class='sc'>Oxyria Smut</span>; produced on the
-swollen receptacles; spores roundish, very small, and minutely
-papillose, separately pellucid, in clusters, violaceous.—On the
-receptacles of <i>Oxyria reniformis</i>. Uncommon.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'><b>Ustilago utriculosa</b>, Tul. <span class='sc'>Utricle Smut</span>; produced in
-the germen and perigonium; epidermis soon ruptured; spores
-effuse, minute, globose, purple-black.—On <i>Polygonum hydropiper</i>
-and other <i>Polygona</i>. Autumn. Not uncommon. (<a href='#i096'>Plate VI.</a>
-figs. 112-116.)</p>
-
-<p class='c008'><b>Ustilago flosculorum</b>, Fr. <span class='sc'>Floret Smut</span>; produced
-within the florets; spores minute, purplish-brown.—On the
-florets of <i>Scabiosa arvensis</i>. Not common. (<a href='#i096'>Plate VI.</a> figs. 123-125.)</p>
-
-<p class='c008'><b>Ustilago receptaculorum</b>, Fr. <span class='sc'>Goatsbeard Smut</span>;
-produced within the receptacles; spores ovate, minute, reticulated,
-violet-brown, nearly black, very profuse, filling the receptacle.—On
-the receptacles of Goatsbeard. June, July. Common.
-(<a href='#i080'>Plate V.</a> figs. 92-95.)</p>
-
-<p class='c008'><b>Ustilago antherarum</b>, Fr. <span class='sc'>Anther Smut</span>; produced
-on the anthers and germens; spores subglobose, effuse, violet.—On
-the anthers of <i>Silene inflata</i>, &amp;c. (<a href='#i080'>Plate V.</a> figs. 102-104.)</p>
-<h3 class='c031'><span class='sc'>Uredo</span>, <i>Lév.</i></h3>
-<p class='c036'><i>Stroma</i> composed of little irregular cells forming a lentiform
-disk, whose surface is covered with many layers of cells,
-each of which encloses a spore; <i>spores</i> simple, always
-without any appendage.—<i>Berk. Outl.</i>, p. 331.</p>
-<hr class='c009' />
-
-<div class='nf-center-c0'>
- <div class='nf-center'>
- <div>* <i>Spores more or less yellow.</i></div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c008'><b>Uredo Potentillarum</b>, DC. <span class='sc'>Potentilla Uredo</span>; spots
-yellowish; sori subrotund and oval, bullate, aggregate, open,
-confluent; spores subglobose, subcoherent, orange.—On various
-<i>Rosaceæ</i>. Common.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'><b>Uredo Saxifragarum</b>, DC. <span class='sc'>Saxifrage Uredo</span>; spots
-pallid; sori subrotund and oval, raised, scattered and aggregate
-on the under surface; epidermis ruptured, persistent; spores
-subglobose, yellow.—On various <i>Saxifrages</i>.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'><b>Uredo Filicum</b>, Desm. <span class='sc'>Fern Uredo</span>; spots yellowish; sori
-subrotund, bullate, scattered and aggregate on the under surface;
-epidermis at length bursting; spores subglobose, yellow.—On
-Ferns (<i>Cystopteris</i>, &amp;c.) Not common.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'><b>Uredo pustulata</b>, P. <span class='sc'>Willow-herb Uredo</span>; spots yellowish;
-sori subrotund, minute, closed, scattered and confluent on both
-surfaces; spores globose, yellow.—On <i>Epilobium palustre</i>.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'><span class='pageno' id='Page_205'>205</span><b>Uredo Hypericorum</b>, DC. <span class='sc'>St. John’s-Wort Uredo</span>;
-spots yellowish; sori subrotund, small, bullate, distinct, scattered
-on the under surface; epidermis at length bursting; spores subglobose,
-cohering, orange.—On various <i>Hyperica</i>. August. Not
-uncommon. (<a href='#i104'>Plate VIII.</a> figs. 174, 175.)</p>
-
-<p class='c008'><b>Uredo Caryophyllacearum</b>, Johnst. <span class='sc'>Stitchwort Uredo</span>;
-spots yellowish; sori subglobose, scattered and aggregate, minute,
-generally on the under surface; epidermis closed; spores oval, at
-length yellow.—On various <i>Caryophyllaceæ</i>. Autumn.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'><b>Uredo Quercus</b>, Brond. <span class='sc'>Oak-leaf Uredo</span>; on the under
-surface; sori yellow, then orange, minute, ovate, and orbicular,
-slightly prominent, scattered, solitary or agglomerated into minute
-patches, surrounded by the ruptured epidermis; spores subglobose,
-pellucid, not cohering.—On Oak-leaves. September. Not
-common.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'><b>Uredo porphyrogenita</b>, Kze. <span class='sc'>Bird-cherry Uredo</span>;
-spots purplish; sori subrotund, small, aggregate, hypogenous;
-epidermis at length ruptured; spores coherent, subglobose.—On
-leaves of <i>Prunus Padus</i>. Scotland, 1863. (<i>Rev. M. J. Berkeley.</i>)</p>
-
-<p class='c008'><b>Uredo Vacciniorum</b>, P. <span class='sc'>Bilberry Uredo</span>; spots yellow-brown;
-sori subrotund, minute, aggregate, and scattered, on the
-under surface of the leaves; epidermis seldom ruptured; spores
-ovoid, yellowish.—On <i>Vaccinium Myrtillus</i> and <i>V. vitis-idæa</i>.
-Scotland.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'><b>Uredo confluens</b>, DC. <span class='sc'>Mercury Uredo</span>; on the under
-surface, depressed, yellow, oblong, concentric, at length confluent;
-spores nearly oval.—On <i>Mercurialis perennis</i> and <i>M.
-annua</i>. May, June. Common. (<a href='#frontis'>Plate VII.</a> figs. 133, 134.)</p>
-
-<p class='c008'><b>Uredo Alliorum</b>, DC. <span class='sc'>Garlic Uredo</span>; spots obliterated;
-sori linear, oblong, and oval, on both surfaces; spores ovoid or
-subglobose, yellow or whitish.—On various species of <i>Allium</i>.
-Common.</p>
-
-<div class='nf-center-c0'>
-<div class='nf-center c003'>
- <div>* * <i>Spores brown.</i></div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c037'><b>Uredo Statices</b>, Desm. <span class='sc'>Sea-lavender Uredo</span>; sori few
-and scattered, orbicular or oval; spores sessile, globose, brown.—On
-various species of <i>Statice</i>.</p>
-<p class='c008'><b>Uredo Circææ</b>, A. &amp; S. <span class='sc'>Nightshade Uredo</span>; sori minute,
-crowded, subrotund, slightly confluent, on the under surface;
-spores irregular, ovate, small, ochraceous.—On leaves of <i>Circæa
-lutetiana</i>. June, July. Common. (<a href='#frontis'>Plate VII.</a> figs. 135, 136.)</p>
-
-<p class='c008'><b>Uredo bifrons</b>, Grev. <span class='sc'>Twin-faced Uredo</span>. On both surfaces
-of the leaves, often opposite, scattered, round, light brown,
-girt with the remains of the epidermis; spores globose.—On Sorrel leaves
-(<i>Rumex acetosa</i> and <i>R. acetosella</i>). July, September. Common. (<a href='#frontis'>Plate VII.</a> figs. 137-139)</p>
-<div>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_206'>206</span>
- <h3 class='c031'><span class='sc'>Lecythea</span>, <i>Lév.</i></h3>
-</div>
-<p class='c036'><i>Stroma</i> surrounded or sprinkled with elongated abortive spores.
-<i>Spores</i> free, invested with their mother-cell, or concatenate.—<i>Berk.
-Outl.</i>, p. 334.</p>
-
-<div class='nf-center-c0'>
-<div class='nf-center c003'>
- <div>* <i>Spores free.</i></div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c008'><b>Lecythea Ruborum</b>, Lév. <span class='sc'>Bramble Rust.</span> Spots pale,
-brown or purple on the opposite side, sometimes depressed
-above; sori subrotund, aggregate; epidermis soon bursting;
-spores globose or subglobose, echinulate, bright ochraceous-yellow.—On
-the under surface of Bramble leaves. July and
-August. Very common. (<a href='#i032'>Plate II.</a> fig. 40.)</p>
-
-<p class='c008'><b>Lecythea Rosæ</b>, Lév. <span class='sc'>Rose Rust</span>; spots yellow, small,
-scattered; spores sub-oval, sometimes minutely pedicellate,
-orange.—On Rose-leaves. July, September. Extremely common.
-(<a href='#i032'>Plate II.</a> fig. 37.)</p>
-
-<p class='c008'><b>Lecythea Poterii</b>, Lév. <span class='sc'>Burnet Rust</span>; spots obliterated,
-rufous on the opposite side; sori subrotund, scattered, minute on
-the under surface; epidermis bursting; spores subglobose, often
-pedicellate, intense orange; barren spores pale, cylindrical, and
-slightly curved.—On <i>Poterium Sanguisorba</i>. Summer. Common.
-(<a href='#i048'>Plate III.</a> fig. 31.)</p>
-
-<p class='c008'><b>Lecythea Populina</b>, Lév. <span class='sc'>Poplar Rust</span>; hypogenous;
-sori yellow, roundish or oblong, surrounded by the ruptured
-epidermis; spores copious, elongated or ovate.—On Poplar and
-Birch leaves. Summer. Common.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'><b>Lecythea Euphorbiæ</b>, Lév. <span class='sc'>Spurge Rust</span>; spots obliterated;
-sori subrotund, small, scattered, surrounded by the
-ruptured epidermis; barren spores pyriform or subglobose, pedicellate;
-fertile spores subglobose, orange.—On the under surface
-of the leaves of various species of <i>Euphorbia</i>, especially <i>E.
-helioscopia</i> and <i>E. peplus</i>. August. Very common.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'><b>Lecythea epitea</b>, Lév. <span class='sc'>Tawny Willow Rust</span>; sori
-roundish, scattered, at first tawny, at length growing pale, surrounded
-by the ruptured epidermis; spores subrotund and pyriform.—On
-the under surface of Willow-leaves.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'><b>Lecythea mixta</b>, Lév. <span class='sc'>Orange Willow Rust</span>; spots
-yellow; sori subrotund, aggregate, confluent, effuse, permanently
-surrounded by the ruptured epidermis; spores oblong and pyriform,
-orange.—On both surfaces of the leaves of Willows.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'><span class='pageno' id='Page_207'>207</span><b>Lecythea Saliceti</b>, Lév. <span class='sc'>Common Willow Rust</span>; spots
-yellowish; sori subrotund, solitary, or in circles, surrounded by
-the ruptured epidermis; barren spores subglobose and pedicellate
-or pyriform; fertile spores subglobose, orange.—On the under
-surface of Willow-leaves. Autumn. Common.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'><b>Lecythea Baryi</b>, Berk. <span class='sc'>De Bary’s Rust</span>; sori few;
-cystidia with an abrupt globose head; spores subglobose.—On
-leaves of <i>Brachypodium pennatum</i>. Very rare.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'><b>Lecythea Valerianæ</b>, Berk. <span class='sc'>Valerian Rust</span>; spots
-yellowish; sori subrotund, small, confluent, sometimes circinating;
-epidermis at length bursting; spores reddish-brown, subglobose
-or clavate, shortly pedicellate.—On <i>Valeriana officinalis</i>.
-August.</p>
-
-<div class='nf-center-c0'>
-<div class='nf-center c003'>
- <div>* * <i>Spores invested.</i></div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c022'><b>Lecythea gyrosa</b>, Berk. <span class='sc'>Ringed Rust</span>; spots obliterated;
-sori minute, confluent, and forming a small distinct ring; epidermis
-bursting; spores globose and elongato-pyriform, yellow or
-pale.—On the upper surface of Raspberry and Bramble leaves,
-forming a more or less perfect ring with the centre unoccupied.
-September. (<a href='#i104'>Plate VIII.</a> figs. 162-164.)</p>
-
-<div class='nf-center-c0'>
-<div class='nf-center c003'>
- <div>* * * <i>Spores concatenate.</i></div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c008'><b>Lecythea Capræarum</b>, Berk. <span class='sc'>Sallow Rust</span>; spots
-obliterated, yellow on the opposite side; sori varied in form, here
-and there confluent, surrounded by the ruptured epidermis;
-barren spores subglobose and pyriform, pedicellate; fertile spores
-subglobose, dirty yellow.—On the under surface of the leaves
-of Sallows. June to August. Very common. (<a href='#i104'>Plate VIII.</a> figs.
-160, 161.)</p>
-
-<p class='c008'><b>Lecythea Lini</b>, Berk. <span class='sc'>Flax Rust</span>; spots yellowish; sori
-subrotund, scattered, surrounded by the ruptured epidermis;
-spores globose or pyriform, sometimes pedicellate.—On <i>Linum
-catharticum</i>. July. Not uncommon. (<a href='#i104'>Plate VIII.</a> figs. 165-167.)</p>
-<h3 class='c031'><span class='sc'>Trichobasis</span>, <i>Lév.</i></h3>
-<p class='c036'><i>Spores</i> free; attached at first to a short peduncle, which at
-length falls away.—<i>Berk. Outl.</i>, pp. 332.</p>
-
-<div class='nf-center-c0'>
-<div class='nf-center c003'>
- <div>* <i>Spores yellow.</i></div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c008'><b>Trichobasis rubigo-vera</b>, Lév. <span class='sc'>Round Corn Rust</span>;
-spots yellow, heaps oval, scattered, generally on the upper
-surface; epidermis at length bursting longitudinally; spores subglobose,
-reddish-brown, easily dispersed.—On Grasses and Corn.
-Throughout the Summer. Very common. (<a href='#frontis'>Plate VII.</a> figs. 140-142.)</p>
-
-<p class='c008'><span class='pageno' id='Page_208'>208</span><b>Trichobasis linearis</b>, Lév. <span class='sc'>Long Corn Rust</span>; spots
-yellow-brown. Sori elliptic, then elongated and linear; epidermis
-bursting; spores oblong or globose, yellow.—On leaves and
-sheaths of Corn and Grasses. Summer. Common. <a href='#frontis'>Plate VII.</a>
-figs. 143, 144.)</p>
-
-<p class='c008'><b>Trichobasis Glumarum</b>, Lév. <span class='sc'>Glume Rust</span>; sori minute,
-round, scarcely convex, subgregarious, often confluent. Spores
-globose or subovoid, orange, not pedicellate; epispore smooth.—On
-the glumes of Cereals. August.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'><b>Trichobasis Symphyti</b>, Lév. <span class='sc'>Comfrey Rust</span>; Sori
-minute, very numerous, scattered, roundish, then confluent;
-epidermis ruptured, scarcely conspicuous around the margin;
-spores subglobose, pallid orange.—On Comfrey.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'><b>Trichobasis Pyrolæ</b>, B. <span class='sc'>Wintergreen Rust</span>; spots
-yellowish-brown on the opposite side; sori globose, minute,
-scattered or aggregate, on the under surface; epidermis generally
-closed; spores subglobose, yellow.—On <i>Pyrola rotundifolia</i>, &amp;c.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'><b>Trichobasis Petroselini</b>, B. <span class='sc'>Parsley Rust</span>; spots
-yellowish; sori subrotund and oval, confluent, on both surfaces;
-epidermis at length ruptured; spores globose or subglobose,
-occasionally obsoletely pedicellate, pale yellow.—On various
-<i>Umbelliferæ</i>.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'><b>Trichobasis Senecionis</b>, B. <span class='sc'>Groundsel Rust</span>; spots
-obliterated; sori solitary or regularly crowded, subrotund and
-oval, on the under surface, surrounded by the ruptured epidermis;
-spores subglobose, orange.—On various species of Groundsel.
-July. Very common. <a href='#frontis'>Plate VII.</a> figs. 145, 146.)</p>
-
-<p class='c008'><b>Trichobasis Caricina</b>, B. <span class='sc'>Sedge Rust</span>; spots red; sori
-oval, minute, scattered, surrounded by the ruptured epidermis;
-spores subglobose, reddish, then brown.—On <i>Carex pendula</i>, <i>C.
-pseudo-cyperus</i>, &amp;c. June to August. Common. (<a href='#i104'>Plate VIII.</a>
-figs. 170, 171.)</p>
-
-<div class='nf-center-c0'>
-<div class='nf-center c003'>
- <div>* * <i>Spores brown.</i></div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c008'><b>Trichobasis oblongata</b>, B. <span class='sc'>Luzula Rust</span>; spots oblong,
-often confluent, yellow-brown; sori elliptic, on both surfaces;
-epidermis closed; spores brown, obtuse at either extremity.—On
-<i>Luzulæ</i>. May to July. (<a href='#frontis'>Plate VII.</a> figs. 158, 159.)</p>
-
-<p class='c008'><b>Trichobasis Scillarum</b>, B. <span class='sc'>Hyacinth Rust</span>; spots
-oblong or subrotund, crowded into patches; epidermis bursting
-longitudinally; spores rubiginous, obovate, shortly pedunculate.—On
-the Wild Hyacinth, &amp;c.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'><b>Trichobasis Cichoracearum</b>, Lév. <span class='sc'>Hawkweed Rust</span>;
-on both sides of the leaf, dark, fuscous, minute, round, scattered:
-spores globose, rarely minutely pedicellate.—On Thistles and
-Hawkweed. July to September. Common.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'><span class='pageno' id='Page_209'>209</span><b>Trichobasis Artemisiæ</b>, B. <span class='sc'>Mugwort Rust</span>; spots obliterated,
-brownish on the opposite side; sori subglobose and
-oval, minute, scattered, on both surfaces; epidermis soon ruptured;
-spores subglobose, brownish.—On <i>Artemisia vulgaris</i>, &amp;c.
-Not common.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'><b>Trichobasis Labiatarum</b>, Lév. <span class='sc'>Mint Rust</span>; spots
-yellowish and brown; sori subrotund, scattered, subaggregate,
-on the under surface; epidermis ruptured; spores subglobose,
-brown.—On various <i>Labiatæ</i>. August to September. Common.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'><b>Trichobasis Lychnidearum</b>, Lév. <span class='sc'>Chickweed Rust</span>;
-spots pallid yellowish; sori subrotund plane, scattered on the
-under surface, cinnamon, at length brownish; epidermis ruptured;
-spores globoso-ovoid, sessile, or shortly pedicellate.—On <i>Caryophyllaceæ</i>.
-Summer and Autumn.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'><b>Trichobasis Umbellatarum</b>, Lév. <span class='sc'>Hemlock Rust</span>;
-spots yellowish; sori subrotund and ovate, scattered, on the under
-surface, surrounded by the ruptured epidermis; spores ovate,
-oval, and oblong in the same heap, brown.—On <i>Conium maculatum</i>,
-<i>Apium graveolens</i>, and other <i>Umbelliferæ</i>. August and September.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'><b>Trichobasis Heraclei</b>, B. <span class='sc'>Hogweed Rust</span>; on the
-under surface, scattered, sometimes subconfluent, roundish, light
-brown, girt by the remains of the epidermis; spores obovate,
-with a very short peduncle.—On <i>Heracleum spondylium</i>. June
-and July.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'><b>Trichobasis Hydrocotyles</b>, Cooke. <span class='sc'>Flukewort Rust</span>;
-without definite spots; sori chiefly on the upper, sometimes on
-the under surface, scattered, variable, roundish, erumpent, surrounded
-by the ruptured epidermis; spores subglobose, at length
-brown; epispore rough with minute tubercles.—On <i>Hydrocotyle
-vulgaris</i>. Epping, July to September, 1863 and 1864.
-(<a href='#i104'>Plate VIII.</a> figs. 168, 169.)</p>
-
-<p class='c008'><b>Trichobasis Betæ</b>, Lév. <span class='sc'>Beet-leaf Rust</span>; spots yellow;
-heaps subrotund and oval, scattered and concentric, on the upper
-surface; epidermis at length bursting; spores subglobose, shortly
-pedicellate, brown.—On the leaves of Beet. August and September.
-Common.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'><b>Trichobasis Fabæ</b>, Lév. <span class='sc'>Bean Rust</span>; spots obliterated;
-sori subrotund and oval; bullate, scattered and aggregate, surrounded
-by the ruptured epidermis; spores ovoid, brown.—On
-Beans. August and September. Common.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'><b>Trichobasis Galii</b>, Lév. <span class='sc'>Bedstraw Rust</span>; spots yellowish;
-sori subrotund, aggregate, closed; spores globose, reddish.—On
-<i>Galium verum</i>, <i>saxatile</i>, &amp;c. July and August.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'><span class='pageno' id='Page_210'>210</span><b>Trichobasis suaveolens</b>, Lév. <span class='sc'>Thistle Rust</span>; spots
-obliterated, yellow on the opposite side; sori subrotund, nearly
-plane, scattered, at length confluent, on the under surface, surrounded
-by the ruptured epidermis; spores globose, brown.—On
-leaves of Thistles, frequently covering the whole under surface.
-Summer. Common. (<a href='#frontis'>Plate VII.</a> figs. 151-153.)</p>
-
-<p class='c008'><b>Trichobasis Polygonorum</b>, B. <span class='sc'>Knotgrass Rust</span>; spots
-red-yellow, widely effused; sori subrotund, scattered, sometimes
-forming a ring, epidermis at length bursting; spores somewhat
-obovate, brown.—On <i>Polygonum aviculare</i>, <i>amphibium</i>, and other
-species. July to September. Common.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'><b>Trichobasis Vincæ</b>, B. <span class='sc'>Periwinkle Rust</span>; spots yellowish;
-sori small, subrotund, and oval, on the under surface, surrounded
-by the ruptured epidermis; spores oval, rather ovoid,
-brown.—On leaves of <i>Vinca major</i>. May and June. (<a href='#i096'>Plate VI.</a>
-fig. 130, 131.)</p>
-
-<p class='c008'><b>Trichobasis Geranii</b>, B. <span class='sc'>Geranium Rust</span>; spots yellowish;
-sori subrotund, nearly plane, scattered or confluent; spores
-subglobose, brown.—On various species of Geranium.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'><b>Trichobasis Violarum</b>, B. <span class='sc'>Violet Rust</span>; spots yellowish;
-sori subrotund, scattered, generally on the under surface; epidermis
-ruptured, persistent; spores subglobose, brown.—On leaves
-and petioles of Violets. July. Not uncommon.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'><b>Trichobasis Parnassiæ</b>, Cooke. <span class='sc'>Grass of Parnassus
-Rust</span>; on both surfaces of the leaves; sori at first bullate, at
-length rupturing the epidermis, scattered, often confluent; spores
-globose or nearly so, rather large, tawny brown.—On <i>Parnassia
-palustris</i>. Irstead, Norfolk. September, 1864.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'><b>Trichobasis Epilobii</b>, Berk. <span class='sc'>Willow-herb Rust</span>; spots
-yellowish; sori subrotund, scattered, surrounded by the ruptured
-epidermis, often on the under surface; spores subglobose, brown.—On
-<i>Epilobium montanum</i>, &amp;c. June and July.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'><b>Trichobasis Rhamni</b>, Cooke. <span class='sc'>Buckthorn Rust</span>; seated
-on definite yellowish spots; sori occurring only on the under
-surface of the leaves, scattered or collected in clusters, very
-minute, roundish, or oblong; spores at length rusty brown, subglobose.—On
-<i>Rhamnus catharticus</i>. Selsdon, Surrey. September
-16, 1864. (<i>A. Grugeon.</i>)</p>
-<h3 class='c031'><span class='sc'>Uromyces</span>, <i>Lév.</i></h3>
-<p class='c036'><i>Spores</i> unilocular, attached permanently to a decided peduncle
-of greater or less length.—<i>Berk. Outl.</i>, p. 333.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'><span class='pageno' id='Page_211'>211</span><b>Uromyces Alliorum</b>, DC. <span class='sc'>Garlic Rust</span>; spots obliterated,
-sori linear, oblong, or oval, amphigenous; spores subglobose,
-yellow.—On species of <i>Allium</i>.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'><b>Uromyces Ulmariæ</b>, Lév. <span class='sc'>Golden Rust</span>; broad, pulverulent,
-on the under surface of leaves, nerves, and petioles;
-spores numerous, subglobose, bright reddish-orange.—On <i>Spiræa
-Ulmariæ</i>, Roses, &amp;c. Common. (<a href='#frontis'>Plate VII.</a> figs. 147, 148.)</p>
-
-<p class='c008'><b>Uromyces appendiculata</b>, Lév. <span class='sc'>Long-stemmed Rust</span>;
-spots yellowish-brown, sori subrotund and oval, confluent, nearly
-plane, on the under surface. Epidermis bursting, spores ovoid,
-brown, with a long peduncle.—On <i>Leguminosæ</i> and other plants.
-August and September. (<a href='#frontis'>Plate VII.</a> figs. 149, 150.)</p>
-
-<p class='c008'><b>Uromyces apiculosa.</b>, Lév. <span class='sc'>Short-stemmed Rust</span>: spots
-yellow or brown, sori subrotund, scattered, surrounded by the
-ruptured epidermis; spores ovoid, brown, shortly pedunculate.—On
-dock and various other plants. August and September.
-Common. (<a href='#frontis'>Plate VII.</a> figs. 154, 155.)</p>
-
-<p class='c008'><b>Uromyces Limonii</b>, Lév. <span class='sc'>Sea-Lavender Rust</span>; epiphyllous,
-sori bullate, scattered or disposed in rings; spores
-ovate.—On <i>Statice limonia</i>.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'><b>Uromyces Ficariæ</b>, Lév. <span class='sc'>Pilewort Rust</span>; spots yellowish,
-sori scattered, aggregate, confluent, and expanded; epidermis
-ruptured; spores ovoid, brown.—On <i>Ranunculus Ficaria</i>.
-May and June. Common. (<a href='#frontis'>Plate VII.</a> figs. 156, 157.)</p>
-
-<p class='c008'><b>Uromyces Primulæ</b>, Lév. <span class='sc'>Primrose Rust</span>; spots yellowish,
-sori subrotund and oval, aggregate, on the under surface;
-epidermis at length bursting; spores ovoid, brown.—On Primroses.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'><b>Uromyces intrusa</b>, Lév. <span class='sc'>Lady’s-mantle Rust</span>; on the
-under surface, scattered, or partially aggregate, reddish-brown,
-rounded, somewhat prominent, minute, very unequal; spores
-roundish or oval.—On <i>Alchemilla vulgaris</i>.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'><b>Uromyces Iridis</b>, Lév. <span class='sc'>Iris Rust</span>; on the under, rarely
-on the upper, surface; spots yellow, sori small, pale red-brown,
-oblong and linear, scattered or aggregate, scarcely convex; epidermis
-bullate, rarely bursting longitudinally; spores globose or
-broadly elliptic, pale brown, pellucid.—On <i>Iris fœtidissima</i>.
-August to September. Not uncommon.</p>
-<h3 class='c031'><span class='sc'>Polycystis</span>, <i>Lév.</i></h3>
-<p class='c036'><i>Spores</i> irregular, consisting of several cells.—<i>Berk. Outl.</i>, p.
-334.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'><b>Polycystis Colchici</b>, Tul. <span class='sc'>Meadow-saffron Smut</span>; sori
-elongated, bursting irregularly; spores smooth or slightly papillose.—On
-leaves of Meadow-Saffron. Not common.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'><span class='pageno' id='Page_212'>212</span><b>Polycystis Violæ</b>, B. and Br. <span class='sc'>Violet Smut</span>; sori scattered,
-elongated, on both surfaces of the leaves and petioles;
-spores more or less globose, consisting of several cells surrounded
-by a common irregular crust.—On leaves and petioles of Violets.
-August. Common. (<a href='#i112'>Plate IX.</a> figs. 185, 186.)</p>
-
-<p class='c008'><b>Polycystis pompholygodes</b>, Lév. <span class='sc'>Buttercup Smut</span>;
-sori varied in form, bullate, epidermis inflated, at first entire, then
-bursting irregularly, its remains surrounding the clusters; spores
-copious, subglobose, black, opaque or pellucid.—On <i>Ranunculus
-repens</i> and other <i>Ranunculaceæ</i>. Summer. Very common.
-(<a href='#i112'>Plate IX.</a> figs. 183, 184.)</p>
-
-<p class='c008'><b>Polycystis parallela</b>, B. and Br. <span class='sc'>Rye Smut</span>; sori very
-long, linear, epidermis bursting longitudinally, spores globose,
-with several projecting nodules, dark brown.—On culms and
-sheaths of Rye and on the leaves of Carices. (<a href='#i112'>Plate IX.</a> figs. 187, 188.)</p>
-<h3 class='c031'><span class='sc'>Tuburcinia</span>, <i>Fr.</i></h3>
-<p class='c036'><i>Plant</i> deeply seated; <i>spores</i> multicellular, subglobose, or conchiform.
-<i>Berk. Outl.</i>, p. 335.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'><b>Tuburcinia scabies</b>, B. <span class='sc'>Potato Smut</span>; spores globose
-composed of minute cells forming together a hollow globe with
-one or more lacunæ, generally attached laterally by a slender
-thread, olive. On Potatoes. Common. (<a href='#i048'>Plate III.</a> fig. 54.)</p>
-
-<p class='c008'><b>Tuburcinia Trientalis</b>, B. and Br. <span class='sc'>Trientalis Smut</span>;
-sori two lines broad, bullate, containing a black mass of rather
-irregular depressed subglobose spores, which are very opaque
-and distinctly cellular. Hyphasma white, branched, creeping,
-delicate.—On leaves of <i>Trientalis Europæa</i>. August and September.
-Scotland. (<a href='#i048'>Plate III.</a> figs. 52, 53.)</p>
-<h3 class='c031'><span class='sc'>Coleosporium</span>, <i>Lév.</i></h3>
-<p class='c036'><i>Spores</i> cylindrical, septate, some separating at the joints, some
-of a different nature, persistent.—<i>Berk. Outl.</i>, p. 333.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'><b>Coleosporium Tussilaginis</b>, Lév. <span class='sc'>Coltsfoot Rust</span>; on
-the under surface, prominent, crowded, generally forming circles,
-becoming very confluent; spores numerous, sub-ovate, orange-yellow.—On
-<i>Tussilago Farfara</i>. Summer. Common. (<a href='#i104'>Plate VIII.</a>
-figs. 180, 181.)</p>
-
-<p class='c008'><b>Coleosporium pingue</b>, Lév. <span class='sc'>Tawny Rose Rust</span>; spots
-obliterated, sori effuse, on the nerves and petioles of the leaves;
-spores ovoid, yellowish-brown.—On Roses, &amp;c.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'><span class='pageno' id='Page_213'>213</span><b>Coleosporium Petasitis</b>, Lév. <span class='sc'>Butterbur Rust</span>; on
-the under surface, minute, depressed, spreading, somewhat aggregate,
-subconfluent, irregular in form; spores oval, orange,
-or orange-red.—On <i>Tussilago Petasites</i>. Autumn. Common.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'><b>Coleosporium Campanulæ</b>, Lév. <span class='sc'>Campanula Rust</span>;
-spots obliterated, brown on the opposite side, sori irregular, confluent,
-plane, on the under surface; spores subglobose, cohering,
-yellow, at length pale. On leaves of various Campanulæ. September
-and October.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'><b>Coleosporium Sonchi-arvensis</b>, Lév. <span class='sc'>Sow-thistle
-Rust</span>; on the under surface, depressed, irregular in form, scattered,
-partially confluent; spores ovate, reddish orange.—On
-<i>Sonchus oleraceus</i> and <i>arvensis</i>. Summer. Common.
-(<a href='#i104'>Plate VIII.</a> figs. 178, 179.)</p>
-
-<p class='c008'><b>Coleosporium Rhinanthacearum</b>, Lév. <span class='sc'>Cow-wheat
-Rust</span>; spots none or subferruginous; sori irregular, confluent, on
-the under, rarely on both surfaces; spores subglobose, compact,
-golden-yellow.—On <i>Euphrasia officinalis</i>, <i>Bartsia odontites</i>,
-<i>Melampyrum arvense</i>, &amp;c. August and September. Common.
-(<a href='#i104'>Plate VIII.</a> figs. 170, 177.)</p>
-<h3 class='c031'><span class='sc'>Melampsora</span>, <i>Cast</i>.</h3>
-<p class='c036'>Spores of two orders, crowded into a dense compact mass, with
-or without a covering, wedge-shaped. <i>Berk. Outl.</i>, p. 333.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'><b>Melampsora Euphorbiæ</b>, Cast. Hypophyllous; sori of
-summer spores golden-yellow, scattered, distinct, sometimes
-cauline; spores small, subglobose; sori of perfect spores becoming
-black, small, roundish, spores prismatic, membrane thickened
-above, dark brown.—On leaves and stems of <i>Euphorbia helioscopia</i>,
-<i>E. exigua</i>, and other species of spurge. Common. (<a href='#i112'>Plate IX.</a>
-figs. 193, 194.)</p>
-
-<p class='c008'><b>Melampsora Populina</b>, Lév. Hypophyllous, epiphyllous,
-or amphigenous, at first yellow or orange; summer spores
-obovate-oblong, attenuated or truncate, echinulate; paraphyses
-obovate, capitate or claviform, abundant in fully-ripened sori;
-sori of perfect spores at first tawny yellow, becoming black
-during the winter, swelling in the spring, and becoming of a
-cinnamon-colour, hypophyllous, roundish, or oblong; spores
-prism-shaped, 5-6 together, yellowish, smooth.—On leaves of
-<i>Populus nigra</i>. Common. Spores perfected in February.
-(<a href='#i112'>Plate IX.</a> figs. 195, 196.)</p>
-
-<p class='c008'><span class='pageno' id='Page_214'>214</span><b>Melampsora Tremulæ</b>, Tul. Hypophyllous; sori of
-summer spores punctiform, prominent, or papillæform, numerous;
-spores tawny-yellow, elliptical or obovate; paraphyses slender;
-sori of perfect spores scattered, at length blackish; spores
-elongated, compressed, attenuated downwards, yellowish.—On
-leaves of <i>Populus tremula</i>. Common. Spores perfected during
-the winter.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'><b>Melampsora Betulina</b>, Desm. Hypophyllous; sori of
-summer spores bright yellow or orange, oblong, cylindrical, or
-obovate, truncate at the base, echinulate; paraphyses encircling
-or intermixed, obovate, smooth, hyaline; sori of perfect spores
-confluent, of an obscure brown in the winter, becoming of a bright
-orange when mature; spores elongated, attenuated below, polygonal,
-ochraceous.—On leaves of <i>Betula alba</i>. Common. Spores
-perfected in January and February. (<a href='#i112'>Plate IX.</a> figs. 189, 190.)</p>
-
-<p class='c008'><b>Melampsora Salicina</b>, Lév. Epiphyllous or hypophyllous;
-sori, or heaps of summer spores, scattered, pale orange, bright
-orange, or cinereous; spores ovato-globose, paraphyses capitate,
-rarely obovate; sori of perfect spores epiphyllous, scattered or
-aggregate, at first yellowish-tawny, then brownish, at length
-nearly black, bullate; spores oblong, closely packed, and laterally
-compressed.—On <i>Salix viminalis</i> and <i>S. capræa</i>. Common. Spores
-perfected in February. (<a href='#i112'>Plate IX.</a> figs. 191, 192.)</p>
-<h3 class='c031'><span class='sc'>Cystopus.</span></h3>
-<p class='c038'>Receptacle consisting of thick branched threads; conidia concatenate,
-at length separating; oospores deeply seated on
-the mycelium.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'><b>Cystopus candidus</b>, Lév. <span class='sc'>Crucifer White Rust</span>;
-conidia equal, globose; membrane equal, ochraceous; oospores
-subglobose, epispore yellowish-brown, with irregular obtuse
-warts; warts solid.—On Shepherd’s-purse, Cabbages, and other
-Cruciferæ. Summer. Very common. (<a href='#i120'>Plate X.</a> figs. 198-200,
-205-207.)</p>
-
-<p class='c008'><b>Cystopus cubicus</b>, Str. <span class='sc'>Goatsbeard White Rust</span>;
-conidia unequal; terminal cell sterile, larger than the rest;
-membrane thickened, ochraceous, rarely yellowish; fertile cells
-shortly cylindrical; membrane hyaline; oospores globose; epispore
-brown, verrucose; warts hollow, round, or irregular.—On goatsbeard,
-salsify, and scorzonera. Summer and autumn. Common.
-(<a href='#i120'>Plate X.</a> figs. 201, 202, 210.)</p>
-
-<p class='c008'><b>Cystopus Lepigoni</b>, De By. <span class='sc'>Sandwort White Rust</span>;
-conidia unequal; terminal cell sterile, globose; membrane
-thickened; fertile cells subglobose or cylindrical; membrane
-hyaline; oospores globose; epispore brown, tubercles minute,
-irregular, very convex, often resembling spines.—On <i>Spergutaria
-rubra</i>. Swanscombe Marshes, September, 1864. (<i>R. G. Keeley.</i>)</p>
-<div>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_215'>215</span>
- <h3 class='c031'><span class='large'>PERONOSPOREI, De By.</span></h3>
-</div>
-
-<div class='nf-center-c0'>
-<div class='nf-center c000'>
- <div><span class='sc'>Peronospora</span>, <i>Casp.</i></div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c039'>Parasitic threads mostly inarticulate. Spores of two kinds:—1.
-Acrospores on the tips of the branchlets; 2. Oospores large,
-globose, on the creeping mycelium.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'><b>Peronospora infestans</b>, Mont. <span class='sc'>Potato Mould</span>; threads
-of mycelium slender, always destitute of suckers; fertile threads
-thin, gradually attenuated upwards, with one to five branches,
-one or more inflated vesicles near the apices of the branches;
-branches either simple or with short branchlets; acrospores
-ellipsoid or ovoid; apex furnished with a prominent papilla.—On
-leaves, stems, and tubers of the Potato, causing the potato-murrain.
-Very common since 1845. (<a href='#i144a'>Plate XIV.</a> fig. 264.)</p>
-
-<p class='c008'><b>Peronospora nivea</b>, Ung. (<i>P. macrospora</i>, B.). <span class='sc'>Parsnip
-Mould</span>; threads of mycelium stout, often torulose; suckers
-numerous, vesicular, obovate; fertile threads fasciculate, dwarfish,
-tapering or subulate, or once or twice shortly bifurcate, rarely
-trifurcate, with one to four horizontal branches near the summit,
-once, twice, or three times bifurcate; acrospores subglobose or
-ovoid, with an obtuse papilla at the apex.—On various <i>Umbelliferæ</i>.
-Common and variable.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'><b>Peronospora pygmæa</b>, Ung. (<i>P. curta</i>, Berk.). <span class='sc'>Anemone
-Mould</span>; threads of mycelium thickened, often constricted and
-varicose; suckers minute, obovate, or pear-shaped; fertile threads
-fasciculate (2-5 or more), simple above or divided at the apex
-into 2-4 short simple branches, or shortly twice dichotomous, or
-all simple, obtuse, surmounted by 2-4 short spicules; acrospores
-ovoid or ellipsoid, variable in size; apices broadly and obtusely
-papillate.—On Wood-anemone. Not uncommon. (<a href='#i152b'>Plate XV.</a>
-fig. 267.)</p>
-
-<p class='c008'><b>Peronospora gangliformis</b>, Berk. <span class='sc'>Lettuce Mould</span>;
-threads of the mycelium stout, now and then torulose; suckers
-vesicular, obovate or clavate; fertile threads 2-6 times dichotomous,
-sometimes trichotomous; stems and primary branches
-slender, dilated or inflated above; the ultimate ramuli inflated at
-the apex into a turbinate or subglobose vesicle bearing from
-2-8 subulate processes or spicules; acrospores minute, subglobose;
-apices with broad depressed papillæ, produced on the
-spicular processes, On Lettuces and other <i>Compositæ</i>. Frequent.
-(<a href='#i144b'>Plate XIV.</a> fig. 265.)</p>
-
-<p class='c008'><span class='pageno' id='Page_216'>216</span><b>Peronospora parasitica</b>, Pers. <span class='sc'>Cabbage Mould</span>;
-threads of the mycelium thickened and much branched; suckers
-numerous, branched; branches clavate, obtuse; fertile threads
-thick, soft, flexile, equal or unequal, 5-8 times dichotomous,
-rarely trichotomous; branches always repeatedly trifurcate;
-acrospores broadly elliptical, very obtuse at the apex, white.—On
-Cabbages, Shepherd’s-purse, and other Cruciferæ, sometimes
-in company with <i>Cystopus candidus</i>. Summer and autumn.
-Common. (<a href='#i138a'>Plate XIII.</a> fig. 262.)</p>
-
-<p class='c008'><b>Peronospora Viciæ</b>, Berk. <span class='sc'>Pea Mould</span>; fertile threads
-densely cæspitose, erect, equal, rarely unequal, 6-7-8 times
-dichotomous; ultimate ramuli shortly subulate, acute; acrospores
-ellipsoid, very obtuse at the apex, obtuse or slightly acute at the
-base; membrane with a violaceous tint.—On Tares, Peas, &amp;c.
-Frequent. (<a href='#i152a'>Plate XV.</a> fig. 266; <a href='#i120'>Plate X.</a> fig. 212.)</p>
-
-<p class='c008'><b>Peronospora Arenariæ</b>, Berk. <span class='sc'>Sandwort Mould</span>;
-fertile threads slender, 6-7 times equally, rarely unequally,
-dichotomous; branches spreading; ultimate ramuli slender,
-acute, subulate, nearly erect; acrospores broadly elliptical,
-oftentimes very obtuse, small; membrane scarcely violaceous.—On
-<i>Arenaria serpyllifolia</i> and <i>A. trinervis</i>.—June.
-(<a href='#i160a'>Plate XVI.</a> fig. 268; <a href='#i120'>Plate X.</a> fig. 211.)</p>
-
-<p class='c008'><b>Peronospora effusa</b>, Grev. <span class='sc'>Spinach Mould</span>; fertile
-threads fasciculate, short, thick, 2-6, rarely 7 times dichotomous
-above; acrospores broadly ellipsoid, sometimes very obtuse;
-membrane with a violaceous tint. On Spinach, Goosefoot, and
-some other allied plants. Spring and autumn. Not uncommon.
-(<a href='#i120'>Plate X.</a> figs. 214, 215.)</p>
-
-<p class='c008'><b>Peronospora Urticæ</b>, Casp. <span class='sc'>Nettle Mould</span>; fertile
-threads small, loosely 4-6 times dichotomous; branches flexuose,
-ultimate ramuli subulate, arcuate, often deflexed; acrospores
-large, broadly ovoid or subglobose, distinctly pedicellate; apices
-very obtuse; membrane violaceous.—On leaves of the common
-Nettle.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'><b>Peronospora trifoliorum</b>, De By. <span class='sc'>Clover Mould</span>; fertile
-threads cæspitose, equally or unequally 6-7 times dichotomous,
-rarely trichotomous; ultimate branches subulate, acute,
-slightly curved; acrospores ellipsoid, very obtuse; membrane
-with a slightly violaceous tint; oospores large; epispore brown.—On
-Lucern (<i>Medicago sativa</i>). Highgate and Hampstead,
-1864.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'><span class='pageno' id='Page_217'>217</span><b>Peronospora grisea</b>, Ung. <span class='sc'>Veronica Mould</span>; fertile
-threads erect, fasciculate, grey, 5-7 times regularly dichotomous;
-branches gradually attenuated; primary oblique erect;
-others spreading, flexuose; ultimate mostly unequal, slightly
-arcuate; acrospores ellipsoid or ovoid, obtuse; membrane pale
-and dirty violet.—On leaves of <i>Veronica beccabunga</i>. May, 1846.
-(<a href='#i120'>Plate X.</a> fig. 213.)</p>
-
-<p class='c008'><b>Peronospora arborescens</b>, Berk. <span class='sc'>Poppy Mould</span>; fertile
-threads slender, erect, 7-10 times dichotomous above;
-branches more or less flexuose, squarrose, spreading, gradually
-attenuated; ultimate ramuli shortly subulate, more or less
-arcuate; acrospores very small, subglobose; membrane scarcely
-violaceous.—On the Corn Poppy. June. Common.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'><b>Peronospora Schleideniana</b>, De By. (<i>P. Destructor</i>, B.)
-<span class='sc'>Onion Mould</span>; fertile threads robust, erect, not septate, branched
-alternately; ultimate ramuli forked and uncinate or divaricate;
-acrospores seated on the tips of the ultimate ramuli, obovoid or
-nearly pear-shaped, attenuated at the base; membrane of a dirty
-violet-colour.—On the leaves of various species of <i>Allium</i>. Often
-plentiful. (<a href='#i138b'>Plate XIII.</a> fig. 263.)</p>
-
-<p class='c008'><b>Peronospora violacea</b>, Berk. <span class='sc'>Scabious Mould</span>; fertile
-threads branched; acrospores sub-elliptical, violet-coloured. All
-that is known of this species is contained in the following note
-from the Rev. M. J. Berkeley:—“It grew on the petals of the
-common scabious. I have not found it again, and have either lost
-or mislaid my specimens. You may describe it as <i>læte violacea</i>;
-<i>floccis ramosis</i>; <i>sporis subellipticis</i>, <i>violaceis</i>. It is
-probably the <i>Farinaria</i> on Scabious of Sowerby.” (M. J. B.)</p>
-
-<p class='c008'><b>Peronospora sordida</b>, Berk. <span class='sc'>Figwort Mould</span>; forming
-broad, irregular, dirty, pallid spots on the under surface of the
-leaves; fertile threads loosely dichotomous above; tips forked,
-unequal; acrospores obovate, apiculate.—On leaves of <i>Scrophularia</i>.
-Jedburgh.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'><b>Peronospora sparsa</b>, Berk. <span class='sc'>Rose Mould</span>; fertile threads
-scattered, by no means torulose, ultimate branches scarcely uncinate,
-dichotomous, pallid grey; acrospores sub-elliptical.—On the
-under side of rose-leaves in conservatories.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'><b>Peronospora obliqua</b>, Cooke. <span class='sc'>Dock Mould</span>; threads of
-the mycelium slender; fertile threads fasciculate, erect, simple,
-rarely bifurcate, attenuated upwards; acrospores large, ellipsoid,
-attached obliquely near the base.—On the under surface of dock
-leaves. Winter and spring. Probably not uncommon. Brownish
-circular spots on the leaves indicate the presence of this mould,
-which is so minute that it might otherwise be overlooked.
-(<a href='#i160b'>Plate XVI.</a> fig. 269.)</p>
-<div>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_218'>218</span>
- <h3 class='c031'><b>Erysiphei</b>.</h3>
-</div>
-<div class='lg-container-b c000'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'><i>Conceptacle with one sporangium.</i></div>
- <div class='line in6'>Appendages floccose&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;<i>Sphærotheca</i>.</div>
- </div>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'><i>Conceptacle with many sporangia.</i></div>
- <div class='line in6'>Appendages needle-shaped, rigid&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;<i>Phyllactinia</i>.</div>
- <div class='line in6'>Appendages hooked&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;<i>Uncinula</i>.</div>
- <div class='line in6'>Appendages dichotomous&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;<i>Microsphæria</i>.</div>
- <div class='line in6'>Appendages floccose&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;<i>Erysiphe</i>.</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<h3 class='c031'><span class='sc'>Sphærotheca</span>, <i>Lév.</i></h3>
-<p class='c036'>Mycelium arachnoid; perithecia globose, containing a single
-globose sporangium; appendages numerous, floccose.—<i>Berk.
-Outl.</i>, p. 404.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'><b>Sphærotheca pannosa</b>, Lév. <span class='sc'>Rose Blight</span>; mycelium
-thickened, woolly, felted, persistent; conceptacles minute, globose,
-scattered; appendages floccose, white; sporangium many-spored.—On
-the branches, calyces, petioles, and leaves of Roses.
-Very common. (<a href='#i128'>Plate XI.</a> figs. 217, 218.)</p>
-
-<p class='c008'><b>Sphærotheca Castagnei</b>, Lév. <span class='sc'>Hop Blight</span>; on both
-surfaces; mycelium effuse, web-like, commonly evanescent; conceptacles
-minute, scattered, globose; appendages numerous, short,
-flexuose above; sporangium many-spored.—On the leaves of the
-Hop, Meadow-sweet, and various other plants. Common. (<a href='#i128'>Plate XI.</a>
-fig. 216.)</p>
-<h3 class='c031'><span class='sc'>Phyllactinia</span>, <i>Lév.</i></h3>
-<p class='c036'>Perithecia hemispherical, at length depressed, seated on a
-persistent or evanescent membranaceo-granular receptacle;
-appendages straight, rigid, acicular, at length bent back.—<i>Berk.
-Outl.</i>, p. 404.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'><b>Phyllactinia guttata</b>, Lév. <span class='sc'>Hazel Blight</span>; amphigenous;
-mycelium web-like, often evanescent; conceptacles large,
-scattered, hemispherical, at length depressed; appendages hyaline,
-rigid, simple; sporangia 4-20, containing 2-4 spores.—On
-the leaves of Hawthorn, Hazel, Ash, Elm, Alder, Beech, Birch,
-Oak, Hornbeam, and various other plants. Common. (<a href='#i128'>Plate XI.</a>
-figs. 219, 220.)</p>
-<h3 class='c031'><span class='sc'>Uncinula</span>, <i>Lév.</i></h3>
-<p class='c036'>Mycelium floccose; perithecia globose; appendages rigid, simple,
-bifid or dichotomous, uncinate, at length bent upwards.—<i>Berk.
-Outl.</i>, p. 404.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'><span class='pageno' id='Page_219'>219</span><b>Uncinula adunca</b>, Lév. <span class='sc'>Willow Blight</span>; mycelium
-variable; conceptacles scattered or gregarious, minute; appendages
-simple; sporangia 8-12, sub-pyriform, containing 4 spores.—On
-the leaves of Willows, Poplars, Birch, &amp;c. Not uncommon.
-(<a href='#i128'>Plate XI.</a> figs. 221-224.)</p>
-
-<p class='c008'><b>Uncinula bicornis</b>, Lév. <span class='sc'>Maple Blight</span>; amphigenous;
-mycelium web-like, effuse, evanescent, or like a membrane and persistent;
-conceptacles large, hemispherical, at length depressed;
-appendages simple, bifid or dichotomous, uncinate; sporangia 8,
-sub-pyriform, containing 8 spores.—On the leaves of Maples.
-Common. (<a href='#i128'>Plate XI.</a> figs. 225-228.)</p>
-<h3 class='c031'><span class='sc'>Microsphæria</span>, <i>Lév.</i></h3>
-<p class='c036'><i>Mycelium</i> arachnoid; appendages straight, dichotomous; branchlets
-swelling at the tip, or filiform.—<i>Berk. Outl.</i>, p. 404.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'><b>Microsphæria Hedwigii</b>, Lév. <span class='sc'>Mealy Guelder-rose
-Blight</span>; hypophyllous; mycelium web-like, evanescent; conceptacles
-minute, globose, scattered; appendages few, very little
-longer than the diameter of the conceptacles; sporangia 4, ovate,
-containing 4 spores.—On leaves of mealy Guelder-rose. Near
-Greenhithe, Kent.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'><b>Microsphæria penicillata</b>, Lév. <span class='sc'>Guelder-rose
-Blight</span>; amphigenous; mycelium web-like, effuse, evanescent;
-conceptacles scattered, minute, globose; appendages 8-12, equal
-to the diameter of the conceptacle; sporangia 4, ovate, rostrate,
-containing 8 spores.—On leaves of Guelder-rose and Alder. Probably
-not uncommon. (<a href='#i128'>Plate XI.</a> fig. 234.)</p>
-
-<p class='c008'><b>Microsphæria Mougeotii</b>, Lév. <span class='sc'>Tea-tree Blight</span>;
-amphigenous; mycelium web-like, oftentimes persistent; conceptacles
-minute, scattered or gregarious, globose, at length
-depressed; appendages loosely dichotomous; sporangia 12-16, on
-a short pedicel, 2-spored.—On leaves of <i>Lycium barbarum</i>.
-Near Dartford, Kent. October, 1864.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'><b>Microsphæria Berberidis</b>, Lév. <span class='sc'>Berberry Blight</span>;
-amphigenous; mycelium web-like, oftentimes persistent; conceptacles
-scattered or gregarious, globose, minute; appendages
-few (5-10); branchlets long, divaricate, obtuse at their apices;
-sporangia 6, ovate, containing 6-8 spores.—On leaves of the
-common Berberry. Autumn. Frequent. (<a href='#i128'>Plate XI.</a> figs. 229-232.)</p>
-
-<p class='c008'><span class='pageno' id='Page_220'>220</span><b>Microsphæria grossulariæ</b>, Lév. <span class='sc'>Gooseberry Blight</span>;
-amphigenous; mycelium web-like, fugacious or persistent; conceptacles
-scattered or gregarious, globose, minute; appendages
-10-15, vaguely dichotomous, ultimate branchlets bidentate;
-sporangia 4-8, ovate, containing 4-5 spores.—On Gooseberry-leaves.
-Autumn. Frequent.</p>
-<h3 class='c031'><span class='sc'>Erysiphe</span>, <i>Hedw.</i></h3>
-<p class='c036'>Mycelium arachnoid; appendages floccose, simple or irregularly
-branched.—<i>Berk. Outl.</i>, p. 404.</p>
-
-<div class='nf-center-c0'>
- <div class='nf-center'>
- <div>* <i>Sporangia 2-spored.</i></div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c008'><b>Erysiphe Linkii</b>, Lév. <span class='sc'>Mugwort Blight</span>; amphigenous;
-mycelium web-like; fugacious or persistent; conceptacles minute,
-globose, scattered, emersed; appendages white, interwoven with
-the mycelium; sporangia 8-20, pyriform, with elongated pedicels.—On
-leaves of Mugwort. Autumn. Frequent. (<a href='#i136'>Plate XII.</a>
-figs. 248, 249.)</p>
-
-<p class='c008'><b>Erysiphe lamprocarpa</b>, Lév. <span class='sc'>Composite Blight</span>; amphigenous;
-mycelium web-like, fugacious or persistent; conceptacles
-minute, globose, scattered, or gregarious; appendages
-coloured, interwoven with the mycelium; sporangia 8-16, shortly
-pedicellate.—On leaves of Salsify, Scorzonera, Plantain, &amp;c. Autumn.
-Not uncommon. (<a href='#i136'>Plate XII.</a> figs. 250, 251.)</p>
-
-<div class='nf-center-c0'>
-<div class='nf-center c003'>
- <div>** <i>Sporangia 3-8-spored.</i></div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c008'><b>Erysiphe graminis</b>, D.C. <span class='sc'>Grass Blight</span>; amphigenous
-or epiphyllous; mycelium effuse, floccose, persistent; conceptacles
-large, gregarious or disseminated, hemispherical, at length depressed
-and semi-immersed; appendages simple or interwoven
-with the mycelium; sporangia 20-24, ovate, pedicellate, with
-8 spores.—On leaves of Grasses. Autumn. Frequent. (<a href='#i128'>Plate XI.</a>
-figs. 235, 236.)</p>
-
-<p class='c008'><b>Erysiphe Martii</b>, Lk. <span class='sc'>Pea Blight</span>; amphigenous; mycelium
-web-like, very often evanescent, globose; appendages short,
-interwoven with the mycelium; sporangia 4-8, globose, pedicellate,
-with 4-8 spores.—On leaves of Peas, Beans, <i>Umbelliferæ</i>,
-and other plants. Autumn. Very common. (<a href='#i128'>Plate XI.</a> figs.
-237-239.)</p>
-
-<p class='c008'><b>Erysiphe Montagnei</b>, Lév. <span class='sc'>Burdock Blight</span>; amphigenous
-or hypophyllous; mycelium web-like, evanescent; conceptacles
-minute, globose, gregarious or scattered; appendages
-distinct from the mycelium; sporangia 8, ovate, rostrate, with
-2-3 spores.—On leaves of Burdock. Not uncommon.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'><span class='pageno' id='Page_221'>221</span><b>Erysiphe tortilis</b>, Lk. <span class='sc'>Cornel Blight</span>; hypophyllous;
-mycelium web-like, effuse, evanescent; conceptacles minute, globose;
-appendages ten times as long, free from the mycelium,
-flexuose; sporangia 4, ovate, rostrate, with 4 spores.—On leaves
-of the common Dogwood. Autumn. Frequent. (<a href='#i136'>Plate XII.</a> figs.
-245, 246.)</p>
-
-<p class='c008'><b>Erysiphe communis</b>, Schl. <span class='sc'>Buttercup Blight</span>; hypophyllous;
-mycelium effuse, web-like, evanescent or persistent;
-conceptacles minute, globose, scattered or gregarious; appendages
-short; sporangia 4-8, ovate, rostrate, with 4-8 spores.—On
-leaves of various <i>Ranunculaceæ</i>, <i>Leguminosæ</i>, and other plants.
-Autumn. Very common. (<a href='#i128'>Plate XI.</a> figs. 240-242.)</p>
-<h3 class='c031'><span class='sc'>Chætomium</span>, <i>Kze.</i></h3>
-<p class='c036'>Perithecium thin, brittle, mouthless; sporangia linear, containing
-dark lemon-shaped spores. <i>Berk. Outl.</i>, p. 405.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'><b>Chætomium elatum</b>, Kze. <span class='sc'>Straw-bristle Mould</span>;
-perithecium sub-ovate, base radiato-fibrose, hairs of the vertex
-very long, interwoven, branched; spores broadly elliptic, apiculate
-at either end.—On mouldering straw, reeds, matting, &amp;c. Very
-common. (<a href='#i136'>Plate XII.</a> figs. 257-259.)</p>
-
-<p class='c008'><b>Chætomium chartarum</b>, Ehb. <span class='sc'>Paper-bristle Mould</span>;
-perithecium subglobose, black, surrounded by a bright yellow
-spot; spores subglobose.—On paper. Stibbington, Hants. Rare.
-(<a href='#i136'>Plate XII.</a> figs. 252, 253.)</p>
-
-<p class='c008'><b>Chætomium glabrum</b>, B. This species has never
-been described. It was recorded, by name only, in
-Berkeley’s Outlines, and, the specimens being mislaid,
-that gentleman is unable to describe it completely and
-correctly. “It grew abundantly on straw, and differed
-from <i>Chætomium elatum</i> in being perfectly free
-from hairs.”—(<i>M. J. B.</i>)—On damp straw.</p>
-<h3 class='c031'><span class='sc'>Ascotricha</span>, <i>Berk.</i></h3>
-<p class='c036'>Perithecium thin, free, mouthless, seated on loose, branched,
-conidiiferous threads; sporangia linear, containing dark
-elliptic spores.—<i>Berk. Outl.</i>, p. 405.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'><b>Ascotricha chartarum</b>, B. <span class='sc'>Paper Mildew</span>; perithecium
-thin, olive-brown, seated on radiating flocci; sporangia linear,
-numerous; spores broadly elliptic, chocolate-coloured.—On white
-printed paper in a deal candle-box. King’s Cliffe. (<a href='#i136'>Plate XII.</a>
-figs. 254-256.)</p>
-<div>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_222'>222</span>
- <h3 class='c031'><span class='sc'>Eurotium</span>, <i>Link.</i></h3>
-</div>
-<p class='c036'>Perithecia reticulated, vesicular, coloured, attached to mucedinous
-threads; sporangia delicate.—<i>Berk. Outl.</i>, p. 405.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'><b>Eurotium herbariorum</b>, Lk. <span class='sc'>Herbarium Mould</span>;
-perithecium spherical, sub-depressed, yellow, seated upon
-radiating expanded, branched, intricate flocci.—On plants in
-herbaria, and various decaying substances. Very common.
-(<a href='#i136'>Plate XII.</a> figs. 260, 261.)</p>
-<div class='pbb'>
- <hr class='pb c003' />
-</div>
-<div class='chapter'>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_223'>223</span>
- <h2 id='app2' class='c035'>APPENDIX B.</h2>
-</div>
-<hr class='c040' />
-<p class='c023'>The following species, belonging to those sections
-of Microscopic Fungi which are included in this
-volume, have been found in Britain since the publication
-of the preceding Appendix:—</p>
-
-<p class='c008'><b>Peridermium columnare</b>, Alb. and Schw. Simple,
-slender, naked, cylindrical, elongated, lacerated at the apex,
-white; sporidia orange.—On <i>Picea</i>. Watcombe, near Torquay.
-September, 1867. (<i>E. Parfitt.</i>)</p>
-
-<hr class='c028' />
-
-<p class='c008'><b>Æcidium Orchidearum</b>, Fiedl. <span class='sc'>Orchis Cluster-cup</span>;
-spots large, pallid, orbicular or elongated; peridia circinating,
-semi-immersed; spores golden-yellow.—On <i>Orchis latifolia</i>.
-Dilham, Norfolk. June, 1866.</p>
-
-<hr class='c028' />
-
-<p class='c008'><b>Puccinia discoidearum</b>, Link. <span class='sc'>Southernwood Brand</span>;
-spots obliterated; sori subrotund, minute, surrounded by the
-ruptured epidermis; sporidia brown, oblong or ovoid, somewhat
-rhomboidal, with both cells attenuated, and triangular; peduncles
-elongated.—On <i>Artemisia maritima</i>. Swanscombe Marshes.
-1865.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'><b>Puccinia Virgaureæ</b>, Lib. <span class='sc'>Golden-rod Brand</span>; spots
-orbicular, pallid, then yellowish; sori blackish-brown, minute,
-punctiform, shining, clustered, nearly stellate, convex; sporidia
-oblong, subconstricted, yellowish-brown above, attenuated and
-yellowish-white below; peduncles short.—On leaves of <i>Solidago
-virgaurea</i>. Shere, Surrey. July and August, 1865. (<i>Dr. Capron.</i>)</p>
-
-<p class='c008'><b>Puccinia difformis</b>, Kunze. <span class='sc'>Goosegrass Brand</span>; spots
-yellowish; sori variable, compact, often in rings; epidermis
-bullate; sporidia obovate, obtuse, on short pedicels, brown.—On
-leaves of <i>Galium aparine</i>. July, 1866. Shere and Darenth
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_224'>224</span>Usually occurring on or near spots previously occupied by
-<i>Æcidium</i>.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'><b>Puccinia Apii</b>, Corda. <span class='sc'>Celery Brand</span>; sori large, confluent,
-red-brown, powdery; spores oblong, constricted, brown;
-epispore smooth, thick; pedicels short, attenuated.—On leaves
-of Celery. Autumn, 1866, 1867.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'><b>Puccinia Asari</b>, Kunze. <span class='sc'>Asarabacca Brand</span>; spots
-obliterated; sori small, subglobose, crowded or circinating, ultimately
-confluent, surrounded by the ruptured epidermis, usually
-forming a large, roundish, convex, pulverulent mass; sporidia
-brown, elliptic, constricted.—On leaves of <i>Asarum Europæum</i>.
-Bettws-y-coed, N. Wales. July, 1866.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'><b>Puccinia Mœhringiæ</b>, Fuckel. It is very doubtful whether
-this deserves to rank as a species distinct from <i>P. Lychnidearum</i>,
-Lk. I think not. The sporidia are rather shorter than in the
-last-named species, and the pedicels are very long; otherwise it
-does not appear to differ from the typical form.—On <i>Mœhringia
-trinervis</i>. Near Worcester. June, 1867. (<i>Dr. Holl.</i>)</p>
-
-<p class='c008'><b>Puccinia fallens</b>, Cooke. <span class='sc'>Vetch Brand</span>; sori few and
-small, scattered, intermixed with pustules of <i>Trichobasis</i>; sporidia
-obovate, on rather long pedicels, of a tawny colour, and slightly
-constricted at the septum; epispore smooth.—On leaves of <i>Vicia
-sepium</i>. Liverpool. Autumn, 1865. (<i>R. McLeod.</i>)</p>
-
-<hr class='c028' />
-
-<p class='c008'><b>Uredo Orchidis</b>, Mart. <span class='sc'>Orchis Uredo</span>; amphigenous;
-spots reddish-brown; sori subrotund, arranged in circles, often
-confluent; sporidia subglobose, golden-yellow.—On <i>Listera ovata</i>
-and <i>Orchis latifolia</i>. Crosby, near Liverpool. May, June, 1865.
-(<i>R. G. McLeod.</i>)</p>
-
-<p class='c008'><b>Uredo Empetri</b>, D.C. <span class='sc'>Crowberry Uredo</span>; hypogenous;
-spots obliterated; sori oval, scattered: the epidermis at first
-convex, afterwards ruptured and concave; sporidia ovoid or subglobose,
-bright yellow.—On <i>Empetrum nigrum</i>. Near Llanderfel,
-N. Wales. May, 1865.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'><b>Uredo Euonymi</b>, Mart. <span class='sc'>Spindle Uredo</span>; spots yellowish;
-sori roundish, circinating, often confluent; epidermis erumpent;
-sporidia ovoid and slightly coherent, tawny-yellow.—On
-leaves of <i>Euonymus Europæus</i>. Darenth Wood, Kent. August,
-1864. Rare.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'><b>Uredo Tropæoli</b>, Desmz. <span class='sc'>Nasturtium Uredo</span>: hypogenous;
-spots pale-yellow; sori minute, roundish, scattered or
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_225'>225</span>confluent; sporidia ovoid or subglobose, orange.—On leaves of
-<i>Tropæolum aduncum</i>. Shere. October, 1865. (<i>Dr. Capron.</i>)</p>
-
-<hr class='c028' />
-
-<p class='c008'><b>Trichobasis fallens</b>, Cooke. <span class='sc'>Clover Rust</span>; spots obliterated;
-sori amphigenous, numerous, scattered, subrotund,
-brown, surrounded by the remains of the ruptured epidermis;
-spores sub-ovate; pedicels short, hyaline, evanescent; epispore
-verrucose. <i>Uredo fallens</i>, Desmz.—On leaves of Clover, &amp;c.
-September. Not uncommon.</p>
-
-<hr class='c028' />
-
-<p class='c008'><b>Uromyces graminum</b>, Cooke. <span class='sc'>Cocksfoot Rust</span>; epiphyllous;
-sori oblong or confluent and linear, convex, black and
-shining, so as easily to be confounded on casual observation with
-<i>Dothidea graminis</i>, at length bursting longitudinally; sporidia
-subglobose or ovate, tawny, with hyaline pedicels of variable
-length.—On leaves of <i>Dactylis glomerata</i>. Shere. October, 1865.
-(<i>Dr. Capron.</i>)</p>
-
-<p class='c008'><b>Uromyces concentrica</b>, Lév. Described at p. <a href='#Page_208'>208</a> as
-<i>Trichobasis Scillarum</i>, B.; but it appears to be a good <i>Uromyces</i>,
-and has been placed in that genus by Lévielle.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'><b>Uromyces sparsa</b>, Lév. <span class='sc'>Sandwort Rust</span>; spots pallid;
-sori subrotund and oval, amphigenous and cauline; epidermis
-erumpent; sporidia ovoid, brownish; peduncles thickened, short.—On
-<i>Spergularia rubra</i>. Swanscombe Marshes. June, 1865.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'><b>Uromyces Polygoni</b>, Fuckel. <span class='sc'>Knotgrass Rust</span>; cauline;
-sori elongated and confluent, convex, surrounded by the remains
-of the ruptured epidermis; sporidia subglobose or globose, smooth,
-yellowish-brown; pedicels very long, thickened, hyaline, persistent.
-<i>Capitularia Polygoni</i>, Rabh.—On the stems of <i>Polygonum aviculare</i>.
-October. Common.</p>
-
-<hr class='c028' />
-
-<p class='c008'><b>Cystopus spinulosus</b>, De Bary. <span class='sc'>Thistle (White) Rust</span>;
-conidia in time much elongated; sori erumpent on both surfaces
-of the leaves, white; oospores globose; epispore brown; tubercles
-minute, solid, very prominent, often acute and spinulose.—On
-Thistles. Bungay, Suffolk. September, 1865.</p>
-
-<hr class='c028' />
-
-<p class='c008'><b>Peronospora candida</b>, Fuckel. <span class='sc'>Primrose Mould</span>;
-densely cæspitose, white; threads erect, dichotomously branched;
-ultimate branchlets short, spreading; sporidia ovate.—On leaves
-of Primrose. Near Corwen, N. Wales. July, 1866.</p>
-
-<div class='nf-center-c0'>
-<div class='nf-center c003'>
- <div><span class='pageno' id='Page_226'>226</span>The following genus is entirely new to Britain. Its position is</div>
- <div>next to <i>Microsphæria</i> at page 219.</div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<h3 class='c031'><span class='sc'>Podosphæra</span>, <i>Kunze</i>.</h3>
-
-<p class='c022'>Mycelium effuse, web-like, evanescent; conceptacles sphærical,
-containing one subglobose 8-spored sporangium; spores ovate;
-appendages few, dichotomous, thickened at their extremities,
-hyaline.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'><b>Podosphæra Kunzei</b>, Lév. <span class='sc'>Plum Blight</span>; amphigenous;
-conceptacles minute, scattered, globose; appendages three times
-the length of the diameter of the conceptacles.—On leaves of
-<i>Prunus domestica</i>. Shere, Surrey. Sept., 1865. (<i>Dr. Capron.</i>)</p>
-
-<p class='c008'><b>Podosphæra clandestina</b>, Lév. <span class='sc'>Hawthorn Blight</span>;
-amphigenous; conceptacles minute, globose, scattered; appendages
-(8-10) equal in length to the diameter of the conceptacles;
-branches short and rounded at their extremities.—On leaves of
-the Hawthorn. Upper Holloway. October, 1864; Shere, Surrey,
-September, 1865. (<i>E. C.</i>)</p>
-
-<hr class='c028' />
-
-<p class='c008'><b>Uncinula Wallrothii</b>, Lév. <span class='sc'>Sloe Blight</span>; amphigenous;
-mycelium web-like, evanescent; conceptacles minute, scattered;
-sporanges 12-16, pear-shaped, 6-spored; appendages numerous,
-twice the length of the diameter of the conceptacles.—On leaves
-of the Sloe, <i>Prunus spinosa</i>. Shere, Surrey. October, 1865.
-(<i>Dr. Capron.</i>)</p>
-
-<hr class='c028' />
-
-<p class='c008'><b>Microsphæria comata</b>, Lév. <span class='sc'>Spindle Blight</span>; hypophyllous;
-mycelium web-like, fugacious; conceptacles scattered,
-minute, globose; sporanges 8, ovate, with a beak-like termination
-at their base, 4-spored; appendages few, six times the length of
-the diameter of the conceptacles.—On <i>Euonymus Europæus</i>. Shere,
-Surrey. August, 1865. (<i>Dr. Capron.</i>)</p>
-
-<hr class='c028' />
-
-<p class='c008'><b>Erysiphe horridula,</b> Lév. <span class='sc'>Borage Blight</span>; amphigenous;
-mycelium web-like, sometimes persistent; conceptacles minute,
-globose, scattered or clustered; sporanges 20-24, oblong-ovate,
-attenuated downwards, containing 3-4 spores; appendages short,
-flexuose, and bent upwards.—On leaves of <i>Lycopsis arvensis</i>.
-Shere. October, 1865. (<i>Dr. Capron.</i>)</p>
-
-<hr class='c028' />
-
-<p class='c008'><b>Chætomium murorum</b>, Corda. <span class='sc'>Wall Bristle-mould</span>;
-gregarious, glaucous, then blackish; perithecium globose, brown;
-hairs circinate, erect, septate, pulverulent; spores oblong, yellowish.
-On plaster. Rare. (<i>M. J. B.</i>)</p>
-<div class='pbb'>
- <hr class='pb c003' />
-</div>
-<div class='chapter'>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_228'>228</span>
- <h2 class='c012'>ADDENDA.</h2>
-</div>
-<hr class='c040' />
-<p class='c041'>[The following species have been added to the British Flora since
-the publication of the Appendix.]</p>
-
-<p class='c008'><b>Æcidium Parnassiæ</b>, Grav. <span class='sc'>Parnassia Cluster-cups</span>;
-hypophyllous; spots pallid; peridia in subrotund patches, irregularly
-disposed, tawny-yellow, between urceolate and concave; the
-margin thick and nearly entire; spores pallid. <i>Duby. Bot. Gall.</i>
-ii. p. 904.—On leaves of <i>Parnassia palustris</i>, near Glasgow.
-(<i>Dr. Greville.</i>) The original specimen is in the Edinburgh
-Herbarium.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'><b>Æcidium Statices</b>, Desm. <span class='sc'>Sea-Lavender Cluster-cups</span>;
-hypophyllous; spots subrotund, or confluent and irregular,
-purple; peridia in subrotund circinating clusters, sometimes
-irregularly disposed on the nerves and petioles; urceolate; margin
-lacerated, white; spores orange. <i>Desm. Exs.</i> No. 132. <i>Cooke,
-Exs.</i> No. 444.—On leaves and petioles of <i>Statices</i>. June, July.
-Fleetwood, 1859 (<i>Rev. A. Bloxam</i>). Walney Island, Lancashire,
-1871 (<i>C. Bailey</i>). Near Basingstoke, 1871 (<i>R. S. Hill</i>). Near
-Chichester, 1872 (<i>F. V. Paxton</i>).</p>
-
-<p class='c008'><b>Chætomium funicolum</b>, Cooke. <span class='sc'>Twine Bristle-mould</span>;
-perithecia scattered, sub-ovate, black; hairs of the vertex very
-long, dichotomous or simple, erect, slender, acute, black; sporidia
-lemon-shaped, dingy brown.—On twine suspended in a vessel
-containing water at the British Museum. (<i>W. Carruthers, F.R.S.</i>)
-March, 1872. This species is most closely allied to <i>C. elatum</i>, but
-much smaller and neater. It is wholly black, and without the fibrous
-base of <i>C. elatum</i>. The hairs are more delicate, not having half
-the diameter, and the sporidia are scarcely more than half as long
-or broad. A species of <i>Polyactis</i> afterwards made its appearance
-on the same mycelium on some portion of the twine left behind
-with a few immature perithecia.</p>
-<div class='pbb'>
- <hr class='pb c003' />
-</div>
-<div class='chapter'>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_229'>229</span>
- <h2 class='c012'>EXPLANATION OF PLATES.</h2>
-</div>
-<hr class='c040' />
-<table class='table5' summary=''>
-<colgroup>
-<col width='8%' />
-<col width='8%' />
-<col width='83%' />
-</colgroup>
- <tr>
- <td class='c042'>Plate</td>
- <td class='c042'>fig.</td>
- <td class='c043'>&nbsp;</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c042'><a href='#i004'>I.</a></td>
- <td class='c042'>1.</td>
- <td class='c043'>Goatsbeard with its cluster-cups (<i>Æcidium Tragopogonis</i>).</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c042'>〃</td>
- <td class='c042'>2.</td>
- <td class='c043'>Fragment of same, slightly magnified.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c042'>〃</td>
- <td class='c042'>3.</td>
- <td class='c043'>Section of cluster-cup, further magnified.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c042'>〃</td>
- <td class='c042'>4.</td>
- <td class='c043'>Leaf of wood-anemone with its cluster-cups (<i>Æcidium leucospermum</i>).</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c042'>〃</td>
- <td class='c042'>5.</td>
- <td class='c043'>Portion of same, slightly magnified.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c042'>〃</td>
- <td class='c042'>6.</td>
- <td class='c043'>Anemone cluster-cups, further magnified.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c042'>〃</td>
- <td class='c042'>7.</td>
- <td class='c043'>Leaf of Berberry with cluster-cups (<i>Æcidium Berberidis</i>).</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c042'>〃</td>
- <td class='c042'>8.</td>
- <td class='c043'>Cluster of cups from the Berberry, as seen with a lens.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c042'>〃</td>
- <td class='c042'>9.</td>
- <td class='c043'>Cluster-cups of Berberry, magnified.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c042'>〃</td>
- <td class='c042'>10.</td>
- <td class='c043'>Nettle-stem distorted by growth of cluster-cups (<i>Æcidium Urticæ</i>).</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c042'>〃</td>
- <td class='c042'>11.</td>
- <td class='c043'>Nettle cluster-cups, magnified.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c042'><a href='#i032'>II.</a></td>
- <td class='c042'>12.</td>
- <td class='c043'>Leaf of Pilewort with groups of cluster-cups (<i>Æcidium Ranunculacearum</i>).</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c042'>〃</td>
- <td class='c042'>13.</td>
- <td class='c043'>Group of cluster-cups from Pilewort, as seen with a lens.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c042'>〃</td>
- <td class='c042'>14.</td>
- <td class='c043'>Section of Pilewort cluster-cups, magnified.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c042'>〃</td>
- <td class='c042'>15.</td>
- <td class='c043'>Bedstraw cluster-cups (<i>Æcidium Galii</i>) on the Great Hedge Bedstraw.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c042'>〃</td>
- <td class='c042'>16.</td>
- <td class='c043'>Tip of leaflet with cluster of cups, viewed through a lens.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c042'>〃</td>
- <td class='c042'>17.</td>
- <td class='c043'>Bedstraw cluster-cup from same, magnified.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c042'>〃</td>
- <td class='c042'>18.</td>
- <td class='c043'>Leaflets of Mountain-ash with horn-shaped cluster-cups (<i>Rœstelia cornuta</i>).</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c042'>〃</td>
- <td class='c042'>19.</td>
- <td class='c043'>Group of Mountain-ash cluster-cups, magnified.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c042'>〃</td>
- <td class='c042'>20.</td>
- <td class='c043'>Pear-leaf with its cluster-cups (<i>Rœstelia cancellata</i>).</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c042'>〃</td>
- <td class='c042'>21.</td>
- <td class='c043'>Cluster-cup from the same, magnified.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c042'>〃</td>
- <td class='c042'>22.</td>
- <td class='c043'>Leaves and fruit of Hawthorn with lacerated cluster-cups (<i>Rœstelia lacerata</i>).</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c042'>〃</td>
- <td class='c042'>23.</td>
- <td class='c043'>Elongated cells forming the walls of the cluster-cups, × 250.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c042'>〃</td>
- <td class='c042'>24.</td>
- <td class='c043'>Single cell, more highly magnified, with its parallel striæ.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c042'><span class='pageno' id='Page_230'>230</span>〃</td>
- <td class='c042'>25.</td>
- <td class='c043'>Cluster-cups from fruit of Hawthorn, magnified.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c042'>〃</td>
- <td class='c042'>26.</td>
- <td class='c043'>Section of same, further magnified.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c042'>〃</td>
- <td class='c042'>27.</td>
- <td class='c043'>Fir-leaves bearing cluster-cups (<i>Peridermium Pini</i>).</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c042'>〃</td>
- <td class='c042'>28.</td>
- <td class='c043'>Isolated cup of same, magnified.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c042'><a href='#i048'>III.</a></td>
- <td class='c042'>29.</td>
- <td class='c043'>Many-jointed fruit of Burnet chain-brand (<i>Xenodochus carbonarius</i>), magnified.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c042'>〃</td>
- <td class='c042'>30.</td>
- <td class='c043'>Leaflets of Burnet with rust on the lower, and brand (<i>Aregma acuminatum</i>) on the upper leaflets.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c042'>〃</td>
- <td class='c042'>31.</td>
- <td class='c043'>Spores of Burnet rust (<i>Lecythea Poterii</i>) × 230.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c042'>〃</td>
- <td class='c042'>32.</td>
- <td class='c043'>Fruit of Burnet brand (<i>Aregma acuminatum</i>).</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c042'>〃</td>
- <td class='c042'>33.</td>
- <td class='c043'>Leaf of Barren Strawberry with rust and brand intermixed.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c042'>〃</td>
- <td class='c042'>34.</td>
- <td class='c043'>Spores of Barren Strawberry rust × 230.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c042'>〃</td>
- <td class='c042'>35.</td>
- <td class='c043'>Fruit of Strawberry brand (<i>Aregma obtusatum</i>) × 300.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c042'>〃</td>
- <td class='c042'>36.</td>
- <td class='c043'>Leaflet of Rose with its rust and brand intermixed.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c042'>〃</td>
- <td class='c042'>37.</td>
- <td class='c043'>Spores of Rose rust (<i>Lecythea Rosæ</i>) × 230.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c042'>〃</td>
- <td class='c042'>38.</td>
- <td class='c043'>Fruit of Rose brand (<i>Aregma mucronatum</i>) × 300.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c042'>〃</td>
- <td class='c042'>39.</td>
- <td class='c043'>Leaflet of Bramble, with its rust and brand intermixed.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c042'>〃</td>
- <td class='c042'>40.</td>
- <td class='c043'>Spores of Bramble rust (<i>Lecythea Ruborum</i>) × 230.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c042'>〃</td>
- <td class='c042'>41.</td>
- <td class='c043'>Fruit of Bramble brand (<i>Aregma bulbosum</i>) × 300.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c042'>〃</td>
- <td class='c042'>42.</td>
- <td class='c043'>Leaflet of Raspberry with its brand.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c042'>〃</td>
- <td class='c042'>43.</td>
- <td class='c043'>Fruit of Raspberry brand (<i>Aregma gracile</i>) × 230.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c042'>〃</td>
- <td class='c042'>44.</td>
- <td class='c043'>Cluster of fruits of Rose brand (<i>Aregma mucronatum</i>) × 230.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c042'>〃</td>
- <td class='c042'>45.</td>
- <td class='c043'>Fruit of Bramble brand (<i>Aregma bulbosum</i>) in active germination, with sporidia at the tips of the threads × 300.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c042'>〃</td>
- <td class='c042'>46.</td>
- <td class='c043'>Fruit of Bramble brand (<i>Aregma bulbosum</i>) ruptured, with inner cell escaping × 250 (<i>F. Currey</i>).</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c042'>〃</td>
- <td class='c042'>47.</td>
- <td class='c043'>Portion of leaflet of Meadow-sweet with its brand.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c042'>〃</td>
- <td class='c042'>48.</td>
- <td class='c043'>Spores of Meadow-sweet brand (<i>Triphragmium ulmariæ</i>) × 300.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c042'>〃</td>
- <td class='c042'>49.</td>
- <td class='c043'>Spore of Meadow-sweet brand (<i>Triphragmium ulmariæ</i>) in germination, with sporidia borne on the germ-tubes × 300 (<i>Tulasne</i>).</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c042'>〃</td>
- <td class='c042'>50.</td>
- <td class='c043'>Sprig of <i>Thesium humifusum</i> bearing Bastard-toadflax cluster-cups (<i>Æcidium Thesii</i>).</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c042'>〃</td>
- <td class='c042'>51.</td>
- <td class='c043'>Portion of leaf of same, with cluster-cups, enlarged.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c042'>〃</td>
- <td class='c042'>52.</td>
- <td class='c043'>Leaflet of <i>Trientalis Europæa</i> with its smut (<i>Tuburcinia Trientalis</i>).</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c042'>〃</td>
- <td class='c042'>53.</td>
- <td class='c043'>Spores of the same × 320.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c042'>〃</td>
- <td class='c042'>54.</td>
- <td class='c043'>Spores of Potato smut (<i>Tuburcinia scabies</i>) × 320. (<i>Berkeley.</i>)</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c042'>〃</td>
- <td class='c042'>55.</td>
- <td class='c043'>Leaflet of Alexanders (<i>Smyrnium olusatrum</i>) with its brand.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c042'>〃</td>
- <td class='c042'>56.</td>
- <td class='c043'>Spores of Alexanders brand (<i>Puccinia Smyrnii</i>) × 320.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c042'><span class='pageno' id='Page_231'>231</span><a href='#i056'>IV.</a></td>
- <td class='c042'>57.</td>
- <td class='c043'>Wheat-straw attacked by mildew (<i>Puccinia graminis</i>).</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c042'>〃</td>
- <td class='c042'>58.</td>
- <td class='c043'>Cluster of spores of corn-mildew, magnified (<i>Bauer</i>).</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c042'>〃</td>
- <td class='c042'>59.</td>
- <td class='c043'>Single spore of corn-mildew (<i>Puccinia graminis</i>) × 300.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c042'>〃</td>
- <td class='c042'>60.</td>
- <td class='c043'>Portion of blade of grass with coronated mildew (<i>Puccinia coronata</i>).</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c042'>〃</td>
- <td class='c042'>61.</td>
- <td class='c043'>Portion of same enlarged, showing the pustules, or sori.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c042'>〃</td>
- <td class='c042'>62.</td>
- <td class='c043'>Spore of coronated mildew (<i>Puccinia coronata</i>) × highly.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c042'>〃</td>
- <td class='c042'>63.</td>
- <td class='c043'>Portion of leaf of Spear-thistle with its brand (<i>Puccinia syngenesiarum</i>).</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c042'>〃</td>
- <td class='c042'>64.</td>
- <td class='c043'>Spores of Thistle brand (<i>Puccinia syngenesiarum</i>) × 320.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c042'>〃</td>
- <td class='c042'>65.</td>
- <td class='c043'>Leaf of Wood-anemone with brand (<i>Puccinia anemones</i>).</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c042'>〃</td>
- <td class='c042'>66.</td>
- <td class='c043'>Spore of Anemone brand (<i>Puccinia anemones</i>) × 320.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c042'>〃</td>
- <td class='c042'>67.</td>
- <td class='c043'>Leaf of <i>Centaurea nigra</i> with brand.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c042'>〃</td>
- <td class='c042'>68.</td>
- <td class='c043'>Spores of Composite-brand (<i>Puccinia compositarum</i>) × 320.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c042'>〃</td>
- <td class='c042'>69.</td>
- <td class='c043'>Leaf of Mint with Mint brand (<i>Puccinia menthæ</i>).</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c042'>〃</td>
- <td class='c042'>70.</td>
- <td class='c043'>Spore of Mint brand (<i>Puccinia menthæ</i>) × 350.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c042'>〃</td>
- <td class='c042'>71.</td>
- <td class='c043'>Portion of leaf of Earth-nut with brand (<i>Puccinia umbelliferarum</i>).</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c042'>〃</td>
- <td class='c042'>72.</td>
- <td class='c043'>Spore of Earth-nut brand (<i>Puccinia umbelliferarum</i>) × 320.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c042'>〃</td>
- <td class='c042'>73.</td>
- <td class='c043'>Leaf of Ground-ivy with its brand (<i>Puccinia Glechomatis</i>).</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c042'>〃</td>
- <td class='c042'>74.</td>
- <td class='c043'>Spore of Ground-ivy brand (<i>Puccinia Glechomatis</i>) × 320.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c042'>〃</td>
- <td class='c042'>75.</td>
- <td class='c043'>Pustule of brand surrounded by the ruptured epidermis, magnified.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c042'>〃</td>
- <td class='c042'>76.</td>
- <td class='c043'>Portion of leaf and stem of Goatsbeard with brand.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c042'>〃</td>
- <td class='c042'>77.</td>
- <td class='c043'>Spores of the same × 320.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c042'>〃</td>
- <td class='c042'>78.</td>
- <td class='c043'>Portion of leaf of Willow-herb with its brand (<i>Puccinia pulverulenta</i>).</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c042'>〃</td>
- <td class='c042'>79.</td>
- <td class='c043'>Spores of Willow-herb brand (<i>Puccinia pulverulenta</i>) × 320.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c042'>〃</td>
- <td class='c042'>80.</td>
- <td class='c043'>Leaf of Pennywort with brand (<i>Puccinia umbilici</i>).</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c042'>〃</td>
- <td class='c042'>81.</td>
- <td class='c043'>Spores of Pennywort-brand (<i>Puccinia umbilici</i>) × 320.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c042'>〃</td>
- <td class='c042'>82.</td>
- <td class='c043'>Portion of leaf of Dandelion with its brand.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c042'>〃</td>
- <td class='c042'>83.</td>
- <td class='c043'>Spores of Variable-brand (<i>Puccinia variabilis</i>) × 320.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c042'><a href='#i080'>V.</a></td>
- <td class='c042'>84.</td>
- <td class='c043'>Grain of Wheat infected with Fœtid smut (<i>Tilletia caries</i>).</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c042'>〃</td>
- <td class='c042'>85.</td>
- <td class='c043'>Longitudinal section of the same.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c042'>〃</td>
- <td class='c042'>86.</td>
- <td class='c043'>Spores of Fœtid smut (<i>Tilletia caries</i>) mixed with delicate branching threads × 320.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c042'><span class='pageno' id='Page_232'>232</span>〃</td>
- <td class='c042'>87.</td>
- <td class='c043'>Spores of Fœtid smut in germination × highly.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c042'>〃</td>
- <td class='c042'>88.</td>
- <td class='c043'>Sporidia of the first order borne on the germinating tubes of the fœtid smut (<i>Tilletia caries</i>) × highly.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c042'>〃</td>
- <td class='c042'>89.</td>
- <td class='c043'>Sporidia of the first order, showing their transverse connection, × highly.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c042'>〃</td>
- <td class='c042'>90.</td>
- <td class='c043'>Sporidia of the first order, producing sporidia of the second order, × highly.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c042'>〃</td>
- <td class='c042'>91.</td>
- <td class='c043'>Sporidium of the second order in active germination.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c042'>〃</td>
- <td class='c042'>92.</td>
- <td class='c043'>Deformed flower-head of Goatsbeard infested with smut (<i>Ustilago receptaculorum</i>).</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c042'>〃</td>
- <td class='c042'>93.</td>
- <td class='c043'>Floret removed, sprinkled with spores of the smut, enlarged.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c042'>〃</td>
- <td class='c042'>94.</td>
- <td class='c043'>Spores of Goatsbeard smut (<i>Ustilago receptaculorum</i>) × 460.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c042'>〃</td>
- <td class='c042'>95.</td>
- <td class='c043'>The same in active germination × 460 (<i>Tulasne</i>).</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c042'>〃</td>
- <td class='c042'>96.</td>
- <td class='c043'>Beaksedge (<i>Rhyncospora alba</i>) with its smut (<i>Ustilago Montagnei</i>).</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c042'>〃</td>
- <td class='c042'>97.</td>
- <td class='c043'>Spores of <i>Ustilago Montagnei</i> × 460.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c042'>〃</td>
- <td class='c042'>98.</td>
- <td class='c043'>Ear of Barley infected with smut (<i>Ustilago segetum</i>).</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c042'>〃</td>
- <td class='c042'>99.</td>
- <td class='c043'>Spores of Corn-smut (<i>Ustilago segetum</i>) × 460.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c042'>〃</td>
- <td class='c042'>100.</td>
- <td class='c043'>Grass with its smut (<i>Ustilago hypodytes</i>).</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c042'>〃</td>
- <td class='c042'>101.</td>
- <td class='c043'>Spores of Grass-smut (<i>Ustilago hypodytes</i>).</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c042'>〃</td>
- <td class='c042'>102.</td>
- <td class='c043'>Flowers of Bladder-campion with anther smut (<i>Ustilago antherarum</i>).</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c042'>〃</td>
- <td class='c042'>103.</td>
- <td class='c043'>Anther distorted by smut (<i>Ustilago antherarum</i>).</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c042'>〃</td>
- <td class='c042'>104.</td>
- <td class='c043'>Spores of Anther smut (<i>Ustilago antherarum</i>) × 460.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c042'>〃</td>
- <td class='c042'>105.</td>
- <td class='c043'>Portion of leaf of water grass with Elongated smut (<i>Ustilago longissima</i>).</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c042'>〃</td>
- <td class='c042'>106.</td>
- <td class='c043'>Pustule of same, enlarged.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c042'>〃</td>
- <td class='c042'>107.</td>
- <td class='c043'>Spores of Elongated smut (<i>Ustilago longissima</i>) × very highly.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c042'>〃</td>
- <td class='c042'>108.</td>
- <td class='c043'>Spores of Maize smut (<i>Ustilago maydis</i>) × 460.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c042'><a href='#i096'>VI.</a></td>
- <td class='c042'>109.</td>
- <td class='c043'>Sedge (<i>Carex recurva</i>) with Sedge smut (<i>Ustilago urceolorum</i>).</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c042'>〃</td>
- <td class='c042'>110.</td>
- <td class='c043'>Single fruit covered with the smut.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c042'>〃</td>
- <td class='c042'>111.</td>
- <td class='c043'>Spores of Sedge smut (<i>Ustilago urceolorum</i>) × 460.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c042'>〃</td>
- <td class='c042'>112.</td>
- <td class='c043'>Flower of <i>Polygonum persicaria</i> distorted by Utricle smut (<i>Ustilago utriculosa</i>).</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c042'>〃</td>
- <td class='c042'>113.</td>
- <td class='c043'>Section of the same (<i>Tulasne</i>).</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c042'>〃</td>
- <td class='c042'>114.</td>
- <td class='c043'>Inflorescence of <i>Polygonum hydropiper</i> with Utricle smut (<i>Ustilago utriculosa</i>).</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c042'>〃</td>
- <td class='c042'>115.</td>
- <td class='c043'>Section of infected flower of <i>Polygonum hydropiper</i>.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c042'>〃</td>
- <td class='c042'>116.</td>
- <td class='c043'>Spores of Utricle smut (<i>Ustilago utriculosa</i>) × 460.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c042'>〃</td>
- <td class='c042'>117.</td>
- <td class='c043'>Leaf of Cocksfoot, grass with smut (<i>Ustilago Salveii</i>).</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c042'>〃</td>
- <td class='c042'>118.</td>
- <td class='c043'>Portion of leaf, showing pustules, × slightly.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c042'>〃</td>
- <td class='c042'>119.</td>
- <td class='c043'>Spores of Cocksfoot smut (<i>Ustilago Salveii</i>) × 320.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c042'>〃</td>
- <td class='c042'>120.</td>
- <td class='c043'>Grass stem with Banded smut (<i>Ustilago grammica</i>).</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c042'><span class='pageno' id='Page_233'>233</span>〃</td>
- <td class='c042'>121.</td>
- <td class='c043'>Portion of same, showing arrangement of the pustules, × slightly.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c042'>〃</td>
- <td class='c042'>122.</td>
- <td class='c043'>Spores of banded smut (<i>Ustilago grammica</i>) × 320.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c042'>〃</td>
- <td class='c042'>123.</td>
- <td class='c043'>Inflorescence of Scabious with Floret smut (<i>Ustilago flosculorum</i>).</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c042'>〃</td>
- <td class='c042'>124.</td>
- <td class='c043'>Floret occupied by the smut.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c042'>〃</td>
- <td class='c042'>125.</td>
- <td class='c043'>Spores of Floret smut (<i>Ustilago flosculorum</i>) × 320.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c042'>〃</td>
- <td class='c042'>126.</td>
- <td class='c043'>Sedge (<i>Carex riparia</i>) attacked by Olive smut (<i>Ustilago olivacea</i>).</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c042'>〃</td>
- <td class='c042'>127.</td>
- <td class='c043'>Spores of Olive smut (<i>Ustilago olivacea</i>) × 460.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c042'>〃</td>
- <td class='c042'>128.</td>
- <td class='c043'>Reed stem with smut (<i>Ustilago typhoides</i>).</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c042'>〃</td>
- <td class='c042'>129.</td>
- <td class='c043'>Spores of Reed smut (<i>Ustilago typhoides</i>) × 320.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c042'>〃</td>
- <td class='c042'>130.</td>
- <td class='c043'>Leaf of Periwinkle with its rust (<i>Trichobasis vincæ</i>).</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c042'>〃</td>
- <td class='c042'>131.</td>
- <td class='c043'>Spores of Periwinkle rust (<i>Trichobasis vincæ</i>) × 320.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c042'>〃</td>
- <td class='c042'>132.</td>
- <td class='c043'>Spores of Periwinkle brand (<i>Puccinia vincæ</i>) × 320.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c042'><a href='#frontis'>VII.</a></td>
- <td class='c042'>133.</td>
- <td class='c043'>Leaf of Mercury with its rust (<i>Uredo confluens</i>).</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c042'>〃</td>
- <td class='c042'>134.</td>
- <td class='c043'>Spores of Mercury rust (<i>Uredo confluens</i>) × 320.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c042'>〃</td>
- <td class='c042'>135.</td>
- <td class='c043'>Leaf of Enchanter’s Nightshade with its rust.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c042'>〃</td>
- <td class='c042'>136.</td>
- <td class='c043'>Spores of Nightshade rust (<i>Uredo Circææ</i>) × 320.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c042'>〃</td>
- <td class='c042'>137.</td>
- <td class='c043'>Leaf of Sorrel with Twin-faced rust (<i>Uredo bifrons</i>).</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c042'>〃</td>
- <td class='c042'>138.</td>
- <td class='c043'>Pustule of Twin-faced rust seated on a coloured spot × slightly.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c042'>〃</td>
- <td class='c042'>139.</td>
- <td class='c043'>Spores of the same rust × 320.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c042'>〃</td>
- <td class='c042'>140.</td>
- <td class='c043'>Leaf of Wheat with Corn rust (<i>Trichobasis rubigo-vera</i>).</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c042'>〃</td>
- <td class='c042'>141.</td>
- <td class='c043'>Pustules of the same rust × slightly.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c042'>〃</td>
- <td class='c042'>142.</td>
- <td class='c043'>Spores of Round corn rust × 320.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c042'>〃</td>
- <td class='c042'>143.</td>
- <td class='c043'>Tuft of spores of Elongated corn rust (<i>Trichobasis linearis</i>) magnified.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c042'>〃</td>
- <td class='c042'>144.</td>
- <td class='c043'>Spores of Elongated corn rust (<i>Trichobasis linearis</i>) × 320.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c042'>〃</td>
- <td class='c042'>145.</td>
- <td class='c043'>Leaf of Groundsel with its rust (<i>Trichobasis Senecionis</i>).</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c042'>〃</td>
- <td class='c042'>146.</td>
- <td class='c043'>Spores of Groundsel rust (<i>Trichobasis Senecionis</i>) × 320.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c042'>〃</td>
- <td class='c042'>147.</td>
- <td class='c043'>Wild Rose with Golden rust (<i>Uromyces Ulmariæ</i>).</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c042'>〃</td>
- <td class='c042'>148.</td>
- <td class='c043'>Spores of Golden rust × 320.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c042'>〃</td>
- <td class='c042'>149.</td>
- <td class='c043'>Leaf of Vetch with Long-stemmed rust (<i>Uromyces appendiculata</i>).</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c042'>〃</td>
- <td class='c042'>150.</td>
- <td class='c043'>Spores of the same × 460.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c042'>〃</td>
- <td class='c042'>151.</td>
- <td class='c043'>Leaf of Common thistle with Sweet-smelling rust (<i>Trichobasis suaveolens</i>).</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c042'>〃</td>
- <td class='c042'>152.</td>
- <td class='c043'>Spores of Sweet rust (<i>Trichobasis suaveolens</i>) × 320.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c042'>〃</td>
- <td class='c042'>153.</td>
- <td class='c043'>Spermogone of Sweet rust, from common thistle, × highly (<i>De Bary</i>).</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c042'>〃</td>
- <td class='c042'>154.</td>
- <td class='c043'>Clover leaf with Short-stemmed rust (<i>Uromyces apiculosa</i>).</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c042'>〃</td>
- <td class='c042'>155.</td>
- <td class='c043'>Spores of Short-stemmed rust × 320.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c042'>〃</td>
- <td class='c042'>156.</td>
- <td class='c043'>Leaf of Pilewort with its rust (<i>Uromyces Ficariæ</i>).</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c042'>〃</td>
- <td class='c042'>157.</td>
- <td class='c043'>Spores of Pilewort rust (<i>Uromyces Ficariæ</i>) × 320.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c042'><span class='pageno' id='Page_234'>234</span>〃</td>
- <td class='c042'>158.</td>
- <td class='c043'>Portion of leaf of <i>Luzula</i> with Oblong rust (<i>Trichobasis oblongata</i>).</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c042'>〃</td>
- <td class='c042'>159.</td>
- <td class='c043'>Spores of Oblong rust (<i>Trichobasis oblongata</i>) × 320.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c042'><a href='#i104'>VIII.</a></td>
- <td class='c042'>160.</td>
- <td class='c043'>Leaf of Sallow with its rust (<i>Lecythea capræarum</i>).</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c042'>〃</td>
- <td class='c042'>161.</td>
- <td class='c043'>Spores of Sallow rust (<i>Lecythea capræarum</i>) × 320.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c042'>〃</td>
- <td class='c042'>162.</td>
- <td class='c043'>Bramble leaf with Ringed rust (<i>Lecythea gyrosa</i>).</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c042'>〃</td>
- <td class='c042'>163.</td>
- <td class='c043'>Pustule of Ringed rust (<i>Lecythea gyrosa</i>) × slightly.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c042'>〃</td>
- <td class='c042'>164.</td>
- <td class='c043'>Spores of Ringed rust (<i>Lecythea gyrosa</i>) × 320.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c042'>〃</td>
- <td class='c042'>165.</td>
- <td class='c043'>Purging Flax with its rust (<i>Lecythea Lini</i>).</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c042'>〃</td>
- <td class='c042'>166.</td>
- <td class='c043'>Pustule of the same × slightly.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c042'>〃</td>
- <td class='c042'>167.</td>
- <td class='c043'>Spores of Flax rust (<i>Lecythea Lini</i>) × 320.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c042'>〃</td>
- <td class='c042'>168.</td>
- <td class='c043'>Leaf of Flukewort with its rust (<i>Trichobasis hydrocotyles</i>).</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c042'>〃</td>
- <td class='c042'>169.</td>
- <td class='c043'>Spores of <i>Trichobasis hydrocotyles</i> × 320.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c042'>〃</td>
- <td class='c042'>170.</td>
- <td class='c043'>Portion of leaf of Sedge with its rust (<i>Trichobasis caricina</i>).</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c042'>〃</td>
- <td class='c042'>171.</td>
- <td class='c043'>Spores of Sedge rust (<i>Trichobasis caricina</i>) × 320.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c042'>〃</td>
- <td class='c042'>172.</td>
- <td class='c043'>Whorl of leaves of Hedge Bedstraw with Bedstraw brand (<i>Puccinia Galii</i>).</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c042'>〃</td>
- <td class='c042'>173.</td>
- <td class='c043'>Spores of Bedstraw brand (<i>Puccinia Galii</i>) × 320.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c042'>〃</td>
- <td class='c042'>174.</td>
- <td class='c043'>Leaf of Tutsan with St. John’s-wort rust (<i>Uredo hypericorum</i>).</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c042'>〃</td>
- <td class='c042'>175.</td>
- <td class='c043'>Spores of St John’s-wort rust (<i>Uredo hypericorum</i>) × 320.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c042'>〃</td>
- <td class='c042'>176.</td>
- <td class='c043'>Leaves of Cow-wheat with its rust (<i>Coleosporium rhinanthacearum</i>).</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c042'>〃</td>
- <td class='c042'>177.</td>
- <td class='c043'>Spores of Cow-wheat rust (<i>Coleosporium rhinanthacearum</i>) × 320.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c042'>〃</td>
- <td class='c042'>178.</td>
- <td class='c043'>Portion of leaf of Sow-thistle with its rust (<i>Coleosporium sonchi-arvensis</i>).</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c042'>〃</td>
- <td class='c042'>179.</td>
- <td class='c043'>Spores of Sow-thistle rust × highly (<i>De Bary</i>).</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c042'>〃</td>
- <td class='c042'>180.</td>
- <td class='c043'>Portion of Coltsfoot leaf with its rust (<i>Coleosporium Tussilaginis</i>).</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c042'>〃</td>
- <td class='c042'>181.</td>
- <td class='c043'>Spores of Coltsfoot rust × highly.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c042'>〃</td>
- <td class='c042'>182.</td>
- <td class='c043'>Group of spores of Coltsfoot rust <i>in situ</i> × highly (<i>Tulasne</i>).</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c042'><a href='#i112'>IX.</a></td>
- <td class='c042'>183.</td>
- <td class='c043'>Leaf of Buttercup with Buttercup smut (<i>Polycystis pompholygodes</i>).</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c042'>〃</td>
- <td class='c042'>184.</td>
- <td class='c043'>Fruit of Buttercup smut (<i>Polycystis pompholygodes</i>) × 460.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c042'>〃</td>
- <td class='c042'>185.</td>
- <td class='c043'>Violet leaf distorted by Violet smut (<i>Polycystis Violæ</i>).</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c042'>〃</td>
- <td class='c042'>186.</td>
- <td class='c043'>Fruit of Violet smut (<i>Polycystis Violæ</i>) × 460.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c042'>〃</td>
- <td class='c042'>187.</td>
- <td class='c043'>Portion of Rye-leaf with Rye smut (<i>Polycystis parallela</i>).</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c042'>〃</td>
- <td class='c042'>188.</td>
- <td class='c043'>Fruit of Rye smut (<i>Polycystis parallela</i>) ×460.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c042'>〃</td>
- <td class='c042'>189.</td>
- <td class='c043'>Dead Birch leaf with Birch wedge-rust (<i>Melampsora betulina</i>).</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c042'>〃</td>
- <td class='c042'>190.</td>
- <td class='c043'>Winter spores of (<i>Melampsora betulina</i>) × 460.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c042'><span class='pageno' id='Page_235'>235</span>〃</td>
- <td class='c042'>191.</td>
- <td class='c043'>Portion of Sallow leaf with Willow wedge-rust (<i>Melampsora salicina</i>).</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c042'>〃</td>
- <td class='c042'>192.</td>
- <td class='c043'>Winter spores of <i>Melampsora salicina</i> × 460.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c042'>〃</td>
- <td class='c042'>193.</td>
- <td class='c043'>Leaves of Spurge with Spurge wedge-rust (<i>Melampsora Euphorbiæ</i>).</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c042'>〃</td>
- <td class='c042'>194.</td>
- <td class='c043'>Winter spores of <i>Melampsora Euphorbiæ</i> × highly.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c042'>〃</td>
- <td class='c042'>195.</td>
- <td class='c043'>Portion of Poplar-leaf with Poplar wedge-rust (<i>Melampsora populina</i>).</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c042'>〃</td>
- <td class='c042'>196.</td>
- <td class='c043'>Winter spores of <i>Melampsora populina</i> × 460.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c042'>〃</td>
- <td class='c042'>197.</td>
- <td class='c043'>Winter spores of <i>Melampsora betulina</i> in active germination—<i>a</i> sporidia × 466 (<i>Tulasne</i>).</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c042'><a href='#i120'>X.</a></td>
- <td class='c042'>198.</td>
- <td class='c043'>Fruit of Shepherd’s-Purse with White rust (<i>Cystopus candidus</i>).</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c042'>〃</td>
- <td class='c042'>199.</td>
- <td class='c043'>Portion of Cabbage-leaf with White rust (<i>Cystopus candidus</i>).</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c042'>〃</td>
- <td class='c042'>200.</td>
- <td class='c043'>Conidia of White rust (<i>Cystopus candidus</i>) × 360.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c042'>〃</td>
- <td class='c042'>201.</td>
- <td class='c043'>Portion of Goatsbeard-leaf with White rust (<i>Cystopus cubicus</i>).</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c042'>〃</td>
- <td class='c042'>202.</td>
- <td class='c043'>Conidia of Goatsbeard white rust (<i>Cystopus cubicus</i>) × 360.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c042'>〃</td>
- <td class='c042'>203.</td>
- <td class='c043'>Portion of Mycelium producing the first of a chain of conidia × 400.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c042'>〃</td>
- <td class='c042'>204.</td>
- <td class='c043'>Mycelium of White rust with sucker-like processes × 360.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c042'>〃</td>
- <td class='c042'>205.</td>
- <td class='c043'>Mycelium of White rust with nascent oogonia × 360.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c042'>〃</td>
- <td class='c042'>206.</td>
- <td class='c043'>Oogonium of Crucifer white rust (<i>Cystopus candidus</i>) × 400 (<i>De Bary</i>).</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c042'>〃</td>
- <td class='c042'>207.</td>
- <td class='c043'>The same, further advanced, ruptured, with zoospores, × 400.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c042'>〃</td>
- <td class='c042'>208.</td>
- <td class='c043'>Free zoospores of White rust, with their ciliæ, × 400 (<i>De Bary</i>).</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c042'>〃</td>
- <td class='c042'>209.</td>
- <td class='c043'>Resting zoospores in germination × 400 (<i>De Bary</i>).</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c042'>〃</td>
- <td class='c042'>210.</td>
- <td class='c043'>Oogonium of Goatsbeard white rust (<i>Cystopus cubicus</i>) × 400 (<i>De Bary</i>).</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c042'>〃</td>
- <td class='c042'>211.</td>
- <td class='c043'>Oogonium of Sandwort mould (<i>Peronospora arenariæ</i>) × 400 (<i>De Bary</i>).</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c042'>〃</td>
- <td class='c042'>212.</td>
- <td class='c043'>Oogonium of Pea mould (<i>Peronospora viciæ</i>) × 400 (<i>De Bary</i>).</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c042'>〃</td>
- <td class='c042'>213.</td>
- <td class='c043'>Oogonium of Veronica mould (<i>Peronospora grisea</i>) × 400 (<i>De Bary</i>).</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c042'>〃</td>
- <td class='c042'>214.</td>
- <td class='c043'>Oogonium of Spinach mould (<i>Peronospora effusa</i>) × 400 (<i>De Bary</i>).</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c042'>〃</td>
- <td class='c042'>215.</td>
- <td class='c043'>Leaf of Goosefoot with mould (<i>Peronospora effusa</i>).</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c042'><a href='#i128'>XI.</a></td>
- <td class='c042'>216.</td>
- <td class='c043'>Conceptacle of Hop mildew (<i>Sphærotheca castagnei</i>) × 80.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c042'>〃</td>
- <td class='c042'>217.</td>
- <td class='c043'>Conceptacle of Rose blight (<i>Sphærotheca pannosa</i>) × 80.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c042'>〃</td>
- <td class='c042'>218.</td>
- <td class='c043'>Sporangium of <i>Sphærotheca pannosa</i> × highly.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c042'><span class='pageno' id='Page_236'>236</span>〃</td>
- <td class='c042'>219.</td>
- <td class='c043'>Conceptacle of Hazel blight (<i>Phyllactinia guttata</i>) × 80.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c042'>〃</td>
- <td class='c042'>220.</td>
- <td class='c043'>Sporangium of <i>Phyllactinia guttata</i> × highly.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c042'>〃</td>
- <td class='c042'>221.</td>
- <td class='c043'>Portion of leaf of Willow with Willow blight (<i>Uncinula adunca</i>).</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c042'>〃</td>
- <td class='c042'>222.</td>
- <td class='c043'>Conceptacle of Willow blight (<i>Uncinula adunca</i>) × 80.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c042'>〃</td>
- <td class='c042'>223.</td>
- <td class='c043'>Tip of one of the appendages × highly.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c042'>〃</td>
- <td class='c042'>224.</td>
- <td class='c043'>Sporangium of Willow blight (<i>Uncinula adunca</i>) × highly.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c042'>〃</td>
- <td class='c042'>225.</td>
- <td class='c043'>Conceptacle of Maple blight (<i>Uncinula bicornis</i>) × 80.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c042'>〃</td>
- <td class='c042'>226.</td>
- <td class='c043'>Tip of one of the appendages of <i>Uncinula bicornis</i> × highly.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c042'>〃</td>
- <td class='c042'>227.</td>
- <td class='c043'>Furcate tip of one of the appendages of the Maple blight (<i>Uncinula bicornis</i>) × highly.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c042'>〃</td>
- <td class='c042'>228.</td>
- <td class='c043'>Sporangium of <i>Uncinula bicornis</i> × highly.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c042'>〃</td>
- <td class='c042'>229.</td>
- <td class='c043'>Leaf of Berberry with Berberry blight (<i>Microsphæria Berberidis</i>).</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c042'>〃</td>
- <td class='c042'>230.</td>
- <td class='c043'>Conceptacle of Berberry blight × 80.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c042'>〃</td>
- <td class='c042'>231.</td>
- <td class='c043'>Tip of one of the appendages of Berberry blight (<i>Microsphæria Berberidis</i>) × highly.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c042'>〃</td>
- <td class='c042'>232.</td>
- <td class='c043'>Sporangium of Berberry blight × highly.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c042'>〃</td>
- <td class='c042'>233.</td>
- <td class='c043'>Tip of appendage of a continental species of blight (<i>Microsphæria Ehrenbergii</i>) × highly (<i>Léveillé</i>).</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c042'>〃</td>
- <td class='c042'>234.</td>
- <td class='c043'>Tip of appendage of Alder blight (<i>Microsphæria penicillata</i>) × highly.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c042'>〃</td>
- <td class='c042'>235.</td>
- <td class='c043'>Portion of Grass leaf with blight (<i>Oidium monilioides</i>).</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c042'>〃</td>
- <td class='c042'>236.</td>
- <td class='c043'>Tuft of conidia of <i>Oidium monilioides</i> × 120.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c042'>〃</td>
- <td class='c042'>237.</td>
- <td class='c043'>Leaflet of Garden Pea with Pea blight (<i>Erysiphe Martii</i>).</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c042'>〃</td>
- <td class='c042'>238.</td>
- <td class='c043'>Conceptacle of Pea blight (<i>Erysiphe Martii</i>) × 80.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c042'>〃</td>
- <td class='c042'>239.</td>
- <td class='c043'>Sporangium of <i>Erysiphe Martii</i> × highly.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c042'>〃</td>
- <td class='c042'>240.</td>
- <td class='c043'>Conceptacle of Buttercup blight (<i>Erysiphe communis</i>) × 80.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c042'>〃</td>
- <td class='c042'>241.</td>
- <td class='c043'>Sporangium of <i>Erysiphe communis</i> × highly.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c042'>〃</td>
- <td class='c042'>242.</td>
- <td class='c043'>Sucker from the mycelium of <i>Erysiphe communis</i>, magnified.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c042'><a href='#i136'>XII.</a></td>
- <td class='c042'>243.</td>
- <td class='c043'>Conceptacle of Mealy Guelder-rose blight (<i>Microsphæria Hedwigii</i>) × 80.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c042'>〃</td>
- <td class='c042'>244.</td>
- <td class='c043'>Sporangium of same, containing spores, × highly.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c042'>〃</td>
- <td class='c042'>245.</td>
- <td class='c043'>Conceptacle of Cornel blight (<i>Erysiphe tortilis</i>) × 80.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c042'>〃</td>
- <td class='c042'>246.</td>
- <td class='c043'>Sporangium of same, containing spores, × highly.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c042'>〃</td>
- <td class='c042'>247.</td>
- <td class='c043'>Tip of appendage of <i>Microsphæria Hedwigii</i> × highly.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c042'>〃</td>
- <td class='c042'>248.</td>
- <td class='c043'>Sporangium of Mugwort blight (<i>Erysiphe Linkii</i>), containing spores, × highly.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c042'>〃</td>
- <td class='c042'>249.</td>
- <td class='c043'>Conceptacle of Mugwort blight (<i>Erysiphe Linkii</i>) × 80.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c042'>〃</td>
- <td class='c042'>250.</td>
- <td class='c043'>Sporangium and spores of Plantain blight (<i>Erysiphe lamprocarpa</i>) × highly.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c042'><span class='pageno' id='Page_237'>237</span>〃</td>
- <td class='c042'>251.</td>
- <td class='c043'>Conceptacle of Plantain blight (<i>Erysiphe lamprocarpa</i>) × 80.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c042'>〃</td>
- <td class='c042'>252.</td>
- <td class='c043'>Conceptacle of Paper bristle-mould (<i>Chætomium chartarum</i>) magnified.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c042'>〃</td>
- <td class='c042'>253.</td>
- <td class='c043'>Sporidium of the same, further magnified.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c042'>〃</td>
- <td class='c042'>254.</td>
- <td class='c043'>Conceptacle of Paper mildew (<i>Ascotricha chartarum</i>) magnified (<i>Berkeley</i>).</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c042'>〃</td>
- <td class='c042'>255.</td>
- <td class='c043'>Portion of thread of same with conidia, further magnified (<i>Berkeley</i>).</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c042'>〃</td>
- <td class='c042'>256.</td>
- <td class='c043'>Sporangium of same, containing spores (<i>Berkeley</i>).</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c042'>〃</td>
- <td class='c042'>257.</td>
- <td class='c043'>Piece of straw with Bristle mould (<i>Chætomium elatum</i>).</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c042'>〃</td>
- <td class='c042'>258.</td>
- <td class='c043'>Conceptacle of same, slightly magnified.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c042'>〃</td>
- <td class='c042'>259.</td>
- <td class='c043'>Section of same, further magnified.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c042'>〃</td>
- <td class='c042'>260.</td>
- <td class='c043'>Dead leaf over-run with Herbarium mildew (<i>Eurotium herbariorum</i>).</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c042'>〃</td>
- <td class='c042'>261.</td>
- <td class='c043'>Conceptacles of the same, seated on their mycelium, magnified.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c042'><a href='#i138a'>XIII.</a></td>
- <td class='c042'>262.</td>
- <td class='c043'>Fertile thread of Turnip mould (<i>Peronospora parasitica</i>).</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c042'>〃</td>
- <td class='c042'>263.</td>
- <td class='c043'>Fertile thread of Onion mould (<i>Peronospora Schleideniana</i>).</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c042'><a href='#i144a'>XIV.</a></td>
- <td class='c042'>264.</td>
- <td class='c043'>Fertile thread of Potato mould (<i>Peronospora infestans</i>).</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c042'>〃</td>
- <td class='c042'>265.</td>
- <td class='c043'>Fertile thread of Lettuce mould (<i>Peronospora gangliformis</i>).</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c042'><a href='#i152a'>XV.</a></td>
- <td class='c042'>266.</td>
- <td class='c043'>Fertile thread of Pea mould (<i>Peronospora Viciæ</i>).</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c042'>〃</td>
- <td class='c042'>267.</td>
- <td class='c043'>Fertile thread of Anemone mould (<i>Peronospora curta</i>).</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c042'><a href='#i160a'>XVI.</a></td>
- <td class='c042'>268.</td>
- <td class='c043'>Fertile thread of Sandwort mould (<i>Peronospora arenariæ</i>).</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c042'>〃</td>
- <td class='c042'>269.</td>
- <td class='c043'>Fertile thread of Dock mould (<i>Peronospora obliqua</i>) × 320.</td>
- </tr>
-</table>
-<div class='pbb'>
- <hr class='pb c003' />
-</div>
-<div class='chapter'>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_239'>239</span>
- <h2 id='idx' class='c012'>INDEX.</h2>
-</div>
-<p class='c044'><span class='small'>PAGE</span></p>
-<ul class='index'>
- <li class='c045'>Acrospores, <a href='#Page_141'>141</a></li>
- <li class='c045'>Æcidiacei, <a href='#Page_189'>189</a></li>
- <li class='c045'><i>Æcidiolum exanthematum</i>, <a href='#Page_22'>22</a></li>
- <li class='c045'><i>Æcidium</i>, <a href='#Page_5'>5</a></li>
- <li class='c045'>—— (Descriptions), <a href='#Page_190'>190</a></li>
- <li class='c045'>—— <i>Euphorbiæ</i>, <a href='#Page_11'>11</a></li>
- <li class='c045'>—— <i>Galii</i>, <a href='#Page_15'>15</a></li>
- <li class='c045'>—— <i>leucospermum</i>, <a href='#Page_11'>11</a></li>
- <li class='c045'>—— <i>quadrifidum</i>, <a href='#Page_11'>11</a></li>
- <li class='c045'>—— <i>Ranunculacearum</i>, <a href='#Page_12'>12</a></li>
- <li class='c045'>—— <i>Saniculæ</i>, <a href='#Page_15'>15</a></li>
- <li class='c045'>—— <i>Thesii</i>, <a href='#Page_15'>15</a></li>
- <li class='c045'>—— <i>Tragopogonis</i>, <a href='#Page_5'>5</a></li>
- <li class='c045'>Alternation of Generations, <a href='#Page_38'>38</a></li>
- <li class='c045'>Anemone brand, <a href='#Page_60'>60</a></li>
- <li class='c045'>—— cluster-cups, <a href='#Page_10'>10</a></li>
- <li class='c045'>Anther smut, <a href='#Page_85'>85</a></li>
- <li class='c045'>Antheridia, <a href='#Page_129'>129</a></li>
- <li class='c045'>Appendages or fulcra, <a href='#Page_165'>165</a></li>
- <li class='c045'><span class='sc'>Appendix</span>, <a href='#Page_189'>189</a></li>
- <li class='c045'><i>Aregma bulbosum</i>, <a href='#Page_69'>69</a></li>
- <li class='c045'>—— (Descriptions), <a href='#Page_195'>195</a></li>
- <li class='c045'>—— <i>gracilis</i>, <a href='#Page_71'>71</a></li>
- <li class='c045'>—— <i>mucronatum</i>, <a href='#Page_34'>34</a></li>
- <li class='c045'>—— <i>obtusatum</i>, <a href='#Page_73'>73</a></li>
- <li class='c045'><i>Artotrogus</i>, <a href='#Page_151'>151</a></li>
- <li class='c045'>Asci, <a href='#Page_35'>35</a></li>
- <li class='c045'><i>Ascomyces Rumicis</i>, <a href='#Page_161'>161</a></li>
- <li class='c045'><i>Ascotricha chartarum</i>, <a href='#Page_175'>175</a></li>
- <li class='c045'>—— (Descriptions), <a href='#Page_221'>221</a></li>
- <li class='c045'>Bean rust, <a href='#Page_104'>104</a></li>
- <li class='c045'>Bedstraw cluster-cups, <a href='#Page_15'>15</a></li>
- <li class='c045'>Beet rust, <a href='#Page_104'>104</a></li>
- <li class='c045'>Berberry cluster-cups, <a href='#Page_16'>16</a></li>
- <li class='c045'>Berberry mildew, <a href='#Page_170'>170</a></li>
- <li class='c045'>Birch rust, <a href='#Page_118'>118</a></li>
- <li class='c045'>—— wedge-rust, <a href='#Page_118'>118</a></li>
- <li class='c045'>Blackberry brand, <a href='#Page_68'>68</a></li>
- <li class='c045'>Bladder brand, <a href='#Page_86'>86</a></li>
- <li class='c045'>Blight, Berberry, <a href='#Page_170'>170</a></li>
- <li class='c045'>—— Burdock, <a href='#Page_174'>174</a></li>
- <li class='c045'>—— Crowfoot, <a href='#Page_173'>173</a></li>
- <li class='c045'>—— Dogwood, <a href='#Page_174'>174</a></li>
- <li class='c045'>—— Gooseberry, <a href='#Page_171'>171</a></li>
- <li class='c045'>—— Guelder-rose, <a href='#Page_171'>171</a></li>
- <li class='c045'>—— Hazel, <a href='#Page_168'>168</a></li>
- <li class='c045'>—— Hop, <a href='#Page_169'>169</a></li>
- <li class='c045'>—— Indian Cotton, <a href='#Page_177'>177</a></li>
- <li class='c045'>—— Maple, <a href='#Page_167'>167</a></li>
- <li class='c045'>—— Mealy Guelder-rose, <a href='#Page_172'>172</a></li>
- <li class='c045'>—— Mugwort, <a href='#Page_174'>174</a></li>
- <li class='c045'>—— Pea, <a href='#Page_173'>173</a></li>
- <li class='c045'>—— Plantain, <a href='#Page_174'>174</a></li>
- <li class='c045'>—— Rose, <a href='#Page_166'>166</a></li>
- <li class='c045'>—— Salsify, <a href='#Page_174'>174</a></li>
- <li class='c045'>—— Willow, <a href='#Page_169'>169</a></li>
- <li class='c045'><i>Boletus cyanescens</i>, <a href='#Page_106'>106</a></li>
- <li class='c045'><i>Botrytis devastatrix</i>, <a href='#Page_153'>153</a></li>
- <li class='c045'>—— <i>fallax</i>, <a href='#Page_153'>153</a></li>
- <li class='c045'>—— <i>infestans</i>, <a href='#Page_153'>153</a></li>
- <li class='c045'>Bramble brand, <a href='#Page_68'>68</a></li>
- <li class='c045'>Brand, Anemone, <a href='#Page_60'>60</a></li>
- <li class='c045'>—— Bladder, <a href='#Page_86'>86</a></li>
- <li class='c045'>—— Bramble, <a href='#Page_68'>68</a></li>
- <li class='c045'>—— Burnet chain, <a href='#Page_73'>73</a></li>
- <li class='c045'>—— Centaury, <a href='#Page_63'>63</a></li>
- <li class='c045'>—— Complex, <a href='#Page_67'>67</a></li>
- <li class='c045'>—— Dust, <a href='#Page_76'>76</a></li>
- <li class='c045'>—— Earth-nut, <a href='#Page_64'>64</a></li>
- <li class='c045'>—— Goatsbeard, <a href='#Page_65'>65</a></li>
- <li class='c045'><span class='pageno' id='Page_240'>240</span>—— Ground-ivy, <a href='#Page_59'>59</a></li>
- <li class='c045'>—— Meadow-sweet, <a href='#Page_67'>67</a></li>
- <li class='c045'>—— Mint, <a href='#Page_58'>58</a></li>
- <li class='c045'>—— Pepper, <a href='#Page_86'>86</a></li>
- <li class='c045'>—— Periwinkle, <a href='#Page_103'>103</a></li>
- <li class='c045'>—— Raspberry, <a href='#Page_71'>71</a></li>
- <li class='c045'>—— Sanicle, <a href='#Page_64'>64</a></li>
- <li class='c045'>—— Strawberry, <a href='#Page_72'>72</a></li>
- <li class='c045'>—— Thistle, <a href='#Page_62'>62</a></li>
- <li class='c045'>Bristle-moulds, <a href='#Page_175'>175</a></li>
- <li class='c045'>Buckthorn cluster-cups, <a href='#Page_16'>16</a></li>
- <li class='c045'>Bunt, <a href='#Page_86'>86</a></li>
- <li class='c045'>Bunt, germination, <a href='#Page_87'>87</a></li>
- <li class='c045'>Burdock blight, <a href='#Page_174'>174</a></li>
- <li class='c045'>Burnet chain-brand, <a href='#Page_73'>73</a></li>
- <li class='c045'>Butter-bur rust, <a href='#Page_122'>122</a></li>
- <li class='c045'>Buttercup blight, <a href='#Page_173'>173</a></li>
- <li class='c045'>—— cluster-cups, <a href='#Page_12'>12</a></li>
- <li class='c045'>Cabbage rust, <a href='#Page_136'>136</a></li>
- <li class='c045'>Campanula rust, <a href='#Page_123'>123</a></li>
- <li class='c045'>Centaury brand, <a href='#Page_63'>63</a></li>
- <li class='c045'><i>Chætomium</i> (Descriptions), <a href='#Page_221'>221</a></li>
- <li class='c045'>—— <i>elatum</i>, <a href='#Page_175'>175</a></li>
- <li class='c045'>Classification, <a href='#Page_189'>189</a></li>
- <li class='c045'>Clover rust, <a href='#Page_116'>116</a></li>
- <li class='c045'><span class='sc'>Cluster-cups</span>, <a href='#Page_2'>2</a></li>
- <li class='c045'>Cluster-cup, Anemone, <a href='#Page_10'>10</a></li>
- <li class='c045'>—— Bedstraw, <a href='#Page_15'>15</a></li>
- <li class='c045'>—— Berberry, <a href='#Page_16'>16</a></li>
- <li class='c045'>—— Buckthorn, <a href='#Page_16'>16</a></li>
- <li class='c045'>—— Buttercup, <a href='#Page_12'>12</a></li>
- <li class='c045'>—— Fir-tree, <a href='#Page_20'>20</a></li>
- <li class='c045'>—— Goatsbeard, <a href='#Page_3'>3</a></li>
- <li class='c045'>—— Hawthorn, <a href='#Page_17'>17</a></li>
- <li class='c045'>—— Houseleek, <a href='#Page_21'>21</a></li>
- <li class='c045'>—— Mountain-Ash, <a href='#Page_19'>19</a></li>
- <li class='c045'>—— Nettle, <a href='#Page_14'>14</a></li>
- <li class='c045'>—— Pear-tree, <a href='#Page_18'>18</a></li>
- <li class='c045'>—— Sanicle, <a href='#Page_14'>14</a></li>
- <li class='c045'>—— Spurge, <a href='#Page_11'>11</a></li>
- <li class='c045'>—— Violet, <a href='#Page_13'>13</a></li>
- <li class='c045'>Cocksfoot smut, <a href='#Page_83'>83</a></li>
- <li class='c045'><i>Coleosporium</i>, <a href='#Page_119'>119</a></li>
- <li class='c045'>—— <i>Campanulæ</i>, <a href='#Page_122'>122</a></li>
- <li class='c045'>—— (Descriptions), <a href='#Page_212'>212</a></li>
- <li class='c045'>—— <i>petasites</i>, <a href='#Page_122'>122</a></li>
- <li class='c045'>—— <i>tussilaginis</i>, <a href='#Page_120'>120</a></li>
- <li class='c045'><i>Coleosporium sonchi-arvensis</i>, <a href='#Page_122'>122</a></li>
- <li class='c045'>—— <i>Rhinanthacearum</i>, <a href='#Page_122'>122</a></li>
- <li class='c045'>Collecting fungi, <a href='#Page_179'>179</a></li>
- <li class='c045'>Coltsfoot rust, <a href='#Page_120'>120</a></li>
- <li class='c045'><span class='sc'>Complex brands</span>, <a href='#Page_67'>67</a></li>
- <li class='c045'>Complex smuts, <a href='#Page_90'>90</a></li>
- <li class='c045'>Composite rust, <a href='#Page_105'>105</a></li>
- <li class='c045'>Conceptacles, <a href='#Page_165'>165</a></li>
- <li class='c045'>Conidia, <a href='#Page_126'>126</a></li>
- <li class='c045'><i>Coniomycetes</i>, <a href='#Page_5'>5</a></li>
- <li class='c045'>Conjurer of Chalgrave’s fern, <a href='#Page_61'>61</a></li>
- <li class='c045'>Corn mildew, <a href='#Page_48'>48</a></li>
- <li class='c045'>—— mildew, germination, <a href='#Page_55'>55</a></li>
- <li class='c045'>—— rust, <a href='#Page_49'>49</a>, <a href='#Page_52'>52</a>, <a href='#Page_95'>95</a></li>
- <li class='c045'>—— smut, <a href='#Page_79'>79</a></li>
- <li class='c045'>Cornel blight, <a href='#Page_174'>174</a></li>
- <li class='c045'>Coronated mildew, <a href='#Page_56'>56</a></li>
- <li class='c045'>Cotton blight in India, <a href='#Page_177'>177</a></li>
- <li class='c045'>Cow-parsnip rust, <a href='#Page_105'>105</a></li>
- <li class='c045'>Cow-wheat rust, <a href='#Page_122'>122</a></li>
- <li class='c045'>Crowfoot blight, <a href='#Page_173'>173</a></li>
- <li class='c045'>Crucifer white rust, <a href='#Page_136'>136</a></li>
- <li class='c045'><i>Cryptosporium Neesii</i>, <a href='#Page_35'>35</a></li>
- <li class='c045'><i>Cystopus</i>, <a href='#Page_124'>124</a>, <a href='#Page_136'>136</a></li>
- <li class='c045'>—— <i>candidus</i>, <a href='#Page_136'>136</a></li>
- <li class='c045'>—— <i>cubicus</i>, <a href='#Page_136'>136</a></li>
- <li class='c045'>—— (Descriptions), <a href='#Page_214'>214</a></li>
- <li class='c045'>—— <i>Lepigoni</i>, <a href='#Page_136'>136</a></li>
- <li class='c045'>Dandelion parasites, <a href='#Page_61'>61</a></li>
- <li class='c045'>De Bary’s experiments, <a href='#Page_129'>129</a></li>
- <li class='c045'>Descriptions, <a href='#Page_189'>189</a></li>
- <li class='c045'><span class='sc'>Di-morphism</span>, <a href='#Page_33'>33</a></li>
- <li class='c045'>Diseases of wheat, <a href='#Page_85'>85</a></li>
- <li class='c045'>Dock mould, <a href='#Page_160'>160</a></li>
- <li class='c045'>Dogwood blight, <a href='#Page_174'>174</a></li>
- <li class='c045'><i>Dothidea ribis</i>, <a href='#Page_36'>36</a></li>
- <li class='c045'>Dust-brand, <a href='#Page_76'>76</a></li>
- <li class='c045'>Earth-nut brand, <a href='#Page_64'>64</a></li>
- <li class='c045'>Elongated corn rust, <a href='#Page_95'>95</a></li>
- <li class='c045'>—— smut, <a href='#Page_84'>84</a></li>
- <li class='c045'>Enchanter’s Nightshade rust, <a href='#Page_112'>112</a></li>
- <li class='c045'><i>Endophyllum</i>, <a href='#Page_20'>20</a></li>
- <li class='c045'>—— (Descriptions), <a href='#Page_194'>194</a></li>
- <li class='c045'>Endospore, <a href='#Page_40'>40</a></li>
- <li class='c045'><span class='pageno' id='Page_241'>241</span>Epispore, <a href='#Page_40'>40</a></li>
- <li class='c045'><i>Erineum acerinum</i>, <a href='#Page_170'>170</a></li>
- <li class='c045'><i>Erysiphe communis</i>, <a href='#Page_173'>173</a></li>
- <li class='c045'>—— (Descriptions), <a href='#Page_220'>220</a></li>
- <li class='c045'>—— <i>lamprocarpa</i>, <a href='#Page_174'>174</a></li>
- <li class='c045'>—— <i>Linkii</i>, <a href='#Page_174'>174</a></li>
- <li class='c045'>—— <i>Martii</i>, <a href='#Page_173'>173</a></li>
- <li class='c045'>—— <i>Montagnei</i>, <a href='#Page_174'>174</a></li>
- <li class='c045'>—— <i>tortilis</i>, <a href='#Page_174'>174</a></li>
- <li class='c045'><i>Eurotium</i> (Descriptions), <a href='#Page_222'>222</a></li>
- <li class='c045'>—— <i>herbariorum</i>, <a href='#Page_177'>177</a></li>
- <li class='c045'>Examining fungi, <a href='#Page_183'>183</a></li>
- <li class='c045'>Fern rust, <a href='#Page_112'>112</a></li>
- <li class='c045'>Fungi, species of, <a href='#Page_45'>45</a></li>
- <li class='c045'>Generations, alternation of, <a href='#Page_38'>38</a></li>
- <li class='c045'>Genus and species, <a href='#Page_58'>58</a></li>
- <li class='c045'>Germination of mildew, <a href='#Page_55'>55</a></li>
- <li class='c045'>—— of pea rust, <a href='#Page_40'>40</a></li>
- <li class='c045'>Goatsbeard cluster-cups, <a href='#Page_3'>3</a></li>
- <li class='c045'>—— smut, <a href='#Page_82'>82</a></li>
- <li class='c045'>—— white rust, <a href='#Page_136'>136</a></li>
- <li class='c045'>Goat-willow rust, <a href='#Page_116'>116</a></li>
- <li class='c045'>Golden-rose rust, <a href='#Page_113'>113</a></li>
- <li class='c045'>Gonosphere, <a href='#Page_130'>130</a></li>
- <li class='c045'>Gooseberry blight, <a href='#Page_171'>171</a></li>
- <li class='c045'>Ground-ivy brand, <a href='#Page_59'>59</a></li>
- <li class='c045'>Groundsel rust, <a href='#Page_97'>97</a></li>
- <li class='c045'>Guelder-rose blight, <a href='#Page_171'>171</a></li>
- <li class='c045'><i>Gymnosporangium</i> (Descriptions), <a href='#Page_201'>201</a></li>
- <li class='c045'>Hawthorn cluster-cups, <a href='#Page_17'>17</a></li>
- <li class='c045'>Hazel blight, <a href='#Page_168'>168</a></li>
- <li class='c045'>Herbarium mould, <a href='#Page_177'>177</a></li>
- <li class='c045'>—— of fungi, <a href='#Page_182'>182</a></li>
- <li class='c045'>Hop disease, <a href='#Page_167'>167</a></li>
- <li class='c045'>Hyphomycetes, <a href='#Page_139'>139</a></li>
- <li class='c045'>Inoculation, <a href='#Page_9'>9</a></li>
- <li class='c045'>Iris rust, <a href='#Page_115'>115</a></li>
- <li class='c045'><i>Lecythea</i>, <a href='#Page_107'>107</a></li>
- <li class='c045'>—— <i>capræarum</i>, <a href='#Page_117'>117</a></li>
- <li class='c045'>—— (Descriptions), <a href='#Page_206'>206</a></li>
- <li class='c045'>—— <i>Lini</i>, <a href='#Page_108'>108</a></li>
- <li class='c045'>—— <i>longicapsula</i>, <a href='#Page_118'>118</a></li>
- <li class='c045'>—— <i>Rosæ</i>, <a href='#Page_34'>34</a>, <a href='#Page_107'>107</a></li>
- <li class='c045'>Lettuce mould, <a href='#Page_156'>156</a></li>
- <li class='c045'>Line-like rust, <a href='#Page_95'>95</a></li>
- <li class='c045'>Long-stemmed rust, <a href='#Page_114'>114</a></li>
- <li class='c045'>Luzula rust, <a href='#Page_104'>104</a></li>
- <li class='c045'>Maple blight, <a href='#Page_169'>169</a></li>
- <li class='c045'>Meadow-saffron smut, <a href='#Page_92'>92</a></li>
- <li class='c045'>Meadow-sweet brand, <a href='#Page_67'>67</a></li>
- <li class='c045'>Mealy Guelder-rose blight, <a href='#Page_172'>172</a></li>
- <li class='c045'><i>Melampsora betulina</i>, <a href='#Page_118'>118</a></li>
- <li class='c045'>—— (Descriptions), <a href='#Page_213'>213</a></li>
- <li class='c045'>—— <i>salicina</i>, <a href='#Page_117'>117</a></li>
- <li class='c045'>Mercury rust, <a href='#Page_110'>110</a></li>
- <li class='c045'>Microscopic examination, <a href='#Page_183'>183</a></li>
- <li class='c045'>—— fungi collecting, <a href='#Page_179'>179</a></li>
- <li class='c045'>Microscopic preserving, <a href='#Page_182'>182</a></li>
- <li class='c045'><i>Microsphæria Berberidis</i>, <a href='#Page_170'>170</a></li>
- <li class='c045'>—— (Descriptions), <a href='#Page_219'>219</a></li>
- <li class='c045'>—— <i>Ehrenbergii</i>, <a href='#Page_171'>171</a></li>
- <li class='c045'>—— <i>Hedwigii</i>, <a href='#Page_172'>172</a></li>
- <li class='c045'>Mildew and brand, <a href='#Page_45'>45</a></li>
- <li class='c045'>—— what is it?, <a href='#Page_46'>46</a></li>
- <li class='c045'>Mint brand, <a href='#Page_58'>58</a></li>
- <li class='c045'>—— rust, <a href='#Page_102'>102</a></li>
- <li class='c045'>Monthly calendar of fungi, <a href='#Page_180'>180</a></li>
- <li class='c045'>Moulds, <a href='#Page_138'>138</a></li>
- <li class='c045'>Mould, Dock, <a href='#Page_160'>160</a></li>
- <li class='c045'>—— Lettuce, <a href='#Page_156'>156</a></li>
- <li class='c045'>—— Onion, <a href='#Page_155'>155</a></li>
- <li class='c045'>—— Parsnip, <a href='#Page_157'>157</a></li>
- <li class='c045'>—— Potato, <a href='#Page_144'>144</a></li>
- <li class='c045'>—— Rose, <a href='#Page_159'>159</a></li>
- <li class='c045'>—— Spinach, <a href='#Page_158'>158</a></li>
- <li class='c045'>—— Tare, <a href='#Page_156'>156</a></li>
- <li class='c045'>Mountain-ash cluster-cups, <a href='#Page_19'>19</a></li>
- <li class='c045'>Mounting fungi, <a href='#Page_184'>184</a></li>
- <li class='c045'>Mugwort blight, <a href='#Page_174'>174</a></li>
- <li class='c045'>Mycelium, <a href='#Page_23'>23</a></li>
- <li class='c045'>Nettle cluster-cups, <a href='#Page_14'>14</a></li>
- <li class='c045'>Nightshade rust, <a href='#Page_112'>112</a></li>
- <li class='c045'>Number of species, <a href='#Page_45'>45</a></li>
- <li class='c045'>Oak-leaf rust, <a href='#Page_111'>111</a></li>
- <li class='c045'><i>Oidium</i>, <a href='#Page_34'>34</a>, <a href='#Page_162'>162</a></li>
- <li class='c045'>—— <i>leucoconium</i>, <a href='#Page_167'>167</a></li>
- <li class='c045'>—— <i>monilioides</i>, <a href='#Page_162'>162</a></li>
- <li class='c045'>—— <i>Tuckeri</i>, <a href='#Page_164'>164</a></li>
- <li class='c045'>Onion mould, <a href='#Page_155'>155</a></li>
- <li class='c045'>Oogonia, <a href='#Page_129'>129</a></li>
- <li class='c045'>Oospores, <a href='#Page_131'>131</a></li>
- <li class='c045'>Origin of mildew, <a href='#Page_47'>47</a></li>
- <li class='c045'><span class='pageno' id='Page_242'>242</span>Parsnip mould, <a href='#Page_157'>157</a></li>
- <li class='c045'>Pea blight, <a href='#Page_173'>173</a></li>
- <li class='c045'>Pear tree cluster-cups, <a href='#Page_18'>18</a></li>
- <li class='c045'>Pea and bean rust, <a href='#Page_114'>114</a></li>
- <li class='c045'>Pearust, germination of, <a href='#Page_40'>40</a></li>
- <li class='c045'>Pennywort rust, <a href='#Page_100'>100</a></li>
- <li class='c045'><i>Peridermium</i>, <a href='#Page_20'>20</a></li>
- <li class='c045'>—— (Descriptions), <a href='#Page_189'>189</a></li>
- <li class='c045'><i>Peridium</i>, <a href='#Page_4'>4</a></li>
- <li class='c045'><i>Perithecium</i>, <a href='#Page_35'>35</a></li>
- <li class='c045'>Periwinkle brand, <a href='#Page_103'>103</a></li>
- <li class='c045'>—— rust, <a href='#Page_103'>103</a></li>
- <li class='c045'>Persicaria rust, <a href='#Page_104'>104</a></li>
- <li class='c045'><i>Peronospora</i>, <a href='#Page_138'>138</a></li>
- <li class='c045'>—— (Descriptions), <a href='#Page_215'>215</a></li>
- <li class='c045'>—— <i>destructor</i>, <a href='#Page_156'>156</a></li>
- <li class='c045'>—— <i>effusa</i>, <a href='#Page_159'>159</a></li>
- <li class='c045'>—— <i>gangliformis</i>, <a href='#Page_156'>156</a></li>
- <li class='c045'>—— <i>infestans</i>, <a href='#Page_153'>153</a></li>
- <li class='c045'>—— <i>macrospora</i>, <a href='#Page_158'>158</a></li>
- <li class='c045'>—— <i>nivea</i>, <a href='#Page_157'>157</a></li>
- <li class='c045'>—— <i>obliqua</i>, <a href='#Page_160'>160</a></li>
- <li class='c045'>—— <i>Schleideniana</i>, <a href='#Page_155'>155</a></li>
- <li class='c045'>—— <i>sparsa</i>, <a href='#Page_159'>159</a></li>
- <li class='c045'>—— <i>Trifoliorum</i>, <a href='#Page_157'>157</a></li>
- <li class='c045'>—— <i>Umbelliferarum</i>, <a href='#Page_158'>158</a></li>
- <li class='c045'>—— <i>Viciæ</i>, <a href='#Page_156'>156</a></li>
- <li class='c045'>Pepper brand, <a href='#Page_86'>86</a></li>
- <li class='c045'><i>Phragmidium</i>, <a href='#Page_71'>71</a></li>
- <li class='c045'><i>Phyllactinia</i> (Descriptions), <a href='#Page_218'>218</a></li>
- <li class='c045'>—— <i>guttata</i>, <a href='#Page_168'>168</a></li>
- <li class='c045'>Pilewort rust, <a href='#Page_115'>115</a></li>
- <li class='c045'><i>Podisoma</i> (Descriptions), <a href='#Page_201'>201</a></li>
- <li class='c045'><i>Polycystis</i>, <a href='#Page_91'>91</a></li>
- <li class='c045'>—— (Descriptions), <a href='#Page_211'>211</a></li>
- <li class='c045'>—— <i>pompholygodes</i>, <a href='#Page_91'>91</a></li>
- <li class='c045'>—— <i>Violæ</i>, <a href='#Page_92'>92</a></li>
- <li class='c045'>Potato disease, <a href='#Page_144'>144</a></li>
- <li class='c045'>—— mould, <a href='#Page_142'>142</a>, <a href='#Page_144'>144</a></li>
- <li class='c045'>—— smut, <a href='#Page_93'>93</a></li>
- <li class='c045'>Preserving fungi, <a href='#Page_182'>182</a></li>
- <li class='c045'><i>Puccinia</i> (Descriptions), <a href='#Page_196'>196</a></li>
- <li class='c045'>—— <i>Anemones</i>, <a href='#Page_60'>60</a></li>
- <li class='c045'>—— <i>Compositarum</i>, <a href='#Page_63'>63</a></li>
- <li class='c045'>—— <i>coronata</i>, <a href='#Page_57'>57</a></li>
- <li class='c045'>—— <i>glechomatis</i>, <a href='#Page_59'>59</a></li>
- <li class='c045'>—— <i>graminis</i>, <a href='#Page_25'>25</a></li>
- <li class='c045'>—— <i>Menthæ</i>, <a href='#Page_58'>58</a></li>
- <li class='c045'>—— <i>Rosæ</i>, <a href='#Page_34'>34</a></li>
- <li class='c045'>—— <i>Saniculæ</i>, <a href='#Page_64'>64</a></li>
- <li class='c045'>—— <i>Syngenesiarum</i>, <a href='#Page_62'>62</a></li>
- <li class='c045'>—— <i>Umbelliferarum</i>, <a href='#Page_64'>64</a></li>
- <li class='c045'>—— <i>variabilis</i>, <a href='#Page_62'>62</a></li>
- <li class='c045'>—— <i>vincæ</i>, <a href='#Page_103'>103</a></li>
- <li class='c045'>Purslane white rust, <a href='#Page_137'>137</a></li>
- <li class='c045'>Raspberry brand, <a href='#Page_71'>71</a></li>
- <li class='c045'>Reed smut, <a href='#Page_83'>83</a></li>
- <li class='c045'><i>Rœstelia</i> (Descriptions), <a href='#Page_189'>189</a></li>
- <li class='c045'>—— <i>cancellata</i>, <a href='#Page_19'>19</a></li>
- <li class='c045'>—— <i>cornuta</i>, <a href='#Page_19'>19</a></li>
- <li class='c045'>—— <i>lacerata</i>, <a href='#Page_19'>19</a></li>
- <li class='c045'>Rose blight, <a href='#Page_166'>166</a></li>
- <li class='c045'>—— mould, <a href='#Page_107'>107</a></li>
- <li class='c045'>—— rust, <a href='#Page_159'>159</a></li>
- <li class='c045'><i>Rusts</i>, <a href='#Page_95'>95</a>, <a href='#Page_110'>110</a></li>
- <li class='c045'>Rust, Bean, <a href='#Page_104'>104</a></li>
- <li class='c045'>—— Beet, <a href='#Page_104'>104</a></li>
- <li class='c045'>—— Birch, <a href='#Page_118'>118</a></li>
- <li class='c045'>—— Butter-bur, <a href='#Page_122'>122</a></li>
- <li class='c045'>—— Cabbage, <a href='#Page_124'>124</a></li>
- <li class='c045'>—— Campanula, <a href='#Page_123'>123</a></li>
- <li class='c045'>—— Clover, <a href='#Page_116'>116</a></li>
- <li class='c045'>—— Coltsfoot, <a href='#Page_120'>120</a></li>
- <li class='c045'>—— Composite, <a href='#Page_105'>105</a></li>
- <li class='c045'>—— Corn, <a href='#Page_49'>49</a>, <a href='#Page_95'>95</a></li>
- <li class='c045'>—— Cow-parsnip, <a href='#Page_105'>105</a></li>
- <li class='c045'>—— Cow-wheat, <a href='#Page_122'>122</a></li>
- <li class='c045'>—— Fern, <a href='#Page_112'>112</a></li>
- <li class='c045'>—— Flax, <a href='#Page_109'>109</a></li>
- <li class='c045'>—— Goatsbeard, <a href='#Page_136'>136</a></li>
- <li class='c045'>—— Goat-willow, <a href='#Page_116'>116</a></li>
- <li class='c045'>—— Golden-rose, <a href='#Page_113'>113</a></li>
- <li class='c045'>—— Grass of Parnassus, <a href='#Page_106'>106</a></li>
- <li class='c045'>—— Groundsel, <a href='#Page_97'>97</a></li>
- <li class='c045'>—— Iris, <a href='#Page_115'>115</a></li>
- <li class='c045'>—— Long-stemmed, <a href='#Page_114'>114</a></li>
- <li class='c045'>—— Luzula, <a href='#Page_104'>104</a></li>
- <li class='c045'>—— Mercury, <a href='#Page_110'>110</a></li>
- <li class='c045'>—— Mint, <a href='#Page_102'>102</a></li>
- <li class='c045'>—— Nightshade, <a href='#Page_112'>112</a></li>
- <li class='c045'>—— Oak-leaf, <a href='#Page_111'>111</a></li>
- <li class='c045'>—— Pea and Bean, <a href='#Page_114'>114</a></li>
- <li class='c045'>—— Pennywort, <a href='#Page_100'>100</a></li>
- <li class='c045'>—— Periwinkle, <a href='#Page_103'>103</a></li>
- <li class='c045'><span class='pageno' id='Page_243'>243</span>—— Persicaria, <a href='#Page_104'>104</a></li>
- <li class='c045'>—— Pilewort, <a href='#Page_115'>115</a></li>
- <li class='c045'>—— Rose, <a href='#Page_107'>107</a></li>
- <li class='c045'>—— St.-John’s-wort, <a href='#Page_113'>113</a></li>
- <li class='c045'>—— Sandspurry, <a href='#Page_136'>136</a></li>
- <li class='c045'>—— Sedge, <a href='#Page_104'>104</a></li>
- <li class='c045'>—— Sorrel, <a href='#Page_111'>111</a></li>
- <li class='c045'>—— Sow-thistle, <a href='#Page_122'>122</a></li>
- <li class='c045'>—— Stinking, <a href='#Page_87'>87</a></li>
- <li class='c045'>—— Sweet-smelling, <a href='#Page_99'>99</a></li>
- <li class='c045'>—— Thistle, <a href='#Page_99'>99</a></li>
- <li class='c045'>—— Twin-faced, <a href='#Page_111'>111</a></li>
- <li class='c045'>—— Umbellifer, <a href='#Page_105'>105</a></li>
- <li class='c045'>—— Violet, <a href='#Page_102'>102</a></li>
- <li class='c045'>Rye smut, <a href='#Page_92'>92</a></li>
- <li class='c045'>Sandspurry white rust, <a href='#Page_136'>136</a></li>
- <li class='c045'>Sanicle brand, <a href='#Page_64'>64</a></li>
- <li class='c045'>—— cluster-cups, <a href='#Page_14'>14</a></li>
- <li class='c045'>Sedge rust, <a href='#Page_104'>104</a></li>
- <li class='c045'>—— smut, <a href='#Page_84'>84</a></li>
- <li class='c045'>Smuts, <a href='#Page_76'>76</a></li>
- <li class='c045'>Smut, Anther, <a href='#Page_85'>85</a></li>
- <li class='c045'>—— Cocksfoot, <a href='#Page_83'>83</a></li>
- <li class='c045'>—— Complex, <a href='#Page_90'>90</a></li>
- <li class='c045'>—— Corn, <a href='#Page_79'>79</a></li>
- <li class='c045'>—— Crowfoot, <a href='#Page_91'>91</a></li>
- <li class='c045'>—— Elongated, <a href='#Page_84'>84</a></li>
- <li class='c045'>—— Goatsbeard, <a href='#Page_82'>82</a></li>
- <li class='c045'>—— Grass, <a href='#Page_79'>79</a></li>
- <li class='c045'>—— Maize, <a href='#Page_79'>79</a></li>
- <li class='c045'>—— Meadow-saffron, <a href='#Page_92'>92</a></li>
- <li class='c045'>—— Potato, <a href='#Page_93'>93</a></li>
- <li class='c045'>—— Reed, <a href='#Page_83'>83</a></li>
- <li class='c045'>—— Rye, <a href='#Page_92'>92</a></li>
- <li class='c045'>—— Sedge, <a href='#Page_84'>84</a></li>
- <li class='c045'>—— Trientalis, <a href='#Page_93'>93</a></li>
- <li class='c045'>—— Violet, <a href='#Page_92'>92</a></li>
- <li class='c045'>St.-John’s-wort rust, <a href='#Page_113'>113</a></li>
- <li class='c045'>Sow-thistle rust, <a href='#Page_122'>122</a></li>
- <li class='c045'>Specific names, <a href='#Page_57'>57</a></li>
- <li class='c045'>Spermatia, <a href='#Page_24'>24</a></li>
- <li class='c045'><span class='sc'>Spermogones</span>, <a href='#Page_22'>22</a>, <a href='#Page_98'>98</a></li>
- <li class='c045'><i>Sphærotheca</i> (Descriptions), <a href='#Page_218'>218</a></li>
- <li class='c045'>—— <i>Castagnei</i>, <a href='#Page_167'>167</a></li>
- <li class='c045'>—— <i>pannosa</i>, <a href='#Page_167'>167</a></li>
- <li class='c045'>Spinach mould, <a href='#Page_158'>158</a></li>
- <li class='c045'>Sporangium, <a href='#Page_165'>165</a></li>
- <li class='c045'>Sporidia, <a href='#Page_38'>38</a></li>
- <li class='c045'>Spurge cluster-cups, <a href='#Page_11'>11</a></li>
- <li class='c045'>Sterigmata, <a href='#Page_24'>24</a></li>
- <li class='c045'>Stinking rust, <a href='#Page_87'>87</a></li>
- <li class='c045'>Strawberry brand, <a href='#Page_72'>72</a></li>
- <li class='c045'>Stylospores, <a href='#Page_38'>38</a>, <a href='#Page_42'>42</a></li>
- <li class='c045'>Suckers, <a href='#Page_125'>125</a>, <a href='#Page_141'>141</a></li>
- <li class='c045'><span class='sc'>Suggestions</span>, <a href='#Page_179'>179</a></li>
- <li class='c045'>Sweet-smelling rust, <a href='#Page_99'>99</a></li>
- <li class='c045'>Tare mould, <a href='#Page_156'>156</a></li>
- <li class='c045'>Thistle brand, <a href='#Page_62'>62</a></li>
- <li class='c045'>Thistle white rust, <a href='#Page_137'>137</a></li>
- <li class='c045'><i>Tilletia caries</i>, <a href='#Page_87'>87</a></li>
- <li class='c045'>—— (Descriptions), <a href='#Page_202'>202</a></li>
- <li class='c045'><i>Trichobasis Betæ</i>, <a href='#Page_104'>104</a></li>
- <li class='c045'>—— <i>caricina</i>, <a href='#Page_104'>104</a></li>
- <li class='c045'>—— <i>Cichoracearum</i>, <a href='#Page_105'>105</a></li>
- <li class='c045'>—— (Descriptions), <a href='#Page_207'>207</a></li>
- <li class='c045'>—— <i>Fabæ</i>, <a href='#Page_104'>104</a></li>
- <li class='c045'>—— <i>hydrocotyles</i>, <a href='#Page_100'>100</a></li>
- <li class='c045'>—— <i>Labiatarum</i>, <a href='#Page_102'>102</a></li>
- <li class='c045'>—— <i>linearis</i>, <a href='#Page_95'>95</a></li>
- <li class='c045'>—— <i>oblongata</i>, <a href='#Page_105'>105</a></li>
- <li class='c045'>—— <i>Parnassiæ</i>, <a href='#Page_106'>106</a></li>
- <li class='c045'>—— <i>Petroselini</i>, <a href='#Page_105'>105</a></li>
- <li class='c045'>—— <i>Polygonorum</i>, <a href='#Page_104'>104</a></li>
- <li class='c045'>—— <i>rubigo-vera</i>, <a href='#Page_49'>49</a>, <a href='#Page_95'>95</a></li>
- <li class='c045'>—— <i>Senecionis</i>, <a href='#Page_97'>97</a></li>
- <li class='c045'>—— <i>suaveolens</i>, <a href='#Page_99'>99</a></li>
- <li class='c045'>—— <i>Umbellatarum</i>, <a href='#Page_105'>105</a></li>
- <li class='c045'>—— <i>Violarum</i>, <a href='#Page_102'>102</a></li>
- <li class='c045'>Trientalis smut, <a href='#Page_93'>93</a></li>
- <li class='c045'><i>Triphragmium</i> (Descriptions), <a href='#Page_196'>196</a></li>
- <li class='c045'>—— <i>Ulmariæ</i>, <a href='#Page_67'>67</a></li>
- <li class='c045'><i>Tuburcinia</i>, <a href='#Page_93'>93</a></li>
- <li class='c045'>—— (Descriptions), <a href='#Page_212'>212</a></li>
- <li class='c045'>Tulasne on Fungi, <a href='#Page_35'>35</a></li>
- <li class='c045'>Twin-faced rust, <a href='#Page_111'>111</a></li>
- <li class='c045'><i>Uncinula adunca</i>, <a href='#Page_169'>169</a></li>
- <li class='c045'>—— <i>bicornis</i>, <a href='#Page_169'>169</a></li>
- <li class='c045'>—— (Descriptions), <a href='#Page_218'>218</a></li>
- <li class='c045'>Uredines, <a href='#Page_33'>33</a></li>
- <li class='c045'><i>Uredo Betulina</i>, <a href='#Page_118'>118</a></li>
- <li class='c045'>—— <i>bifrons</i>, <a href='#Page_111'>111</a></li>
- <li class='c045'>—— <i>Circææ</i>, <a href='#Page_112'>112</a></li>
- <li class='c045'>—— <i>confluens</i>, <a href='#Page_110'>110</a></li>
- <li class='c045'><span class='pageno' id='Page_244'>244</span>—— (Descriptions), <a href='#Page_204'>204</a></li>
- <li class='c045'>—— <i>Filicum</i>, <a href='#Page_112'>112</a></li>
- <li class='c045'>—— <i>hydrocotyles</i>, <a href='#Page_101'>101</a></li>
- <li class='c045'>—— <i>Hypericorum</i>, <a href='#Page_113'>113</a></li>
- <li class='c045'>—— <i>Parnassiæ</i>, <a href='#Page_106'>106</a></li>
- <li class='c045'>—— <i>Quercus</i>, <a href='#Page_111'>111</a></li>
- <li class='c045'>—— <i>Rosæ</i>, <a href='#Page_33'>33</a></li>
- <li class='c045'><i>Urocystis</i>, <a href='#Page_91'>91</a></li>
- <li class='c045'><i>Uromyces apiculata</i>, <a href='#Page_116'>116</a></li>
- <li class='c045'>—— <i>appendiculata</i>, <a href='#Page_40'>40</a>, <a href='#Page_114'>114</a></li>
- <li class='c045'>—— (Descriptions), <a href='#Page_210'>210</a></li>
- <li class='c045'>—— <i>Ficariæ</i>, <a href='#Page_115'>115</a></li>
- <li class='c045'>—— <i>Ulmariæ</i>, <a href='#Page_114'>114</a></li>
- <li class='c045'><i>Ustilago antherarum</i>, <a href='#Page_85'>85</a></li>
- <li class='c045'>—— (Descriptions), <a href='#Page_202'>202</a></li>
- <li class='c045'>—— <i>longissima</i>, <a href='#Page_84'>84</a></li>
- <li class='c045'>—— <i>maydis</i>, <a href='#Page_79'>79</a></li>
- <li class='c045'>—— <i>olivacea</i>, <a href='#Page_84'>84</a></li>
- <li class='c045'>—— <i>receptaculorum</i>, <a href='#Page_83'>83</a></li>
- <li class='c045'>—— <i>Salveii</i>, <a href='#Page_84'>84</a></li>
- <li class='c045'>—— <i>segetum</i>, <a href='#Page_79'>79</a></li>
- <li class='c045'>—— <i>typhoides</i>, <a href='#Page_79'>79</a>, <a href='#Page_83'>83</a></li>
- <li class='c045'><i>Valsa suffusa</i>, <a href='#Page_35'>35</a></li>
- <li class='c045'>Vine disease, <a href='#Page_164'>164</a></li>
- <li class='c045'>Violet cluster-cups, <a href='#Page_13'>13</a></li>
- <li class='c045'>Violet smut, <a href='#Page_92'>92</a></li>
- <li class='c045'>Wedge-rust, Birch, <a href='#Page_118'>118</a></li>
- <li class='c045'>—— Willow, <a href='#Page_117'>117</a></li>
- <li class='c045'>Wheat diseases, <a href='#Page_85'>85</a></li>
- <li class='c045'>—— mildew, <a href='#Page_53'>53</a></li>
- <li class='c045'>White mildews or blights, <a href='#Page_162'>162</a></li>
- <li class='c045'><i>White rusts</i>, <a href='#Page_124'>124</a></li>
- <li class='c045'>White rust, Cabbage, <a href='#Page_129'>129</a>, <a href='#Page_136'>136</a></li>
- <li class='c045'>—— Crucifer, <a href='#Page_136'>136</a></li>
- <li class='c045'>—— Goatsbeard, <a href='#Page_136'>136</a></li>
- <li class='c045'>—— Purslane, <a href='#Page_137'>137</a></li>
- <li class='c045'>—— Sandspurry, <a href='#Page_136'>136</a></li>
- <li class='c045'>Willow blight, <a href='#Page_169'>169</a></li>
- <li class='c045'>—— wedge-rust, <a href='#Page_117'>117</a></li>
- <li class='c045'><i>Xenodochus carbonarius</i>, <a href='#Page_73'>73</a></li>
- <li class='c045'>—— (Descriptions), <a href='#Page_195'>195</a></li>
- <li class='c045'>Zoospores, <a href='#Page_126'>126</a></li>
-</ul>
-<hr class='c046' />
-
-<div class='nf-center-c0'>
- <div class='nf-center'>
- <div><span class='small'>WYMAN AND SONS, PRINTERS, GREAT QUEEN STREET, LONDON, W.C.</span></div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<div class='pbb'>
- <hr class='pb c003' />
-</div>
-<p class='c008'>&nbsp;</p>
-<div class='tnbox'>
-
- <ul class='ul_1 c003'>
- <li>Transcriber’s Notes:
- <ul class='ul_2'>
- <li>A link to the Index was added to the Table of Contents.
- </li>
- <li>The Table of Contents entry for the first Appendix has no identifier. Clicking on the
- page number will take you to Appendix A.
- </li>
- <li>The Table of Contents references Appendix II. This is should have been a reference
- Appendix B. Clicking on the page number for Appendix II will take you to Appendix B.
- </li>
- <li>The image of SPERMOGONES (Fig 1.) on page 25 has been rotated to make the letter
- identifications more legible.
- </li>
- <li>On page 40 there is a reference to fig. 150, but nothing in that figure is labeled
- 150.
- </li>
- <li>On page 56, in the footnote, there is a reference to fig. 45 on Plate II. This was
- corrected to Plate III.
- </li>
- <li>On page 67 there is a reference to fig. 47 on Plate II. This was corrected to Plate
- III.
- </li>
- <li>On page 69 there are references to figs. 47 and 41 on Plate II. This was corrected to
- Plate III.
- </li>
- <li>On page 79 there is a reference to figs. 123—125 on Plate IV. This was corrected to
- Plate VI.
- </li>
- <li>On page 216 there is a reference to fig. 268 on Plate VII. This was corrected to
- Plate XVI.
- </li>
- <li>Missing or obscured punctuation was silently corrected.
- </li>
- <li>Typographical errors were silently corrected.
- </li>
- <li>Inconsistent spelling and hyphenation were made consistent only when a predominant
- form was found in this book.
- </li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- </ul>
-
-</div>
-<p class='c008'>&nbsp;</p>
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-<pre>
-
-
-
-
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