lle, a French Mycologist.
Let. Jean Baptiste Louis Letellier, a French Mycologist.
L. or Linn. Carl von Linnaeus, a Swedish Botanist who is the author
of the Linnaean classification and who adopted the
binomial nomenclature, viz.: the generic name which is
the substantive, or a word used as such, and the
specific name, an adjective, 1707-1778.
Mass. George Massee, an English Botanist, Principal Assistant,
Royal Gardens, Kew; author of several works on Mycology.
Morg. Prof. A. P. Morgan, Preston, Ohio, a well-known Botanist
and an authority on Mycology.
Mont. Montagne, a French Botanist and Mycologist.
Pk. Dr. Charles Horton Peck, the State Botanist of New York;
an eminent authority on Mycology and Botany generally.
Pers. Christian Hendrik Persoon, a German Botanist,
1755-1837.
Rav. W. H. Ravenel, leading Mycologist of South Carolina.
Roze Ernest Roze, a French Mycologist.
Schw. Rev. Louis David de Schweinitz, Bethlehem, Pa., a
pioneer American Mycologist.
Schroet. Schroeter, a German Botanist and Mycologist.
Schaeff. Jacobi C. Schaeffer, a German Botanist, 1718-1790.
Scop. Giovanni Antonio Scopoli, an Italian Botanist,
1725-1788.
Schum. Schumacher, a German Botanist and Mycologist.
Sacc. P. A. Saccardo, an Italian Botanist, the author of
Sylloge Fungorum, a work of several volumes written
in Latin, describing over forty thousand species.
Sow. James Sowerby, an English Botanist.
Vahl. Martin Vahl, a Norwegian Botanist, 1749-1804.
Vitt. Carlo Vittadini, an Italian Mycologist.
Wulf. Wulfen, a German Botanist.
REFERENCES CONSULTED.
Atkinson's Studies of American Fungi.
Cooke's Hand-book of British Fungi.
Massee's European Fungus Flora.
McIlvaine's One Thousand American Fungi.
Our Edible Toadstools and Mushrooms--W. H. Gibson.
Herbst's Fungal Flora of the Lehigh Valley.
Berkeley's Outlines of British Fungology.
The Mushroom Book--Nina L. Marshall.
Morgan's North American Fungi.
Lloyd's Mycological Notes.
Peck's Reports of New York.
Kellerman's
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