r 



201 



Dougtasia Icevigata, (Gard. Chron., iii., 524, fig. 71.) 



rcpeiis, (Garden and Forest, i., 154.) 



Contrary to the experience of almost everyone who has at- 

 tempted to transplant this unwiUing emigrant, it has been suc- 

 cessfully grown at the Arboretum at Brookline. Much pains 

 were taken to establish it. 

 Erysiphe(E and PeronosporecB. — Notes dn Western — S. M. Tracy 



and B. T. Galloway. (Journ. Mycol., iv., Z?i~Z^') 

 Erythronitim albiflorum and E. Hendersonii, Watson. (Gard. 



Chron., iii,, 556-652/ figs. 74, 86.) 

 Etudes sur /e Peristome, VIL — Philibert. (Rev. Bryol. xv., 37-44.) 



This includes comparative studies in homologous parts of the 



m 



inner peristome and its variations in Cinclidhmt and Fontuialis, 



Euphorbia Jacquiniceflora. (Garden, xxxiii., 486, plate 6^0) 



Evolution in the Plant Kingdom. — John M, Coulter. (Amen 

 ^ Nat., xxii., 322-335.) 



Ficiis anrea — The wild fig-tree of Florida. — C. S. S. (Garden 

 and Forest, i., 128, illustrated.) 



Flora of Bergen County, N. J.— Notes on the — Willard A. Stow- 

 ell. (Journ. Trenton Nat. His. Soc, i., 345-347.) A brief 

 account of some rarer plants of the region. ^ 



Flora of Milwaukee County.—^. M. Wheeler. (Proc. Nat. flist. 

 Soc. Wisconsin, 1888, 154-190.) A Hst of 691 species of 

 Anthophyta and Pteridophyta, with localities. 



Flora Ottawae7isis, (Ottawa Nat., May, 1888.) 



The additions made during 1887 number twenty-four species 



and include eight of mosses, three of which have been heretofore 



undescribed ; Leskea nigrescens, Pylaisia Selwyniy and 



thecium corticola, named by Kindberg. 



Homalo 



CardoL 



Miquelon 



J 



) 



The collections on which these lists are based were made by 

 ^r. E. Delamare, including Phanerogams, Vascular Cryptogams, 

 bosses, Sphagnums, Hepatics and Lichens, with a short list of 

 Algas. The list is not a bare enumeration, but includes descrip- 

 tive notes and comments, is written in a pleasant style and 

 records some interesting comparisons in geographical distribu- 

 tion. Among the notable plants the authors record Schizoea 



