336 
Limpricht, Bryotheca Silesiaca. 
Jack, Leiner u Stitzenberger, Arypiecemen Badens. 
Wilson, Musci Brittanici. 
De Notaris, Erbario Crittogamico Italiano. 
Husnot, Musci Galliz. 
F. Gravet, Bryotheca Belgica. 
V. F. Brotherus, Musci Fennici Exsiccatz. 
W. Ph. Schimper, Un. itini. crypt. 
Molendo, Univ. itin. crypt. 
Of tropical American there are Spruce, Amazonici et Andini, 
a duplicate set, as Dr. Spruce sold his own private collection to 
us last winter; a set of F. Miiller’s Mexican mosses, with auto- 
graph labels, also a duplicate, as we had a fine set from the 
Meisner Herbarium; a set of Wright’s Cuban mosses; of Ber- 
nouilli’s Guatemala; Lindig’s New Grenada; and a set from 
Venezuela, collected by Wullschlagel. Of North American sets 
there are only three, all duplicates. Sullivant’s Musci Allegha- 
nienses, and two sets of Sullivant and Lesquereux Musci Boreali 
Americani, 2d edition (1869), one of which we would gladly 
exchange for the first edition, which is still one of our desiderata. 
Among Jzger’s own specimens isa set of his Musci Hispanici, 
and the cleistocarpous mosses which he described in his “ Musci 
Cleistocarpici” are very fully represented. 
Besides these, there are many autograph specimens from well- 
known bryologists, such as Schimper, J. and K. Mueller, Hampe, 
Winter, Juratzka, Hornschuh, Pfeffer, Bauer, Blytt, Brotherus, 
Reinhardt, Ruthe, Lorentz, Bamberger, Breidler, Milde, Molendo, 
Venturi, Mitten, Wilson, etc., including portions of many valuable 
types. 
Of. the exotic mosses, other than American and European, 
there are sets from Greenland collected by Melhose, from Madeira 
by Bauer, from Java by Van Oorschot and Lacoste, from Australia 
and New Zealand by King, from the Auckland Islands by Knight 
and St. Clair, from the Himalayas by Jacquement, from India, 
Sikkim by Kurz, the East Indies, Nepaul and New Zealand by Sit 
J. D. Hooker, Japan by Savatier, Ceylon by Hooker and Mitner, 
New South Wales by Wallich and others. See 
: EvizaBETH G. BRITTON. 
