ALGÆ NOVA ZELANDIÆ. 5921 
fructifére. 5. un fruit. 6. coupe verticale d'un dès car- 
pelles. Ces trois dernières figures sont de grandeur natu- 
relle. 
Aucm Nova ZELANDLE; being a Catalogue of all the 
species of ÂLGæ yet recorded as inhabiting the shores 
of New ZEALAND, with characters and brief descriptions 
of the new species discovered during the Voyage of H. M. 
discovery ships * EnEBUS" and “ TERROR,” and of others 
communicated to Sir W. Hooker by Dr. Sincuatr, the 
Rev. W. Cocenso, and M. Raouz. By Dr. HOOKER, 
and W, H. Harvey, Esa. 
(In Mr. Allan Cunningham’s “Specimen of the Botany of 
New Zealand,” published in the ** Companion to Curtis’s Bot. 
Magazine," a list of forty-seven Alge is given, comprising all 
that was known up to the year 1836 of the Marine Botany 
of the Islands of New Zealand. M. Montagne has recently 
described twelve additional species in the Botany of the 
French Polar Voyage, and we have now to add sixty-five 
others, making the whole number recorded one hundred and 
twenty-four, which can scarcely be more than one fourth, at 
the very most, of the Alge which probably inhabit the 
extensive coasts of New Zealand. The new species now 
described were chiefly collected by the officers of the 
Antarctic expedition. To these we have added a few, com- 
municated to Sir W. J. Hooker by Dr. Sinclair and the - 
Rev. W. Colenso, and an interesting fasciculus of Alge col- 
lected by M. Raoul, and liberally placed in our hands for 
publication by the Directors of the Paris Museum. We 
regret that we have not been able to procure a set of Mr. 
Stephenson's Alge, an examination of which would in all | 
probability have added somewhat to our number. In the - - 
following list we have marked with an asterisk (*) ! those = 
which we have as yet seen no New Zealand s a E 
|. With a cross (t) those that are altogether unknown to us.) 
Yon, fv. | ea 
