86 ANNALS OF SCOTTISH NATURAL HISTORY 



" New British Fungi," all in S.JV., as follows : Dothidea Angelica 

 near Forres, 1875, P- 2I '> Hydnum lavigatum and Labrella 

 Ptarmicce. at Rannoch, 1875, p. 178: Pez. amentacea, found 

 by Sir. T. Moncrieffe, near Perth, 1877, p. 79; Pucdnia 

 Oxyria, Fckl., in Mull, 1882, p. 254. 



"Fungi forwarded to Messrs. Berkeley and Broome," S.N., 1875, 

 pp. 77-78; 1876, pp. 267-73; 1878, p. 255. 



"New and Rare British Fungi," S.JV., 1880, p. 234. 



"On Uredo filicum, Desm., and Uredo (?) Pteridum, n. sp.," S.N., 

 1877, pp. 26-27. 



"The Wild Fruits of Scotland," S.M, 1875, PP- 22-28, 73-76. 



On the " Characters of the Flowers of Silene maritima and S. 



inflata" as regards their Stamens and Pistils, E.B.S.Tr., x., 



1869, pp. 443-45 ; J-B-* viii., 1870, p. 323. 

 "Monstrosity of Scabiosa Succisa" (petalody of stamens), S.N., 



1871, p. 128. 



"Monstrous Form of Teucrium Scorodonia," S.1V., 1873, P- 33- 



Remarks on "Hermaphrodite Catkins of Salix," P.P.S., 1883-84, 



p. 163. 

 " Winter Fertilisation by Agency of Insects,"^/^., New Ser., i. p. 48. 



"The Influence of Insect Agency on the Distribution of Plants," 

 J.B., New Ser., 1873, PP- II ' 1 3> Ainer. Nat., vii., 1873, 

 pp. 268-71. 



" On the Relations, Analogies, and Similitudes of Insects and 

 Plants," being a Thesis for M.D. in Edinburgh, Commended, 

 in 1864. 



On the "Botany of the 'Jardin' of Mont Blanc," E.B.S. Tr., ix., 

 1868, pp. 140-42. 



ZOOLOGICAL. 



"Fauna of Glen Tilt," S.N., 1877, pp. 160-63; 1878, pp. 181-90, 

 244-48; Ent., 1888, pp. 247-50. 



" Natural History of Kinnoull Hill, The Vertebrates," P.P.S., 1 885- 

 1886, pp. 248-51. 



Museum Notes, I. "Perthshire Mammalia," P.P. S., 1884-85, pp. 



178-81. 

 On a "Hedgehog's Nest," P.P.S., 1883-84, pp. 139-40. 



"The Mammalia of Scotland," S.N., 1881, pp. 49-56. (This is a 

 Review of E. R. Alston's " Mammalia " in the " Fauna of 

 Scotland," published by Nat. Hist. Soc. of Glasgow, with a 

 criticism of Alston's views as to the origin of the Mammalia of 

 Scotland.) 



