20 MISSOURI BOTANICAL GARDEN BULLETIN 
Carolina; Walter Deane, 96 plants, mainly from Berkshire 
County, Massachusetts; J. A. Drushel, 118 plants of the 
United States; P. Dusén, 457 specimens of plants of Brazil; 
D. Lewis Dutton, 160 plants of Vermont; Dr. W. H. Emig, 
269 specimens of mosses from Rocky Mountain Park, Alberta; 
Field Museum of Natural History, 52 fungi of Santa Catalina 
Island, California; Friedlander & Sohn, 100 fungi of Ger- 
many; J. M. Grant, 307 plants of Washington; Gray Her- 
barium, Harvard University, 148 specimens, mostly plants of 
Nova Scotia; A. A. Heller, 170 plants of California; Dr. 
H. D. House, 65 fungi; C. J. Humphrey, 95 Hydnaceous 
fungi; L. A. Kenoyer, 715 plants of the Himalayas and the 
Gangetic Plains; National Herbarium, Pretoria, 51 plants of 
South Africa; New York Botanical Garden, 260 plants of 
the United States and the West Indies; Dr. E. B. Payson, 56 
plants of Idaho, Wyoming, and Colorado; Ad. Tonduz, 201 
plants of Guatemala; United States National Herbarium, 860 
herbarium duplicates; Botanical Museum, University of Hel- 
singfors, 1,000 plants of Finland. Many smaller collections 
have been received, which are duly recorded in current num- 
bers of the BULLETIN. 
Mounting and Distribution—The mounting of herbarium 
material has continued throughout the year, and approxi- 
mately 25,000 specimens have been mounted and incorporated 
in the general herbarium during the fiscal year. This num- 
ber includes specimens received on current accessions and a 
complete series of the first set of plants from the David A. 
Watt Herbarium and the John H. Kellogg Herbarium. These 
two private herbaria have furnished several thousand dupli- 
eates which are now ready for distribution. The Kellogg 
Herbarium is made up primarily of plants of Missouri and 
Arkansas, and substantially supplements the constantly in- 
creasing representation of the flora of Missouri and the entire 
Ozark region. The Watt Herbarium consists mainly of ferns 
and fern-allies from all parts of the world, as well as several 
series of exceedingly rare exsiccati of mosses, lichens, and 
algae, especially of Great Britain, Central Europe, Scandi- 
navia, and Lapland. This collection in particular forms a 
very valuable addition to the herbarium of the Missouri Bo- 
tanical Garden. 
Field Work.—No systematized field work has been carried 
on during the year, although a few short trips have been 
made and several local botanists and friends of the Garden 
