No. 2, June, 1921] ECOLOGY, PLANT GEOGRAPHY 139 



955. Salisbury, E. J. A draft scheme for the representation of British vegetation in black 

 and white. Jour. Ecol. 8: 60-61. PI. 1920. — The various types of vegetation are repre- 

 sented by rather simple sj'mbols. — Geo. D. Fuller. 



956. Shreve, Forrest. Vegetation of Washington and Idaho. [Rev. of: Weaver, J. E. 

 A study of the vegetation of Southeastern Washington and adjacent Idaho. Univ. Nebraska 

 Studies 17: 1-114. 48 fig. 1917.] Plant World 22: 216-217. 1919. 



FLORISTICS 



957. Anderson, J. P. Plants of southeastern Alaska. Proc. Iowa Acad. Sci. 25: 427- 

 449. 1920. — A catalogue of pteridophytes and spermatophytes collected mostly at Sitka 

 and Juneau. Habitat and abundance are noted. — H. S. Conard. 



958. Andrews, A. LeRoy. Bryological notes. V. Scapania nimbosa from Norway. 

 Torreya 19: 49-51. 1919.— See Bot. Absts. 3, Entry 699. 



959. Anonymous. Geography of U. S. botanical drugs. Pharm. Era 52: 63-66, 89-92. 

 9 fig., 2 maps. 1919.— See Bot. Absts. 3, Entry 424. 



960. Arber, Agnes. Aquatic angiosperms: the significance of their systematic distri- 

 bution. Jour. Botany 57:83-86. 1919.— See Bot. Absts. 3, Entry 733. 



961. Clute, WiLLARD N. Rarity of Conopholis. Amer. Bot. 25: 108. 1919.— Conopholis 

 americana is regarded as very rare in most of its range. At Saeger's Lake, Valparaiso, Indiana, 

 several acres thickly strewn with this plant were noted in 1919. — W. N . Clute. 



962. Deane, Walter. Amsinckia in New England. Rhodora 21: 38-40. 1919. — An 

 account of the occurrence of the genus in Xew England. — James P. Poole. 



963. Fuller, George D. Vegetation of Newfoundland. [Rev. of: Fernald, M. L. 

 The contrast in the floras of eastern and western Newfoundland. Amer. Jour. Bot. 5: 237- 

 247. Spl. 1918 (see Bot. Absts. 1, Entry 469).] Bot. Gaz. 67: 101. 1919. 



964. Gerstlauer, L. Neue Arten und Standorte der Flora von Augsburg und Mittel- 

 schwaben. [Species and stations new to the flora of Augsburg and Middle Swabia.j Ber. 

 Naturw. Verein. Schwaben u. Neuburg 42: 251-263. 1919.— This article is a continuation of 

 earlier articles published in the same transactions. The author lists 10 pteriodophytes and 

 161 spermatophytes from the region indicated, giving in each case one or more definite stations 

 with the names of the collectors. Eighteen species and 14 hybrids are reported for the first 

 time. At the close of the paper, certain records in Weinhart and Lutzenberger's "Flora von 

 Augsburg" are corrected. — A. W. Evans. 



965. Gleason, H. a. Rhamnus dahurica in Michigan. Torreya 19: 141-142. 1919. — 

 Two wild trees of this species have been found in a swamp south of Ann Arbor, Michigan, 

 500 yards or more from any residence. Only 1 cultivated tree of the species is known in the 

 vicinity, and as it is smaller it cannot be the parent of the wild trees. — /. C. Nelson. 



966. Harper, Roland M. Tumion taxifolium in Georgia. Torreya 19: 119-122. 1919. — 

 Tumion taxifolium (Arn.) Greene, the "savin" or "stinking cedar," which has heretofore 

 been known as occurring only in Gadsden and Liberty counties, Florida, was collected by 

 the author in Decatur County, Georgia, on August 16, 1918, in a ravine about 100 yards north 

 of the State line at Chattahoochee, Florida. Several trees were found, some a foot in diame- 

 ter and 40 feet tall. — J. C. Nelson. 



967. Kidder, Nathaniel T. Solidago lepida, var. fallax in Knox County, Maine. Rho- 

 dora 22 : 77-78. 1920. — An account of the discovery of Solidago lepida DC. var. fallax Fernald 

 on Nathan's Island, one of the outermost islands of Penobscot Bay, lying about 15 miles 



