8o Forestry Quarterly. 



1887, data regarding the Spruce Budworm and Larch Sawfly 

 and the projected work of controlHng them by parasites, and an 

 account of some plant diseases of trees. The Arboretum and 

 Botanic Garden which in the past has been mainly a trial ground 

 for ornamental trees and shrubs is to be developed along broader 

 lines. 



A Critical Revision of the Genus Eucalyptus: Part 13 (Volume 

 2, part 3). By J. H. Maiden. Sydney, New South Wales. 191 1. 

 Pp. 101-133, plates 57-60. 



Australian Plants Suitable for Gardens, Parks, Timber Re- 

 serves, etc. By W. R. Guilfoyle. Melbourne, Australia. Pp. 478, 



Trees of the Tasmanian Forests of the Order Myrtaceae: the 

 Genus Eucalyptus. By L. Rod way. Bulletin 17, Agriculture and 

 Stock Department, Tasmania. 191 1. Pp. 15. 



Extracts from a Report on Forestry in Southern Rhodesia. 

 By James Sim. Bulletin 71, Rhodesia Department of Agriculture. 

 Salisbury. 191 1. Pp. 44. 



The Virgin Forests of Kameriin. By Jentsch. Tropenpflanzer, 

 Beihefte 12, No. 1-2. 191 1. Pp. 199. 



This report embodies the results of investigations made relative 

 to the composition and character of the areas examined in Kame- 

 run and Togo and gives the author's conclusions relative to the 

 utilization and conservative exploitation of the forests, together 

 with considerable information of value in the establishment of 

 private wood-working industries. 



The Tree Species of Java: Contribution No. 12. By S. H. 

 Koorders and T. Valeton. No. 10. Meded. Dept. Laudb. Dutch 

 East Indies. 1910. Pp. 782. 



This is the twelfth of a series of reports on the tree species of 

 Java which have been published from time to time, and the first 

 of which appeared in 1894. The present report gives the contents 

 of the previous volumes and deals specifically with the species 

 and genera of Buxaceae, Euphorbiaceae, Ulmaceae, and Urti- 

 caceae. 



