﻿Meetings 



9- 



55. Length of Time from Blossoming until Seed Development 

 of Leucanthcmum vulgare. By F. William Rane. 



56. The Work performed by the Agricultural College toward 

 a Botanical Survey of Michigan. By W. J. Beal, Agricultural 

 College, Ingham Co., Mich. 



Seven additional titles were handed in, but were omitted 

 from the program owing to the fact that no abstracts had been 



* 



furnished. It was suggested that these papers might be read 

 before the Botanical Club, in case the authors should be in at- 

 tendance at its meeting. 



It was voted, contrary to the recommendation of the committee 

 having the matter in charge, that literature relating to Bacteriology 

 should be included in the " Index of recent Literature relating to 

 American Botany." 



BOTANICAL CLUB OF THE A. A. A. 3. 



D. T. MacDougal, Minneapolis, Minn., Acting President, in ab- 

 sence of the President and Vice-President elected at the Detroit 

 meeting ; A. B. Seymour, Cambridge, Mass., Secretary. 



The following papers were read : 



r. Note on the Influence of Eskers upon Plant Distribution in 



Maine. By M. L. Fernald. 



Moth 



Cells of Monocotyledons. By K. M. Wiegand. 



3. The future Growth of Taxodium distichum. By Hermann 

 von Schrenk. 



4. Progress of the Work on the Buffalo Botanic Garden. By 



Joh 



5 



s 



Cells in Begonia. By B. M. Duggar. 



Hydrophylh 



natural one ? By K. M. Wiegand. 



7. An Apparatus for washing Material killed by certain Fix- 

 tures. By E. J. Durand. 



8. Notes on the Occurrence near Boston of some fleshy Fungi. 



By Hollis Webster. 



9. The Influence of Temperature upon Sporotrkhum globu- 



liferum. By B. M. Duggar. 



