EY 
October 4. Life story of the honeybee. Inkowa Club. Brooklyn 
Botanic Garden. 
October 20. The use and beauty of American trees. Depart- 
ment of Botany, Brooklyn Institute of Arts and Sciences. 
Brooklyn Botanic Garden. : 
APPENDIX 4 
REPORT ON BROOKLYN BOTANIC GARDEN 
PUBLICATIONS, 1925 
American Journal of Botany.—Official publication of the 
Botanical Society of America, and published in cooperation with 
the Society. Monthly, except August and September. The ten 
issues for 1925 constitute Volume XII, with 50 articles on various 
phases of botany, 667 pages (an increase of 11 pages over last 
year), 62 plates and 142 text-figures. The circulation, as of 
November 31 (the close of the fiscal year of the Journal), was 
1,297. Prof. C. E. Allen, University of Wisconsin, continued as 
editor-in-chief, with an editorial board of eight, of which the 
business manager (the director of the Garden) and one of the 
editors (at present, Dr. Arthur Harmount Graves) are appointed 
by the Botanic Garden. One editor is elected by the American 
Phytopathological Society, and the others by the Botanical 
Society of America. 
Ecology.—Official publication of the Ecological Society of 
America. Quarterly. The editorial board is elected by the 
Ecological Society, with the exception of the business manager 
(the director of the Botanic Garden) and one editor (at present, 
Mr. Norman Taylor), who are appointed by the Botanic Garden. 
Volume VI, 1925, contains 35 original papers, besides notes and 
comment, reviews, and abstracts of current ecological literature, 
and proceedings of the annual meeting of the Society. There 
were 473 pages, with § plates and 78 text-figures. 
Genetics.—Published bi-monthly in cooperation with the Edi- 
torial Board of Genetics; Prof. George H. Shull, Princeton 
University, managing editor. This journal is a periodical record 
of investigations bearing on heredity and variation in both plants 
and animals. The director of the Botanic Garden is business 
