LIST OF PUBLICATIONS. 



117 



GREENE, Edward L. — Continued. 



Texano-Neo-Mexican region, a few from the 

 district of Wyoming and Dakota, several 

 from western British America, and one each 

 from the shores of Bering Sea and Hudson's 

 Bay. 



— Some west American red cherries. 



Proc. Biol. Soc, Wash., xvm, Feb. 21, 

 1905, pp. 55-60. 



Ten new species of Cerasus, 7 of them from 

 California, 1 from each of the following: New 

 Mexico. ( (regon, Montana. 



Revision of Eschscholtzia. 



Pittonia, v, June 10, 1905, pp. 20.3-292. 

 !i of the history of 1 be genus, a general 

 classification of the species, with full descrip- 

 tions of all known at this date. 



New papaveraceous genus. 



Pittonia, v. June 1". 1905, pp. 293, 294. 

 An account of the new genus Petromecon 

 and of the 2 known species both endemic on 

 the Mexican Island of Guadalupe. 



A study of Dendromecon. 



Pittonia, v, June in, 1905, pp. 295-305. 



I!e\ isi; n of the genus, with descriptions in 

 full of the 17 species, 14 of which are proposed 

 as new. 



Suggestions regarding Sanguinaria. 



Pittonia, v. Jam- in, 1905, pp. 306 308. 



Proposed segregation of the S. canadensis 

 of recent books into 6 species: 2 for the region 

 of the Eastern Stales: :> for the Southern 

 States, and 1 for the upper Mississippi Valley. 

 Three of tin' 6 an^ described provisionally as 

 new. 



The earliest local flora. 



Plant World, vm, June 10, 1905, pp. 115 121. 

 Sketch of Thalius's Suva Hercynia, pub- 

 lished at Frankfort on the Main, in the year 

 1588. The genera now known as Trientalis 

 and Eleocharis were first published in this 

 book. 



Some Ptelea segregates. 



Torreya, v, June 27, 1905, pp. 99-100. 

 Three new segregates from P. trifoliata, 

 namely, P. Carolina, P. obcordata and /'. 

 mesochora; the first from North Carolina, the 

 secondfrom Florida, the third from the upper 

 Mississippi and region of the Great Lakes. 



HOUSE, Homer Dolliver. Some rare 

 ferns of central New Jersey , 



Fern Bulletin, \n, Aug., 1904, pp. 80-82. 



A new violet from New England. 



Rhodora, VI, Nov., 1904, pp. 226-227, pi. 59. 

 Description of a new species, Viola novae- 

 angliae. 



- The nomenclature of Calonyction 



bona-nox. 

 Bull. Torrey Botan. Club, xxxn, 1904, 

 pp. 589-592. 



HOUSE, Homer Dolliver— Continued. 



Reviews the pre-Linnsean history of this 

 species, which proves to include at least the 2 

 species of Linmeus, Ipomoea alba and Con- 

 volvulus aculeatus, combined by him under the 

 name of Ipomoea bona-uo.r. in 1762. The new 

 combinations Calonyction aculeatum (L.) 

 House, and C. album (L.) House are made. 



Two new species of Convolvulus from 



the western United States. 



Bull. Torrey Patau, elm,, xxxn, 1905, 

 j. p. L39, 140. 

 Describes Convolvulus ambigens aid Con- 

 volvulus intt rior as new species from Colorado. 



Notes on New Jersey violets. 



Bull. Torrey Botan. Club. XXXII, KM)."). 

 pp. 253-260, pis. 16-18. 

 Describes a new species, Viola stoneana and 

 a new hybrid Viola brittoniana cucullata. 



MANX, Albert. Diatoms, the jewels of 

 the plant-world. 



Smithsonian Misc. Coll*., xi.vin, Quar. 

 issue, in. pt. 1. No. 1578, May 23, 1905, 

 pp. 50-58, 4 pis., 9 figs. 



MAXON. William R. Notes on American 

 ferns. 



Fern Bull., xn, Oct., 1904, pp. nil -103. 



A Comparison Of specimens With the types of 



Polypodium vulgar e occidentale Hook. (1840) 

 in the British Museum, indicates thai t he fern 

 ranging from California to Alaska and known 

 under this name and as P. falcatum Kellogg 

 (1854) is an extremely variable species. The 

 series should bear the name Polypodium occi- 

 ili ntali (Hook. I Maxon. 



A new Asplenium from Mexico. 

 Bull. Torrey Botan. Club, xxxi, Dec, 1904, 

 pp. <;.",7, 658, 1 text fig. 

 Asplenium moth sin in, new species, is de- 

 scribed from Chihuahua, Mexico. It is re- 

 garded as an aberranl member of the group 



of A. hini-i olalu in . 



On the mimes of three Jamaican 



species of Polij piuji urn . 



Bull. Torrey Botan. Club, xxxn, Feb., 

 1905, ii]). 73-75. 

 Notes upon the long-continued misidentifi- 

 cation of Polypodium myosuroides Swart/. 

 (1788). The name is restored to its original 

 application and a related species receives the 

 name Polypodium delitescens Maxon. The 

 new name Polypodium induens Maxon ispro- 

 posed for P. saxicolum Baker (1877), not P. 

 saxicola Swartz (1817). 



— A new species of fern of the genus 

 Polypodium from Jamaica. 



Smithsonian Misc. Colls., xi.vn, Quar. 

 issue, II, pt. 4, No. 1562, Apr. 5, 1905, pp. 

 410, 411, pi. 57. 

 Polypodium ncsioticum Maxon. e rare 

 simple-leaved new species from Jamaica, is 

 described and figured. It is compared in de- 

 tail with several allied species. 



