2590 



SUPPLEMENT. 



" A. castaneafulia Mirb. Mem. Mus., vol. xiv. t. 21., and our/g. 2532., has 

 the leaves oblong-elliptic, blunt, repand ; or oblong-lanceolate, eroso-dentate 

 petiolate; glabrous above; the axils of the veins downy beneath. Panicle 

 leafy at the base. Male catkins leafy, erect. (^Mirbel.) A tree, found by 

 Dombey, near Tarma, in Peru. Leaves from 3 in. to 5 in. long, and from 10 

 to 15 lines broad. Stipules small, glabrous, membranaceous, linear-lanceolate. 

 Male catkins from 1 in. to 2 in. long, more slender than in A. glutinosa, and 

 4 or 5 in a panicle. Female catkms about 2 lines long, 4 or 5 on a common 

 pedicel. (Mem. Mus., xiv. p. 464.)" 



Betula alba. Page 1704., add to the list of fungi: "Besides the species 

 mentioned above, Mr. Berkeley informs us that the following are found 

 upon the birch: — ^igaricus torulosus Pers., A. pulmonarius Fr., A. 

 algidus Fr., A. ringens Fr., Daedalea albida Fr., D. discolor Fr., 

 Polyporus chioneus Fr., P. pubescens Fr.; P. nidulans Fr., also oa 

 the beech ; P. annosus Fr., Hydnum diversidens Fr., H. leoninum 

 Fr., H. corrugatum Fr., H. aiireum Fr., H. subcarneum Fr., H. 

 cristulatum Fr., H. argutum Fr., H. subtile Fr., Thelephora sarcciides 

 Fr., T. anthochroa Fr., T. mucida Fr., T. conHuens, Peziza Schumd- 

 cheri Fr., Patellaria olivaceo-virens Fr., Bulgaria pellucens Fr., Ce- 

 nangium pulveraceum Fr.; C. urceolus Fr., also on the heath; C. ^etulae 

 F/-.,"Tremella elegans Fr.; Exidia repanda Fr., also on the alder ; 

 Sphae'ria virgultoruru." 

 B.fruticosa. 1705. 1. 23 for " Sc/trift.," read " Schraiik." 



B. papi/rdcea. 1709. 1. 16. from the bottom, for " Gard. Mag., vol. xi, p. 407.," 

 read " Gard. Mag., vol. vi. p. 405." . 



CORYLA^CEiE. 



Quercui. 1729., 1. 26., for " Part IV. of this work," read "our Encyclo- 

 pa'din of Arboriculture." 



Q. sessilijlura. 1736. 1. 11., add : " In the First Annual Report of the Edin- 

 burgh Botanical Society, p. 35., Dr. Graham states that he found 

 three varieties of oaks on the banks of Loch Lomond ; and that 

 they are the same as those figured in Martyn's Flora Rustica, t. 10, 

 11, and 12." 

 I. 39., aild, after full stop : " At Woburn Abbey." 



1746. 1. 21., for " Great part of the Forest of Ardennes," &c., read : " In the 

 district of Warwickshire, called the Forest of Arden, are several 

 woods which consist almost entirely," <&c. 



1773., add to the paragraph hc-ddtd" Ireland :" "We have been informed by 

 Sir Robert Bateson, that there is an oak in Belvoir Park, in the 

 county of Down, which is supposed to be above a thousand years old. 

 Its trunk measures 28 ft. in circumference, at 

 6 ft. from the ground ; and its branches cover a 

 space the diameter of which is 70 ft." 



1790. 1. 1., for " we know tree," read "we know no 

 tree." 



1809. 1. 14. from the bottom, for "small ones," read 

 " small arms." 



1818. 1, 23., add: " Scolytus pygmae'us (see p. 1390.) 

 is said to have destroyed 80,000 young trees in 

 the Bois de Boulogne." 



1831., before the paragraph beginning "The other 

 lichens," insert : " U'snea barbata, Acli. Syn., 

 306. ; Ziehen barbatus Linn., articulatus ^ 

 Eng. Bot., t. 258. f. 2. ; and our fig. 2533., is 

 also found on the oak." 



1837., add to first paragraph : " In addition to the above, the Rev. M. J. 

 Berkeley has sent us the following list of fungi found on the oak : ^ga- 

 ricus dasypus Pers. ; A. speireus Fr. also beech ; A. chama Bosc, A. pin- 

 situs Fr.; A. tessulatus Bull., also on pine ; A. zlicinus Dec, on (d. /Mex >• 



