REEVE AND CO., HENRIETTA STREET. 



THE TOURIST'S FLOHA. A Descriptive Catalogue of the 



Flowering Plants and Ferns of the British Islands, France, \ 



Germany, Switzerland, and Italy. By Joseph Woods, >, 



F.A.S., F.L.S., F.G.S. 8vo. IS*. | 



" The appearance of this book has been long expected by us ; and we can justly | 



state that it has quite fulfilled all our expectations, and will support the high re- \ 



put^tion of its author. Mr. "Woods is kuown to have spent mauy yeai's in collect- \ 



iug and arranging the materials for the present work, with a view to which he I 



has, we believe, visited all the most interesting localities mentioned in it. This \ 



amount of labour, combined with extensive botanical knowledge, has enabled him | 



to produce a volume such as few, if any other, botanists were capable of writing." I 



— Annals of Natural History. \ 



ZOOLOGY. I 



{Under the Authority of the Lords Commissioners of the Admiralty.) ; 



ZOOLOGY OF THE VOYAGE OF H.M.S. SAMAEANG. \ 



Edited by Aethl-r Adams, F.L.S., Assistant-Surgeon, KN., \ 



attached to the Expedition. > 



Vertebrata. By John Edward Gray, F.E.S., Keeper of the 

 Zoological Department of the British Museum. 



Fishes. By Sir- John Richardson, M.D., F.R.S. 



MoLLUSCA. By the Editor and Lovell Reeve, F.L.S. In- 

 cluding the anatomy of the S/irula^ by Prof. Owen, F.R.S. 



Crustacea. By the Editor and Adam White, F.L.S. 



*^* Complete in one handsome royal J:to volume, containing 55 

 plates. Price, strongly bound in cloth, 2>l. 10s. 



THE BIRDS OF IRELAND. By William Thompson, Esq., 



President of the Natural History and Philosophical Society 



of Belfast. Vol. I., price 16s. cloth. Vol. II., price 12«. 



Vol. III., price 16s., 8vo, cloth. 



" Our readers, if once they get hold of this work, will not readily lay it down ; 

 for while habits are dwelt upon in a manner so amusing that we have known 

 extracts to be read aloud to a delighted circle of children, it contains the 

 precise infonnation which the ornithologist demands, and brings forward topics 

 both of popular and scientific interest, such as the geographical distribution of 

 species, the causes which seem to operate on their increase and decrease, their 

 migrations, theh uses to man, the occasional injuries they inflict, and the impor- 

 tant benefits they confer. It is a standard work, and will rank \yith those of 

 our first ornithologists." — Bublin Quarterly Journal of Medical Science. 



