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ALPHABETICAL LIST OF BOOKS AND MEMOIRS 



BEARING ON THE STUDY OF AQUATIC 



ANGIOSPERMS 



[This list is far from exhaustive, being merely intended to indicate the principal 

 sources. Each title is followed by a brief note on the contents and scope of the 

 memoir. In the case of works cited in the body of the text, or from which figures 

 have been reproduced, references to the pages in question will be found beneath 



the authors' names.] 



Agardh, C. A. 



[P 123] 



Anon., (1828) 



:i82i) 



[P- 17] 



Anon., (1895) 



[P- 17] 



Arber, A. (1914) 

 [pp. 50, 186 and 

 Figs. 31, p. 49 and 

 121, p. 186] 



Arber, A. (19 18) 



[PP- 52, 33(> and 

 Figs. 169, p. 341, 170, 

 p.342andi7i,p.345] 



Species Algarum, Vol. i. 1821, 531 pp. Gryphis- 

 waldiae. 



(Amphibolis zosteraefoUa [= Cymodocea antarctica] included 

 under the Algae.) 



Homo Zufu (Phonzo Zoufou). Yedo, 1828. 



(Pi. large series of volumes with fine illustrations of Japanese 

 plants. Vols. 69-76 contain coloured figures of Nymphaeaceae, 

 Trapa, Trapella and other water plants. There is a copy in the 

 Library of the Kew Herbarium.) 



Useful Plants of Japan, described and illustrated. 

 Agricultural Society of Japan, Tokyo, 1895. 



(Trapa, Nelumbo, Euryale, Sagittaria and Scirpus tuber osus are 

 figured and their uses described.) 



On Root Development in Stratiotes aloides L. Proc. 



Camb. Phil. Soc. Vol. xvii. 1914, pp. 369-379, 2 pis. 



(The development of the adventitious roots is discussed in this 

 paper, and attention is called to thefrequently-bi-lobed character 

 of the nuclei in their stelar tissues.) 



The Phyllode Theory of the Monocotyledonous Leaf, 



with Special Reference to Anatomical Evidence. 



Ann. Bot. Vol. xxxii. 1918, pp. 465-501, 32 text-figs. 



(In this paper the nature of the leaves in the Pontederiaceae, 

 Sagittaria and other aquatic Monocotyledons is discussed.) 



Aquatic Angiosperms and their Systematic Distri- 

 bution. Journ. Bot. Vol. 57, 1919, pp. 83-86. 

 (See Chapter 25 of the present book.) 



The 'Law of Loss' in Evolution. Proc. Linn. Soc. 

 Session 131, 1918-1919, pp. 70-78. 

 (See the last chapter of the present book.) 

 Heterophylly in Water Plants. Amer. Nat. Vol. 53, 

 1919, pp. 272-278. 

 (A general discussion of this question.) 

 On the Vegetative Morphology of Pistia and the 

 Lemnaceae. Proc. Roy. Soc. B, Vol. 91, 1919, pp. 

 96-103, 8 text-figs. 



(It is here shown that the leaf of Pistia is phyUodic in anatomy, 

 and that its sheath forms a lateral pocket in which a bud is 

 produced, in a position comparable with that of a young frond 

 of Lemna.) 



