Botany. 1 1 9 



100 Appalachian mosses collected by Austin : acquired by 

 exchange. 



565 specimens forming Wainio's " Lichenes Brasilienses 

 exsiccati " : purchased. 



348 Dahurian plants collected by F. Karo : purchased. 



590 specimens, forming eleven fasciculi of Seymour and 

 Earle's " Economic Fungi," with supplement : purchased at 

 intervals between the years 1892 and 1900. 



150 preparations of " Champignons de France " by Tempere 

 and Dutertre : purchased ; the following year, 100 more were 

 purchased. 



250 specimens, forming five pugilli of Cavara's " Fungi Longo- 

 bardiie exsiccati" : purchased between 1892 and 1896. 



30 species, forming fasc. 1 of H. and J. Groves's " Characese 

 Britannicse " : purchased; in 1900, fasc. 2 was purchased. 



Revs. E. F. and "W. B. Linton's fascicles of " British Rubi " : 

 purchased 1892-97; similar sets of Willows and Hieracia were 

 purchased between 1895 and 1901. 



150 specimens of Migula, Sydow and Wahlstedt's " Characese 

 exsiccate," 6 fascicles : purchased between 1892 and 1901. 



1893. 



The collection of Diatomacese made by Mr. Julien Deby : 

 purchased. 



Edward Jenner's herbarium of algae, containing over 6,000 

 specimens : purchased. 



1,097 cellular plants collected by W. R. Elliott in Dominica 

 and St. Vincent were presented by a joint committee of the 

 Royal Society and the British Association. 



A collection of plants from East Equatorial Africa made and 

 presented by Dr. J. W. Gregory. 



472 plants from Borneo, collected by G. Haviland ; in 1894, 

 261 ; in 1895, 200 ; in 1896 (with C. Hose), 108. 



220 plants from Milanji, Nyasa, collected by A. Whyte, Esq., 

 and presented by Sir H. H. Johnston. 



138 West Australian and 72 Corean plants, collected and 

 presented by J. H. Veitch, Esq. 



133 plants from Uruguay collected by O. V. Aplin, Esq. 

 99 South African plants collected by Rudolf Schlechter: 

 acquired by exchange ; in 1894, 101 plants were purchased; in 

 1895, 96; in 1897, 1,010; in 1898, 1,120; in 1899, 540; in 

 1901, 445. 



