BIBLIOGRAPHY 



373 



Greene, E. L. (1909) 



[P- 285] 



Grew, Nehemiah 



(1682) 

 [P- 154] 

 Griset, H. E. (1894) 



Gronland, J. (1851) 

 [p. 127] 



Guppy, H. B. (1893) 

 [pp. 35, 220, 243, 244, 

 297, 301, 302] 



Guppy, H. B. (I894 1 ) 



[pp. 85, 88, 273, 274, 

 275, 301 and Fig. 55, 

 p. 86] 



Guppy, H. B. (18942) 



[PP- 75, 77, 275] 



Guppy, H. B. (i894 3 ) 



[P- 274] 



Guppy, H. B. (1896) 



[P- 274] 



Landmarks of Botanical History. Part I. Prior to 

 1562 A.D. Smithsonian Misc. Coll. Vol. 54, 1909, 

 pp. 1-329. 



(On pp. 126, 127, attention is drawn to the opinions of Theo- 

 phrastus upon the ecology of water plants.) 



The Anatomy of Plants. 1682. 304 pp., 83 pis. 



(This classic account of structural botany contains occasional 

 references to aquatics or to subjects bearing on their study.) 



Circulatory Movements of Protoplasm. Science- 

 Gossip, Vol. i. New Series, 1894, PP- 132-133, 2 text- 

 figs. 



(The author draws attention to the stipules of Hydrocharis 

 Morsus-ranae and the diaphragms of the petiole and peduncle 

 of Alisma Plantago as affording excellent material for the 

 observation of intracellular protoplasmic movements.) 



Beitrag zur Kenntniss der Zostera marina L. Bot. 

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The River Thames as an Agent in Plant Dispersal. 

 Journ. Linn. Soc. Bot. Vol. xxix. 1893, pp. 333-346. 

 (An account of observations upon river drift in the Thames, 

 Lea and Roding, with a discussion of the part played by birds 

 in the dispersal of aquatic plants.) 



Water-Plants and their Ways. Science-Gossip, Vol. 

 i. New Series, 1894. Their Dispersal and its Observa- 

 tion, pp. 145-147. Their Thermal Conditions, pp. 

 178-180. Ceratophyllum demersum, pp. 195-199, 

 i text-fig. 



(These short papers, though published in a popular journal, 

 contain original observations of great importance.) 



On the Habits of Lemna minor, L. gibba, and L. 

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 1895 (for 1894), pp. 323-330. 



[Observations on the life-history of these forms, including a 

 detailed study of the temperature conditions necessary for 

 germination, flowering, etc. The paper may be regarded as 

 supplementary to Hegelmaier, F. (1868).] 



River Temperature. Part I. Its Daily Changes and 

 Method of Observation. Proc. Roy, Phys. Soc. 

 Edinburgh, Vol. xn. 1892-1894, pp. 286-312. 

 [A more detailed consideration of the subject than in Guppy, 

 H. B. (I894 1 )-] 



River Temperature. Part III. Comparison of the 



Thermal Conditions of Rivers and Ponds in the 



South of England. Proc. Roy. Phys. Soc. Edinb. 



Vol. xin. 1894-1897, pp. 204-211. 



[The comparison of the temperatures of ponds with that of the 



Thames is treated more fully in this paper than in Guppy, H. B. 



(I894 1 )-] 



