52 
Eggleston, W. W. Plants to be ene for in Vermont. Bull. 
Vermont Bot. Club 7: 17-20. My 
cena n of Cyrus G. Pace Bull. Vermont Bot. 
Fromme, As _ Sexual fusions and spore development of the 
flax rust. Bull. Torrey Club 39: 113-131. pl. 8, 9. Ap 1912. 
Harper, R. A. The structure and development of the colony in 
Gonium. Trans. Am. Micro. Soc. 31: 65-83. pl. 5. Ap 1912. 
S t tions of the germ plasm. Science II. 
35: 909-923. Je 1912 
Harper, R.M. The diverse habitats of the eastern red cedar and 
their interpretation. Torreya 12: 145-154. Jl 1912. 
Hollick, A. odern aspects of paleobotany—II. Relation of 
paleobotany to botany. 3. Ecology. Am. Nat. 46: 239-243. 
Ap 1912 
Some features of the Dismal Swamp of Virginia. Jour. 
N. Y. Bot. Gard. 13: 53-56. pl. or, 92. Ap 1912 
Additions to the ralesbotay or the Cretaceoiis Forma- 
tion on Long Island. No. I 1,N. Y. Bot. Gard. 8: 154- 
o. N Iog12. 
anges and inconsistencies in the spelling of local place- 
names by the States Geol. Surv. Proc. Staten Island 
Assoc. Arts & Sci. 3: 109-112. F 1912. 
Howe, M. A. The aes of “coral” reefs. Science II. 35: 
eee My Ig912 
eef-building and land-forming seaweeds. Proc. Acad. 
Nat. = Philadelphia 54: 137, 138. 1912. 
Howe, R.H. Further notes on the North American pean 
of the genus Usnea. Bryologist 15: 29, 30. gi2 
The lichens of the Linnean a i remarks on 
Acharian material. Bull. Torrey Club 39: 199-203. My 
1912. [Illust.] 
———— Oropogon loxensis and its North American distribution. 
Mycologia 4: 152-156. f. 1, 2. My 1912. 
——— Some lichens from Nantucket Island, Mass. Rhodora 
14: 88-90. My1 
Kern, F. D. ee N. Am. Fl. 7: 188-211. Ap 
