33 
type in having the parts of the perianth marked with fewer and 
smaller spots, and in having the blade of the lip broader and 
more pronoun 
he penne acacias, in house no. 13, are in full bloom. 
Conspicuous among these at present are: A. /ongifolia, with its 
yellow flowers borne in racemes ; A. cyanophylla, with its droop- 
ing branches, blue curiously curved leaves, and balls of yellow 
flowers; and the dainty feathery A. dasyphylla, producing an 
effect quite unlike the others 
n rge palm house there are many plants which are 
always interesting, whether in bloom or not. Perhaps the one 
of unusual interest at the present time to the lover of these stately 
plants, is a small member of the collection, a native of the Sand- 
wich Islands. This is Pritchardia Marti, which flowered for the 
first time with us during January. It sent out three large panicles 
of deep yellow ee which added much to its attractiveness. 
It is one of those plants which by the stately manner of bearing 
its leaves gives one the impression of greater size than it really 
possesses, for, tub and all, it stands only about eight feet high. 
GrorGE V. Nasu. 
PUBLICATIONS OF THE STAFF AND STUDENTS OF 
THE NEW YORK BOTANICAL GARDEN 
DURING THE YEAR 1903. 
Barnhart, J. H. Duplicate Binomials. Torreya, 3: 142, 143. 
1903. 
ee E.G. The | Species a Sematophyllum. Jour. 
Bot. 40: 55. 
Ree YeCuruans. rn 6: 1-3. pl. 7. Ja 
1903. (27 D 1902.) 
——- The Jenman Collection of Ferns. Jour. N. Y. Bot. 
Garden, 4: 85, 86. My 1903. 
* This title was accidentally omitted in the bibliographical list for 1902, published 
in the JouRNAL of February, 1903 
