BOOK-NOTES, NEWS, ETC. 335 
flora of the Province of Moray. The early volumes of the Scottish 
Naturalist contain very excellent lists by him of the ‘Mosses found 
in the Vicinity of Forres’ and of the ‘ Fungi of Morayshire,’ and 
short botanical notes. He aided others with his knowledge and 
with specimens most willingly, and was recognized as one of the 
most accurate mycologists in Scotland. The Mycologia Scotica and 
British Hymenomycetes of the Rev. John Stevenson, LL.D., and the 
British Uredinee and Ustilaginee of Dr. Plowright bear testimony 
to the worth of Dr. Keith’s researches, as do also the well-known 
papers by Mr. Berkeley in the Annals and Magazine of Natural 
flistory. He discovered a number of additions to the British lists 
of fungi, of which some were new to science, and of whic oly- 
B ‘ 
porus Keithit B. & Br. and Peziza Keithii Phill, commemorate him. 
degree of LL.D. was conferred on him by the University of Aber- 
deen, in recognition of his merit as a naturalist and of his public 
services.”’ 
by Dr. Bagshawe during the Anglo-German Uganda Boundary 
gan 
Commission under Lieut.-Col. Delmé Radcliffe, and presented to 
rated . e 
Gish cbetitle the Apetale and Monocotyledons are undertaken 
by Dr. Rendle. 
Dr. F. E. Cuements’s Research Methods of Ecology (Lincoln, 
Nebraska) will necessitate considerable additions to the next edition 
of M ackson’s Glossary of Botanic Terms. Ecology, as a 
being somewhat interfered with by pyrium and ecballium; furth 
