DEPAHT^EENT OF BOTANY. 169 



Australasia. 



W. A. WeymoTitli, 562 Tasmanian Cryptogams. 



General. 



A. Kneucker, 150 specimens of Grasses; J. E>. Maxtindale, 

 5,313 British and European Lichens. 



(3) By Exchange of Duplicates. 



Curator, Botanical Museum, Christiania, Norway, 335 Euro- 

 pean Plants, including 51 Eerns ; Miss A. Eastwood, Academy of 

 Science, San Francisco, California, 312 specimens from Cali- 

 fornia and Colorado, and 200 specimens (including 27 Vascular 

 Cryptogams) from Galapagos Islands; the Director, Goeldi 

 Museum, Para, Brazil, 301 Brazilian Plants; Director, Botanic 

 Garden, Harvard University, Cambridge, Mass., U.S.A., 104 

 Malayan Orchids; F. C. Hoehne, Institute de Butantan, San 

 Paulo, Brazil, 72 Brazilian plants; Director, Royal Botanic 

 Gardens, Kew, 25 species of West Indian Grasses, 299 Malayan 

 Plants, 46 Macedonian Plants, and 1 Fern from Malacca; Mr. 

 L. V. Lester-Garland, 11 Critical species of Bavarian Plants, and 

 18 Indian Plants; Dr. Merrill, Bureau of Science, Manilla, 

 Philippine Islands, 3,113 Philippine plants (including 159 Cryp- 

 togams), and 339 plants from Amboina ; Chief, Division of 

 Botany, Pretoria, South Africa, 34 South African species of 

 Aloe, and 26 Cape Marine Algae; Director, Botanic Gardens, 

 Sydney, Australia, 24 Australian plants; Curator, Department 

 of Agriculture, Washington, U.S.A., 300 specimens of North 

 American Grasses; Dr, A. Zahlbruckner, Hof museum, Vienna, 

 360 Cryptogams; Director, Botanisches Museum, Zurich, 38 

 Tropical African Leguminosee. 



VI. — Students and Visitors. 



The number of visits to the Department for consultation and 

 research was 3,443. 



VII . — Demonstrations. 



Demonstrations on the collections have been given to students 

 from tTie Birkbeck College, the Lambeth Natural History Society, 

 and others. 



A. B. Rendu 





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