DEPARTMENT OF BOTANY. 143 



50 specimens of Erythraea from Wittrock ; 90 species of 

 Fungi from the Orinoco collected by Roumeguere ; 200 

 species of Uredinece, and 400 species of other Fungi, from 

 Sydow ; 650 species of Fungi from Saxony, from Kruger ; 

 300 British Fungi from Massee ; 25 species of rare British 

 Algse from Holmes ; 100 species of European Algse from 

 Hauck ; 525 species of Canadian Mosses from Macoun ; and 

 100 species of Mosses from Brazil collected by Ule. 129 pre- 

 pared slides of British Algse exhibiting the organs of repro- 

 duction have been acquired from Mr. BufFham, and 150 

 similar slides of British Fungi from Mr. W. G. Smith. 



The following Books, &c. have been presented to the Her- 

 barium : — 



Pierre's Flore de la Cochin China, Parts 14-16, by the 

 Minister of Marine, Paris; Green Fields and their Grasses, by 

 Mr. Cheadle ; North American Epilobium, by W. Trelease ; 

 F. V. Mueller, Iconography of Australian Salsolaceae, from the 

 Government of Victoria ; Nederlandsch Kruidkundig Archief, 

 by the Society ; F. M. Bailey's' Supplements (2-3) to Queens- 

 land Flora and Poisonous Plants, and Bernays' Cultural In- 

 dustries of Queensland, from Hon. Secretary for Agriculture, 

 Brisbane ; Plants of Sydney, W. Woods, by F. v. Mueller ; Flora 

 of Stonyhurst District, by Rev. C. A. Newdigate ; Vols. 3-5 

 Diet. Economic Products of India, from India Office; Two 

 Papers on Bromeliacese, from the Author, C. A. M. Lind- 

 man ; Draft List of Latin Place-nameS) from the Compiler, B. 



D. Jackson ; J. M. Coulter, Manual of the Phanerogams and 

 Pteridophytes of Western Texas, by U.S. Department of 

 Agriculture ; G. E. Alderton, Treatise and Handbook of 

 Orange Culture in Auckland, New Zealand, and T. Kirk, 

 Forest Flora of New Zealand, also Reports on the Dura- 

 bility of New Zealand Timber, by the Agent General of 

 New Zealand ; J. N. Rose, List of Plants collected by Dr. 



E. Palmer in 1890 in West Mexico and Arizona, U.S. 

 Department of Agriculture ; Three Papers on the Tubercle 

 Bacillus, by Academy of Natural Sciences of Philadelphia ; 

 Maxwell T. Masters, Bud-variations or Sports, by the 

 Author ; F. H. Knowlton, Directions for collecting Recent and 

 Fossil Plants, and Asa Gray, Plates prepared between the years 

 1849 and 1859, to accompany a Report on the Forest Trees of 

 North America, by Smithsonian Institution ; C. Linnseus, 

 Betula nana, Plants Martino-Burserianse, Anandria, Spon- 

 salia plantarum, Vires plantarum, Flora oeconomica. Speci- 

 men Academicum de Curiositate naturali, Specimen Acade- 

 micum de oeconomia naturae, Lignum colubrinum, Gemmae 

 arborum. Pan suecicus, Plantse rariores Camtschatcenses, 

 Odores medicamentorum exhibens, Rhabarbarum, Qugestis 

 historiico-naturalis Cui bono ? Vernatio arborum, Demons. 



0.108. plantarum 



