DEPARTMENT OF BOTANY. 181 



Fiji, from Miss L. S. Gibbs ; 110 specimens including 49 Cryp- 

 togams from Christmas Island, from Dr. Andrews ; 2 specimens 

 of Bark from British Columbia from Rev. E. H. Burgess ; 

 2 Cones from California, from Mrs. J. M. Hutchings ; 18 speci- 

 mens of Woods and 17 Fruits from Tucuman and Salta, from 

 R. Morton Middleton, Esq. ; 2,097 Phanerogams and 180 Cryp- 

 togams from Jamaica, presented by the Hon. the Colonial 

 Secretary, Jamaica; 14 specimens of Orchids from Jamaica, 

 from Miss Gosset ; 30 North American specimens of Cratoegus, 

 from W. W. Eggleston, Esq. ; 15 specimens of fruits from the 

 West Indies, from the Secretary of the West Indian Committee ; 



2 specimens of cultivated Jamaica Orchids from Dr. Longstaff ; 



3 specimens of cultivated Orchids from Sir Trevor Lawrence ; 

 2 specimens of cultivated Orchids from Messrs. Charlesworth 

 & Co. ; 2 specimens of cultivated Orchids from Messrs. Stuart 

 Low & Co; ; 12 cultivated plants from Chelsea Gardens, from 

 the Curator; 114 dissections of cultivated Iris flowers from 

 W. R. Dykes, Esq. ; Seeds of Manihot dichotoraa from Messrs. 

 Honey and Thompson ; 12 specimens of cultivated plants from 

 Walter Ledger, Esq. 



2 Crj^ptogams from near Budapest, from Hon. N. C. Roths- 

 child ; 245 Mosses of Bolivia, from Sir Martin Conway ; 56 

 Canadian Algse from Prof, John Macoun ; 14 Marine Algse of 

 Madagascar, from G. Dixon, Esq. ; 81 Fucaceous Algse from 

 the French coasts, from Prof. C. Sauvageau ; the Lichens of 

 the British Antarctic Expedition (1901-4) from the Managing 

 Committee ; 320 microscope preparations of Laboulbeniacese, 

 illustrating his memoir, from Prof. Roland Thaxter ; 395 original 

 drawings of Diatoms by the late Prof. R. K. Greville, illustrat- 

 ing his types, from J. Paul Rylands, Esq. ; 5 species of Mycetozoa 

 from North America, from Miss G. Lister ; Lithothamnia dredged 

 oflf Madeira, from R. Kirkpatrick, Esq. ; 2 microscope-prepa- 

 rations from H. N. Dixon, Esq. ; and single specimens from 

 R. Kemp, Esq., Miss E. F. Noel, James Groves, Esq., Prof. 

 Ewart, E. A. Bowles, Esq., W. Le Fevre, Esq., Dr. Stapf, and 

 H. S. Thompson, Esq. 



The additions to the British Herbarium by presentation 

 have been: — 8 specimens from Prof. A. H. Trow; 111 speci- 

 mens from Rev. E. S. Marshall ; 163 specimens from Rev. 

 H. J. Riddelsdell ; 131 Phanerogams and 7 Cryptogams from 

 G. C. Druce, Esq. ; 24 specimens of dwarf plants from the 

 Downs at Freshwater and Eastbourne, from John W. Love, 

 Esq.; 3 specimens of Rosa from Rev. Augustin Ley; 12 

 Lichens of Westmorland and Cumberland, from J. A. Martin- 

 dale, Esq. ; 3 Cryptogams, from E. M. Holmes, Esq. ; 3 Fungi 

 from C. E. Hartley Smith, Esq. ; 51 Microfungi of Ayrshire, 

 from D. A. Boyd, Esq. ; a new British Moss, from Canon H. 

 W. Lett ; 2 new or rare British Hepaticse, from W. R. Sherrin, 

 Esq. ; 3 new British Hepaticse, from W. E. Nicholson, Esq. ; 

 and single specimens from T. Gibbs, Esq., Dr. R. Braithwaite, 

 Miss C. E. Larter, Miss M. Knowles, Rev. T. S. Lea, James 



