DEPAHTMENT OF BOTANY. 173 



Mrs. E. Gregory, Mrs. Marindin, F. W. Burbiclge, Esq., E. R. 

 Bankes, Esq., John Cryer, Esq., F. J. Stayner, Esq. 



The following additions have been made by exchange of 

 duplicates : — 125 specimens from the Pacific Islands, from 

 J. H. Maiden, Esq. ; 24 specimens of Potamogeton and Najas 

 from Manchuria, from Dr. Litwinow ; 100 Kryptogamse 

 Exsiccatas, from the K. K. Naturhist. Hofrauseum of Vienna. 



The following specimens have been acquired by purchase : 

 — Herb. Normale, fascicle XLIV, Dorfler; 25 specimens 

 of American Woods, by R. Hough; 946 Phanerogams, 

 649 Cryptogams, and 130 Fruits from Australia, New 

 Zealand, &c., by G. Podenzana ; 65 specimens, Flora Bulga- 

 rica, by V. Stribrnj-; 240 specimens from Mexico, by E. Palmer; 

 371 Phanerogams and 81 Cryptogams from Georgia, by Roland 

 M. Harper ; 493 Phanerogams and 21 Cryptogams from the 

 Gulf States of America, by S. M. Tracy ; 100 Phanerogams 

 and 100 Cryptogams, Flora Exsiccata Austro - Hungarica, 

 Centurise ^XXXV, XXXVI, from the Naturhistorisches Hof- 

 museum, Vienna; 115 Phanerogams and 7 Cryptogams from 

 Vancouver Island, by C. O. Rosendahi ; 442 specimens, 

 Transcaspico - persicum. Fascicles VI — X, by Sintenis ; 140 

 Phanerogams and 9 Cryptogams from West Tropical Africa, 

 by Zenker ; 1,968 specimens from Columbia, by Herbert W. 

 Smith ; 280 specimens " Plantse Mexicanse," by C. G. Pringle ; 

 393 Phanerogams and 4 Cryptogams from Togoland, by 

 Warnecke ; 1,228 Phanerogams and 12 Cryptogams from 

 West Australia, by Cecil Andrews ; 76 specimens from Brazil, 

 by E. M. Reinecke ; 472 specimens from Persia, by J. Born- 

 muller ; 179 Phanerogams and 21 Cryptogams, Flora Exsiccata 

 Carniolica, Centurise III — IV, by A. Paulin ; 400 West American 

 Fungi, by Griffiths ; 245 British Mosses, mostly Sphagna, 

 by Horrell ; 200 Micro-Fungi, by Vestergren ; 15 American 

 Uredinse with drawings, by Arthur and Holway ; 250 North 

 American Algse, by Collins, Holden, and Setchell ; 250 

 Cryptogams of Germany, by Migula ; 93 German Hepaticas, 

 by Warnstorf ; 120 Venetian Hepaticse, by Massalongo ; 38 

 slides and 38 herbarium specimens of British Micro-Fungi, 

 by Miss A. L. Smith ; 87 East Indian Hepaticse, by Schiffner ; 

 50 Micro-Fungi of North Germany, by Jaap ; 216 Welsh 

 Mosses, by Painter ; 75 Ascomycetes, by Rehm ; 100 Economic 

 Fungi of North America, by Seymour and Earle ; 25 Italian 

 Fungi, by Briosi and Cavara; 40 North American Lichens, by 

 Cummings ; 100 European Fungi, by Paschke ; 212 Fresh-water 

 Algse, by Wittrock, Nordstedt, and Lagerheim ; 50 Japanese 

 Algse, by Okamura ; 150 Uredinese and 100 German Fungi, 

 by Sydow ; 200 Italian Fungi by Saccardo ; 50 parasitic 

 Fungi, by Krieger ; 30 sketches of British Basidiomycetes, 

 by Worthington G. Smith ; 34 water-colour drawings of British 

 Marine Algse, and 21 of British Lichens, for public exhibition, 

 by P. Highley. 



The following works have been presented to the Library 

 of the Department :— Journal of the Kew Guild, 1900, 1902, 



