336 APPENDIX III 



a thick volume, containing many illustrations, is of the highest 

 value, especially from the ecological standpoint. It is to be 

 hoped that it will one day be translated into French, if not 

 into English, It is hardly suited, however, to the la)rman. 



H. Ch&ist's Der Flora der Schweitz (Translated into French by Ti^che under 

 the title La Flore de la Suisse et ses Origines. H. Georg: Bale, 

 Geneva, Lyons. 2nd Edition, with Supplement, 1907), 



is a standard work, especially on the distribution and origin of 

 the Swiss Alpiiies. 



For a summary of recent literature, especially by the 

 Zurich School of Botany, on the ecology of the Swiss flora, 

 see T. W. Woodhead, in the Natii/rdlist for May and June 1908. 



