2590 



SUPPLEMENT. 



" A. casta >itufo/hi Miib. Mem. Mus., vol. xiv. t. 21., and our Jig. 2532., has 

 the leaves oblong-elliptic, blunt, repand ; or oblong-lanceolate, eroso-dentate 

 petiolate; glabrous above; the axils of the veins downy beneath. Panicle 

 leaf) at the base. Male eatkins leafy, erect. CMirbel.) A tree, (bund by 

 Dombey, near Tarma, in Peru. Leaves from 3 in. to 5 in. long, and from 10 

 to 1") lines broad. Stipules small, glabrous, membranaceous, linear-lanceolate. 

 Male catkins from 1 in. to 2 in. long, more slender than in A. glutinosa, and 

 4 or 5 in a panicle. Female catkins about 2 lines long, 4 or 5 on a common 

 pedicel. (Mc/n. Mus., xiv. p. 464.)" 



Betula alba. Page 1704., add to the list of fungi: "Besides the species 

 mentioned above, Mr. Berkeley informs us that the following are found 

 upon the birch: — yigaricus torulosus Pers., A. pulmonarius Fr., A. 

 •alg'ulus Fr., A. rfngens F/\, Daedalea albida Fr., D. discolor Fr., 

 Polyporus chioneus Fr., P. pubescens Fr. ; P. nidulans Fr., also on 

 the beech ; P. annosus Fr., i/ydnum diversidens Fr., H. leoninum 

 JFV., II. corrugatum Fr., H. aureum Fr., H. subcarneum Fr., H. 

 eristulatum Fr., H. argutum JFV*., II. subtile Fr., Thelephora sarcoides 

 Fr., T. anthochroa Fr., T. mucida Fr., T. confluens, Peziza Schuma- 

 cher* Fr., Patellaria olivaceo-virens Fr., Bulgaria pellueens Fr., Ce- 

 nangium pulveraceum Fr.; C. urceolus Fr., also on the heath; C. I?etulae 

 Fr., Tremella elegans Fr.-, Exidia repanda Fr,, also on the alder; 

 SphaeVia virgultorum." 

 B.fruticdsa. 1705. 1. 23 for "Schrift.," read " Schrank." 



B,papyrdcea, 1709. 1. 16. from the bottom, for " Gard. Mag., vol. xi. p. 407./* 

 read " Gard. Mag., vol. vi. p. 405." 



6 T OKYLA^CEiE. 



Querent. 1729., 1. 20., for "Part IV. of this work," read " our Encyclo- 

 paedia of Arboriculture." 



Q. scssitijtora. 1736. 1. 11., add : " In the First Animal Report of the Edin- 

 burgh Botanical Society, p. 35., Dr. Graham states that he found 

 three varieties of oaks on the banks of Loch Lomond ; and that 

 they are the same as those figured in Martyn's Flora Rustica, t. 10,, 

 11, and 12." 

 1. 39., add, after full stop : " At Woburn Abbey." 



1746. 1. 21., for " Great part of the Forest of Ardennes," &c, read : " In the 

 district of Warwickshire, called the Forest of Arden, are several 

 woods which consist almost entirely," &c. 



1773., add to the paragraph headed " Ireland ;" "We have been informed by 

 Sir Robert Bateson, that there is an oak in Belvoir Park, in the 

 county of Down, which is supposed to be above a thousand years old. 

 Its trunk measures 28 ft. in circumference, at 

 6 ft. from the ground ; and its branches cover a 

 space the diameter of which is 70 ft." 



1790. 1- I-, for " we know tree," read "we know no 

 tree." 



1809. 1. 11. from the bottom, for "small ones," read 

 " small arms." 



1818. I. 23., add: ** Scolytus pvgmae*ui (see p. 1390.) 

 id to have destroyed 80,000 young trees in 

 the Boi i de Boulogne." 



1831. before the paragraph beginning u The other 



lichen:-,'' insert : " ll'.snca barbata, Ach. Sun., 



306. , Lichen barbatufl Linn., articulatus i3 



I . Bot. t t. 258. f. 2. ; and our fig. 2533,, is 



also found on the oak." 



I837.| add to hi I paragraph : "in addition to the above, the Rev. M. J. 



\',< il.( l< v bai sent ns the following list, of fungi found on the oak : Jga- 



j-u /''/.; //.pencil., Fr, also beech ; ^f.chama Jiosc, A. pin- 



ifu-, Fr.\ A. t(. ul.it n , JinlL, also on pine; A.i\ic\n\is Dec, on Q, /Meat . 



J^0?k 



