ROYAL GARDENS, KEW. 
BULLETIN 
OF 
MISCELLANEOUS INFORMATION. 
APPENDIX II.—1900. 
NEW GARDEN PLANTS OF THE YEAR 1899. 
The number of garden plants annually described in botanical 
and horticultural publications, both English and foreign, is now 
80 considerable that it has been thought desirable to publish a 
complete list of them in the Kew Bulletin each year. The 
owing list comprises all the new introductions recorded during 
9. These lists are indispensable to the maintenance of a 
cultivation at this establishment, many of which will be distri- 
uted from it in the regular course of exchange with other 
botanic gardens. 
The present list rper ie not only plants brought into cultivation 
for the first time during 1899, but the most noteworthy of those 
which have been rodhirodnobd after being lost from cultivation. 
Other plants included in the list may have been in gardens 
several years, but either were not described or their names had 
not been authenticated until recently. 
In addition to rites: and well-marked varieties, hybrids, 
whether introduced or of garden origin, have been included 
where they have Dub: described with formal botanical names. 
Mere cultural forms of well-known garden plants are omitted 
for obvious reasons. 
In every case the plant is cited under its published name, 
although some of the names are doubtfully correct. Where, 
however, a correction has appeared desirable, this is made, 
The name of the person in whose A the plant was first 
noticed or described is given where known 
5340—1375—3/1900 Wt81 D&S 29 A 
