FLORAS OF THE WORLD—PART II 59 
General considerations, discussion of localities and regions; annotated list 
of cultivated plants giving range and for the more important species ex- 
tensive data; German summary, including annotated list of the more impor- 
tant species.—See also Haapanen, below. 
Eneberg, E. E. Korta anvisningar for insamling af inhemska vaxtdroger. 
Agr.-Ekon. Férsdéksanst. Landtmannaskr. 4. 3 p.l., 41 p. 35 fig. (partly on 
fic 4915. 
A Includes descriptive account of principal native and cultivated vascular 
and cellular medicinal plants, alphabetically arranged by scientific names, 
with Swedish and Finnish names and directions for collecting, but no account 
of uses.—See also Cantell, above, and additional references there given. 
Erkamo, Viljo. Suomen kasvistollisesti tutkitut seudut. [Regions of Fin- 
land floristically investigated.] Luonnon Tutkija 52: 86-87 incl. fig. (map). 
1948. 
Map showing the localities for which local floras are published or available 
in manuscript, indicating by symbols their degree of completeness, but with- 
out titles or names of localities or authors. Covers present day Finland, 
Petsamo region, Karelia ladogensis, and Isthmus karelicus, but not the rest 
of Russian Karelia or Russian Lapland.—See also his Kansallisherbaarios- 
tamme ja kasviemme levinneisyyden tuntemuksen historiasta. [On our 
national herbarium and the history of the knowledge of the distribution of 
our plants.}] Luonnon Tutkija 53: 67-72. 5 fig. (maps). 1949. (Sketch of 
the growth of the national herbarium (Herbarium Musei Fennici) and of 
increase in the knowledge of plant distribution. One of the maps shows the 
approximate number of species from each parish represented in the national 
herbarium.) 
Ervast, Petter. Akademisk afhandling om Finlands inhemska lakemedel. 
vi, 70 p. 19.5 cm. Helsingfors, 1840. 
Account of indigenous medicinal plants, with vernacular names and uses. 
(Not seen; title and annotation supplied by H. Luther.)—See also Cantell, 
above, and additional references there given. 
Haapanen, Arvo. Yleisimpien puutarhakasvien suomenkielinen nimisté. 
[The Finnish names of the commonest garden plants.] Maataloustiet. 
Aikak. 23: liite [suppl.] 1. 14 p. 1951. 
Alphabetical list of scientific names with equivalent standardized Finnish 
names, followed by Finnish-Latin list—See also Elfving, above, and 
Suhonen, below. 
Hayrén, Ernst. Om vaxtgeografiska granslinjer i Finland. (tber phyto- 
geographische grenzlinien.) Meddel. Geog. For. Finland v. 10, [no. 1]. 28, 
8 p. 3 fig. 1915. 
Sketch of the floristic, phytophysiognomic, phytotopographic, and agricul- 
tural regions of Finland.—See also Kalela, Kujala, and Nuttonson, below. 
Hiitonen, Ilmari. Suomen kasvio. [Flora of Finland.] 771 p. 487 fig., 
map. 22.5 cm. Helsingissé, 19338. (Vanamon kirjoja no. 32.) 
Glossary, key to genera on Linnaean system; annotated, keyed, descrip- 
tive flora of vascular plants (wild and cultivated), the range given by botani- 
cal provinces (including those in Russian Karelia and Russian Lapland). 
eoeaeacum and Hieracium are treated briefly. This is the standard flora of 
inland. 
Suomen putkilokasvit. Luettelo Suomessa luonnonvaraisina, 
villiytyneind ja yleisimmin viljeltyina kasvavista putkilokasveista. [Vascu- 
lar plants of Finland. List of the indigenous, naturalized, and most com- 
monly cultivated vascular plants in Finland.] 160 p. 1 fig. (map). 22.5 
cm. Helsingissa, 1934. 
Unannotated systematic list of wild and cultivated vascular plants of 
Finland, intended for use in making exchanges; alphabetical list of parishes 
with indication of the corresponding provinces (laani) and phytogeographi- 
cal regions (the latter shown on the map). In Taraxacum and Hieracium 
only the species collectivae are listed. 
and Poijarvi, Arvi. Koulu- ja retkeilykasvio. [School and excur- 
sion flora.] kahdeksas, tarkisettu painos. [8. rev. ed.] 472 p. 811 fig., 
map. 20 cm. Helsingissa, 1955. (1st ed. 1932, by Hidén [= Hiitonen] 
and Poijarvi; 9. ed. 1958, not seen.) 
