104 MISC. PUBLICATION 797, U. S. DEPT. OF AGRICULTURE 
with title: Graines et plantules des arbres et arbustes indigénes et com- 
ree cultivés en France. 2 v. (179, 348 p.). illus. 25 cm. Versailles, 
1911-14, 
Descriptive account of the seeds (and in angiosperms also the fruits) of 
the native and commonly cultivated gymnosperms and woody dicotyledons 
of France, and separate account of the seedlings; both sections with keys.— 
See also Gayffier, above, and additional references there given. 
Holden, William. Bibliography relating to the flora of France. Embracing 
botanical section N of the Lloyd Library. Bibl. Contr. Lloyd Libr. v. 1, no. 
4, p. 1838-186. 23 cm. 1911. 
List of books and some separates from journals, alphabetically arranged 
by authors, with call numbers of those that are in the Lloyd Library; a 
good working list, although far from complete.—See also Deniker, above, 
and additional references there given. 
Jaume Saint-Hilaire, J. H. Plantes de la France, décrites et peintes 
paps nature. 10 vol. 1,000 col. pl., 10 port. 26 cm. Paris, 1808 [1805]- 
Glossary; semipopular descriptive account of about 1000 wild and cultivated 
plants, with descriptions, vernacular names in French and various other 
languages, uses, cultivation—See also Baillon, above, and additional refer- 
ences there given. 
Jovet, Paul, ed. Notices botaniques et itinéraires commentés publiés a 
occasion du VIIIe Congrés international de botanique, Paris-Nice, 1954. 48 
parts (1,125 p.). illus., maps. 21cm. Paris, 1954. 
Guides for excursions to nearly all parts of France (and to French regions 
in north Africa), containing account of topography, climate, soils, geobotany, 
plant associations, general features of flora, etc.; by various authors. Maps 
and illustrations prepared under direction of H. Gaussen and Paul Rey. Very 
few parts have been examined.—See also Verlot, below. 
Kosch, Alois. Quelle est cette plante médicinale? Les plantes médicinales 
de France. Leur description et leur activité. 135 p. 49 + 181 fig., 8 col. 
pl. 20 cm. Paris, 1948. 
General considerations; tabular list of 157 medicinal] plants, arranged by 
month of collection, with description, properties, uses, etc.; annotated list 
of poisonous plants, list of diseases with remedies.—See also Ansberque, 
above, and additional references there given. 
Kreiter, Heinrich. Die von tiernamen abgeleiteten pflanzennamen im 
franzdsischen. viii, 126 p. Darmstadt, 1912. (Diss.) 
Account of French vernacular names of plants derived from animal names. 
(Not seen; cited from review in Bot. Jahresber. Just 34 (1): 1111. 1914.)— 
See also Gatin, above, and additional references there given. 
LeBrun, Pierre. Principales acquisitions de la flore francaise depuis 1854. 
Bul. Soc. Bot. France 101, Suppl. p. 47-48. 1954. 
Running account of about 300 vascular plants added to the flora since the 
Flore de France of Grenier and Godron (1848-56), arranged geographically 
and mostly with localities; Rosa, Rubus, and Hieracium are omitted. 
LeGrand, Antoine. Relevés numériques de quelques flores locales ou 
régionales de France. Bul. Soc. Bot. France 38: 190-192. 1891. 
List of departmental and regional floras of France, with some critical 
notes, arranged in order according to number of valid native species included 
in them (according to Le Grand’s concept of species). 
Léveillé, Hector. Dictionnaire inventoriel de la flore francaise. Espéces 
et races. iv, 44 p. 27.5 cm. Le Mans, 1916. (Arnold Arboretum library.) 
Unannotated list of species and races of vascular plants, alphabetically 
arranged; does not include “micromorphes.” 
Les hybrides de France. Bul. Géog. Bot. 27: 34-68. 1917.— 
Correction 2-02 Ke, 272/100," 191%: 
List of vascular plants regarded by the author as hybrids, the families 
arranged alphabetically. The hybrids are listed under the name of only one 
of the presumed parents (the other not being mentioned), and all are given 
names ending in “oides,” the synonyms being cited. The same new hybrid 
name often occurs more than once in a genus (e.g., monspessulanoides 6 times 
in Dianthus).—See also Camus (Statistique des plantes hybrides), above. 
