396 MISC. PUBLICATION 797, U. S. DEPT. OF AGRICULTURE 
Herbarium library; v. 1-9 in U. S. Dept. Agriculture library.)—Indice gen- 
erale dei volumini... 31 p. Firenze, 1896. (Gray Herbarium library.) 
Descriptive flora of phanerogams, with synonymy, iconography, vernacular 
names, detailed local range (especially in later volumes), extralimital distri- 
bution, annotations. Some families (such as Asteraceae) are only synop- 
sized, without mention of species. Vol. 1 to 5 by Parlatore alone; from vol. 
6 continued by T. Caruel, after Parlatore’s death. 
Pasquale, Fortunato. Bibliografia botanica riguardante la flora delle 
piante vascolari delle provincie meridionali d’Italia. Nuovo Gior. Bot. Ital. 
n.s., 1: 259-270. 1894.—1.—[2.] aggiunta ... Bul. Soc. Bot. Ital. 1897: 19-22. 
1897; 1901: 288-244. 1901—3. aggiunta ... Annali Bot. 4: 1383-1387. 
1906.—4. aggiunta...lec. 8:247-251. 1910. 
List of principal herbaria; alphabetical list of authors, with their papers. 
Covers the regions of Abruzzi e Molise, Calabria, Campania, Lucania, and 
Puglie—See also Béguinot (La botanica), above, and additional references 
there given. 
Penzig, Otto. Flora popolare italiana. Raccolta dei nomi dialettali delle 
principali piante indigene e coltivati in Italia. 2 v. (xv, 541; 615 p.). 214 
fig. 25 cm. Genova, 1924. 
Vol. 1, alphabetical list of scientific names of vascular and cellular plants, 
with Italian vernacular names and localities where used; bibliography; vol. 2, 
alphabetical list of vernacular names, with locality and botanical equivalent. 
Intended to replace all previous local and general lists of Italian vernacular 
names, but unfortunately did not incorporate the names from many dialect 
dictionaries; see review by Clemente Merlo in L’Italia Dialettale 1: 273-275. 
1925.—See also Flechia, above, and additional references there given. 
Perini, Carlo, and Perini, Agostino. Flora dell’Italia settentrionale e del 
Tirolo meridionale rappresentata colla fisiotipia. 4 v. 400 col. pl. 34.5 
em. Trento, [1854-65]. (Arnold Arboretum library, v. 1-3.) 
Colored plates prepared by the physiotype process, unnumbered but 
arranged alphabetically in each volume, and bearing brief text indicating 
habitat and range. Each of the two first volumes contains an alphabetical 
list of species figured, the third (in copy examined) does not; fourth volume 
not seen.—See also Fiori and Paoletti, above. 
Piccioli, Lodovico. Le piante legnose italiane. vii, 991 p. 150 fig., pl. 
23 cm. Firenze, 1890-1903. (Arnold Arboretum library.) 
Account of 627 woody plants (native and introduced) with vernacular 
names, brief descriptions, range, uses, etc.—See also Borzi, above, and addi- 
tional references there given. 
Pinolini, Domenico. Le erbe dannose alle piante coltivate e mezzi per di- 
struggerle. vi, 207 p. 1380 fig. 19 cm. Milano, 1924. 
Descriptive list of weeds, divided according to occurrence in different 
crops, with methods of control. (Not seen; title and annotation supplied 
by R. Pichi-Sermolli.)—See also Béguinot and Mazza, above, and additional 
references there given. 
Poggi, Tito, and Ciferri, Raffaele. Malerbe e lotta. 3. ed. completamente 
aggiornata. xiv, 428 p. 54 fig., 35 col. pl. 24.5 cm. Casale Monferrato, 
1952. ‘ Ist ed. 1894, by Poggi, with title Le principali erbe dannose all’agri- 
coltura. 
General considerations; descriptive treatment of 100 principal weeds (and 
mention of others) with vernacular names and methods of combatting 
them.—See also Béguinot and Mazza, above, and additional references there © 
given. 
Rehder, Alfred. (Phytography.) Italy. In his The Bradley Bibliogra- 
phy. A guide to the literature of the woody plants of the world before the 
beginning of the twentieth century. Compiled at the Arnold Arboretum of 
Harvard University under the direction of Charles Sprague Sargent. v. 1, 
p. 423-432. 29.5 em. Cambridge, Mass., 1911.—Additions and corrections. 
Lesbs bape LOG the scxiiy pt dies 
Essentially unannotated list of floristic works (including those in periodi- 
cal and serial literature), chronologically arranged, divided into General and 
Sicily, the dendrological works in each section separated from the general.— 
