General Summary. 



131 



Orders. No. 

 99 Rosaceae, 



100 Salicariae, 



101 Salicineae, 



102 Sanguisorbeae, 



103 Santalaceae, 



104 Sarraceniae, 



105 Saxifrageae, 



106 Sclerantheae, 



107 Scrophularineae, 



108 Smilaceae, 



109 Solaneae, 



110 Staphylaceae. 



111 Stellatae, 



Gen 

 10' 

 3 



No. Spe. 

 36 

 5 

 22 



3 



Orders. 



112 Thymeleae, 



113 Tiliaceae, 



114 Typhaceae, 



115 Ulmaceae, 



116 Umbelliferae, 



117 Urticeae, 



118 Vaccineac, 



119 Verbenaceae, 



120 Violaceae, 



121 Vites, 



122 Xanthoxyleae, 



123 Xyrideae. 



Whole No. 



No. Gen, No. 8 



451 



rpe. 



1 



2 

 5 

 3 



21 

 8 



11 

 4 



17 

 4 

 1 

 1 



1246 



FLOWER LESS PLANTS. 



Orders. No. of Genera. No. of Species. 



1 Algae, 8 10 



2 Characeae, 1 3 



3 Equisetaceae, 1 6 



4 Filices, 16 42 



5 Fungi, 49 176 



6 Hepaticae, 5 24 



7 Lichenes, 28 110 



8 Lycopodiaceae, 1 9 



9 Musci, 31 110 



Whole No. 140 491 



ADDENDA. 



Since the preceding Catalogues were printed, an addition to the list of Birds has been received. It 

 formed a part of a Report to the Bcston Natural History Society, by C. C. Emerson Esq. 



LAND BIRDS. 



AiusciCHpa acadica, Gmel. Small Pcwee. One of the most common summer birds, arriving from the 

 South about the last week in April, and leaving us about the beginning of September. 



Sylvia discolor, Vieill. Prairie Warbler. Rare in the Atlantic States ; comes in May, and returns 

 to the West Indies about tbe middle of September, 



Sylvia Philadelphia, Wils. Mourning Warbler. Seen in Botanic Garden, Cambridge, by Mr. Nut- 

 tall, May 20th, 1831. 



Regulus calendulus, Stephens. Bon. Ruby-croioned Wren. Never observed in Massachusetts in 

 i he Spring; but in October and November frequents gardens and orchards on its way to the 

 South. 



Fringilla Georgiana, Lath. Swamp Sparrow. Arrives in New England from the Southern States 

 about the middle of April. 



WATER BIRDS. 



Totanus Bartramius, Temm. Bartram's Tatler. Breeds in Massachusetts. Very common from 



Julv to August. Goes South in September, 

 Lestris Richardsonii, Swain. Richardson's Jager. Seen in the winter in the inland bays in Boston 



Harbor. 



Anas obscura, Gmel. Dusky Duck. Met with fiom Labrador to Florida. 



Fuligula fusca.Bon. Velvet Duck. Arrives in this vicinity from the North about the close of Sep- 

 tember. 



Fuligula rubida, Bon. Ruddy Duck. Visits Massachusetts in October, and in the winter goes far- 

 ther South. 



Fuligula ferina, Stephens. Red-headed Duck. Appears within the limits of the United States to- 

 wards the close of October : is often seen after northeast storms on the feeding bars in Massa 

 chusetts Bay. 



Fuligula rufitorqucs, Bon. Ring-necked Duck. Frequent in our lakes, estuaries and rivers, at thr> 



commencement of winter. 

 Fhalacrocorax carbo, Dumont. Cormorant. Found on hare rocky island- in the vicinity of Boston. 



