INDEX. 



%* The letter w. following some of* the figure 

 to the notes at tl 



A BRICOT Piche, account of, App. 8.— Re- 

 markable for the softness of its stone, ib. 



Acaste Pulchra and Fenusta, 322, 323. 



Acocotli, Mexican name of one of the species 

 of Dahlia,84. — Medicinal virtues attributed 



Aeridium Odorum, 295.— When, and by whom 



introduced, ib. 

 Agave Americana, account of one at Wood- 



ville, 242, 243. 

 Age., its influence upon trees, greater in cold 



than in warm climates, App. 8. 

 Air, 



i hot-ho 



1)1 



proporlior 



Aiton, T. W. Esq. his success inbringing the 

 Mango, &c. to perfection, 151. n. — Large 

 crops of Figs raised by him in the Royal 

 Gardens at Kevv, 254. 



Ajax Bicolor, 546;—Cuneiflorus, 343 Fes- 

 talis, 347 ;—Grandijiorm, 344 \-Lacinu- 

 luris, ib.—Longiflorus, 349 ; — Lorifolius l 

 346 ;—Obvaliaris, 345 Patulus, 348 ;— 

 Pygmaus, 343. 



Alberge jaune ; Iihret's painting of two va- 



101. 



Alburnum (the), its g 

 process of vegetatic 

 Aletris Farinosa, 328. 

 Alexis Bifurcaand Grandijk 



ovvth and office i 



9, 220. 



-When, 



and by whom introduced, ib. 

 Almond-stock, preferable to all others for 



budding peaches upon, App. 5. 

 Almonds, both sweet and bitter, amongst the 



fruits known to the Romans, 152. 

 Almyra Stellaris, &c. 330, 337. 

 Aloe, American, account of one at Salcombe, 

 which flowered in the open ground, 176. 



foot of the 

 Alpine plfl 



how raised in the Jardin des 

 aris, App. 24, 25. 

 Alpine Strawberry ; see Strawberry. 

 Alps, the Swiss, aspect of the vegetation of 

 those mountains, and description of some 

 of the native trees, App. 17, &c. 

 American Cranberry: see Cranberry. 

 Amomum Plinii : see Solarium Pseudo-capsi- 



Amphigloltis Lurida and Secunda, when and 



by whom introduced, 294-, 295. 

 Anderson, Mr. George, imported the Tu- 



Jipa Clusiana, 334. 

 Anigosia Flavida, S27. — Whence brought, 



328. 



Animals, domestic, societies for the improve- 

 ment of, established throughout the British 

 empire, 2. — Carnivorous and herbivorous, 

 the expulsion of them from the precincts of 

 human habitations, a task not easily ac- 

 complished, 41 ; — their dreadful power in 

 warm and thinly inhabited countries, 42. 



Annual plants, methods of applying manure 



Anomalies, fructiferous, instancesof, 103, 104. 



—Accounted for, 105, 106. 

 Anomaza Excisa, 323. 

 Antholyta Florihunda and Vittigera, 324. 

 Aphides, hints for the destructiun of, 297- 

 Aphulax Spiralis, 271. 



Apple; Mr. Knight's experiment to raise 

 that fruit from the seed, 34.— No English 



fruit 



ung 



: the Horticultural Society, 66' to 70. 

 enly two varieties known to the Ro- 

 152. — Account of a new variety, 



