518 



GENERAL INDEX 



Ireland : Stranded bottles {continued) — 

 from Davis Strait, 484, 496 ; twenty- 

 three from mid-Atlantic to the 

 north-west of the Azores, 52, 53; 

 range of the sources of Irish bottle- 

 drift from the New World, 55, 79 

 A bottle reaching the Bahamas from 

 the vicinity of the Irish coast, 57, 

 66, 69, 72, 79, 464, 465, 477 

 Irminger, C. ; currents, drift-wood, and 

 drift-seeds in the North Atlantic, 20, 

 35, 40, 41, 43, 45 

 Isatis tinctoria (Woad), early cultivation 



in the Azores, 397 

 Islands. See Insular factor. 

 Islets, Coral-reef; plant -stocking in the 

 West Indies and Pacific Ocean com- 

 pared, 453, 454 

 Isnardia palustris, 104, 105 

 Isoetes in the Azores, 380-382, 387, 420, 

 429 



Iva imbricata, 451, 453 



Jackson, Capt., on the Guinea Current, 

 476 



Jacquin, Von, Rhizophora mangle, 96; 



Hippomane mancinella, 114; Mucuna 



pruriens, 459 

 Jacquinia armillaris, 86, 109 

 Jamaica : 



Rhizophora mangle, 98-101 



Black River district; infiltration of 

 sea-water into the Great Morass, 101 ; 

 underflow of sea-water up the 

 estuary, 102; springs of the Great 

 Morass (Blue Hole), 104; vegetation 

 of the river, riverside, and Great 

 Morass, 104-106; Great Lake at 

 Pondside, 107; Salt Lakes district 

 and the vegetation, 107-109, 206 



Savanna -la-mar district ; vegetation, 

 106; Cabarita River, 106; Bowen's 

 River, 107 



Vegetation, bordering the beaches, 244 ; 

 of the woods, 16, 111, 118, 144, 155, 

 160, 226, 243; of rivers, ponds, 

 mangrove-swamps, 15-17, 104-109; 

 of the Blue Hole spring, 104 ; of the 

 Roaring River Falls, 16, 147, 211 



Migrating birds on the highlands, 500 



Beach-drift, 3, 6-9, 11, 12, 129; 

 seed -drift brought by the Main 

 Equatorial Current, 8, 129 



Bottle-drift; brought by the North 

 Equatorial Current, 56, 57; by the 

 Main Equatorial Current, 61; and 

 from the vicinity of Ascension, 474, 

 475 



Japan; Sphagnum, 334, 343, 349; Carex, 

 349 



Johnson, J. Y. ; the Juniper in Madeira, 

 410, 431; plants of the Peak of Tene- 

 riffe. 411 



Johnson, T., Arceuthobium, 427 



Jones, F. Wood, 82, 312 ; bottle-drift as 

 illustrating plant -dispersal in the Indian 

 Ocean, 50, 302, 303, 305, 308 ; snakes 

 and crocodiles drifted to Keeling Atoll, 

 303, 486; floating corals, 165 



J. M., Sapindus saponaria in Ber- 

 muda, 157 



Jonston, J., 43; early allusion to the 

 drift fruits of Sacoglottis amazonica, 

 137 



Jouan, H. ; on Tahitian and Marquesan 



plants, 171, 247 

 Jourdan, S., early reference to Bermudian 



plants, 204 

 Juan Fernandez, Uncinia, 498 

 Juglandese; fruit in Azorean beach-drift, 



37, 38 



Juglans; fruit in West Indian beach- 

 drift, 12, 13 ; distribution of the genus, 

 326 



Juncus, 382; capacities for dispersal by 

 birds and winds, 418, 419, 422, 424 



acutus, in Azores, 384, 388, 404, 



421, 422 



Juniper, Brown-berried; J. oxycedrus, 

 430 



zone in the Macaronesian islands and 



on the Great Atlas, See under J. 

 oxycedrus. 



Juniperus bermudiana, 204; J. brevi- 

 folia (see J. oxycedrus) ; J. com- 

 munis, 401, 430; J. macropoda, 426 ; 

 J. nana, 401, 430 



oxycedrus (Cedro, Cedar) ; Azorean 



variety, brevifolia, 430 : 



Affinities of the Azorean tree, 401, 

 430-432 



Dwarfing, 373, 374, 382, 383, 387; 

 large size in the original forests, 392, 

 396; trees buried in volcanic ashes, 

 363, 393-395 ; use of the wood, 393, 

 397 



Juniper-zone; on Pico, 369, 370, 371, 

 373-375, 386, 430; on Teneriffe, 

 Madeira, and the Great Atlas, 408- 

 410, 415, 416 



Junipers of the Lake District of Pico, 

 379, 387; of San Miguel, 382; of 

 Terceira, 383 



Source in the Great Atlas, 405, 406; 

 dispersal by birds, 417, 418 ; the host 

 of Arceuthobium, 370, 375, 379, 386, 

 426; fruiting, 373, 430 

 Jussisea, 105 



Jutland coast, stranded West Indian 

 seeds, 37 



Kamel, Father, mentioned by Petiver, 163 

 Keane, A., the lake of the Grand Etang, 

 455 



Kearney, T. H., the salt in sea-beaches 

 and halophily, 186 



