PLANT NOTES FOR 1913, ETC. 



367 



described. Some of the names used scarcely comply with the rule of 

 priority, i.e. Quercus pedunculata, Betula verrucosa, Laburnum vul- 

 gare, but they are in common use. The Duke's example in having 

 this book prepared might well be followed by other landowners. 



Plant Ecology of Ben Armine, Sutherland. W. B. Cramp 

 ton. Scottish Geogr. Mag. 29, 1913. pp. 169-192, 256-266. 



Journal of Ecology. Camb. Univ. Press. Quarterly, 5/- 

 parts. Annual Sub. 15/- nett. Some Remarks on Blakeney Point. 



F. W. Oliver. Vol. L, pp. 5-16, 1913. 



Reconnaissance in the Cottes wolds and the Forest of Dean. A. 



G. Tansley and R. S. Adamson. 



The Relation of the present Plant population of the British Isles 

 to the Glacial Period. Clement Reid, pp. 42-46. 



Annals of Botany, vol. xxvii., p. 607, 1913. Contributions to 

 our knowledge of the species of Utricularia in Great Britain. Dr 

 Hugo Gluck. 



Gardener's Chronicle, 1913. Blakeney Point, Norfolk, The 

 New Nature Reserve. F. W. Oliver, p. 97, with illustration of 

 Suaeda fruticosa. 



ACTES DU CONGRES INTERNAL DE BoT. E. DE WlLDEMAN. 



Bruxelles 1910. Yol. i. Comptes-Rendus des Seances, Excursion, 

 etc., 1912, pp. 383. Planches 16. Yol. ii. Conferences et Memoires, 

 pp. 234. Planche 57, numerous maps, 1912, A. de Boeck. Includes a 

 valuable paper, La Protection de la Nature en Suisse, by Dr C. 

 Schroeter, illustrated with beautiful reproductions of Photographs. 

 La Cinquantieme Herborisation Generale de la Society Royale de 

 Botanique de Belgique. Sur le littorale Beige, by Jean Massart. The 

 plants noticed were to a very large extent similar to those on the 

 Eastern Coast of Britain, but the following not as yet recorded as 

 British were observed about Ostend : — Senecio Jacobaea var. dunensis 

 Dumort., Erodium Boraeanum Jord., Anchusa officinalis var. glabres- 

 cens Dumort. As at Southport Monotropa and Pyrola rotundifolia 

 are associated. Viola tricolor sabulosa is a conspicuous plant, which 

 Dr Williams asserts is not British. (Journ. Bot. 349, 1911.) 



Pour la Protection de la Nature en Belgique. Jean Massart. 

 pp. 308, with 350 illustrations and maps, 1912. H. Lamertin, 



