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Index Kewensis. All enumeration of th® Genera and Species of Flowering Plants from the 
time of Linnaeus to the year 1885 inclusive, together with their authors’ names, the works in 
which they were first published, their native countries and their synonyms. Compiled at the 
expense of the late Charles Robert Darwin under the direction of Sir J. D. Hooker, by 
B. D. Jackson. V 0I.I.A. A.-Justicia. Vol. II; Kablikia-Zyzygium and appendix. Royal 4to, 
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Supplement I (1886-95). By T. Durand and B. D. Jackson. (Not sold separately.) Bruxellis 
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The Silviculture Of* Indian Trees. ByR. S. Troup. Published under the authority 
of Plis Majesty’s Secretary of State for India. In three volumes. Imperial 8vo. ^5 5s.- net. 
Volume I — Dilleniaceae to Leguminosae-Papilionaceae. With a Rainfall Map of India and 
136 Illustrations in line, half-tone, and colour. Volume II — Leguminosae-Caesalpinieae to 
Verbenaceae. With 161 Illustrations in line, half-tore, and colour. Volume III — Lauraceae 
to Coniferae. With 193 Illustrations inline, half-tone, and colour. 
This work deals with the more important and many of the less important forest trees of India 
and Burma, giving particulars of their distribution and habitat, silvicultural characters, seeding and 
germination, natural and artificial reproduction, rate of growth, and other characteristics. Although 
primarily of silvicultural interest, the work will appeal not only to the forester but also to the 
botanist, containing as it does numerous botanical descriptions of seedlings as well as drawings, 
' including ninety coloured plates of flowers,, fruits, and seedlings. The descriptions of forest types 
will interest the plant-geographer and the ecologist. The work should be of service to the forester 
not only in India but throughout the Tropics, where the cultivation of teak and other valuable 
"species is now receiving much attention, and tree-lovers in Britain and other temperate countries 
will find detailed accounts of the more important Himalayan trees known to them, as they occur in 
their natural habitat. 
PftefFer’s Physiology Of* Plants, a treatise upon the Metabolism and Sources of Energy 
in Plants. Second fully revised edition, translated and edited with notes and indexes by A. J.. 
Ewart. Three volumes. Royal 8vo. A handbook containing a complete account of our 
knowledge concerning the general process of metabolism and the sources of energy in the plant. 
Vol. I. With seventy illustrations, Introduction, physiological morphology, mechanism of 
absorption and translocation, movements of water, food of plants, constructive and destructive 
metabolism, &c. (Not sold separately.) Vol. II. With thirty-one illustrations. Growth, 
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Goebel’S Organography of* Plants, especially of the Archegoniatae and Sper- 
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Solereder’s Systematic Anatomy of the Dicotyledons. A handbook for Labora- 
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De Bary’s Comparative Anatomy of the Vegetative Organs of the Phanerogams and 
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De Bary’s Comparative Morphology and Biology of Fungi, jMycetozoa and 
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Botany. By H. M. Richards. Being one of the Lectures delivered at Columbia University, 
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