THE JOURNAL OF BOTANY, 
BRITISH AND FOREIGN. 
A MONTHLY JOURNAL, EDITED BY JAMES BRITTEN, F.L.S. 
Usually a Plate with each Number . Price Is. 8d • Contains Original Articles by 
Leading Botanists , Notices of Books, and Botanical News genet ally. 
Contents of April Number Notes on Mycetozoa from Japan, by Arthur Lister, F.R.S. ; 
Mons. A, Robert’s Matto Grosso Plants, by Spencer le M. Moore; Epilobium colli mini , Gmel., by 
C. E. Salmon ; Radnorshire Lichens, by W. H. Wilkinson ; Botanical Exchange Club Report, 1902 ; 
Short Notes, Notices of Books, Book Notes, News, & c. SuPPLEMENT^Notes on the drawings for 
‘ English Botany,’ by F. N. A. Garry (continued). 
LONDON : WEST, NEWMAN & CO., 54 HATTON GARDEN. 
OXFORD UNIVERSITY PRESS. 
» > » < ♦ 
The Physiology of Plants. 
A Treatise upon the Metabolism and Sources of Energy in Plants. By Dr. W. Pfeffer, 
Professor of Botany in the University of Leipzig. Second fully Revised Edition, translated and 
edited by Alfred J. Ewart, D.Sc., Ph.D., F.L.S. With many Illustrations. Royal Svo, 
half-morocco, Vol. II, i6j. Previously published, Vol. I, 28 j. 
Schimper’s PlanUGeography. 
A Summary of the Existing State of Knowledge about the Geographical Distribution of Plants 
so far as dependent on Conditions now present; with Special Consideration of the Principles 
determining the Habits and Structure of Plants, the Evolution of their Adaptive Characters, 
and the Congregation of Plants to form Communities. Authorized English Translation by 
W. R. Fisher, M.A. Revised and Edited by P. Groom, M A., D.Sc., F.L.S., and I. Bayley 
Balfour, M.A., M.D., F.R.S. With a Portrait of the late Dr. A. F. W. Schimper, Four Maps, 
Four Cojlotypes, and 497 other Illustrations. Royal 8vo. In Four Parts, at gs. net per Part. 
Complete Volume, half-morocco, 42 s. net. 
Scotsman .-—‘This work on Plant-Geography is undoubtedly Professor Schimper’s magnum opus. It is already 
recognized on the Continent as the standard work on oecologieal botany, and its translation into English will give 
an immense stimulus to a fascinating branch of botanical study in this country.’ 
On the Physics and Physiology of the Proto= 
plasmic Streaming in Plants. 
By Alfred J. Ewart, D.Sc., Ph.D., F.L.S., Lecturer on Botany in the Birmingham Technical 
Institute. Communicated to the Royal Society by Francis Gotch, D.Sc. (Oxon.), F.R.S. 
Royal Svo, half-morocco, with 17 Illustrations. 8 j". 6d. net. 
Plant World (Washington): — ‘The present volume not only contains a summary of what has already been 
learned about protoplasmic streaming, but also the results of many experiments and observations made by the 
author. The work is comprehensive, and will be indispensable to all physiological botanists.’ 
REPRINTED FROM THE ‘ANNALS OF BOTANY.’ 
A Sketch of the Life and Labours of Sir William 
Jackson Hooker, 
K.H., D.C.L. Oxon., F.R.S., F.L.S., &c., late Director of the Royal Gardens of Kew. By his 
son, Joseph Dalton Hooker. Royal 8vo, paper covers, 3 s. 6d. net. 
LONDON: HENRY FROWDE, 
OXFORD UNIVERSITY PRESS WAREHOUSE, AMEN CORNER, E.C. 
