^ s- PLAMT IMI«A«S 
Descriptive notes furnished mainly by Agricultural 
Explbrers and Foreign Correspondents relative to the more 
important introduced plants which have recently arrived at 
the Office of Foreign Seed and Plant Introduction of the 
Bureau of Plant Industry of the Department of Agriculture, 
together with accounts of the behavior in America of pre- 
vious introductions. Descriptions appearing here are re - 
vised and published later in the Inventory of Plant s >^m^ 
ported. f REC ' D x 
f LIBRARY 
No. '120. APMIL tar 
V, OF S 
Genera Represented In this Number. v?"j N o^ 
Page 
Page 
Cacara 
984 
Malus 
986 
Careya 
984 
Mesembryanthemum 
986 
Cassia 
984 
Nephelium 
986 
Chusquea 
984 
Osterdamia 
987 
Cicer 
984 
Persea 
989 
Citharexylum 
984 
Prinsepia 
987 
Citrus 
984 
Prunus 
987 
Colocasia 
985 
Sasa 
988 
Cytisus 
985 
Spiraea 
988 
Eugenia 
985 
Strychnos 
988 
Hakea 
985 
Tamarix 
988 
Hibiscus 
986 
Uvarla 
988 
Inodes 
986 
Vltis 
989 
Macadamia 
986 
Zea 
989 
Plaftesi 
PI. 189. Fresh Fruits of the Litchi, Litchi chinensis. 
190. The Oldest Litchi in Hawaii. 
191. A Cherimoya Sugar Apple Hybrid, Annona cherimola. 
192. Prunus Glandulosa. 
Applications for material listed in these multlgraphed 
sheets may be made at any time to this Office. As they 
are received they are placed on file, and when the materi- 
al is ready for the use of experimenters it is sent to 
those on the list of applicants who can show that they arb 
prepared to care for it as well as to others selected 
because of their special fitness to experiment with the 
particular plants Imported. Do not wait for the annual 
List of New Plant Introductions. 
One of the main objects of the Office of Foreign Seed 
and Plant Introduction is to secure material for plant 
experimenters, and it will undertake as far as possible to 
fill any specific requests for foreign seeds or plants 
from plant breeders and others interested. 
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