^ O library . YORK New York State Museum Bulletin Published by The University of the State of New York No. 329 ALBANY, N. Y. June 1942 NEW YORK STATE MUSEUM Charles C. Adams, Director BIBLIOGRAPHY OF THE BOTANY OF NEW YORK STATE 1751-1940 PART 2 By Homer D. House Ph.D., State Botanist New York State Museum CONTENTS Introduction New York State in general State Botanist’s reports Adirondack mountains Catskill mountains Central New York Hudson River valley / Long Island Susquehanna valley Western New York Citations of titles by counties Index to biographical references to species, localities and subjects mentioned to citations by authors PAGE 177 179 188 188 190 190 190 191 * 192 192 192 207 208 222 ALBANY THE UNIVERSITY OF THE STATE OF NEW YORK 1942 M367r-041-2000 (H2-142) Digitized by the Internet Archive in 2017 with funding from IMLS LG-70-15-0138-15 https://archive.org/details/newyorkstatemuse3291newy New York State Museum Bulletin Published by The University of the State of New York No. 329 ALBANY, N. Y. June 1942 NEW YORK STATE MUSEUM Charles C. Adams, Director BIBLIOGRAPHY OF THE BOTANY OF NEW YORK STATE 1751-1940 PART 2 By Homer D. House Ph.D., State Botanist New York State Museum CONTENTS PAGE Introduction 177 New York State in general 179 State Botanist’s reports 188 Adirondack mountains 188 Catskill mountains 190 Central New York 190 Hudson River valley 190 Long Island 191 Susquehanna valley 192 Western New York 192 Citations of titles by counties 192 Index to biographical references 207 to species, localities and subjects mentioned 208 to citations by authors 222 ALBANY THE UNIVERSITY OF THE STATE OF NEW YORK 1942 ERRATA (PART 1) p. 31. Rankin, 1931; should read Duncan G. Rankin, not Dun- can C. p. 36. Boyle, Raymond J. ; should read Raymond J. Hoyle. p. 99. Littlefield, 1931. Calluna. Should be referred to Frank- lin county. Under Paul W. Stickel, 1934; second line of citation should read fir, instead of for p. 104. York, 1926. Peridenniitm. Should be referred to Oneida county. p. 150. Wiegmann, William H., instead of Wiegmenn p. 152. Pratt etc., 1938. Finns Banksiana. Should be W. F. Pratt, instead of W. R. p. 172. Under Clum, Harold H., 1932 ; read Nepperhan, instead of Nepperham. 178 BIBLIOGRAPHY OF NEW YORK STATE BOTANY 179 1 NEW YORK STATE IN GENERAL Mitchill, Samuel L. 1800-2 A sketch of the mineralogical history of the State of New York. Med. Repository, 1:279-303 (2d ed.), 431-39; 3:326-55. 1800. Ap- pendix. Ibid., 5 :2I2-i5. 1802 Havens, Jonathan N. 1801 Experiments and observations on the culture of white thorn for hedges. Trans. N. Y. Soc. Pro. Agr. Arts & Manuf., i :2i4-30 Mead, Elijah 1821 An experimental inquiry into the botanical history, chemical properties and medicinal virtues of the Spiraea tomentosa. Med. Repository, 6:255-72. illus. Emmons, Ebenezer 1846- 51 Agriculture of New York. Natural History of New York. Pt. V., i: p. i-xi, 1-371. pi. I-XXI (1846). 2: p. i-viii, 1-343 & Appendix, p. 1-46. pi. 1-54 (1849). 3: p. i-viii, 1-340. pi. 1-81 (1851) Bailey, Jacob Whitman 1847- 48 Notes on the algae of the United States. Amer. Jour. Sci. (II), 3:80-85 (January), 399-403 (May); 6:37-42 (July). 1848. (De- voted largely to New York references.) Beck, Lewis C. 1848 Oaks of the State of New York. Amer. Quart. Jour. Agr. & Sci., 7:490-93 (November) Barnard, Daniel D. 1852 Life and services of Stephen van Rensselaer. Munsell’s Annals of Albany, 3 :28i-327. portrait Gray, Asa 1868 Monstrous flowers of Habenaria finibriata. Amer. Nat., 2:38 (March) Hough, Franklin B. 1878 On the preservation of forests and the planting of timber. Trans. N. Y. State Agr. Soc., 32:177-94 Coulter, John M. 1883 John Torrey. Bot. Gaz., 8:165-70 (February) Halsted, Byron D. 1883 Notes on Sassafras leaves. Science (II), 2:491, 492 (12 October), p. 684 (23 November) Arthur, J. C. 1885-87 Report of the Botanist. 3d Ann. Rep’t N. Y. Agr. Exp. Sta., P- 353-85- 1885. 4th Ann. Rep’t, p. 268-92. 1886. 5th Ann. Rep’t, P- 275-375- 1887. 6th Ann. Rep’t, p. 343-71- 1887 Prentiss, A. N. 1889 Weeds. Trans. N. Y. State Agr. Soc., 34:298-302 i8o NEW YORK STATE MUSEUM Sturtevant, E. Lewis 1889 Agricultural botany. Trans. N. Y. State Agr. Soc., 34:335-38 Underwood, L. M. & Cook, O. F. 1889 Generic synopses of the Basidiomycetes and Myxomycetes, p. 1-21. Publ. by the authors. Syracuse, N. Y. Bailey, Liberty Hyde 1890 The false shagbark hickory (Htcoria microcarpa). Amer. Gard., 11:386-89. illus. McMillan, William 1893 Shade trees in city streets. Trans. N. Y. State Agr. Soc. for 1892, p. 511-21 Peck, Charles H. 1894 Mushrooms and their use. The Cultivator & Country Gentleman, 59:422 (with brief sketch and portrait of Peck on p. 425) (31 May) ; 438 (7 June) ; 454 (14 June) ; 470 (21 June) ; 486 (28 June) ; 562 (5 July) ; 518 (12 July) ; 534 (iQ July) ; 550 (26 July) ; 566 (2 August) ; 582 (9 August) ; 598 (16 August) ; 614 (23 August) ; 632 (30 August) ; 650 (6 September) ; 666 (13 Septem- ber) ; 684 (20 September) Zabriskie, Rev. J. L. 1894 Rev. Samuel Lockwood, 1819-1894. Jour. N. Y. Micros. Soc., 10:51-53 (April) Peck, C. H. 1897 Mushrooms and their use. p. 1-80. illus. (May) Cambridge Botan- ical Supply Co., Cambridge, Mass. (Reprint of series of articles in The Cultivator and Country Gentleman) Rafter, George W. 1898 Natural and artificial forest reservoirs of the State of New York, 3d Ann. Rep’t Fish. Game & For. Com. N. Y. for 1897, p. 398-401 (with references to other papers on the relation of forests to natural water supplies) Fox, William F. 18980 A forest product (maple sugar and syrup). 3d Ann. Rep’t Com. Fish. Game & For. N. Y. for 1897, p. 308-23 See also Forestry & Irrig., 9:132-38 (March) 1903 l898i> Forestry tracts. Ibid., p. 324-71 18990 Botanical (p. 52), Conifers (p. 52-56), Broad-leaved trees (p. 56-61). 2d Ann. Rep’t For. Preserve Bd. N. Y. for 1898 1899b Forest fires in 1898. 4th Ann. Rep’t Fish. Game & For. Com. N. Y. for 1898, p. 328-45. illus. Fernow, B. E. 1898-1901 The New York State College of Forestry. The Forester, 4:185- 92 (September); 7:304-8 (December) 1901 Price, Overton W. 1899 Working plans for the state preserve. 4th Ann. Rep’t Fish. Game & For. Com. N. Y. for 1898, p. 418-22 BIBLIOGRAPHY OF NEW YORK STATE BOTANY l8l Cleveland, Tredwell 1901 The forest laws of New York. The Forester, 7:81-85 (April) McClintock, J. Y. 1902 Tree planting. 7th Ann. Rep’t For. Fish & Game Com. N. Y. for 1901, p. 43-58 Murrill, W. A. 1902 Shade trees. Cornell Univ. Agr. Exp. Sta. Bui., 205:71-118. fig. 1-25. pi. 1-4. {Ibid., abridged ed. p. 1-24. fig. 15-18, 21-25. pi. 2, 4) Peck, Charles H. 1904 Secrets of the woods. Albany Sunday Press. Pt. II, p. 28 (18 De- cember) Atkinson, G. F. & Shore, Robert 1905 Mushroom growing for amateurs. Cornell Univ. Agr. Exp. Sta. Bui., 227:415-24. fig. 151-54 (March) Fox, William F. 1905 Forestry affairs in New York, 1904. For. Fish & Game Com. N. Y. Bui., p. 1-28. illus. Burgess, Edward S. 1906 Species and variations of biotian asters. Torrey Bot. Club Mem., I3:i-xv, 1-419. fig. 1-108. pi. 1-13 Benedict, Ralph C. 1908 Organizing a field trip. Torreya, 8 :2o6 (August) Reprinted by Nature Study Review (April) 1909 Taylor, Albert D. 1908 Street trees. Cornell Univ. Agr. Exp. Sta. Bui., 256:303-45. fig. 223- 59 (June) Comstock, Anna B. 1909a Mushrooms and other fungi. Cornell Univ. Home Nature-study Course, 6: no. i. p. 1103-117. illus. 1909& Thistles. Ibid., p. 1120-27. illus. 1910a Weeds. Ibid., 6: no. 4. p. 1198-210. illus. 19106 The linden or basswood tree. Ibid., p. 1214-220. illus. Britton, N. L. 1910 Relations of botanical gardens to the public. Jour. N. Y. Bot. Gard., 11:25-30 (March) Kennedy, John S. 1910 The forest parks of New York. Amer. For., 16:695-98 (December) White, Paul J. 19100 Some common weeds and how to destroy them. Cornell Rur. Sch. Leaf., 3: no. 8. p. 988-91. illus. (April, May); 4: no. i. p. 1091- 94. illus. (September) 19106 New York pastures. Cornell Univ. Agr. Exp. Sta. Bui., 280:475-95. fig. 151-62 (July) NEW YORK STATE MUSEUM 182 Pettis, C. R. 1910 Reforesting. For. Fish & Game Com. N. Y. Bui., 2:1-25. illus. (Rev. ed. (Cons. Com. N. Y.) in 1912, 1918, 1924, 1925, 1929 and 1936) 1911 Growing trees from seed. Amer. For., 17:155-59. illus. (March) Gaylord, F. A. 1912a Forestry and forest resources in New York. Amer. For., 18:685-701 (November) ; Cons. Com. N. Y. Bui., i : p. 1-58. illus. 1912& Shade trees. Cons. Com. N. Y. Bui., 7:1-69. illus. Mulford, Walter 1912 The improvement of the woodlot. Cornell Read. Courses, i : no. 12 (Farm For. Ser. no. i) p. 109-32. fig. 210-20 (15 March) Reed, C. A. 1912 Wild flowers of New York. Mohonk Lake, N. Y. illus. Sterling, E. A. 1912 A definite state forest policy. Amer. For., 18:421-30 (July) Rosenbluth, Robert 1913 Woodlot forestry. Cons. Com. N. Y. Bui., 9:1-104. illus. Pettis, C. R. 1913 Efficiency of the top-lopping law. Special Rep’t Cons. Com. N. Y. to the State Legislature, March 13, 1913, p. 1-12 1914 The work of the New York State Conservation Commission. Official Pub. Cornell Univ., 5: no. 19. p. 24-27 (December) Bentley, John 1914 Methods of determining the value of timber in the farm woodlot. Cornell Read. Courses, 3: no. 62 (Farm For. Ser. no. 4) p. 133-64. fig. 77-80 (15 April) Brown, Nelson C. 1914 Possibilities of municipal forestry in New York. N. Y. State Col. For. Syracuse Univ. Bui., ser. XIV. no. 2 (d). p. 1-19. illus. Howard, William G. 1914 Forest fires. N. Y. State Cons. Com. Bui., 10:1-52. illus. (Rev. ed. p. 1-31. 1921) Moore, Frank L. 1914 Problems in lumbering. Official Pub. Cornell Univ., 5 : no. 19. p. 36-38 Vary, W. H. 1914 Forestry on the farm. Official Pub. Cornell Univ., 5 : no. 19. p. 16,17 (December) Whipple, James S. 1914 Problems of forestry in New York State, Official Pub. Cornell Univ.,_ 5: no. 19. p. 41-44 (December) Dodge, B. O. 1916 Fungi producing heart-rot of apple trees. Mycologia, 8:5-15. pi. 173-76 (January) BIBLIOGRAPHY OF NEW YORK STATE BOTANY 183 Paul, B. H. 1916 Reforestation of hills and farmed-out lands. N. Y. State Dep’t Agr. Circ., 130:118-24 Wilson, Percy 1916 Collecting pollen for hay fever investigations. Jour. N. Y. Bot. Card., 17:157-59 (October) Baker, Hugh P. 1916 The economic side of New York State woodlands. N. Y. State Dep’t Agr. Circ., 130:125-31 1917 Forests and water in New York. N. Y. For. 4: no. i. p. 18-24. illus. (April) Anthony, R. D. & Hedrick, U. P. 1917 Vinifera grapes in New York. Bui. N. Y. Agr. Exp. Sta., 432:81-104. pi. 1-5 (April) Schmidt, Karl 1917 Shade trees. N. Y. State Cons. Com. Bui., 7:1-32. (rev.) illus. (2d rev. ed. 1930) Fairman, C. E. 1918 Notes on new species of fungi from various localities. -11. Mycologia, 10:164-67 (May) Felt, Ephraim Porter 1918 Gall insects and their relations to plants. Sci. Mo., 6:509-25 (June), illus. Pettis, C. R. 1918 New York State parks and reservations. N. Y. State Cons. Com. Recreation Circ., i :i-i4 Rhodes, Arthur S. 1918 The biology of Polyporus pargamenus Fries. N. Y. State Col. For. Syracuse Univ. Tech. Pub., ii :i-i97. pi. I-XXXI (June) Stephen, J. W. 1918 Making the best use of idle lands in New York. N. Y. State Col. For. Syracuse Univ. Circ., 19:1-51. illus. (June) Whipple, James S. 1918 Plant and acquire forests. Rep’t on For., p. 1-37. Albany Adams, Charles C. 1920 The relation of natural history and ecology to public forest parks. N. Y. State Col. For. Syracuse Univ. Bui., 10:11-14 Spring, S. N. & Guise, C. H. 1921 Forest planting on the farm. Cornell Read. Courses, 159:1-40. illus. (July) 184 NEW YORK STATE MUSEUM Fairman, Charles E. 1921 The fungi of our common nuts and pits. Proc. Rochester Acad. Sci., 6: no. 3. p. 73-115. pi. 15-20 (September) 1922 New or rare fungi from various localities. Proc. Rochester Acad. Sci., 6:117-39. pi. 21-23 Muenscher, W. C. 1922 Keys to woody plants, p. 1-64. Ithaca. Published by the Author. Ed. 2, p. 1-96, 1926; Ed. 3, p. 1-96, 1930; Ed. 4, p. 1-106, 1936 Leet, Ernest D. 1923 New York’s beaver problem. Amer. For., 29:199-203 (April) Macdonald, Alexander 1923 Policy of reforestation. N. Y. State Cons. Com. Reforestation Con- ference of November 19, 1922 (p. 8-1 1) Also C. R. Pettis. Tree growing and planting. W. C. Howard. Forest lire protection. Ralph S. Hosmer. Extension work in for- estry. A. B. Recknagle. Tree planting by forest industries in New York. J. R. Simmons. Community forests. A. D. Davis. What a county can do in reforestation. Moon, Franklin F. 1923 Timber resources and forest industries in New York. N. Y. For., 9 : no. 3. p. 61-63 Trelease, William 1924 Romeyn Beck Hough, 1857-1924. Science, 60:297,298 (31 October) Belyea, Harold C. 1925 The forestry situation in New York State. N. Y. For. Yrbk for 1925, p. 42-44 Hall, E. H. 1925 New York State forest policy. N. Y. For. Yrbk for 1925, p. 35-39 Hosmer, Ralph S. 1925 Steps toward a comprehensive forest policy for the State o£ New York. N. Y. For. Yrbk for 1925, p. 32-34 Kindle, E. M. 1925 The bottom deposits of Lake Ontario. Mem. & Comptcs Ecndus de la Soc. Roy. du Canada (III). 19 (Sect. IV) : p. 47-102. 4 fig. 3 pi. Aslander, Alfred 1926 Chlorates as plant poisons. Jour. Amer. Soc. Agron., 18:1101, 1102 (December) Howard, William G. 1926 Fire suppression in New York. Papers For. Protect. Conf., p. 75,76 McAttee, Waldo L. 1926 The relation of birds to woodlots in New York State. Roosevelt Wild Life Bui., 4; no. i. p. 7-152. fig. 1-22. pi. 1-4. (October) Pettis, C. R. 1926 Protection of forest plantations in New York State. Papers For. Protect. Conf., p. 73,74 BIBLIOGRAPHY OF NEW YORK STATE BOTANY 185 Spring, S. N. 1926 Grazing and the woodlot. Papers For. Protect. Conf., p. 69-72 Stewart, F. C. 1926 The mica ink-cap or glistening Coprinus. N. Y. State Agr. Exp. Sta. Buh, 535 :i-30. pi. I, II. frontispiece in color (July) York, H. H. 1926 White pine blister rust in New York. Papers For. Protect. Conf., p. 4-10 Stewart, F. C. 1927 Experiments with cottonseed meal in mushroom culture. Bui. N. Y. State Agr. Exp. Sta., 546:1-38. pi. I. (July) Hirt, Ray R. 1928 The biology of Polyporus gilvus (Schw.) Fries. Bui. N. Y. State Col. For. Syracuse Univ., i : no. la. p. 1-47. fig. 1,2. pi. I-XI (Tech- nical Pub. no. 22) Muenscher, W. C. & Retry, L. C. 1928 Keys to spring plants, p. 1-30. Ithaca. Published by W. C. Muenscher. Ed. 2, p. 1-34, 1932; Ed. 3, P- 1-34, 1927; Ed. 4, p. 1-34, I94i Adams, Charles C. 1929 The importance of preserving wilderness conditions. 22d Rep’t of the Director of the New York State Museum and Science Department. N. Y. State Mus. Bui., 279:37-46 Amadon, A. F. 1929 Christmas tree plantations. N. Y. State Cons. Com., p. i-ii. illus. Georgia, Ada 1929 The violets. Cornell Univ. Home Nature-study Courses, 5 ^829-37. illus. (April) Hopkins, Arthur S. 1929 General forestry. N. Y. State Cons. Com. Bui. i (rev.), p. 1-31. illus. (Another rev. ed. 1938) Pettis, C. R. 1929 Public use of the forest preserve. N. Y. State Cons. Com. Recreation Circ., 2:1-15 Wiant, James Stewart 1929 The Rhizoctonia damping-off of conifers, and its control by chemical treatment of the soil. Cornell Univ. Agr. Exp. Sta. Mem., 124:1-64. fig. 1-6 (April) Pettis, C. R. 1930 Reforesting. Bui. N. Y. State Cons. Com., 2:1-30. illus. Prescott, Herbert F. 1932 Municipal or community forests. N. Y. State Cons. Com., p. 1-50. illus. i86 NEW YORK STATE MUSEUM Wilson, B. D. & Staker, E. V. 1932 Relation of organic matter to organic carbon in the peat soils of New York. Jour. Amer. Soc. Agron., 24:477-81 (June) Wilson, B. D., Staker, E. V. & Townsend, G. R. 1932 Reaction and calcium content of drainage water from peat deposits in New York. Jour. Amer. Soc. Agron., 24:589-93 (August) Wilson, J. K. & Higbee, H. W. 1932 The presence and distribution of sulfofying bacteria in mineral and peat soils. Jour. Amer. Soc. Agron., 24:806-21 (October) Cummings, C. E. 1933 Mushrooms and toadstools. Nat. Hist., 33 :4i-53. illus. (January, February) Lane, Charles N. 1935 Submarginal farm lands in New York State; a report to the State Plan. Bd., p. i-xii, 1-561. fig. 1-21. tab. I-51, lA-lC (mimeo.) Rickards, B. R. 1936 Ivy poisoning. Health News, 10: no. 27. p. I-7. illus. (Reprinted N. Y. State Dep’t of Health) Snell, Walter H. 1936 The relation of the age of needles of Phtiis Strobiis to infection by Cronartium ribicola. Phytopathology, 26:1074-80 (November) Stewart, F. C. 1936 The uncertain Hypholoma. N. Y. Agr. Exp. Sta. Bui., 666:1-16. fig. 1-4. I colored pi. (July) Wodehouse, R. P. 1936 Toxic wind-borne pollen in its relation to hayfever. Jour. N. Y. Bot. Card., 37:177-85. fig. 1-3 (August) York, H. H., Wean, R. E. & Childs, T. W. 1936 Some results of investigations on Polyporus Schweinitzii Fr. Science, 84:60,61 (14 August) Worden, John L. 1936 Clinical aspects of Rhus dermatitis ; the poisonous substance of poison ivy and related plants, the etiology, treatment and prognosis of plant dermatitis. (St Bonaventure) Science Studies, 4: no. 4. p. 22,23 (June) 1937 Cause and treatment of pollinosis. (St Bonaventure) Science Studies, 5 : no. 4. p. 12 (June) Hatch, A. B. 1937 The physical basis of mycotrophy in Pinus. Black Rock For. Bui., 6:1-168. pi. I-XVI Hubert, Fr (Vecchierello, Hubert) 1937 Some plants causing hay fever (pollinosis). (St Bonaventure) Sci- ence Studies, 5: no. 4. p. 11,13 (June) BIBLIOGRAPHY OF NEW YORK STATE BOTANY 187 Wilson, B. D. & Staker, E. V. 1937 Loss of plant nutrients from peat soil. Cornell Univ. Agr. Exp. Sta. Mem., 206:1-13. illus. Welch, Fay 1938 The place of forest recreation in forestry. For. News Digest, p. i8,ig (October) Littlefield, E. W. 1939 Experimental collection of white pine cones in August. N. Y. State Cons. Com. Notes on For. Invest., no. 24 Place, Frank 1939 Raymond H. Torrey. High Spots (Yrbk of the Adirondack Moun- tain Club), p. 64-71 (January) Blakeslee, Albert F. 1940 Howard J. Banker. Science, 92:547,548 (13 December) Day, G. M. 1940 Topsoil changes in coniferous plantations. Jour. For., 38:646-48 Eliason, E. J. & Heit, C. E. 19400 The size of Scotch pine cones as related to seed size and yield. Jour. For., 38:65,66 1940& The results of laboratory tests as applied to large scale extraction of red pine seed. Jour. For., 38:426-29 1940C The effect of light and temperature on the dormancy of Scotch pine seed. Proc. Ass’n Official Seed Analysis of N. Amer. (ii pages rnimeo., unnumbered) Heit, C. E. 1940 Stratification technique for white pine. N. Y. State Cons. Com. Notes on For. Invest., no. 12 Heit, C. E. & Eliason, E. J. 1940 Coniferous tree seed testing and factors affecting germination and seed quality. N. Y. State Agr. Exp. Sta. Tech. Bui., 255:1-45. fig. 1-8 (October) Hildebrand, E. M. 1940 Cane gall of brambles caused by Phytomonas Rubi n. sp. Jour. Agr. Research, 61 :68s-96. fig. 1-3 (November) Hirt, Ray R. 1940 Relative susceptibility to Cronartmm ribicola of 5-needle pines planted in the East. Jour. For., 38:932-37 (December) Linn, M. B. 1940 Cephalosporium leaf spot of two aroids. Phytopathology, 30:968-72. fig. I, 2 (November) NEW YORK STATE MUSEUM 1 88 2 STATE BOTANIST’S REPORTS House, Homer D. 1939 Botany. In loist Ann. Rep’t N. Y. State Museum. N. Y. State Mus. Bui., 317:38,39 1939 Office of Botany. In “A summary of the accomplishments and func- tions of the New York State Museum during the past century, 1836-1936.” N. Y. State Mus. Bui., 317 :93-99. fig. 34-37 1940 Botany. In i02d Ann. Rep’t N. Y. State Museum. N. Y. State Mus. Bui., 322:45,46. fig. 13,14 3 ADIRONDACK MOUNTAINS (and the Lake George Region) Hough, Franklin B. 1873 A New York State park. The Adirondack wilderness as a pleasure ground. Albany Evening Jour., 14 November Packard, A. S. jr 1883 Decay of spruce in the Adirondacks and northern New England. Na- tion, 37 :525,526 (27 December) Prentiss, A. N. 1883 Notes on the Adirondacks. Bui. Torrey Bot. Club, 10:43-45 (April) Sage, D. 1883 Decay of spruce in the Adirondacks. Nation, 37:506 (20 December) Sargent, Charles Sprague 1883 The Adirondack forests. Nation, 37 :464 (6 December) 1885 The Adirondack forests (A symposium). Outing, 6:77-83 (April) Hough, Franklin B. 1884 Address on state forest management, before the committee on the preservation of the Adirondack forests, of the Chamber of Commerce of the State of New York, January 14, 1884. New York. Press Cham, of Comm., p. 1-13 1885 State forestry, source of pleasure and profit in the Adirondacks. 3p. (Reprinted from the Albany Evening Journal, March 10, 1885) Ballou, William Hosea 1885 An Adirondack park. Amer. Nat., 19:578-82 (June) Peck, Charles H. 1886 Destruction of spruce and fir by bark-borers, ist Ann. Rep’t For. Com. N. Y. for 1885, p. 54-60 Colvin, Verplanck 1896 The Adirondack forest. Proc. Amer. For. Ass’n, ii : 142-47 Sterling, E. A. 1902 Adirondack birds in their relation to forestry. For. Quart., i :i8-25 Williams, Asa S. 1902 The Adirondack Park. For. & Irrig., 8:141,142 (April) BIBLIOGRAPHY OF NEW YORK STATE BOTANY 189 Pettis, C. R. 1903 Report on the gathering of spruce seed. 8th Ann. Rep’t For. Fish. Game Com. N. Y. for 1902, p. 76-87. illus. Suter, H. M. 1904 Forest fires in the Adirondacks in 1903. U. S. Dep’t Agr. Bur. For. Circ., 26:1-15. map Schwartz, G. Frederick 1907 The Adirondacks are a park, not a timber reserve. For. & Irrig., 13:601 (November) Pinchot, Gifford 1912 The Adirondack problem. Amer. For., 18:51-59 (January) Spaulding, Parley 1912 Notes upon tree diseases in the eastern states. Mycologia, 4:148-51 (May) Sterling, E. A. 1913 The return of the beaver to the Adirondacks. Amer. For., 19:292-99 (May) Pratt, George D. 1918 Conservation in the Adirondacks. N. Y. For., 4: no. 4. p. 5-14 (January) Sterling, E. A. 1921 Adirondack forest musings. Amer. For., 27:620-23 (October) Belyea, Harold Cahill 1922 Current annual increment of red spruce and balsam fir in the western Adirondacks. Jour. For., 20 :6o3-5 Recknagel, A. B. 19220 Growth of spruce and balsam in the Adirondacks. Jour. For., 20:598- 602 1922& Sample working plan for Adirondack softwoods. Empire State For. Ass’n Bui., 15:1-16 Adams, Charles C. 1923 Notes on the relation of birds to Adirondack forest vegetation. Roose- velt Wild Life Bui., i : no. 4. p. 4S7-519. fig. 142-63 (March) Silloway, Perley M. 1923 Relation of summer birds to the western Adirondack forest. Roosevelt Wild Life BuL, i : no. 4. p. 397-486. pi. 30-33 (March) Belyea, Harold Cahill 1924 A study of mortality and recovery after logging. Jour. For., 22:768-79 Johnson, Charles E. 1927 The beaver in the Adirondacks; its economics and natural history. Roosevelt Wild Life Buh, 4: no. 4. p. 499-641. fig. 87-127. maps 4-6 (July) 190 NEW YORK STATE MUSEUM Littlefield, E. W. 1938 Spruce and balsam reproduction occurring under a porcupine-damaged Scotch pine plantation in the Adirondacks. N. Y. State Cons. Com. Notes on For. Invest., no. 9 4 CATSKILL MOUNTAINS Forest Preserve Board 1899 The Catskill preserve. 2d Ann. Rep’t For. Preserve Bd. for 1898, p. 67-70 Greeley, W. B. 1905 The effect of forest cover upon stream flow. II. A study of drainage conditions in the Catskill mountains. For. & Irrig., 11:309-15. illus. (July) 5 CENTRAL NEW YORK Dudley, William R. 18830 An abnormal orchid, Habenaria hyperborea. Science, 2:335 (7 Sep- tember) 18836 Origin of the flora of the central New York lake region. Science, 2:336 (7 September) Saunders, Aretas A. 1926 The summer birds of central New York marshes. Roosevelt Wild Life Bui., 3: no. 3, p. 329-475. pi. 6-19. fig. 88-145 (September) Chandler, Robert F. jr 1940 The influence of grazing upon certain soil and climatic conditions in farm woodlands. Jour. Amer. Soc. Agron., 32:216-30. fig. 1-6 (March) 6 HUDSON RIVER VALLEY Tenney, Sanborn 1867 A supposed new Columbine, and a new Ox-eye daisy. Amer. Nat., I :388 (September) Britton, N. L. 1912 In “The geology, fauna and flora of the lower Hudson valley,” by Edmund Otis Hovey, Frank M. Chapman & N. L. Britton. Pamphlet presented to the 8th International Congress of Applied Chemistry, New York, September 8, 1912 (plants mentioned on p. 10, ii). The Rumford Press, Concord, N. H. Adams, Charles C. 1919 An ecological survey of the Palisades Interstate Park. Empire For- ester. N. Y. State Col. For. Syracuse Univ., 5:12-18 Silloway, Perley M. 1920 The Palisades Interstate Park; a study in recreational forestry. Bui. N. Y. State Col. For. Syracuse Univ., 10:15-45. fig. 1-18 (Febru- ary) BIBLIOGRAPHY OF NEW YORK STATE BOTANY I9I Riss, Paul B. 1930 Native plants for the Harriman Park restoration. Parks & Recreation, 13:414,415 (July, August) Clausen, R. T. 1937 Ne\v species of Najas from the Hudson river. Rhodora, 39:57-60. pi. 455 (March). (N. Muenscheri n. sp.) Muenscher, W. C. 1937 Aquatic vegetation of the lower Hudson area. VII. in “A biological survey of the Lower Hudson watershed.” N. Y. State Cons. Com. Biol. Surv. no. XL p. 231-48. fig. I-3, tab. i, 2 Tressler, Willis L. & Bere, Ruby 1937 A limnological study of some lakes in the lower Hudson area. VIH. in “A biological survey of the Lower Hudson watershed.” N. Y. State Cons. Com., Biol. Surv. no. XL p. 249-63. fig. 1-3 Pennell, Francis W. 1938 “Commelina communis” in the eastern United States. Bartonia, no. 19:19-22 (8 March) Gustafson, A. F. 1940 Soil and field-crop management for southeastern New York. Cornell Agr. Exp. Sta. Bui., 746:1-31. fig. 1-16 7 LONG ISLAND Clute, Willard N. 1898 Yellow-berry holly. Meehan’s Mo., 8:184 Gifford, John 1899 Forestry in sandy soils. 4th Ann. Rep’t Fish. Game, For. Com. N. Y. for 1898, p. 396-417. illus. Kalbfleisch, Augusta Schenck 1899 Some of our wild flowers. Meehan’s Mo., 9 :84-86 Hulst, George D. 1900 The pinxter flower. Meehan’s Mo., 10:110 Kirby, James 1902 Asclepias quadrifolia. Meehan’s Mo., 12:120 Knechtel, Abraham 1903 Report on dead and diseased trees in Flushing and Port Jefferson, Long Island. 8th Ann. Rep’t For. Fish. & Game Com. N. Y. for 1902, p. 67-76. illus. Harper, Roland M. 1905 A peculiar hygroscopic movement in the capsules of Kneiffia. Plant World, 8:301-3. illus. (December) Stout, A. B 1918 Hibiscus moscheutos. Addisonia, 3 :37. pi. 99 192 NEW YORK STATE MUSEUM Bicknell, E. P. 1921 Hypopitys insigmta. Addisonia, 6:25. pi. 205 Svenson, Henry K. 1936 The early vegetation of Long Island. Brooklyn Bot. Card. Rec.. 35:207-27. fig. 1-6 (July) Latham, Roy 1940 Distribution of wild orchids on Long Island. Long Island Forum, no. 56. p. 1-8 (Bay Shore) Moldenke, Harold N, 1940 An additional note on Tecsdalia. Castanea, 5:12 (January) 8 SUSQUEHANNA VALLEY Note: No additional citations 9 WESTERN NEW YORK Williamson, C. 1798 Description of the Genesee country. Albany. Loring Andrews & Co. 4to. p. 1-37. frontispiece. 2 maps Review in Med. Repository, 2 :397-403. 1800 Watkins, John W. 1801 An account of some of the natural productions of the western part of this State. Trans. N. Y. Soc. Pro. Agr. Arts & Manuf., i :324-27 Munro, Robert A. 1804a A view of the present situation of the western parts of the State of New York, called the Genesee country. Herald Press. Frederick- town. p. 1-23 (Also a facsimile edition by George P. Humphry, Rochester, N. Y. 1892) 1804^ A description of the Genesee country in the State of New York. New York. 8vo. p. 1-16 Review in Med. Repository (II), 6:69-77. 1809 Stewart, F. C.; Rolfe, F. M. & Hall, F. H. 1900 A fruit-disease survey of western New York. N. Y. State Agr. Exp. Sta. Bui., 191 :29i-33i (December) 10 CITATIONS OF TITLES BY COUNTIES ALBANY COUNTY Dean, Amos 1855 Eulogy on the life and character of Jesse Buel. Munsell’s Annals of Albany, 6:201-18 Colvin, Verplanck 1869 The Helderbergs. Harper’s New Mo. Mag., 39:652-67 BIBLIOGRAPHY OF NEW YORK STATE BOTANY 193 House, Homer D. 1930 (Notes on vegetation.) In Ruedemann, Rudolf. Geology of the Capi- tal District. N. Y. State Mus. Bui., 285:11-15 1935 (Chapter on vegetation.) In Goldring, Winifred. Geology of the Berne Quadrangle. N. Y. State Mus. Bui., 303 124-26 BRONX COUNTY Pennell, Francis W. 1916 Commelina communis. Addisonia, 1 :39. pi. 20 Wilson, Percy 1917 Micrampelis lobata. Addisonia, 2 147. pi. 64 Mackenzie, Kenneth K. 1917 Solidago altissima. Addisonia, 2 169. pi. 75 1919 Eupatoriwn maculatum. Addisonia, 4 :23. pi. 132 Bicknell, E. P. 1918 Ilex verticillata. Addisonia, 3 :7i. pi. 116 Small, J. K. 1918 Diospyros virginiana. Addisonia, 3 :g. pi. 85 Britton, N. L. 1918 Aronia atropurpurea. Addisonia, 3:15. pi. 81 1920 Cephalanthus occidentalis. Addisonia, 5:17. pi. 169 Boynton, K. K. 1920 Rudbeckia laciniata. Addisonia, 5 151. pi. 186 Nash, George V. 19200 Benzoin aestivale. Addisonia, 5:15. pi. 168 1920& Solidago rugosa. Addisonia, 5 :43. pi. 182 Hollick, Charles Arthur 1922 Alnus rugosa. Addisonia, 7:25. pi. 237 Small, J. K. 1924 Iris versicolor. Addisonia, 9:55. pi. 316 Barnhart, John Hendley 1926 Chelone glabra. Addisonia, 11:5. pi. 355 Cattell, J. McKeen, ed. 1940 The herbarium of the New York Botanical Gardea Science, 92:572 (20 December) See also Chronica Botanica, 6:234. 10 February 1941 CATTARAUGUS COUNTY Saunders, Aretas A. 1923 The summer birds of the Allegany State Park. Roosevelt Wild Life Bui., I : no. 3. p. 239-354 1926 Additional notes on the summer birds of Allegany State Park. Roose- velt Wild Life Bui., 3 : no. 3. p. 477-97 194 NEW YORK STATE MUSEUM Alexander, William P. 1928 Nature study in the Allegany School of Natural History. Hobbies, 8: no. 9. p. 3-12 (March) Hubert, Fr (Vecchierello, Hubert) 1938 Notes on a few of the edible fungi. Science Studies (St Bonaventure) 7: no. I, p. 18-22 (November) 1940-41 A check list of the more common plants found on the campus and within a range of ten miles of St Bonaventure College. III. Science Studies, 9: no. 1. p. 24,25,28 (November 1940). IV. Ibid., 9: no. 2. p. 10-12 (January 1941). V. Ibid., 9: no. 3. p. 10-12, 39 (March 1941). VI. Ibid., 9: no. 4. p. 11-15, 27 (June 1941) Kalmykow, Alexandra 1940 Week-end trip (Torrey Botanical Club) of June 21 to 23 at the Allegany School of Natural History, Quaker Bridge, N. Y. Torreya, 40:180-82 (September, October) Boehner, P. 1941 A check list of the Hepatics of Cattaraugus county, N. Y. A pre- liminary survey of the county. (St Bonaventure), Science Studies, 9: no. 2. p. 14-16, 28 (January) CAYUGA COUNTY Savage, Edward & others 1807 Great size to which the Platanus occidentalis or American button- wood sometimes grows. Med. Repository (II), 4:427 Thomas, J. J. 1888 Memoir of David Thomas. Cayuga County Hist. Soc. Collections, no. 6. p. 39-53 CHAUTAUQUA COUNTY Guttenberg, G. 1881 A new grass {Cynosurus cristatus at Chautauqua lake). Bot. Gaz., 6:177 (February) CHEMUNG COUNTY Frost, E. C. & Wynkoop, A. J. 1843 Agriculture of Chemung county. Trans. N. Y. State Agr. Soc., 2:143- 49 Lucy, T. F. 1891 The Chemung county flora — its relation to that of the southern tier counties, and a brief comparison with other portions of New York State. Proc. Elmira Acad. Sci., i : no. i (June) CORTLAND COUNTY Randall, Henry S. 1843 Agriculture of Cortland county. Trans. N. Y. State Agr. Soc., 2:151- 62 BIBLIOGRAPHY OF NEW YORK STATE BOTANY 195 DELAWARE COUNTY Wilson, Percy 1916 Adoxa moschatellina. Addisonia, i :4i. pi. 21 DUTCHESS COUNTY Ely, William 1814 Venomous qualities of the water hemlock or Cicuta maculata. Med. Repository, 2:303-4 Shattuck, M. M. 1869 Double Thalictrum anemonoides. Amer. Nat., 3:382 (September) Flint, Martha B. 188s Galium verum in New York. Bot. Gaz., 10:386 (November) Also in Bot. Gaz., 9:149. 1884 Van Ingen, Gilbert 1887 Bees mutilating flowers. Bot. Gaz., 12:229 (September) 1890a Ferns (of Poughkeepsie). Vassar Bros. Inst. Trans., 5:143-46 1890^? (List of specimens in the herbarium of Vassar Brothers Institute, col- lected in the county of Dutchess, N. Y.) Vassar Bros. Inst. Trans., 5:179-92 Sargent, Charles Sprague 1888 The Washington oak at Fishkill. Gard. For., i :5ii. fig. 81 (19 De- cember) See also Silva, 8 :53. 1895 ERIE COUNTY Fleming, Mary A. 1897 Report of the Field club. Ann. Rep’t Buffalo Soc. Nat. Sci., 1897, p. 20-23 Lloyd, C. G. 1920 George W. Clinton. Mycological Notes, no. 64. p. 985. portrait (Sep- tember) Knobloch, Irving W. 1933 Plant records from Buffalo and vicinity. Torreya, 33:1-3 (February) Alexander, William P. 1940 Nature sanctuary expands. Hobbies, 2i:(p. 3,4) (October) ESSEX COUNTY Heady, Harold F. 1940 Annotated list of the ferns and flowering plants of the Huntington Wildlife Station. Roosevelt Wildlife Bui., 7: no. 3, part IV. p. 234-369. fig. 39-74 FRANKLIN COUNTY Fox, William F. 1899 Report on township 26, Franklin county. 2d Ann. Rep’t For. Preserve Bd. for 1898, p. 46-62 196 NEW YORK STATE MUSEUM McClintock, J. Y. 1901 (Report) On the examination and appraisal of forest lands in Frank- lin and Essex counties. 4th Ann. Rep’t For. Preserve Bd. for 1900, P- 33-96 Shepard, Edward M. 1904 The public interest involved in the Cornell forestry experiment. New York. p. 1-27 Fernow, B. E. 1917 Axton plantations. Jour. For., 15:988-90 GENESEE COUNTY Osborne, C. S. 1870 Monstrosity in Trillium. Amer. Nat., 4:125 (April) GREENE COUNTY Allen, T. F. 1868 The smallest flowering-plant known (Wolffia). Amer. Nat., 2:440 (October) Zabriskie, Rev. J. L. 1891 The fungus Pestallozia insidens. Jour. N. Y. Micros. Soc., 7:101,102. pl. 28 (July) Efferson, J. N. 1937 An economic study of land utilization in Greene county. New York. Cornell Univ. Agr. Exp. Sta. Bui., 668:1-42. fig. I-18 (April) HAMILTON COUNTY Horton, Robert E. 1898 The clearing of timber within the flow line of the Indian Lake reser- voir. 3d Ann. Rep’t Fish. Game & For. Com. N. Y. for 1897, p. 398- 401 Newell, Frederick H. 1901 A discussion of conservative lumbering and the water supply. 6th Ann. Rep’t For. Fish & Game Com. N. Y. for 1900, p. 163-236. illus. Hosmer, Ralph S. & Bruce, Eugene S. 1902 A forest working plan for townships 5, 6 and 41, Totten & Crossfield purchase, Hamilton county. 8th & 9th Ann. Rep’ts For. Fish & Game Com. N. Y., p. 373-456. illus. map Hawley, Ralph C. 1920 Forestry at Nehasane Park. Jour. For., 18:681-92 HERKIMER COUNTY Bessey, C. E. 1884 An enormous puff-ball. Amer. Nat., 18:530 (May) BIBLIOGRAPHY OF NEW YORK STATE BOTANY 197 JEFFERSON COUNTY Henderson, Hugh 1811 A topographical description of Jefferson county, in the State of New York. Med. Repository (III), 2:21-27 KINGS COUNTY Gager, C. Stuart 1928 Facts about the Brooklyn Botanic Garden. Brooklyn Bot. Card. Rec., 17:147-63 (July) Gundersen, Alfred & Doney, Charles F. 1932 The genus Prunus (cherries, plums etc.) in the Brooklyn Botanic Garden. Brooklyn Bot. Gard. Leaf. XX, no. 4. p. 1-4 (ii May) Free, Montague; Gager, C. Stuart & Graves, A. H. 1938 The herb garden of the Brooklyn Botanic Garden. Brooklyn Botanic Gard. Leaf. XXV, no. 2-4. p. 1-12 (21 September) Gager, C. Stuart 19400 The four botanic gardens of Brooklyn. L. I. Hist. Soc. Quart, 2:5-18 (January) 19406 Brooklyn Botanic Garden’s cooperation with public schools. Sch. Sci. Math., 40:614-18 (October) 1940C Popular and scientific horticulture in a botanic garden. Parks & Recreation, 24:167-73 (December) Graves, A. H. 1940 Common oak trees in summer. Sch. Nature Leag. Bui. Ser. 10, no. 10 (Amer. Mus. of Nat. Hist) (May) Shaw, Ellen Eddy 1940 A children’s garden in the city. Library Jour., 65:243-45 (15 March) Doney, Charles F. 1940 Some interesting woody plants in the Brooklyn Botanic Garden. Brooklyn Bot. Gard. Rec., 29:10-13 (January) 1941 List of shrubs, exclusive of conifers, growing outdoors in the Brook- lyn Botanic Garden. Brooklyn Bot. Gard. Rec., 30:1-32. illus. (January) MADISON COUNTY Warne, Henry A. 1899 White Cypripedium spectabile. Meehan’s Mo., 9:55 Maxon, William R. 1903 A botanist’s mecca (Chittenango Falls). Plant World, 6:38 (Febru- ary) MONROE COUNTY Crittenden, Claude 1869 Abnormal form of the Sensitive fern. Amer. Nat, 2:658 (February) House, Homer D. 1915 Western plants introduced at Rochester. Bui. N. Y. State Mus., 179:38,39 198 NEW YORK STATE MUSEUM Kirby, R. S. & Thomas, H. E. 1920 The take-all disease of wheat in New York. Science, 52 :368,369 Merrell, William Dayton 1930 Natural history features of the Mendon ponds park area. Rochester Hist. Soc. Publ., IX : p. 219-22 McKelvey, Blake 1940 The Flower City, center of nurseries and fruit orchards. Rochester Hist. Soc. Publ., XVH : p. 121-69 NEW YORK COUNTY Thurber, George 1868 The Torrey festival. Amer. Nat., 2:41-47 (March) Southwick, E. B. 1885 The ginkgo tree. Science, 6:243 (18 September) See also R. P. Whitfield. Ibid., 6:4 (3 July) 1886 Protococcus viridis. Jour. N. Y. Micros. Soc., 2:1-8 (January) Fairchild, H. L. 1887 A history of the New York Academy of Sciences, p. i-xii, 1-190. illus. New York Murrill, W. A. 1909-22 Illustrations of fungi. I. Mycologia, 1:1-3. pl- ^ (January) 1909. H. Ibid., 1:37-40. pi. 3 (March) 1909. HI. Ibid., 1:83-86. pi. 7 (May) 1909. IV. Ibid., i :257-6i. pi. 15 (November) 1909. V. Ibid., 2:1-6. pi. 17 (January) 1910. VI. Ibid., 2:43-47. pl- IQ (March) 1910. VII. Ibid., 2:159-63. pl. 27 (July) 1910. VHI. Ibid., 3:97- 105. pl. 40 (May) 1911. IX. Ibid., 3:165-69. pl. 49 (July) 1911. X. Ibid., 4:1-6. pl. 56 (January) 1912. XI. Ibid., 4:163-69. pl. 68 (July) 1912. XH. Ibid., 4:289-93. pl. 76 (November) 1912. XIII. Ibid., 5:1-5. pl. 80 (January) 1913. XIV. Ibid., 5:93-96. pl. 87 (May) 1913. XV. Ibid., 5:257-60. pl. 92 (September) 1913. XVI. Ibid., s -.287 -g2. pl. 102-8 (November) 1913. XVH. Ibid., 6:1-4. pl. 113 (January) 1914. XVHI. /hid., 6:61-66. pl. 126-32 (July) 1914. XIX. Ibid., 6:221-25. pl. 138,139 (September) 1914. XX. Ibid., 7:115-20. pl. 157 (May) 1915. XXI. Ibid., 7:163-67. pl. 160 (July) 1915. XXH. Ibid., 7:221-26. pl. 163 (September) 1915. Index to illustrations of fungi, I-XXII. Ibid., 8:47-51 (January) 1916. Illus- trations of fungi. XXHI. Ibid., 8:121-24. pl. 185 (May) 1916. XXIV. Ibid., 8:191-94. pl. 187 (July) 1916. XXV. Ibid., 8:231-34 pl. 190 (September) 1916. XXVI. Ibid., 9:185-90. pl. 7 (July) 1917. XXVII. Ibid., 9:257-60. pl. II (September) 1917. XXVIII. Ibid., 10:107-10. pl. 6 (May) 1918. XXIX. Ibid., 10:177-81. pl. 8 (July) 1918. XXX. Ibid., 11:101-3. pl. 6 (May) 1919. XXXI. Ibid., 11:289-92. pl. 13 (November) 1919. XXXII. Ibid., 12:59-61. pl. 2 (March) 1920. XXXHI. Ibid., 14:25-29. pl. 2-9 (January) 1922. Index to illustrations of fungi, XXIII-XXXHI. Ibid., 14:332- 34 (November) 1922 BIBLIOGRAPHY OF NEW YORK STATE BOTANY 199 Britton, N. L. 1913 Notable trees in New York City, Inwood tulip tree celebration. i8th Ann. Rep’t Amer. Scenic & Hist. Pres. Soc., p. 191-93 Francis, H. R. 1914 New York City’s trees. Amer. For., 20:560-66 (August) Nearing, G. G. 1939-40 Guide to the lichens of the New York area. I. Torreya, 39‘29-37- pi. I, 2; II. Ibid., 39-S7-69- pl- 3, A', HI. Ibid., 39:93-107. pk 5, 6; IV. Ibid., 39:164-76. pl. 7, 8. 1939. V. Ibid., 40:9-18. pl. 9; VI. Ibid., 40:34-39. pl. 10; VII. Ibid., 40:110-17. pl. ii; VIII. Ibid., 40:198-206. pl. 12. 1940 Brandwein, Paul F. 1940 Preliminary observations on the culture of Spirogyra. Amer. Jour. Bot., 27:161,162 1941 A further note on the culture of Spirogyra. Torreya, 41 :S6,57 (March, April) Monachino, Joseph 1941 Local flora notes. Torreya, 41 :8,9 (January) Svenson, Henry K. 1941 Report of the local flora committee. II. Agrimonia; HI. Querctis; IV. Ranunculus; V. Viola. Torreya, 41 :3~7 (January) NIAGARA COUNTY Hill, E. J. 1879 Potamogeton niagarensis Tuckerman. Amer. Nat., 13 :699 (Novem- ber) Severance, F. H, 1911 The Niagara in science. In “Studies of the Niagara Frontier.” BuflFalo Hist. Soc. BuL, 15:175-216 ONEIDA COUNTY Haberer, Joseph V. 1900 Botany (of the vicinity of Utica). In “Outline history of Utica and vicinity,” by a committee of the New Century Club, Utica, p. 152-62. L. C. Childs & Son, Utica ONONDAGA COUNTY Gaylord, Willis 1843 Agriculture of Onondaga county. Trans. N. Y. Agric. Soc., 2:174-86 Gray, Asa 1866 Scolopendrium officinarum. Amer. Jour. Sci. (II), 41:417 (May) Cowles, Samuel N. 1869 Bidens frondosa. Amer. Nat., 2:658 (February) 200 NEW YORK STATE MUSEUM Geddes, George 1872 The forests and the rainfall. The Tribune (New York), 29 October Beauchamp, W. M. i8g6a Bartram’s travels, a trip through the Onondaga country. Onondaga Hist. Ass’n Local Hist. Leaf., no. 2 (4p.). (Reprinted from the Syra- cuse Journal, 4 February) Early botanists. Onondaga Hist. Ass’n Local Hist. Leaf., no. ii (6p.). (Reprinted from the Syracuse Journal, 17 November) Meehan, Thomas 1898 Trillium variations. Meehan’s Mo., 8:182 Brown, Nelson C. 1912 Municipal forestry. Amer. For., 18:777-82 (December) ORANGE COUNTY Arnell, David R. 1809 A geological and topographical history of Orange county. New York. Med. Repository (H), 6:313-23 Trippe, T. Martin 1868 A variety of the common agrimony. Amer. Nat, 2:214 (June) Mitchell, H. L. & Hosley, N. W. 1936 Differential browsing by deer in plots variously fertilized. Black Rock For. Pap., I : no. 5, p. 24-27 ORLEANS COUNTY Fairman, Charles Edward 1913 Notes on some fungi from various localities. Mycologia, 5 :245-48 (July) PUTNAM COUNTY Small, J. K. 1918 Solidago squarrosa. Addisonia, 3:43. pi. 102 QUEENS COUNTY Martin, Everett P. 1915 Flushing’s oldest tree. Amer. For., 21 :6i4 (May) RICHMOND COUNTY Akerly, Samuel 1843-44 Agriculture of Richmond county. Trans. N. Y. State Agr. Soc., 2:188-214. Suppl. Ibid., 3:454-61. 1844 Hollick, Charles Arthur 1882 New or noteworthy additions to the flora of Staten Island. Proc. Nat. Sci. Ass’n S. L, i :7,8 (14 March) BIBLIOGRAPHY OF NEW YORK STATE BOTANY 201 Rabenau, Hugo von 1887-93 Vegetationsskizzen vom unteren Laufe des Hudson. Adhandlungen der Naturforschenden Gessellschaft zu Gorlitz, 19:235-64 (p. 259-64 refer to Staten Island) ; 20:1-38. 1893 (p. 13-38 refer to Staten Island, and a short sketch of the life of Joseph Schrenk appears on P- 3) Davis, William T. 1888 Bartram’s oak on Staten Island. Proc. Nat. Sci. Ass’n S. I., i :7i,72 (8 September) Britton, N. L. 1892 The ash trees of Staten Island. Proc. Nat. Sci. Ass’n S. L, 3 :2i,22 (15 October) Davis, William T. 1892 Quercus Brittoni. Proc. Nat. Sci. Ass’n S. L, 3:19,20 (10 September) Gratacap, L. P. 1892 Notes on berries of Smilax rotundifolia. Proc. Nat. Sci. Ass’n S. I., 3:27 (17 December) Craig, Thomas 1893 Discovery of Wolffia on Staten Island. Proc. Nat. Sci. Ass’n S. I., 4:7,8 (9 December) 1894 A new Dictyosphaerium. Proc. Nat. Sci. Ass’n S. I., 4:10. Ulus. (13 January) 1896 A rare fungus parasitic on Oscillaria. Proc. Nat. Sci. Ass’n S. I., 5 :I7 (8 February) Davis, William T. 1895 Notched leaflets in Aralia. Proc. Nat. Sci. Ass’n S. I., 4:76 (ii May) 1896 A conspicuous growth of the scouring rush ; a large white pine. Proc. Nat. Sci. Ass’n S. L, 6:13,14 (9 January) Kerr, W. C. 1896 A tree new to our flora (Ostrya virginiana). Proc. Nat. Sci. Ass’n S. L, 6:3,4 (14 November) See also William T. Davis, Ibid., p. 9 Britton, N. L. 1898 A buried forest near Giffords. Proc. Nat. Sci. Ass’n S. L, 7:2 (12 November) Hollick, Charles Arthur 1898 Union between dissimilar trees. Proc. Nat. Sci. Ass’n S. I., 6:57,58 (14 May) Gratacap, L. P. 1899 Note on Erythronium americanum. Proc. Nat. Sci. Ass’n S. I., 7:18 (13 May) Johnson, Elizabeth W. 1901 The double Rue Anemone. Meehan’s Mo., 11 :82 202 NEW YORK STATE MUSEUM Davis, William T. 1903 Notes on the time of flowering of a white maple. Proc. Nat. Sci. Ass’n S. I., 8:57 (14 March) 19040 The ripening of the fruit of chokeberries. Proc. Nat. Sci. Ass’n S. I., 9:32 (12 November) 1904^ Variation in the fruit of the black haw. Proc. Nat. Sci. Ass’n S. L, 9:33,34 (17 December) Hollick, Charles Arthur 1905 Staten Island’s first resident naturalist (Samuel Akerly M.D.). Proc. Nat. Sci. Ass’n S. I., 9:43-46 (15 April) Davis, William T. 19060 Botanical Notes. Proc. S. I. Ass’n Arts Sci., i :27,28 (9 July) igo6h Aberrant forms of Rudbeckia hirta. Proc. S. I. Ass’n Art Sci., 1 :35-37 (9 July) 1906-10 Additions to the lists of Staten Island plants. Proc. S. I. Ass’n Arts Sci., 1:35 (1906). 2:161,162 (1910) Hollick, Charles Arthur 1910 A maple tree fungus. Proc. S. I. Ass’n Arts Sci., 2:190-92 (16 Sep- tember) Dowell, Philip 1912 Notes on some Staten Island ferns. Proc. S. I. Ass’n Arts Sci., 3:163- 68 (25 April) Hollick, Charles Arthur 1916 A quaint old work on seaweeds. Proc. S. I. Ass’n Arts Sci., 5 :8s-9i (10 April) Refers to C. F. Durant’s “Algae and Corallines of the bay and harbor of New York,” 1850 Davis, William T. 1920 Louis P. Gratacap. Proc. S. I. Ass’n Arts Sci., 7:19-21. portrait. (21 June) 1922a The cold winter of 1917-18 and its effect upon vegetation on Staten Island. Proc. S. I. Inst. Arts Sci., i :49-54 (29 August) 19226 A second station for hybrid oaks on the western end of Staten Island. Proc. S. I. Inst. Arts Sci., i :5s. pi. i (29 August) Leng, C. W., Davis, William T. & Burke, Joseph F. 1933 Arthur Hollick. Proc. S. I. Inst. Arts Sci., 7:11-23 (ii December) 1935 Nathaniel Lord Britton. Proc. S. 1. Inst. Arts Sci., 7:101-8 (3 May) 1937 Philip Dowell. Proc. S. 1. Inst. Arts Sci., 8:17,18 (27 January) Davis, William T. 1939a A valuable Staten Island botanical asset (Staten Island hybrid oaks). Bui. S. 1. Inst. Arts Sci., 22: no. 3. p. 4 (October) 19396 The blazing star or snakeroot on Staten Island. Proc. S. 1. Inst. Arts Sci., 9:21,22 (26 September). Bui. S. 1. Inst. Arts Sci., 22: no. 4. p. 4 (November) O’Connor, Robert 1939 Preliminary list of the Mycetosoa of Staten Island. Proc. S. I. Inst Arts Sci., 8:129-34 (26 July) See also Bui. S. 1. Inst. Arts Sci., 22: no. 10. p. 4. 1940 BIBLIOGRAPHY OF NEW YORK STATE BOTANY 203 ROCKLAND COUNTY Zabriskie, Rev. J. L. 1883 Dispersion of seed by Wistaria. Amer. Nat., 17:541 (May) SARATOGA COUNTY Sterns, John 1809 A topographical description of the county of Saratoga (N. Y.) Med. Repository (II), 6:130-35 SCHENECTADY COUNTY Van Epps, Percy 1896 Peculiar abrasion of tree trunks. Science (II), 3:442 (20 March) Meehan, Thomas 1899 Rev. J. Herman Wibbe. Meehan’s Mo., 9:63 SCHUYLER COUNTY Wilson, J. K. 1935 Indigenous species of Rhizobium in the Arnot forest. Jour. Amer. Soc. Agron., 27:231-36 (March) STEUBEN COUNTY Denniston, Goldsmith 1864 Noxious weeds of the county (Steuben), by “Agricola,” presented for publication by Goldsmith Denniston. Trans. N. Y. State Agric. Soc., 23 :532-42 SUFFOLK COUNTY Shull, George H. 1906 Aecidia in Fraxinus. Science, n.s., 23:201 (19 February) See also “Where do pitcher-leaved ash trees grow ?” Science 45 :479 (18 May) 1917 TOMPKINS COUNTY Atkinson, George F. 1907 A mushroom parasitic on another mushroom. Plant World, 10:121-30. illus. (June) Edgerton, C. W. 1910 Trochila populorum Desm. Mycologia, 2:169-73. fig- t-y (July) Roberts, I. P. 1910 The Roberts’ pasture. Cornell Univ. Agr. Exp. Sta. Bui., 280:505-11. fig. 163-65 (July) White, Paul J. 1910 The Preswick pasture. Cornell Univ. Agr. Exp. Sta. Bui., 280:495- 505 (July) Bentley, John 1912 Forest planting at Cornell University. Amer. For., 18:716-20 (No- vember) 204 NEW YORK STATE MUSEUM Webber, H. J. 1912 The Cornell experiment in breeding timothy. Amer. Breeders Mag., 3:85-99. pi. 1-5 (June) Durand, Elias J. 1919 Pesiza profeana var. sparassoides in America. Mycologia, ii :i-3. pi. I (January) Wilson, J. K. 1934 Relative number of three species of Rhizobium in Dunkirk silty clay soil. Jour. Amer. Soc. Agron., 26:745-48 (September) Chandler, Robert F. jr 1937 Certain relationships between the calcium and oxalate content of foliage of certain forest trees. Jour. Agr. Res., 55:393-96 (i September) Wilson, J. K. & Schubert, H. J. 1940 The microflora in the soil and in the run-off from the soil. Jour. Amer. Soc. Agron., 32:833-41 (November) ULSTER COUNTY Bonisteel, William J. 1941 (Torrey Botanical Club) Trip of July 13-14 (1940), to the Beaver- kill. Torreya, 41 :22 (January, February) Smiley, Daniel, jr 1941a (Torrey Botanical Club) Trip of September 13-15, 1940, to Shawan- gunk mountains. Torreya, 41 :26 (January, February) ig4ib (Torrey Botanical Club) Trip of October 18-20, 1940, to Mohonk Lake, N. Y. Torreya, 41 127 (January, February) WESTCHESTER COUNTY Morris, Robert T. 1909 Chestnut timber going to waste. Conservation, 15 :226 (April) Murrill, William A. 1909-11 A new poisonous mushroom. Mycologia, 1:211-14 (September). Ibid., 3 : 1 78-80 (July) Seaver, Fred J. 1912 The genus Lamprospora, with description of two new species. Myco- logia, 4:45-48. pl. 57 (March) Swift, J. Otis 1921 Winter walks in the woods : Sleepy Hollow at Tarrytown, New York. Amer. For., 27 :87-90 (February) Wilson, Percy 1927 Asanim canadense. Addisonia, 12:27. pl. 398 Schanck, Will H. 1938 Fungi and the food supply. Westchester Countryside, 3 : no. i. p. 16,17,23. illus. BIBLIOGRAPHY OF NEW YORK STATE BOTANY 205 Thomson, John W. jr 1941 (Torrey Botanical Club) Trip of September 28, 1940, to Sprain Ridge. Torreya, 41 :26,27 (January, February) YATES COUNTY Lee, Charles 1855 Noxious weeds. Trans. N. Y. State Agr. Soc., 14:681-86 •• ■■ ; ^ ; r'.-nsl • • ; V '4-'. "i-t V^''! •1 INDEX^ TO BIOGRAPHICAL REFERENCES (Parts 1 and 2) Akerly, Samuel, 202 Alexander, William Pindle, 96 Allen, Timothy Field, 17 Atkinson, George Francis, 25 Austin, Coe Finch, 12, 20, 24 Bailey, Jacob Whitman, 9 Bailey, William Whitman, 21 Banker, Howard J., 187 Beck, Lewis Caleb, 21 Bicknell, Eugene Pintard, 28 Bisby, Julius, 13 Booth, Charles M., 113 Bradley, Samuel Beach, 112, 113 Britton, Elizabeth Gertrude, 34, 35, 84 Britton, Nathaniel Lord, 34, 123, 202 Brown, Addison, 21, 29 Buel, Jesse, 192 Burgess, Edward Sandford, 30 Clinton, George W., 96, 195 Colden, Cadwallader, 19, 35 Golden, Jane, 15 Cowell, John Erancis, 95 Day, David Fisher, 95 Dewey, Chester, 112, 113 Dowel, Philip, 150, 202 Eaton, Amos, 19, 38 Eights, James, 23 Fairman, Charles Edward, 138 Ferguson, William Cashman, 31 Fuller, Joseph B., 113 Gratacap, Louis P., 202 Hankenson, Edward L., 113 Harris, Carolyn Wilson, 20 Harris, George H., iii Hill, Ellsworth Jerome, 24 Hogg, Thomas, 15 Hollick, Arthur, 33, 202 Holzer, Lawrence, 113 Hosack, David, 19 Hough, Eranklin B., 40, 109 Hough, Romeyn Beck, 184 Howe, Elliott Calvin, 16 Howe, Marshall Avery, 37, 38 Hulse, Gilbert White, 27 Lockwood, Rev. Samuel, 180 Millington, Lucy, 168 Millspaugh, Charles Frederick, 28 Mitchill, Samuel L., 19 Morong, Thomas, 15, 119 Nash, George Valentine, 26 Parmentier, Andre, 108 Parry, Charles Christopher, 14 Peck, Charles Horton, 22, 24, 77 Pilat, Ignatz A., 10 Prentiss, Albert Nelson, 15 Rafinesque, C. S., 7, 19 Sargent, Henry Winthrop, 93 Schrenk, Joseph, 201 Seelye, Charles W., 113 Small, John K., 38 Stevens, Frank Lincoln, 35 Streeter, Mary E., 113 Sturtevant, E. Lewis, 25 Thomas, David, 194 Thompson, Alexander, 10 Thurber, George, 14 Torrey, John, ii, 19, 117, 118, 179 Torrey, Raymond H., 38, 187 Underwood, Lucien Marcus, 18, 19, 80 Van Rensselaer, Stephen, 7, 179 Wibbe, Rev. J. Herman, 203 Zabriskie, John Barrea, 105 ^ The indexes to biographical references; species, localities and subjects mentioned and citations by authors also include entries in New York State Museum Bulletin 328. [207] 2o8 INDEX INDEX TO SPECIES, LOCALITIES AND SUBJECTS MENTIONED (Parts 1 and 2) Aconitum noveboracensis, 89, 166, 167 Acrospermum compressum, 163 Adiantum capillus-veneris, 59, 102 Adirondack, birds, 188, 189; League Club, 104; Park, 52, 188, 189; trees, 52 Adirondacks, 18, 25, 51, 97, 99, 100, 102, 188, 189 ; western, 56, 58, 189 Adoxa moschatellina, 92, 195 adventive, 94, 95, 97 aecidia, 203 Aecidium, 41 Aegilops cylindrica, 72 Aethusa cynapium, 66 Agaricus {Tricholovia) Peckii, 142 Agricultural Society of New York, 28 agricultural manual, 26 agriculture, 7, 22, 33, 51, 53, 62, 63, 68, 97, 129, 142, 154, 179, 180, 194, 200 Agrimonia (agrimony), 199, 200 Ailanthus, 144; altissimus, 86 Albany, 5, 47, 65 ; county, 76, 192 ; Institute, 77; Lyceum of Natural History, 77 albinism, 102 algae, 8, 15, 68, 72, 80, 95, 106, 114, 133, 161, 162, 171, 179; marine, 66, 72, 119, 145; plankton, 150 Allegany, county, 77; School of Natu- ral History, 194; State Park, 85, 86, 193 ; watershed, 75, 89 Alniis noveboracensis, 147; rugosa, 193 ; serrulata, 171 Amanita, 42 Amaranthus blitoides, 119 Amenia, 92 American Fern Society, 132 American Museum of Natural His- tory, 125 Anacharis densa, 71 Anaquassacock hills, 168 Anemone Hepatica, 145 Anthurus borealis, 83, 119 Apalachin, 159 Aphyllon uniflorum, 66 A plectrum hyemale, iii apple-tree, heart rot, 182 apples, 33 aquatic fungi, 71 aquatic plants (vegetation), 32, 36, 56, 57, 64, 72, 73, 75, 86, io6, in, 118, 131, 13s, 191 Aquilegia canadensis, no, 154 Arabis laevigata, 117 Aralia, 201 ; nudicaulis var. elongata, 102 Arden, 138 Arden-Surebridge trail, 135 Argemone mexicana, 119 Arisaema, 67 Arkville, 92 Arlington, 146, 148, 149 Armillaria, 44 Armoracia aquatica, 28 Aronia atropurpurea, 193 Arthraxon hispidus, 85 Asarum canadense, 204 Asclepias quadrifolia, 191 Ascobolus, 23 Ascoidea rubescens, 163 ash trees, 201 Ashokan, 165 Asperula, n Aspidium, aculeatum, loi ; aculeatum var. Braunii, 102 ; fragrans, 97 ; marginale, 60; spinulosum, 52; The- lypteris, 97, 129 Asplenium, Bradley, 165 ; ebonoides, 19, 93, 165 ; montanum, 165 Aster, 77, 139; novae-angliae, 88; pa- tens f. rosea, 158 Asters, Biotian, 181 Aurora, 88 Austrian field cress, 135 Averyville marsh, 48 Axton, 100, 196 Aaolla, caroliniana, 61, 141, 144; filicu- loides, 159 Babylon, 156 bacteria, 119, 186 ballast grounds, 119 INDEX 209 Balm of Gilead, 135 balsam, 99, 109, 189, 190; fir, lOO, 189 Balsam Gap, 166 Banning, Mary E., 44 bark-borers, 188 Bartram’s travels, S, 200 Basbish Falls, 90, 91 Basidiomycetes, 180 basswood, 181 bayberry, 149 Bay Terrace, 149, 150 Bear mountain, 135, 138, 151 ; State Park, 151, 172 Beauchamp, William H., 10 beaver, 184, 189 Beaverkill, 204 Bedford Park, 106 beech, 148 bees, 52, 93, 109, 134, 156, 19s Bellvale mountain, 136 Belmont Lake State Park, 159 Benzoin aestivate, 193 Bergen swamp, 50, 100, loi Berne, 193 bibliography, 49, S3 Bidens frondosa, 199 Binghamton, 77, 78 biology, 27, 78 birch, 144, 148 ; white, 8i ; yellow, 54 birds, 59, 87, 1 14, 132, 170, 184, 188, 190, 193 black haw, 202 black locust, 30 Black river watershed, 31, 32 Black Rock Forest, 136, 137, 138 blackberry, 93 blazing star, 202 Blephilia ciliata, 73, 133 blister rust, 24, 30, SS, S8, 185 Blueberries, high-bush, 148 blueberry, 169 Blue Mountain reservation, 173 bog gardening, 24 bogs, 163; sphagnum, 168 Boleti, 14 Boletus, 19, 41, 56; decipiens, 126 Boott’s fern, 18 botanical, calendar, no; congress, 28; excursion, 10, 165 (see gardens) ; notes, 10, II, 14, 91, 93, 95, 96, 115, 1 19, 123, 130, 134. 146, IS3, 158 botany, 25, 160; agricultural, 180; medical, no, 160 Botrychia, 60, 61 Botrychium, 128, 134; lanceolatum, 54; Lunaria, 128, 129, 130; matri- cariaefolium, 127 ; simplex, 109, 129, 160 Botrytis, 81 Boyce Thompson Institute, 172 bramble, 36, 187 Braun’s holly fern, 21 breadroot, Indian, 14 Bridgewater, 126 Britton, Dr Nathaniel Lord, 123 Britton, Elizabeth Gertrude, 34, 83. 84, 85 Bromus sterilis, 117 Bronx, county, 78, 193 ; Park, 79, 80 Brooklyn, 105, 106, 107, 108; Botanic Garden, 105, 106, 107, 108, 197 Broome county, 77 Brown, Addison, 15 Bryophytes, 55, 67, 7i, 75, 163 Buck mountain, 168 buckberry, 151 Buffalo, 75, 94, 19S ; Naturalist’s Field Club, 95, 19s ; Society of Natural Sciences, 96 Burroughs, John, 166 Butomus umbellatus, 169 buttonwood, 194 Buxbaumia, 16; indusiata, 161, 162 Calamagrostis epigejos, 141 calcium, 164, 186, 204 Caledonia creek, 42, ill Calicopsis pinea, 164 Callitriche stagnalis, 71 Calluna, 99 Camptothecium nitens var. falcifolium, 54 Canada thistle, 5, 8, 10, 92 cancer root, 88 Cantherellus, 44 Capital District, 193 carbon, organic, 186 Carex, 15, 45, 142; pennsylvanica, 118; Sullivantii, 170; varia, 118 carices, 13, 43, 168, 170 Carmel, 139 Catskill, aqueduct, 59; Lyceum, 102; preserve, 59, 190 210 INDEX Catskills, i8, 58, 59, 92, loi, 102, 133, 167, 190; southern, 59, 60; western, 59, 60 cat-tail, 68 Cattaraugus county, 85, 193 Cayuga, basin, 50, 62 ; country, 161 ; county, 87, 194; flora, 60, 61, 88 Cayuta creek, 159 Cedarhurst, 141 Cedar pond, 135; brook, 151 cedar rust, 24 cedar swamp, 68 Central New York, 25, 49, 60, 61, 74, 127, 190 Central Park, 120 Cephalanthus occidentalis, 88, 193 Cephalosporium, 187 Cephalosia frayicisci, 157 Ceratophylluni, 40 Cetaria fahluensis var. Frostii, 34 Chaetochloa versicolor, 79 Chamaecyparis thyoides, 136 Chateaugay, 56 Chautauqua, county, 49, 88, 194; lake, 194 Cheilanthes vestita, 93, 118 Chclone glabra, 193 Chemung, county, 89, 194; Upper, 154; watershed, 75, 89 Chenango county, 89 Chenopodiaceae, 117 cherries, 14, 22, 197 chestnut, 21, 32, 80, 87, 134, 204; dis- ease, 79, 80, 148; water, 77 Chilson lake, 98 Chittenango Falls, no, 197 chlorates, 32, 184 Chlorophyceae, 95 chokeberries, 202 Ciboria acerina, 164 Cicero swamp, 130 Cicuta maculata, 195 cinderfield, 150 Cladonia floridana, 167 Cladoniae, 57 Claudopus, 43 ; subdephiens, 162 Clavaria, 41 Claytonia, 169 Clematis verticillaris, 174 cliffbrake, slender, 98, 131 climate, 5, 16, 22, 65, 70, 190 Clinton, 127; county, 87, 98 Clitocybe, 48; illudens, 84 Clitopilus, 44 Clove Valley, 147, 149 clover, bush, 79 clover rust, 130 club-mosses, 104 Cnicus arvensis, 5 Coelopleuron actaefoliurn, 157 Cold Spring Harbor, 70, 71, 156, 157, 158 Colden, Cadwallader, 7 Coleosporium Campanulae, no Collybia, 45 ; campanella, 49 Columbia, College, 116, 118, 120; county, 14, 90 columbine, 190; wild, (see Aquilegia) Comandra umbellata, 66 C ommelina communis, 191, 193 Compositae, 168 Conesus lake, 74 conifers, 139, 180, 185 conservation, 26, 30, 36, 189; soil, 37 Conservation Commission, 182 Cooper Plains, 47, 154 Copake Falls, 90 Coprinus, 185 Coptis trifolia, 10 corallines, 8 Cordyceps, 2,7 Corema Conradii, 165, 166 Cornell University, 160, 162, 163, 196, 203 Cornus canadensis, 10, 66 Cornwall, 135 Cortland, Academy, 91 ; county, 91 Corydalis canadensis, 6; formosa, 6 Corynephorus canescens, 141 crabapples, 33 Cranberry Lake, 152 Cranberry marsh, 48 Crantzia lineata, 155 Crataegus, 17, 19, 21, 46, 47, 50, 74, 76, 93, 98, 1 13, 154; durobrivensis, 1 13; Laneyii, 113 Craterellus, 44 Crateriuni pyriforme, 134 Crepidotus, 43 Cronartium ribicola, 35, 186, 187 Crooked lake, 174 INDEX 2II Croton, Lake, 173; Point, 172; river, 173 Crowberry, 157 Crown Point, 98 cryptogams, 119 Cryptoporus volvatus, 77 cup fungi, 84, 85, 138 Cuscuta epithymum, 19 Cyclatis, 6 Cynosurus cristatus, 194 Cyperus, 12 ; cyliiidricus, 144 ; micro- iria, 115 Cyphella niuscigena, 157 Cypridepium acaule, 133; spectabile, 197 Cystopferis bulbifera, 154 daisy, ox-eye, 190 damping-off, 185 dandelions, 25 Danthonia, il Daphne mezereum, 112 Dasyscypha Agassizii, 55 Daucus Car Ota, 14 deer, 58, 200 Delaware, county, 91, 195 ; Literary Institute, 91 ; Park, 96 Dentaria maxima, 66 Desmidiaceae, 58 desmids, 79 DeVries, Professor Hugo, 106 Dianthus Armeria, 119 Diaporthe parasitica, 79 Diatomaceae, 66 diatoms, 74, 79, 84, 145 Dicentra, 31, 52; CucuUaria, 109 Dictyosphaerium, 201 Diospyros virginiana, 193 Diplocea barbata, 65 Discomycetes, 61, 74 Dothidea Pteridis, 155 Doubletop mountain, 166 Douglaston, 141 Dover Plains, 94 Downing, A. J., 134 Drosera, 136; longifolia, 138 Droseraceae, 135 Dryopteris, 148; Clintoniana, ig;mar- ginalis f. Churchiae, 168; novebora- censis, 61, 127; simulata, 16, 127 Dunderberg mountain, 151 dutch elm di'^'ase, 34, 38, 39, 173 Dutchess county, 92, 195 Eaton, Amos, S. ^3, 37 Echium vulgare, 134 ecological, investigations, 82, loi ; problems, 35 ; surveys, 190 ecology, 93, ISO, IS7, 183 edible plants, 25 edible wild fruits, 14 eel-grass, 71 Eights, James, 23 electric light, 153 Eleocharis, 145 ; diandra, 61 ; Robbin- sii, 39 Elgin Botanic Garden, 116, 120, 122 Ellenville, 167 elm, 95, III, 1 13, 162 Encalypta laciniata, 162 endemism, 12 1 Endophyllum sempervivi, 107 Endothia, 21 Engelmann, Dr, ii Engler, Professor Adolph, 106 Enteridiiim rozeanum, 61 Entoloma, 47 Ephemera, 122 Epifagus virginiana, 59 Epigaea repens, 143, 168, 170 Epilobium angustifolium, 102, 160; palustre, 167 Epipactis Helleborine, 94, 129 Erasmus Hall, 105 Erechtites megalocarpa, 72 Erie, canal, 6 ; county, 94, 195 Er odium cicutarium , 92 erosion, 36 Erythronium americanum, 29, 94, 201 Essex county, 97, 195 Eupatorium mactdatum, 193 Euphorbia, 161 ; cyparissias, 36 ; Es- cula, 31; Helioscopia, 92; niaensis, 78 evergreens, 57 Eagus sylvatica var. purpurea, 117 Fahnestock, estate, 139; State Park, 139 farm areas, abandoned, 30, 31 fasciations, 67, 121, 134, 144 fern, Boott’s, 18; Braun’s Holly, 21; flora, 17, 33; interrupted, 132; law, 31 ferns, 12, 13, 17, 18, 31, 33, 34, 53, 56, 212 INDEX 58, 59, 60, 63, 73, 74, 75, 79, 80, 81, S3, 86, 91, 93, 99, loi, 104, III, 1 13, 1 15, 124, 127, 128, 129, 130, 131, 132, 133, 135, 138, 144, 147, 148, 152, 168, 1 71, 19s, 202 fertilization, 13, 155, 168, 170 Festuca capillata, 147; gigantea, 170 Ficaria ranunciiloides, 143 field cress, Austrian, 135 field crop management, 71, 105, 191 Finger lakes, 61, 62 fir, 56, 99, 103, 188 fire protection, 55 Fisher’s Island, 156, 157, 159 Fishkill, 93, 133, 195 Flammula, 45 Flatbush, 105 flax, 5 Flower City, 198 flower show, 120, 122 Floyd Bennett Field, 108 Flushing, 140, 141, 191, 200 Fames pinicola, 152 forest, 51, 157, 159; buried, 201; hem- lock, 79, 82; swamp, 159 forest, administration, 21, 23 ; condi- tions, 69, 128, 168; cover, 190; de- velopment, 55, 152; fires, 32, 40, 53, 56, 99, 146, 166, 154, 180, 182, 184, 189; flora, 171 ; humus, 35, 56; in- dustries, 184; influences, 9; laws, 181 ; litter, 34; management, 13, 23, 26, 56, 162, 188; parks, 181, 183; plantations, 184 ; planting, 23, 32, 183; 203; policy, 38, 55, 182, 184; practice, 32; preservation, 14, 179; preserve, 14, 53, 59, 180, 185; pro- tection, 184; recreation, 55, 187; re- gions, 26, 35 ; reproduction, 9 ; res- ervations, 53, 63 ; reservoirs, 180, 196; resources, 53, 183, 184; soils, 100, 136, 164 ; surveys, 85, 165 ; trees, 98, 148, 159, 164 ; types, 26, 56, 57, 58, 75 ; uses, 9 ; vegetation, 164, 189; working plans, 103, 162, 180, 189, 196 forest-site, 58 forestry, 13, 14, 15, 16, 22, 23, 26, 32, 37, 38, 39, 40, 48, 52, 53, 54, 55, 56, 58, 103, 128, 154, 162, 165, 168, 180, 181, 182, 184, 185, 191, 196; College of, 180; experiment station, 16; farm, 182, 183 ; industrial, 55 ; mu- nicipal, 182, 200; private, 23, 39, 56, 58; recreational, 55, 187, 190; State, 188 ; woodlot, 182 forests, 9, 16, 21, 27, 39, 56, 57, 58, 59, 69, 75, 98, 103, 135, 164, 183, 200; Adirondack, 103, 188 ; hardwood, 93 ; municipal or community, 162, 184, 185 ; primeval types, 75 Fort Frederick, 98 Fort Montgomery, 136 Fort Washington Park, 125 Fox Hills, 146 Franklin county, 99, 100, 195 Fraxinus, 203; nigra, 138; profunda, 75 Fresh Kills, 149, 150 frosts, 21, 164 fruit disease survey, 63, 192 fruits, edible wild, 14 Fulton county, 100 Funaria flavicans, 79 fungi, 10, II, 12, 13, 15, 16, 20, 23, 24, 25, 26, 35, 39, 41-50, 67, 74, 75, 80, 89, 92, 98, 99, 100, 121, 131, 133, 138, 145, 147, 161, 162, 163, 166, 170, 172, 180, 183, 184, 198, 200, 204; aquatic, 71 ; edible, 15, 16, 20, 39, 45-48, 80 ; parasitic, 12, 42, 162 ; pileate, 13 ; poisonous, 15, 20, 39, 45, 77, 84, 120, 204 Galera, 45 Galium mollugo, 63 ; verum, 195 gall insects, 183 garden, botanical, 27, 37, 39, 68, 78, 79, 80, 81, 82, 83, 84, 89, 95, 105, 106, 107, 108, III, 1 16, 1 19, 123, 134, 140; fern, 113, 114; children’s, 197; herb, 197; local flora, 106; medicinal plant, 108; native, 39; physic, 120; water, 86; wild, 96, 107; wild flow- er, 85, 107 Garden City, 115 gardening, bog, 24 ; landscape, 93 ; wild, 107, 108; wild flower, 107, 123 gardens, 7, 38, 39, 73, 106, 107, 108, 1 13, 114, 1 19, 120, 122, 123, 153; historic, 29; private, 117 Gardiner’s Island, 156, 158 INDEX 213 Genesee, country, 192 ; county, 100, 196; valley, 74 Geneva, 133 gentian, fringed, 28, 159; horse, 79 Gentiana, 88; Andrewsii, 168 geography, 86 geology, 68, 70, 76, 82, 137, 142, 144, 146, 148, 190, 193, 200 Geranium puAllum, 66 Gerard, W. R., 12 Gerardia flava, 155 germination, 68, 93 Geuni virginianum, 97 ghost plants, 33 Giffords, 201 ginkgo tree, 198 glaze damage, 75 Glen Cove, 114, 115 Globijomes graveolens, 149 Glyceria arkansana, 75 goldenrods, 77 grapes, 19, 183 grapevine, 144 Grasmere, 147 Grass river, 56 grasses, 10, 13, 79, 173 grassland, 157 Grassy Sprain, 171, 173 Gray, Asa, ii, 62 grazing, 185, 190 Great Kills, 149 Great Lakes, 130, 131 Green, Lake, 130, 131 ; pond, 136 Greene county, lOl, 196 greens, 36 Grier, N. M., 70 Habenaria, fimbriata, 179; hyperborea, 190 hackberry, 96 Hall, Elizabeth C., 84 Hall, I. H., 10 Hamilton, no; College, 127; county, 102, 196 Hapochyrium, 161 hardwoods, 35, 54, 57, 64, 88, 93, 100, 114, 132, 137, 166; fire-damaged, 64; northern, 64; utilization, 64 Harriman State Park, 136, 191 hart’s-tongue fern, 61, 62, no, 130, 131 hawkweed, orange, 20 hay fever, 28, 33, 183, 186 Hebeloma, 48 Helderbergs, 76, 192 H elianthemum, 15 H elianthus Dalyi, 67, 156 Helicoma, 80 Helotium nyssicola, 84 Helvella, 42 hemlock, 35, 82, 172; forest, 79, 82; weeping, 79, 139 hemp, 5 Hempstead, 18; Plains, 115 Hepatica acuta, no, 168; acutiloba, 10 Hepaticae, 54, 66, 78, 80, 157, 158 hepatics, 78, 104, 133, 194 herb garden, 38, 197 herbarium (herbaria), n, 12, 13, 15, 17, 22, 28, 41-50, 80, 83, 84, 122, 195 ; Alphonso Wood, 124 ; Amos Eaton, 37 ; B. D. Gilbert, 168 ; Beck, 12; Bicknell, 28; Charles S. Shel- don, 49; Clinton, 97; Columbia Col- lege, 118; Cornell University, 160; Dr John Torrey’s, 31 ; Long Island Historical Society, 15; New York Botanical Garden, 193; New York State, 12; Union College, 153 herbs, 38; symbolic, 38 Herkimer county, 103, 196 Hesperis matrionalis, 117 Heteranthera, 36 hickory, false shagbark, 180 Hie aria microcarpa, 180 Hieracium aurantiacum, 14, 98, 102, in, 130 Hillside, 141 Hogencamp mountain, 15 1 Hollick, Arthur, 8 Hollis, 141 holly, 191 Holly-fern, Braun’s, 21 Homer, 91 honeysuckle, 121 Honnedaga lake, 104 Hook mountain, 151 hop-hornbeam, 146 horticulture, 6, 93, 197 Hosack, David, 116 Hottonia inflata, n, 151 House, H. D., 23, 27 huckleberry, loi 214 INDEX Hudson, 90, 91; highlands, 63, 135, 136, 137; palisades, 63, 171; river, 97, 191 ; river estuary, 64, 191 ; river flora, 65, 201 ; river valley, 63, 76, 190; watershed, 57, 191 Hudson-Fulton exposition, 120 Hulett’s Landing, 54 Hulst Botanical Club, 106 Humphrey, W. F., 5 humus, 34; layer, 35, 56 Hunt Botanical Garden, 105, 108 Hunter’s Island, 83 Huntington Wildlife Station, 99, 100, 195 hurricane damage, 125 Hyde Park, 93 Hydrocotyle, 75 Hygrophorus, 47 Hymenomycetes, 45, 113, 138 Hypericum canadense var. major, lOi Hypholoma, 48, 186 Hypochaeris radicata, 67, 147 Hypopitys insignata, 192 Ilex opaca, 140; verticillata, 193 illuminating gas, 79 Impatiens julva, loi Indian, bread root, 14; Kill brook, 137 ; Ladder, 77 ; Lake, 196 industries, wood-using, 21 ; forest, 184 ink-cap, mica, 185 Inocybe, 48, 50 ; infida, 120 insect galls, 24, 168 insects, 31 interrupted fern, 132 Inwood Park, 123, 124, 199 Iris versicolor, 193 iron sulfate, 25 Island pond, 136 Islip, 156 Isotria verticillata, 149 Ithaca, 28, 29, 162, 163 ; marshes, 161 ivy, poison, 31 James, Thomas P., lo Jamesville, 132 Jefferson county, 105, 197 Jejjersonia diphylla, ill Jones Beach State Park, 115, 157 J uncus, maritimus, 105 ; trifidus, 165 Juniperus communis, 68 Kalm, Peter, 5, 18, 76 Kanawauke lakes, 135 Kelley, A. P., 8 Kinderhook, 90, 91 king-devil, 105 Kings county, 105, 197 Kirkland, 127 Kissena Park, 141 Kneiffia, 19 1 Knevels, J. W., 134 Kreischerville, 150 Kyllingia pumila, 72 Laccaria, 48 Lactarius, 43 Lactuca Scariola, 94 Lady’s-slipper, Ram’s-head, 98 Lake Champlain, 18, 56, 169 Lake Erie, 74, 95, 96 Lake George, 50, 52, 53, 54, 55, i88 Lake Ontario, 5, 184; watershed, 75, 76 Lake Placid, 99 Lamprospora, 204 land, classification, 37 ; submarginal, 34, 186; subsidence, 65, 66; utiliza- tion (use), 32, 37, 38, 78, 89, 90, 91, loi, 1 14, 143, 155, 160, 163, 174, ig6 lands, cutover, 54, 109; idle, 183 larch, 143, 159 lead arsenate, 31 Leather-flower, Erect silky, 149 Lebanon Springs, 90 Lemanea grandis, 86 Lenina, 143 ; valdiviana, 155 Lentinus, 47 Lepidozia setacea, lOi Lepiota, 43 Leptomitus lacteus, 165 Lespcdeza, 125; Brittonii, 79; velutina, 79 Letchworth Park, 174 Leucanthemum vulgare, 93 Lewis county, 109 Lewiston, 126 Liatris, 126 lichens, 35, SS, 57, 59, 64, 67, 98, 104, 1 17, 121, 137, 139, 169, 199 lightning, 148 Ligniera, 34 Limnobium Spongia, 27 limnological observations, 55 ; study, 72, 76, 89, 191 INDEX 215 lindens, 124, 181 Linnaea borealis, 66, 152 Linnaean Botanic Garden, 140 Linnaeus, 18 Liquidambar, 144 Little Falls, 104 Little Moose lake, 104; region, 104 Littorella americana, $7, 105 liverworts, 75 Livingston county, no Lobelia infLata, 36; syphilitica, 170 local floras, 7, 12, 19, 67, 77, 78, 88, 90, 92, 95, 99, 100, 101, 102, 103, 104, 105, 106, 108, 109, no, 1 13, IIS, 1 18, 121, 122, I2S, 128, 131, 133, 139, 142, 152, 153, 154, 157, 160, 162, 166, 168, 169, 174, 194, 19s, 200, 202 locust, black, 30; shipmast, 38, 39, 65, 72 logging, 30, 189 Long Island, 65, 191, 192; cedar swamp, 68 ; plains, 65 Long pond, 112 Lonicera hirsute, 73 lumber industry, 17, 8$ lumbering, 182, 196 Lychnis Floscuculi, 171 Lycoperdon, 12, 42; giganteum, 81, 121, 133 Lycopodium, 67, 142, 147; adpressum, 67 ; Chamaecyparisus, 128 ; lucidu- lum, 88; sabinaefolium, 22; tris- tachyum, 127 Lygodium, loi ; palmatum, 153 Lythrum Salicaria, 63, 134, 159; ver- ticillatum, 6 Madison county, no, 197 Magnolia acuminata, 37; glauca, 66, ISS mandrakes, 133 Manhattan Island, 122, 125 Manitou Station, 173 maple, 115, 125, 137, 148, 152, 202; sugar, 30, 38, 40, 180 ; white, 202 maps, 14 Marasmius, 22, 49 Marchantia polymorpha, 32 marl ponds, 25 may apples, 133 meadow crop diseases, 31 meadows, 13, 21, 28 medicinal plants, 8, 32, 40, 108 Melanoleuca pulverulentipes, 98 Melamspora parasitica, 80 Mendon ponds, 198 Merrick, 115 Merrill, Elmer Drew, 82 mice, 81 Micrampelis lobata, 193 microflora, 204 Micromyces, 158 microplankton, 96 migrations, 114, 122 mildews, powdery, 85, 87 Miniulus moschatus, 152 Mineola, US Minnewaska, 165 mistletoe, dwarf, 89, 100, 167 Mitchella repens, 88, 144, 160 Mohawk, river, 65 ; watershed, 64 Mohawk Hill, 109 Mohawk-Hudson watershed, 64, 77 Mohonk, i66, 167 ; Lake, 167, 204 Monroe county, iio, 197 Montauk, 157; Point, 155, 156, 138 Montgomery county, 114 moonwort, 75, 131 Moravian cemetery, 150 Morchella esculenta, 173 mosses, 9, 34, 42, 54, 56, 59, 60, 67, 70, 71, 80, 82, 90, III, 121, 128, 14s, 146, 149, 157 Mount Hope Botanic Garden, iii Mount Marcy, 41, 46, 97, 98, 99, 100 Mount Redfield, 100 Mount Vernon, 171 muck, 36; soils, 32 Musci, 66 (see mosses) mushroom, beefsteak, 84; cellar, 84; culture, 9S, 181, 185 ; models, 24 ; parasitic, 203 mushrooms, 16, 18, 19, 20, 24, 35, 39, 48, 77, 84, 114, 161, 173, 180, 186; edible, 15, 16, 39, 45-48, 80, 194; poisonous, IS, 20, 39, 45, 77, 84, 120, 204 mustard, wild, 30 Mycetozoa, 38, 70, 71, 115, 157, 202 Mycological Society, 103, 164 mycology, 74 mycotrophy, 186 Mycorrhizae, 158 2i6 INDEX Mycosphaerella, 26, 50 Myrica caroliniana, 149 Myxogasters, 42 Myxomycetes, 16, 38, SO, 61, 62, 84, 103, 163, 180 naiadales, 53 Najas, 36, 191 ; major, 129; Muen- scheri, 191 Nassau county, 71, 114 Nasturtium palustre, 117 native flowers, 15 (see wild flowers, plants) natural history, 5, 6, 8, 90, 116, 134, 198 natural productions, 5, 192 nature sanctuary, 195 nature study, 60, 194 Negundo aceroides, 160 Nehasane Park, 52, 196 Nemopanthes, 6 Nepera Park, 172 Nepperhan, 172 Newburg, 134 New York, Central, 25, 49, 60, 61, 74, 127, 190 ; eastern, 64 ; northern, 7, 52, 53, 55, 56, 57, 58, 99: southern, 62, 154; southwestern, 75, 86; west- ern, 7, 25, 61, 73, 85, 97, 129, 133, 192 New York, 7, 27, 78, 83, 85, 116, 117, 1 18, 1 19, 121, 122, 123, 124; Acad- emy of Sciences, 23 ; Botanical Gar- den, 27, 78, 79, 80, 81, 82, 83, 84, 1 19, 120, 122, 123, 193 ; College of the City of, 1 16; county, 116, 198; Har- bor, 1 19; Island, 1 18; Mycological Society, 124 New York State, Cabinet, 8, 9, 28; College of Forestry, 180; Museum, 16, 30, 37, 38, 39, 188 Niagara, county, 125, 199; Falls, 5, 125, 126; frontier region, 75; reser- vation, 126 ; river, 74 Nichols, 159 North Elba, 49, 98 North Salem, 169 North woods, 52, 109 Norwich, 89 nurseries, 7, 28, 73, 117, 134, 136, 140, 198 nut growing, 33 Nyctalis asterophora, 164; parasitica, 164 Nymphaea odorata, 11 oak (oaks), 6, 16, 64, 108, 124, 137, 144, 146, 148, 158, 164, 171, 173, 179, 197 ; Bartram, 149, 201 ; hybrid, 145, 148, 149, 202; Washington, 195 Oenothera, 155, 162; sinuata, 119 Omphalia, 44; pulvinata, 93 Omphalopsis pallida, 98 Oneida, county, 126, 199; lake, 49, 50, 62, 128, 13 1 Onobrynchis onobrynchis, 96 Onoclea sensibilis var. obtusilobata, 130 Onondaga, 5; Academy, 129; county, no, 129, 199 Ontario, basin, 27 ; county, 133 ; low- lands, 61 ; watershed, 75, 76 Ophioglossum, 61 Opuntia, ii, 170; Rafinesquii, 139 Orange county, 14, 133, 200 Orchidaceae, 135 orchids, 25, 26, 61, 67, 122, 123, 129, 142, 168, 171, 192 Orchis spectabilis, 134 Orient, 158 Orleans county, 138, 200 Oscillaria, 201 ; prolifica, 81 Osmunda cinnamomea, 143, 170, 173 Oswegatchie watershed, 31, 32 Oswego, 5 ; county, 138 ; river, 62 Otsego county, 139 Palisades, 151 ; Interstate Park, 26, 150, 151, 190 Panaeolus venenosus, 81 Panicuni Wrightianum, 156 Parker Cabin mountain, 151 parks, 27, 120, 181, 188 Parmelia Cladonia, 60 parsleys, 168 pasture, 13, 29, 181, 203 ; management, 71, 105 Patella contradicta, 85 Paulownia, 81 Paxillus, 44 peat, 17, 36, 69, 92, 122; bogs, 25, 69, 122, 144; deposits, 37, 186; marsh, 1 12; soils, 186, 187 Peck, Charles Horton, 22, 27, 47 Peekskill, 173 INDEX 217 perennials, native, 107 Peridermium, 104 Pestallosia insidens, 196 Pezicula cornicola, 158 Pesisa proteana var. sparassoides, 204; pustulata, 83 phalloid, 82, 83 Phallus Ravenelii, 13 pharmacopoeial plants, 13 PhoUota, 47; candicans, 80 Phorna conidiogena, 83 Phyllitis Scolopendrium, 130 (see Scolopendrium) Physarum polycephalum, 87 Physcomitrium, 162 Physoderma, 34 phytoplankton, 62 pigeon weed, 73 Pine Plains, 92 pine (pines), 99, 145; red, 133, 137, 187; white, 24, 30, 35, 55, 58, 89, 132, 133, 135, 137, 185, 187, 201 pine-barrens, 66, 68, 144, 156 Pinus, 186; Cedrus, 117; Strobus, 55, 186 Plandome, 114 plane tree, leaf-blight, 80 plankton, 31, 56, 57, 62, 64, 72, 95, 96, 150 plant, associations, 71; diseases, 20; distribution, 64, 66, 144; formations, 53, 59: immigrants, 26, 83, 85, 122; lore, 37 ; photographs, 20, 84, 85, 158; physiology, 29; press, 50; propagation, 33 ; remedies, 40 ; so- ciology, 70 plantations, coniferous, 137, 187 (see forest) plants (see aquatic plants), ballast, 1 18, 119; climbing, 40; creeping, 40; edible, 25 ; Indian names, 130 ; intro- duced, 94, 118, 148; marine, 68; medicinal, 8, 32, 40, 108 ; native, 24, 36; naturalized, 94, 122; new or rare, 7, ii, 41, 50, 60, 62, 78, 96, 99, loi, 128; pharmacopoeial, 13; poisonous, 36, 1 19, 124, 19s; sprawl- ing, 40 Platanus occidentalis, 194 Pleasant Plains, 150 Pleasantville, 173 Pleurotus, 43 Plum Island, 156 plums, 14, 20, 133, 197 Pluteolus, 45 Pluteus, 43 Pogonatum urnigerum, 165 Pogonia verticillata, 66 poison ivy, 31, 107, 186 poison sumac, 31 poisonous plants, 36, 119, 124, 195 Polanisia, 6 pollen, 183, 186 pollination, 66 pollinosis, 186 Polygonatum biflorum, 166 Polypodium vulgare, 16; var. Chur- chiae, 168 Polyporaceae, 34 Polyporus, 53 ; delectans, 162 ; fron- dosus, 83; giganteus, 150; gilvus, 132, 185 ; pargamenus, 183 ; Schwein- itzii, 186 ; volvatus, 13 Polystichum acrostichoides var. in- cisum, 160 Pontederia cordata, 102 Popolopen creek, 135, 136 Populus balsamifera var. candicans, 134; grandidentata, 132; hetero- phylla, 145 ; tremuloides, 132 porcupine damage, 190 Poria, 25, 49 Port Jefferson, 191 Port Morris, 120 pot herbs, 36 Potamogeton, 36, 73 ; Hillii, 13 ; pau- ciflorus var. niagarensis, 126; niag- arensis, 199 Potentilla paradoxa, 94; recta, loi ; tridentata, 32, 60, 166 Poughkeepsie, 195 Powder Mills Park, 113 Prenanthes crepedineus, 97 Pressia commutata, 88 productions, 5 Prospect Park, 106, 107, 108 Protococcus viridis, 198 Prunus, 197 Psalliota, 43 ; brunnescens, 30 Psathyra, 48 Psilocybe, 48 Puccinia caricis-strictae, 157 2i8 INDEX Pucciniae, 41 puff-ball, 81, 138; giant, 103, 121, 196 Pursh, Frederick, 36 Putnam county, 139, 200 Pyrenomycetes, 13, 138 Pyrola oxypetala, 91 Pyrus coronaria, 94 Quaker Bridge, 194 Quaker Run, 86 Quarry Lake, 173 Queens, county, 140, 200; pond, 141 Quercus, 199; alba, 144; Brittoni, 147, 148, 201 ; heterophylla, 149 ; Rich- ter i, 124 Rafinesque, 7 ragweed, 35 rainfall, 200 Ramapo, 151 Ranunculus, 126, 199; alisaemifolhis, 10; boraceanus, 153; lacustris, 6; micranthus, 171 ; pusillus, 10 Raquette river, 57 rattlesnake plantain, 153 Rasoumofskya pusilla, 100 recreation, 55, 85, 187, 190 red root, 73 Redfield, William C., 100 reforestation, 31, 63, 183, 184 (see for- estry) reforesting, 23, 182, 185 (see forestry) Rensselaer, county, 142 ; Polytechnic Institute, 142 reservations, 183 revegetation, 68 Rhizobium, 203, 204 Rhizoctonia, 185 Rhizophtdium globosum, 161 Rhododendron maximum, 97, loi, 127, 162 Ribes, 40 Richmond county, 143, 200 (see Staten Island) ringing, 18 rivers, 5 Robbins, William J., 84 Rochester, 49, no, ill, 113, 114, 198; Academy of Sciences, 113 rock cities, 85 rock trips, 71 Rockaway Beach, 141 ; Park, 140 Rockland county, 150, 203 root foods, 12 Rubus, 134; Chamaemorus, 156 Rudbeckia, 67, 169, 171 ; hirta, 17, 63, III, 1 12, 202; laciniata, 193 Rue anemone, 25, 201 Rue-spleenwort, 135 Ruppia maritima, 129 Russulae, 69 rusts, 30 Sagittaria latifolia var. obtusa, 28 St Bonaventure, 87 St Lawrence, basin, 27; county, 152; watershed, 56 St Regis (river), 56 Salina, 129 saline areas, 132 Salix, 78, 143 Salmon (river), 56 salt marsh, 69; plants, 72, 74, 159, 174 Salvinia natans, 146 Sam’s Point, 165 sanctuaries, 96 sand, barrens, 148, 156; plain, 54, 152 Sanguinaria, 19 Saratoga, battlefield, 152; county, 152, 203; lake, 152 Sargent, Henry Winthrop, 94 Sassafras officinale, 66, 179 Savastana Nashii, 79 Saxifraga aizoides, 139; virginiensis, 118 Saxon woods, 172 Scabiosa australis, 78, 88 Schenck, George W., 88 Schenectady county, 153, 203 Schoharie county, 153 Schunemunk mountain, 166 Schuyler county, 153, 203 Sclerotinia, 29, 81, 164 Scolopendriuni, 16, 26, 62, 129, 130, 132; lake, 130 scouring rush, 201 Scrophulariaceae, 25 seaweeds, 79, 202 sedges, 54 seed, dissemination, 161 ; dormancy, 34, 37, 187; germination, 36, 187; testing, 187 seeds, 36, 38, 93, 97, 98, 140, 161, 164 Selaginella, 126; apus, 8l INDEX 219 Seligeria Doniana, 98 Seneca, county, 154; Indians, 12; lake, 62, 174 sensitive fern, 197 Sequoia, 50, 88 Serapias Helleborine, 57, 74, 96 Seventh lake, 103 Shagbark hickory, false, 180 Shawangunk mountain, 166, 204 Sheldon, Charles S., 22, 49 shield fern, Goldie’s, 128; spinulose, 128 Shinnecock hills, 156 shrubs, 6, 8, 59, 79, 83, 90, 96, 105, 106, 107, III, 1 12, 1 17, 120, 121, 123, 124, 125, 141, 150, 197 Shushan, 169 Sibbaldiopsis tridentata, 60 (see Po- tentilla) Silver Lake, 74, 172; basin, 148; Park, 172 silviculture, 55, 154 Sr'mblum rubescens, 140 Sisymbrium niagarense, 126; thallia- mim, 94 skunk cabbage, 140 Slabsides, 166 Sleepy Hollow, 204 slime moulds, 59, 67, 70, 138 (see Myxomycetes) Smilax glauca, 146; rotundifolia, 201 Smithtown, 159 snakeroot, 202 snow, cover, 164; injury, 171 softwoods, 189 soil, chemical treatment, 185 ; classifi- cation, 35 ; conditions, 190 ; conser- vation, 37; erosion, 36; forest, 82; fungus flora, 21; heterogeneity, 152; management, 71, 105, 191 ; map, 35 ; microflora, 204 ; morphology, 58 ; temperature, 103, 164; texture, 137; types, 163 soils, 5, 21, 22, 32, 34, 35, 37, S3, 62, 63, 68, 74, 82, 88, 91, loi, 128, 129, 163, 164 ; agricultural value of, 35 ; cove, 136; forest, 100, 136, 164; mineral, 186; muck, 32; peat, 186; sandy, 191 Solatium rostratum, 73, 119 Solea concolor, 92, 170 Solidago, altissima, 193; serotina var. gigantea, 161 ; rugosa, 193 ; speciosa, 171 ; squarrosa, 200 Sorodiscus, 36 Southfields, 135 Southold, 156 sow-thistle, 31 Spartina patens, 74 Spiraea tomentosa, 179 > var. alba, go Spirodella, 143 Spirogyra, 199 spleenwort, Scott’s, 93 Sprain Ridge, 205 spring flowers, 57 spruce, 52, 53, 56, 99, 103, 109, 153, 188, 189, 190; black, 12, 52; red, 152, 189; swamp, 55; white, 55 Spruce pond, 135, 136 spurge, leafy, 31 Spuyten Duyvil, 83 squaw-root, 88 squirrels, 98 State Botanist’s reports, 16, 20, 40 State Cabinet, 8, 9, 28 State flora, 5, 7, 9. I5, 28 State Museum, 16, 30, 37, 38, 39, 188 State parks, 86, 87, 188 State preserve, 180 Staten Island, 66, 143, 200, 201, 202; Association, 147 Sterling mountain, 135 Steuben county, 154, 203 strawberries, 154, 167 stream flow, 16, 190 street lights, 124 submergence, marine, 29 succession, 123, 154, 158 SuflPerns, 150 Suffolk county, 155, 203 sugar maple, 78, 140 sugarberry, 96 Sullivan county, 159 Sullivant Moss Chapter, 82 sumach, 144, 169; poison, 31 sunflower, 67 Surbridge Interstate Park, 65 survey, biological, 18, 31, 32, 54, 55, 56, 57, 62, 64, 72, 73, 74, 75, 76, 77, 89, 163, 174, 191 : botanical, 86, 87, 109; ecological, 190 ; fruit disease, 63, 192 ; geological, 6, 76, 142 ; limnological, 220 INDEX 55. 72, 76, 191 ; phytopathological, 107; soil, 88, 128, 139, 152, 153, 163, 174; topographical, 77, 197, 200, 203 ; wild life, 85 surveys, 7, 14, 69, 99, 129, 134, 154; agricultural, 6, 97, no, 142, 154; for- est, 85, 165, 195, 196 Susquehanna, area, 73 ; Upper, 73 ; valley, 46, 49, 73, 160, 192 Symphoricarpus racemosus, 98 Synchytrimn decipiens, 83 Syracuse, 129, 130; Botanical Club, 130, 131 Syrrhopodon, 158 Taphrina, 39; Dearnessii, 63 Tarrytown, 204 teasel, 15 Teesdalia, 125, 192; nudicaulis, 159 Teucriunt, 105 Thacher Park, 77 Thalictrum anemonoides, 195 thinning, 88 thistles, 181 thorn, white, 179 tide levels, 68 Tilia, 34 Tillaea aquatica, 71 timber, 30, 36, 196; growing, 30; planting, 179; resources, 51, 184 timothy, 204 Tioga county, 159 Tipularia uni flora, 157 toadstools, 186 Tolypella longicoma, 88 Tompkins county, 160, 203 Tompkins Cove, 151 Torrey Botanical Club, 12, 16, 17, 18, 19, 20, 22, 23, 24, 26, 30, 40, 60, 65, 83, 94, 100, 102, 104, 108, 1 15, 1 18, 123, 124, 125, 131, 135, 136, 137, 138, 139, 140, 141, 144, 147, 149, 150, 151, 158, 159, 166, 167, 171, 172, 173, 194, 204, 205 Torrey, Dr John, 7, 13, 31, 60, 117, 151 ; festival, 198 Torreya, 40 Tottenville, 147 Tragopogon porrtfolius, 14 trailing arbutus, 37 Trametes suaveolens, 166 Trapa natans, 65, 77 travels, 5, 6, 7> to, 76, 200 tree, diseases, 21, 24, 122, 189; plant- ing, 17, 22, 121, 181, 184 trees, 6, 8, 14, 17, 20, 22, 26, 29, 39, 52, 59, 63, 69, 73, 79, 81, 83, 84, 86, 90, 96, 104, 105, 106, 107, 109, no, in, 112, 113, 114, 117, 118, 120, 121, 122, 123, 124, 125, 127, 134, 140, 141, 143, 14s, 148, 150, 151, 159, 164, 171, 173, 182; ash, 201; broad-leaved, 180 ; Christmas, 185 ; coniferous, 45 ; diseased, 191 ; freak, 29 ; historical, 27 ; large, 73 ; native, 14, 83, 84 ; notable, 199; New York City’s, 199; ornamental, 34; shade, 180, 181, 182, 183; snow injury, 171 ; street, 180, 181 Trichoglossuni tetrasporum, 62 Tricholoma, 44 Trillium, 19, 95, 96, 161, 174, 196, 200; cernuum, 27 ; erectum var. album, 10; grandiflorum, 169 Triosteum aurantiacum, 79 Trochila populorum, 203 Troy, 142; Lyceum, 142 truffle, 143 Tug Hill, 109 tulip tree, 199 Tully Lake, 133 Ulster county, 165, 204 Ulmus racemosa, 87, 94 Uncinula Jaborosae, 85 Underwood, Lucien Marcus, 18 Underwoodia, 36, 164 United States Naval Lyceum, 108 Upper St Regis, 100 Urtica, 5 Ustilago, 41 Utica, 127, 128, 199; Lyceum, 127 U tricularia, 68, 95 ; minor, 66 ; resupi- nata, 109 Vaccinium Dobbini, 169 Vagnera stellata, 157 Valeriana sylvatica, 92 Van Cortlandt Park, 18 Van Rensselaer, Hon. Stephen, 6 vandalism, loi Vassar Brothers Institute, 195 Vaucheria, 161 vegetable fibers, 170 vegetation, 69, 74, 86, 103, 193; aqua- INDEX 221 tic, 32, 56, 57, 64, 72, 73, 74, 75, 86, 1 18, 131; changes, 65, 91; cinder field, 64 ; development, 22 ; early, 192; natural, 69; New York State, 22 ; salt marsh, 72 V ermicularia phlogina, 138 Viburnum Rafinesquianum, 35; tomen- tosum, 83 Vinca minor, 66 Vincetoxicum nigrum, 134 vines, 120 Viola, 67, 199; palmata, 14, 78; pedata var. alba, 66; rotundifolia, 141 violets, 61, 67, 13s, 147, 148, 185 Vitis cordifolia, 94 Volvox globator, 112 Wading River, 158 wake-robin, 89 walking fern, 150 Warren county, 167 Washington county, 168 water, 183; drainage, 186; supply, 196 water chestnut, 77 water hemlock, 195 Watkins Glen, 153, 154 Wayne county, 169 weather, 99; forest fire, 56 weed seeds, 31, 32 weeds, 9, H, 30, 31, 32, 35, 107, 125, 154, 179, 181, 203, 205 Westchester county, 169, 204 Western New York, 7, 61, 73, 129, 133, 192 wheat, 198 white cedar swamp, 115 Whitney preserve, 103 wild flower sanctuaries, 185 wild flowers, 12, 13, 15, 24, 26, 27, 29, 31, 32, 49, 55, 56, 58, 75, 83, 84, 106, 107, 122, 123, 128, 147, 182, 191 wild fruits, 13 wild greens, 36 wild herbs, 121 wilderness conditions, 185 willow, 168; weeping, 121 windfall, 54 winter injury, 57, 73, 106, 107, 108, 147, 170, 202 Wistaria, 144, 203 Wolf creek, 74, 174 Wolffia, 147, 196, 201 wood, 13, 17, 23; acid, 92; destructive fungi, 13, 44; growing, 33; struc- ture, 23 Wood, Alphonso, 124 woodlands, 13, 74, 183 ; farm, 190 woodlot, 78, 93, 162, 163, 182, 184, 185 woods, 8; native, 8 Woodsia, glabella, 97; obtusa, 132; smooth, 102 Woodstock, 166, 171 W oodwardia areolata, 123, 149 woody climbers, 123 woody plants, 17, 28, 34, 81, 107, 108, 109, no, 122, 123, 149, 184, 197; flowers of, 30; fruits of, 34 working plans, 180, 189, 196 World’s Columbian Exposition, New York fungi at, 15, 45 Wyoming county, 174 Xanthium macidatum, 65 Xylaria, 42 Yama farms, 166 Yates county, 174, 205 yellow birch, 54 Yonkers, 171 Zygnema stellinum, 168 222 INDEX INDEX TO CITATIONS BY AUTHORS (Parts 1 and 2) Adam, Fr & Toffany, Victor, 87 Adams, Charles C., 98, 183, 185, 189, 190 Afsnasiev, Michael, 37 Akerly, Samuel, 200 Alexander, E. J., 60, 83 Alexander, William P., 74, 86, 95, 96, 97, loi, 194, 195 Allen, E. A. H., 142 Allen, T. F., 10, 60, 117, 155, 196 Amadon, A. F., 185 Anderson, G. P., 34 Anderson, H. A., 161 Andrew, B. L., 158 Andrews, A. LeRoy, 163 Anonymous, 51, 58, 69, 95, 106, 1 1 7, 142, 153, 161 Anteys, Ernst, 70 Anthony, R. D. & Hedrick, U. P., 183 Arnell, David R., 200 Arnold, Isabel S., 154 Arthur, J. C., 154, 179 Aslander, Alfred, 184 Atkinson, George F., 15, 18, 24, 49, 161, 162, 203 Atkinson, George F. & Shore, Robert, 181 Atwood, Charles, 88 Austin, C. F., ii, 143 Ayres, George B., 74 Bacon, William, 160 Baehni, Charles, 58 Bagg, M. M., 127 Bailey, Jacob Whitman, 7, 134, 179 Bailey, Liberty Hyde, 14, 161, 168, 180 Bailey, W. W., 14, 63, 134, 135, 139, 171 Baker, Fred C., 131 Baker, Hugh P., 21, 142, 183 Baldwin, H. L, 103 Ballou, W. H., 19, 20, 188 Banning, Mary E., 44 Barnard, Daniel D., 179 Barnhart, John Hendley, 18, 19, 20, 23, 24, 27, 28, 38, 68, 84, 193 Barrett, Mary Franklin, 33 Barstow, J. W., 140 Barstow, J. W. & Poggenburg, J. F., 13 Bartlett, H. H., 162 Barton, Benjamin Smith, 5, 125 Bartram, John, 5 Batchelor, Daniel, 13 Baxter, M. S. & House, Homer D., 50, lOI Baxter, M. S. & Alaloy, Thomas P., 114 Baxter, Milton S., 112, 114 Bayle, Francis L., 56 Beals, A. T., 60, 65, 122, 141 Beauchamp, W. M., 14, 17, 130, 200 Beck, Lewis C., 6, 8, 179 Beck, L. C. & Tracey, J. G., 6, 126 Beck, R. S., 143 Becker, Hermann, 108 Beckwith, Florence, ill, H2, 113 Behre, C. E., 54 Belyea, H. C. & Woolsey, T. S. jr, 55 Belyea, Harold C., 26, 55, 152, 184, 189 Bendrat, T. A., 109 Benedict, Ralph Curtis, 18, 19, 27, 29, 30, 53, 59, 80, 102, 131, 132, 150, 171, 181 Bennett, Henry Clay & Jelliffee, Smith Ely, 79 Bentley, John, 182, 203 Benton, Myron B., 95 Bergen Swamp Preservation Society, lOI Bessey, C. E., 24, 196 Bicknell, Eugene P., 15, 59, 63, 67, 68, 78, 79, 1 18, 1 19, 170, 171, 192, 193 Bird, Henry, 173 Birge, E. A. & Juday, C., 62 Bisby, G. R., 107 Bishop, Irving T., 95 Bisky, Julius A., 140 Blagg, Betty, 70, 157 Blakeslee, A. F., 78, 187 INDEX 223 Bleekman, Francis, 33 Blizzard, A. W., 70 Bloch, Don, 38 Bodman, Ida M., 123 Boehner, P., 87, 194 Bond, Miriam Apthrop, 57 Bonisteel, William J., 167, 204 Boughton, Fred S., 23, 113, 114 Bowen, A. W., 103 Bowen, Leon W., 65 Bowman, Isaiah, 6l Boyle, Raymond J., 36 Boynton, K. K., 193 Boynton, Margaret F., 161 Bradford, George W., 91 Bradley, Dan, 129 Brandriff, Helen, 163 Brandwein, Paul F., 199 Bray, William L., 22, 54, 152 Brewer, William H., 154 Britten, James, 15 Britton, Elizabeth G., 16, 20, 28, 59, 67, 79. 90, 98, 1 19, 122, 144, 14s, 146, 170 Britton, N. L., 12, 14, 15, 16, 17, 24, 25, 26, 29, 33, 66, 67, 79, 80, 81, 82, 88, 91, 95, 97, los, 109, 114, 118, 1 19, 120, 143, 144, 145, 146, 147, 156, 165, 181, 190, 193, 199, 201 Britton, N. L., Harper, R. A. & Howe, M. A., 23 Broadhurst, Jean, 121, 162 Brown, Addison, 118, 120 Brown, Edward F., 85 Brown, H. P., 26 Brown, Nelson C., 29, 182, 200 Browne, D. J., 8 Bruce, Eugene S., 103 Bruckman, H. O., 21 Bruckman, Louisa, 67 Bryant, R. C., 100 Bryson, John, 115 Buchheister, J. C., 171 Buckley, S. B., 73 Buel, Jesse, 6 Buel & Wilson, 76 Bullard, Herbert E., 57 Bumstead, F. J., 10, ii Burchheister, J. G., 59 Burgess, Edward S., 16, 88, 181 Burke, Joseph F., 84 Burkholder, Paul R., 57, 62, 96 Burkholder, Paul R. & Tressler, Willis L., 31 Burlingham, Gertrude S., 69 Burnham, Stewart H., 19, 21, 24, 50, 53, 54, 55, 77, 90, 140, I47, 148, 152, 162, 168, 169 Burnham, Stewart H. & Latham, Roy A., 156 Burns, George P., 98 Butler, E. E., 92 Cahalane, V. H., 85 Cain, Stanley A., 115, 158 Cain, Stanley A. & Penfound, Wil- liam T., 159 Caldwell, Dorothy W., 56 Caparn, H. A. & Taylor, Norman, 106 Caparn, Harold A., 26 Carey, John, 8, 117 Carpenter, Warwick S., 55 Carson, Russell M., 57, 58, too Carter, Alice, 66 Cattell, J. McKeen, 38, 193 Chadwick, L. C., 33 Chamberlain, John, 126 Chamot, E. M. & Georgia, F. R., 163 Chandler, B. A., 103 Chandler, Clyde ; Moldenke, Harold N. & Karling, John S., 38 Chandler, R. F. jr, 100, 164, 190 Chase, Agnes, 156 Chubb, Edith Day, 83 Church, Mrs M. P., 129 Churchill, H. L., 55, 99 Claassen, P. W., 163 Clark, Chauncey W., 15 Clark, Ernest D., 120 Clark, Judson F., 100 Clarke, John M., 23 Clarkson, Rosetta E., 38 Clausen, Robert T., 36, 39, 75, 159, 191 Clausen, Robert T. & Smith, S. J., 63 Cleaves, Howard H., 148 Cleveland, George T., 73 Cleveland, Tredwell, 181 Clinton, Dewitt, 6 Clinton, George W., 9, 94 Clum, Harold H., 172, 173 Clute, Willard N., 16, 66, 67, 73, 78, 79, 130, 131, 147, 156, 159, 191 224 INDEX Cobb, M. J., 82 Golden, Cadwallader, I33 Coles, Isaac, ii Collingwood, G. H. & Cope, J. A., 38 Collingwood, G. H., Cope, J. A. & Rasmussen, M. P., 30 Collins, Dorcas E., 61 Colvin, Verplanck, 188, 192 Comstock, Anna B., 181 Conard, H. S., 68, 69, 71, 158 Congdon, J. W., 97 Conover, George S., 14 Cook, David B., 143 Cook, George H., 65 Cooke, Mordecai Cubitt, 12 Cooley, L. M., 36 Cope, J. A., 30, 33, 38, 57, 64, 65, 92, 114 Cope, J. A. & Bump, Gardiner, 29 Cope, Mary S., 102 Copeland, Edwin Bingham, 156 Cormack, Maribelle, 96 Cottam, Clarence, 71 Couch, John N., 158 Coulter, John M., 24, 172, 179 Covillc, Frederick Vernon, 89 Cowell, John F., 94, 95 Cowles, Samuel N., 199 Cox, Townsend; Knevels, Sherman & Basselin, Theodore B., 52 Craig, Thomas, 146, 201 Crawford, James A., 81 Crittenden, Claude, 197 Crocker, Wil.iam, 172 Croizat, Leon, 124, 141 Cross, Jean A., 107 Cummings, C. E., 85, 186 Curtis, Carlton C., 19, 119 Curtis, R. W. & Wyman, Donald, 34 Curtis, Ralph W., 163 Cushman, J. A., 79 Dallas, Ellen Markoe, 165 Dana, S. T., 30 Darling, C. A., 20, 121 Davenport, C. B., 156 Davenport, George E., 109, 129, 130, 160, 165 Davis, A. D., 184 Davis, N. S., 77 Davis, William T., 68, 145, 146, 147. 148, 149, 201, 202 Day, David F., 85, 94, 95. nS, 126, 174 Day, David F. & Cowell, John F., 95 Day, Edward H., 170 Day, G. M., 187 Dean, Amos, 192 Deane, Walter, 15, 21 Dearness, John, 157, 164 Dearness, John & House, Homer D., 26, 49, so DeCoster, Mrs H. A., 104 Delafield, John, I54 Demarest, Josephine M., 56, 57 Demarest, S. A., 24 Denning, W. H., 8 Denniston, Goldsmith, 134. ^54. 203 Denny, C. S., 137 Dense, W. A., 99 Denslow, Herbert M., 25, 26, 122, 123 Detwiler, S. B., 72 Dewey, Chester, no, m Diebold, C. H., 163, 164 Dillman, George, 94, I73 Dobbin, Frank, 76, 168, 169 Dodge, B. O.. 22, 83, 103, 172, 182 Dodge, Charles S., m Dodge, Charles Wright, 18 D’Olier, J. G., m Donahue, R. L., 58 Doney, Charles F., 197 Douglas, I. S. & Babcock, L, no Dowell, Philip, 18, 91, I47, MS, 202 Downing, A. J., I33 Downs, Albert A., 75 Dudley, P. H., 13, 44 Dudley, William R., 60, 88, 160, 190 Dumond, A. M., m Dunbar, John, 112, 113 Durand, Elias J., 61, 74, I33, 161, 204 Durant, C. F., 8 Dwight, Henry E., 58 Dwight, Timothy, 6 Dyar, Harrison Gray, ng Eames, A. J. & Wiegand, K. M., 27 Eaton, Amos, 6, 142 Eaton, Amos & Beck, T. R., 76 Eaton, D. C., 170 Eaton, H. Hurlbert, 142 Eddy, Caspar Wister, 114 Eddy, F. A., 63 Edgerton, C. W., 203 INDEX 225 Edson, Josephine Zollman, 1 13 Efferson, J. N., loi, 196 Eggleston, W. W., 18, 50, 93, 98 Egler, Frank E., 133 Eights, James, 8, 76 Eliason, E. J. & Heit, C. E., 187 Ellwanger & Barry, iii Ely, William, 195 Emerson, F. W., 86 Emmons, Ebenezer, 179 Engelmann, George, ii, 105, 143 Evans, Alexander W., 157 Evans, Gurdon, no Everitt, John S., 162 Fairchild, H. L., 113, 198 Fairchild, H. L. & Barnum, E. G., 112 Fairman, Charles Edward, 74, 126, 138, 183, 184, 200 Falconer, W., 115 Far low, W. G., 15 Faust, M. E., 132 Fay, Dolores, 158, 159 Felt, Ephraim Porter, 24, 31, 39, 173, 183 Fenno, Frank E., 46, 49, 160 Ferguson, John, 10 Ferguson, William C., 69, 115 Fernald, M. L., 75, 97 Fernald, M. L. & Wiegand, K. M., 27 Fernow, B. E., 53, 104, 180, 196 Fetherston, E., 75 Finley, M., 133 Fippin, Elmer O., 53, 62, 64, 68, 74 Fisher, Clyde J., 170 Fisher, G. Clyde, 98 Fisher, W. K., 30 Fiske, J. G., 124 Fitzpatrick, H. M., 103, 138, 162, 163 Fleet, S., 6 Fleming, Mary A., 195 Flint, Martha B., 195 Forest Commission of New York, 52, 59 Forest Preserve Board, 190 Foster, C. H., 32 Fox, William F., 15, 16, 17, 52, 180, 181, 19s Francis, Henry R., 22, 85, 199 Frazee, Vernon L., 136 Free, Montague, 107 Free, Montague; Gager, C. Stuart & Graves, A. H., 197 Friend, Eleanor, 139, 166 Frost, E. C. & Wynkoop, A. J., 194 Fuller, Joseph B., 112 Fuller, Myron L., 68 Fulling, Edmund H., 40, 82 Gager, C. Stuart, 28, 37, 39, 68, 79, 80, 84, 89, 106, 107, 108, 123, 165, 174, 197 Gardiner, Elizabeth N., 36 Gardner, Mrs Edwin P., 133 Gaylord, F. A., 182, 199 Gaylord, Willis, 199 Gebbard, John jr, 9 Geddes, George, 129, 200 Georgia, Ada, 185 Gerard, W. R., 13, 92, 93, 134, 140 Gerard, W. R. & Britton, N. L., 12 Gifford, John, 100, 191 Gilbert, Benjamin D., 12, 16, 17, 52, 60, 61, 109, 127, 128 Gilbert, E. S., 77 Gitin, Louis Leonard, 35 Gleason, Henry A., 82, 122, 124, 173 Gleason, Henry A. & Bonisteel, W. J., 166 Goodale, G. L., 78 Goodrich, Mrs L, L. H., 131 Gordinier, H. C. & Howe, E. C., 142 Gordinier, Herman C., 98 Gordon, Alexander, 117 Gordon, Eva L., 34 Gordon, Eva L. & Kellogg, Paul, 30 Gordon, Robert B., 75, 86 Gould, A, A., 9 Gould, John Stanton, 10 Graham, H. W. & Henry, L. K., 158 Gratacap, L. P., 118, 201 Gratacap, L. P. & Woodward, A., 118 Graves, Arthur H., 32, 108, 122, 123, I2S, 141, 149, 150, 15 1, 197 Graves, Arthur H. & Rusk, H. W., 124 Graves, Charles Burr, 156 Graves, E. W., 62 Graves, Henry S., 53 Gray, Asa, 7, ii, 126, 127, 129, 152, 167, 168, 169, 179, 199 Greeley, W. B., 190 Green, Jacob, 5 226 INDEX Greene, Edward L., Ii8 Gridley, Rev. Amos Delos, 127 Grier, N. M., 70 Grier, N. M. & Green, S. A., 157 Griffiths, David, 119 Griggs, A. F., 80 Grout, A. J., 35, 37, 67, 121, 140, 149 Guise, C. H., 23, 88 Gundersen, Alfred, 100, 107, 108 Gundcrsen, Alfred & Doney, Charles F., 197 Gustafson, A. F., 37, loi, 191 Gustafson, A. F. & Howe, F. B., 71, 105 Gustafson, A. H., 37 Guttenberg, G., 194 Haberer, J. V., 61, 103, 127, 128, 199 Haeselbarth, Francis C., 150 Hagelstein, Robert, 38, 70, 71, 103, 115, 157 Hall, E. H., 184 Hall, Elizabeth C., 159 Hall, Isaac H., 10, ii, 73, 88, loi, 114, 117, 152, 170 Hall, R. C., 72 Halsey, Abraham, 117 Halstead, Byron D., 179 Hankenson, E. L., 169 Hankinson, T. L., 98 Hanmer, Charles C., 159 Hansen, Albert A., 135 Hara, Hiroshi, 115 Hargitt, Charles W., 14 Haring, Inez M., 102, 153 Harper, Robert A., 121 Harper, Roland M., 68, 69, 80, 115, 120, 122, 140, 156, 191 Harris, Caroline W., 98, 104 Harris, George H., ill Harris, George S., 12 Harris, John T., 21 Harrison, Arthur, 90 Harrison, W. H., 90 Harshberger, John W., 18, 53, 59, 140 Hastings, G. T., 26, 27, 37, 40, 64, 82, 83, 122, 124, 133, 13s, 141, 150, 171, 172, 173 Hastings, John C., 127 Hastings, M. MacG., 128 Hatch, A. B., 186 Haven, Jonathan N., 179 Hawley, Ralph C., 196 Haynes, C. C., 18, 104 Hazen, Tracy E., 98 Heady, Harold F., 195 Hedrick, U. P., 19, 20, 22, 28, 33 Hedrick, U. P., Taylor, C. M. & Wellington, R., 18 Heinburger, Carl C., 57, 99 Heit, C. E., 187 Heit, C. E. & Eliason, E. J., 187 Henderson, Hugh, 197 Hendrick, J. L., 129 Henry, L. K., 158 Henshaw, H., 144 Heusted, A. B., 13 Hicks, Henry, 115 Hicks, Lawrence E., 86 Hildebrand, E. M., 187 Hill, E. J., 73, 74, 88, 100, loi, in, 199 Hill, Ezra, 125 Hill, F. F. & Blanch, George T., 114 Hirt, Ray R., 35, 58, 132, 185, 187 Hirt, Ray R. & Eliason, E. J., 152 Hitch, Annie Delano, 135 Hitchcock, Romeyn, 88 Hoag, Julia S., 76 Hoefle, Olive M., 32 Hollick, C. A. & Britton, N. L., 144, 145 Hollick, Charles Arthur, 24, 66, 82, 98, 1 18, 143, 144, 145, 146, 147, 148, 149, 156, 193, 200, 201, 202 Holtzoff, Mary, 85 Hooker, Joseph D., 129 Hopkins, Arthur S., 185 Hopkins, Ira, 87 Horsfall, J. G., 31 Horton, Robert E., 196 Hosack, David, 5, 116 Hosmer, Ralph S., 40, 103, 18^ Hosmer, Ralph S. & Bruce, Eugene S., 196 Hotchkiss, Neil, 109 Hough, Franklin B., 13, 109, 179, 188 Houghton, Frederick, 96 House, Homer D., 22, 23, 24, 25, 26, 27, 28, 29, 30, 32, 33, 35, 37, 39, 48-51, 57, 58, 61, 62, 69, 77, 78, 88, 89, 90, 92, 93, 95, 99, 100, loi, 102, 103, 104, 105, 109, no, 113, 115, 127, INDEX 227 128, 131, 132, 133, 139, 142, 143, 152, iS3> ^54. iS7i 160, 162, 166, 168, 169, 174, 188, 193, 197 House, Homer D. & Alexander, Wil- liam P., 85 House, Homer D. & Gordon, Robert B., 87 Hovey, C. M., 7, 73, ii7, I34 Hovey, P. B. jr, 153 Howard, William G., 38, 182, 184 Howe, E. C., II, IS, 45, 142, 170 Howe, F. B., 35, 163 Howe, F. B. & Adams, H. R., 36 Howe, M. A., 20, 30, 33, 34, 53, 68, 79, 80, 81, 82, 121, 123 Howell, Robert, 159 Hoysradt, L. H., 12, 92 Hubert, Fr, 36, 39, 86, 87, 186, 194 Hughes, Francis T., 25 Hulst, George D., 66, 131, 191 Humphreys, Edwin W., 80, 171 Hunt, Edwin, 127 Hunt, W. R., 30 Hunter, Mabel R., 26, 132 Hyatt, James, 92 Hylander, Clarence J., 27 Illick, Joseph S., 29, 32, 34, 37 Ingham, R. H., 78 Jackson, H. S., 50, 103 Jacobsen, Edna L., 109 Jahn, Albrecht, 67 James, Joseph T., 13 Jansen, C. N., 21 Jelliffee, Smith Ely, 66, 67, 106, 119 Jenkins, Anna E. & Ray, W. Winfield, 63 Jenkins, Charles F., 139 Jennings, Allyn B., 125 Job, S. E., 40 Johnson, Benjamin P., 10 Johnson, Charles E., 100, 189 Johnson, Duncan S. & York, H. H., 68 Johnson, Eliazbeth W., 201 Johnson, Frank W., 74, 96 Johnson, Roswell H., 19 Jones, L. R., 16 Jones, Paul B., 160 Jordan, David Starr, 60 Joss, Alexander, 89 Juday, C., 55 Kaiser, George B., 59 Kalbfleisch, Augusta Schenck, 67, 191 Kalmykow, Alexandra, 194 Kantor, John L., 120 Karling, J. S., 34, 83 Kauffman, C. H., 49, 50, 98 Kaufman, Pauline, 91, 120, 135 Keepper, W. E., 155 Kellicott, David S., 95 Kelly, Howard A., 21 Kennedy, John S., 181 Kenoyer, L. A., 87 Kerr, W. C., 146, 201 Killip, E. P., 25 Kindle, E. M., 184 Kirby, James, 115, 191 Kirby, R. S. & Thomas, H. E., 198 Kittredge, Elsie M., 121, 150, 168 Kittredge, Joseph, jr & Belyea, H. C., 55 Kling, H. R., 174 Knauz, Marie B., 104 Knechtel, A., 53, 103, 191 Kneiskern, Peter D., 127 Knevels, J. V., 133 Knevels, J. W., 134 Knight, Elizabeth G. (Britton), 102 Knobloch, Irving W., 75, 86, 97, 195 Knobloch, Irving W. & Bleekman, Warren H., 75 Knowlton, Clarence H., 91, 169 Kobbe, Frederick William, 67, 102, 123 Koetteritz, J. B., 14 Kolk, Laura A., 71 Krieger, Louis C. C., 35 Kunze, Richard E., 170 LaMont, T. E., 37, 63, 78, 89 Lane, Charles N., 186 Laney, C. C., 15, 112 Larkin, Frederick, 85 Latham, Roy A., 157, 158, I59, 192 Lattimore, S. A., 103 LeConte, John, 116 Lee, Charles, 205 Lee, Charles A., 8 Leet, Ernest D., 184 Leggett, William H., 10, ii, 12, 52, 63, 66, 93, 97, loi, 109, 1 17, 130, 143, 144, 155, 159, 167 Lemmon, Robert S., 39 Leng, C. W., Davis, W. T. & Burke, Joseph F., 202 228 INDEX Lennon, W. H., iii, 138 Leslie, Lena, 171 Lesquereux, Leo, 12 Levine, Darwin S., 60 Levison, J. J., 19, 106 Levy, Daisy J., 54 Lewis, A. B., 163 Lewis, Charles S., 99 Lewis, Elias, jr, 65, 66 Lewis, William F., 99 Linden, Charles, 95 Linn, M. B., 187 Lipski, W. H., 81 Littlefield, E. W., 32, 99, 187, 190 Littlefield, E. W. & Charlton, J. W., 40 Lloyd, C. G., 24, 76, 77, I95 Lloyd, Francis E., 128 Lord, Henry B., 160 Lowe, Josiah L., 34, 58 Lown, Clarence, 93 Lucy, Thomas F., 89, 194 Lunt, Helene, 123 Luquer, Thatcher T. R., 173 Luther, T. F., 39 McAtee, Waldo L., 184 Macauley, James, 6 Macauley, Mary, 100, 1 12 McCarthy, E. F., 54 McCarthy, E. F. & Belyea, M. C., 54 McClintock, J. Y., 181, 196 McCormack, Helene Wallace, 164 McCulloch, W. P., 63 MacDaniels, L. H., 33 Macdonald, Alexander, 184 McDonald, Frank E., 119 McDonald, W. H., 119 MacDougal, D. T., 79 McFarland, J. H., 120 McGuire, Edward, 120 McGuire, Mrs J. H., iii, 1 12, 113 McKee, A., 157 McKelvey, Blake, 198 Mackenzie, Kenneth K., 27, 193 McLean, Forman T., 83, 84 Macloskie, George, 152 McMillan, William, 180 McVaugh, Rogers, 36, 64, 75, 91 Maine, Henry C., 14 Mains, E. B., 37 Mann, Paul B., 25 Markle, J. S. & Peck, Charles H., 76 Marshall, Robert, 55 Martens, J. W. jr, 170 Martin, D. S., 105 Martin, Everett P., 200 Martindale, Isaac C., I45 Mason, Carol Y., 86 Mathews, Velma Dare, 86 Matteson, DeForest A., 86 Matzen, E. H., 91 Matzke, E. B., 124, 151 Maxon, E. T., 174 Maxon, E. T. & Bromley, J. H., 152 Maxon, E. T., Carr, Earl & Stevens, E. H., 128 Maxon, E. T. & Cone, W. R., 89 Maxon, E. T. & Fuller, G. L., 91, I53 Maxon, William R., 22, 61, no, 130, 131. 197 Mead, Elijah, 179 Mead, Samuel Barnum, 169, 170 Meagher, George S., 103 Meagher, George S. & Recknagel, A. B., 103 Mearns, Edgar Alexander, 59 Medsger, Oliver P., 59 Meehan, Thomas, 102, 133, 200, 203 Meisel, Max, 28, 77, 9i, 102, 108, 122, 127, 142, 154 Merrell, William Dayton, 198 Merriam, C. Hart, 52 Merriam, J. S., 10, 66 Merrill, E. D., 83 Merrill, F. J. H., 63 Metcalf, F. P. & Griscom, Ludlow, 62 Meyers, Mrs M. J., 129 Miller, E. S. & Young, H. W., 155 Miller, Elihu Sanford, 155, 156 Miller, Mary F., 20, 165 Miller, William J., 54 Millington, Lucy A., 97, 167 Mills, Stephen, 140 Millspaugh, C. F., 73, 78, I35, I59 Minckler, L. S., 39 Mitchell, E., 93 Mitchell, H. L., 136, 137 Mitchell, H. L. & Chandler, Robert F. , 137 Mitchell, H. L. & Finn, R. F., 137 Mitchell, H. L., Finn, R. F. & Rosen- dahl, R. C., 136 INDEX 229 Mitchell, H. L. & Hosley, N. W., 200 Mitchell, H. L. & Rosendahl, R. C., 137 Mitchill, Samuel L., S, 179 Moldenke, Harold N., 84, 125, 159, 167, 173, 192 Monachino, Joseph, 85, 125, 137, 141 Montgomery, E. G., 21 Moody, F. B. & Bentley, John jr, 78, 93 Moon, Franklin F., 63, 168, 184 Mooney, Charles N., Maxon, E. T., Morgan, R. J. & Bromley, J. H., 139 Moore, Adele D., 154 Moore, Barrington, 58, 82, 98 Moore, Frank L., 182 Morong, Thomas, 13, 15, 126 Morris, Edward L., 68, 156 Morris, Robert T., 204 Morrison, T. M., Engle, C. C. & Ful- ler, G. L., 88 Muenscher, W. C., 30, 31, 32, 35, 36, 40, 50, 56, 57, 62, 64, 72, 73, 74, 77, 88, 101, 105, 136, 162, 169, 174, 184 Muenscher, W. C. & Clausen, R. T., 57 Muenscher, W. C. & Maguire, B., 31 Muenscher, W. C. & Petry, L. C., 185 Muenscher, W. C. & Wann, F. B., 163 Mulford, Walter, 182 Munn, M. T., 25 Munro, Robert A., 192 Munsell, Joel, 76 Murrill, W. A., 18, 22, 27, 53, 69, 79, 81, 92, 98, 100, 120, 121, 166, 181, 198, 204 Mussle, H. A., 164 Nanz, Ralph S., 162 Nash, George V., 79, 81, 102, 174, 193 Nearing, G. G., 199 Needham, J. G., 54 Needham, J. G. & Claassen, P. W., 163 Newell, Frederick H., 196 Nichols, G. E., 35, 123 Nichols, Mary A., 161 Nicholson, Zaida, 83, 141 Northrop, John I., 78 Northrop, Mrs J. I., 171 Nussle, Helene A., 36 Oak, D., 123 O’Connor, Robert, 202 Olive, E. W., 106 Olney, S. T., ii Osborne, C. S., 196 Overacker, M. L., 31, 154 Overholts, L. O., 24, 25, 49, 70 Pack, C. L., 122 Packard, A. S. jr, 188 Paige, E. W., 153 Paine, John A. jr, 127, 129 Palmer, E. Laurence, 27, 28, 31, 32, 33. 37, 40 Paris, Frances Johnstone, 29 Parkhurst, H. E., 120 Parmenter, Andre, 105 Parry, C. C., 167 Parsons, Frances Theodora, no Paul, B. H., 23, 24, 69, 183 Pearce, John, 58 Peattie, Donald Culross, 27 Peck, Charles H., 9, 10, li, 12, 13, 14, 15, 16, 17, 20, 40-48, S3, 97, 98, 109, III. 139. 159. 180, 181, 188 Peet, Louis Harmon, 106, 120 Pennell, Francis W., 25, 191, 193 Pennington, L. H., 22, 49 Perkins, Anne E., 96 Petry, Loren C., 131 Pettis, C. R., 21, 29, 53, 182, 183, 184, 185, 189 Phelps, Orra Parker, 56, 153 Phinney, H. K., 113 Piffard, Henry G., 16 Pike, M. H., 165 Pike, Nicholas, 66 Pinchot, Gifford, 52, 189 Place, Frank, 138, 187 Platt, M., 91 Plice, Max J., 34 Plitt, C. C., 169 Poggenburg, Justus F., 1 18 Pollard, Charles Louis, 147 Porter, Edna N., 96 Porter, Thomas Conrad, 118, 170 Porterfield, W. M., 125 Powell, E. P., 127 Pratt, George O., 189 Pratt, W. F. & Littlefield, E. W., 153 Prentiss, Albert Nelson, 102, 153, 160 179, 188 230 INDEX Prescott, Adella, 128 Prescott, Herbert F., 185 Price, Overton W., 180 Prichard, Reuben F., 23 Pridham, A. M. S., 39 Prince, William, 140 Pugsley, Franc Fassett, 113, 114 Pugsley, Franc F. & Frank W., 113 Pugsley, Frank W., 149 Pursh, Frederick, 10 Rabenau, Hugo von, 201 Raber, Oran, 39, 72 Raffenau-Delile, Alire, 116 Rafinesque, C. S., 6, 7, 58, 65, 105, 133 Rafter, George W., 16, 180 Randall, Henry S., 194 Rankin, Duncan C., 31 Rankin, W. H., 21 Ransier, Herbert E., 130, 131, 132 Rau, E. A. & Austin, C. F., 59 Raup, Hugh M., 137 Raup, Lucy C., 137 Rawolle, Charles & Pilat, Ig. A., 117 Ray, W. Winfield, 39, 164 Recknagel, A. B., 27, 54, 55, 56, 58, 59, 99, 153, 162, 163, 165, 184, 189 Redfield, J. H., 13, loi, 102, 165 Redfield, W. C., 97 Reed, C. A., 182 Reed, George M., 107 Reichling, Gerard Alston, 67 Reis, Heinrich, 17 Rhodes, Arthur S., 183 Rich, Alice B., 171 Richards, Edward, 109 Rickards, B. R., 35, 186 Ricker, P. L., 31 Ridgway, Robert, 165 Riss, Paul B., 191* Robbins, William J., 39 Roberts, Edith A., 94 Roberts, Edith A. & Reynolds, Helen W., 94 Roberts, Edith A. & Shaw, M. F., 93 Roberts, I. P., 203 Robertson, Felix, 125 Robinson, B. L., 126 Romell, L. G., 35, 56 Romell, L. G. & Heiberg, S. O., 56 Root, Orin, 127 Rosenbluth, Robert, 182 Ross, J. H., 71 Rowlee, W. W., 25, 61, 112, 139, i6i Rudkin, W. H., 118, 134; 155 Rudolph, A., 31 Ruger, Menahem, 10, 12, 66 Rusby, H. H., 14, 17, 18, 21, 119, 120, 124 Rusk, Hester W., 108, 149, 150 Rust, Mary Oliva, 130 Rydberg, Per Axel, 171 Saccardo, P. A., 19, 23, 138 Sadler, Nettie M., 132 Sage, D., 188 St John, Robert P., 124 Salisbury, J. H., 8 Sammis, Mrs Elmer G., 121 Sargent, C. S. & Peck, C. H., 47, 76 Sargent, Charles Sprague, 19, 21, 47, 48, 52, 74, 78, no, 1 13, 139, 140, 154, 171, 188, 195 Sartwell, H. P., I74 Saunders, Aretas A., 87, 190, 193 Saunders, C. F., 130 Savage, Edward, 194 Schaeffer, Rev. E. C., 92 Schanck, Will H., 204 Schenck, George W., 88 Schmidt, Karl, 59, 183 Scholz, Harold F., 136, 137 Schrenk, Joseph, 66 Schultze, E. A., 145 Schwartz, G. Frederick, 189 Schweinfurth, Charles, 56 Searing, A. H., 112 Sears, John H., 98 Seaver, Fred J., 23, 81, 82, 83, 84, 8$, 124, 150, 158, 162, 173, 204 Seelye, Charles W., in, 112 Sefferien, M. L., 83 Severance, F. H., 199 Shannon, Howard J., 71 Sharp, Harry S., 64 Shattuck, M. M., 195 Shaw, Ellen Eddy, 197 Shear, Cornelius L., 171 Shear, E. V., 64 Shepard, Edward M., 196 Sherff, E. E., 28 Sherrill, Cecelia Adelaide, 53 Shorey, A. T., 58, 135 Shull, George H., 203 INDEX 231 Sibley, C. K. & Leflfingwell, D. J., 163 Silloway, Perky M., 189, 190 Simmons, J. R., 29, 184 Sinden, J. W. & Fitzpatrick, H. M., 62 Skilton, Avery J., 142 Skutch, A. F., 70 Slavin, A. D., 114 Small, John K., 28, 34, 80, 83, 96, 124, 125, 193, 200 Smallwood, W. M., 38 Smiley, Daniel, jr, 167, 204 Smith, A. B., 133 Smith, Annie Morrill, 98, 104 Smith, Arma A., 161 Smith, C. P., 126 Smith, Charles E., 165 Smith, Clayton S., 120 Smith, Gilbert Morgan, 150 Snell, Walter H., 30, 55, 56, 186 Snow, J. W., 95 Southwick, E. B., 20, 198 Spaeth, J. N., 34, 93 Spaeth, J. N. & Diebold, C. H., 164 Sparrow, F. K. jr, 71, 163 Spaulding, Perky, 189 Spingarn, J. E., 94 Spring, S. N., 32, 100, 185 Spring, S. N. & Guise, C. H., 32, 183 Stabler, Louise Merritt, 115 Standky, Paul C., 93 Stark, Charles M., 73 Stebbins, Cyrus M., 90 Stebbins, G. L., no Steele, J. H., 152 Stephen, John W., 128, 183 Sterling, E. A., 56, 182, 188, 189 Sterns, E. E., 88, 118, 119 Sterns, John, 203 Sterns, Winfred A., 93 Stetson, Sereno, 90 Stevens, A., 8 Stevens, F. L., 131 Stevens, George Thomas, 51 Stewart, F. C., 20, 30, 103, 185, 186 Stewart, F. C. & Blodgett, F. H., 63 Stewart, F. C. & Eustace, H. J., 17, 165 Stewart, F. C. & French, G. T., 19 Stewart, F. C., Rolfe, F. M. & Hall, F. H., 192 Stewart, Paul Alexander & Merrell, William Dayton, lOi Stickel, Paul W., 40, 56, 57, 64, 99, 166 Stickel, Paul W. & Marco, Herbert F., 99 Stone, George E., 121 Stone, Winthrop E., 134 Stout, A. B., 38, 139, 191 Sturgis, W. C., 16 Sturtevant, E. Lewis, 25, 154, 180 Sumstine, D. R., 49, 89 Suter, H. M., 189 Svenson, H. K., 29, 64, 71, 72, 102, 108, 123, 125, 137, 141, ISO, IS3, 158, 192, 199 Swift, J. Otis, 204 Swift, Marjorie E., 83 Swingle, C. F., 72 Switzer, Harry D., 56 Taylor, Albert D., 181 Taylor, Aravilla Meek, 59, 60 Taylor, Norman, 19, 20, 24, 26, 31, 59, 63, 69, 70, 72, 86, 91, 92, 98, 106, 107, 1 15, 121, 122, 123, 157, 159 Taylor, Norman & Hall, Helen Smith, 157 Taylor, William Randolph, 72 Tehon, L. R., 35 Tenney, Sanborn, 190 Thom, Charles, 161 Thomas, David, 6, 73, 87, 126 Thomas, J. J., 9, 194 Thomas, William Sturgis, 83 Thomen, August A., 33 Thompson, Alexander, 88 Thompson, G. E., 164 Thomson, John W. jr, 138, 151, 166, 205 Thone, F., 29 Thurber, George, 10, 66, 118, 198 Tilden, Mary, 12 Tillinghast, Frank N., 156 Todd, John B., 132 Todd, Sereno E., 8 Torrey Botanical Club, 104, 131, 149 Torrey, John, 7, 8, 9, ii, 1 17, 133 Torrey, R. H., Place, Frank jr. & Dickinson, Robert L., 27 Torrey, Raymond H., 32, 33, 35, 57, 60, 64, 65, 71, 77, 102, 123, 124, 135, 232 INDEX 136, 139, I4I, 151, 157, 158, IS9, 166, 172, 173 Tourney, James W., 23 Transeau, E. N., 156 Trelease, William, 160, 184 Tressler, Willis L., 64 Tressler, Willis L. & Austin, T. S., 76 Tressler, Willis L. & Bere, Ruby, 57, 72, 89, 191 Trippe, T. Martin, 200 Tryon, Henry H., 136, 137, 138 Tryon, Henry H. & Finn, R. F., 137 Tukey, Harold B., 133 Turner, E. T., 16 Tweedy, Frank, 109 Tyler, H. S, 89 Underwood, L. M., 13, 16, 60, no, 120, 129, 130 Underwood, L. M. & Cook, O. F., 180 Vail, Anna Murray, 66, 78, 120 VanDevanter, William C., 114 VanEseltine, G. P., 33 Van Ingen, Gilbert, 93, 195 \^an Rensselaer, Jer., 134 VanWagner, Edith, 26 Vary, W. H., 182 Van Epps, Percy, 203 Vaughn, L. M., 30 Vecchierello, Hubert; see Hubert, Fr. Vilkomerson, Hilda, 124 Vinton, Francis, 105 Von Engeln, O. D., 22 Walden, D. T., 124 Walker, Leva B., 163 Wallihan, Ellis F., 164 Wann, F. B. & Muenscher, W. C., 62 Ward, Cabot, 121 Ward, Lester F., 105 Warden, Rev. Daniel B., 90 Warne, Henry A., 197 Warren, William T., 95 Watkins, John W., 192 Watson, Winslow C., 9, 65, 97 Weatherby, C. A., 34, 71 Webber, H. J., 204 Weierheiser, Ruth V., 89 Weimer, James LeRoy, 24 Welch, D. S., 72 Welch, D. S., Herrick, G. W. & Cur- tis, R. W., 34 Welch, Fay, 187 Wells, Nelson M., 125 Wernham, Clifford C., 36 West, Gladys F., 138 Westveld, M., 99 Wherry, E. T., 124, 132 Whetzel, H. H., 25, 29 Whetzel, H. H. & Buchwald, N. Fa- britius, 164 Whipple, Gurth A., 27, 29, 36 Whipple, James S., 22, 182, 183 White, O. H., 90 White, Paul J., 20, 181, 203 Whitlow, Charles, 5 Whitney, Elsie G., 31, 33, 37 Wiant, James Stewart, 185 Wibbe, John Herman, 60, 138, 152, 153 Wickenheister, Herbert C., 81 Wickes, Mildred L., 158 Wiegand, K. M., 28, 60, 61, 161 Wiegand, K. M. & Eames, Arthur J., 62, 163 Wiegand, K. M. & Foxworthy, F. W., 17 Wiegmann, William H. & Beals, A. T., 150 Wiggans, R. G., 28, 29 Wilber, G. M., 93, ISS Wiley, Farida A., 60, 125, 150 Williams, Asa S., 188 Williams, R. S., 79, 82 Williamson, C., 192 Willis, O. R., 14, 66, 135, 140, 170, 171 Wilm, H. G., 154 Wilson, B. D., 36 Wilson, B. D., Eames, A. J. & Staker, E. V., 37 Wilson, B. D. & Staker, E. V., 32, 186, 187 Wilson, B. D., Staker, E. V. & Town- send, G. R., 186 Wilson, Guy West, 80 Wilson, J. K., 203, 204 Wilson, J. K. & Higbee, H. W., 186 Wilson, J. K. & Lyon, T. L., 29 Wilson, J. K. & Schubert, H. J., 204 Wilson, Percy, 82, 183, 193, 195, 204 Wilson, W. T. & Efferson, J. N., 114 Wilson, Wilford M., 21, 22 Winchell, A., 92 Winchell, Martin E., 92 INDEX 233 Winnie, William T., 65 Winslow, E. J., 160 Wiswal, Frank L., 77 Wodehouse, R. P., 28, 139, 186 Wood, E. A., 55 Wood, George Clayton, 67, 121 Woodin, M. D., 174 Woodward, Carol H., 83, 85 Woodworth, W. V. S., 90 Woolson, George C., 150 Worden, John L., 87, 186 Worden, Leone E. & Worden, John L., 87 Worthley, L. H., 173 Wright, A. H., 174 Wright, Berlin Hart, 174 Wright, John & Hall, James, 142 Wyman, Alanson Phelps, 16 Wyman, Donald, 164 York, H. H., 104, 133, 185 York, H. H., Wean, R. E. & Childs, T. W., 186 Young, Henri Wilson, 155 Young, John P., 163 Young, Vernon A., 132, 152 Zabriskie, Rev. J. L. 180, 196, 203 Zenkert, C. A., 75, 96, 97, 126 Zimmerman, P. W., 172 1- (3TJ/- y I l* V , A* J J I 1 I *\ ■ • tvr '-iSSI * V . New York Botanical Garden Library 3 5185 00337 3329