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Mr. E. Cheel, President, in the Chair. Sir George Julius, Sydney; Miss Gladys Carey, Epping; Miss Lilian R. Fraser, Pennant Hills; Miss Joyce W. Vickery, Homebush; and Miss Jessie A. Webster, Stanmore, were elected Ordinary Members of the Society. The President offered the congratulations of members to Dr. G. A. Waterhouse on his election as President of the Board of Trustees of the Australian Museum. A letter was read from Miss Doris Selby, thanking the President and members for congratulations on attaining her M.Sc. degree. The President referred with pleasure to the proclamation issued by the Government extending the existing protection to certain species of wild flowers for a further period of twelve months. The President and members offered a very hearty welcome to Professor J. T. Wilson, who expressed his pleasure at being present and also conveyed a message of greeting to members from Professor J. P. Hill. The Donations and Exchanges received since the previous Monthly Meeting (25th June, 1930) amounting to 18 Volumes, 168 Parts or Numbers, 2 Bulletins, 9 Reports and 39 Pamphlets, received from 84 Societies and Institutions and 2 private donors, were laid upon the table. PAPERS READ. 1. Notes on Australian Diptera. xxv. By J. R. Malloch. (Communicated by Dr. G. A. Waterhouse.) 2. Notes on the Autumn Orchids of the South Maitland Coalfields. By Rey. H. M. R. Rupp, B.A. 3. The Origin of Hndemism in the Angiosperm Flora of Australia. By the late Professor A. A. Lawson, D.Sc., F.R.S.E. NOTES AND EXHIBITS. Mr. David G. Stead exhibited a drawing (made by Mr. M. Lynch of the Lands Department, Fiji) of a “sea monster” cast up on a mud bank, two miles inside the mouth of the Dreketi River, Labasa, Vanua Levu, Fiji, and seen by Mr. Lynch on 17th November, 1928. The animal was fourteen feet in total length (tail appears to have been mutilated), four feet across at the shoulders and eighteen inches across the narrowest part of the tail. Head and neck together measured three feet in length, the neck being two and a half feet thick. Distance from end of snout to widest part of shoulders was four feet. Though a number of the characters mentioned were difficult to reconcile with each other, Mr. Stead stated that there appeared to be no doubt that the animal was a Dugong (Halicore). Further enquiries were being made. Mr. W. W. Froggatt exhibited some “Blood Wood Apples’. These are the large galls of Cystococcus pomiformis Froggatt, one of the most remarkable galls in the world. They are found in North Queensland, Central and North-western Australia, growing upon the branchlets of Eucalyptus terminalis. The gall starts as a small round marble on the branchlet and becomes as large as a small apple. The blacks eat the coccids in the galls. The gall has thin walls with a large gall chamber; at the base in the centre is a circular depression; at the summit a rounded funnel just beneath the apical opening. The female coccid stands on XXXiV. ABSTRACT OF PROCEEDINGS. her head which forms a circular plate, fitting into the circular depression, with the tip of the abdomen, which is smooth and rounded, fitting into the funnel on the roof of the chamber. She has no mouth, antennae or legs, but four spiracles. The male coccids hatch out inside the gall-chamber, and go through the whole of their development into two-winged slender-bodied coccids within the gall, emerging when adult through the apical orifice. Mr. Froggatt also exhibited two Hymenopterous galls: (1) leaf of tropical jungle plant from Cairns, N. Queensland, covered with minute Chalcid galls, (2) Hucalypt branchlet with mass of long spindle-shaped galls of Tepperella eucalypti, from the South Coast of New South Wales. — The President exhibited a flowering plant of ‘“‘soft-leaved Wattle” (Acacia pubescens) taken from a sucker growth near Bankstown two years ago, and cultivated as a pot-plant. This species has a limited distribution and may become extinct, as it rarely matures its pods and seeds. It is noteworthy on account of the leaflets not folding in sleep at night as is the case with most species of the Mimosae. He also exhibited live plants of “Australian Lime” (Microcitrus australis) and “Finger Lime’ (Microcitrus australasica) together with a series of fruits showing considerable variation in shape, size and colour. Three hybrids (“Faustrimon,”’ “Faustrimedin”’, and “Faustrime’’) were also exhibited produced as the result of crossing the “finger lime’ (M. australasica) with three cultivated citrus varieties. Seedling plants of ““Bangalow Palm” (Archonto- phoenix Cunninghamii) and the “Curly Palm” or “Belmore Palm” (Howea belmoreana) were shown and attention drawn to the suitability of the “Bangalow Palm” for certain decorative effects which it was contended were superior to that of the “Curly Palm”. Seedling plants of several species of Hucalyptus were also exhibited to show the distinctive characteristics of the juvenile stage of development in comparison with the adult stage and to demonstrate the easy method of propagating them from seeds and transferring the seedlings from the seed beds to thumb pots for transport purposes. Mr. H. J. Carter called attention to the very early flowering of Pittosporum undulatum following the mild winter experienced this year. ORDINARY MONTHLY MEETING. 27th August, 1930. Mr. E. Cheel, President, in the Chair. The President announced that the first Fletcher Memorial Lecture would be delivered in the Lecture Theatre of the Australian Museum, College Street, Sydney, on Monday, 15th September, 1930, at 8 p.m., by Mr. A. H. S. Lucas, M.A., B.Sce., the subject being—‘“Joseph James Fletcher, an Idealist Secretary.” A cordial invitation to be present was extended to all. The President announced that applications for grants to scientific research workers should be made to the Council for Scientific and Industrial Research, 314 Albert Street, East Melbourne, C.2, not later than lst November, 1930. The Donations and Exchanges received since the previous Monthly Meeting (30th July, 1930) amounting to 16 Volumes, 116 Parts or Numbers, 6 Bulletins, 2 Reports and 5 Pamphlets, received from 79 Societies and Institutions, were laid upon the table. ABSTRACT OF PROCEEDINGS. XXXV. PAPERS READ. 1. On Grevillea Gaudichaudii, a supposed natural Hybrid between Grevillea laurifolia and G. acanthifolia. By J. McLuckie, M.A., D.Sc. 2. The Topography and Water Supply of Cox’s River, N.S.W. By Frank A. Craft, B.Sc., Linnean Macleay Fellow of the Society in Geography. 3. Goulburn—a vital Point on the New South Wales Highlands. By Frank A. Craft, B.Sc., Linnean Macleay Fellow of the Society in Geography. NOTES AND EXHIBITS. Mr. David G. Stead reported that a large Humpback Whale, Megaptera nodosa, had found its way into Port Jackson on August 12 and had penetrated so far up the harbour as to pass under the newly joined arch of the Sydney Harbour Bridge. It moved about the harbour all that day and the next morning returned to the ocean. It remained in Watson’s Bay for an hour and a half after daylight before going to sea. From close personal observations Mr. Stead estimated this whale to be about 45 feet in length. It is of interest to note that only two days before, a whale estimated to be about the same size, was observed swimming backwards and forwards all day long off Tuggerah Lakes entrance in a kind of small bay formed by a slightly submerged bank, covered by light surf. Although apparently able to escape, the whale would move a few lengths in one direction and then back again, as though in hiding from its foes, keeping to its small basin. This observation was made by Miss Rachel Davis, of The Entrance. Miss Lilian Fraser exhibited root-nodules of Casuarina glauca which resemble those of C. Cunninghamiana, but are on the average rather larger, being up to two inches in diameter, and the individual roots are rather more swollen. The nodule arises as a lateral root which becomes modified by bacterial infection and branches profusely, forming a coralloid structure. It becomes covered with cork except at the growing tips and is a perennial structure. The nodules exhibited were found at Church Point, Pittwater, August, 1930. Root-nodules of Casuarina Cunninghamiana have been described (Proc. Linn. Soc. N.S.W., 1923) by Dr. J. McLuckie and, so far as the exhibitor knows, have not been reported for any other species. The President (Mr. EH. Cheel) exhibited a series of specimens of the following species of Hucalyptus: E. capitellata, H. eugenioides, LE. agglomerata, EF. laevopinea, E. Muelleriana, E. macrorrhyncha, and E. macrorrhyncha var. brachycorys. Baron von Mueller suggested many years ago that the var. brachycorys was worthy of specific rank, a statement with which the exhibitor was entirely in accord. Attention was drawn to the extremely variable character of the leaves of seed- lings, as well as those of the reversionary shoots or so-called sucker or coppice growths, together with the shape and size of the fruits taken from sapling trees and compared with those of older trees. It was suggested that the whole group of Stringybark forms of Eucalypts should be carefully examined in the field and an exhaustive study made in connection with the literature dealing with these before proposing any more new species. Specimens of Callistemon lanceolatus and C. pachyphyllus were also exhibited for comparison with the Hucalyptus spp., to show the relative size of the fruits of last season’s flowers to those of three-year old capsules on the same branch, the valves of which had not yet opened to shed their seeds. XXXvVi. ABSTRACT OF PROCEEDINGS. ORDINARY MONTHLY MEETING. 24th SEPTEMBER, 1930. Mr. E. Cheel, President, in the Chair. The President announced that the Council is prepared to receive applications for four Linnean Macleay Fellowships tenable for one year from 1st March, 1931, from qualified candidates. Applications should be lodged with the Secretary, who will afford all necessary information to intending candidates, not later than Wednesday, 5th November, 1930. The President announced that a large majority of the members who had replied to the questionnaire regarding the hour of meeting, which had been circulated to members in the metropolitan district, had expressed a preference for the hour at which meetings are now held; it was therefore proposed to take no further action regarding the suggestion that some hour other than 7.30 p.m. might be more convenient for members. The President, on behalf of members, expressed appreciation of the Fletcher Memorial Lecture delivered by Mr. A. H. S. Lucas on Monday, 15th inst. The Donations and Exchanges received since the previous Monthly Meeting (27th August, 1930) amounting to 7 Volumes, 71 Parts or Numbers, 4 Bulletins, 1 Report and 3 Pamphlets, received from 51 Societies and Institutions and 1 private donor, were laid upon the table. PAPERS READ. 1. Notes on Australian Diptera. xxvi. By J. R. Malloch. (Communicated by Dr. G. A. Waterhouse.) 2. Descriptions of New Species of Australian Coleoptera. xxi. By A. M. Lea, F.E.S. 3. An Abnormal Xanthium Burr. By J. Calvert, M.Sc., F.L.8S. (Communicated by Dr. B. T. Dickson.) 4. Notes on Gall-making Coccids, with Descriptions of New Species. ii. By W. W. Froggatt, F.L.S. 5. Trichopterygidae of Australia and Tasmania. Descriptions of New Genera and Species. By C. Deane. NOTES AND EXHIBITS. Dr. W. L. Waterhouse exhibited specimens showing variegation of the leaves of wheat and rye plants. The former arose from grain of a normal green plant of “Alberta Red’, and the latter as a result of two generations of selfing a normal plant of “March” rye. This rye family already appears to be homozygous for the variegated character. The President (Mr. HE. Cheel) exhibited live plants of Darwinia tazifolia var. intermedia Cheel (D. intermedia A. Cunn.) which is comparatively rare in the Botany Swamps, and Dendrobium Beckleri F.v.M., from the Williams River near the foot of the Barrington Tops Range. He also exhibited (i) for comparison with D. intermedia, plants of Darwinia fascicularis which had been grown in pots for the purpose of forming plantations to exploit the species for its valuable essential oil, and (ii) fresh flowering plants of Dendrobium gracilicaule which were noted as being fairly plentiful on various trees along the Williams River where they were collected recently. ABSTRACT OF PROCEEDINGS. XXXVii. ORDINARY MONTHLY MEETING. 29th OcToBErR, 1930. Mr. E. Cheel, President, in the Chair. Miss Muriel G. Holdsworth, B.Sc., Stanmore, and Miss Germaine A. Joplin, B.Sc., Eastwood, were elected Ordinary Members of the Society. Candidates for Linnean Macleay Fellowships, 1931-32, were reminded that Wednesday next, 5th November, is the last day for receiving applications. A letter was read from Dr. H. Claire Weekes, returning thanks for congratulations. The President expressed the sympathy of members with Professor L. A. Cotton on the death of his wife. The President called the attention of members to the fact that there will be professional offices available for letting in Science House. The Donations and Exchanges received since the previous Monthly Meeting (24th September, 1930) amounting to 7 Volumes, 101 Parts or Numbers, 4 Bulletins, 3 Reports and 3 Pamphlets, received from 64 Societies and Institutions and 1 private donor, were laid upon the table. PAPERS READ. 1. Notes on the Australian Species of the Genus Atriplex. By R. H. Anderson, B.Sc.Agr. 2. On Placentation in Reptiles. ii. By H. Claire Weekes, D.Sc. 3. The Uterine Cycle of Pregnancy and Pseudo-Pregnancy as it is in the Diprotodont Marsupial Bettongia cuniculus. By Professor T. Thomson Flynn, D.Sc. 4. Additions to the Flora of New England. By W. F. Blakely and Rey. EH. N. McKie, B.A. 5. A New Species of Eucalyptus from New England. By W. F. Blakely. NOTES AND EXHIBITS. The President (Mr. E. Cheel) exhibited fresh flowering specimens of Callistemon linearifolia, C. lilacina, C. lilacina var. carmina and a hybrid, C. acuminatus x C. lanceolatus; and specimens of Leptospermum emarginata Wendl., which is united with L. flavescens by Bentham and other workers. Specimens of L. flavescens var. leptophylla were exhibited for comparison. Foliage of a stringy- bark LHucalyptus, raised from seed obtained from Wyndham and which has an aromatic oil identical with the original parent, was also exhibited. Mr. W. F. Blakely gave an interesting chat, illustrated with lantern slides, on Stringybarks. In it he dealt with the early use of some of the vernacular names of the Hucalypts, which could be traced to some of the first explorers and surveyors, and pointed out that the name “Stringybark” was in common use in 1798, ten years after the colony was founded. He also gave an outline of the classification of the Eucalypts by their barks, and a detailed description of the morphological characters of the Stringybark Series, together with an explanation of their range, size, habit and economic uses, and their utility to the aboriginals and also to the early settlers. He also explained that the first Hucalypt known to science was a Stringybark, H. obliqua, and that it held the unique position of being the type of the genus Eucalyptus. Another distinction claimed for the XXXVIii. ABSTRACT OF PROCEEDINGS. Stringybarks was that one of its members, HE. regnans, is the largest tree in Australia and the second largest tree in the world. Mr. Blakely concluded by stating that he did not know of a more useful tree in the Commonwealth or one that has played a more important part in the development of this country than the Stringybark. ORDINARY MONTHLY MEETING. 26th NovEMBER, 1930. Mr. E. Cheel, President, in the Chair. Mr. Allen N. Colefax, B.Sc., Kogarah, Miss Enid M. Edmonds, B.Sc., Rose Bay, and Mr. Erik Munch-Petersen, Ph.B., M.Sc., M.I.F., North Sydney, were elected Ordinary Members of the Society. The President announced that the Council had re-appointed Miss Ida A. Brown, B.Se., and Mr. Frank A. Craft, B.Sc., to Linnean Macleay Fellowships in Geology and Geography respectively for a period of one year from 1st March, 1931. The President announced that Science House is expected to be completed by the end of January, 1931, and that, therefore, this meeting would be the last monthly meeting of the Society to be held at Macleay House. Detailed drawings made by the Architects (Messrs. Peddle, Thorp and Walker) in connection with the building of Science House were exhibited. The Donations and Exchanges received since the previous Monthly Meeting (29th October, 1930) amounting to 34 Volumes, 128 Parts or Numbers, 9 Bulletins, 1 Report and 53 Pamphlets, received from 70 Societies and Institutions, were laid upon the table. PAPERS READ. 1. Xerophytes and Xerophily, with Special Reference to Protead Distribution. By O. H. Sargent. (Communicated by A. G. Hamilton.) 2. Australian Rust Studies. iii. Initial Results of Breeding for Rust Resistance. By W. L. Waterhouse, D.Sc.Agr. 3. New Guinea and Australian Coleoptera. Notes and Descriptions of New Species. By H. J. Carter, B.A., F.E.S. 4. The Geology of the South Coast of New South Wales. iii. The Monzonitic Complex of the Mount Dromedary District. By Ida A. Brown, B.Sc., Linnean Macleay Fellow of the Society in Geology. 5. The Leaf-Buds of some Woody Perennials in the New South Wales Flora. By Gladys Carey, B.Sc. 6. Notes on a Cellulose-decomposing Soil-fungus of an unusual Character. By H. L. Jensen, Macleay Bacteriologist to the Society. NOTES AND EXHIBITS. Mr. W. W. Froggatt exhibited two specimens of the larva of the Geebung Hawk Moth (Coequosia triangularis) from Gosford, showing the two varieties of coloration, green and yellow. The President (Mr. E. Cheel) exhibited specimens of Helichrysum leuconsidum DC., and Boronia oppositifolia (Pers.) Cheel (see Journ. and Proc. Roy. Soc. N.S.W., 1927, 408) from Hill Top, between Picton and Mittagong, thus establishing a definite locality near Sydney for these two species which are quite common in Victoria and Tasmania. He also exhibited a specimen of a stemless thistle, ABSTRACT OF PROCEEDINGS. XXxXix. Onopordon acaulum Linn., from Balranald, collected by Stock Inspector Chanter, who reports that it is spreading rapidly in that district. It is recorded for South Australia but has not previously been recorded for this State. Dr. G. A. Waterhouse exhibited both sexes of Ogyris zosine arazes, including an interesting aberration of the male, all reared from pupae found near Penrith, N.S.W. He gave a short account of the habits of the larvae and their attendant ants. He also exhibited a pair of Ogyris olane from the same locality; this is a new record for this species of butterfly from the County of Cumberland. Note on Sterility in the Proteaceae. Mr. A. G. Hamilton contributed the following note: In a valuable posthumous paper on The Origin of Endemism in the Angiosperm Flora of Australia (These PROCEEDINGS, lv, 1930, 371), the late Professor A. A. Lawson gives certain criteria from which hybridism may be deduced. With one exception they all appear to be cogent. The exception is sterility. He instances the infertility of the Proteaceae. From my observations of the plants, I am inclined to think that the sterility is accidental and not constitutional, i.e., that it arises from the failure of the pollinating agent to visit the flowers. In most of the Proteaceae, the official pollinators are birds—the honey-eaters mainly. My experience of the failure of Proteads to produce seeds was even more striking than Professor Lawson’s. I observed one small tree of Banksia serrata in Centennial Park. There were on it 53 heads of flowers, all dead. Forty-five had no follicles at all. The remainder had between them 30 follicles. The average number of flowers in each head was 460, giving a total of 24,380. There was therefore 0:12% which developed fruits. On the other hand, I have seen trees, every head of which bore a few, and some 20 or 30 follicles, and now and then one finds a head completely covered with fruits, so closely packed that there is no room for another follicle. Doubtless, in such cases, many pollinated flowers are crushed so that no fruit can form. Again, I once saw a New Holland honey-eater visit a flower head of Banksia ericifolia. It worked on it for a considerable time, so I marked the head, and returning some months afterward found a large number of follicles. It is worthy of note that the bird did not visit any of the neighbouring heads, but flew off to another tree. The conclusion I came to was that it is only at a certain stage that the flowers produce nectar in large quantities, and if that stage is neglected by the birds, no fruits are produced. The aborigines knew of the nectar-producing powers of this plant, and collected the sweet fluid by placing a number of heads on a sheet of bark, and it is recorded that they suffered from severe headaches after a feed. On a visit to Albany, W.A., in 1904, I found Banksia occidentalis trees had every head with a large number of fruits, some so crowded that \there was not room for one more. I was told that the little marsupial, Tarsipes, was very plentiful all through the bush. As it feeds on the honey of the Banksia flowers (and, incidentally, on the insects frequenting them), there can be no doubt but that it is an efficient pollinator, and that it was responsible for the plentiful fruiting of the Banksias. Some years ago I was walking through a glade behind Mt. Kembla where there were very many Waratahs in blossom, and saw a spinebill (a very efficient xl. ABSTRACT OF PROCEEDINGS. pollinator) alight on a Waratah stem just below the flower head. The jar shook the plant, and a shower of drops of nectar flew in all directions. The bird worked at the head for over ten minutes. I marked the head, and coming back after a couple of months, I found 23 fruits developed. This instance again suggests that it is only at a certain stage of flowering that nectar is produced in sufficient quantities to attract the pollinators. Two species of Isopogon mentioned by Professor Lawson in his tables have 50 and 85% of sterile pollen, yet my experience is that in both, every head produces quantities of fruits. Lomatia silaifolia has 70% of sterile pollen and yet it is quite common to see 20 to 30 fruits on a stalk. I think, therefore, that a good’ case has been made for the theory that the sterility of the Proteaceae is caused, to a great extent, by the failure of the pollinators to visit the flowers, and that it is not due to any inherent infertility. DONATIONS AND EXCHANGHS. Received during the period 28th November, 1929, to 26th November, 1930. (From the respective Societies, etc., unless otherwise mentioned.) ABERYSTWYTH. Welsh Plant Breeding Station, University College of Wales.—Bulletin, Series H, Nos. 10-11 (1930); “The Welsh Journal of Agriculture”, vi (1930). ACCRA. Geological Survey of the Gold Coast.—Buliletin, No. 2 (1928); Memoir No. 1 (1929) ; Report of the Director for the Financial Year 1928-1929 (1929); “The Utility of Geological Surveys to Colonies and Protectorates of the British Empire’, by A. E. Kitson (Brit. Assen. Adv. Sci. South Africa, 1929, Section C—Geology) (1929). ADELAIDE. Department of Mines: Geological Survey of South Australia—Bulletin No. 14 (1930); Mining Review for the Half-Year ended December 31st, 1929 (No. iL) GIORO)). Field Naturalists’ Section of the Royal Society of South Australia and South Australian Aquarium Society—‘The South Australian Naturalist’; xi, 1-4 (1929-1930). Public Library, Museum and Art Gallery of South Australia—Forty-sixth Annual Report of the Board of Governors, 1929-30 (1930); Records of the South Australian Museum, iv, 2 (1930). Royal Society of South Australia.——Transactions and Proceedings, liii (1929). South Australian Ornithological Association—‘The South Australian Orni- thologist’”’, x, 5-8 (1930). University of Adelaide-—“The Australian Journal of Experimental Biology and Medical Science’, vi, 4 (T.p. & c.) (1929); vii, 1-3 (1930); 14 Reprints from Trans. Roy. Soc. 8S. Aust. lii-liv (1928-1930); 3 Reprints from Rept. Aust. Asscn. Adv. Sci. xviii (1926); 1 Reprint from Med. Journ. Aust., July 6, 1929, pp. 1-8 (1929). Woods and Forests Department.—Annual Report for the Year ended June 30th, 1929 (1929). f ALBANY. New York State Library, University of the State of New York.—New York State Museum Bulletin, Nos. 281-283 (1929). ALGER. ! Institut Pasteur @ Algérie Archives, vi, 1, 4 (T.p. & c.) (1928); vii, 1 (1929). Société d'Histoire Naturelle de VAfrique du Nord—Bulletin, xx, 1929, 6-9 (T.p. & c.) (1929); xxi, 1930, 1-5 (1930). AMSTERDAM. Nederlandsche Entomologische Vereeniging.—Entomologische Berichten, T.p. & c. for vii (Nos. 145-168) (1929); viii, 169-174 (1929-1930); Tijdschrift voor Entomologie, Ixxii, 3-4 (T.p. & c.) (1929); Ixxiii, 1-2 (1930). >-d bing DONATIONS AND EXCHANGES. ANN ARBOR. University of Michigan.—Contributions from the Museum of Palaeontology, iii, 5-7 (1929-1930); Occasional Papers of the Museum of Zoology, T.p. & c. for Nos. 153-171 (Vol. vii) (1929); Nos. 200-214 (1929-1930); Papers of the Michigan Academy of Science, Arts and Letters, xi-xii, 1929 (1930). AUCKLAND. Auckland Institute and Museum.—Annual Report, 1929-30 (1930); Records, i, 1 (1930); “Guide to the Josiah Wedgwood Bicentenary Exhibition, May 14th to 31st, 1930”, by Gilbert Archey (1930); “The Tertiary (Waitematan) Molluscan Fauna of Oneroa, Waiheke Island”, by A. W. B. Powell and J. A. Bartrum (from Trans. N.Z. Inst., 1x, 395, 1929). BALTIMORE. Johns Hopkins University—University Circular, N.S. 1928, 11 (1928); 1929, 1-11 (1929); 1930, 1-9 (1930). BANDOENG. Anthropological Laboratory of Java.—‘Somatical Investigation of the Javanese, 1929”, by Dr. D. J. H. Nyessen (1929). Opsporingsdienst Dienst van den Mijnbouww in Nederlandsch.—Indie-—Bulletin of the Netherlands East Indian Volcanological Survey, Nos. 24-28 (1929- 1930); T.p. & c. for Nos. 1-28 (1927-1930); Nos. 29-34 (1930); Vulkano- logische en Seismologische Mededeelingen, No. 11 (1930); Wetenschappelijke Mededeelingen, Nos. 13-14 (1930). BARCELONA. Real Academiu de Ciencias y Artes de Barcelona.—Boletin, vi, 1 (1930); Memorias, xxi, 17-24 (T.p. & ec.) (1929-1930); xxii, 1 (1930); Nomina del Personal Academico, 1929-1930 (1929). BASEL. Naturforschende Geselilschaft—Verhandlungen, xl, 1928-1929, 1-2 (complete) (1929). BERGEN. Bergens Museuwm.—Arbok, 1929, 2 (T.p. & c.) (1930); 1930, 1 (1929); Arsberet- ning, 1928-1929 (1929). BERKELEY. University of California—Publications, Botany, xi, 16-18 (1930); T.p. & ec. for xiv (1927-1929); xvi, 3 (1929); Entomology, T.p. & c. for iv (1926-1928) ; v, 4-8 (1930); Geology, xviii, 14-15 (1929); xix, 1-11 (1929-1930); Physiology, vii, 9-13 (1929-1930); Zoology, T.p. & c. for xxx (1930); xxxii, 5-7 (1930); xxxiii, 7-20 (1929-1930); xxxiv (complete) (1929); xxxv (complete) (1930). BERLIN. : Botanische Garten und Museum.—Notizblatt, x, 98-100 (T.p. & c.) (1929-1930). Deutsche Entomologische Gesellschaft, E.V.m—Deutsche Entomologische Zeit- schrift, T.p. & c. for 1929, 5 (1930); 1930, 1 (1930); Mitteilungen, i, 1-6 (1930). Notgemeinschaft der Deutsche Wissenschaft—‘Flora”’, Neue Folge, xxiv, 2-4 (T.p. & c.) (1929-1930). Zoologische Museum.—Mitteilungen, xv, 1-4 (T.p. & c.) (1929-1930); xvi, 1-2 (1930). BERN. Naturforschende Gesellschaft.—Mitteilungen a.d. Jahre 1929 (1930); Verhand- lungen, 110. Jahresversammlung (1929). DONATIONS AND EXCHANGES. xliii. BIRMINGHAM. Birmingham Natural History and Philosophical Society.—List of Members, 1930, and Annual Report, 1929; Proceedings, xvi, 1 (1930). BLOEMFONTEIN. Nationale Museum.—Paleontologiese Navorsing, i, 1 (1929); ii, 1-2 (1930). BoLoGNa. Laboratorio di Entomologia del R. Instituto Superiore Agrario di Bologna.— Bollettino, ii (1929). BomBayY. Bombay Natural History Society.—Journal, T.p. & c. for xxxiii, Pts. 1-2 (1929) ; xxxiii, 4 (1929); T.p. & c. for xxxiii, Pts. 3-4 (1930); xxxiv, 1-2 (1930). Haffkine Institute—Report for the Year 1928 (1929). BONN. Naturhistorische Verein der Preussische Rheinlande und Westfalens.—Sitzungs- berichte, 1928; Verhandlungen, Ixxxv, 1928 (1929). Boston. American Academy of Arts and Sciences——Proceedings, Ixiv, 1-6 (1929-1930). Boston Society of Natural History.—Proceedings, xxxix, 5 (1929). BRISBANE. Department of Mines: Geological Survey of Queensland.—Publication, No. 278 (1930). Institutes of Surveyors in the States of the Australian Commonwealth. ‘The Australian Surveyor”, i, 1-8 (Index) (1928-1929); ii, 1 (1930). “Queensland Government Mining Journal’ (from the Editor) —xxx, Dec., 1929 (T.p. & c.) (1929); xxxi, Jan.-Nov., 1930 (1930). Queensland Museum.—Memoirs, x, 1 (1930). Queensland Naturalists’ Club and Nature-Lovers’ League.—“‘The Queensland Naturalist”, vii, 4-5 (1930). Royal Geographical Society of Australasia (Queensland Branch) —Queensland Geographical Journal, N.S. xlii-xliv (in one), 42nd-44th Sessions (1926-1929). Royal Society of Queensland.—Proceedings, xli, 1929 (1930). Brno. Prirodovedecka Fakulta, Masarykovy University.—Spisy . (Publications) (Botanical Only), Cis. 5, 12, 16, 27, 35, 49, 52, 53, 55, 56, 59, 70, 74, 76, 101, 102, 105, 110, 111, 116 (1921-1929). BROOKLYN. Botanical Society of America.—‘American Journal of Botany’, xvi, 9-10 (T.p. & c.) (1929); xvii, 1-7 (1930). BRUSSELS. ‘ Académie Royale des Sciences, des Lettres et des Beaux-Arts de Belgique.— Annuaire, 96e Année (1930); Bulletin de la Classe des Sciences, 1929, 5-12 (T.p. & c.) (1929); 1930, 1-2 (1930). Musée Royal d Histoire Naturelle de Belgique.——Bulletin, vi, 1-4 (1930); Mémoires, Nos. 38-40 (1929). Société Entomologique de Belgique.—Bulletin and Annales, lxix, 8-12 (Index) (1929); Ixx, 1-8 (1930); Mémoires, xxiii, 2-3 (1930). Société Royale de Botanique de Belgique—Bulletin, |xi, 1-2 (T.p. & c.) (1928- 1929); Ixii, 1-2 (T.p. & c.) (1929-1930). Société Royale Zoologique de Belgique.—Annales, lix, 1928 (1929). xliv. DONATIONS AND EXCHANGES. BUDAPEST. Musée National Hongrois.—Annales, xxv, 1928 (Contents, Vols. i-xxv) (1928). BUENOS AIRES. Sociedad Argentina de Ciencias Naturales.—Revista “Physis”’, ix, 34 (T.p. & c.) (1929). BUITENZORG. Department van Landbouw, Nijverheid en Handel—Bulletin du Jardin Botanique, Série iii, x, 3-4 (T.p. & c.) (1929-1930); xi, 1 (1930); Supplément, Vol. i (1930); Vol. ii, 1-2 (1930); ‘‘Treubia’, vii, Supplément, Livr. 4-6 (1929-1930); xi, 2-4 (T.p. & c.) (1929-1930); xii, 1-2 (1930). Natuurwetenschappelijke Raad voor Nederlandsch.Indie te Batavia.—P ubli- cation No. 3 (Mei, 1930). CAEN. Société Linnéenne de Normandie—Bulletin, 7e Série, x, 1927 (1928); Mémoires, xxi, 1 (1904); Nouvelle Série—Section Botanique, i, 2-3 (1928). CALCUTTA. Geological Survey of India.—Memoirs, liv (complete) (1929); lv, 1 (1930); Memoirs, Palaeontologia Indica, N.S. xvi (1930); Records, lxii, 4 (T.p. & c.) (1930) ; Ixiii, 1-2 (1930). ? Indian Museum.—Memoirs, ix, 3-4 (1929); x (complete) (1929); Records, xxx, Appendix; xiii, 2-4; xxxii, 1 (1929-1930); Report of the Zoological Survey of India for the Years 1926-1929 (1929). CAMBRIDGE, England. Cambridge Philosophical Society.—Biological Reviews and Biological Proceed- ings, iv, 4 (T.p. & c.) (1929); v, 1-4 (T.p. & c.) (19380). CAMBRIDGE, Mass. Museum of Comparative Zoology at Harvard College—Annual Report of the Director for 1928-1929 (1929); Bulletin, lxix, 11-15 (T.p. & c.) (1929); Ixx, ies) (Abo, 3(085)) (GOED). CANBERRA. Commonwealth Bureau of Census and Statistics —Official Year Book, No. 22, 1929 (1929). Commonwealth Forestry Bureau.—Third British Empire Forestry Conference, Australia and New Zealand, 1928, Proceedings (no date). Council for Scientific and Industrial Research.—Third Annual Report for Year ended 30th June, 1929 (1929). CANTON. Geological Survey of Kwangtung and Kwangsi—Annual Report, i, 1927-1928 (1928) ; ii, 1, 1928-1929 (1929); Special Publication, Nos. 1-4 (1929). CaPE Town. Royal Society of South Africa—Transactions, xviii, 3-4 (T.p. & c.) (1929-1930). South African Museum.—Annals, xxii, 3 (T.p. & c.) (1928); xxviii, 2-3 (1930); Report for Year ended 31st December, 1929 (1930). CHERBOURG. Société Nationale des Sciences Naturelles et Mathématiques de Cherbourg.— Mémoires, xl (General Index to xxxi-xl) (1924-1929). CHICAGO. Field Museum of Natural History—Geology, Memoirs, i, 1 (1930); Leaflet, Botany, 14 (1930); Geology, 11-12 (1929); Zoology, 12 (1930); Publica- tions, Botanical Series, iv, 6-9 (1929); vii, 1 (1930); Geological Series, v, 2 DONATIONS AND EXCHANGES. xlv. (1929) ; Report Series, T.p. & c. for vii (1926-1928) ; viii, 1 (1930) ; Zoological Series) xii, 19) (Cp. & e¢:)) G'930))\ > xiii, 6 (Gi929)) 3 xv, 1 @'923)); xvii, 2-6 (1929-1930); xviii, 1 (1930). John Crerar Library.—xxxyv-th Annual Report for the Year 1929 (1930). CHRISTCHURCH. Canterbury Museum.—Records, iii, 4-5 (1930). Philosophical Institute of Canterbury.—tTransactions and Proceedings of the New Zealand Institute, lx, 3-4 (T.p. & c.) (1929-1930); lxi, 1-2 (1930). CLUJ. Gradina Botanica.—Bulletin, ix, Appendix 1-2 (1929). COIMBRA. Universidade de Coimbra: Museu Zoologico—Memorias e Hstudios, Serie i No. 1, Fase. 4; No. 29, Fasc. 1; Nos. 30-37 (1928-1929). CoLtp Spring Harsor. Department of Genetics: Carnegie Institution of Washington.—Annual Report of the Director, 1928-1929 (Extracted from Year Book No. 28, 1928-29) (1929). COLOMBO. Colombo Museuwm.—Spolia Zeylanica (Ceylon Journal of Science, Section B— Zoology and Geology), T.p. & ec. for xv (1929); xvi, 1 (1930). COLUMBUS. American Chemical Society.—Industrial and Engineering Chemistry, xxi, 11-12 (T.p. & c.) (1929); xxii, 1-10 (1930); Analytical Edition, ii, 1-4 (T.p. & c.) (1930); News Edition, vii, 21-24 (Index) (1929); viii, 1-20 (1930). Ohio Academy of Science.——‘Ohio Journal of Science’, xxix, 5-6 (T.p. & c.) (1929); xxx, 1-4 (19380). Ohio Biological Survey.—Bulletin 6, 11, 13, 21, 22 (1916, 1921, 1926, 1929, 1929). Ohio State University —Bulletin, xxxiv, 10 (1930). CoPpENHAGEN. Det Kgl. Danske Videnskabernes Selskab.—Biologiske Meddelelser, viii, 1, 4-8 (T.p. & c.) (1929-1930); ix, 1-2 (19380). Zoological Museum of the University.—Publications, Nos. 60-68 (1929-1930) ; The Danish Ingolf-Expedition, iv, 7 (1930). DUBLIN. Royal Dublin Society—EHconomic Proceedings, ii, 26; Scientific Proceedings, N.S. xix, 29-39 (1930). Royal Irish Academy.—Proceedings, xxxviii, Section B, 15 (T.p. & c.); xxxix, 1-15 (1929-1930). DURBAN. Durban Museum.—Annals, iii, 3 (1930). Natal Herbarium.—Two separates—‘The Genus Psoralea Linn.’ by Helena M. L. Forbes; “A Drying Cabinet for the Preparation of Plant Specimens for the Herbarium’, by A. P. D. McClean and H. H. Storey (From “Bothalia’, iii, 1930). Hasr LANSING. Michigan State College of Agriculture and Applied Sciences —Chlorine Resistance of Colon bacilli and Streptococci in a Swimming Pool’, by W. L. Mallmann and A. G. Gelpi, Jr. (Bull. No. 27, Michigan Engineering Experi- ment Station) (Jan., 1930); Agricultural Experiment Station, Technical Bulletin No. 103 (1929). xlvi. DONATIONS AND EXCHANGES. EDINBURGH. Royal Botanic Garden.—Transactions and Proceedings of the Botanical Society of Edinburgh, xxx, 2, Session 1928-29 (1929); Notes, xvii, 81-85 (T.p. & c.) (1929-1930). Royal Society of Edinburgh.—Proceedings, xlix, 4 (T.p. & c.), Session 1928-29 (1929); 1, 1-2, Session 1929-30 (1930); Transactions, lvi, 2 (1930). FRANKFURT a. M. Senckenbergische Naturforschende Gesellschaft——Abhandlungen, xlii, 1-2 (1930); Natur und Museum, lix, 6-12 (T.p. & c.) (1929); lx, 1-8 (1930). FREIBURG i Br. Naturforschende Gesellschaft.—Berichte, xxix, 1-2 (T.p. & c.) (1929); xxx, 1-2 (T.p. & ce.) (1930). GENEVA. Société de Physique et d'Histoire Natwrelle—Compte Rendu des Séances, xlvi, 3 (T.p. & c.) (1929); xlvii, 1-2 (1930); Mémoires, xl, 4 (T.p. & ec.) (1930). GENOVA. Societa Entomologica Italiana.—Bollettino, lx, 9-10 (Title page) (1928); Ixi, 1-2 (1929); Suppl. to No. 1 (Memorie, vi, 1927, 2, Index (1928) ); 9-10 (T.p. & c.) (1929); Supplements to Nos. 8 and 9 (Memorie, vii, 1928, and Memorie, viii, 1929, Fasc. 1 (1929) ); Ilxii, 1-7; Suppl. to No. 5 (Memorie, ix, 1930, 1) (1930); “Insetti Dannosi alla Barbabietola”, by Carlo Menozzi (1930). Museo Civico di Storia Naturale —Annali, lii-liii (1925/28-1928/30). GRANVILLE. Denison University—Journal of the Scientific Laboratories, xxiv, pp. 115-264, 265-427 (T.p. & c.) (1929); xxv, pp. 1-164 (1930). GRAZ. Naturwissenschaftlicher Verein fur Steiermark.—Mitteilungen, Ixiv-lxv; Ixvi (1929). HALIFAX. Nova Scotian Institute of Science——Proceedings and Transactions, xvii, 3, Session 1928-29 (1930). HALLE. Kaiserliche Leopoldinische deutsche Akademie der Naturforscher zu Halle.— Leopoldina, v-vi (1929-1930). HAMBURG. Naturwissenschaftlicher Verein.—Abhandlungen, xxii, 1-2 (1928-1929); Verhand- lungen, Vierte Folge, iii, 3-4, 1927 (1927); “Zur Geschichte der Exakten Naturwissenschaften in Hamburg” (1928). HARLEM. Société Hollandaise des Sciences.——Archives Néerlandaises des Sciences exactes et naturelles, Series IIIB (Sciences naturelles), v, 2 (1930);; Series IIIC (Archives Néerlandaises de Physiologie de lhomme et des animaux), xiv, 3-4 (T.p. & c.) (1929); xv, 1-3.(1930); Archives Néerlandaises de Phonetique experimentale (Organ officielle de la Société internationale de Phonetique experimentale), v (1930). HELSINGFORS. Societas pro Fauna et Flora Fennica.—Acta, lv (1924-1929); Acta Zoologica Fennica, vi-ix (1928-1930). DONATIONS AND EXCHANGES. xl vii. Societas Scientiarum Fennica.—Arsbok-Vuosikirja, vii, 1928-1929 (1929); Bidrag till Kannedom af Finlands Natur och Folk, Ixxxiii, 1-5 (1929-1930); Com- mentationes Physico-Mathematicae, iv, 13-25 (T.p. & c.) (1928-1929). Societas Zoolog-botanica Fennica Vanamo.—Annales, viii-ix (1929). HoBART. Royal Society of Tasmania.—Papers and Proceedings for the Year 1929 (1930). HONOLULU. Bernice Pauahi Bishop Museum.—Bulletins 66-73 (1929-1930); Memoirs, xi, 1-3 (1929-1930) ; Special Publication 15 (1929). Pan-Pacific Union.—Bulletin, N.S. Nos. 117-125, 128 (1929-1930); “Journal of the Pan-Pacific Research Institution’, v, 1-4 (1930). INDIANAPOLIS. Indiana Academy of Science.—Proceedings, xxxviii, 1928 (1929). ITHACA. Cornell University—48 Separates (Nos. 781-783, 785-818, 820-823, 827-832, 834) (1927-1930); The George Fisher Baker Non-Resident Lectureship in Chemistry, Vols. i-v (1926-1930). JAMAICA PLAIN. Arnold Arboretum.—Journal, x, 4 (T.p. & c.) (1929); xi, 1-3 (1930). JOHANNESBURG. South African Association for the Advancement of Science.——South African Journal of Science, xxvi (1929). KURASHIKI. Ohara Institute for Agricultural Research.—Berichte, iv, 2-3 (1929-1930). KyYoro. Kyoto Imperial University—Memoirs of the College of Science, Series B, v, 1-3 (19380). La JOLLA. Scripps Institution of Oceanography of the University of California.—Bulletin, Technical Series, T.p. & ec. for Vol. i (1927-1928); ii, 4-5, 7-9 (1929-1930) ; Bulletin, Non-technical, No. 16 (1930). La PLATA. Museo de La Plata.—Revista, xxxii (1930). LEIDEN. Rijks Herbarium.—Mededeelingen, Nos. 57-58 (1929). LENINGRAD. Académie des Sciences de VU.R.S.S.—Annuaire du Musée Zoologique, xxix, 1928 (1929); xxx, 3-4 (1929-1930); Bulletin, Série vii, 1928, 8-10 (T.p. & c.) (1929); 1929, 410 (T.p. & c.) (1929); 1930, 1-6 (1930); Bulletin de V’Académie Imperiale des Sciences de St. Petersbourg, Série v, xxi, 5 (T.p. & c.) (1904); Musée Zoologique—Fauna de I’U.R.S.S. et des Pays Limitrophes. Pantopodes. (Pantopoda). Livr. 1 (1929); Tableaux Analytiques de la Faune de 1’U.R.S.S. No. 2 (1929). Geological and Prospecting Service, U.S.S.R. (formerly Comité Géologique) .— Bulletin, xlviii, 1929, 3-6 (1929); xlix, 1930, 1-5 (1930); Explorations géologiques dans les régions auriféres de la Siberie. Carte géologique de la région aurifére de la Lena. Description des feuilles iv-4 et v-4; vi-1 et vi-2 (1929); Matériaux pour la géologie générale et appliquée, Livr. 89, 96, 125- xlviii. DONATIONS AND EXCHANGES. 127, 131, 134, 136-140, 142-144, 146-148, 150-152 (1929-1930); Mémoires, N.S. Livr. 173, pt. 2; 187 (1929); Statistical Summary on the Mineral Industry of the U.S.S.R., for 1926/27 (1929); Transactions, Fase. 4, 6 (1930). ! Lenin Academy of Agricultural Sciences in U.S.S.R.: Institute of Applied Botany and New Cultures (formerly Institut de Botanique appliquée et adAmélioration des Plantes).—Bulletin of Applied Botany, of Genetics and Plant-Breeding, xx (complete) (1929); xxii, 1-5 (Index) (1929); xxiii, 2-3 (1930); “Rye in U.S.S.R. and in the Adjoining Countries’, by V. and V. Antropov (36th Supplement to the Bulletin) (1929); “Wild and Cultivated Oats (Sectio Huavena Griseb.)” by A. I. Malzew (388th Supplement to the Bulletin) (1930); ‘Lentils of the U.S.S.R. and of other Countries”, by Helena Barulina (40th Supplement to the Bulletin) (1930). Société Entomologique de Russie—Revue Russe d’Entomologie, xxiii, 1929, 1-4 (1929). Société Russe de Minéralogie—Mémoires, 2me Série, lviii, 1-2 (T.p. & c.) (1929). State Institute of Experimental Agronomy, Bureau of Applied Entomology.— Reports on Applied Entomology, iv, 1 (1929); Reprints Nos. 10-11 (1929); “Recent Attainments and Perspectives in Agronomy” (1929); Works on Applied Entomology, xiii, 5 (1930). LIEGE. Sociéte Royale des Sciences de Liége-—Mémoires, 3me Série, xiv (1928). LIVERPOOL. Liverpool School of Tropical Medicine—Annals of Tropical Medicine and Parasitology, xxiii, 3-4 (T.p. & c.) (1929); xxiv, 1-2 (19380). LONDON. British Museum (Natural History) —A Monograph of the Recent Cephalopoda. Pt. 1. Octopodinae. By G. C. Robson (1929); Diptera of Patagonia and South Chile. Pt. 1. By C. P. Alexander; Pt. 2, Fasc. 1, by A. L. Tonnoir; Pt. 2, Fase. 2, by F. W. Edwards (1929); Index Animalium, 2nd Section, Pts. xvii-xix (1928-1929); Insects of Samoa and other Samoan Terrestrial Arthropoda: Pt. i, Fase. 2; Pt. iv, Fase. 3-4; Pt. vi, Fase. 3-4; Pt. viii, Fasc. 2 (1929). Entomological Society of London.—Proceedings, iv, 2-3 (T.p. & c.) (1929-1930) ; v, 1 (1930); Transactions, Ixxvii, 2 (T.p. & ce.) (1929); Ixxviii, 1 (1930). Geological Society.—Quarterly Journal, Ixxxy, 4 (T.p. & c.) (1929); Ixxxvi, 1-2 (19380). Linnean Society.—Journal, Botany, xlviii, 323 (1930); Zoology, xxxvii, 250- 251 (1930); List, 1929-1930 (1929); Proceedings, 141st Session, 1928-1929 (1930). Ministry of Agriculture and Fisheries.—Journal, xxxvi, 8-12 (T.p. & c.) (1929- 1930); xxxvii, 1-7 (1930). Royal Botanic Gardens, Kew.—Bulletin of Miscellaneous Information, 1929 (1929). Royal Microscopical Society.—Journal, Series iii, xlix, 1929, 4 (T.p. &c.) (1929); 1, 1930, 1-3 (1930); List of Fellows (Sept., 1930) (19380). Royal Society—Philosophical Transactions, Series B, ccxvii, No. B 449 (T.p. & ec.) (1929); eexviii, Nos. B 450-460 (1929-1930) ; Proceedings, Series B, cv, Nos. B 738-740 (T.p. & c.) (1929-1930); evi, Nos. B 741-747 (T.p. & c.) (1930); cvii, Nos. B 748-749 (1930). DONATIONS AND EXCHANGES. xlix. Zoological Society.—Index to Proceedings, 1921-1928 (19380); Proceedings, 1929, 2 (T.p. & c. for pp. 1-364) (1929); 3-4 (T.p. & c. for pp. 365-770) (1930); 1930, 1-2 (T.p. & c. for pp. 1-548 (1930); Reports of the Council and Auditors for the Year 1929 (1930); Transactions, xxi, 2 (1930). Los Banos. University of the Philippines: College of Agriculture—‘‘The Philippine Agri- culturist”, T.p. & c. for xvii (1930); xviii, 6-10 (1929-1930); xix, 1-6 (1930). LUND. K. Universitets i Lund.—Lunds Universitets Arsskrift (Acta Universitatis Lundensis), Ny Foljd, Avd. 2, xv-xxv (1919-1929); “Wichtige ztige in der Biologie der Stisswassergastropoden”, by Gustaf Alsterberg (Lund, 1930). LYON. Société Linnéenne de Lyon.—Annales, Nouvelle Série, Ixxiv, 1928 (1929). MapIson. Wisconsin Academy of Sciences, Arts and Letters—Transactions, ii, 1873-74 (1874); xxiv (1929). MADRID. Junta para Ampliacion de Estudios e Investigaciones Cientificas—Memoria correspondiente a los Cursos 1926-7 y 1927-8 (1929). Real Sociedad Espanola de Historia Natural.—Boletin, xxix, 7-10 (T-.p. & c.) (1929); xxx, 1-3 (1930); Memorias, xv, Fasc. 1-2 (complete) (1929). MANCHESTER. Conchological Society of Great Britain and Ireland.—“Journal of Conchology”, Xviii, 12 (T.p. & c.) (1929); xix, 1-2 (1930). Manchester Literary and Philosophical Society~—Memoirs and Proceedings, Ixxiii, 1928-29 (1929). Manchester Museum.—Museum Publication 97 (1929). MANILA. Bureau of Science of the Government of the Philippine Islands.—‘Philippine Journal of Science”, xl, 3-4 (T.p. & ec.) (1929); xli, 1-4 (T.p. & c.) (19380); xlii, 1-4 (T.p. & c.) (1930); xliii, 1-3 (1930). MARSEILLE. Faculté des Sciences de Marseille—Annales, xxvi, 2 (1929); 2me Série, iv, 1 (1929). Musée @ Histoire Naturelle de Marseille—Annales, xxi (1927); xxii, 1-2 (1929). MELBOURNE. “Australasian Journal of Pharmacy’, N.S. x, 119-120 (Index) (1929); xi, 121- 130 (1930). (From the Publisher.) Council for Scientific and Industrial Research.—Bulletin, Nos. 44-45 (19380) ; Journal, ii, 4 (T.p. & c.) (1929); iii, 1-3 (1930); Pamphlets, Nos. 14-17 (1929-1930); ‘Australian Rain-Forest Trees, excluding the Species confined to the Tropics”, by W. D. Francis (1929); “Catalogue of the Scientific and Technical Periodicals in the Libraries of Australia’, edited by E. R. Pitt, B.A. (Melbourne, 1930); “The Dairy Industry of the Commonwealth in relation to Possible Activities of the Council for Scientific and Industrial Research”, by Prof. S. M. Wadham (Melbourne, 1930); “The Progress of Biological Control of Prickly-Pear in Australia’, by Alan P. Dodd (Brisbane, October, 1929). Department of Agriculture in Victoria—Journal, xxvii, 11 (T.p. & c.) (1929); XXvViii, 1-10 (1930). 1. DONATIONS AND EXCHANGES. Field Naturalists’ Club of Victoria—‘The Victorian Naturalist”, xlvi, 8-12 (T.p. & c.) (1929-1930); xlvii, 1-7 (1930). Public Library, Museums and National Gallery of Victoria. Report of the Trustees for 1929 (1930). Royal Australasian Ornithologists’ Union.—‘The Emu”, xxix, 3-4 (T.p. & c.) (1929-1930) 3 xxx, 1-2 (1930). Royal Society of Victoria.—Proceedings, N.S. xlii, 1-2 (T.p. & ec.) (1929-1930) ; >ditbi, Ib. IQR). University of Melbourne.—Calendar, 1930 (1929). MILWAUKEE. ‘ Public Museum.—Year Book, viii, 1928, 1-2 (1929-1930). Monaco. Institut Océanographique de Monaco.—Bulletin, Nos. 541-547 (T.p. & ec. for Nos. 531-547) (1929); 548-560 (1930). MONTEVIDEO. Museo de Historia Natural de Montevideo—dAnales, Série ii, T.p. & ec. for ii (1926-1928) ; iii, 1 (1929). MONTREAL. Laboratoire de Botanique de lUUniversité de Montreal.—Contributions, Nos. 14-15 (1929). Moscow. Biologische Station zu Kossino.—Arbeiten, Lieferung 1-4 (1924-1926); 10 (1929). MUNCHEN. Bayerische Akademie der Wissenschaften.—Abhandlungen, Neue Folge, 1929, 5-6 (1930); Suppl.-Bd. 11-14 Abhandlung (1929); Sitzungsberichte, 1929, 2-3 (ania, 2 @)) (IOZD) 3s WS), 1 CLORO). NANKING. Science Society of China—Contributions from the Biological Laboratory, iv, 1, 3-5 (1928); v, 1, 3-5 (1929); vi, 1-8 (1930). NANTES. Société des Sciences Naturelles de VOuest de la France.—Bulletin, 4me Série, vii, 1927, 1-4 (T.p. & c.) (1927-28); viii, 1928, 1-4 (T.p. & c.) (1929). NAPLES. Museo Zoologico della R. Universita di NapolimAnnuario, Nuova Serie, T.p. & c. for iv (1909-1915); v, 12-23 (T.p. & c.) (1925-1929); Supplemento (Fauna degli Astroni) Fasc. 1-2 (Nos. 1-12) (1915-1928). Stazione Zoologica di Napoli.—Pubblicazioni, ix, 3 (T.p. & ec.) (1929); x, 1-2 (1930). NEw HAveEN. Connecticut Academy of Arts and Sciences——Transactions, xxx, pp. 159-355; 357-510 (19380). NEw York. American Geographical Society—‘‘Geographical Review”, T.p. & ec. for xix (1929); xx}. 1-4 (1930). American Museum of Natural History. ‘Natural History”, xxix, 6 (T.p. & c.) (GLS2 9) exexexee IES G93 0) New York Academy of Sciences.—Annals, xxxi, pp. 1-30; 31-80; 81-120; 121-186 (1929). DONATIONS AND EXCHANGES. li. IDAROS. Det Kongelige Norske Videnskabers Selskab.—Forhandlinger, ii, 1929 (1930) ; Skrifter, 1929 (1929); Museet: Arsberetning, 1928 (1929); Oldsaksamlingens Tilvekst, 1928 (1929); “M. Foslie—Contribution to a Monograph of the Lithothamnia”’, after the author’s death collected and edited by Henrik Printz (1929). NISHIGAHARA, Tokyo. Imperial Agricultural Experiment Station in Japan.—Bulletin, ii, 2 (1919) ; iii, 2 (1928); Journal, i, 1-3 (1929-1930). OMSK. Siberian Institute of Agriculture and Forestry.——Trudi (Transactions), x, 1-6 @i928) a exig G9 29) exile 3 929) is xan (L929) OSLo. Det Norske Videnskaps-Akademi i Oslo—Arbok, 1929; Avhandlinger, I. Mat.- Naturv. Klasse, 1929; Skrifter, I. Mat.-Naturv. Klasse, 1929 (3 vols.) (1930). OTTAWA. Department of Agriculture.—Bulletin, N.S. Nos. 118, 114; Circular, No. 72 (1929); Pamphlet, N.S. No. 108 (1930); Report of the Minister of Agri- culture for Year ended March 31, 1929 (1929); Reports of the Superinten- dents of Experimental Stations at Charlottetown and Farnham for the Year 1928 (1929). Department of Mines: Geological Survey of Canada.—Bulletin, No. 56 (National Museum Annual Report for 1927); 62 (National Museum Annual Report for 1928) (1929); Economic Geology Series, No. 6 (1929); Memoirs, 155, 157-162 (1929-1930); Report of the Department of Mines for Fiscal Year ending March 31, 1929 (1929); Summary Reports, 1928, pts. A and B (1929). Royal Society of Canada.—Transactions, Third Series, xxiii, Section 1-2; Section 3, pt. 2; Section 4, pts. 1-2; Section 5, pt. 2 (1929); xxiv, List of Officers, ete. (1930). Pato ALTO. Stanford University.—Contributions from the Dudley Herbarium, i, 3 (1929); Stanford University Publications, University Series, Biological Sciences, v, Sead ah (GWA )e Paris. 9 “Journal de Conchyliologie”’, \xxiii, 3-4 (T.p. & c.) (1929-1930) ; Ixxiv, 1-2 (1930). (From the Publisher.) Muséum National Wd Histoire Naturelle—Archives, 6me Série, iv (1929); Bulletin, 1928, 1-6 (T.p. & c.) (1928); 2e Série, i, 1-6 (T.p. & ce.) (1929). Société Entomologique de France.—Annales, xcviii, 3-4 (T.p. & c.) (1929); xeix, 1-3 (1930); Bulletin, 1929, 15-21 (T.p. & c.) (1929); 1930, 3-6 and Supplément, 7-14 (1930). PEKING. Academia Sinica.— ‘Academia Sinica with its Research Institutes” (1929). Fan Memorial Institute of Biology.—Bulletin, i, 1-9 (1929-1930). Metropolitan Library.—Third Annual Report for the Year ending June, 1929 (1929). National Geological Survey of China.—‘‘Interim Report on the Skull of Sinanthropus”, by Davidson Black (From Bull. Geol. Soc. China, ix, 1, 1930); “Preliminary Notice of the Discovery of an Adult Sinanthropus Skull at lii. DONATIONS AND EXCHANGES. Chou Kou Tien”, by Davidson Black; “An Account of the Discovery of an Adult Sinanthropus Skull in the Chou Kou Tien Deposit”, by W. C. Pei; “Preliminary Report on the Chou Kou Tien Fossiliferous Deposit”, by P. T. de Chardin and C. C. Young (Reprints from Bull. Geol. Soc. China, viii, 3, 1929). Peking Society of Natural History.—Bulletin, iv, 1-4 (1929-1930) ; Index to Vols. i-iv (1926-1930); v, 1 (1930). : PERM. Institut des Recherches Biologiques a VUniversité de Perm.—Bulletin, vi, 10 (T.p. & c.) (1929); vii, 1-3 (1930); Travaux, ii, 4, pts. 1-2 (1930). PERTH. Department of Agriculture of Western Australia.—Journal, 2nd Series, vi, 4 (Index) (1929); vii, 1-2 and Supplement, 3 (1930). Geological Survey of Western Australia—Annual Progress Reports for the Years 1928 (1929); 1929 (1930); Bulletin 94 (Text and Maps and Sections) (1929). Government Statistician, Western Australia— Quarterly Statistical Abstract, Nos. 255-258 (1929-1930). Royal Society of Western Australia.—Journal, xi, 1924-1925 (1925); xv, 1928- 1929 (1929). PHILADELPHIA. American Philosophical Society.—Proceedings, Ixviii, 2-4 (T.p. & c.) (1929); lxix, 15 (1930); Transactions, N.S. xxiii, 1 (1929). University of Pennsylvania.—Contributions from the Zoological Laboratory, xxvii, 1928-1929 (1929). Wistar Institute of Anatomy and Biology— ‘The Journal of Experimental Zoology”, liv, 2-3 (T.p. & ec.) (1929); lv (complete) (1930); lvi, 1-4 (T.p. & c.) (S30) eMlviiy el SS OE Zoological Society of Philadelphia.—lviii-th Annual Report of the Board of Directors (1930); Report of the Laboratory and Museum of Comparative Pathology in conjunction with the lviii-th Annual Report of the Society (1930). PLYMOUTH. Marine Biological Association of the United Kingdom.—Journal, N.S. Xvi, 2-3 (T.p. & c.) (1929-1930); xvii, 1 (19380). PORTICI. Laboratorio di Zoologia Generale e Agraria della R. Scuola Superiore d Agricoltura.—Bollettino, xxiii (1930). PRAG. Deutsche Naturwissenschaftlich-medizinische Verein fur Bohmen “Lotos’ in Prag.—Naturwissenschaftliche Zeitschrift ‘“Lotos”’, Ixxi-lxxv (complete) (1923-1927) ; Ixxvi, 8-12 (T.p. & ec.) (1928); Ixxvii, 1-12 (T.p. & c.) (1929). Societas Entomologica Cechosloveniae.—Acta, xxv, 1928, 1-6 (T.p. & c.) (1928) ; 2O-Gvily IVA, ale (ao, ts 5) (GALO28))- PUSA. Agricultural Research Institute-—Catalogue of Indian Insects, Pt. xix (1930); Memoirs of the Department of Agriculture in India, Botanical Series, xvii, 3-4 (1929-1930); xviii, 2-4, 6 (1929-1930); Scientific Reports, 1928-29 (1930). DONATIONS AND EXCHANGES. liii. RENNES. Société Géologique et Minéralogique de Bretagne.—Bulletin, vii, 1926, 3-4, Fascicule Spécial (1928-1929); viii, 1927, 1-4 (1930). RICHMOND. Hawkesbury Agricultural College—H.A.C. Journal, xxvi, 11-12 (T.p. & c.) (1929); xxvii, 1-10 (1930). RIGA. Latvijas Biologijas Biedriba (Societas Biologiae Latviae)—Raksti (Acta), i (1929). Naturforscher Verein zu Riga.—Korrespondenzblatt, lix-Ix (1927, 1930). R10 DE JANEIRO. Instituto Oswaldo Cruz—Memorias, xxii, 1929, (complete) (1929); xxiii, 1930, 1-5 (Index) (1930); Supplemento das Memorias, Nos. 11-12 (1929). Jardim Botanico.—Archivos, v (1930). RIVERSIDE. University of California: Graduate School of Tropical Agriculture and Citrus Experiment Station.—Papers, Nos. 152, 166, 179, 180, 184-186, 188-206 (1927- 1929). San DIEGO. San Diego Society of Natural History—Transactions, v, 16-20 (T.p. &'c.) (1929); vi, 1-3 (1930). SAN FRANCISCO. California Academy of Sciences.—Proceedings, Fourth Series, xvii, 11-12; xviii, 4-16 (1929). SARATOV. Naturforschergesellschaft.—Berichte, iii, 1 (1929). SEATTLE. ‘Puget Sound Biological Station.—Publications, vii, pp. 1-168; 169-288 (1929- 1930). SENDAI. Tohoku Imperial University.—Science Reports, 2nd Series, xiii, 3; xiv, 1 (1930); 3rd Series, iii, 3 (T.p. & c.) (1929); 4th Series, iv, 3-4 (T.p. & c.) (1929); v, 1-2 (1930). SHANGHAI. Institute of Geology, National Research Institute of China—Memoir, No. 8 (1929). SHARON. Cushman Laboratory for Foraminiferal Research.—Contributions, v, 4; Index to Vols. i-v (1929); vi, 1-3 (1930). SOFIA. Société Botanique de Bulgarie.—Bulletin, iii (1929). Société Bulgare des Sciences Naturelles—Travaux, Nos. 2-12 (1904-1926). Str. Louis. Missouri Botanical Garden.—Annals, xvi, 3-4 (T.p. & ce.) (1929); xvii, 1-2 (1930). STOCKHOLM. Centralanstaltens Entomologiska Avdelning Experimentalfaltet.—Flygblad, Nos. 135, 148, 144, 147, 148 (1928-1930); Meddelanden, Nos. 341-343, 345, 349, 350, 354-357, 361, 362, 372-375 (1928-1930). liv. DONATIONS AND EXCHANGES. K. Svenska Vetenskapsakademien.—Arkiy for Botanik, xxii, 2-4 (T.p. & c.) (1929); Arkiv for Matematik, Astronomi och Fysik, xxi, 2-4 (T.p. & c.) (1929); Arkiv for Kemi, Mineralogi och Geologi, x, 1-2 (1929-1930); Arkiv for Zoologi, xx, 3-4 (T.p. & c.) (1929); xxi, 1-2 (1929-1930); Arsbok, 1929 (1929); Handlingar, Tredje Serien, vi, 1-8 (T.p. & c.) (1928-1929); vii, 1-4 (T.p. & c.) (1930); viii, 1 (1929); Skrifter i Naturskyddsarenden, Nos. 10-14 (1929-1930); “Kristinebergs Zoologiska Station, 1877-1927” (1930). SYDNEY. Australasian Antarctic Hapedition, 1911-14.—Scientific Reports, Series ©, vi, 7 (1930). Australian Musewm.—Annual Report of the Trustees for Year ended 30th June, 1929 (1930); Australian Museum Magazine, T.p. & ec. for iii (1927-1929) ; iv, 1-4 (19380); Memoirs, v, 3-4 (T.p. & ec.) (1929-1930); Records, xvi, 8 (T.p. & c.) (1929); xvii, 6-9 (1929-1930) ; xviii, 1 (1930). Australian National Research Council.—‘Australian Science Abstracts’, ix, 1-4 (1930). Australian Veterinary Association.—‘Australian Veterinary Journal’, v, 4 (AOA) s Aap ess G13). Botanic Gardens.—‘A Critical Revision of the Genus Hucalyptus’’, viii, 3-4 (1929-1930), by the late J. H. Maiden, lately Govt. Botanist and Director of the Botanic Gardens, Sydney. Department of Agriculture, N.S.W.— ‘Agricultural Gazette of N.S.W.”, xl, 12 (T.p. & ce.) (1929); xli, 1-11 (1930); Veterinary Research Report, 1927-28, No. 5 (1929) (sent by Veterinary Research Station, Glenfield, N.S.W.). Department of Mines—Annual Report for Year 1929 (1930); Geological Survey: Mineral Resources, No. 35 (1930). Department of Public Health.—Report of the Director-General of Public Health for the Year 1928 (1930). Education Department—‘Education Gazette”, xxiii, 12 (T.p. & c.) (1929); xxiv, 1-11 (19380). Forestry Commission of N.S.W.—Report for the Year ended 31st December, 1929 (1930); “The Australian Forestry Journal’, xii, 4 (1929); xiii, 1-3 (1930). Government Statistician—Quarterly Statistical Bulletin, Nos. 214-216 (1929- W980) Institution of Engineers, Australia—Journal, ii, 3-4, 7-9 (1930). Naturalists’ Society of New South Wales.—‘The Australian Naturalist”, T.p. & c. for Vols. v and vi (1922/25-1926/27) ; viii, 1-4 (1930). Public Library of New South Wales.—Annual Report of the Trustees for the Year ended 30th June, 1929 (1929). Royal Society of New South Wales.—Journal and Proceedings, Ixiii, 1929 (1930). Royal Zoological Society of New South Wales—“The Australian Zoologist’, vi, 2-3 (1930). State Fisheries, Chief Secretary's Department.—Annual Report of the Fisheries of N.S.W. for the Year 1928 (1929). Technological Museum.—Bulletin, Nos. 13-15 (1929); Five reprints from Journ. Roy. Soc. N.S.W., lxiii (1929-1930). “The Medical Journal of Australia’, 1929, ii, 22-26 (T.p. & c.) (1929); 1930, i, 1-26 (T.p. & c.) (1930); 1930, ii, 1-21 (1930). (From the Editor.) DONATIONS AND EXCHANGES. lv. University of Sydney—Calendar for the Year 1930 (1930); Journal of the Cancer Research Committee, i, 4; ii, 1-3 (1930). TASHKENT. Université de VAsie Centrale—Acta Universitatis Asiae Mediae, Ser. ia, 1; ib, 1; ii, 1-2; iiia, 2; iva, 1; va, 2; viia, 13-16; viiia, 6-10; viiib, 4-9; ix, 13-14; x, 1; xi, 1-3; xiia, 2, 4-8; xiib, 2 (1929). ToKYOo. Imperial University of Tokyo.—Journal of the Faculty of Science, T.p. & c. for Section i, Vol. i (1925-1929); Section iii, Botany, ii, 3-5 (1930); Section iv, Zoology, ii, 2 (1929). National Research Council of Japan.—Japanese Journal of Botany, iv, 4 (T.p. & ce.) (1929); Japanese Journal of Geology and Geography, vii, 1-4 (T.p. & ec.) (1929-1930); Japanese Journal of Zoology, ii, 4 (T.p. & ce.) (1929) ; iii, 1-2 (1930); Report, Nos. 1, Mar., 1922; 2-3, Apr. 1922—Mar. 1924 (1930). TORONTO. Royal Canadian Institute —Transactions, xvii, 1 (1929). TOULOUSE. Société d'Histoire Naturelle de Toulouse.—Bulletin, xlix, 1921, 1-3 (1921); 1, 1922, 1-4 (T.p. & c.) (1922); li, 1923, 1 (1923); lvi, 1927, 4 (Index) (1927); Ivii, 1928, 1-4 (T.p. & c.) (1928-1929) ; lviii, 1929, 1-4 (T.p. & c.) (1929). TRING. Zoological Museum.—Novitates Zoologicae, xxxv, 3-4 (T.p. & ec.) (1930). TUNIS. Institut Pasteur de Tunis.—Archives, xviii, 3-4 (T.p. & ¢c.) (1929); xix, 1-2 (1930). UPPSALA. University of Upsala.—Bulletin of the Geological Institution, xxii (1939). URBANA. American Microscopical Society—Transactions, xlviii, 4 (T.p. & c.) (1929); xlix, 1-3 (1930). University of Illinois.—lIllinois Biological Monographs, xi, 4 (1927); xii, 1 (1929). VIENNA. Naturhistorische Museum in Wien.—Annalen, xliii, 1929 (1929). Zoologisch-botanische Gesellschaft in Wien.—Verhandlungen, Ixxix, 1929, 1 (1929). WARSAW. Panstwowe Muzeum Zoologiczne (Polish Museum of Zoology).—Annales Musei Zoologici Polonici, vii, 2-4 (T.p. & ec.) (1928); viii, 1-2 (1929); ix, 1-5 (1929); Fragmenta Faunistica, i, 1-7 (1930). Societas Botanica Poloniae.—Acta, vi, 2-4 (T.p. & c.) (1929); vii, 1 (1930). whe WASHINGTON. Bureau of American Ethnology.—Bulletins 89, 90, 91, 93, 95, 96 (1929-1930). Carnegie Institution of Washington—Publications, Nos. 390, Vols. i-ii; 395, 398, 399, 405 (1929-1930); “Reports of the Conferences on Cycles” (1929); Year Book No. 28 (1929). lvi. DONATIONS AND EXCHANGES. National Academy of Sciences——Proceedings, xv, 11-12 (T.p. & c.) (1929); xvi, 1-10 (1930). National Research Council.—Organization and Members, 1929-1930 (1929). Smithsonian Institution—Annual Report of the Board of Regents for the Year ending June 30, 1928 (1929). U.S. Coast and Geodetic Survey: Department of Commerce.—Special Publica- tion 159 (1930). U.S. Department of Agriculture—Year Book, 1930 (1930); Library: Biblio- graphical Contributions, No. 20 (Jan., 1930); Bureau of Entomology: Circular, Nos. 106, 109, 109 (Corrected Edition), 116, 117, 123, 130 (1930); Farmers’ Bulletins, Nos. 1483 (revised), 1624, 1627 (1929-1930); Miscel- laneous Publication No. 74 (1930); Technical Bulletins, Nos. 86, 112, 135, 137, 138, 149, 152, 157, 161, 178, 183, 188, 190, 195, 198 (1929-1930); Seven reprints from Journal of Agricultural Research, xl, 4, 6-8, 11 (1930). U.S. Geological Survey.—Fiftieth Annual Report of the Director for Fiscal Year ended June 30, 1929 (1929); Bulletins, T.p. & c. for 788 (1928), 799, 800, 804, 808, 809, 810B-C, 811A-E (T.p. & c.), 812A-D (T.p. & c.), 813B-C, 816, 822B (1929-1930); Professional Papers, 154A, 156, 158A-I (T.p. & c.), 165A-B (1929-1930); Water Supply Papers, 578, 597C, E (T.p. & c.), 598-619, 621-624, 627, 629, 632, 636B-F (T.p. & c.), 687A (1929-1930). U.S. National Museum.—Bulletins, 76, pt. 3; 100, Vols. lx, x; 104, pts. vi, vil; 147-153 (1929-1930); Proceedings, T.p. & ec. for Vol. Ixxiv; Ixxyv, 19 (No. 2790) (T.p. & ce.) (1929); Ixxvi, 5-26 (Nos. 2802-2823) (T.p. & c.) (1929-1930) ; Ixxvii, 1-4, 7-11 (Nos. 2824-2827, 2830-2834) (1929-1930); Report for the Year ended June 30, 1929 (1929). WELLINGTON. Department of Scientific and Industrial Research: Geological Survey Branch.— xxili-trd and xxiv-th Annual Reports (N.S.), 1928-29, 1929-30 (1929-1930) ; Bulletin, No. 33 (N.S.) (1929). Dominion Museum.—Bulletin, No. 12 (1929); “New Zealand Journal of Science and Technology”, xi, 4-6 (T.p. & ¢.) (1929-1930); xii, 1 (1930). New Zealand Institute—Transactions and Proceedings, Ix, 3-4 (T.p. & e¢.) (1929-1930); Ixi, 1-2 (1980). WELTEVREDEN. Centraal Militair Geneeskundig Laboratorium.—Dracunculus medinensis in the Dutch East Indies’, by S. L. Brug (From Meded. Dienst Volks. in Ned.- Indie, Pt. i, 1930); “Wilariasis in Ned.-Indie. ii’, by S. L. Brug and H. de Rook; “Scabies crustosa s. Norvegica”’, by S. L. Brug, J. Haga, R. P. A. C. van Joost and J. A. M. Verbunt (From Over. Genees. Tijd. Ned.-Indie, 1xx, 5 and 6, 1930); ‘Filaria malayi, n. sp., parasitic in Man in the Malay Archipelago’, by S. L. Brug (From Vol. iii, Trans. of F.H.A.T.M. Seventh Congress, held in India, Dec., 1927) (1929). Koninklijke Natuurkundige Vereeniging in Nederl.-Indie—Natuurkundig Tijdschrift, Ixxxix, 3 (T.p. & c.) (1929); xe, 1-2 (1930). Woops Hote. Marine Biological Laboratory.—Biological Bulletin, lvii, 1-6 (T.p. & c.) (1929); lviil; 4-39 Giep &ice)GL930) elie nGl930)) 2 WoRMLEY. The Hill Museum.—Bulletin, iii, 3-4 (T.p. & c.) (1929); iv, 1 (1930). DONATIONS AND EXCHANGES. lvii. Private Donors (and authors, unless otherwise stated). Brewster, Miss A. A., and Dymock’s Book Arcade, Ltd., Sydney (donors) .— “Botany for Australian Secondary Schools’, by Agnes A. Brewster (Sydney, 1929). Carnegie Corporation Visitors’ Grants Committee, Pretoria, South Africa (donor) .— “Museums and Art Galleries as Educational Agents’, by EH. C. Chubb (1929). FLETCHER, W. Horner, Sydney (donor).—From among the books of the late J. J. Fletcher—Journal of Sir William Macleay (58 pp., 1875); ‘‘Notices of Insects that are known to form the Bases of Fungoid Parasites’, by G. R. G. (privately printed, 1858); “On the Birds in the Imperial Collection at Vienna, etc.”’, by A. von Pelzeln (From ‘‘The Ibis’, Jan., 1873); “Specimen Zoologicum, etc.”’, by P. J. I. de Fremery (1819); “The Stereoscopic Magazine’, No. xiv (Aug., 1859); Bulletin No. 235, Agric. Exp. Station, Univ. of California (Berkeley, 1912); “The Tasmanian Journal of Natural Science, ete.’, i, 1 (1841); ‘“Cata- logue of Mammalia, etc.”, by G. Krefft (1864); and 27 Pamphlets, reprints, catalogues, ete. Froccatr, W. W., F.L.S., Sydney (donor).—Hight Pamphlets published by Depart- ment of Interior, Ottawa, Canada—‘‘The Lake Erie Cross’; “Guide to Fort Anne’; “Guide to Fort Chambly” (1922); “Traffic and Motor Regulations for Canadian National Parks” (1921); “Guide to the Geology of the Canadian National Parks” (1914); “Handbook of the Rock Mountains Park Museum” (1914); “The Banff-Windermere Highway” (1923); “Just a Sprig of Mountain Heather” (1914). JENSEN, H. L., Sydney.—‘Decomposition of Keratin by Soil Micro-Organisms” (From Journ. Agric. Sci., xx, 3, July, 1930); “On the Influence of the Carbon: Nitrogen Ratios of Organic Material on the Mineralisation of Nitrogen” (From Journ. Agric. Sci., xix, 1, Jan., 1929). PostHuMus, Dr. O., Buitenzorg, Java.— “On Palaeobotanical Investigations in the Dutch East Indies and Adjacent Regions” (From Bull. Jard. Bot. Buitenzorg, Ser. iii, x, 3, 1929). REYCHLER, LUCIEN, Saint-Nicolas (Waes), Belgium (donor).—‘“Complement to the Album Mutation with Orchids”, by L. Reychler (1930); French Association for the Promotion of Science, Address, Congress of La Rochelle (1928), by E. Rabaud and ‘“Utriusque labore’, etc., by L. Reychler (1930); “The Embryo of a Collection of Orchids to be preserved to Science’, by L. Reychler and “Fecundation by Traumatism, etc.”’, by Z. Kamerling (1930). Shell Company of Australia, Sydney (donor)—‘“Wild Flowers of Australia’ (Sydney, no date). SmirH, Dr. G. P. DARNELL, Sydney.—Australian Tobacco Investigation, Bulletin No. 1 (no date). SteaD, David G., Sydney (donor).—U.S. Department of the Interior: National Park Service—“Glimpses of our National Parks”; “Glimpses of our National Monuments”; 14 Circulars of General Information regarding the National Parks (1929). TADGELL, A. J., Melbourne, Victoria (donor).—‘“The Victorian Naturalist”, Vol. xlvi, No. 12 (1930). TowLg, C. C., B.A., Eastwood, Sydney.—“Certain Stone Implements of the Scraper Family found along the Coast of New South Wales” (Sydney, 1930). LIST OF MEMBERS, 1930. ORDINARY MEMBERS. 1927 *Albert, Michel Francois, ““Boomerang’’, Elizabeth Bay, Sydney. 1929 1905 1906 1922 1899 1929 1927 1912 1913 1888 1925 1G )aly) 1907 1920 1929 1923 1926 1912 1927 1912 1923 1921 1924 ila 1928 1920 1921 1910 1910 1926 1901 1927 1930 1905 1890 1903 1899 1924 1901 Allan, Miss Catherine Mabel Joyce, Australian Museum, College Street, Sydney. Allen, Edmund, c/o Chief Engineer for Railways. Brisbane, Q. Anderson, Charles, M.A., D.Sc., Australian Museum, College Street, Sydney. Anderson, Robert Henry, B.Sc.Agr., Botanic Gardens, Sydney. Andrews, Ernest Clayton, B.A., F.G.S., 32 Benelong Crescent, Bellevue Hill. Angell, Herbert Raleigh, Ph.D., Council for Scientific and Industrial Research, Canberra, F.C.T. Armstrong, Jack Walter French, ‘‘Callubri’, Nyngan, N.S.W. Aurousseau, Marcel, B.Sc. Badham, Charles, M.B., Ch.M., B.Sc., Bureau of. Microbiology, 93 Macquarie Street, Sydney. Baker, Richard Thomas, The Crescent, Cheltenham. F Barnard, Colin, M.Se., Council for Scientific and Industrial Research, Division of Plant Industry, Box 109, Canberra, F.C.T. Barnett, Marcus Stanley, c/o Colonial Sugar Refining Co., Ltd., O’Connell Street, Sydney. Benson, Professor William Noel, B.A., D.Sc., F.G.S., University of Otago, Dunedin, N.Z. Blakely, William Faris, Botanic Gardens, Sydney. Boardman, William, Australian Museum, College Street, Sydney. Bone, Walter Henry, 6 Deans Place, Sydney. Branch, Kenneth James Fergus, B.Sc., 99 North Steyne, Manly. Breakwell, Ernest, B.A., B.Se., Department of Education, Box 33A, G.P.O., Sydney. Bredero, William Adrien Lewis, Box 127, Post Office, Orange, N.S.W. Brewster, Miss Agnes A., 481 Alfred Street, North Sydney. Brough, Patrick, M.A., B.Sc., B.Se.Agr., “Kinross’’, Billyard Avenue, Wahroonga. Brown, Horace William, 871 Hay Street, Perth, W.A. Brown, Miss Ida Alison, B.Se., Geology, Department, The University, Sydney. Browne, William Rowan, D.Sc., Geology Department, The University, Sydney. Burgmann, Rev. Ernest Henry, M.A., St. John’s Theological College, Morpeth, N.S. W. Burkitt, Professor Arthur Neville St. George Handcock, M.B., B.Sc., Medical School, The University, Sydney. Burns, Alexander Noble, Sugar Experiment Station, Mackay, N. Queensland. Burrell, Harry, 19 Doncaster Avenue, Kensington. Burrell, Mrs. Harry, 19 Doncaster Avenue, Kensington. Buzacott, James Hardie, Meringa (private bag), via Cairns, North Queensland. Campbell, John Honeyford, I.8.0., M.B.E., Royal Mint, Ottawa, Canada. Campbell, Thomas Graham, “Burrandong’’, 101 Lauderdale Avenue, Manly. Carey, Miss Gladys, B.Sc., 32 Rawson Street, Epping. Carne, Walter Mervyn, Senior Plant Pathologist, Division of Economic Botany, Council for Scientific and Industrial Research, c/o Department of Agriculture, Perth, W.A. Carson, Duncan, c/o Winchcombe, Carson, Ltd., Bridge Street, Sydney. Carter, Herbert James, B.A., F.E.S., “Garrawillah’”’, Kintore Street, Wahroonga. Cheel, Edwin, Botanic Gardens, Sydney. Chisholm, Edwin Claud, M.B., Ch.M., Comboyne, N.S.W. Cleland, Professor John Burton, M.D., Ch.M., The University, Adelaide, S.A. * Life Member. 1930 1908 1928 1900 1925 1929 1885 1929 1925 1928 1881 1927 1921 1926 1928 1920 1930 1914 1908 1927 1930 ibs)ial 1886 1930 1912 1911 1910 1901 1911 1925 1909 1919 1897 1885 1928 1922 Uae 1911 1930 1913 LIST OF MEMBERS. Thiexe Cochran, William Manning Patrick, B.A., c/o Messrs. W. R. Carpenter & Co., Ltd., Rabaul, New Guinea. Cotton, Professor Leo Arthur, M.A., D.Sc., Geology Department, The University, Sydney. Craft, Frank Alfred, B.Se., “Kyla”, 24 Fourth Street, Ashbury. Crago, William Henry, M.D., 185 Macquarie Street, Sydney. Cunningham, Gordon Herriot, Department of Agriculture, Fields Division, Plant Research Station, P.O. Box 240, Palmerston North, N.Z. Dakin, Professor William John, D.Sc., Department of Zoology, The University, Sydney. David, Sir Tannatt William Edgeworth, K.B.E., C.M.G., D.S.O., M.A., D.Se., F.R.S., Burdett Street, Hornsby. Deane, Cedric, A.M.I.H.Aust., “Cloyne’’, 9 State Street, Malvern, Victoria. de Beuzeville, Wilfred Alexander Watt, J.P., ‘““Melamere,’ Welham Street, Beecroft. Dickson, Bertram Thomas, B.A., Ph.D., Council for Scientific and Industrial Research, Division of Plant Industry, Box 109, Canberra, F.C.T. Dixson, Thomas Storie, M.B., Ch.M., 215 Macquarie Street, Sydney. *Dixson, William, ‘‘Merridong’’, Gordon Road, Killara. Dodd, Alan Parkhurst, Prickly Pear Laboratory, Sherwood, Brisbane, Q. Dumigan, Edward Jarrett, Boys’ State School, Toowoomba North, Toowoomba, Queensland. Durrell, Miss Hileen Leys, B.Se., 345 Bridge Street, Drummoyne. Dwyer, Rt. Rev. Joseph Wilfrid, Bishop of Wagga, Wagga Wagga, N.S.W. English, Miss Kathleen Mary Isabel, B.Sc., March Street, Yass, N.S.W. Enright, Walter John, B.A., West Maitland, N.S.W. Flynn, Professor Theodore Thomson, D.Sc., University of Tasmania, Hobart, Tasmania. Francis, William Douglas, Botanic Gardens, Brisbane, Queensland. Fraser, Miss Lilian Ross, B.Sc., “Hopetoun,’’ Bellamy Street, Pennant Hills. Froggatt, John Lewis, B.Sc., Department of Agriculture, Rabaul, New Guinea. Froggatt, Walter Wilson, F.L.S., Young Street, Croydon. Fuller, Miss Mary Ellen, B.Sc., Council for Scientific and Industrial. Research, Box 109, Canberra, F.C.T. Goldfinch, Gilbert M., ‘‘Lyndhurst’’, Salisbury Road, Rose Bay. Greenwood, William Frederick Neville, F.L.S., F.E.S., c/o Colonial Sugar Refining Co., Ltd., Lautoka, Fiji. Griffiths, Edward, B.Sc., Department of Agriculture, Raphael Street, Sydney. Gurney, William Butler, B.Se., F.E.S., Department of Agriculture, Raphael Street, Sydney. Hacker, Henry, F.H.S., Queensland Museum, Bowen Park, Brisbane, Q. Hale, Herbert Matthew, South Australian Museum, Adelaide, S.A. Hall, Edwin Cuthbert, M.D., Ch.M., George Street, Parramatta. Hall, Leslie Lionel, ‘‘Haldor’, Drumalbyn Road, Bellevue Hill. Halligan, Gerald H., F.G.S., ‘Uplands’, Station Street, Pymble. Hamilton, Alexander Greenlaw, “Tanandra’’, Hercules Street, Chatswood. Hamilton, Edgar Alexander, 16 Hercules Street, Chatswood. \ Hardwick, Frederick George, B.D.S., D.D.Sc., ‘““Wyoming”’, 175 Macquarie Street, Sydney. Hardy, G. H. Hurlstone, The University, Brisbane, Q. Haviland, The Venerable Archdeacon F. E., St. Stephen’s Rectory, Portland, N.S.W. Heydon, George Aloysius Makinson, M.B., Ch.M., School of Public Health and Tropical Medicine, The University, Sydney. Hill, Gerald F., Council for Scientific and Industrial Research, Division of Economie Entomology, No. 12, Melbourne Buildings, Canberra, F.C.T. * Life Member. 1927 1910 LIST OF MEMBERS. Holmes, Professor James Macdonald, B.Sc., F.R.G.S., Department of Geography, The University, Sydney. Hull, Arthur Francis Basset, Box 704, G.P.O., Sydney. Hynes, Miss Sarah, B.A., “Isis”, Soudan Street, Randwick. Irby, Llewellyn George, Forestry Department, Hobart, Tasmania. Jacobs, Ernest Godfried, ‘“‘“Cambria’’, 106 Bland Street, Ashfield. Jensen, Hans Laurits, Department of Agriculture, The University, Sydney. Johnston, Professor Thomas Harvey, M.A., D.Se., F.L.S., The University, Adelaide, S.A. Ti Joplin, Miss Germaine Anne, B.Sc., ‘“Huyton’’, Wentworth Street, Eastwood. Julius, Sir George Alfred, B.Sc., B.E., M.I.Mech.E., M.1.H.Aust., 67 Castlereagh Street, Sydney. Kendall, Mrs. W. M., M.Se. (née Williams), 5 Queen Victoria Street, Drummoyne. Kinghorn, James Roy, Australian Museum, College Street, Sydney. Lawson, Augustus Albert, 9 Wilmot Street, Sydney. Lea, Arthur M., F.E.S., 241 Young Street, Unley, Adelaide, S.A. Le Souef, Albert Sherbourne, C.M.Z.S., Zoological Gardens, Taronga Park, Mosman. Lindergren, Gustaf Mauritz, Secretary, Swedish Chamber of Commerce, Pacific House, 249 George Street, Sydney. Lucas, Arthur Henry Shakespeare, M.A., B.Se., ‘“‘Girrahween’”’, William Street, Roseville. Mackerras, Ian Murray, M.B., Ch.M., B.Sc., Box 109, Canberra, F.C.T. Mackinnon, Ewen, B.Se., Commonwealth Department of Health, Civic Centre, Canberra, F.C.T. Mann, John, Commonwealth Prickly Pear Board, Field Station, Box 49, Post Office, Chinchilla, Queensland. Martin, Miss Bertha Mary, B.Sc., 371 Mowbray Road, Chatswood. Mawson, Sir Douglas, D.Sc., B.E., F.R.S., The University, Adelaide, S.A. McCarthy, Timothy, Department of Agriculture, Raphael Street, Sydney. McDonnough, Thomas, L. S., “‘Iluka’’, Hamilton Street, Randwick. McHugh, Miss Mary Virgilius, St. Vincent’s College, Potts Point, Sydney. McKeown, Keith Collingwood, Australian Museum, College Street, Sydney. McKie, Rev. Ernest Norman, B.A., The Manse, Guyra, N.S.W. © McLuckie, John, M.A., D.Sc., Botany Department, The University, Sydney. McNeill, Francis Alexander, Australian Museum, College Street, Sydney. Mitchell, Miss Dora Enid, B.Se., ‘“‘Wilga’’, Bradley Street, Goulburn. Munch-Petersen, Erik, Ph.B., M.Se. (Haunensis), M.I.F., 31 Lytton Street, North Sydney. Mungomery, Reginald William, c/o Sugar Experiment Station, Bundaberg, Queens- land. ‘ Murray, Patrick Desmond Fitzgerald, D.Sc., Zoology Department, The University, Sydney. Musgrave, Anthony, F.E.S., Australian Museum, College Street, Sydney. Newman, Ivor Vickery, M.Sc., “Tip Tree’, Kingsland Road, Strathfield. Newman, Leslie John William, F.E.S., ‘‘Walthamstowe’’, 5 Bernard Street, Clare- mont, W.A. Nicholson, Alexander John, D.Se., F.E.S., Council for Scientific and Industrial Research, Box 109, Canberra, F.C.T. Noble, Robert Jackson, B.Se.Agr., Ph.D., Department of Agriculture, Raphael Street, Sydney. North, David Sutherland, c/o Colonial Sugar Refining Co., Ltd., Broadwater Mill, Richmond River, N.S.W. O’Dwyer, Margaret Helena, B.Se., Ph.D., Dyson-Perrins Laboratory, South Parks Road, Oxford, England. ; Oke, Charles George, 56 Chaucer Street, St. Kilda, Victoria. Oliver, Walter Reginald Brook, F.L.S., F.Z.S., Dominion Museum, Wellington, N.Z. LIST OF MEMBERS. xa Osborn, Professor Theodore George Bentley, D.Se., F.L.S., Department of Botany, The University, Sydney. Osborne, George Davenport, D.Sc., Geology Department, The University, Sydney. Perkins, Frederick Athol, B.Sc.Agr., Biology Department, University of Queensland, Brisbane, Q. Phillips, Montagu Austin, F.L.S., F.E.S., 57 St. George’s Square, London, S.W., England. Pincombe, Torrington Hawke, B.A., ‘‘Mulyan’’, Beta Street, Lane Cove, Sydney. Priestley, Professor Henry, M.D., Ch.M., B.Sc., Medical School, The University, Sydney. Pritchard, Denis Adrian, M.B., Ch.M., B.Sc., Royal Australian Naval College, Jervis Bay, N.S.W. Pulleine, Robert Henry, M.B., Ch.M., 163 North Terrace, Adelaide, S.A. Raggatt, Harold George, B.Se., Geological Survey, Department of Mines, Sydney. Roberts, Frederick Hugh Sherston, M.Se., Department of Agriculture and Stock, Brisbane, Queensland. Roughley, Theodore Cleveland, Technological Museum, Harris Street, Sydney. Rupp, Rev. Herman Montagu Rucker, B.A., St. Mary’s Rectory, Weston, N.S.W. *Scammell, George Vance, B.Sc., ‘““Melrose’’, 28 Middle Head Road, Mosman. Selby, Miss Doris Adeline, M.Sc., ‘““Marley’’, John Street, Gordon. Shaw, Alfred Eland, M.R.C.S., L.R.C.P., F.E.S., 13 Harbour Street, Mosman. Sherrard, Mrs. Kathleen Margaret, M.Sc., Bromley Avenue, Cremorne. Shiels, Mrs. N. L., M.Se., F.L.S. (née Collins), Norwood Avenue, Lindfield. Sloane, Thomas G., F.E.S., Moorilla, Young, N.S.W. Smith, G. P. Darnell, D.Se., F.I.C., F.C.S., Botanic Gardens, Sydney. Smith, Jacob Harold, M.Sc., N.D.A., Court House, Cairns, N. Queensland. Smith, Thomas Hodge, Australian Museum, College Street, Sydney. Smith, Miss Vera Irwin, B.Sc., F.L.S., ‘‘Coree’’, Wisdom Road, Greenwich. Stanley, George Arthur Vickers, B.Sc., “Clelands’, Battery Street, Randwick. Stead, David G., ‘““Boongarre’’, Pacific Street, Watson’s Bay. Steel, Miss Jessie Keeble, B.Sc., ““Helensburgh’”’, Marion Street, Killara. Stokes, Edward Sutherland, M.B., Ch.M., Metropolitan Water, Sewerage and Drainage Board, 341 Pitt Street, Sydney. *Sulman, Miss Florence, ‘‘Burrangong’’, McMahon’s Point. Sussmilch, C. A., F.G.S., Hast Sydney Technical School, Darlinghurst, Sydney. Taylor, Frank Henry, School of Public Health and Tropical Medicine, The University, Sydney. Tillyard, Robin John, M.A., D.Sc., F.R.S., F.L.S., F.E.S., C.M.Z.S., Chief Common- wealth Entomologist, Canberra, F.C.T. *Troughton, Hillis Le Geyt, Australian Museum, College Street, Sydney. Turner, A. Jefferis, M.D., F.E.S., Wickham Terrace, Brisbane, Q. Turner, Rowland E., F.Z.S., F.E.S., c/o Standard Bank of South Africa, Adderley Street, Cape Town, South Africa. Veitch, Robert, B.Sc., F.E.S., Department of Agriculture, Brisbane, Queensland. Vickery, Miss Joyce Winifred, 6 Coventry Road, Homebush. Walker, Commander John James, M.A., F.L.S., F.H.S., R.N., “Aorangi’’, Lonsdale Road, Summertown, Oxford, England. Walkom, Arthur Bache, D.Se., Science House, Gloucester and TIS. Str eets, Sydney. Ward, Melbourne, “Bellevue Gardens’, Wylde Street, Potts Point, Sydney. Wardlaw, Henry Sloane Halcro, D.Sec., Physiology Department, The University, Sydney. Waterer, Arthur S., “Cisco”, 6 Everton Street, Hamilton, Newcastle, N.S.W. *Waterhouse, G. Athol, D.Sc., B.E., F.E.S., 10 Bull’s Chambers, Martin Place, Sydney. Waterhouse, Lionel Lawry, B.E., ‘Rarotonga’, 42 Archer Street, Chatswood. Waterhouse, Walter Lawry, D.Se.Agr., ‘““Hazelmere’’, Chelmsford Avenue, Roseville. * Life Member. Ixii. US) 1924 1930 1926 1922 1916 1926 1926 1903 1925 1929 1910 1923 1923 1888 1902 1902 1902 LIST OF MEMBERS. Watt, Professor Robert Dickie, M.A., B.Se., University of Sydney. Wearne, Walter Loutit, “Telarah’’, Collingwood Street,- Drummoyne. Webster, Miss Jessie Alice, B.Sc., ‘“‘Chesterfield’’, 49 Bruce Street, Stanmore. Weekes, Miss Hazel Claire, D.Sc., ‘““Omar’’, Vivian Street, Bellevue Hill. Welch, Marcus Baldwin, B.Sc., A.I.C., Technological Museum, Harris Street, Sydney. White, Cyril Tenison, F.L.S., Botanic Gardens, Brisbane, Q. *Whitley, Gilbert Percy, Australian Museum, College Street, Sydney. Willings, Mrs. H., B.A. (née Wood), Council for Scientific and Industrial Research, Box 109, Canberra, F.C.T. Woolnough, Walter George, D.Sc., F.G.S., Park Avenue, Gordon. Wright, Fred, c/o Messrs. Elliott Bros., Ltd., O’Connell Street, Sydney. Wright, George Henry, H.D.A., Public School, Barellan, N.S.W. Wymark, Frederick, 89 Castlereagh Street, Sydney. HONORARY MEMBERS. Hill, Professor J. P., Institute of Anatomy, University of London, University College, Gower Streef, London, W.C.1, England. Wilson, Professor J. T., LL.D., M.B., Ch.M., F.R.S., Department of Anatomy, the New Museums, Cambridge, England. CORRESPONDING MEMBERS. Bale, W. M., F.R.M.S., 63 Walpole Street, Kew, Melbourne, Victoria. Broom, Robert, M.D., D.Sc., F.R.S., 38 Somerset Street, Grahamstown, South Africa. McAlpine, D., c/o Bank of New South Wales, Leitchville, Victoria. Meyrick, Edward, B.A., F.R.S., F.Z.S., Thornhanger, Marlborough, Wilts, England. * Life Member. INDEX. (1930.) (a) GENERAL INDEX. Address, Presidential, i. Alexander, C. P., Observations on the Dipterous Family Tanyderidae, 221. Anderson, R. H., Note on the Australian Species of the Genus Atriplex, 493. Apistomyia (Diptera), Notes on _ the Genus, and Description of a New Species, 136. Armit, Dr. H. W., reference to death, iv— Mrs. and Miss, letter from, returning thanks for sympathy, xxix. Asilidae, Australian, Fifth Contribution towards a New Classification of, 249. Atriplex, Note on the Australian Species of the Genus, 493. Australian, Asilidae, Fifth Contribution towards a New Classification of, 249— Coleoptera, Descriptions of New Species, No. xxi, 451—Coleoptera. Notes and New Species, No. vii, 179— Coleoptera, and New Guinea. Notes and New Species, 532—Diptera, Notes on, 92, 303, 429, 488—Expedition to the Antarctic under leadership of Sir Douglas Mawson, ii—Oenochromidae, Revision, 1, 191—Rust Studies, 159, 596 —Teleasinae (Hymenoptera: Procto- trypoidea), Revision, 41. Balance Sheets, 1929, xxvi-xxviii. Bettongia cuniculus, the Uterine Cycle of Pregnancy and Pseudo-Pregnancy as it is in the Diprotodont Marsupial, with Notes on other Reproductive Phenomena in this Marsupial, 506. Blakely, W. F., Another New Species of Hucalyptus from New England, 594— Stringybarks, xxxvii. Blakely, W. F., and Rev. E. N. McKie, Additions to the Flora of New England, N.S.W., 587. British Scientific Expedition to the Great Barrier Reef, iii. Broom, R., letter from, returning thanks for congratulations, xxix. Brown, Ida A., Linnean Macleay Fellow in Geology, The Geology of the South Coast of New South Wales, ii— Devonian and Older Palaeozoic Rocks (Palaeontological Notes by W. S. Dun), 145—iii. The Monzonitic Complex of the Mount Dromedary District, 637— Summary of year’s work, leave of absence and reappointment, 1930-31, vii —reappointed, 1931-32, xxxviii—see Exhibits. Browne, W. R., elected a Vice-President, XOXGLXS Calvert, J.. An Abnormal Xanthium Burr, 475. Carey, Gladys, elected a member, xxxiii— The Leaf-buds of some Woody Peren- nials in the New South Wales Flora, 708. Carter, H. J., elected a Vice-President, xxix—Attention called to very early flowering of Pittosporum undulatum by, xxxiv—Australian Coleoptera. Notes and New Species. No. vii, 179—New Guinea and Australian Coleoptera. Notes and New Species, 532. “Catalogue of Scientific and Technical Periodicals in the Libraries of Aus- tralia,” attention called to publication OL Xexexe. Cheel, E., A short Account of the Progress made in the Attempt to have an Area set aside in the National Park for the Cultivation and Exhibition of the Native Flora of N.S.W., xxxi—elected President, xxv—see Exhibits. Coccids, Notes on Gall-making, Descriptions of New Species, 468. Cochran, W. M. P., elected a member, OIDG Colefax, A. N., elected a member, xxxviii. Coleoptera, Australian, Descriptions of New Species, 451—Australian, Notes and New Species, 179—New Guinea and Australian. Notes and New Species, 532. Coloured Plates, Publication of, as Supple- ments to the Proceedings, iii. Concession fares offered by Common- wealth Railways, attention called to, TOO:e, Cotton, L. A., sympathy of members expressed with, xxxvii. with Ixiv. Cox’s: River, N.S.W., Topography and Water Supply of, 417. Craft, Frank A., appointed Linnean Macleay Fellow in Geography, 1930-31, vii—reappointed, 1931-32, xxxviii—Goul- burn—a Vital Point on the New South Wales Highlands, 381—Topography and Water Supply of Cox’s River, N.S.W., 417—see Exhibits. Detain, — We doy Council, v. Davies, H. W., elected a member, xxix. Deane, C., Trichopterygidae of Australia and Tasmania. Descriptions of six New Genera and eleven New Species, 477. Diptera, Notes:on Australian, 92, 303, 429, 488. Dixon, H. N., and William Greenwood, The Mosses of Fiji, 261. Dodd, A. P., A Revision of the Australian elected a member of Teleasinae (Hymenoptera: Proctotry- poidea), 41. Donations and Exchanges, xxix-xxxi, XXXili, XxxXiv, XXXVi-XxXXVili. Dun, W. S., Palaeontological Paper by Ida A. Brown, 155. Notes to Edmonds, Enid M., XXXVIii. Hlections, xxv, xxix, xxxi, xxxiii, xxxvii, XXXVIii. Endemism, Origin of, in Flora of Australia, 371. English, Kathleen M. I., elected a member, YO. Eucalyptus, Another New Species of, from New England, 594. Exchange relations, iv. Exhibits :— Brown, Ida A., Specimens of well pre- served leaves from rocks of Tertiary age between Bundanoon and Penrose, N.S.W., xXxxii. Cheel, E., a flowering plant of “soft- leaved Wattle’ (Acacia pubescens), elected a member, Angiosperm xxxiv—Live plants of “Australian Lime” (Microcitrus australis) and “Ringer Lime” (WMicrocitrus aus- tralasica), together with a series of fruits, showing considerable varia- tion in shape, size and colour, xxxiv— Three hybrids (“Faustrimon”, ““Faus- trimedin” and “‘Faustrime’”’), xxxiv— Seedling plants of “Bangalow Palm” (Archontophoeniz Cunninghamii) and the “Curly Palm” or “Belmore Palm” (Howea belmoreana), xxxiv—Seed- ling plants of several species of Eucalyptus, xxxiv—A _ series of specimens of the following species of Hucalyptus: H. capitellata, LE. eugenioides, EH. agglomerata, E, laevo- pinea, EH. Muelleriana, LE. macrorrhyn- INDEX. Exhibits (Contd.): cha and #. macrorrhyncha var. brachycorys, Xxxv—Specimens of Cal- listemon lanceolatus and C. pachy- phyllus for comparison with the Eucalyptus spp., xxxv—Live plants of Darwinia taxifolia var. intermedia Cheel (D. intermedia A. Cunn.) and Dendrobium Beckleri F.v.M., xxxvi— For comparison with D. intermedia, plants of Darwinia fascicularis; and fresh flowering plants of Dendrobium gracilicaule, xxxvi—Fresh flowering specimens of Callistemon linearifolia, C. lilacina, C. lilacina var. carmina and a hybrid, C. acuminatus x C. lanceolatus, xxxvii—Specimens of Leptospermum emarginata Wendl... xxxvii—For comparison, specimens of L. flavescens var. leptophylla, xxxvii —Foliage of a stringybark Hucalyp- tus, xXxxvii—Specimens of Helichry- sum leucopsidum DC., and Boronia oppositifolia (Pers.) Cheel from Hill Top, xxxvili— Specimen of a stemless thistle, Onopordon acaulum Linn., from Balranald, xxxviii. Craft, F. A., Aboriginal stone axe from Wingello, N.S.W., xxx—lantern slides illustrating the upland valleys and gorges about the Shoalhaven River near Tallong, xxx. Fraser, Lilian R., Root-nodules' of Casuarina glauca, which resemble those of C. Cunninghamiana, xxxy. Froggatt, W. W., A piece of red wood from the side of the door of the Government Residence at Rabaul, New Guinea, riddled with holes by leaf cutting bees, Megachile sp., and a specimen of the bee, xxxii— Some “Blood Wood Apples”, which are the large galls of Cystococcus pomiformis Froggatt, xxxiii—Two Hymenopterous galls: (i) leaf of tropical jungle plant from Cairns, N. Queensland, covered with minute Chaleid galls and (ii) Hucalypt branchlet with mass of long spindle- shaped galls of Jepperella eucalypti, from the South Coast of N.S.W., Xxxiv—Two specimens of the larva of the Geebung Hawk Moth (Coequosia triangularis) from Gos- ford, xxxvili. i Hall, L. L., A mass of rolled Kurra- jong leaves from Goulburn, caused by the caterpillars of the Moth, Notarcha plycalis Walker, xxxii. Jacobs, E. G., Twenty-two plants of various species from Middlesex, British Honduras, Central America, SXOXONGT Te INDEX. Ixv. Exhibits (Contd.): Kinghorn, J. R., A specimen (the holo- type) and a skull of Ozyuranus maclennani, described in Rec. Aust. Mus., a few years ago, xxxii—skull of a Death Adder, Acanthophis antarcticus, for comparative pur- poses, Xxxii. Le Souef, A. S., A specimen of a mouse from East Sisters Island, Bass Straits, xxxii. ; Stead, D. G., An example of the egg of the Chimaeroid shark, Callorhyn- chus tasmanius Richardson, known as the Elephant Fish, xxxi—A drawing of a “sea monster” cast up on a mud bank, two miles inside the mouth of the Dreketi River, Labasa, Vanua Levu, Fiji, xxxiii—Report that a large Humpback Whale, Megaptera nodosa, had found its way into Port Jackson, XXXvV. Walkom, A. B., Specimens of a fossil fern, apparently new, from the roof of the Bulli Coal Seam in the Ex- celsior Colliery, Illawarra District, XXXil. Waterhouse, G. A., Both sexes of Ogyris zosine araxes, including an interesting aberration of the male, xxxix—A short account of the habits of the larvae and their attendant ants, xxxix—A pair of Ogyris olane, from Penrith, N.S.W., xxxix. Waterhouse, W. L., Specimens of Hordeum maritinum With., which showed genetic variation, xxxi—Seed- lings of rye showing marked albinism, xxxii—Specimens showing variegation of the leaves of wheat and rye plants, xxxvi. Whitley, G. P., Illustrations of some Queensland Fishes and remarks upon them, xxxii. Fletcher, Joseph James, an _ Idealist Secretary, 738. Fletcher, Joseph James (Memorial Series No. 2) issued, iii. Fletcher Memorial Lecture, acceptance of invitation of Council by A. H. S. Lucas to deliver the _ First, iii—First, announcement of delivery of, xxxiv— First, delivered by A. H. S. Lucas, appreciation expressed, xxxvi. Fletcher Memorial Lecture, 1930. Joseph James Fletcher, an Idealist Secretary, 738. Flora, Angiosperm, of Australia, Origin of Endemism in, 371—Native, Resolu- tion re setting apart an area of Crown Land for the eultivation, preservation and exhibition of, iv. Flynn, T. T., The Uterine Cycle of Preg- nancy and Pseudo-pregnancy as it is in the Diprotodont Marsupial Bettongia cuniculus, with Notes on other Repro- ductive Phenomena in this Marsupial, 506. Fraser, Lilian R., elected a member, xxxiii—see Exhibits. Froggatt, W. W., Notes on Gall-making Coccids with Descriptions of New Species. No. ii. 468—see Exhibits. Fuller, Mary E., elected a member, xxix. Fungus, Soil, Notes on a Cellulose- decomposing, of an unusual Character, 699. Geolegy of the South South Wales. Pt. ii. Devonian and Older Palaeozoic Rocks, 145—Pt. iii. The Monzonitic Complex of the Mount Dromedary District, 637. Goulburn—a Vital Point on the New South Wales Highlands, 381. Grants to scientific research workers, applications for, xxxiv. Greenwood, William, see under Dixon, 13h ING Grevillea Gaudichaudii R. Br., a supposed Natural Hybrid between. Grevillea laurifolia Sieb., and G. acanthifolia A.C. Pt. i. Analysis of the Hybrid, 386. Hall, L. L., see Exhibits. Hamilton,.A. A., obituary notice, v. Hamilton, A. G., Note on Sterility in the Proteaceae, xxxix. Hardy, G. H., Fifth Contribution towards a New Classification of Australian Asilidae, 249. Heydon, G., elected a member, xxxi. Hill, Prof. J. P., congratulations to, xxxi —message of greeting from, xxxiii. Holdsworth, Muriel G., elected a member, XXXvVii. Holmes, J. Macdonald, elected a member, XGXEXG Hour of Ordinary Monthly Meeting of the Society, result of questionnaire circu- lated to members in metropolitan district regarding, xxxvi. Hull, A. F. B., elected a Vice-President, SXSXGIEXG Jacobs, E. G., see Exhibits. Jensen, H. L., Macleay \Bacteriologist, arrival in Sydney, welcome and com- mencement of duties, vi—Notes on a Cellulose-decomposing Soil Fungus of an. Unusual Character, 699—The Genus Micromonospora Orskov, a little known Group of Soil Microorganisms, 231. Joplin, Germaine A., elected a member, XXXVii. Mule, Sie Ge AG XXXiii. Coast of New elected a member, lxvi. Kinghorn, J. R., see Exhibits. Lawson, late A. Anstruther, Origin of Endemism in the Angiosperm Flora of Australia, 371. Lea, A. M., Descriptions of New Species of Australian Coleoptera, No. xxi, 451. Leaf-buds of some Woody Perennials in the New South Wales Flora, 708. Le Souef, A. S., see Exhibits. Linnean Macleay Fellowships, reappoint- ment and appointment, 1930-31, vii— Applications invited; 1931-32, xxxvi, xxxvii—reappointments, 1931-32, xxxvili. Lucas, A. H. S., Acceptance of invitation of ‘Council to deliver the First Fletcher Memorial Lecture, iii— Fletcher Memorial Lecture, 1930. Joseph James Fletcher, an _ Idealist Secretary, 738. Maiden, Joseph Henry (Memorial Series No. 3), 355. Malloch, J. R., Notes on Australian IDeA, INO, so-clhl, GAS sesh, BOBS Zong 429; xxvi, 488. Mawson, Sir D., Australian Expedition to the Antarctic, ii. McKie, Rev. E.:N., see Blakely, W. F., and Rev. E. N. McKie. McLuckie, J., On Grevillea Gaudichaudii R. Br., a supposed Natural Hybrid between Grevillea laurifolia Sieb., and G. acanthifolia A.C. Pt. i. Analysis of the Hybrid, 386. Meeting, Ordinary Monthly, last to be held in Macleay House, xxxviii. Memorial Series No. 2 (J. J. Fletcher) issued, iii—No. 3 (J. H. Maiden), 355. Micromonospora Mrskov, a little known Group of Soil Microorganisms, 231. Mosses of Fiji, 261. Munch-Petersen, E., XXXViil. elected a member, Native Flora of N.S.W., account of pro- gress made in the attempt to have an area set aside in the National Park for the cultivation and exhibition of, BxOXOXGl 2 New England, N.S.W., Another New Species of Hucalyptus from, 594— Additions to the Flora of, 587. New Guinea Coleoptera. Notes and New Species, 532. Obituary Notices, Sir W. Spencer, v—A. A. Hamilton, v. Oenochromidae (Lepidoptera), Australian, Revision of, 1, 191. Orchids, Autumn, of the South Maitland Coalfields, N.S.W., with Description of a New Species of Pterostylis, 413. Baldwin INDEX, Organisms, Living, some aspects of the Adaptation of, to their environment, viii. Osborn) erot Le 1G Be appoimbeduaa member of National Park Trust, iv. Perennials, Woody, in the New South Wales Flora, the leaf-buds of, 708. Pittosporum undulatum, very early flowering of, xxxiv. Presidential Address, i. Proteaceae, Note on Sterility in the, BXEXOXGIEXG Protection of native plants extended for further period, iv. Reptiles, On Placentation in, 550. Revision of Australian Oenochromidae (Lepidoptera), 1, 191. Revision of the Australian Teleasinae (Hymenoptera: Proctotrypoidea), 41. Rupp, Rev. H. M. R., Notes on the Autumn Orchids of the South Maitland Coalfields, N.S.W., with Deseription of a New Species of Pterostylis, 413. Rust Studies, Australian. Pt. ii, Part iii, 596. 159; Sargent, O. H., Xerophytes and Xerophily, with Special Reference to Protead Dis- tribution, 577. Science House, Successful conclusion of negotiations for the erection of, and summary of steps leading to this, i— Announcement that professional offices will be available for letting in, xxxvii— Detailed drawings of, made by the Architects, exhibited, xxxviii—Expected to be completed by end of January, XxXxviii—Progress made with the build- ing of, and Foundation Stone set, xxxi. Selby, Doris, congratulations to, xxx— letter from, returning thanks, xxxiii. Soil Microorganisms, the Genus Micro- monospora Orskoyv, a _ little known Group of, 231. Some Aspects of the Adaptation of Living Organisms to their Environ- ment, viii. South Coast of New South Wales, Geology Of, M4563. South Maitland Coalfields, Autumn Orchids of, 4138. Spencer, Sir W. Baldwin, obituary notice, N.S.W., Vv. Stead, D. G., see Exhibits. Stringybarks, illustrated slides, xxxvii. with lantern Tanyderidae, Observations on the Dip- terous Family, 221. Taylor, F. H., elected a member, xXxxi. Teleasinae (Hymenoptera: Proctotry- poidea), Australian, revision of, 41. INDEX. Tonnoir, A. L., Notes on the Genus Apistomyia (Diptera) and Description of a New Species, 136. Trichopterygidae of Australia and Tas- mania. Descriptions of six new Genera and eleven new Species, 477. lxvii. Waterhouse, W. L., congratulations to, xxix—elected member of Council, xxix —letter from, returning thanks for con- gratulations, xxix—Australian Rust Studies. Pt. ii. Biometrical Studies of the Morphology of Spore Forms, 159— Turner, A. J., Revision of Australian Pt. iii. Initial Results of Breeding for Oenochromidae (Lepidoptera). Pt. ii, Rust Resistance, 596—see Exhibits. le IPE abbl, UY) Webster, Jessie A., elected a member, XXX1ii. Vickery, Joyce W., elected a member, Weekes, H. Claire, Linnean Macleay SROXOXT THT Fellow in Zoology, summary of work, Walkom, A. B., Appointed representative of Society on Joint Management Com- mittee of Science House, ii—visit to South Africa to attend British Associa- tion for the Advancement of Science Meeting, iv—see Exhibits. Wardlaw, H. S. H., elected a _ Vice- President, xxix—Presidential Address, i. Waterhouse, G. A., Appointed representa- tive of Society on Joint Management Committee of Science House, ii—con- gratulations to, xxxiii—elected Hon. Treasurer, XXix. resignation of Fellowship and departure vi—congratulations to, thanks, in Reptiles, for England, xxx—letter from, returning xxxvii—On Placentation Pt 50: Whitley, G. P., see Exhibits. Wild Flowers, proclamation announced, xxxiii. Wilson, Prof. J. T., welcome to, xxxiii. Xanthium Burr, an Abnormal, 475. Xerophytes and Xerophily, with Special Reference to Protead Distribution, 577. issued by Government extending protection of, Absidia cylindrospora .. 705 Acrotriche aggregata . 736 Adeixis 24 Acacia .. . 371-2, 579-80 Acthosus pascoei A Oiher siselay: AK griseata .. 24 celastrifolia var. myrti- Actia 3038, 306-7 inostentata 24 folia . IDSs ARGENTIFRONS 304, 309-310 insignata ae 24 ? Chalkeri . 149 BALDWINI . 303,306 ARNIGMETOPIA i 437, 447 ? decora .. . 149 BREVIS . 304, 309 FERGUSONI . 447 decurrens Se PN fill darwini .. 304, 308-9 Aequia 56: 010) GD ~ decurrens var. mollis 731 eucosmae 304, 307-8 | Aerobryopsis . 265, 285 discolor .. Hoee gay ouk fergusoni 303-5 longissima 285 elata 721, 731-2 hyalinata a 5 Bul) vitiana bo ASI) linearis 6 a0 SOO INVALIDA . 303, 305 Aesculus a Secs longifolia 724, 726, 732, 746 LATA 304, 307-8 Hippocastanum sa LAS juniperina ao ax monticola : . 809 Agonis flexuosa so) OG) melanoxylon a x, 746 NIGRITULA .. 304,309 Agropyron scabrum . 616 myrtifolia 724, 726, 732, 746 norma 5 VOUS 30a ASrOLis! inconecilale eye aes e pubescens : XXXiv PARVISETA .. 304,308 Allecula og DEST Acanthophis antarcticus xxxli PLEBEIA . 304, 310 papuensis AD Acaulium nigrum” . 705 selangor a o0ke Aims se 5 Acemyia eS SD, oc . 305 Alophora so Acephana 5 BBS, Bae) valida. So SUH Alternaria citri. go UE) ACHOSIA 481-2, 487 Actinomyces 231, 241, 245, 247 Spee peep OO FEMORALIS . 482 alni seueZiog Amaryemus_ aeneus SAL LANIGERA Sine Meera O's griseus 240-3 alienus ; .. 543 Acianthus exser ‘tus .. 413, 416 maculatus so DBZ convexiusculus oo Hee fornicatus 5 Als} monosporeus . 232 cuprarius bee DAT Acidalia schistacearia 6 salmonicolor . 232 cupreus ne DAT Ackama Muelleri 3) U3, viridochromogenus 240-3 curvipes gio Be} Acrometopia .. .. 488 -Actinopteryx j sib lucene gol foveoseriatus 30 Het Acroporium . 265,298 ACUCERA E 326, 328, 337, 339 foveostriatus ee DA brevicuspidatum .. . 298 MONTANA 328 HOSSFELDI .. 543 (b) BIOLOGICAL INDEX, New names are printed in SMALL CAPITALS. 1xviii. Amarygmus inornatus .. 547 INSIGNIS .. . es 542-3 morio 532, 542-3, 547 mutabilis 5. eET niger . BAT picipes nD AT ruficrurus fee DAY tasmanicus . 543, 547 uniformis AG Amblyopone obscura . 487 Amblyostegium serpens.. 291 byssoideum eet cs 42 Oil Amenia . 101, 103 chrysame 101-2 dubitalis 56 stil imperialis ao. alii leonina a 101-2 nigromaculata . 102 parva atch, Vin een aaisy te Mec ede] LO b Amphibolosia 310-1 flavipennis paola Amphiclasta on PAIL) lygaea oo) call) Amplipilis 347-8 versicolor . 3848 Anacamptomyia africana 119 ANATROPOMYIA .. | LAG Bar FLAVICORNIS .. 50 ALAT Angophora BY Mla 372, 376, 746 cordifolia a a Ugs(7AD, es lanceolata . 377, 720, 724, 727, 735 Anguis fragilis 56 BOND) Anoectangium .. 262, 264, 278 tapes 4 PATS) Antictenia so ale punctiunculis . 198 Antocha . 226 Aotus mollis . 588 SUBGLAUCA 587-8 subglauca var. FILI- FORMIS 587-8 APALPOSTOMA . 134 CINEREA ed: APILIA . 345 CILIFERA 345-6 Apiomorpha .. 468 ANNULATA .. 469 dipsaciformis serves DUMOSA . 468 duplex 471 excupula AT1- 2 fletcheri .. MATT, FUSIFORMIS 470-1 LONGMANI .. 469 pharatrata aaa rosaeformis so US SPINIFER .. .. 470 thorntoni a Galles urnalis ; 473 Apistomyia "136- Gl. 139- 144 collini mas 137-9 elegans "186-7, 139, 141 MACKERRASI 137-9, 143-4 INDEX. Apistomyia tonnoiri 136-9, 141 trilineata 137-9 Archontophoenix Cunning- hamii XXXiV Arctophyto bio) vos exo) Arctotis oo Ate, Zalal Arhodia 200-1 lasiocamparia .. 200 ? lutosaria . 206 modesta .. Bed Ve orthotoma bo Allies porphyropa 49) FAL retractaria . 200 semirosea Be 22200 Armillaria mellea 5 COS Arrhodia ? illidgei .. . 205 Arthrocormus dentatus .. 269 Aspergillus .. 104 fumigatus pio CS) niger BOD oryzae Seen aie 705 Spetige Sa seh i Ge), 705 terricola 66 OS) Aspidoptera ambiens 5 AIS Aspilates chordota .. .. 218 ATERPOGON .. 250-2, 254 CYRTOPOGONOIDES . 254 Atherix 5) Atriplex . 493 ACUTIBRACTUM . 499, 500 angulatum 497-8, 500 campanulatum . 497 campanulatum var. IN- APPENDICULATUM . 497 cinereum 502-3 conduplicatum : 503-4 crassipes . 494, 497 elacophyllum.. 494-5, 501 fissivalve 495-7 halimoides 503-4 halimoides var. condu- plicatum 5 BOS holocarpum . 504 hymenothecum . 501 inflatum 50° BES INTERMEDIUM 497-500 isatidea .. ; .. 502 leptocarpum .. 498-500 leptocarpum forma MINOR .. .. .. 499 leptocarpum forma "TUR: BINATUM 498-9 leptocarpum var. acu- minatum 499-500 lobativalve 5 ey Morrisit .. 504 Muelleri 494- 5, 500-1 nitens . 500 paludosum 5 OY paludosum. var. appen- diculatum .. . 502 Quinii D0 rhagodioides 502-3 rosea 5 lal Atriplex roseum var. stipitatum ach dee DOM! semibaccatum 495-7, 501 semibaccatum forma tenuis .. 495 SPINIBRACTUM 496-7 spongiosum . 504 varia 494-5 vesicarium 493, 501-3 Atrypa (?) reticularis .. 154 AUSTRODEXIA 5 ILS, Lz COMMUNIS LZ Se 25 MIXTA 5 laa, AG PALLIDIHIRTA 5 LAR. WAG pictipennis 123-4 rubricarinata 123-4 SETIGERA : 122-4 SETIVENTRIS 5 a, AG UNIPUNCTA 5 WA, LAG Austrolimnius luridus .. 190 luridus var. SUFFUSUS 190 politus eo dlyt) AUSTROMETOPIA 437-8 BURNSI : . 438 Austrophorocera toe biserialis . 344 Avicennia officinalis 720-1, UBT ? Aviculopecten Rey AXIAGASTA . 209 RHODOBAPHES 5 ZAl®) Axymyia furcata 5 Bacillus influenzae .. 234, 246 mycoides o ZAI Backhousia LEE TO myrtifolia 5 OU Us as ? Bacterium typhi .. . 246 Baeckea STAG brevifolia ‘oo CED linifolia .. 5 URS Balliace vetustaria .. 5 al¥}7/ Banksia 372-3 ericifolia SXGXSXGDNG 718, 727-8, 733 integrifolia 5 Ole AAS) littoralis Po Ae IS marginata . 374, 728 occidentalis .. »,0:0.b< serrata xxxix, 374, 580, 715, 718, 728 spinulosa, . 374, 728 Barbula S264 2rK inflexa 5 AUS javanica 277-8 LEUCOBASIS ao Cut louisiadum pan CALE mauiensis ae UU Bassia 2 493 Bathypogon 250-1, 253, 255 Bauera rubioides 718, 127, 731 Beplegenes seals LACHRYMOSA .. tet emilee Bescherellea . 265, 282 eryphaeoides 2282) Bettongia .. 506-7, 509-11, 514, 516-9, 524-30 cuniculus 506-7, 509 Billardiera scandens 50 Casl Bipalium kewense .. ...742 Blepharocera . 141,143 Boronia PAD Ciara is ese to macrophylla ss 4. 2. woo oppositifolia .. XXXVili pinnata Mia aioe TROSSIAGD- 4d Nea wemmoul heterophylla .. .: .. 732 microphylla .. ioe Botryosporium .. 699, 700, 706 Botrytis 234, 700-1 cinerea .. sib pon COS Brachychiton ‘populneus 150, 734 Brachyloma daphnoides var. LATIUSCULUM 587-8 Brachymenium . 263, 279 DMGUCUMI Gs.) er ae a. eg indicum var. corru- gatum Sellen MearaEer ats) Brachyrrhopala es. DOS bella aoe) ey ma em 5: limbipennis .. .. .. 254 maculata Se ee Ea ies MUNCIE Goo 258 nitidus var. dissimilans 259 nitidus var. dissimilis 259 IRRVADYAOUNOINEN 7 Go bo de 1 tmychnoptilla s. 5.) 2. 1 Bradymerus crenatus .. 547 granaticollis FeO a raucipennis .. .. .. 547 SGICTENGUIY So Ga) Ge oo eel Breynia BA nih epi yac ule MOnt oblongifolia 121-2, 733 Bryum ool lota Mele MeO cay) chrysoneuron .. 261, 279 ‘Decaisnei ea EAS) erythrocarpoides.. .. 279 gedeanum nn DAM rs se eae) GREEN WOODII Sie ees) pachytheca .. .. .. 279 sullivani PD Vesna OOO) truncorum .. .. .. 280 VITIANUM Se Braise Mdopanir crLEG, Bursaria spinosa .. 731 Byallius ANDERSONI .. igs 5 punctatus Nc ae rineet 8 ipsa) Callicoma serratifolia 724, 731 Callicostella . 264, 289 obloneitolian sa) 425 ee 289 papillata Ot WORE sa Nokomey Fone) vesiculata A penitent Zoo Callistemon 5 BUAy BUG acuminatus x C. lanceo- latus XXXV1i lanceolatus XXXv, 377, 710, 735 INDEX. Callistemon lilacina.. xxxvii lilacina var. carmina xxxvii linearifolia XXXVii linearis .. 5s) URE EOI L: pachyphyllus XXXV punifolius PE leech aU ey BOT ACE Callorhynchus tasmanius xxxi Calcacerwa hee ero. 0 Calcageria we) Sete roLlg CALOPYGIDIA BE arn D ey ARUN GIS 56 ot ew) () Calymperes ; 263, 274, 276 ALBO-LIMBATUM ... .. 274 chamaeleontum ..... 274 denticulatum 275-6 Dozyanum .. .. .. 274 Geppiiteere Wan sec. orate linearifolium Ripon HEA Teo longifollum .. .. .. 276 lorifolium WATE ieee riven’ eretlO MARGINATUM .. 274-5 molluccense 274-5 obliquatum .. ..... 274 orientale 275-6 samoanum 95. 92.) 2. 274 serratum RR ee Be OO tahitense 275-6 tahitense var. TRUN- CATUM Sena oar ALAD) tenerum a 274-5 tuberculosum -. 261, 276 Calyptothecium .. 265, 285 Urvilleanum .. .. .. 285 Camptochaete .. 266, 287 porotrichoides een is PAO Campylodontium .. 265, 287 flavescens ao PADIS PASI Campylopodium .. 264, 267 integrum Gren) eon ror GTi Campylopus So) oo RR BO? Richardii rites 267 Carima basisparsata oo ALY Carthiaealmey ermine) os LOD saturnioides .... 199 Castiarina AERATICOLLIS 182 APICHNODTATAG = ns. ha Doo Y aweenoollhiSs b5. 56 oo. dlenl IOGUAMIEN 956! ob. 66 oo wax! DRYADULA pte) cag sia § Syae DOO gebhardti Stee ae TT Peey ie kee IMITATOR craberabheparreltoO TOSGWAGHPA Sc) 66) oo oo altel moribunday . ss)... Lei OITA, oo oo 06 oo dlfenl WLAGROAYONRUN “55 155) 50 Wan) QUADRIPLAGIATA .. 535 suberata var. discoflava 533 Casuarina .. .. Bs ens Bi Cunninghamiana . XXXV glauca XXXV, 578 IBlingEaiene, 55 9 oo oo woul Celerena .. .. 5 PADS), AALaL divisa MRS lence 0) oe gan Mae, (9 lxix. Celerena griseofusa e209 Celmisia .. Bee Bo Behe Ceratodus forsteri dee! AS Ceratopetalum .. .. 723-4 apetalum 6 UALS UAB Ue gummiferum a 731 Ceratopogon SAN eee ea, ACAD Cernia A EROE shit oko th aOke) amyclaria dat ale arey Senet (16 Ceropria bifasciata 50. et janthinipennis He rere Ae maculata 2 bl See cad peregrinus .. .. .. 547% quadriplagiata .. .. 547 valga AU error niescha | ita ath Cestrinus aspersus .. 183 brevis Aeneas " 182- 3 CARBO sya Ny STEIN ROS ELOY trivialis Roan Cott sciatica al bes Chaetoliga AIRES Se ESAS Chaetolyga A Pa OLS CHAETOMETOPIA .. 437, 443 CINERD AW ate ch, a an 4S Chaetomitrium ». 265, 289 depressum .. .. .. 289 rugifolium’ >. .5 .%. 289 Chaetophlepsis A Leo tarsalis .. a0 BUY Chaetophthalmus “sn, 310-1 BISERIATUS Dela eee att LL! brevigaster....) 5.) se ou Chalcidesteawe eee OS ocellatus . 551,570, 574 tridactylus 551, 570, 572-3 Chaleopterus affinis .. 544 eatenulatus .. .. .. 544 clypealis Pia ig etre Bushy aes meyricki ie a Sak Aa NIT Sw ee ee eee ae Oe perforans SN ma AL AIA IE a) purpureus Fy Aad lucidus ss face ee reese SDALSUSHiaew die ened 4 Chamaemyia .. .. 488, 491 Chariotheca cupripennis 547 impressicollis TAPS ANG Oblon saya ne Oa planicollis SAGE ert soa ema V4 AP punctiventris Renee Ute ye fi Cheilanthes tenuifolia .. 581 Chilma flagrantaria .. 204 Chiloglottis Sey eet cASTG Tenexaes te (aes) Wie o Chiroleptes te eee 44 Chromomoea major 56 ALY METALLICA eee aie 5. als OGWAIE, 60 (o5 oo oo IST SUTURALIS Be ea ars pl Be WIATCONOP 65 5 oo oo LSS ViOIACeaiie wae ak 187 Chrvseutria 250- 2 Chrysopasta 105-6 elevanSi =. saree ne Od oxox Chrysopasta zabrina .. 106 Chrysopila Bee cc) PONG Cidaria metaxanthata .. ii Circopetes .. 26, 203 obtusata We ECE eae O13 Citromyces UE RS 4: SD Aaen site Asura heures ¢ MLR 7K () 5 Claopodium . 264, 291 AMBLYSTEGIOIDES .. .. 291 assurgens Bye Lee ae ee OL: hawaiiense .. .. .. 291 leuconeuron .. «=. =. 297 nervosum PAO Ae oil E prionophyllum .. .. 291 Clastobryella = 2652910 cuculligera . 261, 297 Clerodendron tomentosum 737 (ClhNINEVOWNG, <50 9 560, 06 oo» AUS Climacograptus sp... .. 153 Clinopogon . 251, 260 CNEMADOXIA 482, 486-7 OKEI aa a eS AST Coccospora agricola (2) 705 CocHLIARION 484-5 WIKCMOMODINISIH 56 oe oo CEOS Coequosia triangularis xxxvili Cohnistreptothrix 231-2, 240, 242, 247 Colobochlia ?personalis 20 Colpochila AS ia raniy cul Aiy S setosa ons aes Coniophora cerebella Pe i0S Conospermum longifolium 715, 728 Coptocercus SCRIPTICOLLIS 548 NACA S'S FP Soe oe ee eS Correa Aenea ee ta RS OTILe alba PSA ene Le DIPS 7a speciosa Bry Bee eRe Pie Corynebacterium .. .. 231 Cristularia Ae ats er eet U0 8 Crowea REE nae ieee LL ae M74 Cryphaea . 265, 281 SACHS. Gigul) eis bese eae ea orl Schleinitziana POL Me Raa L Cryptocarya obovata 50 Wel) patentinervis (?) OU, Cryptochaetum 488-90 Cryptocladocera 50. oo SADE) Cryptopogon 250-1, 260 Cucullothorax eee Os: Culicoides .. a PAPAS PPA) Cunderdinia SETISTRIATA 454 variabilis ie SRE ee ea Cup HOCEEA Na a oo EMMESIA 55 ILO, Stilts} PILOSA so CLG, Biles SETIGERA Ho og GUL, Bil SP eeereke ayers) Tecan AS SHES (CUUPIN OH: 55 oe oo oo. llélZ! Cyclodictyon .. .. 264,289 Blumeanum .. .. .. 289 Cylindromyia 4 OILY, BiaI7 INDEX. Cylindromyia ATRATULA 312, 314-5 BRUNNEA 312, 315-6 flavifrons 312, 315-6 NIGRICOSTA 312, 314-5 SYDNEYENSIS .. 5 Buz, asl! TRICOLOR .. 6 BULA, Sls tristis Hynes sais Aelia Gaetan tly Cyrtopogon ; 250; 253 (CAIPHOIOUIS 6s) oa bo po ? eryphaeoides A ate AS Cystococcus pomiformis xxxili - Daedalia confragosa SA OB Daldinia concentrica oo OS SDicweet Sige meter (0)5) vernicosa Assets ith ANS) Dampiera .. .. .. BU Darwinia , 372, 376 fascicularis xxxvi, 724, UU 5 UaxD intermedia XXXVi taxifolia var. inter- media XXXVI Dascillus brevicornis 5 a DAY) OBLONGUS PMSA sige LY) serraticornis Dy ad ea ROO), Dasypogon analis .. .. 257 australis Pre nee kcigh Za: carbo ere EO es PATO) festinans Sas ae pe OO) gamarus So oe oo DY Gareth). » sg oie, Be eo AD6 ? limbinervis Nae) ,6 limbipennis .. .. .. 254 luctuosus acarntas e 256 nitidus 958- 9 sergius 258-9 suavis.. Poulet cian Gbiae CANE Daviesia ulicina 5 trie five: Feat Dasyuris tridenta .. . 9 Dasyurus 507, 510-1, 514, 519, 526-7 ID SIAN, 5 6 5 BO) BBD, B17 AUSTRALIENSIS 332-4 GRISEA 332-3 WATOR oo oo CO Bay sot OPACA . 382) 304 SCUTELLATA .. . 332, 334 Demoticus 129-30 Dendrobium Beckleri xxxvi egracilicaule XXXV1 Denisonia superba .. 551, 554, 573-4 suta ae 551, 554, 573-4 Derambila .. .. ah IL Sal catherina 215-6 IDIOSCELES NERA relies Meta LIOSCELES 215-6 permensata 215-6 punctisignata A stabi epee iy Derispia coccinelloides .. 537 IDO 66° oo. 00. bo ZaU australis UES, Baer Mey ae OL Diaclina immaculata .. 547 nitida 3 An Diamuna gastropacharia 194 Diaporthe Sojae 705 Dicellograptus sp. 5 la Diceratucha © Semen ez le! Dichromodes 12, 2A AESTA 5 3h oe ainaria 2,4, 1, 8 albitacta Beery?) anelictis 33) JL angasi i 3, ILI aristadelpha .. 3. 12 atrosignata 4, 17, al 2a berthoudi By. 2433 cirrhoplaca eens i) confluaria 5 ISS ING consignata 4, 22 compsotis 35 1K) DENTICULATA .. Bi IL diffusaria ay, 113%. 14! disputata By, 17 diasemaria Uy Ue divergentaria qf EMPLECTA 335 15) estigmaria BSH euprepes 3, 9,10 euscia 4, 20 exocha 5 ld explanata 4,16 exsignata 4,16, 23 fulvida 9 GALACTICA 3,6 haematopa 3, 8 ICELODES .. 3, 20 indicataria 4, 20-1 ioneura 35 Y)5 WD) ischnota . 3,9 LAETABILIS 3, 7 LEPTOGRAMMA 4,18 LEPTOZONA 4,19 LIMOSA 4,19 LISSOPHRICA 4,16 liospoda .. 4,18 LYGRODES 4,18 mesogonia 3, 14 mesozona UA, ILS molybdaria 3; D MESODONTA 4, 22 nexistriga ee 2 obtusata 4,11,16 obtusata var. longidens 11 odontias 1, 13} ophiucha 4, 20 orectis AS. ORIPHOETES 3, 12 ornata ; 5, 9823 orthogramma P23 orthotis .. 3, 10 orthozona 3, 10 paratacta ay 3, 1 partitaria 5 By iQ, al perinipha 5 8H © Dichromodes personalis 4, 20, 22 phaeostropha pela! poecilotis 3519, 0) DEVOMACKAM a.) | se 2 raynori Bi 4, 21 TIM OSAWEe ee. ak 522 ROSTRATA he 4,15 UMA eee 2 oy EH ats On S scothima eRe RMCA OR TK semicanescens St 4,17 sigmata .. 6 25s alal Ske steropias 2 steropias ab. nexistriga 24 stilbiata 4, 22 strophiodes! 2.0.2) y. 13 SUMO AVA ss so aralree 7 ? triglypta RMN) PRA ONLS triparata 2 4545 2 ey Chmoptilayery | ean use. iL uniformis parca c-a6 ie co rue usurpatrix 0d, 23 Dicksonia antarctica .. 452 IDICMEMOS THe oe ee Oe eeeZio PUSOSHS col ea e657 oa ZOU Dicranella . 264, 266 flaccidula Hon een eo OO pycnoglossa .. .. .. 266 imichophylilay a. 2298. 3267 Dicranum oceanicum .. 267 Didelphys .. 507, 514, 527-8 aurita atomae Bay oro PAS Wiese, ' 56° eo oo Bet Dietysus .. Paw se A Dillwynia ericifolia bo UBe Dinophalus a 26, 34 cyanorrhaea .. 2. 26-7 dilutaria 20 drakei Mg Bil eremaea .. ae . 27-8 _IDIOCRANA ety amen eee LECHRIOMITA .. 27, 29 macrophyes Pilly Py) postmarginata 27, 30 pygmaea .. 21-8 serpentaria 27-8, 30 Dioctria tasmanica no Pas Diogmites .. 250, 252-3, 257 Diphucephala angusticeps 453 caerulea bg basa tn Co Ras GCAMUCIIE MN aca’, hon MUSE UMA DO CONCINNA peer tesa De erebra 453-4 a (Gienloehermouls 65 oo oo Cede DICISOMIUND 55) so 65 Col GIPAB RACE eon cere (ul Vets eA Da: IMNTADTOES oo loo bo oo Cent MONTANA BOREDOM, Mes. nitens Br tiursyteun tog) Gs cued yi MONChOOHTE cd ‘os (o. 454 parviceps Smite Sea erie 2 Us) pulchella Takin a ee Oe pulcherrima .. .. 451 purpureitarsis 453- 4 INDEX. Diphucephala quadrati- DOTA ks hy OMe 4S richmondia 451-2 THU CSas estes Ae eee DIS. SOLdidagas iy sc eae ADS UBNOSEUNIS Go los Cals | on CEOS Diphyrrhyncus apicalis.. 547 MUCOMATUGU Sines een een ail Diphyscium : 263, 301 submarginatum .. .. 301 Diplograptus foliaceus .. 153 Dirce .. planner alles Discophyllum flavescens 288 Distichophyllum . 264, 288 flavescens Hawn ther fennel Avuiieves Graeffeanum Molla ee PAS is limibatwlum) >> 8. 3 288 TORQUATIFOLIUM .. .. 288 VON oo bo Tab eee ASS vitianum Gey ls Wo UNI Poy Doddiana 340-2 australis 340-1 FLAVIFRONS 341-2 pallens es Aiea 340-2 PARVISETA CLO A Vee Dodonaea we anu Oe triquetra . 120, 734 Doliema (?) nitidula .. 547 spinicollis SEO AA Ber ety t BAEY ANG, Doryanthes a6 Sy Reactors Doryphora teeta oo Cad) Drosera She Min oii esdaten & longifolia 372-3, 387 ovata Sree eadh oa 3872 rotundifolia : 372, 387 Drosophila melanogaster 378 IDIVANACIED og) de 5 6 6b) BUS floribunda re et oh ad eM a TC Dysarchus BROWNI 183-4 PERCOSMALRWS! wanes ie ToS Ebenolus ARUENSIS .... 545 papuensis yt he aie ENA papuensis var. anthra- GIMNWS oe Mao Ss So Bas plicicollis Pais Pate ee gio ae) sculptipennis fe pil BYE) SERRATICOLLIS Bee 544 wollastoni var. anthr: a- Goats) 6, eet) oe ey, ALY Hehidna Pee Mies Lil hicipsilioinnic pa ROC Hehinomyia Her Wa DEAN OO Ketropothecium 262, 266, 293 adnatum Sie SPREE le A RAS YE Callodietyonwee ee eo 4: cyathothecium AS Oi a a en) A incubans Dr Atala VEE MILO O incubans var. scaberu- lum ie HSMM Ae Ps By eS AKON OVERDO G5 Bae oe, ZANE! MOLLE Benin. iE OA pacificum A SNE tee 24253 percomplanatum 20 2408 Lxsxcil Ectropothecium percom- planatum var. FAL- CATUM Shins VaR OAS malacoblastum Sane OF! sandwichense Te athe SP 4 SCAbDerALIUIM Ee eee ne SOdaleie ware S tutuilum pe) SEARO vitianum hy Meet ae DOA Edwardsina 5 dz, ats) Heernia 5 ; 557-8, 560 cunninghami 550-3, 555, 557, 559-60, 568-70, 574 kingii BP wean Aas hata! Aaa KD) stokei Bigs 93) MRA Mea 5) striolata .. 550-3, 556-7, 559-60, 568-70, 574 whitei 550-3, 556-7, 559-60, 568-70, 574 Hidamia catenulata eto (05) WAUPIOIEROGINEY de 55 150 KOS Elaeocarpus holopetalus 734 reticulatus 5 UAL, ese: Elaeodendron australe .. 734 MINCGHOCRANAN oe ere ios THA CSAS eae (es anese re bunt Eneryphia .. di 212-3 argillina Oe Wee eo: frontisignata a es eee Endothia parasitica 50 (AUS) Endotrichella . 266, 282 (GhrEeSHSE NN, 956 oo 60 CAI IDM CWOy 55 SH oo CABDS ZOTl Hillebrandii .. . 262, 287 RUNGE 5S°° Gol oo 50 AAST Solanderi oe EE A Ol! Hoacemyia etd See PEERS Epacris nisl Seca nS GEE RAM OTIC! mucrophyllay sa. een oemloO pulchella Pen eee aii ts (88) Epidesmia ophiosema .. 20 ONE 6 6 b'5 aon 00) CULES EXPOPTIA 482-3 ROMWINIDIAN anes 5 a5. 333 Hriocera 209- Bi, 45) gaspensis Puig on ie neon 2.3 longicornise) eee eee Eriochilus cucullatus .. 413 Eriococcus sp. .. 489-90 Eriostemon Deh Se Meer: crowei .. hi PCO ROO Erysiphe eraminis oo te), 609, 622, 633 Erythropogon 251-2, 254 australis 5 PIL, ZAsyES limbipennis ... .. .. 254 maculinevris se abil, 254 Eubolia indicataria oa rAd) linda AP ie A NE OAS a nae iter b partitaria Sa Dea ee aD) Eucalyptus xxxiv, xxxvii, 371-2, 376, 746 ACMENTOIeSIyee ee roo agglomerata .. XXXV ixexai® Eucalyptus Andrewsi .. 595 approximans so) oo wet) Basten meester wish beckon to biCOlOTs eee calophylla Stays hy hide pionio GINWCOEOME, oa “oo. oo 2083 Camfieldi Spider a srecacie Cannonives) yee 591 capitellata XXXV, 591 CODONOCARPA .. . 587, 589 conglomerata Bis ey eos coriacea .. erties corymbosa 376, 724, M2 M35 GRD ay ee aes SEG elaecophorayy yee eee: eugenioides Xxxv, 376, 471 Ko cktonaleymi sen lee) oO rao! o> 66 oo o5 2083 haemastoma .. Soo, Aa Hemiphlioiawies es onside globulus Ge ee eae ates MOT AS laevopinea XxXXV TN ACEOCATD Agere alo macrorrhyncha SXEXGXGV 591,595 macrorrhyncha var. brachycorys 3 XXXV McKigaNa . 592, 594 nO, G5 oo oo “783 Muelleriana XXXV IWHEMNON 56 256 se no fos nigra aie octaet ik acarae eg eae nitens Sih PAS cle AOS obliqua tt XXXVii OCGIdentalisie) eel: paniculata 0 CA, CdD PADCLEATAT Dh mas) CEL Men OO pilligaensis » 474, 473 pilularis 5 UB, ALB} piperita .. . 376, 471 quadrangulata So) ae DO regnans .. . XXXVili TUDIda Os tee ie ee ATS saligna 5) UO, 4871 Santvalitoliaeey een ono Sidenophloila ec eae G sideroxylon .. teak Oe anto: sp. pie 468, 471, 473 spathulata Maco WPA RRAT OS stellulata ica, SERS eo lO stricta . 589, 590 tereticornis OOM Ania terminalis 5 PA XXXiii TINGHAENSIS .. 5 Hails Beil WOOlISTanay an eee, YOUMANI 587, 590-1 Eucamptodon .. .. 264, 267 piliferus Ah Rae Gri Eumelea ae . 207, 209 australiensis Sika rere OS duponchelii : 207-8 obliquifascia 56. oo ADS rosalia 207-9 INDEX. Eumelea rosalia form stipata he ire see DS Saneuinaitay eee eee Od sanguinata australiensis 207 STIPATA 207-8 Euphasia 50. 00, GAG, Bart picta ek See O'2 O EUPHOLOCIS .. 464, 466 DENTIPES Bete nega eee ees) MEAG 64 do oo CXi5) Euprosopia 5 dp Sera 4g) biarmata nee 430-1 conjuncta . 429, 430 macrotegularia 430-1 maculipennis eeeipa A SAIRYD) miliaria ye Ue ee tO punctifacies .. .. .. 480 SCATOPH AGA 430-1 separata eZ 9-3: tenuicornise sa. see ese4o0 Huptychium ~ 2663-282 assimile .. we 282-3 cuspidatumyy >.) 2 seco Gunnii 261, 282-3 pungens al ete EROS robustum DUPE urs tow ROS setigerum Ses NE Ge OO VITIENSE FORM AM a8 5 < ANS Eustacomyia 133-4, 326, 337-8 breviseta 133-4 HIRTA 56 eile oi dless Eutelia undulifera Mei aeat RICKS Eutermes westaustralien- sis Boe lsat clan aera OO Eutinophaea 463-4, 466 bicristata 459-60 GiSMaiee ere fo: Ate oz HASCICUMATAY 6 | eee) a4 459 IMISWRATING AUG ey lh) soos cee ie LOM nana Be ket 23 ot est Reale 4 O'S PAPUENSIS te) bane Ole SETISTRIATA .. . 459, 461 SUBVIRIDIS PUM ce. hoe 5 AMD) SUTURALIS Bete creas LAD) variegata Aly Alt cee ome LO VITIENSIS at eG] Hxechopaipus!) 2. 3: “=. 130 IATRDPHGHEAR SE lsc! ns) somo DUBITALIS 131-2 FULVIPES af 131-2 IMGT 55} bo 6a bo dH RUFIFEMUR Sed 131-2 rufipalpis ay 5 BO, 12 Exocarpus SDiCrei te. Seo Exodictyon sleet By 269 Spo W AOL “1g-gh. e crate ears 269 dentatum ie se ENR AE Ae) scabrum et OU scolopendrium Bre eee OU, Fagus COP as 708 Moorei oA 710, 728 Favosites . 146, 150 Ficus rubizinosa stephanocarpa Fidonia squalidata Fissidens abbreviatus ALTISETUS OUSPIDIFERUS DIVERSIRETIS fissicaulis daltoniaefolius GLOSSO-BRYOIDES lagenarius LAUTOKENSIS mangarevensis mangarevensis peracutae mangarevensis PERACUTUS .. mangarevensis taitensis naho-bryoides PERACUMINATUS PEROBTUSUS pungens .. philonotulus samoanus VITIENSIS Zollingeri Floribundaria .. aeruginosa floribunda pseudo-floribunda Fomes roseus Forcipomyia Formosia atribasis CINGULATA frontosa .. QUADRIPUNCTATA smaragdina speciosa .. Froggattimyia .. Frontina Fusarium avenacearum coeruleum culmorum bullatum faleatum (?) herbarum moniliforme .. oxysporium orthoceras sp. Galanageia quadrigramma 50 ASD, : . 282 Garovaglia setigera . Weberi Gastrophora henricaria qasintceran Ne peas) bay) . 124, 728 na (4 5 alla . 262, 269 5 Apfat 5 ATA eee ciiels 269-70 oo ZARA 269-70 . 269 . 272. ea 272-3 var. var. Fo. og AUS: Var. . 272 a AUS oo UY 56) lle a Call . 269 271 272-3 5 PAUL . 269 ZOOS 284 284-5 .. 284 284-5 705 "| 226 etoe A085 Jas; 109 sep Os . 104 eS elOd . 328 Ss 347 .. 104 se Od 50 US a5. OS s6 (KDE) co, UDR so TADS y05 go (US 5.) (ADS) ao. (D5) . 705 197 282 “. 282 “| 200 - 200 Gaultheria hispida Poo Geoplana .. 143 eaerulea pio UE coxil : 50 4ka3 purpurascens | .. 143 rubicunda . 748 variegata re 743 GERALDIA A 397, 337 HIRTICEPS A UUslethamnb Baers) Gerusia 38, 201, 2038 excusata 201-3 multicolor sh 201-2 RUBRICOSA . 201, 203 virescens ae 201 Gibberella saubinetii . 105 Glochidion Ferdinandi .. 733 Gompholobium Beier olle Gonocephalum costatum 547 costipenne wei seney aT hispidocostatum . 547 Goodenia ag le anal mets A371 (020 Graptopezus costipennis 547 erenaticollis .. .. .. 547 Grevillea 372-4, 580, 727, 746-7 acanthifolia .. 386, 407, 411, 728, 747 aquifolium . 587 asplenifolia hs Ae ape BoC buxifolia . ot 4, 128 excelsior (7?) ISO) laurifolia 373, 386-407, 411, 747 lavandulacea 56 OU linearis in 720, 728-9 Gaudichaudii 386-7, 747 oleoides 1 814, 728 mucronulata-.. 2. 2. 728 paradoxa 5 UY) punicea a yi ctah Oe: robusta 373- 4,580, 728 SARMENTOSA 5 DOT SDC oes oan se LOD Spachelavacmunes msc nema Gryon Sect eee Le Oh Pure ane alter Gryonella 42, 81, 84 AFFINIS 84-6, 88 bruesi . 84-8 crawfordi 84-5, 88 magnidens 84, 87 PLATYTHORAX 84, 88 Gryonoides .. 41-2 Guava aa 5 AQ Gymnosoma Re fy S rotundata 93, 97 Hakea 372-4, 726-7 dactyloides Ne Seba O) eriantha 5 BUD, TA, C29) SUNOS, oo oo oo . oo, Breil) FanononSneiee 55 oc oo WUD pubescens 710-1, 726-7, 129, 735 INDEX, Hakea pugioniformis .. 586, 710, 729 saligna . 126, 729 suberea . OL: trifurcata 580-1, 584 varia SOS Halicore XXXili Halmaturus ruficollis a) tales} Hapalothrix 50 dat) Haplonycha bella 5456 BREVISETOSA bn) CHO) erinita .. 455 deceptor ao CHS electa . 456 fraterna .. 456 gagatina "457- 8 gibbicollis 5.6. AlaNs! IMMATURA Fp Petite a a) bE RE NG) IRIDEA DS ee Ae BE AREA OTT) marginata .. 458 nigra eee Dy pallida 92456 PILOSICOLLIS ao 454 PRUINOSA 5 2S) PYGIDIALIS aig Cnt ruficollis 58 GY rustica oo CaN rustica var. ~. 458 setosa oo a EADS tarsalis .. 458 Hedycarya angustifolia, . 730 Helaeus occidentalis 5 Oey) PERLATUS i pa OO Heleioporus . 744 Helianthus 586 Helichrysum diosmifolium onl leucopsidum .. XXXVili Helminthosporium sp. .. 621 Hemiergis decresiensis .. 550 aquadridigitatum 550-1, 559-60, 570, 574 Herpetineuron .. 2 26452911 MWOCCOROE os bo oo on eel Heteralex aspersa .. its Heteromeringia . 434 australiae RP eA RAO IMITANS .. 5 AlBxS) nigrimana Pie sia MIA Sy Hibbertia 5 wry) Hieracium Shee 1S NA RONG Hillia at Bins Bb NSS Himantocladium . 265, 286 implanum Hee teabehat nasi AShO loriforme rhay by BARONE Pere wre pel) Hinulia quoyi 551, 553-4, 556, 559-60, 568-70, 572-4 HOBARTIA 5 AS BA, Or PECULIARIS SO U2T, Holocephala : 1, 260 Homalia .. 265, 286 exigua .. 261), 286 Homaliodendron » 265, 286, dendroides™ “7.544 22a) 206 mleoellignean os 566 oo FASO 1xxiii. Homaliodendron gran- didens i . 286 javanicum ; 286 Homoeotrachelus 466 Homospora 201 lymantriodes 201 procrita .. 201 rhodoscopa she 201 Hookeria flabellata 50) PANE Graeffeana .. .. .. 289 oblongifolia 289, 294 vescoana ee elk cise) Hoplogryon = Oe ee eA? DICOlOTLRN A Een eee OG castaneithorax Apne? Ea hU) fuscicoxa OURS Fees | OAM howensis ape sees ae eS IMAM NVSMAMS S5 oa oa U7 pulchrithorax Resaerrecane x0) punctata TCE cine AONE rufithorax a ermhanretn gs ER PLA: SOR GHC ag attra, eres rugulosa BPs esas.” ri oy5) varicornis San deeds eee ONO Horaia 144 Hordeum maritimum Xxxi Hovea linearis .. 732 Howea belmoreana .. XXxiv Jaluben@Oles SH, ss 556 55 OB Hyalomyia 93, 98 aureiventris .. 94, 96 BASALIS 94, 96 CHRYSIS .. 94-5 costalis 94-5 DISCALIS 94-5 HYALIS 94, 96 lativentris 94, 97 lepidofera . 93-8 nigrihirta 94-5, 97 nigrisquama .. 93,95 normalis 93, 95 sensua ap 95, 98 Hyalomyodes 5 BAB BAD AUSTRALASIAE i 325 Hyalurgus 50 Be lucidus woke Hybrenia CLERMONTIA A . 188 dentipes .. ao IY) Hyla he Tee! caerulea .. T44 ewingii ait er ee et Te. ISHMNGORUIS ob) oot oo SIO), BBL Hymenostomum 5g PASS PANG GulemeEmiiiien so se 65 AUG Hyophila . 262, 264, 277 elata snfejt Meh), MRR See LL IMGI@OONWAI 55 289 semi-marginatum . 289 struthiopteris .. 289 Hypostena 5 Boe Idiodes loxosticha 5 Als} Ipsaphes . 547 Isopogon : oo Sal, Bees! anemonifolius 375, 727, 729 anethifolius 50) OS Isopterygium . 266, 295 albescens 295-6 byssicaule 50 austro-pusillum . 295 lonchopelma . 295-6 minutirameum » 295 minutirameum var. VITIENSE ee 95 molliculum 295-6 taxirameum .. . 295 Jacksonia .. 50 HUY Kunzea 06 BUS corifolia .. 56 UexD Lacerta agilis 50 BB) vivipara .. 50. BOD Lachnostachys .. . 518 cordifolia 578 Lambertia .. He °372- 4 formosa .. . 315, 729 Lamprogaster ood basalis . 434 elongata 432-3 FUSCIBASIS oo CBR PSEUDELONGATA 432-3 viola 5 0 Ahase3 xanthoptera 50) ES zelotypa . 432 Laphystia .. » 2d 260 LASIOCALYPTER 118-9, 122, 327 ATRIPES 119, 121-2 INDEX, LLASIOCALYPTER FLAVOHIRTA 119, 121-2 HIRTICAUDA 119-21 NIGRIHIRTA 5 alilS), abeAL LASIOCALYPTRINA 118-9, 122 MODESTA . 2 ea Lasiopetalum ferrugineum 720, 734 rufum Lae p ee toe Lasiopogon . 251, 260 gamarus . 257 sergius 5 AD) Lathyrus . T46 LEADUADICUS . 480 IMPERIALIS 480-1 TOLERABILIS 480-1 Leiochrodes octomacula- tus . do DAY suturalis ao Max VARIABILIS ao. Darl Lenzites sepiaria 50) US Lepidodendron australe 146 Leptis 5 50 BAU Leptogaster BOA asc) a. PARIS, Leptospermum .. 102,105, 107-9, 351, 372, 376 attenuatum 0 18S emarginata XXXVii flavescens xxxvii, 710, 735 flavescens var. lepto- phylla .. XXXVii lanigerum 0 VAD, 735) parvifolium 50 Cae stellatum a BU, Cae Leschenaultia 583 biloba .. 582 floribunda DIC oO: formosa .. no BSS laricina . ao BNO linarioides no OSB tubiflora ao BS Leskea glaucina a0 (AZ) Leskia : oa wea) Leucania labeculis aa . 198 Leucobryum . 263, 267 laminatum . 55 AGT pentastichum .. 268 pungens .. .. 268 ’ samoanum eZos sanctum bo ZAK tahitense Me . 268 Teysmannianum .. 268 Leucoloma 5) PAD, 264, 267 tenuifolium eer Ort Leucomium : 262, 266, 297 debile oo LOY Leucopis 488-91 Leucophanes . 263, 268 densifolium 268 pungens . 268 smaragdinum 7. 268 vitianum .. 268 Leucostoma oo BAR simplex 5 B28 Licinoma elata eeDAZ OBLONGA Sem Aili splendens 55 AY TRICOLOR , bAZ Limnodes j .. 485 Limnodynastes affinis , eA! dorsalis .. 744-5 tasmaniensis . 744 Liodes ? angasi arin eyeregumelin stilbiata Pee) Oe Liolepisma ive ee EE OS entrecasteauxi 550-1, . 553-4, 561-3, 568-74 metallicum 550-1, 560-1, 572, 574 ocellatum 550-1, 560-1, 572-4 pretiosum ; 550-1, 560-1, 572, 574 weekesae 550-1, 554, 560-1, 566, 570-4 Liparetrus distinctus . 458 melanocephalus . 458 Liponeura . 141,144 bischoffi .. 5 LRG decipiens o dlak& IGhiSSOCRLASDEC aE pygmaea int SE OS Lissomma .. 26, 31, 38 AMPYCTERIA . 32-3 atmoscia . 32-3 himerata .. dl-2 hiracopis a2 o2-3 incongrua po ples MACRODONTA 32, 34 minuta ; . 31-2 Litsea dealbata 2 US%l Lomatia 5 RUBS WAU Fraseri ee 4) EERE Z9 longifolia é 375, 720, 729 silaifolia dl BD, Uz) Lygosoma .. ol fae OS entrecasteauxi 550-1, 553-4, 561-3, 568-74 decresiensis .. bo Wa) metallicum 550- 1, 560- iL. 572, 574 ocellatum 550-1, 560-1, 572-4 pretiosum 550-1, 560-1, 572, 574 quadridigitatum 550-1, 559-60, 570, 574 oyi ae 551, 553-4, 556, 559-60, 568-70, 572-4 weekesae 550-1, 554, 560-1, 566, 570-4 Mabuja multifasciata .. 550-1, 560, 570, 574 MACROCTENIA .. . a8 EPAENETA Je SESS Macromitrium . "262-3, 278 angulatum . 278 Macromitrium Beechey- anum 278-9 incurvifolium : 278-9 involutifolium 278-9, 297 tongense 278 MACROPIA 5g) CAA RUFIVENTRIS 50 Oe Macropus ruficollis 5 AL rufus a .. bOI Masicera lata . 349 rubrifrons 339 Megachile sp. XXXli Megaptera nodosa XXXKV Meiothecium . 265, 298 microcarpus .. 298 SERRULATUM .. be uataw PASS} Melaleuca .. 5 372, 376, 416 ericifolia ake tye 736 TOCOSE “Sc ale 1 as 377, 736 raphiophylla 578 thymifolia 736 Melobasis AUROCINCTA 179 PARVULA .. 179 terminata 3g 180 Meneristes dentipes 547 Merulius lacrymans 705 Mesembrianthemum aequi- laterale 730 Mesembriomintho 110 compressa aN so 1ILO) Metalaphria 250- iL, 253, 255-6 aurifacies 5/0 LADD australis 4 CAB) TESSELLATA Bos noeee a) Meteorium . 264, 284 aeruginosum . 284 intricatum . 284 Miquelianum . 284 vitianum bo PAD Metopia 439-40 Microcitrus australasica xxxiv australis a XXXi1V Micromonospora 231-2, 240-2, 244-8 Micropalpus vittatus . 318 Microstylum 250-1, 253 Microtropeza .. .. .. 99 flavitarsis .. 100 FLAVIVENTRIS 99,101 INTERMEDIA 99,100 latimana 99,100 ochriventris .. .. 100 sinuata 99-101 Miltogramma . 487, 440 NORMALIS . 441, 443 RECTANGULARIS . 441, 443 REGINA 441-3 REX .. 441-2 Mirbelia erandifiora 5 60 UaHe4 reticulata so (a4 Misophrice .. 463 Mniadelphum De tal vitianum 5 Be INDEX. Mniadelphus Graeffeanus 288 limbatulus SF leia. rhets) Mniobryum . 263,279 RUBRUM Si Ag) tasmanicum .. oo Aly) Mniodendron ? 262, 265, 300 tahiticum sah ee eee oO Mnium ayo het 262-3, 280 rostratum we .. 280 Monoctenia 37-8, 40 calladelpha 39-40 cycnoptera 195 decora 192 digglesaria 197 excusata 202 eximia 39-40 falernaria 5 aesinate 38-40 Prater MAT aye eee eee 40) himeroides 203 hypotaeniaria Bepiene eam be} TVUINUGAt ne eee ett) eet eR iD niphosema * 218 obtusata 203 ochripennata 194 odontias .. 206 orthodesma 11083 ozora 200 pallidula 192 phyllomorpha 193 polyspila Saw aka to! Ob DOstcarnrneatayacwieaeese OO punctiunculis 198 punctiunculus Pel IS smerintharia AYRE or Og subcarnea 193 subustaria 193 turneri 196 vinaria HERA LOD, Monoctophora caprina .. 194 stillans Boeueene 193 Mortierella sp. .. Te ree D) MuUcomtavilSsee, foe. 05 glomerula 705 plumbeus 705 Ramannianus 705 Mus musculus .. Xxxii Mycelium radicis atro- virens - 705 Mycobacterium 231 tuberculosum 246 Mycogone nigra so COS SD iiestainens leon PW aun nr QQ Myiobia eel 29 Myoporum 727 tenuifolium " 720- iL 737 Myothyria .. 328, 338-9 ARMATA eee nA yA () FERGUSONI ee 4.0) Myrtus Hen Meh AN EL hee OOO Dwllatae vee eee VPS SG obcordata bo Bxats) Nearcha 214 paraptila 214 xxv. Neckera australasica .. 286 dendroides . 286 EKugeniae 2285 Graeffeana . 286 implana .. . 286 Lepineana . 285 loriformis PRE 2S 6 Neckeropsis . 265, 285 gracilenta . 285 Lepineana 2 285 Nemopalpus 5 Ne Nemoraea .. e dlitg) NEOAMENIA oo. JhO83 LONGICORNIS thaknGere lO, Neocurupira 9 ALas7/, ale hudsoni .. 5 BY nicholsoni 5 Ue Neocyrtopogon .. 251, 253, 258 bifasciatus ZS maculata sa) iS Neodioctria ; 251, 253, 259 australis 2 259 Neophasia .. Pe Nae MOLE Neopogon 250-1, 260 Neosaropogon 250-1, , 253-4, 258-9 claripennis 55 ANG claripes ee oO froggattii "'250- i, 256 nigrinus ben 2D0 nitidus 6 60 PANS princeps 251, 258-9 salinator 5 ZANT suavis bar esc) Mesee aaY Neoscleropogon se 2D 259 Neotheca FUSCA : 540 NESOGENOCIS os CUCULLUS .. 464 Neurigona so eke} Nigasa subpurpurea 71200 Nissolia : : . 746 Noreia. ean ailes perdensata so) cule vinacea Eee lilies Nossidium . 478 Notaden .. 744 Notarcha plycalis “Xxxii Notechis curtis so HD Notelaea longifolia .. 710,737 Nothofagus So BOO Cliffortioides . 386 fusa as . 386 Notostrongylium rugosi- colle ; 5 BAM Nyctozoilus . 547 Ochromyia flavipennis .. 310 Ochrus . Slate ence i: Kes Ochthiphila . 488, 491 Octoblepharum . 263, 269 albidum .. + 269 densifolium .. 268 dentatum en OS, 1xxvi. Octoblepharum scolopen- Ghelwarn 26 960 60. o0 ZY) smaragdinum Sip eeiaeabs Oenochroma .. 37, 39,191, 198 ALPINA .. 192,196 artia Deemer Tia | fore doves cerasiplaga . 192,194 cycnoptera 191-2, 195 decolorata +6 1925195 GM NOMS so 50 oo NOB euttilinea Whageree oo JOD infantilis 191- 2, 197 leucospila Re ars eed Cr tl Lay es) lissoscia -. L925 196 ochripennata . 192,194 orthodesma . L191, 193 pallida ‘ igi 191-2 6 phyllomorpha 5 els ale polyspila 191-2, 195 postcarneata sty RO, privata 191, 193-4 quadrigramma . 192, 197 GQuaternanialy CaXo Rhodobryum . 263, 280 Graeffeanum . 280 Rhynchodemus . 143 Rhynchonella 152-3 ? cuboides aos ee pleurodon 146, 152- 3, 156-7 primipilaris . Be eu cieite baa) Rhynchostegiella . 265, 300 VITIENSIS : so oo. ah) Rhynchostegium. . 265, 300 selaginellifolium . 300 Rhyncodexia bg LS, alz474 longipes 59 dlaly) Rhytiphora frenchi . 467 Ricinocarpus pinifolius .. 412, 724, 726, 733 . 491 . 491 . 429 491-2 491-2 Rivellia connata .. doclea ISOLATA virgo Rodwayia GRANDIS orientalis Rosa Rutilia ALBOCINCTA argentifera elegans flavipes formosa .. hirticeps leucosticta leucosticta var. SQUAMA micans nigriceps ruficornis sp. Acs 485 485-6 .. 486 50 OG) oo OG Los og UDG we lO5 4 09 .. 108 .. 109 een FUSCI- co JUN EeLOS so) KO) co ly) LOG INDEX, Saccharomyces cerevisiae 705 Sapromyza no Gays alboatra .. no Gers brevicornis .. 434 LICHTWARDTI .. .. 434 mariage (722 Ms Spee aoe Sarcinodes oe POSTS 1380 carnearia Red event, OG compacta urenietee Hel a TON holzi SO SUMS BN awe! Reo subfulvida A eee SELON Sarcophaga 5 GULy Sarcophilus ee 5. oo WWE Saropogon 251, 253, 256-8 dispar o) AZ bre: gamarus 5 CD ILS PAST rubescens . 256 semirufum Bt ol CAE sergius . 256, 259 suavis : 5 NU Sceloporus torquatus 2 55 Schizactiana co Oe Schizoceromyia 303-4 fergusoni . 304 INVALIDA = AOS SO, Be Vea 2 Ue aS U5 validal 304-5 Schizophyllum commune 705 Schizotachina .. » ao a Scleropogon : 250, 254, 259 Sclerotinia Libertiana .. 705 Seirotrana ACUTICOLLIS .. 186 bimetallica so JUST JOHNSTONENSIS ba JUS ‘parallela ELS TG tumulosa 186 Sematophyllum contaeuule 299 cuculligerum 5 ee theliporum . 298 Semisuturia 340-1 Senostoma 5 1h) flavipes - 109 hirticeps 4 LOY) nigriceps ; 109 ruficornis 50 JOY) Senotainia 437, 443-4 Sigmatella Powelliana .. 296 Simsonia DEANEI . 189 purpurea 2. 1190 wilsoni .. 190 Simulium : on ha CARA Smerinthus 2? wayii. yea40 Solanum sodomaeum 5 UST xanthocarpum oo Cast Solemya : 22 56 Solmsia inflata. ae Choe Sphagnum oo PAA, XIE acutifolium 50 UL cuspidatum . 301 Reichhardtii .. 301 Seemannii na oval vitianum oo ait Sphenothorax ao Bele Spiculaea ciliata FD Oe Spiridens . 264, 282 aristifolius ; 202 Balfourianus 282, flagellosus Ase had 6 PASS Spirifer disjuncta .. 150, 152-3, 155, 157 elongati . oes 155 Spirillum rubrum . 246 Sprengelia 56 UA Stachybotrys 221699 Stenocarpus Rr a(74 salignus .. 5 BD sinuatus 375 Stenopogon 250- i 253- 4, 259- 60 elongatus . 259 fraternus ees oa Ne Stereophyllum .. 7 265250 VITIENSE .. Me 2Sit Sterrha mele Stetholus elongatus 189, 532 PAPUANUS 189 Stichopogon .. 260 Stigmodera BM soe. aA AERATICOLLIS .. Oy Anieyoubis oo op 5G ley APICENOTATA .. 5 Wa ARIEL 56 Das atricollis Aig» aye: blackburni 55. ORT BOGANIA .. eS 4: caudata .. sa Ba) coeruleipes so Hat eydista 56 Da) dilatata .. eS 2 DRYADULA a ae humeralis oo 38) IMITATOR Aacl80 insignis .. 56 OB INTACTA ,. Ser altel MACKAYANA ao Gekn obscura Say Ov parva ao ey! pulchella Pie AG) QUADRIPLAGIATA Bo OOH) rubriventris .. ~ BSSz sagittaria 182 subgrata var. discoflava 533 trimaculata bn ORK vigilans .. sae UESKD Stilbomyia 102-3 costalis 102-3 “MINOR Palo opulenta 102-3 Stomatomyia 5. 320 filipalpis so. aval MICROPALPIS bo. Beall Streptothrix chalcea 232, 247 Chalceae 4 PBA Strongygaster . 92-3 globulus .... PGES 9S Strongylium angulatum 546 gravidum . 547 Strongylium horridum .. 547 MAME “55 o8 Vea sou) keyanum mets) Sel TD AG punctithorax ait e546 PUSILLUM etre tay tania tuberipenne var... .. 547 WAGNERI EAE Ean 1 Ua od OY! A) Strongylogaster Bio up sais cee 3 Sturmia oo oo. BOs BOIL SEMIRUFA eat Oenhop: Shypielias 25 2. 228 es 3872 humifusa Bh MEL ERO lanceolata 5 Caley, 7W richei eine ERCP EH OO triflora co oo Malek, 7D tubiflora danse ANGLO WHPTGIIS: \ Ge tals Weel) Unton COko Sumpigaster : 110-1 fasciatus scien ee an LCD) SNNIPERYEISTIS «2 ..- o. 25 TEBPMOCYMA 2. 2. ©... 26 Symphysodon 6.0. PAO, ZASC) ecylindraceus .. .. .. 283 rugicalyx SGA oO vitianus .. So OBO Symphysodontella . 266, 283 cylindracea .. .. .. 283 Syncarpia .. 5 oe BUA BUG laurifolia 377, 710, 712, 736 Synoum glandulosum .. 734 Syrrhopodon 262-3, 273 albo-vaginatus See ee eae CHOCCUS: (ses ee ee 204 fasciculatus! .. 2. «9 204 Graeffeanus .. .. .. 273 laevigatus Saul Wauel a vauatn cates luteus Pes Min eae ene M ha cl OA: mamillatus o AGA, AUS scolopendrium AiG epaicAwe _tuberculosus .. .. .. 276 Tachina ae Sol eis, oH AD Tacparia ? frontisignata 214 TALARACTIA o GkNB}, OD BALDWINI BN rie mC naan X11) Talarocera ee ee HOOD mamManlCleAw re fo oat es 9S Tapeigaster ST Bea dig "SD annulipes i 435-6 argyrospila 435-6 fulva 435-6 luteipennis 435-6 marginifrons 435-6 Tarsipes Ms cae XxXxix MAKCOEISH Tile ao ek les poe Taxithelium . 265, 296 Binsteadii Bree hsses 297 herpetium Seen 4 nes (290 isocladum Mase uve tk, papillatum .. .. .. 296 POLYANDRUM .. .. .. 296 TARO 55 Go na AY REioMORnbe So) Gy Go aki SLIZIMOSUIIM ee ee 296 INDEX. Taxithelium ventrifolium 296 TVA ORVAW) siete Peer oes oe ROS TESTACEA Fee ee tO S Teleas 41-2, 84 Telopea - 012, 374 speciosissima Bos Yond sey) Tephrina punctilineata .. 214 Tepperella eucalypti XXXiV Teremenes ey ye aA, Tetratheca ericifolia .. 733 Thamnium >) 2655 287% aneitense oe ea ee een Ol! latifolium Rae ict) ca raeH | SUBLATIFOLIUM Bae BOON Thelairia 109-11 australis Rac eee Piller tel () leucozona Ain Ai erenaed Itt) Thereutria 250- 2, 256 Thermoactinomyces' vul- garis te Rckee bt ispse FOO Thesilea ~ b4i, 547 Thrycolyga sorbillans .. 320 Thrypticus A Beli se on cane MSS Thuidium . 264, 291 biparium Ri ote een Gif DYSSoldemme ys ya a 29! cymbifolium ZO2293 erosulum RETO RS 291 glaucinum Mein eee ue DO glaucinoides .. .. .. 292 Meyenianum Se hee ONL plumulosum .. ... .. 292 ramentosum .. .. 293 samoanum "299- 3 tahitense Beh eo OU trachypodum et ee ceca Oi Thyridium MPMI se LOD fasciculatusie. os. 2. 204 luteus ae Ae OC TUS Thysanomitrium See MRE SZ ALOK IDEN VEWNKOUDIN 945. 6 | aa VADT Powellianum BS dt ese CO Richardii Beane re OM umbellatum .. .. .. 267 Tiliqua nigrolutea 550-1, 557-8, 560, 568-70, 574 scincoides 550-1, 554, 557-8, 560, 568, 570, 574 Torula My cos Unset Trachypus od 6 0.6 CLOD, ZROD LONCONOP -s5 )o0 Yoo on CAD) Trematodon Se 0402.0.0 SO, oc ee an het 2 OG suberectus Re ahi ate OO Trichoderma .. .. .. 704 IOMMNITAS Go oo Go 705 SDs Sse pee 699, 705 Trichopteryx AUSTRALICA 483 VOlANS@) ac ciep ais ) ee AOE Trichosteleum .. . 265, 299 BOSCH nT ne Eno, Boschii var. MINUS .. 299 brachypelma Se eo CaN) xxix. Trichosteleum fissum .. 299 hamatum PAE em eLAh 87.9.9) Rickerineiieee eee ae 209 rhinophyllum SEE E299 Samoanumis ss anatiee ag oO ShISMOSUMN eee eee 200 trachyamphorum 22299 Trichostomum .. .. 264, 277 INSUIATS sl a eee eT mauiense Rae cereal richostylume se ela Trichosurus . 507, 509 vulpecula Cae E sa wrens () 9 Trimorus . 42-3, 80-2, 89 ACUTISPINUS .. 44-5, 69 assimilis 44-5, 56, 59-61 ATERRIMUS Re RPA IS) ATRIPES . 44, 56, 58, 78 auratus 59, 60 australicus 44, 56, 78 australis 45,78 BICOLORICORNIS 44,57 BREVIVENTRIS .. 44, 46, 61-2 castaneithorax 45, 70, 73 CITREICLAVUS 43, 49 CONCOLORICORNIS 44, 62-3 CONDENSUS 45, 75, 83 CRASSISPINUS 45, 70-1, 73, 76 DELICATUS 44-5, 67 fuscicoxa 44, 67 howensis 43, 46 IMPRESSUS ; 44, 68 LATISPINUS 45, 76-7, 83 LATIVENTRIS 43, 47-9 leai .. ets : 59-60 mymaripennis 43, 45, 53 niger RELI Ae Ge te ae Mee nigrellus de so (ul nigrinotum 43, 46, 53-4 NITE OAS o's 9 bo ba OS nigriventris 45, 76-7, 83 nitescens 43,52 norfolcensis .. .. .. 483 NOVISPINUS 44, 64 PALLIDICLAVUS : 43, 51 ? pallidiclavus et ee sai Sy PARVIPENNIS 2 43, 49 PARVULINUS 43, 47, 49 PILOSICORNIS .. 44-5, 66 pulcherrimus 46, 79 pulchrithorax 44, 60, 63 punctatus . 44, 46, 54, 61-3 rufithorax 45, 74, 76 rugulosus .. 44-5, 65 sordidus .. 44, 56, 58, 60-1 speciosus 46, 78-9 STRIATELLUS 44, 63 STRIATISCUTUM 45, 54 TANTILLUS 43, 47-8 TENUIPUNCTATUS 45, 73, 75-6 TENUISTRIATUS : 43, 46 TRICOLORICORNIS 43,50, 52 ?tricoloricornis .. .. 45 1xxx. Trimorus VALIDISPINUS 45, 72-3 varicornis 44, 46, 54, 56, 58, 62 Trismegistia . 265, 298 complanatula el tee N29 8) rigida PeRUeeIeg KF EAISN) 1 ch ee) Trissacantha 42, 81 americana ee ttl ASPERATA 42, 81 SIMULATA 42, 81-3 TRIFURCATA 42, 81-3 Tristania . d12, 316 Conftertitoliawse. seer laurina . 377, 718, 736 Triticum dicoccum ajar.. 604 durum . 599, 607 sphaerococcum .. .. 630 vulgare 599, 602-3, 607, 609 vulgare alborubrum .. 597 vulgare pseudo - hosti- anum .. oto. oa Be Trochocarpa laurina Tales; 7asr Tropidonotus sirtalis .. 551 ? Tryplasma ea naman ease alt () Uloma corpulenta .. .. 547 Venidium 55 207, hbk Vesicularia 5 ee ZADO 2) calodictyon .. .. .. 294 inflectens Be eesti pase UO 4. reticulata 294-5 VAL TeIVAUINGAUe eeedenen iy eri ee OA INDEX. WASISTEIAUOIUN cog, a oo. wo exe NIGRIVENIRISE es | sc eento4it Viminaria denudata eS VITICIS 463-4 BIDENTATUS 45.2 22 468 Vitis Baudiniana 721-2, 734 hypoglauca .. eeeinod Voria : 318- 9, 321-2 ruralis 319-20 VORIELLA 5 BOD, BOxs ARMICEPS 335-7 INCONSPICUA .. 335-6 RECEDENS eres Te etooO UNISETA .. 335-7 VoRINA Renae. yi. eeee ST SETIBASIS Lew, AAO at: Webera aa ales Neuse ZA) submarginata : a6 ail Weinmannia rubifolia so Carll Westringia rosmarinifor- MWS ee ne 5 W245 13 Winthemia 347-8, 350-1 ALBICEPS .. 348-9 GUSDAec. 9 Gc ste emo ee, DIVERSA .. Bie stale BYES quadripustulata BoP Wissel ays He) trichopareia .. 348-9 Woollsia pungens 5 OLBRS ase Xanthium .. 475-6 pungens)). «. a. 2a. 475 Xanthorrhoecay eee Preissii ..... 44) | ee Xenogenes <2. Se chrysoplacay sss eustrotiodes).. eee Xenomerus » BL ARB 42, 89 Gubius. 12. 40) so. ergenna. ..., (ila flavicornis 89, 91 laticeps 89-90 varipes ee Sc 89-91 ACN ineey se Bh 55 ao ZAle Xenosuma rubra ep ee OF Xylomelum A's 372-4 pyriforme é 375, G12; 730 Zanclopteryx PT iy 216 permensata 215-6 Zeuctophlebia 210-1 rufipalpis ci<., a RPM ele squalidata PMS EE i eral LIL tapinodes MMM SIS vet's! PALL JASE), SMM 66 se so Tae Zita < . 330, 338 aureopyga 5 ae 330 Zophophilus J ee ene ey AT CUTEICORNISI eo TADtOT ) paces Zosteromyia 3G. ueatee Mee) cingulata Wee 111 Zy gorhynchus Vuilleminii 705 z,. REVISION OF AUSTRALIAN OEHENOCHROMIDAE (LEPIDOPTERA). II.* By A. JEFFERIS TURNER, M.D., F.E.S. [Read 26th March, 1930.] Genus 11. BRrRADYCTENA, n. gen. Bpadvxrevos, with heavy comb. Face smooth. Tongue present. Palpi moderate, porrect. Antennae in ¢ unipectinate, the pectinations short (1), and almost as broad as long, extreme apex simple. Thorax and abdomen slender; thorax not hairy beneath. Femora smooth. Tarsi not spinulose. Forewings with tufts of raised scales; 9, 10 arising from end of cell, connate or even short-stalked with 7 and 8, anastomosing with 8 to form the areole from which 8, 9, 10 arise by a common stalk, 11 free. Hindwings with 3 nearer 4 than 2 at origin, 6 and 7 connate, 12 approximated to cell to about two-thirds, thence diverging. A curious modification of the Dichromodes group. It does not seem specially allied to Phrizocomes. There is only one species and of that only the type is at present known. 65. BRADYCTENA TRYCHNOPTILA. Dichromodes trychnoptila Turn., Trans. Roy. Soc. 8S. Aust., 1906, 131. Tasmania: Zeehan. Genus 12. PHRIXOCOMES, n. gen. ppréoxouns, With bristling hair. Face smooth. Tongue well-developed. Palpi long or very long, porrect, thickened, with loosely appressed hairs. Antennae in ¢@ unipectinate, extreme apex simple. Thorax and abdomen slender; the former not hairy beneath. Femora smooth. Tarsi not spinulose. Forewings with tufts of raised scales, areole present, 8, 9, 10 arising from areole by a common stalk, 11 free. Hindwings with 3 arising midway between 2 and 4, 6 and 7 closely approximated at origin or connate, 12 closely approximated to cell to about four-fifths, thence diverging. Type, P. ptilomacra Low. A small genus near Dichromodes, distinguished by the tufts on forewings, wide separation of 3 and 4 of hindwings, and long palpi, though the last character is shared by some species of the former genus. Key to Species. 1. Forewings with longitudinal sinuate line .......................... neaistriga. 66 MorewinessShwithoutmMonsitudinalelinemeemr sede eieleceieitie eee iene eae 2 Ceeealpinte tomonvantennaleepectinatlonsie4) py onic sie acta lee) soe eels steropias. 67 Palpigietons montennalepectinationsl0ms sia sh le elec a ie eee ptilomacra. 68 * Continued from these PROCEEDINGS, liv, 1929, 504. A 2 REVISION OF AUSTRALIAN OENOCHROMIDAE, ii, 66. PHRIXOCOMES NEXISTRIGA. Dichromodes steropias ab. nexistriga Warr., Novit. Zool., 1900, 101.— Dichromodes nexistriga Prout, Gen. Insect., Oenochrom., p. 26. Not having seen this I can add nothing to Warren’s brief description. According to Prout it is certainly a distinct species. North-west Australia: Roeburne. 67. PHRIXOCOMES STEROPIAS. Dichromodes steropias Meyr., Proc. Linn. Soc. N.S.W., 1889, 1182. This also I have not seen. Western Australia: Perth, Geraldton. 68. PHRIXOCOMES PTILOMACRA. Dichromodes ptilomacra Low., Trans. Roy. Soc. S. Aust., 1892, 8. 6. 28-30 mm. Head and thorax fuscous irrorated with whitish. Palpi 7 to 8; whitish-grey irrorated with dark fuscous. Antennae fuscous; pectinations in ¢ 10. Abdomen grey. Legs fuscous; posterior pair ochreous-whitish. Forewings triangular, rather narrow, costa strongly arched, apex round-pointed, termen rounded, slightly oblique; pale fuscous sparsely irrorated with dark fuscous; tufts of raised scales beneath costa at one-fourth, and two-fifths, in middle of disc, and on cubital vein at one-third; antemedian line from one-fourth costa to one-fourth dorsum, slender, dark fuscous, edged anteriorly with white, dentate, very acutely angled outwards in middle, its apex reaching fourth tuft; discal dot formed by third tuft, dark fuscous edged with white posteriorly; postmedian line from four-fifths costa to two-thirds dorsum, slender, dark fuscous, edged posteriorly with white, straight, acutely dentate; a finely dentate white subterminal line preceded by a dark shade; an interrupted dark fuscous terminal line; cilia fuscous, bases barred with white. Hindwings rather elongate, termen rounded; grey; cilia grey, apices paler. South Australia: Mt. Lofty, Port Victor. Genus 13. DICHROMODES. Gn., Lep., ix, 320; Meyr., Proc. Linn. Soc. N.S.W., 1889, 1167; Prout, Gen. Insect., Oenochrom., p. 23. Type, D. ainaria Gn. Face with short projecting tuft of scales. Tongue present. Palpi moderate or long, porrect, thickened above and beneath with loosely appressed hairs; terminal joint concealed. Antennae of ¢ unipectinate, near apex simple. Thorax and abdomen slender; the former not or only slightly hairy beneath. Femora smooth. Tarsi not spinulose. Forewings with 11 free but closely approximated to areole, 9, 10 anastomosing with 8 to form the single areole, from which 8, 9, 10 arise by a common stalk. Hindwings with 6 and 7 separate but approximated at origin, 12 closely approximated to cell to three-fourths or meore, thence diverging. A large genus, some of the species of which are not easy to distinguish. Structural points such as the length of the palpi, and of the antennal pectinations in the g, must be carefully observed. The genus is distinctively Australian but has reached New Zealand, where it is represented by five indigenous species. -1 28. 29. BY A. JEFFERIS TURNER. Key to Species. Palpi whitish-grey or whitish-brown; hind tibiae of co much swollen ...... 2 Palpi not so; hind tibiae of @ not or only slightly dilated .................. 4 Palpimwithybase sharply, swhitew sey.) a eialeeio icles c) evcuelele sic Sea itp er stiches ischnota. Hp IW LCD aSewn Otanwitelieyycs eter cient she mneiuesea cnet Deloiens letelleellste) aval even avenebellekeapers 3 Forewings with transverse median band ........................ molybdaria. IDOE ALEK Woho ole GacKeXobkeyn lovnoKel GooooocanovomabadcoopoboUdbooouaa estigmaria. IEE ON Nid gba obs cennsioeruee uononOto Se IDEN Tce) OTE CREME SRC UCE CTO LANCOlo eC NERE Coc Ie RC eR ICC Gta LRtCy eLicee ig te cietee 5 al pip lackish Or sfuScOus acres cre retsecta clea Rarer hotel clear ielchaie uencnsnatnelcveloners 6 Forewings whitish without fuscous irroration or ochreous streaks .. galactica. Forewings with fuscous irroration and ochreous streaks ............ perinipha. Palpi with white or whitish basal area usually sharply defined ............ 7 Palpi with at most a few whitish scales towards base ................... 43 Hindwings orange-yellow ................--5- SSE ADs La ea area nen a Ped eee cha 8 EN awinessHn Gen OFAN LES EllO Wig rita c scl el cle sucliolens) ouseh ane wees etelesh A heustace Oley cae aigisunceetie 9 Forewings with basal two-thirds blackish ..........................- scothima. Forewings with basal two-thirds not blackish ...................... laetabilis. Forewings suffused throughout with reddish .............. 0... eee eee eee 10 Forewings not suffused throughout with reddish ......................000% 11 Forewings with pale-centred discal spot ................2.0200000 haematopa. Forewings with discal dot not pale-centred .................. 0000 eeaee rufula. Forewings with interrupted reddish or ochreous streaks from base to termen 12 Forewings without such streaks from base to termen ....................-. 15 Forewings with antemedian line only slightly dentate ..................06... 13 Forewings with antemedian line with strong acute median tooth .... poecilotis. Horewines swith) postmedian wine straicintie cite clase ck ele cele ioneura. Forewings with postmedian line not straight .....................00-0200es 14 Forewings with median band narrow; its edges slenderly whitish ....... aesia. Forewings with median band moderately broad, bordered by strongly marked DUVETS! terete rues oh teaes VE Cae alee be Uisumiraletactsc i" re cae fala) Oia a area Let compsotis. Forewings with two oblique ochreous streaks ...................005. EUprepes. Forewings without oblique ochreous streaks .............. 0.0... ce eee eee 16 Forewings with transverse lines nearly straight, converging on dorsum .... 17 Forewings with transverse lines dentate, wavy, or not converging .......... 18 Forewings with grey-whitish median band .......................... orthotis. Forewings with median band not grey-whitish .................... orthozona. Forewings with grey-whitish terminal band ......................00 000 e eee 19 Forewings without grey-whitish terminal band .......................-..4- 20 Forewings with white transverse lines ....................-20+2002- partitaria. Forewings without white transverse lines ...................0 cee eeaee angasi. Forewings with median band darker. than basal and terminal areas ........ 21 Forewings with median band not darker than basal and terminal areas ...... 30 Forewings with postmedian line acutely angled in middle .................. 22 Forewings with postmedian line not so angled ......................-000- 26 Forewings with postmedian line denticulate ..........................-002- 23 Forewings with postmedian line not denticulate .......................... 24 Forewings with subterminal line angled in middle .............. phaeostropha. Forewings with subterminal line not angled in middle .............. anelictis. Forewings with subterminal line acutely angled in middle ......... aristadelpha Forewings with subterminal line not acutely angled ........................ 25 Forewings often with ochreous markings; subterminal line edged anteriorly and sometimes interrupted by dark-fuscous ......... NE Ra Buena ee be diffusaria. Forewings without ochreous markings; subterminal line not edged anteriorly MEGA VIS EUS COUS eee arth EAM oon cour Te uesnr lan ya (Unie Co UGA olga Ree ten mesogonia. Forewings with margins of median band denticulate ...................... 27 Forewings with margins of median band not denticulate ................. 29 EDI NCW eS OCHECOUS = bil eC uMey Hain easy aucel chal eunaUL) Spare Ure Nb oop Aa Naty a oriphoetes. TEAC IAS MOE COMeOUeEOiNl Yd sossoubooevuroaaaobobsenoduodeoanadda sks 26 JEEVION, 2S Eoin joss ihn “ef A Goupadeasooebonuedaahobes denticulata. iPeiliol Wess ehaecronneyl yoxoiieniony iim 6 Yo oso onuasooodckappauocddooduns disputata. Forewings with a whitish-ochreous costal suffusion beyond postmedian Tit Cpetraryesteg Sey cemrcun taney MAME AIR T beh EN ae aur Cad) he emacs EAA Bad UN aR degen paratacta. Forewings without postmedian whitish-ochreous suffusion ........... emplecta. 75 76 1 “1 -] co 88 89 94 95 96 ALO}: 50. ol 55. eo REVISION OF AUSTRALIAN OENOCHROMIDAL, ii, Forewings with a whitish longitudinal streak from base .................. 31 Forewings without whitish longitudinal streak from base ................ 3 Forewings with a whitish subcostal streak from base to median line AOR Ne ER EP PAV ey ee rinse Pen AE Neer ee EM ne Eon an ad Dav eee ra tego anti atl, LAL has Ve ee confluaria. Forewings with a short median longitudinal streak from base ........ rostrata. Forewings with postmedian line strongly indented above dorsum explanata. Forewings with postmedian line not indented above dorsum ............... 33 Forewings with postmedian line dentate throughout ..................... 34 Horewings with postmedian line not dentate w:.....-.5%.4.55..-2 0-42-2424 36 Forewings with discal spot annular, pale-centred .................. obtusata. Forewings with discal spot not so formed ................0. cece cee e et seces 35 Forewings with antemedian line and a parallel preceding line strongly indented Lovey Konia goulc Ko New cup nr mnN ok ci aes aaa tah Ait A ee Pv er eae elm Ian Ger ns foc lissophrica. Forewings with antemedian line not indented ...................... exsignata. Forewings with discal spot annular, pale-centred ...................... orectis. HMorewine swith. discal ispotenotsomhormlediy ssc) -cucie cr cnteieecneiele nei iene ener ienereneeiene 37 Forewings with costal area suffused with pale ferruginous-ochreous .......... LACAN eA ey fea | ne NE Eo IE ate nee Ny EEN Ua eM an oe STR VALUE cc aero senrvicanescens. MOE WINS “NOt SOMISULEUIS e Gli iy Wye wets eee Me eee cia edi esac cslalteyray a rent tre yatta cate opteare vem eee eae 38 Forewings with postmedian line angled in middle ........................- 39 Forewings with postmedian line not angled in middle ...................... 40 Forewings with transverse lines edged with blackish ................ sigmata. Forewings with transverse lines not edged with blackish ............ lygrodes. Forewings uniformly fuscous-grey, lines indistinct ......................... 41 Forewings not uniformly fuscous-grey, lines distinct ..................... 42 Forewings with two obscure blackish transverse lines towards base liospoda. Forewings without sub-basal blackish lines .................... leptogramma. Forewings ochreous-grey-whitish ; palpi 3; antennal pectinations 7 limosa. Forewings grey without ochreous tinge; palpi 24; antennal pectinations 5 Banal akal Mis) aun waa Senet alas: 6 (GG. GA a hie Ons) tate ue ReReR MEEHAN! 3d Sh Olsees SOLS at era ath c/a tenia c leptozona. Eindwinesmoranee- Vv ellowanwcerene ied aus nist ene ence isfell seen ichotemain aR onence rene ainaria. EMindwihes) NOE NOT ANE C= VellLOwgy tyr sick oe: (cious su stretia foot outed fellerielioilssicus’ ieee eure Bel aches mercl tehenche 44 Forewings with a broad dark-fuscous subdorsal streak ............. personals. Morewines swithoutsubdorsallstiealke nya. ceacuickeeieesienniciciolc erences once ier nen eae 45 MOGEwiIness wAthouteLansVeESem LIN Sia icin. se spelen tei cicieleieie eile aoieieieke ophiucha. Forewings not wholly without transverse lines ...................-..+.-.- 46 HMorewines without) antemedianimlinie 4.55.1 c cet cieeicieieeieraer einen EUsCia. Morewings) with antemedian: line developed 24.4.5 40 55505 so -lee oe ee cee 47 Morewiness swith) postmedianghmerdemtate 4. pi cnacieeeenste siete eieiens a iaieneichsneneineae 48 Morewings with) postmedian line not dentate. i. sae cae eeciae sien clele erences 49 ISTW I Op ROD EES HM CON Ey CUMS OM AEN Uns Gg orate CaO EMT EMPe DIAS Glain icra ela iars bic: pioarclo indicataria. Pal pivoL 4s Ot Ob Hae totale Lie Oba sate car 5 cat, Realist GY 2g a SPE tuk vaenseelousit icelodes. Forewings with transverse lines broadly edged with blackish towards dorsum 50 Forewings with transverse lines not edged with blackish ................... 51 Palpi of ¢ 4, of @ 5 to 6; forewings with discal spot annular, pale-centred PERRO EERE Se S OTe PE ECU CN STE Gico 0! ONC Ter ERR REE PEE os ics REET oatuel cba cy Rec emocsigea O's raynori. Palpi 3 to 34; forewings with discal spot dot-like, rarely pale-centred ........ Bc stehenie ata taal cetera ba La nay ahaa By aoe at MR anir UCRN aia 200 Seis aa ea mA ato) MRS atrosignata. 2 Forewings more or less ochreous-tinged with darker median band .............. RUSE CN NRO eee eect Us (UI ee eae HAD ae LY cd ent a LE UP Cu aD Da I atrosignata. & MOrewinssy Not /OChTEous=tin Seq ser ecices: caion calles any SA een Saar apne a 52 Forewings with postmedian line angled in middle ........................ 3 Forewings with postmedian line not angled in middle ..................... 54 Palpi 34; forewings with narrow median band ..................... triparata. Palpi 23; forewings with moderately broad median band .......... mesodonta. Forewings with postmedian line white, strongly curved outwards on dorsum ose lcatkay Sh wha; Eres, SECS HGaNG yes ce OOS CL Se RRC TEN REEL ETS eT OURO Ee oO UE Tal SCENE Ta Te ee aR ean stilbiata. Horewing Ss iawiths postmedilanmlinemnOGaSOnenea edt el eeieiae erie eee ee 55 Forewings with antemedian line edged on both sides with fuscous ............ Ect PRORCMOPHPRERT real cca HOF OLA RAT Sm wid Ch CE RU Sale teysc Mi Serle t