Abstract
THIS volume is almost entirely made up of four scientific papers representing work carried out in connection with the Missouri Botanical Garden. The papers are: a disease of Tascodium distichum known as “peckiness,” also a similar disease of Libocedrus decurrens known as pin-rot, by Dr. H. von Schrenk; Agaves flowering in the Washington Botanic Garden in 1898, by Mr. J. N. Rose; A Revision of the American species of Euphorbia of the section Tithymalus occurring north of Mexico, by Mr. J. B. S. Norton; and a Revision of the species of Lo-photocarpus of the United States, and a description of a new species of Sagittaria, by Mr. J. G. Smith. Dr. von Schrenk's paper has already been noticed (vol. Ixi. p. 452).
Missouri Botanical Garden. Eleventh Annual Report.
Pp. 144; 58 plates. (St. Louis, Missouri, 1900.)
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Missouri Botanical Garden. Eleventh Annual Report . Nature 62, 495 (1900). https://doi.org/10.1038/062495a0
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DOI: https://doi.org/10.1038/062495a0