Abstract
THE new bi-monthly international journal Acta Phaenologica amis at concentrating the hitherto scattered studies in phenology and offering an opportunity to “set forth various tendencies, stages of development, points of view of different centres of phenological experiment, and by giving a chance to consult on aims and methods, to achieve useful and active collaboration” The journal is issued under the editorship of the board of the Phenological Association of the Netherlands, and in the first part (Sept. 1931: Publ. Martinus Nijhoff, The Hague) the Secretary, Dr. H. Bos, writes on the scope and prospects of phenology. In the same number there are articles by J. Edmund Clarke on “The Cold Spring of 1929 in the British Isles” and S. Illichevsky on “The Results of the Phenological Observations at Poltava (U.S.S.R.)”. The second part includes contributions from Prof. Ihne on “The Beginning of the Phenological Spring in Central Europe during the Ten Years' Period, 1921–1930”, Prof. Poggenpohl on “Phenological Observations, 1886–1907”, and Dr. H. Bos on “The Dropping of Small Fruits after Blooming”. Contributions are accepted in English, French, or German, and each is accompanied by a translation of its title and a short summary of the contents in the two other languages.
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Acta Phaenologica . Nature 130, 504 (1932). https://doi.org/10.1038/130504c0
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DOI: https://doi.org/10.1038/130504c0