Abstract
AN authoritative and comprehensive work on plant—dispersal-mainly, that is, the means by which fruits and seeds of flowering plants and spores of ferns, mosses, and other cryptogams are dispersed from the parent plant—has long been a desideratum. Such a work is now to hand, and we congratulate Mr. Ridley on the completion of his book, which embodies the results of his own observations over many years and of a digest of the very considerable and widely scattered literature of the subject.
The Dispersal of Plants throughout the World.
Henry N. Ridley. Pp. xx + 744 + 22 plates. (Ashford, Kent: L. Reeve and Co., Ltd., 1930.) 63s. net.
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R., A. Plant-Dispersal. Nature 127, 399–400 (1931). https://doi.org/10.1038/127399a0
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DOI: https://doi.org/10.1038/127399a0