Abstract
IN a recent number of NATURE (vol. xxxv. p. 151) I mentioned instances which had come under my observation, in which birds had taken an active part in the dispersion of seeds and plants. Since then I have come across further notes bearing upon the subject which is one of considerable interest and importance, as it throws a direct light upon some at least of the agencies whereby plant life has been distributed over the surface of the globe. Although birds, from their greater adaptability to rapid and extensive locomotion, are more concerned than any other animals in the dispersion of plants, they are by no means alone in this work.
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References
"Flora, British West India Islands,” p. 225.
"Naturalist's Voyage rornd the World,” by Charles Darwin, new ed. 1870, p. 119.
"Notes of a Naturalist in South America,” by John Ball, F.R.S., London, 1887, pp. 164, 165.
Annual Report, Public Gardens and Plantations, Jamaica, for the Year 1884, p. 45.
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MORRIS, D. The Dispersion of Seeds and Plants . Nature 37, 466–467 (1888). https://doi.org/10.1038/037466d0
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DOI: https://doi.org/10.1038/037466d0