Abstract
Miss ANNIE D. BETTS, editor of The Bee World, writing with reference to the reviewer's comment on the “lack of comprehensive works” in discussing Wodehouse's “Pollen Grains” (NATURE, Feb. 22, p. 294), has directed our attention to two recent works dealing with pollen, which, though primarily designed for the purpose of identifying pollen grains in honey, may be of use in other spheres of pollen study. These works are: Armbruster, “Pollenformen und Honigherkunftsbestimmung” (1929, and a supplement 1935); Zander, “Pollengestaltung und Her-kunftsbestimmung bei Blutenhonig”. The first-mentioned publication contains drawings of the pollen of more than 1,200 species of plants; the second has photographs of more than 700 species.
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Pollen Grains. Nature 137, 573 (1936). https://doi.org/10.1038/137573c0
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DOI: https://doi.org/10.1038/137573c0