| XLIII.—Notices of British Fungi M J Berkeley (1841) Annals And Magazine of Natural History 6: 355-365 | |
| II.—On the Marine Algæ of the vicinity of Aberdeen G Dickie (1844) Annals And Magazine of Natural History 13: 6-10 | |
| IX.—A list of the scarcer amongst the lichens which are found in the neighbourhood of Oswestry and Ludlow, with occasional observations upon some of them T Salwey (1845) Annals And Magazine of Natural History 16: 90-99 | |
| XXX.—Observations on the tribe Sphæriaceæ, and descriptions of certain new genera Giuseppe De Notaris (1846) Annals And Magazine of Natural History 17: 217-227 | |
| XXXIII.—Notices of British fungi M J Berkeley and C E Broome (1850) Annals And Magazine of Natural History 5: 365-380 | |
| XIV.—On the reproductive organs of the Lichens and Fungi (First part) M L R Tulasne (1851) Annals And Magazine of Natural History 8: 114-121 | |
| Manual of British Botany, containing the flowering plants and ferns arranged according to the natural orders. By Charles Cardale Babington, M.A., F.L.S., F.G.S. &c. Third edition, with many additions and corrections. London: Van Voorst, 1851. Pp. 434 (1851) Annals And Magazine of Natural History 8: 121-126 | |
| I.—On the structure of the Echinoderms Johannes Müller (1854) Annals And Magazine of Natural History 13: 1-24 | |
| XXIII.—The process of fecundation in the Vegetable Kingdom, and its relation to that in the animal Kingdom L Radlkofer (1857) Annals And Magazine of Natural History 20: 241-262 | |
| Royal Society (1857) Annals And Magazine of Natural History 20: 297-303 | |
| XXXI.—Centuries of North American Fungi M J Berkeley and M A Curtis (1859) Annals And Magazine of Natural History 4: 284-296 | |
| XXIV. –Synopsis of the Fructification of the Simple Sphæriæof the Hookerian Herbarium Frederick Currey (1859) Transactions of The Linnean Society of London 22: 313-335 | |
| XXX.—Observations on the geographical distribution of fungi M E P Fries (1862) Annals And Magazine of Natural History 9: 269-288 | |
| XLVII.—Notes on the possibility of the embryos of the Guinea-worm and so-called "Fungus-Disease" of India, respectively, entering the human body through the sudorific ducts H J Carter (1862) Annals And Magazine of Natural History 9: 442-446 | |
| XLVII.—Notices of British Fungi M J Berkeley and C E Broome (1865) Annals And Magazine of Natural History 15: 444-452 | |
| Zoological Society (1865) Annals And Magazine of Natural History 16: 203-220 | |
| XLII.—Notices of British Fungi M J Berkeley and C E Broome (1865) Annals And Magazine of Natural History 15: 400-404 | |
| XXIII.—Notices of British fungi M J Berkeley and C E Broome (1866) Annals And Magazine of Natural History 18: 121-129 | |
| LIII.—Notices of British Fungi M J Berkeley and C E Broome (1871) Annals And Magazine of Natural History 7: 425-436 |