B. Papp szerk.: Studia Botanica Hungarica 38. 2007 (Budapest, 2007)

Barina, Zoltán: The herbarium of Endre Jeney (1934-2004). I. Pteridophyta

sometimes even photos accompany the specimen. Mainly in his earlier col­lections, presumably due to the lack of adequate maps, and as it was rou­tinely practiced by other collectors also in the 1950s and 1960s, the collection locality was not more than a note with the name (or vicinity) of the nearest settlement. Endre Jeney only published a small fragment of his floristical results (BARINA 2006, DANCZA 2007), thus these remained practically unknown both in Hungary and abroad. With the present article we intend to launch a series of reports which, as the elaboration of the collection proceeds, will make data of the Jeney collection easily accessible to interested professionals. MATERIAL AND METHODS The revision of the Pteridophyta part of the Jeney herbarium, and pro­cessing of the data documented on the labels were carried out in December 2006 and January 2007. The present report contains data displayed on the labels in abbreviated forms, without loss of any essential information. The general location of the collecting is followed by additional geographical name(s) and information on the habitat (e.g. "in spruce forest"). The Hungar­ian toponyms are listed according to the present spelling, and these are indi­cated as they are classified in the present Hungarian administrative borders. Geographical names not present in recent tourist maps, or on maps of the Unified National Mapping System (EOTR), scale 1:10,000, and which do not occur in the work of FÖLDI (1981), are indicated between quotation marks. The notes by the author of this report, following the specimen data, are in square brackets. The geographical name, and that of the area or region (e.g. mountains, county), which facilitate the orientation of the reader are in brack­ets, followed by the elevation as noted on the label, the date of collecting, and the collector's name (only if other than Endre Jeney). In some cases we quote the annotations the collector made on the label since this might give important information for any subsequent study. Finally, the inventory num­ber of the Pteridophyta collection of the Department of Botany of the Hun­garian Natural History Museum (BP) is recorded; if the sheet has duplicate(s) that remain part of the collection at BP, these also appear with their inventory numbers. The nomenclature of the species follows TUTIN et al. (1993).

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