Ce CURTIS’S | BOTANICAL MAGAZINE; OR Flower Garden Displayed: In which the most Ornamental Fore1en Pants cultivated in the Open Ground, the Green-House, and the Stove, are accurately represented and coloured. To which are added, THEIR NAMES, CLASS, ORDER, GENERIC AND SPECIFIC CHARACTERS, ACCORDING TO THE SYSTEM OF LINNZUS; Their Places of Growth, Times of Flowering, and most approved Methods of Culture. CONDUCTED By SAMUEL CURTIS, F. L. S. THE DESCRIPTIONS By WILLIAM JACKSON HOOKER, L. L. D. F.R. A.and L. S. and Regius Professor of Botany in the University of Glasgow. VOL. V. & OF THE NEW SERIES; Or Vol. Lv 1it. of the whole Work. Embellit les objets ; tantdt leur déclin yea Aux objets fugitifs préte un charme q Le ceeur vole au plaisir que l’instant a produit, DUT 22 194) Et cherche a retenir le plaisir qui s’en LONDON : Printed by Edward Couchman, 10, Throgmorton Street ; FOR THE PROPRIETOR, SAMUEL CURTIS, AT THE BOTANICAL MAGAZINE WAREHOUSE, GLAZENWOOD, NEAR COGG ESHALL, ESSEX : Also by Sherwood, Gilbert, & Piper, 23, Paternoster Row; J. & A. Arch, Cornhill; Treuttel & Wartz: Soho Square; Blackwood, Edinburgh; and in Holland, of Mr. Gt. Eldering, Florist, at Haarlem ; And to be had of all Booksellers in Town and Country. 1831, TO HIS GRACE JOHN, DUKE OF BEDFORD, &c. &c. A NOBLEMAN NO LESS DISTINGUISHED FOR HIS PRIVATE THAN HIS PUBLIC VIRTUES, AND WHO, BY THE VARIOUS SPLENDID WORKS WHICH HE HAS FOSTERED, PATRONIZED AND PUBLISHED, HAS EMINENTLY DESERVED WELL ‘OF BOTANY AND THE ARTS, THE PRESENT VOLUME Is DEDICATED, BY HIS FAITHFUL AND VERY OBEDIENT HUMBLE SERVANT, W. J. HOOKER. GLascow, Dec. 1, 1831. 5039. Pub by 8. Curtis, Walworth, Jan 21831 ( 3039 ) HeEpycHIUM FLAVUM. LARGE Y ELLOW- FLOWERED HEpDYCHIUM. RRR KKK KER KE KKK KEKE EEK Class and Order. Monanpria Monoeynia. ( Nat. Ord.—Scrraminesw. Br. ) Generic Character. Anthera duplex, stylum amplectens. Filamentum lon- gum, gracile, antheram in apicem sustinens ligamento flexili dorso affixo. Capsula 3-locularis. Semina nume- rosa, arillata. Rosc. Specific Character and Synonyms. Hepycutum flavum ; foliis lato-lanceolatis, spica terminali imbricata, bracteis subquadrifloris, corolla, laciniis duabus interioribus linearibus, labello obcordato apice profunde retuso. Roxb. , Hepycuiom flavum*. Roxb. Fl. Ind. v.1. p. 81. (cum nota Wallichii ad caleem pagine 82). Lodd. Bot. Cab. t. 604. Spreng. Syst. Veg. v.1. p. 9. cur, post. p. 6. Rose. Pl. Scit. eum ic. Descr. Roots exceedingly large and thick. Stems seve- ral, thick, four to five feet high, at the bottom fully an inch in diameter, slightly compressed upwards, and there, as well as on the rib of the leaves, furnished, though scantily, — with long, appressed, deciduous hairs. Leaves very large, elliptical, twelve to fourteen inches long, as broad as one’s hand, nearly sessile on their sheaths, sides bent down, up- per * Not of Sims in Botanical Magazine, t, 2378, which is Hep. flavescens. — (Wall) VOL. V. B. per surface glabrous, pale beneath ; the lowermost leaves shorter. Sheaths ample, with a membranous margin, ele- gantly lineated, and having a large, obtuse, appressed ligule. Spike terminal, large, shorter than the uppermost leaves, consisting of loosely imbricated, coriaceous, broad, ovate, smooth, four-flowered bracteas, each about three inches long; imner bracteas thin and membranaceous, much smaller than the outer ones. Flowers very large ; orange-coloured, highly fragrant. Calyx two inches long, oblong at the upper end, subventricose and split on one side, mouth bearded, entire. Tube of the Corolla cylindri- cal, two inches and a half long, double the length of the calyx ; limb spreading ; exterior lacinie linear, acute, loosely patent, about fourteen lines long; imner two (or lateral ones) cuneate, unguiculate, rather shorter than the outer ones, but their apex much broader than those, short- ly clawed. Lip very large, roundish, retuse, lateral mar- gins sometimes notched, an inch and a half in diameter, furnished with a short, broad claw. Filament divaricate, thick, semicylindrical, orange-coloured, equalling in length the inner petals, rather, though very little, shorter than the lip. Anther oblong, thick, fleshy, half an inch long, with a sagittate, bilobate base, the lobes of which are slenderish. Ovary thick, ovate, obscurely triangular, shining, smooth : Style filiform, pallid, with the usual two short, yellow bodies at its base (within the tube) : Stigma rather large, clavate, compressed, transverse, obtuse and convex, greenish-yellow, — villous. Wallich. The present is one among many fine plants, for speci- | mens and drawings of which I have again to acknowledge myself indebted to W. 'T. Arron, Esq. A root of Hepy- — cuium flacum was brought by Dr. Watuicu from India, in August, 1828, and presented by the Hon. the East India Company to Kew Gardens, where it produced its magnifi- _ cent blossoms in the same month of the present year. The specimen was received through Dr. Wanucn, and that most ‘enlightened and most liberal of Botanists, not- — withstanding his numerous and important engagements, — has been so kind as to draw up the above account of it for _ me, although there is already an accurate description in — Flora Indica ; partly, as he says, because he never saw the 8 in such perfection before, as it was produced — at Kew, and partly, because it seems possible, that the roots may have been derived from the mountains on the Trawaddi, — {rawaddi, in the Burma country, where he collected some; whereas, the specimens described in Flora Indica came from Sylhet. Dr. Watticu’s note in the Flora Indica is as follows : In January, 1816, I received roots of this most charm- ing species from Mr. Smrru, at Sylhet, which produced blossoms in the Botanic Garden, during October of the following year. It differs from H. coronarium, in regard to its flowers, which are about one-third smaller, having the inner segments of the corolla linear-clavate, the fissure of the lip narrow, with straight sides, and its base con- tracted into a linear claw. They partake not only of the yellow colour of those of Micuet1a Champaca, but possess even the peculiar fragrance of the latter, only in a less powerful, and therefore, more grateful degree. In stature and leaves both species are alike.” Fig. 1. Flower. 2. Style and Stigma.—Naé, size. D? 6revilledei* Pub by § Curtis, Walworth, Jan’ 11851. ( 3040') ALSTROEMERIA PALLIDA. PALE-FLOWERED ALSTROEMERIA. a KEKE REE EE EEE EEE EEE Class and Order. Hexanpria Monoeynia. ( Nat. Ord.—Amary.uipE. ) Generic Character. Perianthium corollaceum, subcampanulaceum, sexparti- tum, irregulare ; laciniis duabus (vel-tribus) interioribus basi tubuloso-conniventibus. Stam. 6, laciniis inserta, demum declinata. Stigma trifidum. Capsula trilocularis, loculis polyspermis.—Caulis erectus, scandens aut volubilis, JSoliatus. Flores umbellati. : Kunth. Specific Character and Synonym. Arstramerria pallida; caule erecto-flaccido, foliis lanceo- lato-linearibus denticulatis subamplexicaulibus, peta- lis exterioribus obovatis lateralibus latioribus, interio- ribus longioribus lanceolatis, pedunculis unifloris. ALSTROEMERIA pallida. Graham in Edin. Phil. Journ. v. 14. p. 345. Descr. Stem simple, slender, flaccid, round, as well as the leaves glauco-pruinose, several rising from the same root. Leaves scattered, sessile, half-stem-clasping, spar- ingly denticulate, lanceolato - linear, flat above, keeled behind, and with several parallel ribs, of which one on each Side is stronger than the others. Flowers umbellate. Pert- anth of six unequal segments, attenuated, succulent, and channelled and nectariferous at the base; four outer seg- ments of an uniform, very pale rose colour, much reticu- lated, nearly of equal length, obovate, the lowest the harrowest and most pointed, and much the least ed , | | o at the base, the two lateral ones the largest, denticulated, all slightly acuminated in the middle, the two inner segments longer than the others, lanceolate, having denticulate wings towards their bases, of the same colour as the outer seg- ments at their apices, lower down being marked with red- dish veins, above the middle on a yellow, below it on a pink ground, at the lower part of which there are a few oblong orange spots. Stamens six ; filaments as long as the outer segments of the perianth, and of a similar colour, flattened, at the base triangular, and glanduloso-pubescent, twisted when decaying : anthers erect, large, cordate, flat- tened, mucronulate : pollen pale brown, discharged in the same way as in the other plants of this Genus. Stigmas three, revolute, pink: style three-cornered, tapering upwards from its greenish, persisting base ; colourless below, becom- ing pink towards the stigmas: Germen as in A. pelegrina. This remarkably beautiful species, the colours of whose inflorescence harmonize together more than in any other cultivated Atstramertia, blossomed first in the collection of Mr. Nest, at Canonmills, in July, 1829. Graham. _ I am indebted to Dr. Grevitie for the drawing here figured. Pub by $ Curtis, Walworth, Jan” 1.1831. ( 3041 ) GESNERIA BULBOSA. BULBOUS-ROOTED GESNERIA. She he ee eS ee a Class and Order. Dipynamia ANGIOSPERMIA. ( Nat. Ord.—Gesneriz. Rich. ) Generic Character. Cal. 5-partitus (plerumque germini adnatus). Cor. tubu- loso- campanulata, limbo bilabiato ; labio superiore bi-, inferiore trifido. Stigma bilobum. Capsula bilocularis, bivalvis, placentis parietalibus. Specific Character and Synonyms. Gesneria * bulbosa ; pubescenti-tomentosa, foliis oppositis 7 cordato-ovatis crenato-serratis, panicula terminali, co- rollz labio superiore longissimo bifido recto, inferiore minuto reflexo. GesneriA bulbosa. Ker in Bot. Reg. t. 343. Spreng. Syst. Veget. v. 2. p. 839. | Descr. Root, or rather root-stalk, a rounded, large tuber. Stem erect, herbaceous, downy, simple, in our plant two to three feet high. Leaves opposite, shortly petioled, cordato- ovate, downy, especially beneath, glaucous-green. Panicle terminal, of many large and splendidly-coloured scarlet Jlowers. Bractee cordate. Calyx five-cleft, the segments short, linear, subulate. Corolla three inches long, tubular, enlarged upward, contracted just below the base, the very base five-lobed, and remarkably inflated, orange re eee _ * Named in honour of Conran Gesner, a celebrated Phy: sician and Botan a ist, and a native of Switzerland. vs ee ES while the rest of the corolla is of a bright scarlet, clothed with a fine down. Stamens inserted near the base of the corolla: Filaments arched upwards and meeting, so that their anthers form a cross. Germen more than half su- perior, downy. Style shorter than the stamens. Stigma obtuse. This fine plant is a native of Brazil, and was, we believe, first introduced to the stoves of our gardens by Mr. Cuam- BERLAYNE, our late Consul at Rio Janeiro, who also brought into notice the beautiful Bienonia that bears his name. It has since been imported through other channels, and is now, probably, not uncommon. ‘The specimen here figur- ed, bloomed in the Glasgow Botanic Garden, in the spring of 1830. J.T. Mackay, Esq. has also lately sent us fine te Saag specimens from the College Botanic Garden, ublin. Fig. 1. Calyx and Pistil, slightly magnified. a + ° 6: Pub by S.Curh’s Walworth. Jan? LISSL. WJH del? ( 3042 ) SPHENOGYNE CRITHMIFOLIA. SamPIRE- LEAVED SPHENOGYNE. EERE EEKEEEEEEEEREREERE Class and Order. SyneenesiA Potyeamia FRustranea. ( Nat. Ord.—Composirz. ) Generic Character. Receptaculum paleis distinctis. Pappus paleaceus, sim- plex. Stigmata apice dilatato subtruncato. Calyx imbri- catus : squamis intimis (omnibusve) apice dilatato scarioso. Brown. Specific Character and Synonyms. Spuenoeyne crithmifolia. Brown in Hort. Kew. ed. 2. ». Ursinia crithmifolia. Spreng. Syst. Ve eget. v. 3. p. 609. Descr. Stem woody, short, much branched ; branches red, erect. Leaves erect, once, or rarely twice, pinnatifid, fleshy, channelled both above and below, as well as the branches glanduloso-verrucose, shining ; segments ascending, subu- late, each terminated by a slighly hooked mucro. gees : eae i we _ * From com, a wedge, aid fh, a female. Sir James E. Smrra supposes in allusion to the wedge-shaped Stigma. = cles terminal, erect, very long, single flowered, having many slender grooves, and one or two subulate bracteas. Anthodium nearly globular, when in bud glabrous, coloured, inner scales blunt, scariose, slender, coloured at the apex, outer ones subulate, keeled, and reddish brown. Flowers (above three-fourths of an inch long, one inch across) rather handsome, yellow. Florets of the ray neuter, nu- merous, erect, subplicate, orange-red on the outside, and sprinkled with shining dots, yellow within, elliptical, atten- uated at the base, and there distant; twbe short, including the rudiments of a style, three-toothed at the apex. Florets of the disk very short, yellow, erect, regular, terminating in five blunt. teeth, and furnished with small, erect, crystalline, glandular pubescence on the outside. Stamens subex- serted, yellow. Pustil rather longer than the stamens; Style cleft, revolute ; Germen woolly at the base: Pappus marginate, lobed. Receptacle covered with carinate, chafly scales, which are shorter than the florets of the disk. ‘We received this plant from Kew as a species of Arc- rotis, native of the Cape of Good Hope. It requires the protection of a greenhouse during Winter, and flowers freely in the open air during the month of July. Granam. Fig. 1. Central Floret with its accompanying Scale. 2. Floret of the Ray.— Magnified. Wide? . Pub by §. Curtis Walworth, Jan” 1.1831 Swan St ( 38043 ) UrENA LOBATA. ANGULAR-LEAVED URENA. KK KKK EEE KEK KEKE KEK KEE Class and Order. MonapetpeutA Ponyanpris. ( Nat. Ord—Matvaces. ) Generic Character. Calyx cinctus involucello 5-fido, nempé foliolis 5 ad me- dium coalitis. Anthere in apice tubi staminei. Carpella capsularia 5, conniventia, l-sperma, extus aculeis apice radiatis sepissime echinata.—Folia subtus in nervis sepius glandulosa. os Specific Character and Synonyms. = Urena * lobata ; foliis subrotundis obtusissime 3—5-lobis, subtus precipua molliter velutinis 3—5-nerviis uni- glandulosis, laciniis calycinis oblongo-lanceolatis. Urena lobata. Linn. Sp. Pl. p. 974. Willd. Sp. Pl. v. 3. p. 800. Cav. Diss. 6. p. 336. t. 185. f. 1. Ait. Hort. Kew. ed. 2. 0. 4. p. 222. De Cand. Prodr. v. 1. p. 441. Spreng. Syst. Veget. v. 3. p. 96. + Ail. Pl. Us. Brasil. t. 56. | as. ee Urena sinica, xanthii facie. Dill. Hort, Elth. Pp. 340. c 319. f. 412. ‘ Descr. A shrub, from two to four feet high, every where downy. Leaves alternate, roundish, three to five-lobed, and about as many nerved, the upper ones less divided, green, below very downy and almost white, having at the very base just above the insertion of the petiole, a yellow- i _ ish-green => es * From Uren, its Malabar name, according to ADANSON. ee eee gs é ish-green gland. Flowers solitary, axillary, on short pedun- cles. Calyx five-cleft, glabrous, surrounded by a five-cleft, downy involucre. Corolla of five, somewhat wedge-shaped petals, combined at the base, of a delicate rose-colour, streaked, and having a dark purple ring at their base. Staminiferous tube with many anthers. Stigmas many. — Fruit consisting of five carpels, which surround the base of the style, each clothed with long, soft papille, stellato- Aen at their extremity. Seed single in each carpel, ob- ong, fixed to the inner angle of the cell. A native of China, whence the seeds were communicated to the Glasgow Botanic Garden, by Cartes Minzert, Esq. It is unquestionably the U. lobata of Linnaus and of Dittentus. Aveuste Sr. Hinarre considers it a native of Brazil, and seems disposed to rank the U. heterophylla, Swartzii, scabriuscula, and tricuspis, as mere varieties of U. lobata. In common with the rest of the Mallow tribe, but in an inferior degree to many, this plant possesses emollient and mucilaginous qualities, which have obtained it a place among the medicinal productions of Brazil. It flowered with us, in the stove, during the month of July. Fig. 1. Calyx and Involucre. 2. Section of a Carpel. 3, Papilla from the Capsule.—Magnified. D! Grevithdel? Pub by S. Carts Walworth Jan?) 1831. C 3044 ) ScCHIZANTHUS GRAHAMII. Dr. Grauam’s ScHIZANTHUS. i he Se Se oe a Os a i Class and Order. Dianpria Monoeynia. ( Nat. Ord.—Scropnutarines. ) Generic Character. Corolla irregularis, labio superiore quinquefido, inferiore tripartito. Stamina 2 antherifera, 2 sterilia, filamentis villo- sis. Capsula bilocularis. . a Specific Character. Scuizantuus * Grahamii; corolle tubo calycem equante limbo duplo breviore, labii inferioris laciniis laterali- bus centralem equantibus, centrali bifido, labii superi- oris lobo medio ovato-acuminato, pedicellis fructiferis erectis. Giullies MSS. Pi Soke Scuizanruus Grahamii. Gillies MSS. In addition to the two Scuizanrui already given in most of our botanical periodical publications, two species have — lately been raised from seeds brought from Chili by Dr. — Gitttes, in the garden of Mrs. Boos, at Portobello ; the subject of the present plate, with which we have been favoured with a drawing by Dr. Grevii1e, and one, the S. Hookeri of its discoverer, hereafter to be figured : and if we are correct in considering the ScuizanTuus represented in the following plate as a distinct species, a third additional kind is now known to us. I * From exile, to cleave, and avbos, a flower, in reference to the divisions of the corolla. : In all, there exists a considerable general similarity in their mode of growth and foliage. The present}is distin- guished from those hitherto described by the structure of its flowers: which both in colour and shape are very dif- ferent from S. pinnatus and S. porrigens. Fig. 1. Root-leaf.—wNat. size. * 5045, / WIHT ced Pub by Siurts Walworth Jan ® 11831 ( 3045 ) ScHIZANTHUS RETUSUS. BLUNT-PETALED ScHIZANTHUS. SRR SRR sbaboakakeoskeaoteskcabokesksbeakestea Class and Order. Dianpria Monoeyntia. ( Nat. Ord.—Scropnuuxarin2. ) Generic Character. Corolla irregularis, labio superiore quinqvefido, inferiore tripartito. Stamina 2 antherifera, 2 sterilia, filamentis vil- losis. Capsula bilocularis. Specific Character. Scnizantaus retusus ; corolle tubo brevi, labii inferioris laciniis lateralibus intermedio bifido brevioribus, labii superioris lobo medio subrhomboideo obtusissimo e- marginato. Gute This Scuizantuus was raised by Mr. Barciay at Bury Hill, where it flowered in June of the present year, from seeds sent by Dr. Gixu1es from Chili. | It is remarkable for the large and deep orange-coloured Spot in the intermediate lobe of the notched upper lip of its corolla, which is streaked with black, and for the uni- form deep purple hue of the rest of the corolla. It is but fair to observe, that Dr. Grnxies considers it only a var. of S. Grahamii: but, assuredly, its marks, whether constant or not, are as decided as those of almost any other species of this Genus, and I think it exceeds them all in the beauty of its blossoms. ye = — Fig. 1. Stamens.—Magnified. 2. Root-leaf—Natural size. ( hy mae + ety oh Srey WA we co es oN > 1.) WIE del? Pad by S. Curtis Walworth Feb™ 1.1331 Svan € 3046 ) ADAMIA CYANEA. BLUE-BERRIED ADAMIA. * Class and Order. Decanpria PEntacynia. (Nat. Ord —Aratiacez. Wallich. Saxirracem. De Cand.) Generic Character. Calyx ovario adnatus, limbo quinquedentatus. Petala quinque, dentibus calycinis alternantia, epigyna, verticem ovarii ambientia. Stamina decem, quorum alterno petalis Opposita. Styli quinque. Stigmata clavata, sub-biloba. Bacea infera, coronata, subquinquelocularis, polysperma. Specific Name and Synonyms. a Apamia * cyanea. Apamia cyanea. Wallich, Tent. Fl. Nep. p. 46. t. 36. _ De Cand. Prodr. 0, 4. p. 16. ne cae ed Descr. A much-branched, paniculated shrub, three to four feet high. Stem from an inch to an inch and a half thick, with the bark spongy, whitish, glabrous ; wood pale- coloured. Branches opposite, rounded or obscurely qua- drangular, glabrous, rather glaucous, above purplish, and the le. with oe pais 2 the oun seer tain ‘he leaves, thickly hairy. Leaves opposite, patent, - imated, sonata fleshy, potwcen oblong and lanceolate, acuminated, sharp at both ends, serrated, the ve J ee incurved, Saale * So named by Dr. Wauuicu, in memory of his late friend, Jonn Apam, Esq., President of the Supreme Council at Calcutta, an ardent promoter and . India, “NCowrager of Botany, Horticulture, and Rural Affairs in the Bast — es. VOL. vy, c incurved, cuspidate, acute; above dark green, rather rugose, glabrous ; beneath pale, downy towards the midrib as well as on the elevated, parallel, approximated, oblique nerves, transversely reticulated with vems. Petioles an inch long, rounded, plane above, slightly marginate by reason of the acute, entire, decurrent base of the leaf. Stipules none, unless an elevated sometimes downy line, connecting the bases of the petioles be so called. Panicle large, terminal, broadly-ovate, naked or furnished at the base with a few lanceolate, entire, — floral leaves, shorter than the uppermost pair of leaves, densely-flowered ; its branches opposite, downy, subtricho- tomous at the summit. Bracteas none. Flowers very numerous, pale blue, or sometimes pink, externally whitish, scentless, in many fascicles, or subumbellate, their pedun- cles short, villous, slightly coloured. Calyx superior, that is, cohering with the ovary; the limb small, free, five-tooth- ed, the teeth minute, spreading, ovate, acute, distant, rather downy. Corolla fleshy, glabrous, five-petaled, prior to expansion valvular and ovato-obtuse. Petals lanceolate, acute, marked with three lines, quite patent, finally recurv- ed, inserted with its broad base upon the calyx within the limb of the latter and alternating with its teeth. Stamens ten, patent, rather shorter than the petals and alternately opposite, nearly equal ; filaments subulate, bluish, fleshy, glabrous : anthers fixed by their base, large, ovate, two- celled, before bursting, those five which are opposite to the petals are deflexed, the rest erect. Ovary inferior, globose, as large as a grain of black pepper, downy, pseudo-quin- quelocular, with the top a little elevated within the petals; ovules minute, fixed to five parietal, fleshy receptacles. Styles five, nearly erect, fleshy, swelling at the top into as many club-shaped, compressed stigmas, which are some- what tumid at the margin, and somewhat two -lobed. Berries very numerous, panicled, globose, glabrous, deep blue, as large as a black currant, within fleshy, pale and spongy, somewhat five-celled, many-seeded, convex at the top, retuse at the centre, and terminated by the persistent styles, crowned with the numerous, minute, persistent, calycine teeth, which are united with a very narrow margin. Seeds extremely numerous, minute, pear-shaped, slightly | striated, inserted upon five parietal, fleshy, finally vanishing receptacles, and filling the whole cavity of the fruit. . Inte- — simple, dark brown, membranaceous. Perisperm eshy, of the same shape as the seed. Embryo cylindrical, occupying nearly the whole of the centre of the perisperm. | Cotyledons Cotyledons ovate, obtuse, convex at the back, short. Radi- cle obtuse, directed towards the hilum. This new and interesting Genus was found by Dr. Watticu, inhabiting barren, stony, and mountainous places near Bechiaco, in Nepal, and by him introduced to the Royal Gardens at Kew; whence a flowering specimen, accompanied by a drawing from which the annexed figure of the natural size was taken, were kindly communicated, by W. T. Arron, Esq. Dr. Watuicu characterises it as an elegant shrub, covered with large panicles of pale blue or pink flowers, which are succeeded by an almost equally ornamental profusion of deep blue berries. Fig. 1. Stamen. 2. Pistil invested by the Calyx. 3. Section of the Ger- men, 4, Fruit. 5. Seed. 6. Section of ditto. 7. Embryo :—magnified. Fig. 4—6 are copied from Dr. Wauuicn’s figure, in the Tent. Fl. Nepal. bt) WI Adel Pub by S. Curtis Walworth Fo? 1.7831. - es ( BOA7, » Dit tig CoMMELINA GRACILIS. SLENDER COMMELINA. Jee Class and Order, TrianpriA MonoGynia. ~— ( Nat. Ord.—Commetineg. ) Generic Character. Cal. 3-sepalus. Cor. 3-petala, petalo uno aut altero sepe abortiente. Stamina 3 spuria glandulosa, cruciata. Capsula bi- trilocularis, spatha tecta. Spr. Specific Character and Synonyms. _ Commetina* gracilis; caule ascendente ramos colorato piloso pilis reflexis, foliis sessilib latis acuminatis planis utrinque glabris, spatha c compressa, floribus pentandris, petalis maqualib _ staminibus inclusis tribus fertilibus. Graham. Commeuina gracilis. Ruiz et Pavon, Fl. Perwo. v. 1. p. 44. t. 72. Spreng. Syst. Veget. v. 1. p. 173. eg Commetina formosa. Graham in Edin. Phil. Journ. Dee. has __ Descr. Stem ascending, rooting, branched, red, espe _ cially above the joints, hairy, hairs reflected. Leaves — lanceolate, acuminate, flat, glabrous on both sides and shining, bright green above, whitish below, seven-nerved, the middle rib prominent behind, channelled above, sheaths striated, ciliated. Peduncles (two inches long) straight, with a line of reflexed hairs along the inner side (the ciliz of the adhering sheath of the spatha). Spatha heart-shaped, folded, compressed, several-flowered, glabrous. P — Tio i of pe, 8 — . Named in compliment to Jonn and Gaspar COMMELIN, celebrated Dutch Sts. of unequal length, slightly pubescent, erect, straight. Calyx white, glabrous, triphyllous, leaflets unequal, the upper one the smallest and most acute, the two lower rounded, and co- hering towards their base. Corolla a beautiful, rather pale blue, of three unequal petals, each concave, rounded, slightly and unequally crenate, (the largest three-fourths of an inch long, and nearly as much broad, ) the two upper ones particularly unguiculate. Stamens (five?) inserted within the base of the corolla, and sometimes attached to it at their origin; filaments glabrous, pale blue, less than half the length of the petals. Anthers, two abortive, yellow, lobed, three fertile, white, linear, sagittate at their base ; pollen white. Germen superior, ovato-acuminate, white. Style deflected upon the lower petal, otherwise like the filaments, and similar to them in length. Stigma small, three-lobed. Unripe capsule three-sided, three-celled. The seeds of this very pretty species of CommELInA were gathered by Mr. Crucksuanks in the valley of Lima, and communicated to me last spring. The plants flowered freely in the greenhouse in July. Graham. It appears, from a comparison of this plant with the figure and gescription of C. gracilis in Ruiz and Pavon, that it is the same ; an opinion in which Dr. Grauam concurs. Fig. 1. Fertile Stamen. 2. Sterile Stamen, or Nectary. 3. Calyx and Pistil— Magnified. Pub by §. artis Walworth Feb? 1.1831 ow ( 3048 Ede Loasa INcANA. Hoary Loasa. KEE EKER EE EEE EERE EERE Class and Order. PotyapELpHia PoLyAnprRiA. ( Nat. Ord.—Loasez. ) Generic Character. Calycis tubus cylindraceus arcte ovarium vestiens, sed for- san liber ; limbus 5-partitus, persistens. Pet. 10, unguicu- lata, calyce inserta. Stamina numerosa (200—250), cum petalis inserta, iis breviora, filamentis liberis, externis inter- dum sterilibus, antheris oblongis. Stylus filiformis, striis 3—-spiralibus notatus et inde stylis 5—7-omnino connexis et spiraliter tortis constans. Caps. oblonga, 1-locul. a7 - valvis, placentis totidem seminum series duobus gerentibus. mina compressa, numerosa. D C. A Se Specific Character and Synonym. Loasa* incana, suffruticosa suburens, caule suberecto ra- moso foliisque sparsis petiolatis ovato-lanceolatis in- Ciso-serratis scabris, pedunculis simplicibus oppositi- foliis, Graham. Pe Loasa incana. Graham in Ed. Phil. Journ. Dec. 1830. eee Descr. Suffruticose. Whole plant, particularly the stem, densely covered with harsh, barbed, white hairs, and a few stinging hairs interspersed. Stem round, much branched, branches scattered, sp eading. Cuticle like paper, and Peeling off in the dried specimen. Leaves scattered, petioled, spreading, ovate, acute, hispid on both sides, veined, inciso-serrate, veins and midrib prominent below, channelled above. Flowers opposite the leaves, solitary, peduncled. * A name given by Apanson, of dubious origin. peduncled. Peduncles spreading, about half the length of the leaves, round. Calyx green, widely spread, segments ovato-acuminate, three-ribbed, undulate, reflected in their sides, persisting. Corolla white, ten-parted, uniseriate, alternate, segments alike, the larger segments spreading, cucullate, nerved and veined, longer than the calyx; the smaller segments nearly glabrous, slightly ciliated, concave, within nectariferous, each having near its rounded apex, three erect, dorsal filaments as long as itself. Stamens numerous, nearly as long as the longer segments of the corolla, lodged within the hollow larger petals till the pollen is ripe, when they become erect, free, unconnected with each other, within the corolla, mostly perfect, with simple colourless, slightly flattened, glabrous filaments, and greenish-yellow, oblong, bilocular anthers, erect, bursting along the sides, ten barren, two within each of the shorter petals, spreading, and flattened at the base, there ciliated, each having a reflected lip at the apex of the petal within which it is placed, and above this extended into an erect filament, nearly as long as the fertile stamens. Style erect, simple, shorter than the stamens, tapering, nearly smooth towards the top. Stigma capitate, small, lobed, smooth. Germen turbinate, inferior, green, unilocular, with three to four parietal receptacles, alternate with the teeth, covered along their edge with numerous ovules. Cap- sule opening by three to four teeth above the level of the calyx. This plant was raised from seeds communicated in spring last from Yazo, valley of Canta, in Peru. Mr. CrucxsHAnks me observed one plant, which was low and branching, with its branches much entangled. From this he also most kindly presented me with a well-dried specimen, from the appearance of which, rather than from our plant (we raised but one), which is still small, it would seem to blossom very freely. With us it flowered in the greenhouse during October and November, and even now (7th December) there are buds which may possibly expand. Graham. Fig. 1. Outer Petal. 2. Germen and Calyx, one segment of the limb of the latter being removed. 3. Inner Petal, with two abortive Stamens. 4 bid yee abortive Stamens, 5, Fertile Stamen. 6. Fruit. 7. Seed.—Mag- ni 11°? Hl OS UVAS re —( 3049 +) : CLERODENDRON NUTANS. DROOPING- FLOWERED CLERODENDRON. Te oe ea Se i se a an os Ons os Os os Class and Order. : : Dipynam1aA ANGIOSPERMIA. ( Nat. Ord—Vergenacez. ) Generic Character. _ Cal. 5-fidus (nune 5-dentatus). Cor. tubo cylindrico ; limbo 5-partito, patente, laciniis subequalibus. Stam. juxta faucem inserta, exserta, adscendentia: antherarum loculis parallelis. Bacca pyrenis 4, monospermis. Br. ° | Specific Character. Cieropenprum nutans; fruticosa, erecta, glabra, ramis acuté tetragonis, apice nutantibus ; foliis ternis vel oppositis, oblongis, longé acuminatis, integerrimis, basi attenu- atis, brevissimé petiolatis, panicula oblong4, laxé pen- dula, pedunculis bis dichotomis, calyce ventricoso tubo corolla parim breviore, limbo secundo. Wallich. . 4 ceteat re i + + Named after Wintiam Vernon, a Botanist and American Traveller, whose Herbarium came into the possession of Sir Hans Suoane. rose-colored, five-cleft, the segments linear, patent. Stamens exserted, purplish. Stigmas recurved, purplish, downy. Germen obovate, silky. Pappus, with the outer paler very narrow, short; the inner ones capillary and scabrous. The present plant was communicated to the Glasgow Botanic Garden from that of Bayswater, under the hitherto, I believe, unpublished name of Vernonta acutifolia, but without any native country being mentioned ; as, however, I possess the same species, gathered by the late Mr. Boog, near Rio, in Brazil, our plant here figured, in all probabi- lity, is of Brazilian origin also. Its nearest relative is, doubtless, the V. sericea, 8 purpurascens, figured in the Botanical Register, t. 522: but that has the leaves consider- ably broader, and silky on both sides. Still, the present may possibly prove a narrow and nearly glabrous-leaved variety of it. = The present plant blossomed in our stove in the month of December : a season when flowers Jess showy than the pre- sent are always acceptable. : — _Fig. 1. Floret. 2. Inner Scale of the Involucre. 3.3. Outer Scales of ditto. 4. Portion of the outer and inner Pappus.—Magnijfied. p, * , ‘ , se fab. by S.Curtis,Walworth, doril L1H ( 3063 yy DRYANDRA NERVOSA. NERVED-LEAVED DRYANDRA. KEKE EEE ER EEE EE EK Class and Order. TerranpriaA Monoeynia. ( Nat. Ord.—Prorzacez. ) Generic Character. Perianthium quadripartitum vel quadrifidum. Stamina apicibus concavis laciniarum immersa. Sguamule ple Syne 4. Ovarium biloculare, loculis monospermis. Flli- culus ligneus: dissepimento libero, bifido. Receptaculum commune planum, floribus indeterminatim confertis 3 paleis pestis, raro nullis. Involucrum commune imbricatum. ”. | I) Specific Character and Synonyms. Dryanpra* nervosa; foliis profunde pinnatifidis subtus ferrugineo-tomentosis, lobis linearibus subfalcatis mu- cronatis nervosis basi dilatatis, involucri bracteis ob- longo-ovatis ferrugineo-tomentosis, perianthii laciniis linearibus fulvo-hirsutis apice barbatis.. F Drvanpra nervosa. ‘“ Mackay, MSS. Catal.” Sweet Fl. Australasica, t. 22. tl bf Ti og 250A a Descr. A small shrub, about two feet high, with downy, stout, tortuose branches. Leaves nearly a foot long, in- cluding the petiole, deeply pinnatifid, coriaceous, dark Steen above, clothed with rusty down beneath, the seg- ments one to two inches long, broadly linear, dilated at the ‘ase, acute at the point, marked with three to four parallel : nerves : — 5 ‘ fe .* etme a ran a ene rme oe i . Named in compliment to the eminent and learned Swedish Botanist, brarian to Sir Josern Banks, Jonas Dryanver. nerves: petioles four to five inches long, rounded, clothed with rusty down. The young leaves are covered all over with a rich velvety, red tomentum. Head of Flowers ter- minal, moderately large, handsome, surrounded at the base by an involucre of many imbricated, oblongo-ovate leaves or bracteas; thickly clothed with rusty-coloured down. Small, subulate scales are mixed with the flowers. Peri- anth tubular, cut nearly half-way down into four, narrow- linear, dull orange-coloured, erect lacinia, hairy without, and bearded at the extremity. Within each of these laci- niz, lodged in a groove, is a linear anther. Germen linear- oblong. Style filiform. Stigma clavate. The present is one of the many fine Austrahan Prorracez for which our collections are indebted to Mr. Mackay of the ag Sey Nursery ; and by him plants were communicated to the Liverpool Botanic Garden, where the flowering spe- cimen here figured was produced in September, 1830. It is a native of the South coast of New Holland, whence the seeds were procured by Mr. Baxrer. It is a plant of con- siderable beauty, and of much variety of colouring. Fig. 1. Flower. 2. Segment of the Perianth, with its Stamen. 3. Pistil. —Magnijied. 3064, ? ¥ Wh ER tejt Pub br S. Curtis Walworth AprotLIey. ( 3064 ) Portrutaca Gintiesi. Dr. Gites’ PuRSLANE. KKK ERE EEE KEKE KEE REE Class and Order. | Icosanpria Mownoeynia.. ( Nat. Ord.—Porrutacez. ) Generic Character. Cal. aut liber aut imo ovario adherens, bipartitus, demum circumscissus et deciduus. Pet. A—6, xqualia, inter se libera, aut ima, basi concreta, calyci inserta. Stam. 8—15 (v. plura,) filamentis liberis interdum ima corolla adnatis. Ovarium subrotundatum. Stylus 1, apice 5—6- (9-) fidus, aut stylus nullus et stigmata 3—8 elongata. Capsula sub- globosa, 1-locularis, medio circumscissa’:: Semina plurima placentz (v. placentis tot stigmata) centrali affixa. D C. Specific Character. Porturaca Gilliesii; caulibus suberectis basi -_ramosis, foliis oblongo-cylindraceis subcompressis obtusis punc- tatis, pilis axillaribus fasciculatis erectis appressis, flo- ribus terminalibus, petalis calyce longioribus. [tees Descr. Perennial. Stem nearly erect, four to five inches high, stout in proportion to its length, purplish with trans- verse whitish lines, branched, the branches short, princi- pally at the base of the stem, sometimes at the extremity. aves scattered, remote and reflexi-patent on the stem, dense and rosulate on the branches, linear-oblong, tereti- compressed, obtuse, green, rosy at the top, and punctated with white, pellucid dots. In their axils is a tuft of white, erect, appressed hairs. Calyx of two rather unequal, broadly oval, membranaceous leaves, scariose and white at the margin. Petals five, bright red-purple, patent, broadly Obovato-rotund, waved. Filaments numerous, deep te le. Anthers roundish, orange. Style filiform. Stigmas seven, subulate, reflexed, downy. For this new species of Porrunaca, as well as for the scarcely more beautiful one, P. grandiflora, (t. 2885) we are indebted to Dr. Gitties, who communicated seeds from the plains of Mendoza. With us the plant flowered in the greenhouse in August. Like all other succulent plants from the same country, these two species of Portuaca should be kept dry, especially during winter. The short, dotted, very obtuse leaves, the upright and appressed axillary tuft of hairs, together with the large size of the blossoms, afford abundant characters for distin- guishing the present species. fee Fig. 1. Stamen. 2. Style and Stigmas. 3. Portion of the Stem and Leaves.—Magnified. C 3065 ) INDIGOFERA ATROPURPUREA. BLoop- FLOWERED INDIGOFERA. KKK KK EEE EERE KER EK EEK Class and Order. | DiApELPpHIA DEcANDRIA. ( Nat. Ord —Lereuminosa. ) Generic Character. Cal. 5-fidus, lobis acutis. Vexillum rotundatum, emar- ginatum. Carina utrinque calcare subulato notata, demum sepe elastice deflexa. Stam. diadelpha. Stylus filiformis, glaber. Legumen teretiusculum, aut planum aut tetrago- num, polyspermum, bivalve, rarius oligospermum, ovatum, iM0 Monospermum subglobosum. Semina ovata, utrinque truncata, isthmis cellulosis sepe disjuncta. DC. Specific Character and Synonyms. INDIGOFERA atropurpurea; caule fruticoso erecto, foliis pin- natim 5-jugis, foliolis ovato-ellipticis obtusis mu- ' Cronatis margine subundulatis, junioribus adpresse pubescentibus, adultis glabris, racemis axillaribus gracilibus inferioribus longitudine foliorum, legumin- ibus pendulis rectis compressis 8—10-spermis. INDIGoFERA atropurpurea. ‘ Hamilt. in Hort. Hy . add. “p. 152.” Don, Prodr, Fl. Nepaul, p. 244. De Cand. pons. v. 2. p. 225. Spreng. Syst. Veg. Cur. post. Pp. 285. | fog 7 eee ot _, Descr. A shrub three to five feet high, with a straight, Simple stem, and few branches; the young and tender __ parts somewhat villous. Leaves pinnate, fr om six to twelve Inches long. Leaflets opposite, six to eight pairs, shortly Petioled, oval, entire, smooth on both sides ; their gener Size about an inch and a half long by one ge | Stipules subulate; those of the petiole caducous, of the leaflets (each par of which have two) permanent. Racemes axillary; by the time the flowers have fallen, considerably longer than the leaves, sometimes twice their length. Flowers numerous, scattered, before expansion imbricated, large, dark purple. Bracteas one-flowered. Legumen Ph odges smooth, reflexed, six- to twelve-seeded. Roxb. S. To the preceding account may be added, that the shrub grows very large, and when in full blossom is highly orna- mental on account of its numerous long spikes of dark purple flowers. It is common in the forests of Nepal, and, according to Dr. Roxsureu, was introduced thence into the Calcutta Botanic Garden in 1802, by Dr. Hamirron. Dr. Roxzureu observes that, “‘ the same plant has been reared from American seeds, sent without a name from Philadelphia, by Mr. Witttam Hamirron.” It is very possible that the Nepal plant may have been introduced into Mr. Hamitron’s garden at Philadelphia, and acci- dentally returned again to Calcutta; or that Dr, Roxpures may haye mistaken a nearly allied species for his I. atro- ee ; but the former assumption is the most probable. allich. Fig. l. Flower, magnified. 2, 3. Fruit, nat. size. Lad C 3066 ) | PLADERA DECUsSATA. DecussaTE PLApERA. Class and Order. © | TerranpriA Monoeynta. ( Nat. Ord.—Genrianen. ) Generic Character, Cal. elongatus, 4-dentatus. Cor. infundibuliformis, Jim- bo irregulari. Stamen unicum reliquis minus. Stigma bi- lobum. Capsula supera, 1-locularis, 2-bivalvis. Seria numerosa. Specific Character-and Synonyms. Prapera* decussata; annua, caule erecto 4-alato, ramis decussatis, foliis ovato-lanceolatis 3-nerviis, floribus- terminalibus trichotome paniculatis. Roxb. Puapera decussata. Roxb. in Fl. Ind. v.1. p.478. Spreng. Syst. Veget. v. 1. p. 427. Descr. Root small, annual, fibrous. Stem scarcely a span high, erect, glabrous, four-sided, the angles four- winged, branched, the branches decussate, equally four- Winged. Leaves few, opposite : the lowest roundish-oval, the rest ovato-lanceolate, all three-nerved, entire ; the up- permost small, bracteiform. Flowers in a trichotomous panicle ; peduncles and pedicels four-winged : the flowers ag on the pedicels. Calyx elongated with four winged eels, four-toothed. Corolla, with the tube as long as the calyx, infundibuliform ; the limb three-lobed, lobes round- ed, the lower one bifid, (two united,) keeled at the back. Stamens four, of which three are alternate with the saree ; Oo 3 jer 7 From mradapos, full of moisture perhaps from growing in moist situa- “ions, certainly not from the nature of the plant itself. lobes, and the fourth smaller and apparently abortive; one is situated within the keel of the lower lobe: this has a thickened, clavate filament, and a small, ovate anther, whereas the others have filiform filaments and oblong anthers. Germen cylindrical, one-celled, many seeded : the seeds attached to the sutures of the valves: Style fili- form, shorter than the germen: Stigma two-lobed. Two species of this Genus were referred by Linnzus to Exacum, a third constituted the Genus Canscora of La- mMARCK ; but this was so imperfectly defined, that the MSS. name of Prapera of Soranper has been preferred, establish- ed by Roxgures in the FI. Indica, and adopted by Cuamisso and ScutecuTenpat in the Linnaa, and by Spreneex in his Systema Vegetabilium. Five species are described by Dr. Roxsuren. The present one seems to accord with his P. decussata, an inhabitant, indeed, of Bengal ; whereas, our plants, which flowered in the stove of the Glasgow Botanic Garden, in July, 1830, were raised from seeds communicated by Dr. Linpsay, from Nepal. Fig. 1. Flower. 2. Upper portion of the Corolla, cut open to show the Stamens. 3, 4, Stamens. 5. Pistil. 6. Section of the Germen.—Magat- fied. Swan Se. May 11831 Curtis Walwerth, a Pub by D! Crerille del* € 38067 ) MIMULUS PERFOLIATUS. PERFOLIATE MonkKEY-F LOWER. KEKE KEKE EEK KKK KEKE KEKE Class and Order. : eal P* ee a DipynamiA ANGIOSPERMIA. ~— ( Nat. Ord.—Scropnutarineg. ) Generic CNaacter. Calyx tubulosus, angulatus, 5-dentatus. Corolla perso- nata ; labio superiore bilobo lateribus reflexo ; inferiore trifido, laciniis subequalibus. Stamina 4, didynama. An- therarum lobis divaricatis. Stigma bilamellatum. Capsula calyce inclusa, bilocularis, loculicido-bivalvis ; valvis in- tegris. Kunth. ) Specific Character and Synonyms. Mimuuus * perfoliatus ; caule erecto alato, foliis lanceolatis amplexicaulibus brevi-pubescentibus pedunculo axil- lari solitario subcymoso multo longioribus. Graham. Mimutus perfoliatus. “Humb. et Kunth, Nov. Gen. v. 2. p. 298. Spreng. Syst. Veget. v. 2. p. 799. Conozea alata. Graham, in Ed. New Phil. Journ. Oct. ie Descr. Root creeping. Stem (two feet and a half high) erect, glabrous, shining, four-sided, four-winged, wings undulate, and sparingly ciliated. Branches decussating, Spreading widely similar to the stem. Leaves (ten inches long, two broad) opposite, spreading horizontally, acutely Serrulate, lanceolate, attenuated and entire towards the ase, at their origin dilated and stem-clasping, much vein- ed and reticulated, soft, covered on both sides with voy short s een * From sue, an ape, which the flowers are supposed to resemble. VOL. y. 5 short pubescence, bright green above, somewhat glaucous below, middle-rib very strong, and with the veins pro- ‘minent below. Peduncles axillary, opposite, four-sided, closely applied to the upper surface of the leaves, and (in- cluding the pedicels) about a fifth of their length, pubes- cent, bracteate, trifid, the lateral branches again dividing in the same way; pedicels like the peduncles, but less distinctly angled. Bracteas lanceolate, entire, acuminate, Calyx green, oblique, five-ribbed, five-toothed, pubescent on the outside, persisting. Corolla (eight lines long, four and a half across) yellow, bilabiate ; tube elongated, com- pressed laterally in its lower, vertically in its upper half, nearly thrice the length of the calyx ; upper lip bifid, re- volute, lower lip spreading forwards, plicate, trifid, revolute at the apices, all the lobes rounded ; two very prominent ridges, very hairy, and somewhat orange-coloured, extend backwards into the corolla from the central lobe of the lower lip. Stamens didynamous, included ; filaments gla- brous, yellow, adhering to the corolla for about half their length, connivent ; anthers bilobular, lobes divergent ; pollen white. Pistil as long as the stamens; stigma bifid, white, lobes broad, revolute, upper surface pubescent; style straight, white, filiform, glabrous, marcescent; germen ovate, green, glabrous, four-valved, bilocular ; ovules very numerous, attached to a large central receptacle, a trams- verse section of which presents a kidney-shaped surface in each loculament. This plant was raised in the garden of P. Neizz, Esq. at Canonmills, from Mexican seeds, communicated by Mr. D. Don, as probably, a species of Conozga, and flowered in the greenhouse, in September, 1830. Graham. Since the above was written, Mr. Don has had an oppor- tunity, in the garden of Messrs. Wuitiey & Co., of examil- ing specimens of this plant, flowering freely in the ope air, and has determined it to be a Mrmuuvs, nearly allied to, if not the same as, M. AE pets of Humsotpt and Kunta. — Their description, indeed, so well accords with our plant, — that I have little hesitation in adopting the name. ——— (Fig: 1. Flower. 2. Back view of an Anther. 3. Front view of ditto. + Pistil. 5. Young Fruit : nat. size. 6. Immature Capsule. 7. Section os nearly ripe Germen.—All but fig. 5, more or less magnified. WS. H. del? Pub:by 8.Curlis Walworth, May 1 1851. ( 3068 ) KRANTHEMUM strictum. Upricnr ERANTHEMUM. Sea Soba skooekskokeokeokeobeobeateote Class and Order. Dianpria Monoeyntia. ( Nat. Ord.—Acanruacea. ) Generic Character. Cal. 5-partitus, equalis. Cor. hypocrateriformis, limbo 5-partito, equali v. parum inequali. Stam. 2 antherifera, exserta. Anthere loculis parallelis muticis. Filamenta 2 sterilia. Ovarii loculi dispermi. Caps. valvule naviculares, dissepimento adnato. Semina retinaculis subtensa. Br. Specific Character and Synonyms. Erantuemum * strictum ; suffruticosum, erectum, pubes- cens, ramis adscendentibus decussatis simplicibus, foliis lanceolatis obscure crenulatis, spicis terminalibus : Sracilibus valde elongatis, bracteis oppositis decussatis unifloris demum remotis. Wall. ig Pak Be ; Eranruemum strictum. “ Colebr.’ Wall. in Fl. Ind. v. 1. p. 114, Bot. Reg. v.10. t. 867. ieee eS Descr. A small shrub, of about four or five feet in height, slightly covered with short hairs. Stem almost _ round, jointed, sending out quadrangular, slender branches I remote pairs. Leaves about four inches long, acute at _ €ach end; their margins somewhat revolute and crenulate, smooth, shining, and of a peculiar eyish green colour _ above, ve pale, and with prominent, hairy, and reticulated _ ferves and veins below. ‘The uppermost or floral leaves, at ; — ——— —— age _* From «ap, spring, and avbos, a flower. Sir J. E. Suita suspects from _ "5, love, on account of the beauty of the flower. at the base of the spikes, approach to the size and figure of the bracteas. Petioles about an inch long, flattened above, and slightly marginated by the decurrent base of the leaf. Spikes solitary, erect, one to two feet long. Rachis sharply quadrangular, almost four-winged. Flowers large, dark blue, opposite, in alternate pairs, which become remote as the spike lengthens. Bracteas appressed, imbricating, their extremities cuneato-lanceolate, dark green, acute, ciliated, about an inch long ; the lowermost barren, and becommg floral leaves. Interior two very small, scarcely longer than the five calycine segments, and like them linear, pubescent. Tube of the Corolla slender, pubescent, slightly enlarged towards the mouth, about twice the length of the outer bractea. Segments obovate, truncate, spreading, and flat, equal, very pale below. Two filiform, barren stamens are between the filaments. Anthers in the mouth of the co- rolla, with parallel cells. This is almost an equally desirable inmate of the stove with the well-known E. pulchellum, for although the flowers are not so numerous as in that species, yet they are indivi- dually larger, and quite as beautiful in colour. Our collections are indebted for its introduction to Dr. Watucu. The plant from which our figure was taken, flowered in the hothouse of the Glasgow Botanic Garden ; but being a native of Nepal, it will probably succeed equally well in the greenhouse. — ———— Fig. 1. Calyx and Bracteas. 2, Stamens. 3, Pistil.—Magnified. ~ WJ. Edel: Pub: by 8. Curtis Walworth May 1. 1S3C. Seat ( 3069 ) BROWALLIA GRANDIFLORA. LARGE- FLOWERED BROWALLIA. EEK KEKE KEKE KEE EERE Class and Order. DipynaM1A ANGIOSPERMIA. ( Nat. Ord.—ScropuutarinzZ. ) Generic Character. Cal. tubulosus, 5-fidus. Cor. tubo apice subinflato, limbo hypocrateriformi, lobis subeequalibus. Stam. inclusa. An- there inequales. Caps. 2-locularis, 2-valvis. Spr. Specific Character and Synonyms. Browatua* grandiflora; caule diffuso ramoso, foliis ovatis acutis, pedunculis axillaribus unifloris vel in racemis terminalibus dispositis, ramulis calycibusque adultis glabris. E Browauuis grandiflora. Bot. Reg. t. 1384? Graham m Edin. Phil. Journ. Dec. 1830. pee Descr. Annual. Stem herbaceous, diffused, branched, smooth, green, purplish below; branches spreading, smooth and shining, scattered. Leaves ovate, acuminate, atten- uated into a petiole, smooth and shining, the middle rib and converging veins prominent below, and channelled above. Peduncles straight, single-flowered, axillary, and longer than the diminished leaves near the termination of the branches, or collected into lax, terminal racemes, when young glanduloso- pubescent. Calyx five - cleft, smooth, or, when young, glanduloso-villous, many-nerved, nerves branching ; segments unequal, spreading, linear, channelled. Corolla hypocrateriform ; tube longer than — : Pera after Joun Browaut, a Swede, perm of re meets tobe and subsequent rupture between Browavt ant » wel commemorated by the tastiest the specific appellations which he bestowed on the only three individuals of the Genus then known. B. elata apne degree of their union; B. demissa, its cessation; while the ambiguous —— the third species, B. alienata, while it intimates the uncertam characters ¢ of the plant, implies also the subsequent difference between the parties. — the calyx, slightly inflated towards the top, and compressed vertically, glanduloso-villous, greenish-yellow, marked, as well as the calyx, with dark streaks ; mb plicate in the bud, when expanded flat, white, or very pale lilac, witha yellow throat, yellow on the outside, bilabiate, the upper lip linear and emarginate, the lower much larger, semicir- cular, formed of four united, obcordato-cuneate lobes, each smaller than the upper lip. Stamens didynamous, adhering to the inside of the tube, the two longer ones closing the throat of the corolla with the upper part of their filaments, which is bent down, flattened and hairy above, their anthers included, having one perfect and one abortive lobe, divari- cated, compressed, and opening along their upper edge ; Jilaments of the shorter stamens flexuose at the top, filiform and smooth, their anthers bilobular, both the lobes perfect, divaricated and compressed, bursting along their upper edges ; pollen and anthers of all the stamens yellow. Ger- men ovate, and slightly compressed, pubescent, bilocular, bivalvular, the dissepiment proceeding from the centre of the valves across the shorter diameter of the germen ; semt- nal receptacle large, central, covered with numerous ovules. Style filiform, glabrous, longer than the shorter, shorter than the longer stamens, tortuose at the top. Stigma qua- drangular, peltate, green, obscurely four-lobed, having two depressions or cells in the upper margin, where the anthers of the longer stamens are lodged, and two obscure depres- sions on the lower side, where the anthers of the shorter stamens appear to be placed. 3 Bo I am indebted to Dr. Hooxer for the description of the style and stigma, and for some observations regarding the anthers, for the style was lost in the only flower which I reserved for dissection, when the specimen was sent to him to be figured in the Botanical Magazine. The anthers on the longer and shorter stamens ap- peared to him to be alike, reniform, and one-celled; but I am uite certain that the above description of what I saw is accurate* the appearance probably varying from abortion. Hy We received this plant from the Botanic Garden, Glasgow, 12 October last, having been raised there from seeds collected by Mr. Crucksuanks, near Yazo, in the yalley of Canta, in Peru. It is now (December) flowering very freely in the greenhouse, and probably will be found to bear cultivation as a very ornamenta annual in the open border. Graham. _ The plant figured in the Botanical Register above quoted, has _ the flowers considerably smaller and the leaves more cordate than in Dr. GraHawm’s, and appears to be raised from seeds of another kind of Browatxta, in Mr. Cruckxsuanks’ Herbarium, which} — have rather been disposed to consider as B. demissa. Fig. 1. Portion of the Corolla with Stamens and the upper part of the Style. 2- - : : upper Stamen. 3. A lower ditto, 4. Anthers of a lower Stamen. 5. Pistil. oe Stigma. 7. Section of the Germen :— Magnified, me eo 3079. Pub: by 8. Curis, Walworth, May 11831 W LH. del? ( 3070 ) ScuizANTuus Hooxkeri. AcUTE-PETALED ScuHIZANTHUS. KEK KKK EEE EE EEEE EEE Class and Order. Dianpria Monoeynia. ( Nat. Ord.—Scropuutarina. ) Generic Character. Corolla irregularis, labio superiore quinquefido, inferiore tripartito. Stamina 2 antherifera, 2 sterilia, filamentis vil- losis. Capsula bilocularis. Specific Character and Synonyms. Scmizanruus Hookeri ; corolla tubo limbum equante, labio: inferiore longe bicornuto, labii superioris lobo medio longe acuminato. Scuizanruus Hookeri. Gillies MSS. Graham in Edin. Phil. Journ. 1830. 7 ae ‘=e Descr. Biennial? Stem herbaceous, stout, branched. Branches diffuse, whole surface covered with glandular pubescence. Leaves variable, once or twice pinnatifid, lacinie incised. ‘Pedicels (three-fourths of an inch long) secund, both in flower and fruit, erect. Flowers in large ranching, terminal, bracteated panicles. Calyx persistent, five-parted, four of the segments suberect, the upper rather shorter than the next, while the longest, which is closely applied to the underside of the tube of the corolla, is con- siderably longer than any of the others, at least in the culti- vated specimens. Corolla an inch across in both directions, slightly pubescent externally, two-lipped ; upper lip, as in the other species, three-lobed, the central lobe much nar- Tower than in S. porrigens, or S. pinnatus (the latter cer- tainly distinct from S. pinnatus of Ruiz and Pavon) entire, — With prominent edges forming the throat, with its sides — revolute towards the apex, and drawn out to a long, erect a point, which, as well as its base, and the whole remainder of the corolla, is of an uniform pale rose lilac, rather darker and somewhat streaked on the outside, the centre orange- coloured, with a few dark purple streaks; lateral lobes bipartite, each segment bifid ; lower-lip tripartite, lateral segments linear, very narrow, spreading, and half the length of the central one, which is notched, and each segment is drawn out into a long beak ; tube slightly curved, laterally compressed, and longer than the limb. Stamens four; fila- ments pubescent at the base, the two upper ones very short, abortive, and projecting forwards from the edge of the central lobe of the upper lip, at its base, the two others rising from the base of the lower lip, nearly reaching to the fissure in its central lobe, and as in the other species, re- tained within this till the pollen is ripe, after which they advance, and pass forward in straight, parallel lines from the centre of the flower: anthers large, green, broadly elliptical, notched at their base, bilobular, bursting along their inner surface ; pollen greenish-yellow. Stigma very minute, terminal. Style rather longer than the stamens, ascending at its extremity, lilac. Germen small, conical, yellow, bilobular. Ovules numerous, attached to a central receptacle in each loculament, capsule ovate, longer than the calyx, two-valved, valves bifid. Seeds brown, dotted, somewhat scaly, reniform, or so much bent round that their extremities meet. This remarkably distinct species of ScuizanrHus was raised by James Boog, Esq. in his garden at Portobello, from seed brought to this country by my excellent friend, Dr. Gitures, having been gathered by him in various places on the Chilian side of the Cordillera of the Andes, at an elevation of eight or nine thousand feet above the level of the sea. The seed was sown in the spring of 1829, in the open border, and the plants not having flowered, they were taken into the house during winter, and replanted abroad in March. The flowers began to appear in June, and were abundantly produced during the whole summer. Thus treated, Scuizanruus Hooker? has proved itself of biennial duration, at least; whether it may be longer lived, oF whether, if raised in a greater degree of heat, the plant might not have blossomed in the first year and afterw died, Iam unable tosay. Dr. Giuies obligingly informed me when the flowers first appeared, expressing his convic- tion, that the species was hitherto undescribed ; he narrated its most characteristic features, and enclosed 4 specimen. Graham. el Fig. 1. Flower, magnified. 2. Fruit, nat. size. a Sait h~ TI Micholsen. MD. delt Pu bby 8. €urtis Walworth. Mayl I83. ( 3071 ) JANIPHA Maninot. EATABLE-ROOTED Puysic-Nut, Birrer Cassapa, MANIoc, or TAPIOCA. ny . : Se oa ee ee ee Class and Order. Monazc1a DEcANDRIA. ( Nat. Ord.— EvurnorsiAcez. ) Generic Character. Masc. Cal. nullus. Cor. campanulata, quinquefida. Stam. 10, libera. Nectarium 10-radiatum. Fam. nullus. Cor. 5-partita. Stigma amplum, carnosum, cris- _ tatum, multifidum. Capsula ovata, apice acutiuscula, tri- occa. Pohl, (sub Manihot.) on ee Specific Character and Synonyms. —Jantpua * Manihot; foliis palmatis 5—7 -partitis glabris subtus glaucis, laciniis lanceolatis integerrimis, flori- bus racemosis. Janipna Manihot. Humb. et Kunth, Nov. Gen. v. 2. p. 85. Spreng. Syst. Veget. v. 3. p. 77. ae Mantnor itiliesitak. * Poli, Pl. Brasil. Icon. v. 1. p. 32. Jarropua Manihot. Linn. Sp. Pl. p. 1428. Ait. Hort. Kew. ed. 2. v. 5. p. 330. Willd. Sp. Pl. v. 4. p. 562. Lunan, Hort. Jamaic. v. 1. p. 161. J Jatropna. xn. 5. Brown, Jam. p. 350. tee Ricinus (eens fo cme * Janrpna is an Indian name, applied to another species of this Genus, the Jarrorna Janipha of cores P Maxraor is equally an Indian appella- tion, by which the various kinds are known in Brazil. ‘The Genus, therefore, being separated from Jarropua, the Generic name of ManinoT would have n more properly applied to it, as has already been done by PLuMIER, Tournerort, Apanson, and, subsequently, by Pont JANIPHA Was, how- ever, established by Kuna, and has been sanctioned by Jussieu, SPRENGEL, — and the majority of Botanists. = Se Ricinus minor, &c. Sloane, Jam. v. 1. p. 130, t. 85, et t. 141. f. 1. (root) et vol. 2. App. t. 6. f. 1. Maninot Theveti, Yucca, et Cassavi. Bauh. Hist. v. 2. p. 794. Descr. “ This has an oblong, tuberous root, as big as one’s fist, having some fibres drawing its nourishment, and being full of a wheyish, venomous juice. The stalks are white, crooked, brittle, having a very large pith, and several knobs sticking out on every side like warts, being the remains of the footstalks of the leaves, which have dropped off. The plant usually rises six to seven feet high, and has a smooth, white bark; the branches, which come out on every side towards the top, are crooked, and have, on every side, near their tops, leaves, irregularly placed” (Stoane), on long, terete petioles, broadly cordate im their outline, divided nearly to their base into five spreading, lanceolate, entire segments, attenuated at both extremities, dark green above, pale glaucous beneath; the midrib strong, prominent below, and there yellowish-red : from it there branch off several oblique veins, connected by lesser transverse ones. Stipules small, lanceolate, acumi- nate, caducous. Panicles or compound racemes, axillary and terminal, four to five inches long, bearing sometimes all male or all female flowers, at other times these are mixed on the same peduncle. Pedicels with small, subulate, bracteas at their base. Male flower smaller than the female. Perianth single, purplish on the outside, fulvous- brown within, cut about half-way down into five, spreading segments. In the centre of the flower is an orange-colour- ed, fleshy, ten-rayed mectary, and the ten stamens alternate with its lobes or rays. Filaments shorter than the perianth, white, filiform, free. Anthers linear-oblong, yellow. Pol- len globular, yellow. Female flower of the same colour a8 the male, deeply five-partite, the laciniz lanceolato-ovate, spreading. Nectary an annular, orange-coloured gland oF ring, in which the purple, ovate, furrowed germen is 1m- bedi ed: Style short: Stigmas three, reflexed, furrowed, and plaited, white. Capsule ovate, trigonous, tricoccous- — elliptical, black, shining, with a thick, fleshy, seed- We learn from the Hortus Kewensis, that the CassavA has been cultivated in the stoves of Great Britain ever since the — year 1739, having been introduced from South Ane * w e . 7 where it is most extensively grown, on account of its useful and medicinal properties. Some have supposed its native country to be Africa, but Pout expressly states it to be indigenous to Brazil, where there exist many apparent varieties, differing chiefly in the breadth of the sezments of their leaves, which that author has distinguished in his truly splendid ‘‘ Icones et Descriptiones Plantarum Brasilie,” as so many distinct species. Indeed, he says himself, of his dwarf “ Maninor pusilla, Ego quidem meam Maninor pusillam primitivam ipsius Manor utilissime plantam esse censeo.”’ It is stated in the Hortus Kewensis, that the Jarropna Manihot blossoms in our collections in the months of July and August. But I have never been able to procure recent flowering specimens ; and I have felt greatly obliged to my valued correspondent, Dr. Nicnorson of Antigua, for an excellent drawing, here given, made from the recent plant m that island. : Two kinds are especially cultivated in the Colonies, the Sweet Cassada of Browne’s Jamaica (p. 350) and Lunan’s Hort. Jam. (v. 1. p. 163.) Maninor Azpi, Pout ; whose root is of a white colour, and free from deleterious qualities : and the Bitter Cassada, whose root is yellowish, and abounds in @ poisonous juice. We shall confine our observations to the latter kind, which is the one here figured and described. hey seem not to differ in botanical character. ie When it is considered, that the Manioc belongs to a tribe of plants, the Evpnorsracex, which is essentially distin- Suished by its acrid and poisonous qualities, and that the root of the plant itself abounds in a juice of this peculiar character, it cannot fail to excite astonishment in the minds of those who are not already aware of the fact, that it never- theless yields an abundant flour, rendered innocent indeed by the art of man, and thus most extensively employed in lieu of bread, throughout a very large portion of South America: and that even to our country it is lar, ely im- ported, and served up at table, under the name of Tapzoca. Such is the poisonous nature of the expressed juice of the Mantoc, that it has been known to occasion death in a few minutes. By means of it, the Indians destroyed many of their Spanish persecutors. M. Ferrer, a physician at urinam, administered a moderate dose to dogs and cats, Who died in a space of twenty-five minutes, passed in great torments. Their stomachs, on being opened, exhibited no ‘Symptoms of inflammation, nor affection of the viscera, nor ; was was the blood coagulated, whence it appeared, that the poison acted on the nervous system ; an idea that was con- firmed, by thirty-six drops being afterwards administered toa crimmal. ‘These had scarcely reached the stomach, when the man writhed and screamed with the agonies under which he suffered, and fell into convulsions, in which he expired in six minutes. Three hours afterwards, the body was opened, but no alteration was found, except that the stomach was shrunk to less than half its natural size: so that it would appear that the fatal principle resides in a volatile substance, which may be dissipated by heat; as, indeed, is satisfactorily proved, by the mode of preparing the root for food. | By various processes, by bruising between stones, by a coarse rasp, or by a mill, the root of the Manroc is broken into small pieces, then put into a sack, and subjected toa heavy pressure, by which all the juice is expressed. What remains is Cassava or Cassada, which, if properly dried, is capable of being preserved for a great length of time. In French Guiana, according to Auster, Cassava flour is made, by toasting the grated root over the fire, in which — state, if kept from humidity, it will continue good twenty years. vias Cassava-cake or Cassava-root is the meal, or the grated, expressed, and dried root of the Manroc, pounded in a mortar, passed through a coarse sieve, and baked on flat . circular iron plates fixed ina stove. The particles of meal — are united by the heat, and when thoroughly baked in this manner, form cakes, which are sold at the markets, and ual versally esteemed as a wholesome kind of bread. The Spaniards, when they first discovered the West Indies, found this in general use among the native Indians, who call dit : Cazabbi, and by whom it was preferred to every other kin of bread, on account of its easy digestion, the facility W! which it was cultivated, and its prodigious increase.” — . wn Lunan’s Hort. Jamaic. Again, in Guiana, Cipipa is ane — ther preparation from this plant, and is the name given t03 — very fine and white fecula, which, according to AuBuET, * — derived from the expressed juice of the roots, which is de canted off, and suffered to rest some time, when it deposits = an amylaceous substance, which requires repeated washing: S I know not whether this is exactly analogous to our Taptoc® — «The juice,” says Stoang, “‘ evaporated over the fire, ge the Tipioca meal.” But Lunan tells us, that from 4° — “ roots of the Sweet Cassada, Tapioca is made in Jamar in every respect similar to that imported ; which is done by grating them, washing and infusing them in water, and evaporating the liquor so as to obtain a sediment like starch, which must be well dried in the sun.” The root of the Mantoc is also the basis of several kinds of fermented liquors; and an excellent condiment for sea- soning meats, called Cabion, or Capion, is eg from the juice, and said to sharpen the appetite. The leaves beaten and boiled are eaten after the manner of Spinach; and the fresh root is employed in healing ulcers. From what has been above stated, it will appear, that the expression of the juice from the root deprives the latter of all its deleterious properties ; and that the application of heat to these juices, renders their residue also, wholesome and nourishing. And whilst Cassava-bread is, as Stoane says, in the most general demand of any provision all over the West Indies, and is employed to victual ships ; the use of Tapioca is still more extended, and throughout Europe is largely employed, for the same purposes as Sago and Arrow-root. é . An acre of ground planted with Manroe, yields nourish- ment to a greater number of persons, than six acres culti- vated with the best Wheat: but it is probable that it greatly exhausts the soil. The estate of Mandiocca in Brazil,the late residence of M. De Lanesporrr, is so called on account of the excellency of the Manioc, or Mandiocca roots, which are cultivated on it. There, after burning the felled trees, the lands are planted with cuttings, (mant- bas ) of this plant. In eighteen or twenty months, durin Which time the farmer endeavours above all things to chee their upward growth by breaking out the buds, the roots ave attained their full size. Each plantation usually yields three crops, and is then abandoned. (Spix and artius’ Travels in Brazil. eee Flowers. 2. Panicle, with mostly - Fig. 1. Branch of a plant with Female Male Flowers. 3. Pistil 4. Stamens and Nectary. 5. Anther. 6. —3, 4, 5, magnified. ( 3072 ) _ Cnrysopnytium Cainito. Broap-LEAvVED Star-AppLe. ERK KEKE EEE KEE EEE EEE Class and Order. PEnTANDRIA Mownoeynia. ( Nat. Ord.—Saporez. ) Generic Character. — Cal. 5- seu 4-partitus. Cor. campanulata, 5—4-fida. Stamina tubo corolla inserta, laciniis opposita. Stylus brevis. Stigma subsessile, peltatum. Bacca 1—10-locula- ris, 1—10-sperma. Specific Character and Synonyms. Curysopnyttum* Cainito; foliis ellipticis supra nitidis subtus aureo-sericeis parallelo-venosis, pedunculis sparsis axillaribus terminalibusque aggregatis unifloris. Curysopuytium Cainito. Linn. Sp. Pl. p. 278. Willd. Sp. Pl. v. 1. p. 1083. Jacq. Am. p. 51. t. 37. Lam. Ill. t.120. Gaertn. de Fruct. v. 3. p. 120. t. 201. Ait. Hort. Kew. ed. 2. v. 2. p. 12. Spreng. Syst. Veg. v. 1. p. 666. ee Curysopnytium 1-fructu majori globoso, foliis subtus ferru- gineis. Browne, Jam. p. 171. t. 14. f. 2. ; Anona, foliis subtus ferrugineis, &c. Sloane, Jam. v. 2. p. 170. ¢. 229, a (8.) fructu purpureo, C. jamaicense. Jacg. Am. p. 52. (y.) fructu ceeruleo, C. cceruleum. Jacq. Am. p. 52. Descr. This tree is described in its native climate as . : 4 * rising to a height of thirty or forty feet, and having a trunk em fps the color of the underside of xpve0s, gold, and Qudro», a leaf, from the color : the leaves, “ Cainito is the American name of the plant. trunk a foot in diameter, clothed with a reddish-brown bark, with branches and twigs spreading on every side, and reaching almost to the ground.”— Sloane. The young branches are clothed with silky, ferruginous, appressed hairs. The leaves are alternate, elliptical, four to five inches long, entire, shortly acuminated, dark green and glabrous, or with only a few scattered hairs above, beneath glossy, with abundant, closely-pressed, golden-rust-colour- ed hairs, (aureo-nitentia) which give a satiny appearance, “in beauty and strangeness,” says Sioang, “ much beyond any leaf I ever beheld.” The nerves are numerous, parallel, and transverse. Petioles short, scarcely more than half an inch long. The flowers arise from the axils of the leaves, or sometimes from the extremity of the young branches: they are on short, single- flowered, aggregated stalks, shorter than the petioles. Calyx in five, in our specimens four, deep roundish lobes, rust-coloured, and satiny. Corolla subcampanulate, yellowish-white, the limb cut into five or four roundish lobes. Stamens inserted at the base of the limb, and opposite the lobes of it, very small. Filaments short, scarcely longer than the rounded, two-lobed anthers. Germen ovate, hairy: Style shorter than the germen : Stigma obtuse. The fruit is a large, globose, ten-celled Berry, in which, however, some of the cells are usually abortive. Seed large, compressed, marked with an umbilical areola : its albumen fleshy. The Embryo large, erect, the cotyle- dons fleshy, with a curved radicle. The Star-apple is a well-known fruit of the West Indies, where, however, it appears to be more esteemed by the natives than itis by Europeans; yet I am not aware that any good figure of it exists in the more recent Botanical publi- cations. In our stoves, where it has been known since 1737, when it was introduced by Pum Mitzzr, it recom- mends itself by the beauty of its foliage, particularly on the underside: for its flowers not only appear but seldom, but they are small in size, and by no means of a brilliant colour. They were produced in the month of November, 1830, in the stove of the Glasgow Botanic Garden. With the view to render the figure more complete, the fruit and seeds are _§iven, copied from Gartner. j The wood is said to be serviceable for indoor work, if preserved from moisture. ——" * Fig. 1. Flower. 2. The same cut open, nat. size. 3. Fruit cut ope? ederghra 4, Seed, 5. Seed cut through transversely (from Gar TNER-)s nat. size, ae ( 3073.) ARGEMONE GRANDIFLORA. LARGE-FLOWERED Mexican Poppy. here Class and Order. Atte Potyanpria Monoeynia. ( Nat. Ord.—Papaveracez. ) - Generic Character. — Pet. 4A—6. Stamina plurima. Stylus vix ullus: Stig- mata 4A—7, radiantia, concava, libera. Capsula obovata, 1-locularis, valvulis apice dehiscens, placentis linearibus. Semina spherica, scrobiculata.—Flores flavi aut albi. Pe-’ dunculi ante anthesin erecti. D C. BR Ga6 Specific Character and Synonyms. ArcgemMonEe* grandiflora ; foliis pinnatifidis sinuatis parce pa catg Make caule hlyceaiie levibus, capsula ob- _ longa tetragona nudiuscula. ArcEmone grandiflora. Sweet, Br. Fl. Gard. t. 226. Bot. — Reg. t. 1264. Lodd. Bot. Cab. t, 242. a See Descr. A hard rennial, throwing up a much branch- ed, rounded stem eee to four feet high, which, upwards especially, is of a pale yellowish-green colour, with a red- dish tinge arising from numerous fine streaks of that colour, unarmed as well as the peduncles. Leaves numerous, mostly large, plane, or sligou? waved, green, whitish d € centre, pinnatifid, sinuated and beset with soft an Temote spinous teeth, the base amplexicaul, the i * Derived from ar; ema, the cataract of the eye, and which again is thus named from apyos, ieloge. The Greeks so called a plant, perhaps this, which they Considered beneficial in the cure of that complaint. ones small and scarcely pinnatifid. Flowers large, in pani- cles. Calyx caducous, of three concave, glabrous leaves, each lengthened into a soft horn. Petals six, nearly or- bicular, pure white, and extremely delicate. Stamens nu- merous, spreading, and lying over each other with great regularity, ome Pistil obtusely four-angled, linear-oblong. Stigma nearly sessile, rich purple, downy, with four impressed, bright blue spots. Capsule (scarcely mature) oblong, with a few soft, spinous hairs, one-celled, with four parietal receptacles, to which many seeds are attached. Introduced by Mr. Barcray among many other rarities from Mexico ; and now, by that gentleman’s well-known liberality, it has become a not uncommon inmate of our gardens, producing freely its fine white blossoms with their orange stamens and brilliant stigma, through the whole summer months. Its stem and peduncles are quite smooth, and the fruit has only a few soft spinous teeth, Apres none of those “ sharpe and venomous prickles,” describ by old Gerarpe as characteristic of the A. mexicana, of such a nature, “ that whosoever had one of them in his nate doubtless it would send him either to heaven or to e. od * See the account of ARGEMONE mevicana in t. 243 of the Old Series of this Work. 4 —_—___ _ Sea Fig. 1. Stamen. 2. Section of an unripe Capsule. W 7 W.delt Pab by S Curtis Claze (3074 ). DENDROBIUM SPECIOSUM. GREAT DENDROBIUM. Class and Order. GYNANDRIA MOoNANDRIA. ( Nat. Ord —OrcuipE#. ) Generic Character. Labellum ecalearatum, articulatum cum apice processus unguiformis, cujus lateribus petala antica adnata, calcar xmulantia. Masse pollinis 4, parallele. Br. Specific Character and Synonyms. Denprorium speciosum; caulibus erectis apice 2—3-phyllis, foliis ovali-oblongis integerrimis racemo terminali mul- tifloro brevioribus, perianthii foliolis angusto-oblongis, labello infra divisuram carina unica, lobo intermedio latiore quam longo ecarinato. Br. Denpronium speciosum. Sm. Ex. Bot. p. 17. t. 10. Br. Prodr. Fl. Nov. Holl. p. 332. Ait. Hort. Kew. ed. 2. v. 5. p. 212. Spreng. Syst. Veget. v. 3. p. 738. eee Descr. Stem a foot or more high, somewhat swollen, bulbiform, striated, jointed, aheathed with pale membrana- ceous scales, terminated by three large, coriaceous, oval- oblong, obtuse leaves, dark green above, paler beneath, obscurely striated, eight to nine inches long. From the centre of these, and from the extremity of the stem, arises the pedunculated ruceme, a foot and a half long: its pedun- cle sheathed with large scales or bracte@. — Flowers resup!- nate, numerous, of an uniform, pale yellow colour, (except the lip,) deeper towards the extremity, generally secund When most expanded, though the -buds point in various directions, scentless. Petals narrow-oblong, nearly equal, except that the two upper ones which cover the lip are | somewhat * VOL. ve 2 - : somewhat falcate, and are swollen at. the base where they receive the base of the lip, all of them erect, never spread- ing *. Lip almost white, within spotted with purple, ob- long, erect, the sides incurved, and a little waved, three- lobed, the middle or terminal lobe the largest, broad and retuse. Column short, white, plane in front, and then spotted with purple below the stigma. Anther white, hemi- spherical, attached to the back of the top of the column. Pollen-Masses yellow. Denproszium speciosum is a New Holland plant, that has been long cultivated in our stoves ; but which, as far as I am aware, has rarely produced blossoms. In the present season, (Jan. 1831,) a noble flowering specimen was com- municated to me, from the Liverpool Botanic Garden, by the Messrs. SHzpuerps. The plant was named by Sir James E. Smiru, in his Exotic Botany, where a figure likewise is given, but so unlike our present one, that the two plants scarcely appear to be the same. Yet I believe they are identical, and that the difference arises from the artist of Sir James E. Smrru’s figure (which was done in New Holland,) not being skilled in Botanical drawing. The flowers are greatly larger than in our plant, the gib- bous or spur-like base, essential to the Genus Denprosivm, is omitted, and the petals are widely patent. The plant from which our figure is taken was sent by Mr. Fraser to the Liverpool Garden. A drawing has likewise been obligingly communicated to me, by W. T. Arron, Esq., from the Royal Gardens at Kew. _ * Ina fine specimen forwarded to me from the Edinburgh Botanic Garden, since the plate was engraved, one of the blossoms was considerably more expanded than is here represented. ——— eet Fig. 1. Flower, slightly magnified. 2. Column or Lip, the latter forced back to show more of the former. 3. Front view of the Column. 4. Inte- rior view of the Lip. 5, Pollen-Masses.—All more or less magnified. 5075. WTA del? . Pab by S. Curtis Glazenwood Efsex Jane 11831. at ( 3075 ) LoBELIA HYPOCRATERIFORMIS. SALVER- SHAPED LOBELIA. SEEK KK KEKE KEK KEKE EEE Class and Order. PentanpriA Monoeynia. ( Nat. Ord.—Losetracez. ) Generic Character. Cor. tubo hine fisso (raro integro) ; limbo 5: partito, Anthere connate. Stigma bilobum, (nunc indivisum.) Capsula bilocularis, (raro 3-locularis,) apice supero bi- valvi. Br. Div. Isotoma. Br. Cor. hypocrateri ormis, tubo integro, limbo parum inequali. Anthere imberbes (2 inferiores mucronate.) Flores racemost. - Specific Character and Synonyms. Lozrnia hypocrateriformis ; annua glabra, caule subsim- plici, foliis linearibus integerrimis. Br. Lozetia hypocrateriformis. Br. Prod. v. 1. p. 565. Spr. Syst. Veg. v. 1. p. 719. Gi Descr. A slender, scarcely branched, annual plant. ems erect, glabrous, as is every part, wavy, rounded. aves scattered, remote, linear-filiform, from half to three quarters of an inch long, spreading, oF often recurved, obtuse, entire, pale green, gradually becoming smaller up- wards, and passing into bractee. Raceme terminal, few- flowered. Pedicels slender, wavy, much longer than the linear bractew. Calyx superior, of five linear-subulate, closely-placed teeth. Corolla truly hypocrateriform ; the tube slender, twice or thrice as long as the calyx, entire, almost white : the limb five-partite, somewhat two-lipped, the segments broadly obovato- cuneate, submucronate, purple | purple, with a small red spot at the base, the two upper ones rather the smallest, approximate, as are the three lower, of which the middle segment is the largest of all. Filaments white. Anthers oblong, bluish-purple. Germen obovate, furrowed, glabrous: Style a little exceeding the stamens: Stigma two-lobed. This interesting little plant is a native of the Southern shores of New Holland, where it was discovered by Mr. Brown, and described by that learned author as the type of the division of Lopetia which he calls Isoroma. Seeds were sent to the Glasgow Botanic Garden, by Mr. C. Fraser, and the plants blossomed in the greenhouse during the month of September, 1830. We possess native specimens, gathered at King George’s Sound, which are larger than the plant here figured. Fig. 1. Flower. 2. Anthers and Stigma :—magnified. CNwetd E/sex. Rine TIS SL SE Curtis Glas Pub by ( 3076 BROUGHTONIA SANGUINEA. CRIMSON- - -FLOWERED BROUGHTONIA. Class and Order. GynanpriA Monanpria. ( Nat. Ord.—OrcutpEz. ) Generic Character. Columna libera, v. basi tantum connata labello ungui- culato (nunc inferne producto in tubulum ovario adnatum). Masse Pollinis 4 parallele, septis completis persistentibus distincte, basi filo granulato elastico aucte. Br. Specific Character and Synonyms. - Broventonra * sanguinea ; foliis geminis oblongis bulbo innatis, seapo diviso. Br. ci Broucuronta sanguinea, Br. in Hort. Kew. ed. 2. v. 5. p. 217. Spreng. Syst. Veget.v. 3. p. 734. Denprozium sanguineum. Swartz, Fil. Ind. Oct. v. 4. p. 1529. Willd. Sp, Pl. v. 4. p. 132. We EripenprumM sanguineum. Swartz, Prodr. p. 124. Viscum radice bulbosa minus, &c. Sloane, Jam. v. 1. p. ‘Saryrium parasiticum ; foliis paucioribus, &e. Browne, Jam. p. 32A. i vice Pies ~~ Descr. Bulbs roundish or ovate, dark green, the younger ones depressed, slightly compressed, smooth, sheathed with a brownish, membranous coat, bearing one or (as would appear to be the correct number) two leaves from the ‘ £ ¢ ‘summit, ‘ * Named by, Mr. Brown, in compliment to Mr. Arraur BroucHTon, a» nglish Botanist. — summit, which are said by Swartz to be adnate with the bulb, four to five inches long, coriaceous, rigid, obtuse or emarginate at the point, channelled in the middle on the upper side, somewhat keeled below, nerveless. From the base of the leaves, within, rises a rounded, unbranched, purplish-green scape, a foot or more high, jointed at inter- vals, and having a small, appressed scale at each joint. Raceme terminal, lax, few- (seven to eight) flowered. Pedi- cels curved upwards, scarcely two inches long, (including the adnate spur,) bright red, each with a small bractea at the base. Perianth (except at the base of the labellum) of a fine rich crimson, inner segments a little paler, and more delicate in structure. The three outer segments are lanceolato-acuminate, carinated ; the two inner and lateral ones obovato-cuneate, somewhat waved, veiny ; Labellum scarcely longer than the rest of the segments, broadly obovate, waved and somewhat crenate at the margin, very veiny, and with deep red lines upon an orange-coloured ground at the scarcely unguiculated base, where it is decurrent, running down into a long spur, which is adnate with the slender germen. Column rather short, semicylin- drical. Stigma transverse, very viscid. Anther white, hemispherical, with four parallel cells, and four oval, com- pressed, white pollen-masses, each with a filament, which lies upon the edge of the mass. , Browne, in his Natural History of Jamaica, says that this is “ one of the most beautiful species of this tribe of plants ;” and it is certain that there are few that can excel it in richness of colour. It grows in its native island not far from the shore upon the old trunks of Bompax, Rarzo- PHORA, Conocarpus, &c., along with the Cymgipium nodo- sum. (Swartz.) It was introduced to Kew, in 1793, but 1s, probably, yet rare in collections. A specimen has been obligingly communicated to me by Cuaries HorsFAtt, Esq. of Everton, near Liverpool, raised from bulbs sent by Mr. Wits, from Jamaica; and accompanied by an excel- lent drawing from the pencil of Mrs, HorsFatu. ————— Fig. 1. Column and part of the Perianth. 2. Inner view of an Anther- case, 3, and 4, Pollen-Masses:—more or less magnified, Pub by 8.Curtis.Glaxenwood Essex. Jane 1183. ws Madelt ( 3077 ) ORNITHOGALUM FIMBRIATUM. Hatry- LEAVED STAR OF BETHLEHEM. KEKE KEKE EERE EERE Class and Order. Hexanpria Monoeynta. ( Nat. Ord.—AspHopELeg. ) Generic Character. _ Perianthium inferum, petaloideum, hexaphyllum. Stam. alterna majora, seu basi dilatata. _ Capsula 3-loba, lobis sulcatis, 3-locularis, polysperma. Semina biserialia. ape Specific Character and Synonyms. Ornirnogatum * fimbriatum ; foliis. linearibus patentibus canaliculatis extus scapoque perbrevi hirsutis, racemo subcorymboso, pedunculis clongatis patentibus fructi- ; feris deflexis. : OrnitHoGatum fimbriatum. “ Willd. in Nov. Act. Nat. Cur. Berol. 3. p. 26.” Bieb. Fl. Taur. Cauc. v. 1. p. 276. Bot. Reg. t. 555. Spreng. Syst. Veget. v. 2. Pp. 50. ee OrnitH0Gato umbellato affine, foliis pilosis. “ Pall. in Nov. Act. Petrop. 10. 309.” i RNITHOGALUM samium villosum umbellatum album. Tourn. Cor. p. 26. (Bieb.) Gi _ Descr. Bulb ovate, whitish. Leaves all radical, spread- Ing, six to eight inches long, linear, channelled above and glabrous, semicylindrical beneath and very hairy, the apex obtuse. Scape exceedingly short, hairy, bearing a short - but broad raceme of flowers. Peduncles at first erect, short, then etnies * From opris, opribes, a bird, and yaaa, milk: but why so named is very doubtful . then lengthened and becoming patent when the flower expands ; somewhat more elongated and deflexed in fruit. Bractee at first equal in length with the peduncle, then longer, membranaceous, whitish, sheathing. Perianth of six spreading, ovato-acuminate leaves, white, green in the centre: the three inner ones smaller and less green on the back. Stamens opposite the segments of the perianth. Filaments white, subulate, very broad at the base, and nearly equal in size and shape. Anthers oblong, yellow. Germen obovate, deeply three-lobed, each lobe furrowed in the centre, so that there are three deep alternating with three shallow furrows ; three-celled, cells with many seeds arranged in two vertical rows in the inner angle. Style short, straight. Stigma small, triquetrous. Fruit (imma- ture) of the same form and structure as the germen. Marsuaty Biezerstein and Mr. Ker are surely not cor- rect in considering this as so closely allied to O. wmbellatum that they can scarcely point out any distinction, except the hairiness of the leaves. 'The inflorescence seems to me very different, the raceme being almost radical, the pedun- cles much more spreading, and becoming deflexed as the fruit approaches to maturity. It is a native of the Crimea, and was introduced by the Horticultural Society of London, in 1821. In the green- house of our Botanic Garden it flowers in March, and con- tinues in blossom during many successive days. ee Fig. 1. Stamens, 2. Pistil. 3. Section of the Germen.—Magnified. 3078. ¢ eee : pee x wane Je JD Sowerly det? Pabby S Curtis Glazenwood Ef sex. Janel 1831 - CRTs 5 RuHIPSALIS MESEMBRYANTHEMOIDES. FiG- MARIGOLD-LIKE RHIPSALIS. SEK KK KK KEKE EEE KEKE EEE Class and Order. IcosanpR1A Monoeynlia. ( Nat. Ord.—Cacrtez. ) Generic Character. Cal. tubus ovario adherens, levis ; limbus superus 3—6- partitus brevis, dentibus acuminatis membranaceis. Pet. 6, oblonga, patula, calyci inserta. Stam, 12—18, petalis affixa. Stylus filiformis. Stigmata 3—6, patula. Bacca pellucida, subrotunda, calyce marcescente coronata. Semina intra pulpam nidulantia, exalbuminosa, radicula embryonis: crassa, cotyled. 2 brevibus obtusis.—Frutices pseudo-para- sitict super arbores Ins. Caribearum orti, sepius pendulr aphylli ramosi teretes nudi aut setas minimas subf gerentes, fasciculis tune ordine spirali quincuncialt dispo sitis. Flores laterales sessiles parvi albi. Bacce (fe Visci) albe pellucide. DC. Specific Character and Synonyms. Ruresatis * mesembryanthemoides; glomerato-ramosa, ra- mis erectis teretibus strictis articuliferis, articulis late- ralibus confertis teretibus utrinque attenuatis nebu- losis medio floriferis, fasciculis setarum capillacearum albis pallidis demum mortuisve nigris, floribus soli- tariis. D C. : IPSALIS mesembryanthemoides. Haw. Revis. p. 71. De Cand. Prodr. v. 4. p. 476. atts salicornoides, 8. Haw. in Suppl. Pl. Succ. p. 83. Descr. a - —— * From pub, a willow-branch, in allusion to the long flexible stems and branches, Descr. Plant easily cultivated in earth, but evidently a parasite, like its congeners. Stems woody, covered, as well as the branches, (which send out roots from different points,) with greyish bark, rough with the scars of fallen leaves and with scattered black spines.. Branches woody, clus- tered, densely covered with fleshy, oblong, nearly cylin- drical joints (leaves?), which are sprinkled with minute dots, and with fascicles of slender black spines. Flowers solitary, from the middle of a joint, large, white, inferior in size only to those of R. grandiflora. Fruit a white Berry, smaller than that of R. Cassytha. Christy MSS. A native, as are most of the Cacrus family, of South America, and first described by A. H. Haworrn, Esq., who has for many years paid the most devoted attention to the study of succulent 6 seek That gentleman, however, had not seen the blossoms, which were produced in the stove of our valued friend, W. Curisty, Esq. Clapham Road, London, in the month of March, 1831. For the drawing of this and the two following species, we ' are indebted to the accurate pencil of Mr. J. D. Sow=ERBY. Fig. 1. Flower. 2. Stamen. 3. Pistil.—Muagnified. > & SCurtis Clazen wood Bfsese.Jane 11851. LD Sowerby del 4h by ( 3079 ) - RAIPSALIS FASCICULATA. CLUSTER=BRANCHED R#IPSALIS. SKK EEK EEK EK KKEEE EK Class and Order. Icosanpria Monoeynia. ( Nat. Ord.—Cacrez. ) Generic Character. ~ Cal. tubus ovario adherens, levis ; limbus superus 3—6- partitus brevis, dentibus acuminatis membranaceis. Pet. 6, oblonga, patula, calyci inserta. Stam. 12—18, petalis affixa. Stylus filiformis. Stigmata 3—6, patula. Bacca pellucida, subrotunda, calyce marcescente coronata. Semina intra pulpam nidulantia, exalbuminosa, radicula embryonis: crassa, cotyled. 2 brevibus obtusis.—Frutices pseudo-para- sitict super arbores Ins. Caribearum orti, sepius penduli aphylli. ramosi teretes nudi aut setas minimas subfalcatas gerentes, fasciculis tunc ordine spiralt guincunciali dispo- sitis. Flores laterales sessiles parvt albi. Bacce (fere Visci) albe pellucide. DC. Specific Character and Synonyms. Ruipsauis fasciculata; pendula, ramis teretibus fasciculatis, pilis cum fasciculis ordine quincunciali iraliter ser- vatis secus ramos juniores. De Cand. Prodr. v. 3. p. 476. Rurpsauis fasciculata. Haw. Suppl. Pl. Succul. p. 83. Rauresauis parasitica. Haw. . Pl. Succ. p. 187. Cacrus fasciculatus. Willd. Enum. Suppl. p. 33. Cactus parasiticus. Lam. Dict. v. 1. p. 541. De Cand. Pl. Gras. t. 59. a See Descr. Plant parasitical ; but growing well in a pot of Soil. Branches springing many together in a —_ ase and more abundantly from near the root, cylindrical, pen- dulous, rather thicker than a goose-quill, with many dots or scars, especially on the younger branches, and these dots are placed beneath a slight protuberance : they each bear a fascicle of fine hair-like spines. When the branches are young these spines are white, and very soft : but in a more advanced state, they are very conspicuous, and of a deep black colour. On the older branches, however, they are less perceptible. The extremities of the branches are also furnished with a tuft of similar spines. Flowers rarely pro- duced, and few on a plant, confined to the main branches, greenish-white. Petals about six. Stigmas two-lobed, the lobes spreading, hairy. Fruit a Berry, similar to that of R. Cassytha. Christy MSS. Mr. Curisty, to whom I am indebted for the opportunity of figuring the present species of Rurpsauis, observes, that he received the plant from Mr. Hoop along with the follow- ing, and that he believes it to be a native of Brazil. It flowered in March, 1831, for the first time, and, may pro- bably, another season, bear more copious blossoms. | The fruit-bearing plant is represented by M. De Can- DOLLE, in the “ Plantes Grasses’ above quoted. Fig. 1. Flower. 2. Stamens. 3, Part of the Style with its two-lobed Stigma :—magnified. ff Aub. by 8. Curtis blazenwood Efyex. June 11831. “ ID Sowerby del? Ruipsauis CassytHa. NAKED RauipsaLis. KEKE REE EEK KEKE EERE Class and Order. IcosanpriA Monoeynia. ~ ( Nat. “Ord.—Cacrez. ) Generic Character. Cal. tubus ovario adherens, levis ; limbus superus 3—6- partitus brevis, dentibus acuminatis membranaceis. Ped. 6, oblonga, patula, calyci inserta. Stam. 12—18, petalis affixa. Stylus filiformis. Stigmata 3—6, patula. Bacca pel- Z lucida, subrotunda, calyce marcescente coronata. Semina _ Intra pulpam nidulantia, exalbuminosa, radicula embryonis _ €fassa, cotyled. 2 brevibus obtusis.—Frutices pseudo-para- _ silict super arbores Ins. Caribearum orti, sepius penduli — Dphylli ramosi teretes nudi aut setas minimas subfalcatas ‘ rs erentes, fasciculis tunc ordine spirali quincunciali dispo- _ Sts. Flores laterales sessiles parvi albi. Baccwe (fere _ Visci) albe pellucide. DC. ee ae Specific Character and Synonyms. Ruupsaris Cassytha ; pendula, ramis verticillatis nudis gla- bris, calyce 4—6-partito, petalis 4—6. Rurpsatis Cassytha. Gaertn. Fr. v. 2. p. 136. t. 28. Haw. Syn. Succ. Pl. p. 186. Hook. Ex. Fl. t. 2. (ear. Hook- | stra DC.) De Cand. Rev. des Cact. t. 21. (var. ~ Mociniana.) Prodr. v. 3. p. 476. : Cactus pendulus. Sw. Fl. Ind. Occ. p. 876. Willd. Sp. pts. 2. p. 942. Ait. Hort. Kew. ed. 2. v. 3. p. 178. reng. Syst. Veg. v. 2. p. 496. Cactus Mesias, &c. Browne’s Jam. p. 238. a =... _ _ Descr. A parasite, but flourishing in a pot of common — Soil in the scones Stem more woody than in R. grandi- flora, covered with a greyish bark. Branches smooth, — ‘ green, — green, cylindrical, obtuse at their extremities, the older ones almost truncated. Smaller branches mostly alternate, sometimes opposite, the extremities of the main branches generally terminating in a sort of whorl of from three to six smaller ones. The branches are studded with irregu- larly placed dots or scars, whence the flowers, and, occa- sionally, young shoots are produced. Each of these scars is furnished with a very minute and hardly perceptible spinule, in other respects the branches are entirely naked. Flowers sessile, greenish -white, most abundant on the alternate ramules. Petals five. Stamens numerous. Stig- mas generally three-, sometimes four-cleft. Fruit a semi- transparent, white, pulpy Berry. Seeds numerous, black, apparently in three cells. Christy MSS. This is an old inhabitant of our stoves, readily cultivated, flowering freely in February and March, and, as Mr. Curisty observes, (from whose collection our figure was made,) when covered with ripe fruit in April, it bears a considerable resemblance to a plant of Misseltoe. The number of divisions to the calyx, the number of petals and lobes to the stigma are evidently variable. ————— Fig. 1. Portion of a Flower, the Petals heing removed. 2. Flower. 3. Stigma—Magnified. Swan Se Pab by §. Curtis Glagen wood Essex July 1I8H1. ( 3081 ) CoLUMNEA HIRSUTA. Hatry CoLUMNEA. SEEK Class ial Order. Dipynami1A ANGIOSPERMIA. ( Nat. Ord.—GesnErRIAceEz. ) Generic Character. . Cal. profunde 5-fidus. Cor. tubulosa, curvata, limbo, bilabiato, labio superiore fornicato, inferiore 3-fido, laci- niis divaricatis. Anthere connexe. Capsula subbaccata, unilocularis, polysperma, receptaculis 2 parietalibus. - Specific Character and ‘Synonyms. Cotumyea * hirsuéu ; foliis ovatis acutiusculis crenato-ser- ratis superne hirtis, laciniis calycinis denticulatis lan- ceolatis corollisque hirsutis. Conumnea hirsuta. Swartz, Fl. Ind. Occ. v. 2. p. 1080. . Willd. Sp. Pl. v. 3. p. 396. Ait. Hort. Kew. ed. 2. v4. p. 68. Spreng. Syst. Veget. v. 2. p. 342. _ Actumenrs major, &c. Browne, Jam. p. 270. t. 30. f. 3. ~ Rapuncunus fruticosus, &c. Sloane, Jam. v. 1. p. 58. p. 100. 7.1. a Descr. Stem suffrutescent and climbing, according to x Swarrz, branched, branches thick, obtusely quadrangular, _ pubescenti-scabrous, the extremities soft tn ee ea | eaves opposite, each pair generally unequal in size, tiree to four ilies long, ities on bier short, thick footstalks, fleshy, ovate, rather acute, with a strong midrib and several lateral veins, the margins crenato-serrate, the upper side _ ‘Sark green and hairy, the lower pale green, wit at ag airs, a s 2 ._ Named in compliment to Fasrus Conumna, an Italian Botanist of the “ixteenth century. ; VOL. y. H hairs, and those mostly confined to the midrib and nerve, and appressed. Flowers from the axils of the superior leaves, large, handsome; solitary or two together. Pedun- cles nearly an inch long, red, they are mostly declined, so that the flowers appear under the stem and leaves. Calyx altogether inferior, very hairy, often streaked with about five red lines, the tube subglobose, the laciniz linear-lan- ceolate, laciniated or toothed at the margin, three outer and two inner, these almost close over the mouth of the tube when the corolla is removed. Corolla three inches long, tubular, curved, the mouth oblique ; gibbous at the base above, bright red, streaked with yellow, and yellow on the underside, velvety with numerous hairs, two-lipped, the lip (in this species being much the largest,) trifid, the two lateral segments entire, linear, recurved, the middle one large, convex, bifid; the lower lip of one reflexed, linear piece. Stamens four, didynamous; the stamens curved inwards, so as to bring the anthers close, when they combine and form apparently one piece. Germen superior, ovate, silky, with a thick, bifid, fleshy gland at the base above. Style curved, filiform, white, pubescent, glandular upward, nearly as long as the corolla: Stigma detlexed, with a small, transverse furrow. The fruit I have not seen : but the more advanced germens scarcely indicate that it will be a berry: they are one-celled, with two opposite, parietal receptacles, covered with numerous obovate ovules, each upon a short stalk. This Corumyea has been very coarsely figured by SLOANE, and a representation of the flower is given by Browne in his History of Jamaica. But, although introduced into our stoves by the Marquis of Rockingham upwards of fifty years ago, according to the Hortus Kewensis, it has not yet appeared in any of our modern Botanical periodical publi- cations. I was, then, much gratified at receiving in March of the present year, a fine flowering specimen from Messrs. Suepuerps of Liverpool. The plant was sent from Jamaica by Mr. Wizes, where, according to Swarrz, it inhabits rocks, and grows about the roots of trees, in shady moun- tain woods. J eT Fig. 1. Anthers and upper portion of the Filaments. 2. Base of the Corolla. 3. Calyx including the Pistil. 4, Pistil. 5. Section of the Ger- men :—more or less magnified. 3082, a 4 5 “tia WiLddel? Pub by §Cartis Glazenwood Essex tmylI83l. ( 3082 ) DroseERA BINATA. FORKED-LEAVED SUN-DEW. Class and Order. PENTANDRIA PENTAGYNIA. ( Nat. Ord.—Droseracez. ) Generic Character. Sepala petalaque 5, inappendiculata. Stam. 5. Styli 3—5, bipartiti—Herbe tn uliginosis sphagnosis crescentes. Folia cilits glandulosis rubidis writabilibus ornata. Specific Character and Synonyms. Drosera * binata ; acaulis, foliis longe petiolatis profunde bipartitis lobis linearibus, stylis capillaceo-multifidis. Drosera binata. Labill. Nov. Holl. v. 1. t. 105. p. 78. De Cand. Syst. Veget. v. 1. p. 319. Spreng. Syst. Veget.v. 1. p. 956. Descr. Root perennial, of a few stout, descending, branched fibres. Leaves all of them radical, five to six inches or more long (including the petiole) deeply bipar- tite, with two spreading, linear-acuminate lobes, fringed at the margin, and clothed on the upper surface with copious hairs, tipped with red, viscid glands. Petioles very long, terete, glabrous. Scape longer than the leaves, terete, reddish at the base, glabrous, bearing a few-flowered co- rymb. Pedicels glabrous. Calyx four- to five-partite. Petals four or five, large, obovate, waved, yellowish at the base. Stamens four or five. Filaments subulate. Anthers Cordate, deep orange. Pistil : Germen subglobose, ~ o —.. bea en From dpococ, dew, the glands of the leaves distilling a viscid, pellucid » resembling dew. to five-lobed. Styles four to five, divided into numerous capillary segments and obtuse stigmas. A native of Van Diemen’s Isle, according to Lasiizar- DIERE: but in 1823, it sprung up among some earth im- ported from New Holland to the Royal Gardens at Kew, whence a drawing, taken from the specimen that flowered there, was kindly communicated by W. T. Arron, Esq. There can be no question, but that the other Droserz of New South Wales, and the still more showy ones of the Cape of Good Hope, may be safely introduced to our gardens, if the seeds be kept in moist earth during the voyage: and they would prove a most valuable acquisition to our collections. Fig. 1. Petal. 2. Stamen. 3. Stamens and Pistil. 4. Style and Stigmas: magnified. 3083. = ( 2 a W.JIH delt iz Swan Se Pab by 8.Cartis Glazenwoed Essex Jaly 1831, | ( 3083) FRITILLARIA LEUCANTHA. WHITE-FLOWERED FRritituary. KEKE KEKE EKER KEKE KEEESE Class and Order. Hexanpria Monoeynia. ( Nat. Ord.—Tuutpracez. ) Generic Character. Cor. 6-petala, basi nectarifera. Semina compressa mar- ginata. Spr. Specific Character and Synonyms. Frivinnuaria * leucantha ; ceaule paucifloro, floribus axilla- ribus terminalibusque solitariis, foliis infimis oppositis ovatis apice attenuatis obtusiusculis multinerviis, supe- rioribus verticillatis lineari-lanceolatis’ carinatis apice cirrhosis. < Fritittartaleucantha. Graham MSS. Impertauis leucantha. Fischer MSS. eee Descr. Bulb round, lobed, covered with a thick brown coat, which separates in large fragments, splitting all along the furrows between the lobes. Stem simple. Leaves (three to four inches long) bright green, or slightly glau- cous, somewhat crowded about the middle of the stem, the lowest pair opposite, many-nerved, without a conspi- cuous middle rib, ovate, tapering towards the apex, which israther blunt; the others more or less perfectly whorled, linear-lanceolate, few- (three to five-) nerved, nearly flat in front, and with a strong middle-rib behind, extended at the apex into a simple cirrhus. Flowers solitary, axillary or - . terminal, ke T a di i rding to Sir a dice-box, but which most authors, acco ) me a chess-board, to which the tessellated flowers terminal, nodding, white, at the base externally green, and within at the base, sprinkled with small purplish spots. Petals tipped with a green, callous, slightly pubescent apex, the three outer ones ovate, the three inner ones obo- vate and broader, all gibbous on the outside near the base, and there, on the inside, each having a round, green, con- spicuous pit, containing honey. Stamens included; fila- ments straight, white, collected together in the centre of the flower; Fig. 1. Front view of a Flower. 2. Labellum. 3. Column. 4. Anther. 5. Pollen-Masses.—Magnified. WJIH delt Pub by S.Curtis Glazenwood Esseae Jaly] 1831 . ; («3087 » FaRseTIA LUNARIOTDES. LUNARIA-LIKE ae -Farsetia. Se ie Si a es as a Class and Order. TETRADYNAMIA SILICULOSA. ( Nat. Ord.—Crucirers. ) Generic Character. Silicula sessilis, ovalis aut orbiculata, valvis planis. Semina alata. Calyx basi bisaccatus. Petala integra. Specific Character and Synonyms. Farsetra * lunarioides; caulibus suffruticosis adscenden- tibus, foliis spathulatis petiolatis siliculisque tomen- tosis incanis. Br. Farseria lunarioides. Br. in Hort. Kew. ed. 2. v. 4. p. 96. De Cand. Prodr. v. 1. p. 157. Spreng. Syst. Veget. v. 2. p. 870. : Atyssum lunarioides. Willd. Sp. Pl. v. 3. p. 461. Lunaria greca. “ Willd. Enum. v. 2. p. 67 6. Lunaria fruticosa, perennis, incana, Leucoii folio. Tournef: It. ed. Angl. v. 1. p. 189. eum Ie. . ‘emeee je Descn. Stems nearly a foot high, perennial, and throw- lag out many shoots from near the base where the plant is Suffruticose and purplish : the rest herbaceous, pubescenti- Irsute. Leaves numerous at the base and spathulate, those of the stem oblong-obtuse, waved, and somewhat Sinuate, hoary with stellated down on both sides. Flowers dense corymbs, moderately large, extending gradually as the fruit ripens into a lax raceme. Pedicels two to pee nes — s -. * Named in compliment to Paixip Farseti, a Venetian Botanist. lines long, downy, without bracteas. Calyx of four erect, elliptical, concave leaves, pale green, hirsute, scareely sac- cate at the base. Petals bright yellow, oblongo-obovate, retuse, with a claw nearly equal in length with the border, which latter is patent and even recurved. Stamens: Fila- ments subulate, the shorter ones with an obtuse tooth in the inside near the middle : Anthers oblong, greenish. Pistil: Germen oblongo-cylindrical, densely clothed with white hairs : Style a quarter of the length of the germen: Stigma _ capitate, papillose, yellow. Pouch elliptical, compressed, hoary. Septum complete. Cells two- to four-seeded. Seeds large, flat, with a broad, membranous ring. Cotyle- dons accumbent. ; This plant is a native of the Greek Archipelago, and was introduced to our gardens, where (in England at least) it is treated as a hardy perennial, by Mr. Pu. Mitrer, in 1731. The specimen here figured is from the Glasgow Botanic Garden, where, sheltered by a frame in winter it produces its bright coloured blossoms in March and April, _ and those again are succeeded by the numerous and large seed-vessels. | _ Tournerorr has figured this plant in his Voyage to the Levant, and his account of its discovery is admirably de- scriptive of his own botanical enthusiasm. ‘ The 22d of September,” he says, “ as we passed close by Caloyero, an ugly rock twelve miles from Amorgos, the master of our vessel would needs climb one of its sharp points to take some young falcons out of the nest. We did not dare to follow him. This man not only knew how to run up the shrouds, but would scale the steepest rocks with surprising agility. We desired him to bring us all the plants he could light on, assuring him we would willingly resign to him our share of the falcons. He accordingly brought us some eee which we could have preferred to all the Birds of “aradise in Arabia. The description of one of these beau- tiful plants take as follows. Lunarta fruticosa, &c.” Voy: ed. Angl. v. 1. p. 188. | ad Fig. 1. Root-leaf: nat. size. 2. Flower, 3. Stamens and Pistil. 4. One of the shorter Stamens. 6. Silicula (nat. size.) 7. Seed. § Embryo: —all but fig. 1 and 6 magnified. WJ Hf del? Py Curits Glazenwood Kfsex dug Ids. Swan Se. i} p E Ee. ( 3088 ) XMANTHOCHYMUS DULCIS. SWEET-FRUITED . X ANTHOCHYMUS. KEREEEEEEEERE EERE RIE Class and Order. PoLyADELPHIA PoLyANDRIA. ( Nat. Ord —GurttTiFERz. ) Generic Character. Cal. 5-partitus ineequalis imbricatus. Cor. 5-petala ovato-rotunda.. Nectaria 5 petalis opposita. Stam, 15—20 altissime 5-delpha petalis alterna ; Anthere oblonge. Stylus brevissimus. Stigma 5-lobum, longum, patulum. acca maxima pericarpio luteo coriaceo. Sem. 3—4.— Arbor foliis lineari-lanceolatis acutis oppositis integris pe- tiolatis ; flores fasciculati laterales pedunculati, DC. | Specific Character and Synonyms. Xantuocuymus * dulcis; polygama, foliis oblongis, floribus lateralibus fasciculatis, corollis globosis, fructibus ova- libus obtusis. Roxb. % soe Xantuocuymus dulcis. Roxb. Pl. of Corom. v. 3. p. 66. 1270: ’ hy a lee _Descr. A small tree with a straight trunk and oppo- site, glabrous branches; green and cylindrical in the feat shoots. Leaves opposite, six inches and more in ength, oblong, more or less acuminated, coriaceous, entire, glabrous, bright green, glossy, dark above and penni- nerved, beneath paler, and veiny. Petiole short, thick. ers in fascicles, from the joints of a former year’s shoot, and where the leaves have fallen away. Peduncles scarcely longer than the flowers. Calyx of three or i rathe a... ———— oe Easbos, yellow, and Xvuos, juice, from the colour of the juice of the VOL. Vv, I — rather small, unequal, rounded, and somewhat imbricating leaves. Corolla of five petals, erect and very concave, so as to connive in a globular form, cream-coloured, almost white. Bundles of stamens five, erect, each of five filaments, © free at the extremity, and each terminated by a two-celled, rounded, mostly abortive, anther. Alternating with the five bundles of stamens, are five rounded, and somewhat tuber- cled glands. Pistil: Germen globose, tapering upwards into a short style, terminated by a large stigma of five — spreading, obtuse, stellated rays. The fruit is, according to Dr. Roxsures, a rounded or oval berry, of the size of an apple, smooth and bright yellow, with copious yellow pulp, five-celled, and five-seeded, or fewer by abortion. These seeds are large, oblong, acute, with a distinct broad yellow hilum. Integument reticulated. A large portion of the pulp, of a more agreeable taste than the rest of the fruit, is attached to the seed. Albumen hard, fleshy. In the month of February, of the present year, (1831,) Mr. Marnocx was so obliging as to send to me, from Mrs. Beaumont’s noble collection at Bretton Hall, the speci- men here figured of the Xanruocuymus dulcis. ‘“ Our plant,” he says, “is now about ten feet high, and is loaded with not less than two hundred flowers and young fruit, which latter have every prospect of coming to perfection.” The seeds bad been transmitted to Mrs. Beaumont by Dr. Watticu, from the Calcutta Botanic Garden, where it was introduced by Dr. Roxgureu, from the Molucca Islands, as a supposed species of Mangosteen. The fruit appears to be palatable and good. Dr. Roxsuren’s plants, at the Calcutta Garden, at eight years old, were not larger than the one which flowered at Bretton Hall. ———— Fig. 1. Flower. 2. Petal, nat. size. 3. Stamens and Gland. 4, Section of Pistil, magnified. 5. Fruit; and 6, Section of do. nat. size (copied from Dr. Roxpurén’s Plate), 5088 Cy vit) 4) gram °° Pub. by §.Curtis, Glazenwoed Essex fag SL 1851 HIE del? “uta: BOBS) ys. OLEA UNDULATA. WaAvVY-LEAVED FRAGRANT } Care OLIVE. KKK KEKE EEK EEE EEE EEK Class and Order. Dianpria Monoeynia. ( Nat. Ord.—O.ernez. ) Generic Character. Cal. 4-dentatus. Cor. 4-fida (raro nulla). Stylus 2- fidus. Drupa baccata, putamine osseo, l-sperma. Spreng. Specific Character and Synonyms. _ Otea * undulata ; foliis oblongis utrinque acuminatis un- : dulatis subtus pallidioribus, paniculis terminalibus re- ‘ petitim trichotomis, ramis verrucosis. ae ~Orea undulata. Jacg. Hort. Schoenbr. v. 1. p. 1. t. 2. Spreng. Syst. Veget. v. 1. p. 34. Lodd. Bot. Cab. t. 379. a Otea laurifolia. Lam. Ill. v. 1. p. 29. - Oxea capensis. (@.) Ait. in Hort. Kew. ed. 2. v. 1. p. 21. Roem. et Sch. Syst. Veget. v. 1. p. 70. ‘Cites. Descr. With us, cultivated in the greenhouse, this rises with a tree-like stem, to the height of eight or nine feet, with many spreading branches, which are rough, with scat- tered warts; the young shoots green, and all of them gla- | brous. Leaves opposite, petiolate, three or four inches long, coriaceous, oblong, attenuated at each extremity, wavy, dark green above, paler beneath, quite glabrous. Petioles from half to three-fourths of an inch long, rounded, flattish above. Panicles terminal, somewhat thyrsoid, re- ‘ peatedly th 2 ~ Yaaia, of the Greeks, from Asios, smooth, in allusion to the nature of AE oul, te Somarau divided in a trichotomous manner, with the ranches four-sided, glabrous, very pale green. Pedicels with minute bractez at their base. Flowers numerous, white, very fragrant, small. Calyx minute, yellowish- white, four-toothed. Corolla rotate, deeply four-lobed, the lobes spreading or recurved. Stamens two, inserted opposite to each other in the sinus of the lobes. Anthers deep orange. Pistil pale green ; Germen globose. Style shorter than the stamens. Stigma globose. This is a native of the Cape of Good Hope, where it appears to form a tree, yielding a wood so hard, that the Dutch colonists, according to Mr. Burcuext, call it Yzer- hout, (or Iron-wood,) which they esteem for making the poles of their waggons as but little inferior to the Hassa- gay-wood (Curtisia faginea). It is a very desirable green- house plant; for after it has attained a certain age, tt blossoms freely in the early spring, the flowers continue for a long period, and are exceedingly fragrant. Some Botanists are of opinion, that this is only a variety of Ores capensis, (figured in the Bot. Register, t. 613.) ; but the leaves are less rigid, longer, and vastly more acu- minated at both extremities, and the flowers are smaller. — ——— Fig. 1. Flowers.—Magnijfied. MELOCACTUS ComMUNIS. GREATER 'TURK’S Car MeEton-TuistTLe. KKK EEK KEE EEE KEKE EEE Class and Order. ‘IcosaNDRIA Monoeynia. ( Nat. Ord.—Cacrez. ) Generic Character. — Calycis tubus ovario adherens, lobi 5—6-petaloidei fruc- tum juniorem coronantes. Petala totidem cum petalis in tubum cylindraceum longe concreta. Stam. filiformia plu- riserialia, Stylus filiformis. Stigma 5-radiatum. Bacca levis calycis et corolla lobis marcescentibus coronata. Semina nidulantia. Cotyledones minime. Plumula sub- _globosa maxima.—Suffrutices carnosi reg. caudice aphyllo _ simplici rotundato, sulcis profundis et costis verticalibus al- _ ternantibus. Coste tuberculis confluentibus in apice fasei- ¢culi aculeorum insignite. Spadix seu Cephalium terminale _ cylindraceum tuberculis mammeformibus confertissims to- _ Mentosis et setiferis constans, flores in tomento subimmersos _ $ub apice gerens. DC. ee ; Specific Character and Synonyms. ~ Metocacrus * communis; ovatus seu subrotundus atro- -__-Virens 12—20-angulatus, costis rectis, spinis fascicu- __ latis fuscis subequalibus. bs ~ (a.) subrotundus. Link et Otto, Diss. de Cact. 1827. t. 11. _ De Cand. Diss. de Cact. 6. Prodr. v. 3. p. 460. Cacrus melocactus. Linn. Sp. Pl. p. 666. De Cand. PI. - Grass. t. 112. Willd. Sp. Pl. v. 2. p. 938. Haw. Syn. _ Pl. Succ. p. V3. Dict. des Sc. Nat., cum Ic. Spreng. Syst. Veget. 0. 2. p. 494. 23 (8.) ovatus. (Tab. nostr. 3090. ) ' Descr. —S * From Melo, a Melon, and Cactus; signifying Melon-shaped Cactus. Descr. This curious plant forms a succulent mass, twelve or fifteen inches high, and ten inches in diameter ; in the generality of our specimens, of a dark and rather lurid green colour, ovate in form, cut into from twelve to twenty deep furrows, and as many rather acute angles, which are armed with a regular series of stellated spines, about five in number (exclusive of lesser aculei or bristles); and of these five, the three lower ones are the largest. They scarcely exceed three lines in length, and are of a dusky brown colour. On the summit of this large, ovate, leafless stem, is a cylindrical crown, not half the breadth of the stem, and from three to five inches in height, composed externally of innumerable reddish-brown, compact, rigid, acicular bristles; and within, of a mass of a pale, whitish, cotton-like substance. The upper half exhibits some transverse lines, which appear to indicate a periodical growth. In the summit of these, the flowers are produced, and half imbedded. They are small, red, fleshy, cylindrical, or a little swollen below; above, divided into a number of spreading and subreflexed narrow segments : the caly and corolla being combined into one perianth. Anthers numer- ous, sessile, inserted upon the throat of the perianth. Germen inferior, oval. Style reaching to the mouth of the perianth, and there dividing into six or seven filiform styles. Fruit, a small oval, red berry, containing numerous small, black, shining seeds. The noble Cactus here figured differs from Mr ocactus of authors in its truly ovate, not rounded and somewhat de- pressed, form; and it may perhaps be deemed worthy to con- stitute a distinct species. It has many times been imported from the island of St. Kitt’s, to the Glasgow Botanic Gardens by Capt. Mac Arruur. It grows in very dry and barren places, often on bare porous rocks, into which its tortuose roots pene- trate, if they do not derive nutriment from it. Its increase size is very slow. The inhabitants of St. Kitt’s have observed plants for a long period of years to make no apparent progress, and tradition estimates the age of some of them at from two to three hundred years. When the head is by any accident broken off, a cluster of new Cacruszs springs up from the wound, an by removing and planting these, the plant may be increased. Care must be taken that the pots be well drained, for this specles 1s very impatient of moisture. De CanpouteE mentions a var. “ oblongus ” of Link and OTT0, but that is described as being only six inches high, and three and a half broad ; whereas our’s reaches a gigantic size, and is always elongated. From Jamaica, we have lately received a MELo- cactus, with a comparatively small, rounded, and depressed stem, which is probably the M. communis, 2, of De CAND. and the **'Turk’s Caps” of Soaneg, and which in the Windward Islands, we are told in the Dictionnaire des Sciences Nat. have rece!¥ the name of “ Englishmen’s Heads.” —<——— A. Mexocactus communis, reduced to one-third of its nat. size- Fig. 2 - Flower. 2. The same, laid open to show the Style and Stamens.—Magnifiee gt 5091 Svan WSLH del? Pub. by 8.Cartis, Glazenrood Essex Aug*l, 1831. £ 3091 ) - APHANOCHILUS BLANDUS. MILp APHANO- CHILUS. KK EK KKK EEE EKER EE Class and Order. DipynaMiA GYMNOSPERMIA. ( Nat. Ord.—Lax1ara. ) Generic Character. | Cal. subeequalis, 5-dentatus. Cor. tubo calycem equante, breviter 4-fida, lobo superiori suberecto subconcavo emar- ginato, inferioribus patentibus. Stam. 4, sepius exserta, distantia. Antherarum loculi divergentes vel divaricati, demum confluentes, Benth. av pee Specific Character and Synonyms. Apnanocurius* blandus ; canescens, foliis oblongis utrinque -attenuatis, verticillastris secundis laxé spicatis, spicis paniculatis. Benth. fy eee ee Apuanocuiivs blandus. Benth. in Wall. Pl. Asiat. Rar. 1. | p. 29. b, _ Mewrna blanda. Wall. MSS. ann. 1821. non DC. Perini elata. Don, Prod. Fl. Nepal. p. 115. =e Descr. Whole plant hoary, with short, very soft and transparent hairs, and yielding a slightly aromatic smell, especially the spike, on account of the great abundance of glands on the calyces, corollas, and bractes. Stem two to three feet high, erect as well as the branches, quadrangular, furrowed on each face, and slightly thickened at each divi- Sion. Leaves about three inches long, narrowed and acu- minate =—.... eee % From a, not, gaww, to appear, and xs, 4 lip, from the imperfeetly lips of the corolla. minate at the apex, the margins furnished with broad serratures, intermixed with others smaller, entire, and nar- rowed at the base into a petiole about half an inch long, nearly glabrous'on the upper surface, hoary and dotted underneath, with prominent and hairy midrib and nerves; the upper leaves smaller, narrower, and more entire, often bearing only one or two deep indentures, the floral leaves perfectly entire. Spikes slender, three to six inches lon semicylindrical, Fascicles of flowers approximate, secund, containing each about twenty minute, blue flowers. Bracteas subulate. Calyx nearly cylindrical, pubescent, with five linear teeth. Corolla twice as long as the calyx, pubescent, with resinous dots inside. Upper lobe emarginate, lateral ones slightly reflexed, lower one concave. Stamens distant, ao projecting beyond the mouth of the corolla. Wall. This plant was first introduced by Dr. Watticu into the Botanic Garden of Calcutta in the year 1819, from seeds sent from Nepal under the name of Nurcuoo by the Hon. Epwarp Garpyer. From thence Dr. Waxuicn sent seeds to the Royal Gardens at Kew, which produced the specimen here figured. A species closely allied to this, but differing in its shorter and broader leaves, cylindrical spikes, and strong smell, has been also sent to this country by Dr. Watticu, and described in the Transactions of the Horti- cultural Society, and figured by Professor Dg CanpoLle (Pl. Rar. Hort. Genev. p. 23. t. 8.) under the same name of Menrua blanda. As far as can be ascertained from the figure itself, it appears to have been taken from the A. oe (Benru. in |. c.) or Menrua fatens (Waxt. MSS.). nd —— Fig. 1. Flowers, 2. Single Flower :—More or less magnified. S ~~ Ss s &, S s bt 5 iB $ = & 8 8 t& Ss Pith by § Cartis ARRACACIA ESCULENTA. EATABLE - ARRACACHA. Seeker Class and Order. J wo we | ee - Penranpria Dieynta. Ms, SS : i hin hh. 5 4 pe ( Nat: Ord.—UnpeLiirer2. a oh i? on 1 Slr Bye ster te, Generic Character._, shia _ Aracacia. Bancr. Calycis margo obsoletus. Pet.lance-— olata aut ovata integra, acumine inflexo supra mervyum medium frenatum. Styli erectiusculi (‘‘ demum diyer- gentes’”’) basi dilatati. Fructus oblongus a latere com- bressus. Mericarpia jugis 5-equalibus levibus, laterali- bus marginantibus. Vitée nulle.—Involucrum o aut ee hyllum. Involucella subwnilateralia 2—8 setacea. Flores olygami, radii hermaphroditi, disct mascult aut imperfecti. Specific Character and Synonyms. Arracacia* esculenta ; foliis pinnatis, pinnis pinnatifidis_ _ incisis serratis lobis acuminatis, fructus jugis obtusis. — Arracacia esculenta. De Cand. Prodr. »v. 4. p. 244. Arracacia xanthorhiza. Bancroft m Trans. of Agr. & Hort. Soc. Jam. ithe ee Contum Arracacha. Hook. Exot. Fl. t. 152. (excl. Syn. Conn maculati, Humb.?) ikea: é (cass “ ti _Descr. Root annual, fleshy, itself a tuber, of a large Size, yellow or white, and bearing several knobs or other tubers on the outside. These latter are of two sorts ; the _ One kind, comparatively small, p oceeds from the upper - Surface or crown of the root, inclining upwards, gives oft Piensa 8 —__===:"'_ * So called, from the Indian name of the plant. each several germs or shoots towards the top, and is marked about the base with horizontal rings, bearing there mem- branous sheaths, which gradually wither away :—the other or larger and edible sort, grows on the outside and below those just mentioned, to the number of eight to ten, besides small ones, and descend into the earth ; the largest measures eight or nine inches long, by two, or two anda half inches in diameter, and is nearly of the same circum- ference throughout, tapering off suddenly, and sending out a few sinall fibres at the extremity. Their surface is nearly smooth, and covered with a thin pellicle, marked across with transverse scars, like the roots of carrots. These latter are called “ Hios,” i. e. sons, in Bogota, and are the roots generally brought to table, being more tender and more delicate in flower than the main root, or “ Madre,’ mother. (Bancr.) Stem erect, two to four feet high, glabrous, branched, rounded and striated, green, often streaked with purple. Leaves, those arising from the root, six to nine inches long, (independent of the petiole,) broadly ovate in their circumscription, pinnated with five ovato-acuminate pinne, which are deeply and irregularly pinnatifid, the lower pair almost again pinnated, incised and coarsely serrated, the segments acuminated. The colour is a dark green, shining, paler beneath: the serratures yellowish. Petiole about as long, or longer than the leaf, sheathing and mem- — branous at the base. The stem-leaves are gradually smaller and less compound upwards, alternate, with short petioles, the uppermost ones sessile and opposite. Umbels mostly terminal. Partial umbels small, with small inconspicuous flowers: their Involucre, consisting of from two to eight small setaceous, simple bracteas, mostly on one side of the umbellule. Blossoms of two kinds, those in the centre of the umbel are either altogether imperfect, or they bear stamens only, having a flat disk in the centre. Filaments at first in- curved, purplish. Anthers pale green, at length white. Flow- ers of the circumference on longer pedicels, bearing stamens and pistil. Calyx none. Petals five, (as in the male flower, erect, not spreading in our specimens, oval, with an incurv point, and an elevated line, or frenum within, of a brow ish-purple colour. The fruit I have only seen imperfect, but apparently fully formed: it is oblong, laterally com pressed, each carpel (or mericarp of DEcaNDOLLE) having tive longitudinal, equal, rather obtuse ribs, which are eve?» not wrinkled as in Contum. The styles are nearly as long as the fruit; erect or slightly diverging dilated at the base: We > We have here given the representation of a plant be- longing to a Natural Order, the Umseirers, possessing, it must be confessed, very few external attractions ; and, in general aspect, the present individual may rank among the least ornamental of its Tribe. But what this plant wants in outward charms, is amply compensated by the utility of its roots, which, in certain parts of South Ame- rica, are no less esteemed than the Potato is among us. In this country, public attention was first directed to the “ Arracacua,” by an account of it published by M. VareAs, a native of Santa Fé, in Kénie and Sis’ “ Annals of Botany,’ about the year 1805.—“ The root,” he says, “yields a food which is prepared in the same manner as potatoes, is grateful to the palate, and so easy of digestion, that it frequently constitutes the chief aliment of the sick. Starch and pastry are made from its fecula ; and the root, reduced to pulp, enters into the composition of. certain fermented liquors, supposed to be efficacious as tonics. In the city of Santa Fé, and, indeed, wherever it can be pro- cured, the Arracacua is as universally used as the potato isin England. The cultivation of this plant requires deep black mould, that will easily yield to the descent of the large vertical roots. It is propagated by planting pieces of the root, in each of which is an eye or shoot ; these acquire, in three or four months, a size sufficient for culi- nary purposes ; though, if permitted to continue six months in the ground, they attain to immense dimensions, without any injury to their flavour. The colour of the root is white, yellow, or purple ; but all the varieties have the same quality. eile “ Like the potato, the Arracacua does not thrive in the hotter regions of the kingdom, for there the roots will not acquire any size, but throw up a great number of stems, or at best, they will be but small and indifferent in flavour. In the countries which are there called temperate, being less hot than those at the foot of the Cordilleras, this Vegetable sometimes succeeds, but never so well as in the elevated region of those mountains, where the medium t is between 58° and 60° of FAHRENHEIT. Here it is that these sorts grow most luxuriantly, and acquire the Most delicious taste.” M. Varcas further remarks, that he was not aware of the existence of this plant in any other part of America than the kingdom of Santa Fé ; and also, that it is not mention- by any American writer except Axcepo, who notices it in in few words, at the end of his Diccionario Geographico- Historico de las Indias Occidentales 6 America. No further mention appears to have been made of this plant in Britain, till the year 1824, when Mr. SuepHerp was so fortunate as to bring an individual into flower in the Botanic Garden of Liverpool, from which I published the figure and description given in the Exotic Flora. A few years previously, the late Baron pr Sack, of Trinidad, had sent roots to the Glasgow Garden, and to that of the Horticultural Society of London, as well as to Liverpool. At the latter place, I believe, alone, it produced flowers, when it soon perished, as did all the other plants that had been imported: and the expectations of cultivators, that this plant might, with due care, hold a similar rank in this country with the potato, were frustrated. ~ In Jamaica, however, my valued friend and correspond- ent, Dr. Bancrort, directed the attention of the public to it, by an interesting memoir, which appeared in the Trans- actions of the Agric. and Hort. Soc. of Jamaica, and which was read before that Society at Kingston, in July, 1825. That gentleman, ever anxious to promote the interests of Science and of humanity, was no sooner made aware of the value of this plant in domestic economy, than, through the medium of Don Francisco Urguinaona, he introduced it to Jamaica. “ Despairing,’”’ he says, “ of succeeding with the culture of these roots in the heart of the city, (Kingston,) I placed them in charge of a very intelligent planter in St. David’s Mountains, Mr. Henry Buresr, and under his fostering care the remaining six throve perfectly ; so that I was enabled in the following year to send young plants of the Arracacna to the Horticultural Society of London, and to His Majesty’s Gardens at Kew, &c. a well as to distribute others to various friends in different parishes, through whose attention this vegetable may now, I trust, be considered as extensively and well establish in this island. It is not for me to speak of the value ° the Arracacua as an esculent ; this will be best shown the course of time. In flavor it appears to me nearly to resemble a mixture of the parsnep with the potato. am aware that not a few of those who have tasted it but once, have not liked it; yet I believe that those who have liked it even on the first trial, are quite as numerous. For my own part, I am inclined to think, that the taste for it may rather be deemed an acquired one; having found with several persons, that its relish improved up’ subsequent subsequent trials. As the root requires a longer applica+ tion of heat than the vegetables in common use, a part of the distaste which has been felt for it, may have been caused by insufficient dressing. At all events, a vegetable, which has, for so many ages been the constant and favourite food of a considerable portion of the population of South Ame- rica, in preference even to the potato, which is there indi- genous, ought not to be thought undeserving of a fair trial in the way of cultivation in Jamaica.” | When the Arracacua had arrived at perfection, Dr. Bancrorr determined it to belong to a new Genus, to which he gave the native name of the plant, with a more euphonious termination, Arracacta, and the species he designated xanthorhiza, to distinguish it from a white and purple-rooted kind, which, however, he afterwards, . I believe, justly deemed to be only a variety: hence Pro- fessor De Canpoxte’s reason for changing it. To Dr. Bancrorr I am indebted for drawings and many details of this plant, as our Garden is for the roots. With these valuable helps, I have been able here to give a more correct figure than that which appeared in the Exotic Flora. Still the fruit is a desideratum ;—neither in Tri- _ Nidad, nor in Jamaica, nor in Britain, have perfect seeds been formed: the fruit has invariably fallen away before the seeds were ripe. The plants increase considerably by the roots; and by removing the offsets from the parent roots, and keeping them through the winter, as the roots of Dahlias are kept, Mr. Murray has found them to vege- tate readily in the Spring, and to succeed in a warm Situation, even in the open air. See Dr. Bancrorr relates the following method of cultivating this plant at Bogota ; which is, after separating the upper tubers, or knobs, from the root, to detach from these the offsets, singly, each with its portion of the substance of the tuber, which is then to be pared smoothly all round at the bottom, the outer leaves being stripped or cut off, so as to leave a sprout from half to two or three inches at the most. fany germs or eyes be seen at the base of the offsets, these must be carefully cut out. Thus prepared, the shoots are Planted in loose mould, in a slanting direction, at distances of fifteen or eighteen inches from each other, whether the ground be level or sloping. Afterwards, at intervals of about two months, the soil ought to be weeded ; and when the plants have attained the height of ten or twelve inches, or whenever they show a disposition to blossom, the ra Ing ding tips should be taken off, as the process of flowering would hinder the root from coming to its greatest size, care being taken not to remove more than the budding extremities, lest the growth of the root should thereby also suffer ; with the same view, any luxuriance in the shoots ought to be prevented, since it must be at the expence of the root. From time to time, and particularly after weeding the ground, fresh mould should be laid round the foot of each plant, to aid likewise in the enlargement of the root. In favourable situations, the Arracacna, I am told, attains its full size in six months. It does not seem to require a rich soil or much moisture ; since here, on a loose but poor soil, in the St. Andrew’s Mountains, where very little rain fell from the time it was planted until it was full grown, it throve and reached maturity in eight months. The soil which suits Yams, appears equally adapted to the Arracacna. In Bogota and Popayan, they obtain a succession of Arracacnas through the whole year, by planting shoots at every decrease of the moon. The root rasped and macerated in water, deposits a fecula, which is in very general use at Bogota, as a light nourishment for the sick, in the same manner as the fecula of the Maranra arundinacea is in Jamaica. In the Exotic Flora, I inclined to an opinion, that the Conium moschatum, of Hums. and Kunru. Nov. Gen. v. 9. P- 14. t. 420, might be the same as our Arracacna ; but the more compound leaves of Humsoxpr’s plant, their more obtuse segments, less deeply serrated, spotted when dry, the much larger umbel, trifid involucre, larger fruit, which is broad at the base, and the divaricating styles, together with the odour of musk, (whereas our plant has the heavy smell of Conrum maculatum,) have induced me to consider it distinct. It is the Arracacta moschata of De CAnpDoLLe. It grows in cold places, in the province of Los Pastos, near Teindala, at an elevation of eight thousand four hundr feet above the level of the sea, where it is called by the natives, Saccharacha; a name not very dissimilar to Ula of our plant. = i rE Fig. 1. Male Flower, young. 2. Stamen from the same. 3. Male Flowet, with Stamens exserted. 4, Female Flower, with a Bractea. 5. Petal. Frui t, immature, 7, Partial Umbel.—All more or less magnified. Pab. by 8. Curtis Glazenweod Essex dng 18d. pwan St. MSH del? C 3093 ) ARBUTUS MUCRONATA. SHARP-POINTED --. ArBuTus. Class and Order. Decannria Monoeynia. ( Nat. Ord.—Enricez. ) Generic Character. Cal. 5-partitus inferus, Cor. urceolata, limbo 5-dentato, reflexo.. Anthere dorso biaristatez. Bacca 6-locularis, pla- centis laminas polyspermas sistentibus. Specific Character and Synonyms. _ Argutus * macronata; caule lignoso diffuso, foliis ovatis cuspidatis denticulato-serrulatis rigidis utrinque niti- dis, pedunculis axillaribus folia subaquantibus brac- teatis 1-floris cernuis. Argutus mucronata. Linn. fil. Suppl. 239. Forst. Com-. ment, Goett. 9. p. 31. Lam. Ill. t. 366. f. 2. Willd. Sp. Pl. v. 2. p. 619. Spreng. Syst. Veget. v. 2. p. 287. eee Descr. Shrub much branched from the root ; branches diffuse, round ; bark brown and cracked, younger branch- es reddish, sparingly pubescent, the hairs flexuose, sub- ulate, arising from red glands, at first white and soon becoming yellow. Leaves (eight lines long, four lines broad) on short petioles, scattered, turned towards the light, flat, naked and shining, dark green in front, pale behind, | coriaceous, with a distinct middle rib, but obscure veins, excepting on the old leaves, which are faintly reticulated, ovate or lanceolato- ovate, denticulato -serrulate, and ter- — minated © Scents * So named from ar, rough or austere, and boise, a bush, in Celtic. minated by a long, rigid bristle. Flowers axillary, solitary, white, nodding. Peduncles pale green, nearly as long as the leaves, sprinkled with reddish pubescence, and having several scattered, appressed, ovate bracteas on their lower half. Calyx naked, white, five-parted ; segments acute. Corolla white, campanulate, rather smaller than that of Convatiaria majalis, somewhat transparent between the calyx-segments, five-toothed, segments reflected. Stamens ten ; filaments cordato-ovate, white, and under a moderately powerful lens appearing rough ; Anthers attached by their backs to the apex of the filament, erect, brown, attenuated at their points, where they open by two pores, bristles very short, erect. Pistil included. Stigma of five, erect points. Style nearly half as long as the whole pistil, erect, cylindrical, pale yellowish-green ; Germen equalling the stamens in length, round, smooth, green. We raised a single plant of this species from seed given us by Mr. Mackay in 1828, which flowered in the Edin- burgh Bot. Garden, May 1830, for the first time. It is stated by Forster, to be a native of the Streights of Ma- gellan. Mr. Macxay’s seeds were received from Mr. An- DERSON, an indefatigable and highly successful cultivator, who has been sent to explore the southern parts of the continent of America, by the establishment at Clapton: but I do not know the exact station where he met with the plant. Graham. ———— Fig. 1. Leaf: nat. size. 2. Flower. 3, 4. Stamens. 5. Apex ofa Cell of the Anther. 6. Pistil—Magnified. BS H. det? Lab. by §.Curtis Glazenwood Essex Ana Z[ssl Swan 8 ( 3094 ) CALCEOLARIA ANGUSTIFLORA. NARROW- FLOWERED SLIPPER-WORT. Class and Order. - Dianpria Monoeynia. ( Nat. Ord.—Scropuutarina. ) Generic Character. Cal. 4-partitus. Cor. bilabiata : labium inferius calcei- forme, inflatum. Caps. semibivalvis: valvulis bifidis. Specific Character and Synonyms. Catcrotaria angustiflora ; caule suffrutescente, ramis dif- fusis purpureo-maculatis foliisque oppositis vel ternatis pedunculatis ovato-oblongis duplicato-serratis pubes- centibus subviscidis, pedunculis axillaribus umbella- tis in paniculo terminali collectis. Carceoraria angustiflora. Ruiz et Pavon, Fl. Peruv. v. 1. p. 17. t. 28. f. a. Spreng. Syst. Veget.v.1.p 47. Descr. Stem scarcely woody, slender, much branched and diffused ; branches green, sprinkled with oblong pur- ple spots, pubescent, hairs spreading. Leaves nearly two inches long and one inch broad, petioled, opposite or ter- nate, ovato-oblong, doubly and unequally inciso-serrated, pubescent on both sides, as well as the branches subviscid, shining and bright green. above, paler below, veined and wrinkled, veins prominent below, channelled above. Pe- duncles axillary, umbellate, forming an oblong panicle at the extremity of the branches, the lower peduncles gene- rally supporting four pedicels, two of which are occasion- ally branched, the upper peduncles with fewer pedicels, or simple ; two bracteas of the structure and form of small leaves, are at the origin of the pedicels, these, as well as the peduncles, pedicels, and calyx, are pubescent and sub - . viscid: | viscid: the whole scarcely exceeding the length of the leaf, in the axil of which they are placed. Calyx four-parted; segments unequal, lanceolate, the upper the broadest. Corolla yellow, upper lip wanting, there being only a scarcely prominent ring, passing round the germen; low- er lip extremely slender, and somewhat pubescent at its origin, turgid below, and closed by a prolongation of its upper edge, turned up and brought into contact with the stigma. Stamens two, having their origin from the lower half of the ring which forms the faux of the corolla ; fila- ments erect. Anthers large, yellow, as in the other species, bilocular with the lobes attached to each other by their ends, and bursting along the front. Pistil rather longer than the stamens; stigma minute ; style somewhat hooked downwards. Germen pubescent, and, as in the other species, conical and furrowed on two sides. The only plant of this species which we possess, was re- ceived from the Botanic Garden of Glasgow, where it was raised from seed communicated from Lima by Mr. Cruck- sHANnKs. In habit and appearance it is very distinct from any of the species already in cultivation, and corresponds with a native specimen that Mr. CrucksHANnKs kindly gave me, as well as with the figure of Ruiz and Pavon, sufficiently to induce me to consider it as illustrative of the form to which these authors applied the specific name that I have adopted. Still, a continued experience of the tendency to produce hybrids which this Genus possesses, renders me more and more sceptical about the title which very appreciable varieties of form have to be consider specifically distinct. In a former number of the Edinburgh Philosophical Journal, I noticed some mule plants, which had been raised by Mr. Garpner, at Grantown, near Edin- burgh, by artificially impregnating some of the most dis- tinguishable kinds of Carceonarta: since that time, the same cultivator has obtained all sorts of mixtures, am blended different species into one another, through an in- finity of gradations. _ | In the figure of Ruiz and Payon, the lip of the corolla is much less turgid than it appears either in the cultivat plant or in my native specimens; but the representations are not always correct in these details, and the station, Canta, assigned by these authors for C. angustiflora, is the sameé.as where Mr. Crucxsnanxs gathered the individ plant that he gave me. Graham. aR . VOL. ¥. ‘ L in length, arising from the base of the bulb, at first thrown out in a horizontal direction, at length from the weight of the flowers quite pendulous. Bracteas membranaceous, ovato-lanceolate, large, two or three upon the scape, where they are sheathing, and one at the base of each of the flowers. The two larger petals, as soon as the flowers expand, spread cut in an horizontal direction, and then from their size and texture, they resemble a bat’s wings, soon becoming reflexed and withering. The colour of the petals is a pale ochraceous yellow, that of the lip and its appendage more inclining to yellow, the latter tinged at the margin, and spotted inside with purple. The struc- ture of all the parts of the flower is so similar to that of Goneora (Coryanthes) speciosa, figured at t. 2755 of this work, that it is scarcely necessary to repeat the description. Although in the vegetation of this plant, and also in some degree in its flowers too, there exists a considerable affinity with the Genus Goneora of Ruiz and Pavon ; (and of Exotic Flora, t. 178;) yet there are few who will not allow, that it might well form a distinct Genus, in its labellum very unlike all other known Orchidew. Hence I have been led to distinguish it under the appellation of Coryantues; which I am the more disposed to do, now : that I have seen three species belonging to the same Genus, o all agreeing in general habit and essential character. The first of these is the Goncora speciosa above referred to; the second, Goneora macrantha (Bot. Miscellany, t. 80,) remarkable for its plaited margin to the stalk of the galeate appendage ; and our present plant is the third, which cer- tainly approaches very near to the first of those now men- tioned. It differs in the much greater breadth of its leaves, in its more numerous and pendulous racemes, and espe- cially in the colour of its flowers, which are here of a pale and dingy yellow more or less approaching to tawny, aué in having the inside of the appendage to its labellum spot ted and blotched with purple. It is a native of the trunks Of trees in the forests of Demerara, where it was discoveré by James ANKERs, Esq. and communicated to C. S. PARKER, — , Esq. of Liverpool, who presented it with many rarities from the same fertile country, to the Liverpool Botanic Garden. © ___It blossomed in the stove of that collection in the month 2 of June, 1831, and was sent to us by our often-mention friends, the Messrs, Suepuerps. A. Column and Lip, with its Helmet-shaped Appendage: nat. size. Fig 1. Summit of the Column with th th iew of the case, 3. Fillets Bits ccBtscateor. Anther, 2, Inner view 0: WIE. del? Pub. by 8 Curtis, Glazenwoed Esse ce 3103° ¥* LoNICERA HIRSUTA. Harry AMERICAN W oopBIne. KKK KER EEE EKER EEE EE Class and Order. PentranpriA Monoeynia. ( Nat. Ord.—Capriroticez. ) Generic. Character. Calycis tubus 5-dentatus. Cor. tubulosa, campanulata aut infundibuliformis, limbo 5-fido sepe irregulari. Stam. 5. Stylus filiformis. Stigma capitatum. Bacca 5-locul., — loculis oligospermis. Semina crustacea.—Frutices inter- dum scandentes. Folia opposita interdum connata, integra aut in iisdem speciebus subruncinata. Flores axdllare s dis- positione vari. DC. 2 re Specific Character and Synonyms. Lonicera* hirsuta; volubilis, verticillis capitatis glandu- loso-pubescentibus, foliis late ovato-ellipticis breviter petiolatis pubescentibus ciliatisque subtus glaucis, summis connato-perfoliatis. here Lonicrra hirsuta. \“ Eaton, Man. of Bot. ed. 3. p. 341.” ed. 4. p. 352. Torrey Fl. of Midd. St. of N. Am. v. 1. Pp. 242. ae SS as Lonicera pubescens. Sw. Hort. Brit. p. 194. De Cand. Prodr. v. 4. p. 332. ign | Carrironium pubescens. Goldie in Ed. Phil. Journ. (1822,) v. 6. p. 323. Hook. Ex. Fi. t. 27. pe Descr. Stem climbing, six to eight feet high, more _ or less downy, terete. Leaves large, of a full deep green, he eect - a aoe = Ao compliment to Apam Lonicer, a German Naturalist of the sixteenth in opposite and rather remote pairs, ovato-elliptical, waved, rather acute, the lower ones almost obovate, and on short petioles, the upper sessile, and the uppermost ones connato- perfoliate, downy on both sides, but especially beneath, where they are glaucous, ciliated at the margin. The floral leaves are quite glabrous above. Flowers in ter- minal, capitate whorls ; the extreme ones generally in three heads, of a fine golden-yellow colour, externally, and par- tially within, glanduloso-pubescent. Calyx of five very minute teeth. Corolla with the tube longer than the limb, curved. Upper lip broadly cuneate, five-toothed, lower one linear, the margins recurved. Stamens exserted. Fila- ments hairy in their lower half. Anthers oblong. Style nearly as long as the stamens. Stigma orbicular, de- pressed. - This beautiful and hardy species of Honeysuckle was introduced to our gardens by Mr. Goxpie of Ayr, from North America, in the year 1819, and published by him m the Edinb. Phil. Journal, in April, 1822, under the name of Carrirotium pubescens, by which appellation also it ap- peared shortly after in the Exotic Flora. Neither Mr. Goxpre nor myself were then aware that the same plant was known to Mr. Eaton, an American Botanist, and pub- lished by him in the third edition of his useful Manual of Botany, as Lonrcera hirsuta, n. sp. That edition, I have — indeed not yet had the opportunity of seeing; but judging from the date of the Preface to the fourth edition, (1823,) and from the circumstance of Dr. Torrey’s giving the preference to Mr. Eaton’s name, it must have the right of priority. I do not see any reason for suspecting, with Dr. Torrey, that this is only a variety of Lonicera flava, Curt. (CAPRI Fotium F'rasert of Pursn,) which has glabrous flowers a0 leaves, and cartilaginous margins to the latter, and appeals to be a much more Southern species. _ Our figure is taken from a fine plant, which blossomed in the Glasgow Bot. Garden, in June, 1831. —— _ Fig. 1. Flower. 2. Stamen, 3. Stigma and part of the Style: magnified. 4. Lower Leaf, nat. size. ee : : : rS . swan % WA del? Pub: by S. Curtis Glarenwood Bssex0etLIEH “ = 4 Bast 00 a NE i i arta i i gat Who published an account of his voyage to China. C 3104 ) TORENIA SCABRA, . Rouen Torenta, Class and Order. Dinynamia ANGIOsPERMIA. ( Nat. Ord.—Scrornurarina. ) Generic Character. Cal. tubulosus 5-dentatus, v. bilabiatus, labiis 2—3-den- tatis. Cor. ringens, labio superiore bilobo, inferiore trifido. Stamina didynama: Antheris per paria coherentibus, lobis oppositis : filamentis longioribus dente laterali auctis. Sigma bilamellatum. Caps. bilocularis, bivalvis, valvis in- tegris ; dissepimento parallelo libero—Herbe. Folia op- posita, dentata. Pedunculi axillares et terminales, ebrac- teat, fructiferi erecti. Br. 3 Specific Character and Synonyms. Torenia * scabra ; folus lanceolato-ovatis serratis scabris, _ caule erecto pubescentulo, calyce 5-dentato zquali. Torenra scabra. Graham, in Ed. Phil. Journ. Br. Prod. Fl. Nov. Holland, p. 440. Tirrmannra scabra. Spreng. Syst. Veget. v. 2. p. 800. a -_ Descr. Annual? Root slender, tapering, having many branching, lateral fibres. Stem erect, with very short, harsh, slightly reflected pubescence at its base, perfectly glabrous above, channelled on two sides, alternating at the joints. Leaves lanceolato-ovate, acutely serrated, entire at the apex and base, subciliated, veined, scabrous along the Veins behind, soft and subglabrous in front. Inflorescence 4 few-flowered terminal cyme, peduncles erect, without bracteas, stout. Calyx smooth, regular, five-parted, per- _ sistent, — — * Named after OLor ToreeEn, a Swedish Naturalist, and pupil of Linnaus, fs sistent, segments acute, mucronulate, spreading in. their upper half, closely imbricated below. Corolla one inch long, one inch across, lilac and white, (violet-purple in my specimens. /1.) striated, glanduloso-pubescent, ringent, its limb dilated and spreading, crenate, the upper lip two- lobed, the lower three-lobed, of which the central lobe is the largest and emarginate ; tube campanulate, dilated on its lowest side, somewhat flattened above, contracted and having two pits without on each side towards its base, again dilated as it covers the germen. Stamens didyna- mous; filaments distant, hairy near the base, adhering to the corolla nearly as far as the throat, there suddenly bent, the longer at right angles, the shorter at an angle of about 45°. The longer filaments projecting from each a clavate tooth at this angle, pass horizontally round the throat of the corolla, and meet under the stigma; the shorter having a much smaller tooth at the angle, pass obliquely upwards to the style, and meet below the others. Anthers bilobular, divaricating, lilac, at first free, afterwards cohering in pairs, and bursting along the front. Stigma exserted, of two ovate, subacute, diverging plates, the lower rather the largest. Style glabrous, filiform, slightly flattened near the stigma, as well as the filaments colourless, marcescent. Germen green, conical, somewhat furrowed in the sides, ovules very numerous, attached to a large, central recep- tacle. Capsule ovate, tumid, tipped by the persisting base of the style, bilocular, bivalvular, valves entire, dissepiment parallel to the valves, seeds very numerous, ovate, dotted. Seeds of this very pretty plant* were sent from New Holland by Mr. Fraser last year, and communicated to the Botanic Garden, Edinburgh, both directly from himself _and by Sir Tuomas Brissane, in October and November. _ They were marked “ Ruellia, sp. nov. from the banks of - the River Brisbane, Moreton Bay.” Graham. = oe I think it searcely accords sufficiently with the name or character of Mr. Brown s T. scabra, to warrant its being with certainty united to that Species, H, ee ee co 1. Corolla laid open to show the Stamens. 2, Calyx and Pistil. 3. ermen and Nectary. 4, Section of a Germen: magnified. . MSH del? Pub by 8, Curtis, Glazenwood #seca.0et"ss8H ( 3105 ) Austra:meria Nertun. Mr. NEILu’s ALSTRGEMERIA. Re Se he ie ie ee a as Class and Order. HexanpriA Monoeynia. ( Nat. Ord.—AmaryLimeg. ) Generic Character. Perianthium corollaceum, subcampanulaceum, sexpar- titum, irregulare ; laciniis duabus (v. tribus) interioribus - tubuloso-conniventibus. Stam. 6, laciniis inserta, demum declinata. Stigma trifidum. Caps. trilocularis ; loculis polyspermis.—Caulis erectus, scandens aut volubilis, folia-. tus. Flores umbellati. Kunth. Specific Character and Synonym. Atstrameria Neillii ; caule erecto flaccido folioso, foliis spathulatis obtusis glauco-pruinosis apice lateribusque reflexis integerrimis, petalis tribus exterioribus obo- vatis emarginatis equalibus crenatis, interioribus paulo. longioribus spathulatis subintegerrimis, pedunculis umbellatis bifloris. Graham. Atstrameria Neillii. Gillies’ MSS. eee Descr. Stems simple, many from the same root, erect, flaccid, round, very leafy, subglauco-pruinose, especially towards the top, greener below. Leaves spathulate, about Seven-nerved, central rib hardly prominent behind, except im the lower and narrower half, reflected at the point and Sides, waved, glauco-pruinose, quite entire, callous at the _ Margin, and particularly so at the apex. Peduncles three _ OF four, forming a terminal wmbel, two-flowered, dull pur- le, a little longer than the leaves, which are collected in the form of an involucre round their base. Perianth: Segments _ om SIx, unequal, much attenuated, succulent, involute and — _ Ciliated at the base, each with three primary nerves, pro- 4 minent behind, and two or four secondary nerves, scarcely — reticulated ; three outer segments equal, of a nearly ee | pale rose colour, rather darker in the middle of the outside, obo- vato-crenate, with a central, green, concave, callous point ; three inner segments rather longer than the outer, spathulate with a green callous apex, and oblong deep rose-coloured spots on their upper half, the lowest is rather the shortest of the three, nearly flat and arched backwards ; the two others project in the centre of the flower, and are straight, except near the apex, where they are bent back, and immediately below this point are marked by a broad, transverse, yellow band, nectariferous at the base. Sta- mens laid along the lower petal till the pollen is mature, when they become straight, and nearly parallel with the two central tals, which they almost equal in length : filaments rose-colour- ed, slightly tapering, pubescent at the base; Anthers greenish- rose-coloured, flattened, and, as in the other species when the loculaments burst, becoming flattened in the opposite direction ; Pollen reddish, granules very small and oblong. Stigma trifid, rose-coloured as well as the prismatic style, which is only green at its persisting base. Germen trilocular, purple, obovato-turbi- nate, covered with minute, shining tubercles, ribs strong and rominent. Ovules numerons, attached in two rows, within each oculament, to the central receptacle. This extremely handsome plant flowered, for the first time in this country, in Mr. P. Nuixx’s greenhouse, at Canonmills *, near Edinburgh, June 1831. Mr. Nerux is uncertain to whom he is indebted for the plant, but as seeds of ALstRameERiA pal- lida were sent in the same packet, and as we possess specimens of this, collected by Dr. Giux1es at Los Ojos de Agua, it is probable A. Neillit was from him also, Dr. Giir1es inclines to the same opinion, and believes that this species is the one which at Men- doza is called Pelegrina, and of which he has various individuals in his Herbarium. It is possible that these are identical, though the segments of the perianth are in the native specimens perfectly entire, the inner ones lanceolate, not spathulate, the outer acute, not emarginate, and the peduncles single-flowered. Dr. G1LL1£s found it on both sides of the Cordillera of the Andes, between Chili and Mendoza. I alluded to it in my description of ALSTRE- MERIA pallida, in the Edinburgh New Philosophical Journal for September, 1829, and conjectured, that when it flowered, it might prove to be a variety of it. The inflorescence, habit, and colour- ing give support to this conjecture ; and our increasing acquaint- ance with South American Genera throws increasing scepticism upon all enquiries as to the natural boundaries of species; but U the period arrives when a revision of the whole Genus ALSTRE- MERIA Shall warrant a considerable reduction of its species, the characters above noted may be deemed sufficient, as giving to this form a better title to a specific name than several others, which are now held to be sufficiently distinct. Graham. _* This very interesting establishment has recently sustained a great loss 10 the removal of the gardener, ALExanpER Scorr, whose professional talent and patient industry have been transferred to a situation of more extensive usefulness. He has been appointed foreman to Mr. Knicur1's Exotic Nor” sery, Chelsea, a situation for which he is especially fitted by his quiet, unas — suming manners, and uniformly steady conduct. Graham. Fig. 1, Lower Leaf. 2. Outer, and 3, inner Petal: nat. size. — 3106. Fud : Sn: 4 s. Cart, Claxenwood Essex, Oct? 17832 ( 3106 ) RuHopopENDRON Lapponicum. LaApiLanp RHODODENDRON. BREE EEE EREEEER EE EERE Class and Order. PEeNTANDRIA MonoeyniA. ~ ( Nat. Ord.—Enricea. ) Generic Character. Cal. 5-partitus. Cor. infundibuliformis 5-lobus. Stam. 5—10 declinata : antheris apice biporosis. Capsula 5-locu- laris, 5-valvis, ab apice dehiscens, valvarum marginibus in- flexis dissepimenta formantibus: Receptaculum centrale 5-angulare. Semina membrana inyoluta. Specific Character and Synonyms. Ruopoprenpron* Lapponicum ; fruticosum, ramosum, pro- cumbens, ramis divaricatis, floribus umbellatis 5—8- andris, corollis rotato-infundibuliformibus, foliis ob- longis obtusis rigidis foveolato-punctatis subtus disco- loribus lepidotis marginibus reflexis. Ruopopenpron Lapponicum. Wahl. Fl. Suec. p. 249. Spreng. Syst. Veg. v. 2. p. 293. Graham, in Kd. N. Phil. Journ. Oct. 1830. — | Azatea lapponica. Linn. Fl. Suec. p: 64. Sp. Pl.v. 1. p. 214. Fl. Lapp. (ed. Smith,) p. 59. t.6.f.1. Pall. Fl. Ross. v. 2. p. 52. t. 70. f.1. Fl. Dan. v. 6. t. 906. Willd. Sp. Pl. v.1. p.832. Pers. Syn. Pl. v. 1. p. 212. ‘ee é Descr. An evergreen, procumbent shrub, about six Inches long ; branches at length divaricated, round, grey, when young red, obscurely pubescent, warted. a ree ——— * From odor, a rose, and dsvdpor, a tree, from the usual colour of the flowers of these shrubby plants. z Bs three lines long, four lines broad, petioled, divaricated, elliptical, veinless, reflexed at the edges, dark green above, paler and at last yellowish beneath, thickly sprinkled on both sides with hollow dots, which are covered with an umbilicated, persisting, yellowish scale, obscurely chan- nelled along the middle rib, which is somewhat prominent behind. Flowers terminal, umbellate, about five or six in the umbel, of which three expand at a time, surrounded with large, concave, imbricated, brown, dotted scales or bracteas. Peduncles as long as the bracteas, round, dotted. Calyx small, five-toothed, blunt, ciliated, thickly covered with yellow scales. Corolla (three-fourths of an inch across, ) crimson, rotato-funnel-shaped, five-cleft, segments blunt, unequal, waved, the throat hairy and nectariferous, nectari- ferous pore very indistinct. Stamens five to eight, equal in length to the corolla, scarcely declined ; filaments adhering to the base of the germen, of the same colour as the corolla, hairy near their base ; anthers brown, attached by the back, bilocular, each cell depressed in the middle as by a longi- tudinal suture, but bursting by a pore at its upper extre- mity ; pollen yellow. Stigma red-brown, capitate, five- lobed, lobes depressed. Style round, red, glabrous, longer than the stamens, once or twice geniculated. Germen green, thickly covered with yellow scales, similar to those on the calyx, conical, obscurely five-lobed, ciliated round the base of the style, five-celled ; placente linear, extend- ing to the parietes, covered with innumerable ovules. The enterprise of Mr. Cunnrncuam has been rewarded by having first in Britain brought into flower AnpDROMEDA hypnoides * and Ruopopenpron Lapponicum. These two interesting plants may be seen under the same hand-glass, in the nursery at Comely Bank, near Edinburgh: they were both brought from Canada by Mr. Brarr, in 1825. The subject of the present description flowered in July, 1830. Graham. Ruopopenpron Lapponicum inhabits the alpine ridges of the low grounds in the extreme Arctic regions of Europe, Asia, and America. The bruised leaves are fragrant, yie d- ing a smell, which Patias compares to that of Turpentine. ‘The flowers are exceedingly beautiful. * Figured at Tab. 2936 of this work. Fig. 1. Flower, with its Bracteas. 2. Calyx, Stamens, and Pistil. 3. Anther. 4. Germen. 5. U d : ace gs ae magnified. pper, and 6, Under side of a leaf :—mor 5107. WSL del? Pub by §. Cartes Glenenwood: Essex, OcPLI8El. ( 3107 ) Ecuinocactus Ortonis. Mr. Orro’s E:CHINOCACTUS. Class and Order. IcosanpR1A Monoeynia. ( Nat. Ord.—Cacrez. )} , Generic Character. Sepala numerosa imbricata basi ovarii adnata in tubum brevissimum concreta, exteriora involucriformia, intima petaliformia, Stam. numerosa. Stylus filiformis apice multifidus, Bacca sepalorum reliquiis subsquamata. Co- tyledones nulle ?—Frutices simplicissimi carnosi ovati aut globosi melocactoidei costati aphylli costis tuberculis conflu- entibus quasi formatis, dorso aculeorum fasciculos geren- tibus. Cephalium seu spadix nullus. Flores e fasciculis aculeorum ad apices costarum orti, similes floribus Cerei sed tubo vix ullo donati. Specific Character and Synonyms. Ecuinocactus * Oftonis ; caule subcylindrico, costis 12 obtusiusculis, spinis mediis 3—4-longioribus erectius- culis tenuibus fuscis, reliquis 1O—14 tenuissimis paten- tibus longe acuminatis subserrulatis cuspidatis. Ecurnocacrus Ottonis. Link et Otto, Gew. Bot. Gart. Berl. eft. 16. Cacrus Ottonis. Lehm. Ind. Sem. Hort. Hamb. 1827, p. 16. Ind. Schol. in Gymn. Hamb. 1828, p. 11. f a Descr. Stem, in our plant, three to four inches in height, orbiculari-cylindrical, contracted at the base, where a pro- 3 uces oe —_—==—=— * From exw, a hedgehog, and xaxros, cactus. wa i duces offsets, marked with about twelve vertical, deep fur- rows, the ridges between the furrows obtuse, studded with rather closely set small tufts of reddish wool, from which arise three or four rather strong spines, of a deep purplish- brown colour, which stand forward, and are sometimes curved, and several lesser pale-coloured spreading ones. The longest and strongest spines are from the summit of the stem ; but the largest of them rarely exceed half an inch in length, and their bases are the most woolly. From the summit of the stem arise one to three or four sessile flowers, large in proportion to the size of the plant, and ofa delicate lemon colour. Calyx tapering at the base, imbricated with scales, which are clothed with reddish or ferruginous wool, mixed with long, slender, dark red spines. Petals numer- ous, erecto-patent, linear-acute, obscurely and irregularly serrulated, aristate, of a rather thin and scariose texture. Stamens about half as long as the petals, yellow. Style equal to them in length, bearing a bright red stigma, with about twelve to fourteen rays. This very beautiful species of Ecuinocactus was first described by Dr. Leamann, (to whom our Glasgow Garden is indebted for the possession of the plant,) and afterwards was well represented in Linx and Orto’s excellent publi- cation on the plants of the Berlin Garden, It is a native of Brazil : and like all its tribe should be cultivated in a warm and dry stove, and the pots kept well drained from mois- ture. It blossomed with us in July, 1831. Our collections are now, by the zeal of the Botanists in the New World, beginning to be well stocked with the species of this curious and highly interesting family. At one time, the hotter parts of that vast continent were alone supposed to afford them: but from the lat. of Mendoza, (33° South,) and at a considerable elevation above the level of the sea, Dr. Gruxiss has supplied the Glasgow and other Botanic Gardens, with no less than twenty-two species ; gathered within the distance of a morning’s ride from that city ; while in North America, Messrs. Dovenas and Drum: monp met with Cactuses between the parallels of 40° and 50°, in the Rocky Mountains: whereas, Professor ScHouUWw has scarcely extended the region of the tribe beyond the tropics. a _ ‘Fig. 1. Cluster of Spines: magnified. ( 3108 ) NIEREMBERGIA GRACILIS. SLENDER NIEREMBERGIA. SS oa i ae ee a oe Class and Order. PentTAanpDRIA Monoeynia. ( Nat. Ord.—Soxanacez. ) Generic Character. Cal. tubulosus, 5-fidus. Cor. subhypocrateriformis, tubo longissimo, tenui; limbo 5-lobo, plicato (sub-) aquali. Stam. 5, exserta. Filam. inferne connata (an semper ?) Anthere longitudinaliter dehiscentes. Stigma subinfundi- buliforme, bilobum, (nobis laterale transverse oblongum utrinque acuminatum recurvum). Capsula in fundo caly- cis persistentis bilocularis, bivalvis; dissepimentum valvu- lis parallelum, demum liberum; placente dissepimento intime adnate.—Caules lignost aut herbacei, filiformes, procumbentes et sape repentes. Folia sparsa, solitaria, interdum gemina, integra et integerrima. Flores extraaxil- lares aut oppositifolii, solitarii, subsessiles, albi. Kunth. = - Specific Character. | Nieremperera * gracilis ; caulibus herbaceis erectiusculis foliisque anguste lineari-subspathulatis pubescentibus, capsula polysperma, ue oe ‘, _Descr. Stems several, as it appears, from the same root, six to eight inches high, herbaceous, rounded, downy, branching upwards, with the branches alternate, very slen- er. Leaves small, scarcely more than he if an inch long, | harrow-linear, approaching to spathulate, rather ee ‘ =. __. * In compliment to Joun Evsestvs Nizrempers, a Spanish Jesuit of the a ey ms i Sixteenth century, who wrote a “ History of Nature.” pale glaucous-green, obscurely costate, downy, all of them alternate and scattered, except the lowermost, which ap- pear almost whorled, the uppermost ones on the young branches subsetaceous. Flowers terminal on the young branches. Calyx with its tube attenuated at the base, white and membranaceous, with ten green, prominent ribs, scarcely downy ; limb of five linear, spreading, green and somewhat foliaceous, slightly downy segments. Corolla: tube much exserted, very long and exceedingly slender; the limb spreading, convex, unequally five-lobed, white, streak- ed with purple, having a yellow eye where it is inserted on the tube: the lobes rounded, obtuse. Stamens five. Filaments rather short, inserted in the mouth of the tube, scarcely connate, two in front of the style and three behind it, somewhat equal, two longer than the rest, and one (the centre of those behind the style,) smaller, curved at the apices. Anthers roundish, reniform, two-lobed, two- celled, the cells opening laterally by a vertical fissure. Style as long as the stamens. Stigma transverse, anterior, oblong, acuminate at each extremity and recurved, green, viscid. Germen ovate, dotted, two-celled, cells with many ovules attached to the receptacles of the dissepiment. _ The Genus Nieremserers, characterized by the ex- tremely slender tube of its corolla, inhabits exclusively the New World, and appears to have an extensive range there; one species of those hitherto described being a native of Peru (N. repens, R. and P.) another of Mexico, (N. angus- tyfolia, H. and K.) and a third of Monte Video, (N. pubes- cens, Sprene.). To these, I have the pleasure of adding a fourth, a native, like the last, of the vicinity of the Uraguay, but in botanical character nearly approaching the Mexican lant. From that it differs in the pubescent stems and eaves, as well as in the structure of the stamens and stigma; so much so, that I should almost be inclined to consider them generically distinct ; only that the figure and descrip- tion of N. angustifolia being made from dried specimens, the learned authors might be deceived in the appearance of ae minute parts, and thus the difference may be account- or. pei . Our plants were raised from seeds sent from Buenos Ayres, by Mr. Tweepse, and promise to bear the open aif insummer. They flowered in July, 1831. $$$ —— Fig. 1. Leaves. 2. Calyx. 3. Front view of Stamens and Style. _ Back view of ditto. 5. Anther. 6, 7. Front and back view of the Stigma. . 8. Germen. 9, Section of ditto,—Mugnified. : ga id Harrison del? Pub. by § Curtis, Glazenwood Essex Nov? 17831 Swan &t ¢ 3109 ) ONCIDIUM BICORNUTUM. ‘'T'wo-HorNeED ONCIDIUM. KKK KK EEK EEE KKKEEEK Class and Order. GyNANDRIA MoNANDRIA. | ( Nat. Ord.—Orcuinez. ) Generic Character. Labellum explanatum, lobatum, basi bituberculatum. — Petala patentia (2 antica nune connata). Columna alata. Masse Pollinis 2, postice bilobe : medio affixe processu communi stigmatis. Br. | , Specific Character. Onciprum bicornutum ; bulbo elongato diphyllo, scapo radicali, panicula densa, perianthio tetraphyllo foliolis ; obovatis subequalibus, labello angulato-lobato late- ribus apiceque reflexis, disco tuberculato, columna : pubescente, anthera cornubus duobus mollibus re- 2 flexis. Descr. The bulbs of this singular and beautiful species of Oncipium are four to five inches long, subcylindrical, furrowed, clustered and clothed at the base with lacerated, brown, sheathing scales, at the extremity bearing rarely one, mostly two, linear-lanceolate, coriaceous, obscurely striated, acuminated leaves. Scape radical, terete, jointed and bracteated, rising a little above the leaves, and bearing a comparatively large and dense panicle, which, apparently from the weight of the numerous flowers, curves gracefully like an ostrich-feather, the branches somewhat distichous, each ramification and the base of each flower bracteated. — _ Perianth deep yellow, with transverse spots and bars of a _ dark-red purple-brown colour, almost wholly yellow . the | 708,..%. M stad eee base, in four pieces or leaflets, which are nearly equally obovato-cuneate, waved, the lateral ones especially, the lowermost one the smallest and narrowest, yet formed of the two lower leaflets of the outer series, and obscurely two-nerved. Labellum erect, of a very singular form, and difficult to be explained by words. It appears smaller than the rest of the pieces of the perianth, but these arise from the margins and extremity, which are waved and angled, being singularly reflexed ; whilst the upper side presents many wrinkles and tubercles, yet even these are ‘placed with regularity, so that every labellum is alike in its angles and projections and depressions : the colour is yellow, mottled and spotted with purple-red. Column pale reddish-yellow, almost white, downy, semicylindrical, shorter than the column, upwards expanding into two pro- jecting wings: beyond this the column rises into an orbi- cular receptacle for the hemispherical anther, which is also downy, and which bears on its anterior edge, two soft, recurved awns or horns, such as I have never seen in any of this family. When the anther-case is removed, two obovate, wavy, yellow masses of pollen with a cleft at their posterior side are seen attached to an attenuated, narrow, membrane or filament, bearing a small gland at its base. Germen linear-clavate, scarcely twisted. This is another of the many highly interesting Orchideous plants for the possession of which our country is indebted to Mrs. Arnorp Harrison of Aigburgh, near Liverpool, and to her brother Harrison, Esq. of Rio. It was discovered by that gentleman in woods, sixty miles inland from that capital, and communicated to his sister, who is no less successful in cultivating, than he is in detecting the many novelties of the tribe which the forests of Brazil afford. It was sent to England in 1830, and in June, 1831, pro- duced the panicle of flowers here represented, done in part from the plant itself, and in part from a drawing sent by Mrs. Harrison. —— or Fig. 1. Flower. 2. Flower, from which the Lip has been removed. Anterior and posterior views of the Lip. 6. Column, with its Anther — attached. 7. Column, with the Anther-Case forced back, to show the — Pollen-Masses. 8. U . Z Saget of ditto — Magnified. pper view of the fplep Masses. 9. Posterior view of the lower of the four Segments of the Perianth. 4, 5. — : # SL FE del* ( 3110 ) LANTANA Nivea, var. mutabilis. Waorre- FLOWERED Lantana, Changeable var. Se i Sie hee es a Class and Order. Dipynamia ANGIOSPERMIA. ( Nat. Ord.—Verpenacez. ) Generic Character. Cal. brevissimus, obsolete dentatus. Cor. tubulosa, lim- bo inequaliter bilobo. Stam. inclusa. Drupa baccata, 1-pyrena, pyrene biloculari, 2-spermo, rima loculis interpo- sita. Spr. eh Specific Character and Synonyms. - Lanrana nivea; foliis oppositis ovatis acuminatis scabris in — petiolum attenuatis, capitulis hemisphericis, bracteis linearibus tubo brevioribus, caule frutescente aculeato. Lantana nivea. Willd. Enum. p. 631. Vent. Mal. p. 8. t.8. Bot. Mag. t. 1946. — : | (8.) floribus flavis demum roseis. (Tab. nostr. t. 3110.) _ _ Descr. A shrub, four or five feet high, branched, the branches four-sided, glabrous, but furnished with strong, Short, often curved aculei, set principally upon the angles. Leaves large, of a deep green colour, scabrous, ovate, acu- _ Minate, obtusely serrated, much nerved, diffusing an un- _ pleasant odour, at the base gradually tapering into a rather _ long petiole. From the axils of the upper leaves, the — _ peduncles arise, equal in length with the leaves or sometimes — longer, four-sided and slightly aculeated, rarely branched, ring a large and beautiful head of changeable flowers _ at the extremity. These flowers are collected upon an_ oblong, fleshy receptacle, which has sometimes a pair of _ Opposite small leaves at the base. Bracteas, one ae flower, shorter than the tube, linear, the outer ones broader, almost lanceolate. Tbe somewhat curved, slightly downy, limb spreading, waved, unequally five-lobed, the margins more or less recurved, at first yellow with an orange eye, then becoming rose-coloured with an orange eye, finally entirely rose-coloured. Calyx small, obscurely four-lobed. Stamens four, inserted nearly at the middle of the tube. Filaments short. Anthers rounded, brown, Pistil: Ger- men ovate : Style about half the length of the tube: Stagma capitate, oblique. Our Glasgow Botanic Garden is indebted for this hand- some and most desirable inhabitant of the stove to Mr. Marnock, of Britton Hall, by whom it was communicated, under the very appropriate name of L. mutabilis. The _ comparatively large heads of flowers are at first wholly yellow, with a deeper eye; the outer ones then first gra- dually become rose-coloured, the orange eye for a time remaining, when that changes likewise, and at length the whole flowers are a delicate rose colour. Of what country it is a native, I am ignorant; but it possesses all the essen- tial character of L. nivea, and hence I have considered it as a variety of that species, although, perhaps, the white- flowered state should rather be considered ’a variation from this. L. nivea is stated in Bot. Mag. t. 1946, to be an East Indian plant ;—a native of the West Indies according to Sir J . Situ, in Rees’s Cycl. From L. aculeata it differs in its far more strongly aculeated and glabrous stems and branches. Its flowers appear in May and June, and continue for a considerable length of time. —— Fig. 1. Young Flower. 2. More advanced ditto. 3. Stamens. 4. Calyx. 5. Pistil :—magnified. Rarz. Cake deeng dele Lieb by S. Curia, Claxenwood EssexNev 1193! Sl? ( 8lll 3112 ) Acuras Sapota. Common Sapora. Butry-Tree. EERE KEE EEE EER EE EEE ee Class and Order. Hexanpri1a Monoeynia. ( Nat. Ord.—Saporez. ) Generic Character. Cal. 6- (raro 5-) partitus. Cor. 6-fida. Stamina 6 ste- riia squameformia, cum totidem fertilibus alternantia. Ovarium 12—6-loculare. Pomum 12—6-spermum. Nu- ces compress, ossex, ventre longitudinaliter deraso. Semen albuminosum. Br. Specific Character and Synonyms. _Acuras* Sapota; foliis oblongo-ellipticis acutis, pedunculis calycibus petiolisque ferrugineo-pubescentibus, fila- _ mnentis sterilibus oblongis obtusis, ovario pluri-loculari. -) fructu elliptico seu ovato. ee ras Sapota. Linn. Sp. Pl. p. 470. Willd. Sp 2. p. 224. Jacq. Am. p. 57. t. 41. Ait. Hort. Kew. ed. 2. v. 2. p. 312. Spreng. Syst. Veget. v. 2. p. 132. — zas fructu elliptico scabro majore. Brown, Jam. p. | er eet. 19. ff. 3. | , _ (8.) fructu subrotundo subdepresso. (Sappadilla or Nase- berry tree.) Acuras Sapota, 8. Jacg. Am. I. ¢. t. 41, @. Acuras Zapotilla. Browne, Jam. p. 200. . Ayona foliis laminis, &c. Sloane, Jam. 0. 2. p. 171. t. 230. Anona maxima, &c. Sloane Jam. v. 2. p. 172. t. 169. 7. &. ‘ig _. Descr. This, according to SLoANE, is one of the largest trees _ in the mountainous woods of the island of Jamaica. Jacquin says _ the height varies from ten to fifty feet: Mr. Guinp1ne states it . from thirty to forty feet. From every part of it a tenacious, _ Viseid, white juice is distilled. The wood is white, the bark brown. Branches numerous, forming a spreading top. Leaves numerous, _ almost all of them placed in clusters at the extremity of her — ical- oblong, acute, glabrous, the midrib prominent behind, the lateral * From the Greek apes, a wild pear, from some resemblance in the fruit = a that of a pear. branches, three to four inches long, coriaceous, shining, ee 5 i aaa nerves numerous but indistinct : the petioles are more or less downy. Peduncles from the axils of the terminal leaves, solitary, single- flowered, about an inch long, frequently drooping, rather thick and downy. Calyx divided nearly to the base into six, rather large, erect, ovate, coriaceous segments, of which the three outer are clothed with dense, ferruginous hairs, the three inner much paler coloured. Corolla of one petal, tubular, rather longer than the calyx, white, cut one-third of the way down into six oblong ob- tuse segments: within (alternating with these segments, and nearly ct Os to them in size and shape,) are six scales, abortive stamens, often notched at the point. Perfect stamens six. Filaments short, curved upwards. Anthers ovato-oblong, opening with a longitu- dinal fissure at the sides of the cells. Pistil: Germen subglobose, densely hairy. Style exserted. Stigma obtuse, obscurely lobed. Berry as large as a moderately-sized apple, often tipped with the persistent sty/e, of a dirty brown colour, mottled ont spotted with a deeper hue, in « elliptical, in 8 more or less rounded or com- pressed ; having at the base the reflexed segments of the calyx, eight to ten- (seven to thirteen, Jaca.) celled, many of the cells frequently abortive. In the inner angle of the cells is a solitary, _ rather large, laterally compressed, glossy, blackish-brown seed, _ having at the inner angle a long, pale, linear scar; the lower ex- tremity is frequently recurved. Albumen white, fleshy, with the flattened embryo in the centre : the radicle pointing downwards. Mr. GuiipinG compares the appearance of the fruit of this tree to that of an old and decayed potato: yet he observes that, it is the most luscious of the West Indian fruits; but so abounding in an acrid milk, that it cannot be eaten until it is completely ripe, oF according to French authors, until it almost begins to be putrid. It is there served at all tables and generally esteemed. a The flowers are, according to Jacquin, inodorous, but Mr. GuiLpine remarks, that they yield a smell resembling that of brass or copper, and far from agreeable. The general form of these blossoms when in perfection is campanulate ; but when fer- tilization is effected, the top of the flower closes upon the style, and it becomes ovato-acuminate in its circumscription. : The timber yielded by this tree is considered of great service In the making of shingles to corn-houses. The bark is astringent, and commonly known by the name of Cortex jamaicensis, accord- ing to Brown, being frequently administered to the negroes in lieu of the Jesuit’s Bark, and found to answer all the purposes of that medicine. The seeds are aperient and diuretic. It is a native of the West Indies and abundantly cultivated throughout all the hot parts of South America for the sake of its fruit. In our stoves it was cultivated so long ago as 1731, but it does not appear ever to have flowered with us. The figures here given are taken from beautiful drawings made by Mr. GuiLDING in St. Vincent. To the same Naturalist I am indebted for many observations on the tree. $< Tab. 3111. Fig. 1. Flower. 2. Coroll laid open. 4, Pis- ti 5. Stamen ee orolla. 3. Corolla laid open. — | ‘AB. 3112. Fig. 1. Very young Fruit. 2. Fruit of var. a. 3. Ditto wen of ditto. 4. Fruit of var. 6:—nat. size. 5. Seed. 6. Transverse - _ Section of ditto. 7. Vertical Section of ditto. 8. Embryo :—magnifiet Jl. Swat? * fe Vazenmocd Ls sexcNol/83l. F & , . CRPELES: = Mag A LUD; HTH del* (F088) SALPIGLOSSIS INTEGRIFOLIA. ENTIRE- LEAVED SALPIGLOSSIS. KEKE EE EEKEEEEEEEEEEEK Class and Order. ~ Dipynamia ANGIOSPERMIA. ( Nat. Ord.—Sotanzz. Don. ) Generic Character. Cal. 5-fidus seu 5-partitus, subinequalis. Cor. infundi- _ buliformis 5-loba. Filamentum quintum sterile (nunc an- — theriferum). Stylus apice dilatatus. Stgma truncatum, transversum. Papeite bi-locularis, dissepimento valvis parallelo. Semina punctato-scabra. | Specific Character. Sarpictossis integrifolia; foliis ovato-lanceolatis in petio- lum attenuatis, floribus solitariis axillaribus, calyce profundo 5-partito, corolle lobis integris. : 2 ‘Ginnnieiines Descr. Stem herbaceous, six to ten inches high, some- what procumbent at the base, then erect, slightly branched, rounded, every where clothed with glandular hairs. Leaves alternate, rarely opposite, those from near the root almost _ exactly ovate, the rest approaching to lanceolate or oblong, all, but especially the younger ones, more or less clothed with glandular and rather fetid hairs, rather obtuse at the point, quite entire at the margins, tapering gradually below into a footstalk, which has often, at its base, a purplish 2 tinge. Peduncles principally confined to the uppermost = leaves, solitary, about an inch long, glandular, single-flow- _ ered. Calyx three-fourths of the length of the tube of the ss corolla, deeply five-partite, the segments linear, increasing in size, after the corolla has fallen away, and inclined up-— wards. Corolla more than an inch long, bro undi-— * buliform : the tube dark bluish-purple, hairy, and glandular, the limb nearly equal, oblique, five-lobed, the lobes rounded entire, obtuse, of a rich crimson purple. Stamens five, in- cluded, four didynamous, the central one antheriferous. Filaments quite glabrous, purplish. Anthers blue, two- lobed, the lobes at first approximate, opening at the outer margins, at length spreading. Germen, small, ovate, green, imbedded in a fleshy yellow gland or ring, with two teeth. Style slender, filiform, green, dilated upwards, and bearing an orbicular green, peltate, flat stigma, marked with a transverse line. Capsule ovate, small, two-celled, two- valved, the valves sometimes bifid at their points. Seeds numerous, attached to a receptacle on each side the disse- piment, oval, approaching to reniform, studded with numer- ous, raised points, arranged in lines. ‘This new and most distinct species of SaLprexossis was raised from seeds sent in the autumn of 1830, by Mr. _ ‘Tweenie of Buenos Ayres, to the Glasgow Botanic Garden, where the young 2 grace placed in a warm exposure in the open air produced their richly coloured blossoms in July of the following year (1831). It promises to be a most valuable addition to our semi-hardy plants: but whether an annual or otherwise, I am not at present able to say. I have specimens of the same plant sent to me by Mr. James Barrp of Buenos Ayres, who gathered them upon the Uraguay*, near the Rio Negro. Mr. Don has justly referred the present Genus to Sons- NAcEz. It has the same heavy and fetid smell, though not in a very powerful degree, as many others of that family. * From the same source, and from the same country, I possess another species of Saupre.ossis, which may be thus named and distinguished : Ss. linearis ; foliis (parvis) linearibus integerrimis glandulosis, paniculis pau- cifloris terminalibus foliosis, calyce 5-fido, corolla lobis integris. Has. Banks of the Uraguay, Mr. James Baird. — | eo: rye a — Sle 2. Flower. 3. Stamen. 4. Anther burst. » Pistil. 6, on of the Germen. 7. Summit of the Style and Stigma. — 8. Capsule. 9. Seed :—more or less magnified. - 2 Pubby &§ Curke Glavenwood Essex, Nov" 1 1831 'H deft a ( 3114 ) CENTROCLINIUM REFLEXUM. REFLEXED- SCALED CENTROCLINIUM. skskobsekaokoeseaokekekaskekokakakakeak Class and Order. SYNGENESIA SUPERFLUA. ( Nat. Ord.—Composira. Div. Lasiatirtor2. ) Generic Character. Involucrum subglobosum vel cylindraceum arcte imbri- catum. Flosculi disci tubulosi, 5-dentati, hinc profundius fissi; radii 7—12 bilabiati, labio interiore minutissimo bipartito erecto (dein revoluto ?) exteriore longissimo tri- fido. Anthere biaristate. Stigma integrum. Pappus in- zqualis, scaber. Receptaculum spinulis mollibus hispidum. —Herbex? v. Frutices Peruviane. Folia petiolata subtus albo-tomentosa. Pedunculi solitarii axillares vel terminales uniflori. Flores fragrantes speciosi: Radius purpureo- roseus. Specific Character. Centrociinium * reflexum; herbaceum ? foliis ovato-lan- ceolatis grosse dentatis, pedunculis bracteato-setaceis, involucri squamis apice reflexis. ’ Descr. This appears to be an annual plant from a foot and a half to two feet in height, branched, the branches woolly. Leaves spreading, two to three inchs long, ovato- lanceolate, acute, coarsely toothed, gradually tapermg into - a petiole, woolly and white beneath, above cobwebby, but at length nearly glabrous. Peduncles solitary, terminal, or from the axils of the upper leaves, four to five inches long, woolly, and bearing many subulato-setaceous a | —— — a —— _ * From xerrpor, a sharp point, ond xr, the receptacle, from the hard, g __ Tigid spinules observed by the anther. agg teas, single-flowered. Flowers large, handsome, fragrant. Involucre broadly ovate or oval, imbricated with numerous subulate scales, their apices all remarkably reflexed. Filo- rets of the disk deep yellow, very prominent. Corollas tubular, cleft more deeply on the interior side, with the five linear oblong teeth somewhat unilateral. Anthers deep yellow, exserted, biaristate. Germen cylindrical. Style yellow, somewhat clavate, entire. Pappus of many unequal hairs, the outer being shorter and slenderer, the inner longer, frequently darker-coloured ; all of them sca- brous. Florets of the ray nine to twelve, rose-purple, two- lipped, the inner lip very minute, of two subulate segments, erect, probably in a more advanced state reflexed ; outer one very long, linear, three-toothed, externally downy. Anthers small, abortive. Germen, style, stigma, and pappus as in the florets of the disk. Receptacle plane, set with small, soft, erect spinules. Among the many interesting plants raised last year (1830) from the Peruvian seeds liberally communicated to the Glasgow Botanic Garden by our valued friend, Mr. CrucksHANKs, are two species of the family of CompositT2, and of the division LasratirLor#, agreeing in so many points with Mr. Don’s Genus Centrocriinium (Linn. Trans. v. 16, p. 254,) that I cannot suppose they are other than the same: yet in the nature of the spinules of the receptacle there is a remarkable difference ; for whereas Mr. Don de- scribes them as harsh and rigid aculei (whence he has derived the Generic Name) ; in our plant they are soft and inconspicuous. Mr. Don suggests that the Onoceris salicifolia of Hum- sotpt and Kunrs may be a species of this Genus, an opinion in which I quite agree with him, though the little aculei of the receptacle have been overlooked in the description. In- deed, except in the narrow and more entire leaves, it seems to agree with the present species, possessing, in fact, the egence and involucre of the present individual, and the _ foliage of the subject of our next plate. - Our plants of C. reflexum were cultivated in the stove, _ and produced their handsome, fragrant flowers, smelling like Hawthorn, late in the Autumn, when they died, without pro : ducing seed. Mr. Murray considers it to be truly annual. ne ———— 1 Fig. 1. Section of an Involucre and Receptacle. 2. Floret of the Disk. 3- nner side of the extremity of a Floret from the Disk, showing the a cleft. 4. Inner view of the Anthers. 5. Floret of the Ray. 6. Portions the Pappus:—Magnified. se ll 8, gran se en, Nov? 1,182 renwood Ess Pub. oy S. Curtis, Gla ( 3115 ) CENTROCLINIUM APPRESSUM. CLOSE-PRESSED- SCALED CENTROCLINIUM. Jaa kaeasek Class and Order. SYNGENESIA SUPERFLUA. ( Nat. Ord.—Composirz. Div. Lapiatirior2. ) Generic Character. Involucrum subglobosum vel cylindraceum arcte imbri- catum. Flosculi disci tubulosi, 5-dentati, hime profundius fissi ; radii 7—12 bilabiati, labio interiore minutissimo bipartito erecto, (dein revoluto ?) exteriore longissimo tri- fido. Anthere biaristate. Stigma integrum. Pappus in- equalis, seaber. Receptaculum spinulis mollibus hispidum. Herbe ? v. Frutices, Peruviane. Folia petiolata subtus albo-tomentosa. Pedunculi solitarii axillares vel terminales uniflori. Flores fragrantes speciost: Radius purpureo- roseus. PL ay Specific Character. Centrocuinium appressum; fruticosum, foliis lanceolatis subintegerrimis, pedunculis nudis, involucri squamis erectis appréssis.. "A Ss mS Descr. Stem shrubby, one to two feet high in our stove, with white, woolly branches, and numerous patent or reflexed leaves, three inches or more long, lanceolate, waved, and nearly entire, partially glabrous and green above, pure white and cottony beneath. Peduncle solitary, terminal, or, from the prolongation of a shoot beneath it, axillary, woolly, naked, single-flowered. Flower large, fragrant. Florets of the disk and of the ray, similar to those described under C. reflexum. Involucre cylindrical, _ imbricated with many close-pressed, subulate scales. Re- ceptacle with soft, small aculei. i This This species, for which we are indebted to Mr. Cruck- sHANKS, Who brought the seeds from Peru, is undoubtedly, a perennial and frutescent plant. It blossomed for the first time, imperfectly, in December 1830, and again, with larger flowers, in June, 1831. : It appears to differ from Mr. Don’s Centrocuinium albi- cans in its entire leaves, and from Onosrris angustifolia (Humes. and Kunru,) principally in its larger and broader foliage. It is certainly a very desirable stove plant, no less on account of its beauty than its fragrance. _Fig. 1. Floret from the Disk. 2. Floret from the Ray. 3. Portion of ditto, to show the inner Lip :—magnified. KH Arnold Harrison bl? ; Pub by 8 Carts Claxenwood Essex Dect, 183, ( 3116 ) PERISTERIA ELATA. Lorry Dove-FLower. Class and Order. GyYNANDRIA Monanpria. ( Nat. Ord.—OrcuipEz. ) Generic Character. Flores subglobosi. Petala subcarnosa, 3 ext. equalia, valde concava, 2 int. lato-obovata. Labellum obovatum, carnosum, truncatum, cum basi columne articulatum, disco cristato crasso. Columna basi petalorum adnata, apice solummodo libero, inferne longe producta, insigniter dila- tata alata, alis erectis obtusis carnosis crassis intus uniden- - tatis. Anthera bilocularis. Masse pollinis 2 clavate, com- presse, hinc lateraliter fisse. Specific Name. PeristeriA * elata. Descr. A parasite. Bulb, when it has attained its full size, as large as a swan’s egg, broadly ovate, green, ob- scurely striated and somewhat wrinkled, having at its base the remains of old, membranous, sheathing scales, at the summit bearing from three to five leaves, which are from two feet to forty inches in length, and six inches in breadth at their greatest diameter, lanceolate, or almost sword- shaped, acute, with several strong ribs, prominent at the back, and having many plice and stria ; the outer ones sessile and sheathing, the inner tapering at the base into a sort of petiole. From the base of the bulb arises the flower-stem or scape, four feet high, terete, glabrous, earns Z ; elow * From sspicrspe, a dove, from the resemblance in the shape of the column : to that bird. VOL, Ve N - below three or four large, sheathing, membranous scales, and at the extremity a spike or raceme a foot in length, of large, yellowish-white, almost globose, fleshy flowers, yield- ing a peculiar = somewhat resembling that of the Nupnar lutea. Bracteas much shorter than the germen, ovato-acuminate, often carinate, rigid, green tinged with purple. The three outer petals of the flowers are broadly ovate, almost rotundate, very concave, the two inner ones rather more delicate, broadly obovate, all of them subcon- nivent. JLzp erect, broadly obovate, truncate, erect, thick and fleshy, having a large excrescence or protuberance, somewhat wrinkled, on the disk, often sprinkled with deep purple dots, which reach to the base, where the lip is joint- ed upon the prolonged base of the column. Colwmn adnate with and decurrent upon the bases of the petals, its upper part alone free and standing forward nearly horizontally, the rest is extended downwards, remarkably dilated and thickened, bearing on each side two large, fleshy wings, which are erect, and reach nearly to the top of the column, rounded at the apex, below the middle bearing a conspicu- ous tooth: the whole is of the same waxy white with the petals, but the upper or inner side of the wings is beauti- fully sprinkled with deep purple dots. Anther hemispher- ical, white, two-celled. Pollen-masses 2, clavate, flattened, with a fissure at the outer margin, deep yellow, waxy, firm, fixed upon an oblong-acuminate membrane, with its mar- gins recurved ; this projects beyond the anther-case, so as to resemble the beak of a bird. Germen cylindrico-clavate, furrowed and slightly twisted. In the year 1826, Henry Barnarp, Esq. of Truxillo in Peru, communicated to Ricuarp Harrison, Esq. of Liver- pool, a bulb of a remarkable, parasitical, orchideous plant, which he had found in the neighbourhood of Panama, and ihe flower of which is there looked upon with no little con- sideration, and known to the inhabitants by the name of “el Spirito Santo.” The reason for this appellation was quite obvious on the blossoming of the plant, which did not occur in Mr. Harrison’s stove, until the summer of the present year, 1831, when the centre of the flower exhibited a column which, with its summit or anther, and the project- Ing gland of the pollen-masses, together with the almost erect wings, bore a striking resemblance to a Dove, the emblem of the third person in the Trinity. El Spirito Santo was therefore applied by the same people, and 1n the same religious feeling as, dictated the naming of the ‘* Passion-Flower.”’ SS So soon as the curious flowers were fully expanded, Mr. Harrison, with his usual kindness, forwarded me a speci- men ; together with an excellent drawing from the pencil of Mrs. Arnotp Harrison. This is, in part only, copied, to suit the plate of the Magazine ; and therefore but imper- fectly represents the stately appearance of the original. For this species is no less remarkable among Orchideous plants for its stature, than for its large and copiously flow- ering spike. Being unable to find any Genus of the Orcuipex which corresponds with it, 1 have ventured to give it a Generic name significant of the dove-like appearance of the column of fructification. It is to be hoped, now that Mr. Harrison has so success- fully cultivated this rarity from the tropical parts of America bordering on the Pacific, that Mr. Barnarp will further the cause of Science by collecting and introducing to our stoves other plants of the same family, and which bear a long voyage better than many less interesting tribes. Fig. 1. View of the Column and Lip, the latter bent down. 2. Side view of the upper part of the Column and Anther. 3. Anther-case. 4. Upper, and 5, underside of the Pollen-masses: magnified. fub.by & Curtis, Glazenwoed Eeeex Dect 1, 1851. (BZ .) OROBUS CANESCENS. CANESCENT BITTER- VETCH. Class and Order. DiapetpH1A Decanpria. ( Nat. Ord.— Lecumrinosaz. ) Generic Character. Cal. campanulatus, 5-fidus, lobis 2 superioribus breviori- bus. Cor. papilionacea. Stam. diadelpha. Stylus graci- lis linearis apice villosus. Legumen cylindraceum oblon- gum 1-loc. bivalve polyspermum. Semina hilo lineari.— Herbe erecte. Stipule semisagittate. Petioli in setam brevem simplicem desinentes. Folia abrupte pinnata pauci- juga. Racemi axillares pedunculati. De Cand. Specific Character and Synonyms. Orogus canescens; caule tetragono, foliis subtrijugis, foli- olis linearibus obtusiusculis pubescentibus vel punc- tato-rugosis, nervis parallelis, stipulis semisagittatis linearibus acutis petiolum alatum subzequantibus, pe- dunculis 3—5-floris folio duplo longioribus, dentibus — calycinis latis tubo brevioribus, leguminibus rectis compressis glabris longitudinaliter reticulato-venosis. _ Orosus canescens. Linn. Fil. Suppl. p. 327. Willd. Sp. Pl. v. 3. p. 1075. - Benth. Cat. Pl. Pyr. p. 110. De Cand. Prodr. v. 3. p. 379. Orogus ensifolius. Lapeyr. Mem. du Mus. v. 2. p. 303. t. 12. (excl. var. B.) Orosgus atro-purpureus. Lapeyr. Abr. (non Desf.) os Orogus filiformis. Lam. Fl. Fr. ed. 2. p. 568. Spreng. Syst. Veg. v. 3. p. 258. ~ | ee Descr. Root perennial, throwing up several four-sided _ and striated, simple, glabrous stems, about a foot high. Leaves remote, almost sessile, pinnated with two or three pairs of opposite, linear, sword-shaped, closely-striated, scarcely pubescent leaflets: the rachis or common petiole short, tipped with a mucro. Stipules narrowly semisagit- tate. Peduncles often more than twice the length of the leaves, bearing a rather close raceme of four to eight large and very beautiful flowers. Calyx glabrous, two upper teeth shorter than the rest. Vextllum ample, and, as well as the ale, rich purple, becoming more blue when fully ex- panded. Carina almost white, purple only at the edges. Style remarkably dilated upwards, more so than in most of the Lathyri. Our Glasgow Botanic Garden is indebted to Mr. FiscHEr of Gottingen for the possession of this most desirable spe- cies of Orozgus, which produces its large and highly colour- ed blossoms in May and June. It is said to be a native of the South of Europe ; but chiefly, as it would appear, of the Pyrenées. Mr. Brenrnam gives it as inhabiting the central parts of that great chain. Spreneen adopts the name of O. filiformis of Lamarck for it; and it must be confessed that the appellation given by Liynaus is far from appropriate. The habit of this plant and the absence of tendrils pro- claims it to be an Orogus; but the style, remarkably dilated upwards, is altogether that of a Larnyrus. Fig. 1. Calyx and Carina; nat. size, 2. Front view of the Style. 3. Back view of the same :—magnified. Find by Fs Cur % VES Claxenwood Issex Dec? L183. gwaehf ( 3118 3119 ) CEPHALOTUS FOLLICULARIS. FOLLICLED CEPHALOTUS. Se oi SIC SiS SC SS SS SS Class and Order. DopecanprRiA HExXAGynIA. ( Nat. Ord.—Rosacez. ) Generic Character. Calyx coloratus 6-fidus, xstivatione valvata. Pet. o. Stam. 12, perigyna: Antherarum dorso glanduloso. Ova- ria 6, distincta, monosperma, ovulo erecto. Styli termi- nales. Br. Specific Name and Synonyms. Cepuacotus * follicularis. Labill. Fl. Nov. Holl. v. 2. p. 7. t. 145. Br. Rem. on Bot. of Terra Austr. p, 68. t. 4. De Cand. Prodr. v. 2. p. 591. - Descr. Root perennial, somewhat fusiform, the upper part dividing, as it were, into two or three short stems, which bear a cluster of elliptical, lanceolate, petiolated, entire, thickish, nerveless, purplish leaves ; and amongst these, but principally occupying the circumference, are several beautiful and highly curious pitcher-shaped appen- dages or operculated ascidia, attached by rather stout petioles where the lid unites with the margin of the ascidium. Their form is ovate or somewhat slipper-shaped, between foliaceous and membranaceous, green tinged with purple, furnished with two lateral oblique wings and one central one, the latter remarkably dilated at the margin, and all | beautifully * Derived from xs@aan, a head, and ov, an ear; on account of the glan- dular head of the anthers. beautifully fringed with hairs. The inside, which contains a watery fluid and entraps many insects, especially ants, is clouded with dark purple. The mouth is contracted, horse-shoe-shaped, annulated and crested with several deep, sharp, vertical annuli, of a dark purple colour, smallest near the base of the lid, three of them, which are opposite the wings, larger than the adjoining ones ; all of them form- ing a sickle-shaped point within the mouth. Lid plano- convex, green without and a little hairy, within clouded with purple, marked with broad veins which are somewhat dichotomous, the margin scalloped ;—at first it closes the mouth of the ascidium, and afterwards becomes nearly erect. Scape one to nearly two feet high, erect, terete, downy, bearing a compound, spicate raceme at the extre- mity, and one or two subulate bractee in its lower half. Branches very short, downy. Calyx small, hairy, greenish- white, deeply five-cleft, the segments ovate, erecto-patent, obtuse, the points thickened : the base or tube within has a thickened green disk, covered with small papille, at the margin of which the twelve stamens, alternately shorter, are inserted : all shorter than the calyx segments; those opposite the calyx-segments the longest. Filaments subu- late, purplish rose-coloured, glabrous. Anthers two-celled, didymous, subglobose, in part concealed by a large fungose, steel excrescence (the connectivum); those of the longer laments rather the largest. Pollen globose. Pistils six, small, arranged in a circle around a small tuft of hairs, purplish. Germen ovate, glabrous, tapering into a some- what recurved style: Stigma obtuse. “ Ovule erect, almost as large as the cell, and containing within the membrana- ceous testa a little, pendulous sack, of the same size as the cavity of the testa,’ (Br.) For our first knowledge of this rare and highly curious plant, having the ascidia or appendages of the famous Neprentuss, but belonging to the Natural Order Rosacez, we are indebted to M. Lagrizarpiere, who discovered it in “ Leuwin’s Land,” and figured and described it in his ff Specimen of the Plants of New Holland.” Mr. Browne, durmg his voyage with Capt. Furxpers detected it on nearly the same line of coast, namely, “ in the neighbour- hood of King George’s Sound, especially near the shores of Princess Royal Harbour, in 35° S. lat. and 118° E. long.; beginning to flower about the end of December.” From Specimens there gathered, the species has been illustrated WS Hi dedt Ticb by § Curtis, Clanzenwood Essea Decttiiy.. by that profound Botanist, so as, aided by the pencil of Mr. Bauer, to leave nothing to be wished relative to its structure, save what might be obtained from a knowledge of the seed, which is still a desideratum. Capt. Kine brought over living plants of Cepnatorus to the Royal Gardens of Kew in 1823, which flowered in August, 1827. From those individuals and the drawing liberally communicated by Mr. Arron, and some noble dried specimens from King George’s Sound, for which I am indebted to Mr. Fraser, the accompanying figures and description have been made. | Recently, I believe, growing plants have been brought home by Mr. Baxrer, which are flourishing at the Clapton Nursery. Tas. 3118. Plant: nat. size. Fig. 1. Upper part of a Scape, the Flowers yet unexpanded (from Mr. Baver’s figure.) Tas. 3119. Fig. 1. Front view of an Ascidium. 2. Side view of ditto. 3. Vertical section of the same, slightly magnified. 4. Outside view of a Flower. 5. Vertical view of ditto. 6. Vertical section of ditto. 7. A shorter Stamen, seen from behind. 8. Longer Stamen, seen in front. 9. Pistil, laid open to show the Ovule. 10. The Ovule (from Mr. Bauer's figure) : more or less magnified. . i & by § f m0 LIE. {JEL 4 Ff A del fit yy} CGurtts bla RLAWEO vd £. wer. Ls L ls ( 3120 ) BANKSIA MEDIA. INTERMEDIATE BANKSIA. Class and Order. TrerranpriA Monoeynta. ( Nat. Ord.—Proreaces. ) Generic Character. Perianthium 4-partitum (raro 4-fidum.) Stamina apici- bus concavis laciniarum immersa. Sguamule hypogyne 4. Ovarium uniloculare biovulatum. Folliculus lignosus : Dissepimento (e testis ovulorum amborum formato) libero bifido. Amentum flosculorum paribus tribracteatis. Br. Specific Character and Synonyms. Banxsta media ; foliis cuneato-linearibus truncatis dentato- serratis basi attenuatis: subter reticulatis venis venu- lisque glabratis laciniis tomentosis, perianthii unguibus sericeis; laminis glabris, folliculis glabriusculis immer- sis, floribus marcescentibus. Br. Banxsia media. Br. Prodr. Fl. Nov. Holl. Suppl. p. 35. Descr. This appears to constitute a large shrub, or small tree, with rather thick, rounded branches, clothed with a thin pale tomentum. Leaves scattered, four to six inches long, linear-cuneate, coriaceous, rigid, often truncated at the extremity, the margins coarsely dentato-serrated, almost spinulose, the base attenuated into a very slender, pale yellow-green petiole: the upper side is glabrous, dark green, and glossy, very obscurely veiny, below paler, the © veins and veinlets glabrous, the areole or lacunes filled — with white down. Finer’ of an uniform, rather pale, and © dull yellow, densely collected into a broadly-oblong, ter- — minal head. Scales very hairy, deep orange. Perianth slender, silky, tubular at the base; the lacinia filiform, spathulate at the extremity, and there hollowed for the reception of the anther. Style as long as the perianth, a Sor... For a fine specimen of this, likewise accompanied by a drawing, I am indebted to W. T. Arron, Esq. It was re- ceived at Kew from Francis Hencuman, Esq. in 1824: the seeds having a short time previously been gathered, on the South-Western Shores of New Holland, between Cape Arid and Lucky Bay, by Mr. Baxter. It is nearly allied to B. marcescens, (already figured at Tab. 2803 of the present work) between which and B. attenuata it is placed by Mr. Brown. At Kew Gardens its flowering season is August. Fig. 1. Flowers with their accompanying Bracteas. 2. Part of a seg- ment of the Perianth with its Stamen: magnified. HAM debt Seas Curlis Glazenwood Fesex, Dect LIBR ( 3121 ) BaptTisiA PERFOLIATA. PERFOLIATE Baprisia. KEK KEKE EEE EEE KEE REE EE Class and Order. DecanpriA Mownoeynia. ( Nat. Ord.—Lereuminosz. ) Generic Character. Cai. semi-5-fidus, bilabiatus. Cor. papilionacea, petalis longitudine subequalibus: vexillum lateribus reflexis. Sta- — mina decidua. Legumen ventricosum, pedicellatum, poly- spermum. Br. Specific Character and Synonyms. Baptista * perfoliata ; foliis perfoliatis integerrimis subro- tundis. Br. ; Baprisia perfoliata. Br. in Hort. Kew. ed. 2. v, 3. p. 5. De Cand. Prodr. v. 2. p. 100. Spreng. Syst. Veg. v. 2. p. 347. Elliott, Cav. v. 1. p. 467. Lodd. Bot. Cab. t. 1104. Ranta perfoliata. Willd. Sp. Pl. v. 3. p. 949. Popatyrria perfoliata. Mich. Fl. Am, v. 1. p. 263. Pursh, : Am, v. 1. p. 307. Sopuora perfoliata. Walt. Pl. Car. p. 135. Crorataria perfoliata. Linn. Sp. Pl. p. 1003. Crorararia perfoliata folio. Dill. Elth. p. 122. t. 102. f. 122. Descr. Root perennial. Stems herbaceous, erect or declined, slightly branched, mostly near the base, ee a 3 oot * From farrw, to dye, on account of the peculiar properties of some a species, foot high: the branches terete, glaucous, glabrous, as is every part of the plant. Leaves broadly oval, or almost orbicular, simple, entire, pierced by the stem at some dis- tance from the margin, hence perfoliate and secund, large in proportion to the size of the plant, often emarginate at the inferior edge, glaucous-green, veiny, the veins or nerves somewhat radiant. Flowers solitary, axillary, erect. Pe- duncle short, slender, erect. Calyx in four somewhat equally-sized, rather spreading teeth, the upper tooth again bidentate. Corolla pale yellow. Petals nearly equal in length : the Vexilluwm shortest, roundish, carinated, emar- ginate, the sides somewhat reflexed and concave. Ale oblong-oval, closed upon the carina, which is obovate. Stamens ten, equal: Filaments free, standing close together. Anthers oval, deep orange. Pistil about as long as the stamens. Germen linear-oblong, pedicellate, about as long as the subulate style, which is curved upwards. “ Legume inflated, large. Seeds reniform, very small.’”’ (Elliott. ) Roots of this singular plant were obligingly sent to our Glasgow Garden by the late Srernen Exuiorr, Esq. and by Dr. Wray, of Augusta, from Georgia, where it grows in dry sandy hills. Coming from so Southern a latitude, it might well be supposed to be a tender plant ; and, indeed, as such it is considered by Mr. Loppices, requiring the protection of a greenhouse. With us, in the peat border of the American ground, it has survived two winters, and flowers in great perfection during the months of July and August. The blossoms are neither large nor showy, but the foliage, of so unusual a character for a leguminose plant, and of a tender glaucous-green colour, renders it eminently deserving a place in every garden. —— Fig. 1. Flower. 2. Vexillum. 3. Inner view of a Wing. 4. Calyx and Carina. 5, Calyx and Stamens. 6. Pistil :—magnified. On? 5122. . B32 WLI del Pub by 8. Curtss, Glaxenwootl EesexDecLl ¢ 81m9 MowNINA OBTUSIFOLIA. BLUNT-LEAVED Mownlina. KK EEK EERE KEKE EKKKEK EK Class and Order. Diavetpu1a Ocranpris. ( Nat. Ord.—Potyeaez. ) Generic Character. Flores resupinati. Cal. 5-sepalus deciduus, sepalis 2 in- ternis aleformibus, 3 exterioribus ovatis, 2 quorum sepe coalitis. Petala basi connata, medio concavo sepe 3- dentato. Stam. 8, filamentis subdiadelphis_pilosiusculis. Drupa 2-loc. 2-sperma aut abortu 1-loc. 1-sperma, inter- dum margine membranaceo cincta. Semen fere ex apice loculi pendulum. Albumen nullum. De Cand. Specific Character and Synonyms. Monnina * obtusifolia ; fruticosa, ramulis foliisque glabris (vel puberulis) oblongis obtusis basi cuneatis obsolete venosis, spicis solitariis. Kunth. Monnina obtusifolia. Humb. et Kunth, Nov. Gen. v. 5. p. All. De Cand. Prodr. v. 1. p. 339. Monnina nemorosa. Hook. in Bot. Misc. v. 2. p. 208. (vix Humb. et Kunth.) Heseanpra phyllireioides. “ Bonpl. in Mag de Gesellsch, 1808, p. 42.” Descr. This forms a small, upright, somewhat frutes- cent, slender and dichotomously branched shrub; branches glabrous or very obscurely pubescent, slightly tinged with purple. Leaves obovate, obtuse, attenuated into a short petiole, * According to the Flora Peruviana, this plant is named from Monnino, © Count de Flora Blanca, a Spaniard, who was a patron of Botany. petiole, quite entire, scarcely more than one inch long, often glabrous, but sometimes minutely and indistinctly pubes- cent. At the base of the petiole, on each side, is a promi- nent, fleshy, roundish gland, depressed in the centre. Ra- cemes terminal, solitary, slender, more or less peduncled. Bracteas very deciduous. Pedicels short, curved down- wards, so that the flower is drooping. Three outer seg- ments of the calyx small, greenish-purple, oblong, two inner ones very large, petaloid, roundish, attenuated at the base, deep bluish-purple, spreading. Corolla of three, or rather, perhaps, of five, reddish-purple petals, united into one hollow keel, within which are the stamens, combined below into one body, the free part of the filaments slender, incurved, hairy at their base. Anthers oblong, opening by a pore at the extremity. Pistil: Germen oblong ; style curved almost like the letter S, incrassated above, with a tooth on each side. Stigma obtuse, yellow. This pretty plant, with its small but bright-coloured flowers, blossomed in the stove of the Glasgow Botanic Garden, in June, 1831; having been raised from seeds brought from Lurin, near Lima, by our valued friend Mr. Crucksuanxs, during the preceding year. _ Thad in the Botanical Miscellany referred the dried spe- cimens from the same country, though not without hesita- tion, to the M. nemorosa of Humsoxpr and Kuna: but the living plant, seeming to accord better with the M. obtu- sifolia of the same authors, I have, therefore, here adopted that name. _Fig. 1. View of the upperside of a Flower. 2. Underside of ditto. 3. Side view of a Flower. 4. Corolla, laid open. 5. Stamen. 6, Pistil. 7- Gland, from the base of the Petiole :—all more or less magnified. IND Eox, In which the Latin Names of the Plants contained in the Fifth Volume of the New Series (or Fifty-Highth of the Work) are alphabetically arranged. > Pi. Pi. SIL Achras Sapota. 3061 Hunnemannia fumariefolia. 3112 Ibid> 3065 Indigofera atropurpurea. 3046 Adamia cyanea. 3050 Alstreemeria acutifolia. 3105 Neillii. 3040 pallida. 3095 Annona squamosa. 3084 Anthericum ? plumosum, 3091 Aphanochilus blandus. 3093 Arbutus mucronata. 3073 Argemone grandiflora. 3092 Arracacia esculenta, 3101 Asplenium Nidus. 3060 Banksia littoralis ? 3120 media, 3052 speciosa. 3121 Baptisia perfoliata. 3098 Brassavola elegans. 3076 Broughtonia sanguinea. 3069 Browallia grandiflora. 3094 Calceolaria angustiflora. 3115 Centroclinium appressum. 3114 _ reflexum. 3118 Cephalotus follicularis. 3119 Ibid. 3072 Chrysophyllum Cainito. 3049 Clerodendron nutans. 3051 Codizeum pictum. 3081 Columnea hirsuta. 3047 Commelina gracilis. 3102 Coryanthes maculata. 3058 Delima sarmentosa. 3074 Dendrobium speciosum. 3063 Dryandra nervosa. 3082 Drosera binata. 3107 Echinocactus Ottonis. 3068 Eranthemum strictum. 3087 Farsetia lunarioides. 3083> Fritillaria leucantha. 3041 Gesneria bulbosa. 3039 Hedychium flavum. 3099 Houstonia longifolia. 3053 Hovea pannosa. 3071 Janipha Manihot. 3110 Lantana nivea, var. mutabilis. 3057 Loasa hispida. 3048 incana. 3075 Lobelia hypocrateriformis. 3103 Lonicera hirsuta. 3056 Lupinus Cruckshanksii. 3090 Melocactus communis. _ 3067 Mimulus perfoliatus. 3122 Monnina obtusifolia. 3059 Monodora Myristica. 3108 Nierembergia gracilis. 3055 Nothoclena tenera. 3089 Olea undulata. 3109 Oncidium bicornutum. 3077 Ornithogalum fimbriatum. 3117 Orobus canescens. 3100 Palavia rhombifolia. 3116 Peristeria elata, 3066 Pladera decussata. 3064 Portulaca Gilliesii. 3085 Pterostylis nutans. 3086 curta. 3080 Rhipsalis Cassytha. 3079 - fasciculata. . 3078 - mesembryanthemoi- des. 3106 Rhododrendron aes: ge 3113 Salpiglossis ymin fae 3044 Schizanthus G poten 3070 Hookeri. Tb se 3045 retusus. _ 3042 Sphenogyne erithmifolia. 3104 Torenia scabra. 3096 Tournefortia Netleieoplahdes 3097 Trillium discolor. | 3054 Tupistra nutans. 3043 Urena lobata. — ~ 3062 Vernonia acutifolia. 3088 Xanthochymus dulcis. INDE X, In which the English Names of the Plants contained in the Fifth Volume of the New Series (or Fifty-Eighth of the Work) are alphabetically arranged. ao Semen tenes OO c.s rere ey PE 3046 Adamia, blue-berried. 3105 Alstreemeria, Mr. Neill’s. 3040 pale-flowered. 3050 leaved., sharp-pointed- 3084 Anthericum, bearded-flowered. 3091 Aphanochilus, mild. 3093 Arbutus, sharp-pointed. 3092 Arracacha, eatable. 3052 Banksia, handsome. 3120 intermediate. 3060 ———— Shore. 3121 Baptisia, perfoliate. 3117 Bitter-Vetch, Canescent. 3098 Brassavola, elegant. 3076 Broughtonia, crimson-flowered. 3069 Browallia, large-flowered. 3059 Calabash-Nutmeg, Jamaica. 3115 Centroclinium, close-pressed- scaled. 3114 Centroclinium, reflexed-scaled. 3118 Cephalotus, follicled. 3119 Ibid. 3051 Codixum, painted-leaved. 3081 Columnea, hairy. ara enero slender. at oryanthes, spotted-lipped. 3049 Clerodendron, drooping ower a _ 3095 Custard-apple, undulated, Su- gar-apple, or Sweet-sop. 3058 Delia, clibing. 5 3074 Dendrobium, great. 3116 Dove-flower, lofty. 3063 Dryandra, nerved-leayed. 3107 Echinocactus, Mr. Otto’s. _ 3068 Eranthemum, upright. _ 3087 Farsetia, Lunaria-like. 3083 Fritillary, white-flowered. 3041 Gesneria, bulbous-rooted. 3039, oe large yellow-flow- _ 3099 Houstonia, long-leaved. _ $053 Hovea, rusty. 3061 Hunnemannia, Fumitory-leaved —— 8065 Indigofera, blood-flowered. _ S10 Lantana, white-flowered ; | | 3048 Loasa, hoary. Pl. 3057 — hispid. 3075 Lobelia, salver-shaped. 3056 Lupine, Mr. Cruckshanks’ Pe- ruvian. 3090 Melon-Thistle, greater Turk’s- cap. 3073 Mexican-Poppy, large-flowered 3067 Monkey-flower, perfoliate. 3122 Monnina, blunt-leaved. 3108 Nierembergia, slender. 3055 Nothoclena, thin-leaved. 3089 Olive, wavy-leaved, fragrant Cape. 3109 Oncidium, two-horned. 3100 Palavia, rhomb-leaved. 3071 Physic - Nut, eatable-rooted, Bitter Cassada, Manioc, or Tapioca. 3066 Pladera, decussate. 3085 Pterostylis, nodding-flowered. 3086 —————~ short-lipped. 3064 Purslane, Dr. Gillies’. 3079 Rhipsalis, cluster-branched. 3078 ———— Fig-marigold-like. 3080 ————— naked. 3106 Rhododendron, Lapland. 3113 Salpiglossis, entire-leaved. 3111 Sapota, common or Bully-tree. 3112 Ibid. 3070 Schizanthus, acute-petaled. 3045 blunt-petaled. 3044 Dr. Graham's. 3042 Sphenogyne, Sampire-leaved. 3101 Spleen-wort, Bird’s-nest. 3094 Slipper-wort, narrow-flowered. 3072 Star-Apple, broad-leaved. 3077 Star of Bethlehem, hairy-leaved. 3082 Sun-dew, forked-leaved. | 3104 Torenia, rough. : 3096 Tournefortia, Heliotrope-like. 3097 Trillium, green-fiowered. 3054 Tupistra, drooping. 3043 Urena, angular-leaved. © 3062 Vernonia, sharp-leaved. 3103 Woodbine, hairy American. 3088 Xanthochymus, sweet-fruited.