CURTIS’S BOTANICAL MAGAZINE, COMPRISING THE Plants of the Royal Gardens of Key AND OF OTHER BOTANICAL ESTABLISHMENTS IN GREAT BRITAIN ; WITH SUITABLE DESCRIPTIONS ; BY JOSEPH DALTON HOOKER, M.D., F.R.S. L.S. & G.S., DOL. OXON., LL.D. OANTAB,, CORRESPONDENT OF THE INSTITUTE OF FRANCE, iA RANA RRA AAA VOL: 3350 OF THE THIRD SERIES; (Or Vol. XCV. of the Whole Work.) ROPER AAERADARAAAAAAALMAAADAA RRA IAPR MAR ARAL “ Fair pledges of a fruitful tree, Why do ye fall so fast ? Your date is not so past ; But you may stay yet here awhile, To blush and gently smile, And go at last.” R. Herrick, SAAR ARAAAAARAAAAAAAAARARIRAAAAAAARAAAAAARAA LONDON : & ‘REEVE & LO. oes HENRIETTA STREET, COVENT GARDEN. 1869. Mo. Bot. ae | | 1897. TO WALTER FITCH, ESQ,, F.LS.. The accomplished Artist and Lithographer of upwards of Two Thousand Five Hundred Plates already Published of the “ BOTANICAL MAGAZINE,” this volume is dedicated By his faithful And sincere friend, JOS. D. HOOKER. RoyaL Garpens, Kew, Dec, 1, 1869. STA Son Imp Vincent Brooks, Day& W Fitch, del et lith Tas. 5748. BRASSIA Lawrenctana, var. LONGISSIMA. Mr. Lawrence's Brassia, long-sepaled variety. Nat. Ord. Orncu1pEm.—Gynanpria MonanpRia. Gen. Char. Perianthium explanatum. Sepala et petala angusta, libera, zequalia, his nune minoribus. Labellum planum, indivisum, ecalearatum, cum columna continuum, basi bicristatum. Colwmna nana, libera, aptera. Anthera 1-locularis. Pollinia 2, postice suleata; eaudicula brevi; glan- dula crassa.—Herbex epiphytice, acaules, pseudobulbose, Americe tropice incole. Folia coriacea. Scapi radicales, basi bracteati. Flores speciosi, spicati. Lindl. Brassta Lawrenciana ; sepalis lateralibus elongatis, labello oblongo apice lanceolato subundulato, callo baseos simplici canaliculato truncato pubescente. Lindl. Brassta Lawrenciana. Lindl. in Bot. Reg. v. 27. t. 18. Var. longissima, sepalis longissime caudatis, labello oblongo-lanceolato sub- tiliter aristato-acuminato ima basi abrupte excavato. Reichb. fil. in Gard. Chron. 1868, p. 1313. This magnificent Orchid is a native of Costa Rica, and was flowered last September by Wentworth Buller, Esq., F.L.S., of Strete Raleigh, Exeter, who informs me that one spike bore no less than thirteen fragrant flowers, of the size and colour represented in our Plate. When figuring the original Brassia Lawrenciana, Dr. Lindley well remarked that “the species of this genus are difficult to distinguish from one another, especially those which have the lateral sepals much lengthened out.” The flowers of the original state are not half so large as those of our plants, the lateral sepals measuring barely three inches, whilst they are fully seven inches long in the var. longissima ; the colours, too, are considerably different, a deep orange- yellow, with few large, broad, purple blotches in the variety, but a pale golden-yellow, with more, much smaller, paler, redder bars in the original. In more important characters, however, the two plants agree so closely, that I have followed JANUARY Ist, 1869. Professor H. Reichenbach in referring the splendid plant here figured to its comparatively pigmy and pale-flowered predecessor, described by Dr. Lindley. It should further be stated that Mr. Lawrence’s plant is said to be a native of Brazil, whilst Mr. Wentworth Buller’s comes from Costa Rica; but in the early days of Orchidology, localities and habitats were not much attended to. _ Descr. Pseudobulbs three inches and a half long, oblong in outline, much compressed, with very acute thin edges, quite smooth, even, and bright green. Leaves six to eight inches long, oblong-lanceolate, coriaceous, very dark green. Bracts at the base of the pseudobulb, often leafy. Spikes from the base of the peduncle, two feet long, nearly hori- zontal, drooping at the apex, many-flowered; bracteoles short and small. Ovary one inch long, narrowed into a stout pedicel. Sepals very long and slender, a quarter of an inch broad at the base, lateral upwards of seven inches long, dark orange-yellow, with a few large, deep red-purple blotches towards the base. Petals erect, similar to the sepals, and as broad, but much shorter, two to three inches long. Lip three inches long, ovate-lanceolate, acuminate, pale yel- low, with a ring of purple spots at the base, surrounding two raised parallel ridges that are slightly pubescent and termi- nate in tubercles. Edges of column pubescent.—J. D. H. Fig. 1. Base of lip and column ;:—magnified. 5749. W. Fitch, del et lith. : Vincent Brooks, Day & Son, Imp. Tas. 5749, IBERIDELLA rorunprrorta. Round-leaved Iberidella. Nat. Ord. Cructrer#.—TsrrRaDYNAMIA SILICULOSA. Gen. Char. Sepala erecta, basi equalia. Petala equalia. Stamina libera, edentula. Siligua compressa, oblonga v. lanceolata, acuta v. acuminata ; valvis carinatis v. subalatis ; septo angusto membranaceo ; stylo elongato, stigmate emarginato. Semina in loculis 2-6, oblonga, immarginata ; coty- ledones accumbentes, interdum oblique.—Suffrutices v. herbe sepius basi ramosi, glabri, montium Europe australis, Syrie, Persiz, e¢ Asie Minoris incole. Folia alterna et opposita, integra. Flores racemosi, albi lilacini v. roset. Iserivetta rotundifolia; humilis, glaberrima, radice elongata, ramis con- fertis ascendentibus foliosis, foliis oppositis parvis carnosulis obovatis v. obovato-rotundatis obtusis integerrimis v. obscure sinuato-dentatis radicalibus petiolatis caulinis sessilibus basi obtusis v, auriculatis, ra- cemis oblongis densifloris, pedicellis gracilibus patentibus, petalis li- lacinis, siliquis obovato-oblongis acuiinatis stylo persistente termi- natis, valvis carinatis, loculis 2-spermis. Tuuasprt rotundifolium. Gaud. Fl. Helvet. v. 4. p. 219. TutaspPt ceperfolium. Koch, Fl. Germ. ed. 2. p. 75. Tataspr corymbosum. Reichb. Ic. Fl. Germ. v. 2. p. 8. t. 6. f. 4224. Hurcurnsta rotundifolia. 2. Brown in Hort. Kew. ed. 2. v. 4. p.82. DC. Prodr, v. 1. p. 177. Hurcnrnsta cepeefolia. DC. Syst. v. 2. p. 386. Prod. v. 1. p. 177. Hutcurnsta corymbosa. J. Gay, in Syllog. Ratisb. v. 1. p. 169. Iseris rotundifolia. Linn. Sp. Pl. n. 905. Iserts cepeewfolia. Wulf. in Jacq. Mise. v. 2. p. 28. f. 1. Noccea ceperfolia. Reichb. Fl. Hxcurs. p. 663. A lovely little rock-plant, native chiefly of shingly calca- reous soils in the Alps of Europe, from Mont Cenis to Ca- rinthia, at elevations of 6-9000 feet. It flowered in the Royal Gardens, Kew, in April last, and at the same period in Messrs. Backhouse’s establishment at York; the Kew plants were received from the Zurich Botanic Gardens; Messrs. Backhouse’s were imported from the Monte Rosa JANUARY ILstT, L869, Alps. The plant is variable in habit, in the colour of the foliage, and its glaucousness; the Zurich variety is denser, deeper green, and has stouter racemes of more numerous flowers than the Monte Rosa ones, the lower leaves of which are of a lovely glaucous hue, variegated with red-purple, and the inflorescence laxer and fewer flowered. The species has been transferred from genus to genus until the late settlement of the Thlaspideous crucifers in the ‘Genera Plantarum.’ There.can, I think, be no doubt that it is a close ally of the more Eastern forms that constitute the genus Jheridella, which differ from Thlaspi in the acute pod, from Léeris in the equal petals, and from Hutchinsia in the long style and foliage. Descr. A densely-tufted, more or less glaucous-green, glabrous herb, with a long perennial tap-root, that burrows deep amongst stones. . Stems three to six inches long, ascend- ing. Leaves mostly opposite, small, fleshy, one-third to three- quarters of an inch long; radical petioled, broadly obovate or almost orbicular, quite entire or obscurely sinuate-toothed ; cauline sessile, obtuse or auricled at the base. Flowers half an inch in diameter, in cylindric, crowded, erect racemes, pale lilac, with a yellow eye; pedicels horizontal.—J. D. H. Fig, 1. Flower, 2. Ditto, with the calyx and pet —all magnified. alyx and petals removed. 3. Ovary: | + VEit af tch del et ith v Tap. 5750. TACSONTA ERIANTHA, Woolly-flowered Tacsonia. Nat. Ord. PasstrrorE®.—PrEnranpria TRIGYNIA. Gen. Char. (Vide supra, Tas. 557 1.) Tacsonta eriantha; caule glabrato, foliis latis profunde 3-lobis 5-nervibus, lobis ovatis calloso-serratis supra glabris subtus niveo-tomentosis venis glabratis, stipulis dimidiato-orbiculatis aristato-dentatis, bracteis con- natis venosis venis viridibus calyceque albo-lanatis, calycis tubo elon- gato, lobis petalisque consimilibus oblongis apice rotundatis roseis, coronis brevissimis exteriore carnosulo dentato intermedio integro, in- teriore crenulato. Tacsonta eriantha. Benth. Pl. Hartweg. 183. Walp. Rep. v. 5.773. A noble plant, resembling in habit and colour of flower the well-known T. mollissima (Tab. nostr. 4187*), from which, however, it differs conspicuously in the white undersurface of the foliage and long bracts; these species, and others not yet introduced, are natives of the temperate Andes of Ecua- dor and New Granada, and are cultivated in the Gardens of Quito, whence they have been introduced into this country. The one here figured was sent by Professor Jameson, of that city, to Isaac Anderson Henry, Ksq., F.L.S., of Hay Lodge, Edinburgh, with whom it flowered last J uly. Professor Jameson describes it asa native of the Volcano of Pichincha, growing at the upper boundary of the forest regions, 1]- 13,000 feet above the sea, ina cold and foggy climate. Asa greenhouse or conservatory climber, it rivals the 7. mollis- sima, and is as free a flowerer. Descr. A late woody climber. Stem nearly glabrous, an- gular. Leaves on stout glandular petioles an inch and a half to two inches long; blade four to six inches in dia- meter, much broader than long, deeply three-lobed, subcor- date at the base, glabrous above, covered below except the * I doubt much this being the true mollissima, H. B. K., which has densely tomentose stems; it more resembles 7. Quitensis, Benth. JANUARY lst, 1869. nerves with snow-white cottony tomentum; lobes serrate. Stipules semiorbicular, coriaceous, convex, acutely toothed, with a spinous process at the base. Peduncles solitary, stout, one-flowered, shorter than the petioles. Bracts connate into a three-lobed tube one inch long, covered as well as the calyx-tube with white down, the veins conspicuous and green. Calyx-tube three inches long by half an inch in diameter, cylindric, lobes an inch and a half long, oblong, rounded at the point, pink, with a green midrib at the back, which is produced into a sharp point. Pefals similar to the calyx- lobes. Corona of three short series, outer an irregularly lobed ring, intermediate an almost entire ring, inner tubular, embracing the base of the stamens, crenulate. Ovary vil- lous.— J. D. Hf. Fig. 1. Portion of calyx, showing the outer and middle coronas :—magnified. S751. W. Fitch del et lith: Vincent Brooks Day & Son imp ‘Tas. 5751. STAPELIA Hysrrix. Bristly flowered Stapelia. Nat. Ord. ASCLEPIADE®.—GyYNANDRIA PENTANDRIA. Gen. Char. (Vide supra, Tan. 5692.) Stapeia Hystriz; glauco-virescens, ramis ramulisque pentagonis, angulis rotundatis dentatis, dentibus patentibus corneis acutis, pedunculis so- litariis v. aggregatis unifloris roseis ex parte inferiore ramulorum enatis, corolla patentissima 5-fida, lobis ovatis acuminatis, supra sul- phureis striis brevibus interruptis transversis rufis et processubus subulatis erectis diaphanis apicibus rufescentibus densissime obtectis, corona exteriore depressa lobata, cornubus conniventibus appendici crasso horizontali oblongo obtuso terminatis, appendicibus discum obtuse 5-lobum efformantibus, This is an entirely new species, in so far as I can ascertain, of the long neglected but interesting and beautiful genus Stapelia. At first sight it resembles so closely the S. glan- duliflora of Masson (cultivated in Kew in 1796, but now lost to the country), that it was taken for that plant ; but it differs entirely in the five-angled stems, horizontal spines, in the larger flowers, in the subulate processes (not clavate hairs) that cover the corolla-lobes, and in the curious hori- zontal appendages that crown the stamina] processes, and to- gether form a five-rayed disk in the centre of the flower. It is a native of Eastern South Africa, and was sent to the Royal Gardens by Mr. M‘Ken, the indefatigable and able Superin- tendent of the Natal Botanic Gardens. Descr. A small, tufted, pale glaucous-green species, four to six inches high, and much branched. Branches half an. inch to three-quarters of an inch in diameter, five-angled ; angles obtuse, tuberculate, toothed, tubercles conical, teeth horny, pointing outwards. Flowers two to three together from near the bases of the branches, bracts subulate; peduncles pink. Sepals small, lanceolate. Corolla one inch in dia- meter, pale sulphur-coloured, internally marked with innu- JANUARY Ist, 1869. merable small, short, transverse bars of dark purple, lobes ovate acuminate, spreading and recurved, densely covered with erect, diaphanous, subulate, fleshy processes, tipped with . purple; interior of tube smooth. Outer corona depressed, expanded, lobulate, with small tubercles between each sta- men. Staminal processes erect, conniving, with horizontal terminal appendages that are thick and ovoid, flat above and convex below; these together form a five-rayed disk in the centre of the flower.—J. D. H. Fig. 1. Vertical section of tube of corolla, showing the corona and sta- minal processes :—magnified. Aenea, 8 om, it Brooks Day & Son Imp i Vince ay Tas. 5752. THIBAUDIA acumryara. Sharp-leaved Thibaudia. Nat. Ord. Ertckm.—Prntanpr1a Monoeynt. Gen. Char. (Vide supra, Tas. 4308.) Turpavpta (Proclesia) acuminata ; fruticosa, glabra v. ramulis et inflores- centia puberulis, foliis brevissime petiolatis coriaceis ovatis y. ovato- lanceolatis longe acuminatis v. apice caudatis integerrimis 3-5-plinerviis coriaceis subtus nigro-punctulatis, racemis brevibus subterminalibus, bracteis amplis coloratis deciduis, calycis limbo 5-dentato, corolla elongato-urceolata 5-dentata, filamentis glaberrimis alternis paulo mi- noribus. THIBAUDIA acuminata. Hook. Ic. Pl. ¢. 111. Tarpaupia Hookeri. Walp. Rep. v. 6. p. 412. ProctEsta acuminata et P. Benthamiana. Klotzsch in’ Linnea, v. 24. p. 34. A very distinct, showy, free-flowering shrub, a native of the Andes of Columbia and Ecuador, whence we have many specimens collected by Jameson, Hartweg, and others. It was introduced by Mr. Pearce when collecting for Messrs. Veitch, by whom it was flowered in November last. Being a native of the loftier regions of the Andes, from 8-10,000 feet, it is well suited to a conservatory temperature, where its handsome green foliage, purple-tinted young leaves, and brilliant red flowers, which are produced in great abun- dance, render it a very attractive plant. Colonel Hall, its discoverer, describes the fruit as fragrant and eatable. Pro- fessor Jameson observes that around the suburbs of Quito, where it abounds, it flowers throughout the year. Descr. A branching, leafy, evergreen shrub, with pendu- lous branches, that are glabrous or slightly pubescent. Leaves subdistichous, on very short stout petioles, two to three inches long, ovate or oblong-lanceolate, rounded at the base, with long acuminate or caudate points, three to five-nerved towards the base, glabrous and dark green above, below JANUARY Ist, 1869. paler, with a few scattered, minute, black, glandular dots. Flowers in terminal and axillary short racemes, covered when in bud by large, imbricating, concave, scarlet, deciduous, ob- long, obtuse, coriaceous bracts, the longest nearly half an inch long. Pedicels short. Calyz-tube globose, limb. five- toothed. Corolla two-thirds of an inch long, glabrous, tubu- lar, but ventricose below, shortly five-toothed, bright red, with green tips and lobes. Stamens included, filaments very short, curved, glabrous; anthers slender, cells with long terminal slits. Style slender, stigma truncate.—J. D. H. Fig. 1. Flower. 2, Ovary. 8. Stamens :—all magnified. J75d o => z- Br ee ae Ene Te re as ‘ Tas. 5753. CdELOGYNE (Pleione) ReicHEnBACHIANA. Dr. Reichenbach’s Pleione. Nat. Ord. OrcnipEx.—Gynanpria Monanprra. Gen. Char. (Vide supra, Tan. 5674.) CaLoe@rne (Pleione) Reichenbachiana; pseudobulbo magno lagenweformi supra medium tumido longitudinaliter lobato, apice abrupte conico, floribus amplis, sepalis petalisque anguste oblongis roseis, labello albo disco roseo maculato mento brevissimo, lobis lateralibus brevibus terminali dilatato ciliato-dentato 2-fido, disco 3-carinato carinis medio serie papillarum ornatis, columna gracili apice 3-lobo, lobis lateralibus emarginatis intermedio dentato, rostello 3-lobo. Catoarne (Pleione) Reichenbachiana. T. Moore in Gard. Chron. 1868, p- 1210. This is decidedly the finest species of the Pleione group of Celogyne known; it was discovered by our excellent and indefatigable correspondent Col. Benson, of Rangoon, on the mountains of Arracan, I believe (but have no certain infor- mation), and transmitted by him to the Royal Gardens and to Messrs. Veitch’s establishment, in both which places it flowered simultaneously in November of last year. It was first described in the ‘ Gardeners’ Chronicle’ under the above name, thus paying a richly deserved compliment to a foreigner who has ever lent a helping hand to all classes of the British cultivators of his favourite order of plants. As a species it is very distinct from any other, by the great size, peculiar shape, lobing, and reticulated coloration of the pseudobulb, in which respect it most resembles C. lagenaria (Tab. nostr. 5370). The colouring of the lip and form of the lobes of the top of the column are variable. Descr. Pseudobulbs crowded, two inches and a half long, FEBRUARY Ist, 1869. by one inch and a half in diameter, pitcher-shaped, but sud- denly contracted into a blunt conical apex, constricted below the middle, rounded at the base, deeply longitudinally 6-8-lobed, the lobes semicylindric and forming rounded prominences at thé broadest part; very dark green, reti- culated with dark brown. Leaves not seen. Scapes one to two inches high, closely sheathed; lower sheaths short, inflated, green spotted with brown, uppermost long, lax, membranous. Ovary slender, one inch long. lowers two to two inches and a half across. Sepals narrow-oblong, pale rose-coloured, with white edges. Petals narrower and paler. Lip nearly white, with a very short gibbosity (mentum) at the base ; lateral lobes convolute, gradually dilating into the open, reflexed, suborbicular, 2-fid middle lobe, which is white, with a few pale-red purple spots, and has ciliate toothed mar- gins; disc of lip streaked with purple, and bearing three slender crests along the middle, which are shortly produced on to the middle lobe, each crested with a series of short flattened prominent papille. Colwmn very slender, apex 3- lobed, lateral lobes notched, middle obtusely irregularly toothed. Rostellum 3-lobed.—J. D. H. Fig. 1. Column. 2. Lip:—both magnified. i URSRITRG ES, tp Ogre Si tee ea W-Fitch d Vincent Brooks Day & Son Imp. Tas. 5754. DELOSTOMA DENTATUM. Toothed-leaved Delostoma. Nat. Ord. Branontacr2.—Dipynamta ANGIOSPERMIA. Gen. Char. Calyx coriaceus, alabastro obovoideus, clausus acuminatus, adultus 2-8-labiatus. Corolla tubulosa, plus minusve incurya, limbo patente 5-lobo sub-2-labiato. Stamina 4 fertilia, quinto setiformi v. 0, didynama; antherarum loculi subdiscreti. Ovariun 2-loculare; stylus filitormis, stigmate 2-lamellato. Oapsula oblonga v. lineari-oblonga, com- presso 4-gona, utrinque attenuata, valvis cymbiformibus levibus, septo valvis contrario (parallelo, DC.), polysperma. Semina in loculis plurise- riata, compressissima, late alata.—Frutices Peruvim et Nove Granade imcole. Folia opposita, petiolata, simplicia, elliptico-oblonga. ‘Racemi inter ramulos oppositos orti, pauciflori, bracteis 0 v. minutis. © Flores conspicut. —Bureau, Monog. Bignon. p. 51, ¢.16. Copazzta, Karst. et Trian. in Linnea, v. 28. p. 426. Dertostoma dentatum, parce puberulum, foliis amplis oblongis subacutis obtuse serratis, calycis tubo campanulato 5-gono angulis superne nodoso-incrassatis lobis 8 parvis triangulari-ovatis aristato-acuminatis, corolla alba y. pallide rosea glaberrima tubo incurvo, staminibus 4 cum quinto setiformi, stylo pubescente. Detostoma dentatum. Don in Hd. Phil. Journ. 1823, p. 263. Gen. Syst. Gard. v. 4. p. 228. DC. Prodr. v. 9. p. 198. A remarkably beautiful plant, with the habit of a Gesne- ria, raised from seeds sent by Professor J ameson, of Quito, to that able and intelligent horticulturalist Isaac Anderson Henry, Esq., of Hay Lodge, Edinburgh, with whom it flowered in October of last year. It is a native of Gualesca, near Cuenca, in Ecuador. The genus consists of three or four other species, none of which have ever been introduced, and the present is the only one hitherto figured in botanical works. Descr. A small shrub of robust habit, sparsely pubescent on the branchlets and leaves below. Branches stout, terete. FEBRUARY Ist, 1869. Leaves opposite, simple, petioled, four to five inches long by three to four inches broad, broadly oblong, subacute, obtuse at the base, coarsely bluntly serrate, bright green on both surfaces, nerve very strong below. taceme arising from the forks of the upper branches, two to three inches long, 3—4- flowered; peduncles short, with minute bracts at the base. Calya a quarter of an inch long; tube campanulate, 5-ribbed above, the ribs produced into tubercles at the apex ; limb small, of three triangular-ovate subaristate conniving lobes. Corolla one inch and a half.long, subcampanulate ; limb nearly two inches in diameter, white suffused with pale rose- colour; tube incurved; lobes five, nearly equal, spreading, orbicular. Stamens four, with a rudimentary fifth; fila- ments swollen and pubescent at the base; anther-cells con- tiguous, parallel. Ovary sunk in a fleshy cup-shaped disc ; style hairy; stigmas small, unequal.—dJ. D. H. Fig. 1. Base of corolla and stamens. 2. Anther. 8. Calyx, style, and stigmas :—all magnified. a 8 ic) ; s Re = ent Brooks Day &SonJmP. Vin« i, a Tas. 5755. CAMPTOPUS Manni. West-African Camptopus. Nat. Ord. Rusracez. Tribe Psycnorries.—Pentanpria Monoeynta. Gen. Char. Flores involucrati, hermaphroditi. Calycis tubus brevis, obconicus, limbus ultra ovarium productus subcylindricus 5—6-fidus, lobis lanceolatis erectis ciliatis. Corolla tubulosa, coriacea, extus glabra, tubo paulo ampliato limbo calycis duplo longiore, fauce intus ad insertionem staminum oreque villosis, lobis 5 ovatis valvatis. Stamina 5, fauci corolle inserta, filamentis subulatis ; anthers exserte, dorso supra medium affixe, lineares, obtuse, basi breviter 2-lobe. Discus epigynus magnus, globosus, apice depresso. Ovarivm 3-4-loculare; stylus brevis validus, stigmate 3—4-lobo lobis erectis oblongis intus papillosis; ovula in loculis solitaria, erecta. Fructus * * * —Frutex glaberrimus, Africe occidentalis tropice incola, ramis crassis cylindricis levibus. Folia ampla, opposita, breve crasse petiolata, obovata, coriacea, costa subtus crassa, nervis divergentibus. Stipulx magne, 2-fide, foliacee, decidue. Pedunculi rubri, solitarii, axillares, lon- gissimi, cernui, apice erecti floriferi, capitulum compositum multiflorum involucrato-bracteatwm gerentes, bracteis orbicularibus concavis rubris nitidis. Flores albi, breviter exserti, densissime congesti. Camptorus Manni. This very singular stove shrub was discovered at Fernando Po by Mr. Mann during his dangerous botanical journeys on the west coast of tropical Africa in the service of the Royal Gardens, and was introduced by him in 1863. It has also been collected at Old Calabar, from the coast opposite Fer- nando Po, by a correspondent of Dr. Balfour, of Edinburgh, to whom the Hookerian Herbarium is indebted for a dried speci- men. As an ornamental hothouse plant it is conspicuous for the size and beauty of the deep-green foliage with a red midrib beneath, and the brilliant coloured bracts and pedun- cles, the latter of which, after reaching a foot in length, curve outwards and downward beyond the foliage and become suddenly thickened as they bend upwards at the tip and support the scarlet and white ball of flowers, pre- FEBRUARY Ist, 1869. senting a most graceful and striking feature. It was received at Kew in 1864, and flowered, for the first time, in November of last year. As a genus it is closely allied to Cephaéhs, differing in habit, in the 3-4-celled ovary, and exserted sta- mens. Descr. A shrub attaining fifteen feet in height. Branches stout, cylindrical, green. Leaves opposite, on petioles two to three inches long, obovate or obovate-lanceolate, acute, narrowed into the petiole, quite glabrous, coriaceous; mid- rib stout, red below, nerves diverging. Stipules large, leafy, oblong, 2-fid, united at the pubescent base within the petioles, deciduous above the base. Peduncle axillary, eight to twelve inches long, solitary, scarlet, curving outwards, then down- wards, thickened and ascending at the apex, and bearing an erect subglobose compound head, two to five inches in dia- meter, of white flowers clothed with numerous general and partial orbicular concave shining involucral bracts. lowers densely crowded, white, shortly exserted, almost sessile; bracts spathulate. Calyax-tube very short, limb cylindric, 5—6-cleft, segments ciliate. Corolla-tube white, coriaceous, one-half to three-quarters of an inch long, lobes spreading, throat and mouth villous. Stamens exserted. Disc very large, almost globose. Ovary 3—4-celled ; style stout; stigma 3- or 4-lobed. ii Sr as . ees Fig. 1. Flower. 2. Corolla laid open. 3. Stamen. 4. Calyx, style, and stigma. 5. Ovary, disc, and base of style. 6. Vertical section of ditto. 7. Transverse section of ovary :—all magnified. 3756 wi Vincent -“YOKs in6) > 5 cent Sr0os é Tas. 5756. ONCIDIUM xantnopon. Golden-toothed Oncidium. Nat. Ord. Orncnu1pr“#.—GynNanpRIA MoNnaANpDRIA. Gen. Char. (Vide supra, Tas. 4148.) Oncrpium (Cyrtochilum) wanthodon; pseudobulbo elongato ovoideo com- presso levi, folio anguste obovato-oblongo coriaceo, scapo volubili longissimo, panicula ampla ramosa flexuosa multiflora, bracteis ovato- lanceolatis spathaceis ovario elongato multo brevioribus, perianthii lobis undulato-crispatis brunneis aureo-marginatis et crenulatis, se- palis petalisque unguiculatis obovato-rotundatis his paulo minoribus, labello parvo sessili basi subhastata fornicata, callis tuberculiformibus, lamina anguste obovata unguiculata recurva, columna breyi sigmoidea, alis minutis. Onciprum (§ Cyrtochilum) xanthodon. H. G. Reichenbach ful. in Gard. Chron. 1868, p. 1338. A very remarkable species, described by Dr. Reichenbach as being allied to O. serratum, conspicuous for its large panicle and numerous flowers, and the chocolate-brown colour of the reflexed and wavy perianth-segments, which are edged with a golden band, crenate and almost crisped ; it was im- ported by Messrs. Backhouse, of York, from the eastern parts of the Cordillera of Ecuador. Four plants of it flowered simultaneously in November of last year with Messrs. Back- house, who inform me that the flowering stems were six to eight feet long and twined round every available object with which they came in contact. Descr. Pseudobulb five inches long, narrow-ovoid, much compressed, perfectly smooth, bright green, with a few sheathing leaves at its base and one at its apex. Leaves one anda half to two feet long, two to two and a half inches broad above the middle, narrow linear-obovate, acute, bright green, quite smooth. Scape very slender, six to eight feet ‘long, much branched, twining, greenish-brown ; sheaths ap- FEBRUARY Ist, 1869. pressed. Panicle much branched ; rachis and branches slen- der, flexuous; bracts ovate-lanceolate, nearly half an inch long. Ovary and pedicel together slender, nearly two inches long. Flowers one inch and a half in diameter, of a rich chocolate-brown colour, with golden crisped and crenate edges. Petals and sepals very similar, waved and reflexed, clawed; blade broadly ovate, rounded or almost hastate at the base. Jp smaller and narrower than the petals; basal portion irregularly quadrate, sessile, two-lobed at the apex; disc very prominent, with several tubercular calli which are yellow, shining, and viscid; blade spathulate, recurved, acute, of the same colour as the sepals and petals. Column short, curved like the letter s, with small lateral wings at the apex.—J. D. H. Fig. 1. Lip and column :—magnified. VincentBrooks Day & Son imp W.-Fitch, del et lith Das. 6757: COBAA PENDULIFLORA. Pendulousflowered Cobea. Nat. Ord. Poremoytacexs.—PrEntanpRia Monoeynta. Gen. Char. Calyz late campanulatus, foliaceus, 5-fidus, sepalorum mar- ginibus induplicatim connatis 5-alatus. Corolla campanulata, tubo brevi, fauce ampla elongata; limbi lobi breves vy. elongati, nunc loriformes et penduli. Stamina 5, exserta, filamentis elongatis alabastro contortis, basi villosis. Discus maximus, carnosus, 5-lobus. Ovarium 8-loculare ; stylus gracilis, stigmate 3-lobo; ovula pauca v. plurima. Capsula 3-gona, 3-locu- is, 3-valvis, oligo- y. polysperma. Semina 2-seriatim adscendentia, im- bricata, compressa, in alam expansa.—Frutices Mexici, Nove Granade ef Americe centralis incole. Folia alterna, pinnatisecta, in cirrhum desinentia, Soliolis 2-3-jugis infimis stipuleformibus. Pedunculi axillares, 1flori, basi Soliaceo-bracteati. Copxa penduliflora; gracilis, glaberrima, foliolis petiolulatis lineari-ob- longis acutis v. acuminatis basi obtusis vy. subcordatis, sepalis lineari- oblongis acutis, corolle campanulate lobis loriformibus pendulis un- dulatis apice 2-fidis, filamentis longissimis inter lobos corollz longe exsertis bislaiwnidiies patentibus, stylo longissimo stigmatibus fili- formibus. Roszyzrrata penduliflora. Karsten, Fl. Colomb. p. 27, t. 14, This very singular and graceful climber at first sight so little resembles the common Cobea of our greenhouses that it is difficult to suppose it belongs to the same genus; but a ‘Yeference to the C. macrostema, Pavon (Tab. nostr. 3780) at once shows how simple the transition is from one to the other, the chief differences being in the immensely long corolla-lobes of C. pendulifiora and the much exserted stamens of this and of C. macrostema, which project horizontally between the corolla-lobes, forming five rays, much as in Gloriosa—an arrangement doubtless intended to secure cross- impregnation by removing the anthers to the furthest distance from the stigma. C. penduliflora is a native of the mountains of Caraccas, at an elevation of 6000 feet, where it was dis- FEBRUARY 1st, 1869. covered by Fendler, and published by Karsten, who has given an excellent figure of it, adopting the generic name of Rosenbergia, which was originally applied by Cirsted for an allied Central-American species. The seeds were sent to the Royal Gardens by Monsieur A. Ernst, of Caraccas, a zealous correspondent of this establish- ment ; and the plants flowered in the cooler end of the Palm House in December 1868. It has also been found near Tarapoto, in Eastern Peru, by Spruce. Descr. A slender, glabrous, pale-green climber. Leaves three to five inches long, pale green and membranous ; leaf- lets in two pairs, one and a half to two inches long, petiolu- late, narrow oblong, acute or acuminate, obtuse or rounded at the base; petiole ending in a long, branched, filiform, tortuous tendril. Pedwncles solitary, axillary, pendulous, eight to ten inches long, naked, 1-flowered. ower four to five inches long from the base of the calyx to the tips of the corolla-lobes. Calyx-tube dilated, lobed and intruse at the base; segments one and a half inch long, broadly linear, acuminate, green. Corolla green, campanulate; tube one inch, and lobes three to four inches long, the latter strap- shaped, not one-quarter of an inch broad, pendulous, wavy, 2-fid at the tip. Stamens spreading; filaments three inches long, dark red-purple; anthers yellow, three-quarters of an inch long. Style filiform, green; stigma slender.—J. D. i. Fig. 1. Base of corolla and stamen. 2. Tip of corolla-lobes. 3. Base of calyx, dise, and ovary. 4. Transverse; and 5. Longitudinal section of ovary :—all magnified. Pind ae ae ate a Tas. 5758. CYCLAMEN AFRICANUM. Algerian Cyclamen. Nat. Ord. Primviacem.—Prntanpria Mownoeynta. Gen. Char. Calyx 5-partitus. Corolle tubus brevis, subglobosus, fauce incrassata, limbi refracti laciniis 5 tubo longioribus. Stamina 5, imo corolle tubo inserta, inclusa, filamentis brevissimis ; anthers cuspidate. Ovarium 1-loculare ; stylus indivisus, stigmate simplici; ovula numerosa, peltatim amphitropa. “Capsula globosa, 1-locularis, 5-valvis, valvis reflexis. Semina plurima, subglobosa, angulata, umbilico ventrali; embryo rectus, umbilico parallelus.—Herbe Europe medi, Asie occidentalis et Africe borealis incole, tubere carnoso napiformi. Folia radicalia, petiolata, cor- dato-reniformia. Scapi nudi, lflori, floriferi stricti, fructiferi in spiramn convolut: humo appressi. Corolla rosea, purpurea v. alba. CrcLamen Africanum; tubere magno, foliis synanthiis basi cordatis swpius acute 7—9-angulatis margine revolutis crenulato-dentatis, pedunculis superne calycibusque pubescenti-glandulosis, sepalis ovatis setaceo- acuminatis glanduloso-dentatis, corolla roseo-alba, tubo apice non constricto, fauce 10-dentato, laciniis oblongo-linearibus, antheris sessilibus. Crctamen Africanum. Boiss. § Reuter, Pugill, Plant. Nov. Afr. Or. et Hisp. Austr. p. 75. Planchon in Flore des Serres, v. viii. t. 841. Cyctamen Neapolitanum. Duby in DC. Prodr. quoad descriptionem et patriam Algeriam, non Tenore. CycLaMEN macrophyllum. Host ex Planchon in Fl. des Serres, 1. ¢. The largest species of the beautiful genus to which it be- longs, the tubers sometimes attaining the size of a large turnip. It is a very common Algerian plant, and was sent to the Royal Gardens by Giles Munby, Esq., Col. Playfair, Consul-General of Algeria, and other parties, and it flowers abundantly in September. I follow Boissier and Reuter in considering this a distinct species, though under a conviction that it is but a form of one of the European kinds (probably C. Neapolitanum), which FEBRUARY Isr, 1869. are themselves so variable that authors differ widely as to their — nomenclature and synonymy; its best character appears to reside in its strongly toothed calyx-lobes. The figure in the ‘Flore des Serres’ represents a huge overfed garden form of the plant, quite unlike any indigenous specimens. Descr. Tuber very large, four to ten inches in diameter. Leaves two to two and a half inches long, ovate-cordate, ob- scurely or shallowly and acutely angled, obtusely coarsely toothed, dull green, marbled with paler green, pale beneath ; petioles and scapes red. Calya pubescent, 5—6-fid ; lobes broadly ovate, acuminate, toothed, green-veined. Corolla nearly white, with a faint rose-purple tinge; segments five to six, deep purple at the base, one inch long.—J. D. ZH. 5702 Vincent Brooks, Day &Son, Imp Tas. 5759. VANDA INSIGNIS. Noble Vanda. Nat. Ord. Orncurpr#.—GynaNnpriA MoNnANDRIA. Gen. Char. (Vide supra, Tan. 5174.) Vanna insignis ; foliis rigidis canaliculatis apice inequali-abscissis v. den- tatis, racemis folium wquantibus laxis 5-7-floris, perianthii foliolis patentibus obovato-spathulatis rectiusculis, labelli basi 2-carinati lobis lateralibus parvis adscendentibus obtusis, intermedio arrecto apice repente dilatato-rotundato undulato ad basin subhastatam utrinque calloso, caleari compresso conico obtuso recurvo. Vanpa insignis. Blwme, Rumphia, v. 4. p. 49, t. 192. f. 2 e& 197 A. Lindl. in Paxt. Fl. Gard. v. 2. p. 19, ewm ic. aylog. Folia Orchidacea, Vanda, No.7. Reichb. in Gard. Chron. 1868, p. 1259. * The magnificent Orchid here figured is one of the most interesting importations of late years. It settles a long ob- scure point in the garden nomenclature of this noble genus, proving that the plant which has hitherto usually borne the name of V. insignis is not the plant of Blume, but, as was often suspected, a form of V. tricolor; and that Blume’s plant is not only a perfectly distinct species, but as fine a one as any in the genus, V. Cathcartii, perhaps, alone excepted. The V. insignis is a native of the Moluccas; it was sent to Messrs. Veitch by their late lamented collector Mr. Hutton, and flowered at their establishment in the King’s Road in October 1868. Blume gives the mountains of the island of Timor as its native country. It is probably as rare as it is a little-known species; for I do not find it included in the rich (1866) catalogue of the plants cultivated in the Royal Botanic Gardens of Buitenzorg, in Java, where upwards of 500 Orchids, chiefly Malayan, are enumerated. Descr. Stem suberect, as thick as the finger, leafy. Leaves equidistant, ten inches long, one to one and a quarter broad, MARCH Ist, 1869. closely imbricating below, curved in a semicircle, linear, but slightly narrowed at both ends; apex truncate, obliquely ex- cised, in one curve or in two, one on each side the midrib, deep green, nerveless, as are their sheaths, deeply keeled, with rather recurved margins. Raceme rather short, axillary, shorter than the leaves, drooping, 4—7-flowered ; rachis green, terete. Flowers two to two and a half inches in diameter, spreading ; pedicels and ovary together one and a half inch long, at right angles to the rachis, almost white. Sepals obovate-spathulate, three-quarters of an inch in diameter, obtuse, fleshy, bright ochraceous brown, with darker brown blotches, whitish externally. Petals similar, but narrower. Lip almost fiddle-shaped, consisting of a subovate white body, with two short auricles or lateral lobes, and two low ridges on its disk; this suddenly expands into a rosy semilunar con- cave limb, one inch broad, with smooth surfaces and entire rounded margin. Colwmn short, thick.—J. D. H. Tas. 5760. : AGLAONEMA Maynn. Mr, Mann’s Aglaonema. Nat. Ord. Arnorppm.—Monecra PoLyanpria. Gen. Char. (Vide supra, Tas. 5500.) Actaonema Mannii; foliis breviter petiolatis elliptico-oblongis mucronatis luride viridibus, vaginis 2-3-pollicaribus viridibus, margimibus anguste membranaceis, spatha breviter pedunculata 2 poll. longa oblonga acuta, e basi breviter convoluta aperta sordide alba, spadice spatha paulo breviore cylindrico obtuso, ovariis ad 15 depressis 2-locularibus, stigmate sessili disciformi concavo, antheris 3-gonis late truncatis 2- porosis. To those who cultivate stove plants, the value of the tropical Aroids is well known, because of their fine evergreen foliage and remarkable freedom from insects, their singular form, and the often conspicuous nature of their floral organs. Of the several hundreds that are in cultivation in England, and on the continent, where they are more highly prized than with us, not half a dozen have been imported from Tropical Africa, where various species form conspicuous features in the humid forests of the west coast. Amongst these is the subject of the present plate, which was sent to the Royal Gardens by Mr. Gustav Mann from the Victoria Mountains, one of the Cameroon range, which that intrepid traveller and excellent collector was the first to explore. The genus to which it belongs has hitherto been known as a native of India only, where it ranges from the foot of the Eastern Himalaya through the Malayan peninsula and islands to the Moluccas, and it thus forms another proof of .- close affinity between the tropical African and Malayan oras. Descr. Stem eighteen inches to two feet high, as thick as MARCH Ist, 1869. the thumb, covered with the erect sheathing bases of the leaves. Leaves five to seven inches long, by three to four broad, coriaceous, elliptic-oblong, rather obtuse, mucronate, dark green above, paler below, with prominent midrib and veins; petiole above the sheath half an inch long, stout, deeply channelled in front, swollen at the base, as if jointed on the sheath, which is two to four inches long, herbaceous and green, with a very narrow membranous margin, not auricled, but rounded at the upper termination. Peduncle terminal, short, stout, erect. Spathe two inches long, white, greenish below, discoloured above, scarcely convolute at the concave base, then gradually expanding, but the margins only reflexed. Spadiz one-third shorter than the spathe, one- third of an inch in diameter, cylindric, on a stout columnar peduncle, one-third of an inch long. Male portion half the whole length; anthers white, trigonous, truncate, and flat- topped, with 2 apical pores. Ovaries about fifteen, 2-celled, very depressed, subspheroidal, but irregular in figure, scarlet. Stigma a sessile depressed disk.—J. D. H. Fig. 1. Spadix. 2. Group of three anthers. 3. Anther. 4. Ovary. 5. Transverse; and 6. Vertical section of ovary :—all magnified. 5767. ennai ——S Pee W. Fitch, del et lith Vincent Brooks, Day &San, Hap: Tas. 5761. AMOMUM SCEPTRUM. Sceptrate Grain of Paradise. Nat. Ord. Zrvarprerace2.—Monanpria Monoeynta. Gen. Char. (Vide supra, Tan. 4603.) Amomum sceptrum; foliis petiolatis anguste oblongo-lanceolatis glabris, ligula scariosa, scapis simplicibus apice clavato-turgidis, circa 10- floris, bracteis superioribus dorso apiculatis tempore florifero trans- verse plicatis, labello amplo orbiculato undulato roseo, staminodiis - liberis, fructu ovoideo compresso v. sub3-gono glabro, pericarpio crasso, seminibus angulatis. Amomum sceptrum. Oliver & Hanbury in Jowrn. Linn, Soc. v. 7, Bot. (1863), p. 109. A very beautiful plant, discovered by Gustav Mann, whilst collecting for the Royal Gardens, on the Gaboon River, in 1861, and at Ambas Bay, where it grows near the shore. The specimens here figured were raised from seed procured by Daniel Hanbury, Esq., F.R.S., who flowered it in his garden at Clapham in January of the present year, and who informs me that it has also been sent from Old Calabar in 1863, and from Akassa, River Nun, by Mr. E. J. L. Simmonds in 1865. As a species it approaches A. longiscapwm (Hook. Kew Journ. Bot. 1854, p. 296), but differs conspicuously in the narrowed base of the leaf and the linear outer perianth- lobes. Though belonging to the same genus as the plant producing the pungent and highly aromatic Melaguetta or Grain-of-Paradise seeds, those of this species are almost flavourless. Descr. Rhizome stout, rooting, sending out long scaly suckers. Leafing stems five to six feet high. Leaves eight to ten inches long, narrow oblong-lanceolate, one and a quarter to one and a half inch broad, narrowed to an acu- MARCH Ist, 1869. minate point, unequal at the base, and obliquely decurrent on a very short slender petiole. Sheath five to eight inches long in its loose open part, which is rather membranous and finely striate; ligule oblong, scarious, half an inch long. Blade with a distinct midrib, striated with innumerable fine parallel diverging nerves. Flowering scape six inches high; Jruiting, one to one and a half foot, erect, slender, red-brown, covered with appressed obtuse sheaths of a darker red-brown ; those surrounding the flowers distichous, gradually larger, retuse or emarginate, green, mottled with brown, and with brown margins. flowers suberect, three inches long, altogether of a fine bright rose-purple. Spathaceous or outer perianth short, obliquely truncate, subacute. Dorsal petal narrow, oblong, obtuse, arched, very concave, twice as long as the stamens; lateral lanceolate, decurved. Lip two to two and a half inches in diameter, lamina orbicular, waved, almost plicate. Staminodes linear, obliquely truncate. Anther pubescent, with the connective produced at the top into two spreading linear-oblong obtuse incurved horns; fila- ments with an erect subulate basal appendage on each side. Stigma small, capitate, excavated.. Fruit three inches long; narrowly flagon-shaped. Seeds subpyriform, like grape- stones; testa bright pale brown, very shining, nearly taste- less—J. D. H. = : Fig. 1. Ovary and spathaceous perianth. 2. Anther. 3. Staminodes. 4. Ovule in its aril. 5. Seed ate | 2 magnified, Be \\ aa ae ee e ——— 4 ai z , VEee W. Fitch del etlith Vincent Brooks, Day & Son, imp Tas. 5762. CARYOTA Cuminel. Mr. Cumings Wine-Palm. Nat. Ord. Patan=.—Moneacra PoLyanprRia. Gen. Char. Flores monoici in distinctis spadicibus, spathis aliquot basi- laribus completis cincti, sessiles, bracteolati. Maso. Caly« 3-phyllus, foliolis ovatis imbricatis. Petala 8, oblonga, valvata. Stamina plurima, filamentis brevissimis basi in urceolum connatis ; anther lineari-oblonge. Fem. Calyx maris. Petala imbricato-convolutiva. Staminwm rudimenta 0. Ovariwm 3-loculare, stigmatibus 3 depressis connatis. Bacca 2-locu- laris, 2-sperma. Semina plano-convexa, albumine cartilagineo ruminato ; embryo dorsalis.—Palme Indicw, caudice annulato. Folia 2-pinnata, pinnulis premorsis. Spadices magni, fastigiato-ramosi. Baccw pisiformes. * Caryora Cwmingii ; trunco mediocri basi parce sobolifero, foliis bipinnatis, 5-6-pedalibus, vaginis glabris, petiolo tereti glabro, rachi superne et rachibus partialibus sparse nigro-furfuraceis compressis subquadratis superne sulcatis, pinnulis subcoriaceis sessilibus elongato-dimidiato- rhombeis extrorsum grosse eroso-dentatis, spadicis ramis pedalibus, floribus masculis } poll. longis, antheris elongato-linearibus apice 2-lobis. Caryora Cumingii, Loddiges ex Mart. Hist. Palm. ii. p. 159. This plant has for many years been cultivated in the Royal Gardens as the Caryota Cumingii, which was introduced by the late Hugh Cuming from Singapore some twenty years ago. The authority of the specific name appears to be the late Messrs. Loddiges, by whom the plant was first raised, and probably presented to these Gardens. It is alluded to in Martius’s great work, and defined there by a short descrip- tion transmitted by De Miquel, which, however, like all specific diagnoses of Palms, does not suffice to identify the species: so difficult is it to express the characters of these noble trees; nevertheless, so far as it goes, the description MARCH Ist, 1869. applies. It is a most elegant little Palm, differing from its great congener C. wrens in size, in the nearly glabrous petioles, and in sending out suckers from the base of the stem, as C. sobolifera does, but much fewer of them. It may indeed prove identical with C. sobolifera, a native of Malacca, described by Griffith subsequently to C. Cumingii; but the leaflets appear longer. As with all its congeners, after arriving at maturity it throws out a flowering spadix (in this case male) from the uppermost leaf-axil, and then from the next leaf-axil lower down, and so on downwards till all the leaf-axils have flowered, after which the stem dies. There is thus fruit at the top of the tree and buds at the bottom for a long period. Descr. Trunk ten feet high, erect, covered almost to the base with the sheathing leaf-bases, as thick as the forearm. Leaves about five to six feet long, spreading, three to four feet broad, bipinnate; sheath very coriaceous, glabrous, dark green ; petiole terete, thicker than the thumb; rachis terete for halfway up, then becoming compressed laterally, slightly convex on the back, grooved in front, presenting a vertically elongate oblong figure when cut across, the apex and the partial raches having on their sides a sparse black fur- furaceous down. Pinnules eight to ten inches long, rather coriaceous, sessile, two to two and a half inches broad, sub- falcate, obliquely cuneate for one-quarter to one-third up from the base; lower margin straight, upper entire for the cuneate portion, then irregularly sharply erose for the other two-thirds ; lowest pinnule shorter and broader, uppermost longer. Spadix a foot long, formed of a bundle of floriferous simple partial spadices, green. Dale Jlower half an inch long; sepals very broad and short, ciliate, almost circular and cup- shaped. Petals one-quarter to one-third of an inch long, four times as long as the calyx, very coriaceous, erecto-patent, oblong, obtuse. Anthers narrow, bilobed at the apex; fila- ments very short.—J. D. H. Fig. 1. Reduced view of the Palm. 2. Pinnule. 3. Portion of spadix. 4. Female flower. 5. Male ditto. 6. Stamen :—all but 2 and 3 magnified. ee, ae aoe BS yen pen anacttd cae ae ue en ee ae Tas. 5763. KAEMPFERIA Partsutt. Mr. Parish’s Kempferia. Nat. Ord. Sorramine®.—Monanprra Mownoeynta. Gen. Char. (Vide supra, Tan. 5600.) Kamprerta Parishii; caudice tuberoso, radicibus passim tuberiferis, scapis preecocibus paucifloris,vaginis inferioribus brevibus late oblongis acutis fusco-reticulatis, foliis oblongo-lanceolatis acuminatis basi acutis costa valida, ovario piloso, perianthio externo spathaceo apice 2-caudiculato, petalis 8 exterioribus anguste linearibus apice subulato- tereti acuminatis albis, interiorum 2 superioribus oblongis apiculatis albis, inferiore bilobo lobis obovato-cordatis purpureis, anthere con- morose Superne in laminam apice fissam dilatato, staminodiis filifor- mibus. This is another of the Rev. C. Parish’s valuable contribu- tions to the Royal Gardens; it is a native of the dense forests of Moalmayne, whence seeds were sent home which flowered in a stove in July of last year. Like its allies of the genus, the flowers appear long before the leaves, after the full development of which latter, the whole plant goes to rest. As a species it closely approaches K. diversifolia, Link (K. ovalifolia, Roscoe, Monand. Plants, t. 95), but differs in the short, oblong, appressed, reticulate lower sheaths of the flowering scape, and in the two lower inner perianth-segments not being appendaged in the sinus. ae Descr. A glabrous herb. Root stout, tuberous, emitting many stout cylindric fibres as thick as a small quill, that bear at intervals oblong tubers the size of a nut. Leafing stems one inch in diameter at the base. Leaves six to nine inches long, pale green, not glaucous, oblong-lanceolate, acuminate, waved, pale below, with a very stout midrib and prominent diverging nerves; petiole short, half to one inch MAROH Ist, 1869. long, stout, deeply channelled in front; sheaths four to eight inches long, open, green, with short rounded ligules. F/ower- ing scapes three inches high, as stout as the little finger ; lower sheaths three to four, oblong, acute, appressed, pale yellow-green, reticulated with brown nerves; inner narrower, white, with purple veins. Flowers several, three inches long. Ovary small, pilose. Outer or sheathing perianth two inches long, gradually swelling upwards, truncate at the top, with two subulate points, white. nner perianth-tube exserted, slender, terete, white; three outer segments spreading and recurved, two inches long, linear, with a terete subulate apex, white ; two upper inner segments oblong, obtuse, apiculate, white ; lower deeply 2-lobed, each lobe equal to the upper, obcordate, bright violet-purple. Anther with the connective dilated into a broad oblong membrane unequally cut at the apex. Staminodes very slender. Stigma funnel-shaped.— é..D, Hl. ‘ Fig. 1. Flower with part of the petals removed. 2. Anther and stigma. 3. Ovary and staminodes :—all magnified. aa oa on, bmp g Vincent Brooks Day & W. Fitch, del.et lith. Tas. 5764, ALLAMANDA wnopsttis. Noble Allamanda. Nat. Ord. Apocynea.—Pentanpria Monoeynia. Gen. Char. (Vide supra, Tas. 4851.) ALLAMANDA nobilis ; scandens, ramulis robustis, petiolis foliis calycibusque pubescenti-pilosis, foliis oppositis v. 3-4natim verticillatis oblongo- lanceolatis acuminatis brevissime petiolatis, glandulis minutis rotun- datis, sepalis foliaceis ovato-lanceolatis, corolla extus pubescentis tubo gracili, limbo oblique campanulato, lobis amplissimis horizontaliter patentibus medio valide 3-nerviis. ALLAmanDa nobilis, 7. Moore in Gard.: Chron. 1868, p- 180 et p. 918, cum wc. xylog. A magnificent plant, imported from the Rio Branco, on the confines of Brazil and Venezuela, by Mr. Bull, of Chelsea, and certainly one of the finest stove climbers in cultivation. As a species I doubt very much its proving distinct from A. Schottii (Tab. nost. 4411, by error 4911), 4. grandiflora (Tab. nost. 4351), 4. Aubletii, and A. Hendersonii; but as a horticultural acquisition it differs from all these, and sur- passes them individually, either in habit or in the large size and full green of the foliage, or in the very large flower, its regular contour and bright colour, or in the number of flowers produced, or in their magnolia-like odour—altogether render- ing it one of the most gorgeous free-flowering stove-plants introduced into Europe for many years past. From the original 4. Schottii (Tab. nost, 4351) it differs more conspicu- ously than from 4. Hendersonii in its pubescent calyx and broader more abruptly acuminate leaves, as well as in other points; but in my experience of both wild and cultivated _ Apocynee, these have proved to be very variable characters ; and judging also by dried specimens of forms not hitherto imported in a living state, I suspect that many intermediate APRIL Ist, 1869. forms between these and others, perhaps connecting them all with the old 4. cathartica, may yet be found. The erect or scandent habit, so striking a character in cultivated plants, is one singularly liable to variation ina state of nature. For the magnificent specimen here figured, I am indebted to Mr. Glendinning, of Turnham Green, with whom it flowered in July, 1868. Descr. A tall stout pubescent climber, the pubescence extending over all parts except the upper surface of the corolla lobes. Stems slender, green tinged with purple. Leaves opposite or whorled in threes and fours, subsessile, six to eight inches long, oblong or oblong-lanceolate, abruptly acuminate, pale green above, paler and more pubescent below, glands minute, orbicular. F/owers in six- to eight-flowered axillary racemes; shortly pedicelled. Sepals very unequal, about one inch long, ovate-oblong or lanceolate, subacute, green. Corolla four to five and a half inches in diameter, fine golden yellow, with a pale spot at the base of each segment; tube rather slender, one and a half inch long, expanding abruptly into an oblique campanulate limb, which has five imbricating broadly orbicular-obovate spreading three-nerved segments, margined externally with red in the bud.—/. D. #. Fig. 1. Disc, ovary, style and stigma :—magnified. ‘ 5765. vy po / i, “ la ry 4 W. Fitch, del.et lith s.Day &5on,im OOK: Vincent Br Tas. 5765. RICHARDIA MELANOLEUCA. Black-throated Richardia. Nat. Ord, AROIDEZ.—Monaec1a Monanpria. Gen. Char. (Vide supra, Tas. 5140.) Ricwarp1a melanoleuca ; scapo petiolisque inferne pilis rigidiusculis sparsis, foliis hastato-ovatis acuminatis maculis oblongis translucidis albis nota-_ tis, auriculis obtusis; spatha pallide straminea a basi aperta recurva marginibus revolutis, intus basi plaga ampla atro-purpurea notata, spa- dice brevi. This belongs to a remarkable group of African Richardius, distinguished by the often white transparent spots on the foliage, and cream-coloured flowers, to which belong the 2. a/bo- maculata (Tab. nost. 5140) and R. hastata (Tab. nost. 5176). From both these the present plant appears to be well dis- tinguished by its spathe being open to the very base, thus exposing the dark-black purple spot at its base, which is only seen in the other species by everting the spathe: whether this is asufficient distinctive character cannot be determined with- out more specimens of these plants than are at present in cul- tivation. In other respects they present no difference of consequence. f. melanoleuca was imported by Mr. Bull, of Chelsea, from Africa, and was flowered in his establishment in | the autumn of 1868. Like its congeners it is no doubt a greenhouse plant, and may be cultivated out of doors in the warmest parts of England. Duscr. Plant, two feet high. Habit and appearance of ft. albo-maculata : lower part of petioles and scape bearing a few Spreading stiff bristly hairs. Leaf six to nine inches long, exclusive of the petiole; oblong, or ovate-hastate, acu- minate with a filiform point; basal lobes spreading, obtuse, base deeply cordate ; substance membranous, dark green, with many oblong translucent spots following the direction of the APRIL Ist, 1869. nerves. Spathe three inches long, and as broad when spread out, quite open from the very base, acuminate with a filiform apex, recurved, as are the margins, pale straw-coloured, with a large dark-red purple basal spot. Spadir one to one and a half inch high, shortly stipitate ; male portion bright orange- yellow; female with about four rows of green subglobose ovaries.—/J. D. H. Fig. 1. spadix; 2, stamen; 3, ovary; 4, transverse, and 5, longitudinal section of ditto :—all magnified. 5766. s 8 ‘ As fe = Vinent Brooks Day&SonLmp- Tas. 5766. DENDROBIUM CRASSINODE. ; Thick-knotted Dendrobe. Nat. Ord. OrcuipEa:.—GyYNANDRIA MoNANDRIA. Gen. Char. (Vide supra, Tas. 4755.) Denprogium crassinode ; caulibus pallidis robustis creberrime nodosis leviter sulcatis, nodis globosis internodiis duplo latioribus, floribus ad nodos solitariis v. 2-nis, pedicellis basi bracteis scariosis vaginatis, sepalis lineari-oblongis subacutis albis apice roseis petalis consimilibus sed latioribus, labello ovato-rotundato breviter unguiculato superne tenuiter velutino albo apice roseo disco flavo, mento brevissimo. Denprogium crassinode, Benson et Rchb. fil. in Gard. Chron. 1869, p. 164. One of the most remarkable Dendrobes hitherto discovered, of which an excellent sketch was sent to Sir W. Hooker by Mr. Parish in 1859, and another to myself by Col. Benson early in 1868, and which was shortly followed by living plants from the latter gentleman, both to Messrs. Veitch and to the Royal Gardens, that flowered simultaneously in January of the present year. Mr. Parish’s specimens were procured in the Siamese province of Kiong-koung ; Col. Benson’s are from the Arrakan mountains, at an elevation of 2500 feet. The drawings of both differ a very little from the cultivated specimens, Mr. Parish’s in having a purple base to the claw of the lip, and purple edges to the wings of the column; Col. Benson’s in having a deep purple column. The latter gentleman finds as many as twenty-two flowers upon one stem. As a species D. crassinode approaches in habit to D. nodatum, Rehb. (Tab. _ nost. 5470) and in flower to D. Bensonie nob. (Tab. 5679), but is abundantly distinct from both in the stems. Descr. Forming large tufted leafless masses. Stems pen- dulous, a span to two feet long, formed throughout of swollen internodes, in the form of depressed spheres one inch in APRIL Ist, 1869. diameter, and less than that apart; the constricted portions between them about half that diameter ; nodes and inter- nodes with shallow distant grooves; the upper half of each node is covered with a scarious appressed sheath ; colour pale dull olive-green. Leaves not developed in our specimens, apparently confined to first year’s shoots at the base of the stems. lowers two to two and a half inches in diameter, abundantly produced from the upper nodes, solitary or in pairs ; white with broad rosy tips to the sepals, petals, and lip, and a yellow disc to the latter. Sepals linear-oblong, acute or subacute. Petals similar, but much broader. Lip very broadly ovate-oblong, obtuse, undivided, shortly clawed ; margin minutely erose and ciliate ; upper surface covered with a fine velvety down. Column short, white in our spe- cimen, purple in Col. Benson’s drawing.—/. D. H. Fig. 1. Ovary and column; 2, lip :—both magnified. 5767 W. Fitch, del.et lith Tas. 5767. SACCOLABIUM BIGIBBUM. Orange-flowered Saccolabe. Nat. Ord. Orcntpex.—Gynanpria MoNnAnprtia. Gen. Char. (Vide Supra, Tas. 5483.) Sacco.anrum bigibbum ; caule brevissimo, foliis late lineari-oblongis apice contracto 2-fido, racemis breviter pedunculatis subcorymbosis folio brevioribus, sepalis petalisque consimilibus patentibus pallide flavis spathulatis, calcare subhemispherico, labelli lamina latissime triangulari calcare latiore sed breviore margine eroso-ciliato disco levi, columna brevi. Sacco.anium bigibbum, Rchb. fil. MSS. “ _. A very curious discovery of Col. Benson’s, in Rangoon or _ Arrakan, and by him communicated to Messrs. Veitch, who flowered it in November, 1868; it is nearly allied to S. den- _ ticulatum (Tab. nost. 4772), of the Khasia Mountains, and to S. acutifolium, Lindl. of the Sikkim Himalayah ; having a similar habit, subcorymbose inflorescence, spathulate petals and sepals, and large broad laterally compressed spur, upon the outer edges of which the very broadly triangular lip is perched ; but it differs from these in the colour of the flower, the naked disc of the lip, the shorter stem, and bifid apices of the leaves. | _ Desor. A small epiphyte. Roofs flattened, creeping ex- tensively on the surface of wood, pale brown. Slem very short. Leaves few, spreading, three to four inches long, by one broad ; linear-oblong, bifid at the contracted apex, bright green, paler and keeled below, coriaceous. Peduncle one to one and a half inch long, curved, and rachis green. Raceme very short, almost corymbiform, drooping, many-flowered, shorter than the leaves. Mowers, twelve to fifteen in each corymb, two to three inches in diameter, pale yellow with faint red markings on the edge of the spur. Svya/s and petals APRIL Ist, 1869. very similar, spreading, spathulate, obtuse or subacute, with broad flat claws. Spur large in proportion to the size of the flowers, sub-hemispherical, short, and broad, laterally com- pressed, about as long from back to front as the lateral sepals. Lip placed on the outer edge of the spur, and thus appa- rently disconnected from the rest of the flower; very broadly triangular, with erose and ciliated margins, white, tumid and yellow on the disc, which is smooth or papillose. Column very short.—J. D. H. Fig. 1. Lateral, and fig. 2, front view of flower :—both magnified. OM SS w Vincent Brocks, Day 4 Son, Imp, W. Fitch, delet lith Tas. 5768. PALAVA FLEXUOSA. Hexuous-stemmed Palava. Nat. Ord. Matvacrea.—MonapDELPHIA Po.yeynia. Gen. Char. Bracteole 0. Calyx 5-fidus; Columna staminea usque ad apicem in filamenta oo divisa. Ovariiloculi © ; styli rami totidem, filiformes, superne truncati summo vertice stigmatosi. Carpella matura inordinate capitato-congesta, a receptaculo secedentia, indehiscentia. Semen ascendens.— Herbe Peruviane et Chilenses, tomentose v. glabriuscule. Folia sepius lobata dissecta v. sinuata. Flores aviliares, pedunculati, solitarii, purpuret. Habitus Sere Cristarie. Paxava flexuosa; annua, pilosa, ramis ascendentibus superne flexuosis, foliis oblongo y. deltoideo-ovatis sub 2-pinnatifidis lobis primariis paucis oblongis lobulatis v. pinnatifidis, stipulis subulatis, pedunculis folia superantibus, sepalis triangulari-ovatis basi purpureis, carpellis mamil- latis. Patava flexuosa, Masters in Gard. Chron. 1866. A lovely hardy or half-hardy annual, discovered in the valley of San Lorenzo, in Peru, by Mr. McLean of Lima, who sent it to Sir W. Hooker some thirty years ago; since which time nothing seems to have been known of the plant | until its introduction by Messrs. Veitch, through their suc- cessful collector, Mr. Pearce, who sent seeds that flowered in the Royal Exotic Nurseries in June 1868. The genus consists of five or six species, some annual, others perennial, all natives of the Western slopes of the South American Andes, and all well worthy of cultivation. One of these, P. rhombifolia, Graham, was figured in this work (Tab. 3100) many years ago. Descr. A slender annual, branched from the roots, covered with spreading branched hairs. Stems eight to ten inches long, ascending, slender, flexuous above. Leaves on slender petioles, one to two inches long; blade one to two inches APRIL Ist, 1869. long, and broad, oblong-ovate, or triangular-ovate in outline, pinnatifid with one or two pairs of spreading lobed or irregularly pinnatifid segments, which are obtuse or rounded at the apex; stipules subulate, slender. Peduncles longer than the leaves, very slender. ower one to one and a half inches in diameter, light mauve, pale towards the centre, with bright red anthers and bases of the petals. Sepals triangular- ovate, acute, purple at the base, green, not glandular dotted as they are in a closely-allied species. Petals very much larger than the sepals, obliquely truncate. Anthers very numerous, superimposed in five longitudinal series. Carpels tumid and mammillate. Styles very numerous (twenty-five to thirty), spreading, truncate-—/. D. H. Fig. 1. Flower with corolla removed. 2. Ovary. 3. Transverse section of ditto :—all magnified. SS) Ss 3 W. Biteh, del et lith. Vincent Brooks Day&Son,lmp- Tas. 5769. AZALEA ttearirorta. Slender-leaved Azalea. Nat. Ord. ERIcE#.—PENTANDRIA Mownoeynta. Gen. Char. (Vide supra, Tas. 4726.) Azatza linearifolia ; ramulis pedicellisque hispidis, foliis elongato-linearibus utrinqueangustatis longe acuminatis marginibus revolutis sinuatis ciliatis, floribus 1-3 terminalibus, sepalis elongato-setaceis hispido-glandulosis ; corollz laciniis liberis roseis longe subulato-lanceolatis glabris patenti- recurvis, staminibus 5, ovario appresse setoso, Ruopopenpron linearifolium, Siebold and Zuccarini, Fl. Jap. Fam. Nat. Sect. altera, p. 7. This is certainly the most remarkable species of Azalea hitherto introduced, well supporting the character of its native country, Japan, for contributing odd as well as hand- some plants to our collections. It has been referred to Rhododendron by its original describers, Siebold and Zuccarini, but this could only be under the extreme course of uniting Azalea with Rhododendron, a step I am not prepared to take. No doubt these genera are closely allied, and a few species’ occur that are referable to either, but these are very excep- tional, and the multitude of species of both kinds, and espe- cially of Rhododendron, lately discovered, have not added to their number. As a rule Azaleas have deciduous foliage, a more deeply divided corolla, 5-8 stamens, and never more than five cells to the ovary; Rhododendrons have very persistent coriaceous foliage, a less deeply-divided 5-10 lobed corolla, ten or more (rarely eight) stamens, and a 5-15 celled ovary. The present plant has all the habit and characters of an Azalea, carried indeed in one point to excess, for the corolla lobes are very long, and free to the very base, or all but so. It was introduced from J apan by Messrs. Standish, in whose nursery it flowered in February of the present year. MAY Ist, 1869. Descr. A small shrub; branches slender, hispid with rigid spreading hairs, red-brown. Leaves few, crowded at the ends of the branches, two to four inches long, narrow linear- lanceolate, 41-inch in diameter, narrowed into a short hispid petiole ; margin revolute, undulate, ciliate. //owers crowded, fascicled at the ends of the -branches ; bracts linear or setaceous, green ; pedicels short, and sepals hispid with gland- tipped hairs. Calyx segments linear-subulate, one half-inch long. Corolla one-and-a-half to two inches in diameter, of five subulate-lanceolate recurved red-purple acuminate petals. Stamens five, filaments as long as the petals, slender, slightly pubescent, red; anthers small, dark-brown. Ovary densely clothed with erect stiff bristles, five-celled; style slender ; stigma capitate—/J. D. H. Fig. 1. Flower with petals removed; 2. petal. 3. stamen. 4, ovary- 5. transverse section of ditto :—all magnijied. 2 snus’ Q\ Vincent Brocks, Day&Son, Inap. W Fitch, del. et lith Tas. 5770. CROTALARIA CUNNINGHAMII. Allan Cunningham’s Crotalaria. Nat. Ord. Leguminosa.—D1ADELPHIA DECANDRIA. Gen. Char. Calycis lobi liberi v. varie connati, Veaillum sepius orbi- culatum, supra unguem brevem sepius 1-callosum; ale obovate vy. oblonge, vexillo breviores; carina incurva v. dorso angulata, rostrata. Stamina omnia in vaginam supra fissam connata; anthere alterne, parve, versatiles, alterne long basifixe. Ovarium sepissime sessile, 2-co ovulatum; stylus incurvus v. abrupte inflexus, longitudinaliter barbatus. Legumen glo- bosum v. oblongum, inflatum, 2-valve, intus continuum. Semina sepissime strophiolata, funiculo filiformi. Herbe v. frutices. Folia simplicia v. digitatim 1-« -foliolata ; stipule a petiolo libere, interdum decurrentes rarius 0. Flores flavi, rarius cerulei v. purpuret, racemosi v. solitarit. Bractee parve v. 0, rarius foliacee ; bracteolis parvis rarius 0. CroraLaria Cunninghamii ; frutex tomentosus, foliis ovatis obtusis, petiolo supra medium articulato, stipulis bracteisque subulatis caducis, racemis lateralibus densifloris, floribus magnis flavidis, calyce tomentoso, lobis * subsequalibus, vexillo ovato-acuminato carinam subequante, alis brevio- ribus, ovario breviter stipitato villoso, legumine 14-poll. longo coriaceo tomentoso. CroraLaria Cunninghamii, Hook. Ic. Pl. 829. F. Mueller Fragment. v. 3, p- 52. Benth. Fl. Austral. v. 2, p. 182. Though unattractive as to the colour of the flower, this is a very curious and striking greenhouse plant, the soft velvety pubescence that clothes all the surfaces with a uniform glaucous hue at once arresting the attention. It is a native of the dry, almost desert regions of North-western and Central Australia, growing on sandy ridges, from Shark’s Bay to the Gulf of Carpentaria, and penetrating southwards through Central Australia towards Spencer’s Gulf. The specimen here figured was raised by W. Wilson Saunders, F.H.S., and flowered in his garden at Reigate, in February of the present year. MAY Ist, 1869. Descr. A shrub two to three feet high, everywhere covered with a soft grey-green tomentum. Stem and branches stout, terete. Leaves apparently simple, but really one-foliolate ; petiole half to one and a half inches long, . jointed above the middle; stipules subulate, caducous; leaflet two to three inches long, oblong or ovate-oblong, obtuse at both ends. Racemes \ateral on the branches, terminating short branchlets, short or long, one to six inches long, very stout, erect, few or many flowered; bracts subulate, deciduous. Yowers shortly pedicelled, one anda quarter inch long. Calyz, pale blue- green, tube hemispherical; lobes five, subulate, subequal. Corolla yellow-green, with purple veins on the ovate, long- acuminate reflexed standard. Wings oblong, obtuse. Keel as long as the standard; shortly clawed, ovate below, with a long narrowed beak. Stamens all united below; filaments very long and slender. Pod one and a half inch long, in- flated, subulate, tomentose.—/. D. H. Fig. 1. Flower with the corolla removed; 2, standard; 3, keel; 4, wing: 5, pod :—all but f. 5 magnified. + ay & Son, imp 4s \ ~ Vincent Brooks.t Tarn. 5771. ERAN THEMUM anpersont. Dr. Anderson's Eranthemum. Nat. Ord. AcaNTHACEa.—DIANDRIA MonoGynia. Gen. Char. (Vide supra, Tas. 5440.) Erantuemum Andersoni; elatum, glaberrimum, ramis subteretibus supra nodos leviter incrassatis, foliis oblongo-lanceolatis utrinque angustatis petiolatis obtuse acuminatis, fasciculis florum subverticillatis in spicam strictam erectam densifloram dispositis, bracteis minutis, calycis lobis subulatis, corolla hypocrateriformi, tubo leviter curvo, calycem longe superante, lobis oblongis obtusis 4-subequalibus albis antico purpureo maculato, antheris exsertis purpureis. Erantuemum Andersoni, Masters, in Gard. Chron., 1869, p. 134. K. elegans, Masters 1. c. 1868, p. 1234, non Brown. A beautiful stove plant, a native of India, whence it was sent by Dr. Anderson from the Calcutta Gardens to the Botanic Gardens of Trinidad, and thence to Kew by Mr. Prestoe, the active and intelligent curator of those long- established and flourishing colonial gardens. It was first described by Dr. Masters, from plants which flowered with Mr. Bull, of King’s Road, Chelsea, and which were exhibited at the Royal Horticultural Society’s Gardens in November of last year; our plant did not flower till the following January, and from it the figure here given is taken. Dzscr. A tall half-shrubby stove plant, bright green, per- fectly glabrous, sparingly branched. Stems erect, strict, green, _ nearly terete, swollen above the nodes. Leaves six to twelve — inches long, oblong-lanceolate, narrowed into a short petiole, and produced at the apex into an obtuse elongated point, bright deep green above, paler beneath. Flowers sessile, fas- _eicled ; fascicles whorled on a tall, erect, common peduncle, six to eight inches high, which is simply or sparingly branched at the base; bracts minute, shorter than the calyx MAY Ist, 1869. tube. Calyx short, green, with five subulate, erect, glabrous lobes. Corolla salver-shaped; tube slender, half an inch long, curved; limb one to one and a quarter inches in diameter, of five subequal, spreading, oblong, obtuse lobes, the two upper rather ascending, smallest, forming an upper lip; the lower also spreading, the middle of them the largest, and sprinkled with purple on the disc. Anthers exserted, oblong, purple; cells parallel, mucronate at both ends. Ovary ovoid- oblong, on an oblique cupular disc; style very slender, stigma minute, notched.—/. D. H. Fig. 1. Calyx and ovary; 2, stamen; 3, ovary and disc :—all magnijied. os7¢. W. Fitch, del et lith. Vincent Brooks Day &Son.imp Tas:-5772. CALCEOLARIA uenrict. Mr. Anderson-Henry’s Calceolaria. Nat. Ord. ScropHuLARINEa.—DIANDRIA Monoeynia. Gen. Char. (Vide supra, Tan. 5892.) CatcroLaria Henrici ; erecta, foliosa, caule puberulo, foliis oppositis breviter petiolatis supremis sessilibus elongato-lanceolatis 3-5 poll. longis acumi- natis marginibus recurvis serratis supra glabris subtus pubescenti-pilosis, cymis pedunculatis corymbosis 6-8-floris, glanduloso-puberulis, calyce parvo explanato ad medium 4-lobo, lobis latis obtusis, corolla puberula, labiis clausis superiore inflato transverse oblongo, inferiore depresso- globoso ascendente. For the opportunity of describing this new and@* almost hardy and. beautiful Calceolaria, I am indebted to Isaac Anderson Henry, Esq., F.L.8., of Hay Lodge, Edinburgh, who received seeds of it from our mutual friend Professor Jameson, of Quito, its discoverer, who states that it grows on the Andes of Cuenca. A very similar plant was gathered on the Andes of Ecuador by Mr. Spruce (No. 6081), but differ- ing in the much more tomentose foliage and branches, and al- most villous calyces and peduncles. Mr. Henry’s specimen was flowered in 1865. As a species it closely approaches C. hyssopifolia, H. B. K. (Tab. nost. 5548), also introduced by Professor Jameson, and flowered by Mr. Henry, and which, like this, forms a beautiful greenhouse plant. Descr. Sfem two to three feet high, terete, slender, erect, pale green, very sparingly pubescent. eaves opposite, three to five inches long, lower and middle shortly petioled, upper sessile, elongate-lanceolate, acuminate, margins recurved serrate, glabrous and dull green above, beneath pubescent, with scattered rather woolly hairs, midrib and veins strong and prominent. Cymes, six- to eight-flowered, numerous, terminal and in the upper axils, corymbose or subumbellate at the top of the stem, glandular-pubescent, peduncles two MAY Ist, 1869. to four inches long, pedicels slender, one inchlong. Calya one quarter inch in diameter, flattish, obtusely four-lobed to the middle, glandular-pubescent. Corol/a deep bright yellow, two-thirds of an inch long, puberulous; lips both much inflated, entirely closing the mouth, upper one-third smaller, depressed at the calyx, prominent in front, with a transverse depression, lower projecting, subspherical in front. S/amens minute, anther-cells oblong, placed end to end.—/. D. /. Fig. 1. Flower with corolla removed :—magnified. 4 3 a77. eLVSNTEPITATAS A: eo Vincent Brooks, Dayo"? del .etlith W. Fitch Tas. 5773. IRIS sryuosa. Long-styled Tris. Nat. Ord. IntpEa.—Trianpria Monoeynia. Gen. Char. (Vide supra, Tan. 5298.) Ints stylosa ; foliis erectis anguste ensiformibus longe attenuato-acuminatis striatis; spathis 1-floris, valvis appressis inequalibus submembranaceis carinatis striatis, ovario angusto elongato, perianthii foliolis subeequa- libus late oblongo-spathulatis obtusis, exterioribus reflexis, stigmatibus linearibus profunde 2-fidis, segmentis apice 2-caudatis. Inis stylosa, Desfontaines, Flor. Atlant., v. i. p- 40, f. 5. I. unguicularis, Poiret, Encycl., v. iii. p- 802. Nevsecgra stylosa, Alefeld, fide Klatt, Revis. Irid. in Linnea, v. xxxiv, p. 589. A very beautiful and sweet-scented spring flowering Iris, for which the Royal Gardens are indebted to Mrs. Bodichon of Algiers. It has been referred by Alefeld to his genus Weubeckia, the characters of which, as given by Klatt in his revision of the order Jridee quoted above, seem to me of very doubtful generic value, depending mainly, if not altogether, on a very variable character—viz., the length of the tube of the perianth, “elongate” in Neubeckia, and “short,” in Iris. A further diagnostic character is given to Neubeckia, in the persistent septum of the anthers, but this, if not accompanied by characters of higher importance, is not enough to found a genus upon. Klatt refers the J. longispatha of this work (Table 2528) doubtfully to this species; Ledebour, however (Flora Rossica, v. iv. p. 95), identifies the J. Jongispatha with J. biglumis, Vahl, a Dahurian and Siberian species, of a very different habit. 1. stylosa is a native of the hedges of Algeria, and is also found in Corfu and the Morea; it was first published, with- out a specific name, in 1789, by Poiret, in his Voyage en Bar- barie, v. ii. p- 96, and afterwards, first as J. stylosa, by MAY Ist, 1869. Desfontaines in 1798, and then as J. unguicularis by Poiret, in 1799. Duscr. Rhizome creeping, as thick as the thumb, pale, and with pale brown membranous sheaths. eaves one to one and a half foot long, one-sixth to one-third of an inch broad, erect, slender, flat, thin, striated, attenuated to long sharp points, bright green, shorter or longer than the scapes. Scape erect, slender, sheathed by slender appressed spathes, one-flowered. Ovary narrow, slender, one inch or more long. lowers sweet-scented, two to two and a half inches diameter. Claws of the perianth segments yellowish, veined with red-purple, one and a half inch long, gradually dilating into broadly oblong spathulate, subequal, entire, obtuse, unbearded lamine ; outer leaflets recurved, pale violet, mottled below the middle with pale yellow, and with a strong deep yellow central band; izzer rounded at the top, apiculate, of a uniform pale violet colour. Stigmas deeply cleft into linear lobes which are acutely 2-fid at the apex, and usually single toothed on the outer margin —/. D. H. Fig. 1. Portion of styles, stigmas, and anther :—magnified. T. T on, imp Tas. 5774. CORDIA GLABRA. Stiooth:leaved Cordia. Nat. Ord. Boraginea.—PENTANDRIA Monoeynia. Gen. Char. (Vide supra, Tas. 5027.) Corp1a (Sebestenoides) glabra; ramulis teretibus, pedunculis petiolisque scaberulo-pubescentibus, ceterum glabra, foliis alternis oppositis v. sub- verticillatis oblongo-lanceolatis acuminatis integerrimis v. subserratis in petiolum breviusculum angustatis, subtus reticulatis, cyma brevi ramosa ramis scorpioideis, calyce obconico-campanulato breviter 2-4 lobo, lobis obtusis acutisve, corolla 5-loba. Corpia glabra, Chamisso in Linnea, v. viii. p. 124, non Linn. D.C. Prod. v. ix. p. 477. A handsome Brazilian stove plant, introduced into the Royal Gardens from South America, and flowering late in autumn. It has been collected in the neighbourhood of Rio de Janeiro and elsewhere in Brazil, by Gardner, (No. 182 and 5031,) Von Martius, Weir, and other travellers. Duscr. A woody shrub. Branches terete; branchlets covered with a minute rigid pubescence, which extends over the petioles, branches of the cyme, and often the midrib and nerves of the leaf below. Leaves variously disposed, usually alternate, but occasionally opposite or almost whorled towards the ends of the branches, three to eight inches long, oblong- lanceolate, variable in breadth, acuminate, tapering below into a petiole, one quarter to half an inch long, glabrous and shining deep-green above, paler below, with a finely reticu- lated venation, quite entire or rarely with sinuate teeth along the margins. Cymes terminal, short, branched; branches scorpioid, several-flowered. Calyx between obconic and bell- shaped, variable in size, one-third to two-thirds of an inch long, glabrous, finely striated, shortly and unequally two to four lobed at the apex, lobes obtuse or sub-acute, usually hispid at the top. Corolla snow-white, two and a half inches in May Isr, 1869. diameter ; tube rather broad, angled and corrugate ; lobes five, broad, acute, much wrinkled and crumpled. Stamens five, short; anthers versatile, included in the tube; filaments slightly hairy at the base. Ovary subglobose, narrowed into the style which is sub-equally four-cleft at the apex; stigmas slightly thickened or clavate, recurved. Fruit (described by Chamisso), ovoid, half an inch long, subtended by the per- sistent calyx, truncate and apiculate at the top—/. D. H. Fig. 1. Calyx, style and stigmas; 2. base of corolla and stamens; 3. ovary :—all magnified. f J W. Fitch, del et ith. Vincent Brooks, Day &Son,Imp Tas. 5775. CEREUS LIVIDUS. Livid Cereus. Nat. Ord. CacTe.—IcosanpRIA Monoeynta. Gen. Char. (Vide supra, Tan. 5360.) Cereus lividus ; erectus, robustus, plumbaceo-viridis, caule elato remote articulato 4-6-costato, costis compressis 1-2 poll. profundis, obtusis, rec- tiusculis, areolis remotis leviter depressis sublanuginosis, aculeis 6-10 rectis rigidis, 1-3 poll. longis, brunneis; floribus 10 poll. diametro, albis, calycis tubo glabro, sepalis cum petalis 30-40 lineari-oblongis patentibus obtusis, stigmatibus ad 18. Cereus lividus, Pfeiffer Enum. diagn. Cact.98. Labouret Monog. Cact. 359. C. Perotetti, Hort. (id. Pfeiffer.) One of the most striking of the columnar Cacti in the succulent house at Kew, and procured, I believe from Germany, as a small plant many years ago; since which time it has at- tained a height of twelve feet, and diameter of four to six inches. Though placed by Pfeiffer (who seems to have seen young plants only) in the section Cereastri, with inarticulate stems, it will be seen from the plate that when full-grown the stem is distinctly articulated at regular intervals, and it should hence probably be referred to his section Protracti. The specimen here figured is the largest hitherto described, and flowered for the first time in June, 1868. It is a native of Brazil, La Guayra, and Curacoa. Drscr. Stem tall, erect, simple or very sparingly branched, twelve feet high in our specimen, with about twelve narrow oblong joints in that space; of a dull leaden green colour, five to six angled (six to eight angled at the very base); angles produced into thick flat straight round-edged wings or ribs, one to one and a half inches deep. Areole on slight depressions of the wings, about one to one and a half inches apart, circular, _ ne-quarter inch diameter, grey, velvety, bearing six to eight JUNE Ist, 1869. marginal spines, which are one-quarter to one-half inch long deflexed grey with red tips, besides one or two central ones of about the same length. F/owers one or two, produced on the terminal joint, ascending, ten inches in diameter, white with a yellow-green tinge. Calyw-tube five inches long, one inch in diameter, terete, green, smooth, glabrous, with few dis- tant appressed green triangular scales; lobes about ten, linear-oblong, subacute, yellow-green, purplish at the back towards the tip. Petals very numerous, in about three series, spreading, narrow obovate-oblong, obtuse or apiculate, erose, ivory white, faintly undulate. Stamens excessively numerous, forming a broad cylinder two and a half inches in diameter, and two inches high, of filiform pale-green fila- ments, the lower most numerous, incurved at the apices; anthers small. Style very stout; stigmas about eighteen, subulate, erect, yellow.—/. D. H. Fig. 1. Reduced figure of plant. W. Fitch, del.et lith Imp: Vincent Brooks, Day £50", P Tas. 5776. CROCUS ORPHANIDIS. Prof. Orphanides’ Crocus. Nat. Ord. In1pea—Trianpria TRIGYNIA. Gen. Char. (Vide supra, Tas. 5297.) Crocus Orphanidis, bulbo lageneformi, tunicis castaneis fibroso-membrana- ceis, fibris parallelis, foliis synanthiis latiusculis elongatis flores super- antibus, scapo involucrato, spatha membranacea vaginis inclusa, perianthii laciniis oblongis subacutis pallide lilacinis, fauce antherisque pallide flavis, stigmatibus multifidis intense aurantiacis. This most lovely and very distinct Grecian Crocus was sent to the Royal Gardens, together with many other valuable bulbs, by Professor Orphanides of Athens, under the name of C. pholegandrus, but with no authority for that name: as I can find no such name published, and am unable to trace its etymology, I feel compelled to coin another for it. Crocus Orphanidis belongs to the group with C. Boryanus and others, distinguished by their multifid stigmas, and flowers appearing together with the leaves; it differs, however, from all pre- viously described species of that group, in the form of the bulb, its tunic, its great size, and the size and colour of the flower, anthers, and especially of the stigmas. It is a very handsome and free-flowering species, blossoming in a cool frame in November. Duscr. Bulbs very large, one and a half to two inches long, narrow, closely covered with the bright chestnut-brown tunic, which is formed of fine parallel slightly interlaced fibres. Sheaths of the leaves two to three, membranous, pale green, acute, slightly striate. eaves produced with the flowers and much exceeding them, lengthening after flowering, seven to ten inches long, about one-fifth of an inch broad. Spathes membranous, for the most part ufcluded in the " JUNE Ist, 1869. sheaths. Flowers two to two and a half inches diameter, pale bright lilac-blue without veins, pale yellow in the throat. Segments of perianth equal, elliptic-oblong, obtuse, concave, not crested. Ps Tap. 5783. DIPLADENIA pottviensts. Bolivian Dipladenia. Nat. Ord. ArocyNem—PENTANDRIA DicGyniA. Gen. Char. (Vide supra, Tas. 4702.) Dipapenta Boliviensis ; scandens, glaberrima, foliis petiolatis acuminatis basi acutis, stipulis 0, calycis lobis brevibus ovatis acuminatis, pedicellis tortis, corolla alba tubo cylindrico fauce elongato-cylindrico, ore flavo non constricto, limbi patentis lobis late ovatis obtuse acuminatis, glandulis ad basin sepalorum lobulatis, squamis hypogynis semi-orbicularibus. The genus Dipladenia has hitherto been supposed to be confined to the east coast of America, ranging from Trinidad to South Brazil; hence the discovery of the present species in Bolivia by Mr. Pearce, late collector to Messrs. Veitch and Sons, is a most interesting one. As a species, it approaches very near indeed to D. urophylla Hook. (Tab. nost. 4414) from the Organ mountains of Brazil, but differs in the shorter apices to the leaves, the much narrower throat of the corolla, and white flowers. It is a very beautiful plant, well deserving of cultivation, and flowered for the first time in June, 1868, in Messrs. Veitch’s establishment. Descr. Everywhere perfectly glabrous. Stems slender, terete, twining. eaves petioled, two to three and a half inches long, oblong or narrow oblong, narrowed into an obtuse acumen, acute at the base, bright green and glossy above, pale beneath, stipular glands none. acemes subterminal or axillary, three to four-flowered; peduncles short. green ; bracts minute, at the base of the short stout twisted pedicels. Calye-lobes short, ovate, acuminate, green, one quarter of an inch long. Glands at the base of the calyx-lobes short, lobulate. Corolla almost salver-shaped, the tube and throat being both of them narrow and slender ; tube cylindric, half an inch long ; faux about twice as long and half as broad again, golden JULY Ist, 1869. yellow inside ; limb one and a half inches across, of a beautiful pearly white colour, lobes broadly ovate acuminate with obtuse tips. Stamens linear-sagittate. Ovary narrow oblong; hypogynous scales two, opposite, almost semicircular in out- line; style very slender, stigma mitriform.—J. D. /. Fig. 1. Portion of corolla and stamens; 2, calyx, ovary, style and stigma ; 3, base of calyx, perigynous glands, hypogynous scales and ovary; 4, lateral view of ovary and scales :—all magnvjied. SO mS a) W. Fitch, del et lith inp eo Vincent Brooks Day &Son ge ag Tas. 5784, PTERODISCUS LURIDUS. Lurid-flowered Pterodiseus. Nat. Ord. Peparinem.—Dipynam1a ANGIOSPERMIA. "Gen. Char. (Vide supra, Tas. 41 17.) Preropiscus luridus ; caudice obconico, ramis brevibus foliisque subtus pulvereis, foliis vix petiolatis lineari-oblongis semi-pinnatifidis segmentis ovatis obtusis, sinubus latis rotundatis, glandulis ad basin petiolorum sessilibus vertice depressis, corolla ‘flavo-fusca, tubo lato lente curvo inferne gibbo, fauce paulo constricto, ore transverse oblongo, lobis brevibus retusis. i One of the most remarkable botanical features of the drier districts of South Africa, is the presence of plants of various natural families possessing short stout tuberous stems or caudices, rising a few inches above the ground, and sending forth from their crowns, on the approach of the wet season, a few stout herbaceous, succulent, leafy, flowering-branches : such are species of Vitis, of Composite, Asclepiadee, Apocynee, Convolvulacee, Pedalinee, and probably many other orders. These have repeatedly been sent to this country, where they have been too often regarded as dead sticks, or if they have been planted they have been killed with kindness ; in other words, they were either watered to death, or kept in damp stoves till they rotted away. Happily a different system of treatment has lately been introduced, and we may soon ex- pect to see these curious and interesting things brought more largely into cultivation. They flourish best in a moderately warm house, planted in a poor soil, amongst stones, &c., and exposed to the full light of the sun. The present example of this form of vegetation is a native of the Albany district of Cape Colony, and was sent to the Royal Gardens from those of Graham’s Town, along with many other interesting plants. It flowered in July, 1868, and though equally JULY Isr, 1869, curious, is less handsome than the beautiful P. speciosus figured at Tab. 4117 of this work. Desc. Caudex stout, tuberous, a foot long in our specimen ; the upper part conical, two and a half inches diameter at the widest part, and three quarters of an inch at the top, covered with pale bark. Branches annual, six to eight inches long, spreading, stout, rather flexuous, covered like the leaves with a powdery pubescence. Leaves two to three inches long, spreading, linear-oblong, subacute, pinnatifid to beyond the middle; lobes spreading, a quarter of an inch long, triangular- ovate, obtuse, quite entire, dark green above, pale below ; petioles short, with a small sessile depressed gland on each side. Flowers solitary, axillary; pedicels very short, 2- glandular at the base. Calya-lobes triangular-lanceolate, un- equal. Corolla one and a half inches long; tube one-third of an inch diameter, slightly curved, vertically compressed, gibbous below towards the base, pale green ; throat trans- versely reniform, contracted ; lobes a quarter of an inch long, one-third of an inch broad, retuse, spreading, pale dirty orange-yellow or brown.—J. D. H. Fig. 1. Calyx, pédicel and glands, with ovary, style and stigma; 2, base of corolla and stamen; 3, ovary and disc :—-all magnified. J785, Witch dele lith = : nce: Brooks Day & Susie ra Tar. 5785. ° MORAA BULBIFERA. Bulbous Morea. Nat. Ord. Irmea.—Trianpria Monoeyrnta. Gen. Char.—Perigonium corollinum, superum, tubo brevissimo, limbi 6- — partiti laciniis interioribus minoribus, post anthesin convolutis. Stamina 3, perigonii tubo inserta, filamentis distinctis, anthere oblonge basifixe. Ovarium oblongo-prismaticum, stylus triqueter, gracilis, stigmatibus 3 petaloideis, 2—3-fidis; ovula plurima, angulo centrali loculorum 24seriatim affixa, horizontalia, anatropa. Capsula membranacea, obtuse 3-gona, 3-locularis. Semina plurima, angulatan—Herbe Capenses, rhizomate repente v. tuberoso-bulboso. Folia 2-faria ensiformia. Spathe elongate, subimbricate. Monza bulbifera; 14-3-pedalis, bulbo subrotundo, bulbillis numerosis et radicibus brevibus curvatis divaricatim ramosis circumdato, scapo angulato apice flexuoso folioso glabro, foliis distichis scapo interdum longioribus anguste ensiformibus canaliculatis striatis margine carinaque asperulis, floribus luteis distiche paniculatis, spathis bivalvibus, valvis amplexicaulibus herbaceis inequalibus, valva inferiore breviore ovata v. ovato-lanceolata acuminata, superiore lineari-lanceolata, pedi- cellis trigonis glabris, perigonii laciniis oblongis obtusis recurvatis, stigmatibus bifidis laciniis lanceolatis acutis denticulatis. Morea bulbifera, Jacq. Hort. Schenbr. ii. tab. 197; Klatt in Linnea xxxiv. 565. The Mormas, which are amongst the gayest and easiest- cultivated of Cape-bulbs, have long gone out of fashion, and yet no plants of the kind exceed them in beauty ; this is no doubt mainly due to the length of time during which their bulbs or tubers must be kept dry and at rest, when the plants are as so much lumber in the greenhouse. The present species is one of the most beautiful of the genus, and produces a great multitude of its golden flowers in succession, which expand fully in the sunshine, and ornament a house for a period of several weeks. It is a native of various districts of 8. Africa, and was lately imported by our friend Mr. Wilson Saunders, F.R.S., through his indefatigable collector, Mr. Cooper. It was originally introduced into the Vienna Gardens so long ago as last century, and figured, in 1792, in Jacquin’s mag- JULY Ist, 1869. nificent “Hortus Scheenbrunensis.” The specimen here figured flowered in the Royal Gardens, in May, 1868. Viessceuwia Jugazx (Tab. nost. 5438), also introduced by Mr. W. Saunders, is another species of Morea (M. edulis, Gawl.) Descr. Bulbs the size of a walnut; surrounded with innu- merable bulbils, giving off numerous rigid rootlets that bear stiff horizontal fibrils. Stem rigid, one to three feet high, angled, glabrous, repeatedly forked, flexuous, leafy. Leaves often bulbiferous in the axils, distichous, longer than the stems, ensiform, six to twelve inches long, one-third to two- thirds inch broad, striated, green, slightly rough or toothed on the keel and margins. Spathes convolute, acuminate, ap- pressed. Flowers peduncled, two inches diameter, golden yellow; pedicels 3-gonous, glabrous. Perianth-segments subsimilar, oblong, obtuse, slightly reflexed, the three outer speckled at the base. Anthers purple; pollen yellow. Stigmas 2-fid; segments lanceolate, acute, toothed.—/. D. H. Fig. 1. Outer segment of the perianth ; 2, ovary, stigmas and stamens—all magnified, Vincent Brooks Day & Son, imp ith W. Fitch. del ct} Tas. 5786. GRIFFIN IA DRYADEs. Wood Grifinia. Nat. Ord. AmaryLLipex.—Hexanpria Moyoeyrnia, Gen. Char. (Vide supra, Tas. 5666.) GrirFinta dryades, elata, robusta, foliis longiuscule et. crasse petiolatis oblongo-lanceolatis, scapo crasso multifloro, floribus 3-4 unc. diametro, perianthii foliolis lanceolatis lilacinis disco albo, inferiore minore, stig- mate simplici. GrirFinia dryades,, Vellozo, Flor. Flum. Inde«, p. 3, AmaryLLis dryades, Vellozo, Flor. Flum. Liber primus, p. 130, Icones, v. iii. t. 117. Kunth. Synops. v. 5. p. 544 (nomen tantum). When figuring the beautiful Grifinia Blumenavia two years ago (Zab. nost. 5666), it was little expected that a much larger and finer congener would soon be introduced; such however is the present plant, a native of maritime forests near Rio de Janeiro in Brazil, and imported and flowered by that admirable horticulturalist, W. Wilson Saunders, Esq., F.R.S., at his gardens near Reigate, in 1868. As a species, it is most distinct, of a very robust habit, the scapes being as thick as the finger, and bearing ten to thirteen flowers, of a fine clear blue-lilac colour, white in the centre. These Grifinias are amongst the most charming stove dma- ryllidee, and if not so large and gaudy as the Crinums and Pancratiums of the Old World, are far more delicate in habit and colouring. The G. dryades was originally described by Vellozo in 1790, in his MSS. of the Flora of kio de Janeiro, which was published in 1824 by Fr. Antonio d’Arrabida at Rio. Descr. Bulé almost as large as the fist, broad, flat below. Leaves spreading, on stout long petioles as thick as the little finger, with closed sheathes at the base; limb leathery, a foot long and upwards, five to six inches broad, bright green, avGusT Ist, 1869, oblong lanceolate, subacute, with many strong well marked nerves, and transverse reticulations. Scape thicker than the petiole, terete, one and a half feet high; bracts five to six, one to one and a half inches long, gradually tapering from a broad base, recurved. Flowers ten to thirteen ; pedicels short, green, about one inch long. Ovary small, globose. Perianth four inches long by four and a half inches broad when fully expanded, tube cylindric, limb gibbous at the base, broadly funnel-shaped, lobes subequal, lanceolate, the lower shorter and narrower, the three upper approximate, each two and a half inches long by two-thirds of an inch broad, recurved, acuminate, of a fine blue-lilac colour, white in the middle and at the base. Stamens inserted at the mouth of the tube, the upper erect, the rest declinate. Anthers pale yellow. Stigma quite entire. Fruit (from Vellozo’s drawing) as large as a chesnut.—J. D. H. Fig. 1, Ovary, section of perianth-tube, stamens, and style; 2, transverse section of ovary; 3, a pair of ovules :—all magnified. 5787. a TET ERAT aE mE Tas. 5787. PHALERIA LAURIFOLIA. Laurel-leaved Phaleria. Nat. Ord. TuymeLe®,—Terranpria Monogynta. Gen. Char.—Perianthium hypocraterimorphum y. infundibuliforme, limbo subequali 4-6-fido, fauce nuda, Stamina 8, biseriatim disposita, fila- mentis exsertis; anthere adnate, connectivo crassiusculo. Ovarium sessile, 2-loculare, basi disco cupuleformi cinctum, glabrum ; stylus terminalis, exsertus, stigmate capitellato; ovula in loculis solitaria, prope apicem septi appensa. Drupa ovoidea, nuda, sarcocarpio fibroso, 1—2- sperma. Semina exalbuminosa; cotyledones carnose.—Arbores fru- ticesve Moluccane. Folia sparsa v. opposita, breviter petiolata. Flores capitati v. umbellati, terminales v. axillares—Puauerta, Jack, in Malay. Misc. v. ii. p. 59 (1822). Hook., Comp. Bot. Mag. v. i. p. 156. Dry- MISPERMUM, Reinwardt, Sylloge Nov. Pl. Ratisb. 1828, p. 15, t. ii. Puateria laurifolia ; foliis superioribus oppositis oblongo-lanceolatis acu- minatis, corymbis terminalibus paucifloris, involucri foliolis paucis an- gustis inequalibus, floribus extus pubescenti-pilosis 4—6-lobis, DrrmisPerMuM laurifolium. Decaisne in Ann. Sc. Nat., Ser. 2, v. xix. p. 89, t.i.f A. Meissn. in D. C. Prod. v. xiv. pt.2, p. 604. Miquel. Fl. Ind. Bat. v. i. part 1. p. 885. An evergreen stove shrub, remarkable for the delicious Daphne-like odour of its flowers. It was communicated to the Royal Gardens from Ceylon by our excellent correspondent, G. H. K. Thwaites, Esq., F.R.S., under the specific name given above, and under which he received it, I believe, from the Buitenzorg Gardens of Java. It is a native of Timor, but is closely allied to various Malayan island species. The genus Phaleria having been published and well described by Jack in 1822, takes precedence of Reinwardt’s Drymispermum, which was not published till six years afterwards. The Malayan Miscellanies, printed at the Missionary press of Bencoolen in Sumatra, and of which the first volume, with many of Jack’s descriptions, appeared in 1820, and the second in 1822, are unfortunately extremely rare in European libraries, but how they came to be ignored by the Dutch auausT Ist, 1869. botanists who were actively employed simultaneously in the neighbouring island of Java, is not easily explicable. Descr. A shrub four to eight feet high, erect, evergreen. Branches covered with brown tough bark. eaves four to five inches long; the upper opposite, lower alternate, very shortly petioled ; oblong-lanceolate, acuminate, quite glabrous, shining. Corymb terminal, six to eight flowered ; peduncle short, bracts linear-oblong or lanceolate, with tomentose apices and margins. Flowers sessile. Perianth pubescent, with scattered flaccid hairs; tube slender, two-thirds of an inch long ; lobes four to seven, spreading and reflexed, very pale yellow. Stamens much exserted, in two approximate series. —J. D. H. Fig. 1, Flower ; 2, ditto with perianth laid open; 3, anther; 4, ovary and disc; 5, transverse section of ovary:—all magnified. 5788. grt octet a Renamer hie SLT ae “aL W Fitch, del et ] 7 Tas. 5788. STERIPHOMA parapoxum. Paradoxical Steriphoma. Nat. Ord. CapparIpDEz.—OctTANDRIA Monoeynia. Gen. Char. Calyx cylindraceo-campanulatus, apice 2-4-lobus, irregulariter ruptus, basi squamulis 4 auctus. Discus annularis. Petala 4, sessilia, toro inserta, 2 antica paulo majora. Stamina 6, cum petalis inserta, adscendentia; 2 postica breviora, filamentis longe exsertis. Ovarium oblongum v. cylindraceum, 2-loculare, ovulis « 2-seriatis, stigmate sessili. Bacca globosa, angulata v. cylindrica, corticata, pulposa. Semina o, nidulantia, angulata; cotyledones spiraliter convolute. Frutices Americe tropice. Folia 1-foliolata, foliolo integerrimo. Racemi terminales, pedicellis apice refractis v. decurvis, 1-floris. Flores speciosi, aurantiact, SrerrpHoma paradoxum; _foliis apicibus fere setaceis. Srerrpnoma paradoxum. Endl. ea Karst. Ausw. Gew. Venezuel. p. 10, cum icone. Planch. in Flore des Serres, v. 6, t. 534, 535. SrepHanta cleomoides, Willd. Sp. Pl. v. 2, p.239. D.C. Prodr. v. 1, p. 253. Carparis paradoxa, Jacq., Hort. Schoenb. 1, p. 58, t. iii. oblongo-lanceolatis, caudato-acuminatis A beautiful stove-shrub, introduced into Europe so long ago as 1797, when it was figured by Jacquin from plants that flowered in the Imperial Botanic Gardens at Scheenbrunn (Vienna). Inthe Royal Gardens of Kew it has existed for many years, having been received from the Trinidad Botanic Gardens some forty years ago, and it flowers freely every year in a stove. My attention was drawn to the fact of its never having been figured in this Magazine by Dr. Moore, of Glas- nevin Botanic Gardens, who sent beautiful flowering specimens from which the accompanying drawing in April of last year, was made. It is a native of the Caraccas and various parts of New Grenada. : Descr. A leafy shrub, four to ten feet high. Branches erect or ascending, slender, terete, woody, covered with fur- furaceous pubescence. Leaves alternate, crowded towards AuGust Ist, 1869. the ends of the branches, spreading and deflexed, four to seven inches long, oblong or ovate-oblong, rounded at the base, narrowed into slender acuminate points, furfuraceous below and above when young; petiole slender, furfuraceous, tumid at the apex. aceme terminal, short, stout, dense- flowered, one to three inches long, rachis furfuraceous, tumid. Flowers imbricating ; abruptly deflexed from the apex of the orange-yellow pedicels, which are one to one and a half inches long. Calyx bright orange, oblong-cylindric, two-thirds of an inch long, irregularly split half way down, covered like the pedicels with furfuraceous down. Pefals hardly twice as long as the calyx, linear-oblong, pale yellow. Stamens five to seven, horizontal, slightly upcurved, pale yellow, three to four inches long. Ovary cylindric, on a curved gynophore. Fruit described as cylindric.—J. D. H. Fig. 1, Petal; 2, receptacle and ovary :—both magnified. 2 7 9 1, [mp Vincentt ics. cent Brooks, Day£5o Tap. 5789. APHELANDRA ACUTIFOLIA. Sharp-leaved Aphelandra. Nat. Ord. ACANTHACEA.—DIDYNAMIA GYMNOSPERMIA. Gen. Char. (Vide supra, Tas. 5463.) APHELANDRA acutifolia ; glaberrima, caule sub-4-gono, foliis petiolatis ob- longis acuminatis, basi in petiolum angustatis, spica terminali sessili, bracteis imbricatis ovato-oblongis acuminatis serratis ciliatis rigidis rachique puberulis, corolla glabra coccinea, labii inferioris lobis 3 ob- longis obtusis, lateralibus patentibus, intermedio minore. APHELANDRA acutifolia. Nees in D. C. Prodr. v. 11, p. 299. One of the most brilliant flowered of the beautiful genus to which it belongs, and apparently a common plant in South America, as I find specimens in the Herbarium from Mexico, Peru, New Grenada, and Surinam. The individual here figured was sent by Messrs. Veitch, of the Royal Exotic Nurseries, who imported it from South America, and with whom it flowered in October, 1863. Descr. A glabrous erect shrub. Stems obscurely four- angled. eaves four to eight inches long, membranous, glabrous, oblong-ovate, acuminate and much narrowed at the apex, entire, but when dried rather waved and almost crenate at the margin, narrowed at the base into a long or short petiole, sometimes two inches long ; colour, a bright uniform green, glossy above, paler below. ASpése terminal, sessile, erect, strict, four to six inches long, with the bracts two- thirds to one and a half inches broad; rachis pubescent. Bracts imbricating, two-thirds to one and a third inches long, ovate-oblong, acuminate, rigid, sharply, serrate above the middle, minutely ciliate and finely pubescent on the back, strongly nerved, green with dull purple margins. — Flowers one and a quarter to one and a half inches long, bright and deep vermilion red. Calya lobes lanceolate, from a broad AueusT Ist, 1869. base, gradually acuminate; bracts small, subulate. Corolla tube slender ; limb flat, one and a half inches diameter ; upper lip arched, very concave, subacute ; lower longer, three-lobed ; lateral lobes two-thirds of an inch long, spathulate-oblong, middle almost twice as large, and broader in proportion. Ovary pubescent at the apex; stigma minutely toothed.— J. D. H. Fig. 1, Bract and flower, with corolla removed; 2, ovary :—both magnified. ail Tas. 5790. MYRCIA AMPLEXICAULIS. Ampleaicaul-leaved Myrcia. Nat. Ord. Myrracea.—lIcosanpRia MonoGyYnia. Gen. Char. Calycis tubus turbinatus v. hemisphericus; limbi lobi 5, rarius 3 v. 4. Petala 5, rarissime 3 v. 4, patentia. Stamina , «-seriata, libera, filamentis filiformibus; anthere versatiles, v. fere basifixe, loculis parallelis v. altero altius affixo, longitudinaliter v. oblique dehiscen- tibus. Ovarium 4-rarius 2-loculare; stylus filiformis, stigmate parvo; ovula in loculis gemina, collateralia. Bacca calycis limbo reliquiis coronata. Semina sepius 1-2, subglobosa: radicula longiuscula, in- curva v. cyclica; cotyledones contortuplicate. — Arbores fruticesve Americe tropice et subtropice incole. Folia opposita, pennivenia. Flores sepius parvi, cymosi v. paniculatt. Myrcta amplexicaulis ; ramulis tomentosis et sericeo-strigosis, foliis amplis sessilibus basi lata cordatis amplexicaulibus oblongis acuminatis reticu- _ lato-costatis nervis plurimis arcuatis, paniculis brachiatis oppositis folio multo brevioribus, floribus fasciculatis, fasciculis remotis, antheris 2- locularibus linearibus loculis parallelis rimis longitudinalibus. EveEnta amplexicaulis.— Vellozo, Flor. Flum., v. 5, t. 44. Gomiprs1a amplexicaulis—Berg, in Mart. Flor. Brazil. ; Myrt., p- 13. A very handsome Brazilian stove-shrub, remarkable for its fine evergreen persistent foliage. A native of the province of Rio de Janeiro, where it probably forms a bush or small tree, though it flowers freely in the stoves at Kew when only three to five feet high. 2 Berg, in his elaborate account of the Brazilian A/yrtacee, in Von Martius’ Flora of Brazil, describes the calyx-lobes of this plant as acute, from the wretched drawing in Flora _ Fluminensis, where they are incorrectly figured as acute on the plant of the natural size, but correctly as truncate im the enlarged analysis; Berg further states that the anthers are figured by Vellozo as those of a Gomidesia (viz. 4-celled) ; but I see no signs of this in the figure, nor in the live plant. lwDesor. A shrub, covered everywhere with a soft velvety tomentum. Branches strict. erect, terete, stout ; branchlets AuGuUsT Ist, 1869. as thick as a goose-quill. eaves opposite, sessile, ten to sixteen inches long, narrow-oblong or linear-oblong, acumi- nate, downy on both surfaces, reticulated above, lateral nerves below numerous, very divergent, elevated. Panicles downy, from the upper axils, six to ten inches long ; branches ~ few, opposite, spreading. owers fascicled on the branches, sessile, three-quarters of an inch in diameter, calyx-tube turbinate ; lobes five, short, transversely oblong, very obtuse, almost truncate. Petals orbicular, white. Stamens much larger than the petals, filaments linear, flexuous, much con- tracted at the very apex; anthers linear, cells slender, bursting longitudinally ; style filiform.—J. D. /. Vig. J, Ovary and calyx; 2, transverse, and 3, vertical section of ovary ; 4, stamen :—all magnified. 5791, AS 1 W. Fitcl Tas. 5791. CYPRIPEDIUM PARISHI. The Rev. Mr. Parish’s Lady's Slipper. Nat. Ord. Orcnipe®.—GYNANDRIA DIANDRIA. Gen. Char. (Vide supra, Tas. 5349.) Cypripepiom Parishii ; foliis distichis loriformibus coriaceis, apice obliquo obtuso v. 2-fido immaculatis, scapo elongato stricto pubescente 3-5-floro foliis multo longiore, bracteis late ovatis acutis ovario dimidio brevio- ribus, sepalis pallide viridibus lateralibus carinatis, dorsali late ovato subacuto, petalis sepalis 3-plo longioribus elongato-linearibus tortis sordide purpureis basi viridibus, marginibus undulatis verruceis paucis purpureis penicillatis ornatis, apicibus obtusis ciliatis, labello anguste oblongo basi rotundato ore paulo ampliato obliquo auriculis subacutis prominulis, staminodio 2-fido, : Cypripepium Parishii, Reichb. fil. in Flora, 1869, 322; and Gard. Chron. 1869, 814, cum ic. xylogr. A superb species belonging to the Indian section of which C. insigne is the type, and was long the only known represen- tative, but which section is now increased by several noble discoveries, including C. Jevigatum (Tab. nost. 5508) and C. Stonei (Tab. 5349); to the former of these indeed, a native of the Philippines, C. Parishi 18 very closely allied, differing in the larger size, pale green unstriped dorsal sepal, obtuse tips of the petals, the pencilled warts on the ae of which are more prominent, in the form of the mou > the obtuse-based lip, and in the shape of the staminode. : Parishii was discovered in the Moulmayne mountains by the eminent amateur of this family, our energetic correspondent, the Rev. ©. Parish, of Moulmayne, 1859, and refound in 1866, when he brought roots to his garden, which flowered in 1867. From this a drawing was made, and sent to Kew, with a noble dried specimen, bearing five open flowers, and to this Prof. Reichenbach has attached the name of its dis- SEPTEMBER lst, 1869. coverer. The specimen here figured flowered with Messrs. Veitch in July of the present year, and presented a spike no less than two feet long! Mr. Parish’s dried specimen and flowers are quite as large as ours, and differ only in having a broader leaf (full two inches across) and a deep purple- tinted lip. Z Desc. Stem four to eight inches high, leafy. Leaves eight inches long by two inches broad, coriaceous, exactly linear, bright green, obliquely rounded, and bifid at the apex. Scape one and a half to two feet high, stout, covered with villous hairs, three- to five-flowered. Bracts large, spatha- ceous, ovate, acute, green. Ovary and pedicel two inches long, covered with soft green villous hairs. Sepals spreading, pale green, two inches long by one to one and a half inches broad. Petals pendulous, four to five inches long, linear, twisted, purple with pale margins for the lower two-thirds of their length, apex rounded and pencilled, margin in the upper third greenish, waved, presenting here and there purple very prominent shining pencilled warts. Lip one and a half inches long, rounded at the base, green or purplish, mouth rather expanded with erect acute auricles. Sfaminode large, green, broadly oblong, bifid.—/. D. H. Fig. 1. Staminode and stigma :—magnified. \ fee .. 3 P LY \ W.Fitch, delet lith. ; Vincent Brooks, Day&Son.Imp Tas. 5792. CEROPEGIA SANDERSONI. Mr. Sanderson's Ceropegia. Nat. Ord. AscLEPIADEZ.—PENTANDRIA Monocynia. Gen. Char. (Vide supra, Tas. 5806.) Crropecia Sandersoni ; glaberrima, caulibus robustis elongatis volubilibus, foliis crasse petiolatis ovatis v. ovato-cordatis subacutis obtusisve car- nosis, pedunculis brevibus crassis paucifloris, bracteolis parvis ovatis acutis, calycis lobis ovato-lanceolatis acuminatis, corolla albo-viridi magna ampla, tubo basi modice inflato curvo sursum valde ampliato late infundibuliformi translucido, lobis remotis in laminam horizontalem basi 2-lobam ciliatam dilatatis, laminibus in umbraculam latissimam 5-lobam 5-sulcatam connatis, corone staminex lobis exterioribus 0, interioribus elongatis erectis apicibus recurvis. Ceropraia Sandersoni, Decaisne in litt. This very striking and conspicuous-flowered plant, was discovered in J uly, 1867, by our active and able correspondent, John Sanderson, Esq., of Natal, in the Bush on the banks of a stream flowing into the Umgeni river in a stony soil; and by: him a sketch was in the following year sent both to myself and to my friend M. Decaisne, who provisionally gave it the above name,—a richly-deserved compliment to its ex- cellent and liberal discoverer. In 1868 live specimens were transmitted in a Ward’s case by Mr. Sanderson to Kew, and these having gone on flowering abundantly, from the month of May till the present time, enable me to figure it here. In habit C. Sandersoni differs altogether from its congeners, as it does in its stout stem like that of a Vanilla, its succulent leaves, and the remarkable structure and colour of its semi- transparent flower capped by the curious broad lobed hood of mottled green, which bears near the margin a series of erect white flat hair-like processes. SEPTEMBER Ist, 1869. Descr. A lofty glabrous climber. Stems stout, succulent, as thick as a goosequill, twining, and sparingly branched. Leaves small and distant for the size of the plant, shortly stoutly petioled, one and a half to two and a half inches long, ovate-cordate, obtuse, thick and succulent, nerveless, deep green like the stems. Peduncles axillary, short, curved, stout, terete, bright green, three- to four-flowered. Bracteoles small, subulate. Pedicels short. Calyx-lobes subulate, quarter of an inch long, green. Corolla two and a half inches long, curved at the base, two inches broad across the top; tube slightly inflated and green at the base, expanding into a funnel- shaped, five-angled, transparent limb, with opaque green reticulated veins; this presents five short distant lobes on its margin, which bears the five curious horizontal appendages that together form the umbraculiform cap to the flower: this cap is bright verdigris-green, pitted on the surface and formed of five confluent convex lobes with a conical central papilla, each lobe is two-lobed at its outer margin, and the margins are turned up and bear a series of transparent flat erect hairs within the border. Staminal corona yellow, termi- nating in five erect strap-shaped connivent processes with recurved apices.— J. D. H. Fig. 1, Staminal corona; 2, pollini:—both magnified. we pena Tas. 5793. ACER RUFINERVE; var. albo-limbata. fed-nerved Maple,—white-bordered variety. Nat. Ord. SapinpacE&#.—PoLyGAMiA OCTANDRIA. Gen. Char.—F lores seepissime polygamo-dieci. Calyx sepius 5-partitus, deciduus, imbricatus. Petala 0 v. lobis calycinis isomera. Discus annu- laris, lobatus. Stamina sepius 8, disco inserta, filamentis filiformibus. Ovarium 2-lobum, 2-loculare, septo contrarie compressum; styli 2, inter _ lobos ovarii inserti, filiformes, intus longe stigmatosi; ovula in loculis 2, superposita v. collateralia. Samare 2, divaricate, 1—2-sperme, longe alate, alis elongatis oblique dilatatis. Semina adscendentia, compressa, testa membranacea, endopleura carnosa; embryo conduplicatus.—Arbores succo aqueo, rarius saccharato, rarissime lacteo. Folia opposita, decidua, integra lobata v. subpedatim 5—7-partita. Flores racemosi v. corymbost, axillares et terminales. : Acer rufinerve ; foliis e basi cordato, palmato, 8—5-lobis argute duplicato serratis superne glabris, subtus ad nervos rufo-lanatis demum glabratis, lobis deltoideis abrupte caudato-acuminatis lateralibus brevioribus, ra- cemis simplicibus multifloris, floribus breviter pedicellatis, sepalis ob- longis petalis obovatis paulo brevioribus ovarioque glabris, samare alis late cultratis rotundatis adscendentibus. Acer rufinerve, Siebold et Zuccarini, Fl. Japon. v. ii. t. 158, ined. ex. Fl. Jap. Fam. Nat., Sect. i. p. 47. Miquel Prolus. Fl. Japon. p. 20, et “ Sur les Erables du Japon,” in Archives Néerlandaises, v. ii. 1867. Var. albo-limbata ; marginibus foliorum albo marmoratis. The Japanese Maples, of which many species are now to be found in our gardens in a young state, are amongst the most beautiful novelties of late introduced into the Arboretum, for that many of them will prove as hardy as their fellow- countrymen, the Salisburia, Sophora japonica, and Aucuba, can no longer be doubted. Our figure represents one of the noblest of these in foliage, and a very remarkable variety of it, exhibiting that variegation so frequent amongst Japan SEPTEMBER Ist, 1869. plants, and which the Japanese themselves so sedulously encourage in their gardens and pleasure grounds. Acer rufinerve is a native of Nagasaki and Yokohama, two widely-separated localities, with very different climates ; and there are specimens of the white-bordered variety in the Kew Herbarium, collected by the eminent Russian traveller and botanist, Maximowicz, in the town of Jedo. The figured specimen is from the nurseries of Mr. Standish, and was ex- hibited at the Horticultural Society in May of the present year. Desor. A largetree. Branches stout ; branchlets, peduncles, petioles, and often midrib of the leaf below pale red. Leaves palmately three- to five-lobed, cordate at the base, three to five inches long and broad ; rufous-pubescent or woolly below on the nerves when young, glabrous when old, lobes broadly ovate or triangular abruptly cordate-acuminate, doubly serrate, deep green, mottled along the border with white ; petiole one to one and a half inches long. Racemes pendulous ; flowers green, quarter of an inch in diameter. Calya-lobes obovate-oblong. Petals broadly obovate, crenate. Stamens eight. Fruiting raceme lengthened. Samaras one to one and a half inches across the pair; wings slightly falcate, rounded at the apex.—J. D. #. : Fig. i, Flower; 2, the same seen from the outside; 3, stamen; 4, fruit:—all but fig. 4 magnified. 5794. W. Fitch, del.et lith. 8 a a) "6 o fa pi = 3) $ Tas. 5794, PRIMULA PEDEMONTANA. Piedmontese Primrose. Nat. Ord. PrimuLaceEa.—PENTANDRIA Monoaynia. Gen. Char. (Vide supra, Tas. 5528.) Primvuxa pedemontana ; foliis oblongis obovatisve obsolete repando-dentatis glanduloso-ciliatis junioribus convolutis subcarnosis levibus, scapo pedi- cillisque glandulis brevissime stipitatis viscosis adspersis, involucri brac- teis parvis late oblongis obtusis pedicellis multo brevioribus, corolla lobis obcordatis, fauce esquamato non farinoso, staminibus sexus bre- vistyli paulo infra medium tubi insertis, capsula calycem equante. Priva pedemontana, Thomas. Plant. exsicc., Koch. Synops. Flor. Germ. et Helvet., Ed. 2. p. 675. One of a: lovely series of Swiss Alpine Primulas of the Auricula group, which includes P. pubescens, Jacq., rhetica, Gaudin and villosa, Jacq., and which are distinguished from one another by such slight characters that continental authors are not altogether of one accord as to their limits Reichen- bach (Ie. Crit. vol. vii. p. 17. t. 856-7), considering them as one species, and Koch keeping them distinct. It is a native of the high Alps of Piedmont and Switzerland, and one of the most lovely plants of those regions. ‘The specimen figured bloomed profusely in the Royal Gardens in April of the present year, from roots received from Messrs. Backhouse, of York. ‘The flowers vary a good deal in colour in the native state, those here figured are of the clearest and brightest rose-purple that can well be imagined. _ Les Desc. Rosettes of leaves two to three inches in diameter, appressed to the ground. Leaves one to one and a half inches long, oblong or obovate, hardly petioled enough to be spathu- late, obtusely sinuate, toothed, covered and fringed with glan- dular viscid hairs, deep green with a paler midrib. Scapes stout, two to four inches high, very many-flowered, viscidly SEPTEMBER Ist, 1869. pubescent. — Znvolucral leaves very short, ovate or oblong, obtuse, appressed. M/owers numerous, usually forming a dense head ; pedicels strict, viscid, much longer than the snvolucral bracts. Caly«-tube oblong-cylindric, viscid, teeth short, rounded. Corolla rose-purple, tube much longer than the calyx, half an inch long; limb one inch diameter ; throat naked, yellow, without farina or scales, lobes obcordate, not deeply lobed. Stamens in the short-styled form inserted shortly below the mouth of the corolla. Ovary globose. Capsule as long as the calyx —J. D. #7. Fig. 1, Flower; 2, calyx cut open, showing the ovary :—magnified, h del et lith tch del et lith. 7, DD. Vincent Brooks Day & So mn Imp Tas. 5795. . DORSTENTA ARGENTATA. Stlvered-leaved Dorstenia. Nat. Ord. More&.—Monecia DrsaNnpria. Gen. Char.—Receptaculum carnosum, concavo-planum. Flores plurimi i alveolis receptaculi, masculi femineis mixti. Masc. Alveoli superficiales. Perigonium 0 vy. lobi 8 ad orem alveoli. Stamina 1 v. plura, filamentis fili- formibus; anthere 2-loculares, globoso-didyme. Frm. in foveolis recep- taculi solitarii. Perigonium 0. Ovarium breviter stipitatum, ovatum, 1-loculare; stylus lateralis, filiformis, stigmate 2-fido; ovulum 1, parieti styligeri appensum. Utricudé demum circumscissi, receptaculo subsucculento immersi. Semen uncinatum, testa crustacea; embryo uncinatus—Herbe Americe tropice incole, acaules v. caulescentes. Folia varia, radicalia v. caulina et alterna. Capitula scapos radicales v. pedunculos axillares termi- Mantia, Dorstexta argentata ; caule e basi radicante prostrato erecto puberulo folioso purpurascente, foliis alternis breviter petiolatis oblongis v. anguste lanceolatis, apice attenuato obtuso apiculato, obscure sinuato-dentatis, supra et subtus ad nervos patentes puberulis siccitate scabridis, disco supra late irregulariter argentatis margine saturate viridi, petiolo brevi costaque subtus fusco-purpureis, stipulis subulatis persistentibus, pedun- culis axillaribus, receptaculis, orbicularibus pubescentibus leviter con- cavis margine processibus brevibus subcapitellatis ornato, alveolis disci fomineis marginis masculis monandris, perigonii lobis 3. A remarkably pretty variegated-leaved stove plant, a native of South’ Brazil, for which the Royal Gardens are in- debted to Mr. Wilson Saunders, F.R.S., of Reigate. It is not described by Miquel in the monograph of the Brazilian species, which has appeared in Martius’s Flora Brasiliensis, but there are dried specimens in the Kew Herbarium sent by Dr. Fritz Miiller, of Sta. Catherine, South Brazil. Duscr. Stem nearly simple, terete, horizontal and rooting for a foot or so, sending up few ascending simple leafy branches six to twelve inches high; branches dull purple, terete, pu- SEPTEMBER Ist, 1869, bescent, almost as thick as a goosequill. Leaves numerous, alternate, three to five inches long, oblong- or narrow-lanceo- late, narrowed above to an obtuse apiculate tip, and below into the petiole, sinuate-toothed, deep green at the margins, with a broad central silvery zone which is marbled with green at the juncture of the colours, scabridly puberulous above and beneath on the nerves which spread widely from the costa, petiole half an inch to one inch long and midrib below purple; stipules persistent, small, subulate. Peduncles axillary, half an inch to one inch long, stout, dull purple, puberulous, suddenly expanding into the peltate orbicular slightly concave receptacle, which is dark green, three-quarters of an inch to one inch in diameter; margin furnished with a series of short obtuse purple capitate conical tubercles, each tipped with a few short hairs. /owers of the disc all female, immersed in simple alveoli. Ovary flagon-shaped; styles two, recurved. Ovter flowers male, in few series ; the mouth of the alveoli furnished with three broadly ovate, short, green incurved perianth-lobes. Sfamens three, surrounding a conical papilla (a rudimentary ovary).—/J. D. H. Fig. 1, Receptacle; 2, vertical section of the same :—both magnified. 196. del etlith OE et ne ete Tas. 5796. DROSOPHYLLUM LUSITANICUM. Portuguese Yellow Sundew. Nat. Ord. Droseracem.—OcTANDRIA PENTAGYNIA. Gen. Char.—Calyx 5 partitus, foliolis oblongis imbricatis. Petala 5, hypo- gyna, patentia, nervosa. Stamina 10-20, hypogyna, filamentis filiformibus ; anther oblonge, extrorse. Ovarium ovoideum, 1 loculare; styli 5, fili- formes, stigmatibus capitatis; ovula numerosa, placente basilari affixa. Capsula conica, chartacea, 1-locularis, ad medium 5-valvis, polysperma. Semina majuscula, obovoidea, funiculo elongato, testa crassa; embryo in _basi albuminis densi semi-immersa, minima. Fruticulus pedalis, caule brevi, totus pilis grosse capitato-glandulosis viscidus. Folia confertim alterna, elongato linearia, apice attenuata, vernatione circinatim revoluta. Flores corymbosi, ampli, sulphurei. Capsula exserta, erecta. Drosopny.uium lusitanicum, Linn. D.C. Prod. i. 320. St. Hil.in Mem. Mus. ii. 124, t. 4, f. 13. This almost shrubby representative of the Sundews of our bogs and moors is one of the most singular plants of the European Flora; it differs from its ally Drosera, not only in habit and size, and in some very curious points of struc- ture, as the numerous stamens, entire styles and basilar placente, but in the nature of the glandular hairs, which have rigid pedicels that are not endowed with the motive power of those of the English Sundews, which curve towards their prey when once it is entangled. A still more anoma- lous character is to be found in the way the leaves are developed in the bud, being circinate and revolute, not imvo- lute as in our Droseras, in Ferns, Cycads, and other plants ; and of this mode of development Drosophyllum is, in so far as I know, the only example in the vegetable kingdom. Drosophyllum is a native of Spain, Portugal, and Mauri- tania, inhabiting sandy shores and dry rocks, by the sea and OCTOBER Ist, 1869. inland. The Royal Gardens are indebted to M. Goeze, of the Botanical Gardens of Coimbra, for seeds and living plants ; as also to Mr. Darwin, to whom they were sent by Mr. G. Maw, who collected them himself on the coast of Marocco. The plant flowered at Mr. Darwin’s and at Kew in April of the present year. Desor. Whole plant, except the leaf-base, inside of sepals, petals, stamens and ovary, covered: with purple, pedicelled, viscid glands. Stem woody, two to three inches high, as thick as the little finger, rough with the old leaf bases. Leaves crowded at the top of the stem, four to eight inches long, spreading, one-eighth of an inch broad, gradually narrowed to the apex. Flowering stem leaty, stout, a foot high. Flowers in a lax corymb, erect, one and a half inches in dia- meter branches distant, flexuous, bracteate at the forks; bracts linear, quarter to half an inch long, pedicels one to three inches long, stout. Sepals one-third of an inch long, oblong, acute. Petals obovate, spathulate, bright pale yellow, membranous, twisted after flowering. Stamens usually ten, alternate longest; anthers short, yellow. Ovary oblong, one- celled; styles usually five, stigmas capitate ; ovules anatro- pous, crowded on a central receptacle. Capsule three-quarters of an inch long, narrow ovoid, coriaceous, glossy, five-valved. Seeds compressed.—J. D. H. Fig. 1, Portion of leaf and gland; 2, gland; 3, sepals, stamen and pistil ; 4, petal; 5, stamen; 6, ovary; 7, transverse, and 8, vertical section of ditto : —all magnified. meena VincentBrooks Dayk Son imp. el et ith. 7 t W.Fitch.« Tas. 5797. MACKAYA BELLA. Natal Mackaya. Nat. Ord. ACANTHACE.,—DIANDRIA MonoGyYnIA. Gen. Char.—Calyx parvus, ebracteolatus, equaliter 5-partitus, laciniis subulatis. Corolle tubus cylindraceus, limbus ampliatus oblique campanu- latus, venosus, subsqualiter, 5-lobus, lobis patentibus. Stamina circa apicem tubi inserta; duo fertilia antheris sagittatis bilocularibus sub- equilateris pilosis; duo inferiora ananthera filiformia. Stylus filiformis ; stigmate minute bifido. Ovarium loculis medio bi-ovulatis. Capsula?— Frutex gracilis, inermis. Folia supra minute punctata, sinuato—dentata. Racemi terminales, laxe secundiflori, bracteis bracteolisque infra medium pedicellorum minimis. lores magni, speciosi, lilacini. Harv. Thes. Cap. Tab. xiii. Mackaya bella, Harvey in Proc. Dubl. Univ. Zool. et Bot. Ass. ined. The- saurus Capensis, t. xiii. T. Anderson, in Journ. Linn. Soc. v. vii, p. 18 and 53. This most beautiful Acanthaceous plant was dedicated by the late Professor Harvey, of Dublin, to his old friend, Dr. J. T. Mackay, Keeper of the Dublin University Botanic Garden, and author of “ The Flora Hibernica ;’ it is ana- tive of the bed of the Tongat river, Natal, where its dis- coverer, Mr. J. Sanderson, describes it as “a beautiful shrub, one mass of most delicate pendant, pale lilac, campanulate flowers.” For living specimens the Royal Gardens are in- debted to its discoverer, and to Mr. McKen, of the D’Urban Botanic Gardens. It flowered in the Palm House in May of the present year. Descr. A tall, slender, nearly glabrous shrub, with virgate branches. Leaves on short petioles, patent, ovate-oblong, two to four inches long, glabrous, but minutely granulated on the upper surface when dry, sinuate-toothed, apex con- tracted, obtuse or acuminate, veiny. tacemes four to six OCTOBER Ist, 1869. inches long, many-flowered, terminal, unilateral; bracts opposite, minute, subulate; pedicels two to three lines long, cernuous, bracteolate at a line from the base. Flowers secund, erect. Calyx continuous with the pedicel, equally five-partite, with narrow subulate segments. Corolla nearly two inches long, pale lilac, throat with most delicately pencilled reticulated purple veins, of thin membranous sub- stance, tubular below, campanulate upwards, with a deeply five-lobed, subequal, spreading limb; the segments oblong, obtuse. Stamens inserted at the top of the narrow tube of the corolla, shorter than the limb ; two perfect, with sagittate, pilose, equal-sided, two-celled anthers; two reduced to fila- ments, nearly as long as the others, without anthers. Style filiform, with a minute, bifid stigma; ovary bilocular, with two ovules in each cell. Capsule unknown.—/. D. H. Fig. 1, Corolla laid open; 2, stamen; 3, calyx and style; 4, ovary :—all magnified. zy Sel? , " ksD W- Fitch del etlith, Vincent Brooks Tas. 5798. ARIDES JAPONICUM. Japanese dirides. Nat. Ord. OrcuipeEx.—GyYnanpriA Monoeynta. Gen. Char. (Vide supra, Tas. 5138.) ZErwes Japonicum ; foliis brevibus lineari-oblongis recurvis carinatis apice oblique bilobis, racemis 6—10-floris, sepalis oblongis obtusis albo-viri- dibus, petalis consimilibus, labelli laciniis posticis brevibus plicatis in- termedio obovato spathulato basi saccato apice rotundato crenulato medio obtuse carinato carina crassa tumida levi alba violaceo-maculata, calcare brevi infundibuliforme obtuso adscendente, columna subelon- gata, anthera rostrata, fErwes Japonicum, Linden et Reich. fil. in Hamburg Garten- und Blumen- zeit, ann. 1863, p. 210. The presence of rides in so high a northern latitude as Japan is a remarkable fact in Botanical Geography, as testify- ing to the warmth of the southern coasts of that Archipelago, and to the extension of a Malayan type of vegetation to so high a parallel. As a species 4. Japonicum is compared by Reichenbach with A. radicosum, A. Rich. (Saccolabium Wight- anum, Lindl.), from which it differs in habit, but which it resembles in the form of the lip. Zbrides Japonicum was originally introduced from Japan by Mr. Linden of Brussels in 1862, and more recently by Messrs. Veitch, with whom the plant from which the present figure was taken flowered in June of this year. Descr. Stem very short. Leaves six to eight, two to three inches long, three quarters to one inch broad, recurved, linear- oblong, keeled, unequally two-lobed at the apex, dark green above. Raceme six inches long, flowers distant, one and a half inches from the tip of the lip to that of the back sepal, bracts short. Sepals and petals nearly half an inch long, oblong, obtuse, greenish-white; lateral sepals with dull OCTOBER Ist, 1869. prown-purple bars towards the base. Basal lobe of lip ob- long, with two short plaited lobes and an intermediate spinous process placed over the mouth of the spur; terminal lobe obovate-spathulate, crenate, concave and gibbous below, white, with a raised, dark violet, smooth, median ridge, and a few paler violet spots. Spur short, funnel-shaped, obtuse, the point reaching half the length of the lip, to the gibbosity at the back of which it points. Co/wma one third of an inch long, incurved. Anther beaked. Pollinia globose ; caudicle short.—J. D. HH. Fig. 1, Column and anther; 2, pollinia; 3, lip and spur ; 4, anterior view of lip :—all magnified. ‘i ees 5799. } Sbedetetath W. Fitch, del.etlith. 2 ; E E Tas. 5799. NERTERA DEPRESSA. Depressed Nertera. Nat. Ord. Rupracea.—TETRANDRIA Monoernia. Gen. Char.—Flores hermaphroditi. Calycis tubus ovoideus; limbus _ truncatus v. obscure 4-dentatus. Corolla tubulosa v. infundibuliformis, 4-loba. Stamina 4; filamenta basi corolle inserta; antheris exsertis. Ovarium 2-loculare ; Joculis 1-ovulatis. Styli 2, elongati, exserti, undique piloso-stigmatiferi. Bacca globosa, carnosa, dicocca; coccis coriaceis, 1-spermis. Semina plano-convexa, intus sulcata.—Herbe parve, repentes ; foliis sempervirentibus ; stipulis intrafoliaceis ; floribus axillaribus, sub-— sessilibus. : ) Nerrera depressa; glaberrima, caulibus repentibus, ramulis suberectis v- demissis, foliis petiolatis late ovatis acutis, calycibus ovariisque glaber- rimis, embryone majusculo, Nerrera depressa, Banks and Sol. in Gertn. Fruct. v. i. p. 124, t. 26. D.C. Prod. v. iv. p. 451. Smith, Ic. ined. v. ii. t. 28. Hook. f. Fl. Tasm. v. i. p. 167. Handbook of New Zealand Flora, p. 120. . Nerrera repens, Ruiz and Pav. Fl. Peruv., v. i. p. 60, t. 90. Eryrnropamum alsineforme, Pet. Thouar, Fl. Trist. @Acunha, p. 42. t. 10. GonoziA granatensis, Mutis in Linn. fil. Suppl. p. 29. Though when in flower one of the most insignificant of flowering plants, when covered with its translucent orange fruit, which it keeps for a long period, this is one of the most charming of rockwork plants. It is a native of the bleak cold Antarctic mountains throughout the southern hemisphere, where I have gathered it in Lord Auckland and Campbell Tslands, the Falkland Islands, and Cape Horn; it also inhabits Tristan d’Acunha, the mountains of New Zea- land and Tasmania, and follows the Andes from Cape Horn to New Grenada. oe The specimen here figured flowered in June, and fruited in ocroBer Isr, 1869. August, 1868, and remained in fruit during a good part of the winter. It was communicated to the Royal Gardens by Mr. Niven, from the rich herbaceous collection of the Botanic Gardens of Hull. Descr. A low, depressed, densely tufted herb, covered with minute yellow-green flowers, succeeded by globose, bright orange-red berries. Almost glabrous in every part. Stems creeping and rooting, densely tufted, six to ten inches long, tetragonous. Leaves one-sixth to one-third of an inch long, broadly ovate, acute or obtuse, coriaceous or almost fleshy ; petioles as long as the blade or shorter. Séipules very small. Flowers solitary, minute, sessile, one-tenth of an inch long, probably subunisexual, one sex having long stamens and short styles, the other the reverse. Calyx-limb four-toothed. Corolla fannel-shaped, green with four short spreading lobes. Stamens four, filaments flattened. Ovary two.-celled, styles slender, papillar all over ; ovules one in each cell. Fruit glo- bose, bright orange, translucent, size of a small pea, most abundantly produced, each with two plano-convex coriaceous one-seeded cocci.—J. D. H. Fig. 1, Tip of branch with leaves and flower; 2, corolla laid open; 3, sta- men; 4, ovary; 5, vertical section of ditto; 6, tip of branch and fruit; 7, transverse section of ditto; 8, cocci :—all highly magnified. 8 La ec ee eee ee Tas. 5800. BIGN ONIA PURPUREA. Nat. Ord. BigNoNIAcEZ.—DipyNamIA ANGIOSPERMIA. Gen. Char.—Calyx margine 5-dentatus, rarius integer aut 5-partitus aut 2-3-lobus. Corolla bilabiata aut subequalis, 5-fida. Stamina 4 fertilia, didynama, quinto sterili. Amnthere loculis glabris, sepissime dis- cretis. Stigma bilamellatum. Capsula valvis vix convexis planisve, septo. plano valvis parallelo. Semina ad quodque septi latus uniseriata, utrinque alata, ala pellucida.—Caules nune frutescentes arboresve erecti, nunc fruticoso- scandentes. Folia fere ubique opposita, petiolata, sed ceterum valde varia. Flores s@pe speciost. Biegnon1a purpurea, glaberrima, foliis breviter petiolatis 2-foliolatis petiolo sepissime in cirrhum producto, foliolis oblongis obtusis v. subacutis re- curvis breviter petiolatis, floribus inaxillis foliorum 2-nis, breviter pedun- culatis, pedunculis basi minute bracteolatis, calyce tubuloso campanulato, ore plicato plicis in dentes 5 conicos breviter productis, corolle pallide lilacine fauce albo tubo infundibuliforme, limbi lobis obovato-rotun- datis, ovario tuberculato. Bignowia purpurea, Lodd. D, C. Prod. v. ix. p. 171 (name only). This magnificent stove climber has long been cultivated in the Palm House at Kew, and is no doubt the Bignonia pur- purea of Loddiges’ catalogue, an undescribed plant, of which there is a named specimen in the Hookerian Herbarium, col- lected in the Liverpool Botanical Garden, probably thirty years ago. As a species B. purpurea 1s closely allied to B. speciosa, Hook. (Tab. nost., 3888), a native of Uraguay, resembling it altogether in habit and foliage, and in size and colour of the flower, but differing in the longer calyx, with short conical teeth, and narrower corolla tube. Duscr. A lofty glabrous climber. Stem slender. Leaves bifoliolate ; petioles short, one-third of an inch long, some- times ending in a long flexuous tendril; leaflets two and a half to three and a half inches long, obovate-lanceolate, ocToBeR Ist, 1869. abruptly narrowed to an acute point, bright green above, paler below, their petioles one quarter of an inch long. Mowers in pairs in the axils of the leaves, pedicels half an inch long, with minute subulate bracts at the base. Calyz one-third of an inch long, tubular-campanulate, plaited at the mouth, with five short, obtuse, conic teeth. Corolla mauve, with a large white eye, tube funnel-shaped, one inch long, lobes nearly equal, rounded, mouth transverse. Stamens and style included, glabrous. Ovary upon a small disc, ovoid, tuber- se cells with two rows of horizontal ovules.— Fig. 1, Calyx and style; 2, base of corolla throat, showing the stamens; 3, anther; 4, ovary; 5 and 6, vertical and transverse section of ditto:—all magnified, . 20 W Fitch, del. et lith. Vincent Brooks, Day&Son.lmp Tas, 5801. COTYLEDON SALZMANNI. Salzmann’s Cotyledon. Nat. Ord. CrassuLAcEa®.—DECANDRIA PENTAGYNIA. Gen. Char—Calyx 5-partitus, corolle tubo equalis v. brevior. Corolle tubus angustus v. amplus, urceolatus v. cylindricus, teres v. 5-gonus, limbi lobis parvis patentibus. Stamina 10 (rarissime 5), tubo corolle inserta, filamentis filiformibus brevibus v. elongatis; anthere oblongex, exserte v. incluse. Squamule lineares, oblonge v. quadrate, nunc latiores quam longe. Ovarit carpella 5, libera, in stylos filiformes v. subulatos sepe exsertos attenuata, stigmatibus oblique capitellatis; ovula in carpellis «. Folliculi «<-spermi.—Herbe v. suffrutices ramose v. subscapigere, habitu valde varie, Folia opposita v. alterna, sessilia v. petiolata, sepe crassissime carnosa, in paucis peltata, sparsa v. rosulata. Flores erecti v. penduli, parvi majusculi v. ampli, spicati racemosi v. cymosi, nunc speciosi. Corolle lobi estivatione torti. Benth. and H. f. Gen. Plant. i. 659, CotyLtepon Salzmanni ; radice annua, ramis cymosis glanduloso-hirtis, foliis subulato-lanceolatis acutiusculis glandulosis teretibus, sepalis 5 parvis acutis hirtellis, corolla calyce plus sextuplo longiore ad tertiam partem usque profunde 5-fida, tubo subconico extus hirtello, limbi subpatuli lobis ovatis apiculatis mucronulatis flavis apice brunneis et brunneo sparse punctatis, stylis et staminibus subequalibus exsertis. CotyLepon (Pistorinia) Salzmanni, Boiss. Voy. in Esp. p. 224, t. 63, fig. B. Walp. Rep. ii. 258. A more beautiful rock plant of the kind than this can scarcely be imagined. It is literally a mass of brilliant golden blossoms, relieved by the red-brown spots at the tips of the corolla lobes, which give them the appearance of being forked at the apex. The foliage, too, is of a brilliant green trans- lucid texture relieved with blood-red streaks. I have referred it with some doubt to Boissier’s Mogador plant, the dried specimens of which are but one and a half inches high, and am far from satisfied that itis nota form of C. hispanicum, Desff. OCTOBER Ist, 1869. The Royal Gardens are indebted for this beautiful plant to G. Maw, Esq., who collected it at Tangiers in the early spring of the present year, and transmitted it to Kew with many other most interesting herbaceous plants: it flowered in the month of July. Descr. Annual, covered with glandular hairs, tufted. Stem stout, inclined, ascending, as thick as a crow-quill, leafy, ex- cessively corymbosely branched at the top. Leaves half an inch to two-thirds of an inch long, spreading, curved, very thick and fleshy, terete, obtuse, green, covered with short red streaks, tips red-brown. Flowers most abundantly produced, shortly pedicelled. Calyx-lobes lanceolate, one-third of an inch long. Corolla between funnel- and salver-shaped, golden yellow, tube half an inch long, streaked with red, lobes spread- ing, ovate, apiculate, golden yellow, with red-brown tips and scattered spots. Stamens on the throat of the corolla, ex- serted. Hypogynous glands slender, linear, bifid. Carpels very slender, with diverging filiform styles.—J. D. H. Fig. 1, leaf; 2, flower; 3, corolla, tube, and stamens; 4, anther; 5, ovary and scales :—all magnified. 5802. a pares ee sonaermsscecrnns ‘ 1 id p. W. Fitch, delet lith q Vincent Brooks, Day &Son, Imp Tas. 5802. MORMODES GREENII. Mr. Charles Green's Mormodes. Nat. Ord. Orcuipe&®.—GyYNANDRIA MOoNANDRIA. Gen. Char.— Sepalum superius fornicatum angustum ; lateralia conformia reflexa. Petala sublatiora conformia. Labellum selleforme, ascendens, truobatum, subcuneatum, apiculatum v. lineare apice dilatato cucullato cum columna articulatum. Columna semiteres; clinandrium postice acumina- tum. Pollinia 4, per paria connata, caudicule crasse affixa, glandule carnose crasse adherentia.—Herbe Americe tropice incole. Pseudobulbe oblonge. Folia elongato-lanceolata, sepius plicata, membranacea. Flores | numerosi, in racemos sepius pendulos dispositi, speciosi v. luridi. Mormopes Greenii ; pseudobulbis ovoideo-cylindricis subancipitibus, foliis subtus glaucis elongato-lanceolatis pedalibus, racemo magno pendulo longe pedunculato multifloro, sepulis petalisque subequalibus patentibus ovato-oblongis auctis subconcavis extus pallidis intus flavis creberrime rubro-maculatis, labello e basi lineari incurvo apice in laminam cucul- latam fimbriatam acuminatam dilatato. This noble species was flowered by our friend Mr. W. Wilson Saunders, F.R.S., from imported bulbs purchased at one of Stevens’ sales. It seems to differ entirely from any species hitherto published, and I have dedicated it to Mr. Charles Green, one of the most accomplished and skilful of English gardeners, who for many years managed the immense collec- tion of herbaceous plants cultivated by the late Mr. Borrer, and since then has cultivated with equal skill the very dif- ferent and far richer and more varied horticultural collections of the Maczenas of scientific gardeners, Mr. W. Wilson Saunders, © of Reigate. The specimen here figured flowered in June, oa 1869, and exhaled a powerful aromatic odour. -Dascr. Pseudo-bulbs broadly fusiform, somewhat two-edged. Leaves narrow-lanceolate, one to one and a half feet long, eee _ NOVEMBER Ist, 1869. gradually acuminate, dark green above, paler and glaucous beneath. Raceme very large, pendulous, many-flowered ; peduncle one foot long. Flowers horizontal, two and a half inches diameter, whitish externally ; perianth lobes ovate, subacute, the outer rather smaller, one and a half inches long, somewhat concave, inner surface pale yellow, entirely covered with oblong dark-red spots. ip curved upwards, rather longer than the perianth-lobes, narrow, gradually dilated from a linear fleshy base quarter of an inch broad, to a very concave or saccate incurved orbicular mucronate apex, which is irregularly toothed on the margin ; base of lip dark purple, rising into two calli; inner surface yellow with red streaks ; outer covered with spots like the perianth segments, except on the dilated apex, which is a dirty lilac. Column short, green inside, curved, so that the ovate acuminate anther comes under the concave apex of the lip.—/. D. H. Fig. 1, Column and lip:—magnified. W. Fitch, del et lith. Vincent Brooks, Day Son Imp. on Tas. 5803. VELLOZIA erxzeans. Natal Vellozia. Nat. Ord. VELLOzIEa.—HEXxANDRIA Monoeynia. Gen. Char. (Vide supra, Tas, 5574.) VeLtozia elegans ; caule pedali gracili erecto, foliis ensiformibus racemosis carinato-complicatis multinervis acuminatis apices versus cartilagineo- serrulatis, scapis 3—5-floris, pedicellis valde elongatis filiformibus, ovario 3-quetro glaberrimo, perianthii albi foliolis subequalibus oblongis obtusis demum excrescentibus viridibus, staminibus 6 subsessilibus, antheris linearibus obtusis, stylo brevi, stigmate oblongo-cylindraceo 6-sulcato obtuso, seminibus teretibus elongatis curvis. Vettozia elegans, Oliver MSS. ex Balfour in Trans. Bot. Soc. Ed. v. ix. pp. 79 and 189. Ta.soria elegans, Balfour, l. c. 192, name only. Our first knowledge of this plant was derived from a spe- cimen brought from his garden by the Hon. H. Fox Talbot, F.R.S., to the Kew Herbarium, in 1866, and which was raised from seed procured either from the Cape or Madagascar, which Professor Oliver pronounced to be a Vellozia (identical with a Natal plant, Hypovis barbacenioides, Harv. MSS.), and the name V. elegans was proposed for it. A specimen, presented by Mr. Fox Talbot to the Edin- burgh Botanic Gardens, was next exhibited to the Botanical Society of that city by my friend Professor Balfour, as Vellozia elegans (see Proc. Bot. Soc. Edinb., ix. p. 79, Jan. 1867). At a subsequent meeting (/. c. p. 189, 138th June), Dr. Balfour again exhibited this plant as V. Talbott, or, if it should prove a new genus, Zulbotia elegans. On a third occa- sion (/. c. p. 192, 11th July), he exhibited it as Zulbotia elegans, without a generic character, or pointing out its generic differences from Vellozia. Meanwhile it appears to have been overlooked that an African (Madagascar) genus of NOVEMBER Ist, 1869. Vellozie had already been described by Commerson, under the name of Xerophyta, and figured in Lamarck’s Encyclopedia, t. cexxv. Commerson’s plant agrees with V. elegans in the principal character by which [ find /. elegans to differ from its Brazilian congeners (the cylindric stigma), whilst it differs from V. elegans in another character which is common to the Brazilian species—viz., the length of the filaments. As, how- ever, Xerophyta is reduced by Endlicher to Vellozia, it appears clear that Zulsotia should go with it, and that Professor Oliver’s original name of V. e/egans should be retained for this plant. Another character by which /. elegans differs from the Brazilian species, is the terete not angled seeds; but as the structure of the seed, testa, raphe, and funicle are otherwise identical with those of the only Brazilian species which I have examined, this character is unavailable. The specimen here figured was communicated from the Botanical Gardens of Edinburgh, and flowered in those of Kew in May of the present year. Descr. Glabrous. Svem rigid, flexuous, six inches high, simple, leafy above, below densely covered with the fibrous remains of the leaves. Leaves tristichous, recurved, four to eight inches long, linear-lanceolate, sharply keeled, acu- minate, serrated towards the apex, base sheathing; nerves close-set. Peduncle terminal, sheathed at the base, divided into three to five slender pedicels two to six inches long. Flower pale lilac in bud, then pure white, one and a quarter inches diameter, ebracteate. Perianth segments spreading, ovate, subacute, three outer rather smaller; all enlarging and turning green after flowering. Stamens six, erect ; anther subsessile, linear, obtuse. Ovary obovoid, triquetrous three- celled; ovules many, on two thick placentas in each cell; style as long as the stamens; stigma cylindric, thickened, obtuse, six-furrowed. Capsule obovoid, sharply three-angled, half an inch: long, many-seeded ; septa and walls breaking away from the three persistent angles. Seeds narrow, terete, curved; funicle thickened, and raphe conspicuous.—/. D. H. Fig. 1, Flower with the perianth removed; fig. 2, stamen ; fig. 3, stigma; fig. 4, transverse section of ovary :—all magnified. 5804. WRitch, debetlith. Tas. 5804. CALOCHORTUS ovuntrtorus. Single-flowered Calochortus. Nat. Ord. Lit1acea.—HEeExanpriA Monoeyrnia. Gen. Char.—Perigonium corollinum, deciduum, hexaphyllum ; foliola ses- silia v. subunguiculata, supra basim fovea nectarifera; exteriora minora, omnia vy. interiora tantum intus barbata. Stamina 6, perigonii foliolis basi adherentia, Ovarium triloculare; stigmata 3, subsessilia, libera v. basi coalita, reflexa, canaliculata; ovula in loculis plurima, biseriata, horizontalia, anatropa. Capsula subgloboso-trigona, trilocularis, septicido-trivalvis, valvi demum bifidis. Semina in loculis plurima, subuniseriata, horizontalia, com- pressiuscula; testa fusca, membranacea, laxiuscula, hine raphe percursa ; embryo rectus, teres, excentricus. Herbx im America boreali occidentali, et in terris mexicanis indigene, bulbose, simplices. Folia ensiformia vaginan- tia Flores speciosi solitarit umbellati v. racemosi, purpurei v. albidi. Endl. CaLocnortus uniflorus ; parvula, folio radicali anguste elongato-lanceolato marginibus recurvis, scapo gracili 1—3-floro, sepalis anguste oblongis acu- minatis, petalis late obovato-cuneatis apice obscure erosis basi barbatis et squama nectarifera transversa notatis, antheris ceruleis obtusis, stylo distincto. CaLocnortus uniflorus, Hook. and Arn. Bot. Beech. p. 398, tab. 94; Alphonso Wood in Proc. Soc. Nat. Sc. Philadelph. 1868, p. 168. CrcLopoTura uniflora, Kunth. Enum. v. iv. p. 669. For this most lovely little Liliaceous plant, the Royal Gardens are indebted to Dr. Bolander, of San Francisco, California, an eminent botanical explorer, who sent it under the unpublished name of C. dilacinus. It is a native of the high plains of Santa Cruz, according to Mr. A. Wood, who has monographed the Oregon and Californian Liliacee in the Proceedings of the Philadelphia Academy ; and though called uniflorus, the flowers are usually more than two. It flowered in the Royal Gardens in June of the present year. Descr. Bulb small, ovoid, half an inch long. clothed with NOVEMBER Ist, 1869. a thin shining membrane. Zadical leaf sheathing at the base ; sheath slender ; d/ade four to six inches long, very narrow-lan- ceolate, acuminate, one-fourth to one-third of an inch broad, with many slender nerves, margin revolute. Stem or scape five to eight inches high, slender, few-leaved, one or more flowered. Flowers on slender peduncles, one and a half inches in diameter, pinkish white. Sepa/s narrow oblong, acuminate, one-third shorter than the petals, externally veined with pale crimson. Petals spreading, obovate-cuneate, membranous, obscurely erose, faintly streaked with pink on the back, hairy towards the base inside, with a transverse nectariferous scale, anda few purple spots. Stamens spreading ; filaments subulate ; anthers linear-oblong, obtuse, bluish. Ovary triquetrous ; style short, stigmas short obtuse spreading purple.—/. D. Hi. Fig. 1, Flower with perianth removed; fig. 2, sepal; fig. 3, petal ; fig. 4, ovary ; fig. 5, the same cut transversely :—all magnijied. 5805. Y W. Fitch, del et lith Vincent Brooks Day &So0, imp. Tas. 5805. RHODOTYPUS KERRIOIDES. Japanese Rhodotypus. Nat. Ord. Rosacea.—IcOSANDRIA DIGyYnNIA. Gen. Char.—Calycis persistentis tubus explanatus, intus villosus ; lobi 4, foliacei, argute serrati, imbricati. Petala 4, ampla, orbiculata. Discus lla includens amplus, carnosus, in urceolum 4-dentatum intus sericeum carpe constrictus. Stamina perplurima, filamentis filiformibus liberis; anthere late didymo-oblonge. Carpella 4; styli filiformes, exserti, stigmatibus capitellatis; ovula 2, sub apice loculi pendula. Drupe 1-4, pisiformes, epicarpio sicco nitido a sarcocarpio farinaceo secedente, putamine osseo reti- culato l-spermo. Semina obovoidea, testa membranacea ; cotyledones plano-convexe ; radicula curva, supera.—Frutex J aponicus rams decussatis virgatis strictis, gemmis perulatis. Folia decussatim opposita, petiolata, ovata, acuminata, argute serrata, subtus sericea. Stipule Libera, membrana- cee. Flores solitarit, ampli, ramulos terminantes, breviter pedicellati ; calyce 4-bracteolato. 1. Ruopotyrus Kerrioides, Sieb. and Zucc. Fl. Jap. p. 187, t. xe. Regel, Gartenflora, Vv. XV. P- 130. t. 505, f. 2 and 3. CAD EO ORO OPO aoa TaE T A very elegant shrub, and no doubt hardy, a native of Japan, where it is said to grow wild in the mountains of Kiusiu, but which is known only in cultivation ; flowering in April and ripening its black fruit in mid-winter. The latter resembles that of a blackberry, except in the fewness and dryness of the drupes. It was introduced first of all into the Imperial Gardens of St. Petersburgh, by M. Maximovicz, the eminent Japanese traveller and botanist, and has since been transmitted to Europe by other parties. The plant here figured flowered # the Temperate House at Kew in May of the present year, from seeds by Mr. Oldham, from J apan. Dxscr. A shrub fifteen to twenty feet high, according to the Japanese, but only known to botanists as attaining three to six feet under cultivation. Branches twiggy, spreading ; NOVEMBER IsT, 1869. buds oblong, covered with scales. eaves shortly petioled, one-and-a-half to two-and a-half inches long, ovate, acumi- nate, trebly serrate with glandular teeth, ciliate, glabrous above, silky pubescent beneath, nerves very numerous ; sti- pules subulate, acute. Flowers terminal, solitary, one-and-a- half inches diameter ; peduncles short, much thickened up- wards after flowering. Calyx of four broad, ovate, acute, serrate green sepals, subtended by as many short, subulate, alternating bracts. Petals nearly orbicular, white; stamens very numerous; filaments slender; anthers small, broad. Disk forming four silky, fleshy lobes, concealing the carpels. Ovary of two to four cohering carpels, with slender styles, obtuse stigmas, and two pendulous ovules in each carpel. Fruit of two to four single-seeded, subglobose, dry, black, 5 shining drupes. Seed pendulous, exalbuminous.—J/. D. H. _Fig. 1, Disk and styles; fig. 2, stamen; fig. 3, bases of carpels; fig. 4, ripe drupe :—all but fig. 4 magnified. 5806. W. Fitch, delet lith. Vincent Brooks Day &Son.JmP linha spaniel Tas. 5806. ; IRIS | NUDICAULIS. Naked-scaped Iris. Nat. Ord. InIpDEx.—TRIANDRIA TRIGYNIA. Gen. Char. (Vide supra, Tas. 5298.) Iris nudicaulis ; robusta, foliis breviusculis late ensiformibus falcatis caule nudiusculo brevioribus, floribus pedunculatis, spatha herbacea, perigonii lacinis obovato-oblongis subequalibus exterioribus ungue fimbriato- cristatis ceterum glabris, ovario subtereti, stigmatibus 2-fidis segmentis dentatis, capsula parva obtuse 3-gona. Irs nudicaulis.—Lamk, Encycl., v. iii. p. 296. Reichb. Ic. Fl. Germ. v. ix. p- 4, t. 831, Ram, and Schultes, v. i. p. 463, In1s, BonEMIcA, Schmidt, Bohem. Cent. v. iv. p. 506. Koch. A very handsome, hardy herbaceous plant ; growing in sunny places, and forming large tufts. It is a native of Bohemia, Silesia, and it is said of Volhynia in Russia; but I have seen no specimen from so far East as the latter locality. It is specifically closely allied to J. Germanica, and others of that group; but is sufficiently distinct. The Herbarium specimens are much taller than the cultivated ones, and with larger scapes ; but these often elongate much after flowering, and greatly exceed the leaves. The plant here figured, which flowered in April of the present year, has long been cultivated in the Royal Gardens under the above name, and I am unaware of its origin. Descr. Rootstocks matted, as thick as the thumb, ringed, sending up many flowering and leafing stems. Leaves six to eight inches long, three-quarters to one inch broad, falcate, linear ensiform, acuminate, pale green, rather thick, nerves obscure. Flowering scapes several together from the root, two to ten inches long, two to three-flowered, compressed ; bracts one and a half to two inches long, herbaceous, with NOVEMBER Ist, 1869. membranous margins, oblong-lanceolate, acuminate. Flowers sessile or pedicelled, two and a half to three and a half inches across, dark. purple. Perianth segments nearly equal, ob- ovate-oblong, rounded at the apex; three outer darker; claw banded with white, and bearing a crest of dense long white hairs in the middle; inner segments with narrower claws, less distinctly banded. Sézgmas oblong, bifid, segments nar- row, triangular, acute, toothed. Capsule small for the size of the plant, one to one and a quarter inch long, obtusely angled.—J. D. H. — 5807. ey ptt. W. Fitch, del. et lith Tas. 5807. ERIA VESTITA. Furred Fria. Nat. Ord. OrcHipEm.—GyYNANDRIA MOoNANDRIA. Gen. Char. (Vide supra, Tas. 5391.) Entra (Trichotosia) vestita ; totus villis deciduis dense vestitus, caulibus guberectis v. pendulis, foliis coriaceis lanceolatis apice obliquis obtusis supra parce subtus densissime villosis, racemis elongatis pendulis multifloris flexuosis, bracteis late ovato-rotundatis amplis coriaceis persistentibus, floribus capsulisque villosis, sepalis rubro-aurantiacis lanceolatis lateralibus in cornu lato obtuso porrecto connatis oblique mucronulatis, petalis albis lineari-oblongis obtusis brevioribus glabris, _ labelli trilobi auriculis lateralibus elongatis obtusis segmento terminali subrotundato eroso emarginato piloso per axin linea elevata interrupta velutina dentibusque paucis aucto, lamellis inter auriculas angustis approximatis. Erta vestita, Lindl. in Bot. Reg. 1844. Misc. 1845, p. 79, tab. 2. Walp. Ann. v. vi. p. 284. Denprosium vestitum, Wall. Cat. n. 2005 (in Orchid. No. 33. part); Lindl. Gen. and Sp. This curious orchid is undoubtedly the Fria vestita figured by Lindley in the Botanical Register for 1845, from Manilla specimens flowered by Loddiges, and which specimens are preserved in his Orchideous Herbarium, now at Kew. It is also in part the Dendrobium vestitum of Wallich, who dis- tributed along with this plant another species, which may be E£. vulpina, Reich. f., but is more probably different from either. E. vestitawas discovered by Wallich, at Sincapore; Loddiges received it from Manilla, and there are fine specimens in the Hookerian Herbarium from Bangarmassing, 1» Southern Borneo, whence the species seems to have a very wide range. DECEMBER Ist, 1869. The beautiful specimen here figured was imported by W. Wilson Saunders, Esq., F.R.S., who flowered it in May of the present year, at Reigate. Drscr. Wholly covered with soft villous spreading hairs, most copious on the inflorescence. Stems tufted, usually ascending, six to ten inches long, as thick as the little finger at the base, leafy. Leaves lanceolate, acute, spreading and recurved, five to seven inches long, one and one-third inches to one and two-third inches broad, hairy on both sur- faces, many-nerved. Racemes axillary, pendulous, five to six inches long, many-flowered ; rachis zigzag, sheathed with short broad imbricate scales at the base ; floral bracts large, one-half to one inch long, broadly orbicular-ovate, white, with a broad blood-red margin. Flowers sessile. Ovary very short. Perianth orange-red, curved, an inch long, nearly half an inch diameter. Sepals connate, lanceolate, tips abruptly recurved. Spur very broad, obtuse, half as long as the sepals. Petals linear-oblong, obtuse, white, their tips projecting between the sepals. Lip white, basal portion with two long, broad, obtuse auricles ; terminal portion nearly as broad, suborbicular, erose; disk of lip with three to five obscure blunt ridges between the auricles, which are continued as a villous prominence on to the disk of the basal portion. Column broad below, narrowed upwards, very concave in front. Anthers small; pollinia, long, slender.—J. D. H. Fig. 1, flower with the sepals removed ; fig. 2, lip ; fig. 3, column and half of spur; fig. 4, front view of column ; fig. 5, pollinia :—all magnified. 5808. : Day & Son, Imp: W Fitch, delet lith. : Vincent Brooks Day :