HOOKER’S ICONES PLANTARUM; OR 3 FIGURES, WITH DESCRIPTIVE CHARACTERS AND REMARKS, OF NEW AND RARE PLANTS, ' SELECTED FROM THE KEW HERBARIUM. THIRD SERIES. EDITED BY JOSEPH DALTON HOOKER, M._D., F.R.S. LS. & G:S., D.C.L. OXON., LL.D. CANTAB., CORRESP. MEMB. INST. FRANCE. VOL. 1, -@ OR VOL. XI. OF THE ENTIRE WORK. . LONDON : eee WILLIAMS AND NORGATE, Le 14, HENRIETTA STREET, COVENT GARDEN. 1867-71. ICONES PLANTARUM. Pirate 1001. HERMAS VILLOSA, Thundé. UMBELLIFER2. H. villosa, Thunb.; DC. Prodr. iv. 242 ; Harv. et Sond. Fl. Cap. ii. 566. b olucelloru : V. pauce, anguste, eequantes. Flores in umbellula centrales 1—3 perfecti, caeteri masculi. Caly- cis segmenta ovata, petaloidea, semilinea paullo longiora. -Peta/a lineari-subu- Thunberg’s original error in describing the calycine segments of the flowers of Hermas as petals has been followed by most subsequent writers, by De Can- dolle, by Endlicher (Gen. Pl. 790), by Sonder and others, whilst the same organs have been made to do duty again as petals, the true subulate petals Fig. 1. Umbellule. 2. Hermaphrodite flower. 3. The same, more open. 4. : Two stamens. 6. Ovary crowned by the calycine segments, petals, and styles after the e. 5. stamens have fallen off. 7. Fruit. 8. Transverse section of the sam B 2 ICONES PLANTARUM. Pirate 1002. TRAVERSIA BACCHAROIDES, Look. /f. CompositT#, § SENECIONIDER. T. baccharoides, Hook. f. Handb. N. Zeal. Fl. 164. Has. New Zealand, mountains of the Middle Island, Upper Awatere and irau valley, alt. 5000 ft., Stme/air, Hurumui Mo untains, Discovery Peaks, alt. 5500 ft., Travers. ’ Gorge of the Poulter, alt. 2200 ft., Haast. Fi s, glaberrimus, parce ramosus, subglutinosus, ramulis teretibus sulcatis flexuosis, inferne angulatis. Folia sparsa, ‘sessilia, decurrentia, 13-23 poll. longa, obovato- spathulata, subacuta, obtuse serrata, basin versus fate: gerrima, coriacea, nervis tenuibus subflabellatis. Capitula eesioe: sr in tomis, bracteis paucis sparsis is linearibus auctis, ad 4 poll. diametro, erecta, flava: tis p flavi, 5-lobi, ~~ linearibus revolutis. Stamina exserta; yc lineares, ecaudatee. S/yli rami lineares, truncati, ayice papillosi. Achenium breve, enainens certs: costatum. Puppus 1-serialis, rigidus, scaber, albus. A remarkable plant, of obscure affinity, differing from Senecio in the very rigid scabrid pappus, and resembling in certain points the curious Juan Fer- nandez genera Balbisia and Robinsonia. The achenium is immature, and I h genera. I find a minute cordiform embryo in the cavity of the half-mature seed.—J. D. Hooker. Fig. 1. Floret. 2. Hair of pappus. 3. Single stamen. 4. Style-branches. PLATE 1003. HAASTIA PULVINARIS, J/ook. /. Composit#, § SENECLIONIDES. H. Se Hook. f. Handb. N. Zeal. Fi. 156. Has w Zealand, mountains of the Middle Island, Kaikora range, and Mowatt s Sone alt. 5000 ft., Sinclair. Discov ery Peaks, alt. 5800 ft., ver, Planta densissime cespitosa, pulvinos Ss Geena fulyos v. albidos, 3 ped. diametro, in montibus scopulosis monte ans. Caules densissime compacti, ramosi, cum foliis arctissime sortie $-2 alt. diametro, ramulorum apicibus mammieformibus. Folia x Dhoribatialite patentia, late obcuneata, ICONES PLANTARUM., 3 in petiolum late linearem angustata, apice irregulariter crenulata, re re- curvis, lana adempta membranacea, ‘ecostata, subflabellatim nervosa, u medium dense lanuginosa. Baits in aie ramulorum subsolitaria, ses- silia, ad . diametr. — Involue su age heterogamum ; foliola 1- -2-seriata, numerosa, snares Tineati, hi taculum angus- tum, papillosum. FV, radii 2 , sub-2-seriales Stl aie tubulosa, cylin- dracea, 5-dentata. Pappus 1-serialis, setis basi liberis, eequilongis tenuibus rigidis scaberulis, superne subclavellatis. st longe exsertus, ramis elongatis linearibus obtusis papillosis. #7. disci 3 , numerosi, corolla infundibuliformi 5-dentata. Stamina 5, filamentis sub pai dilatatis ; antherze connate, ees breviter 2-auriculate. Pa ‘appus et styli rami ut in fl. 9. Achenium lineari-oblo ongum, glabrum, compressum, ecostatum. 1. Leaf the wool removed. - pata: of ray. 8. Pappus hair. 4. Ray corolla and a tig. 5. Flower of disk. 6. Stam HAASTIA SINCLAIRII, Hook. /. 2. c. Has. New mre Middle Island, on shingle beds, Wairau and Awatere Mountain: alt. 6000 ft., Sinclair. Mounts Darwin nid Cook, Haast. Mounts Alta ae Banvater alt. 6000 ft., Hector and Bucha Decumbens, laxe cspitosa, ramulis adscendentibus may Folia 3-} poll. longa, obovato-oblonga v. -rotundata, obtus sa, integerrima, plana, 5—7- essilia v. breviter pedunculata, 4-1 poll. diametro. nvolucri bractexe exte- riores breves, lanuginose, interiores lineari-obovate, acute, longe cili Cetera fere ut in H. pulvinari. The genus Haastia was named after that most indefatigable explorer of the geology, geography, and botany of the Midd le Island of New nd, Julius Haast, P.R.S. It consists of three New Zealand plants, the two mf d at the base. Its affinities are with Helichrysum, Gnaphalium, and Raoulia, differing from all by its ee habit and the absence of tails at the base of the anthers.—J. D. Hoo Fig. 1. Involucral scale. 2. Flower ie fs ray. 3. ae 4, Arms of style of the same. 5. Flower of disk. 6. — hair. 8. Arms of style of the sam Prate 1004. ALLANBLACKIA FLORIBUNDA, Oliv. GUTTIFERZ. A. floribunda, Oliv. in Journ. Linn. Soc. x. 42. Has. Cameroons River, G. Mann. BR 4 ICONES PLANTARUM. Arbor 40-pedalis (Mann. in sched.), berrima. Rami teretiusculi v. obscure eo leves, glabri. Folia coriacea, petiolata, elliptico- v. ovato- oblonga, apiculata v. breviter acuminata, acuta, basi plus minus (interdum aes rotundata integra, supra _ lucida, -subtus subopaca, costa subtus promi- ente. 4—6 poll. longa, 14-23 poll. lata; petiolus 3} poll. lo lo ngus. Tiglorencentio v. axillaris machide Sei eth producta , v. terminalis paniculatim v. Sar atim racemosa, foliis floriferis minoribus bracteiformibus apicem versus ramorum ~ L apeircener Flores interiora duplo majora margine scariosa. Petala eosin basin versus cu- neata, 3-1 ae longa, per < anthesin patentia—D, OLiver. Fig. 1 e of stamens and corrugated red - disk of male flower. 2. Anther and free portion of eaten t detached,—front and back view. 3. Female flower. 4. Transverse section of ovary. 5. Porton of placenta and pony 6. Immature fruit PLATE 1005. CHAUNOCHITON LORANTHOIDES, Bent. OLACINER. Chaunochiton, Benth. in Benth. et Hook. Gen. Pi. 996. oni Along streams near Barra do Rio Negro, North Brazil, Spruce, n Arbor 30- spine ramis seepe fastigiatis, ex omni parte glabra. Folia alterna, ovata obtusa v. erin sae in petiolum brevem contracta, in- egerrima, coriacea rere ollica Flores pallide flavicantes, in cymis densis confertim paniculatis v. snbeoryan bosis sessiles vy. revissime aeotearpiae see age fere pollicem diametro. Corolla tenuis, 2-23-pollicaris. Stamina endocarpio du ro, exocarpio tenul uissimo. This plant, of which the full generic character will be found in the above- quoted Genera, bears, in the dried specimens, and, according to Mr. Spruce, in the fresh state, so much resemblance to a Loranthus, that in the hasty sorting of the Sprucean collection it was distributed as Loranthus, n. 22, and the more readily as the scar left by the style on the top of the drupe i is exactly like that left by a deciduous corolla on an inferior fruit. It t is, however, as ob- served by Mr. Spruce, a terrestrial tree by no means parasite, ‘and the ovary is really superior, = on dissection of the flowers and fruit it proved to eth all the characters of Olacinee of the tribe Olacee, with, however, the ova as far as we “ra been able to ascertain, perfectly 2-celled. That, bowever, occurs in most species of Strombosia, ‘and, apparently, in some species of ICONES PLANTARUM. 5) Heist The form of the calyx, corolla, aod anthers are 2 ae to dis- tinguish Chaunochiton from either of these genera.—G. BentHaM. Fig. 1. Bud. 2. Expanded flower. 3. Petal and stamen. 4. en eae with the get has their “eng 5. Ovary and style. Vertical section of the ovary. 7. Transverse sectio the same. 8. Fruiting calyx " enclosing the drupe. 9, Drape. 10. Vertical a section of the drupe and seed. Pirate 1006. PLEUROCARP/A DENTICULATA, Benth. ComposIT&. P. denticulata, Benth. Fl. Austral. iii. 460. Has. Islands of the Gulf of Carpentaria, North Spa R. Brown. Herba glabra, basi verisimiliter perennis, ramis duris diva bentibus, specimina nostra ultrapedalia. Fbiia alterna, vate ¥: elliptica, mucronato-acuta, in petiolum perbrevem angustata, majora 2-pollicaria v. Pedunculi terminales, solitarii v. gemini, 1-2 poll. longi v. post anthesin elon- gati, sub capitulo leviter incrassati. Involucrum 4 lin. lon ngum, basi dilata- tum, bracteis lato-lanceolatis acuminatis 2 aggre re 10-20, cxruleo- purpurei, tubo involucrum excedente sepe 1 , limbi lobis 5 angustis aqualibus. Anthere basi sagittate, aurl cle: rat sis apiculatis. Stylus Vernonia. poe crassa, costis prominentibus leviter glandulosis. Pappi setee 2-5, breves, rigide, caducissime. This plant is sd known from Brown’s pemener one of which, with the tracing of a dra by Bauer, was given to me at Vienna in 1837, and of which I have since seen others in Brown’s sastikalbind: Although very dis- tinct in habit from most Vernoniee, a style soso it clearly in that tribe, where it is nearest allied to Decaneurum, and not indeed so far removed as I had at first thought from Vernonia itself, for it ose ie tion are researches are oe and almost tailed at the base.— Fig. ret. 2. Two = theanthers. 3. Upper aaa of ha ea 4. Fruit. 5. One of the twists of the pappu Chet Pirate 1007. HYDROLYTHRUM WALLICHII, Hook. f. LyTHRARIEH, § AMMANNIES. H. Wallichii, Hook. f. in Benth. et Hook. Gen. Fi, 71%. Has. Tavoy, Gomez (Wall. Cat. n. 9059). 6 ICONES PLANTARUM. Herba gracilis, — aquatica, Myriophylli habitu, glaberrima, caule laxe ramoso, spithamza et ultra, ramulis 4-gonis. Folia verticillata, inferiora ubmersa in Le lurima, anguste linearia, fase superiora sensim in verticillo pauciora brevioraque, summa a, 4-6-na, onga, obtusa, errima, brevite ata. Flores in axillis foliorum superiorum sessiles v. breviter pedunculati, minuti, albi, pedicellis folio basi adnatis 2-bracteolatis, bracteolis — Calyx campanulatus, membranaceus, 4-gonus, 4-lobus, dentibus accessoriis 0. Petala 4, inter dentes calycis inserta, oblonga, obtusa. Stamina 4, pr calycis inserta, filamentis filiformibus ; antheree didyme Glandule hypogyne 8, liber v. per paria vy. varie connate, obtuse, ovaril basin cingentes. Ovarium parvum, calyce inclusum, oblongum, 2-sulcatum, 2-loculare ; stylus breviusculus, superne dilatatus, stigmate capitato subdis- coideo, 4-lobo ; ovula parva, placentis heats versus loculorum septis adnatis inserta, adscendentia. Capsula minuta, membranacea, subglobosa, calyce cincta, 2-locularis sates -sperma. Semina suberecta, imbricata, obovoidea, plano-convexa, testa coriacea. Fig. 1. Whorl of upper seh and flowers. 2. Leaf and flower. 8. Flower laid ta 4. Stamen. 5. Eyer glands. 6. Pistil. 7. Transverse section of the sa 8. Immature seed. PLATE 1008. ALSODEIOPSIS MANNII, Oliv. OLACINES. A. Mannii, Oliv. in Journ. Linn. Soc. x. 43. co; Mount John, Kongui river, West Tropical Africa (n. 1805), G Frutex 15-pedalis. Ramuli_tenues, teretiusculi, strigil a ebencen ies Folia tenuiter coriacea, obverse lanceolata v. oblanceolato-oblong: i angustata at obtusa, saga obscure undulata, supra An say Iucida venosa, infra secus costam mediam nervosque prominentes strigillosa, 5-9 poll. lon 2-23 poll. lata; petiolus brevissimus, 1-2 lin. longus. Flores 1¥ lin. longi, in cymas corymbosas axillares paucifloras breviter seer tae Fructus (exsice. ) pollicem longus, 4 poll. la us.—D. Our Fig. 1. Bud. 2. Ex xpanded flower. ts a. 4. Pistil. . Ve rti “ section of ovary. 6. Fruit. 7. Same laid open. Seed. 9. Vertical wali of sam . ICONES PLANTARUM. 7 Pirate 1009. PACHYCLADON NOV A-ZELANDIA, //ook. /. CruciFerz, § LEPIpINes. P. Nove-Zelandiz, sg Jf. Handb. N. Zeal. Fl. 724. Braya Nove- Zelaie Hook. f. 1. ce. w Zealand, Otago Pa on schisty sa Mount Alta and other hight in the Lake district, Hector und Buchanan epressa, femtren Se acaulis v. caudice beciinctinn crasso ramoso dense roawlite; 4 poll. tae anions ales pinnatifida, in petiolum planum angustata. Scapi numerosi, infra folia orti, breves, i. 3 adscendentes, 1-2-bracteati, bracteis digitatim lobulatis, 3-5-flori. Flores ignoti. Siligue breviter pedicellate, 3-2 poll. longe, lineari-oblonge, utrinque obtuse, septo imperfecto contrarie comp z subcymbi- ormes, carinate, nervis obscuris; stylus brevissimus, stigmate- subcapitato 2-lobo. Semina in quovis loculo 3-5, obovoidea, funiculo brevi; cotyledones incumbentes A very curious little plant, intermediate in technical characters betw the tribes Sisymériee and Lepidinee, but I think referable to the latter, aiid a: a. to Notothlaspi, though the valves are altogether wingless.— —— Fig. 1. 2 and 3. Pods. 4. The same, with the valves removed. 5. Seed. 6. Embryo. 7. The same, cut transversely. Prate 1010. ANONA MANNII, Olic. ANONACER. A. (§ GuaNABANI) Mannii, Oliv., sp. n.; foliis subsessilibus mem- branaceis v. tenuiter coriaceis obovato-oblongis vel elliptici cis breviter et latius- crasse coriaceis in Has. Old Calabar River, G. Mann ! Arbor 30-40-pedalis { gee sched. Mann Ramuli teretiusculi, novelli minute ferrugineo- puberul . Folia ampla, alterna, margine obscure undulata, utrinque glabra, vernatione autem subtus pilis ferruyineis minutissimis sparsis puberula, costa in pagina inferiori valida, venis primariis subdistanti bus mar- ginalique anastomosanti prominentibus. Flores diametro 2-3 poll. in cymis 8 ICONES EFLANTARUM. racemosis 6-9 poll. longis dispositi ; ee angulatus, primum ferru- gineo-pubescens, deinde glabrescens ; bracteze }-3 po oll. longze, floribus o site ; pedicelli crassi, }—? poll. longi, bracteolas oppositas stray sri alabas- trum primum includentes gerentes. Sepala crassa, late ovata, basi cuneata, extus ferrugineo-puberula, intus glabra tuberculata, wativatione valvata. Petala crassissima, coriacea, biseriata, sessilia, _ subeequalia, late elliptica vel obovato-elliptica, obtusa v. obtu puberula; petala interiora zestivatione leviter imbricata Reseptaculm conicum, basi antheras gerente dilatatum. Stamina numerosa, 3—4-seria ata, imbricata; antherze sessiles, oblongo-cuneate, biloculares, eile: “extrorsum Jomelaasdiie’ ie dehiscentes, connectivo truncato dilatato recurvato puberulo. Carpella numerosissima ; ovariis in toro immersis ; stylo crassiusculo angulato sursum clavatim dilatato ; stigma em hexagonum. Ovula solitaria, erecta, L’ructum non vidi.— D. Our Fig. 1. Torus, bearing the densely crowded styles ts the ng sai cages and the stamens upon the a d deesec 2. Stamen, fro = arte . Style and stigma with imm ulate ovary. Ab ace 5 ae which the sepals and outer nies ‘ave been removed, sdioining the ‘tinbeisstiong ts the j inner r petals. Pirate 1011. SENECIO TROPHOLIFOLIUS, M/Owan. Composit, § SENECIONIDEA. Has. South Africa, in grassy and rushy places on mountain sides near Givin’ 8 tea P. M‘Owan a ca: acea, nervis tenuibus obscuris an Scapi solitarii, graciles, stricti, erecti, 8-10 poll. alti, 1-2-cephali, bracteis paucis minutis linearibus remotis instructi. Involucrum campanulatum, ecalyculatum ; bracteze 10-12, 3 poll. longe, discum zequantes, anguste lineares, acuminate, virides, apicibus non sphacelatis, marginibus tenuiter membranaceis. Flores radii ad 8, flavi, oo apice denticulati. Flores disci 10-20. Achenium glaberri- mum, um. Pappus tenuissimus, albus, scaberulus A very prett or distinct species, allied, as Mr. M‘ Owsin points out, to . paucifolius, and S. oryriafolius, DC., but differs from the former i in the peltate aia: "and from the latter in the radiate flowers. The plant is living in the Royal Garden ew, specimens having been sent from the ham’s Town Botanic Ghitien, The first description of it appeared in an article by. Dr. Mueller, ee “VI. Characteristics of an undescribed Senecio from South Africa,” which he has favoured us with a copy, and which is, de Sate extracted fins the Proceedings of the Royal Society of Victoria.— Fig. 1. oo of ra 2. Style- f di 3 i : dite. 5. ci yie-arms of ditto. 3. Flower of disk. 4. Style-arms of ICONES PLANTARUM. 9 Pirate 1012. THAMNEA DEPRESSA, Oliv. BRUNIACEM. T. depressa, Oliv. in Journ. me Soc. ix. 332; procumbens, glabra, ramulis floriferis brevibus v. brevissimis (floribus quasi ‘axillaribus) numerosis adscendentibus subfastigiatis, foliis eines adpressis imbricatis ines — toideisve trigonis obtusiusculis, involucralibus conformibus nuce monosperm ir egratcroroie leviter sulcata palo revioribus, ovario imperfalee bilo- ms tis ftin. Chip Baviaan’s Kloof, erage, Burchell! in Herb, Kew (n. 7678). A low, intricately branched shrub of 6-9 inches. I have ie a to detect the embryo in the seeds which I have vp Fig. 1. Flower 4 eee leaves. 2. Flower isolated. 8. Petal. 4. Stamen. 5. In- ferior ovary mo yle. 6. Vertical, an d 7, tran of ovary. 8. Fruit and sur- rounding leay 9. Transverse section of same. 10. Leaves Prate 1013. THAMNEA UNIFLORA, Sol. ; var. HIRTELLA. BRUNIACEX. T. uniflora, Sol., var. hirtella ; decumbens, ramulis floriferis adscen- dentibus fastigiatis sparsim pilosulis, foliis lanceolatis trigonis obtusis im- bricatis laxe adpressis, involucralibus lineari-lanceolatis pilosis ciliatisve apice ean patentioas recurvisve, ovario bioetdari (vel dissepimento interdum imper- fecto).—Thamnea hirtella, Oliv. in Journ. Linn. Soe. ix. 332. Hap. Cape: on Witsenberg, near Tulbagh, “Darehelt | in Herb. Kew (n. 8685). b, Merit probably from 6 inches to 1 or 2 feet in height, with as- nding or procumbent branches, emitting very numerous, fastigiate, unequal, densely leafy ramuli, repeatedly divided, each ultimate, often very short, divisio n bearing a terminal flower. At first I regarded this plant as speci- fically distinct from Z. uniflora, and so Ouse it, but on further examina- = I cannot maintain this claim.—D. OLIVER 1. Leaves. 2. —— — 3. Flower and ee leaves. ap petal and stameus removed. - Inferior ovary and style. 6. Petal. is Poni ertical section te ovary. 10 ICONES PLANTARUM. Prate 1014. BERZELIA CALLUNOIDES, Oiiv. BRUNIACER. B. (§{ Myroruamnea) callunoides, Oliv. in Journ. Linn. Soc. ix. 333. Has. Cape of Good Hope. Craggy Peak, near Zwellendam (n. 7382), and Mountain, near Valley-Rivier’s Poort (n. 7097, 7116), Burchell in Herb. Kew Fraticulus $-2-ped., ane adscendens y. erectus v. ramis inferioribus procumbentibus, ramosus, diffusus, ramulis lateralibus divisis et subdivisis intricatis v. subfastigiatis, floriferis seepe brevissimis, teretibus dense hirtello- tomentosis, foliis minutis spiraliter dispositis seepius imbricatis undique tectis. Folia ovata vy. in ramis sterilibus lanceolata, crassiuscula, integra, apie acuta (in ramulis sterilibus interdum 14 lin.) longa. Flores i inconspicui, pilosi (intus rubri), in axillis foliorum sessiles v. terminal les folia vix superantes ; axillares bibracteolati, bracteolis subulatis pilosis calycem equantibus. Calyx tubo obconi © piloso ovario adnato, limbo fere ad basin 5-partito, lobis del- prema mantra sda glabris, dorso et margine pilosis. Petala lobis caly- cinis alterna, iis uplo longiora, sessilia, ovato- y. elliptico-oblonga, eymbi- ja v. pleetiniedta, intus basi tuberculo incrassato cuneato instructa, eesti- vatione valvata. Stamina 5, perigyna, tubo ca ycis inserta, petalis alterna, lisde em paulo breviora ; filaments nea -ubulatis eet per a anthesin i incurvis ; in versus affixis, loculis longi- tudinaliter Sabicea Ghee Ovarium semi-inferum anil oculare, apice liberum, pilosum, in stylum simplicem glabrum leviter calorie attenuatum ; ovulum unicum, anatropum, pendulum. Semen maturum non examinavi.—D. OLIV Fig. 1. Extremity of flowering branchlet. 2. Single flower and bracts. 3. Same, the petals and stamens removed. 4. Vertical section of Somer. 5. Stamens. 6,7. Leaves. Prate 1015. ALSOPHILA REBECCA, F. Muell. Finicgs, beccee, F. Muell. Fragm. Phyt. Austr. v. 53; frondibus bipin- natis ; pinnis lanceolatis rachidibus castaneis subnudis ; pinnulis linearibus basi cordatis marginibus inciso-crenatis, facie superiore nuda, inferiore pur- puracea, venis confertis parce pinnatis, soris medialibus. Has. Rockingham Bay, Queensland, Hill, Dallachy. Caudex 8 ped. altus, gracilis. Lamina bipinnata. Rachis castaneus, parce fibrillosus, muricatus, punctis paucis elevatis. Pinne inferiores 12-15 poll. long, 4—5 poll. late, lanceolate. Pinnule 20-30-juge, inferiores petiolate, ICONES PLANTARUM. ll 2-3 poll. longe, 3-4 lin. late, apice acuminato, marginibus inciso-crenatis basi cordata subauriculata. Pagina subcoriacea, s supra glabra, infra paleis membranaceis minutis conspersa, Vene paettes venule bijuge. Sori diales, inter costam et marginem biseriales interesting addition to the reefers of Australia. It does not come seales of the under see cones sometimes subtend ried sori like the invo- lucre of a Hemitelia.—J. G. Bax Fig. 1. Portion of fertile pinnule. < iene Pirate 1016. SCHIZHA SPRUCEI, Hook. FILIcEs. S. Sprucei, shee cog caule kde erecto dense fibrilloso, fronde ligulata crassa ca apice palmato-furcata, segmentis cipreeare pedi- cellatis spiraliter curves: spicis numerosis elongatis confert Has. Brazil ; pao of the Rio Negro, above the mouth of 4 Casiquiare, 1854, R. Spruce Caudex lignosus, echo Petioli conferti, rigidi, — 9 poll. longi, paleis denis squarrosis fibrillosis brunneis vestiti. Lamina 6-8 poll. psc ligulata,. crassa, vérticaliter canaliculata, 3-4 lin. lata, nti — versus sobtresdl segmenta fertilia 1-6, longe pedicellata. 20 longa, spiraliter recurvata. Spice numerose, 4-7 lin . longe, inte te A new and very elegant species of the same group (Lophidiu se as S. dicho- toma and elegans, with the fronds flabellately divided only at the so of the barren portions, and quite different in the fertile segments.—J. G. Fig. 1 and 2. Portions of fertile segment. 3. Sporangium. Prates 1017, 1018. SINDORA WALLICHII, Benth. LEGUMINOSZ. allichii, Benth., sp. .?; foliolis (sub-2-pollicaribus) obovato- oblongis subellipticisve ace fetusis y. breviter poke acuminatis demum glabratis —Guilandina Walli chiana, Grah. in Wall. Cat. Herb. Ind. n. 5805. Echinocalyx, Benth. in Benth. et Hook. Gen. Pl. 584. Has. Singapore, Wallich, Malacca, Griffith. 12 ICONES PLANTARUM. le inconspicue. Flores secus ramos panicule terminalis late pyramidate oblongum, concayum, ciliato-hirsutum, 4 inferiora minuta rudimentaria v. 0. Stamina 10, calyce longiora, basi declinata, oblique breviterque monadelpha, dein ascendentia, apice subinvoluta, infra medium hirtella. arium breviter stipitatum, hirsutum, breve, in stylum longum superne involutum attenu- atum, 2-ovulatum. men oblique orbiculare y. late ovatum, 2-3-polli- spersis. Semina nobis ignota. The flowering specimens, one of which is here figured, had long been ex- tensively distributed from Griffith’s Malacca collection as an apparently new and remarkable genus, which I first described as such in the ‘ Genera Planta- conjectured, I did not venture to unite them. Since that we received from the Calcutta Garden, under the name of Sindora Siamensis, a specimen in fruit, which at once reminded me of one of Wallich’s Guilandinas, and on turning to this specimen (from Singapore), I found it was evidently con- specific with Griffith’s plant, with leaflets of the same shape and size. | Con- the same tree, with leaves much nearer to those describe by Miquel, whilst Siam specimen from Calcutta has the leaflets shaped as in Griffith’s, but of the size described by Miquel. Further specimens may therefore show that there is but one species, for which Miquel’s name, S. Sumatrana, would have to be adopted as the oldest ; the union would, however, at present be ture. genus is nearest allied to Copaifera, although abundantly distinct in calyx, petals, and stamens, and in the prickles of the pod.—G. Brntuam. Fig. 1. Flower. 2. Perfect upper petal. 3. One of the lower rudimentary petals. 4. Ovary and style. 5. Vertical section of the ovary. 6. Stamen. 7. Diagram of the flower. CN ee aaa es ee a eaten a ICONES FLANTARUM. 13 Prate 1019. LIQUIDAMBAR ORIENTALIS, J/iil. HAMAMELIDEX. L. orientalis, Mill.; DC. Prod. xvi. 158 ; foliis ee palmati-quin- quefidis ate us tri- v. septem-fidis) serrulatis, subtus gla v. axillis ner- continuo v. leviter corrugato.— L. imberbe The only wild specimens which I lave s seen are from Asia Minor, from the m Mr. Hanbury. Specimens from the Botanic Gardens of Venice, Marseilles, and St. Mandrier, near Toulon, are in the same herbarium, and agree with the wild ones, excepting, as Mr. Hanbury observed to me, in having the leaves wholly glabrous ; that is, eink the hairy tufts in the axils of the principal nerves on the under side of the leaf, which are noticeable in the indigenous specimens. The only good figure esleoies of this long-known tree accompanies a valuable memoir by Mr. ury, in the ‘ Pharmaceutical Journal’ (March, 1867), * On the Origin anit Preparation of Liquid Storax.” It is a species of peculiar interest as being, like Platanus orientalis, the solitary outlier of a Bes genus, the other species of which occur gS in North America and (in th case of Liguidambar) Kastern Asia. Both Liquidambar and Platanus ‘aie over, wee is reason to believe, were prevalent in Central Europe during g the Mioce Al * gh, as Dr. Hance observes (Seemann’s Journ. ee = Le so there can Ne little doubt that L. styraciflua and L. orienta forms from one parent type, beg in the rather numero ny aC which T have seen dried, or growing in yal Gardens, the differences between the two are generally so ae. that J think they cannot be regarded as conspecific in any usual, or useful, a of the term.* I “append a diagnosis of L. styraciflua for compari L. styracifi L.; DC. Prod. xvi. 157; foliis seepius ad apices ra- morum v. ramulorum brevium lateralium fasciculatis, palmati-quinquefidis (rarius tri- v. septem-fidis), serratis, subtus in axillis nervorum barbatis, lobis ovato-lanceolatis acutis ™. acuminatis indivisis (rarissime utrinque lobulo laterali) ; fructu preecedent This description is were upon specimens from various States of the North American Union. It is not a little remarkable, as Dr. Hooker pointed out to me some time ago, that the specimen labe ed L. imberbe, Ait., distributed by the late Dr. Kotschy, and collected in the garden of the Monastery of is but fair to observe that there is in the Kew Herbarium a solitary leafy specimen of L. acs without locality, which combines, to some extent, the characters of the two. 14 ICONES PLANTARUM. Antiphonitos, in the island of Cyprus, should belong to the American _— L. styraciflua. The leaves are tufted, their lobes undivided, and the low nerve-axils hair ry. The only cert ainly-known indigenous ta that I am aware of for L. orientalis, is that cited above.-—D. OLive Fig. 1. ne ed branch, 2. Male flower. 3. Stamen. 4. Styles, surrounded by disk and sanuliedils . Fruiting branch. 6. Section of capitate fruit. Prate 1020. LIQUIDAMBAR FORMOSANA, Hance. HAMAMELIDEZ. enheteeome osana, Hance in Ann. Sc. Nat. Ser. 5. v. 215; foliis ple- ue in ramulis brevibus — ener s trilobis serrulatis subtus suave pilosulis et in axillis nervorum obs te barbatis, lobis latiuscule ovatis in acumen gracillimum gidaitis basi rdetis, lobis lateralibus patentibus ; fructu spinis pluribus si induratis capituli similibus) e limbo calycino inter capsulas oriundis arm Has. Formosa, Oldham / ( 88-1, Kew Distribution). Dr. Hance, in a memoir on this plant Sore s Journ. Bot. 1567, p. 110), dambar pretas of No merica. It is, however, soa to this careful ryge hg remark, that his identification was based, not upon specimens, but a comparison of the Chinese plant with the plate in Hayne’ is slight so far as the foliage is oo but the fruits are very diverse. While in both L. styrac faa and L. orientalis the margins of the adherent Fig. 1. Female inflorescence. 2. Styles ~ gaeemeng ‘4 is oer — of the disk : meet ereopeserae 3. Staminode. 4. Vertical section : ached fruit-head. a ing e mer ee rc 7 and 8. Aber: aa 9 gel 10, er seeds, 1]. Sec- * The ovules are represented as attached to the dorsal suture of the carpels. » 1CONES PLANTARUM,. 15 PLate 1021. MELLISSIA BEGONIFOLIA, Hook. / SoLaNE&. Mellissia, Hook. f. gen. nov.—Calyx subcampanulato-pateriformis, ad medium inequaliter 5-lobus vy. 3—4-lobus, lobis 1 v. 2, 2- aad interdum 2-labiatis, wstivatione apertis, angulis non plicatis. Corolla ampanu- lata, subsequaliter 5-loba; lobi a aeons obtusi, indupHento-valvati apicibus leviter imbricatis, non plicati. Stamina 5, basi tubi corolle inserta, este, subzequilonga, filamentis lifomi-subulti pilosis ; anthere breviter n atil Ovarium placentis crassiusculis septo adnatis affixa. Bacca parva, fusiformis, stylo basi articulato terminata, calyce accrescente patente stipata, 2-locularis, carne tenui, polysperma. Semin the Geman leviter compressa, testa crus- tacea ulata, albumine carnoso; embryo rdeattens te teres. — Frutex graveolens, pubescenti-tomentosus, ramulis tortuosis. Folia petiolata, per paria sparsa, ovato-oblonga, obtusa, integerrima, recurva. Flores in azillis inter paria foliorum solitarii, pedicellati, nutantes, albi. Corolla extus tomentosa. M. begonifolia, Hook. /.—Physalis begonifolia, Roxb. in Beatson’s St. fee, Tracts, Appendix, 317; DC. Prod. xiii. 1451. Boxwood of the colon eae B. St. Helena, rocky hills in the east and south side of the island, Roxburgh, 1812-13. By the telegraph on Longrange Point, and Little and Great Stone Top Mountains, Burchell (Jan. 1807). The first specimens (which were both in flower — fruit) I ever procured of this very rare and now probably extinct plant, were given me by Mr. Bennett, of St. Helena, on my second visit to that island in 1843 ; and I, at the time, wrote on the ticket that it was now extinct, no doubt on Mr. Bennet tt’s authority. Fi im ist, however, in the Burchellian collections, together with a drawing of the plant, that represents a low scrubby bush, growing on rocky p ave na the genus in honour of J. Melli Esq., sad! and en of the sony, o has paid much attention to ectahpishvent The affinities of this interesting plant are not very clear to me in the pre- sent condition of the Order; it is, perhaps, nearest to Withania, but the very oblique calyx and the corolla are both very differently shaped, and the lobes of the = are semi induplicate valvate with slightly imbricating tips.—J. D. wer. 2. The same laid open. 3and 4. Stamens. 5. Pistil. 6. Transverse Fig. 1. Flo section of the ovary 16 ICONES PLANTARUM. + Prate 1022. HETERONEURON NIGRICANS, ook. fil. MELASTOMACEs, § MICONIER, H. nigricans, Hook. f. in Benth. et Hook. Gen. Pl. 768. Has. Orinoco river, near = in — > se se — inary co lita, 45 poll. longa, nee aide recurva, in egerrima, penninervia, i d culatas ramulis infra folia orti, pedunculis bracteolatis pedicellisque pallide- viridibus calycibusque albo-punctatis demum rubris. Calycis tubus hemi- sphericus, 4 4 oe diametro, intus levis ; limbus cupularis, truncatus, ore sub- integro. Petala 5, crasse coriacea, obtusa; demum reflexa, alba. Stamina 10, pa alba, gAvtites brevibus com Jlanatis ; anthers magne, su ubreni- pees 1-recurvee, poro minuto dehiscentes, ito profunde sulcatis, connectivo so basi non producto inappendiculat arium aid cum fundo calyeda incrassato confluens, 5-loculare, valle concavo glabrum; stylus co- lumnaris, stigmate capitellato 5-lobo ; ovula eS oe hai Segoe subglobosis ab axi loculorum anes afi, Riser a pulposa, oo-sperma. * Semina minuta, anguste obo testa raphe laterali incrassata, hilo basilari ; embryo petoran sey lndontbias: plano-convexis. A very remarkable plant, the pinnate venation of whose leaves is very rare in the Order to which it belongs; it has many characters in common with Mouriria, to which Spruce allies it Tr but differs in the placenta- tion and numerous seeds.—J. D. Hooke Fig. 1. Bud. 2. Vertical section of calyx and ovary. 8 and 4. Stamens. 5. Trans- theipaectath of an anther. 6. Immature fruit. 7. Transverse section of the same. § and mbryo. Pirate 1023. KALIPHORA MADAGASCARIENSIS, Hook. f. CoRNACER. K. Madagascariensis, [Jook. f. in Benth. et Hook. Gen. Pl. 951 (staminibus false desiin. Has. Madagascar. rules v. j bor oes nitida, siccitate fuscescens, potassio es ramulis A eaaceceee Folia 2-4 poll. longa, alterna, oblique oblongo-lance lata, acuminata, basi cael, integerrima, coriacea, nervis grroents ettiyue nitida, Flores parvi, in paniculas parvas axillares nutantes dis- positi, pedicellis bracteatis non articulatis. : Calyx parvus, 4-lobus. Petala 4 4, lineari-oblonga, coriaceo-carnosa, valvata ICONES PLANTARUM. 12 v. apicibus imbricatis. Stamina 4, filamentis brevissimis crassiusculis; an- there lineari-oblonge, 2-loculares, leaaie medio profunde suleatis, connectivo dilatato tenni ultra loculos paulo producto. Discus pulvinaris, obtuse 4- gonus. Ovarii rudimentum subulatum, F%. 9: Calycis tubus — ; ya sphericus, obtuse 4-gonus, dentibus 4 remotis tala . rudimenta 0. Discus emisphericus. Ovarium 2-loculare ; styli. 2, mina ecurvi, discum coronantes, intus stigmatosi ; ovula in loculis solitaria, oblonga. Dru arva, compressa, didyma, 2-pyrena ; pyrene crustacer, compress, 1-sperme, Semina pgp or ae yrene conforinia, testa membranacea, albumine carnoso; embryo albumini conformis, sed paulo angustior, cotyledonibus planis eco Padioile brevi crassa obliqua. I take this opportunity, in figuring a very interesting and rare plant, of correcting the serious ino er ge which I fell in describing it for the * Genera ‘Plantarum’ as 8-an s, and hence anomalous in the forte The stamens are very large faaell¢ in the buds, which alone I had the opportu- nity of examining, occupying its whole cavity, the filaments not at all de- guous cells tore ap and, each cell having a very deep longitudinal speed (dividing it a transverse section into two apparently perfect cells), I regarded each W half-anthe er as a whole one. The petals seem to be normally valvate, but in some flowers their tips appear imbricate, and in one flower one of the a seemed to overlap the contiguous one strongly; their substance is, however, so black, thick, and fleshy, t the broad oo of a anthers are so agglutinated to their ‘surfaces, and the tips of the connectives especially cohere so closely with the apices of the petals, that it is axioms difficult to obtain a clear view of the relations of their parts, even on transverse sections of the bud. The ticket attached to the specimens is marked “ Ravendo,” probably the name bo! a bBiaes to which is added, “ produces ee of potash.” —J. D. Hoo Fig. 1. Bud of male flower. Male flower a ae 3. Stamen. 4. Female fi 5. Ripe fruit. 6. Vertical section of ie same. 7. Seed. 8. The same cut vertically, ower the embryo. PLATE 1024. -LAMPROLOBIUM FRUTICOSUM, Benth. LEGUMINOS2. a sree: Benth. Fl. Austral. ii. 202. . Endeavour river, Queensland, Banks and Solander (in flower and i a Cunningham (in fruit only). x erectus, orgyalis, ramulis molliter pubescenti-hirtis. Folia pin- nata ; "foliola 3, 5.v. 7, rarius in foliis summis ‘solitaria, oblonga, obtusa v. mucronata, 1-2 ‘iil longa, coriacea, supra glabra v. pilis 7 con- % 18 ICONES PLANTARUM. - spersa, subtus sericco-pubescentia. Peduneuli breves, terminales axillares v. extra-axillares, omnes 1-flori in speciminibus suppetentibu s, sed fo rte inter- coneavum connatis. Petala calycem non excedentia. Stamina monadelpha. Legumen planum, 1}-pollicare, 3-4 ah — glabrum, leve. Semina trans- versa. Lmbryo rectus, radicula brevi The aspect of this plant spraces oan of some sbribtiy Tephrosia, near which A. Cunningham had placed i he flower recalls that of several Crotalarie, whence the provisional name or indication, Crotalarioides, in Brown’s herbarium, whilst the pod, the seed, ‘nid especially the embryo, show a curious ag with the American genera Brongniartia and Harpalyce.— G. BenTHAM Fig. 1. Flower. 2. Standa rg 3. One of = on 4. Keel. 5. Stamens. 6. An- ther. 7. Ovary. 8. Seed. 9. Embryo, side 10. Em ryo seen > eg the edge. These details are taken from a om and seed domedcielol by Mr. Beunet Puate 1025. ELLIPEIA CUNEIFOLIA, Mook. J. et Thoms. ANONACEA, § Uvarien. E. cuneifolia, Hook. /. et Thoms. Fl. Ind. i. 104. Has. Malayan Peninsula, Veruppa Tabong, near Malacca, Griffith. e scandens, ramulis ferrugineo-velutinis. Folia 6—8 poll. oe 2-3 poll. pate petiolo vix 3 poll., anguste obovato-oblonga, abrupte acu nata, basin versus Sinn eer obtusa v - subcordata, coriacea, rigida, sain lucida et preter costam tomentosam date, subtus adpresse fulvo-tomentosa, ervis numerosis obliquis parallelis conspicuis. Panicula terminalis, laxa, i lla. t ramosa, multiflora, plerumque ap Flores dense tomentosi, bractea rotundata concava calyci appres arva, rotundata, bracteam equantia. Petala 6, rotundata, basi angustata, utrinque fuly entosa, e sertum. Cirgetia’ matura siterca 3 ¢ Poll. longa, longiuscule stijitata stipite ly Lair “eee appresse tomentosa, supra medium uno latere mucroue parvo instr very anomalous Anonacea, on account of san solitary ovule attached t the middle of the ventral suture.—J. Date itary ovule attached to Fig. 1. Flower sop outer ye cut thro’ ugh. same with * ie ee Srsiirs 4, — 5. Carpel. 6. The same cut sti de 7. Ripe carpel. 8. The ; | | ICONES PLANTARUM, 19 PLate 1026. DAMPIERA TRIGONA, De Pr. GOODENOVIEX. D. (Di celia) trigona, De Vriese in Pl. Preiss. i, 401; diffusa v. sub- erecta, glabra, ramis tonwibur angulatis, foliis initia linearibusve, ovario 2- loculari, ovulis linearibus erectis, ae; biloculata, F. Muell: Fragm. Phyt. Austral. ii. 17. Has. W. ee from the South Coast to Swan River, Drummond, Pie and other: Herba glabra, ee libus diffusi 1 suberectis acutan- gulis seepius laxis tenuibusque rarius “leidicnbas suba nes Folia sessilia v. petiolata, haud crebra, lanceolata v. fere linea ia, integerrima v. pauci- dentata, 1-2 poll. longa; infima interdum breviora latioraque, floralia sum- linearibus Fructus oblongus, rectus, ad 2 lin. longus, apice —— et coroll basi circumscissim persistente coronatus. Semina subtereti i resents a very distinct section of Dampiera, coating of two see which, with the peculiar pron ae anthers, ¢ ., of the genus, differ from all others in their ovary a and fruit -celled as in oo —- of Scevola. Both ae are limited to Western hewn —G. BentHam. Fig. 1 and 2. Flowe . The same, < the corolla removed, showing the stamens and syle” 4. _Two alt 5. Fruit. 6. The same, longitudinal section. The same, PiaTE 1027. DAMPIERA ALATA, Lindi. GOODENOVIE. D. (Camptospora) alata, Lindl. Swan River App. 27; caule ee v. 3-alato, foliis oblongis lanceolatisve, calycis tubo subgloboso lobis minimi sub indumento occultis, ovulo ie hippocrepico.—D. caulopter "DC. Prod. vii. 504; De Vriese, Gooden. t.18. D. trialata, D. spinhylisitea, et D. Lindleyi, De Vr. in Pl. Preiss. i. a 402. . Australia, from the South Coast to Swan and Murchison rivers, Has. Drieimiad wid many 0 D 20 I1CONES PLANTARUM. Herba perennis, eo agen are inflorescentia excepta glabra v. leviter sericeo-pubescens, Caules erecti v. ascendentes, parum ramosi, 1-2-pedales, alis 2-3 a foliis ce rarias nunc angustissimis nunc 2-3 lin. latis. Folia coriacea, nunc oblonga y. laieec integra v. dentata pollicaria v. longiora, nunc minima linearia v. ad squamas minutas reducta. Pedunculi in axillis superioribus solitarii v. gemini, 1-flori v. laxe 2—3-flori, bracteolis sub flore minutis. Calyx molliter villosus, tubo oblique subgloboso, lobis minimis sub indumento occultis. Corolla 6-9 lin. longa, pilis appressis laxisve vestita. Ovarium 1-loculare; ovulum basi erectum recurvum hippocrepidiforme v. fere annulatum. Fructus valde obliquus, 2 lin. diametro, pericarpio crustaceo Vv. slong tubo separabili. Semen hippocrepidiforme, supra semiseptum re- curve Although ayers figured by De Vriese, we have again bet this plant, in order to w the curious shape of the ovule an ; a pears hitherto to have seer observation, but which really sleaetbenies the - eerond ce oe consisting of five species, all from Western Australia.— BE Fig. 1. Flower. 2. Corolla, cut ssi 8. Y deel with the erelle removed, showing . The s the stamens and style. — gh Two stamens. 5: ary, vertical section. same, trans- verse section. 7. Fruit. 8. The natn peed pai A areas the a Prate 1028. CATOSPERMUM MUELLERI, Benth. GOODENOVIE. atospermum, Benth. gen. nov.—Calycis tubus adnatus; lobi 5, liberi. Corolle tubus supra usque ad ovarium fissus ; limbi lobi 5, subzequales, demum digitatim arta marginibus breviter alatis. Stamina libera. Ovarium in- ferum, 2-loculare ; « ula in loculis gemina, ab apice ie es Indusium stata, 4-spe ma, 2 loculis imperfecte 2- oo a paia “Folin dentita. Flores 1sposi =| ee ce s ae itis af = ioe e mM ey, ao 5B ~ = x] ra 4 (a7) = ack i) [om ig) 3 77) = Vt e ; j : ’ Pa aay tert ON ene ee Oe ICONES PLANTARUM. 27 tusis mee bilocularibus longitudinaliter dehiscentibus, dorso prope basin filamento Ovarium s essile, liberum, parvulum, medio disci insidens, 4-lobum, lables 4-loculare ; styli 4, brevissimi, apice liberi: stigmata mi- _nuta. ula solitaria, minutissima (v. interdum geminata Ps angulo centrali affixa. Fructus exsuccus, epicarpio iva. endocarpio coriaceo-fibr roso, 0 longus, tetragonus, carpellis 4 monospermis utrinque Se —— emum ab apice phori quadrifidi pendulis. Semina exalbuminosa, testa pa viavke cotyle. dones carnose, complanate, lineari-oblonge, basi emarginate, radicula brevi supera 4—6- io longiores.—Arbor meadionren: glabra. olia alterna, tmpari- pinnata, multifoliolata, ad apices ramulorum sepius conferta, exstipulata, lores cymosim paniculati, paniculis foreesienmit axillaribus multifloris. K. acuminata, Oliv. Fl. Trop. Afr. i. Has. Zambesi, common from Batoka to a ve Dr. J. Kirk. Flowering in December Ramuli ‘erotie: ae assiusculi, laeves, glabri. Folia 13— 19-foliolata, — —l ped. a basi ineequalibus s semicordatis vel margine superiore rotundatis, serrulatis epunctatis. Pedunculi recti, rigidi, teretiusculi, glabri, 2-6 poll. longi, apicem versus subtrichotome divisi, pedunculis secundariis divergentibus adscenden- tibusque, pedicellis pilosulis glabratisve oe brevioribus v. % uilongis. Calyx \obis ovato-deltoideis obtusis v. obtusiusculis. Petala circiter 2 ‘iin. thera fere duplo longiora. Anthere lanceolato-elliptice v. ovato-oblonge, mutice. Discus crassiusculus, subcorrugatus, tetragonus, glaber. Ovarium minutum, 4-lobum, lobis sapelis alternis. Fructus 6—8 lin. longus, 3 lin. latus. Cocei maturitate facile secedentes, oblongi, triquetri, apice processus recurvato carpophori affixi. I have allowed this plant to be printed off in the * Tropical African Flora’ under Simarubee, but I admit that its affinity with the more characte venera of this Order i is not very marked, nor have I detected the bitterness 3) 80 common amongst Simarubee the minuteness of the ovary in the specimens examined, I think the flowers may p lyga s oO pistillate flowers may enable me to settle the affinity of the plant. It may prove a Burseracea. If in Boszwellia the pyrenes were imbedded in the i valves of the pericarp, the structure of the fruit would be very similar to that of Kirkia The penis commemorates the important services rendered to botany by Dr. John Kirk, net accomplished naturalist of the Livingstone-Zambesi Ex- ER. Fi a ae mde flower. 2. Vertical section of ~— ont — and stamens removed. 3. Sta ary, one cell laid open. 5. Fruit, . Same enlarged, show- ing sesaaicons at ae cocci to the carpophore. as sbertiy 0. 28 ICONES PLANTARUM. PiaTe 1037. ARCEUTHOBIUM CRYPTOPODUM, Lng. LoranTHACER. A. topodum, Lngelm. in Plante Lindheim. 215 (in note) ; “caule ramisque acute quadrangulatis robustis articulis a tea tree 2 truncatis in vaginulas cupulatas connatis, floribus in spicas den mpo- sitas congestis ; femineis ovatis in quavis axillo singulis; baccis divevientaie incluso-pedicellatis erectis Has. Sante Fé, only on Pies brachyptera. Orizaba, Liebmann. Fig. 1. Branch-bud, much enlarged. 2. Vertical one of branch, showing the inser- tion of an axillary, much-compressed female flower. 3. Term nal female flower detached. 4. i showin e ana i base of the ate er, and the a er periauth-serments. 5, 6,7. Vertical section of female 5 further re from the axis. T paler are ord 5 and 6 mmetiately over the dark cone, simply indicates the translucent por- Ww ultimately beco into “ visci i carp, ee wit ree iiciie tolitiogd firm, ceutral portion, presenting the conical outline in, i ral vertical section represeuted in Figs. 5 and 6. This central firmer ti issue, when cut precisely pi iy axial rey is — to be continuous upwards oe the viscine cells towards sessile stigma. shows, within this firmer central tiss minute rented vi] Fig. 7 ae to be eee by a much compressed ielbdet body (weet edgewise the fig.), presenting the appe free, naked, e ovule. ame ‘* cel- i y” froma flower (much enlarged), oy -pilliform conical process, appa- rently organically continuous at its ith the subjacent tissue a uch ), the same at a more advanced ee (seen See in Fig. 7). Near the rounded apex of the ‘ce body’ is a minute enclosed sa nolated in Fig. 10. This latter is bounded by a free but well-defined membranous wall, aes s full of more or less distinctly defined cells. From the material at disposal, I cannot at present i gp a explain - nature of the ovuliform body (Figs. 8 and 9). It may be a fertilized em o-sac, the lower portion of — which is so engaged i in its early stage in the subjacent cellular tissue, as tore appear to be in continuous organic connection with it. In this case, Fig. 10 must represent an early con- dition of development of the embryo in the embryo-vesicle, —_— = occurrence — as a embryo-sac separate base fro: i We have not, fata any case, that I am aware of, in Eopactaons, in which the ovale is wholly free. I recommend the —— to those botanists who may happen — access to a sufficient series of specimens erent stages of development.—D. Our oi.s ye eS ICONES PLANTARUM. 29 Pirate 1038. BRACHYLOMA ERICOIDES, Sond. EPACRIDES. B. ericoides, Sond. in Linnea, xxvi. 247; foliis linearibus mucronatis osneolaeibe s, floribus subsessilibus pluribracteatis, corolle lobis obtusis medio barbatis.—Lobopogon ericoides, Schlecht. Linnea, xx. 620. Stenan- thera ericoides, F. Muell. Fragm. Phyt. Austral. iv. 98. Styphelia lobopo- uell. 1. ¢. vi. 39. Has. Dry desert eyed South Australia and N.W. districts of Victoria, F. Mut and other. Frutex humilis, pao v. diffusus, ramulis puberulis. Folia conferta, erec atentia, linearia v. oblongo-linearia, mucronato-acuta, minute den- ticulato- ciliata, plana v. leviter concava, pleraque 3-4 lin. longa. ores in axillis so olitarii, sbesies, folia vix superantes. Bractee pauce, parve ; antes. i s hypogynus, truncatus, annularis. Ovarium pubescens, 5-loculare ; stylus Uu longiusculus iz ctus calycem squans, globosus, 5-costatus, durus, 5-locu- la ris, 5- T enus oon of Sonder, independently but at a later period he established also by Schlechtendal under the name of Lobopogon, comprises half-a-dozen _ allied to ZLissanthe Pr Leucopogon, but differing from both, as well as from all other genera of the tribe Stypheliee, by the lobes “4 the corolla more or ngite- distinctly overlapping each other in reflexed scales or tufts of hairs in the throat of the corolla are also present in all ae — of Brachyloma, and in very few only of other genera.—G. BENT fei and 2. Leaves. 3. 4. The same cut open, showing the scales rather too low down. 5. Saunas, re age view. 6. The same, front view. 7. Pistil and hypogy- nous disk. Ovary, view al section. 9. The same, transverse section. 10. Fru LI; The same, ae sectio PLATE 1039. ADINANDRA MANNII, Oliv. TERNSTREMIACES. Mannii, Oliv. Fl. Trop. Afr. i. 170; glabra, foliis coriaceis ob- Po vy. pi acuminatis, floribus axillaribus solitariis pedun- 30. ICONES PLANTARUM.- culatis nutantibus, sepalis valde ineequalibus, petalis sorbate ete obtusis sepalis 2—3-plo longioribus, circa stylum gracilem elongatum laxe conv lutim — staminibus indefinitis 1-seriatis glabris basi petalorum brevissime adna HaB AY ont of the peak of the Island of St. Thomas, Gulf of Guinea, Mr. Gustav Man Arbor 30- plas rami glabri, teretes, 2 hele pee Folia alterna, brevissime petiolata, subcoriacea, seepius ovali- vel oblanceolato-oblonga, api- Stipule minute, subulate, deciduze. Pedunculi solitarii, }—% poll. longi, infra apicem per anthesin plus minus recurvi sear 2, inzequa es, ovate, cori- ace, glabre, sepala exteriora simulantes. Sepal cea v. marginibus , apice eato v. emarginato breviter producte, 2- ee res, os rima laterali Sea aeadioali dehisce ntibus. Ovarium liberum, anguste ovoideo- conicum, glabrum, in stylo erat elongato gradatim attenuatum, 4-loculare v. placentis prominentibus bifidis recurvis interdum axi subsecedentibus. = indefinita, campylotropa, compressa, breviter funiculata. ructum non vidi. Differing from the only Asiatic species of Adinandra which I have exa- mined in the glabrous, uniseriate stamens distinct infer se—D. OLIVER. . Calyx and pistil. 2. Transverse section of ovary: 3. Corolla. 4. Same, with sans Jaid open exposing the stamens. 5. Stamen Pirate 1040. XANTHOSTEMON CHRYSANTHUS, F. Muell. Myrtacez. > F. Muell. in Benth. Fl. Austral. iii. 268 ; foliis ellip- chrysanthus ticis lanceolatisve saumiivatia acutisve, esc nei uniseriatis clongatis, pla- centis peltatis truncatis, capsula calyce semiinclus Has, Along streams, Rockingham Bay, ibreshind: Dallachy. Arbor ren — florifera undique glabra. Folia lanceolata v. elliptica, acum Psnye kd | a] & tae we ° — = =} ge < 1 “Eg b~*) oS S QP oo S faa Rae Lan] o Ss =] pets < fa) So a ws entes. is late: depaiiising ima basi tantum ovario adnatus, lin. diametro ; ‘Tobi lati, tubo breviores. Pefala suborbiculata, calycis Iobis ICONES PLANTARUM. 3l duplo longiora. Stamina 20-25, pulchre aurea, uniseriata, parum inequi- longa, a subpollicaria, filamentis crassiusculis ; ; anthere oblonge, ver- iles jum semisuperum, vulgo 3-loculare; placente late peltate, truncate, avatis circa marginem in serie simplici annulatis reflexis. Stylus incurvam plus minus includentes ; ; semina abortiva ster subconformia, intus homogenea indurata. For observations on the genera figured in this and the three cree Plates, see notes on Myrtacee i in Journ. Linn. Soc G. Bentua Fig. 1. Petal. 2. Calyx and ay le, une - petals removed and the stamens cut short, showing their insertion. 3. Ova same, vertical section. 5. The same, trans- verse section. 6. Placenta. 7. Saati PiaTe 1041. OSBORNIA OCTODONTA, F Muell. MYRTACES. ©. octedonta, FP. Muell. Fragm. Phyt. Austral. iii. 31; Benth. Fl. Austral. iii. 271. Has. Tropical Australia ; Islands of the ite of Carpentaria, 2. Brown ; Port oe Armstrong ; Trinity Bay, Fruter erectus, ramosissimus, floribus erie glaber. Folia obovato- i Vv. omnesta, obtusissima v. subretusa, in petiolum brevem contracta riacea, penn nivenia, 3-14 po ga. Flores sessiles, in axillis solitarii v. , “ apices ramorum inter folia. ultima terni, bracteolis 2 tomentosis deciduis stipati. Calyx tomento brevi canescens, adnato angusto, 2 lin seriata, calyce paullo longiora ; anthere ovate, versatiles. Ovarium inferum, basi septo brevissimo divisum, ceterum uniloculare ; ovula plurima, adscen- dentia. Fructus calycis lobis coronatus, ut videtur indehiscens, exsuccus. Semina 1-2, obovoidea, testa tenui; embryo rectus, cotyledonibus crassis planiusculis v. hemispheericis, radicula longioribus.—G. BentuaM. Fig. 1. Flower (the stamens sg rather too Tong): 2. Calyx and pistil. 3. Sta- mens, front and back view. 4. Ovary, v ertical sectio The same, transverse section. 32 ICONES PLANTARUM. PuatTe 1042. LYSICARPUS TERNIFOLIUS, F. Mull. Myrracez. ternifolius, 7. Muell. in Trans. Phil. Inst. Vict. ii. 68; Benth. Fl. Austral. il. 267. AB. Queensland ; on the Maranoa, Mitchell ; Darling Downs and be- SO the Mackenzie and Dawson rivers, F. Mu siler Arbor ad altitudinem 30 ped. assurgens, cortice molli fibroso, ramulis novellis inflorescentiaque molliter tomento oso-pubescentibus. Folia opposita v. ternatim verticillata, anguste linearia, mucronato-acuta v. rarius obtusa, : _pey , ciliata, linea —— latora Stamina ae oe 2—3-seriata, exteriora » avy 3-valvis. Semin Fig. 1. Leaf. 2. The , cut across, showing the thick revolute margins. 3. Flower- bud. 4. Repeal tower. 5. Vertical — of the e — showing the mistil and stamens. - Onter sterile stamens. 7. Perfect stam: 9. The same, transverse section. he same, waited! section, ll. Cae PLATE 1043. RHODOMYRTUS MACROCARPA, Benth. Myrracen, R. macrocarpa, J; Fl. Austral. iii. 273; foliis ovali-ellipticis obovatisve penniveniis, pelinalis 1-5-floris, ovulis 2-seriatis, fructu elongato cylindraceo, seminibus seri Has. Tropical ince me Island, W. Hill ; Datlachy. oe = Frutex elatus, ramulis novellis inflorescentiaque : 1 tomento appresso ca- nescentibus. Folia petiolata, ovali-elliptica v. obovata, pennivenia et reti- Rockingham Bay, ICONES PLANTARUM. 33 culato-venulosa, glabra vy. subtus minute pubescentia, fe 6 poll. v. maxima usque ad 10 poll. longa. Pedunculi in axillis superioribus breves, sepius 3- flori, rarius 1- v.5-flor. Calycis tubus adnatus, breviter winanea lobi 5, lati, ineequales, Pefala diu in globum conniventia, rarius patentia, orbicularia. Stamina pluriseriata, petala haud superantia. Ovarium inferum, a unicum reductum, ovulis 2-seriatim superpositis serie bus septo spurio (pla- singula separantibus ; stylus brevis, stigmate peltato. uctus carnosus, in- dehiscens, seepius cylindraceus, siccitate aibtetdvuek 14 poll. longus, seminibus simplici serie suprapositis, rarius latior seminibus 2-seriatis, Se- mina crassa, compressa, horizontalia, testa duriuscula. Embry y curvatus, radicula crassa carnosa, cotyledonibus brevissimis involutis.—G. BentHam. Fig. 1. Flow 2. Stamen. 3. Calyx and meee 4. far’ é vertical section. 5. The same, boron seat on. 6. Portion of the frui ™ Seed. 8. The same, horizontal sec- tion. 9, Embr 10, The same, horizontal Pi Puate 1044. LEITNERIA FLORIDANA, Chapm. Myricacea ? L. floridana, Chapman, Flora of Southern United States, 427. Has. — Apalachicola, in salt-marshes. Frutex 2-~6-pe Ramuli crassiusculi, teretes, innovationes piloso- phew eine e glabri, leeves v. lenticellati. Fo/ia decidua, membranacea, alterna, eglandulosa, longiuscule petiolata, ovalia v. oblongo-elliptica, obtusa v. obtusiuscula ‘basi an angustata, in ntegra , penn nivenia, supra sublucida, costa ner- labr i idi axillis foliorum delapsorum subsessilia enta Geetuscals, oylindraces, ubmembranaceee, oratoran sce ze, acute v. acu- minate, extus laxe sericeo-pilose, intus glabre a 8-10, li hiceas v. mentis basi ad squamam breviter adnatis; Saanans su caeatate, nuda; antheree — mantions, biloculares, longitudinaliter dehiscentes, basi i affixee. Fi. menta brevia, 3} poll. longa; squame inferiores vacue, late ovate, obtuse, imbricatz, superiores floriferse sericeo-pilose. Ovarium sursum pilosum squamam subzequans, basi squamulis minutis 2-4 inzequalibus seepius fimbriatim seen or circumdatum, 1-loculare, 1-ovulatum. cras- siusculus, ovario 2~3-plo longior, faleato-ineurvus, unilateraliter canaliculatus et i 5 deciduus. Ovu/wm lateraliter affixum, micropyle supera. Fructus drupaceus, exsuccus, ovali-oblongus, } poll. longus, epicarpio tenui, endocarpio crustaceo. Semen ovale, compressum, albuminosum ; testa papy- 34 ICONES PLANTARUM. racea; albumen tenui. Hmbryo cotyledonibus oblongis planiusculis basi emar- pinata: radicula supera ovoidea exserta. y Dr. ao and, following him, by M. Casimir De Candolle, s t overlooked, but I think there can be no mistake as to its presence. e upper squamee of the male catkins occasionally subtend an ovary. We have a of rere a second species of Leitneria, from Texas, collected by Drummond.—D. ER. ela Seale of male Spo with stamens, back and front. 3. Stamen, 4 and 5. Pit and ei ng scale. mules at base of ay 7. Vertical section of ovary. . Enlarged ovaries after the fall of the styles. 9. Embry Pirate 1045. MELANODENDRON INTEGRIFOLIUM, DC. Composit”, Tribe ASTEROIDE®. M. integrifolium, DC. Prod. v. 279. Has. St. Helena; wooded region of Diana’s Peak, alt. 2-3000 ft., Bur- chell, ete. Flowering i in January and February. Arbor 20-30-pedalis, ena rps crassis apice foliosis, crassitie pol- licis, apicibus sericeo-villos Folia lterna, 6-8 p 3-2 poll. ] Il. diam corymbos axillares peduneulatos disposita, pedunculis pedicellisque bracteatis, bracteis linearibus Involucrum hemisphericum, squamis multi ¢ . Sty ‘Slim g, tubulosi, 5-dentati. Pappus ut in ¢. "Anthera rminati. dehenium parvum, pilosulum, ob- longum, o num. Hmébryo obovoideus, cotyledonibus plano-convexis. eee “Mageils, Roxb. in Beatson’s St. Helena Tracts, Appendix, p. 3 from Bri habi ly, as ‘eek: observed by De Cando aoe rom Lrigeron in habit and achenium only ICONES PLANTARUM. 35 genera, differ in the pappus and uniseriate ray-flowers. It is the “ Black Cabbage-tree ” of Rox — and “ Bastard Cabbage-tree ”’ of Burchell’s Catalogue.—J. D. Hoo Fig. 1. Ray-flower. 2. Itsstyle-arms. 3. Disk-flower. 4. A : - ae te mifed yle-arms isk-flower rms of style. 5, Pappus Pirate 1046. HECTORELLA CASSPITOSA, Hook. J. PoRTULACER. Fi. czespitosa, Hook. f. in Handbook of New Zealand Flora, 27. Has. New Zealand ; dry places in the Lake district of the Otago oll alt. 6000 Dr: Hector and Mr. Buchanan. Flowering January to April. Herba glaberrima, densissime cwespitosa, ceespitibus convexis 6-10 poll. latis. Caules — poll. alti, breves, ramosi, crassitie digiti minoris. Folia numerosissima, t poll. longa, densissime imbricata, patula, coriacea, late tri- angulari-ovata, infra medium membranacea, basi dilatata, marginibus inte- gerrimis et carina incrassatis, gakirs reticulatis. FJores parvi, albi, versus apices ramulorum sessiles. Sepala 2, parva, concava, truncata. Pefala 5, basi connata, truncata, venosa. Stamina 5, tubo brevi corolle inserta, fila- mentis filiformibus petalis eequilongis; anthere lineari-oblon “3 Ovarium ovoideum, membranaceum, venosum, in stylum brevem atten stigm tibus 1-3 linearibus intus papillosis ; ovula 4-5, e basi loculi oe "funiculis gracilibus. A very curious little plant, having no known near ally, though such m yet be found amongst the Antarctic “Islands or Alps of the Southern Conti. nent. It is named in honour AG a r, F.R.S., Director of the Geolo- aa Survey of New Zealand, mee to Dr. ae we owe the dis- very of so many alpine New ealanal aiid —J. D. Hooker. Fig. 1 and 2. Leaves. 3. Flower. 4. Petal and stamens. 5 and 6. Ovaries. 7. Ver- tical ition of ovary. ‘8. Ovule :—all magnified. Pirate 1047. PYGMZA CILIOLATA, Hook. f. ScROPHULARINE®. P. ciliolata, Hook. f. Handbook of New Zealand Flora, 217. Has. New Zealand ; —— and Marlborough a Discovery Peaks, rai 5500 ft., Mr. T ; Hopkins river, Dr. Haast Herba densissime a ‘yi albis ciliolata. Folia late a 36 ICONES PLANTARUM, obtusa, utrinque glaberrima, marginibus pilis curvis rigidis ciliatis, Co- rolla 5—6-loba, hie oblongis aaron Rentra inatuen vy. exserta, fila- mentis brevibus v. elongatis. m glaberrim This genus was established, in on Handbook = the New Zealand Flora,’ on two curious little plants, natives of the Southern Alps; it is closely allied to Veronica, differing in the leaves not being obviously quadrifariously arranged, though strictly opposite, and in the 5-6- lobed corolla; the lobes of the latter are, however, unequal, and one is evidently larger than the rest. In both species the filaments vary in len Fig. 1. Leaf. 2. Flower. 3. ai laid open. 4. Ovary. 5. Transverse section of ditto : aiid P. pulvinaris, Hook. /. /. Has. New Zealand; Middle “Teland, summit of ak Torlesse, forming hoary matted patches, Dr. Haast. Flowe ering in Janua Herba densissime ceespitosa, pilis albis subcrinita. i olia lineari-oblonga, dorso et marginibus albis, pilis laxis subflexuosis. Corolla 5-loba, lobis obovato-rotundatis. Stamina inclusa, rarius exserta, Ovarium apice pilo- sum. Clearly allied to P. ciliolata, but with longer leaves, that are furnished with ee and laxer hairs, that give the whole plant a hoary appearance. The ovary also is pilose, g.1. Leaf. 2. Pair of ditto and branch. 3. Flower. 4. Corolla, laid open. 5, Ovary ca rs 6. Fruit. 7. The same, cut transversely :—al/ magnified, Puate 1048. SILVIANTHUS BRACTEATUS, Hook. /. Rusiaces, Tribe Hepyrormes ? Silvianthus, Hook. f. gen. nov.— Calycis tubus obconicus; lobi 5, rarius 4, lineari-oblongi, obtusi, subzequales, post a anthesin accrescentes. Corol la infundibuliformis, tubo et fauce ampliato intus pubescentibus ; limbus parvus, 5-fidus, lobis brevibus rotundatis intus papillosis valvatis, Stamina 2, tubo corollie te usa, filamentis brevibus ; anthere dorso affixze, lin eari-oblongze. 8 nus, conicus. Ovarium 2-loculare ; stylus gracilis, stigmate punc- tiformi ; ov numerosa, placentis septo affixis inserta. Fructus subcarnosus, ina majuscula, ovoi ideo-oblonga, =e, testa cellulosa, albumine co- pioso ; embryo minutus, ovoideus.—Fru glaberrimus, ramosus, ramis tere- tibus. Folia opposita, Letom ous v. ap isd Seo acuminata, basi sepe inaqualia, a ato-dentata, Stipule Flores albi, inter con- generes majusculi, apes etl dunculatas axill densi dispositi, bracteati, bracteis og obtusis = — for as dispositi ‘ bracteatus, //: ook. f. Pea leirig sp., Wall. Cat. n. 8367,—Neuro- calyx (7) sp., Hook. 3 et Thoms. Herb. tad Oe. ee oe er ICONES PLANTARUM. 37 Has. Eastern Bengal; Silhet, De =e Griffith. — Mts., ait. 1200 ft., Lobb, Luckipore i in Cachar. , J. D. Hooker et T. Thom This, one of the most Sarai of au and ‘tough probably referable to the great tribe of Hedyotiden, is closely allied to no other plant of the Order, except perhaps Carlemannia, with which it agrees in its most anoma- lous characters of a diandrous flower, absence of stipules, and dentate leaves. It ditfers from that genus in the valvate corolla-lobes, and from other Hedy lyo- tidee in the ase stigma, and fleshy capsule 5-valved to the base. It is named in honour of M. De Silva, one of Dr. Wallich’s most acute and inde- fatigable sella, who was the first explorer of the Khasia and Silhet jungles. Fig. 1. Flower. 2. peistega see pe open, and stamens. 3. Ovary, ne style, een rp 4. Med oen section of ovary and disk. 5. Transverse section of ova 6. Ripe fru 7. The same, dehisced. 8. Bed. 9. Longitudinal section of ditto. 10. Embryo: all but 6 and 17 magnified. PLATE 1049. POLYURA GEMINATA, Hook. /. Rusiaces, Tribe Hepyorme. Polyura, Hook.f. gen. nov.—Calycis tubus steal he 5, ovati, per- sistentes. Corolla tubuloso-infundibuliformis, tubo brevi intus glabro, fatice villoso ; lobi 5, ovati, obtusi, suberecti, valvati. Stamina 5. scales = corolla inserta, filamentis breviusculis, subulatis ; anthere lineari-oblongz, semi-in- clu iscus pulvinaris. Ovarium 2-loculare ; stylus gracilis, puberulus, sticmatibus 2 brevibus oblongis obtusis; ovula numerosa, placentis septo medio rana inflorescentia puberulis. Folia opposita et spurie verticillata, petiolata, ovata v. oblonga, acuta, penninervia, siccitate rubescentia. Stipule wéringue solitarie, subulate. Pedunculi terminales, stricti, elongati, cymas breves scorpioideas alternatim gerentes. Flores in cymis dense 9-seriatim conferti, secundi, sub- sessiles, bracteis imbricatis occlusi, lb bracteis siccitate rufescentibus. . geminata, Hook. ga —Ophiorhiza? geminata, Wall. Cat. n. 6237 ; Hook. f. et Thom’. Herb. Ind. Or. Gualpara, Hb. Hamilton. Silhet, VW. Gomez. Khasia, Lodd. Ee, ‘Sinmons. Mish mi, Griffith. Nunklow, alt. 2-4000 ft., J. D. ‘Hooker et T. pane! 38 ICONES PLANTARUM. few have its 5-merous flowers. The whole plant assumes a fine vinous-red colour in at which it has retained for forty years in the herbarium.— J. D. Hoo ‘ig. 1. Flower. 2. Section of corolla. 3. Stamen. 4. Ovary, disk, ser and a? 5. ‘Transverse section of fruit. 6. Ripe fruit. 4. aed section of ditto. 8, Seed:— magn ified. PraTeE 1050. LIMNOSIPANEA SPRUCEANA, Hook. f. Rusiaces, Tribe RONDELETIER. Limnosipanea, Hook. f. gen. RA age tubus ovoideus, his- pidus; lobi 5, Ianceciati, subfoliacei i, nts basi glandulosi, persistentes. Corolla hypocraterimorpha, tnbo gracili intus glabro, fauce glabro tenuiter pubescenti v. villoso; lobi 5, patente 8, sjeeneniaitel, oblongi, obtusi, con- torti. Stamina 5, farce corollz inserta, filamentis filiformibus ; anthers oblong», exsertze, dorso affixee. Discus conicus. Ovarium 2-localare stylus filiformis, stigmatibus recurvis intus papillosis; ovula numerosa, lacentis septo medio aflixis inserta. Capsula ee ey oi hee sé ineaiati, loculicide 2-valvis, powspe rma. Semina minuta, a angulata, on reticulata, albumine terete, basi simplice, superne e 2-3-chotome ramoso. Folia 3-co-natim verticil- lata, superiora rarius omnia opposita, oblonga v. linearia. Stipule obsolete. Flores parei, in fasciculos bracteatos terminales et in dichotomiis ramorum sitos dispositi, rosei, 2-bracteolati. is. Spruceana, Hook.f. ; caule e basi decumbente erecto gales foliis mersis iain verticillatis anguste linearibus acuminatis, emersis 3—6- natim verticillatis multo bre vioribus ovatis ovado leneotaiate acuminatis pedunculis floriferis erecto-patentibus elongatis ea corollz rosez fauce pubescente.—Sipania limnophila, Spruce, n Has. Amazon river, marshy and sandy = near Para, Spruce (1851). Fig. 1. Flower. 2. Corolla, laid open. 3. Stamens. 4. Ovary and 2 calyx-lobes. 5. Transverse section of ovary :—all magnified. This curious genus differs from Sipania in its remarkable habit, obsolete sdipalie, and exserted stamens. The other species known Schom » Hook. f. ; caule simplici foliisque paucis oppositis oe obtusis sparse hispido-pilosis, floribus paucis, calycis lobis lineari- -elongati Has. “see Guiana; Rovuma river, Schomburgh, 464 (744). L. palustris, Hook. f—Sipania palustris, Seem. Bot. Herald, Voy. 136, Has. Panama, Seemann; New Granada, Santa Martha, Goudot. ICONES PLANTARUM, 39 Puate 1051. PHYLICA RAMOSISSIMA, DC. RHAMNEZ. ramosissima, DC. Prod. ii. 34. —P. avg ar Roxb. in Beat- son’s St, Helena Teaeta, 316, non Thunb. non Lam Has. St. Helena, Diana’s Peak, Longwood, ete. “Wild Rosemary” the colonists. Frutex 10-pedalis, ramosissimus, ramis gracilibus fastigiatis teretibus, ultimis foliis subtus et inflorescentia niveo-tomentosis. Folia alterna, lanceo- lata v . oblongo-lanceolata, acuminata, basi in petiolum angustata, 3-1} poll. longa, coriacea, marginibus integerrimis tenuiter revolutis, supra glaberrimis nitidis, subtus niveis. Flores sessiles, breviter pedicellati, $ % poll. longi, ex- tus niveo-villosi. Calycis tubus obconicus ; lobi 5, triangulares, patentes. Petaia orbicularia, concava, breviter unguiculata. Stamina petalis occlusa, filamentis subulatis; anthers orbiculares, rimis demum confluentibus late hiantes. Discus Sooene ss: explanatus. Stigma 3-fidum. Fructus ovoideus, apice areolatus, ¢ + poll. longus; carne enui; coccis 3 crustaceis, dorso convexis, intus dehiscentibus. Semen oblongum, leviter compressum, testa brunnea nitida. not uncommon plant in St. Helena, allied to, but very different from any South African species of the genus. The stipules attributed to this species no trace of stipules on young shoots, and no scars on older.—J. D. Hooker. Fig. = lage rge-leaved form. 2. Small-leaved form, with flower. 3. Specimen in fruit. 4. Flow 5. The same, calyx-lobes os TEL 6, Stamens. 7. Inferior ovary. 8. Ver- het seition: and 9. transverse section of same. 10. Fruit. , 11, 12. Seed :—mostly mag- Pirate 1052. NESIOTA ELLIPTICA, Hook. /. RHAMNEX. N. elli » Hook. f. in Benth. and Hook. Gen. Pl. a ee elliptica, Roxb. in Beatson’s St. Helena Pacts. Appendix, 316; DC. Prod. i 34. Has. St. Helena, on the central ridge of Diana’s Peak, elev. 2500-2700 ft., Burchell, on tag ete. I have seen only six or eight of these trees on the island, J. Meliss , Esq. Wild Olive of the colonists. Flowering in Oc- tober and November. F 40 ICONES PLANTARUM. Folia opposita, oe exacte oblo nga, basi et apice aoe ata, 2-3 poll. villosa, Cyme@ axillares, peloreuiatr ka -chotomee, ramosee, folio dimidio breviores v. equilonge, ‘pedunculo 4 4-]2 poll. longo stricto. Flores pedi- cellati, albi, bracteati, 3 $ poll. longi, sire albi, intus rosei, 4—-5-meri. F’ruc- tus obovoideo-clavatus, + poll. longus, lignosus, calycis tubo medio cinctus, vertice tumido apicu culato, maturns 8-parti rtibilis. Semina oblonga, obtuse 3- gona, testa coriacea niti . Hooker. Fig. 1. Flower. 2. Vaden section of ditto. 3. Stamen. 4. Transverse section of tae ae magnified. Puate 1053. PETROBIUM ARBOREUM, By. Composit#, § SENECIONIDES. P. arte sag: Br. in ae Trans. xii. 113.—Laxmannia arborea, Forst. omm. Geett. ix. 56; Gen. t.47. Spilanthes tetrandra a vs oe et Bidens arborea ie ). Roxb. in Beatson’ s St. Helena Tracts, 301 et Has. St. Helena, Diana’s Peak, Harding’s Spring, etc., Burchell, onsturt in January and May. “ Whitewood Cabbage-tree”’ of the peru or parva, dioica, 10—15- pedalis, ligno molli. Rami tortuosi, ¢ cicatricati, tun ata v. tron ate 9 tial tata, acuta bacuta, ultra medium serrata, in plantis saat (ex ply Burchellii) folia latiora basi seepius truncata, in feemineis angustiora et in petiolum angustata. Panicule axil- lares v. terminales, 3-chotome ramose. Capitula erecta, flava, eampanulata, pedunculata, 3 poll. longa, mascula latiora. Involucri foliola sub-3- serialia, oblonga, obtusa, gla riuscula, coriacea, integerrima. Receptaculum paulo TUM voll longum, szepius 3-setosum, setis abate Corolla hypocrateriformis, tubo elongato carnosulo, fauce paulo constricto ; lobi 4, patentes, an . 3-nerves Ss. Stomina 4, ore corolle inserta, omnino exserta, filamentis brevi- bus validis superne incrassatis ; anthere lineares, connectivo apice breviter pilosulis acutis. Fl. feem.: Ovarinm compressum, pappi setis seepius « 2. maris, sed tubo breviore. Stamina parva, antheris ae cassis. . ae Stee oS aoe 3 IGONES PLANTARUM. 41 guste 2-alatum et antic dio carinatum, lateribus in setas 2 subulatas rigidas — — productis. Cotyledones oblonge, obtuse, planiuscule, radicula te and described its structure, makes no allusion to its affinities ; nor can they be well cstv till ‘the sole of Melampodinee and Helianthee ave revised. D. Hoo Fig. 1. maine floret. 2. Apex of achene. 3. Corolla laid open, wep the stami- nodes. 4. Male floret. 5. Detached stamen. 6. Style-branches of sa . Prate 1054, LACHANODES PRENANTHIFLORA, Burch. : Compositm, § SENECIONIDEZ. Lachanodes, DO.—Cuapitulum homogamum, floribus ad 5 albis tubu- losis 5-lobis hermaphroditi s. Involucrum angustum ; foliola ad 5, 1-serialia, anguste poate acuta, pie non sphacelata, c alyculat Rece eptaculum orolie tubus recat stacy basi dilatatus ; Kinhies mau Tobi elongati, lneaes, revoluti, 3-n ee li rami elon- i, fili Sains pluriserialis, pilis rigidulis scaberulis albis. Achenium ars angulatum, obscure costa- um.—Arbor parva, ramulis robus la alterna, petiolata, dentata. Ca- pitula ix paniculas axillares jovisvaliliter nee le pendula. L. prenanthifiora, Burch. n DC. Prod, vi. 442.—Mikania arborea, Roxb. in Beatson’s St. ifelena Tracts, 313 fein Kunth). Solidago Leuga- dendron, Willd. Sp. Pl. iii. Has. St. Helena, on ae s Peak, and on Sandy Bay ridge, alt. 2-2500 . Flowering October to February. Red or purple Cabbage-tree, Burchell. “ He” and “ She Cabbage-tree,” Roxburgh rbor parva, 5-15 ped. alta, trunco crasso, cortice pallido, ligno molli, ramis tee ultimis rubro- poland robustis fragilibus. Folia apices versus ramulorum sparsa, magnitudine valde varia, in plantis junioribus subsessilia, prtirte rin oe 1-2-pedalia in adultis 2—5-pollicaria, in petiolam brevem v. subeequilongum angustata, obovato-oblonga, obtuse irregulariter dentata, osula, superne am 2 nitida, sabi subfurfuraceo-tomentosa v. glabrata, leete viridia, costa purpurea, juniora subtus albo-lanata. Capitula ¢ Jog longa, 42 ICONES PLANTARUM. in paniculas horizontaliter patentes axillares disposita, pendula, ramis ram pedunculisque divaricatis gracilibus purpureis, pedicellis 1 Nioribmcledie bracteolis remotis parvis subulatis. Znvolwcrum angustum, floribus brevius, basi bracteolis 1-3-calyculatum ; foliola 6-8, erecta, lineari-lanceolata, acuta, Recta (siccitate brunnea), marginibus interioribus angusto-membranaceis, uiter nervosa, apicibus non sphacelatis. Receptacudum planiusculum, an- on m, papillosum, nudum. Flores ad 5, omnes tubulosi. Pappus plu- tiserialis, corolla brevior, pilis te nerrimis acaberulis albis. Cor eens pallide ave tubus gracilis, basi dilatatus; limbus tenuis, in lobos 5 elongatos lineares 3-nervos revolutos fissus. nthere exserte, lineares, basi ecaudate, filamento superne incrassato. Styli rami elongati, filiformes, revoluti, trun- cati. Achenium ad + poll. longum, angustum, angulatum, leve, glaberrimum. A very singular-looking small tree, but I fear generically undistinguishable from Senecio, from which it differs technically only in the want of sphacel ated apices to the involucral scales, a character of no constancy in Senecio itself. Until, however, the Senecionideous genera are wo orked up from the pew ma- extent that heterogeneous Tribe may require subdivision® De Candolle’s L. Leucadendron is a totally different genus (Pladarozxylon, Tab. wen 1055), and his doubtful L. euneifolia is probably an Aster.—J. D. Hoo Fig. 1. Capitulum. 2. Single floret. 3. Pappus-bristle. 4. Stamen. 5. Style- branches. ; Puate 1055. PLADAROXYLON LEUCADENDRON, Hook. /. Composit#, § SENECIONIDER. Pladaroxylon, Endl. (sect.) Capitulum heterogamum, floribus albis, radii ligulatis femineis, ie 5-lobis tubulosis ermaphro oditis. tecalstoo cylindricum ; foliola ad 10-15, 1-serialia, basi in hypanthium carnosum late obconicum calyculatum Sie linearia, acuta, apice non sphacelata. Recep- taculum planiusculu um, papillosum, nudum. Flores radii ad 6-8, ligula brevi lata obtuse 4-dentata ; disci 8-10, corolle tubo basi lignoso vix tumido lobis revolutis linearibus 3- -nervils. Anthere g-exsertee, ecaudate, connectivo apice brevi. Styli rami revoluti, truncati, apice papillosi. Pappus pluri- serialis, fuscus, pilis scaberulis rigidulis. Acheniuin anguste oblongum, utringue angustatum, alte pluricostatum. —Arbor parva, ramulis crassis. Folia alterna, integerrima. Capitula in corymbum terminalem compositum dis- posita, er . P, Leucadendron. ee (sectio) Pladaroxylon, Endl. Gen. 461. *s Leucadendron, DC. Prodr. vi. 443. Solid, ago Leucadendron, Forst. Comm. — ex Willd. Sp. Pl. iii. 2054; Roxb. in Beatson’s St. Helena > RR iS ares sep ON cates See ICONES FLANTARUM. 43 Has. St. Helena, Diana’s Peak, and Cabbage-tree ridge by Caxon’s-gate Telegraph, Burchell, etc. Flowering November, February. ‘‘ White Cab- bage-tree,” Burchell. “He Cabbage-tree, ”” Melliss rbor parva, robusta, 8-12 ped. alta, ramulis relies crassitie digiti mi- noris creberrime cicatricatis glabris. "Folia versus 0 ramulorum con- ferta, 4-7 poll. onga, 0 vato-oblonga v. lanceolata, + irregulariter nata, viridia (siccitate brunnea), crassiuscula, be en nervosa, apicibus sub- acutis barbellatis non sphacelatis, marginibus angus mbranaceis. Corolla alba, radii ligula late obovato-oblonga, apice 3-dentata, “disei lobis revolutis 3-nerviis eens ibus, tubo basi indurato. Anthere semi-exserte, aaa ivo apice brevi, omnino “ecaudate. tylus gracilis, et fusiformis, ramis re lutis brie apice obscure papillosis. he cto vis, multiserialis, Fisste pilis rigidiusculis seaberulis. Achenium + ei iscsi, anguste oblongum, , utrinque attest creberrime alte costatu Certainly a totally different genus from the Lachanodes prenanthi tate and far more different than that is from any other Senecionideous genus; nor, in- deed, except in Senecio itself, do I find any near affinity for it. Trot Lacha- nodes it differs in habit, in the terminal erect crowded corymbose panicle, the short en gence the involuere much thickened at the base, its many leaflets, the ma -flowers, woody scarcely inflated base of the corolla-tube, rolla- eg and in thers ; meanwhile I have sedapiad Endlicher’s sectional name of Pladaroxylon i ionideous g Fig. 1. Catalan. 2. Ray-flower. 3. Arms of its a 4. Disk-flower. 5. Pappus hair. 6. Stamen. 7. Arms of its ie :—all aged Prate 1056. ASTER GUMMIFERUS, Hook. /. Composit#, § ASTEROIDER. gummiferus ; arbor parva, gummifera, ramulis lignosis ultimis hispidulis, foliis nari anit die obtusis in petiolum brevem basi nodoso-incrassatum angustatis grosse serratis coriaceis, subtus et basin versus 44 ICONES PLANTARUM. Sparse pilosis, corymbis subterminalibus ramosis polycephalis, capitulis basi angustis, involucri foliolis ineequilongis lanceolatis rigide chartaceis, floribus radii et disci 6-8, acheenio compresso alte costato apicem versus pilosulo.— ooniaidonilo spurium, DC. Prodr. v. 344, excl. syn. (non Solidago spuria, Forst., nec Conyza arborescens, Willd.). Var. B, foliis angustioribus subtus “on subtomentosis, corymbis oligo- cephalis. —Commidendrum gummiferum, Has. St. Helena, Thompson’s Wood hill, and ridge above West Lodge, Burchell. Gated ridge of High Peak. alt. 2700 ft., Me lliss. Flowering in December, March. « Little Bastard Gum-wood, Melliss. * Little umbelled (or eymose) Cabbage-tree,’’ Burchell. Var. p Thompson’s Wood hill, Bur- eset." Cluster-leaved Gum-tree,” Burchel Arbor parva, 10-12-pedalis ; rami lignosi, teretes, crassitie penne anserine®, remote cicatricati, ramulis apices versus pilis paucis brevibus remotis sub- hispidulis. Folia apibes torsus ramulorum subconferta, patentia, 13 fer poll. longa, siccitate a ram erecta, pallida, enervia, ppareainis eaborulis erosis, pappo aequilongis. Recaps taculuin parvu eolat rgimibt Fi. radit albi, ligula brevi late pice 3 apice adobe ; styli rami lineares. 7. ‘die corolla ! 5-loba, pallide flava ; antherse omnino exserte ; styli rami breves, apice cono instructi. dchenium purpureum, compressum. io parcus, 1-seri- alis, rufus, pilis scaber a ineequalibus. This curious plant differs much in habit and in the on of the ear With ater é the var. 8, Burchell has ticketed it Solidago conferta, Burch., and cuneifolia, Roxb., w ence it is possibly Lachanodes cuneifolia, DC. An- other closely allied species is : A. Burchellii, Hook. f.; arbor parva, ramulis teretibus ultimis lignosis villosis, foliis obovato-lanceolstia gt grosse serratis supra sparse villosis subtus albo-tomentosis, corymbis axillaribus oligocephalis, capitulis floribusque ut In A. gummifera. a St. Helena, Longwood, Burchell, 1810; Meiliss, 1868. similar to A. glutinosus, at = leaves longer and conspicuously white a vous beneath.—J. D. Hoo oe : 2 t ’ ICONES PLANTARUM. 45 Fig. 1. Pigg neriowns 2. Pi 8. Pappus hair. 4, Style-branches. 5. Disk- flower. 6. Stamen :—ail magnified. * Pirate 1057. ASTER GLUTINOSUS, Rod. Composit”, § AsTEROIDEA. A. glutinosus, Rovd. ; fruticosus, ramulis teretibus lignosis apice foliosis cum foliis et inflorescentia laxe villosis, foliis alternis obovato-spathulatis crenatis rugosis subtus reticulatim venos is, pedunculis terminalibus erectis halis paucibracteatis, bracteis linearibus, capitulo late campanulato, in- volueri foliolis e a ee pappo_ she acheentis glaberrimis an- gustis compressis alte costatis—Roxb. in Beatson’s St. Helena, 303. nyza rugosa, Ait. Hort. Kew. iii. 184; excl. syn. ry 2, v.30. Oom iio drum rugosum, DC. Prod. vy. 345, Has. St. Helena, between Longwood’s and Gregory’s, Burchell. Flower- ing March to May. ‘“Scrubwood” and “ Gum-shrub” of the colonists. Also as rare in Ascension, Burchell, mss. « v. arbor parva, ramosa, lignosa, ramis teretibus sub-3-chotomis pa- teatibue, ramulis cicatricibus trapezoideis foliorum delapsorum notatis, ulti- mis crassitie enn anserine patentim villosis. Folia 3-14 po (petiolo incluso), 7-3 poll. lata, siccitate fusca, patentia, crenata v. dentata, tie preecipue villosa, superne glabrata v. gummosa. Pedunculi solitarit 3 poll. longi, ota Mehra’ villosi; bractee 1 v. 2, lineares, 3} poll. eee Capitulum oll. i JSoliola numerosa, fesarva. vix squarrosa, glutinosa, ciliata, coriaceo-herbacea. Receptaculum subconvexum, papillosum. Flores radii i perplurimi, ligulis re- volutis. oo parcus, pilis ineequalibus scaberulis. Achenia pallida, apice paulo dilatat There to the ves Aster, from which it differs in no respec 1 Me the heads and narrow subulate recurved savlaen scales, = ae the resent plant, and 4. Rowxburghii, Ff. 8 te A erat DC.), and a variety of it ora closely allied species.—J, D. H Fig. 1. Ray-flower. 2. Hair of pappus. 3. Arms of style. m 6. Arms of style :—all magnified. 4, Disk-fiower. 5. Sta- 46 ICONES PLANTARUM. Pirate 1058. FRANKENIA PORTULACIFOLIA, Spreng. FRANKENIACES. ortulaczefolia ; fruticosa, erecta, ramosissima, ramulis puberulis di- waticntia, foliis minutis cordatis or Arageree atisve convexis marginibus recurvis, floribus os ovario 2—3-mero. — Frankenia portulaccefolia, Spreng. Syst. Veg. 134. Bentions nia, Schultes, Syst. Veg. vii. 70. Beat- sonia spiinlaaispelie. Roxb. in Beatson’s St. Helena Tracts, 300 ; DC. Prodr. i. 350. Has. St. Helena, dry rocks, Lots ridge, Sandy Bay, and Deep Valley, Burchell, ete. Flowering i in January. f St. Helena Tea” of the colonists. Frutex 2-4-pedalis, tortuosus, ramis nodosis fuscis fragilibus gracilibus. Folia 3, poll. longa, siccitate nite carnosula, puberula, j juniora et luxu- riantia orbicularia marginibus recuryis, seniora cordata v. globosa margini- bus ad costam revolutis. Flores terminal, foliis auatto longiores, fere ¢ poll. oe subulata. arium ovoideum, 2-placentiferum ; stylus columnaris, eee stigmatibus capitatis ; ovula in quavis placenta ad 6.—J. D. OK A ied, singular species, closely allied to no other. - 2and 3. Flowers. 4. Ditto, with the petals removed. A petal. 6. ss 7. Anthers. 8, Ovary. 9. Vertical. 10. Transverse sections of ite: :—all magnified, PiatTe 1059. HEMIARRHENA PLANTAGINEA, Benth. SCROPHULARINER. HH. plantaginea » Benth. Fl. Austral. iv. 518.—Vandellia oe F. Muell. in Trans. Viet, Inst. iii. 62. Lindernia plantaginea, F, Muell. Fragm. Phytog. Austral, vi. 102. _ Has. Tropical ease Mount King, Glenelg district, N.W. coast, Marten ; between Providence Hill ace M‘Adam am Range, FP. Mueller ; Arn- hem Land, M‘Douall Stuarts Expeditio Caules e basi crassa perenni subligon erecti, tenues, simpli l- , simplices, seepe ul- trapedales, glaberrimi. Folia opposita, ad basin caulis pauca conferta fere rosulata, brevissime petiolata, ovata yv. late Pome obtusa, integerrima, gla- ICONES PLANTARUM. 47 bra, } ad 14 poll. longa, additis interdum paribus 1—2 secus caulem distanti- bus parvis “fore gt meformibus. Cau/es floriferi earterum aphylli, scapi- ormes. ores in racemum oblongum terminalem es con nferti, scap rarius ramis 2 oppositis pariter racemiferis instructo. _Pedice/di oppositi, si vissimi, glanduloso-pubescentes, bractea parva suffulti,. ties ti. segmenta 5, angusta, lineam longa, membranacea, costa intensius colorata, glandulis nonnu ullis ad utrumque latus instructa. Corolle tubus tenuis, circa 3 lin. longus,*fauce dilatata; labium superius vix lineam longum, erectum, concavum, integrum ; inferius longius, patens, in lobos 3 angustos labium superius eestivatione Ebiescie ivisum; corolla ubique textura tenuis et Euphrasiarum more venosa. Stamina 2, versus apicem tubi corolle inserta, cum lobis labii, inferioris, ene sub labio superiore ascendentia ; supe- riorum vestigia nulla. Anthere conniventes, libere, dimidiatim uniloculare, basi aristato-mucronate, rima longitudinali dehiscentes. ——— biloculare, loculis ee stylus filiformis, apice vix dilatat s, obtusus, integer. Capsula ovoidea, obtusa, calyci subeequilonga, valvis 2 Hite: s septo tenui pa- rallelis dehiscens. Semina numerosa, more Gratiolearum striata reticulataque. This curious plant is one of those instances of which the Australian flora like that of tropical Africa, has afforded several, of mono typic ot ities necting as it were large groups —suborders or even rs— whi other instances clearly and “constantly distant. The habit fruit and eds 6 of He- of the Linderniew, a tribe of Antirrhinide, where F. Mueller had originally placed it, but the form texture and estivation of Rory seg and the structure of the anthers, are characteristic of the fe cat tribe of Rhinanthidee, and unknown in Antirrhi nidee.—G. Fig. 1. Flower. 2. Corolla cut open iy rg at mies eye oneage not quite “eae 3. Stamen. 4. Ovary and style. 5. Fruit. 6. Tra of the capsule magnified. Prate 1060. CASSIA VILLOSA, Mill. Lecuminos#, Tribe CasstEz. ProsospEerma) villosa, Mill. Dict. n. 4; fruticosa, pilis stellatis to- mentoso-villosa, foliolis 3—5-jugis acuminatis, glan ) racemis pedunculatis confertifloris, legumine inter semina | come articula- C. astroites, orcas saps scion G. Don, Gen. G. Don, Gen. Syst. ii. 440. Cine et Schlecht. in Linnea, v. «59%. Syst. ii. 451. Cassia geniculata, Ruiz et Pav. i Has. Tropical America; Province of Oaxaca, Mexico, Liebmann, Andrieuz, n. 418, and others. The specimens in Miller’s and in Pavon’s herbaria pro- bably from the same province. Prutee pluripedalis, undique pilis stellatis dense villosus v. tomentosus, 48 FJCONES PLANTARUM. tomento interdum subfloccoso. Foliola 3—5-juga ovato- v. oblongo-lanceo- lata, acuminata, mollia, 1—2-pollicaria, Knees brevi obtusa v. late globoso- clavata inter paria 1-2 inferiora. Stipule setacew, caduce. Racemi axil- ; duce. t oblonga, obtusa, stellato-tomentosa , 8-33 onga. Petala obovata, vix calyce. longiora, —_— venis purpureis path. nae perfectte 7, filamentis brevibus, parum uales, 3 inferiores in rostrum breve attenuate, 4 inter- indehinventibies: Seminum funiculus breviter filiformis.—G. - Flower. 2. seni n. 8. Ovary and style. 4. The same, longitudinal section —all ot shed. 5. Fruit:—natural size. 6. One of the articles of the fruit puna, showing the seed and deli :—magnified. Prate 1061. CASSIA GONIODES, 4. Cunn. Lecuminosa, Tribe CassiEm. C. (PsitoruecMa) goniodes, 4. Cunn. Herb.—Herbacea, ‘erecta, aie v. pubescens, foliolis 2- apis lanceolatis acutissimis, glandula inter mnia paria, stipulis subulatis, pedunculis axillaribus 2—3-floris, antheris shi us perfectis, legumine glabro compresso valde sre Has. Tropical ater York Sound, Greville Island, Usborne’s Har- bour, all on the N.W. c ast, 4. Cunningham. erecta, staple simplex v. parum ramosa, glabra v. pube tenui ves alae eaule tenui angulato. Hbliola 2-3-juga, anguste v. late lanceolata, acutissima, 1—2-pollicaria, glabra v. detorienes abtie pallida v. canescentia ; be ula tenuis inter omnia paria; stipule setiformes, 1-— onge. uncult in axillis ne nese twregea nune fere filiform es, 14—2-pollicares, nunc iores 3—1-pollicares, apice 2—3-flori. _ Pedicelli 45 lin. longi. secus latera p . s, 3 inferiores ceteris paullo lo os omnes filamento suo sub- duplo ingore Legumen breviter stipitatum, glaberrimum, nitidulum, valde m v. stern fere circinatum, com compressum, immaturum jam ultra em longum, circa 3 lin. latum. Semina pluirma, obliqua, per- fecte m vidi . BENTHAM, ICONES PLANTARUM. 49 This species, allied in some sae to C, oligoclada, F. Muell., was un- fortunately overlooked at a me of making up the second volume of the uF. ustraliensis,’ Cunn Se am’s specimen, the only one then known, having been accidentally mislaid i in a wrong Fig. 1. Flower. 2. The same, back view. 3. Stamens,—ai/ magnified. 4, Young fruit, Sure Size. Pirate 1062. MACOWANIA REVOLUTA, Oliv. CoMPOSIT#. Macow: Wwania, Oliv. gen. nov.—Capitulum multifloram, heterogamum ; floribus radii uniseriatis Froulatis femineis, disci tubulosis abortu masculis. Involucrum hemisphzericum ; squame multiseriate, imbricata, ovatee v. lan- ceolate, ineequales, rigidiuscule, subscariose, intus glabra, interiores longiores lineari- vel oblongo-lanceolate, obtuse. Receptaculum leviter conve epaleaceum. Corolle radii rd Jigula late oblonga v. elliptica apice 3-denticulata; disci tubulose, 5-dentate. -Anthere ” corolla equi a u papillosus, brevissime et obtuse bilobulatus. PITTOSPORES ? Chalepoa, Hook. f. gen. nov. Flores solitarii, hermaphroditi. Calycis 5-fidi chm brevissimus, obconicus; lobi late ovati, obtusiusculi, persis yn abe: ovoidea ete parva, pods | urg ide. -S ae basi ate suf- fulta, stylo tarde ia terminata, 3-locularis, eid 3-valvis, polysperma, epicarpio coriaceo, endocarpio crustaceo, valvis m ab axi seminifero sece- dentibus. Semina parva, oblique sbeveiine. reemlati horizontalia, funiculo brevi crasso, testa crassa crustacea brunnea nitida, raphe inconspicua, teg- mine membranaceo apice ees notato, albumine carnoso et oleoso ; em minimus, cordiformis, hilo proximus, rediculn infera —Fruticulus glaberrinus, sapore duleamaro, repens, ramosus, caulibus teretibus flecuosis robustis cica- tricatis, cortice brunneo ; ramuli sureulos Epilobii revocantes, breves, adscen- dentes, detlie Soliati. Folia alterna, sessilia, crassiuscula, basi subimbricata, adscendentia, oblanceolato- v. obovato-spathulata, apice 3-crenulata. Flores parvi, in apicibus ramulorum solitarii, subsessiles v. breviter crasse pedunculati, pedunculo demum elongato, ebracteati. Capsula parva, pedunculata, erecta. C. magellanica, Hook. f. sp. unica. Has. Tierra del Fuego; Port Famine, Capt. I South Chili; Port ces lat. m1 S.,in marshy ground, Dr. Cunningham. ‘aules vage repentes, 1-3-pedales, crassitie penne corvine. Folia 34 oll. longa, carnosula, pallide viridia, siccitate pallide flavo-brunnea, superne glaucescentia v. utrinque concolora, costa nervisque paucis valde obscuris, basi angusta semi-amplexicauli, dentibus apicalibus scapehance obsoletis. Flores sessiles, ebracteati, 3 poll. diam., erecti, Samolam revoca Pe- tala calyce 3-plo lon nguors, crassiuscula, alba, basi flava. Stamina petalis dimidio breviora; anther parve. Ovarium longitudine staminum. Bacca 4-% poll. longa. Semina in loculis ad 8 My first knowledge of this most curious little plant was derived from fruiting specimens, ected about forty-three years ago, by Captain King, 66 ICONES PLANTARUM. R.N., during the pine ea voyage of H.M.S. ‘ Adventure’ and ‘ Bea These were contained in his own herbarium, which he gave me for Plies in the : Flora wierd ets I _have alluded to this plant under eed o&. S s oe = aly o > ee = © oF oF =: oO i] aad oes ° <5 QO ra) ie Ss <3 > oe 3 i) the Straits of Magalhaens, under Captain Mayne, R.N., in 1867, I Uirested the attention of my friend Dr. Cunningham, naturalist to the voyage, to this OF as affinities of this genus :T am stil very — With Diapensia (a genus Abra’ I have aaelan referred to the immediate neighbourhood of saree he n Ericee) it has nothing sige o do. Except in the hypogynous stamens, it accords fairly with poiteseton Asa Gray, Ww ps deveatt an the plant in the Kew Herbarium, suggested Pitfosporee, a perig base of the flower, and absence of torus. The fact that the “Order Pittosporee is otherwise confined to the Old World is of less value, when it is consi- dered how much there is in —— between Fuegia and New Zealand, the head-quarters of Pitlo se & eculiar be tet taste of the stems of Chalepoa is a curious cha- wishin: as ae the persistence of the seeds, which remain attached to the top of the placentiferous axis in a little shining heap, long after the fall of the valves. Dr. Cunningham’s enone gathere ed in December in full flower, Sem net cases of this.—J. Fig. 1 and 3. Flowers. 4. Stamen. 5. Pistil. 6. Young fruit. 7. Longi- tudinal ane (8) Gaswae section of ditto. 9. Unripe seed :—all magnified Prate 1083. FUCHSIA KIRKII, Hook. /. ONAGRARIER, FP. Kirkii, Hook. f.; procumbens, caule gracillimo elongato prostrato ramoso, foliis eae ionge petiolatis orbiculari- eer obseure dentatis, floribus axillaribus solitariis, ovario obovoideo, calycis tubo late campanulato bis reflexis bisa obtusis, petalis 0, Raisautin ene , stylo brevi, te parvo capitellato incluso. : isn Hew Gistaed: On ‘the beach of ¢ on a December, 1867. beach of Great Barrier Island, 7. Kirk, 1CONES PLANTARUM. 67 So similar to F. procumbens, A. Cunn. (Hook. Ie. Pl. t. 421), a by habit i i wers, how- ever, they differ widely, those of F. prostrata being much more sionate with ellipsoid ovary, narrower longer calyx-tube, lanceolate acuminate calyx-lobes, and the large capitate stigma is much exserted. At first I was inclined to Pi ea that these differences might be sexual, but I should rather regard hem as diagnostic of two reoaene species that possibly had a compa- ratively rece sat common ori gin. It is a remarkable fact that many of the Barrier Island plants differ “permanently, thonek slightly, and some ‘strongly aud specifically, from those of the oo main island, indicative of a long geographical severance.—J. D. Fig. 1. Flower. 2. The same with the calyx laid open :—doth magnified. Prats 1084. RAPHANOCARPUS KIRKII, Hook. /. CucuURBITACE. Raphanocarpus, Hook. f. gen. nov.—Flores monoici. Fl. mase. 2-5 ad apicem petioli v. ad basin laminee folii. Calycis tubus parvus, squamulis 8 incurvis fundo sitis ; lobi ovati v. lanceolati. Petala 5, libera, patentia, obovata. Filamenta 3—4, i | flexuosis ; ; connectivo angusto v. dilatato, apice non product v mentum 0. F/. fem 1-2 es a aero axillaris, v. Tarlus ae orti. Calycis lobi et “petala n g, sed minora et angustiora. Ovari elongato-fusiforme, sulcatum, oer loculo cen er ‘stylus brevis, $ a matis lobis 2 compressis rotundatis ; ovula 2, ants superiore erecto, infe- riore pendula. he airs gust, fusiformis, teres, suberosus, suleatus, pilosus, 1-locularis, 2-spermus, v. e loculis septo transverso discretis 2- locellatus. Seming is cae wae compressa, superiore erec pendulo, testa hyalina.— Herbe annua, pi ‘ostrate v. scandentes. v. orbiculato-cordata. Cirrhi indivisi, Flores flavi. Fructus Raphani Jo- mentum revocans. 1. R. Kirkii, Hook.f. ; pilosus, ba plncasccreinnd obtuse angu- latis v. 3 5-lobis, ‘cbr acutis integerrimis v. obscure dent Has. Mozambique, district of Africa, between Senna and pe ns and on the Shire, near Shigogo, Dr. J. Kirk, January and February, 1859- -3 poll. ules 3-5 ped. longi, gracillimi, angulati, flexuosi. Folia 2-3 poll. longa, fe ste sinu profun do angusto v. lato. Fl. mase. : peduncult breves, graciles, 2-flori, pilosi, bractea oblonga, pedicellis grac Bsc: lobi 4 poll. longi, ovato-lanceolati; squamulie fundo tubi breves. 68 ICONES PLANTARUM. Corolla 1} poll. diam. FF. feem.: pedunculi elongati, 1-2-flori. Fructus pollicaris, profunde sulcatus, longe rostratus, Semina } poll. longa, lineari- oblonga. most natural groups, viz. Plagiospermee, to which Momordica belongs, with horizontal ovules, and Orthospermee, with either pendulous or erect ovules (never, as in this, with one pendulous and the other erect). The con- fluence of the male peduncle wit | the petiole is unique in the Order, and axilla petiole, is still more singular. The corky fruit, often septate in the middle, ith the seed erect in the upper cell, Sing pendulous in the lower, recalls Cakile amongst Crucifere.—J. D. Hoo aa species, R. Welwitschii, will :. es in the ‘ Flora of ta Africa.’ Fig. 1. Stamens. 2. Ovary and calyx. 3. The same laid open vertically. 4. Imma- ture =asaee :—all magnified. Prate 1085. BREDIA OLDHAMI, Hook.f. MELASTOMACER, B. Oldhami, Hook. / ; fere glaberrima, foliis lanceolatis subacutis fere equilateris quintuplinerviis serrulatis, nervis 2 interioribus altius insertis, corymbis multifloris, antheraram majorum connectivo basi breviter producto. Has. Island of Formosa, near Tamsuy, R. Oldham, 1864. een ramis ramulisque suberectis teretibus. Folia 2-3 poll. longa, poll. lata, subcaudato-acumina , imo apice obtuse mucronulata, supra luride viridia, subtus pallidiora, subtilissime puberula, costis prominulis, ner- vulis transversis exilibus, petiolo stricto $—% poll. longo. Corymbi 2-3 poll. diam., ebracteati, pedunculi is pedicellisque subelongatis strictis. Flores poll. diam. Calycis tubus infundibuliformis, basi ventricosus, dentibus 4 minutis. Petala Adages acuta. Stamina declinata ; anthere majores mectivo basi infra lo ucto, apice 2-lobo, ,_miores connectivo non producto. Stylus sigmoi adbedathexias 3 D. Hooker. ICONES PLANTARUM. 69 Prate 1086. SAKERSIA AFRICANA, Hook. f. MELASTOMACER, S. africana, Hook. f. sp. unica. ro West tropical Africa; Cameroons river, Gustav Mann, January, Arbor aay setis brevibus substrigillosus, ramulis divaricatis obtuse 4-gonis. 3-5 poll. longa, firme membranacea, elliptico-oblonga, ob- pallidiora, costis ¢ werviaas transversis prominutis, petiolo } ll. pice obtusis. Flores 3 poll. breviter valide pedicellati, pedicellis basi *9 2-bracteolatis, bracteolis obtusis deciduis. alycis tubus } poll. longus, teres, levis ; = us brevis, lobis latis. Petala oblonga, obtusa. Stamina longe exserta ; antheree 3 poll. longw. Stylus curvus, 3-2 poll. longus. emina vires asieatinatnts v. cristata.—J. D. Hooxer. Fig. 1. Stamen. 2. Calyx and style. 3. Fruit. 4. Seed:—all magnified. Piate 1087. CHATOLEPIS LORICARELLA, Triana. MELASTOMACE*.. “is (ArLopesMiuM) loricarella, Triana, in Trans. Linn. Soc. xxviii. Has. New Grenada, Sierra Nevada de Santa Martha, near the snow, ¥. Purdie Jane, 1844. Frutex rigidus, robustus, suberectus, ramulis virgatis fastigiatis foliisque subtus § squamulis rigidis crassiusculis appressis imbricatis ovatis tria ngulari- busve onustis. Folia 3 poll. longa, dense quadrifariam im phe ges ovato- triangularia, subcarinata, subacuta, intus glabra concava, us squamulis serrulatis loricata, enervia. Flores ad apices ramulorum sess ae solitaria, + poll. diam. Calycis tubus turbinatus, lobique breves ,aucti squamulis dense loricati. Petala oblique sae evenes, ineequilatera, acuta, latere uno argute h oblon dentata. Filamenta crassiuscula; anthers ng, teretiuscule, obtuse, poro terminali, connectivo basi ities producto obscure tubercul - = ] A liberum, gla brum, vertice longe squamoso; stylus cmaaales: Hooker. Fig. = tages and 2, side view of leaf. 3. Flower. 4. Flower expanded. 5. Petal. 6. a 7. Calyx, — and ovary. 8. Vertical section of calyx with enclosed capsul "9, Transverse section of capsule :—all magn nified. ~70 ICONES PLANTARUM. Puate 1088. BRACHYTOME WALLICHII, Zook. /. RUBIACER. Br rachytome, Hook. f. gen. nov.— Flores polygamo-dioici, eum pedicello non articulati. Calycis tubus oblongus ; limbus cupularis, obscure 5-den- Stamina fauce corolle inserta, inclusa, filamentis brevissimis ; anthere metho dorso affix, lineari-oblonge, utrinque obtuse 2-lob tice dehis- centes, in fl. 9 valde imperfe isc rvus, annularis, in : in ularis, major. Ovarium 2-loculare; stylus filiformis, brevis, stigmatis lobis breviter oblongis se suleatis ; ovula numerosis- sima, placentis s septo peltatim affixis inserta, non immersa. Bacca parva, ellipso idea, 2-locularis, polysperma. Semina horisoutalia, conferta, pulpo non immersa, cuneata compressa, nna een reticulata, albumine carnoso 5 em- ryO parvus, su ubey lindricus.—Frutex v. arbuscula glaberrima, ramulis gra- cilibus teretibus, Volia opposita, fildioaces, petiolata, oblongo-lanceolata, caudato-acuminata, siccitate subtus irbeie ea. Stipule nila eps triangu- lares, acuminate. Flores parvi, in cymas graciles paniculatas dispositi ; cyme ex axilla folii non evoluti orte, hine quasi oppositifolie ; pedicelli graciles, basi minute bracteolati ; corolla ie B. Wallichii, Hook. /. sp. unica. Has. East Sones, Khasia Mountains, alt. 3-5000 ft., De Silva (Wall. Cat. n. 8464 and 8466), @ riffith, Hook. f and Thomson ; Eastern Himalaya, Darjeeling and Bhotan, alt. 56000 feet, Griffith (Kew Distrib. n. 2787). x Vv. arbuscula glaberrima, ramulis teretibus suberectis, — seepe Il. ran nervisque numerosis subtus prominulis. Stipule intrapetiolares, subconnate, late res Bs. copa persistentes. Cyme axillares, breves, effusee, multi- nage Seats sce pedunculis pedicellisque gracilibus, bracteis nutis, “Fl. parvi, % poll. longi. Calycis baste ee us. Co- vols subeylindrica, | lineolato-punctata. 1. feem. majores, longiores, } poll. longi. — Calycis_tubus elongato-ovoideus, Corolla sabiifandibulifornais. Bacce \onge peaiodl latee, fere 1 % poll. Din leeves, ovoiderr. Semina dense congesta, compressa, subcuneata, angulata A very distinct genus of Gardeniee, allied - —— but very distinct in the fruit and form of the corolla.—J. D. Hoo , we. I, — — > - same, with the corolla laid open. 3. acme = ovary. erry. 5. Transverse section of ditto. 6. Vertical pag of aitte s—all Bete Senate etna as ne gual, ICONES PLANTARUM. 71 Pruate 1089. COPTOSAPELTA GRIFFITHII, Zook. /. RuBiacEs. Coptosapelta Griffithii, Hook. /.; ramulis foliisque subtus malate tomentosis, foliis breviter petiolatis orbiculato-ovatis v. ellipticis apice abru attenuatis obtusis, paniculis terminalibus elongatis foliosis ser the weer v. velutinis, ramulis patentibus, calycis velutini lobis triangula lee tubo brevi fauce villosa, lobis reflexis linearibus extus sericeis, antheris elon- gatis dorso pilosis, capsulis turgidis tomentosis. Has. Malacca, Grifith (Kew Distrib. n. 2789); Singapore, Dr. 7. An- derson ‘utew ut videtur scandens, ramulis elongatis. Folia 2-2} poll. longa, once: supra glaberrima, n itida, subtus tenuiter tomentosa, nervis paucis arcuatis, petiolo + poll. longo. lipulee parvee, e basi lata in apicem obtusum contracte, ecidue Panicula v. pars ramuli florens 3-5 poll. longa, nutans ; pedunculi y. rami primarii oppositi, fere patients pollicares, validi, apice 2-bracteati, bracteis linearibus Lele 3-floris. Alabastra pollicaria, -breviter agg ion _— obtusa, Corolle faux eee sericea ; lobi line- ares, intus glaberri menta ap Bites aking basi 2- fide, flexuose, acuminate. Oy ‘ylus con stints fusiformi ; ; placentee medio septi peltatim affixee; ovula sursum imbricata. Capsula 4 poll. longa, fere globosa, calycis limbo coronata. Semina minuta, ala Seas circumdata. Coptosapelta i is a very little-known genus, allied to Cinchona, of which there — are three species known to me: the present plant; the original C. flavescens, Korthals (Stylocoryne macrophylla, Roxb. sub Weber a, Wall. Cat. n. 8405), of Borneo, Java, and Malacca, Penang, and Bullets ; and a third unde- scribed — gathered in Java by Zollinger (Iter Seeund. n. 36501).—J. . Hoo Fig. 1. india flower. 2. Stamen. 3. Inferior rae style, and nee 4. Trans- verse section of ovary. 5. Longitudinal section of ditto. 6. Capsule. . Seeds. Prate 1090. TAMATAVEA MELLERI, Moot. /. RUBIACEX. Tamatavea, Hook. f. gen Flores hermaphroditi, cam_pedicello non articulati. Calycis ‘tubus brevis obconicus v. turbinatus ; lobi 5, ovato- acuminati, rigidi, erecti, persistent Corolla late tubulosa, tubo intus fauceque glaberrimis ; limbi_ lobi . ovato-acuminati, patentes, | contorti. t p : bes 0 infra me- dium insert, lineares, utrinque obtuse. onularis. Ovarium 2- 72 ICONES PLANTARUM. — stylus crassiusculus, stigmate elongato-fusiformi sulcato cubtortos vula numerosa, placentis padi “septo medio affixis inserta, non immer json parva, ovoidea, coriacea, lobis calycis erectis coronata, Sloctingc oligosperma. Semina penta a, ee compressa, testa crassa fibroso- rec haiee suleata, albumine ca embryo . —Fru glaberrimus, sempervirens, ramulis leretinsculis,. "Folia opposita, reviter celled: oblonga, acuta, coriacea. Stipule lata, cuspidate, persistentes. Flores in fasciculos supra-avillares glomerati, pareehini “abi. 3-bracteati ; bractee late ovate, acute, persistentes T. Melleri, Hook. f. sp. unica. Has. Madagascar, apparently a common bush, especially on sandy hills near the sea, Bojer, Meller (1862), Gerrard (1866). Flowering in July and Aug rutex 4—6-pedalis, ramulis divaricatis levibus. Folia firme coriacea, 3-7 poll. longa, in petiolum angustata, abrupte acuminata, siccitate pallide fusca; costa nervisque supra subtusque gracilibus. Florum fasciculi ao supra axillas siti, oppositi, 6-8-flori; bractee rigide, late ovate, acute eaten dimidio breviores. Ca/ycis lobi ovario subiequilongi. Corolla coriacea, l.diam. Anthere }-exserte. Bacca immatura 3 poll. longa. Semina fo fere cavitatis bacce I advance this genus as new with some hesitation, because it may prove to be one of the several Madagascarian genera which are so imperfectly or incor- the small placenta, in which the ovules are not sunk ; in the stout na seeds i -limb 3. & z 2 ee ° m= wa - 5 ee fa o 5 = bi B ss 5 aa o & 5 pal) a) Fig. 1. Hie: 2, Corolla laid open. 3. Stamen. — Pistil. 5. Vertical section fed ovary. erse section of ditto. 7. Berry. 8. Vertical a of ditto. 9. Tra verse section of ditto. 10. Seed :—all but fig. 1 7 magni ssid Puate 1091. EMPOGONA KIRKII, Hook.f Rusiaceaz. kh. f. gen. nov.— Flores 8 hermaphroditi, cum pedicello non Empogona, HH: articulati. Calycis ties isieiahonk: lobi 5, parvi, saperiiti, persistentes ? i. tubus eylindricus, fauce densissime et louge barbata ; lobi 5, ovato- ceolati, reflexi, tubo equilongi, contorti. Stam a 5, ore corolle inserta ; a sessiles, reflexee, exserte, anguste linc laedscitane, dorso basi 2-lobo inserte, connectivo dorso i merassato in laciniam anguste spathulatam elongatam ICONES FLANTARUM. 13 producto. Discus annularis, depressus. Ovarium a stylus filiformis, exsertus, stigmatis lobis 2 brevibus linearibus divaricatis ; ovula in loculis ee of ius gt facie cae carnose septo peltatim aflixee immersa. icsartiates Flores arvi, — 8, browter ae io et pedicellis basi bracteatis et interdum minute b villos E. Kirkii, Hook.f. sp. unica. Has. East ake ¥ ee shores of Cape Maclear, on Lake Nyassa, Dr. J. Kirk, October Frutex parvus, ramus teretibus dense tomentosis, nodis oe sips persistentibus minutis. Fodia pollicaria, brevissime petiolata, superne tus nivediteinret tata; nervis obscuris. Stipule rigidule. lores fasciculati, 3 poll. diam., pedicellis ealyce longioribus. Corol/a ut videtur alba, fauce barba sericea dense longe exserta insigni. Anthere corolle lobis ere eequilonge, glaberrime, loculis angustis A near ally of Tricalysia, Rich. ‘eee Meissn.), Diplospora, and other genera of the Gardenieg, with axillary inflorescence and ovules sunk in the fleshy placentas, ie apparently shat from all in the ecalyculate flowers or form of the anthers.—J. D. Hoo Fig. 1. Flower. 2. Corolla laid open. 38. Anther. 4. Vertical section of ovary :— all magnified. Pirate 1092. : LEPTACTINA MANNII, Hook. f. RUBIACEZ. Leptactina, Hook. f. gen. nov.—Flores hermaphroditi, basi non articu- lati. Calycis silos elon gato-obe s, angulatus v. sulcatus; limbi 5-par- titi lobi 5, erecti, magni, ; foliacei, basi intus setis crassiusculis appendiculati, persistentes. Corolla hypocra terimorpha, tubo valde elongato sericeo, fauce villosa ; lobi 5, patentes, anguste oblongi v. lanceolati, late contorti. Stamina 5, fauci corolla inserta, inclusa ; ps ie orso medio inserte, sessiles, anguste sae utrinque subacute. Discus depressus v. tumidus. Chctiom 2-locular e; stylus filiformis, stigmatibus linearibus liberis v. connatis sub- acutis exsertis; ovula perplurima, foveolis placente septo adnate plus minusve immersa, peltata. Fructus ...—Frutices ramosi, glabri v. sparse pilosi, foliosi, ramulis teretibus. Folia opposita, majuscula v. ampla, breviter petiolata, elliptico-obovato-oblonga v. lanceolata, membranacea. Stipule con- spicue, intrapetiolares, basi connate, ample, erecta, v. recurve et quasi inflate. Flores conspicui, ad apices ramulorum fasciculati, sessiles v. breviter pedicellati, albi ?, fasciculis sessilibus v. stipitatis. 74 ICONES PLANTARUM. » Hook. f. ; ramulis validis, foliis brevissime petiolatis ellip- tico- hea ae stile: stipulis recurvis orbiculatis inflatis, calycis lobis_pollicaribus oblongo-lanceolatis subacutis, corolle tubo 3-4- pollicari, lobis 2-3-pollicaribus Has. in Stal Africa; Kongui river, lat. 1° N., Gustav Mann, Sep- tember, 18 Frutexr 12- seals robustus, ramulis levibus glaberrimis, crassitie penne natine. Folia 5-8 poll. onga, coriacea, utrinque glaberrima, siccitate Sing: nervis utrinque coste ad 9 patentibus, basi angustata acuta v. obtusa, petiolo brevissimo robusto. Stipule ramulo latiores, persistentes, 3-3 poll. diametro. Flores subsessiles, erecti, ebracteati. € lobi elongato-lanceolati, acuminati, extus sericei, intus glabri. dnthere fere ares. Stylus pilosus, stigmatibus ad apicem fere connatis. Closely allied to Randia, and perhaps referable to that popeonay genus, but easily distinguished by the calyx-lobes, corolla and s stipules. To the same na: I refer two other West African plants.— OKER Fig. 1. Portion of calyx, showing the appendages at the bases of the lobes. 2. Portion of cate laid open, showing the stigma and anthers. 3. Transverse section of ovary: agnified, L. den tiolum eres pilosum saigatatte Sasth Seivisgue subtu Sods floribus in capitulum sessile densiflorum congestis, stipulis erectis late obovatis longe cuspidatis, calycis tomentosi lobis <-pollicaribus lineari-lanceolatis acutis, corolle tubo 1-13-pollicari, lubis lanceolatis 4-pollicaribus Has. West tropical Africa ; Abbeokuta, on the Slave Coast, Dr. Irving. cena Hook. f. ; ramulis ultimis pubescentibus, foliis 2—4- s puberulis, s His. i Bence n. 893, ICONES PLANTARUM. 75 Pirate 1093. PHITOPIS MULTIFLORA, Hook. f. RUBIACES. topis, /Took. f. gen. nov.—Flores hermaphroditi, cun pedicello n Phi articulati. Calycis tubus obovoideus ; limbus campanulatus, apice ee obtuse 2—3- Sete esa P Corolla subcampanulata, limbo calycis paull —Arbores parva, hispido-villose, ramulis teretibus. Folia opposita, sessilia, obovate: e v. obovato-lanceolata, acuminata, utringue hispido-sericea v. villosa, 7" utringue 2, basi dicheta, erecta. ores mediocres, 1 pedunculatas 3-chotome ramosas dispositi, bracteati et bracteolati, albi ; bractee subspathacee, albo-virides. P. multiflora, Mook. f. ; tota hirsuto-sericea v. villosa, foliis —— petiolatis chasing apice abrupte acuminatis v. rotundatis, panicula oo ampla.— Hippotis multi, ‘fora, Benth. in Herb. pase n. oe - Peru, near Moyobamba, oe n. 1639 ; low woods on the river aes near Tarapoto, Spruce, Fl. 1855. Var. —— foliis anguste an v. oblanceolatis, panicula pauci- flora con Has. Cum priore.—Spruce, n, 4834. Arbor ramosa, 25-30-pedalis, ramulis elongatis. Folia 4-7 poll. longa, subcoriacea, basi obtusa, supra laxe hirsuta, aubtus juniora preecipue plus minusve sericeo-hirsuta v. villosa. Stipule 3—3-po icares, acute, hirsute. Panicula densiflora, see ramis primariis divaricatis foliaceo-bracteatis, bracteis albo-viridib Yores erecti, conferti, }-}-pollicares, albi, sub- odorati ; bracteola shen obtusa, caduca ; pedicelli calyce longiores v. bre- viores. Calyx 3-pollicaris, hirsutus, limbo sub-2-labiato. Corolla calycem vix superans, alba. This forms a very distinct genus, with the habit = Hippotis, of which the name Phitopis is an anagram, but differing in the contorted eestivation - corolla, which is inte in the throat, and in the mere —J.D. Hoo Fig. 1. Flow Calyx. 8. Flower, sora abe laid open. 4. Transverse section of ovary. 5, Vertical section of ditto :—ald m 76 ICONES PLANTARUM. Piate 1094. OPISTHOCENTRA CLIDEMIOIDES, Hook. /. MELASTOMACES. O. clidemioides, Hook. f. in Benth. and Hook.f. Gen. Plant. i. 749. AB. North Brazil, near San Gabriel da Cachoeira on the Rio Negro, June, 1852, R. Spruce (n. 2046). Fruticulus v. herba basi lignosa, glabra, ramulis elongatis ‘gracilibus tus i is. oll. longa, late elliptico-ovata, acuminata, membranacea, 3-nervia, nervis trans- versis laxe reticulatis, petiolo 1-2 poll. longo ; juniora late viridia, seriebus 2 macularum albarum utringue coste notata. Cyme pulverer, axillares, re. £7 ovata, acuta. Capsule apice dehiscentes, secus rachin cymze incrassatam Fig. 1. Calyx. 2. Larger stamen. 8. Smaller stamen. 4. Fruiting-cyme :—all but Jig. 4 magnified. Pirate 1095. PHYLLACANTHUS GRISEBACHIANUS, Jlook. /. RuBIACER. Phyllacanthus, Hook. f. gen. nov.—Flores hermaphroditi, cum _pedi- cello non articulati. Calycis minuti tubus turbinatus ; limbus brevis, cupu- laris, 4-lobus, persistens, lobis subulatis. Corolla cylindraceo-campanulata, a i i iu coriacea, fauce iscus annularis. arium * are; stylus filiformis, superne compressus, stigmate lineari, apice acuto meurvo; ovula numerosa, placentis 2 parietalibus 2 seriatim inserta, non immersa. cca parva, ovoideo-globosa, crasse coriacea, 1- v. 2-locularis, polysperma. Semina numerosa, horizontalia, sub-2-seriata, verticaliter com- pressa, testa crassiuscula, cellulosa, albumine dense carnoso ; embryo parvus, cotyledonibus ovatis, radicula tereti hilo proxima.—Frutex glaberrimus, aphylius, rigid ini i ICONES PLANTARUM, 77 — lateraliter compressissimis basi valde dilatatis rectis ae doh hor- ia ad basin spinarum parva, decidua. Stipule minute, transverse. Flores in axillis foliorum siti, solitarii, gracile breviter pedicellati, ut dite enduli. P. Gri sp nee rast rip J. species unica.—Catesbaa phyllacantha, Griseb. Cat. Plant. Cub. 1 Has. Cuba occid. in litore scsi Wright, n. 2655. Frutex glaberrimus, ramis ee ae rigidis uti spinis viridibus. pine eet opposite, ee ulare i lata cauli ten oe! adnate, 3-3 poll. late, dimidium ultra internodii eequante Folia minima, squamulieformia. Stipule seeks membranacez, truncate, cit capil Flores $-4 poll. longi, in axilla folii ad basin spine orti, pedicellis 2 poll. longis gracilibas. Bac cea pendula, ovoidea, crassiuscula, Q- locularis, aon tenui, v. septo retracto 1-locularis, polysperma. Semina pallida. —J. Fig. 1. Flower with the corolla laid open. 2. Stamen. 3. Pistil. 4. Transverse sitinn of berry :—ad/ magnified. Pirate 1096. BRACKENRIDGEA ZANGUEBARICA, Oliv. OcHNACES. B. Zanguebarica, Oliv. sp. nov. ; ramosissima, glaberrima ; foliis ovali- v. oblanceolato-oblongis obtusis obtusiusculisve denticulis glanduligeris rulatis tenuiter coriaceis nitidis venulosis, floribus axillaribus pedicellatis seepius umbellatim se pedicellis gracilibus flore 4—6-plo longioribus, filamentis anthere equilon Has. Dar Salam, Zanzibar, November, 1869, Dr. Kirk. Folia 14-24 longa, 2—& poll. lata; petiolus 3-1 lin. Pedicelli capil- lares, 3 poll. lon B. nitida, A. Gia (Bot. Expl. Exped. i. 362. t. 42), of om Fijis, differs in its much ‘large er coriaceous entire leaves and longer filamen I regard Brackenridgea rather as a section of Gomphia ae genus. Ochna includes species Moe dehiscence of. the anthers of both Gomphia and Brackenridgea. The ovule (I have not seen ripe seed) of Zanguebarica is remarkably curved, as in the original beaten oc a far this form may obtain in = Gomphia 1 cannot sa ER Fig. 1. Expanded flower. 2. 8. Pistil. 4. Frait with but a single lobe matured, the sepals and remains of ‘ne persisting. ; 78 ICONES PLANTARUM. Prate 1097. MAJIDEA ZANGUEBARICA, Kirk. SAPINDACER, § SAPINDEA. cata. Petala 4, esquamata, quinti sede vacua, ovalia v. oblanceolata, basi gustata, sepalis b ¢.: discus unilateralis, brevissimus, undulatus. Stamina 8, intra discum inserta, libera ; filamenta filiformia glabra, exserta; anther ellipsoide, inappendiculate, basi ari: Yu- g . fem. : yuctus lateraliter trilo- batus, coriaceus, loculicide 3-valvis, valvis medio seminiferis. Semina in loculis solitaria (v. gemina), exalbuminosa, testa crustacea i ubescente, hilo minuto exarillato ; embryo crassus, cotyledonibus carnosis contorto-plicatis. — Arbor verisimiliter. Folia alterna, pinnata, foliolis alternis glabrescentibus. Flores in paniculas terminales dispositi. M. Zanguebarica, Kirk, sp. unica. Has. Dar Salam, Zanzibar, 1869, Dr. Kirk. teretes, cortice cinerascente lenticellato obducti, ramulis foliiferis apicem versus puberulis mox glabris. Folia 5-10-foliolata, primum puberula, se ellipsoideis inappendiculatis dorso affixis bilocularibus, longitudinaliter dehis- centibus. Fructus tenuiter coriaceus, inflatus, trigonus, in valvis 3 extus pe berulis intus rubescentibus cireumscriptione late obovatis 14-11 poll. longis latisque dehiscens. Semina subglobosa, nigra, molliter velutina, }—-2 poll. diam. ly allied to Cossigyna, from which it differs in number of stamens and absence of persistent axis after separation of the fruit-valves; to Lrythro- Pphysa, differing in unisexual flowers, habit, and fruit, if the latter be correctly described in Erythrophysa with indehiscent lobes ; and to Kelreuteria, 10 which, besides the difference in habit, the sepals are valvate and the petals squamigerous.—D. OLiver. Fig. 1. Staminate flower. 2. Rudiment of ovary and unilateral disk of same. * After the late Sultan of Zanzibar. ICONES PLANTARUM. 79 PLATE 1098: STROPHANTHUS KOMBE, Oliv. APOCYNACES. - Kombe, Oliv. sp. nov.—Arbuscula v. frutex eunteas ramulis crassis scabris novellis hirsutis, foliis brevissime petiolatis late ellipticis ob- tusis apiculatis junioribus supra breviter hirsuto-scabridis subtus hirsuto- tomentosis, cymis paucifloris terminalibus hirsutis, bracteis lineari-lanceolatis saduries lobis calycinis linearibus acuminatis corolle tubo brevioribus Has. South tropical agit Zambesi-land. ‘“ Various places between the coast sna the centre of the continent above the Victoria Falls,” Dr. Kirk. Flowering in October and Roveseber sn ngan ja Hills, 2000 ft., 1861, Dr. Meller!’ Kombe Arrow-poison of the nat Our flowering specimens, although not i that could be wished, I think justify the separation of this plant from Strophanthus hispidus, DC., of West tropical Africa, one of the Arrow-poisons of Nigritania. 8. Ko ers in the few-flowered inflorescence and the narrower (linear not nacrad arin and shorter au eo eer sag not reach to the narrow sinuses of the throat of he corolla as i ispi The firmer teetinrs of the “calyx and bracts, and the early fall ‘of the latter, appear additional minor distinctions. ‘The follicles entirely correspond in the two species. The physiological ‘action of the Kombe poison, obtained from the seeds, has been investigated by Dr. Thomas R. Fraser, who includes it in the class of cardiac poisons. (Vide Proc. Royal Soc. Edinb., 1860-70, p- 99.) Dr. Meller describes the Kombe . a.” tree of 15 feet growing on rocks ;’ ; Dr. Kirk, (in Dr. Fraser’s Memoir, | — a woody climber growing in the forest, both of the valleys and hi Extremities the thickness of a seat “quill, often being scabrous from the persistent indurated tuberculate bases of the coarse deciduous hairs which clothe the annual leafy shoots ; ; much ee = the nodes. Leaves perhaps hardly fully developed in our specime 1-31 in. long, 2-23 in. broad, coarsely scabrid-hirsute above, thickly ie beneath with a paler coarse tome nae gine ap equalling or shorter than the calyx. —— lobes 4-4 in. long, —} in. broad, glabrescent within, below hirsute externally, subcori i cena from the base. Corolla paborniens or subhirsute below externally ; lobes Sane brittle when dry, probab ly i, Ovary bifid, densely hirsute. Fodlicles 3-1 ft. long, or rather longer, gla- brate, dark brown and longitudinally siriate when dry, n a above in a stout oe terminating in a subpeltate disk % in. in diameter.— OLIVER Fig. 1. —— ae open, the attenuated lobes removed. 2. Stamen, front and side view. 3. Pist . Portion of reduced follicle. ine 80 ICONES PLANTARUM. PLATE 1099. IPOM@A HABELIANA, Oliv. CoNVOLVULACES. I, Habeliana, Oliv. sp. nov. ; glaberrima, caule prostrato subtereti levi, foliis lanceolatis v. * ovalibus acutis _. ucronatis basi obtusiusculis v. cuneatis leviter undulatis membra , hervo crassiusculo _—_— lo, pedun- culis axillaribus 1(—2 ?)-floris folio ) > beardr — sepalis inzequalibus ovato- oblongis obtusis exterioribus ‘bees ribus, corolla alba calyce 4-5-plo longiora infundibuliformi tubo longo, staminibus exser tis Has. On inland rocks, Hood Island, iene Dr. Habel! Folia 4-6 poll. longa, 1-2 poll. lata; petiolus 3-1} poll. Pedunculus 1-14 poll., ee = poll. Sepala interiora ¢ poll.; corolla 3-3} poll. longa.—D. Out Fig. 1. Corolla = open. 2. Detached stamen. 8. Ovary. 4. Stigma. 5, Trans- verse section of ov: Puate 1100. PASPALUM BURCHELLII, Munro, mss. GRAMINEX. - Burchellii, Munro, mss. in Herb. Burchell. Bras. n. 6844; an- nuum ; culmo erecto glabro (4-10 poll.), foliis linearibus attenuatis vagi- nisque "patentim pilosis, racemis (}—$ poll. longis) 4-5 alternis distichis inter- stitia seepius longioribus falcato-recurvis, axi partiali membranaceo-alato spiculas obvolvente, fronte septulo rominulo angusto alternatim pedicellos 2-fidos geniculatos setigeros emittente, spiculis imbricatis sub-2—3-serialibus plano-convexis, gluma vacua —— fl. neutro, awct.) plana hy: sos oblanceo- lato-oblonga, exteriore (gluma superiore, auct.) deficiente, gluma florigera concava extus tuberculata, palea infra medium late udupican Has. Near Goyaz, Dr. Burchell ! In general habit approaching P. falciferum, Trin., in the absence of empty oe P. Gardneriarum, Nees in Kew Journ. Bot. ii. (1850) 103.—D. LIVE Fig. 1. Raceme. 2. Spikelet closed. 3 and 4. Same laid open. 5, Genitalia. andra Mannii aie foxibunda, Oliv. \lsodeiopsis M \lsophila Rebec: : ingelica bracteata, Roxb. \nona Mannii, Oliv bs ‘en kk Be et em be \rceuthobium cryptopod hellii, Hx. utinosus, Roxb. : iferus, Hk. nc dipterocarpa, F. Mf. . Becaclie portulacaefolia, Roch. ‘ eae aioe J ] bg ytome J Buttonia natalensis, i ‘Ken. Cassia astroites, C. - eee —— crassiramea, genic cult, it: pest oe ina a Catesbeon sayilncantiag: Grist, * Catospermum Muelleri, Chameefistula astroite haunochiton loranthoides, Bth Chomelia (?) sandvicensis, r dendron gummife DC. spurt, ee Conyza rugosa. Coptosapelta rAd Korth. —— cae oe Hk. f. Coursetia erian’ 4% ohne, Bik. fs Dampiera — Lb ey ——— biloculata, F. M. “aha alyx eynometroides, Oli. = ng. INDEX. —+-— Plate ‘age 1039 oe peta De. 19 1004 piphyllaides, Vr.. 19 1008 dleyi, D . 19 1015 ata, D feet pars “* Vr. Pee A 1010 Dasylepit lepis racemosa, Oliv. 21 1066 1037 | Echinocalyx 11 Ellipeia cuneifoia, J Hk. bf and T. 18 1057 | Empogona Kirkii, #. 72 1056 | Euosmia corymbosa, 55 1078 | Frankenia Beatsonia, Behe. Se. 24. B lacifolia, Spr. . 46 1014 Fuchsia Ki — Hk. fo 66 umbens, A.C. 67 1069 1038 | Ge foliosa, Oliv. . 60 1088 Gonphrena F caches: Oliv. . 58 1096 | Guilandina Wallichiana, Grab... 11 1085 1080 | Haastia Saber dike Js - inc | Hectorella pre age 2, if : is 35 1063 | pe fms arborea, 23 ie! miarrhena ab pt “Bth.. 46 1061 | He rome cere! 1 1060 | Hetero nigricans, Hk. f. . 16 | Hippotis mmultifore ae 75 1028 Hydrolythrum W: allichii, Hk. f. 6 1087 | 1082 Ipomoea Habeliana, Oliv. . . 80 1005 ae oe - 16 “Kir acuminata, Oliv. 26 | —— poorer. 7 44 este parr. DC... 42 | = Pladaresyia, End 42 | _________ prenanthiflora, Breh. 41 1089 | Lainpeolobinm Piioma WAS. TT | arborea, Fors. . a 1065 Pitas Chap. Lepidostephium are A ae 22 1027 Leptactina ee a 74 Peet eS Saas erata, Hk. S. 74 1030 82 INDEX. Page Plate | Page Plate os soci Mannii, Hk. f. ... 73 1092 | Polyura geminata, Hk. f.. . . 37 1049 — Sen negambica, Hk. f. 74 Pygmea ciliolata, Hk. f. . . . 35 1047 Lichtensteinia Burchellii, Hk. f. 24 1033 osipanea Paine Hk, f. -. 38 Ranunculus limoselloides, F. M@.. 64 1081 burgkii, Hk. f. 31 Raphanocarpus Kirkii, H%. f. . 67 1084 Spruceana, Hk. f.. 388 1050 | ——————— PR idelihomae H. f. 68 Lindernia plantaginea, F. M. . 46 Rhodomyrtus macrocarpa, Bth.. 32 1043 Taquidambar idambar Formosa, Hance. 14 1020 | Rytidotus sae sabto Hk. foo OT: 1008 , Ast, . I orie ntalis, til. 13 1019 cae Africana, Hk. f.. . . 69 1086 styraciflua, L. Arg 2 Sceev la goodeniacea, FM... 20 Lobopogon er sekiceane BORE ee OOO Sahin eea Sprucei, Hh. f. Mere ceme 11) Zi: Lysicarpus ternifolius, F.M@.. . 32 1042 | Schradera rage: Spr. . see yor — ta, Spr. . . 55 Maco wania revoluta, Oliv. . . 49. 1062 | Sclerolen aces radoxa, Br. 61 1076 Majidea Zanguebarica, Kirk. . 78 1097 | Senecio Fa coctwiednbet: Bolus. 54 1067 Me odendron integrifolium, DC. 34 1045 eolifohus, M‘0 3 «1011 Mellissia begonifolia, Hk. f.. . 16 1021 Silvianthus bracteatns, Hk. cf 36 1048 oT ts ca Sindora Wallic 11 1017- thum, Hk. f. : ; 25 1034 | Sipania limnophil tote 2 ai | Mikania arb a, Seem. . 38 Monococeus shiek aia; F.M. 61 1077 | Sium ete ia m, Hk. f. 23 1032 i Solidago 0 Leweadendron, Foret 42 Nesiota elliptica, Hk. f. . . . 39 1062 | ———— ; Spilenthes t ri ran ry Red. sy a SO Obbea timonioides, Hk. f.. . . 66 1070 | Stachyarrhena spicata, Hk. f. . 54 1068 Poon ee ? —- minata, Wail. 37 Stenanthera ericoides, F. M.. . ) a Hk. uf 76 1094 cs ae en Oliv 1098 Sows susan ta, F 31 1041 | Stylocoryne phylla, 2 Roxb... 7 Styphelia lohopoyann, F ; oe Lu ee S 1009 zia Matthewsii of ag eo yk 2008 Paspalum B 1100 Seber Tac Kirkii, Oliv... . 69 1074 Petrobium shore, ene io 1053 maceum aci ae 1035 | Tamatavea Melleri, Hk. f. . . 71 1090 Phstonsk m ultiflora, ra, Fe ve saan 7 1093 | Tepesia dubia, Gert. . pee Phylica ee, Roads. Tetralopha Motleyi, Hk. f. . . 57 1072 oe ima, DC. - 89 1051 | Thamnea depressa, Oliv. . . . 9 1012 rosmarinifol lia, Roxb... ea 5) ——— hirtella, Oliv. soy Phyllacanthus Grisebachianus, ——_—— uniflora, Sol. var. . . 9 1013 1095 | Traversia baccharoides, Hk. f. 2 1002 Pha lpotison Kh Krebsian um, Bth. 63 1079 Sas ysalis in, Backs: ' 15 Vandellia plantaginea, F. M. . Pladaroxylon Leucadendron f. r 1055 ee Pleurocarpea denticulata 1006 | Xanthostemon chrysanthus, F.M. 30 1040 PRINTED BY TAYLOR AND CO., LITTLE QUEEN STREET, LINCOLN’S INN FIELDS. F s/\ Exh ‘] Wz a fd: 4 ee “: A) = Wy The ons, A SE Sx a: 2 4 Le Ss ZK ;. * Vy NaN Sr re aS (Yj \\ ay — = a) OS 5 a J.N. Fitch mp. W Bitch del. et. hth. Hermas villosa, [hand FL 1002 M W. Fitch del et hth. wv : \ CU AN, SN NW sea vf HAS AA RADY 2 SNE ieee van = Traversia baccharoides, Ak. f. i j f { Syeee / a iy We MD t J.N. Fitch, imp. Lt.1003. es a = @ ta = | a he 8 = a a ae J.N Fitch; W Fitch, del. et. hth. - Haastia Sinclar, Hk ft Allanblackia flonbunda, Mu Lt LUE. W Fitch, del et ith. Pleurocarpea denticulata, Benth. -‘W Fitch del et hth. Hydrolythrum Walhchn, Hk. f ; i i Fl. 1008. JN Fitchimp. W Fitch, del. et ith. Alsodeiopsis Mannii, Jlw. Oe Te al ee ee et ee ee oe oe eee, ata tw a LU. 1009 JN Fitch imp W. Fitch, del. et.lith. Pachycladon Nove-Lelanhiz, 4k. * J.N. Fitch Tarp. W Fitch, det et.ith. ee ia ieee ee) ge te eee Ol. Anona Mannn, W Fitch, del et. hth JN. Fitch, imp Senecio tropzeohfohus, M°U : LtLOLE, ZED PSs SLI A ah a = tet in PEON Ame tbincascimmnne rc ere Py bo A SAE ag? & # IN. Ritchmp V:Fitch, del.et hth. Thamnea depressa, Olw. LULMG. I/ N Fitch, ump. J W Fitch, del et Lith. Thamnea uniflora, Sol var lirtella. /Oki J Lt. 1Ul4 x Nyy) ‘e iN a aoa ay tH oh RaW Bae o 4 Ld oe 4, ¥ xt if We ss ne a pit hs an i : f Rts 7 oe o ZL &e o Oh KB By a? SA 5 ‘ . We ice yy y Sh & we ly his , ase . rte tS ory ys, LS S sn Wee: RY : ¥ if ‘ ARN " vee Y x a ‘ Le oe ED, Asie Pi xe a OK nah By AD. SN oe aii “F 36 ts iF A WN Re } A Mid ytd RAG Sah Ny BAS oe SY o inthe haat “ NY fon fo 4 x oe eat en 2 e, % ry W Fitch, del et.lith iNEtdaap Berzelia (Mmiothamnea) callunoides, Jw Lt. LUG v iy Tes a ‘pe del et ? W fitch Alsophila Rebeccdé, FI. th. eee ee ee ee Se aol a a ON ioe ik ae A ae FULME. ee Simamnrag yg lt repeat sib phy pip Aekeata ree in i see KLM NE SUBUES ALLS J.N Fitch,imp. t dith. W. Kitch, del. Schizdea Sprucei, Ak. FUL? ene Sindora Walhchu, Zen. W.H Fitch, del. et. th. J.N Fitch,imp. Sindora Walhchi,Zenizn. eee eT ee, og pecs | oss a) f Pes ae ee eae A ASA or) \ J b yo WH Fitch delet Lith liguidambar orientahs, Mill. Lt. 10£0. a [N Fitch imp. J Jp ify we ‘ P \ A \ fi cacao a [eS PO “t ioe, BSS AF a W.H Ritch delet hth. ee ae liqudambar Formosana., Hance. Di hate nenieteeieamemte mettre renee TT oT W.H Fitch delet ith | JN Fitch imp. : Physalis begontifolia, Roré. Hock, fil.anal Fitch hth Heteroneuron nigricans, 4k.f oe Beenie eee eens Hook fil. anal. Fitch,delet bth. J.N.Fitch,imp. Kaliphora madagascariensis, Zk.¢ ee Ee RE ar es) Ss ape enee IN Atchimp. W. Fitch, ddl. et-hth. Lamprolobrum fraticosum, Bzh. BS = me t eet rec atiod Elhp eia cuneifoha, ZAf. £0 Dampiera trigona, Delr Coe Vb a. UN Ritch imp. Dampiera alata, Find. WH Fitch, del.et.lith. eT ese eee oe nT ee a eee ee a is 5 - i . ire a zs W.H Fitch delet hth. ~ Catospermum Muellen, Benth. LULOLG ae x ‘ *s 4 o™ b OM . ay = a ‘ ., % h 3 r, \ A My . * ie e Ay wi oS ‘ “2 *. 7 ‘ 3 5 ; Mi, \ i. * * _ 4 7 i “ ry ‘ — rie < a. rf eee : a Rene Re S| ‘ H ms “ete J 4 t wy A | 4 se | Da j "I s, a jy \ Ee Use Soe, JN. Bitch, imp. W H Fitch del et hth. Dasylepis racemosa, Vly. Lepidostephrum denticulatum, Ok W.A Fitch, del. et ith, pee ee Seen Se ee FLI031 D* Burchell, del. Fitch hath. JN Fitch, imp. Hedyotis arborea, ord ee ke eee ae ae ee ee LULOFR. IN Fitch imp. a>. mo 8) SEN eas 4 ~~ t (em Siam Helemanum, Gi Fal eM ) . WH Fitch,del et ith Ee iG on it Mia) AT ee i \7 ie nt Mw oe Ny xe KE/ y ee a ye. Mh Ny Wi ad WY Ss Vex : ‘J SS LZ “gs i A) LEN bane ti w : . “h Nile sh HO ps N i! ae LX NS 2 Ss as WEtanp. W H Ritch del et .hth. Tachtenstemia Burchelln, #k.f gs ied, 2 a WE me te Re Ona fet BPR RSE SEO erat Pea Por PSH RM Ne Mey I LU. 1034 pe Dien teresa ) j 4, : 2 "3 s : * \) Y 4 , ty 3 id ¥ SS oe Se Bm 7H . Bf vig ., At Mesembryanthemum cryptanthum, kf WH Rich del et-hth LU.L0I 95. JN. Fitch,imp. - Pharnaceum acidum, Af WHAtch del et hth: LU. 1036. Py rae if. sf A (‘F y ee PAY \) ‘ 4 . \\ a. ean oe a A / if ee lj Y if” é Y < Se \ : J oe _ eee eres nessa eesti ta ns aan iinet tetent i nee cain WH Hitch, del et ith Kirkia acummata, Jw. oo SOS SOM, Sh heats . WH bee OD. (4 ae.) Le f) % Ky IX \ | D.0.del Fitch, ith IN Hitch imp. Arceuthobmum cryptopodum, fing. LU 1036. J.N.Fitch imp. Brachyloma ericoides, Sona@er W.H. Fitch, del et-hth Adinandra Manni, Jz. PUI040. Xamthostemon chrysanthus, F Mae. ith. » WH Fitch, del et LU.L0H. =<) Sao es => rng —— : ie & SS \ . mar sad ‘ — i ta ee SESS vg JN Hitch imp. Osbornia octodonta, F Muell. WH Fitch, del.et.hth LULOFA. fa as ¢ Dee A DQ ~P i IS) AEA Ihe Ww ) pacer S Sy e327 3a\\) GRAY? = Ne nS TR Za 5 ey \ WH Fitch, del et Lith Lysicarpus temifolius, / Med. W.H Fitch, del et hth. Rhodomyrtus macrocarpa, Benth. rar _ ea 4 bP i rf 4) C % > = $A W.H Fitch, delet Lith. Leitnena Flondana, Chap. Mata = See. Se ¥ 4 . M “Phntinaepe De WR i at eseren \ 8 “4 EOS om ne ‘ ——= sees : a alte ie i "ae Pak , “ges eee ant a JN Fitchimp. W.H Fitch, del. et. lth. Melanodendron inteénfolum, J.C. itn 477 pin Pi lS - = EU A oT On en ae JN Fitch imp. WE Fitch, del et hth. Hectorella caespitosa, Hk.f FU.1047 WH Fitch delet. ith Pyémaea alvinanis, Hk.f. L JN Fitch mp. — Some W.H Fitch, del et. hth heen Fe ee oe STIG Se ae ee, en Let Te a em Silvianthus bracteatas, Hh. SE Te Oar ne ee ee \ at, WY e < L), YH ee V7 XY) SC >, ‘ me SY =caN N ENG Ee ‘ del. et.hth. : a Polyura gerninata, Hk. Nii) \ ey a ’ if Thy! ii W.H Fitch delet hth It Bike. Limnosipanea Spruceana, Ak.f * WH Bitch,del.et.lith JNEichion Phylica. ramosissima, DC. 3 PLO52.— JN. Fitchimp. Nesiota elliptica, Hook. ti. ‘WH Fitch del et. Lith. PO Hoe RRA) RIA id WH. Fitah. del. et-lith. . Fetrobium arboreum, 2. Sr J.N. Fitch imp. WH Fitch, del et ith | J.N Bitch imp Lachanodes prenanthiflora, Avch. FUSE / ff f i ‘a f ‘4 r f > ie ‘ nr eccidbiameghensent or Oe % fiw; Soe Pe a 7 7 at i ¥ z J.N Fitchimp. . WH Fitch del et. bth - Pladaroxylon leuc adendron, Auk. fi. WH Fitch. del. et Lith | TN Bitch inp. : Aster gummiferus; Hoare Til, 4 Alls NN ‘ WH Fitch, del et lith. Aster glutinosus, fax ee ODS Gs SB Jo > elian 9 ap a ra TES ease pete: 4 BB BOY (ey 4 UW D0 VE OLAS ivf (AC ae "WH Eitsh. delet. Tith. JN Fitah, tulacifolia, rag Frankenia por FON Sane nS W.HFiteh, del. et. lith. J NEitch, imep. Hemiarrhena plantaginea, 4a, JN Fitchirmp, Cassia villosa, Mu. WH Fitch, del et. lith. mR ee JNEthion WE Fitch del. ot Lith Cassia goniodes, ACunz. Ne TRIN i WN, AS Wai “4a - p ff A A meen ge ET —— a W.H Fitch del et lith. INERchimp Macowania revoluta, Uy : WH Fitch del et. lith , Barth. Cassia crassiramea FL 06E. Swartzia Matthewsii Aacth. Sg oe eae ON a rod ee SET IP afatte fee ln, Me PSY ME Ens a aa oe ee ene Baa Ae me) kT PN aye eee at Ann po oe oh eae Se el eee ale =u ~ : i “+ ery: iy ie | WH Fitch del et ith J. N. Fitch imp. Coursetia orbicularis, Bath. —PL1WE piaZ Se a ce a ae Ze Ca iso Sevres J WEtchimp Aphano i ers aa Lt. L067 sneeuwbergensis, 4 Lol. Senecio W.H Fitch,del et.lith = Re 4 ef Lee ra j w 4 Fi Lae Saey ; { LX ae D S2en va fs A \_ SF WH Fitch, del, et-lith. Stachyarrhena spicata, Hook. fil 7, RRS ie AE - > ? : WH Fitch, del et Lith | Bish crus INE Bothniospora corymbosa, 40%. iz. LULOVA W H Fitch, del et ith. JN. Fitchimp. Obbea. Timonicide s M0k. Tl: WH.Eiteh del et.lith JN Fitch imp. ; Rytidotus Sandvicensis, 40h fl © — JN Kitch imp. Tetralopha Motleyi, oot. 72 WH Fitch, del et. hth. ; ane ONL, sca RS wi ‘ Sd ee ; GSTLS & oz N <) oO, ON, ae 7. Ay : i: = aw OA OSIND Sie iH AV Df WH Fitch del et hth. , Gomphrena Lear cel Wey, i i é < a i eae eh, Synaptolepis Kirkii, “lz. TW euch Gerrardina foliosa, Jkv 2 W. HFitch del. et. lith. LU LUE. WH Fitch, del. et ith. YN Etch imp. Sclerolaena paradoxza, 457 Ree pt OAR TT ere ee WH Fitch del. et ith. | JN Fitch imp. Monococcus echinophorus, EM. oN SV M4 ) | wi N Sy SA Vi \ >) o> Y/ ey, 3 MY ava ANY} .# YA. as er oe ay A 3 SONY "4 J.N-Fitch, del. et Iith, J.N.Eitch imp. Babbagia dipterocarpa, 7 UL Alig 3\ » <> y - ee 7 oF i, Imp. Wel. Fitch, del et bth. Phyllopodium. Krebsianum, Dé/. W.H Fitch, del et. ith. JN Fitch, imp. Buttoma. natalensis, M/°Aer, | TE 9 RO eS ST gC een PP NE aan eRe W. Fitch, del. et lith. : JNEtehimp. « Ranunculus limoselloides, CG 2k eee W.H Etch del et‘hth. JN Fitch imp. Chalepoa magellani ca, ALF eis Korku, Hk z tohamep W.H Fitch, del et tith. IN gid a: Raphanocarpus Miri, Hk f TANG ee. eS A\ «> Wo s @ : WO) TY \ er ak A roe re . W.H Fitch, del. et. ith J. N. Fitch ump. Bredia Oldhami, Arf ant Ww) ~S , y PI 1086. e WH Fitch, del et. ith. Sakersi1a africana, Hh F FU. L087. W. H Hitch del et. ith Chaetolepis loricarella, /rvana. J. N.Fitch, imp. WH Fitch, del et. hth Het chi Brachytome Walh LLLOEY JNEHtchimp. .- WH Fitch, del. et ith. Coptosapelta Griffith, = WEE Ertch, del. et ith. . Tamatavea Melleri, Zk. f J NEtch,omp. as AR er 2 W. H Fitch, del et. ith. Ge d ith Empogona Mirkin Let ith TNFitch. imp Leptactina Manni, 7 i — pe — tle ot — eet eee q a paar” ae é é i i | if ts Ragemonenenre Danie f rd ea g : A a $ P ie, a \ ~~ = WH Fitch, délet ith Phitopis multiflora, Ake fe FLL Opisthocentra clidermoides, ALF JN Etch imp WH Fitch del et ith Phyllacanthus -Grisebacmanus, 47 F, / i Yy \ BiH ; az Li WHbitch daletlth, JN Fitch, imp. Brackenridgea zanguebarica, Uy, Fa WH Bitch, del et.lith. - Mapdea zangueébarica, Av itch, del et. th. WH w ‘Strophanthus Kombe, Hv WH Fitch, del et. lith. Ipomaéa Habeliana, OLY. LUHOO.: Ti tacaee “WH Hitch del et ith Paspalum Burchelln, Munro