HOOKER’S ICONES PLANTARUM; FIGURES, WITH DESCRIPTIVE CHARACTERS AND REMARKS, OF NEW AND RARE PLANTS, SELECTED FROM THE KEW HERBARIUM. FOURTH SERIES. EDITED FOR THE BENTHAM TRUSTEES BY SIR WILLIAM T. THISELTON-DYER, K.0.M.G., C.LE., LL.D., Sc.D., M.A., F.R.S. HONORARY STUDENT OF CHRIST CHURCH, OXFORD; DIRECTOR, ROYAL BOTANIC GARDENS, KEW. VOL. VIII. OR VOL. XXVIII. OF THE ENTIRE WORK. Part I. 2701-2725, September 1891. Part II. 2726-2750, May 1902. Part III. -2751-2775, November 1903. Part IV. 2776-2800, January 1905. DULAU & CO. 37 SOHO SQUARE, LONDON. 1905. VOL. VIII—PART IJ] t— (SEPTEMBER. HOOKER’S [CONES PLANTARUM; FIGURES, WITH DESCRIPTIVE CHARACTERS AND REMARKS, OF NEW AND RARE PLANTS, SELECTED FROM THE KEW HERBARIUM. FOURTH SERIES. EDITED FOR THE BENTHAM TRUSTEES BY SIR WILLIAM T. THISELTON-DYER, © K.C.M.G., G.LE., LL.D. M.A. F.B.S. HONORARY STUDENT OF CHRIST CHURCH, OXFORD DIRECTOR, ROYAL BOTANIC GARDENS, KEW. VOL. VIII. OR VOL. XXVIII. OF THE ENTIRE WORK. DULAU & CO. 37 SOHO SQUARE, LONDON. 1901. Pl 2701 ~ _ ~~ i NS “y rae eS ba’ aes 7 WN ' Se XA \ a 2 : oe eae sey AS. 4 A 3 ’ M.S. del et ith Puate 2701. HEMICYCLIA PORTERI, Gamble. EupHorBIACE®. Tribe PHYLLANTHE. H. Porteri, Gamble (sp. nov ) ; H. | — ohn quoad folia similis : meri, Thwaites, foliis integerrimis acuininatis, floribus pienid distincta Arbor parva vel frutex 20-30-pedalis, dioica, ramulis pallide fulvis lenticellis multis albis ornatis. Foliabreviter petio ata ete acuminata, coriacea, integerrima, apice retusa, 2-3 poll. longa, 1-1} poll. lata, basi inequalia, supra nitida, glabra, subtus reticulata, glabra vel secus ostam glandulis aureo-tomentosis ornata, venis primariis lateralibus r curvatis prominulis utrinque 5-6. Flores masculi 5-7 lin. diametro, in ramis infra fol ] in axillis foliorum fasciculati, pedicellis 3-4 lin longis, ad basin bracteis minutis munitis e noti ala a intus etiam precipue secus nervos ee pire 0 Sere -—25, glabra, circa discum centrale argine um affixa, filamentis 4 lin. longis, sachet eae sarki Senoibadtiratitix ‘deliscanti bus Inp1a: Warsanad Valley, ine an District, Madras, at about 2,000 feet, H. J. Porter, April 18 This small tree is found growing gregariously in moist soil near to have been con one tes is used for posts and rafters, and much esteemed.—J. S. Gams . 1, a flower-bud showing estivation ; 2, andrecium and disc; 3, anthers. All PP hai ed, SERIES IV. VOL. VIII. PARTI. B Pt 2i02 Ww, Ws AC VY 4 Ps p Wr <—> CRY fhe iS wy WS St es = = fy =p ~~ p F } RT ey CTY } (I) of TREN: eve Puate 2702. CHISALPINIA ROSTRATA, JN. £. Brown. Lecuminosm. Tribe CaH¥sSALPINIE®. C. rostrata, V. HL. Brown (sp. nov.) ; species ab omnibus hucusque sngeteae sepalo inferiore rostrato distinctissima. oe secingrorete 8- pedali s. Rami aculeati, cortice cinereo ; ; ol]. longi, mul ri. actee caduce, submembranaceex, orbiculate, a. emarginate, aristate, profunde concave, Tubree, | puberule. n. longi brunnee, polline ium ovatum, compressum, 6-ovulatum, glabrum ; stylus Bitten filiformis. Legwmen 14 nec longum, 10 lin latum, oblongum, oblique truncatum, turgidum, glabrum South Arrica: Figured and described from specimens of a plant cultivated in the Botanic Garden, Durban, Natal, raised from seed received from Delagoa Bay, Wood, 7934. This species differs from all the others ie present known in having the lower sepal very distinctly beaked. r. Wood states that it has not yet perfected seed at Durban.—N. E. pasied Fig. 1, ra are bract from base of pedicel ; 2, flower-bud ; 3, upper petal; 4, a lateral petal ; 5, cium; 6, lower portion of andreecium and gyneceum in section ; 7, pod. Pull peter 7 enlarged Pl 2708 Sy WOR aNe teu PuLaTeE 2703. LEPINIA SOLOMONENSIS, //emsi. APOCYNACEA, L. solomonensis, /Zems!. (sp. nov.) ; species quam L. taitensis, Decne fere omnibus partibus major, foliis abrupte acuminatis, coroll tubo breviore. Arbor usque ad 15 ped. alta (Comins), ramulis floriferis crassis, novellis glabris. Folia alterna, petiolata, coriacea, oblonga vel oblongo- lanceolata, cum petiolo 4-8 poll. longa, 14-2 poll. lata, abrupte primariis numerosissimis rectis tenuissimis. Pedunculi oppositifolii, quam flores breviores, apice furcati, pauciflori, pedicellis brevissimis crassis rigidis. lores vix pollicares, Calycis segmenta parva, ovalia, = ; ; ; ; nfra faucem inclusa, filamentis brevibus puberulis. Ovariwm glabrum, 4-loculare, loculis uniovulatis, sty io incluso. Fructus s carpella : A aaades interdum 3), uno sepe casso, | tipitata, apice tantum connata et cruciatim cits cum stipitibu us usque 8-9 poll. longa, monosperma, parte seminifera circiter sesquipollicari, indehiscentia, demum fibrosa. Semina in quoque carpello solitaria, fusifurmia vel oblonga, in longitudinem sulcata, transversim rimulosa, testa tenui ; albumen corneum ; ventre fer e ad m edium impressum ; embryo rectus, tenuis, fere cylindricus, cokbialensbaa radice brevioribus. hier aay Pics Cristoval, &. B. Comins, 132; chiefly New gia, Officers H.M.S. Penguin, 1894-5 (fruit associated with oe of Corhaas ; ealeat locality, W. Micholite. Specimens of this singular plant were first sent to Kew in 1890 by Archdeacon Comins, and it was thought it might be the ori;zinal and only described species, L. taitensis, Dene., which is not represented by an authenticated specimen at either Kew or the British Museum. The species inhabiting the Society and Solomon Islands are certainly very closely allied, but there are differences which seem to justify separating them rather than risk combining two under one name. The distribu- tion of ‘the genus is remarkable, “for, so far as I am aware, it ‘sam not been found between Tahiti and the Solomon Islands, which are separated by 50° of longitude, equal to about 3,300 miles in the lati- tudes of these islands.—W. Borrinc HemsLEy Pik Be , a flower-bud ; 2, a a Paras — — of corulla laid open, gil achment of stamens ; 4, a ri eed; 6, a section of the sam 7. pon ryo. dl except 4 and 3 ts a PL 2704 ts rie a WE: = uf Le. a SED ~ Fig ay (heh Y= > PAN Ian Ve ai vas el A ry ae vy Ay nai Piate 2704. CUSCUTA HYGROPHILA, 1. H. W. Pearson. CONVOLVULACE®. C. (§ Eugrammica) Hygrophile, YW. H. W. Pearson (sp. nov.) ; C. chinenst, Lamk., affinis, sed calyce haud carinato, calycis lobis obtusis- simis vel rotundatis, squamis multo minoribus differt. Caules filiformes. Spica compacta, umbellata, umbellulis 5-6 breve pedunculatis paucifloris instructa. Flores globosi, 1-1} lin. diametro. an incluse, }—} lin. longe. Ovarium globosum, apice fovea alta lataque instructum, siyli 2 (rarius 3) subulati, subequales, ovario breviores ; stigmata capitata, leviter lobata. Capsula obconica, apice alte de- pressa, 1—2- (rarius 3-) sperma, circ. 1 lin. longa. Semina subangu- laria, complanata, minutissime tuberculata, 4 lin. diametro. - Matay Peninsuta : State of Johor ; Johor Bahru, Ridley, 9161. ns group Obtusilobe, which, like the other divisions of the Australian C. australis, R. Br., from which it is easily distinguished by its dry fruit, fewer and more flattened seeds, smaller scales, and finer stems. This is interesting as being the first species recorded tee cos Malay Peninsula, no specimens having hitherto been received a m the country to hoe er and south of the Khasia Hills aid Silhet.—H. H. W. Pear Fig. 1, calyx and pistil; 2, corolla, showing also the scales and stamens; 3, cap- sule surrounded by corolla and calyx; 4, different views of seeds. All enlarged. PL 2705 PLaTE 2705. VITEX MOOIENSIS, H. H. W. Pearson. VERBENACESH. Tribe VITICER. V. mooiensis, H. H. W. Pearson (sp. nov.); a speciebus africanis omnibus panicula terminali pialuio guia: Arbor humilis, ramis subangularibus sulcatis glaberrimis vel novellis minute puberulis. Folia opposita, rarius subopp , simplicia, membranacea, elliptica vel ov basi cuneata, apice obtus a vel subacuta, marginibus integra vel rarius ad deitate: serrata, glaberrima vel rarius in nervis te pubescentia vel scabrido- minu pubescentia, venis primar os lateralibus undulatis utrinque 3-5 patenti- adscendentibus distinctis, 3-1 poll. longa, 5-7 lin. lata, petiolis tenuibus glabris 2 -3 lin. longis, su a ta. me |—3-flore, edunculis 3— eat id — = S # , oppositis minute pubescentibus instru ; bractesz: lineari-subulate, circa 1} lin. longe. Flores breviter “pedicellat, “albidi. Calyx per anthesin subcampanulatus, ad medium subequaliter 5-sectus, glandu- losus, minute puberulus, prominenter nervatus, 2-2} lin. longus, mox paulo accrescens ; segmenta oblonga, subacuta, 4-3 lin. lata. Corolla subbilabiata, 4 lin. longa; tubus brevis, curvatus, extus obscure uberulus, intus supra medium villosus, circa 2 lin. longus ; labium b glo tenuis, glaber, apice ‘brovicer bitidus. Drupa pyriformis, glabra, e calyce paulo accrescente exserta, 3 lin. longa, 15-2 lin. lata. //, 4. W. Pearson in Dyer, Flora Capensis, v 212. Soutn Arrica: Natal ; near the Mooi River, Gerrard and McKen, 1238. Var. Rudolphi, H. H. W. Pearson (var. nov.). Rami novelli pukescentia fulva vestiti. Folia verticillata vel opposita, pubescentia, petiolis pubescentibus suffulta. Calyx =p pubescens, dentatus, tubus 1-14 lin. longus ; dentes circa } lin. long 2 Soutn Arrica: Delagoa Bay; Ressano Garcia, in stony places, R. Schlechter, 11935. This species is the only known African member of the group Terminales. It is undoubtedly related to Premna somaliensis, Baker. It is however here placed in Vitex on account of its 5-lobed, subbilabiate corolla and its campanulate accrescent calyx.—H. H. W. "PEARSON Fig. 1, 6 enclosing the fruit; 2, corolla, showing the insertion of the stamens ; 3, anthers ; 4, ovary and style. All enlar arged, PuatTe 2706. PENTAPHRAGMA ALBIFLORUM. J/. I. W. Pearson. CAMPANULACEE. ‘Tribe CAMPANULE. P. albiflorum, 77. H. W. Pearson (sp. nov.) ; valde affinis P. aurantiaco, Staph a qua fois glabris majoribus, bracteis majoribus, floribus albidis presertim differ Herba sucosa, circa 1 ped. alta ; caulis crassus, fistulosus, oe Folia membranacea, ovata vel elliptico-ovata, 7-9 poll. longa, 3-5 poll. lata, basi aliquanto inzqualia, breviter attenuata, apice obtusa, mar- ginibus sinuato-crenato- duaitaiin glaberrima, pinnatim nervata, nervis lateralibus primariis utrinque 3-5, subito adscendentibus, nervulis circa 2 lin. longe, filamentis latis circa 1 lin. ongis. Stylus crassus, sulcatus, 1 lin. longus ; stigma oblongum, incrassatum, sulcatum, 3—1 lin. longum. acca immatura fusiformis, glabrescens, circa 1 poll. ge longa Borneo: Bungal, on the north-east coast, Lobb. This species, like the other members of this small genus, has a marked cyrtandraceous habit, and its true position is only apparent when in the Malayan region P. begoni Srp Wall., is 1 da bund ot in the southern portion of the Malay Peninsula. P. macrophyllum, Oliver, f w ea, a grandifiorum, Kurz, fro Moluccas, are contined to these areas respective P. aurantiacum, Stapf, and species are Boy no om the N.E. corner of Borneo ; the a from Mount Kinabalu at an elevation of 6,000 feet—H. H. W. PEARSON . 1, ealyx-lobe, seen from without ; 2, Soe of an hermaphrodite flower showing ihiensntia ‘and pistil; 3, anther. All enlarge 5 ty PU 2707 PiLate 2707. LYSIMACHIA TRIENTALIOIDES, Hemsi. - PRIMULACER. L. trientalioides, Hemsi. (sp. nov.) ; species ex affinitate L. par formis, Franch h. (t. 1982 hujus operis), a a qua differt imprimis foliis multo numerosioribus anguste lanceolatis. Herba perennis, glabra, habitu ac statura Trientalis europea, rhizomate plurica ali. Caules simplices, graciles, 4—8 poll. alti, infra i nudi apicem preter folia pauca squamiformia 1, olia in apicibus caul conferta, sessilia, demum m subcoriacea, anguste Janceolata vel lineari-lanceolata, 14-25 poll. longa, maxi 6 lin. lata, utrinque sbi vix betas glandulis validis immersis crebre instructa ; ven imme imze ores terminales v seudo-terminales, umbellatim Soiigeitt circiter 6 lin. diametro, pedicellis brevissimis Calycis segmenta anguste la eolata, acuta, glandulosa lobi ovato-oblongi, simple “lamenta fere ad medium connata, glabra Ovarium gl i es Aria ae hed or 4 L. paridi CHINA: the Min river, 25 miles above aes Province of Binchiociy Piber Province of Kweichau, Perny. The late Mr. A. Franchet’s original description of L. paridiformis in the publication ee covers the plant here figured as well as that of Plate 1982. Following = — he adds : Planta valde variabilis uoad foliorum rashes etu a stenophylla,—Folia 7 9, veiiciiiaka: anguste lanceolata, longe acuminata, B iglaae —Folia 4-6, verticillata, elliptico-ovata, breviter acu- minata But I would restrict the name paridiformis to his (3 tects to which it aptly applies, and treat his a stenophylla as a distin t species under the name adopted. This appears justifiable, Bursa a and ;3 equal the whole, and a name of the whole is not applicable to a.— W. Borrinc Hemsie Fig. 1, calyx and pistil ; 2, corolla laid open and stamens ; 3, capsule and part of calyx. All enlarged. Piate 2708. BRETSCHNEIDERA SINENSIS, Hemsl. SAPINDACER, Bre f qua foliis piserais pinnatis, Pct racemosis, etc., differ re whe ee ex aflinitate Ungnadie, Endl., pane floribus amplis racemosis, petalis ecristatis episepalis, etc., differ Flores, ut videtur, vere ee, Calyx late Nise rains pasa: '5- lobulatus, extus puberula, intus pubescen tala 5, inzequalia, postico minore, unguiculata, medio calycis pee uaa glabra i ade i i ium pubescentibus, antheris dorsifixis. Orarium sessile, pubescens 3-loculare, loculis 2 -ovulatis ; stylus cline stamina paullo superans ultra medium pubescens. Ovula subcollateralia, ab axi pendula. 9-18 poll. longa, ra penta subtereti qracil : "volioke Heat opposita vel inferiora alterna, breviter petiolulata, contigua, vix coriacea, leviter oblique oblongo- lanceolata vel ovato-lanceolata, 3-6 poll. longa, et usque ad 2 poll. diametro, acute acu uminata, basi rotundata vel interdum fere acuminata, integra, subtus pallidiora, venis primariis lateralibus utringue 10-15, venis — rabepaa a Flo speciost, albo-rosei, circiter 2 poll. diametro, i comos terminales erectos rigidos 12- 15 poll. longos dispositi, contigus,, Leet diver- gentibus 6-12 lin. longis ; bractere minute, citissimo deci Cuina : Mengtze, Yunnan, in mountain forests, A. Henry, 10540 ; Sasating: Yunnan, at 5,000 ft., A. Henry, 11651, This highly ornamental tree at first suggests Leguminose and the tribe Cassiex rather than Sapindacex ; but the number of stamens, associated with the structure of the ovar y, seems sufficient to indicate i iop of the petals high up in the ca yx-tube and the absence of a disk are characters which distinguish it from its nearest allies. So the nt is unknown, and the ovary is only known in quite a young state. S genus was named in honour of Dr. Emil Bretschneider, and specimens of it were exhibited at a meeting of the Linnean Society, runes 18, 1901. Some particulars of oy) a s characteristics and affinities appeared in the Gardeners’ Chronicle, $901, p. 291. De B May 4 ; p. retschneider, whose scholarly attainments and writings in ection with the Flora of China are well known, ha e replied under date of February 26 :—‘ Let me state that I highly appreciate the honour done to me, and that I feel very proud of finding my name commemorated in the Flora of China and in connection with s vast botanical explorations.’ Early in May news reached this country of the death of this eminent sinologist—W. Borrine HEMSLEY. Fig. 1, section of a flower showing the insertion of the petals and stamens; 2, anthers; 3, cross section of ovary; 4, longitudinal section of ovary.—AU en larged. PU 2709 Puate 2709. HERMANNIA JOHANSSENI, JX. £. Brown. } Srercutiaces. Tribe HermMAnniex. . Johansseni, V. EL. Brown (sp. nov.) ; species distinctissima ex afinitate 2 comose, Burch., a qua differt, inter alia, calyce ovoideo nec globos Fruticulus 8-9 poll. altus, basi lignosus et ramosus. Rami erecti, simplices, subgraciles, dense stellato-tomentosi, luteo-albidi, e medio vel infra ad apicem floriferi. Folia petiolata, utrinque stellato- bothenteans griseo-viridia ; petiolus 14-4 lin. longus ; lamina in. longa, 2-4 lin. lata, elliptica vel elliptico-oblonga, ‘sets, basi late cuneata, plicata, crenato-dentata. Stipule 2-3 lin. longe, q-13 lin. latee, lanceolate, acute, utrinque stellato-tomentose. lores in axillis foliorum geminati, secundi. Pedwnculi axillares, 0-2 lin. longi, + dorso ultra emeeag i ee eae ; Seeder Pane rmis. Stam ina Souta Arrica: Calvinia om at Brand Vley, Johanssen, 7. A very ea species, not very similar to any other, but it should be placed near H. comosa, Burch. It is remarkably floriferous, all or nearly all is: flowers on the plant being open at the same ti e etals, as is usual in the genus, are twisted to the right in one ‘flower and to the left ir in the other flower of each pair.—N. E. Brown. rome 2, a flower with calyx and corolla remov ed; 3, a petal; 4, stamen, * rsal v ; 5, the pistil, with the base of the staminal tube Rae ous 6, a tuft of “sig " enlarged. PLATE 2710. BABIANA SPATHACEA, Gawler, Irtmpaces. ‘Tribe Ix1em. B. spathacea, Gawler ex Sims in Bot. Mag. sub t. 539 (nec Bot. Mag. t. 638) ; “goal: in Dyer, Fl. Cap. vi. p. 108. Sean spathaceus, Linn. f. Supp p- 96; Thunb. Diss. no. 55; Thunb. Prod. p.9 ; Thunb. Fl. va i. p. 208, et ed. Schultes, p. 52. Folia linearia vel lineari-lanceolata, acuta, subplicata, molliter piloso- ot eis ars vel interdum subglabra, 4-9 poll. longa, 2-6 lin. lata. S ecta, stricta, simplex vel basi pauciramosa, 2-3 poll. longa, sabe multiflora. Bractee 9-15 lin. longze, 3 lin. late, lanceolate, longe aristato-acuminate, complicate, yaline, uninerves, nec striate, glabree, albze, nervo in aristam rufo-brunneam excurrente. Bracteole 7-8 lin. longer, 14-2 lin. late, bracteis similes. Peri cose erectum, glabrum ; tubus i3 poll. longus, Been apice ampliatu procurvus, purpureus ; lobi subsequales, lin. longi, 14 lin. lati, oblongi, obtusi, albi, inferiores basi ae notati. Stamina exserta ; anthers 2-3 lin nge. Ovariwm 13-15 lin. longum, trigono- -turbi- natum, glabrum ; — exsertus, filiformis, apice breviter trifidus stigmata res di lata Soutu Arrica: Calvinia Division; in Bokkeland (Onder Bokke- veld) and the dry regions of Hantam, Thunberg; Brand Vle ey, Johanssen, 14. This is one of many eed South African plants found by the older snllestiirs which hav e long escaped the notice of subsequent travellers. I interest, the more so as Mr. Johanssen also collected Hriosphera known from the specimens collecte un abiana spathacea, Gawl., is one of the m ne distinct species of the genus, the long dense spike, long-tubed flowers, and membranous hyaline bracts serving to distinguish it at once from all o Unfortunately the name B. spat was give awler to two distinct plants. When the genus Babia originally established at the place quoted above (which reference has been overlooked by all subsequent Shae 9 a Gen. p. 151), Thunberg’s — was indicated = aay to it. t two years later, Gawler figured (Bot. Mag ) as B. spathacea other species, which 8 sed as Gladiolus spathaceus, Thunb. ; but it is utterly different from soca v= t his figure exactly ag with calis s rium named B hacea, and one motlncted. in Little k n ag. t. 638 is perfectly distinct from both B. disticha and B. mucronata, I propose that it should bear the name B. Gawleri.—N. E. Brown. Figs. 1 ei , bracteoles; 3, anthers; 4, upper part of style and stigmas; 4, ovary. Ail enlarged Puate 2711. URNULARIA BECCARIANA, Stap/. (With dissections of U. flavescens, Stapf’) ApocyNAce®. Tribe LAnpDOLPHIE®. Urnularia, Stapf (gen. nov.). Calyx parvus, 5-partitus, eglandu- losus, segmentis rotundatis. Corolla urceolari-hypocrateriformis, tubo Semina in pulpa carnosa nidulantia, sparsa, ovoidea vel oblongo- ovoidea, ventre profunde valaeba. eats longitudinaliter angustissime multisulcata ; aloumen iene; copiosum, forma et sculptura semini conforme ; cotyledones plane, foliacee, radicula longiuscula.— nervia, nervi nian Pikes in paniculis aseilleoribate brevibus laxis multifloris, ibus beccariana, Stapf, Frutex ope cirrorum apice ramosoru scandens, glaber; rami juniores subco ompressi vel abeiindveasg iat is supra canaliculatus. Panicule laxwe, ad 1} poll. longe comet is ramulisque demum magis minusve divaricatis gracilibus wen ind ovatis minutis ; pedicelli ad 1 lin. longi. Calya ad } lin. altus, segmentis rotundatis vel ovato-rotundatis albo-ciliolatis. Corolla in alabastro maturo magis minusve conica, 3 lin. longa; tubus subglobosus ; lobi tubo equilongi vel paululo breviores, late ovati, obtusi. Séy/us cum stigmate 4 lin. longus. Willughbeia sp. Benth. in Benth. & Hook. 2 Gen, Plant. ii. p. 691. Ancylocladus beccarianus O. K. Rev. Gen. 1, p. 412 (nomen) ; Pierre in Bull. Soc. Linn. Paris, ii. p. 98. Borneo: Sarawak, forests of Bintula, Beecari, 3764; Baram, Hose, 24. Urnularia is allied to Willughbeia and Chilocarpus. It differs from panicles, and, to judge from the only fruit known so far (see below under U. ovatzfolia), in the very different structure of the s Willughbeia possessing exalbumiaous seeds with large 2 Die thick cotyledons. So far as the seeds are concerned t ew genus approaches Chilocarpus very closely, with this exception, ‘that the testa and the albumen are finely but deeply grooved on the back, the e€ a = gs Chilocarpus. Urnularia comprises at present five ah viz. EO ag ae (Willughbera flavescens, Dyer A Brit. Ind. i 25), U. javanica, Seu (W caer aes javanien “BL ), U. hick wii Rtapt described above, and tw cies from Borneo, the descriptions of whic ‘are given "bel flow f pletely open. It will also be seen from this figure that the mouth of the eben of Py = geen is cai furnished with ‘small lobulate tubercies’ . ¢, nor have I been able to find such tenses in » Witughein oblonga, pee This is placed in FI. Brit. ext to W. flavescens ; but it seems to me to be a typical Witupicn ea In n explanation of fig. 6 on pl. 2711, I might remark that I found the ovules of the two placentas of U. beccariana completely interlocked and sometimes so cemented together, that, except in very thin sections, the placentas would rathe e their base when I tried to separate them. The outer integument was always very conspicuous by its dark brown or almost black “colourin ng. oblongifolia, Stapf (sp. nov.). Frutea scandens, glaber ; rami — uniores subcompressi vel quadranguli, tandem teretes, ad nodos paululo nodosi, cortice fusco. Folia oblonga, subabrupte obtuseque in Jahrb. Hamburg. Wissensch. Anst. xvii. (1899) p. ‘145 (quoad spec. Beccar.) non Blume Borneo : Sarawak, Mount Matang, Beccari, 2272. U. oblongifolia differs from U. javanica in the leaves being larger 3 (3-4 in. by 1}-1§ in. Boyt of 2-3 in. by $-1} in.), more distinctly oblong, more rounde he base, and long acuminate with more numerous, straighter pay more prominent nerves, in the more delicate panicles and in the almost obtuse anthers. It yields, according to Professor Beccari, a good sort of rubber. ovatifolia, Stapf (sp. nov.). Frutex eRe glaber ; rami juniores subcom ig ressi, mox teeta ad nodos vix nodosi, cortice badic. nonnunquam cirros rsus ramosos hamatos abeuntes. apic Folia ovata “i ovato-elliptica, etateanes breviterque vel obscure ra a acumine Bee te basi rotundata, 25- . oll. longa, 14-2} Fructus globosus, 2 poll. dimetiens. Sem -6 lin. Borneo : Sarawak, near pues Haviland, 2302. e flowers are described by Dr. oT as having a pink turgid fis aii a yellow limb.—Orro Sta a ; fi rig gi : longitudinal section of a flower; 3, a corolla-lobe ; n anther; 5, front view of the same; 6, cross sou dl 7 ovary of tacos Gusnsitane. Be 7, flower and bud of U. flavescens, ans tc Re PL 2712 cS, rasta é # : = ot eet Puate 2712. PARVATIA DECORA, Dunn. BERBERIDACER. Tribe LARDIZABALEX, P. decora, Dunn (sp. nov.); a P. br runoniana, Dene., specie adhuc unica, pedunculis sabuniioris fH distincta Frutex scandens (Hancock), veg striatis, sinks pallidis. Folia trifoliolata, petiolo alato, alis decurrentibus : ; foliola subcoriacea, supra glabra, nitentia, infra pra lveabenitla. glauca, marginibus revolutis, elliptica, 2—4 poll. longa, igen acuminata ; petioluli laterales 3 poll. longi, terminales 1-14, poll. lon ngi. Flores masculi carnei (Hancock) ; pedunculi 1-2 ne Tong in fasciculis axillaribus collecti, uniflori vel nonnunquam basi ima ramosi, bracteolas paucas minutas ferentes, perulati ; feline j ons Sepala 6, ovata, longe acuminata, 6-9 lin. longa, stamina excedentia. Petala 6, 1-2 lin. lo onga. Stamina 5-8 lin. t , anthera ai = Cuina : Yunnan, glen near Mengtze at 3,700 feet, and on mountains sieve ‘the Red River at the same altitude. W. Hancock, 241, 242. Parvatia brunoniana inhabits the mountains of Eastern India from Khasia to Tenasserim , extending to the N.E. to Szemao, just over the Chinese frontier. The discovery of the above new species at Mengtze extends the range of the seme in an easterly direction for a distance of about 150 miles.—S. T. Duy Fig. 1, a male flower from which the sepals have been removed ; 2, a section of the same showing the rudimentary pistil. Both enk arged, Puate 2713: CLEMATIS PTERANTHA, Dunn. RANUNCULACEH. Tribe CLEMATIDE. . pterantha, Dunn (sp. nov.) ; C. yunnanensi, Franch., affinis, sepalis alatis distincta. Frutex scandens, preter inflorescentiam glaber, a _ ulcatis, canali centrali perforatis. olia trifoliolata, dentia ; foliola papyracea, ovata, 3-5 po ga, wna fore se dentata. lores in apice pedunculorum brevium axillarium cum bracteis collecti, pedicellis sparso hirsutis, alabastris globosis, Sepala alba A, Henry), 4, ovata, alis tribus membranaceis dorso provisa, extus glabra, intus pubescentia, margine tomentosa. Stamina barbata, filamentis 5—7-plo antheris longioribus. Ovarium stylusque hirsuta. Fructus ignotus. Curna : Yunnan, Szemao, mountain forests to the West, at 5,000 feet, A. Henry, ‘12452. This species was, when discovered, the only member of the genus having dorsally winged sepals. mong Ducloux’s plants, however, which were recently presented to “onde by Dr. Henry and collected in e region, is another undescribed species, having — same peculiarity, but otherwise distinct rate the above.—S. T. Dun Fig. 1, a sepal seen from the outside; 2, a stamen; 3, an achene, AU/ enlarged. PU 2714 PLate 2714: ILLICIUM MICRANTHUM, Dunn. MaGnouiacesz. Tribe WINTERES. I. micranthum, Dunn (sp. eet ; ab J. parvifloro, Michx., stamini- bus pluriseriatis fructuque divers Frutex vel arbor parva, 4—15- site (A. Henry), glabra, ramulis fo flavidis. Yolia subcoria aii su ubtus pallida, lanceolata, acumina 25-5} poll. longa, basi cuneata, ve conspicuis, petiolo brevi Flores solitarii, axillares cum fol ere in verticillos approximati, pedicellis li ovata. Petala flava vel aurantiaca (A. Henry), interiora 4—5 lin. longa, stamina se excedentia, Stamina 12, biseriata. Ovaria 7-8. Fructus 8-10 lin. dia Cuina : Yunnan, Szemao forests and mountains to southward at 4,500- 5,000 feet. Henry 12108, 12108a, 12224 24, 12224a, 122248, 12224c. ee The specimen of star aniseed sent by Dr. Henry in 1886 from Patung under No. 1079 is exceedingly like the fruit of the above species, but as none of the following specimens of /Jiciwm collected by him in that neighbourhvod can be referred here, it may be the fruit of some allied species.—S. T. Dun Fig. 1, a flower; 2, an eriaer sect dorian page 3, one of As innermost petals and thre rat 4, a stame ; pistil; 6, fruit; 7; a . All except 6 enlarged. PU 2715 MS. del et Lith. Puate 2715. SCALESIA RETROFLEXA, //ems/, Compositz. Tribe HELIANTHOIDEA. S. retroflexa, Hemsl. (sp. nov.) ; species ad 8. incisam magis accedit, oe foliis crispato-pinnatifidis recurvatis, paleis altius trifidis lobis Frutex 6- ae (Habel), Ramuli floriferi graciles, villosuli, inter- nodiis brevissimis. lia ad apices ramulorum conferta, longe gracili- “whan tielata, sina eae, cordato-ovata vel oblonga, cum petiolo 3- onga, complicata, alte crispato-pinnatifida, “hispida, simul pilis aoe secHli bie instructa. Capitela in axillis foliorum supremorum brevite er pedunculata, homogama, discoidea, multiflora, 7-9 lin. diametro. fere equantes, Receptaculi palee alte trifide, lobis acutis hispidulis, flores fere eequantes. Corolla extus puberula. Achenia glabra, calva, GALAPAGOS ARCHIPELAGO : Indefatigable Island, Dr. Habel, 1868. Most of the species of peed described by Sir Joseph Hooker (Trans. Linn. Soc. xx. 2 13) were founded on single speci- mens, or single sheets of specimens, which belonged to the late Pro- fessor Henslow, and are now in the University Herbarium at Cambridge. Through the kindness of Professor Nacghali Ward the specimens were lent to Kew for purposes of comparison with other material, and advantage has been taken of the sai to figure four of them in succeeding plates.— W. Borrina HemsLey Fig. 1, an_involueral der seen from the outside; 2, ditto, seen from the a 3,a Sis seen from the o ; 4, ditto, seen from the inside ; 5, a flower ; 6, anther 7,8 stigma. dl enlarge hea PL 2716 Prati 2716: SCALESIA INCISA, Zook. /. Composita. Tribe HEeLianrHoIpEs. 8. incisa, Z/ook. f. in sta ee nn. Soe. XX. p. ee a S. retroflewa, Hemsl. , foliis minus hirsut tis minus dissectis applanat s rectis, involucri bracteis angustioribus, fadepeasit paleis obtuse jobunke, etc., differt. GaLapacos ArcHiPELaGo : Chatham Island, Charles Darwin, Sep- tember 1835. Figured from the original specimen in the Cambridge Herbarium, lent for the purpose by Professor Marshall Ward. This, S. retroflexa, Hemsl., and S. Baurti, Rob. & Greenm. (Am. Journ. Se. i. pea p- 141), are all very closely allied ; and it was in this connection, i consequence of enquiries from America, that I undertook the sevens: gation of the genus.—W. Borrine HEMs.ey Fig. 1, a pale seen from the ratorray ; 2, ditto, seen from the inside; 3, a flower; ne ia» 5, stigma, All enlarged fu wats : es PLATE 2717. SCALESIA PEDUNCULATA, Hook. ff. Composirz, Tribe HELIANTHOIDE. S. pedunculata, Hook. f. in Trans. Linn. Soe. xx. p. 211 ; ab omni- bus speciebus capitulis discoideis hujus generis hactenus cognitis longitudine pedunculorum et magnitudine capitulorum facile distin- uitur, GaLapacos ARCHIPELAGO; James Island, Charles Darwin, October 1835. Designated a tree by Darwin in a note accompanying the specimen in the Cambridge Herbarium. This is mentioned because this species is described by Hooker in the place cited as Hriecabrio We have seen no other specimens.—W. Borring Hems_z Fig. 1,a pale seen from the inside; 2, a flower; 3, anthers; 4, stigma. All en- larged. i ae Gee. rare" “ NS ee Re Te yeas Aa salen, ete ey, a Pl 2718 ot oe aA “ PuLaTeE 2718. SCALESIA AFFINIS, //ook. Ea Composit. Tribe HELIANTHOIDEA. S. affinis, Hook. f. in Trans. Linn. Soc. a ie 212; inter speci radiatas es. pnp aiusilitinas, sed differ cipue picliseata setialia brevibus vel subnullis, capitulisque duplo rani ces latioribus campanu- latisque GaLapacos ARCHIPELAGO: Charles Island, Charles Darwin, Sept. 1835 n from specimens in the Cambridge Herbarium, the only fig ai seen. The differential characters are extracted from the Solos cited above.-—W. Borrinc HEmsLey. Fig. 1, a ray-flower; 2, a pale; 3, a disk-flower; 4, anthers; *, stigma, Al/ enlarged. PU 2719 PLATE 2719. SCALESIA DARWINII, J/ook. /. Composirm. Tribe HELIANTHOIDES. 8. Darwinii, Hook. f. in Trans. Linn. Soc p- 211; species foliorum forma S. atractyloidi eae sed pilis Sonigtuscali vestita et capitulis multo majoribus differ GaLapacos ARCHIPELAGO: James Island, Charles Darwin, Oct. 1835 Drawn from specimens in the Cambridge Herbarium, the only o we have seen. Darwin notes that this species was m fee of James Island, where it formed woods of very straight trees in the having been collected in Charles Island by Dr. G. Baur. They also " describe (loc. cit. p. 141) a new species, S. Baurit, from Duncan Sana’, collected in August 1891.—W. Bormne Hemstey. Fig. 1, a flower; 2, anthers; 3, upper part of style and stigma. Al enlarged. PuatTe 2720. HAZARDIA DETONSA, (Greene. Composita. Tribe ASTEROIDER. H. detonsa, Greene, Pittonia, i. 29; species //. cane Sea simillima, a qua differt (tide pend foliis firmioribus argute serra tis. CairorniA : Island of Santa Cruz, E. L. Greene. Some years ago Dr. Ed. Palmer collected Specimens of a shrubby composite in Guadalupe Island, off the coast of Lower California, which the late Dr. Asa Gray at first regarded as the ‘hts of a new genus, but subsequently described (Proc. “Amer. Acad. xi. p- fe under the name of Diplostephium canum. Since then Prof. E L. Greene Franceschi, and others, have collected some closely allied plants i in the smaller islands of Santa Cruz and San Cl four or five degrees further north. Prof. Greene has dealt with them in ths lace cited above, where he founds the genus Hazardia and describes three species, namely, //. cana, H. detonsa, an serrata. Since then several other quite distinct species have been added to the genus u ave some doubts about the specitic distinctness of the three insular forms described as such by Prof. Greene. Sp fuller material, ould be united ; but that point can only % miles by examining a large number of specimens. On the other hand, a plant collected by A. W. Anthony in San Clemente — distri ates — the name cana, seems to be quite distinct.—W. Bortinc Hems.ey. Fig. 1, one of the innermost bracts of the involucre; 2, a ray- flower a disk flower; 4, a pappus-bristle ; 5, anthers; €, stigma and part of style. ail ondebjele O.Stapf anal: is iV} eh \ SSN A wee oj ce HAS or id Rs | MS.ael-et ith Piate 2721. SYMPETALANDRA BORNEE NSIS, Stapf. LrEguMiInos&. Tribe DIMORPHANDRE#, Sympetalandra, Stapf (gen. nov. .). Calyx campanulatus, Jatus, breviter 5-lo bus, obis in alabastro primo imbricatis. Petala 5, eequalia, rmi. Legumen ignotum -—Arbor parra, glabra. Folia paripinnata, 2-juga, foliolis coriaceis pellucido punctatis oppositis. FI pareve Aeconed pedicellati, racemosi, racemis densis axillaribus et extra- aribus versus apices ramorum et terminalibus in paniculam sallacase, Bracteze minute ; bracteole nulle. S. borneensis, Si tapf (species unica). Ramuli cortice brunnei vel clioloaicion Folia bijuga ; foliola oblonga vel oblongo-lanceolata utringue subacuta vel subacuminata, fe BA in. eens 1-2 in. lata, coriacea shad 2-33 in. longus, basi modice tumidus, eee in subulam productus ; petiolali crassiusculi, 4-6 lin. longi. Racemi pedunculati, 2-5 poll. ong, ad 7-2 poll. nudi, — — incrassata, stricta; bractez vate, persistentes, vix } lin. ; pedicelli ad # lin. longi, plerumque wevinred Calyx a n. longus, “obi a vel subacutis, pellucido- vel subacuta, con neava, pelluc ido- cata Filan men a rosea, episepala 1}-1f lin. longa, epipetala 1]-12 lin - longa ; anthere vix 3 lin. lon Ovarium stipite diseum cupularem vix excedente glabro oblongum, superne rufo-villosum Borneo : Sarawak, near Kuching, by the river, Haviland, 1628. The distinctly imbricate zstivation of the lobes of the gamosepalous calyx and the bars — nguish this genus from the Mimosee as defined at present, and t to the affinity with the small tribe of Dimor phandree in Cambie. It can, however, not be said to be closely 9 ~~ 1, di sore of a ; 2, flowe risen seen ina pty tg zestivation ; 8 Hower; reareinar. pclae cf the same; rolla; 6, a stamen All rged. Pl 2722. PLaTE 2722. JULIANIA MOLLIS, Hems/. Ordo NaturaLis ? J. mollis, Hemsl. (sp. nov.) ; pecie unica Mexicana hactenus dette foliis undique molliter villosis et foliolis ovato-oblongis per totam longitudinem crenatis differt. Ramuli floriferi crassi. olia decidua, in apicibus ramorum con- imparipi stig cit petiolate, cum petiolo 3-4 poll. longa, s mn ’ juvenilia sal albido-villosa ; foliola opposita, sessilia vel subsessilia, be. oO oe pga vel ovato-o longa, leviter inzequalia, 1-14 ll. 1 cuta, basi rotundata vel subcordata, ab apice usque ad basin alte crenata, venis primariis rectis per crenas excurrentibus. Flores maseula , in amenta osita in axillis foliorum supe- riorum solitaria dispositi; amenta gracilia, pendula, 2— longa, foliis coetanea vel precociora, infra medi zter bracteolas minutas a. Perianthium ys: artitum ; segmenta lineari-lanceolata, acuta, extus pilos Sta a ple gg llo breviora, antheris ioopitudinalitse dehiscentibus, su pilis paucis munitis. Flores feminei ac fructus hujus ‘pees Seis Mexico: Barranca of Guadalajara, Jalisco, at 4,000 ft. C. G. Pethats, 6871. This and the following plate are published with the view of eluc insufficient, because he had neither female flowers nor perfect fruit. ur material is not much better, but it comprises three distinct co A second species, J. Huaucui, was published (Bot. U.S. Expl. Exp i. p. 371) by the late Dr. A. Gray ; also from very imperfect material, Matthews, and Canta, in the same district of Peru, McLean. There can be no doubt mms the two published species being pegtnr a and they are very dist or is there any doubt about J. mollis, Hemsl., = diferent from the original J. adstringens, Schlecht.— W. Borrinc Hemsi Figs. 1 and 2, male flowers; 3,astamen. Al/ enlarged. PL 2723. Puate 2723. JULIANIA ADSTRINGENS, Schlecht. Orbdo NatuRALIs ? J. adstringens, Schlecht. in Linnea, xvii. (1843) p. 746 ; a J. molli, Hemsl., foliolis supra medium multo latiorib1s fa Be medium edentatis facile distinguitur. Hypopterygium adstringens, Schlecht. in op. cit. p. 635, Ex1co: Valle Grande, ae of Michoacan and Guerrero, at 450 metres, es Langlassé, 319 There can be little doubt about this being the species described so fully and exactly by Schlechtendal, although he describes the leaves of the sterile branches as abrupte subcaudato acute acuminata, ith regar fer to the nature of the fruit, whether inferior or superior, whether two of the seed-vessels spring from a common involucre or Schlechtendal some sixty years ago. It wi seen that the seed- vessels are in pairs, and there are indications of some rudimentary enveloping organs at their base their apex are remains of styles, and possibly also of perianth-lobes ; but we cannot be sure of their nature. The seed-vessels examined have three collateral or parallel cells, and one imperfect seed was found. One can only suggest that this singular genus will prove the type = a new natural order having affinities with the Burseracez, figured as a tree from twelve to twenty feet = Pages a ml "~ juice and a bark like that of the cork-oak.—W. Borrinc HxmsLe Fig. 1, apex of fruit ; 2 and 3, cross sections of the same; 4, a seed, Ad enlarged. PL 2724. PLaTe 2724. EMBELIA SAXATILIS, Hens. MYRSINACER, E. saxatilis, Hems/. (sp. nov.) ; inter species sinenses repentes foliis longe calloso-dentatis insignis. t vel oblongo-lanceolata, cum petiolo 6-15 lin. longa, utrinque attenuata . ; inclusis. Sepala ovata, acuta, } lin. longa. Petala sublibera, obovato- oblonga, vix acuta, circiter 14 lin. longa, pulverulenta vel papillosa, glandulis precipue linearibus predita. Genitalia glabra. Bacca globosa, 24-3 lin. diametro. Cuina: Mengtze, Yunnan, creeping on wooded cliffs at 8,000 feet, A. Henry, 9793. Cuina: Mengtze, Yunnan, growing in mountain forests at 8,000 feet, creeping on the ground, A. Henry, 11160. 2 ese also has long- and short-styled flowers with short and long mens respectively. I should have regarded them as both fertile, in F aieoen degrees perhaps, as in Primula ; but it is a point that cannot be settled from the material under examination.—W. Borrine HEMSLEY. Fig. 1, portion of the margin of . leaf ; 2, a flower ; 3, a part of a calyx and pistil ; 4,a petal and stamen. A/l enlarged Pl 2725 9 Sr sae) 4 \ iN AAS - >" | e » > ~~ “Na oe 2 : = cS —— 2 Ay as Ze, SPRL " sd ' ~. NG a See ay OE : MS. del etlith Puate 2725. EMBELIA POLYPODIOIDES, Hemsl. et Mez. MYRSINACER, E. polypodioides, Hems/. et me ez in ae izbl. k. Bot. Gart. Berl, iii. (1901) p. 108 ; inter species sinenses repentes vel scandentes ramulis foliiferis elongatis, foliis “dis — brevissime petiolatis grosse crenatis conspicue ‘insigniterque venosis, pseudo-umbellis 2—3-floris vel interdum floribus in axillis foliorum solitariis, facile distinguitur. Frutex ferrugineo-hirsutus, Pi precipue in ramulis, fere setosus, ramulis gracillimis, supra frutices ac arvores scandens. Jolia dense disticha, superficiebus vertioalied, brevissime petiolata, oe cordato-oblonga vel cordato-lanceolata, ea a lin. longa, inferiora inter- dum minora et fere orbicularia, basi lev cordata, a apice hence, margine paucicrenata, crenis latis calloao: ae enticalaiy utrinque preter costam glabra vel cito glabrescentia, conspicue nigro-punctata, et subtus insigniter elevato-venosa. Pseudo reali axillares, brevissime peduneulate, 2 —3-flore vel interdum floribus solitariis ; ; pedicelli graciles, 1-1} lin. longi, parce glanduloso-pilosuli ; bracteole minime. Sepala subcarnosa, ovato-oblonga, #-1 lin. longa, obtusa, margine glanduloso- precipue supra glandulis rubris immersis instructa. n@ exserta vel inclusa. Ovariwm te chat stylo brevi tantum vin acca globosa, circiter 2 lin. diametro. Cuina : South of the Red River from Mammei, at 6, ee ft.; Feng- aieata at 7,500 ft. ; and forests south-east of Mengtze 00 0 ft.— all in the Province of Yunnan. A. Henry, 10060, 100604, Ha 10060s. is is a very remarkable eee in the shape, crenation, vena- and position of the lea Assuming the branches to grow he the reavteas of the leaves are in the same vertical plane.-—W. Borrina LEY. Fig. 1, portion of a leaf; 2, a flower; 3, a part of a calyx and pistil; 4, a fruit ; 5, a section of the same. AU en larged. The impression of the ‘Icones’ is limited to 250 copies, and the work will not be reprinted. A small number of copies of the Third Series, comprising 1,000 plates, is offered for sale at £5 each. Application should be made to Messrs. Dutau & Co., 37 Soho Square. VOL. VIII.—PART II.) [MAY HOOKER’S ICONES PLANTARUM; FIGURES, WITH DESCRIPTIVE CHARACTERS AND REMARKS. | OF NEW AND RARE PLANTS, | SELECTED FROM THE | KEW HERBARIUM. | FOURTH SERIES, EDITED FOR THE BENTHAM TRUSTEES BY SIR WILLIAM T. THISELTON-DYER, K.C.M.G., C.LE., LL.D., M.A., F.R.S. HONORARY STUDENT OF CHRIST CHURCH, OXFORD DIRECTOR, ROYAL BOTANIC GARDENS, KEW. VOL. VIII. OR VOL. XXVIII. OF THE ENTIRE WORK. DULAU & CO. 37 SOHO SQUARE, LONDON. 1902. SPOTTISWOODE AND CO. LTD... PRINTERS. en SQUARE, TONDON. ~ =. : ; Price Four 5 cuir : PU 2726 MS.delet ith PhLate 2726. CAROLINELLA HENRYYI, //emsl. PRIMULACER. Carolinella Hems!. Genus novum habitu et capsula calyptratim dehiscente a Primula recedens. Calyx anguste wont pacha! — tec 5-lobatus, lobis erectis acutis. Corolla bene evolut visa ; tubus s eylindricus, rectus, supra medium inftatis ‘ habese: : " ianvan 5, eequalia, inclusa, tubo a affixa, filamentis brevissimis ; ; anthere lineari- oblonge. Ovarium oblongo-ovoideum ; stylus filiformis, inclusus, basi indurata Sedat aaster Capsula ovoidea, polysperma, corolla marcescente coronata. Semina inzequalia, sepius irregulariter cuneata, angulata, levia, peltatim affixa, longe funiculata.—Herba perennis scapigera, undique glabra, rhizomate subhorizontali. Folia omnia radicalia, coriacea, longe vel longissime petiolata, lanceolata, maxima circiter 15 lamina sapissime longior. Sc capi erecti, graciliusculi, per totam longi- tudinem nudi, quam folia sepissime longior es, Flores parvi, 10-20 ac iden scapi fasciculatim conferti , pedicellr graciles, 2-5 lin. longi ; acteole linesres, quam pedicelli circiter dimidio breviores. C. Henryi, Hemsl. (species unica). Cuina : forests south-east of Mengtze, Yunnan, at 5,000 feet, A. Henry, 10735. This genus is dedicated to the memory of Caroline, the late wife of r. A. Henry, who accompanied him ea China in 1891, and was with him successively at Shanghai i and in Formosa. rs. Henry assisted to some extent in collecting, but delicate Haadids necessitated change, and she first contd to Japan, “where she made a small collection of plants around A , near Kobe. Subsequently Mrs. Henry went to Denver, Colorado, aicinpanied by Miss M. Henry, now Mrs. A. 5. OL Mailoor, in the Nilghiris. These wake ladies made : oP tage on of Colorado plants, a set which is t enry grew gradually worse, and died in “1894, Perfect af foes of Garotinela are still wanting, but I fear we may have long to wait, because the seed from the Kew specimens has not pencchaned: — W. Borrine Hace 1, rhizome with bases of leaves and = as 26 2, a flower, the corolla withered ; 3, withered corolla _ = showing sta 4, pistil ; 5, cross section of ovary 6, capsule; 7, seeds ; mbryo. AB danest hy. 1 enlarged, SERIES IV. VOL. VIII. PART IL. sg Text MS. delet hth. PuLate 2727. HARTIA SINENSIS, Dunn. TERNSTR@MIACEX. Tribe GorDoNIER. Hartia, Dunn. Genus novum ex affinitate Schima, Reinw., a qua staminibus altius monadelphis, fructu acuminato, em ibryone recto differ ubebata nutmerosa, corolle basi adnata, alte mo pod tba ; there versatiles. _ Ovariwm 5-loculare ; styli 5, connati; 0 basi = “ r c = - AK € : er hioeZ Fa Goan, = 77 c = : % 1-3 a? Y a Se é my 7 oa nae : if) a mn Ne Ay be ad ; . =. _ : . 4 Wie. s 5 “ = id : ; ff * pe - . Jf ss NY ew ae = CORD A tal ON a te GR f, A : ae ee ey - mre ie hy ; i P of tore aes aaa: BR a ‘, y — - yey IST RIAARSA 8) fodercca kee. SS ; BOOT ES” “none: ws ‘ gee M-S.delet hth Puate 2731. IONIDIUM FLORIBUNDUM, Walp. : VIOLACE®, = age cae Walp, Rep. ii. p. 767 ; Benth. Fl. Austral. i. p. 102; affinitate J. brevilabris, sed glabra, pedunculis bifloris, floribus auple sajorbes Frutex glaber, erectus, 1-2-pedalis, caulibus ramisque cigs diveaiiociin quam foliis brevioribus. Folia sessilia, linearia, rigida, marginibus incurvis, sepius 5-9 lin. longa, apice recurva, m ta, cr stipulis minutis cito deciduis. Pedunculi axillares, solitarii, gracillimi, seepissime biflori, cum floribus folia vix superantes ; bractee bracteo- 1 ‘ : West AUSTRALIA : Gaeee R. Helms. The specimens here figured of this very variable species were received from Mr. Alex. Morrison, cose to the Department of Agriculture, Perth, West Austra lia. They w e at first supposed to belong to an undescribed species, and the Sedceipaiie only covers the plant figured.— W. Bortine Hemsiey Fig. 1, portions of stem leaf, with stipules; 2, tip of leaf; 3, a flower; 4 and 6, petals ; 6, andrecium; 7, gyneceum, All enlarged, PL 2782 SPSS td M.S. deLet hth. Sarto PuatTe 2732 LACHNOSTACHYS VERBASCIFOLIA, 7. Muell. VERBENACER. L. verbascifolia, 7. Muell. Fragm. ch Austral. vi. p. 158 ; Benth. Fi. Austral. v. p. 38, floribus pentamer West AustraLtia: Cue, Victor. Herbarium of the Bureau of Agriculture, W. A. : This, one of the most singular ae in the Australian Flora, was also received through Mr. Alex . Morriso The genus Lachnostachys, Hook., was founded in the Icones Plant- arum in 1842, and two species are figured: Z. albicans, referred to Amarantacee. Afterwards, F. arheares describing (Fragm. Phyt. Austral. i. p. 241) another species, under t of Wa leottia pour lobes are not developed between the items ens. Briquet (Engler & Prantl, Natiérl. Phanzenf. iv. 3. A. p. 164) has, by a slip, substituted the name Lachnocephalus for Lachnostachys, so that the latter name does not appear in the index to the work cited.—W. Borrine Hems.ey, Fig. 1, a flower; 2, calyx laid open rods. attachment of stamens on the rim 0 the corolla 3, a branched hair; 4, pistil a ag sk; 5, longitudinal section of an ovary ; , cross-section of the same. Adl iia way M.S.del et hth Piate 2733. LEUCONOTIS ELASTICA, Becc, A POCYNACER. L. a Becc. Nelle Foreste di Borneo, pp. 358, 562, 563, fig. 59 ; ab omnibus speciebus hucusque descriptis foliis amplis ellipticis vel late Bligdon- oblate abrupte cuspidato- acuminatis, nervis utrinque -3 patulis subtus eximie conspicuis et sub margine arcuato-connexis distincta - niores crassi, glaberrimi, exaistando nigrescentes, magis rnicosi, internodiis 2-3 poll. longis. Folia elliptica vel late elliptico oblonga, utrin rotundata, api brupte cuspidato- acuminata, 5- . longa, 71-3 ll. lata, erasse coriacea, glaberrima, in alabastra vernice induta, supra exsiccando entia vel nigres- centia, lucida, subtus magis ™m nusve glauca, costa et nervis lateralibus utrinque 2 margine arcuato connexis supra immersis subtus prominulis eximie conspicuis ; petioli robusti, 1 poll. longi, paris cujusque linea transversa elevata co Inflorescenti ni- culate, ohn ae multo rapabegres minute pu le, demum intus eglandulosis. Corolla flava ; tubus ad 5 lin. longus, e basi latiore cylindricus, glaber ; lobi rotundato-ovati, 2 lin. longi. Anthere supra 5 ium insert, os attingentes, 1} lin. longe. Ovariwm gla- rum, 2-loculare, loculis pauciovulatis. Fructus ovoideo-globosus, baccatus, dense verrucosus, 14~2 poll. longus. Semina (haud plane moe circiter 4, rt ad 6 lin. longa ; cotyledones foliacee basi ata ; radicula ‘bre Borneo: Sarawak, Bintulu, Beccari, 899, 2291; near Kuching, Haviland, 3063. Beccari, 3708 (/.c. p. 562), also from Sarawak, comes very near L. ela stica ; ut its leaves taper more gradually towards the acumen, and hav or 5 nerves on each side. he internodes of the leat- m . L. elastica is, according to Beccari, an excellent rubber plant.—Orro STAPF. Pi ig. 1, a flower-bud; 2, the — in longitudinal section; 3, an anther; 4, pistil ; 5, cross-section of ovary. Al/ enlarged. SERIES IV. VOL. VIII, PART II. G PU 2734. M.S delet hth. PuaTe 2734. DIURANTHERA MAJOR, Zemsl. Livtacez. Tribe AsPHODELES. Diuranthera, Hemsl. Genus novum a generibus “he affinitatis differt staminibus sreraantibins, antheris basi bicaudatis D. major, Hemsl. (sp. nov.) ; a D. minore, H. CO. Wri ight (infra), statura, foliis n multo latlocious pas latis flaccidis recurvis, floribus majoribus, antherarum caudis acutis recedit Herba scaposa, aa nage eta! Folia pauca, subcarnosa, late finearia vel lingulata, maxima visa pedalia, crispato-undulata, Scapus erectus, pauciramosus, bracteis quam floribus brevioribus angustis acutissimis. lores albi, glabri, circiter 2 poll. diametro, geminati vel terni, singillatim evoluti, breviter pedicellati, pedicellis medio articulatis. Perianthii segmenta similia, sed interiora angustio : i a : dj linearia, acutissima, a, cescenti ‘tamina aricata, quam perianthium breviora, filamentis filiformibus 3a longatee, curvatee, basi bi a Ovarium sessile, 3-loculare, loculis circiter 12-ovulatis ; stylus valde declinatus, apice recurvus, stigmate parvo Capsula trialata, loculis sepius dispermis. Semina orbicul om- ressa, circiter 13 lj la basi biauriculata, funiculo inter Pp 4 in. auriculas posito ; testa crustacea, nigra, punctulata ; embryo clavatus, in albumine carnoso centralis et oblique positus, radicula hilum spectans WESTERN CHINA : raised from seed pctohes: by Mr. E. H. Wilson for Messrs. James Veitch & Sons, who presented Kew with a living plant, from Wick our drawing and dencriphcter were made. D. a. -(. a ve hic ; Paradisea minor, H. C. Wright, in Kew Bulletin, 1895, ae | WEsTERN CHINA: Seven: Yunnan, at 6,000 feet, W. Hancock, 94. The characters upon once this genus is founded may seem rather slight, but nad J. G, Baker, whose knowle edge of the Liliacex is probably unsurpassed, agrees s that it is as distinct as many others, and that it saaid be difficult, as an alternative, to decide what existing 2 genus to place it in. The rege recall those of some of the Melasto- mace, and especially those of some of the species of salen tel figured i n Baillon’s Histoire Naturelle des Plantes de Madagascar, tt 378-382. The seeds are very peculiar, but unfortunately — were not obtained until after the plate was printed off—W. Bor HEMSLEY Figs. 1 and 2, anthers in different positions; 3, cross-section of ovary. All enlarged. PL 2735 ee | MS deleting. PuatTe 2735. ARCHIDENDRON SOL ENSE, //ensi. Lecuminosm. Suborder Mimosex. = fe ce Hemsl. (sp. n ; ab A. incurvato, Laut. et K. , pinnis ineequalibus, foliolis tenia, venis primariis r numero- Biota diversum. rbor 20-pedalis, trunciflora. Folia aavagstin, ampla, glabra, pari- bipinnata, petiolo communi tereti, perfect viso ; pinne bijuge, r Fi oli ote Sore iter petiolulata, tenuia, fere membranacea, ovata, 3-6 poll. longa, interdum leviter obliqua, obtuse acuminata, basi rotundata vel interdum ai oiarrest integra, venis primariis lateralibus utrinque cir- citer 7, vi ligno Getet tGaaiena) 3-4 poll. longi, circiter 5-6-flori. Flores prope apicem eg conferti, breviter pedicellati, cum staminibus circiter bipollicare alyx coriaceus, per a anthesin tubulosus, bs oon a, i usque ad 6 poll. longa, dorso alte lobata, cito dehiscentia. Semina nigra (Com?ns) ut videtur anguste ovoidea sed perfecta non visa. Sou LOMON IsLanps : ‘only one tree known near the village of Madoa, Ulawa,’ C. B. Comins, 249. Archdeacon Comins, who has sent so ~ interesting plants to Kew from the Solomon Islands, states that the natives ¢ all this tree Az m aco fair representation of the pods, but perfect seeds are still wanting. The leaf, too, is not quite sas, wanting the lower part of the “petiole. Hansemannia oblonga, Hemsl. (Kew Bulletin, 1892, p. 125), is another tree of this affinity from the same source.—W. Borrine HeEMmstey. ee ‘ a era dytied kag lower aid of the errors 2 and 3, quite young etn anded flower; 5, gynzc with pa of calyx and corolla a, and one of the tse fall. length ; “es an ovary ; 7 a pies it ie a eo "al ne 5 and 6 watersst M-S.delet Lith Puate 2736. THOMASSETIA SEYCHELLANA, Hemel. TERNSTREMIACER, Thomassetia, Hems?. Genus novum nulli propinquum, inter Tern- streemiaceas ob staminodia insigne flores hermaphroditi. Nats 5, imbricata, rotundata, margin minute denticulata. Petala 5, contorto- imbricata, nunc idniatioreiin nune dextrorsim obtegentia, ovato-oblonga, obtusa, libera, glabra. Stamina 5, petalis om ares pt ea paulo excedentia ; filamenta carnosa, ima basi inter e staminodiis leviter coherentia ; an ntheree basi cordiformes, i inter ee basins longitudinaliter dehis- centes. Stami nodia circiter 15, dentiformia Caso hnssctits oak Hie se ens cum eet 3-5 po oll. pee obtusa vel rotundata, basi subrotundata, margine cartilaginea, interdun obscure remoteque crenato- undulata, ihe pallidiora, venis primariis lateralibus utrinque circiter 10 in siccis sat con mspicuis. Pedunculi . axillares, compressi, circiter pollicares, recurvi, apice breviter bifurcati. Flores flavo-albi ei 9-12 lin. diametro, in asciculos duos divergentes ad peduncult apicem aggregati, distinete pedicellati. Fructus bipolli- caris, stamin odiie auctis suffultu T. seychellana, Hemsi. (species wnica). SEYCHELLES : summit of Mount Sebert, Mahé, at 1,800 feet, ae: Pio wit So: The specimen nape is all that I have seen of this lta tree. M The figure of the fruit is from a drawing by Mr. Thomasset, the collector of this seid about fifteen other plants from the sate island received at Kew for determination from the late Dr. Schimper, of asle. Mr. Thomasset is the caveats S iecics of the Cascade 2 Estate, in Mahé, which includes a considerable tract of original furest. Fortunately for science, Mr. omasset intends to preserve this interesting vegetation, and also to investigate thoroughly the natural history of the island. s and alm certainly the same species. It belongs to the Wallich collection, is numbere i f ns erbaria has been made in vain, and Major Prain, who has kindly searched the Calcutta herbarium, has also been unsuccessful. Wallich’s evident in our imperfect specimen. The embryo, too, was described from his drawing. The singular inflorescence, five stamens, and the presence of stami- nodia, which persist and grow out, are characters which render it difficult to determine the exact position of the genus; but I think there is no alternative as to the natural order.—W. Borrina Hems.ey. Fig. 1, a flower; 2, the same, from which some of the parts have been removed to show the five stamens; 3, pistil and staminodia ; 4, longitudinal section of the ovary ; 5, cross-section of the same; 6, a fruit. All except 6 enlarged. PU 2737 Gm if BY 2 cy A KAA aR A ZA ee MS. delet lith. OF Piate 2737. CRY PTOTANIOPSIS VULGARIS, Dunn. UMBELLIFERS. Tribe AMMINER. ryptoteniopsis, Dunn. Genus novam Zuamminearum ab affinibu consociatione umbellarum as multiradiatarum et umbellulis irregularibus pauciradiatis differt Calycis dentes breves vel ad tertiam partem fructus accedentes vel rier ie, (tala in acumen inflexa vel plana. Fructus ovatus vel oblon a latere compressus, ad commissuram sepe angustam con- siricel | exapela teretia ; juga primaria equalia, distantia, plus minus prom minula, nonnunquam obscure scabrida; vitte an in quoque valleculo et rarius etiam sub jugis. Carpophorum ee setae Semen teres Her ve perennes. Folia pn wiee vel natim eee ss saahintaian radiate, nonnungquam racemos simu sae Involueri bracteee nulle vel pauce ; involucelli bracteole sepius 3. C. vulgaris, Dunn (sp. nov.). Herba perennis, Sesquipedalis. Rhizoma obliquum, 1-2-caule, radicibus carnosis cylindricis. Caules cavi, auciramosi. Folia radicalia 1-2-ternata, 6-12 poll. longa ; foliola papyracea, fon eip glabra, in ee et infra in venulis setulosa, ovata, acuta, sepe 2—3- oe vel -partita, }~4 poll. longa, grosse crenato-serrata, aa Ta a api iculatis. Folia ‘iacsloind similia sed minora et brevius petiolata vel sssilin, Umbelle caules ramosque a 15-30- radiate ; radii in fructu cof cee, bracte ez pauc 106755 ; Omei, 4,000 to 8,000 feet, Faber, 60, 627, 632; Hu upeh, Chienshih, Henry, 5384, 5444, 54444, Patung, Henry, 5406. The name Cry yptoteniopsis was first used by Franchet (Bull. Soe. Philom. Paris, sér. 8, vi. p. 119) to designate a group of Huamminee \ 2 Cryptotenia in habit, but intermediate between Carum and Pinwinella. distinguishable from one anothe he number of vitte and other characters, and from other genera partly by the relative size of the sepals and by the shape of the petals. In all these respects Crypto- Fig. 1, a flower; 2, an umbellule of fruit; 3, a mericarp; 4 and 5, cross-sections of americarp. All enlarged. PL 2738 M S.del.et lith, Puate 2738. MILLETTIA PACHYCARPA, Benth. LecuMminos®. Suborder PapiLionace®. M. pachyearpa, Benth. Pl. Jungh. p. 250, in nota; Kurz. For. Fl. Brit. Burm. p. 353 5 pedunculi ore fructifest” aerials seepe pedales et ultra, sepissime legumen unicum gerentes ; legumen sepe unispermum, orbiculari-compressum, 13-2 poll. diametro, interdum plurispermum, 9-10 poll. longum ; semina reniformia, castanea CHINA : Szemao, Yunnan, at 4,000 to 4, sited = A. Henry, 13000 and 13530. Also in Eastern India and Bur This plant has been figured on account of the + scan descrip- tions of its pod and seed, which are remarkable in the genus, and suggest some alterations in generic limits. But this would involve an investigation of a large number of species —W. Borrina HEMsLry. Fig. 1 patil ene bo and longitudinal ce of args 2, standard ; 3, a kee petal ; 4, a wing-petal ; 5, andreecium ; 6, a pod; 7and 8, seeds. Figs. 1 ‘faa 6-8 natural sie SERIES IY. VOL. VIII. PART II, H PL 2739 MS. del et Lith. I ii i le PuatTe 273 CARLESIA SINENSIS, Dunn. UMBELLIFERE. Tribe AMMINER. Carlesia, oie tote novum ex affinitate Siz, Linn., et Pimpi- nelle, Linn, a primo habitu folii lisque dissectis, a undo nes polyphyllo, diandibiar | oabyeie conspicuis, carpophoroque obsoleto differt. Calycis dentes prominentes. Petala basi contracta, acumine longo inflexo, quasi biloba. St, tylopodia conica, a dorso compressa. Fructis oblongo-ovatus apice vix contractus, patente teres ; mericarpia adix crassa, apice cylindrica, Jibris plurimis coronata, multicanlie Caules, 2— 4 poll. longi, striati, ramosi, polyphylli. Folia icalia multa, persistentia, caulium longioran dimidium paullo excedentia, tripinnatisecta, lobis linearibus acutis margine inrolutis ; petiolt laminas equantes, basi breviter vaginantes. olia caulina conformia, minus dissecta, brevius petiolata. Umbelle 10-20- radiate, 15 poll. sub anthesi ad 4 poll. in fructu late; involucri bractee multe, lineares vel nonnunquam divise. radiis setulosis excess, lineares, acute. Calycis dentes lineares, 3-4-plo fructu breviores. Petala alba. Styli erecti, — io cequales. ructus dense hirtellus, sine calycis déntibus 14 hin. I C. sinensis, Dunn (species unica). beer bu dubia Athamanthe zi Hemal. in Journ. Linn. Soc. xxiii. Cuina: Shantung, frequent on rocks at 1,000 to 2,000 feet eleva- tion in — Chefoo Mountains, Maingay 49 ; Faber 234. Maingay’s specimen is so fragmentary that its affinities could not be determined for the Index Flore Sinensis, It bears several per- here is a special appropriateness in the dedication of this genus to Mr. W. R. Carles, C.M.G., F.R.G,S., late H.M. Consul-General] for 2 Tientsin and Peking, because his botanical explorations in China, which have resulted in the discovery of many new and interesting plants, began at Chefoo, where he has twice been stationed in different official capacities.— 8. T. Dunn. Fig. 1, a flower; 2, a fruit; 3,a mericarp; 4, a cross-section of the same, All enlarged. PUL 2740 Vy () Y oF = 26: s\% M.S.del et Eth. Puate 2740, SIEBERA DEFLEXA, Benth. UMBELLIFERS. Siebera deflexa, Benth. Fl. Austral. iii. p. 355; Hemsl. in Gard. Chron. 3rd series, xxx. oie tae Tikchyaeis banka 1 urcz. in Bull. Soc. Nat. Mose. 1849, ii. West AUSTRALIA : paces ea. communicated by A. MMor- Tis0Nn. This little shrub has been ph gor on account of its producing an edible tuber. Some months ago . Morrison, botanist to the Department of Agriculture, Perth, We st Australia, sent the tuber its forming tubers, or, at ‘Teast, of the tubers being paeoninir i with the plant. The tubers are known to the aborigines as * yuke,’ and in a later communication Mr. Morrison states, in answer to my ‘tages that he did not know whether the plant propagates itself from the i i n any bud e would endeavour to obtain further specimens. It is oe an unusual boii for a woody plant to form separate tubers.—W. Borrine HeEmMsLe Note.—Since the above was passed for the press further material has been received from Mr. Morrison. It consists of four plants, two e suspect, therefore, that the tuber is the first product of germina- tion, and the statement that the tubers are formed in strings is pro- bably due to some mistake. W. B. H. Fig. 1, diagrammatic sketch by Mr. Morrison, showing that the tubers are formed in strings ; 2, base of a stem pe tap Aol des ng scar ning it had been oh geiied cm a tuber; 3, tube ; 4, leaves; 5, a male; 6, a fertile flower; 7, the same with pet and stamens poof 8a es rr except 1 teaduoedy oa 2 and 3 (natural 5 enlarged, Ft 2741 > > Sys ECO ee AN Puate 2741, EXCCCARIA BENTHAMIANA, Hemsi. EUPHORBIACER. E. benthamiana, Hemsl. (sp. nov.) ; species ex affinitate Z. Agallocha, L., a qua foliis multo majoribus crassioribus et floribus femineis in — distinctis recedit. simplices vel pauciramose, 1-3 poll. longe, densx, multiflore ; bractez semicyathiformes, triflor, flore centrali | pedicellato, lateralibus sessili- b us. Perianthium triphyllum, phyllis 4 lin. longis acutis. Stamina 3, perianthium superantia. lores jfeminei solitarii fn bini (an semper?) distincte pedicellati. Perianthium triphyllv dorsiven- trale, phyllo postico interiore, phyllis lateralibus antice non obtegenti- us, sinu uniglanduloso. Ovariwm glabrum, 3-loculare, stylis validis recurvis Pessoa bas. Capsula tricocea, crust acea, tarde dehiscens. emina ovoidea, 24~3 lin. longa ; embryo diametro seminis fere zquans. Stillingta lineata, * var, densifiora, Baker, Fl. Maurit. & Seych. p. 314 ; ‘wceccarie species nova, Benth. in Benth. et Hook. Gen . Pl. ii. p. 334. SEYCHELLEs : without locality, Wright; Mahé, 800 to 2,000 feet, Horne ; Mount Sebert, Mahé, Thomasset. Mr. J.G. Baker, with imperfect material before him, referred this plant to Stillingia lineata, but, as pointed out by ntham, it is a species of Excecaria, allied to HE. A gallocha, It is however very distinct in foliage, in the bracts of the male iciticeessenisls and in the periant of the female flowers, which has both edges of the Srome segment pind by the lateral segments, which, in it turn — meet at e base, with a gland in the sinus.— W. Bormye Hemsnr Fig. 1, part . paprtonpessdi 2, cluster of male flowers from which the bract has heen removed ; male flower; 4, an advanced ie e flower, incorrect as to the perianth ; 5, fi ee 6. a seed; 7, the same enlarged; 8, section of the same showing the embryo, Fn: 5 and 6 natural size; all the rest enlarged. af \ Se Ui Ge See Tar SK ce ye © ah MS. del et bth. Pirate 2742. CLITANDRA ORIENTALIS, KX. Schum. APOCYNACES. C. wore ey K. Schum, in Engl. Pflanzenwelt Ost-Afr. Teil C. a C. Meenas Benth., pee paniculis multifloris, corollz et Bieri bone distin Frutex inflorescentiis exceptis glaberrimus, ramis gracilibus cortice brunneo multilenticelloso tectis. Molia oblonga vel oblanceolata, obtuse utrinque prominentibus ; petiolus 3-4 lin. longus. Inflorescentie axil- lares et terminales, composite paniculate, multiflore, contracte, vix 1 poll. ites ai subpedunculate, tenuiter ae bractez ovate, i i li ula ; lobi lineari-oblongi, tubum a saplens vel paulo breviores. v ent or i el) ie is ~ { " ct HOE J See \ - ff. ; Bas A: 3 pee Bal \ pea bi : -- \ Vi ‘ey ff \ ; ad ; ab lees f y- Tein “ — ; Z t b yy "i i / bey ie fdr Ae ia fs om. : Y f Zé fn . ‘ \ a att 4 CL a ye 5 t seni er mi . nd i "ee Bae UP ‘ ' py ae, + aie sea = — \ Se. eae: * ne eight . 4 Wels *) ee , 2 << 2 | Bova ss \ Ay N \ Sie ch ay = e 2 . aN x . 4 4 Ait thou BP ks . : Sa =< | ce es NAN ART ceed ets f Po Fitia cee \ ‘ eo See ay Bot \- Ns Fas Se aes —— \ at ee a Te heey : ; S . SS is Saher ; : ~ ; voy] 5 alee hee se ma i ~ } ses M/Z, = " t f \ A Ne » Reo, g — F ot J 5 ~ ‘ f \ y/f os yj S alex eee 2 \ = " ~ y ‘ , . pigs ' . \ \ ro Ne ‘Sateen at s Sy Hi Leg . we. =< Ay 4 LAE Ase.” a i A ‘ ” = >; ) —=*% =) = de = ey Fo 4 a SW has é e othe a Re pee BBP os a mn ais Le iF, = e = ‘ Br eas g Wee nce es n i si ls ta 2 none ¥ ot —S ate 2 ° } A fash an : <\ Z 7 saa) \ > \ pes . vo > re at ee esc er . a" ~~ _ NN \\ d\ pi / hes ve. ao SS 26 SF any | a =F vad a : A ‘a {| Hyp’ = | LZ 7 74 WP , fi tie ae dat rege PIR ,, ( j 3 iff? 4 s f f / , / y { oa olga ee Ee) Bis aa gle, PONCE poo hee fit LP =} - : esas | es 2 y FX = 53 \ ar \ os fy * ; 7 Pea! fF, » aie ae er Se het 4 4 i) Up ! Lith hommes oe ‘ <> areas AS ie tine 2 N LCL ns TPady\ mega seh dN SS Ba at laza - . — ox. z gi fh y/ Ae) 1 of. f { \ - MS.delet lith Piate 2747, AINSLIZA ELEGANS, Hensl. Composirz. Tribe MurTIsiacez. elegans, Hemsl. (sp. nov.) ; inter species scaposas statura majore, ioe crassis cordiformibus sreibieie Sossamon tomentosis et inflores- centia ramosissima flaccida, distinet He perennis, scaposa, erecta, 3-4 ped. alta. Yolia longissime petiolata, subcoriacea, maxima absque petiolo 6 poll. longa, ambitu vere iformia, apice nunc rotundata nunc acuminata, remote calloso- S minusve strigillosa, de rescentia, subtus (in siccis) albo- tomentosa vel fere lanata, in venis et ad margines fulvescentia ; petioli sque ad 7-8 . longi, teretes, dense fulvo-villosi, pilis longissimis diu persstentibusque Scapt graciliusculi, cito glabrescentes, infra medium simplices, nudi vel interdum folio unico prediti, supra medium nic 1 multiramosam fla m ampliati, ramulis pedunculisque gracillimis. Capitula numerosissima, pendula, angusta, ari lobis Sian: Achenia villosa ; pappisete plumose, corolle tubum zequantes Cuina : Mengtze, Yunnan, at 7,000 to 8,000 feet, Henry, 9108, 9108 a ern China is the centre of this beautiful _ os the French missionaries and Dr. A. Henry between them have ed upwards of a dozen at igvame undescribed species. A. elegans, Heal. in some respects closely resembles A. ramosa, Hemsl. (Journ. Linn. Soe. xxiii. p- aah but the ere has a aks flower-stem and a rigidly erect panicle.—W. Bortina J1emsLE g. 1, an involucral bract ; 2, a flower; 3, anthers; 4, upper part of the style. aa Dien d. Pl 2748 Pate 2748, HAMADRYAS SEMPERVIVOIDES, Sprague. RANUNCULACER, madryas ie ake, Sprague (sp. nov. Si } a ceteris speciebus aifert habitu rosulato, sepalis petalisque glabris Radicelli fibrosi, crassi, adventitii. Caulis simplex vel bifidus, 1-1} poll. longus, subtus | foliorum basibus vestitus. Folia sessilia, . lon Scapus foliis occultus, 8 lin. longus, 1-florus. Flores masculos non Vidi. Flores feminei : sepala 5-6 deltoideo- wabalat 15 lin. longa, }—3 lin. lata, scariosa ; petala circa 7, lineari-subulata, 4 Tin. longa, supra basin callo ened instructa. OQvaria bie: inn in stylum uncinatum Ach attenu cheenia basi postice produc 8. Paraconra : on lava rocks in Cordilleras, J. B. Hatcher, February 1897. A most distinct species showing typical adaptation to high mountain conditions. Mr. Hatcher was attached to the Princeton Scientific Ex- pedition to Patagonia, and the specimens of Hamadryas rite eieemot and a few other plants were sent to Kew for identification by P G. “gq oemn of the Princeton University, New Jersey, U. 3 i T. A. Spr Fig. 1 — surface of leaf; 2, lower surface of the same; 3 and 4, flowers; 5, receptacle ; 6 , @ sepal ; 7, a petal ; 8, 9, and 10, carpels. piedids except fig, 3 PU 2749 Puate 2749. PERICHLHNA RICHARDI, 7. Buill. BigNoniacex. Tribe TEcomEs. Perichlena Richardi, H. Baill. in Hist. Pl. 50; K. Sch. in ae u. Prantl a iv. 3 B. P 232 gon hte ecient P communis 1-2 poll. longa, sulcata ; foliola 2-3-juga, elliptica vel elliptico-oblonga, obtusa vel retusa, 1}-2} poll. longa, 7-15 lin. lata, coriacea, ir etd reticulato-venosa, supra servant subtus pallidiora margine reflexa, venis utrinque 6-7 acutis ut nervo medio Peace vel in cymorum racem dentibus 5 subeequalibus tubi + 1 sequantibus. Cor il tate us arcuatus, calycem subduplo superans, intus subter filamento rtionem pilis -alata, basi sata anthere ad m be a: lobis subter insertionem ‘paralllis ‘ec connectivo hears «ikke expanso bituberculato ; stam ium minutum vel deficiens. Discus annularis, margine undulato, j jay ventute depresse conicus ad ovarium appressus. Ovarium 2-loculare, ovulis in orden a ze acute intus et margine puberule. Fructus oblongo- Jlanceolatus, laber, septo parallele ie kgm loculicidus. Semina margine palin 10 lin. longa, + lin. lat MapaGascar : eed of Diego Suarez, Richard, 124, 166 (1837), in the Paris Seabarit A very isolated genus of Tecomex. Baillon (Hist. te va peed places it next to Kigelianthe, from which it differs in the nature of t calyx and disc, and by its 2-seriate ovules ; this seems om be te gph pe affinity. Perichlena has, of all the Bignoniacee, the most strongly bilabiate corolla, the only genus approaching it in this respect being Tynnanthus (Bignonier) from tropical America, We are indebted to Professor Bureau for the loan of the type specimen, Richard 124, from which the present figure is taken.—T, A. SPRAGUE, Fig. 1, calyx laid open showing pistil; 2, base of corolla with stamens; 3 and 4, anthers ; 5, longitudinal section of the be fully developed ovary and disc ; 6, jiaestienion of ova ry ; 7, part of a fruit; 8, a seed. Al! enlarged vacept 7 and 8. Pl 2750 M.S. éel et ith PLATE 2750. PROTARUM SECHELLARUM, Engler. ARACER. Tribe ARINEA. P. Sechellarum, Lngler Jahrb. xxx., Beibl. 67, p. 42 ; species unica. Herba tuberosa. Foliwm solitarium, inflorescentia coztaneum, cata- 1 is ocppti sessile lateraliter com- 5 & Flores masculi: stami pressum seam i erent eM con: SEYCHELLEs : Cascade Estate, Mahé, Thomasset. a very remarkable and anomalous genus, which does not fit The material from which this plate and a were prepared was presented to Kew by Mr. H. P. Thom The specimens described by Engler were ornine in the same eal by the late Dr. W. Schimper.—N. E. Bro Fig. 1, spadix from which the favatige? has — removed - male flowers seen from above ; 3, side view of a male flower; 4, female flowers n from above; 5, ovary; €, longitudinal section of ovary. Fg. 1 natural size, the pee enlarged, The impression of the “Teones’ is 1 Cio ae . ee ee se / Yi LAT ecm Pa % Ww | VOL. VITI.—PART nt} {[NOVEMBER. HOOKER'’S ICONES PLANTARUM: FIGURES, WITH DESCRIPTIVE CHARACTERS AND REMARKS. OF NEW AND RARE PLANTS, SELECTED FROM THE KEW HERBARIUM. FOURTH SERIES. EDITED FOR THE BENTHAM TRUSTEES BY SIR WILLIAM T. THISELTON-DYER, K.C.M.G., C.LE., LL.D., M.A., F.B.S. HONORARY STUDENT OF CHRIST CHURCH, OXFORD DIRECTOR, ROYAL BOTANIC GARDENS, KEW. VOL. VIII. OR VOL. XXVIIL OF THE ENTIRE WORK. 37 SOHO SQUARE, LONDON. Pl 2797. » (A 5 erefs= PU 2752. MS.del.et ith. ~ Puates 2751 ann 2752 ANIBA MEGACARPA, J/ems/. LAvuRINES. A. megacarpa, Hemsl. (sp. nov.); species fructus magnitudine insignis. Arbor interdum ultra 60-pedalis (Hart) preter pape Nagi omnino glaberrims, ramalis ultimis secon crassiusculis rigidis rectis, Folia ad apices r. ru eviter petiolata, siti, coriacea, obovata, obovato- reine oi ata vel in terdum fere elliptica, 3-5 poll. longa, apice rotundata vel subito pans ouanmtes, basi e conspicuis. ores minuti, unisexuales, in panioalas ubabatle axillares 1-2 poll. longas dispositi, pedicellis breviss ssimis. Bractee bracteoleque minut, oblong vel ovate, Seshheers citissime decidue. Perianthium glabrum, globosum vel pyriforme, 1-1} lin. diametro, lobis inflexis ubus eae ovarium omnino includens ; lobi 6, us, aucto grosse lobato 2 poll. diametro semiexsertus, pericarpio incrassato. Semen no ; cotyledones alte peltatim affix, corculum omnino includen TrtntDAD : Guasso and Tabaquite, collected by Dannouse. Trinidad eviaetan, 6786. Mr. J. H. Hart, = peice of the Botanical ming in Trinidad, sent fruiting specimens of this tree to Kew in 1900, and again in 1901, together with case young lowees and sciutes of the parts of th flower as observed by him in the fresh state. Notwith- tanding all the trouble he took, I am not quite certain abou hd t e composition and structure of the andrecium. Mr. Hart adds that n this tree yields a valuable timber, called ‘ Laurier matac’ in the patois French of the colony.— W. Borrina Hemstey. Puate 2751. 1, a cluster of flowers ; 2 and 3, bracteoles from the same; 4, flowers need stage; 5, a section of one of the same; 6, the same from which the psa pam ngited have been removed; 7, one of the outer stamens or staminodia in a very early stage; 8, one of the intermediate series; 9, on he inner series 10, Someaistitel section of ovary. Ali enlarged Priare 2752, Fig. 1, a very young fruit; 2, longitudinal section of the ig ie Jongit tudinal section of the cupule of a ripe ‘fru it; 4, longitudinal section of the ; 5, embryo ; 6, the same appt showing the peltately attached seta: Au, except Sig. 2, natural st. SERIES IV. VOL. VIII, PART III, I Puate 2753. ELEIOTIS TRIFOLIOLATA, 7. Cooke. — Lecuminosz. Tribe HepysaREm. E, trifoliolata, 7. Cooke in Flora Pres. Bomb. (1902), p. 342 The i distinctissima, foliis trifoliolatis, foliolis basi attenuatis nec corda et calycis dentibus longioribus ab Z. sororia, unica specie bisitiacne descripta, differt Herba annua, prostrata. Caules plures, ceespitosi, gracillimi, usque ad 18 poll. longi, obscure triquetri, glabri. olia 3- foliolata ; petioli ‘ubaiteess 6-12 lin. FOr, sige stipule 2} lin. longe, ‘Hineari- Fr basi attenuata; nervi et vene subt conspicui ; stipelle 2 sub uno- quoque foliolo, subulate. IJnflorescentia primo in summis pedunculis aggregata, demum in racemum laxum pauciflorum elongata. Pedunculi axillares vel terminales, pilosi, parte infra flores 1 vel 2 bracteis scariosis instructa. Pedicelli filiformes. loruwm bracteee magne, striate, ovato- orbiculares, breviter acuminate, ciliate, unaquaque bractea duos flores yn Calyx 4 lin. longus ; dentes triangulares, tubo paullo breviores. rolla 15 lin. longa ; vexillum emarginatum. Ovens Dal — indies stipitatum, 1- raro 2-ovulatum ; stylus inflexus, incrassatus. Legwmen 3-33 lin. longum, cymbiforme, iawhes vale scentibus, ikea: suleatum Inpia : Presidency of Backes: near Badami, August 1892, 7. Cooke. e plant, which, so far as is known, has been found only at A rar Badami, near the station of that name on the Southern Maratha Railway in the oereeraeed of Bombay. It flowers during the cold season.—T. Coo . 1, a cluster of flowers ; 2, a flower; Tn calyx Jaid open, and section of padi containing two ovules; 4, sta nda rd; 5, aw g-petal; 6, a keel- te net! AL andrecium ; 8, uniovulate ovary—the usual cond, tion ; 9, ioe fruit. Ali en Pl 2754 f * pa TS sept MS delet lath. Piate 2754. BRACHYSTELMA JOHNSTONI, JN. £. Brown. ASCLEPIADACEH. Tribe CRROPEGIE®. B. Johnstoni, V. £. Brown (sp. nov.) ; species ab omnibus hactenu descriptis corollw lobis longissimis supra densissime albo-villosis dis. tinctissima, Herba 9 9 bt ane alta. Caulis ramosus, compressus, puberulus. Folia opposita, 4-14 poll. longa, 1-2 lin. lata, linearia, acuta, subsessilia, longus, eC arena lobi baal 2 lin. iat in danas socal filiformes 3 poll. longas attenuati. Corona exterior cupularis, 10 dentata, atropurpurea ; Gentes intus ad apicem retrorsum barbata. Corone interioris lobi 4 lin. longi, lineari-oblongi, obtusi, antheris incum- bentes. British East Arrica : 0 srs Protectorate ; at Fort Ternan in Nandi district, Sir H. Johns A most distinct and remarkable species ; the very long woolly tails of the flowers, which are clustered at the top of the stem, give it a very unique appearance. —N. E. Bro Fig. 1, sepal seen from the inside, biglandular at the base ; 2, coronal body; 3 lobar of the outer series of the corona; 4, pollen-masses. All enlarged. Pl. 2755. Os ibe aie. - “ See’ ut Malis “ ree me mae SESE A ee i” “4 Fis! paee Ny - a * BR Ly ot = a a we a0 ya Yi WLP tre ZN MN aN Wetted Bich dh Hanhart unp. PuLate 2755. LANDOLPHIA KIRKII, Dyer. Apocynacem. Tribe PLUMERIOIDER. Landolphia re ae in Kew Report, 1880, pp. 39, 42; Stapf in Flora Trop. Afric 55; L. Heudelotit affinis differt corollis minoribus, ovario gates: ted nervis numerosioribus. Arbuscula cirrhis ramosis scandens, cortice rugoso-tuberculato, novellis ramulisque primum velutinis, ramis deinde glabris nigres- centibus albo-punctulatis. olia lanceolata vel oblongo- ad lineari- lanceolata, 1-4 poll. longa, ad 14 poll. lata, he attenuata, inter- dum acuminata et basi rotundata, breviter petiolata, membranacea, supra lete viridia et Aste subtus pallidiora et ts eal nervo medio boiacnes nervis lateralibus patentibus prope margi tomosan tibu ymee terminales, fusco pubescentes, vel Laapitar ‘paiune atee et iecke thyrsoideo- -corymbosx, pedunculo deflexo 2-5 poll. longo, sien Sepala ovato-elliptica, obtusiuscula, carinata. Corolla tubo silane superne dilatato calyce duplo longiore, lobis tubum subsequantibus linearibus acutis externe puberulis. _Anthere oblonge, acute. e stigmate cylindraceo bifido. Fructus pee: ad 3 poll. Jongus. Semina plurima, angulata, diametro ad 9 lin.—Z. elastica, Vatke ex Dewévre, Caoutch. Afric. Monogr. Lanlsiph, p- 45; L. polyantha, K. Schum. in Engl. Jahrb. xxviii. p. 452; Vahea Kirkii, Sadeb. in Jahrb. Hambur _ uence Anstalt, ix. i, (1891), p. 226; V. elastica, ce. p. 46. TropicaL East AFRICA : Hoge East Africa to the Shire Highlands, where the typical form gro The development of the important india rubber trade of East Africa was entirely due the energy and sagacity of Sir John Kirk. As early as 1868 he sent specimens of the present species and rubber made from it to Ke This is collected in a way s perhaps unique in ch i any rubber-yielding plant. Some of the milk from a wound is gine to coagulate. The pellet so obtained is applied to a fresh cut, ‘and being turned with a rotary motion, the exuding milk i is drawn off like 2 silk from a cocoon.’ It is said that by working hard one person can collect 5 Ibs. of rubber per diem. According to Sir John Kirk, Landol- phia Kirkii ‘yields os best rubber of the enema coast.’ a os “ uce the natives to collect it. ‘Every on engaged in the inetd and the experiment in consequence sill : But it eventually ‘ created a new trade for all those classes pees mea of subsistence came to an end’ with its suppression.—W., T. THIsELTon- Dyer. Fig. 1, a flowering branch—na/ural size ; 2, a flower-bud ; 3, an expanded flower ; 4 and 5, ‘entra 1 and dorsal view of anther ; 6, gynzceum-—all enlarged ; 7, fruit— cae al s PL.2756. 2. oy bet ¥ 4) eae ree Hanhort inp. W. Hood. Fitch hhh PLATE 2756. LANDOLPHIA PETERSIANA, Dyer. ApocynacEx. Tribe PLUMERIOIDE®. Landolphia petersiana, Dyer in Kew Report, 1880, p. 42 ; Stapf, Flora Trop. Africa, iv. p. scandenti affinis differt corollae tubo quam lobis multo breviore, folioram nervis minus numerosis Arbuscula ope cymarum cirrhiformium scandens, novellis ramulisque sa us minusve ochraceo-velutinis, ramis nigrescentibu p is Folia oblonga vel oblongo obovata, 15 1. longa, ?—2 poll. lata, apice obtusiuscula, a ] vissime acuminata, basi obtusa, interdum utrinque plus minusve rotundata, chartacea, supra saturate- subtus szepe flavido-viridia, crebre reticulato. venulosa, utrinque sparsim puberula deinde glaberrima. Panicula longe pedunculata, laxe thyrsoidea, pedunculo 2-5 poll. longo, ramis paucis patentibus, deinde deflexis, capitulis ferrugineo- -pubescentibus. Flores sessiles, capitatim congesti ; alabastra } poll. longa. Sepala lanceolata, acuta. oroll tubo canescenti inferne dilatato, lobis tubum subwequantibus lineari-lanceo- latis acutis giabris margine fimbriatis. Anthere lineari-oblonge, Fructus globosus, ad 2} poll. diametro, denique le a onga.—L, 8 candens vars. petersiana, rotundifolia et china niana, Hallier f., Kautsehuklianen Be ahrb. urg. Wissen Anstalt XVil. (1890), 3. Beih. ‘cn 83 ; Aneylobothrys "petersiana ‘et A. ro tundifolia, Pierre in aris lughbeia petersiana et W. senensis, “Blotesch i in Peters, Reise Miusssiabs 2 . Bot. i. pp. 281, 282 Tropica, East Arrica: British pestle Africa to the mouth of the Zambesi, iors the typical form was fou ee The rubber of Landolphia petersiana does not coagulate sponta- neously on exposure to the air like that of Z. Kirkii, ‘the juice being a some other way similar to that used in Madagascar or the Brazils. The product is said, however, to be of an inferior quality. —W. T. THISELTON- DYER Fig. 1, a flowering branch—xatural size; 2,a flower; 3, a stamen; 4, a pistil— all salads 5, fruit —natural size. Puate 2757. SAPIUM STYLARE, Muell. Arg. Evupuorsiacex. Tribe Crorone. S. stylare (§ Emmenostylum, sect. nov.), Muell. Arg. in Linnea, xxxii. 119 ; a speciebus omnibus mihi cognitis lamina foliorum basi culata recedit.—Hacecaria stylaris, “Muell. Arg ). Prodr. xv. 2, p- 1204. Sapium biglandulosum var. moritzianum in Herb. Mu us. Brit. non Muell. Arg., vide sub tab. nostr. 2647. VENEZUELA: near the former German colony of Tovar, south-west of Caracas, A. Fendler, 1231 ; C. Moritz, 1775. Ecuapor: eastern side of the Andes, H. Jwmelle. A representation of this species, which is most nearly related to sl., plate 2647 of this work, is here given, because what e sam side of the Andes of Ecuador and yielded caoutchouec of inferior quality. Only leaves were sent, but they are so exactly like those of typical S. sigiore: including the ‘pasal auricles, that I think the identi- fication is beyond doubt. “The leaves were sent under three names : caucho blanco, caucho verde, peo by sgioee morado ; yet they are quite indistinguishable from each o an rof, Jumelle (Revue des— ture Ecuador, where it is never found below about 3300 ft., and asce to upwards of 8000 ft. It flourishes best and eee ged _ greatest quantity of rubber at elevations above 5000 ft., wher n temperature ranges from 57° to 61° Fahr. Further asic het will be found in the publication cited. It may be useful to add here some aad nee to what is known of the species of Sapiwm of the Western Province of Ecuador. Dr. Pau Preuss, formerly director of the Botanic Ga ae. Victoria, Cameroons, was depu y the Berlin Colonial- Twirtochaftiiohea Koaitics to visit America in the ete of tropical agriculture, and in his excellent report, Hapedition nach Central- wn Siid-An nerika, he describes and figures the species of api ae et with in Western Ecuador, He states (p. 385) that he met with three species of Sapiawm, two of which inhabited the lowlands, and the third exclusively the highlands. The last is by far the most valuable, he adds, furnishing the _ true caucho blanco Colomb The two species of the lowlands are the source of the caucho andullo sie or cauchillo, and — the name palo de leche, milktree, in common. The highland species was Patrese referred by Preuss to 8. verwm, Hemsl. (plate 2647 of this work), and the other q . 12), wh that they will ettescly prey’ to be forms of one and the same species— ‘welche beide sich auch j edenfalls nur als Formen einer und derselben Art herausstellen w tan. Through the kindness of Dr. I. Urban, the Assistant Director of the Berlin Botanic Garden, Preuss’s specimens have been sent to comparison, and, so far as one can decide from leav es os I ere the highland species is correctly referred to my S. verwm , Which is the only one besides S. stylare known to me as having persistent ae In this connection it Paioald be mentioned that the Bri tish Museum specimen cited in the letterpress to plate 2647 as Sapiwm bi glandu- losum, var. moritzianum, Muell. Arg., is not that plant, but typical S. stylar With aid to S. utile and S. decipiens, they are caper the same, and the species should bear the former name. It is distinguished ute “From the foregoing it seems now an established fact that S. stylare and S. verwm both extend from Colombia to Ecuador, and Apt the latter ial i a superior quality of rubber—W. Borrinc Hemst Fig. 1, portion of a branch, bearing stipules and base of petioles ; 2, portion of a leaf showing the auricled base of the blade and the two glands o n the petiole; 3, a portion of the male part of an inflorescence; 4, one of the ie glands of a brac- eole; 5, a frnit : 6, a section of the same ; 7 and 8, seeds, All, cacept fig. 7, nlarged. ct “etna Pity eee M.S. delet lith. Puate 2758. TRIPLOCHITON JOHNSONI, C. W. Wright. TRIPLOCHITONACEA. . Johnsoni, C. H. Wright; a 7. scleroxyloni, K. a floribus hermaphroditis, antheris bilocularibus, ovulis 4—6, differ Arber alta, ligno molli. Folia palmatim 5—lobata, 5 poll. longa, minuta ; petiolus 3 poll. lorgus. icule axillares, petiolis breviores, cymose, circa ore, bracteis deciduis ? a partitus, 7 lin , inque dense appresseque rufo-sericeus ; | ti, acuti, valvati, patentes. Petala obcordata, basi late unguiculata, 7 li ga, a, utrinque pilosa, alba, bas rophorum 1-2 lin gum, pubescens. Stamina circa 20 ; filamenta filiformia libera vel basi brevissime connata; anthere 1 lin. longs, dorsifix, oblonge, curvatee, loculis 2 Anduplioatis demum e connectivo revolutim dehiscentibus ; staminodia 5 , late ovalia, concava, glumacea, uninervia, glaberrima, 1h lin. longa. "Carpella 5, ad apicem gynandrophori, a agecageg velata, libera, oblique lanceolata, 1 lin. longa, rufo-pube- centia ; stylus subulatus ; ovula 4-6, ad suturam ventralem affixa. West Arrica. Gold Coast: Anum, W. H. Johnson, 813. Native Owa wa.’ name ‘ K. Schumann (in Fng/. Bot. Jahrb. xxviii. p. 330) gives as a deecnagt of this genus ‘antheris monothecis,’ but in the present plant the two flat cells of the longitudinally curved Seance are folded Saeirs so as to lie side by side ; dehiscence takes place by longitudinal slits close to the connective on the ventral side, and the wall of both anther-cells I consider it better to place this plant in ck aastatac than to make it the type of a new genus.—C. H. Wricut Fig 1, gynandrophore bearing stamens and scarious staminodes which conceal the Hii Te with portions of calyx and two petals at the base; 2, front view of a petal; 3, side view of the subpeltate ret of the petal; 4, an anther; 4, cross section of the same; 6, pistil and some of the scarious staminodia; 7, a carpel in longitudinal section. "All, except fig. 2, rot ita PL 2759 _ M.S. del et ith. Pl 2760 -MS.del. et hth. Puates 2759 and 2760. VATERIA SEYCHELLARUM, Dyer. DIPTEROCARPES®. Tribe VATERIE, V. Seychellarum, a 98 in Baker, Fl. Maurit. p. 326 ; foske Bot. xvi . 103; Brandis, Journ. Linn. Soe. xxxi. 44; ; species habitu re. ceylanicce, a ae “iffert petiolis longioribus, gianinibas indefinitis, sepalis haud reflex Arbor 80-100 ae alta, ramulis petiolisque canitie fulva obtectis, denique glabriusculis. lia elliptica vel obovato-oblonga, ad 9 1. subtus prominentibus, petiolo tereti, ad 4 poll. longo, stipulis ignotis. Racemi ee 14-2 poll. longi, pauciflori. lores breviter pedicellati, glabriusculi, } poll. ope Sepala ovata, obtusa, fructu minime accreta, nequaquam recurv etala obovata, erosa, apice m avi nibusque incurvis. Siattna' ‘perplura, apiculo brevi munita ; anther valvis exterioribus majoribus. Ovarium glabrum. ructus globosus rng metro sesquipollicaris, calyce persistente suffultus, pericarpio fibros Semina in fructu prec ermin otyledones carnose, petio- voles orbiculares, ad basin auriculate, plano-convexe, externe radiato- cate, ra iculam iucurvam crassam complectentes.— Vateriopsis Bejck ellarum, Heim, Recherch. Diptérocarp. p. 94. SEY s: near Port Glaud, Mahé, J. Horne; Mahé, without weet hasnt H. P. Thomasset This interesting species is the most tele a of the order as now usually lim ited. The une expected o e of so marked an Indo- Malayan type on a distant island composed "of bebe rocks is a act of great interest in geographical bot Tt was discovered in 1874 by Mr. John Horne, FLS., Tate ‘Director of Gardens and resin, formerly used for incense. The tree is now becoming scarce and ‘large trees are now only found near Port Glaud (erroneously pao 7ox-DYER. PLATE 2759. Fig. 1, a flower-bud ; 2, section of a flower from which the sepals and petals have been remoy “ey 3and 4, different views of an anther; 5, cross-sectionofanovary. Al enlarged. Prate 2760. Fig. a fruit; 2, the e, from which a portion of the pericarp has been Blak OO 3-5, ped iaiet pore in different stages. All natural size. ® PL 2767 MS.deLetlith PiLateE 2761. EURYA OBLIQUIFOLIA, JHemsl. TERNSTREMIACER. E. obliquifolia, Hemsl. (sp. nov.) ; a spe vapid sinensibus mihi cognitis foliis brevissime petiolatis basi obliquis differ 7” parva vel frutex 10-pedalis, ramis floriferis graciliusculis rectis "eanloas: hirsutis. Folia disticha, subsessilia, vix coriacea, oblongo- lanceolata, 14-4 poll. longa, maxima 1} poll. lata, longe binive dae os et fru as s maturus in eadem goer Treviakions pedicellati ; aa oe similes sed minores. Sepa/a puberula, rotundato-oblonga. tala obovato-oblonga, infra medium coalita, demum, saltem in rey recurva. Stamina circiter 15, quam petala tertia parte breviora, filamentis filiformibus glabris. Ovarinm glabrum, 3-loculare, stylo glabro breviter heen * petala excedente. Bacca ovoidea vel fere globosa, circiter 24 lin. diametro maximo, glabra. Semina numerodsa, compressa, circiter 4 lin. pave ts punctulata, basi cayernula vacua instructa ; embryo axilis, curvatus CHIN mountain forests south-west of Mengtze, at 5000 feet, A, Sued, 10914, LODL4 A. Another new cig of the same affinity from the same district my be described E. Henr nryi, Hemsl. ; ab. E. obliquifolia, ies foliis basi rotundatis differt ; ab Z£. distichophylla, Hemsl. ( our nie inn, Soc. xxiii. p. 77 Bories glabris petalis subacutis differt Arbor 10-pedalis (A. Henry). Rami florifert elongati, gracillimi, recti, dense s etuloso-hirsuti. Folia disticha, seo sime petiolata, coriacea, anguste lanceolata vel interdum in eodem ramo oblonga vel ovata, 3-3 poll. longa, 3-8 lin. lata, longe scommnnth obtusa, basi rotundata, vel interdum utrinque rotundata, obscure arcteque denti- culata, subtus secus costam et in margine plus minusve setulosa ; costa supra impressa, subtus elevata. Flores feminei glabri, 23-3 li diametro, 1-3 in foliorum axillis, brevissime pedic ellati. Bracteole sepalis similes, minores. ag ts ae subacu a, quam peta a multo viora. etal CHINA: mountains to the east of ici at 7000 feet, A. Henry, 132, Fig. 1, a male fl wer; 2, a section of the same; 3, a female flower: 4. a section of the — 5, a fruit; 6, a seed; 7, a section of ‘the same showing the embryo. All enlarged Pl 2762 ee Bey 7 (ka Nisan iF Oey, ae \ M.S. delet lith. PLATE 2762. POLYADOA UMBELLATA, Stap/. ApocyNnacEs. Tribe PLUMERIOIDES. P. umbellata, Stapf, in Fl. Trop. Afr. iv. part i. p. 103 ; ab altera specie —* foliis majoribus, nervis magis remotis, ovulis numerosi- oribus differt. abe 24-30 ped. alta, ligno durissimo ; ramuli novelli admodum compressi, exsiccando nigrescentes vel rufo »-fuscescentes, adulti lenti- cellis sparsis verruculosi. Jolia ate vel lato-oblo one breviter gue infra admodum prominente, nervis secondariis utrinque circiter 10-14 obliquis ultra rsticrsiies rectis utrinque (imprimis vero infra) prominulis, venis inconspicuis ; petiolus —{ poll. longus. /Vores in fasciculis subsessilibus, rarius "distine te pedunculatis, terminalibus vel pseudoterminalibus multitloris vel in inflorescentiis umbelliformibus congestis ; pedicelliad 1} lin. longi. Calyx resinosus ; sepala rotundato- ovata, fc) tusa, coriacea, intus glandulis numerosis cylindricis obsita, r ; Pie ; Eh lat et, Kautschuklianen i in “J ahrb. Hamburg. Wissensch. Anstalt, xvii. (1899), 3. Beih. p. 190. Wrst AFR ICA : oo Ibadan Forest, Punch, 12 ameroons, 8; Ca Mbanga Mountai gl aang f, 2300 feet, Staudt, 130 ; ; Bipinde, 500 feet, Zenker, 1707, 729. T Elliotiz. T have already called attention to it tego ‘Journ. Linn. Soc.’ xxx. Loe ie Ae ; but as the material then at my disposal was very oly adoa are the eerie position of the inflorescences, the submembranous g. 1, portion of calyx and interior — ae — of corolla, paar inser- ef stamens and pistil; 3 and 4, anthers in different position; 5, nae r part of pick and stigma ; 6, longitudinal section ei capa to show ovules PL 2763. Ny wa .) y We ot ne ae : a ee ao s WwW) t semi pore NTS: Puate 2763. ANDROTIUM ASTYLUM, Stapf. ANACARDIACES. Tribe MANGIFEREA. Androtium, Stapf. Genus novum Buchananie arcte affine, sed antheris incurvis apice ob connectivum dilatatum bilobum quasi auriculatis, stigmatibus sessilibus distinctum Flores hermaphroditi (?), 5- rarissime 4-me Calyx brevis, seg- mentis subrotundis imbricatis. Petala iio imbricata, patula vel apice demum recurva. Stamina 10 feataat me 8), basi disci extus inserta ; filamenta iat eat i el subulato- hineatia incurva ; u ngens. Carpella 5, libera; unicum fertile subglobosum, dense tomentosum, stigmate subobliquo subterminali sessili inter pilos occulto, cztera sterilia, solida, oblonga, extus curvata , pilosa ; ovulum a b ) reticulata, ‘petiola ata. Flores parvi, breviter eotoatlen in ‘panicu as breves multifloras axillares conferti. astylum, Stapf eee unica). Rami juveniles dense fulvo- Be etbes hi citissime glabrati, teretes. Folia elliptico-oblo nga, breviter et suboblique acuminata, basi subacuta, 15-4 poll. longa, 1-2 lage lata, in gemma subtus dense fulvo pubescentia, citissime glabrata, matura coriacea, nitida, nervis secundariis utrinque 9-10 uti eecatees 4 lin. longi. Calyx 4 lin. longus ; segmenta ciliolata, laxe pube- scentia. Letala cahnitita, viridula, vix 1 lin. longa. Anthere }-} lin. longe. Drupa semipollicaris Borneo : Sarawak, near Kuching, Haviland, 2860. Androtium (évip and ériov) has quite the facies of a Buchanania, of which it has also the peculiar structure of the gynzceum in common. 9 = It differs, however, from Buchanania in the curiously shaped, strongly inflexed anthers, and in t essile sti bar: rs, which After the fall of the corolla the fertile carpel soon outgrows the barren ones, losing at the sam time the hairs when the stigma becomes visible. It had, however, in the flowers I examined, the appear; f ntary organ, I found, in fact, among the more advanced carpels or young fruits up to I lin. long, only one in which the ovule had started growing into a seed.—Orro Srapr. _ Fig. 1, a flower ; 2, petals and portions of the andrecium and disk ; 3, portion of disk separated ; 4, a stamen ; 5 and 6, pistillodia; 7, fertile earpel; 8, section of the same showing the ovule; 9, a fruit; 10, an embryv, All, except fig. 9, enlarged. PUL 2764 M.S. delet lith. PLATE 2764. EUCORYMBIA ALBA, Stap/. APOCYNACER, Tribe TABERNEMONTANOIDES. Eucorymbia, Stapf. Genus novum ex affinitate tosgpaioe! a sed calyce mox deciduo glandulis intracalycularibus annulum confluentibus resiniferis, estivatione corolle deterred. ‘sti mate elongato cylindrico indiviso distinctum. Calyx mediocris, herbaceus, intus basi glandulis numerosis carnosis usve in annulum fusis copiose resiniferis cinctus ; la 5, imbricata, elliptica, obtusa ac inzequalia, anthesi perfecta vel prius dua. Corolla hypocrateriformis ; tubu (a ad tertiam partem) graciliter cylindricus tune sensim ampliatus, a medio latiuscule cylindricus, ore nudus ; lobi perlate obovati, sub- i i, dex obliqui, ampli, trorsum obtegentes, subrecti amina 5, paul infra medium inserta, inclusa ; anthere callo lineari-oblongo insidentes, vix conniventes, a stigmate fere tote libere, lanceolate, acuminate, basi 2-lobx, loculis ima basi prominentibus, appendicibus solidis corneis connectivi pedi tota fere longitudine adnatis eocum sulcum formantibus, pede ipso ima basi barbato. Discus annularis, brevissimus, subundu- latus. Carpella 2, libera, in stylum comer oe stigma ° eylindricum, obscure pentagonum, obtusum, integr basi annulo viscoso instructo et ejus ope connectivi wen ubi- bax alates aggluti- natum ; ovula numerosa, plur copie sisson ignotus.—Frutex glaberrimus, Folia ppostia, papyracea, petioli utringue linea elevata transversa hy gona tipi cataribes nullis, glandulis axillaribus minutis. nflorescentiz terminales, cymoso-corymbose, laxiuscule, 5-7-flore, breviter pedunculate, fordus amplis conspicuis albis loiginboals pedicellatis E. alba, Stapf (sp. il Rami graciles, — fistulosi. Folia oblongo elliptica, breviter vel brevissime abru inata, basi oS a parallels : petioli subgraciles, circiter 6 lin. longi. Corymbi 2-3 in ramulorum apicibus ; ec ad 2} poll. longi; bracteze esha pedicelli demum ad 1} poll. jong), graciliusculi. Sepala, 2-34 lin. longa. Corolle tubus~ 1g ad 2 poll. longa, inferne } lin. 2 superne 2! lin. dimetiens ; lobi 14-1} poll. longi, ad 1} poll. lati. Anthere 4h lin. longi, connectivi dorso pilosulo. Bor Sarawak, near Kuching, Haviland, 2300; Saribas, Pactnars ‘ol jaar 1572. Although the fruit of Zucorymbia is unknown, it is evident from all the other characters that it belongs to the Tabernemontanoidee. It resembles Callichilia, a genus from tropical West Africa, in man w i ca early deciduous, as in Orchipeda and Voacanga, but the sepals are free to the base and fall singly, and the ring of intracalycular glands remains on the torus. The dextrorse estivation is also ver charac- teristic. It occurs, in the tribe of Tabernzemontanoides, outside of Eucorymbia only in the section Anartia of Ervatamia,—Orto Srarr. Fig. mete disk, ring of intracalycular glands and two sepals ; 2, anther, front view. Both enlarged. Pl 2765 ~ Ca! SE A / MS. dal etlith PLATE 2765. ERYNGIUM CRASSISQUAMOSUM, Hemsl. UMBELLIFER. E. (§ Ss meagnedony pro) ceca lnc (sp. nov.) ; ab EF. pec- tinato, Presl, capit minoribus numerosioribus, involueri bracteis multo minoribus ae carpellorum pontine majoribus differt. Herba ut videtur saltem 2-3 ped. alta. Caules graciliusculi, recti, rigidi, striati, supra medium alternatim ramosi, ramis terminali bus - 1 tet vel alternis linearibus longioribus 9-10 lin. vont asi seepe state minuta ornatis ; caulina prope basin paucispinosa, inferiora longissime caudata. Capitula numerosa, globosa vel ellipsoidea, seepius 6—9 lin. diametro maximo, ore striatis vel suleatis, Jnrolucri bractee circiter 9, rigidwe, 6-15 lin. longe, deflexe, integre. Palee rigidissime, uam longiora. Styli breviores vix divergentes. Carpella pertingeh non visa) undique squamis magnis crassis spongiosis vestita ; vitte dorsales 5, commissurales 0 7—£, pectinatum, Seem, Bot. Voy. Herald, p. "94, non Presl. Mexico: Sierra Madre, Seemann, 2136. name Sierra Madre has been given i elds pape ranges of ) mountains in Mexico, and old and n are nif in this res Th ra Mad of emai journ . is , Or age partly in Sina In the ‘ Royal Atlas’ the mountain range the confines of North ‘Sonora and Chihuahua bears this name, as pe a range in Guerrero, where E. W. Nelson collected. Eryngium crassisgquamosum, Hemsl., is one of several species which have been taken for EZ. pectinatum, Pres, Particulars on this point are given in the letterpress to plate The Mexican and Central Seriont species of Eryngium may be roughly classified by their leaves into four sections, namely: 1, Znermes ; 2, Setosu-dentate ; 3, Aculeate ; 4, Spinescentes ; the last being more robust and rigidly spinous than section 3 2 The following briefly ic inte species belong to the Spinescentes, and are similar to £. er se ate Hemsl., , especially in having narrow, undivided voliieat bract E. Palmeri, Hemsl. (sp. nov.). Herba 4-5 ped. alta inflorescentia subternatim ramosa, caule gracili- usculo. Folia radicalia fere linearia, 1-2 ped. longa, remotiuscule spinosa, spinis oppositis vel alternis sepe sotantes minuta basi ornatis , caulina pauca, multo minora, basi spinis confertis. Capitula subglobosa, 9-12 lin eect Involucri bractee circiter 9, inzequilonge, fere acicnlares, edentate, longiores bipollicares. alec flores excedentes Pet. etala apice denticulata. Carpel/la (matura non visa) squamis acutis tita. Mexico: Rio Blanco, Jalisco, Palmer, 681. Pringle’s 7623, Hills near Guadalajara, Jalisco, and Nelson’s 4003, near Sct cemes ango, Jalisco, are ska sg y this species, but I have before nly drawings of the spec E. loon, Hemsl. (sp. os Species #. Palmeri, Hemsl., similis sed gracilior, minus rigida, foliis usque any apicem pei Fons spinis sepius binis subequalibus. Cap itula pauca, globosa, 9-12 lin. diametro. Involucri bractee circiter 7, lanceo- late, 2-3 lin. longe. Petala apice "eciiolata. Carpella immatura squamis acutis omnino vestita. co: Near Tepic at 5000 feet, Welson, 4174. Specimen in = Hates States Siete Herbarium ; drawing of the same at Kew. W. Borrinc Hemst Fig. 1, a pale; 2, a flower; 3, a very young fruit; 4, a petal; 5, cross section of a very young mericarp. All enlarge ed. Pl 2766 M_5.del et hth Puate 2766. ERYN GIUM PECTINATUM, Presi. UMBELLIFER. E. (§ Spinescentes) pectinatum, | Presi, ex DC. Prodr. iv. p. 6 ; inter species vis, involucri bracteis angustis alte plurispinosis sat distincta. Herba erecta, glabra, circiter 3 ped. alta, caule 3-4 lin. diametro, ase alternis vel terminalibus ternis monocephalis. Folia rigida, nnatim spinoso-lobata, lobis vel spinis longioribus sesquipollicaribus ; ; radivalia 10-15 poll. longa, absque spinis usque a in. lata, supra nudis. Involucri bractee sepius circiter 7—9, rigidissime longe, reflexee, utrimque 1- vel 2-spinose, spinis 2-4 lin. longis. Palee rigidissim, mucronatz, flores excedent Calycis dentes “late ovati, apiculati. Petala apice denticulata. Stamina quam petala inflexa multo longiora. Styli divergentes, quam stamina ane Carpella (matura non visa), apice tantum =i OR teiRENE 3 Vitte 5, quarum commissurales, vel 6, 3 commissurales Iexico: in terris Mexicanis Raison Haenke ; Forét del Desierto Viejo, Vallée de sey res , Bourgeau, 1177 ; near Ozumba, State of Mexico, Rose & Hay, 5 Through the courtesy of Dr. je ieee von Beck, Professor of Botany in the German Univers rsity at Prague, I have been able to examine the original specimen of £. pectinatwm, Presl, and compare it with the rich i and trict, and Rose & Hay’s is the one figured. £. p tinatum is one the most distinct species of the group ‘to which it eer but Lodsiniat have named at least half-a-dozen different species canara the name being more or less applicable to the leaves in each instance. E. pectinatum, Benth. Pl. Hartw. p, 38=2. columnare, msl. Te. Pl. t. 2511. . pectinatum, Coulter et Rose in Donnell Smith * Admirably executed, almost facsimile drawings of this and many other — received on loan have been made by Miss M. Smith for the Kew collection 2 Enum. Pl. Guat. ii. p. 29= 2. guatemalense, Hemsl. infra. = Lhe Seem. Bot. Voy. Herald, p. 294; Hemsl. Biol. Cent . Bot 561, quoad specimen a cl. Seemann lectum= Z, piatenomnne Hemsl. t. 2765. The following species belong to the Spinescentes and are similar t £. OS aie Presi, especially in having spinously lobed involucral brac E. guatemalense, Hems!. (sp. nov.). Herba robusta, neeaig ore pluripedalis, pay juxta gor atesGmez circiter 9 lin. diame Folia radicalia 1-2 ped. longa, absque spini usque ad 9 lin. lata, aes totam longitudinem regulariter spinosa ; spin: sepius 6-9 lin. longee, intervallis sepius 4-6 in. longis, basi spinula minuta ornate. Capitula numerosa, hemispherica, maxima 1} poll. diametro. Involucri bractee circiter 10, sat — integre, usque ad 1} poll. long. Palee flores parum exceden GUATEMALA : mountains near Hacienda de Chancol, at 11,000 feet, Nelson, 3654; San Rafael, Zacatepequez, at 6500 feet, Helmrich. E. stenolobum, Hemsi. (sp. nov.). Herba 3-4 pedalis, caule 3-4 lin. diametro, supra medium trifurco, ramis iterum trifurcis monocephalis. Folia angusta, fere linearia, : ane fere squalibus tenuibus | — os subglobosa, 9-12 5, ineequales, anguste, maxim 13-2 poll. as seepius trifidee, lobis etl vel spinis lateralibus multo 5 yaonsaton ore ced a at non visa) ad a subset, emi squamis parvis. Vitte 6, quarum 3 commissurales. Mexico : Cuernay. Morelos, Rose & Hough, 4393. Bi op oops in United States Ne pilot Herbarium ; drawing of the same t Kew E. monocephalum, Cav. Jc. Pl. vi. t. 553, p. 35. Mexico: Sierra de Pachuca, Hidalgo, at 10,000 feet, Pringle, 8217. Specimen in the United States National Herbarium ; ‘drawi ing of the same at Kew. This ot ea is included, because several other species have been comments for saa related to Z. ca AN Be ‘Heuid ., differing in i narrower leaves, deflected involucral bracts, and relatively longer pales.— Botting HeEmstey. Fig. 1, a pale ; 2, a flower ; 3, a piers —— the commissural face ; 4, a petal ; 5, eross section of a mericarp. Add enlarged PU 2767 M.S.del.et lth PuaTeE 2767. ERYNGIUM MEDIUM, JH/emsi. UMBELLIFER. E. &s conaateel medium, pean (sp. nov.) ; species ex attinitate et £. serratt, a priore involucri bracteis fere semper dictate pall Soa earn a placed involucri bracteis flores exce iselistius distincta Herba glabra, erecta, circiter sesquipedalis, caulibus gracilibus preeter inflorescentiam simplicibus. Folia radicalia fere linearia, 3-8 poll. longa, spinoso-lobulata, sone Jobulos usque ad 3 lin. lata, tte obuli e ati 2-3 lin. i latim pauciramosa, ramulis pedunculisque gracillimis, capitulis seepius ternis. IJnvolucri Bacio circiter 8, rigide, anguste lanceolate, 4-6 lin. longz, spinoso-acuminate, szpissime integre sed interdum unilateraliter 1-dentate. Capitula subglobosa, 2-3 lin. diametro, haud comosa. alee lanceolato-subulate, flores paullo excedentes. Flores minuti, vix 5 lin. diametro. Calycis dentes oblongo-ovati, apicu- lati. Petala apice: integra. Carpella immatura tantum visa, pauci- squamosa, squamis uniformibus. Mexico: near San Julian, Chihuahua, at 7000 to 8000 feet, E. W. Nelson, 4929. have seen only one specimen of this species, which in foliage res ome forms of #. serratum, Cav. For a proposed rough classification the Mexican and Central American species of Eryngium, see the letterpress to plate 2765.—W. Boriinc HemsLey. Fig. 1, a pale; 2, a flower; 3, a mericarp; 4, a petal, A enlarged. PL 2768 — MS.del evi PLATE 2768. WAHLENBERGIA BREVIPES, Heimsl. CAMPANULACE. W. brevipes, JZems/. (sp. nov.) ; species habitu W. Meio Reichb., sed forma florum subsessilium ab ea omnino recedit erba prostrata, ut videtur perennis, fere undique glabra. Canes numerosi, gracillimi, elongati, 1-2 ped. longi, compressi, angustissime bialati ; internodia quam m folia breviora vel. longiora. olia primaria alterna, longe petiolata, membranacea sepius rotundato- ee inter- dum basi subcuneata, maxima 6 lin. diametro, sed se inora, serrulato-denticulata, pilis paucis minutis conspersa ; sansts lamina sequante vel breviore. /Vores purpurascentes, 4-5 lin. diametro axillis foliorum primarium subsessiles, foliis 2 secundariis parvis sub- oppositis suffulti. Calycis tubus longitudinaliter 10-angularis, secus patentibus. Stamina inclusa, glabra, filamentis filiformibus ima basi leviter dilatatis. Ovariwm 3- loculare, multiovulatum ; stylus puberulus, exsertus, trifidus, lobis recurvis. Capsula ignota Cutna : forests south-west of Mengtze at 5000 feet, A. Henry, 10941. This pretty sae oe plant is so like Pratia begoniefolia in general appearance that it was Pita or a congener before the flowers were examined. “Ww. TTING HEMSLE Fig. 1, a flower; 2, the same with the corolla removed; 3, a stamen. All enlarged, Pl 2769 Piate 2769. GLUMICALYX MONTANUS, Hiern. ScROPHULARIACES. Tribe DiciTaLes, Glumicalyx, Miern. Genus novum subtribus Ludigitalearum foliis alternis, calycis segmentis 5 glumaceis, corolle labio postico sub-erecto atque staminibus 4 a consortibus distinguendum. Calycis segmenta 5, oblongo-spathulata, inter se wqualia, rigide glumacea, erecto-incurva, apice glanduloso- mr lateribus inclinatis i 1 i lat bus calyce anticum trilobum, patens, postico paulum longius ; lobi omnes rotundati, , vel marginibus s subincurvis, posteriores altius connati ; eestivatio 4, didynam ze i U b breviter exserta, glabra ; filamenta complanata, erecta, corolle tubo — posteriora longiora uno margine corolle tubo adnata, anteriora breviora facie corolle tubo adnata ; anthere ovales, leviter curve, ifixee, stadlunntai uniloculares, posteriores minores, breviter exsertze subhorizontales, parce polliniferee, anteriores majores, primum sub- eve, minimum. Discus hypogynus, parvus, carnosus, glaber, unilate- ralis, Ovariwm ovale, ootusum, biloculare, septo contrarie ah eke om- Us turus = proximata, crenato-serrata. Flores ‘eiettan sat numerosi, parvi, bracteati, subcapitati, in ee abbreviatam feciaansestes devandatale sa ta Caulis a ee ns, su si sabpaaiien confertim foliosus, basi sublignosus, superne pilis albidis Weevabins turgidis reclinatis pubescens, olia obovata, apice o rotu a, b atiuse versus cuneata, sessilia, tenuiter carnoso- coriacea, glabra vel minute glandulosa, erecto-patentia, sparsa 3-44 lin. longa 1}—2 lin. lata, secus dimidium superius crenato-serrata. Flores 3—4 lin. “longi ; capitula circiter 7} lin. diametro. Bractee rotundo-obovate vel ovales, sessiles, plonicen, 2 oe, moneaiick Senay glandulosee, nitide, 2-2} lin. longs, primum concave, tandem subplane. Calycis segmenta minute laadu- losa, lin. ‘ie orolla 3-34 lin. tei ochroleuca (crcmea) marginibus aurantiacis ; tubus gla be er, si ae lin. ae ; lobi at lin. longa. Anthere circiter 1 lin. longer. Pollen seittae ros Tad dia: am. Ovarium $ lin. longum } lin. latum. Stylus 21-24 lin, ouTtH Arrica: Kalahari region ; Or. range River Colony, on the slopes of the Mont-aux-Soure mount ain, 7000 to 8000 feet alt., January 1894, only two or es specimens seen, Flanagan, 2018. The genus stands nearest to Digitalis and a differing from the former by its suffruticose habit, from the latter by its crenate- serrate leaves, and from both by the texture of the calyx-segments, the mode of insertion of the filaments, and the entire not bilobed apex of the style. Among South African genera it is most closely related to y different, and the leaves are sessile.—W. Fig. 1, a bract; 2 and 3, Coaataae views of a flower; 4, a sepal; 5, diagram of the estivation of the lo bes the rolla; 6, corolla laid open, showing the attachment of the stam ens; 7, pis 8, cross mesion of ovary, showing that the placentas searcely meet in the prddl All enlarged. MS.del et ith. Puate 2770. XYLOPHRAGMA PRATENSE, Sprague. BicnoniacEx. Tribe BiGNONIEX. a qua differt fructus valvis brevioribus, crassioribus, in duas Xylophragma, Sprague. Genus novum ex affinitate Saldanhee, partes findentibus. Calyx tubulosus, truncatus. Corolla infundibuliformis, intus prope staminum insertionem puberula. Stamina antherarum lobis fere horizontaliter divaricatis rectis, connectivoque lato. Ovarium breve, stylo juventute tetraquetro, Discus parvus, cupuiaris. Ovula pro loculo 6—-8-seriatim affixa. Fructus valve lignose, crasse, demum thaigitodinaliter fissee.—Frutices scandentes vel volubiles, Peruvice orien- talis Brasilieque incole, Xylophragma pegs iho Tecoma pratensis, Bur. et K. Schum. in Engler u. Prantl Pflanzenf. iv. 3. 238. Bignonia pratensis, Poepp. ea Bur. en i Schum.in Mart. F L Bras. viii. 2, Saldanha pratensis, Bur. et K. Schum Perv : Tarapoto, in sylvis, as 4232. Xylophragma id icinhoes Sprague (species altera). Bignonia myriantha, Cham. in Linnea, vii. (1832), p.684. Tecoma myriantha, DC. Prodr. ix. p. 2 990. Sa Idanbeea myriantha, Bur. in Vidensk. Meddelel. naturhist. Foren, 1893, p. 104; Bur. et K. Schum. in Mart. Fl. Bras. viii, 2, p. 255. S. Brazit, Sellow. Saldanhea is one of the three genera separated by Bureau and Baitlot, on the discovery of their fruits, from Cuspidaria, DC., and a first included on ly the two species S. pater ah Bur., and S. conferti- a, Bur., both from Brazil, to which Otto Kuntze ry eey Gen. ii. p. 480) added a third, S. seemanniana, from Panama and Trinidad. These three are the ‘only undoubted species of pees which we have seen. In 1893 Bureau transferred Bignonia myriantha, Cham., to Saldanhea, and finally in the Flora Hranhionsis Bureau and Schu- mann added SS. pratensis and two doubtful species, S. heterocalyx and S. bracteata ; at the same time, however, Schumann pointed out the 2 close affinity of S. myriantha and S. pratensis = each other, and observed that, till the nature of their fruit w s known, it would remain 1 doubtful iarats they really belonged to the genus a The v of the fruit of S. pratensis (Spruce, 4232), p — in the Kew et hawed at once ae new genu ‘Wood gee to be created to receive that spec and S. my? panhe: Additional anther lnkox: Wiesced style, a the large number of rows ee ovules in each chamber of the ovary. The stricture of the wood is essentially the same as in csaehgtu According to Spruce the main stem of _Y. pratense measures a foot i n diameter, and the ae thea are purple, have a jas like that of the Primrose.—T. A Spr: Fig. 1, pertion of corolla showing attachment of stamens; 2, pistil and disk ; 3, transverse section of ovary. dll enlarged. -PL2772 MS. del et th. Piates 2771 anp 2772. PARAGONIA PYRAMIDATA, Bur. BiegnonracE&. Tribe Bicnonies. Paragonia 2 elo ep Bur. in Vidensk. Meddelel. naturhist. Foren. 1893, p. 104; A. Schum. in Engler u. Pra ssl ier iv. 3 B.,p. 219; Bur. et K. Sohith; in Mart. Fl. Bras. viii. 2, p. 182. Bignonia pyramidata, Rich. t. Soc. Hist. Nat. Par. i. (1792) P. 110. B. laurifolia, Vahl ane Am. ii. oe 44(1 796). B. ehretioides, Cham. n Linnea, vii. (1832) p. 7 B. rupestris, Gardn. in ook. Lond, Joa. Bot. i. (1842) p. 79. ‘B. lenta, Mart. ex DC. Prodr. ix. p. 159, partim. B, martiusiana, DC. Prodr.ix., p. 156. B.Sinclairii, Benth. Bot. Voy. Sulph., p.129. Tabebuia pyramidata, De. ‘Prodr.ix. ,p. 214. Temno- cydia lenta, Mart. ex DC. 1c. p. 159, partim, T. elliptica, Mart, ex DC. 1c. pp. 156 et 176 (haud Bignonia elliptica auct.aliorum). Pachyptera um- belliformis, DC.1.c. p. 1 P. dasyantha, DC. 1.c. p. 176. oe (?) surinamensis, Mig. in spiel an xviii. (1844) p. 250. abideea dichasia, Donn. Sm. in Coult. Bot. Gaz. xx. (1895) p $Bpetes unica, TropicaL America: Mexico, Atoyac, Kerber, 178 ; Tabasco, Playas de Paso ancho, Rovirosa, 241. Guatemala, Escuintla, J. Donn. Smith, 2048. Honduras, San Pedro Sula, C. Thieme (J. Donn. Sm , 5393) ; Ruatan Island, Gaumer, 86. Costa Rica, Tucurrique, Tonduz, 12799. Trinidad, Fendler, 519; Port of Spain, Lockhart, 169. Colombia, Panama, "Seemann, 400 ; ‘Cuming, 1179 ; Panama, Sinclair ; Cundina- marca, Jervise. Pern, “Monteries: Pears. Bolivia, Coroico, Pearce. Demarara Jenman, 487 ; im egirotta French Guiana, Poiteau. Dutch Guiana, Miquel ; Hostmann, 211. Brazil, Rio Trombetas, Spruce, 537 ; Prov. Rio de Janeiro, Oardact: 78 ; 7’ woedia, 1347 ; Glaziou, 6720 ; Burchell, 2138. Paraguay, Bellavista, Hassler, 8418. Var. tomentosa, Bur. et t K. Schum., Brazil, Burchell, 6362. bl ae illustrate better than the species under consideration the nik aoe ich prevailed in the Bignoniacee prior to the revision ~ Originally described from Guiana under the name Bignonia pyrami- data, this plant now possesses fourteen other synonyms, three of which 2 are here reduced for the first time, while the remaining eleven have been verified. It actually appears in De Candolle’s Prodromus as seven distinct species belonging to three different genera, but, singu- larly enough, has not previously been figure When in fruit the finely warted convex valves of Paragonia pyra- midata afford a ready means of identification ; in flower, it apd be Sag ppranitees is that by Schumann in the Flora Brasiliensis. The present figure is of im Thurn’s Corentyne he specimen, except the fruit, which is Joana 1341.—T. A. Spra Prate 2771. Fig. 1, calyx laid open, showing pistil and disk; 2, part of corolla, showing lets of stamens; 3, anther from the back; 4, transverse soction of ovary. All enlarged. Pate 2772. Fig. 1, a fruit; 2,aseed. Both natural size. WO ca JP Pirate 2773. BAMBUSA OLDHAMI, Munro. GRAMINES. Tribe BAMBUSEX. B. Oldhami, mae in Trans. Linn. Soc. xxvi. (1870), p. 109; affinis B. kingiane, Gamble, spiculis duplo m+ sole antheris mucronatis, i minus diviso, ‘foliis minoribus distin Frutee ad 50 ped. altus, ramosissimus. Culmi stricte-erecti, basi. diametro pluripollicares, fistulosi, — ae pallide virides, demum lutescentes arum delapsarum cicatrices annulatim prominentibus ; rami 2. fie gh solitarii, graciles vel crassiuscull, hae See. innovationum ad vaginas latas 6—1U poll. 0 mox emarcidas densissime tenuiterque striatas intus nitentes ] acuminate, basi ro tundate, innovationum ey p seth ramulor 5 poll. long, ille ad 12 he ad 1} poll late, supra neat subtas sub- lauce, infra primo sepe pubescentes, deinde glabrate juniores ovate, magis minusve acuminate vel stan ad 9 lin. longe, multinerves, glabree, margine tenuiter ciliate. Palew valvis paulo breviores, bicus- g idate, intra et extra carinas ciliatas plurinerves Ledicule plerumque 2 oblong, ciliate, 15 onge. Stamina 6 ; anthere mucronate, mucrone pilis minutis abies. Ovarium eavitie stipitatum, ovoideum, ut stylus ad vel fere ad medium 3-fidus, longe pilosus, stigmata plumosa. Formosa : Tamsui, Oldham, 648 ; Takow, cultivated in a for the edible shoots, Henry, 1955. South Formosa, Mari The drawing was made from specimens, communicated by Dr. 2 F. Franceschi of the Southern ae ioe Acclimatizing Association, Santa Barbara, California. According tv him, this bamboo, which ) and Mar ab ove o be practically identical with them. The original of B. Oldhami differs slightly in so far as the branches are “considerably thicker a t th of some of them is of the same kind as in the other specimens. B. Oldhami has, like the allied B. kingiana, more the habit of a Dendrocalamus, but the floral characters are those of Bambusa, as it is understood at present. I may mention here : connection with this resemblance, that a part of Hance’s 1050 at Kew, which is quoted unro under Dendrocalamus, is in fact a Bambusa, so similar to B. kingiana that the small flowering branchlet of which it consists cannot be distinguished externally ae it.—Orro STAPF 1, top of sheath and base a blade; 2, two florets, laid open; 3, an anther ; 4,48 arate, 5, pistil, All enlarged PLatTeE 2774. RHOPALOCARPUS LUCIDUS, Bojer. RHOPALOCARPACER. quence of the original description having been entirely lost sight of, and partly in consequence of all subsequent descriptions being more or ] i e me h existing in the libraries of Kew, the Royal and Linnean Societies, but not the one containing Bojer’s description. For a copy of this Kew is indebted to M. Casimir de Candolle of Geneva, and it is reproduced below with a few corrections of obvious misprints, but otherwise as copied. ‘Rhopalocarpus (Boj.) qui in Hort. Mauritiano nomen Rapolocarpus male scrib. Ord. Tiliacearum ! ‘Rh. alabastris globulosis magnitudine pisi minimi, appresse pilosis. Calycis sepala 4, orbiculata, concava, subhyalina, ante evolutionem epali iori i i i sepalis 2 exterioribus 2 a involventibus, demum reflexis caducis. Corolle petala 4, sepalis alterna, linearia, tortuoso plicata, albida, basi longe angus uamosa, cum sepalis caduca na circiter 40, toro brevi et sub o erasso colorato inserta, fila tis sub- patentibus subulatis luteo-viridibus tarde deciduis. Ant medifixe, zontales, ovate, utrin tu ee, facie superna plane, 2-loculares, pollinis globosi ulosis. Ovariwm 1, superum 1-locu- lare (rarius 2-locul.) loculis 1-ovulatis, disco Jato, ad ortum albo-pilosum, pilis rigidis post is lignosis evadentibus. Stylus stam bi ~_ osum, coriaceum, sed facile fractum. Endocarpium in fructu por- rents opaco-gelatinosum nuci adherens, in sire maturescente (ex succo) testaceo-luteum, ex succo proprio productum, liberum, aut ssim pericarpio adherens. Nux Solida, sitttadine latior, reniformis, transverse posita, nigra, infra m umbilico strophiolato donata, juxta ieiattetiien pedunculi adherens, cet. libera in cata. Alb orneum ; processibus plurimis lignosis nigris in albumine immersis. Cotyledones foliacex, tenues, in foramine albuminis multi plicate. Embryo inferus r in regione umbilici situs. Radicula alterna, petiolata, elliptico- ovalia, integ ra, lucida, glaberrima, penni- nervia. Stipula intra a ae .\ Gd | se) THQ NN S Hes = =e i MS. del ethth PLate 2776. CALANDRINIA GRANULIFERA, Penth. PoORTULACACE. C. granulifera, Benth. I. Austral. vol. i. p. 176; species ramulis fructiferis recurvis et capsula nigra nitida poro apicali dehiscente insignis. Herba monocarpica, 2-4 poll. alta, a basi multiramosa, glabra, ramis gracillimis, /olia carnosa, radicalia rosulata, spathulata, integra, 6-8 lin. longa, caulina pauca, similia sed minora. Flores numerosi, albi, circiter 4 lin. diametro, unilateraliter cymoso-racemosi, breviter pedi- cellati, bracteis minutis cito deciduis, cree a ovato-rotundata, circiter llin longa. Petala sepius 7, angusta, 14— = longa, acuta Stamina petalis duplo plura. Semina numerosissima, aa poll. diametro t AusTRALIA : Dedari, twenty-four miles west of Coolgardie, at atioak t ,400 feet above sea- -level, G. H. Thiselton-Dyer. r. Bentham described this plant from rather advanced specimens eatiectat by Drummond on the Swan River. He states that the capsules are usually indehiscent, but after being steeped in water for: some time they open at the top by a circular pore. There are also indications that they split into two or three valves at a later stage. Plates 2776 to 2783 were drawn from specimens collected between Perth and Coolgardie, in 1903, by Mr. G. H. Thiselton-Dyer, son of the Director of Kew. Mr. Thiselton- Dyer, who is a mechanical engineer, and was engaged on the official tests of the pumping machinery for the Coclgxedia Water Supply, makes no pretension to botanical knowledge, but in the very little leisure he had, he succeeded in drying a collection of about two hundred species of plants, Having no means of transport- ing large parcels, and acting on advice, he confined himself almost entirely to small and chiefly inconspicuous plants, which constitute a Host inter- esting element in the flora of West Australia, This llection a number of curious plants, including two new genera baie a con- siderable ber of new and very rare species. Some of them had been collected previously by Dr iels and Dr. E. Pritzel, though the descri re tually published. To these gentlemen, who made very extensive collections during 0-1902, as well as to 8. Le Marchant Moore, who also collected in the same region, I a greatly indebted for assistance in determining a r of doubtful i I Iso to record here the valuable assistance e€ ave received from Mr. L. Farmar in comparing this and other Australian collections.—W. Borrina HeEmstey. Fig. 1, a flower; 2,a petal; 3, part of the stamens; 4, pistil; 5, capsule laid open showing the insertion of the seeds; 6, a seed; 7, section of the same, showing the embryo, A ad. SERIES IV. VOL. VIII. PART IV, teri) Piate 2777. ERICHSENIA UNCINATA, Hemsl. Lecuminoss, Tribe PopAtyriex. ichsenia, Hems/. Genus novum inter ceo et Daviesiam sed apolie calycis forma, mara leacg a diffe Calyx grea tose ; lobi leviter SR Be rotundati, tubo duplo biu ib breviores ; la superius xstivatione interius, loborum marginibus contiguis vilvatie’ ; labii inferioris lobus intermedius omnino exteri Petala omnia unguiculata ; vexi lu pointy ; ale dolabriformes ; de elope aha fo Folia alterna, simpli cia, ds bree atiplata Stipule bracteiformes. Flores mediocres, racemosi, bractea E, uncinata, Hems/. (species unica). Frutex nanus, a basi ramosus, li ut videtur, vagans et forsan interdum major quam specimina sub oculis. Caules ramique glabri, teretes, graciles, virides. ‘olia pauca, teretia, maxima semipollicari , apice uncinata tel, purpureo-striati, r mollibus herbaceis. Calyx pilis longis albis sericeis dense vestitus, oblique campanulatus, subbilabiatus, petalis plus quam dimidio brevior ; lobi_ rotundati labii superioris rabie? res. Petala, preter vexillum, . een glabra, omnino inclusa ; filamenta filiformia. ari brum, obliquum, oe filiformi curvato incluso ; ovula 2, pabcctiakeralia, distincte funiculata West AustratiaA: Railway between Cunderdin and Dedari, G.I. oo s genus is named after Mr. Frederik Ole Erichsen, with whom Mr. Thissite on-Dyer was associated as assistant at the official tests of the mping machinery for the Coolgardie Water * Supply. This gentleman Ve ae 776. here is s always some risk in establishing a new genus ‘in such a natural bo wi as the Leguminose, but the present plant is a very distinct one, and, su far as I can Measet had not pawusly been collected.—W. Borrine Hemsie Tee ig. * a olsen’ and stipules — - branch ; 2, calyx laid open and pers stamens removed; 4, ard; 5, a wing-petal; 6, keel spread o : ciel wees laid open. AU pk ang Pl 2778 CW Ak > a Puate 2778. PEYLLOTA GEORGII, J//emsl. Lecuminosm Tribe PopaLyRiex. P. Georgii, Hems/. (sp. nov.) ; species ex aftinitate P. igi, F. Muell., a qua foliis dimidio idapeitea apice inermis differt, mollia, SBIeBce 1-2 lin. longa, secu rete gel at obtusa stipule nulle in ramorum apicibus densissime capitat brevissime pedicellati, aureo-purpurei, 4-5 lin. longi ; Oage: bibrac- teolati, bracteolis anger mene brevioribu sericeo- ve similia, dolabriformia, apice rotundata. Stamina inclusa, ima basi coherentia, filamentis filiformibus glabris, antheris conformibus. Ovarium breviter stipitatum, pilosum, biovulatum, stylo filiformi glabro incluso, Ovula distincte funiculata, ut videtur, estrophiolata, egumen ignotum West AustraLiA: Railway between Cunderdin and Dedari, G. H. a e absence of seed it is difficult to determine whether this In plant au be referred to Phyllota or Pultenea ; but the absence of stipules, the slight cohesion of the stamens, the distinctly stipitate ovary, e apparently ecarunculate ovules point to the former Bonin as characterised in Bentham and Hooker’s ‘Genera Plan- arum.—W. Borrinc Hemstey, 1, a leaf seen from below; 2, calyx laid open and pe 3, standard ; 4, a vin petal 5, a keel-petal; 6, half of the stamens; 7, ovary in section. All enlarged. Fl 2779 IN SSA ve SoS weg ’ SD. SS eae a 4 = ES cael f g BESS . == Ne ASSP ay RSS \ e Ns et MS.del etlith PLATE 2779. VERTICORDIA ROEI, £nd. ee Myrracee. Tribe CHAMELAUCIE®. V. Roei, Endl. in Ann. Wiener Mus. der Ni aturgesch, vol. ii. (1838), p. 194; yietdes a V. insigni foliis parvis crassis concavo-convexis recedit, utes nanus, giaber, ahs ramosus, ramis gracilibus. Folia profunde plumoso-fimbriata. Petala 5, quam sepala breviora, crassiora, ovalia, aia dentata vel simpliciter fimbriata. Stamina 10, brevis- sima, cum staminodiis palmatifidis ee alternantia. Ovarium 10-costatum, esa oa'e infra medium tomentosum, uniloculare, a brevissimo. Ovula 2, placentz basilari Serre collaterniees ails r Australia : Railway between Cunderdin and Dedari, G. H. ri lest -Dyer ponenea bin, Austral. vol. iii. p. 28) dealt with Verticordia Roei, Endl., as ‘ appearing to be only a small-leaved variety’ of V. insignis, Endl., ak with more complete materials there is no doubt that it is apecifically different. The late Sir Ferdinand Mueller called Seaton to this fact when sending a specimen from the sources of the Blackwood River, collected by Miss Cronin, in 18 t I cannot find that he published anything about it. In the Botany of the Elder Expedition, ueller and Tate (Zrans. Roy. So lia, vol. xvi. pa [189 4), a specimen of this species is referr ig This was collecte P. A. Gwynne, es north-east from Esperan ay r also a specimen in the Ke rba from the Oldfield Range, collected by G. Maxwell. An original specimen, collected . Roe, is labelled ‘ Interior, 8.W. Australia.’ Kew now possesses JV. Rovi from five different and distant localities, and all the specimens agree in character, except that the one from the Blackwood River has unusually eis g pedicels. —W. Borrine Hemstey. Fig. 1, a pair of leaves — to branch; 2, a edge) etnies by bracteoles ; ’ ealyx-lobes two of the xed outer series and o the inner erect series ; a petal; 5, one of the tas aE 6, stamens and stam inades Yi Siiabeiins 8, pistil ; ry section of ovary, showing attachment of the ovules, “Au enlarged. PUL 2780 WO, sWO. Bai hs << ‘ So SD A, AR et t) has b ha Ee Pi) — Tid t NS Oli Dy STERECR Ses hae ep GR eeig ts oe" ae pet “eat We) om ox poage ese B+ rt we CBR ICY SoM EE OE CEE SPP FIO Aeods Bit eee LPNS atty J OOS er. @ We. CA? COSTES BS TH LiNe mera O Pe, 1 a Qe SH S Q SOSSeOTyY Osihs QA, reese » SEE tase CC CSS SOO GOS SLES PEE ESO Se EC 1 ae” Cre 45 a Co a Sere Chat I cS | Eaee ay a css, o SCENT D SAP, gE MS.del et hth. PuatTE 2780. MICROMYRTUS ERICHSENII, Hemsl. Myrtackm. Tribe CHAMELAUCIES, M. Erichsenii, Hems!. (sp. nov.) ; species M. Drummondii simillima sed ab ea pedicellis quam folia brevioribus floribus minoribus et sta- minibus 10 recedit. Frutex glaber, dense — ramis virgatis. Jolia ericiformia, conferta, oblongo-clavata, 3-14 lin. longa, appressa, concavo-convexa, subtus carinata, crebre nigro-punctata. flores albi, circiter 1 lin. diametro, ad axillas solitarii, breviter pedicellati, pedicellis apice articulati. Calycis tubus 5-costatus ; lobi minimi, rotundati. Petala orbicularia, circiter 5 lin. diametro. Stamina 10, alterna sepalis oppo- sita minora. varium l-loculare; ovula 2, ad apicem placent sliformis a basi ad apicem loculi adscendentis collateraliter pendula. ructus indehiscens. Semen unicum. Embryo semini conformis ; coty ae minime ; cotyledones ac hypocotyledon reflexe, radicula crassissima. vt AustraALiA: Dedari, twenty four miles west of Coolgardie, Als i ,400 feet above sea- lev el, G. H. Thiselton-Dyer. The full description of this plant leaves it a “igi — whether it is specitically different from Jf. Drummondii, B he same thing was collected by R. Helms, of the Elder Exploring Bxpedi tion, 1891, at Gnarlbine (about 121° E. long. and 31° §. lat.), and by Pritzel (n. ” 863) east of Southern Cross. These eee are all in the same inland district, while Drummond’s specimens are from the Swan iver. The filiform basal placenta is not shown in our figure, having been at first ov gem in these exceedingly small structures.— Botting Hemsi a leaf; 2, a flower; 3, the same, from which two of the petals have been ile Bd 4, stamens ; 5, section of ovary, showing ovules; 6, embryo. Ali enlarged. Pl 2781 Vy) te PLATE 2781. THISELTONIA DYERI, Hemsl. — Composirz, Tribe Heticuryses. Thiseltonia, Hems?. Genus novum ex affinitate Pithocarpe, sed involucri bracteis omnibus latis tenuissimis glabris et antheris ecaudatis iversum. Capitula homogama, multiflora, discoidea, floribus omg mae omnibus, ut videtur, fertilibus. Jnvolucrum hemisphericum ; bract multiseriatze, imbricatm, omnes tenues, ecostatee, viter chguivdlates serierum 2 exteriorum breviores, cordiformes, rubescentes, ceterze albze, ovatie. Receptaculum fere planum, nudum. Corolle regulares, ulose. Antherw oblong, apice connectivo producto membranaceo appendiculate, basi obtusiuscule beled Rai mucronate. mit dents apice gate. barbellati. Achenia calva Reaper nant. gracillima, ramosa. Folia alterna, subulat Capitula sereninali, distincte salaneatity Flores minuti, numerosissimi, T. Dyeri, /Zemsl. =e ee i fere filiformibue Pr abla Dales ina gi Folia lineari- subulata, semiteretia, maxima 6-8 lin. longa, vix acuta. Capitula 6-8 lin. diametro. Involucri bractee interiores lamina alba petaloidea, unguiculo scarioso perlucido medio costa viridi instructe orolle tubus sursum leviter dilatatus, glandulosus ; limbi lobi ovato- Janceolati, acuti, Lea . Achenia minuta, oblonga (matura non visa) puberula, Pere West AustraLiA: Dedari, twenty-four miles west of Coolgardie, at 1, 400 feet above sea-level, G. H. Thiselton-Dyer. oe ri seeigher in the accompanying plate is the only one un he absence is important in classification, though re not sure that shots ai is best placed next to Pithocarpa, with which it agrees in the i cral bracts being very numerous and arranged in many series, and sh aving no pappus. The very minute flowers are difficult to examine in a dr ied, pressed condition, as the glandular corollas stick together in an almost solid mass.—W. Borrina Hemstey. Fig. 1, a 0 attached to a branch; of the outer bracts of the involucre 5 3, one of the conte anya nates ¢ af the phasis 4, a flower; 5, anthers; 6, style- arms. vol, xxxi. ree . 488. — Fortunei, "Hemal. in Journ. Linn. Soe. (1889), p Formosa : mountains of Bankinsing, A. Henry, 430 ; Central District, | seintgee ex oays — moy, Fokien, R. Fortune, 27 ; Ha ainan, B. C. Hen in for at 4,500 to 5,000 ft., Szemao, alias, A. Henry, 10593, 11608, "11957, 11957 a I described this as a doubtful species of Halesia, the fruit and eee were unknown. Dr. J. Matsumura subsequently obtained complete specimens from Formosa and established the genus Ina- ; is . rmosa, where, as well as se Hainan, it attains a —— y feet. Henry’s numerous Yunna specimens are labelled : 10, 15, 30, and 40 ft. high ; but there is no dou ri that all the specimens ‘belong to one species. “_W. Borrine Hemsi Fig. 1, portion Ps calyx and pistil; 2, a stellate hair a the calyx; 3, portion of witli and star oa ched ; 4, a cross section of an ovary ; 5, longitudinal seston of the same; 6. ‘fru t entire and sehissing; 7, as seed 8, an embryo. ll except 6 enlarged ; the aatoe natural si G cy ie ee -f o wc G Us ; PLATE 2792. JUSTICIA PATENTIFLORA, ems. ACANTHACEH. ‘Tribe JUSTICIER. Justicia patentiflora, Hemsl. (sp. nov.) ; ex affinitate J. vasculosa, Wall., et illi simillima, differt imprimis floribus patentibus corollz labio superiore breviore rotundato. rba perennis, erecta, preter flores glabra. Caules subsimplices, teretes, usque ad 6 ped. alti. Folia petiolata, tenuia, fere membranacea lanceolata, usque ad 9 poll. longa, acuminata, vix acuta, deorsum longe attenuata. lores rubri, spicati, spicis ‘axillaribus terminali- subito recurvus ; labiu perius fere orbiculare, quam inferius fere imidio brevius, margine recurvum ; labium inferius intus es reine zequaliter trilobatum, lobis rotundatis patentibus. Stamina 2, inclusa vel brevissime exserta, supra medium tubi affixa ; filamenta filiformia, glabra ; anther oblique biloculares, approximate. Ovarium glabrum, stylo parcissime puberulo. Capsula ignot Cura : forests south-east of Szemao, Yunnan, at 5,000 ft., 4. Henry, 412773. In general appearance the plant figured so strongly resembles the species with which it is compared that it was at first named J. vasculosa, Wall.—W. Bortine Hems.ey Hig- ia aH of ate aa oi corolla removed from ~~ = them ; 2, vomige a disk, and p stil; 3, a corolla laid open, showing the a achment of t mens ; 4, back a fink views of a an anther ; 6, longitu: linal nies of ovary ad disk, All enlarged, PL 2793 PuaTE 2793. UTRICULARIA ECKLONII, Spreng. Ly LENTIBULARIACER, - Ecklonii, Spreng. Syst. Iv. ii. p. 336 ; Stapf in Thiselton- -Dyer, Flora Capensis, iv. p. UT. capensi affinis, sed corolla multo minore labio infero breviter 3-lobo diversa. Herba —— perpusilla, inter muscos herbasque nanas vel in solo humido reptans, interdum cespitosa ; stolones tenuiter filiformes vel capillares ; Pion e pedunculi basi vel e stolonibus vel e foliis orta Folia secundum stolones sparsa vel pa d peduneulorum bases subrosulat ine anguste spathulato-lineares, sagt 9 ge n fimbriatis Sasceg ulus filiformis, rectus, Sieg tus, 1-6-florus, floribus dis sears ; bractes ‘practeoleque ovato-lanceo- late vel Reno 4-2 lin. longe, bractee 1-2 infime plerumque steriles ; pedicelli brevissimi, tandem fere 1 lin. longi. Sepala orbicu- laria vel ovato-orbicula aria, ad # lin. longa. Corolla pallide Meek ge vel alba et purpureo-venosa, palato luteo vel tota lutea, 2-25 lin. um ov ca sepius superans, leviter curvatum vel rectum. Anthere }--1 lin. longe ; filamenta 4 lin. longa; pollinis grana globosa, 30 » dimetientia, vittis meridianis tenuibus circiter 6. tigma sessile ; sie ere superum fm) vel ultra dimetiens. Semina magis minusve a Aa levia, } lin longa.—JU. ¢ ie a ea Spreng. Syst. v. p. 723, et aliorum (in parte ; non Spreng. Syst. i. p. 50); U. Lehmannii, "Benj. in Bot. Zeit. 1845, , a : é A ey ie 213 (e descriptione); U. ewilis, Kam. in Engl. Bo rb. xxxiii p- 97 parte, non Oliv.); U. delicata, Kam. 1 c.; hyceras, Schlecht. in E ii. tirrhinum — 8 . Jahrb. xxv ee 1 BS Linn. f. Suppl. p. 280; Linaria aphylla, Spreng. Syst. ii South Arrica: In boggy places or in wet sand, from German South west Africa to the Cape, eastward as far as N orthern Transvaal n the north and Graaff Reinet and Uitenhage Divisions in the south, 2 Sprengel credited his U. ancien eta ‘ foliis linearibus eho strictis persistentibus ;’ but from a specimen in Sonder’s herbari named U. Ecklonit by Sprengel himself, it appears that the ee aves described in this way were the leaves of a dwarf or seedling Cyperacea, with which the Utricularia had been growing. U. delicata seems to be merely a particularly dwarf state of U. Ecklonii, while Schlechter’s U. brachyceras is, in my opinion, a short-spurred state of the same species, rt s to the variety ‘brevicalcarata Oliv. of U. capensis. Schlechter’s specimens of U. brachyceras (see fig. 14) were collected on Packhuis Mountain, Clanwilliam Division. Drég nd the same form, together with the normal one, near Ellebogensfonteins- berg, Little Namaqualand.— —Orro Srapr Fig. 1, wisn 9g be athena 2, i apres with the sexpe bien oa 3, bladder 4, flower, typical form ; 5, calyx; 6, upper lip cf cor olla 7, lower li of sulle: istil and sate ‘side view; ®, ae oa 10, see : Uy flower, ‘ery small state (U. delicatula, Kam.) ; and lower lips 14, flower with short- -spurred ole (0. ata, Schlecht. ). Mall ieee pene a PUL 2794 Puate 2794, a: UTRICULARIA CAPENSIS, Spreng. LENTIBULARIACER. capensis, Soe Syst. i. p. 50; Stapf in Thiselton-Dyer, Flora Capensis, iv. U. Ecklonit aflinis, sed corolla multo majore labio infero semi- Sue undulato vel vix lobato avn Herla terrestris, pusilla ; stolones et rhizoidea ut in U. Eckloniti. Folia et utriculi ut in U. Ecklonii (vide tab. 2793). DPedunculus fili- formis vel subcapillaris, 2-8 poll. longus, rectus vel subflexuosus, : : =a ; tenue, seepius acutum, rectum vel subcu eaten nabhoeaaes pa deflexum, labium superum magis minusve xquans. Anthere circiter : gl. Jahrb, xxii p. 933 0. Sproujelix. Kam. |. c. p. 100; U. Schinziz, Kam. 1. c. p. 101. utH Arrica: Western and South-western oes of Cape Gainey. from Little Namaqualand to Uniondale Divis Certain flowers from Giftberg and Moddertonteinber have much of U. capen however, also perfectly norm mal specimens and intermediate states among the Giftberg collection.—Orro Srapr Fig. 1, flowering specimen; 2, portion of a stolon with leaf and bladders; 3, bladder; 4, ower, typical form, sate view; 5, flower, typical form, side view 6, calyx ; 7, stam 8, ne side view ; 9, seed; 10, flower with short- paentees corolla Al actual excep B. UTRICULARIA SANDERSONITI, Oliv. U. Sandersonii, Aceh in Journ. Linn. Soc. ix. p. 155; Stapf in ernie Dyer, a Capensis, iv. p. 431; e grege U. capensis, labio supero profunde 2 “fido distinctissima. Herba pusilla, terrestris ; stolones capillares, parce ramosi. Folia pleraque per anthesin persistentia, rosulata et secundum stolones sparsa, obovata-orbicularia vel obovato-spatulata, apice rotundata, ima a b xi lin. longa, ad 14 lin. lata, plerumque multo minora; p revissimi vel inam equantes. Utriculi numerosi, e stolonibus foliisque orti, globosi vel ovoideo-globosi, 2-2 lin. longi, 2-labiati labiis ad margines et in faciebus glanduloso- bractew infime 1—2 steriles ; pedicelli graciles, 1 lin. longi. Sepala elliptica vel orbicularia, superum infero longius latiusque, 1 lin, ra icles , ; abiu longum, profunde 2-lobum, lobis ovato-oblongis; labium inferum, cuneato-suborbiculare, 25 lin. longum ; palatum subbigibbosum, lve ; calcar gracile, curvatum, 4 lin. longum. Anthere ultra } lin. longe ; filamenta linearia ; ; pollinis grana elobosa, vitvis circiter 9 meridianis 30 » diametro. Stylus stigma equans, distinctus ; stigmatis labium superum ovato-oblongum, quam inferum la ne ovatum vel orbicu lare revius. Capsula ignota. Semina globosa, tenuissime reticulata, } lin. dienshieisiacoah Treubvi, Kam. in Ann. Jard. Buitenz. 1898 ; ; Suppl. il, p- 143. ? b Soutn-East Arrica: On wet rocks in Pondoland and Natal. e@ were among the specimens collected by Dr. Bolus at the mouth of St. John’s "River, Pondoland, a few seedling peste vith the rat still attached to them (see figs. 12 ‘and 15).—Orro Sra Fig. 11, flowering specimen; 12, young specimen, attached to the seed, with the scape ati undevelo ped; 13, germinating seed (a, petiole of — ry leaf; b, stolon, cut; ¢, - mary axis! ; . — 14, bladder ; wae flower ; 16, upper corolla lip; edi. Puate 2795. A, UTRICULARIA SANGUINEA, Oliv. aa LENTIBULARIACEE. U. sanguin eas in Journ. Linn. Soc. ix. p. 153 (in parte) ; Here: in Cat. “Woh w. Afr. Pl.iv. p. 788; Kam. in Engl. Jahrb. xxxiii. p , carnosulis, foliis majoribus diutius persistentibus, floribus sanguineis palato magis aperto levissime tuberculato. Herba pusilla, terrestris, 4—5 poll. alta ; stolones filiformes, albidi, ee a ae parce remote ramosi ; rhizoidea capillaria, 2-3 = onga, e pedunculi basi orta. Solia rosulata, ad pedunculorum bases t secundum stolones sparsa, per anthesin poner mine laminze orbi- Dane es vel pooch neg cliptiow : seo brev send cuneate 1-2) in. longze, rnosulze ; petioli vel rosularum bre Utricult e iatobond bus. ‘winks on tl er su f the leaves of the fo , contras t u lous or glabrous leaves of the latter. With the nS bs the additional material of t cies now in t r , they may be defined as follows :—WM. lutea has pagar orbicular pseudostipules, corymbose panicles, a le ae calyx, an row lepidote capsules. A {. tomentosa has conical pseudostipules, sneicd oblong panicles, a tomentose calyx, and relatively broad, soft pubescent capsules. Vogel’s specimen from Patteh, on the Quorra, quoted by Bentham under his Spathodea lutea, is a. glabrescent-leaved form of M. tomen- tosa. The original description of Spathodea lutea combines some of the characters of M/. lutea with others of YU. tomentosa.—T. A SPRAGUE. 1, portion of branch ite leaf and pseudostipules; 2, inflorescence ; Ee portion of soeatha a, Showing a pace 4 end 4, anther; 5, pistil and disk; 6, stigma; 7, cross a of psendostipules of Markha amia lanata, K. Schum. ; 9, flower oe OM. Hiddcbrandtit, ee Figures 1, 2, and 9 natural size ; thea rest enlarge ed. INDEX TO SPECIES AND SYNONYMS. Plate Aine ene “a 2747 mosa, Hem 2747 Alniphyliam macran mdm, nica 2791 ospe rmum, Mat 2791 Aneylobotings petersiana, ‘Pierre lt 56 undifolia, Pierre 756 peer ieees beccarianus, untze. 2711 Androtium ‘astylam, 8 tapf . 276 a megacarpa, Hemsl. 2751-52 Antirr “oo aphyllum, Linn, f. 2793 perula citriodora, Blu 8 Archidendron a acdc Hoist. Diao Arrabidea dichasia, Donn. Sm. 2771-72 Asclepias orbicularis, Schlecht. « 2144 Babiana riche bogota es age a PED —— Gawleri rage Panes Yat = nu croatia, Gaw 2710 r dngiolis, Baker 2710 10 e2 S spat «that Bambusa kingiana, Gamble cea S igre i, Mur tens Ben roe te ‘Sieb. & Zuce. Bitoni eretoides, —e ae Ted gre ve igus si Sracsio De. m yr ianthay Cham cepp. ra He comida, Rich. ris. Gar CU ae scl gine i, Ben th.. re Brachystelma Johnstoni, N. E. Own. 2754 Bretschneidera : sinensis, Hemst. 2708 os as Thomas setia sé seyehellana, Hemsl. 2736 Cesalpinia rostrata, N.E.Brown 2702 Calandrinia granulifera, Benth. Clematis pter ntha, Clitandra Barteri, S ymulosa, Benth —— Mannii, Stapf — orientalis, K. chun Cryptote eniopsis hie ag Sea oe. Cuscuta australis, R. Br. aaa on ——) La: Py Nae ater coma ophile Bd We. pins, ae Hemsl. . — Huegelit oes — iocarpa, Benth. ei : Diplostephium ¢ canes, Diuranther He mino oT Wri cay Daikoharne ‘plat ycalyx, Baker —— Hildebrandtii, Baker sacar: trifoliolata, T. Cooke. . belia polypodioides, Hemsl. & "ios oo Seay —_— proc umbens, “He xatilis, Hemsl. . 5 Erichsenia uncinata, Hems 1. ‘ ium columnare, Hemsl. m, eomca ee Cav. wis OD, Hemnsba 6 es ——- pectinatum, Benth. . . . ulter & Rose. . —— pectinatum, "Pres to. INDEX TO SPECIES AND SYNONYMS. Plate Eryngium pectinatum, Seem. . 2765 —— stenolobum, Hemsi. «. 2IG6 Eucorymbia alba, Stapf 764 Euptelea davidiana, H. Baill 2787 Delavayi, Van Tiegh. . . 278 ea (hg tui, Van Tiegh. . . 2787 —— pleiosperma, Solereder ScEOE Eurya roe ae Hemsl. = StL —— obliquifolia, Hems/. o RIOL Excrensa renthaaiany, Hemsl. 2741 —— stylaris, Muell. A 2757 seams eee Tina. fs 2710 micalyx anus, Hiern. . 2769 Srsclice Paced, Hemsl. . 2789 Halesia ? Fortunei, Hemsl. . . 2791 Hamadryas — ea 2748 Hartia sinensis, Dunn eine 2727 —— cana, Greene. . 2720 etonsa, — ¥ . 2720 a, Gre ‘ 2720 Hemieyelin Dialed, ‘Gamble - 2701 rmannia Johansseni, N. # Town a 2/09 Hunteria um bellata, Hallie f. ~ 2762 oem 4 da adstrin nseese Schlecht. . 2722-23 lllicium micranthum, Dunn . . 2714 lonidium floribundum, Walp. . 2731 Juliania adstringens, Schlecht. 2722-23 Huaiout, A. Gray sos 4s 2782 i mollis; gk el gh een eee Justicia patentifiora, Hemsl. . 2792 Lachnostachys — Hook. . 2732 sede er a, Hook. - 2732 citol a, F. M well... . 2732 Tandolphia arts, Vatke . 2755 sae ee SIDS sia siecoae Dyer . eae ee ee —— polyantha, K.Schum. . . 2755 scandens, Hallier f. var. petersiana, Hallier f. 2756 - Mee - rotundifolia, PORE 275 2756 teins eolomonensis, Hemsl. we 9708 ———. taitensis, Dene. . . 2703 uconotis elastica, Becc. . » 27383 Linaria aphylla, Spreng. . + 2793 ra aromatica, Brandis 2784 a eo ee 2784 = cifriodora, Hemsl. . . . 2784 eae selene Hemel 2... 2784 TBO. oe eee BIR RGR 4 ee ean: tine r Plate sere Steg Blame sos =, . 2184 ——s pine wer se BIBS ist Thunb. 2784 Liriodendron chinense e, Sarg. . 2785 . ees AT) sdetentt var. ? chinense Hemslee=% ere tea X63) sinensis s, Diels Tysimachia pari iformis, s, Franch Ss: Geleeitglontcn, Hems - 2 2108 Markhamia Hildebrandtii, ( ee aety 2800 —- lanata, K. Schwm 2800 800 Microm grins Dronnmondi Benth, rinie Erichsenii, Hems 2780 Millettia pachycarpa, onthe 2738. Oroxylum indicum, Vent. . 2728 Pachycarpus gomphocarpoides, BK. oe BT4e Pachyptera das yantha, DO. . 2771-72 —— umbe —— oS a : deh 72 Paradisea mi ” OH 2734 Paradom mbeya pockets paar pe nsis, Paragonia comers Bur. pte 2 entosa, Bur. é K. Se 2771-72 neice costatum, E. B. Mey. 2744 — crispum, N. 744 Partin brunoniana, Benes 2712 decora, Dwr 2712 oe aidtorann, H. H. W. earsor ee 2IO6 curantiac Stapf 2706 @fo seen Wall. 2706 gran orum, Kurz oes 2706 i il ons Oliver . 706 Pecichiane Richardi, ee Baiil. 2749 ier en ess ning: é 2778 ralima klai = Pears . 2745-46 Polyadon Elliotii,. sia ts ee 2762 2762 oma, alien msi take é 2705 Engl. -. 2750 By a ledifolian "Turez. . 2732 eam: messes Hemsl. 2728 ca, Hem ee 28 Rhabiothannopsis sinensis, emsl, 2788 Rhigozum obvat tum, Burch. . 2799 ——. trichotomum, Burch. 2799 Rhombonema lurida, Schlecht. 2744 ie aw f e R