' \ yy Ae “ CURTIS’S BOTANICAL MAGAZINE, er COMPRISING THE Plants of the Ropal Gardens of Kew AND OF OTHER BOTANICAL ESTABLISHMENTS IN GREAT BRITAIN ; WITH SUITABLE DESCRIPTIONS; BY STIR WILLIAM JACKSON HOOKER, K.H., D.C.L. Oxon., F.L.S., CORRESPONDING MEMBER OF THE ACADEMY OF SCIENCES OF THE IMPERIAL INSTITUTE OF FRANCE, AND DIRECTOR OF THE ROYAL GARDENS OF KEW. NAN VOL. XV. 13 OF THE THIRD SERIES; (Or Vol. LXXXV. of the Whole Work.) ’ Peano pea ata a ane a dda hee ae a ae ‘*F’en in the stifling bosom of the town A garden, in which nothing thrives, has charms That soothe the rich possessor; much consoled That here and there some sprigs of mournful Mint, Of Nightshade, or Valerian, grace the wall He cultivates.’’ aT nae LONDON: LOVELL REEVE, HENRIETTA STREET, COVENT GARDEN. 1859. pea $09{-S/IS23 SOHN EDWARD TAYLOR, PRINTER LITTLE QUEEN SYREET, LINCOLN'S INN FIELDS. TO DECIMUS BURTON, ESQ., F.R.S., F.S.A., ETC. ETO. ETC., THE DISTINGUISHED ARCHITECT OF THE NOBLE PALM-HOUSE AT KEW, WHERE FLOURISH MANY OF THE PLANTS HERE REPRESENTED, AND WHO IS NOW PREPARING A CONSERVATORY IN THE SAME GROUNDS FOR THE CULTIVATION OF TREES AND SHRUBS OF TEMPERATE CLIMATES, The present Volume is Dedicated pe HIS FAITHFULLY ATTACHED FRIEND THE AUTHOR. Royat Garprens, Kew, December 1, 1859. Plate. 5138 5139 5113 5122 5097 5107 5101 5102 5114 5133 5147 5095 5152 5150 5118 5154 5127 5135 5126 5149 5099 5134 5106 5156 5128 5130 5103 5117 5131 5141 5096 5123 5115 5019 INDEX, In which the Latin Names of the Plants contained in the Fifteenth Volume of the Turrp Series (or Eighty-fifth Volume of the Work) are alphabetically arranged. Aerides Wightianum. Areca sapida. Angraecum sesquipedale, Agave maculosa. Jacquiniana. Begonia xanthina ; var. Lazuli. Rex. xanthina ; var. pictifolia. Bilbergia macrocalyx. Brachychiton Bidwilli. Bryophyllum proliferum. Chrysanthemum carinatum ; var. pictum. Camellia Sasanqua; var. anemo- niflora. Cattleya Schilleriana; var. con- color. Columnea scandens. Calceolaria flexuosa. Ceanothus Veitchianus. Cheirostemon platanoides. Cymbidium eburneum. Dissotis Irvingiana. Dasylirium Hartwegianum. Dendromecon rigidum. Dipteracanthus calvescens. - ? Herbstii. Datura chlorantha ; flore pleno. Dendrobium albo-sanguineum. Epigynium leucobotrys. Aisculus Indica. Aischynanthus cordifolius. Evelyna Caravata. Fuchsia simplicicaulis. Gynura bicolor. Gesneria purpurea. Goldfussia Thomsoni. Plate. 5155 5148 5098 5110 5092 5144 5112 5145 5132 5137 5109 5142 5100 5105 5136 5146 5129 5020 Gutierrezia gymnospermoides, Hoya Cumingiana. Hibiscus radiatus; B. flore pur- pureo. Howardia Caracasensis. Juanulloa eximia. Lelia xanthina. Linum pubescens; f. Sibthor- planun., Momordica mixta. Monocheetum ensiferum. Myosotidium nobile. Nepentes ampullaria. Pentstemon centranthifolius: Phyllocactus anguliger. Plectocomia Assamica. Rhipsalis sarmentacea. Rhododendron Nuttallii. Kendrickii; var. latifolium. Stepherdii. Wilsoni (Aydri- dum). Smithii. 3140 Richardia albo-maculata. 5093 5091 5151 5143 5153 5111 5021 5104 Sanseviera cylindrica. Spathodea campanulata. Spireea Douglasii. Spraguea umbellata. Statice Bourgizi. Stephanophysum Baikiei. Stangeria paradoxa. Sonerila margaritacea. 5094 Tachiadenus carinatus. 5124 5108 Thunbergia coccinea. Vriesia psittacina; var. rubro- bracteata. Plate. 5138 5131 5097 5122 5113 5139 5107 5102 5101 5114 5133 5147 5154 5150 5127 5095 5118 5126 5099 5130 5106 5156 5149 5103 5141 5112 5137 5096 5115 5119 5155 5123 5135 5093 INDEX, In which the English Names of the Plants contained in the Fifteenth Volume of the Turrp Szrtes (or Eighty-fifth Volume of the Work) are alphabetically arranged. Aerides, Dr. Wight’s. Aschynanthus, heart-leaved. Agave, Jacquin’s. spotted-leaved dwarf. Angrecum, sesquipedalian. Areca or Betel-nut. Begonia, yellow-flowered ; Lapis- Lazuli var. yellow-flowered ; varie- gated-leaved var. royal. Bilbergia, long-calyxed. Brachychiton, Mr. Bidwill’s. Bryophyllum, proliferous. Calceolaria, flexuose. Cattleya, Schillerian; whole-co- loured var. Ceanothus, Mr. Veitch’s. Chrysanthemum, keeled; painted var. Columnea, climbing, Cymbidium, the ivory. Dasylirium, Hartweg’s. Dendrobium, white - and - san- guine. a Dipteracanthus, subglabrous. Mr. Herbst’s, Dissotis, Dr. Irving’s. Epigynium, white-fruited. Evelyna, Aublet’s. Flax, pubescent ; var. Forget-me-not, Antarctic. Fuchsia, slightly-branched. Gesneria, purple-flowered. Goldfussia, Dr. Thomson’s. Gutierrezia, Gymnosperma-like. Gynura, two-coloured. Hand-plant, Mexican. Hemp, terete-leaved bowstring. Sibthorpe’s Plate. 5098 5117 5110 5148 5092 5144 5145 5132 5109 5142 5100 5105 5134- 5129 5146 5120 5125 5116 5136 5140 5152 5104 5091 5151- 5143 5121 5153 5111 5094 5128 5124 5108 Hibiscus, rayed; purple-flowered var. Horse-chestnut, Indian. Howardia, Caracas. Hoya, Mr. Cuming’s. Juanulloa, large green-flowered. Lelia, yellow-flowered. Momordica, large-flowered. Monochetum, sword-bearing. Nepenthes, ampullacecus, Pitcher-plant. Pentstemon, red Valerian-leaved. Phyllocactus, angle-stemmed. Plectocomia, Assam. Poppy, rigid tree. Rhododendron, Dr. Kendrick’s ; broad-leaved var. Mr. Nuttall’s. Sir James or Smith’s. Mr. Shepherd’s. Wilson’s (a hy- brid). Rhipsalis, sarmentose. Richardia, spotted-leaved. Sasanqua; Anemone - flowered var. Sonerila, pearl-spotted. Spathodea, bell-flowered. Spireea, Douglas’s. Spraguea, umbellate. Stangeria, the Fern-leaved. Statice, Bourgeau’s. Stephanophysum, Dr. Baikie’s. Tachiadenus, keeled. Thorn-apple, yellow-flowered. Thunbergia, red-flowered. Vriesia, parrot-flowered; red- bracteated var. Tas. 5091. SPATHODEA campPaNnuLATa. Bell-flowered Spathodea. Nat. Ord. BeGconrAcEm.—DIDYNAMIA ANGIOSPERMIA. Gen. Char. Calyx spathaceus, antice fissus, postice integerrimus vel dentatus. Corolla hypogyna, subinfundibuliformis, limbi quinquelobi bilabiati lobis sub- eequalibus. Stamina corolle tubo inserta, quatuor didynama, cum quinto rudi- mentario, rarissime eeque fertili ; anthere biloculares, loculis divaricato-patentibus. Ovarium biloculare, ovulis ad dissepimenti margines utrinque plurimis, horizon- talibus, anatropis. Stylus simplex; stigma bilamellatum. Capsula elongato-sili- quzeformis, bilocularis, bivalvis, valvis dissepimento marginibus utrinque semini- fero contrariis. Semina plurima, transversa, compressa, utrinque in alam mem- branaceam expansa. Himbryonis exalbuminosi orthotropi radicula centrifuga.— Frutices vel arbores, inter tropicos totius orbis crescentes ; foliis oppositis vel rarius alternis, conjugatis vel impari-pinnatis, interdum simplicibus ; floribus subpaniculatis, aurantiaceis, flavis vel violaceis. Endl, SPATHODEA campanulata ; arborea glabra, foliis oppositis impari-pinnatis quad- rijugis, foliolis ovato-lanceolatis ‘acuminatis integerrimis basi supra glandu- lis 2-8 junioribus inferne subsericeis, racemis corymbosis terminalibus, calyce magno spathaceo compresso arcuato extus velutino lineato, corolla amplis- sima aurantiaca late campanulata sursum curvata subtus valde ventricosa, limbi subzequalis lobis late ovatis obtusis plicatis. SPATHODEA campanulata. Beauv. Fl. d’Oware et de Benin, v. 1. p. 47. t. 29. De Cand. Prodr. v. 9. p.208. Benth. in Niger Flora, p.461. Walp. Annal. Bot. Syst. v. 3. p. 89. SpaTHODEA tulipifera. G. Don, Gard. Dict. v, 4. p.223. De Cand. Prodr. v. 9. p. 207.., Bienonta tulipifera. Schum. et Thonn. Beskr. p. 273. Palisot de Beauvois’s figure and description are alike inaccu- rate of this magnificent flowering tree, and may be accounted for, as Mr. Bentham observes, by the fact that the characters of his species described are generally drawn up from mere fragments of specimens, and that his drawings, made on the spot, of this and other plants, were destroyed, as M. de Beauvois himself tells us ;—“la proie des flammes que les soi-disant philanthropes -de Paris ont allumées @ St. Domingue.” In the figure of the ‘ Flore d’Oware’ the leaves are made to appear alternate, and the flowers are reversed upon the rachis and give no idea of their size and JANUARY IsT, 1859. beauty. Schumacher’s description of his Bignonia tulipifera — proves it to be the same plant as ours, and he speaks correctly — of the flowers, “as large as the largest tulips.” It is the mis- — fortune of this plant that it does not bear its blossoms until the — tree has attained a considerable size, when they are difficult to — be seen on account of their distance from the spectator, and, in the present instance, the necessarily crowded state of our great stove, where it has perfected its blossoms. It was almost by an accident that they were observed at all. The species is a native of west- ern tropical Africa. M. de Beauvois found it at Oware. Mr. ~ Osborne, of the Fulham Nursery, raised it from seeds sent to — him from Ashantee (and to him we are indebted for our plant). — Schumacher found it in Guinea, and I possess fine specimens gathered by Mr. Ansell, who was attached to the Niger Expedi- — tion under the command of Captain Trotter, collected on Stir- — ling hills, at the confluence of the river, and equally good ones — gathered by the late Dr. Irving at Abeakouta. Dzuscr. A éree, said to attain a good size in its native coun- try, thirty feet high in our stove, much branched above. Leaves opposite, pinnate, dark green, paler and somewhat silky beneath — only in the young state, firm and subcoriaceous, a foot to a foot — and a half long, impari-pinnate. Leaflets about four pairs (ex- clusive of the terminal one), ovato-lanceolate, acute, quite entire, penninerved, having at the base, on the upper side, and just above | the short petiolule, two to three fleshy subglobose glands. Ra- ceme terminal, corymbose, large, spreading, consisting of eight to ten rather long and stout-pedicelled, very large, showy flowers. The curious calye is quite like a spatha, two and a half inches — long, splitting open on one side for the emission of the corolla, © and falcately recurved, leaning, as it were, back from the corolla: its texture is thick and coriaceous, externally velvety, and of a dingy-green colour, striated with raised lines, red within. Corolla at least four inches long, and as much broad, of a rich orange-re colour, paler within the tube, in form broad-campanulate, yet _ curved upwards, the ‘ube suddenly contracted at the very base, where it is attached to the calyx ; singularly ventricose on its under side, striated; the faux very broad and open; the dim _ Spreading, nearly equal, of five, broad, ovate, plicate, and some what undulated segments. Stamens four, included within th broad tube, spreading, two a little taller than the other two Anthers of two divergent, lin opening longitudinally. Ovary ovate, sunk into a large flesh gland or ring. Style as long as the stamens. nS es el Fig. 1. Pistil and hypogynous gland or ri a 3. One of the anthers i etal Be tec het ots ansverse section, Of OVATY cent Brooks 4 ‘os Vinis Wea Nes recat Bi ___nemenanae ree aa Tas. 5092, JUANULLOA ? eximtia. Large green-flowered Juanulloa. » Nat. Ord. Sotanzm.—PENTANDRIA MoNo@yYNIA. Gen. Char. Calyx amplus, coloratus, inflatus, ovatus vel ovato-tubulosus, subcarnosus vel membranaceus, 5-divisus; laciniis plus minus longis, erectis, acutis vel acutiusculis. Corolla subcarnosa vel membranacea, tubulosa, calyce longior, fauce paulo contracta, tubo plus minus inflato, limbo brevi, 5-partito, lobis ovatis obtusiusculis vel rotundatis, estivatione imbricata. Stamina 5, tubo breviora, basi corollz tubi inserta, erecta. Filamenta filiformia, basi villosa. Anthere \ineares, sagittate, intus longitudinaliter dehiscentes.' Ovarium conicum, basi; disco annulari magno 5-lobo carnoso cinctum, biloculare, placentis disse- pimento adnatis multi-ovulatis. Stylus filiformis, tubo breviore, apice crasses- cens. Stigma oblongum, apice bilobum. Bacca ovato-globosa, magni cerasi mag- nitudinis, bilocularis, calyce vestita. Semina plurima, oblongo-reniformia, in pulpa nidulantia. Zmbryo ignotus.—Frutices ex America calidiori. De Cand. JUANULLOA eximia; corolle amplissime viridis tubo campanulato infundibuli- formi longitudinaliter angulato, limbi laciniis latis longe acuminatis revo- lutis, staminibus approximatis exsertis. BRUGMANSIA eximia. Hort. We are indebted to the Messrs. Henderson, of Pine-apple Place Nursery, for this remarkable plant, which they received from the Continent under the name of Brugmansia eximia. In its foliage it presented nothing of the appearance of a Brag- mansia, or of any of the arborescent species of Datura; and our astonishment was great when it produced the flower here répre- sented, in the summer of 1858, to see a corolla having a good deal the form of, and excelling in size any, Datura or Brugmansia, yet with a calyx of a very different character, and much more like that of a Juanulloa, which the foliage and general habit of the shrub also a good deal resemble: it is also very different from any described Solandra, save that it has singularly green flowers like Solandra viridifiora. May it not be a hybrid? But if so, we cannot guess what are the respective parents. It is to be lamented that such a noble-sized corolla should have no brilliant colour to recommend it. JANUARY Ist, 1859. Descr. This very peculiar plant, whether it be in its natural state, or metamorphosed by hybridization, has in its mode of growth and foliage more of a Juanulloa than of a Brugmansia or any frutescent Datura, and more still of a So/andra, than which it forms a much more compact bush; it is moderately branched. Branches ternate, woody. Leaves large, oval, firm, subcoriaceous, glossy, shortly acuminate, quite entire, tapering into a stout petiole about half an inch long. /owers, in our plant, lateral (not strictly axillary), in pairs, very large, drooping. Peduncle scarcely an inch long, stout, curved downwards. Calyx broad- ovate and an inch and three-quarters long and as much broad, of a thick, subcoriaceous texture, very broad-ovate, five-valved and five-angled, in bud sharply so at the sinus; estivation val- vate, bursting irregularly into five acute lobes of unequal lengths, sometimes two or more continuing adherent at the margin (as in Juanulloa). Corolla nearly six inches long, and quite as broad across the limb, if allowance be made for the recurvation of its lobes; the form is between infundibuliform and campanulate ; the colour quite green, but with a peculiar tinge of yellow upon it; the tube has five longitudinal angles, and, alternating with these, five lesser ones ; the mouth spreads widely ; the limb has five broad but sharply acuminate, quite revolute odes, each with three impressed lines or longitudinal plaits. Stamens five. Filaments erect and approximate, a little longer than the tube, so that the linear anthers, an inch long, are quite exserted. Ovary broad-ovate, surrounded by a fleshy ring. Style filiform, quite as long as the filaments of the stamens. Stigma an inch long, incrassated, bifid, the apices of the lobes spreading. Fig. 1. Pistil and fleshy rine. ae magnified. y Ting. 2. Ovary, cut through transversely : Vancent Brooke. # Tas. 5093. SANSEVIERA cy.uinprica. Tf. Terete-leaved Bowstring Hemp. Nat. Ord. ASPARAGINEZ.—HEXxaNDRIA MONOGYNIA. Gen. Char. Perigonium corollaceum, tubulosum, rectiusculum, usque ad me- dium 6-fidum, deciduum ; laciniis subspathulato-linearibus, obtusis, uninerviis, eequalibus, patentissimis (reflexis, Gawl.). Stamina 6, fauce perigonii inserta, exserta, patula (patentissima, Gawl.). Filamenta filiformia. Anthere biloculares, lineari-oblonge, apice bilobe, basi bifidee, dorso medio affixee, introrsee. Ovarium liberum, sessile, oblongum, trigonum? (trilobum, Rowd.), triloculare; ovwla in loculis solitaria, sessilia, adscendentia, anatropa. Colwmna stylina terminalis, fili- formis, erecta, stamina superans. Stigma capitatum, integrum. Bacce 1-3, leviter unite, singule, globose, carnose, monosperme. Semen globosum. Embryo in basi albuminis ad latus exterius locatus.—Plantz acaules, perennantes, stolonifere, Rhizoma crassum, repens. Folia radicalia plurt- vel bi-faria, lanceolata, crassa atque dura, carne fibrosa, sepe fasciata, basi vaginantia. Scapus e centro foliorum prodiens, bracteatus, simplex, apice racemoso-multiflorus. Hlores per 4-6 fasciculato-congesti, bracteolati, viridulo-albi vel viriduloflavidi ; pedicellis supra medium articulatis. Perigonium ast in pedicellum attenuatum. Kunth. SANSEVIERA cylindrica ; foliis teretibus acuminatis solidis, scapo radicali, racemo composito elongato acuminato, sepalis linearibus inferne in tabum approxi- matis demum apice revolutis, staminibus longe exsertis. SANSEVIERA cylindrica. Bojer, Hort. Maurit. p. 349 (name only). Sansgeviera Angolensis. Wellwitsch, MSS. About three years since there were received at the Foreign Office, and transferred to the Admiralty, samples of a peculiar fibre and cordage under the name of //¢, said to be derived from a new plant at the Portuguese settlement, Angola, west coast of Africa. These were accompanied by some apparently living plants, which were placed in the cellars of the Foreign Office, and by the kindness of our valued friend, G. Lenox-Coningham, Esq., forwarded to Kew, where they soon recovered, and have since flowered. The habit of the plant was that of Sanseviera, but the leaves very dark-coloured, and quite terete and solid in the interior, very unlike any known species of that genus. My duties at the Paris Exhibition of 1858 led me to the careful in- JANUARY Ist, 1859. vestigation of the vegetable products, and I was there agreeably surprised to find most extensive samples, in the Portuguese de- partment, of the raw material, fibre, and manufactured articles, ship-cables, rope, beautiful cordage, etc., of the same material, and amongst ‘The Products of Angola,’ it is thus stated in my ‘Report :'—“ Fibre, marked, from Sanseviera Angolensis, this latter being a MS. name of Dr. Wellwitsch for a remarkable spe- cies of Sanseviera, with long, stout, terete leaves, which is in culti- vation at Kew. The cordage and rope made of this plant appear to the eye of excellent quality, whatever experience may prove them to be.”"—Experiments recently made with this cordage have shown it to be the strongest and best fitted for deep-sea sound- _ ing of any fibre known ; indeed this is the less surprising, seeing that other species of Sanseviera (the well-known S. Zeylanica and Guineensis, for example) are cultivated in almost all tropical — countries on account of the strength and durability of the fibre, under the name of Bowstring Hemp. Our Gardens having lately received from Mauritius, through Mr. Duncan, living roots of 8. cylindrica of Bojer, in the ‘Hortus Mauritianus,’ without note or description, I have been agreeably surprised to find that the two plants are identical. It is indeed stated that the 8. cylindrica is a native of Zanzibar, on the east coast of* Africa, and is only known in cultivation in the Botanic Gardens of Mauritius. I have no means then of ascertaining whether this curious plant has been introduced by — the Portuguese from their settlements on the east coast of Africa — to Angola on the west, or vice versd; or whether, as appears to be the case with other plants, it is an aboriginal on both sides of — that great continent, and more or less, possibly, of the interior. — Dr. Livingstone told me he was very familiar with the J/é in se- _ veral districts of the western interior of Africa towards Angola. — It flowered with us for the first time in August, 1858, and. though the blossoms have little to recommend them, the plant deserves a place in all collections where the useful products of 4 vegetables are appreciated, and many a piece of waste land nm — our tropical colonies might be profitably employed in the cultiva- x ok of it for its fibre. It grows rapidly, and requires almost no aa Desor. Perennial. Roots coarse and fleshy. Plants throwing ’ out runners from the base and gs | rs fr eedily sendin oots. Leaves all radical, tufted, few, nb tian eight Pain tuft, — and not so many unless the short, external ones, which almost resemble scales and are more or less furrowed on the upper side, be reckoned ; the rest vary in length, from six to eight inches to three feet, erect or erecto-patent, quite terete, solid within, oceupied by firm, fleshy, cellular matter and copious fibre, of dark-green colour, externally sometimes a little glaucous, and not unfrequently banded transversely with paler lines, acuminated, a little compressed at its apex, now and then longitudinally fur- rowed with three or four shallow lines. Scape, below the flowers, eight to ten inches or more long, shorter than the leaves. ftaceme a toot or more in length, tapering upwards, having fas- cicles of numerous flowers all along the rachis. Bracts small, very deciduous. Perianth of six, narrow-linear, very long, cream-white sepals, tinged with pink; rather more than the lower half of them is erect and approximate, so as to form a tube, but eventually separating, and soon deciduous ; the rest are revolute. S/amens very much exserted, twice as long as the tube of the perianth. Filaments slender. Anthers linear, pale- yellow. Ovary oblong, trigonous, three-celled. Ce//s one-seeded. Style filitorm, longer than the stamens. Stigma capitate, three- lobed. Fig. 1. Apex of one of the larger leaves. 2. Flower. 3. Pistil. 4. Ovary cut through transversely :—magnified. iy) ( Tas. 5094, TACHIADENUS ‘CARINATUS. Keeled Tachiadenus. Nat. Ord. GENTIANEZ.—PENTANDRIA MONOGYNIA. Gen. Char. Calyx 5-fidus v. 5-partitus; segmentis dorso carinatis v. alatis; valvaribus planiusculis, acuminatis. Corolla hypocraterimorpha, nuda, decidua; tubo tenui, apice in faucem anguste campanulatam ampliato, eequali; limbo ex- panso, 5-partito; lobis paulum supra-incumbentibus. Stamina 5, fauce corolle inserta ; filamentis leeviusculis, eequalibus. Anthere erecte, immutatee, neque (?) apiculate. Ovarium annulo basilari continuo glanduloso cinctum, valvulis pa- rum introflexis, subuniloculare ; ovwdis ipsarum margine intus discreto quaternis seriebus insertis. Stylus distinctus, persistens ; stigmate indiviso, capitulato, ovoi- deo. Capsula bivalvis, septicida, subunilocularis ; placentis margine valvarum in- tus discreto insertis. Semina placentis immersa.—Suffrutices v. herbe Mada- gascarienses; inflorescentia terminali; floribus purpureis (albis, Griseb.) ; tubo corolle elongato, gracillimo. Griseb. in De Cand. TACHTADENUS carinatus ; caule suffruticoso tetragono, foliis ovalibus sessilibus trinerviis, cyma terminali bis dichotoma, calycis quinquefidi alis obverse semi-lanceolatis lobis linearibus, corolle tubo biunciali apice ventricoso lobos late ovatos acutiusculos plus duplo superante, genitalibus inclusis. TACHIADENUS carinatus. Grisebach, Gent. p.200. De Cand. Prodr. v. 9. p. 81. LisIanTuus carinatus. Lam. Dict. v. 2. p. 258. ¢. 107. f. 2. Willd. Sp. Pl. v. 1. p. 829. Native of Madagascar, and probably common enough there (as we have received native specimens from thence, from the late Professor Bojer, from Dr. Lyall, and also from M. Bouton) ; yet when one knows the beauty of this plant and the difficulty of obtaining any plants from that fertile region, one cannot be too thankful to the Rev. William Ellis* for having introduced this and several other Madagascar plants, of great rarity and inter- est, to our stoves, through his energy and great love of plants. Beautiful as are European species of the well-known Gentian * Author, some years ago, of ‘ Polynesian Researches,’ and more recently of ‘Three Missionary Visits to Madagascar, in 1853, 1854, and 1856,” published by Murray, a work full of the deepest interest to the philanthropist and to the lover of natural history, clearly proving that an attention to the works of nature by no means detracts from his missionary usefulness. We owe to him the introduction of two species of the wonderful Zace-leaf to our stoves; both figured in the pre- sent work. JANUARY Ist, 1859. family, especially in the Alpine regions, the most lovely of them have their representatives in tropical countries, in the charming species of Zisianthus in South America, and in those of Zuchia- danthus m Madagascar. A clever drawing by Mrs. Ellis (from which our plate is copied), accompanied by a recent flowering specimen, was sent from the garden at Hoddesdon in October, 1858, raised by Mr. Ellis from seeds brought home with him. The five species of this genus hitherto described by authors, have been considered to have white flowers, but this was only inferred from the withered corollas in dried specimens. ‘They are probably all purple or blue-purple, and of a peculiar rich tint not easily expressed by art. Descr. A low, suffruticose plant; that is, woody below, all the leafy and flowering branches being herbaceous, and these are tetragonous, glabrous, as in the whole plant, dichotomously branched. Leaves in remote, opposite pairs, one to one and a half inches long, oval, acute, three- to five-nerved, spreading hori- zontally. Cyme terminal, generally twice dichotomous, and near to these is also an axillary pair of flowers. Pedicel shorter than the leaf. Calya oblong, with five linear, subulate, carinated lobes, from the back of each of which a winged angle extends to the base of the calyx. Corolla hypocrateriform, with a very long, slender, white ttibe, two to three inches long, a little enlarged upwards ; /imb spreading horizontally, rich purple, of five imbri- cating, broad-ovate, acute Jobes; in the faux are four, short, ovate, acute ¢eeth, alternating with the segments of the corolla, which have been overlooked by authors who have seen only dried Specimens. Sfamens inserted at the base of the inflated portion of the tube, quite included ; filaments short. Anthers sagittate, acute, apiculate. Ovary subfusiform, surrounded by a ring of small, scale-like glands. Style filiform, shorter than the tube of the corolla. Stigma ovate, bipartite, lobes erect. Fig. 1. Tube of the corolla laid o i i pen, showing the stamens, style, and stigma, mt the scales in the faux. 2. Calyx with pistil. 3. Calyx iaid. open, showing the pistil and glandular ming. 4. Ovary cut through transversely :—magnified. e 7 t 9S J ith Vincent Brooks , Imp- | WFiteh delet Tas. 5095. - CHRYSANTHEMUM carinatum; var. pictum. Keeled Chrysanthemum : painted var. Nat. Ord. Composit#.—SYNGENESIA SUPERFLUA. Gen. Char. CurysaANtHEMUM, De Cand.—Capitulum multiflorum, heteroga- mum ; floribus radii uniseriatis, ligulatis, femineis, rarissime nullis; disci tubu- losis, hermaphroditis. Involweri campanulati; sguame imbricate, margine sca- riose. Receptaculum nudum. Corolle radii ligulate, disci tubulose ; tudo tereti v. obcompresso, bialato ; limbo quadri- v. quinque-dentato. Anthere ecaudate. Stigmata exappendiculata. Achenia radii triquetra y. trialata, angulis alisve duabus lateralibus, tertia introrsa; disci ala brevi introrsum exserta. Pappus nullus vy. coroniformis.—Herbe v. frutices per regiones temperatas veteris orbis dispersi ; foliis alternis, habitu vario. Endl. CurysantHemum (§ Ismelia) carinatum; herbaceum glabrum, caule erecto ra- moso diffuso, foliis bipinnati-partitis carnosis, lobis linearibus: apice der. tatis acutis, ramis apice nudis monocephalis, involucri squamis carinatis. De Cand. CHRYSANTHEMUM carinatum. Schousb. Plant. Maroc. p. 198. t. 6. Willd. Sp. Pl. v. 3. p. 2146. De Cand. Prodr. v. 3. p. 65. Spreng. Syst. Veget. v. 3. p. 583. CurysanTHEMo tricolor. Andr. Bot. Rep. v. 2. p. 109. Ismexta versicolor. Cass. in Dict. Se. Nat. v. 41. p. 40. - Var. pictum; radii ligulis bi-triseriatis colore albo, luteo rubroque varie pictis. (Tas. Nostr. 5095.) me The ordinary form of this plant is given at our Tab. 508 (in a very carly volume of the ‘ Botanical Magazine), soon after the seeds were sent by M. Broussonet from the coast of Barbary to Mr. Aiton, at the Royal Gardens of Kew, almost sixty years ago. It has proved to be a hardy annual; and, even in its original state, on account of the large size of the flowers, the dark-purple _ eye, and the white rays, yellow at the base, it was spoken of by — Mr. Curtis as “the beautiful Chrysanthemum ;” and he gave it the name of C. ¢ricolor, without being aware that it was pre- viously described by Schousboe, under that of C. carinatum, so called on account of the remarkable green, fleshy keel at the JANUARY Ist, 1859. back of each membranaceous scale of the involucre. Cassini constituted of this a new genus, Ismelia, on very slight grounds, and then very unnecessarily changed the specific appellation to the no less appropriate one of versicolor. Curtis and others had observed that the rays of the corolla were sometimes wholly yellow. Mr. William Thompson, of Ipswich, has sent to us du- ring, the summer of 1858 the singularly. beautiful varieties here figured, which were raised by Mr. K. Burridge, Lexden Road, Colchester. We have seldom seen a richer combination of co- lour than is exhibited in these flowers ; and if the seed is found to continue constant to its parent, no flower-border ought to be without this variety. eae eS BOE Tas. 5096. FUCHSIA simpuicicavtis. Slightly-branched Fuchsia. Nat. Ord. ONaGRARIEH.—OCTANDRIA Monoeynta. Gen. Char. (Vide supra, Tas. 4082.) Fucusra (§ Longiflora) simplicicaulis ; parce ramosa glabra, ramis floralibus elongatis pendentibus, foliis 3—4-verticillatis lanceolatis seu ovato-lanceolatis . acuminatis brevi-petiolatis integerrimis subnitidis subtus pallidis, racemis foliosis, floribus ternis quaternisve rosev-coccineis, tubo elongato infundibu- liformi basi inflato-gibbosa, sepalis lanceolatis petala ovata acuta coccinea superantibus. Fucusta simplicicaulis. Ruiz et Pav. Fl. Chil. et Per. v. 4. p. 89. t. 322 a. De Candolle, Prodr. v. 3. p. 39. The genus Fuchsia includes a considerable number of species, but the difficulty of naming them correctly is, beyond anything, © great ; and this difficulty arises in part from the liability of these plants to vary much in their inflorescence, size, and the shape as the flowers, and in part from brief and imperfect descript: The present species is one of the many beautiful Peruviai a5 new to our collections, which Mr. William Lobb sent to his em- — ployers, Messrs. Veitch and Son, of the Nurseries at Exeter and Chelsea, and which in many respects corresponds with the 7. simplicicaulis of Ruiz and Pavon; the flowers quite correspond in size and shape, and the whorl of flowers is subtended by a corresponding whorl of large foliaceous bractes, or small leaves ; but in Ruiz and Pavon’s plant the leaves and the bracteas are all lanceolate, and even rather narrow-lanceolate, and the whorls are figured and described as always quaternate, whereas in our plant the leaves and bracts are ternate, and rather ovate than lanceo- late, and the latter close over the pedicels so as to form a cup- Shaped involucre. Some of our native dried specimens, indeed, sufficiently accord with Ruiz and Pavon’s plant; but others Seem gradually to pass into the F. venusta of Humboldt and FEBRUARY Ist, 1859. Kunth. The flowering plant here figured was communicated from the Chelsea Nursery, where it was in great beauty in Oc- tober, 1858. _ Descr. Plant moderately branched, and indeed Ruiz and Pavon’s figure represents it so (spite of the specific name), and even with verticillate branches, as might be expected to occur; glabrous, as is the whole plant. Leaves ternate (quaternate, 2. and P.) on the main stem and branches, four to five inches long, much smaller upon the pendulous, elongated, flowering branches, where they become bracteiform, but spreading; their form is ovate, approaching to lanceolate, a little polished above, entire, on very short petioles, those of the bracts sessile. Flowers large, handsome, numerous, rose-scarlet, one in the axil of each floral leaf or bractea, pendent. Pedicels short. Ovary oval. Tube of the calye long, infundibuliform ; the segments spreading, four, lanceolate. Petals ovate, acute (red), shorter than the sepals. Stamens exserted, but moderately so. Fig. 1. Leaves from the lower part of the plant, nat. size. ‘Aincent Brooks, a¥ Tas. 5097. AGAVE JacqQuiniana. Jacquin’s Agave. “Nat. Ord. AMARYLLIDEH.—HeExanpRIA MonoGynia. Gen. Char. (Vide supra, TaB. 4934.) caulescens, foliis lineari-lanceolatis acuminatis crassiuscu- lis remote dentato-spinosis, spinis curvatis, scapo 10-12-pedali bracteato, florum fasciculis densis, perianthii viridis tubo (cum ovario adnato) tereti- oblongo 6-sulcato, limbi laciniis lineari-oblongis erectis 1n tubum subconni- ventibus canaliculatis obtusis, filamentis sepala plus quam duplo excedentibus stylum quantibus, capsula urceolata obtusa trigona, panicula demum sobolifera. Acave Jacquiniana. Schulé p. 827. a Agave lurida. Jacq. Coll. v. 4. p. 94. #.1, (excl. syn.) Salm-Dyck, Hort. 1834, p. 302. - AGave Jacquiniana ; es, Syst. Veget. 7. p. 121. Kunth, En. Plant. v. 5. The true Agave lurida of Hortus Kewensis, ed. 1. v. 1. p. 472, and ed. 2. v. 2. p. 302, is figured and described by Mr. Gawler (Bot. Mag. t. 1522) from the original Kew plant, which has since died. This is the Agave Vera-Cruz of Miller, Gard. Dict. ed. 8. n. 7; and Mr. Gawler has accurately pointed out the dif- ferences between this plant and the dyave lurida of Jacquin 's ‘Collectanea Botanica,’ v. 4. p. 92. t. 1. _ In the original Agave lurida the flowers are lax and distant, twice the size of those of Jacquin’s Agave; the tube (with the adnate ovary) 1s ~ elongato-cylindrical, constricted above the base, longer than sepals, which are broad-lanceolate, acuminate, concave, and spread- ing; the filaments of the stamens are quite erect, and green as well as the anthers. Jacquin’s Agave has densely crowded flowers, the ovary six-furrowed, shorter than the sepals, which latter are quite erect and almost connivent, the stamens are spreading and yellow, and the peduncles are soboliferous or viviparous. About ten or twelve years since, we received an FEBRUARY Ist, 1859. Agave from Mrs. M‘Donald, of Honduras (which accompanied the noble-flowered Cereus Macdonaldia, Bot. Mag. t. 4707); and this, upon flowering in our Palm-house, in the autumn of 1858, corresponded in every particular with the figured descrip- tion of Jacquin. That Ayave, Schultes, in accordance with the views expressed by Mr. Gawler, has named Agave Jacquini- ana. The fruit too, which is now (Jan. 1859) fully formed, pre- cisely accords with that figured in the ‘Collectanea Botanica, and that fruit is not a little remarkable, being exactly urceolate, with a very contracted neck. The above remarks may serve as a substitute for any long or tedious description. : Duscr. Stem ascending, a foot and a half high, scarred with the remains of fallen leaves. The perfect leaves form a crown, and are from two and a half to three feet long, narrow-lanceolate, pungently acuminate, spreading in all directions, the superior and younger ones erect, the middle ones horizontal, the infe- rior ones reflexed, remotely dentato-spinose with curved spines. Scape about twelve feet long, stout in proportion, quite erect, firm and rigid, almost scaly with withered bracteas. Panicle compound. Pedicels stout, dichotomously divided. lowers geminate or ternate, bracteolate, some quite sessile. Perianth quite green, little more than two inches long; the tubular portion 1s oblong-oval, six-furrowed ; the free portion, or sepals, more than half as long again as the tube, linear-oblong, channelled, obtuse, — quite erect, and connivent, pressing as it were against the yellow, much exserted stamens ; these stamens are twice as long as the sepals, spreading. Anthers very large, full-yellow, versatile. Style _ as long as the filaments. Stigma obscurely three-lobed. Fruit, — or capsule, when fully formed, an inch and a half long, urceolate, — almost black when ripe, with a very contracted neck, three- ett three-valved, containing in each cell several black angular — eeds. : Fig. 1. Flowering plant, ona y ] plant, ery reduced scale. 2. Apex of a leaf, nat. size 3. Portion of a panicle, with flowers also, nat. size. 4. Snes and style, after t . a ag have fallen away. 5. Transverse section of the same :—slightl; J098. WRiteh, del. et hth Vincent Brooks bf Tas. 5098. HIBISCUS raptatus; £. flore purpureo. Rayed Hibiscus ; purple-lowered var. Nat. Ord. MaLvace&.—MonapELPHIA POLYANDRIA. Hipiscus (§ Furearia) radiatus ; suffruticosus, caule aculeato, stipulis lineari- bus, foliis digitatim 3—-7-partitis, lobis lanceolatis acuminatis grosse serratis, pedicellis brevissimis calyce involucroque infra apicem unispinoso rigide setosis. a. petalis flavis basi atrosanguinea. Histscus radiatus. Cav. Diss. v. 3. p.150. ¢.54.f.2. Sims, Bot. Mag. t. 191. Roxb. Fl. Ind. v. 3. p. 209. De Cand. Prodr. v. 1. p. 449. Wight et Arn. Prodr. Fl. Penins. Ind. Or. v. 1. p. 48. 8. petalis purpureis basi intensioribus, (TAB. NostR. 5098.) The Hibiscus radiatus, of which the ordinary state is to have sulphur-coloured petals, was first described and figured by Ca- vanilles, in 1780, from plants of which the seeds were sent by Sir Joseph Banks to that distinguished Spanish botanist ; but Cavanilles does not state from what country they were received, or where a native. Willdenow gives no locality. Aiton, in the second edition of ‘ Hortus Kewensis,’ speaks of it as an East Indian species; but Roxburgh seems only to have known it in gardens, observing, “ Native place unknown. Common in gar- dens about Calcutta, where it blossoms during the cold season. Wight and Arnott also, in their ‘ Flora of the Peninsula of India, give no locality, quoting Roxburgh’s statement on this subject, and adding, “ In Dr. Arnott’s herbarium 1s @ specimen from Ja- maica.” So that some have been led to suppose it was a West Indian plant ; and certain it is, we have received specimens from Jamaica, but without any special locality ; and of late Mr. Wil- son, the intelligent superintendent of the late Botanic Garden at Bath, in that island (I say /afe, an awful flood having recently overwhelmed the garden with an avalanche of stones), has sent iful, and all distinguished to us seeds of three varieties, all beaut by the colour of the flowers. One is the sulphur-coloured flower FEBRUARY Ist, 1859. above alluded to ; the second is the one we figure here, of a fine © rose-purple ; and a third is a full blood-purple; but in each of — these two last-mentioned kinds the base of the petals is of a still — deeper purple tinge, forming an eye-like spot to the centre of the entire flower. The three sorts blossom copiously in the stove, and bear a succession of flowers in the summer months. We | are still in ignorance as to whether this species is aboriginal in — Jamaica. Certain it is that we do not find it anywhere recorded — as a native of the West Indian Islands, nor even noticed in any of the Floras of that quarter of the globe. A 8% WA \ Nis My é LINEA , yee \NU Y/ - a WRich, delet ith. Tas. 5099. DASYLIRIUM Harrwecianum Hartweg’s Dasylirium. Nat. Ord. AsPARAGINE®.—Die@cira Hexanprtia. Gen. Char. (Vide supra, Tas. 5030.) Dasytir1um Hartwegianum; caule vel si mavis caudice magno subgloboso tuberculoso, foliis e tuberculis fasciculatis bipedalibus e latiuscula basi lineari-subulatis elongatis rigidis glaucescentibus dorso obtuse carinatis su- perne canaliculatis striatis margine spinuloso-serratis, spinulis mediocribus uniformibus apicibus integris (nec penicillato-fibrosis), panicula subsessili bipedali, ramis remotis patentibus, inferioribus longe bracteatis superioribus glomerulisque bracteis parvis subulatis scariosis, partialibus (sub flore) latis membranaceis. Dasytirium Hartwegianum. Zuccarini in Act. Acad. Monac. v. 4. sect. 2. 1845 (Kth.). Benth. Pl. Hartweg. p. 348. Kunth, En. Plant. p. 41. CorDYLINE longifolia. Benth. Pl. Hartweg. p. 53. About the year 1846, we received from Mr. Repper, of the Real del Monte Company’s establishment, Mexico, some re- markable plants.in the form of tubers, a foot and half long, and nearly as high aboveground, the surface of which is formed by a number of wrinkled tubercles, slightly elevated, and somewhat circinately wrinkled ; from a few of which appeared tufts of rigid, subulate leaves, one to two feet long, in form and texture resem- bling those of some Dasylirium. The general aspect of the tubers reminded one of the well-known “ Elephant’s-foot” of South Africa, or of some remarkable Dioscoree which we cultivate from Mexico. These remained dormant for some years, but one of them has lately produced more copious tufts of foliage and panicles of flowers ; and precisely accord (the female flowers are however wanting to our plants) with the Dasylirium Hartwegianum of Zuccarini, which Hartweg sent from Zacatecas, in Mexico ; and a Dasylirium of Mr. Charles Wright (“ Coll. N. Mex. 1851-2”), n. 1918, also seems to be identical; but neither of these collec- tors has made a note on the nature of the plant ; so that whether FEBRUARY Ist, 1859. we are to consider this tuber as the normal condition of the stem or caudex of this species, or whether we are to look upon it as an accidental collection or congeries of united stems (a kind of monstrosity), still remains a doubt in our minds. All the Dasyliria yet known to us have separate, unbranched, and dis- tinct stems, more or less elongated, as in the caulescent species of Agave, and as may be seen in our figures of two of the species of this remarkable genus, at our ab. 5030 and Tab. 5041. The flowers of the panicles develope themselves very slowly, and the withered stalks and branches remain a long time attached to the trunk. Mr. Bentham compares this plant with the Cordyline longifolia of H.B.K.; but the very large, almost sheathing bracteas, rather than leaves (which latter do not appear in the figure given by Humboldt), and the widely different ra- mification of the panicle, and the acuminated sepals, indicate something very different. Descr. Caudex a gigantic tuber, as above described; from the tubercles on the surface of this, the tufts or fascicles of /eaves appear, from one and a half to three feet long, slender, harsh and . rigid, from a rather broad lanceolate base, gradually becoming subulate, and tapering to a very long, slender, rigid, pungent and entire point ; of a glaucous hue, finely striated, moderately keeled at the back, canaliculate on the upper surface, the margin rough to the touch from the presence of rather distant, curved, spi- nescent teeth, pointing upwards, uniform (not of two kinds as in D. glaucophyllum and D. acrotrichum); at the base behind a — broad costa is seen, transversely wrinkled. From the centre of the tuft or fascicle of leaves the panicle arises, shorter than the leaves, scarcely more than a foot or a foot and a half high, branched from near the base; primary dranches spreading hori- zontally, distant, quite straight, rigid; the inferior ones with long subulate dracteas at their base; the rest with small palea- ceous ones. Flowers in glomerules or clusters upon the straight branches, rather lax, bracteolate. Broader and quite membra- coreg bracteoles (about three) surround each pedicel, which atter 1s about the length of the bracteoles, and jointed at the summit, whence the flowers readily fall away. Sepals orbiculari- elliptical, membranaceous, white at the edge, the rest purplish. Stamens (our plant has only male flowers) six, longer than the penianth ; filament subulate. Anther subcordate. Fig: 1. A very much diminished re i Hie" Y i presentation of a flowering plant, with the great tuberous caudex. 2. Leaf, nat. size. 3. Transverse Soektisas i a leaf above the middle, magnified. 4. Portion of : es : flowers. 6. Stamen :—magnified. ui dremmadived vicious smears * M00. i ce eA ES Shine ERE ARE “Vincent Brooks, mp: Ee Fitch, delet V. Tas. 5100. PHYLLOCACTUS anauticer. Angle-stemmed Phyllocactus. . Nat. Ord. Cactacrz: Tribe Payttocactnx.—IcosanDRIia MonoGynia. Gen. Char. Perigonii tubus ultra germen plus minusve et seepe longissime pro- ductus, gracilis, flexuosus, glaberrimus. Phylla sepaloidea remota, sparsa, axil- lis nudis ; petaloidea numerosa, elongata, varie expansa, corollam rosaceam in- fundibuliformem eemulantia. Semina numerosa, orificio tubi adnata, exteriora longiora, inéeriora gradatim breviora. Stylus filiformis, stamina superans. Stig- ma wultiradiatum, radiis linearibus. Bacca umbilicata, anguloso-costata, gla- berrima. Cotyledones connate, suffoliaceze.—Plante pseudo-parasitice. Caulis ramigue compressissimi, foliaceo-dilatati, ad margines remote crenati, omnino gla- bri, basi etate teretes, lignosi. Flores'e crenis lateralibus nocturni, ephemeri: aut per aliquot dies aperti. Salm-Dyck. Puytuocactus anguliger ; caule ramisque foliaceis rigidis planis crassis pinna- tifidis, lobis fere rectangulari-triangularibus, floris tubo elongato crassiusculo, sepalis subcoloratis, petalis albis, stigmatibus 9-10. Puyttocactus anguliger. Lem. in Jardin Fleuriste, v. 1. p. 6. Lindl. et Paxton, Fl. Gard. p. 177. t. 34. A very handsome plant of the Cactus family, whose large flow- ers are highly fragrant. The species belongs to a group of the old genus Cactus, which have the large and long tube of the Cereus group, but with singularly compressed and almost leaf- like, more or less lobed stems and branches. ‘To this division belongs the Cereus phyllanthovdes, DC. (Bot. Mag. t. 2092); Cereus Akermanni, Pft. (Bot. Mag. t. 3598); Cereus phyllan- thus (Hook. Bot. Mag. t. 2692), ete. ; and these now constitute the genus Phyllocactus of Link. Five species are enumerated by the Prince of Salm-Dyck in his useful ‘ Cacteze in Horto Dyck- ensi culte, anno 1849.’ Since the publication of that work, the present species has been imported from Western Mexico, — and received from M. Lemaire the name of anguliger, from the numerous lobes of the flattened stems, many of them, forming very nearly rectangular triangles. We received our living plant from the Horticultural Society of London. It flowers readily in | the early winter months. Descr. Our plant is a foot and a half high; the older and FEBRUARY Ist, 1859. inferior portion is terete. Main stem and dranches in form ob-— ovato-lanceolate, singularly compressed, fleshy, pinnatifid, lobes more or less triangular and obtuse, sometimes acute. //owers solitary, arising from the sinus of a lobe, more than six inches long, and five or six wide. Zude elongated, terete, a little thick- ened at the base, green, bearing a few appressed, small, tooth-like scales. Sepals greenish, with a pink tinge inside, narrow-lan- ceolate, acuminate. Petals pure white, obovate, sharply acumi- nate, as long as the sepals. Stamens moderately numerous ; stigma with about ten rays. Fig. 1. Extremity of the stem, zat. size. NEL, a Tas. 5101. ne BEGONIA Rex. Royal Begonia. Nat. Ord. Beagontacem™.—Mone@cra PoLyaNnpRtia. Gen. Char. (Vide supra, TaB. 4172.) _Beconta Rez; acaulis, rhizomate crasso, foliis amplis longe petiolatis sparse pilosis ineequilatere cordato-ovatis sinuato-crenatis venoso-bullatis atro-me- tallico-viridibus nitidis versus marginem purpureo tinctis annulo lato argen- teo in disco pictis, pedunculo petiolis longiore dichotome cymoso ; floribus roseis majusculis ; masc. sepalis 4 quorum 2 cordatis 2 triplo minoribus oblongis, antheris acuminatis ; wm. sepalis 5 minoribus subsqualibus ob- longis; capsula obliqua, alis 2 parallelis angustis tertia longe producta ob- longo-ovata obtusa. Begonia Rex. Putz. in Flore des Serres, v. 2, Dec. 1858 (with 2 plates). This is certainly the most lovely of the many lovely species of Begonia with which we are acquainted, and almost justifies the laudatory notice M. Van Houtte has given of it in the volume just quoted: “Nous sommes bien désolé d’arriver si tard a faire paraitre la planche représentant de demi-grandeur* la feuille du Begonia Rex. Ainsi que vient de le dire M. J ules Putzeys, notre honorable collaborateur, c’est a M. J. Linden qu est échue la bonne fortune d’augmenter les collections Europeennes de ce merveille Begonia, dont la venue est tout un événement en hor- ticulture. En ayant acquis de nombreux exemplaires des la mise en vente, nous avons pu en réserver quelques-uns pour en faire des spécimens, qui, pendant le cours du dernier été, produisirent sur les visiteurs un de ces effets saisissants qui char- ment tout autant le vendeur que I’acheteur. Le débit a été grand; mais aussi est-ce la une de ces plantes ‘fit for the million, comme disent nos confréres de la fire Albion.” Mr. Linden is stated to have received the plant from Assam ; but it is not to be supposed the enormous size of the leaf repre- sented by M. Van Houtte is natural to it in its own country, * This “ demi-grandeur” is 14 inches long and 93 wide! FEBRUARY lst, 1859. —it is the effect of high cultivation; and what is gained in size is lost in brilliancy of colour, to judge from the figure. It — has flowered with us in the autumn, and probably by a little management the blossoms may be produced at most seasons of the year. Descr. There is no true stem to this plant. The red, terete — petioles, furrowed on the anterior side, spring in clusters from a — subterraneous creeping rhizome, by dividing which the plant is — readily increased. Bracteas ovate, hair-pointed, strongly ciliated at the lower edge. Leaf about as long as the petiole, in our plants averaging eight to ten inches long, five or six broad, obliquely and — inequilaterally ovate, deeply cordate at the base, the lobes over- lapping, sparingly villous (as is the petiole), the margin sinuato- dentate, the surface bullate as if from the tightness of the veins. The colour a deep-green, with a metallic lustre, and towards the — Margin tinged with purple. The dark green-coloured surface is — however interrupted by a broad ring, if it may be so called, of — a dead silvery-white, which takes the direction of the margin of | the leaf, and is continued almost to the apex of the leaf. Pe- duncle resembling the petiole, but quite terete. Cyme rather few-flowered, twice dichotomous. Flowers large, pale rose-colour. Bracts very deciduous. Yale lowers two inches across, of four — sepals ; two cordato-ovate, concave ; two smaller, oblong, plane. — Anthers yellow, acuminate. Female Jlowers scarcely more than — half the size of the male, of five nearly equal, oblong, spreading — sepals. Style short. Stigmas yellow, convolute. Capsule ob- lique, oval, with two narrow, short, parallel wings, and one long, projecting, ovato-oblong, obtuse one. Fig. 1. Capsule. 2. ‘Transverse section of the cells :—magnified. Tas. 5102. BEGONIA xanrurina; var, pictifolia. Yellow-flowered Begonia ; variegated-leaved var. Nat. Ord. BrEgonracem.—Mone@cia PoLYANDRIA. Gen. Ohar. (Vide supra, Tas. 4172.) BgGonta zanthina; acaulis, rhizomate brevi crasso villosissimo crinito, foliis amplis oblique brevi-acuminatis sinuatis denticulatis subtus discoloribus (rubris), petiolis aggregatis crassis folium subsequantibus rubris stipulatis setosis, stipulis magnis glabris, scapo petiolis duplo longioribus, floribus subnutantibus corymbosis flavis, masculis plerisque tetrasepalis, sep. 3 ob- longo-cuneatis unico majore rotundato magis concavo, fwmineis minoribus sepalis magis equalibus, fructus alis 2 brevibus, unica elongata striata. Brconta xanthina. Hook. Bot. Mag. t. 4683. B. pictifolia ; foliis maculis albescentibus irroratis, floribus pallide flavis sepalis angustioribus, capsulz ala majore angustiore ascendente. . Bueonta picta. Hort. Jackson (not Smith). We received this beautiful-leaved plant* from Mr. Jackson, of the Kingston Nursery, under the name of Begonia picta; but assuredly not having any specific connection with the well-known Begonia picta of Sir James E. Smith. Its affinity is with our B. vanthina, above quoted, and at present at least, till I can learn more of its history, I am disposed to consider it a variety of that plant, or perhaps a cross with some of the painted-leaved species. It is, indeed, near akin to B. Rex (see our Tab. 5101), especially in the leaves; but that has yellowish-white flowers, tinged with rose: all of them have mucronate anthers. I fear much dependence cannot be placed on the colour of the flowers, nor on the spotting of the leaves. Some of our own young * Since the above was printed, we have received No. 14 of Mr. Linden’s Catalogue des Plantes Exotiques,’ in which, under the head of ‘ Plantes Exo- tiques Nouvelles,’ he has represented on one plate leaves of three Begonias of ~“ssam, one of which, called Begonia Victoria, is clearly our plant; but no char Facters are given indicating any specific identity. MARCH 1st, 1859, plants of my B. zanthina have the leaves spotted, but the spots are of quite a different character from those of our present plant. It. is well known that the beautiful B. argyrostigma (Exotic Flora, t. 18) became by continued cultivation spotless, and ther lost all its charm with cultivators. Fig. 1. Female flower, nat. size. 2. Fruit, slightly magnified. 3. Transverse section of ditto, more magnified. Tas. 5103. EPIGYNIUM tevucosorrys. White-fruited Hyigynium. Nat. Ord. VaccINIACE®.—DECANDRIA MonoGyNIa. Gen. Char. (Vide supra, Tas. 5010.) Epieyntum Jeucobotrys ; frutex epiphytica, ramulis verticillatis, radice tube- rosa crassa, foliis oblongo-lanceolatis grosse serratis obtusiusculis, racemis subterminalibus folio longioribus, bracteis minutis ciliato-serratis, pedicellis demum elongatis carnosis (floribusque albis) apice dilatatis, corolla urceo- lata obtuse pentagona; baccis depresso-globosis albis. Epicynium leucobotrys. Nutt. MSS. Whether or not Zpigynium of Klotzsch should rank as a genus, or perhaps more correctly as a section of Vaccinium, our present plant belongs to the same group as Lpigyniwm acumt- natum, K\., figured at Tab. 5010 of our volume for 1857, and we are indebted for the introduction of it to our greenhouses to the same venerable botanist as for that, Mr. Nuttall. It was imported living from the Duppla Hills, north-eastern Bengal, by his nephew Mr. Booth, who found it there growing on a species of Oak. “It is an evergreen shrub,” writes Mr. N uttall, “seven or eight feet high, very erect, with verticillate branches, a tuberous root, almost like that of a yam, but harder in sub- Stance, having numerous racemes of white, conic, pentagonal flowers, so diaphanous as (when held between the eye and the light) to show the ten, yellow, awned anthers within. It proves a hardy greenhouse shrub, bearing its pure-white flowers most copiously in the summer months, and its equally white and wax-like berries (reminding one of the “crow-berries ") in the autumn. Descr. Shrub from four to seven or eight feet high, erect. Branchlets verticillate. Leaves from the apices of the branchlets are very short. Petioles evergreen, oblong-lanceolate, scarcely acuminate, obtuse at the very point, spreading, scarcely serrated, MARCH Ist, 1859. strongly veined: the veins more or less anastomosing. Racemes copious from among the leaves, and longer than them, drooping, secund, many-flowered. Pedicels at first about twice the length of the glabrous flowers, but elongating as the fruit advances to maturity, white, fleshy, pellucid, dilated at the apex, at the base having a small lanceolate and somewhat fimbriated dract. Calyz-teeth five, small, triangular. Corolla conico-urceolate, with a limb of five small spreading teeth. The colour is white, the substance waxy, subdiaphanous. Stamens ten. Filaments short, glabrous, linear-subulate. _Anther subulate, two-lobed at the base, the two cells opening by a pore at the apex, and the back extending so as to form two erect awns. Berries copious, about the size of peas, globose, depressed, pure-white, waxy; with five dark spots in a circle below the apex, which are the remains of the small calyx, five-celled. Fig. 1. Flower. 2. Calyx and pistil. 3. Stamens. 4. Bract, pedicel; and berry. 6. Transversé séction of a berry :—magnified. Ml " &y on ge rs W. Fitch del et hth. Tas. 5104, SONERILA MARGARITACEA. Pearl-spotted Sonerila. Nat. Ord. MELASTOMACE®.—TRIANDRIA MONOGYNIA. Gen. Char. (Vide supra, Tas. 4978.) SoNERILA margaritacea ; herbacea perennis glaberrima, caulibus subdecnmben- tibus pubescenti-glandulosis ramis pedunculisque intense rubris, foliis ovato- lanceolatis sublonge petiolatis acutissime serratis supra nitidis intense viri- dibus maculatis maculis ovalibus albis unipilosis oblique lineatim dispositis, subtus pallidis venis purpurascentibus, terminalibus subsessilibus verticillatis minoribus, corymbis terminalibus solitariis, calyce oblongo triquetro, limbo trilobo erecto; petalis obovatis acutis, antheris longirostratis.; SONERILA margaritacea. Lindl. in Gard. Chron. Nov. 1854, . 127. Planchon, ix Fl. des Serres, t. 1126. : - This very lovely little plant, a great acquisition to our stoves, was imported ‘by Messrs. Veitch and Sons, of the Nurseries, Exeter and Chelsea, through their collector, Mr. Thomas Lobb, “ from some part of India.” It is assuredly among the prettiest of a very pretty genus, and when first exhibited at a meeting of | the Horticultural Society, in 1854, “ excited the admiration of everybody present.” It seems by no means difficult of cultiva- tion, but it is said that the pinching off the young peduncles of flowers increases the vigour of the plant, and the brightness of the foliage. We are indebted to Mr. Veitch for our living plants. Descr. Herbaceous, but perennial. Stems rather weak and subprocumbent, about eight to ten inches long, slender, quad- rangular, rich scarlet, pubescenti-glandulose, as 1s more oF less almost every part of the plant. Leaves opposite, petiolate ( petiole red, from half an inch to an inch and more long), oblong- or ovato-lanceolate, acute or acuminate, sharply but not very closely serrated, penniveined ; the veins oblique, parallel, very dark and MARCH Ist, 1859. glossy green above, with oval, white, margaritaceous spots ar- ranged in single lines or series between the veins, and following — their direction: beneath pale, the veins red-purple. Peduncles — red, terminal, generally surrounded at the base by a whorl of subsessile leaves, or foliaceous bracts, smaller than the cauline ones. Corymb of eight to ten flowers, with minute, subulate bracts at the base of the pedicels. Calyx-tube oblong, trique- trous, adnate with the ovary, striated, sometimes a little glan- dular; Zimé erect, of three, nearly erect, acute lobes. Petals three, obovate, sharply acuminate, rose-coloured. Stamens three, — inserted on the limb of the calyx, alternating with the petals ; fi/a- ments nearly erect, subulate ; anthers subulate, two-lobed at the base, long-rostrate, opening by two minute pores at the apex. — Style subulate ; stigma capitate, small. 4 Se REESE Fig. 1. Flower. 2. Calyx and pistil. 3. Tranverse section of the ovary. 4. Stamens :—magnijied. SP i ata a on a Tas. 5105. PLECTOCOMIA Assamica. Assam Plectocomia. Nat. Ord. PatmMace#.—Drecia HExANDRIA. Gen. Char. Flores dioici in spadice elongato, per spicam simplicem vel ramo- sam dispositi, sub spathis incompletis squamzformibus distiche imbricatis recon- diti, sessiles, masculi geminati, foeminei solitarii; illi: Calya exterior trifidus ; interior 3-partitus, preefloratione valvatus. Stamina 6; filamenta subulata, basi coherentia; anthere lineares, fere basi affixe. Ovariwm rudimentum nullum. Fem. Calyx maris. “Stamina ananthera, in cupulam hypogynam membranaceam sexfidam coalita. Ovarium 3-loculare; loculo uno alterove sepe effeto. Stig- mata 3, subsessilia, subulata. Bacca squamis retrorsis imbricatis loricata, 1-lo- cularis, 1-sperma. Albumen zquabile, corneum. Embryo basilaris. —Caudex longissimus, sarmentoso-scandens. Frondes maxima, pinnate ; pinnis reduplicatis ; rachi sepe in cirrhum longissimum excurrente, dorso aculeis multilobis uncinatis ar- mata. Spadices laterales, divisi in ramos longos, spathis coriacers Juscidulis laxe rr eae coopertos. lores ochroleuci vel rubello-fusciduli. Fractus castanes. th. . PLEcTocom1a Assamica ; spathis laxe patentibus lato-oblongis brevi-acuminatis obtuse sub-complicato-carinatis coloratis, petalorum laciniis longe acumima- — tis, staminibus 8-12. Prectocomra Assamica. Griff. in Calcutta Journ. of Nat. Hist. v. 5. p. 97. Piectocomra Khasiyana? Griff. in Caleutta Journ. v. 5. p. 98; Palms of the ast Indies, p. 106. ¢, 218. PLEctocomia Himalayana? Griff. in Calcutta Journ. v. 5. p. 100, and in Palms of the East Indies, p. 108. ¢. 219. ZALACCA Assamica, Wall. MSS. in Hort. Caleut. Voigt, Hort. Suburb. Caleut. Pp. 639 (name only). This very interesting species of Palm has flowered at the Royal Gardens, Kew, recently, for the second time ; plants having been sent to us many years ago by the late Dr. Wallich, under the name of Zalacca Assamica, Wall. MSS. This same plant Grif- fith has, in the ‘Calcutta Journal of Natural History, properly referred to the genus Plectocomia, and has distinguished it, with little care or accuracy, from the P: elongata of Martius and Blume. Griffith has, indeed, figured and described (very imper- MARCH lst, 1859. fectly) what he considers two other species of the genus, which he has named after the countries in which he found them, P. Khasiyana, and P. Himalayana. Of P. Assamica he observes, “The fruit is a good deal like that of P. elongata, judging from Martius’s figure, but the scales are so fimbriate that it has quite a woolly appearance.” Under P. Khasiyana he remarks, “ This would appear nearly allied to the preceding (P. Assamica), from which it differs in the smaller spathas, the very small calyx, with minute triangular teeth, the broader petals, the brown, not rust- coloured fruit, which is smaller, and not by any means so villous, the points of the scales being less fimbriate, and often deciduous.” Of P. Himalayana,* “This may be the male of the preceding ' (P. Khasiyana).” The figures too, such as they are, sufficiently represent our plant to justify me in quoting them, though doubt- fully. The P. Mueller, Bl., of Java, seems to be a very diffe- rent species, detected also in Borneo by Mr. Thomas Lobb. Our present kind seems peculiar to Eastern Bengal, and differs from P. elongata in the long, lax-coloured (white, brown, and green), narrower spathas, the very long acuminated segments of the corolla, and in the constantly more numerous stamens. It is a slender Palm, attaining the length of sixty-six feet, even in cultivation in our Palm-stove, and though not strictly scandent, needing support; and Nature has admirably provided for this want by the curious and excessively strong, digitate spines upon the rachis of the frond, in shape resembling the foot of a mole. A singular use is made of that of the allied Plectocomia elongata in Java (as witnessed by the late Mr. Winterbottom), by persons whose duty it is to catch rogues and vagabonds. ‘To the inside of a forked stick a sufficient portion of the rachis is attached, with its strong deflexed spines; and this fork being thrust in such a way as to include the body of the man, the spines get a firm hold of the captive, either by his clothes, or what is much more painful, his flesh. The leaves or fronds are said to be em- ployed for basket-work. Duscr. Caudex very long, ragged with the very spinous sheathing bases of fallen leaves ; below, the caudex is scarcely so thick as a man’s ankle, but it becomes a little broader upwards ; the upper portion, and for a considerable length below the apex, leafy. Leaves or fronds often thirty feet long, but the lower half only is pinnated ; the rest is a flagelliform extension of the rachis, destitute of pinne, and the whole flattened under side of this rachis is beset with stout, compound, digitate spines, at greater or less distances, all pointing downwards: those nearest the base * Dr. Hooker, however, detected in Sikkim a small species of Plectocomia which has the appearance of being very distinct from any of these. of the leaves are longest and straightest. It is stated that by means of these spines the fronds hook themselves on to the branches of trees, and so maintain the trunk in a nearly per- pendicular position. Pimze@ numerous,.six to seven inches to nearly a foot long, more or less broadly lanceolate, acuminate, plicate, very glaucous beneath. Spadices (male, the only ones I have seen living) are numerous from among the leaves, com- pound, that is branching from near the peduncle, and these branches long (two and three feet or more), gracefully drooping, pendulous; they are clothed with numerous, imbricated, disti- chous scales or spathas, two to three inches long, subrhombeo- oblong, carinate, concave, firm-membranaceous, acute rather than - acuminate, nearly white, with a band of pale-brown below the green apex, which is often tinged with dark-brown, and finely ciliated at the margin. Within each spatha is a spike (or parteal spadiz) of numerous, pale-yellowish, bracteolated flowers. Calyx trifid, with the lobes or teeth subulate. Corolla tripartite; seg- ments long-lanceolate, acuminate. Stamens eight to ten or twelve, much shorter than the corolla. Filaments short. Anther linear- oblong, subsagittate. Female spatha (from our first flowering specimen) similar to the male.. Spike or partial spadix ot Semale flowers about one-half the length of the spatha. Calya large in proportion to the flower, three-lobed; the /odes obtuse, mu- — cronate, ciliato-fimbriate. Corolla as in the male. Ovary subglobose, clothed with reflexed, fringed scales. Style short. _ Stigmas three, fringed in the inner face. Fruit (seen only in the dried state) globose, brown, an inch broad, clothed with reflexed, fringed scales, subtended by the persistent and very rigid floral coverings. Seed globose. Albumen firm and hard, copious. elect Fig. 1. Extremely reduced figure of the entire Palm. 2. Portion of a frond, with pinne and digitate spines. 3. Portions of the male spadix :—wat. size. 4. Male flower. 5. Stamen:—magnified. 6, Female spatha, with its spike or partial spadix of flowers.—xat. size. 17. Female flower. 8. Ovary :—magnified. 9. Fruit. 10. Section of seed :—anat. size. OS S = ar ooks, bmp. a - VITAE. ee Tas. 5106. DIPTERACANTHUS canvescens. Subglabrous Dypteracanthus. Nat. Ord. ACANTHACE®.—D1pYNAMIA ANGIOSPERMIA. Gen. Char. (Vide supra, TaB. 4494.) Drpreracantuus calvescens ; caule suffruticoso basi repente glabro caudicante, juvenili apice hirsuto, foliis elliptico-oblongis acuminatis basi acutis brevi- petiolatis repandis, juvenilibus supra undique subtus ad costas hirsutis, adultis glabrescentibus, floribus infra terminali-axillaribus geminis ternisve subsessilibus, bracteolis inferioribus ovatis obtuse cuspidatis, superioribus oblongo-lanceolatis obtusis calyce longioribus hirsutis, corolla tubo longo fauce obconico tubum subeequante. Nees. Dirreracanruus calvescens. Nees, in Endl. et Mart. Fl. Brasil. fase. 7. p. 32. De Cand. Prodr. v. 11. p. 128. If Dipteracanthus calvescens can lay no claim to floral beauty, nothing to be compared with that of D. spectabilis (see our Tab. 4494), it is nevertheless worthy of cultivati mn, from the fact of its blossoming, and that freely, in the winter months, in our stove; and it would no doubt succeed well in a warm green- house. It is a native of Rio Janeiro, where it has been gathered by Martius, Riedel, Schott, Sellow, and Gardner. N otwith- Standing some discrepancies, our plant here figured, which we received from Pernambuco through Mr. de Mornay. , 18 clearly the same as Nees’s D. calvescens. We have native pepe both from Riedel and Gardner (n. 805) in our herbarium. drawing was made in December, 1858. Dzscr. A rather straggling, small shrub, or undershru ‘| or the young branches are green and herbaceous, and more . se pubescent. Stem whitish, especially below, subterete, swollen a the setting-on of the branches or leaves. Leaves opposite, one and a half to two inches long, oblong or ovato-lanceolate, short- petioled, gradually but obtusely acuminate, penniveined, the margin repando-subdentate, teeth very blunt, pale beneath, and plant geminate, nearly ses- sometimes purplish. FZowers in our MARCH Ist, 1859. sile, terminal upon young shoots, but it is probable, from the prolongation of a new shoot beneath the flowers, the latter may appear subaxillary. The young leaves, which surround the base of the flowers, have somewhat the appearance of bracts. Caly- cine bracts lanceolate, acuminate, longer than the calyx. Calyx quinquepartite, the segments lanceolato-subulate. Corolla ra- ther pale purplish-lilac, with a few deeper lines or streaks; tube long, infundibuliform, suddenly contracted, so that the lower half is very narrow and white; Zimé nearly equal, of five, ob- cordate, slightly crisped, spreading lobes. Stamens four, didy- namous, quite within the tube. Anthers linear-subsagittate. Ovary oblong-ovate, on a thick fleshy torus. Style slender. Stigma of two very unequal segments. Fig. 1. Tube of the corolla laid open to show the stamens. 2. Single sta- men. 38, Calyx, with pistil. 4. Ovary and torus :—magnified. Tas. 5107. BEGONIA xanturina; var. Lazuli. Yellowflowered Begonia; Lapis-Lazult var. Nat. Ord. BreGonracE®.—Mone@cia POLYANDRIA. Gen. Char. (Vide supra, TaB. 4172.) Brconta zanthina, Hook. (For specific character and synonyms see our Tab. 5102 of the present volume.) Var. Lazuli ; foliis immaculatis supra metallico-purpureis ceruleo-tinctis. (Tas. Nostr. 5107.) Brconra Lazuli. Linden, Suppl. Cat. Pl. Exot. 1858, p. 2 (name). Mr. Linden, the distinguished horticulturist at Brussels, has great merit in having of late years introduced to our Euro- pean stoves a series of plants of the genus ot eae “from Assam, of very great beauty, both in respect o flower and foliage ; the latter remarkable for its great size and metallic lustre, and exhibiting, in these leaves, a considerable variety both in the nature and disposition of the spots. To this group belong the Begonia Rex (see our Tab. 5101), the Begoma amabilis, argentea, and Victoria, of Linden, and B: Lazuli of the same author (the plant here figured); all these belong to one and the same group, of which our B. 2anthina (Bot. Mag. t. 4683) from Bhotan may be considered the type, if it be not, as I am in- duced to suppose it is, the common parent of all, assisted, as may probably be the case with the Begonia Rez, by a cross with some pink-flowered species. Indeed the B. Victoria of Linden (as it proves to be, see our Tab. 5102) I had no hesita- tion in considering as a painted-leaved variety of B. vanthina, and I have as little in referring our present plant to that also. But it deserves a place in every ornamental stove as much as if it were a distinct species. Linden himself alludes to the analogy in question. “Sans avoir la prétention de se comparer a lespéce précédente (B. Rez), ce Begonia est néanmoins d'une grande APRIL Ist, 1859. beauté, et mérite sa dédicace par l’analogie frappante du coloris de ses feuilles avec la pierre précieuse connue sous le nom de Lapis-Lazuli. la partie supérieure de ses grandes feuilles est — en effet d’un bleu minéral parsemé d’une poussicre étincellante. La fleur jaune est de la grandeur et de la forme de celle du — B. wanthina. Cette espéce habite les mémes localités que le B. Rez, et a été découverte par le méme collecteur.” | Fig. 1. Female flower, zat. size. 2. Immature capsule. 3. Transverse sec- tion of the capsule (the longer wing being removed) :—magnijied. —— Hla —— a) SE 4 ° al Rey 5 b Tas. 5108. VRIESIA psirraciIna; var. RUBRO-BRACTEATA. Parrot-flowered Vriesia ; red-bracteated var. Nat. Ord. BromELIACEZ.—HeExaNDRIA MoNOGYNIA. Gen. Char. Sepala 5, convoluta, qualia, petalis apice revolutis breviora. Squame cuique petalo 2, semiadnatee, indivisee. Stamina exserta, 3 libera peta- lorum basi inserta, 3 inter petala inserta iisque basi. connata ; anthere lineares, plane, posticee. Ovariwm semi-inferum, conicum ; stigma trilobum, lobis convo- — lntis et sinuatis villosis.—Folia plana, erecta. Flores distichi, distantes, bracteis magnis canaliculatis coloratis. Lindl. VriEsta psittacina ; foliis oblongo-lingulatis integerrimis brevi-acuminatis basi ventricosis, spica simplici, rachi flexuosa colorata, floribus distantibus, bracteis calycibusque corolla parum brevioribus, staminibus exsertis. a. bracteis superne flavis. TrILLaNpsta psittacina. Hook. Bot. Mag. t. 2841. B. bracteis omnino coccineis. (Tas. Nostr. 5108.) VRIESIa psittacina. Lindl. Bot. Reg. v. 29. t. 10. Native of Brazil, and a very great ornament to our stoves, by bearing its handsome scarlet and yellow spikes of flowers in the — winter months. Our figure, given in the Botanical Magazine, of this plant thirty years ago, does not do justice to its beauty. That here given is, like that of Dr. Lindley the ‘ Botanical Register,’ a variety, in which the bracteas are of the same rich scarlet all over as the rachis; and I am glad to have the oppor- tunity of giving a more perfect representation, and referring it to the genus Vriesia of Dr. Lindley, so named in commemora- tion of the merits of Dr. W. de Vriese, Professor of Botany at “ Leyden, an excellent botanist and physiologist, now on a governl= — : ment botanical mission to Java. ’ Descr. Leaves all radical, eight and ten inches to nearly a foot long, oblongo-lingulate, waved, acuminate, entire, dark-green, much inflated or ventricose at the base, of a coriaceo-membra- naceous texture. Scape one foot to one and a half foot high, APRIL Ist, 1859. erect, arising from the centre of the plant, bearing from ten to twenty distichous flowers, opening from below upwards in suc- cession, of which only two or three are expanded at one time. achis flexuose ; flowers scarlet, distant. Bracteas large, sheath- ing the flower and a little shorter than it, rich scarlet even to the apex. Sepals and corolla bright-yellow, the former the length of the bract, oblong, obtuse. Petals linear, acute, recurved, and with a tinge of blue at the tips; at the base having two spathu- late scales. Stamens and style exserted. Ovary almost entirely free. Stigma in three, cuneate, glandular lobes. Fig. 1. Petal and stamen. 2. Pistil :—magnified. “Vincent Brooks, BP P . Tas. 5109. NEPENTHES ampwu.Luaria. Ampullaceous Nepenthes, or Pitcher-plant. Nat. Ord. NepentHacn®.—Diccra MonapDELPHIA. Gen. Char. (Vide supra, Tas. 4285.) NEPENTHES ampullaria ; caule basi repente superne ascendente scandente, asci- diis radicalibus late ovato-ventricosis reliquis ovali-cylindraceis antice alis duabus membranaceis longe pectinato-ciliatis, ore subcontracto, margime angusto inflexo striato, operculo parvo lanceolato demum reflexo, racemis pubescentibus. NEPENTHES ampullaria. W. Jack, in Hook. Comp. to Bot. Mag. v. 1. p. 271. Lambert, Pinus, v. 2. App. t. 8. Korthals, Bot. p. 39. é. 18. Dp go As compared with the noble pitchers of Nepenthgs Raflesvana, Jack (see our Tab. 4285 of this work), and our still more striking Nepenthes villosa,* given at Tab. 5080, NV. ampullaria claims few attractions ; and it has unfortunately happened that our artist took his drawing too late in the season for the more perfect pitchers, which are collected in numbers about the base of the plant at an earlier season, on small and abortive leaves, and then disap- pear. These are sometimes almost globose, singularly inflated or ampullaceous, whilst the pitchers springing from the end of a fully-formed cauline leaf, where they are always less perfect, are narrower and oval-oblong; and no others were present on the plant at the flowering-season (August). The species 1s a native of the forests of Singapore ; also at Rhio, on the island of Bin- tang, Malay Archipelago. We owe our plants to the liberality of Lady Dorothy Nevill; Dangstein, and of Messrs. Veitch and Sons, of the Nurseries, Exeter and Chelsea. : Descr. The lower part of the plant is more or less creeping, me magnificent pitchers from two he collected on Kina and of a form as re- * And even these are very inferior to so new species lately sent to us by Hugh Low, Esq., which Balloo, in Borneo; one of them more than 14 inches long, markable as the size. APRIL Ist, 1859. and that, together with the lower portion of the erect and scan- dent stem, bears whorls of abortive or very imperfect leaves, ter- minated by an inflated, broad, ampullaceous pitcher, three inches long, green, membranaceous, sometimes faintly tinged with red, — obliquely striated, slightly contracted above; the mouth at first small, and closed with an oblong or lanceolate lid, which soon opens, and becomes erect, at length reflexed ; bearing just above the base a soft bristle. Leaves on the stem remote, broad- lanceolate, sessile, costate, with a few lateral, longitudinal veins, and several transverse ones; these leaves are terminated by a filament (or prolongation of the costa), either clubbed at the apex or bearing a pitcher, narrower and more cylindrical than those just described. Female plant: panicle or raceme downy, bear- ing flowers similar in structure to those of other species already described. Our figure represents terminal leaves and a panicle of male flowers, and a leaf with a pitcher :—nat. size. Fig. 1. Male flower :—magnified. Tan. 0110, HOWARDIA CarRaACcCASENSIS. Caracas Howardia. Nat. Ord. Ruprace®.—PENTANDRIA Monoeyrnia. Gen. Char. Calyx tubo turbinato cum ovario connato, limbo supero breviter 5-dentato, dente uno in folium coloratum cordato-rotundatum petiolatumque expanso. Corolla supera, tubulosa, pubescens, limbo brevi 5-lobo, lobis zstiva- tione valvatis, tubo inferne crassiusculo (in flore sicco chartaceo) intusque glabro et nitido superne molliter membranaceo, pagina intima glabra vel pilosa. Stamina 6, ex annulo densissimo pilorum basim partis membranacez corolle vestientium orta, jilamentis glabris, antheris oblongis introrsis fere medio dorso affixis exsertis. Ovarium disco pulviniformi coronatum, biloculare. Ovula plurima, horizontalia, in placentis membranaceis ellipticis margine involutis — sepiusque bifidis dissepimento medio secundum lineam verticalem adnatis, ana- tropa. Stylus filiformis, corolle longitudine, glaber, stigmate bifido. Capsula rotundato- vel oblongo-turbinata, hinc et inde sulco plus minusve profundo no- tata, obsolete costulata, vertice truncato-areolata, areola (seu pulvine persistente) limbo calycis reliquio annulari integro aut dentato arcte circumeincta, ab apice ad basim loculicide dehiscens, placentis simul longitrorsum fissis, valvis dein septicide bifidis. Semina subcompressa, oblonga, angulosa, aptera.—Arbores — vel frutices Americe tropicalis, foliis oppositis, petiolatis, pubescentibus ; stipulis — interpetiolaribus, persistentibus, parum conspicuis, triangularibus, abrupte acumi- — natis ; floribus cymoso-paniculatis, pedunculis terminalibus. Wedd. Howarp1a Caracasensis ; foliis ovatis vel obovato-ellipticis longiuscule acumi- tis supra nisi in costa glabratis subtus natis, acumine acutissimo, basi cunea osta heb pubescentibus, dentibus calycis triangularibus acuminatis, lobo folie “i ovato (vel cordato-ovato), corolla tubulosa hirsuta, capsulis (exemplaribus Panamensibus) elliptieo-globosis pedicellisque verracosis. A Howarpra Caracasensis. Weddell, Ann. des Sc. Nat. ser. pare ge Pk Canycornyiium tubulosum. Seemann, Bot. of H.MS. Herald, p. 135 (vie De Cand., and excluding the locality of Peru, M‘Lean). Prncxyeya ionantha, Hort. Makoy. Pe Ne nara rEnenee This is indeed a very lovely stove-plant, with gracefully droop- ing panicles of flowers, whose beauty 1s very much increased by the remarkable enlargement of one of the minute teeth of the -coloured, folia- calyx into a heart-shaped, petiolated, deep rose APRIL lst, 1859. ceous Jobe, similar to what takes place (except in respect of co- lour) in the well-known Mussenda of our stoves. It is a plant, too, interesting in another point of view, as one of a new ge- nus of which the typical species, Howardia febrifuga, Weddell, of Bolivia, has been detected as one of the medicinal barks of commerce, and much used by the Bolivians in intermittent fevers.* To this plant Dr. Weddell has assigned the generic name Howardia. “Parmi les genres,” says Dr. Weddell, “que jai fait connaitre dans ma Monographie des Quinquinas, il en est un auquel jappliquai, par mégarde, un nom (Chrysoxylon) apparte- nant a une plante d’une autre famille. Pour mettre fin 4 ce double emploi, je vais aujourd’hui donner 4 ma Rubiacée un nom nou- veau ; et je ne fais, ce me semble, qu’un acte de justice en lais- sant tomber mon choix sur celui de l’excellent quinologiste qui vient de publier, en Angleterre, un mémoire aussi judicieux qu approfondi, sur la collection de Quinquinas de José Pavon, léguée par Lambert au Musée Britannique.” No compliment could be better deserved. Another described plant referred to this genus by M. Weddell is the Calycophyllum tubulosum of De Candolle, from Brazil. A third species is the Howardia grandiflora, Weddell, readily distinguished by its linear calycine teeth; and a fourth species is the Howardia Caracasensis, cer- tainly our plant of Venezuela, but so nearly allied to Howardia tubulosa that Dr. Seemann has united the two, as well as a Peruvian species in my herbaria, which latter, I think, will prove different. : Howardia Caracasensis, as its name implies, is a native of the province of Caracas, in Venezucla, where it was detected by FPuncke (P\. Exsice. n. 463, in Herb. Paris., n. 372, Herb. Hook.). We possess specimens also from Fender, from the shme country, and from our collector, 47. Birschell, and from the banks of the river Chagres, in Panama, gathered by Seemann. “= _ Fig. 1. Flower, from which the foliaceous lobe is removed above the base of its petiole. 2. Stamen. 3. Pistil :—magnified. * For an account of the analysis, by Mr. Howard, see Annales des Sciences , Nat. l.c. p. 68, note. O41. — Se ete Vincent Drooxw, "Fen. SFT STEPHANOPHYSUM Bark1e1. Dr. Baikie’s Stephanophysum. Nat. Ord. ACANTHACEH,—DIDYNAMIA GYMNOSPERMIA. Gen. Char. Calyx 5-partitus, Jaciniis angustis eequalibus. Corolla tubo brevi, faucibus in plerisque campanulato-inflatis deorsum ventricosis aliis ovalibus ob- longisve cequalibus ; Zimdi laciniis brevibus sequalibus erectis (v. magis minusve patentibus). Stamina 4, didynama, faucibus inserta, corollam plerumque eequantia ; filamenta per paria basi connata; anthere biloculares, Zocu/is parallelis, lineares, basi sagittate, demum recurve. Stigma. bilabiatum, labiis planis acuminatis, supe- riore breviore. Capsula a basi ad medium contracta, elocularis, hine bilocularis, 4—12-sperma. Semina plana, orbiculata, vetinaculis fulcrata.—Herbe Americe (et Africe) tropica, foliis plus minus dentatis (v. integerrimis). Cyme umbellares, laterales, pedunculate, 4-fide, abortu bifide, radiis difidis, bracteis parvis subulatis, bracteolis nuilis: abortu evadunt pedunculi uniflori, sub flore bibracteati, vel flores terminales, aggregati, subracemosi, pedicellis ebracteatis. Corolla digitaliformis, coccinea. Nees in De Cand. SrepHaNnopnysum Baikiei ; suffrutex? glaber, ramis 4-angulatis, foliis ovato- lanceolatis acuminatis integerrimis basi in petiolum longum attenuatis, panicula composita terminali multiflora, calyce piloso-glanduloso, corollis elongatis infundibuliformi-tubulosis curvatis lateraliter compressis basi an- gusto-attenuatis medio subventricoso, laciniis patenti-recurvis, glandula hy- pogyna magna cupuliformi carnosa, anthers loculis basi brevi-calcaratis. One of the many highly interesting plants lately sent home from the present Niger Expedition by its successful Comman- der Dr. Baikie, and collected by the indefatigable naturalist, Mr. Barter. Seeds accompanied the dried specimens, and these , have germinated, and the plants flowered in great beauty during the winter months of 1866-9. The atracéure ss 10 every coi" tial particular so much of that of Stephanophysum, Pohl (of which however the thirteen species described by Nees are all South American), that I can have no hesitation in referring the plants to that genus. Duscr. Our plant is between two and three feet high, her- baceous at present, but will probably prove to be suffruticose, erecto-patent erect, branched with opposite, square or tetragonous, APRIL Ist, 1859. branches. Leaves in opposite pairs, sometimes nearly a span long, including the petiole, ovato-lanceolate, submembranaceous, entire, penniveined, acuminate, attenuated at the base. Panicle terminal, with copious dracts and bracteoles, and composed of many-flowered opposite racemes or spikes. Flowers opposite, - sessile. Calyx cut nearly to the base into five, narrow, erect, linear-subulate, glanduloso-pilose segments. Corolla more than two inches long, scarlet, tubuloso-infundibuliform, curved, very slender and much tapering at the basé, inflated or ventricose in the middle, the five triangular lobes of the limb patent and even recurved. Stamens included within the tube. Anthers with a small spur at the base of each cell. Ovary sunk into a large, fleshy, cup-shaped disc. Ovules about four in each cell. - Fig. 1. Calyx, including the pistil. 2. Stamens. 38. Two-celled anthers. 4. Ovary surrounded at the base by the cup-like fleshy disc :—magnified. Ye ‘e : eager wc3! Pe iad ~ane Tas. 5112. LINUM pvusescens; B. Sibthorpianum. Pubescent Flax ; Sibthorpe’s var. Nat. Ord, Linsra.—DeEcanpRIA PENTAGYNIA. Gen. Char. (Vide supra, Tan. 4956.) Linum (Dasylinum, P/.) pudescens; “ annuum, caulibus teretibus levibus superne corymboso-divisis inter folia densa patenti-pilosulis, foliis alternis intermediis ovato-oblongis basi obtusis apice acutiusculis 5-nerviis preter villos raros submarginales v. in disco sparsos glabrescentibus supremis glanduloso- ciliatis, cymze composite ramis apice confertifloris, sepalis e basi lanceolato- lineari in acumen lineare longum basi subcontinuum et multo longius her- baceum productis piloso-ciliatis subglandulosis, antheris ovato-oblongis basi _ profunde emarginatis, stylis ad medium connatis, ovario stipitato glabro.” Planch, Linum pubescens. Russ. Aleppo, ex Schiltz. Syst. Veget.v.6.p. 7158. De Cand. Prodr, 0. 1. p. 428, Planch. in Hook. Lond. Journ. Bot. p. 519. Var. B. Sibthorpianum; humilius, foliis caulinis oblongis 8-nerviis, corymbi floriferi ramis laxioribus minus ramosis. Planch. in Hook. Lond. Journ. Bot.v. 7. p.529. (Tas. Noster. 5112.) Linum piliferum. Presi, Fl. Sic. p. 171. Linum Sibthorpianum. Reuter in Mém. de Gen. v. 8. p. 283. t. 3, ex Walp. Repert. Bot. v. 1. p. 287, et in Herb. Nostr. Linum decoloratum. Griseb. Spicil. Fl. Rum. v. 1. p. 117. Linum hirsutum. Sidth. Fl. Greca, t. 302 (non Linn.) monente Reuter et Grise- bach. Our knowledge of the species of Linum has been considerably increased since the publication of the ‘ Prodromus’ of De Can- dolle, who enumerated forty-six, independent of “species non Satis note.” But the numerical amount in books must not be considered that of the really good and distinct kinds. The genus required weeding ; and our friend Dr. Planchon has done great service to the cause of botany in his’ excellent Revisio Ordinis Linearum,’ and this he has elaborated with great in- dustry and perseverance in the ‘ London Journal of Botany above quoted. I cannot do better than copy his character and * synonyms of the present species, the correct name of which he APRIL Ist, 1859. has established after a careful examination of Russel’s original species in the Banksian Herbarium. The specific character above introduced, and the accompanying figure, render any more minute description needless. The species seems to have an ex- tensive range,—Aleppo, Mount Lebanon (Herb. Hook.), Sicily, throughout Greece and the Greek islands, in Macedonia and Bithynia, at elevations of fifteen hundred to seventeen hundred feet above the level of the sea. The seeds from which our plant were raised, were received from M. Reuter, collected in the plain of Mersina, Cilicia. It is a pretty hardy annual, but the flowers are sadly wanting in that brilliancy of colour which renders the Linum grandiflorum (see our Tab. 4956) such a favourite in our gardens. Fig. 1. Flower, from which the petals are removed. 2. Stamens and pistil. — 3. Ovary :—magnified. | iw 1 Tas. 5113. ANGRAECUM sesequIPEDALE. Sesquipedahian Angrecum. Nat. Ord. Oncuipr#.—GyNANDRIA MoNANDRIA. Gen. Char, (Vide supra, Tas. 4761.) ANGRECUM sesquipedale ; caule subsimplici radicoso, foliis distiche imbricatis oblongis basi attenuatis carinatis apice obtusissime bilobis, pedunculis axil- laribus 2—4-floris, floribus inter maximos albis, petalis sepalisque patentibus subzequalibus e basi latis sensim acuminatis, labello cordato-ovato acuminato marginibus utrinque versus medium grosse crenato-serratis, calcare longis- simo flexuoso viridi. AnGRracum sesquipedale. Aub. du Pet. Thouars, Hist. des Pl. Orchid. Afr. 800, t. 66 (flower, nat. size) and 67 (reduced figure); ejusd. Orchid.* (large folio coloured plates), t. 1,2. Lindl. in Gard. Chron. 1851, p. 253 (with woodcut of the flower, nat. size). AERANTHUS sesquipedalis. Lindl. Gen. et Sp. Orchid. p. 244. I spoke of the Angrecum eburneum (see our Tab. 4761) with admiration on account of its noble aspect. But it shrinks into insignificance in comparison with the present Madagascar rarity, known to botanists only through the figures above quoted of Aubert du Petit-Thouars (published about 1822), till the Rev. William Ellis, the distinguished traveller and historian of Mada- gascar, on his last return from that wonderful island, made us acquainted with the living plant, which that gentleman has twice flowered, first in 1857 , when the interesting account and figure ap- peared in the ‘ Gardeners’ Chronicle,’ and now again in the winter (February) of 1859, at his residence, Hoddesdon, Herts. ‘There our figure was taken, and though not one of the figures quoted, not even the original ones of Du Petit-Thouars (though there * In neither of these two works of M. Aubert du Petit-Thouars is there any description of the plant. The first of them stops short at the thirty-second page, and before any descriptive matter of the genera and species appears, and Pritzel notices this deficiency. Of the second work, in large folio, with six coloured figures of Orchideous plants of Madagascar (presented to me by the author, and pare never published), Pritzel has no record, nor of any work in folio by 1s author. MAY lst, 1859. * was ample space in the large folio page), exactly warrants the sesquipedalian specific name, still there is enough to excite as- tonishment in the great size of the flower, and extraordinary. length of the spur. The former, in the specimen before us, measures seven inches across, and the spur one foot in length, so that if the spur were set on at the edge of the flower, instead of the middle, it would rather exceed than fall short of the size attributed to it. ‘This flower is of a uniform, pure ivory or yel- lowish white, and it has the merit of possessing the odour of the white Garden Lily, Lilivm candidum. The plant continually attracted the attention of Mr. Ellis as he travelled through its native woods; more than one of his photographs includes trunks of trees loaded with this prince of Orchideous plants, and it is frequently the subject of his description and admiration. Indeed no one has travelled in tropical regions, possessed of a greater love of nature, especially of vegetable forms, than this gentle- man. It should be borne in mind also that he introduced to our stoves the still more remarkable Lace-leaf, Ouvirandra fenestralis, and other rarities. Duscr. The plant, including the leaves, does not appear to ex- ceed two feet in length,—so that the flowers are sometimes as long as the plant,—simple or bearing one or two branches; attached to the trunks of trees by wiry fibres, rather densely clothed with distichous, spreading, more or less recurved leaves, of a broad oblong form, thick and fleshy, dark-green, imbricated, carinated at the base. Peduncles solitary, axillary, bearing from two to four gigantic ivory-white fragrant flowers, each subtended, at the base of the ovary, by a broad, ovate, coloured dract. Sepals and petals equally spreading, nearly uniform, three inches long, from a broad base, gradually acuminated, somewhat fleshy. Lap equal in size with sepals and petals, from a cordate base, ovate, acuminated, near the middle, on each side, coarsely and irregu- larly serrated ; from the base of this, beneath, depends the very long, terete, but gradually tapering spur, one foot in length, green in colour. Column very short, thick, with two broad wavy wings on each side the stigma, which almost conceal that organ. A”- ther-case helmet-shaped, white, with a narrow orange-coloured margin. Pol/en-masses two, ovate, waxy, each attached to a somewhat linear gland. Our plate represents a leaf, of the natural size ; the upper part of a peduncle, with flowers, also natural size. Fig. 1. Entire plant, on a very reduced scale. _ 2. Apex of an ovary, column and anther. 3. Pollen-masses :—magnified. etree REDE NMSINNY ¥ eases _ Emp * + Hiro Bro =r Cort Tas. 5114... BILBERGIA MacROCALYX. Long-calyxed Bilbergia. Nat. Ord. BRoMELIACE#.—HEXANDRIA MONOGYNIA. Gen. Char. (Vide supra, TaB. 4756.) BILBERGIA macrocalyz ; rhizomate crasso cylindraceo repente, foliis erecto-pa- tulis lato-lingulatis acutissimis coneavo-canaliculatis apice planiusculis re- curvis remote spinuloso-serratis viridibus pallide maculatis dorso subfastuosis, bracteis amplis ovato-oblongis brevi-acuminatissimis concavis intense roseis, bracteolis subnullis, spica simplici thyrsiformi, ovario infero calyceque biun- ciali farinosis, sepalis lineari-oblongis, petalis calyce 5 longioribus spatulatis apice patentibus pallide viridibus ad marginem purpureo-tinctis, squamis petalorum elongatis bidentatis ad basin squamula ciliata auctis. None of the described Bromeliacee, whether under Puya, Bilbergia, or Tillandsia (for the genera need a thorough revl- sion to render them intelligible), seem to correspond with this species, which our garden owes to the kindness of our friend J. Wetherell, Esq., when he was our Consul at Bahia, where it it is a native on the mossy branches of trees. Brazil indeed seema to abound in novelties of this family; and we save had more than once occasion to remark how well the species are worthy of cultivation, from the great beauty of the flowering © spikes: the beauty however is generally due more to the rich colouring of the large bracts, or spathes as they are sometimes called, than to that of the blossoms. ‘The present one may ¥) with any other in this particular, and will rank near to our B. Wetherelli (see our Tab. 4835), and still more neat perhaps Ms = thyrsoidea (Tab. Nostr. 4756); but is very distinct from oth. Dzscr. Rhizome thick, elongated, terete. Leaves a foot or a foot and a half long, broad-lingulate, erecto-patent, canaliculately concave, swollen and inflated, as it were, at the amplexicaul base, plane towards the apex, and recurved at the very acute or shortly acuminated point ; the margin 1s rather remotely spinu- MAY Ist, 1859. loso-serrate ; the colour darkish-green, with scattered pale spots, somewhat transversely fasciated at the back. Spz/es simple, but thyrsiform ; below are several large, laxly imbricated, very con- cave, deep rose-coloured éracts. Bracteoles at the base of each flower small, deciduous. Rachis and calyx very farinoso-tomentose. Ovary quite inferior. Sepails very large, linear-oblong, erect, ap- pressed. Peta/s one-third larger than the calyx, spathulate, light yellow-green, edged with pale blue livid-purple. Scales of the petals very long, each two-toothed, and with ciliated appendages at the base. Anthers bright-orange. Fig. 1. Base of a petal, with scales, and two stamens,—magnijied. Tas. 5115. GESNERIA purPUREA. Purple-flowered Gesneria. Nat. Ord. GESNERIACEX®.—DIDYNAMIA ANGIOSPERMIA. Gen, Char. (Vide supra, Tas. 4217.) GESNERIA purpurea; herbacea molliter velutino-pubescens, caule simplici inferne nudo, foliis verticillatis cordato-ovatis grosse serratis, pedunculis copiosis axillaribus terminalibusque verticillatis simplicibus rarius prope basin divi- sis, floribus nutantibus, calycis parvi dentibus seu laciniis brevibus erectis angusto-triangularibus, corolle elongate tubuloso-infundibuliformis roseo- purpureze maculatz subclavate tubo lateraliter compresso basi 5-saccato, limbo subsqualiter 5-lobo, lobis erecto-patulis superiore bifido, glandulis hypogynis 2 ovatis. GESNERIA purpurea. Pazt. and Lindl. Fl. Gard. n. 4. t. 78. GesneRta verticillata. Hook. Bot. Mag. t. 2776, @ weak and imperfect specimen (not Cav.). Gesnerta Douglasii, (var. verticillata.) Hook. Bot. Mag. t. 3612. Hensl. im Maund’s Botanist, 5. t. 247, not G. Douglasii, Lindl. Bot. Reg. t. 1110 (from which the syn. D. verticillata, Hook, should be eacluded), nor of Lodd. Bot. Cab. t. 1939, nor Van Houtte, Fl. des Serres, t. 10. t. 1009. Dircmo-GEsNERIA purpurea. Planch. in Van Houtte, Fl. des Serres, t. 1046. —— o Notwithstanding that the ‘Botanical Magazine ’ exhibits two — figures of this species of Gesneria already, yet I venture to give © a third ; firstly, because this fine variety richly deserves a place ; secondly, because it gives an opportunity of correcting errors of my own, and, as I conceive, those of my friends also, who have | treated on this plant. The first appearance of it in the ‘ Maga- zine’ is at Tab. 2776, under the name of Gesneria verticillata, from a very weak plant, with only two terminal flowers, which the late Mrs. Arnold Harrison received from hills about Rio Janeiro. The previous year, namely, in 1826, Dr. Lindley had named, what he was afterwards led to consider the same plant, G. Dou- glasii ;—the name of G. verticillata, too, having been previously occupied by a plant of Cavanilles. This plant of Lindley is well figured in Bot. Reg. t. 1110; and since by Van Houtte and Loddiges, under the correct name of Douglasit. A remarkably fine specimen of my G. verticillata, imported by Mr. Alleard, from MAY Ist, 1859. ; Rio, was sent to me in 1836, and finding it to differ from Lind- ley’s G. Douglasit in the peculiarly verticillate and generally simple peduncules of the flowers, I called it G. Douglasii, var. verticilata ; and I remarked,—* In Professor Lindley’s plant the inflorescence is a decided panicle; in ours the peduncles, gene- — rally simple, are arranged in dense whorls, many of them quite simple, others very slightly branched, and only near the base. - Our flowers too are larger than in that figure, and more inclining to a purple tint.” I may here add that in our plant the corolla is subclavate and decidedly curved; in Lindley’s plant the tube is quite straight, and the limb more patent. During the present winter my attention has been directed to a state or variety of this plant, which has been the pride and ornament of our stoves during the winter months. Of it we re- ceived the tubers from Mr. Millosovich, of Rio Janeiro, last year ; and I was not a little surprised to find it taken up as a new spe- cies, both by Dr. Lindley, in Paxton’s ‘ Flower Garden,’ under the name of G. purpurea; and by Dr. Planchon, in the ‘ Flore des Serres,’ under that of Dirceo-Gesneria purpurea; the former, its introduction being unknown to him, suspects it to be a hy- brid, “ perhaps between G@. Douglasii and G. discolor ;’”’ the latter traces its parentage, but unaccompanied by any proof, to Ges- neria Douglasii and G. (Dircea) lobulata (a rich scarlet-flowered species) of both of which excellent figures are given by the author in the same volume. ‘To Dr. Lindley is due the merit of distinguishing the G. purpurea as a species; and since I am able to prove that this has been imported three different times and by as many different persons, direct from the Brazils, I think a legitimate parentage will be henceforth conceded to it. I may add too that my herbarium possesses native specimens of both the species now under consderation, gathered by Gardner, in Brazil, and exhibiting all the characters, as figured and described by Lindley. The one is n. 251, of Gardner’s Herb. Bras., from the trunks of trees, on the Pedra Bonita Tejuca, 1836, and cor- - rectly named “ Gesneria Douglasii, Lindl.” The other is his n. 466, from the Organ Mountains, marked Gesnerie gp. “At all events,” Dr. Lindley concludes, “ G. purpurea is one of the most striking of the whole race to which it belongs,” and we heartily concur with him in that opinion. Fig. 1. Pistil glands,—magnified. 2. Ovary and glands,—more magnified. « < than eee ~~ a on Brooks, inp: Tas. 5116. RHODODENDRON Wizsonr (hybridum). Wilson’s Rhododendron (a hybrid). Nat. Ord. Ertce®.—DEcANDRIA Monoeynta. Gen. Ohar. (Vide supra, TaB. 4336.) RuopopEnDRON Wilsoni (hybridum) ; foliis elliptico-lanceolatis acutis glaber- rimis subtus pallidis squamulosis, floribus umbellatis, calycis membranacel ampli lobis inaequalibus ovatis longissime ciliatis, ovario oblongo dense squamuloso. RHODODENDRON Wilsoni (hybridum). Nuttall, MSS. oe Flowering specimens of the present Rhododendron were Ye- ceived from Thomas Nuttall, Esq., of Nutgrove, Rainhill, Lan- cashire, in February, 1859, accompanied by the following note : —T beg to dedicate this plant to our mutual friend William Wilson, Esq., the eminent cryptogamist, with whom we have rived from a cross betwixt — been so long acquainted. It is de : R. ciliatum and R. glaucum, and, as you perceive, possesses oe intermediate character between the two, having the foliage © R. ciliatum, without the hairs ; and it is destitute of the glaucous hue of the last-named species. The corolla, too, 18 intermediate, being longer than 2. glaucum, but with a prevalence of the hash rose-colour, not verging to white, as in ciliatum. It will probably prove as hardy as g/aucum, though our plant has at this season been brought forward by artificial heat.—T. N. Be a ee ae ig i af, showing the little seales. 2. Calyx Fig. 1. Portion of the under side of a leaf, s wing a OT and pistil. 3. Stamen. 4. Ovary. 5. Transverse secti ee MAY lst, 1859. Tas. 5117, AESCULUS Inpica. Indian Horse-chestnut. Nat. Ord. HrppocastaNE£.—HeEptTanpRiaA MoNoGyYNIA. Gen. Char. (Vide supra, Tas. 5077.) Ascutus (§ Pavia) Indica; staminibus 5-8 corolla longioribus, petalis ineequa- libus subsecundis obovato-spathulatis einuatis dorso villoso-tomentosis, calyce tubuloso subsequaliter 5-dentato bilabiato, labiis clausis, thyrso laxi- floro, foliis amplis, foliolis 9 lato-obovato-lanceolatis grosse serratis glabris in petiolulum longum basi attenuatis. Pavia Indica. Colebrooke’s MS. in Herb. 1824, Wall. Cat.n. 1188. Jacque- mont, Plant, Rar. Ind. Or. p. 3. t. 35. It is not a little remarkable that, although this handsome Aisculus was distributed by Dr. Wallich as long ago as 1828, and recorded in his well-known ‘ Catalogue’ as Pavia Indica of Colebrooke’s MS., and as a native of Kamaon (Blinkworth) and of Sirmore (8. Webs), it was never described nor further noticed by any author till the appearance of the ‘ Plante Rariores quas in India Orientali collegit Victor Jacquemont : auctore J. Cam- bessédes,’ in 1844. “India borealis” is popularly given for the native country of our common Horse-chestnut (Asculus Hy pocastanum), but Dr. Royle assures us that “Its native region Is still unknown ; it is not enumerated in Dr. Wallich’s catalogue, nor has it ever been distributed by him. I have never met with it, though often visiting the northern mountains of India, where, if any- where, it was likely to be found, and where the nearly allied Indian Pavia® is so abundant.” The Pavia (or dsculus) Indica, or Indian Horse-chestnut, which we now figure, that author further says, “is called by the hill-people Hunour and Pangla, and is found on mountains, at elevations of from 8000 to 10,000 feet, in Kamaon, Gurhwal, and Sirmore, also near the sources of * Generally considered a mere section of Asculus, distinguished by its un- armed fruit. MAY Ist, 1859. the Ganges, and in Kunawur. It is a lofty and not less orna- mental tree than the common Horse-chestnut, The bulky seed, containing a large proportion of feecula, though combined with some bitter principle, is eaten in the Himalayas, as those of the Horse-chestnut have been in other parts of the world in times of famine. The bark of the latter, from its astringent properties, being employed as a tonic and febrifuge, it is worthy of inquiry whether the Himalayan species of Pavia is possessed of any of the same properties.” We owe the specimen here figured to C. J. Fox Bunbury, Esq., who transmitted it to us from the family seat at Mildenhall, Suffolk, in July of last year (1858). It was taken from a tree raised from seeds sent by his brother, Colonel Bunbury, from the north of India, sixteen feet high, the circumference of its stem eight inches; its age from the sowing of the seed seven years; and it had on it, at this early age, twelve panicles of flowers. Of the hardiness of the tree in our climate there can be no question. Two or three years ago the first flowers were produced, when specimens were also kindly communicated to us by Sir Henry Edward Bunbury, K.C.B. Descr. This forms a good-sized éree in its native country, much branched. The dranches rounded, glabrous. Leaves ample, opposite, on long foot-stalks. Leaflets seven to nine, spreading, rather long, all petiolulate, broad-lanceolate, serrated, subacuminate, dark-green, above subglaucous, beneath firm and subcoriaceous when dry ; terminal leaflets the largest, almost a foot long. Flowers numerous, in terminal, thyrsoid, rather Jax panicles at the apices of the branches. Caly« downy, nearly cylindrical, somewhat angular; superior lip 3-toothed, inferior bidentate. Lips erect (not spreading). Petals five, unequal, oval or obo- vate, clawed, very downy on the back, spreading but not regu- larly subsecund ; a fifth petal is often wanting (the lower one), the colour is white, the two superior and narrow ones having 4 blotch of red and yellow at the base, the lateral ones blush- coloured there. Stamens five to eight, scarcely longer than the petals, spreading. Anthers ovate, with a short blunt spur at the base of each cell. PistiZ : ovary oblong, downy ; style subulate, downy ; stigma obtuse. | Fig. 1. Stamen. 2. Calyx, with pistil included. 3. Pistil, with hypogynous gland :—magnified. HIS. > Te a t lith CAL BC TC Witch Tas. 5118, COLUMNEA scanpDeEns. Climbing Columnea. Nat.-Ord. GesneRiAcE£®.—DIpDYNAMIA ANGIOSPERMIA. Gen. Char. Calyz liber, 5-partitus. Corolla tubulosa, rectiuscula, basi postice gibba, ringens, /odis superiore erecto fornicato, inferiore trifido patente. Stamina 4, didynama, antheris connexis, quinti postici rudimentum. Glandule 1—5 circa basin ovarii. Bacca 1-locularis, placentibus 2-parietalibus bilobis. Semina ob- longa.—Frutices Americani, flexiles, erecti. aut scandentes. Folia opposita, brevi- petiolata, crassiuscula, subserrata, hirsuta vel pubescentia. Pedunculi axillares, 80- litarii aut conferti, Corolla coccinea. De Cand. ColumNEA scandens; hic illic radiculosa herbaceo-suffruticosa, ramis obtuse tetragonis pedunculisque tomentosis, foliis brevi-petiolatis ovatis ovato-ob- longisve integerrimis vel calloso-serratis pubescentibus, pedunculis axillari- bus unifloris petiolo longioribus, calycis pubescentis profunde 5-partiti la- ciniis lineari-subulatis basi dente uno alterove instructa, corolle coccinea villosee profunde bilabiatz, labio superiore maximo trifido, lobo intermedio amplo fornicato, inferiore parvo integro reflexo, glandula hypogyna magna solitaria, CoLumNza scandens. Linn. Sp. Pl. p. 891. Sw. Obs. Bot. p. 249. Jacy. Hort. Vind. v. 3. p. 27. t. 48. Bot tags t. 805 (viz Bot. Mag. t. 1614). Mart. Nov. Gen. Pl. Bras, p. 65. t. 226. f. 2. _ CoLumyza rotundifolia. Sadish. Paradis. Lond. t. 29. CoLUMNEA speciosa. Presi, Bot. Bemerk. p. 145. CoLumyza scandens, pheeniceo flore, fructu albo, Plum. Gen. p. 28; Ie. p. 89. Ft. A handsome plant, frequent in the West India Islands, liable to some slight variations in the leaves, and in the depth or pale- ness of colour of the flowers, but not sufficient to justify the Separation of C. rotundifolia, as was done by Salisbury, or the C. speciosa by Presl, as distinct species. The C. scandens of Sims in Bot. Mag., if intended for this plant, is a miserable representa- Hon, and widely different in habit and in the colour of the flowers, and in the form of the corolla and- calyx. Our plant succeeds a cultivated in a basket suspended from the roof of a moist stove. JUNE Ist, 1859. * Desor. A scandent species, but to a moderate extent ; the base of the stem becoming fruticose in age, the rest is herbaceous, obtusely quadrangular, downy, as is more or less the whole plant, rooting occasionally at the joints, branched; dranches opposite. Leaves opposite, with short stout petioles, about half an inch long ; ovate or oblong-ovate, thick, fleshy, acute or subobtuse, downy on both sides, the margin entire or calloso-serrate, penninerved, dark-green above, paler beneath. Peduncles axillary, longer than the petioles, single-flowered. Calyx of five, deep, lineari-subu- late, erect segments, having at the base on one side.one or two soft spine-like teeth. Coro/la more than two inches long, dark flesh-colour, deep-red above, villous; the Je moderately curved and laterally compressed, tapering towards the base; Jimd of two very unequal /ips ; upper lip very large, three-lobed ; lateral lobes spreading, small, oblong ; intermediate one very large, for- nicate (of two combined ?) ; znferior lip small, reflexed, ligulate, with a little plication on each side at the base, which resembles a tooth. Stamens included, the anthers lodged within the cen- tral lobe of the superior lip. Ovary oblong, oblique, a little curved, villous, with a large fleshy gland applied to the superior base. Svyle as long as the stamens, slender, filiform. Stigma of two lobes. _ Fig. 1. Calyx and pistil. 2. Ovary and gland, seen from the back. 3. Side view of the same :—magnified. SND WFitch.del ethth oe eee Vincent Brooks,imp Tas. 5119. GOLDFUSSIA. TxHomsont. Dr. Thomson's Goldfussia. Nat. Ord. ACANTHACEX.—-DIDYNAMIA ANGIOSPERMIA. Gen. Char. (Vide supra, Tas. 4767.) Gotprussta Thomsonii; caule glaberrimo herbaceo gracili, apicibus ramorum ealycibusque glanduloso-pilosis, foliis lanceolato- v. elliptico-ovatis utrinque acuminatis serratis subtus pallidis paribus supremis ineequalibus, floribus ad apices ramulorum 1-5 sessilibus v. pedunculo rarius elongato subspicatis, sepalis anguste linearibus, corolle tubo gracili basi ‘albo dein lobisque in- tense violaceo-purpureis. This pretty species, of which seeds were sent by Dr. Thomson from the Sikkim-Himalaya, belongs to an intricate group of the genus, including G. discolor, Dathousiana, and penstemonordes, from all of which it differs in its more slender habit, fewer almost invariably terminal flowers, and slender tube of the deep violet-purple corolla; it also approaches very nearly some states of the variable G. Wallichii (Strobilanthes Wallach, Nees), but - that plarit has a much more tumid corolla, with a broader tube and narrower limb. All these and many others of the genus are well worthy of cultivation, from the beauty and abundance of their blossoms, which are produced in succession for several weeks. The G. Thomsoni has been gathered by Drs. Thomson and Hooker in Garwhal (west of Nepal), in Sikkim, at elevations of 6-9000 feet, and in the Khasia Mountains, if we are right in our identification of these specimens, which in a dried state 1s @ matter of great difficulty. : Descr. A small, herbaceous perennial, of upright growth and lax habit. Stems slender, glabrous, a foot or two high, sparingly branched. Leaves two to three inches long, the lower pairs petioled and nearly equal, the upper sessile and very unequal, all ovate or elliptical, lanceolate, with tapering points, and ser- rated margins, nearly smooth, or with a little scattered pubes- JUNE lst, 1859, cence. Flowers generally sessile, in twos, threes, and fours at the ends of the ramuli, sometimes forming alternate fascicles on an elongated peduncle, and there constituting a short spike. Calya-. segments narrow-linear, blunt, with glandular hairs. Corolla curved ; tube slender; throat long, gradually dilated, funnel- shaped, with deep oblique grooves on the sides; limb of five, short, spreading lobes. Fig. 1. Calyx and style. 2. Lower part of corolla, cut open, showing the » stamens. 3. Stamens. 4. Ovary and disc. a Tas. 5120. RHODODENDRON SMITHtr. Sir James Smith's Rhododendron. Nat. Ord. Erxtcrm.—Decanpria Monoeoynta. Gen. Char. (Vide supra, Tas. 4336.) RHOpODENDRON Smithii ; frutex humilis, foliis oblongo-ellipticis coriaceis acutis rugosis impresso-venosis basi cordatis margine revolutis supra glabris subtus pallidioribus pilis articulatis supra medium repetitim dichotomo-ramosis laxe tomentosis, petiolis setosis, umbellis terminalibus plurifloris capitatis, calyce subamplo laxo membranaceo, lobis ovalibus ineequalibus glabris, corolla coccinea lato-campanulata subeequaliter quinquelobo, staminibus 8, a rectis subinclusis, ovario subcylindraceo pilis subclavatis erectis obsito. RuopopENDRON Smithii. Nudt. IS. From a drawing made by Mr. Holden, of Warrington, at Nut- grove, Rainhill, Lancashire, where this plant flowered for the first time in March, 1859. It was discovered and introduced to England by Mr. Booth, who detected it on the northern slopes of the Lablung Pass, Bootan, in company with 2. Hookeri, Nutt., and like that it promises to be hardy in our climate. Its affinity is with R. barbatum, and it is remarkable for the nature of the tomentose clothing of the under side of the leaves. Hach hair is jointed, stout at the base, rather copiously and dichotomously branched, as is shown at our Figures | and 2. Mr. Nuttall de- sires it should bear the name of the late Sir James Edward Smith, who was the first to call public attention to its ally the Indian Rhododendron arboreum, now so well known in our gardens. Descr. A low, branching shrub, with much the habit and general aspect of the original 2. arboreum and R. barbatum. Leaves a good deal clustered about the extremities of the branches, elliptical-oblong, acute, cordate at the base, the mar- gins entire and reflexed; above strongly veined, dark-green, — beneath pale-green, laxly woolly with rather sparse, jointed hairs, which are stout at the base, above repeatedly and dichotomously branched. Bracteal scales silky. Corymb or umbel of ten to JUNE Ist, 1859. . twelve or thirteen flowers, forming a terminal globose head. Calye membranaceous, deeply cut into five, very unequal, mo- derately spreading odes. Corolla as in R. arboreum, red, with five nearly equal spreading rounded /odes, notched at the apex. Stamens eight, erect, compact. Anther small. Ovary cylindri- ~ cal, furrowed, clothed with clavate erect hairs, slightly sunk in a waved fleshy annulus. Séy/e a little longer than the stamens. Fig. 1. Portion of the under side of the leaf, with branched hairs. 2.{Two of these hairs. 8. Stamen. 4, Calyx and pistil. 5. Ovary. 6. Transverse section of ovary :—magnified. ; ES Tas. 5121. STANGERIA parapoxa. The Fern-leaved Stangeria. Nat. Ord. CycapE#.—Diq@c1a PoLYANDRIA. Gen. Char. Flores amentacei. AMENT. MASC. cylindracea. Stamina nume- Tosa, superficie inferiore squamz inserta, cuneato-quadrata, breviter stipitata. Pollen globosum. AMENT. F@M. ovoidea v. breviter cylindracea, Ovula 2, inversa, cavitate in basin squamz utrinque solitaria inserta. Frwetus ?—Planta humilis, caudice (caule) brevi rapiforme vie cicatricata; foliis paucis, e apice caudicis evolutus, vernatisve infleais, pinnatis, glaberrimis ; pinnis oppositis, sub- 12-jugis, oblongo-lanceolatis, acuminatis, ultra medium spinuloso-serratis 5 (us Lomarize simillimis); costa valida; venis coste perpendicularibus, creberrimis hic illic furcatis ; petiolo, bracteis ad basin amentorum, amentisgue dense lanatis ; amentis breve pedunculatis ; squamis magnis, arcte imbricatis, late obovato-trape- zoideis, genitalia omnino velantibus. ¥ STANGERIA paradoxa. 7. Moore in Hook. Kew ( J. Smith, l. ec. v. 4. p. 88. Lomarta coriacea. Kze. in Linnea, v. 10. p. 506 (not Schrad.). Lomarta eriopus. Kze. in Linnea, v. 10. p. 152. et v. 18. p. 116. J Misc. v. 5. p. 228, This very remarkable plant, which in its habit and foliage resembles no other of the Natural Order to which it belongs, was first in 1835 imperfectly noticed by Kunze as a South African Fern (Zomaria), and was sent by Dr. Stanger from Natal to N. B. Ward, Esq., and by him given to the Chelsea Botanic Gardens long after, viz. in 1851. It was first de- scribed by Mr. Moore, from imperfect specimens, as a “ Zamia- ike Fern,” or “Fern-like Zamia,” and the opimion exp that its affinity appears to be rather with Cycadee than Ferns, which has since proved to be quite correct. In 1854 speci- mens with cones were exhibited to the Linnean Society by Mr. Stevens (Proc. Linn. Soc. v. 2. p. 340), and since then both male and female ones have been produced at Kew, but unfortunately not in the same year. Of these, a pair of ris ones, formed in April, 1858, produced perfect ovules, an withered away; and in the same month of the present year another plant produced the male cone figured in our Plate. Our specimens were received from Mr. Plant. JUNE lst, 1859. The affinity of Stangeria is very close to Encephalartos, nor is there any structural difference of importance between the fruc- tifications of these genera; in habit and foliage, on the other hand, they widely differ, and most conspicuously in the short, turnip-like stem of Stangeria, that bears no persistent bases of the fallen leaves, in its few terminal leaves, and in the Fern-like venation of its pinne. This difference between the venation of the pinnee of Hncephalartos and Stangeria is very analogous to that between the species of Podocarpus with Dammara-like foliage, and those whose leaves have a midrib. Mr. Smith, in his paper.on Sfangeria, after showing that. Stangeria paradoxa was first referred to Lomaria coriacea of Schrader by Kunze, in the Linnea, and that he subsequently made a new species of it as Z. eriopus, also in the Linnea, gives some valuable remarks on the venation of the frond of this and other Cycadee. I have hitherto had no opportunity of examin- ing a caudex of this singular plant, but I find the vascular bundles _ of the leaves to be formed of annular ducts surrounded by elon- gated cells, and also that there is a thick layer of wood-cells immediately below the cuticle of the stipes. The cuticle of the under surface of the pinne abounds in large stomata, and the cuticular cell-walls are much undulated. Globular white concre- tions with granulated surfaces, occur abundantly in the cellular tissue of the stipes, and are probably composed of oxalate of lime. Desor. Caudew about a foot long, tapering to the base, and terminating in a few roots; contracted at the apex, and there giving off three to six leaves. Bracts few, imbricating, broadly ovate, blunt, woolly. Leaves spreading, two feet long by one broad, glabrous except at the woolly base of the petiole. Leaflets about twelve pair, opposite, the lower petiolulate, the upper sessile, with a broad, adnate, decurrent base, smooth, glossy, bright- green; margin serrated beyond the middle, slightly thickened, plnnately veined. Veins reaching the margin, all free. J/ale cone on a long, terete peduncle, six inches long by one and a quarter broad, blunt; apices of scales woolly, trapeziform. Azthers very numerous, yellow. Female cones similar to the males, but much shorter, about two to three inches long. Scales similar to the males externally, but shorter, more concave, broadly ovate when looked at on the inside, with two minute deep cavities on either side of the insertion, in each of which a small, broadly obovoid ovule is wholly sunk, its apex only protruding. Ovule with a single fleshy coat and contracted micropyle. J. D. H. Plate 5121. Right-hand figure, male cones; left, female. Fig. 1.. Portion of leaf. - 2. Portion of male cone. 8. Seale of cone and stamens. 4, 5. Anthers. 6. Pollen. 7. Scale at base of cone. 8. Ripe nut :—all but Fig. 8 magnified. } HD Pans: 5122; AGAVE macutosa. Spotted-leaved dwarf Agave. Nat. Ord. AMARYLLIDE®.—HeExanpria Monoeynta. Gen. Char. (Vide supra, Tas. 4934.) AGavE maculosq ; humilis acaulis, foliis lanceolato-subulatis carnosis cartilagineo- denticulatis canaliculatis maculatis, scapo bracteato, bracteis appressis, spica simplici laxiflora, bracteolis parvis membranaceis, perianthii tubo recto an- gulato, limbi laciniis tubum subsquantibus patentibus, staminibus longitu- dine laciniarum, stigmatis lobis 3 maximis. A species entirely new, as far as can be learned from the very imperfect descriptions of the individuals of the genus Agave in our books. The Kew Gardens owe the possession of it to the Horticultural Society of London, who received it from Texas. Its nearest affinity is probably with Agave saponaria of Dr. Lindley, from Guatemala, but that has leaves entire at the Margins, and very different in shape and texture, the flowers larger, the tube curved, and the stamens as long as the entire flower. Our species flowers in September. - Descr. Dwarf in stature, stemless. The /eaves are rosulate, four to six inches long, thick and fleshy, lanceolato-subulate, amplexicaul at the base, recurved, channelled for the whole length, the margin with small cartilaginous teeth. Scape cen- tral, a foot to a foot and a half long, leafy below, leaves gradually passing into leaf-like dracts, appressed to the ‘rounded scape. Spike six to eight inches long. lowers ten to twelve, rather distant, bracteolate; bracteoles brown, small, membranaceous. Ovary inferior, oval, almost quite sessile. Zwbe of the perianth green, tinged with red, much longer than the ovary, straight ; limb of six, spreading, oblong segments, white, with a broad brownish-green dorsal line, white within, reddish-yellow in decay. Stamens six. Filaments rather thick, scarcely longer than the JUNE Ist, 1859. lacinize of the perianth. _Anthers linear, versatile, yellow. Style stout, a little longer than the tube. Svigma of three large, diver- gent lobes, velvety at the margin. Fig. 1. Flowers with the floral covering removed. 2. Transverse section of an ovary :—~magnified. : I123, UY bees Fneent Brocks AP Tas. 5125. | GYNURA BICOLOR. Two-coloured Gynura. Nat. Ord. Composrrz.—Synoenesia AUQUALIS. Gen. Char, Capitulum multifloram, homogamum, fl. tubulosis 5-dentatis. Involuerum cylindraceum, 1-seriale, basi (excl. unica sp.) bracteolis nonullis subulatis calyculatum ; sguamis linearibus, ad margines, apice excepto, membra- naceis, apice acutis. Receptaculum planum, alveolatum, alveolarum marginibus hune brevissimis nunc in fimbrillas elevatis. Corolle tubus basi corneus. Styli Tami apice producti, in appendicem longam hispidam sepius exsertam. Ache- mum teretiusculum, rigidum, striatum, erostre. Pappus multiserialis, filifor- mibus, vix barbellulatis.—Herbe perennes, interdum basi suffrutescentes, Astatice aut una Mauritiana., Folia alterna, integra, dentata aut pinnatilobata, Capi- tula corymbosa. De Cand. GynuRA bicolor ; glabra, caule herbaceo erecto ramoso folioso, ramis floridis elongatis subnudis monocephalis, foliis lanceolatis discoloribus pinnatifidis acuminatis, basi subauriculatis, involucro cylindraceo basi bracteolis mee’ latis plurimis calyculato. floribus subaquali, receptaculo alveolato. De Cand. Grvura bicolor. De Cand. Prodr. v. 6. p. 299. Yrs Cacazta bicolor. Roxb, Fl. Ind. p. 412. Salish. Parad.. Lond. t. 25. Bot. Reg. t. 140. Wall. Cat. n. 3148. . In these days of popular admiration of the ort fi ag foliage of plants, truly Nature, and Nature’s own, printing, t i present one, though not new, yet long lost to otr gertions, again restored, will deservedly hold a place; notwithstanding it belongs to a group of much-despised weeds, which in our common Groundsels. Its leaves are on the under side, an sometimes on both sides, most richly dyed with purple; Oe the flowers are not to be despised as far as colour is concern : for they are of a rich golden hue; but we cannot recommen them for a bouquet, in consequence of their disagreeable eh when too closely approached. The plant is a native of the Cal. luccas, whence it was introduced to the Botan ot onariier gPro: cutta, in 1790, and by Sir Joseph Banks to this country in Bet Treated as a stove-plant it flowers freely, and 1s readily increase JUNE Ist, 1859. by cuttings. De Candolle notices its close affinity with G. Pseudo- china and G. hematophylla; and it is impossible not to see a great resemblance to the figures of G. Finlaysoniana and G. pur- purascens of Wallich, and Delessert’s Icones, v. 4. t. 55 and 56; all from Eastern India. | Descr. The plant is perennial, but the stem is altogether herbaceous, erect, two to three fect high, rather slender, shghtly | angular, dark-purple below, varied with green, greener above, branched ; branches long, slender, almost leafless, or with a leaf only at the setting on of the branch. Leaves submembranaceous, broad-lanceolate or ovate-lanceolate, slightly downy, penninerved petiolate ; petiole short, often stipulated on each side at the base; the margin pinnatifid and coarsely but sharply, and deeply but remotely dentate, two-lobed or auricled at the base, almost full- green above, richly purple beneath, in some of the lower leaves of our plants extending to the upper side also; leaves at the base of the branches small, sessile. Peduncles or leafless ex- tremities of the branches subcorymbose, bracteated ; dracteas remote, slender, subulate. Heads (capitula) of flowers solitary, terminal. nvolucres cylindrical, formed by a single series of erect, approximate, if not coadunate, narrow-linear, elongated scales, dark-purple at the somewhat spreading tips, at their base having a whorl of five to six spreading subulate Jrac- teoles. Florets rich orange, not very numerous, slightly spread- ing, uniform, tubular; below singularly inflated above the base. Limb of five erect teeth. Stigma exserted. Styles cleft into two, long, subulate branches. Ovary cylindrical, scabrous. Pappus of a single series of white, long, slender, setaceous hairs. Fig. 1. Involucre and bracteoles. 2. Floret. 3. Hair of the ) appus :—mag- nified. 4, Papille of the receptacle :—magnified. ; Tas. 5124, THUNBERGIA coccinea. RRed-flowered Thunbergua. Nat. Ord. ACANTHACEA.—DIDYNAMIA ANGIOSPERMIA. THun BERGIA (§ Hexacentris) coccinea ; glaberrima, foliis polymorphis inferiori- bus hastato-cordatis subacutis basin versus sinuatis v. repando-dentatis su- _ premis ovato-cordatis acuminatis, racemis elongatis, bracteis inferioribus ovatis supremis lanceolatis, bracteolis spathaceis la obscure dentato, corolla coccinea ore aurantiaca tubo bracteas vix superante. HUNBERGIA coccinea. Wall. Tent. p. 49 and 58. t. 37. Hook. Exot. Flor. t.195. Don, Prodr. p.120. Lodd. Bot. Cab. t. 1195. ‘Tuunsercta pendula. Hassk. Cat. Hort. Bog. p. 147. EXACENTRIS coccinea. Nees in Wall. Plant. As. Rar. Prodr. v. 11. p. 61. nearly forty years ago, by Dr. Wallich, from the Calcutta Botanic Gardens, but owing to the great size 1 een in full magnificence in our stoves. It has long been culti- ated in the Royal Gardens, where it festooned for many years” but though it nnually produced abundance of racemes, the flowers usually popped off before expanding: We are indebted to Exeter, for the specimen here figured, which he raised from Stems, and pendulous branches, festooning trees. Branches harply four-angled. Leaves all opposite, shortly petioled, two JULY Ist, 1859. Gen. Char, (Vide supra, Tas. 4985.) te ovato-acuminatis, calyce 0.8. p. 18, ot in DO. This remarkable and beautiful plant was sent’ to this country — t attains, it is seldom Mr. Veitch, © nder, much-branched — to five inches long, variously shaped; the lower broadly ovate, with a hastate, truncate, or angulate cordate base; the upper ovato-cordate; all acute; the upper acuminate, the lower with sinuato-dentate or almost lobed margins ; the upper entire, all rather glaucous beneath. Racemes terminal and axillary, pendu- lous, very slender and flaccid, one to three feet long, sometimes ~ branched at the base. Bracts half the length of the peduncle, — the lower ovato-oblong, the upper lanceolate, all acuminate, green, usually brown along the centre. Peduneles one to three inches long. Bracteoles large, spathaceous, valvate in vernation, concave, ovate, acuminate, generally brown, including all the corolla but the limb, which is reflexed over them. Calye very small, obscurely twelve-lobed or -toothed. Corolla with a scarlet limb and orange mouth. Anther-cells spurred. Capsule rigid, nearly orbicular, two-lobed, two-celled, with a large, flattened, rigid, ensiform beak, fully an inch long. Fig. 1. Flower, with the bracteoles removed. 2. Base of corolla and stamens. . 3. Disc and pistil :—alZ magnified. j 9 xv J] Tas. 5125, RHODODENDRON SHEPHERDII. Mr. H. Shepherd’s Rhododendron. Nat. Ord. Ertcra#.—Degcanprra Monoeynta, Gen. Char. (Vide supra, ‘Tan, 4336.) RHODODENDRON Shepherdii ; foliis lineari-oblongis acutis glaberrimis utrinque . concoloribus basi subacutis, venis subtus tenuibus margine recurvis, capl- tulis terminalibus plurifloris, pedicellis glaberrimis, calyce 5-lobo parvo, lobis ciliolatis subacutis, corolla ampla campanulata coccinea eequaliter 5-loba staminibus 10, ovario glaberrimo, capsulis gracilibus recurvis. RuopopEnpron Shepherdii. Nutt. in Hook. Kew Journ. Bot. 1855, 0. 5. p. 360. This is another of the beautiful and novel forms of Rhodo- dendron introduced by the venerable Nuttall from the mountains of Bhotan and Assam, and flowered by himself at Nutgrove, in | Cheshire. Tt differs from Rhododendron Kendrickii (of which a Plate will soon appear), in the glabrous ovary and large calyx ; . from R. arboreuvm in the colour of the under surface of the leaf, — the slender nerves, and larger calyx; and from &. eas which is perhaps its nearest ally, in the absence of seta on petiole, and small calyx. Mr. Nuttall remarks that it grew on — the Oola Mountains of Bhotan with 2. eimium, and that it is — named in honour of Mr. Henry Shepherd, of the Liverpool _ Garden. Our engraving was made from a drawing y Mr. Holden, of Warrington. Descr. A shrub, with ea bark on the branchlets. Leaves towards the ends of the branchlets, three to four inches long, : shortly petioled, narrow-linear, oblong or elliptic-oblong, yin : three to four inches long by one wide, of a deep-green above, ar e below, “very thick and opaque ; the young are of a deep para red beneath.” (Nutt.) Buds sharply conic, very smooth, the scales JULY lst, 1859. green, dilate, and ovate (Wwtt.). Flowers in large terminal heads, like those of R. barbatum, of a deep scarlet colour. Calyx small, but quite distinct, of four separate lobes. Corolla broadly bell-shaped,. equally five-lobed. Stamens ten. Ovary quite glabrous. Fig. 1. Calyx and pistil. 2. Stamen. 3. Pistil, cut transversely :—magnified. sg iA ee WFiteh,deL.et ith. Tas: 5126. CYMBIDIUM eEsBuRNEUM. The Ivory Cymbidium. Nat. Ord. OncHIDEH.—GYNANDRIA MONANDRIA. Gen. Char. (Vide supra, TaB. 4844.) CymBipium eburneum ; foliis distichis anguste lineari-ligulatis rigidis apice bi- fidis lobis acutis, racemo brevi sub-2-floro, squamis elongatis acuminatis imbricatis, floribus amplis obovatis eburneis, sepalis petalisque lineari-ob- longis oblongo-lanceolatisve subearnosis acutis subundulatis, labello ob- longo apice trilobo lobis lateralibus rotundatis intermedio triangulari-acuto margine undulato, lamellis in unam mediam incrassatam carnosam auream pubescentem apice tumidam confluentibus. Cymprprum eburneum. Lindl. in Bot. Reg. v. 33. t. 67; Paston’s Magazine, o. 15. ¢. 145. This lovely and rare Orchid has hitherto been found by one botanist only, the late Mr. Griffith, who, according to Dr. Lind- ley’s notes on the Orchidology of India, discovered it at Myrung, on the Khasia mountains of East Bengal, where it grows at an elevation of about 5-6000 feet. Fine plants were imported by Messrs. Loddiges, probably from the Calcutta Botanic Gardens, from which Dr. Lindley described the species in 1847. ‘The specimen figured flowered in the Royal Gardens, Kew, in April of the present year, and its scent, which is scarcely so sweet as is usually described, slightly resembled that of starch. Descr. Stems tufted. Leaves distichous at the base, very long, linear or lorate, one to two feet long by three-quarters of an inch wide, rather rigid, bifid at the apex, the divisions sharp. Raceme very short in proportion to the foliage, four to eight inches long, decumbent or inclined, few-flowered, covered with long, sharp, imbricating dracts. Flowers of a fine ivory- white colour, five to six inches across. Se d petals similar, linear-oblong, acute, scarcely undulate. , shorter, with incurved margins, three-lobed at the apex; he outer lobes rounded, terminal, ovate, crisped or undulate at the margm; a JULY lst, 1859. ‘protuberance * H27. 7429 Tas. 5127. CEANOTHUS VeErtrcHIANus. Mr. Veitch’s Ceanothus. Nat. Ord. RuaMNE®.—PENTANDRIA MonoGyYNIa. Gen. Char. (Vide supra, TaB. 4660.) Cuanoruvs Veitchianus; ramis foliis superne petiolis pedicellisque glaberrimis, ramulis ultimis rachique inflorescentise tomentosis, foliis obovato-cuneatis apice rotundatis junioribus acute adultis obtuse glanduloso-serratis superne lucidis (sicco opacis), venis subtus validis, areolis fimbriatis, floribus ad apices ramulorum omnium dense corymbosis v. in capitula oblonga globosa densissime confertis. _ _ For this magnificent acquisition to our hardy shrubs we are indebted to Messrs. Veitch and Sons, of the Exeter and Chelsea Nurseries, who introduced it from California through Mr. William | Lobb. Though closely allied.to and in many respects so similar to Ceanothus floribundus (Tab. 4806), C. Lobbianus (Tab. 4811), and C. papillosus (Vab. 4815), it is abundantly distinguished from them by the characters of its foliage ; and, beautiful as they are, it far surpasses them all in the abundance of its bright mazarine-blue flowers, and the glossy, almost varnished surface of its deep evergreen foliage. The specimen sent us by Mr. Veitch was fully three feet long, and the profusion of flowers was so great that the leaves were almost concealed throughout the whole length of every twig. To distinguish 1t accurately, attention must be paid to the perfectly glabrous branchlets, upper surface of the leaf, petiole, pedicel, and calyx, to the glossmess of that surface, to the venation beneath, which consists, besides the midrib, of about four, very stout, straight, parallel nerves, _ given off at an acute angle to the midrib on each side ; as also to the pubescence of the minute areoles between the venules, which under the microscope is found to consist of minute, converging, fimbriz or short hairs. 1t does not exist in our herbaria from any North-American or European collectors. JULY 1st, 1859. Dzscr. A ramous shrub, with terete, glabrous, green, straight branches, and bright-green, small, glossy leaves of very uniform size. Leaves shortly petioled, obovate-cuneate, rounded at the apex, margin rather distantly toothed, each tooth terminated by a deciduous gland. Heads of flowers one to three inches long, forming when in bud broadly ovoid cones at the ends of the branchlets, covered with imbricating, silky scales. Rachis stout, villous. Peduncles slender. Calyzx-lobes erect or incurved, tri- angular. Petals with rather long claws, and very broadly obo- vate, deeply cucullate lamine, of a bright deep-blue colour, as are the pedicels, calyx, and stamens. Ovary depressed, three- lobed, lobes tumid at the apex. Fig. 1. Leaf. 2. Back of leaf. 3. Portion of back of leaf. 4. Flower. 5. Dise and ovary :—magnified, . - PRR oe ay SUR IRL Ses Sey Tas. 5128. DATURA cHtorantua; flore pleno. Yellow-flowered Thorn-Apple ; double-flowered. Nat. Ord. Sonanacra.—PENTANDRIA MoNoGyNIA. Gen. Char. (Vide supra, Tas. 4252.) Datura (§ Brugmansia) chlorantha ; fruticosa, ramis teretibus ut et tota planta glaberrimis, foliis sublonge petiolatis late ovatis subtriangularibus grosse sinuato-dentatis acutis, floribus solitariis axillaribus pendentibus brevissime pedunculatis, calyce subcylindraceo laxo basi paululum dilatato apice lobis 5 subuniformibus triangulare breve acuminatis erectiusculis tubo hine semi- fisso obsolete nervoso, corolle flavee infundibuliformis ore dilatato tubo ca- lycem plusquam duplo superante lineis 15 elevatis subviridibus notato, limbi patentis lobis latissimis rotundatis apice anguste uncinatim acuminatis. Flore pleno. (Tas. Nosrr. 5128.) My first knowledge of this really handsome plant was from specimens which flowered at Sion House in 1845, raised from seeds sent to his Grace the late Duke of Northumberland by Dr. Wallich, but from what country is not known. The deter- mination of the species of Datura is attended with great diffi- culty, as all will acknowledge who have made the attempt, partly owing to very imperfect specimens in our herbaria, and more so from the very variable character of the individuals, their change of colour, and their disposition to become double ; and I confess myself to have been fairly puzzled with this, and I put the drawing of it aside for future consideration. = In May of the present year my attention was again directed . the subject by a recent specimen of the same plant, sent by the Messrs, Henderson, of the Nursery, Pine-apple Place, ee Road, who received secds of it from Mr. Francis, the curator 0 the Adelaide Botanic Gardens, South Australia, with the fol- lowing remarks :—* A species of double yellow Datura, very Plentiful in these parts, sweet-scented, and flowering all the summer, of a low spreading habit, producing its flowers ee to eight months throughout the twelve. This will be a use JULY Ist, 1859, plant to you in England; planted in the open borders in June, you may expect it to flower finely during the months of August, September, and October. Here it stands the winter, being al- most deciduous. I never saw it when in England. It is worth your growing, being a free bloomer.”’ There is no reason what- ever for supposing the species to be a native of Australia: on the contrary, it is more likely seeds were sent from Europe to Adelaide, where it would naturally be more hardy than with us. Our plant is evidently arborescent, and of the Brugmansia group. It cannot be the true D. arborea of Linneus, which ’ has quite entire as well as downy leaves; nor the D. ardorea of our gardens (D. Gardueri, Hook. in Bot. Mag. sub t. 4252); nor the D. arborea of Ruiz and Pavon, t. 128, which is more like our D. cornigera, Bot. Mag. t. 4252, but is widely different. The leaves of D. chlorantha accord in shape with our D. corni- gera; but they are quite glabrous, and the calyx is widely dif- ferent, as is the colour of the corolla. These differences are best seen by a reference to the respective figures. It need hardly be said that it has nothing to do with the D. sanguinea of Ruiz and Pavon. ghd * a ¥ roa. Tas. 5129. RHODODENDRON Kenpricxt; var. latifoleum: Dr. Kendrick's Rhododendron ; broad-leaved variety. * Nat, Ord. Erxice®.—DeEcanpria Monoeynia. Gen. Char. (Vide supra, Tas. 4336.) RuopopEenpRon Kendrickii, var. latifolium ; foliis lanceolatis oblongo-lanceola- tisve acuminatis margine subundulatis utrinque concoloribus viridibus sub- tus strigoso- vy. glanduloso-pubescentibus demum glabris, capitulis multifloris, pedicellis puberulis, lobis calycinis parvis acuminatis, corolla late campanu- lata coccinea eequaliter 5-loba, staminibus 10, ovario strigoso-piloso, capsula glabra gracili curva. Ruopopenpron Kendrickii. Nudt. in Ann. and Mag. of Nat. Hist. v. 12. p.10; et in Hook. Kew Journ. Bot. v. 358. Amongst the many new and beautiful species of Rhododen- dron introduced from the Bhotan mountains by Dr. Nuttall, few Surpass this in the gorgeous colouring of flower. It was collected by Mr. Nuttall’s nephew, Mr. Booth, at 7000 feet elevation, ac- companying #. dgeworthii, in the region of Pines and Yews, where it forms lofty thickets after the manner of 2. Pontecum, through which he says the traveller finds dark and difficult paths. It had, however, been previously discovered by Mr. Griffith, and is the n. 2235 of his Bhotan collection. The original specimens have considerably narrower leaves than those here figured, and they _ are perfectly glabrous beneath. We are indebted to the same accomplished artist, Mr. Holden, of Warrington, for this draw- — ing, as for those of R. Shepherdii and Windsorii. The plant _ Itself has proved hardy in the climate of Cheshire. _ Descr. A small dush, with a very ramous ¢runk, seven to eight inches in girth, covered with a smooth, pale bark. Leaves four to six inches long, about one wide, generally undulate at the ‘Inargin, more or less whorled, green on both surfaces: young ___ leaves and other parts of the plant clothed with reddish gluti- _ hous hairs that disappear in age. Flower-head rather loose, : AUGUST Ist, 1859. 7 let, broadly. camipanlate Ovary strigose. ‘ th et ©v SUD, Ch Cel W. Fit we Tas. 5130. DENDROBIUM axpo-sanGuiNeuM. Wihite-and-sanguine Dendrobium. Nat. Ord. Orncurpex.—GyYNANDRIA MONANDRIA. Gen. Char. (Vide supra, Tas. 4352.) Denprosrum (§ Stachyobium) albo-sanguineum ; caulibus crassis erectis foliosis, racemo terminali 4—5-floro, bracteis squameeformibus, sepalis oblongo- lanceolatis lateralibus in mentum breve obtusum productis, petalis ovalibus — obtusis pluries latioribus, labello obovato subrotundo plano retuso apiculato integerrimo. Lindl. Denprosium albo-sanguineum. Lindl. in Paxton’s Flower Garden, v. 2. t. 5. Paxton’s representation of this rare Dendrobium, exhibits the flowers twice the size of ours, and the peduncles one- to two- _ flowered, coming out of old withered pseudobulbs; but Dr. Lindley’s notes which accompany it, throw suspicion on that figure, which is probably made up from imperfect dried speci- mens ; for he says, “If it really forms racemes (as stated by oe i Lobb), it will have to be removed from the section Ludendro- bium, to Stachyobium.” It is a native of Attran River, in Moul- mein, and was imported by Messrs. Veitch and Sons, of the Exeter and Chelsea Nurseries. Our plant flowered in the stove of the Royal Gardens in April, 1859. ee Duscr. Caulescent, forming elongated, terete, jointed, nearly erect stems, rather than pseudobulbs, a foot and more long, leafy at the extremity. Leaves five to six or seven inches long, subdistichous, lineari-lanceolate, sheathing at the base. Peduncle not so long as the leaves, erect, slender, clothed with short, sheathing scales, and bearing five to seven rather large yellow- ish-white flowers, each about two inches broad (four inches, it would appear, in the dried native specimens). Sepals spreading, : oblong-lanceolate, the two lateral ones at their base forming a short, conical, straight spur. Petals oval, twice as broad as the sepals, very obtuse, with a few sanguineous streaks at the base. AUGUST Isr, 1859. te, veined an i gu subun “oboe nearly 2 waved with d = 3 3 =: = Ss = e, plane, blote . ent: quite Is front an base.+ Column short, in decurrent at the > le ith p ood-purple. wit 1 deep bl ther streaked. am ‘ Pollen-masses —magnified. . . Fig. 1. Labeilum. 2. Column. 3. ’ Tas. 5131. AESCHYNANTHUS corprrouivs. Heart-leaved Aischynanthus. Nat. Ord. Cyrranprace®.—DIDYNAMIA ANGIOSPERMIA. Gen. Char. (Vide supra, Tas. 5031.) AlscHYNANTHUS cordifolius ; caule terete scandente glabro, foliis late ovatis giabris integerrimis caruosis, petiolis brevibus semiteretibus, floribus ter- minalibus vel in axillis binis sursum curvatis glanduloso-pubescentibus, ca- lyce basi cum pedicello articulato turbinato apice brevi-quinquelobo lobis co- rolle appressis, corollz velutinge coccinex: fauce intus atra strigosa, tubo ca- lyce vix triplo longiore superne curvato, limbo obliquo subeequaliter quadri- lobo bilabiato, labiis late ovatis concavis superiore apice bifido inferiore trilobo, stamiuibus styloque labii superioris longitudine. This is another of the many fine and highly ornamental tro- pical plants imported by Messrs. Veitch and Sons, of the Nur- series, Exeter and Chelsea, from Borneo, through their collector Mr. Thomas Lobb. Its nearest affinity is doubtless with our isch. tricolor (Tab. 5031), from the same country; but that has much smaller leaves, a shorter, broader, spreading calyx- : tube (not at all appressed to the corolla), a differently formed oi differently marked corolla, and a very different hypogynous gland. ; Duscr. Like the Zschynanthus tricolor above mentioned, this has the appearance of being a climber ands an epiphyte. Its branches are moderately stout, terete, quite ee dent. Zeaves two inches to two and a half inches long, oe ate, sometimes approaching to ovate, thick, fleshy, quite gla aa. shortly and obtusely acuminate, very obscurely penniveined, slightly channelled in the middle above, the margin very ema o and a little reflexed; costa prominent beneath: the a sil 3 very dark, almost glossy-green above, pale beneath. Peh semiterete, short, scarcely half an inch long. lowers large, beautiful, on short two- to three-flowered peduncles in the axils AUGUST IsT, 1859. of the rather closely-placed ultimate leaves. Pedicels short, curved upwards, so that all the flowers form a mass on the upper side of the plant. Calya nearly turbinate, green, tinged with brown, obscurely five-angled, slightly downy, as are the pedicels. Corolla four to five times as long as the calyx, deep- red, glanduloso-villous; ‘ude stout, slightly curved; /imé ob- lique, of four, deep, moderately spreading, broad-ovate lobes, the upper lobe somewhat helmet-shaped and bifid; the three, lower lobes yellow at the throat; each with a radiating black spot. Ovary linear, terete, glabrous, tapering into a rather short downy style. Stigma depressed in the centre. Hypogynous gland forming an erect tubular ring at the base of the ovary. Fig. 1. Flower. 2. Pistil :—magnified. ae a aan Vincent Brooks. imp | Tas. 5132, MONOCHATUM eEnsirervuo. Sword-bearing Monochetum. Nat. Ord. Metastomace#®.—Octanprta Monoayntia. Gen. Char, Flos 4-merus. Calycis oblongo-campanulati dentes tubo suba- quales aut breviores, acuti, caduci aut persistentes. Petala obovata. Stamina 8, alternatim ineequalia ; filamentis complanatis ; antheris longe subulatis, acutis, 1-porosis ; connectivo infra loculos. non producto, sed postice in caudam varie conflatam, anthera ipsa sepius breviorem, porrecto. Ovarium basi tantum costis 8 subevanidis adherens, subtetragonum, apice villosum, 4-loculare. Stylus fili- formis, magis minusve sigmoideus, stigmate punctiformi. Capsula 4-valvis. Semina cochleata.—Frutices suffruticesgue utplurimum monticoli, in Republica Mexicana necnon in Columbia et Peruvia hucusque cogniti, ramosi 3 foliis plerum- que tripli-septuplinerviis ; nervis convergentibus, pagina superiore impressis, unde Solia suicata videntur ; floribus purpureis aut violaceis ; antherarum minorum et Sortassis sterilium filamentis quam fertilium utplurimum longioribus. Naudin. a Monocuaxtum ensiferum ; “ramis subdivaricatis, foliis petfolatis lineari-lanceo- latis obtusiusculis integerrimis supra glabellis vel sparse setulosis a villosis parum conspicue.triplinerviis, floribus majusculis ad apices ramulo- rum terminalibus solitariis roseis.” Naud. Monocn#£tum ensiferum. Naudin, Ann. des Sc. Nat. 1845, p. 49. Monograph, Deserv. Melastom. p. 255. . The beautiful Melastomaceous plant here figured I give Hips the name by which we received it from Mr. Linden, a pct te M. Naudin; too briefly described by him, of a genus establis also by that author on certain kinds of A/elastomacee, ered f four in number, chiefly referable to Rhewia of Bonplan i Ge Arthrostemma of De Candolle, of which M. Naudin says, “ Ge- nus flore 4-mero, habitu specierum, et preesertim singulart eal Melastomeas hujus tribus stamina fabrica facile oncaeey ea et omnino naturale.” Unfortunately the pentamerous site’ are not to be depended upon, for on the specimens now Delore us there are as many pentamerous as tetramerous blossoms. Thus, in regard to the present species, although there is reason to believe it has come to us authentically named, it does not AUGUST Ist, 1859. by any means fully accord with Naudin’s brief remarks :—the branches can scarcely be called divaricate, the leaves are not linear-lanceolate nor quite entire, nor does the -character of the longer stamens (which with us are the sterile ones) quite accord. It is a native of the mountains of Oaxaca, in Mexico, and appears to have been discovered by M. Ghiesbrecht. Duscr. A small, compact shrub (as exhibited in the plant before us), much branched : the dranches nearly erect, straight, short, tetragonous, woody; the younger ones herbaceous, and more or less tinged with red. Leaves horizontally spreading, subapproximate, broad- or ovato-lanceolate, on very short petioles, rather obtuse, subcoriaceous, three- to five-nerved, the margin obscurely sinuato-crenate and ciliated, dark-green above, paler and slightly hairy beneath. Howers solitary, terminal, one and a half inch to two inches across, ovate or suburceolate, villoso- hispid, the limb of four or five, ovato-acuminate, spreading, cili- ated segments, of a bright-red colour (the whole calyx a good deal resembling that of Punica). Petals four to five, cordato- subrotund, purple-rose-colour, spreading, a little waved. Sfa- mens large for the size of the flower, eight or ten, of two kinds, four. to five fertile, four to five sterile, the fertile with taller and ~ slender red filaments, yellow fertile subulate anthers, and a slightly pedicellate appendage of nearly the same shape and size as the anther-cell, both suberect ; the sterile stamens have shorter red Jilaments, much dilated at the base, a bright-red abortive linear. anther, and a lengthened cultriform bright-red appendage, which spreads horizontally or is deflexed. Tas. 5133. BRACHYCHITON Bipwi ttt. Mr. Bidwill’s Brachychiton. Nat. Ord. SrercuLiace#.—PotyGaMia Mon@cta. Gen. Char. Calyx 5-fidus. Anthere congeste. Styli coherentes. Stigmata distincta v. in unicum peltatum coalita. Folliculi coriaceo-lignei, polyspermi. Semina albuminosa, pube stellari tecta, mutuo et fundo folliculi cohzerentia. Em- bryonis radicula hilo proxima.—Arbores (Nove Hollandia) ; foliis lobatis indivi- sisve. Br. ——$—$—$$—<$—<—<——— Bracuycuiton Bidwilli ; ubique stellatim tomentosum ; foliis cordato-trilobis supra parce subtus dense fulvo-tomentosis, floribus polygamo-monoicis 10 axillis dense glomeratis, calyce campanulato-infundibuliformi, limbi lobis ovatis acuminatis striatis intus prope basin squamis; masc. columna elongata fusiformi ; hermaphr. columna brevi, antheris ad basin ovariorum, ovariis dense tomentosis, stylis apice coheerentibus, stigmatibus patenti- recurvis. : Seeds of this remarkable plant were sent to the Royal Gardens = of Kew in 1851, from the Widebay district, north-east Australia, © by the late Mr. Bidwill. I refer it with little hesitation to the section Brachychiton of Sterculia, of Schott and Eadie which Brown has, together with the sections Pecilodermis ~ | Trichosiphon (all tropical New Holland plants), piers genus Brachychiton. Of the five species recorded by Mr. — I believe very imperfect specimens exist in herbaria. which Dr. Mueller has found at Victoria River fpeioe 2 Australia), and calls Br. ramiflorum, in many res resem - 2 this; but the leaves are not, or very imperfectly, rege . the calycine lobes are short and very obtuse, otherwise t wo appear to be almost identical. It is treated with us as ; 7 +g plant, and flowered for the first time in the autumn ‘ 858, continuing in blossom throughout the whole winter an apeing Descr. Our plant, rising from a large, tuberous root, mie a shrub, with rather spreading, terete branches, rea tegnragen as is’almost every part of the plant. Leaves ate a te petioles, swollen at the base ; cordate, usually deeply three-lobed, auGustT lst, 1859. e occasionally quite undivided, sometimes obscurely five-lobed, soft and thick, sparsely tomentose above, densely so and somewhat fulvous beneath. owers polygamo-monoicous, nearly sessile in the axils of the leaves, jointed on the short petiole. Calyz red, between campanulate and infundibuliform, more than an inch long, palish-red; the /im4 cut into five, spreading, ovate, acumi- nate segments, each having three nerves or strize; within, near the base, is a circle of close-placed, incurved, small, concave scales. Male flower: column nearly as long as the tube of the calyx, fusiform, downy in the middle, crowned with a dense, ° globose capitulum, of fifteen, sessile, yellow, two-celled, bright- yellow anthers. In the hermaphrodite flower a much shorter column bears a circle or ring of anthers, and this is crowned with the five, close-placed, very downy, ovate ovaries, tapering into styles, which are adnate just beneath the free, recurved, ra- diating stigmas. Ovules several in each ovary. Fig. 1. Male flower, from which the greater portion of the calyx has been re- moved. 2. Hermaphrodite flower, ditto. 3. Summit of ditto, with the,circle rr ata and the five ovaries cut through transversely. 4. Anthers :—mag- n a oenoks, bei Brooks + “Vincent Brooks, Tas. 5134, DENDROMECON aricipumM. higid Tree-Poppy. Nat. Ord. PAPAVERACE®.—PoLYANDRIA MonoGyNIA. Gen. Char. Sepala 2, ovata, caduca. Petala 4. Stamina plurima. Filamenta filiformia. Anthere lineares, Stigmata 2, sessilia, brevia, crassiuscula, Capsula elongata, siliqueformis, 1-locularis, bivalvis; valvis coriaceis, duris, a basi ad apicem dehiscentibus. Placente marginales, filiformes. Semina plurima, ma- juscula, pyriformia, levia.—Fruticulus dense Soliosus, rigidus, glaber. Folia lan- ceolata, acuta, denticulata, penninervia, reticulata, rugosa, rigida. Peduneuli aa- illares, uniflori. Benth. DENDROMECON rigidum. DeNDRoMECoN rigidum. Benth. in Trans. Hort. Soc. Lond. 2nd ser. v.1. p.407. Hook. Ic. Pl. t. 37. This remarkably fine plant is one of the many interesting — : discoveries of the late David Douglas in California, and sand es first published as a new Papaveraceous genus by Mr. Bentham, in the Transactions of the Horticultural Society, above quoted, and well named Dendromecon, or Tree-Poppy; having all the as pect and character of the Poppy tribe, but with woody stem and | branches. It was long, however, only known in the herbarium, but at length reared from seeds sent by Mr. William Lobb to Messrs. Veitch and Sons, Exeter and Chelsea Nurseries. It has proved quite hardy, and is really a handsome plant, flowering in the summer months. Descr. A small erect shrub, with terete, straw-coloured, woody, alternate branches; the younger ones only herbaceous, and these having several small lanceolate scales or abortive leaves at their base. Leaves two to four inches long, on short petioles, exactly lanceolate, glabrous, acuminate, rigid, carat green, penninerved, the nerves meeting and uniting a li : within the margin, so as to give a three-nerved ese’ the leaf, the interstices reticulated, and the ultimate areoles hav- ing free forked veins within them; the margin is cartilaginous AUGUST Ist, 1859. minutely denticulate. , Flowers solitary, terminal, t ss. Buds globose, apiculate. Sepais two, orbicular, deciduous. Petals four, subrotundate, crenulate, sp ight-yellow. Stamens orange-colour, rather numerous, Az long, two-celled. Filament about equal in length to the 8. Ovary oblong-cylindrical, furrowed. Style short. large, spreading. | ie F50. Fearn rn i an ane ee Se Mp i Witch, dele oun. * TAs. 5135. CHEIROSTEMON ptraranorpes. Mexican Hand-plant. Nat. Ord. StercuLtiacex2.—MoNADELPHIA PENTANDRIA, _. Gen. Char. Calyx basi bibracteolatus, subcampanulatus, 5-partitus; Zaciniis de- ciduis, crassis, intus coloratis, basi foveolatis, sestivatione quincuncialibus. Co- rolla nulla. Tubus stamineus eylindricus, exsertus, apice 5-fidus ; daciniis secun- dis, apice mucronatis, diantheriferis ; anthere extrorse, adnate, lineares, recte, parallel, bivalves. Ovarium liberum, sessile, quinqueloculare. Ovula in loculis plurima, angulo centrali biseriatim inserta, adscendentia, anatropa. Stylus fili- formis, apice incurvus; stigma acutum. Capsula oblonga, quinquangularis, quin- quelocularis, loculicide quinquevalvis, valvis medio septa villosa, margine utrin- que seminifera gerentibus. Semina plurima, ovoidea ; ¢es¢a erustacea, nitida, atra, chalaza rosea terminata. Embryo in axi albuminis carnosi, orthotropus, ejusdem fere longitudine ; cotyledonibus foliaceis, ovatis, planis, radicula brevi, obtusa, umbilico proxima.—Arbor Mewicana ; trunco gracili, elato, coma densa globosa terminato ; ligno albo, levissimo ; foliis alternis, petiolatis, subrotundo-ovatis, acute 5~7-lobis, basi cordatis, supra glauco-virentibus, subtus albo-tomentosis ; stipulis ovatis, acuminatis, deciduis ; pedunculis ix ramulis suboppositifoliis, solitaris, unt- _ floris; calyce eatus cano-tomentoso, intus purpureo. Endl. Currrostemon platanoides. CHEIROSTEMON platanoides. Humb. et Bonpl. Pl. Aiquinoct. v. 1. p. $2. t. 24, Nov. Gen. Am. v.5. p. 302. De Cand. Prodr. v. 1. p. 480. ddr. Juss, in Van Houtte, Fl. des Serres, v. 7. p. 7. t. 619. MacpaLxocureuavnitL. Hernandez, Hist. Pl. Nov. Hisp. ed. 2. p. 531. It was towards the latter part of the last century (about 1787) sse and Mocifio, was sent by that a scientific expedition, under Se ig y the Spanish Government to Mexico, then called New Spain, an attracted by a remark- Where the attention of the botanists was y. able tree, venerated from time immemorial by the Indians on ac- count i the large and very conspicuous nt of the peculiar structure of g ek ps 00 resell flowers, which have their five stamens so arrangé ble the human hand, including the arm and wrist. It was io | lieved to be a solitary tree, of which no other example existed, or could exist, in the world. Nor was it till about 1801 that a pupil of Professor Cervantes detected forests of ; the same us m Guatemala, and near the city of that name. This tree ha SEPTEMBER lst, 1859. ~ consequently,” write Humboldt and Bonpland, who gave to this _ hew genus the name of Cheirostemon, “ been transported by the Indians of Toluca from its native woods, and that, too, long before the conquest of America, since it is recorded in the writings of authors, previous to the celebrated expedition to Mexico, under the Indian name Macpalxochiquauhitl, signifying Hand-flower- tree. It was, however, never botanically noticed till 1795, and then by Professor Cervantes. So great an object of curiosity was this with all the inhabitants of New Spain, that the flowers were gathered with avidity by the Indians even before their full expansion, and thus seeds were not allowed to ripen. Cuttings were transported to gardens in Mexico by Sesse and Mocifio; and at length their labours were rewarded by one, and only one, succeeding.” Humboldt and Bonpland brought seeds to Paris on their re- turn from Mexico, but none of them germinated. More perfect seeds were afterwards readily obtained. Humboldt, in 1811, speaks of its being in collections at Paris and Montpellier ; and not long after Mr. Lambert seems to have introduced it to English gardens. A fine plant had been long in cultivation at Kew, where it has attained a height of twenty-three feet, but never showed any disposition to flower. Happily Charles Dorrien, Esq., of Ash- ean, has been more successful, and fine and perfect flowers were produced in his garden in the spring of 1859, from which, by the kindness of this gentleman, our figures have been made. € Specimens arrived in the most perfect state possible, and Were accompanied by the following notes :—‘“ The tree is ever- green, but loses part of its leaves in winter, so the branches are bare in the lower parts. It seems to like a temperature of about 50° or 55° in winter. The first blossoms are (May 27th, 1859) gone off, but there are now four more expanding. ‘The flowers secrete (in the nectaries at the base within) a quantity of liquid like sugar-and-water, tasting and smelling like toast-and-water. Each blossom continues about a fortnight in perfection before it begins to fade. The plant propagates easily by cuttings.” Descr. Bonpland, in his ful] description, gives the height of the trunk of this tree at fifteen feet; yet in his notice of the plant flowering in the city of Mexico, states it at thirty feet. Our own individual is twenty-three feet, with a diameter of six inches, bearing a rather spreading crown of branches, clothe with handsome foliage, which is partially deciduous in the win- ter. Leaves very much confined to the extremity of the branches, as in Many species of Sterculia, which the tree much resembles in habit, and the portion of the branches bearing the foliage 1 clothed with rusty-brown tomentum ; the rest of the branches glabrous, with brown, smooth bark, or only scarred from the fallen leaves. The form of the /eaves is cordate, rather obtuse, of a firm subcoriaceous texture, about six inches long by five broad, having a deep and acute sinus at the base; the margin is three- to seven-lobed, lower lobes very obtuse, entire, not ser- rated, as represented by Bonpland, five- to seven-nerved, and these principal nerves are united by transverse reticulated ones, prominent beneath ; young leaves tomentose on both sides, older ones nearly glabrous above, densely tomentose beneath ; the éo- mentum rich, ferruginous, composed of stellated hairs, as shown at Fig. 5. The youngest leaves have small recurved stipules. Petioles from three to four inches long. owers large, solitary, lateral, from among the crowded terminal leaves, and opposite to the insertion of a petiole. Peduncle an inch or an inch and a half long, obtusely triangular, very stout, curved, single-flowered, bearing two, ovate, acuminate, deciduous bracts, of which one is appressed to the flower. Flower four inches long, including the stamens. Perianth single, calycine, two inches long, and quite as much broad, thick, firm, coriaceous, downy, of a rusty- red colour, brighter and glabrous and glossy and somewhat wrinkled within, cup-shaped, deeply (two-thirds of the way down) divided into five, large, acute, erect lobes, which have the mar- gins a little reflexed, and a strong dorsal keel, which terminates below in five gibbosities or spurs, forming internally as many deep nectariferous cavities, of a bright yellow colour. Stamens five, monadelphous, bright-red, nearly four inches long, one-third of them below uniting into a tubular column, which at the spread- ing base combines with the perianth, exhibiting five, spreading, yellowish rays or lobes, alternating with the nectariferous cavi- ties ; the rest of the stamens are free, and spread ina fan-shaped manner, like the fingers of the hand (whence the name Cherro- stemon), or rather, like birds’ claws, and like them curved to one side, cylindrical, very much acuminated. On the under side of these five filaments (and externally, with regard to the axis of the flower) are two, long, linear, yellow anther-cells, charged with copious bright-yellow pollen. Ovary quite concealed within the base of the monadelphous stamens, five-lobed, woolly, tapering into a bright-red, clavate style, shorter than the stamens, an bending towards them: this tapers into the acute stigma. The fruit we have only seen from dried native specimens. That here figured (nat. size) is taken from one in the Museum of the Royal Gardens of Kew: for its structure, see the generic character. ee sakcanmennntnnsons Fig. 1. Flower, with the perianth and staminal tube partially laid Ay aie slightly magnified. 2. Pistil. 3. Transverse section of ovary. 4. Stellated hairs of the leaf:—magnified. 5. Fruit,—nat. size. Vincent Brooks, Imp. ) Tas. 5136. RHIPSALIS sarMENTACEA. Sarmentose Rhipsalis. * Nat. Ord. Cactace®.—IcosanpRia MonoGynia. Gen. Char. Perigonii tubus ultra germen non productus; phylla 12-18, sepaloidea brevissima squamiformia, petaloidea rotatim expansa. Stamina nume- rosa, longitudine subeequalia et limbum equantia. Stylus filiformis. Stigma 3—6-radiatum. Bacea a principio emersa, pisiformis, glabra, matura pellucens, Perigonio marcescente coronata. Cotyledones breves, acute.—Plante pseudo- par asilica, interdum subradicantes. Caulis articulato-ramosus, teres, angulosus, aut Soliaceo-dilatatus, crenulatus ; crene sguamula vie conspicua instructe, nude, sub- lanate vel setas minutas gerentes. Flores laterales (rarissime terminales), parvuli subephemeri. Salin-Dyck. RHIPSALIS sarmentacea ; caule gracili repente radicante ramoso terete obtusan- gulo, angulis 4-8 parum prominentibus, areolis confertis minutis subto- mentosis, aculeis paucis (8-12, Ofto) tenuissimis setaceis ineequalibus rectis ulveis, floribus subsolitariis sparsis albis. Rartpsauts sarmentacea. Ofto et Dietr. Allegm. Gartenz. 1841, p. 98. Walp. Repert. Bot. v. 2. p. 244. Cactee Hort. Dyck. p. 60 et 229. * CEREUS lumbricoides, Lem.” Native of Buenos Ayres and South Brazil. We had the satis- faction of receiving the branch of a tree from W. D. Christie, Esq., H.B.M. Minister Plenipotentiary, Argentine Republic, i the winter of 1858~9, covered with the creeping and rooting stems of this singular plant, which soon after being suspended from the roof of a warm stove, produced its delicate white flowers without any nourishment from soil. _ It probably runs Over rocks in a similar manner. Duscr. Stems prostrate, creeping, able length, and slightly attached to Suckers of the fibrous roofs, branc scarcely so thick as a goose-quill, terete, green, our to eight, shallow; angles, or ribs, very ob munute, downy, bearing a few (four to six or seven), lated, filiform, greyish or white aculei. Flowers solitary, SEPTEMBER Ist, 1859. extending for a consider- its place of growth by the hed. Stems and branches furrowed ; furrows tusé. Areoles short, stel- scattered. on the branches, less than an inch in diameter when fully ex- panded. Ovary small, rather short, cylindrical. Calya of a. few, short, Janceolate, greenish scales, gradually passing into the oblong, lanceolate-acuminated, delicate white petals. Stamens moderately numerous ; fi/aments long, spreading. Ovary terete. Style a slender column, a little longer than the stamens. Stigma of four, linear-oblong, spreading /odes. iz Fig. 1. Portion of a branch, with a flower,—slightly magnified. neent Brosks Ing ai Tas. 5137. MYOSOTIDIUM NoBILe. Antarctic Forget-me-not. Nat. Ord. BoraGINE.£.—PENTANDRIA MonoGyYnia. Gen. Char. Myosotrprum, Hook. Nov. Gen. Calyx 5-partitus. Corolla hypogyna, hypocrateriformi-rotata, tubo brevi, fauce fornicibus quinque clausis, limbo 5-lobo, laciniis latis obtusis patentibus, sinubus plicatis. Stamina 5, paulo intra faucem inserta; filamentis brevibus. Ovarium quadrilobum, lobis apice plano-depressis. Fructus subpyramidatus. Nuces 4, dorso compresse, leves, glabra, erectz, late alato-marginate, receptaculo 4-angulari affixe ; ale rectiuscule, undulatee.—Herba insulis Nove-Zelandie “ Chatham Islands”? dictis habitans, subsucculenta ; radice perenni ; foliis inferioribus amplis, longe petiolatis, cordatis, ylabris, parallelo-venosis, superioribus sessilibus, omnibus glabris, nitidis. Corymbus amplus, multiflorus ; pedunculis ante anthesin scorpioideis. Flores (in ordine) majusculi, purpureo-cerulet. Cynogiossum nobile. J. D. Hook. in Gard. Chron. 1858, p. 240. This very lovely Boragineous plant, which cannot fail to call to mind the favourite Forget-me-nots of Europe, is an inhabitant of Chatham Islands, off New Zealand, S. Lat. 44°, whence it was introduced to Europe through the medium of Mr. Watson, of St. Alban’s, by whom a living flowering plant was exhibited at a meeting of the Horticultural Society of London, in March, 1858, and attracted much attention. With the inflorescence of a Myosotis, it has a fruit which, in the state of ovary,. induced Dr. Hooker to refer the plant to Cynoglossum : but the fruit is quite different from the characters of both, approaching Ompha- ‘odes in the winged achenia or nuts, yet differmg in the nature of that wing, not being in any way introflexed, nor are the nuts attached to the style, as in that genus. Its foliage is quite un- like any species of those genera, and we think it may justly be: - considered a new genus, ranking very near the Forget-me-nots. The whole stock of this choice plant is (we believe) in the posses- sion of Mr. Standish, who sent the plant here figured to us m April, 1829. Drscr. Root perennial. Stem herbaceous, a foot to a foot and SEPTEMBER lst, 1859. a half high, stout, succulent, terete, simple, leafy, glabrous below, pubescent above. Root-/eaves numerous, very large (as large as a small cabbage, J. D. H.), cordate, very obtuse and even retuse, quite glabrous, succulent, glossy, parallelo-venose, on very long thick petioles, which are grooved on the upper side, sometimes tinged with purple: wpper leaves gradually smaller, at length sessile and obovato-spathulate. Corym terminal, large, four inches across, compound, leafless. Calya deeply cut into five, oblong /odes, hispid on the outside. Corolla with a short tube and large spreading limb, more than half an inch across, of five rounded lobes, of a blue colour, gradually becoming paler and almost white towards the margin, the disc with a dark-purple ray. Five, yellow, glandular scales (as in Myosotis, etc.) close the mouth of the tube. Stamens included, on very short filaments, arising from near the mouth of the tube. Ovary 4-lobed, de- pressed and quite flattened at the top. Style very short. Stigma two-lobed. #ruit of four, dorsally-compressed, nearly erect, sub- cordate, broadly-winged nuts or achenia, attached to a quadran- gular receptacle, which is terminated by the short remains of the style. Seed ovate, acuminate, laterally attached. Fig. 1. Corolla, with the tube laid open, and showing the stamens. 2. Calyx and pistil. 3. Fruit, with its broadly winged nuts (represented as too much incorporated at the top). 4. The same, cut through transversely, and Showing the receptacle. 5. Nut, cut through vertically. 6. Seed. 7. Eim- bryo :—magnitied. iss Be aaee 4 tag bak Vincent Brooks, mb: pores Ee Tas. 5138, AERIDES Wieuttanum. Dr. Wight’s Acrides. Nat. Ord. OncurpE®.—GyNANDRIA MONANDRIA. Gen. Char. (Vide supra, Tas. 4982.) Agripes Wightianum ; foliis loratis apice obliquis obtusis bilobis inter lobos cuspidatis, racemis strictis simplicibus multifloris foliis longioribus, sepalis petalisque ovalibus anticis majoribus, labelli infundibularis laciniis laterali- bus pedi columnz adnatis obtusis intermedia subcuneata apice triloba TO- tundata, disco lineis plurimis elevatis erispis cristato, caleare brevi conico. Lindl. Axripss Wightianum. Lindl. in Wall. Cat. n. 1320; Gen. et Sp. Orchid. p. 238; Contrib. to the Orchidology of India, in Journ. Proceed. of Linn. Soc. v.3.p.40. Part. Fl. Gard. v. 2. sub t. 66. AERIDEs testaceum. Lindl. Gen. et Sp. Orchid. p. 238. Vanpa parviflora. Lindl. in Bot. Reg. 1844; Mise. p. 57. An inhabitant of Ceylon, Champion ; Madras, Wight ; Concan, Law ; Bombay (Loddiges). Our plant here figured was commu- nicated in June, 1859, by Messrs. Parker and Williams, of the Paradise Nursery, Holloway. Its cbief beauty arises from the — varied colour of the fabellum when closely examined. Drscr. Epiphytal. Roots large, thick, and fleshy. Leaves all radical, distichous, lorate, obtuse, singularly unequally notched at the apex, and having a mucro at the sinus beneath. Raceme arising from the base of the plant, longer than the leaves, apr flowered. Sepals and petals testaceous, much spreading, ark uniform, obovato-spathulate. Zip projecting, three-lobed, side lobes small, incurved, middle one large, broad-oblong, testaceous beneath, dilated and crenate at the apex, semicircular, white above, with elevated lamella on: the thick, fleshy disc, prettily dashed and spotted with purple; spur moderately long, obtuse, incurved. Column short, the base adnate with the lip and spur. Anther-case small. Pollen-masses yellow, compressed. Fig. 1. Front, and 2, side yiew of the column, lip, and spur. 3. Pollen- SEPTEMBER Ist, 1859. i “ih Sta | Witch del etlith, = ¥ Vincent Brooks, Imp. Tas. 5139. ARECA sapipa. Southern Areca or Betel-nut. Nat. Ord. Patmace®.—Mone@cra HEXANDRIA. Gen. Char. Flores monoici, sessiles in eodem spadice, spatha duplici eincti 3 masculi superiores plerumque feemineis 2 stipati. Mase. : Perianthium 6-parti- tum, 2-seriale; stamina 3-12. Fem.: Perianthii foliola 6, imbricata, convo- luta. Ovarium 1—8-loculare. Stigmata 3, sessilia. Drupa monosperma, fibrosa ; ge corneum, in sp. Novee-Zelandie non ruminatum. Embryo basilaris. TD. A. ARECA sapida ; foliis pinnatis, pinnis multijugis anguste lineari-lanceolatis repli- catis terminalibus premorsis, costis petioloque lepidotis, perianthit d folio- lis exterioribus angustis interioribus ovatis acuminatis, ? late ovatis, drupis ovoideis, albumine eequabili. Hook. fil. ae Arxca sapida. Sol. in Forst. Pl. Escul. Ins. Oceano Austral. p. 66. . 35. Rich. Fl. Astrolabe, p. 157. All. Cunn. Prodr. Fl. Nov. Zel. in Hook. Comp. to Bot. Mag. v. 2. p. 374. Hook. fil. Fl. N. Zeal. v. 1. p. 262. t. steeds Pr Arxca Banksii. Mart. Palm. ¢. 151 ef 152. Kunth, Enum. Pi. v. 3. p. 185. The importance of the noble Palm-house at Kew, 1s now — beginning to be felt by the blossoming of many rare Palms, which have never before produced flowers im any European collections. Although one of the less lofty kinds of the princes of the Vegetable Kingdom, the present is an extremely elegant species, native of the Northern and Middle Islands of New Zea- land (where the young inflorescence is eaten), and of peculiar interest, as being one of the most southern representatives of its Natural Order, occurring as far as latitude 38° 22 south; whereas “38° is the limit of Palms in Australia, latitude 38° in South America, and latitude 30° in Africa.” i As Dr. Hooker has had the opportunity of seeing and study- ing this plant in its native islands, and as he has recently pub- lished a good description, together witha figure of the inflorescence and fruit, we cannot do better than offer the following extracts from his ‘Flora of New Zealand.’ Its flowerimg season with us has been in the winter months. Mr. Allan Cunningham has applied to this Palm, Endlicher’s description, drawn up from SEPTEMBER lst, 1859. Ferdinand Bauer’s drawing of Norfolk Island specimens (which have been considered by some as the same species); but this does not agree with the Zew Zealand plant in the shape of the drupe, said to be “ globose” in Norfolk Island. Mr. J. Smith, of the Royal Gardens, Kew, has both of them in cultivation, and has pointed out a very considerable difference in habit, and in the breadth of the pinnules, those from Norfolk Island being twice as broad; but there is great variation in this respect in both species. Von Martius also separates them, but gives Forster's name to the Norfolk Island plant, whereas Forster's drawing is from the New Zealand one only, to which the name of sapida must remain attached, whilst that of Baueri may be given to the Norfolk Island species, if it prove really distinct. The genus Areca, our species of which yields the well-known Betel-nut (Areca Catechu), is found in Asia and its islands; but the group to which 4. sapida belongs, and which has a one- celled ovary, is supposed to be confined to New Zealand, Nor- folk Island, and the Malay Archipelago. Mr. Brown distin- guishes the Australian nearly allied Palm by the name of Sea- Jorthia (see our Tab. 4961): it resembles the New Zealand Plant, but differs from it in having numerous stamens and ruminated albumen. _Duscr. 4. sapida is a small Palm.’ Trunk six to twelve feet high (Allan Cunningham says twenty feet), six to eight inches in diameter. Leaves pinnate, four to six feet long; pinnules very narrow, linear-lanceolate, margins replicate ; zerves and costa, and especially the petiole, covered with minute lepidote scales. Spadix much branched, densely flowered, eighteen to twenty-four inches long, enclosed in a double, boat-shaped spatha. Flowers very numerous, of a pale-pinkish colour, ma/es and Semales intermixed, one of the former being generally placed between two of the latter, all sessile. Male perianth six-cleft, or of six, ovate, acu- minate pieces, in two rows, outer one smaller. Stamens six, surrounding the rudiment of an ovary. Female perianth also of six broadly ovate leaflets, rolled round one another, and enclosing a one-celled ovarium, with three sessile stigmas and a pendulous ovule on one side of the cavity. Fruit an ovoid drupe, half an inch long, with a fibrous outer coat; the membranous éesta thickened on one side down the raphe; albumen horny, the surface not ruminated. Hmdbryo small, in the base of the albumen. J.D.. Fig. 1. Greatly reduced figure of a flowering plant. 2. Spatha. 3. Portion of spadix, with flowers :—nat. size. 4. Male flower. 5. Stamen. 6. Female flower :—magnified. 1%. Drupe. 8. Seed:—nat. size. 9. Albumen,—slightly magnified. INLD G Ba 8 W Fitch, del. cent Brooks, Imp. Vin Tas. 5140. RICHARDIA a.spo-MACULATA. Spotted-leaved Richardia. Nat. Ord. Arorpez.—Mone@cra MoNANpDrRIa, _ Gen. Char. Spatha basi convoluta, limbo expanso marcescente. Spadiz con- tinuo androgynus, staminibus rudimentariis ovaria stipantibus, appendice ste- rili nulla. Anthere plurime, liberee, sessiles, biloculares ; Zocwlis connectivo late cuneato, superne in discum convexum glandulosum dilatato, prope marginem bi- poroso utrinque adnatis, vertice poro dehiscentibus. Ovaria plurima, conferta, libera, placentis parietalibus tribus axim attingentibus, incomplete trilocularia ; staminodiis truncato-clavatis stipata. Ovula in placentis parietalibus gelatinosis, pauca, superposita, e funiculis longiusculis anatrope pendula. Stylus brevis ; stigma convexiusculum, glandulosum. Bacce uniloculares, oligosperme. Semina obovata, e funiculo longiusculo, teste crassee carnos® adpresso, inversa, umbilico tuberculiformi. Hmbryo in axi albuminosis antitropus, eoque dimidio brevior, extremitate radiculari incrassata, umbilico e diametro opposito, infera.—Herbee Capenses ; foliis radicalibus erectis, longe petiolatis, subhastato-cordatis, nervosis ; petiolis basi vaginantibus, scapum centralem, subtrigonum, inferne amplexantibus ; spatha maxima, candida. Endl. Ricwarpta albo-maculata ; foliis subflaccidis hastato-ovatis acuminatis | cer" maculatis, venis opacis, spatha apice erecta bast intus colorata, spac subincluso. Professor Kunth, with great propriety, separated the genus Richardia among Aroidee of the southern hemisphere, from the genus Calla of Linnwus, peculiar to Europe tener r in the northern hemisphere. Richardia has ieee? eu ce represented by one species, the old Calla Aithiopiea, we ag. t. 832 (Richardia Africana, K#/.), of the Cape of Good Hope. We have lately had the satisfaction of receiving at one an the same time, from our friends Messrs. Backhouse, of York, and Messrs. Veitch, of the Exeter and Chelsea Nurseries, pe Species (or possibly varieties), both from Natal, = Ne the greenhouse in June of the present year. At present T sha ne fine myself to the subject before us, from Mr. _cqaneen a 1 name albo-maculatum, though I am far from sure a # Spotting, albeit very copious, is permanent. Where the spo are, the substance of the leaf is very thin ae et re OCTOBER Ist, 1859. to an entire absence of colouring matter. As a species, this is perfectly distinct from 2. Africana, in the different form and in the almost coriaceous texture of the leaves of the latter, which are moreover abundantly marked with pellucid veins, and they have a pellucid edge; nothing of the kind exists in our present species. The spatha, above the involute portion, is much nar- rower, and never reflexed ; the interior base is coloured, and the spadix is much shorter than in 2. Africana. This will probably prove as hardy as the latter mentioned. The other Richardia, from Messrs. Veitch, we shall notice on a future occasion. Dezscr. The general structure and aspect so much resembles that of the well-known &. Africana, that it will suffice to notice the distinguishing marks from that species. The,foliage is of a much thinner texture, flaccid, and submembranaceous, paler in colour, truly hastate (not sagittate) in form, destitute of pellucid veins and margin; the petioles are more slender. The spatha is much less expanded and less broad above-the convolute por- tion, and this portion is nearly erect, not recurved; the inside is purple at the.base. The spadixv is much shorter, and espe- cially the staminiferous portion, in relation to the pistilliferous base. The ovaries and young fruits have their cells varying from one to five. Fig. 1. Spadix, with pistils and stamens :—waé. size. 2,3. Stamen. 4. Grains of pollen. 5. Young fruit. 6. Transverse, and 7, vertical section of the same. 8. Ovule and funicle :—magnified. Tas. 5141. EVELYNA Caravara. Aublet s Lvelyna. Nat. Ord. OrcuipE#.—Gynanpria MonanpRiA. _ Gen, Char, Evetyna, Popp.—Perigonii foliola exteriora erecta, libera ; inte- rora subeequalia. Labellum cum pede column continuum, circa eandem convo- lutum,. obcordatum, basi saccata bicallosum, disco nndum. Columna ovario con- tinua, basi parum producta, semiteres, clavata, medio antice processu brevi aucta. Anthera terminalis, bilocularis, loculis incomplete quadriloculocellatis. Pollinia 8, collateralia, basi quaternatim subcoherentia—Herbe Peruviane (America tropic) ; caulibus vaginatis, foliosis ; floribus spicatis v. subcapitatis, imbricato- bracteatis. Endl. : ap Caravata ; piloso-hispida, spicis capitatis, labelli lobo medio longe clilato. EvELyna Caravata. Lindl. Fol. Orchid. part 5. p. 9 (note under Sobralia). SERAPIAS Caravata. dubl. Guian. v. 2. p. 816. t, 320. Crmerproum hirsutum, Willd. Sp. Pl. v. 4. p. 94. Sopratra? Caravata. Lindl. Gen. et Sp. Orchid. p. 177. Evtyna lepida. Rchb.f. (in Hambr. Gart. Zeit. 1859 °). It fell to the lot of the distinguished German traveller and. botanist Dr, Pceppig, to dedicate a genus of plants to om countryman John Evelyn, an eminent patriot of the pte oe century, and author of ‘Sylva; or a Discourse of Forest rors, and the Propagation of Timber in His Majesty's Dominions ;° to Which is annexed ‘Pomona; or an Appendix concerning aT Trees, ag relating to Cider; and as a sequel to this wor : afterwards published his ‘Terra; a Philosophical ee we 0 Earth, relating to the Culture and Improvement of it for ege- tation, and the Propagation of Plants.’ The first of these works alone would richly entitle him to this honour. _ - . The species which were selected, as belonging to this new genus, are five in number, all discovered by Dr. Poeppig — his Peruvian travels. Dr. Lindley, however, ascertained that oe first known species referrible to this genus was derived from t : eastern side of South America, the one here figured, a native o French Guiana, and well figured by Aublet: to this locality we OCTOBER Ist, 1859. may now add Jamaica, where it was found by the late Dr. M‘Fadyen, and by him communicated to our Herbarium. It is at once distinguished by the copious black rigid hairs investing the stem and leaves and ovary and even the calyx. The bracts are remarkable for their purple colour, while the flowers are bright-yellow. Plants communicated by Mr. Van Houtte, flow-. ered with us in November, 1858, when our figure was taken Dr. Lindley has kindly given the above synonyms. Drscr. An epiphyte, attaching itself to the trunks and branches of trees in its native forests. Stem about a foot high, erect, slender, terete, about as thick as crow’s-quill, hispid, as is all the foliage, and more or less the bracts and calyx, with rigid, black, short, moderately patent hairs. Leaves distant, on long, sheathing bases, lanceolate, rigid, very long, and gradually and finely acuminate ; with two teeth below the spinulose apex, six to eight inches long, more than an inch wide, plicato-nervose, harsh and rigid, gradually smaller and more approximate up- wards, rather suddenly passing into coloured bracts. Spike elongato-capitate, very compact, formed of numerous, erecto- patent, purple, lanceolato-acuminate, imbricated, striated dracts, longer than the flowers. Flowers bright-yellow, with a short, purplish, inferior, twisted ovary. - Calyz of three ovato-lanceolate, suddenly acuminate, nearly erect sepals. Petals shorter than the lip, as are the oblong, obtuse, nearly erect petals. Lip large, erect, three-lobed : lateral lobes short, incurved; terminal one large, subrotund, deeply and beautifully fringed: the disc at the base white, furnished with two large glands, which correspond with two obtuse spurs or gibbosities on the under side of the base of the lip. Column shorter than the lip, erect, nearly terete, white. Anther dark-purple, sunk into the two-toothed clinandrium. -Pod- len-masses eight, in two series. Fig. 1. Apex of a leaf. 2. Flower and bract. 3. Labellum, seen from above. 4. Column and anther, 5. Pollen-masses :—magnified, 5/42. W-Fitch, del. et lith. Tas. 5142, PENTSTEMON CENTRANTHIFOLIUS. fied Valerian-leaved Pentstemon. Nat. Ord. ScROPHULARIEXZ.—DIDYNAMIA ANGIOSPERMIA. Gen. Char. (Vide supra, Tas. 4318.) PENTSTEMON centranthifolius ; elatus, glaucus, foliis inferioribus oblongis supe- rioribus amplexicaulibus oblongo- v. ovato-lanceolatis, panicula elongata virgata secunda, calycis segmentis lato-ovatis acuminatis margine membra- naceis, corolle tubo elongato vix ampliato, filamento sterili glabro filiformi. PENTSTEMON centranthifolius. Benth. Scroph. Ind. p. 7, in note. De Cand. Prodr. v. 10. p. 323. CHELONE centranthifolia. Benth. Trans. Hort. Soc. Lond. n. ser. v. 1. p. 48). Lindl. Bot. Reg. t. 1737. OCTOBER lst, 1859. a half long; ¢vée rather slender, straight, slightly dilated up- wards, red: the mouth of five, equal, spreading, short, acute segments. Stamens included : fifth sterile stamen filiform, beard- less. Ovary lanceolate, glabrous. Style included, slender. Stigma obtuse. Fig. 1. Calyx and pistil. 2. Stamens. 3. Single stamen. 4. Ovary :— magnified. a ia re NS 8 : X / Vincent Brooks, imp Tas. 5143, SPRAGUEA uMBELLATA. Umbellate Spraguea. Nat. Ord. PortuLacacE®.—TRIANDRIA MOoNOGYNIA. Gen. Char. Spraaura, Torr.—Calyz disepalus, persistens ; sepalis suborbicu- latis, basi cordatis, emarginatis, membranaceis, patentibus. Corolle petala 4; estivatio imbricata, libera ; duobus exterioribus sepalis alternantibus, interioribus sepalis oppositis. Stamina 3, petalis oppositis. Ovarium uniloculare. Ovula 8-10, basilaria. Stylus filiformis, apice trifidus; Jodis intus stigmatosis. Cap- sula membranacea, compressa, unilocularis, bivalvis. Semina 2-5, lenticulari- compressa, nigra, nitida, estrophiolata—Herba Californica, perennis, glabra ; caulibus 1-5, scapiformibus, e caudice brevi ortis, remote squamosis ; floribus medi, scorpioideo-spicatis ; spicis plurimis, aphyllis, umbellatis, terminalibus. orrey. SPRAGUEA umbellata. Spracura umbellata. Torr. in Plante Fremontiane, p. 4. t. 1. This very singular plant is a native of California, and was first detected by Col. Fremont at the Forks of the Nozah river, in the foot-hills of the Sierra Nevada of northern California, in flower and fruit in the month of May. From those native specimens it was constituted a new genus by the excellent Dr. Torrey, and dedicated to “Mr. Isaac Sprague, of Cambridge, Massachusetts, so well known as a botanical draughtsman, and especially for the admirable illustrations of the Genera of the Plants of the United States by himself and Dr. Asa Gray. It has since been found by other and by English collectors 1n Cali- fornia, and it has been introduced alive to the gardens of Messrs. Veitch, at Exeter and Chelsea, through Mr. William Lobb, and to those gentlemen we are indebted for the beautiful specimens here figured. It was exhibited in July of this year at a meeting of the Horticultural Society, and «eommended as a very elegant dwarf-flowering species, of novel character, well adapted for rock- gee and the margins of flower-borders, having proved quite ardy in Mr. Veitch’s nursery.” Decca: Perennial. Reet vabiasitont: branched. Stems three to five or more, erect, terete, bearing a few, distant, small, spathu- late Zeaves, one and a half to two inches long, while the radical OCTOBER Ist, 1859. ones, of the same shape, are rosulate, five to six inches long. Jn- volucre of a few small but unequally sized sessile leaves or dracts. Umbel compound, of many rays, the primary ones bearing three to four, secund, crest-like, scorpioid spz/es, formed of the closely imbricated, two-ranked flowers, white, beautifully tinged with purple, and dotted with the dark-purple exserted anthers. Flowers nearly sessile on the spike, generally with a small drac- teole (a third abortive sepal?), scariose with a serrated edge. Calyx of two, erect, orbiculari-cordate, unequal, scariose sepals, much larger than the corolla. Corolla of four, red, apiculated, ovate, erecto-patent petals. Stamens three, purple: filaments longer than the petals and sepals. Anther purple, oblong. Ovary broad-oval: ovules few, four to six, erect from the bottom of the. cell, and elevated upon seed-stalks. ___ Fig. 1. Flower. 2. Corolla, including stamens and pistil. 3. Pistil. 4. Ovary cut through vertically, showing the seeds :—magnified. Witch, del. et lith cameron rae dir papain ser ARE IEI Tas. 5144, LAELIA xaAnTHINA. Yellow-flowered Lelia. Nat. Ord. OrncutpE# —GyYNANDRIA MONANDRIA. Gen. Char. Sepala explanata, lanceolata, qualia. Petala majora, paulo dif- formia, carnosa, explanata. Labellum posticum, 3-partitum, lamellatum, circa columnam convolutum. Columna aptera, carnosa, antice canaliculata. Anthera opercularis. Pollinia 8, caudiculis 4 elasticis—Herbe epiphyte; rhizomate pseudobolbophoro, Folia carnosa. Scapi terminales, pauci- v. multi-flori. Flores speciosi, odorati. Lindl. La. zanthina ; folio oblongo-lorato coriaceo pseudobulbo fusiformi longiore, racemo 4—5-floro, bracteis obsoletis, sepalis petalisque oblongis obtusis sub- eequalibus undulatis valde convexis, labello cucullato subquadrato antice obtuse trilobo, venis in appendiculatis. Lindl. Mst. We are indebted to Messrs. Backhouse and Son, of the York Nursery, for the opportunity of figuring this fine and new Bra- vilian Lelia (imported by them), and to Dr. Lindley for the above specific character and following remarks. | _ “This resembles Lelia flava (Bot. Register, 1842, t. 62), but is far larger and handsomer. It most especially differs in the undulated sepals and petals being leathery and very convex, In consequence of their sides being rolled backwards, and in the form of the lip, which when spread flat is nearly quadrate, the — front side, which is widest, being divided into three shallow lobes — of equal depth, while the lip of Zelia flava is deeply three-lobed, _ the middle lobe being crisp and much longer than the side ones. — oe oreover, in the plant now before me, the lip has no trace OL raised veins, while, on the contrary, in Lelia flava, it has four in es middle very conspicuously raised above the general level. indl. Fig. 1. Labellum. 2. Column and anther. 3, 4. Pollen-masses :—magnified. OCTOBER Ist, 1859. Tas. 5145. MOMORDICA mrxtTa. Largeflowered Momordica. Nat. Ord. CucurBiTaceE®.—Dicecta MoNADELPHIA. Gen. Char. Flores monoici v. dioici. Masc. Calyx brevissime campanulatus, quinquepartitus, patens. Corolla calyci inserta, quinquepartita ; Zaciniis paten- tibus, obtusis, subundulatis. Stamina 5, imo calyci inserta, 3-adelpha. Fila- ~ menta brevia, crassa. Anthere conniventes, uniloculares, loculo lineari, connec- - tivi crassi undulati margini extus adnato. Fam. Calye tubo obovato v. sub- cylindrico, cum ovario connato; Jimbo supero, quinquepartito, patulo. Corolla maris annulo epigyno inserta. Stamina rudimentaria, styli basim cingentia. ‘Ovarium inferum, triloculare, placentis juxta septa hinc parietalibus, multiovu- latis. Stylus cylindricus, trifidus v. tripartitus. Bacca pulposa, muricata, ma- turitate elastice irregulariter rupta, polysperma. Semina compressa, marginata, integumento baccato colorato, exsiccatione rugoso. Embryonis exalbuminosi cotyledones foliaceze, plano-convexe ; radicula brevissima, centrifuga.—Herbe in Asia et America tropica indigene, glabriuscule v. hirte ; foliis alternis, cordatis, palmato-tri-quinguelobis ; cirrhis simplicibus, elongatis ; pedunculis axillaribus, filiformibus, unifloris, medio v. supra basim bractea foliacea instructis.. Endl. Momorpica mizta; dioica, foliis cordatis, 3-5-lobo-palmatis, lobis sinuato-den- tatis, petiolis glandulosis, floribus masculis solitariis magnis, pedunculo elongato bractea magna biloba infra florem, calycis lobis profundis ovatis nigro-striatis, corolle petalis subrhombeo-ovatis venosis disco pubescenti- bus, 8 interioribus basi nigro-purpureis, fructu magno baccato ovalo-globoso rubro ubique muricato apice acuto. Moironvica mixta. Rovb. Fl. Ind. 0.3. p. 109. Wight et Arn. Fl. Penins. Ind. Or. p. 349. Momorprca Cochinchinensis. Spreng. Syst. Veget. 0. 8. p. 14. - Murtcta Cochinchinensis. Lour. Fl. Cochinchin. v. 2. p. 732. v. 3. p. 318. De Cand. Prodr. One of the tropical stoves at Kew has been rendered very at- tractive for some years past by the introduction of various Cu- curbitaceous plants, trained under the rafters and the lights. It is a family of plants that have been too much neglected, for they present no small degree of beauty in their flowers, and their fruits are remarkable in their size or form or colour, and often will flower and their utility. Even in the open air many species OCTOBER Ist, 1859. ripen their fruit in the open ground. The present plant is of recent introduction ; the ripe, curiously compressed and embossed _ seeds, accompanied by a drawing, were sent to us from Moul- mein by the Rev. C. 8. P. Parish, and prove to be those of the Momordica mixta of Roxburgh; and this is considered identical with the Muricia. Cochinchinensis of Loureiro: if so, it is exe- crably described, but is thence shown to be a native of China and Cochinchina, as of thickets about Calcutta. No figure has © ever been published, yet the flowers are both large and hand- some. Unfortunately our plants have produced only male flowers: these quite suffice to form a judgment of the species, especially in conjunction with an outline representation of the — fruit, copied from the unpublished drawings of Roxburgh, in the museum of the India House. The plant flowered with us in July. Descr. Stems climbing, rather slender, angular. Zeaves on long, grooved petioles, bearing conspicuous Peziza-shaped glands, varying in size, cordate, three- to five-palmato-lobate, the seg- ments sinuato-dentate. Opposite the petioles are simple fen- drils. Peduncles \ong, single -flowered, bearing a two-lobed pilose bract beneath the blossom. FV/ower (male) very large, full four inches in diameter. Calyx deeply cut into five, ovato- lanceolate lobes, striated with black. Corolla patenti-campanu- late, of five, rotundato-trapezoid, acute pefa/s, copiously veined, prominently so beneath, subundulate, pale straw-coloured ex- ternally, villous within on the disc: the three inner petals black- purple at the base. Stamens as in the genus, with very long sinuous anther-cells. Fruit large, oval-rotundate, red, muricated, acute, three-celled, containing many large seeds. Our Plate exhibits a small portion of a male plant, with flowers and fruit,— nat. size. Fig. 1. The united stamens, crowning a large fleshy-lobed gland,— magnified. a” aentae karte. OSA aed: 4 OK MANE OTE RT LAT RMT | StS GATS bean “haaareerca on - vee _ saaecediiads . italy saph tanga wore ; : 5 — eeciinatai fir Fre eect aay eerie va ven Tver? Meee eee hae ha : said! Ota Parris VEPersttety ait Wesek wast ey " “<0 Wien AA ot kk ; Vincent Brooks, imp Tas. 5146. RHODODENDRON NUTTALLIL. Mr. Nuttall’s Rhododendron. Nat. Ord. Ertcace#.—DEcANDRIA Monoeynia. Gen. Char. (Vide supra, TaB. 4336.) RHopopENDRON arboreum ; foliis maximis coriaceis ovalibus utrinque obtusis apiculatis subtus valde reticulatis fusco-squamosis, floribus maximis, corym- bis 4—6-floris, lobis calycinis crassiusculis oblongo-ovalibus obtusis, corolla subcampanulata, staminibus, capsula 5-loculari ealyce persistente 3-tecta, _- seminibus pallidis ovato-lanceolatis lato-marginatis, marginibus erosis. Nudt. Ruopopenpron Nuttallii. Booth, MS. Nutt. in Hook. Kew Gard. Misc. 0. 5. p. 855. ae 2 As Victoria regia is justly considered the Queen of Water- lilies, so the plant here represented may with equal justice be called the Prince of Rhododendrons. Yet our figure, though on a quarto size, does no justice to the plant itself, | the Rhododendron House at Kew in May of the present year; and of which a drawing of the flowering portion, on impen folio, is now before us. The height was nine feet. The principal branch was terminated by a corymb of ten or twelve flowers, the cluster measuring fifteen inches across: the corollas white, yellow in the centre, having measured six inches across, with a tinge of blush on the lobes; and the bud, just before erie is of the same length. The leaves have their charms too: the largest of them a foot long, including the short thick Lap 8 rm much puckered on the superior surface, that is swollen or b ee in the areoles of the network, and these reflect a strong lig @ Nor does this include all the beauties of the plant. The ste. : long before it is developed, is enclosed within a scaly me ; : May so call it, six inches long and nearly four inches a ie = very much resembling a pine-cone or the flower-head of s : South African Proteaceous plant ; and the large Son 3 are richly coloured too, almost white below, deep-rose 1m one centre, and tipped with green. Somewhat similar but sm Scale-buds envelope the infant foliage, which, too, is red when it NOVEMBER Ist, 1859. as it floweredin first bursts forth. Such a Rhododendron well merits the name of the late Mr. Nuttall, given to it by its discoverer, Mr. Booth; and we know that but a little before his lamented death, one of the last sources of pleasure he derived from the vegetable creation, which he had so long and so successfully studied, was the information of his namesake having for the first time flow- ered (at Kew), and the sight of the large drawing above referred to. The species was discovered by Mr. Booth, in the “ Duphla ~ Hills, at Meré Patao, about Seram’s village, on the banks of the Papoo, Bhotan, growing in swampy grounds, among Yews and Oaks, sometimes epiphytically on trees, and at an elevation of from four to five thousand feet above the sea-level.” We have seen a drawing of a specimen in the possession of Mr. Standish, which flowered on the Continent ; and Lady Dorothy Nevill in- forms us she has a plant showing flower at this time (October, 1859). __ Descr. Height thirty feet in its native country ; when an epi- phyte, it rises only fre m twelve to thirteen feet, and has then thick tuberous r Leaves from six inches to nearly a foot long, firm and coria acute, strongly reticulated, and _blistered or bullate in the areoles, dark-green, much paler beneath, and there partially covered with numerous minute, circular, peltate, resinous scales. Corymb varying in size according to the number of flowers, which are from four to ten or twelve. Calyz an inch long, with large, obovate, greenish lobes, tinged with red. Corolla pure-white, fragrant, having a deep-yellow tinge at the base within ; the lobes slightly tinged with rose-colour: ‘wbe broad- infundibuliform, with five cavities at the base; the lobes: very large, broad, and obtuse. Stamens ten, curved upwards. Ovary ovato-rotundate, scaly, five- to ten-celled. Style shorter than the tube of the corolla. Stigma very large, peltate, with five lobes. _ Fig. 1. Stamen. 2. Pistil. 3. Section of ovary. 4. Seales on the under side of the leaf :—magnified. SAT, bs | oe W Fitch, del et Jith. Tas. 5147. BRYOPHYLLUM pro.tiFrERvuM. Proliferous Bryophyllum. Nat. Ord. CrassULACE#.—OcTANDRIA MonoGyYNI4. Gen. Char. Calyx inflatus, ante florescentiam vesicularis, vix ad medium 4- fidus, lobis 4-valvatis. Corolla gamopetala, hypogyna ; tudo longo, cylindraceo, basi obtuse tetragono ; lodis 4, ovato-triangularibus, acutis. Stamina 8, tubi basi adnata. Glandule 4, oblongee.—Suffrutices carnosi, erecti, ramosi, glabri. Folia opposita, crassa, petiolata ; alia impari-pinnata ; nunc segmentis 1-2-jugis, inter- dum nullis, terminali maximo interdum solitario, pinnis ovatis oblongis crenatis, crenis (in B. calycino) punctum opacum in plantulam facile evolutam gerentibus. Cytne paniculata, terminales, nunc prolifere. Flores e flavo rubentes. Calyx : fere Silene inflate. De Cand. BryopHyiiuM proliferum ; elatum, caule tetragono, foliis pinnatis, rachi late alata, pinnis oppositis oblongo-lanceolatis sessilibus crenato-serratis, cyms terminalibus proliferis, fluribus nutantibus, calyce tetragono, staminibus styloque exsertis. Bryopuy.iuo proliferum. Bowie, MS. If the two genera, Kalanchoe, Adans., and Bryophyllum, Salisb., are to be retained, the present singular plant belongs to the latter genus, indicated by the monophyllous inflated calyx; and the species, though possessed of little beauty to recommend it, is nevertheless very peculiar, and deserving of place in a green- house to those who cultivate succulent plants. ‘The stout, and at the base almost woody stems, attain, with us, a height of 10-12 feet, and when the copious corymbs of flowers appear, they are disfigured by the quantity of proliferous shoots spring- ing from the bases of the pedicels ; whereas, as 18 well known, a similar power of reproduction exists in the crenatures of the leaves of Bryophyllum calycinum, especially when the leaves come in contact with the soil. It is a native of Madagascar, but certainly neither under Bryophyllum nor under Kalanchoe is there anything described like it. There is a Kalanchoe Delugoensis, — as its specific name implies, of Delagoa Bay, a good deal to the | east of Natal, but all that is said of it is (Eckl. et Zeyh. Enum. NOVEMBER Ist, 1859. Pl. Afr. Austr. Extratropica, p. 305), “ Exemplum et mutilum cel. Commodore Owen ad Delagoa Bay legit, et nobiscum com- municavit.” Our plants were raised from cuttings, sent from the Cape of Good Hope, and which he received as dried specimens for the herbarium, by Mr. Bowie. The species requires a warm and dry house for its successful cultivation. Drsor. Stem ten to twelve feet high, moderately branched, - rounded and terete, and almost woody below; the branches acutely tetragonal, very succulent, as is the whole plant. Leaves a foot to a foot and a half long, opposite, impari-pinnate, with about five opposite pairs of leaflets, which are sessile, subde- current, oblong-lanceolate, obtuse, crenate. Rachis very thick, deeply furrowed in front. nflorescence terminal, in compound, pedunculated, proliferous cymes: sometimes all are proliferous, at other times the pedicels bear drooping flowers, one and a half inch long. Calye large, inflated, bluntly tetragonal, with four, short, acute lobes. Corolla longer than the calyx, urceo- lato-cylindrical. Zimé four-lobed. Stamens exserted, alternately longer. Ovaria with a blunt scale or gland at the base of each. s Fig. 1. Corolla and stamen. 2. The same, laid open :—magnified. Tas. 5148. HOYA Cumin Mr. Cuming’s Hoya. Nat. Ord. ASCLEPIADE®.—PENTANDRIA DIGYNIA. Gen. Char. Calyx brevis, pentaphyllus, plus minusve alte quinquefida, laciniis planis v. reflexis, estivatione valvata. Corona staminea 5-phylla; foliolis de- pressis patentibus, vel plus minusve gynostegio verticaliter adnatis carnosis an- gulo interiore in dentem antheree incumbentem producto. Gynostegium breve. Anthere membrana terminate. Masse pollinis basi affixe, oblonge, compress, conniventes, seepius margine pellucide. "Stigma muticum, cum papilla media obtusa, v. subapiculatum. Folliculi leves v. appendiculis instructi, subpoly- pteri. Semina comosa.—Frutices vel suffrutices Indici v. Moluccani, rarissime Africani, volubiles, scandentes aut decumbentes ; foliis carnosis v. coriaceis v. mem- branaceis; floribus umbellatis; umbellis extra-axillaribus sepius multifloris. Dene. in De Cand. Prodr. Hoya Cumingiana ; scandens glabra, ramis foliosis, foliis ovato-cordatis obtusis subcarnosis subtus venosis papillo-velutinis brevi-petiolatis, pedunculis plu- rifloris brevibus pedicellisque glabris, corolle laciniis triangularibus acutis reflexis extrorsum glabris, introrsum papillosis, coron staminex foliolis ovatis supra convexis, marginibus revolutis, angulo interiore porrecto, stig- mati apiculato incumbente. Dene. in De Cand. Hoya Cumingiana. Dene. in De Cand. Prodr. v. 8. p. 636. Flowering specimens of the pretty Hoya here figured were communicated to us by Mr. Lowe, of the Clapton Nursery, who received the plant from the Eastern Archipelago, gathered either in Singapore or in Borneo. It probably is a native of both those islands, and of the Malayan Islands generally, being unquestion- ably the H. Cumingiana of Decaisne in De Candolle’s 5 Prodro- mus,’ from the Philippine Islands (n. 1480 of Mr. Cuming’s dis- tributed specimens). There are, indeed, some trifling discre- pancies between the character in the ‘ Prodromus ‘and our spe- cimens, almost wholly, however, depending on the more or less pubescent character, a circumstance extremely liable to vary. Descr. A. climber, with terete, green branches, slightly pu- bescent, as are the very short petioles, the peduncles, and calyz. Leaves coriaceous, elliptical-ovate, cordate at the base, suddenly NOVEMBER Ist, 1859. acute at the point, very indistinctly penninerved. Peduncles a little supra-axillary, three-quarters of an inch long, bearing an umbel of flowers, which are drooping: pedicels an inch long, slender. Calya quinquepartite, the segments oblong-ovate, ob- tuse. Flowers tawny-yellow. Corod/a with its five obtuse lobes reflexed. Staminal crown purple in the centre. Fig. 1. Flower. 2. Calyx and pistils :—magnified. i ape ola de nga Fc i Sgn ac y A] acon CRRA" odks,imp | : ia Vincent br Tap. 5149. DISSOTIS IrvinGiana. Dr. Irving's Dissotis. Nat. Ord. MELASTOMACE#.—DECANDRIA Monoeynia. Gen. Char. Dissot1s, Benth. Calyx ovoideo-tubulosus, ovario mediantibus costis adnatus vel demum liber; Jimdi lacinie 5, decidue, apice pluri-setose ; squame palmatim setose, in tubum sparse vel subseriatim disposite. Petala 5, ampla. Stamina 10, antheris \ineari-falcatis rostratis uniporosis 5 petalis oppo- sita, connectivo longissimo filiformi postice in appendices 2 tenues producto, 5 laciniis calycinis opposita, antheris dimidio thinoribus connectivo brevi sed pariter filiformi et bicalearato. Ovarium disco setoso coronatum, 5-loculare. Stylus equalis v. superne leviter incrassatus, apice truncato-dilatatus et stigmatosus. Capsula calyce inclusa, fere ‘libera, 5-locularis, valvulis 5 loculicide dehiscens. Semina numerosa, cocbleata.—Herbe Africana, erecta, habitu Cheetogastris Americanis approximantes. Benth. in Niger Flora, p. 346. _Dissoris IJrvingiana ; ubique pilis patentibus hispidissima herbacea copiose ramosa, ramis tetragonis, foliis elongato-lanceolatis brevi-petiolatis, calycis tubi tuberculis elongatis clavatis. ‘ From tropical Western Africa, whence I received specimens hered in Abeokuta, and, more re- oS ns from the late Mr. Barter, while ion. Both these travellers have te; the former more especially — in the cause of humanity, atter to the love of science and the arduous duties under his energetic friend, and most successful commander of the Expedition, Dr. Baikie. During upwards of two years’ exposure to the climate, Mr. Barter enjoyed excellent health, under the most perilous and trying circumstances, and it. is only recently that the news of his death has reached England, from a rapid attack of dysentery, at Rabba, and while surrounded with comparative comforts :—the first death that has occurred (such has been the care and attention devoted to health) among Dr. Baikie’s small party.* from the late Dr. Irving, gat cently, both seeds and specime Botanist to the Niger E: since fallen a sacrifice to __* Our readers will be glad to learn that on the official news of the death of Mr. Barter having reached the Foreign Office, the First Secretary of State of. that Department, Lord John Russell, immediately gave instruction for a successor NOVEMBER Ist, 1859. The genus Dissotis, chiefly differing from Osbeckia by the very long connectivum and dissimilar anthers, was established by. Mr. Bentham on a Sierra Leone plant, the Osbeckia grandifiora, Sm., and the Osbeckia Senegambiensis ? of Guill. and Perott., of which a specimen in my herbarium from Heudelot, Mr. Bentham observes, is apparently the same. Our present species is very different from that in the form of the leaves and of the scales, or tubercles (as they may rather be called in this instance), of the tube of the calyx; the whole plant, too, is much more villous, and the root is in no way tuberous. Descr. Root subrepent, perennial ?, sending out copious black fibres. Stem one to two feet and more high, herbaceous, clothed as is the foliage, with long, villous, spreading hairs, in the native dried specimens having a purplish cast upon them, obtusely four- angular: dranches copious, more acutely four-angled. Leaves two and a half to three and a half inches long, shortly petiolate, lanceolate, three- to five-nerved, somewhat rigid, quite entire. Flowers solitary, terminal, smaller than in Dissotis grandiftora. Petals purple-rose. Oalye short, urceolate, clothed with tuber- culiform, clavate, spreading scales, each terminated with a pencil of long purplish hairs or sete; dimé of five, spreading segments, each with a gland at the point. Disc of the ovary conical, five- angled, with a few hairs on the angles, and a long tuft of hairs surrounding the style. Stamens ten, alternately small, the lesser ones with a very short connectivum, the larger ones with a very long curved one, bearing the large, purple, falcate anther, which opens with one pore at its summit. are ; ___ Fig. 1. Calyx and pistil. 9. Lower part of the tube of the calyx (including _ the ovary) and base of the style. 3, 4. The two kinds of stamens :— magnified. to be appointed, and Mr. Gustave Mann, one of the very intelligent Hanoverian gardeners of the Royal Gardens of Kew, will sail on the 24th of this month for Lagos, where preparations are making for his ascent of the Quorra to Rabba, where Dr. Baikie awaits his arrival. Tas. 5150. CATTLEYA ScuHi.Lueriana; var. concolor. Schillerian Cattleya ; whole-coloured var. Nat. Ord. OrncH1pEx —GYNANDRIA MONANDRIA. | Gen. Char. (Vide supra, Tas. 4700.) CatrLeya Schilleriana ; pseudobulbis elongatis, foliis binis ellipticis carnosis, crassis atro-purpureo maculatis, flore solitario vivide purpureo-rubro petalis undulatis sepalisque immaculatis, labelli lobo terminali maximo reniformi patente margine ciliato albo. Cattieya Schilleriana. Reichenb. in Berl. Allg. Gartenzeit. Oct. 17, 1847. Var. 8. labello toto purpureo (lobi terminalis margine excepto). This really splendid Cad#leya was communicated to us in Sep- tember, 1859, by Messrs. Backhouse and Son, of the York Nur- series, having been imported direct from Brazil. Dr. Lindley pronounces it to be the Cattleya Schilleriana, Reichenbach, of which the author says, “pseudobulbo C. Aclandia, flore C. gut- tate.” To us it seems very distinct from both, and much hand- somer than either. In the original species the lip is white, with purple veins. : a Duscr. Pseudobulé elongated, clavate, branched. Flowering- branch with two unequally sized, thick, fleshy, elliptical eaves, dark-green above, a little paler beneath, sprinkled with black- purple spots on both sides, the larger spots on the upper side. From a sheathing, compressed, membranaceous bract, between the two leaves, consequently terminal, arises a peduncle, bearing a solitary, large, rich red-purple flower. Sepals spreading, ob- long-lanceolate, nearly straight ; pe/a/s also spreading, nearly of the same shape, waved. Lzp-large, deflexed, three-lobed, lateral lobes involute, enclosing the column, middle lobe very large, spreading, reniform, marked with radiating veins, the margin fimbriato-ciliate and white. Column rather short, nearly white, — dashed with purple. Fig. 1. Column and anther. 2. Pollen-masses :—magnified. NOVEMBER lst, 1859. bei pr ee, Ss paRaae MYST a MU MN WW Vincent Brooks, hmp. Tas. 5151. SPIRAAA Dove.asi. Douglas's Spirea. Nat. Ord. Rosacez.—IcosanDRIA D1-PENTAGYNIA. Gen. Char. (Vide supra, TaB. 4795.) Spirza Douglasii; frutex erectus, ramulis canis, foliis elliptico- vel lineari- oblongis obtusis apices versus grosse serratis subtus cano-tomentosis, pani- cula, oblonga v. pyramidata, calyce tomentoso intus glabro, lobis reflexis, disco eglanduloso, ovariis glaberrimis. . Sprr#a Douglasii. Hook. . Bor. Am. v.1.p.172. Paxton, Mag. of Bot. cum ic. Flore des Serres, v. 2. t. 2. This very beautiful shrub was discovered by Douglas, in British Columbia, and is common on the banks of the Oregon and straits of St. Juan de Fuca; it has also been found in Ca- lifornia by Lobb, n. 341, under which number another species has been sent by the same collector, of which we shall give a figure shortly. It was first raised at the Royal Botanic Gar- dens of Glasgow, from Douglas’s seeds, and since from those of Lobb. It flowered this year in the Royal Gardens, Kew, and in that of Mr. Noble, of Bagshot, to whom we are indebted for the specimen here figured, together with those of 8. Nobleana and S. callosa, wh ill shortly be figured, and under which will be found som her remarks upon this. : Descr. A handsome shrué, four to six feet high, with reddish, erect dranches ; the young ones covered with hoary pubescence. Leaves three to five inches long, rather variable in shape, linear- oblong or elliptic, blunt, rarely acute, serrated beyond the mid- dle, the serratures tipped with small glands, glabrous or pube- rulous above, densely covered with whitish tomentum beneath. Inflorescence a dense, terminal, erect thyrsus of deep-pinkish s, and calya densely pubescent. Calye- flowers. Peduncle, pedicel. / : lobes veflexed. Disc not furnished with glands or thickened ; tube glabrous inside. Stamens very long. Ovaries glabrous. J. D. H. s Fig. 1. Flower. 2. Calyx and ovaries. 3. Stamen :—magnified. DECEMBER Ist, 1859. \\ Ny me Tas, 5152. CAMELLIA Sasanqva; var. anemontflora. Sasanqua ; Anemone-flowered var. Nat. Ord. CAMELLIACE2.—MONADELPHIA POLYANDRIA. Gen. Char. (Vide supra, TaB. 2745.) CaMELLIA Sasanqua ; fruticosa v. arborescens, ramulis petiolisque puberulis, foliis ellipticis v. ovato-lanceolatis acutis subtus subaveniis, floribus inodoris, petalis (albis) obcordato-emarginatis vel bilobis, staminibus glabris, ovario lanato, stylis connatis, capsula pubescente. Seem. Cameira Sasanqua. Thunb. Fl. Jap. p. 273. t. 30. Seem. in Trans. of Linn. Soc. v. 23. p. 343 (where copious synonyms are given). B. var. flore semipleno. Lind. Bot. Reg. 1815, ¢. 12; 1827, ¢. 1091. Seem. L.c. p. 344, not Sims in Bot. Mag. t. 2080, which according to Seemann 18 Thea maliflora, Seem. l.c. (Camellia roseflora, Hook. Bot. Mag. t. 5044). y. anemoniflora ; foliis ovato-lanceolatis longe acuminatis, floribus plenis, petalis exterioribus (albis) obovato-oblongis bilobis, staminibus fere omnibus in petalos spathulatos (flavos) exterioribus multo brevioribus mutatis, stylis (rarissime abortu 4) liberis v. connatis. Seem. 1c. p. 251. (Tas. Nosrr. 5152.) YEtLow Camellia. Fortune, Journ. to Tea Country, p. 339. Gard. Chron. for 1859, p. 807. This is one of the many interesting plants which our Gardens owe to Mr. Fortune’s successful voyages to China. ‘That active traveller considered it to be a variety of the Waratah Camellia group; but Dr. Seemann, with more justice, considers it to be a variety of Camellia Sasanqua. “ Hitherto,” writes Dr. Seemann, in an Addendum to his elaborate synopsis of the genera and species of Camellia and Thea, “ the Waratah form of Camella was only known to occur in C. Japonica ; and the yellow colour is certainly quite a new feature in this genus, deserving the greatest attention of Horticulturists. — That C. Sasanqua has a tendency to assume a yellow tinge 1s evident even from the single-flowered state, as will be seen in the figure in the Bot. Reg. t. 942, where the outer series of stamens displays the prim- rose-colour peculiar to the Yellow Camellia. Fig. 1. Pistil,—magnified. DECEMBER Ist, 1859. WFiteh,del.et. hth. Vincent Brooks p- Tas. 5153. STATICE Boureret. Bourgeau's Statice. Nat. Ord. PLUMBAGINE#.—PENTANDRIA PEN TAGYNIA. Gen. Char. (Vide supra, Tas. 3776.) Statice (Pteroclados) Bourgiai ; basi suffrutescens, foliis amplis petiolatis stellato-puberulis oblongis basi attenuata subsinuatis vel seepe lyratis, lobo terminali ovato obtuso mucronato basi sepe sublobato lateralibus 1-3 auri- culeeformibus rotundatis parvis irregularibus sepe cum terminali confluenti- bus, scapo compresso adpressiuscule piloso superne corymboso-paniculato, ramis ancipitibus vel angustissime alatis, ramulis angulatis, spiculis 1-2- floris ad ramulorum extremitatem 9--3-fasciculatis, bracteis inferioribus rubello-membranaceis puberulis oblongis nervo dorsali excurrente longe mucronato-aristatis, interiori subcoriacea rubella duplo longiori puberula ciliata apice truncata nervo carinali excurrente seepe mucronulata, calycis tubo glabro, limbo eroso truncato nervis excurrentibus 5-aristato. Boiss. Statice Bourgiwi. Webb in Bourgeau Plantes in De Cand. Prodr. v. 12. p. 638. Can. Exsicc. n. 564. Boissier This is one of many specimens of rare and curious species of plants with which the excellent Bourgeau, prince of botanical collectors, has enriched the herbaria of scientific botanists. It was found by him on his last voyage to that interesting group of islands at Lancerotte. Seeds which we likewise received from him have been raised, and our figure is taken from one of the plants so reared, in a cool greenhouse, in August, 1859... M. Boissier places it next to 8. puberula, Webb (see Bot. Mag. Tab. 3701): the leaves indeed appear to be very distinct, but they are described as being very variable ; the branches are more winged: but I do not find the difference the size of the flowers mentioned by Boissier. Of the genus Sfafice as now cut down in the Prodromus of De Candolle (excluding Acantholimon, Boiss., A2 species, Gonio- limon, Boiss., 7 species, Armeria, Willd., 52 species, and some minor genera, all formerly incorporated in Statice), there are now It is true, however, the 110 species enumerated by Boissier. DECEMBER Ist, 1859. Fi igs Py distinctions are very finely drawn of many of them, and the per- manency of some may be questioned. Descr. This is in many respects so closely allied to the S. puberula, Webb, above noticed, that we may sum the distin- guishing characters in few words. S. Bourgiei has the stem and branches more winged, and leaves so waved and lobed in the lower half as almost to constitute a lyrate leaf. Fig. 1. Stellate hairs of the leaf. 2. Flower. 3. Persistent calyx, enclosing the fruit. 4. Bract :—magnified. BY By W Fitch, del. et ith, Vincent Broaks, inp. Tas. 5154, CALCEOLARIA rrexvosa. Flexuose Calceolaria. Nat. Ord. ScROPHULARINE®.—DIANDRIA MoNnoGyYNIA. Gen. Char. (Vide supra, Tas. 4929.) CaLcEoLaRtIA flexuosa ; fruticosa villosa, ramis flexuosis, foliis ovatis crenatis, basi cordatis supra asperis subtus venosis, panicula corymbosa foliosa, ca- lycis villosi Jaciniis obtusiusculis corolle (sub-)concoloris, labio superiore calyce breviore, inferiore obovato-orbiculato patente basi longiuscule con- tracto ad medium aperto. Benth. Catceoxaria flexuosa. Ruiz et Pav. Fl. Chil. et Peruv.v. 1. p. 17. t. 25. f. a. A fine and rare species of this now extensive genus, and till recently scarcely known, except by the figure and description of Ruiz and Pavon, who found it in rocky places of Canta, Peru. Messrs. Veitch and Sons, of Exeter and Chelsea, have the credit of raising it from seeds sent by Mr. William Lobb from Peru, _ and it promises well, from the very dense massy panicles and large flowers, to be well calculated for a bedding-out plant. The calyces, as well as the flowers, partake largely of the yellow co- lour, and these calyces are larger in proportion than the corollas. It flowers through the summer months. a“ Descr. Stems herbaceous, suffruticose at the base, branched, branches rather weak and flexuose. Ruiz and Pavon say the plant DECEMBER Ist, 1859. the corolla), of four, nearly equal, almost cordate, broad, spread- ing sepals, slightly downy externally. Corolla full yellow ; upper lip very small and paler yellow, partly closing the aperture of the inferior lip, which is large, subglobose, and slightly downy. Stamens two, and, as well as the short style, quite enclosed by the corolla. Fig. 1. Calyx. 2. Corolla :—slightly magnified. J10d9. Vincent Brooks Imp TAB. 5155. GUTIERREZIA aymnospEermMoIDEs. Gymnosperma-like Gutierrezia. Nat. Ord. Compostrm.—Syncenesia SUPERFLUA. _ Gen. Char, Capitula 8-40-flora ; flosculi radii ligulati, pistillati, fertiles, serie simplici : disci tubulosi, perfecti, et fertiles. Involucrum campanulatum vel tur- binatum : sguame appresse, arcte imbricate, rigid, apicibus nunc subfoliaceis viridibus. Receptaculum nudum. Corolle ligule oblongz vel ovales, tubo brevi: disci infundibuliformes, 5-dentate, dentibus brevibus recurvis. Styli rami disci lineares, elongati, obtusi, villosi glabri, lines stigmaticae ad apicem continui. Achenia subobconica, teretia, pubescentia vel sericea. Pappus e squamis plurimis paleaceis linearibus oblongisve, plerumque serie duplici, persistens ; radii obso- letus vel nullus.—Plantee perennes, Americana, glabra, subglutinose, et balsamice; foliis Zinearibus lanceolatisve, integerrimis, sepius impresso-punctatis, alternis. Ca- pitula solitaria vel aggregata (nunc subterna), in paniculis corymbisve terminalibus. Flores flavi. Torr. et Gray. GuTierReEzia? (Hemiachyris) gymnospermoides ; caule herbaceo valido subsim- plici, foliis lanceolatis vel oblongo-lanceolatis inferne attenuatis apicem ver- sus seepius denticulatis mucronato-acutis, glutinosis penninerviis, capitulis confertissime corymbosis hemisphericis fere omnibus pedicellatis, involucri squamis Jinearibus acutis, receptaculo planiusculo, ligulis 25-30 angustis discum vix superantibus, fl. disci 40-60, acheniis radii glaberrimis calvis, disci minute hirtellis pappo coroniformi dentato lacero et in fl. centralibus setoso-paleaceo superatis. 4. Gray. : GUTIERREZIA gymnospermoides. Asa Gray, Plante Wright. Texano-Neo-Mez. part 2. p. 79. ‘This is an inhabitant of San Pedro, Sonora, New Mexico, where it was detected by Mr. Charles Wright, whose fine collec- tions from that region are worked up into two valuable memours, under the title above quoted, by Dr. Asa Gray. Seeds were sent to us by Dr. Gray, and the plant pro ved hardy, flowermg in September. It has too much of the aspect of our common Flea- banes ever to become a general favourite. The species of the genus are chiefly inhabitants of South America, but extending into Mexico and California, and along the valley of the Mis- _ SISsippi. DECEMBER Ist, 1859. Dezscr. Stem herbaceous, two to four feet, slightly branched except above, where the flowering branches, as well as the flowers themselves, are corymbose. Leaves three to six inches long, lanceolate, linear and small above, the lower ones subspathulate and serrated towards the point, the rest entire. /Vowers about an inch across. Scales of the involucres subsquarrose. FVorets all yellow; those of the disc tubular-clavate, perfect, their ache- nium obovate, downy, crowned with four to six subulate, mem- branaceous scales, as long as the achenium. Ylorets of the ray ligulate ; their achenium naked. Fig. 1. Floret of the ray. 2. Floret of the disc. 3. Achenium of ditto :— J156. paddle a, > peer Tas. 5156. DIPTERACANTHUS? Herssrnu. an ee ee ee Mr. Herbst’s Dipteracanthus. Nat. Ord. ACANTHACEZ.—DiIpYNAMIA ANGIOSPERMIA. Gen. Char. (Vide supra, Tas. 4494.) Dipreracantuus? Herbstii; frutescens, ramis teretibus, scaberulis, foliis lanceolatis acuminatis in petiolum angustatis obscure sinuato-serratis, nervis crebris, inflorescentia subterminali, floribus axillis foliorum, 3—-5-fasci- culatis sessilibus, bracteis setaceis calyce equilongis, calyce subsequaliter ad basin fere 5-partito lobis subulatis, corolla puberula, tubo gracillimo dein ampliato, subeampanulato lobis 5 brevibus eequalibus recurvis bilobis, sta- minibus inclusis, filamentis basi per paria coherentibus, antheris linearibus 2-locularibus, ovario sub-1 9-o¥ lito. a ERGrn fs deci aan Se eo naceie aah Or reat ele tee Wah Onan ah very elegant plant, received from Messrs. Herbst and Ros- siter, of Rio, and sent as a native of Brazil, flowered in the Royal Gardens early in September of the present year, and continued in bloom during the two succeeding months. In the present unsettled condition of the genera of Acanthacee we have been obliged to refer it provisionally to the large genus Diptera- canthus, as the only one with the characters of which it at all agrees; at the same time we have little doubt but that it is congeneric or very closely allied to the Stephanophysum Bavkiet. of tropical Africa (Tas. Nostr. 5111), a plant which, though agreeing in many respects with the technical characters of that genus, differs (according to Pohl’s figures of the Stephanophysum) - conspicuously in habit, in the stigma not being equally bilamel- late, and in the whole form and structure of the capsule, and in wanting the bifurcate retinaculum of the seed. It 1s a most de- sirable new stove-plant. : Dzscr. An erect shrub or half-shrubby plant, of which our individual, now eightee s old, is about a yard high, spar- ingly branched, the bra earing a terminal inflorescence, consisting of numerous axillary fascicles of sessile flowers, which are conspicuous for the very long slender tube of the corolla. DECEMBER IsT, 1859. Stem and branches stout, terete, green, sparingly covered with _ small asperities. Leaves deep dull-green, the upper of a dull pale-purple beneath, five to seven inches long, by one and three quarters to two inches broad, rather thick in texture, lanceolate, acuminate, obscurely sinuate, serrate, with numerous. stout arch- ing veins, glabrous, or with a few short scattered transparent hairs, which also appear on the inflorescence and calyx. Flowers three to five together, fully three inches long, minutely pubes- cent. Calyx red-purple, three-quarters of an inch long, five- cleft nearly to the base, with two subulate bracts of equal length with itself. Corolla pale rose-purple, abruptly bent, almost geniculate where the slender tube suddenly enlarges; limb of five, short, equal, white, patent or recurved, bilobed divisions. - Stamens five, ncluded. Ovary with about twelve ovules. J.D. H. Fig. 1.’ Corolla, laid open. 2. Stamens. 3. Calyx and pistil. 4. Ovary. 5. Transverse, and 6, vertical section of ovary. 7. Ovule:—all magnified. aah Soe