CURTIS’S BOTANICAL MAGAZINE, COMPRISING THE Plants of the Ropal Gardens of Kev, AND OF OTHER BOTANICAL ESTABLISHMENTS IN GREAT BRITAIN; WITH SUITABLE DESCRIPTIONS; BY SIR JOSEPH DALTON HOOKER, M. ae O.B., K.C.5;, EESis 0L.8;,: 20. D.C.L. OXON., LL.D. CANTAB., CORRESPONDENT OF THE INSTITUTE OF FRANCE. SAA AA RAR ft) VOL. XXXIX. OF THE THIRD SERIES. (Or Vol. CIX. of the Whole Work.) SRARRAR AR AA RAR A “Fair pledges of a fruitful tree, Why do ye fall so fast ? Your date is not so past, But you aad go stay here yet aw hile To'blush and gently smile.”—Hrrricx. LONDON: L. REEVE’& CO., 5, HENRIETTA STREET, COVENT GARDEN. ee 1883, [All rights reserved.| Mo. Bot. Garden, Ae TO HERR MAX LEICHTLIN, BADEN BADEN. My pear Sir, It gives me great pleasure to offer you the dedication of a volume of the Borantcat Magazine, in . _ Tecognition of your eminent services to Horticulture ; and as _ aslight mark of that esteem which I, in common with the intelligent gardening world of Europe, entertain for your knowledge, skill, and enthusiasm, and for the liberality with which the treasures of your garden are distributed amongst _ your fellow-Horticulturists. Believe me, with great regards, Very sincerely yours, J. D. HOOKER. — Royat Garpens, Kew, December 1st, 1883, 6665. Vincent’ Brooks Day &Son Imp MS. del, J.N-Ritch hth Tas, 6665. DORYANTHES Pacmnrr. Native of Queensland. Nat. Ord. AmarYLuIpex.—Tribe AGAVER. Genus Doryantues, Oorr. ; (Benth. et Hook. J. Gen. Pl. vol. iii. p. 739, ined.) DoryantueEs -Palmeri; foliis perplurimis patentim recurvis 5-6-pedalibus 4-6 poil. latis anguste ensiformi-lanceolatis subplicatis nervis crassis prominulis, apice in tubum sphacelatum cylindraceum 4-5-poll. abrupte angustatis, caule y. scapo stricto elato 6-10-pedali foliis parvis erectis lineari-lanceolatis instructo, inflorescentia thyrsoidea bracteata e spicis perplurimis paucifloris secus rhachim brevem crassam constante, bracteis coloratis exterioribus vaginantibus oblongis acutis interioribus lanceolatis concavis floribus brevioribus, perianthii tubo supra ovarium coloratum. brevissime, segmentis lineari-oblongis obtusis extus ‘coccineis erecto-patentibus, interioribus dorso crasse ‘costatis, filamentis inferne incrassatis, antheris breviter oblongis. ; D. Palmeri, W. Hill MSS.; Benth. Fl. Austrat. vol. vi. p. 402; Gard. Chron. 1874, vol. i. p. 181, ewm ic. xylog. f. 44, 45 (icones in Fl. des Serres iterate et incaute colorate), ef-I881, vol. i. p. 408, f. 64; Regel Gartenfl. 1874. When, in the very commencement of ‘this century, the prototype of the genus Doryanthes (D. excélsa, Plate 1685) flowered for the first time in Europe, it was regarded as one of the wonders of the vegetable kingdom; and all the more so from the singular fact that the above-mentioned flowering was that of a solitary flower “which came to per- fection at Kew from a portion of stem without roots, which had been cut many months before in New Holland.” This fact, overlooked by some of the later historians of the genus, is recorded by its founder, Dr. Correa de Serra, in the sixth volume of the Linnaan Society’s ‘Transactions, where the genus is well figured and described in a paper read December 2nd, 1800. Though very rarely flowering im this country, D. ewcelsa-has continued in cultivation in establishments provided with space enough for so gigantic an amaryllid, along with its allies, the Fourcroyas and JANUARY Ist, 1883. Agaves ; but it was not till seventy years after its dis- covery that the present even more gigantic species was made known by Mr. Hill, Government Botanist of Queens- land, who found it on elevated rocks between Moreton Bay and Darling Downs. From the specimens then brought, which flowered in the Queensland Botanical Gardens in 1870, and were exhibited at the Intercolonial Exhibition in Sydney, together with a drawing made by Miss Scott, the description of D. Palmeri by Mr. Bentham, in the “ Flora Australiensis,” was taken. This description, though accurate, is necessarily incomplete; it takes no notice of the ribbing of the leaf, nor of their singular tubular brown tips, the latter a character common to both species, though exaggerated in this; nor of the fact that the ovules and seeds, though inserted in two series, are SO superposed as to form one row in each cell; in which respect the genus differs from all others of the tribe Agavew to which it belongs, and of which tribe it is the sole extra American representative. Though, as above stated, Doryanthes Palmeri was not known as a distinct species till 1870, it must have been discovered a considerable time before that date, for the plant which is here figured has been in the Royal Gardens for upwards of sixteen years, under the name of D. excelsa. As a species D. Palmeri differs from D. excelsa in its much larger size, broader, longer, more ribbed leaves, thyrsoid inflorescence, short and coloured bracts, and much shorter not recurved perianth-segments, which are a pale red within, and in the short anthers : it commenced flowering in the Succulent House at Kew in 1881, and was trans- ferred thence to the South Octagon of the Temperate House, where it commenced to open its flowers in March, and continued in beauty for two months, finally ripening its seeds in October. The name Palmeri records the services to Horticulture of A. H. Palmer, Esq., formerly Colonial Secretary of Queensland. Duscr. Roots fibrous. and recurved, ensiform, si six inches broad, slightly six inches long. Stem Leaves very numerous, spreading x to eight feet long and four to ribbed, tip brown tubular, four to or scape eight to ten feet high, clothed with lanceolate short erect bracts. Inflorescence three feet long, thyrsoid, compact, of many short few- flowered spikes surrounded by red-brown oblong acute bracts, the inner of which are shorter than the perianth. Flowers scarlet, from the tubular ovary, which is one and a half inch long, to the tips of the segments, which are erecto-patent, narrowly oblong, obtuse, and two inches long. Stamens shorter than the perianth-segments, fila- ments gradually narrowed upwards; anthers half an inch long, yellow in bud, then purple. Style deeply grooved, base conical ; stigmas very minute, radiating —J. D. H. Fig. 1, End of leaf; 2, portion of inflorescence :—both of natural size ; 3, reduced figure of whole plant; 4, outer, and 5, inner perianth-segments ; 6, top of ovary and style; 7, top of style and stigma :—all enlarged. 6666 Vincent Brooks Day & Son Imp s § 4 O: €> of = 2 HA MS. del, JN. Fitch Tas. 6666. NEMASTYLIS ACUTA, Native of the South-Western United States. Nat. Ord. In1pEa.—Tribe SISYRINCHIER. Genus Nemastyuis, Wuttall; (Benth. et Hook. f. Gen, Pl. vol. iii. p. 696, ined.) Nemastyuis acuta; bulbo ovoideo tunicis pluribus membranaceis brunneis, foliis basalibus 2-3 elongatis linearibus Plicatis glabris, caule gracili furcato, ramis 2~4 apice floriferis basi folio reducto bracteatis, spathez biflore valvis 2 lanceo- latis r'gidulis striatis apice membranaceis, pedicellis spatha zequilongis, ovario turbinato, limbi segmentis oblongis ceruleis patulis, staminum filamentis brevissimis, antheris erectis linearibus luteis post anthesin revolutis, styli ramis subulato-cylindricis inter antheras patulis apice stigmatosis. N. acuta, Herbert in Bot. Mag. sub t. 3779; Engelm. et A. Gray Pl. Lindheim. parti. p.27; Baker in Journ. Linn. Soe. vol. xvi. p.103; Van Houtte Flore des Serres, t. 2171. N. geminiflora, Nuttall in Trans. Amer. Phil. Soc. vol. v. p. 157. Ixta acuta, Barton Fl. North. Amer. vol. i. p. 76. Of this curious and little-known genus of bulbous Tridacess there are three closely-allied species in the Southern United States. It is remarkable for having its Style divided down to the base into six branches, which spread two together between each of the three anthers at a right angle from their base, and are stigmatose only on the slender tip. The flowers are a bright azure-blue, and are very fugitive. In the present species they are, so far as I have seen, always two in a cluster, one appearing after the other has faded ; but in its close ally, NV. celestina, they are usually solitary. It has been introduced several times into European gardens of late years. We had it from Mr. Chas. Green in 1874, from Mr. Wm. Bull in 1875, and it was figured in the “Flore des Serres” in 1875, from speci- mens sent by Max Leichtlin of Baden Baden. Our drawing was made from plants that flowered at Kew in the summer JANUARY Ist, 1883. of 1882, which came from the collection of the late G. C. Joad, Esq., of Wimbledon. Descr. Bulb ovoid, about an inch in diameter, with many dark-brown membranous tunics. Basal leaves two or three, not distichous, sheathing the stem at the base, then pro- duced into a linear plicate glabrous lamina half a foot or a foot long, of moderately firm texture. Stem slender, terete, a foot or more long, with two, three, or four ascending branches, each ending in a spathe and bracteated at the base by a reduced leaf. Spathe of two lanceolate valves above an inch long, green and moderately firm in texture, membranous at the tips. Flowers two in a cluster, with pedicels as long as the spathe. Ovary small, turbinate ; perianth-limb slit down to the base into six similar oblong azure-blue spreading segments about an inch long. Stamens three, erect, with very short filaments, the bright-yellow erect linear anthers soon curling up after the flower is expanded. Branches of the style spreading horizontally, not more than half as long as the anthers, fruit a small coriaceous loculicidal capsule, with several subglobose seeds in each cell.—J. G. Baker. Fig. 1, Stamens and styles ; 2, front view of a stamen ; 3, back view of astamen; 4, style, with its six spreading forks :—all more or less enlarged. ie Siti. AS ¥ on imp &S entBrooks Day nec Lu iS P { Fitch hth T 4-T itu it e oO es a ‘Tas. 6667. BABIANA xtncens. Native of the Cape of Good Hope. Nat. Ord. In1pEx.—Tribe Ix1nm. Genus Banrana, Ker; (Benth. et Hook.f. Gen. Pl. vol. iii. p- 706, ined.) Bastana ringens; bulbo globoso tunicis pluribus membranaceis brunneis, foliis basalibus 6-8 caulis basin longe amplectentibus linearibus plicatis glabris rigidulis, caule piloso pedali vel sesquipedali medio rami brevi arcuato florifero et sub apicem altero abortivo predito, floribus densis secundis spicatis erectis, spathe valvis 2 magnis lanceolatis rigidulis crebre striatis apice sphacelatis, perianthii tubo infundibulari viridulo, limbo bilabiato splendide rubro, labio superiori oblongo integro longe unguiculato, labio inferiori segmentis 5, centra- libus oblongis unguiculatis, lateralibus minoribus lanceolatis reflexis, genitalibus ' exsertis. AntTHotyza ringens, Lian. Sp. Plant. vol. i. p. 54; Miller Gard. Dict. edit. 8, No.1; Thunb. Fl. Capen. edit. Schultz, p- 39, non Andrews. Banana ringens, Ker in Konig et Sims Ann. vol. i. p. 223; Gen. Irid. p. 152; Lodd. Bot. Cab. t. 1006; Herbert in Bot. Reg. 1838, Misc. p- 18; Klatt in Linnea, vol. xxxii. p. 732; Baker in Journ. Linn. Soc. vol. xvi. p- 166. This is one of the most curious and striking of all the Cape bulbs, and it is interesting historically as being one of the first Cape plants known to botanists. It was intro- duced by the Dutch in the seventeenth century, and ex- cellently figured and described by Commelinus in 1697 in his “Hortus Medicus Amstelodamensis ” (yOL 1... p. sl, tab. 41) under the name of “Gladiolo zthiopico similis planta angustifolia, caule .hirsuto, flore rubicundissimo,” by Gladiolus «wthiopicus what we now call Antholyza wthiopica being intended. It has never been grown in England except casually as a curiosity, and whenever intro- duced appears to have been soon lost. Philip Miller had it at Chelsea in 1759, Loddiges at Hackney from 1820 to 1825, and in 1838 it ripened its seeds with Dean Herbert at Spofforth in Yorkshire in the open air, standing out of doors in a pot of sandy loam, after having been kept during the winter in a greenhouse. Of late years we have had JANUARY Ist, 1883, living specimens sent from Mr. Barr in 1878, and Sir Chas. Strickland in 1879: Our drawing was made from a plant that flowered at Kew in the summer of last year, received from Mr. Harman. Ms Descr. Bulb globose, about an inch in diameter, with numerous brown membranous tunics. Leaves six or eight in a distichous basal rosette, sheathing tightly the lower part of the stem for several inches, produced above the sheath into an erect linear plicate glabrous lamina of firm texture. Stem pilose, a foot or afoot and a half long, with a short arcuate branch bearing a dense secund spike of flowers below its middle, and another or sometimes two near the top, represented only by small bracts. Spathe about an inch and a half long, clasping tightly the perianth- tube, composed of two lanceolate valves of firm texture, the outer one both broader and longer than the inner. Perianth with a green funnel-shaped tube as long as or a little longer than the spathe; limb bright crimson, bilabiate, the upper lip oblong, acute, with a long claw with incurved edges, the lower lip shorter, with five segments, the three central ones standing forward, the two side ones small, lanceolate, reflexed. Stamens and style wrapped round by the incurved edges of the claw of the upper lip of the perianth, protruded beyond its tip ; anthers linear, purplish; stigma with three falcate linear branches. Capsule oblong, coriaceous, with five or six turgid seeds in each cell,— J. G. Baker. Fig. 1, Front view of anther; 2, back view of anther ; 3, stigmas ; 4, vertical section of ovary; 5, two ovules :—adl more or less enlarged, 6668. MS. del J.N-Fitch hth. Vinrent Brooks Day & Son Imp LReeve & C2 London Tas. 6668. MICROSTYLIS merattica. Native of Borneo. Nat. Ord. OxcHipEm.—Tribe EprpeNnpRER. Genus Microstyuis, Nutt.; (Benth, et Hook.f. Gen. Pl. vol. iii. p. 404, ined.) Microsty1is metallica; caule brevi folioso, foliis e basi late vaginante sulcato ellipticis acutis 3-5-nerviis plicatis totis purpureis marginibus crispato- undulatis, scapo gracili sulcato remotifloro purpureo, bracteis parvis lanceolatis reflexis, floribus longe pedicellatis, pedicellis horizontalibus ad basin ovarii breviusculi decurvis, sepalis lineari-oblongis obtusis purpureis marginibus recurvis, petalis consimilibus sed paullo longioribus angustioribus et acutis, lubelli ambitu Jate obovato basi sagittato angulis acutis, antice rotundato eroso- dentato callis 2 minutis column antepositis, columna brevi superne dilatata truncata. M. metallica, Reichb. f. in Gard. Chron. 1879, vol. ii. p. 750. The tendency in the genus Microstylis to assume a deep purple colour, in the foliage especially, is a curious feature of many of its species; in the Ceylon M. discolor (Plate 5403), which in foliage closely resembles this, the colour is confined to the leaf excepting its margin, and to the Scape ; whilst in the present species it pervades the whole plant with the exception of the column. The colours, however, vary in kind and intensity in the same species, being no doubt much influenced by the amount of light under which the plant is grown; thus, in the specimens of this species flowered by Mr. Bull, and described by Dr. Reichenbach, the leaves are blackish purple above and rose- coloured beneath, the scape violet, the odd sepal yellow, and the lateral ones rose-coloured on one side and yellow on the other. Prof. Reichenbach further remarks that after being plunged in boiling water and dried the leaves become green, and I find that in the racemes of flowers dried without boiling water the pedicels become pale green, and the perianth more or less yellow green. Microstylis metallica was communicated by Messrs. Low, of Clapton, JANUARY Ist, 1883, in May, 1880, and it flowered in the Royal Gardens in May, 1881. Desor. A small herb five to seven inches high, for the most part of a fine vinous purple colour. Pseudo-bulbs very indistinct in our specimen (‘ cylindric,” Reichb. f.). Leaves four to six, erecto-patent, two to three inches lon by one to one and a half broad, elliptic, acute, plicate along the three to five deeply impressed nerves, margin crisply undulate; sheath broad, grooved, of the same colour as the blade. Scape very slender, two to three inches high, grooved. ftaceme as long, few and distantly flowered. Bracts small, lanceolate, reflexed, purple. Pedicels one third of an inch long, slender, horizontal, decurved at the insertion of the ovary, which is slender, and one-sixth of an inch long. Flowers vertical, two-thirds of an inch broad across the sepals. Sepals straight, spreading, linear-oblong, subacute or obtuse, margins Strongly recurved. Petals rather longer, much narrower, acute. Inp pale purple, shorter than the sepals, broadly obovoid in outline, flat, deeply sagittate, cleft at the base, the angles acute and sidcs of the cleft straight ; anterior margin rounded, irregu- larly toothed; calli two, minute, opposite the column. Column very short, expanded upwards and truncate with acute angles; anthers nearly cireular.—J. D. H. Fig. 1, Front, and 2, i back view of flower; 3, column 3 4, anther case; 5, pollen : —all enlarged, . 2 é O4 a d D “” od eo Q < HA i Fy vo A= MS.del, JN Bitch ith L Reeve & C° London. Tas. 6669. CEREUS oazspitosus. Native of New Mexico and Texas. Nat. Ord. Cactex.—-Tribe Ecu1nocactex. Genus Cereus, Haworth; (Benth. et Hook. f. Gen. Pl. vol. i. p- 849.) Crrevs (Echinocereus) cespitosus; caulibus ovoideis v, ovoideo-cylindraceis soli- tariis v. cespitosis 12-18-costatis, areolis elevatis linearibus approximatis, Junioribus albo-villosis, aculeis radialibus 20-30 subrecurvis appressis pectinatis albis nonnunquam roseis superioribus inferioribusque brevioribus lateralibus longioribus centralibus 0 v. paucis, tubo foris pulvillis 80-100 longe cinereo- villosis setas apice seu totas fuscas seu nigricantes 6-16 gerentibus stipato, sepalis interioribus 18-25 oblanceolatis integris sea denticulatis, petalis 30-40 obovato-lanceolatis obtusis acutis seu mucronatis ciliato-denticulatis, stigmate viridi infundibulari 13-18-partito, bacca viridi ovata perigonio coronata villosa setosa denum denudata, seminibus obovatis tuberculatis nigris.— Engel. C. cespitosus, Engelm. in Plant. Lindheim. 202; et in Cact. U.S. Mex. Bound. Suro, 32, t. 43, 44; Walp. Ann, vol. v. p. 43. EcurnocrreEvs cespitosus, Eingelm. in Bot. Wisliz. Exped. 26; Walp, Ann. vol. iii. p. 896. E. pectinatus, Hort. Dr. Engelmann, of St. Louis, the learned and most accurate investigator of the Cacti (as of many other groups of American plants), says of this species, that it extends from the Arkansas river to Saltillo, and has been found as far west as the Nueces and San Pedro, and adds that the loose darkish wool and slender bristles on the extremely numerous (eighty to one hundred) pulvilli of the flower- tube, and especially the position of these pulvillim—not in the axil, but considerably above it on the sepal, just below its foliaceous tip,—distinguish this species from the nearly allied H. pectinatus, and from all other Echinocerei known to him. And with regard to the name, cespitosus, which would apply much better to a number of other species of the section Hehinocereus, it was given before any of these were known ; it not inaptly represents a common state of the plant, when it makes five to twelve heads, but not JANUARY Ist, 1883. rarely it is almost or quite simple. As a species this is very near and usually confounded with EH. pectinatus, a Mexican plant (under which name it came to Kew). #. pectinatus has more (about twenty-three) ribs, sixteen to twenty subrecurved prickles, of which two to five are central, sixty to seventy pulvilli on the tube, and fewer (sixteen to eighteen) oblong petals. Dr. Engelmann enumerates three varieties (of H. cespi- tosus,—a, minor, with shorter more slender not interlaced spines and smaller flowers; 8, major, with longer stronger interlaced spines and larger flowers; and y, castanea, with red or chestnut-brown spines. This plant was given to the Royal Gardens by Mr. Croucher, formerly foreman of the propagating department at Kew, and subsequently gardener to Mr. Peacock at Hammersmith, and now in the United States of America. Desor. Stems four to six inches high by three to four in diameter, simple or clustered, cylindric-ovoid, pale greyish or whitish with scanty brown wool. Ribs twelve to eighteen, low, one-half to thr -quarters of an inch broad at the base. Pulvilli close-set, a quarter of an inch apart or more, with twenty to thirty pectinately arranged straight spines a quarter of an inch long or more, mixed with wool; spines white or rosy, appressed to the stem, the lateral much the longest, central none or very few and short. Tube of the flowers with eighty to one hundred pulvilli clothed with long ashy wool, and bearing six to sixteen brown or blackish spines. Inner sepals eighteen to twenty-five, oblanceolate, entire or toothed. Petals thirty to forty, deep rose-coloured, oblong, acute, obtuse or mucronate. Stigma funnel-shaped, green, with twelve to eighteen rays. Berry green, ovoid. Seeds obovate, tubercled, black.—J. D. H. Fig. 1, Group of spines; 2, vertical section of calyx and ovary; 3, pulvillus of tube; 4 and 6, anthers; 6, stigma; 7, ovules :—all enlarged. 6670 oe Vincent Brooks D ay & Son Imp Syne eae pci Tas. 6670. BILLBERGIA PoRTEANA, Native of Brazil. Nat. Ord. Bromettacex.—Tribe BRoMELIER. Genus Bintpereia, Thunb. ; (Benth. et Hook.f. Gen. Pl. vol. iii. p- 664, ined.) Bitisereta (Helicodea) Porteana; acaulis, foliis paucis loratis rigide coriaceis 3—4-pedalibus obscure viridibus purpureo tinctis vittis pluribus transversalibus albidis decoratis, pedunculo farinoso foliis subduplo breviori, bracteis pluribus lanceolatis magnis patulis splendide rubris, floribus pluribus ebracteatis in spicam laxam pendulam dispositis, ovario oblongo farinoo multisulcato, calycis segmentis deltoideis parvis, petalis lanceolatis viridibus basi appendiculatis post anthesin spiraliter tortis, staminibus purpureis, antheris linearibus basifixis, stigmatibus spiraliter convolutis. B. Porteana, Brong.; Beer. Fam. Bromel. p- 115; K. Koch in Wochenschrift 1860, p. 146; EF. Morren in Belg. Hort. vol. xxvi. (1876), p. 9, tab. 1-3. This is one of the most striking of all the cultivated Bromeliacew. It belongs to the section of the genus of which the well-known Billbergia zebrina (figured in the Borantcan Magazine in 1826 at Tab. 2686, under the name of Bromelia zebrina, and described by Dean Herbert) is the typical representative. These plants, which Lemaire proposed to separate generically under the name Helicodea, are remarkable for the way in which the petals roll up spirally from the top when the flower begins to fade. The present plant was discovered by M. Marius Porte, after whom it is named, in the province of Bahia, in Brazil, in 1849, and was sent by him to M. Morel, of Paris, after whom another very fine species of the genus was named. It was named by M. Adolphe Brongniart, but was first described fully by Dr. Karl Koch. I have seen in the herbarium of the latter the specimen from which this description was made, and a drawing from it is now at Kew. The plant is now widely spread in cultivation, and is universally reckoned one of the most desirable Bro- FEBRUARY Ist, 1883. meliads for a cultivator to obtain. It flowered with us at Kew for the first time in the summer of 1878, and again in June, 1882, when the present drawing was made. Descr. Acaulescent. Produced leaves five or six in a rosette, erect, lorate, three or four feet long, two or two and a half inches broad at the middle, four inches broad at the base, dull green more or less tinted on the back with claret-purple and marked with irregular transverse bands of white, the marginal prickles deltoid cuspidate, ascending, small and moderately close. Peduncle about two feet long, terete, densely farinose, with several large lanceolate bright red spreading bract-leaves. Flowers without any special bracts, arranged in a lax drooping simple spike six or eight inches long with a farinose rachis. Ovary oblong, half an inch long, densely farinose, with several strong vertical ribs ; segments horny, deltoid, not more than half as long as the ovary. Petals green, lanceolate, above two inches long, furnished with a pair of minute scales at the base, rolling up spirally from the top when the flower begins to fade. Filaments violet-purple, shorter than the petals; anthers linear, basifixed, nearly an inch long. Ovary with numerous ovules in a cell; stigmas protruding beyond the anthers, twisting up spirally.—J. G. Baker. Fig. 1, A petal, with its basal appendages ; 2, front view of an anther; 3, back view of an anther ; 4, pistil, showing a vertical section of th ; 6, an ovule:— all more or less magnified. : er & 6677. Re. ¥ “ i aT Sid p 4: bad ah | 2) é Vincent Brooks Day & S.deL. JN Fitch ith. London (2) L Reeve & CS (cenit Tas. 6671. POGON ITA GamMInANa. Native of Northern India. Nat. Ord. OncH1pEm.—Tribe Nzorrizx. Genus Pogonta, Juss. ; (Benth. et Hook.f. Gen. Pl. vol. iii. p- 615, ined.) Pogonta (Nervilia) Gammieana; glaberrima, folio late rotundato-cordato acumi- nato multinervio margine obscure undulato supra lete viridi subtus pallido, juniore plicato inter nervos seriatim sublacunoso, scapo robusto pauci- vaginato, racemo 6-10-Horo, bracteis linearibus floribus pendulis brevioribus, sepalis petalisque elliptico-lanceolatis acuminatis pallide lilacinis v. carneis, labello elongato sepalis sequilongo v. longiore albo-virescente lobis lateralibus parvis inflexis terminali rotundato-ovato reticulatim venoso crispato piloso, ovario profunde 6-sulcato. Tubers of this plant were received through the Royal Botanic Garden of Calcutta under the name of Pogonia Jlabelliformis, from Mr. Gammie, of the Sikkim Cinchona Plantations ; it however differs entirely from that plant in the size, colour, and broad form of the sepals and petals, and in the length of the lip, which equals or exceeds the rest of the perianth. I have a flowering specimen of apparently the same species, collected by myself in hot valleys below Darjeeling in 1847; and another, also flowering only, collected in Kumaon, in the Western Himalaya, at Bagesar, 3500 feet above the sea, by Strachey and Winterbottom ; and which is the “ Eulophia No. 19” of their Herbarium. The genus Pogonia is not a small one in India ; and there are probably a dozen species in the Himalaya, Bengal, and the two Peninsulas; but owing to the delicate nature of their flowers, and to the fact that many of the Specimens we possess are either flowerless or leafless, it is impossible to determine them specifically from dried spe- cimens. They should be drawn and analyzed in a fresh State, to provide material for accurate comparison and FEBRUARY Ist, 1883, description. As a rule, they are very difficult to keep under cultivation; the beautiful P. discolor, Bl. (Plate 6125) did not long survive being figured (in 1874). P. Gammieana bears the name of one who has contri- buted greatly to our knowledge of Sikkim plants, by a frequent correspondence with the Royal Gardens of Cal- cutta and Kew, carried on uninterruptediy for many years. The specimens here figured flowered in May, 1881, and perfected their leaves in July of the same year. Desor. Tuber subglobose, the size of a hazel or walnut, tuberculate. Leaf solitary, quite glabrous, four to six inches long and broad, rounded-cordate, acuminate, basal sinus very deep, margin obscurely undulate; nerves very numerous, radiating; young plaited between the nerves, with a row of very shallow broad pits on each fold; deep green above, pale beneath; petiole cylindric, streaked with red-brown, with one obtuse sheath at the base. Scape six to eight inches high, green, stout, with three or four sheaths, the lowest of which are streaked with red-brown. feaceme six- to eight-flowered, rachis green ; bracts linear, slender, membranous, much shorter than the flowers; pedicels very short; flowers drooping. Ovary turbinate, deeply six-grooved, brown. Sepals and petals subequal, three-quarters to one inch long, elliptic lanceolate, acu- minate, pale lilac streaked with pale pink. Lip pale green, as long as or rather longer than the sepals, narrow, lateral lobes small and folded round the sides of the column, terminal rounded veined with darker green, crumpled, hairy. Column smooth, semiterete, one-fourth shorter than the lip. Anther depressed-hemispheric.—J. D. H. Fig. 1, Side view of lip and column; 2, ditto : : 4, anther-case; 5, pollen masses :—aii enlarged. seen from above; 3, column; 6672. oA eaten weer 7 nee Ge ae = gerecmem gt ! Ss Vincent Brooks Day & Son Imp AB. de JN Fitch lith. LReeve & C°London J OMOSTYLIUM cabulicum, Nees in Linnea, vol. xviii. p. 513. Tas. 6672. MICROGLOSSA axpesorns. Native of the Himalaya. Nat. Ord. Compositm.—Tribe AsTEROIDER. Genus Microetossa; DC.; (Benth. et Hook. f. Gen. Pl. vol. ii. p. 282.) Microetossa albescens ; erecta, suffruticosa, ramis sub-sulcatis, ramulis foliis subtus et inflorescentia cano-pubescentibus, foliis breviter petiolatis lanceolatis acutis v. acuminatis integerrimis, capitulis parvis numerosissimis pedunculatis in paniculas corymbiformes terminales et axillares gracile pedunculatas confertis, involucro campanulato, bracteis anguste lanceolatis acuminatis exterioribus brevioribus, floribus radii azureis, -acheniis oblongis angulatis et costatis pubescentibus pappo rufo paullo brevioribus, M. albescens, Clarke Comp. Ind. p. 59; Hook. f. Fl. Brit. Ind. vol. ii. p. 257. M. cabulica et M. Griffithii, Clarke 7. e. pp. 57, 58. Aster cabulicus, Lindl, in Bot. Reg. 1843, Mise. 62; Hook. Comp. Bot. Mag. 1847, p. 34; Boiss. Fl. Orient. vol. iii. p. 158. AsTeER ferrugineus, Edgew. in Trans. Linn, Soc. vol. xx. p. 64. AsTER albescens, Walp. Cat. n. 2974. AMPHIRAPHIS albescens, DC. Prodr. vol. v. p. 343. ONYZA conspicua, Wall. Cat. n. 3066. Though cultivated in England so long ago as 1842, this very handsome and hardy shrub is very little known in gardens. It was introduced by Dr. Royle when in charge of the Saharumpore Botanical Gardens, and flowered first in those of the Horticultural Society at Chiswick; where, from the erroneous supposition that the seeds were sent from Affghanistan, it received the name of Aster cabulicus. It affords a conspicuous example of the confusion into which Indian Botany fell during the first half of this century, for it received no less than nine names, and was referred to five genera, within a comparatively very short period after its being first known to botanists. As a genus Microglossa differs from Aster chiefly in the very FEBRUARY Ist, 1883. small heads, short rays, and not compressed achenes; and from Hrigeron in the single row of ray-flowers. M. albescens differs from its congeners in having a blue ray. It re- sembles Aster sikkimensis (Plate 4557) in the stems forming almost perfect wood the first year, full of leaf-buds in the late autumn, which die down to the root in most winters ; but in the present very mild one are persistent up to this date (January 27th). Microglossa albescens inhabits the temperate regions of the whole length of the Himalaya, from Kishtwar to Sikkim and Bhotan; ascending to 9000 feet in the west, and to 12,000 feet in the east; it has been repeatedly introduced, and flourishes at Kew against a south wall, flowering in June and July, but not ripening seed. Desor. An undershrub, two to four feet high ; branches slender, leaves beneath and inflorescence clothed with hoary whitish pubescence. Leaves three to five inches long, shortly petioled, lanceolate, acuminate, quite entire, nerves inconspicuous, base acute, light. green above. Heads one-third of an inch in diameter, very numerous, in copiously branched axillary and terminal corymbiform peduncles ; branches and peduncles slender. “Involucre campanulate; inner bracts narrowly lanceolate, acuminate, outer shorter. Ligules pale blue, quite horizontal, variable in breadth; disk-flowers prominent, yellow. Achenes narrow, angled and strongly ribbed, pubescent; rather shorter than the red pappus—J. D. H. Fig. 1, Head ; 2, receptacle and part of involucre; 3, ray-flower; 4, its style- arms; 5, corolla of disk-flower ; 6, stamens ; 7, style-arms of disk-flower ; 8, achene and pappus ; 9, pappus hair :—all enlarged, Vincent Brooks Day & Son Imp M.S.da.INFith hth e is fe) od § A Ae O od e id | Tas. 6673. PSE UDODRAC ONTIUM Lacovuru. Native of Cochin-china. Nat. Ord. Aroripem®.—Tribe PyrHoniEx. Genus Pseupopracontium, WN. FE. Br.; (Benth. et Hook. SF. Gen, Pi. vol. iii. p- 971, ined.) PsEupopracontium Lacourii; petiolo scapoque gracili pallide griseo-rufescente olivaceo-fasciato, lamina folii_ trisecta, segmentis sessilibus v. petiolulatis indivisis v. 2-pluri-partitis, ultimis sessilibus obovato-oblongo- v. elliptico- lanceolatis acuminatis viridibus albo-maculatis, spatha cymbiformi viridi apiculata, spadice robusto spathw squilongo, inflorescentia mascula laxiflora quam fcemineam brevem cylindraceam longiore et latiore, staminibus ad 4, antheris clavato-rotundatis, ovariis oblique globosis, stigmate subsessili, appendice crassiuscule stipitato conico obtuso stramineo sinuatim sulcato. P. Lacourii, V. #. Br. in Trim. Journ. Bot. 1882, p. 194. AmorrHorHattus Lacourit, Lindl. et André in Illustr. Hortic. vol. xxv. p. 90, t. 316. The singular Aroid here figured is a native of Phuquoc in Cochin-china, and was introduced by M. Linden, of Brussels, to whom the Royal Gardens of Kew are indebted for living plants, which flowered in May of last year. It belongs to the same tribe of the order as the Amorpho- phalli, of which so many Asiatic species have of late been brought under cultivation, and was discovered by M. Contest Lacour, a horticulturist employed by the French Government in Pondicherry and in Cochin-china. It pro- bably attains a much larger size with more divided leaves than are exhibited by the specimen here figured. _ Descr. Petiole and peduncle slender, pale greyish red, banded with olive green, striate, the former four to six inches long, the latter twice as long, both surrounded at the base by loose membranous sheaths. Blade of leaf three-sect ; the divisions each on petiolules one-half to one inch long and coloured like the petiole, or the central sessile and simple, the lateral two-fid or pinnately three- or more-fid; FEBRUARY lst, 1883. segments sessile, elliptic- or obovate- or oblong-lanceolate, four to five inches long by one-half to two inches broad, pale bright yellow-green with scattered round white spots. Spathe erect, three inches long, boat-shaped, with an acute recurved point, margins hardly overlapping at the base, pale green. Spadix about as long as the spathe, sessile. Male inflorescence cylindric, lax-flowered, occupying about half the spadix, broader and much longer than the female, which consists of a short column of densely packed obliquely globose ovaries with capitate sessile stigmas. Stamens about four ; filaments free, suddenly delated into clavate or very broadly obovate obtuse anthers opening b small lateral slits. Appendix stoutly stipitate, porn obtuse, about one inch long, straw-coloured, sinuately suleate—J, D. H. Fig. 1, Male flower; 2, 3, 4, and 5, anthers of different forms and in different positions ; 6, ovary ; 7, vertical section of ditto ; 8, ovule :—ad/ enlarged, 6674. Tas. 6674, PLEUROPETALUM COSTARICENSE. Native of Central America. Nat. Ord. AMARANTHACEZ.—Tribe CELOSIEZ. Genus PrevrorgTaLum, Hook. f.; (Benth. et Hook.f. Gen. Pl. vol. i. p. 157.) PLEUROPETALUM costaricense; glaberrimum, erectum, foliis alternis petiolatis ovato-lanceolatis acuminatis integerrimis v, marginibus subundulatis, paniculis terminalibus et in axillis supremis ramosis multifloris, floribus parvis confertis breviter pedicellatis bracteatis et 2-bracteolatis, perianthii rubri segmentis 5 ellipticis concavis obtusis, staminibus 5-8 filamentis perianthio subequilongis antheris parvis, ovario ovoideo-globoso, stigmatibus 3 breviter linearibus obtusis, baccis pisiformibus globosis rubris polyspermis. P. costaricense, H. Wendl. MSS.; Hemsil. in Biol. Centr. Amer. vol. iii. p. 12 (? excl, Syn.). A very handsome half-shrubby plant when in fruit, well adapted for pot-culture in a moderately warm house, where it retains its brilliant berries for several months. It is a native of Central America and Mexico, and if, as explained below, it is the same with Melanocarpum Sprucei, its area of distribution extends to Equador in South America. It was sent to Kew by Dr. Wendland, the learned Director of the Imperial Botanical Garden of Herrenhausen, Hanover, under the abovename. The specimen here figured flowers in the Palm House of the Royal Gardens in the autumn months, and ripens its fruit in winter. The genus to which this plant belongs is somewhat doubtful. Plewropetalum was founded by me in 1846, on a single very imperfect specimen of a shrub brought by the late Mr. Darwin from the Galapago Islands, and published in the * London Journal of Botany” (vol. v. p. 108, t. 2), and in the Linnean Transactions (vol. xx. p. 221); it had eight stamens, with the filaments united below the middle into a membranous cup, and four stigmata. Regarding the bracteoles (which are connate) as sepals, and the FEBRUARY Ist, 1883, perianth-segments as petals, I referred it to Portulacee, and named it (after the many ribs on the dried petals) Pleuropetalum Darwinit. The only known specimen of this plant is in the Cambridge University Herbarium, and until better materials should be forthcoming, and especially fruiting ones, it was thought better, when describing the Portulacee for the first volume of Bentham’s and my | **Genera Plantarum,” to retain it, with a mark of doubt, in that Order. Endlicher, however, in the fourth Supplement to his “ Genera Plantarum” (p. 44), had rightly referred it to Amaranthacew, in which he was followed by Moquin Tandon in De Candolle’s Prodromus (vol. xiii. pars 2, p- 463), who, moreover, changed the generic name to Allochlamys, on the ground of the perianth-segments not being corolline. When preparing the Amaranthacee for the “Genera Plantarum,” I met with an undescribed plant gathered by Spruce on Chimborazo, which (relying on Spruce’s description of the fruit) I described as Melano- carpum Sprucei (vol. iii. p. 24), whose similitude to the absent and long-forgotten Plewropetaluwm I did not recog- nize, and which differs from that genus in having usually five nearly free stamens, and two to three stigmas. This, which is also found in Mexico, Mr. Hemsly, in the “ Bio- logia Centrali-americana,”’ has regarded as conspecific with the Plewropetalum costaricense, and probably rightly ; but it remains to be seen whether both may not be referable specifically to P. Darwinii, for which better Specimens of the Galapagos plant are necessary. Dzscr. A small shrub, quite glabrous; branches smooth, terete, green. Leaves petioled, alternate, four to five inches long, elliptic-lanceolate, acuminate, with the tip often drawn out, margin even or obscurely undulate, dark green above, paler beneath, nerves many oblique; petiole one-half to one inch long. Flowers small, very numerous in terminal and axillary subcorymbose much-branched panicles, shortly pedicelled, bracteate and two-bracteolate ; bracts small, at the base of the pedicel; bracteoles minute, ovate, obtuse, connate at the base. Perianth a quarter of an inch in diameter, green at length scarlet ; segments five, elllptic-oblong, obtuse, concave, spreading, strongly many- ribbed when dry. Stamens five to eight, hypogynous, filaments subulate, united at the base ; anthers gmall, included, didymous. Ovary ovoid, with three to four linear obtuse short spreading stigmas; ovules very many, at the bottom of the cell. Berries size of a pea, globose, blood red, shiny, tipped with the stigmas and seated on the persistent perianth. Seeds very numerous, black.—J.D. H. Fig. 1, Flower; 2, ovary; 3, vertical section of fruit and perianth; 4, young seed :—all enlarged. 3 a cya d naeensenbcae DT TATE y suet singe is _ Artans PVE Was RS — SOM is 9 aaiane snrabeatnieh ee — ey &Sontk Jay OOKS I = br Mncenk I & sa + C2 Ton & im Reeve ¢ ae a a i ee a ——- ' ‘ Tas. 6675. CARAGUATA. mosalca. Native of New Granada. Nat. Ord. BRomELIACEZ.—Tribe TILLANDSIER. Genus Caraguata, Lindl, ; (Benth, et Hook. f. Gen. Pl. vol. iii. p. 668, ined.) Caracuata (Massangea) musaica; acaulis, foliis 12-20 loratis integris cuspidatis utrinque fasciis copiosis vermiformibus transversalibus preditis, facie pallide viridibus fasciis saturate viridibus, dorso purpureo-viridibus fasciis purpuras- centibus, pedunculo splendide rubro bracteis multis parvis deltoideis scariosis concoloribus predito, floribus in capitulum globosum aggregatis, bracteis magnis deltoideis splendide rubris, sepalis lanceolatis eartilagineis glabris luteo tinctis, corolla albida calyce breviore segmentis oblongis tubo zxquilongis, staminibus inclusis ad tubi faucem insertis uniseriatis, ovario ovoideo stylo elongato. C. musaica, André in Ill. Hort. vol. xxiv. (1877), p. 27, t. 268. Massanaea musaica, HE. Morren. in Belg. Hort. vol. xxvii. (1877), p. 199, t. 8, 9 Tintanpsta musaica, Hort. Linden. ; J. Moore in Florist (1875), p. 15, cum icone. Varese musaica, Cogn. et Marchand in Dallier Plantes feuill. ornam. vol. ii. t. 39. ; Bin.erGia musaica, Rege! in Gartenfl. (1874), p. 378, cum icone. This fine Bromeliad is now widely spread in cultivation, and at once attracts attention by the remarkable marking of its leaves. It was sent in 1871 to Linden, by Gustave Wallis, from a wood, at an altitude of 3000 feet above sea-level, near T'eorama, in the neighbourhood of Ocana, in New Granada, and was received in the same year direct by Mr. Wm. Bull. It was first exhibited by Mr. Bull in flower to the Royal Horticultural Society in April, 1875. Professor Morren, who gives a full and excellent account of its history and characters in the volume of the Belgique Horticole above cited, has founded upon it his genus Massangea, which principally differs from Caraguata, as represented by the well-known C. ligulata of Lindley, and CO. Zahnii, by the corolla being much smaller than the calyx. MARCH lst, 1883, Our drawing was made from a specimen that flowered at Kew in October, 1882. Descr. Acaulescent. Leaves lorate, twelve to twenty in a rosette, rather cartilaginous in texture, obtuse with a deltoid cusp, one and a half or two feet long, two or three inches broad at the middle, marked with copious slender transverse wavy vermiform lines on both surfaces, those of the face dark green on a pale green groundwork, those of the back bright purple on a purplish-green glossy ground. Pedunele central, a foot long, bright scarlet down the base, furnished with numerous small scariose deltoid bract-leaves of the same colour. lowers about twenty, aggregated into a globose capitulum, each subtended by a large bright red deltoid bract. Calyz of three, lanceolate, cartilaginous, sepals above an inch long, glabrous, free to the base, tinged yellow. Corolla white, much shorter than the calyx, with an oblong tube and three oblong segments. Stamens inserted in a single row at the throat of the corolla-tube ; filaments very short; anthers linear. Ovary ovoid; style elongated ; stigmas three, oblong, not spirally twisted.— J. G. Baker. Fig. 1, Calyx cut open so as to show the corolla; 2, corolla cut open so as toshow the stamens and pistil; 3, a stamen, viewed from the back; 4, summit of the style, with the three stigmas; 5, horizontal section of ovary :—all more or less enlarged. 6676. Day & Vincent Brooks N Fitch lith. hed M.S.d f § 4 Oi O oS © Fy fe e ee ee a ee Tan. 6676. EUCHARIS Sanperu. Native of New Granada. Nat. Ord. AMARYLLIDEH.—Tribe AMARYLLER. Genus Evcnaris, Planch. ; (Benth. et Hook. J. Gen. Pl, vol. ii. p. 731, ined.) Evcnaris Sanderii; bulbo ovoideo, fuliis petivlatis cordato-ovatis cuspidatis, magnis membranaceis viridibus, venis primariis 6-10-jugis venulis transversa- libus crebris conspicuis, scapo tereti subpedali, umbellis 2-3-floris, spathz valvis lanceolatis acuminatis .viridibus, pedicellis brevissimis, ovario oblongo- trigono, ovulis in loculo pluribus horizontalibus, perianthii tubo curvato sursum late infundibulari deorsum cylindrico, segmentis late ovatis niveis, corona ad tubi apicem adnata striis luteis ornata margine libero angustissimo, filamentorum parte libero lineari incurvato, antheris linearibus, stylo ex tubo exserto apice stigmatoso incrassato trilobato. This new Hucharis will, no doubt, be a very popular plant. It has completely the habit and foliage.of the well- known LHucharis grandiflora, but the corona is almost entirely adnate to the dilated upper portion of the perianth- tube, leaving only a narrow collar-like free border, upon which the distinct portion of the filaments is inserted. It comes from the same country as H. grandiflora and candida, and requires similar treatment. It was introduced by Messrs. J. Sander and Co., of St. Albans, after whom it is named, in March, 1882. The bulbs with which they supplied us flowered at Kew in November and December, and it was from one of these that the accompanying figure was drawn. Descr. Bulbs ovoid, one and a half or two inches in diameter, with brown tunics and a short distinct neck. Leaves two to a scape; petiole four or six inches long, flattened on the face ; blade cordate-ovate, cuspidate, eight or ten inches long, five or six inches broad, membranous in texture, quite glabrous, bright green on the face, pale green MARCH Ist, 1883. on the back, with six to ten pairs of arcuate primary veins, connected by close distinct cross-veinlets. Scape terete, about a foot long. Spathe-valves three or four, lanceolate acuminate, green, unequal. Flowers two or three in an umbel, not distinctly scented; pedicels very short; ovary _ oblong-trigonous, half an inch long in the flowering stage, with about twenty horizontal ovules in each of the three cells ; perianth-tube curved, two inches long, cylindrical in the lower part, tinged with green, dilated into a funnel in the upper third; limb pure white, about two inches in diameter when expanded; segments ovate, much imbricated. Corona adnate to the upper portion of the perianth-tube, except a very narrow free border, furnished with six primrose-yellow vertical stripes ; free portion of the filaments incurved, a third of an inch long; anthers linear. Style protruded from the corolla-tube, thickened and distinctly three-lobed at the stigmatose apex.—J. G. Baker. Fig. 1, Anther, viewed from the front; 2, anther, viewed from the back ; 3, stigma :—all enlarged. 6677 Vincent Dr tr of Reeve a Tas. 6677. THUNBERGIA Kirgu. Native of East Tropical Africa. Nat. Ord. AcANTHACER.—Tribe THUNBFRGIEZR, Genus TounBERGtIa, Linn. f.; (Benth, et Hook. f. Gen. Pl. vol. ii. p. 1072.) THunBERGIA Kirkii ; erecta, gracilis, glaberrima, foliis breviter petiolatis lanceo- latis v. trapezoideo-lanceolatis subacutis apiculatis 3-nerviis integerrimis v. utrinque obtuse sinuato-unidentatis 3-nerviis, cymis axillaribus 2-floris, brac- teolis oblongis subacutis tubo corollz paullo longioribus, calyce annulari irregulariter dentato, corollz coerulee tubo brevi, fauce campanulato longiore, limbi lobis brevibus late obovatis retusis. Tropical Africa is rich in species of Thunbergia, including plants referred to Meyenia (now reduced to a section of the genus), especially of the erect forms, to which belong the T. natalensis (Plate 5082), Meyenia Vogeliana (Plate 5389), unfortunately lost to our gardens, and M. erecta (Plate 5013). These all differ from the Indian species in never climbing, but, as with 7. Kirkii, forming bushes with rigid stems and branches; they further differ from such types as 7. alala (Plate 2591) in the corolla-lobes being comparatively (to the tube and throat) smaller, and not so flat and hori- zontally patent. Amongst other superb species yet to be introduced into our gardens from Africa as especially handsome are the above-mentioned 7’. Vogeliana, Benth., from Fernando Po, which forms a shrub 20 feet high, bearing a profusion of violet-coloured flowers two inches long; 1. lancifolia, T. Anders., of Angola, with deep blue flowers as much in diameter. Thunbergia Kirkii is most nearly allied to T. erecta (Plate 5013), in which there is the same tendency to a rhomboid form of leaf, but which has a much larger and deeper coloured flower, a calyx of many equal subulate teeth, and which is a native of the opposite (western) MARCH Ist, 1883. African coast, whereas 7. Kirkii has been found only at Mombasa, N. of Zanzibar, in latitude 4° 8., where it was discovered by the Rev. Mr. Wakefield, who communicated specimens to Col. Grant in 1876, without flower, however. The specimen here figured was from a plant received from Sir John Kirk, K.C.M.G., which flowered in the Royal Gardens in September, 1882. Desor. A small shrub two to three feet high, with slender rigid divaricating acutely four-angled stem and branches. eaves one and a half to three inches long by half to three-quarters of an inch broad, very shortly petioled, lanceolate, subacute or obtuse, apiculate with the excurrent midrib, quite entire or with each side dilated into an obtuse lobe, giving a rhomboid form, three-nerved, rigid, dark green above, paler beneath. lowers in two- flowered short cymes; peduncle and pedicels short, stiff. Bracteoles one-third of an inch long, oblong, subacute, green. Calyx a very short irregularly obtusely toothed cup. Corolla one and a quarter inches long; tube short, slender, one-third the length of the campanulate limb; lobes spreading, but not horizontally, broadly obovate, retuse, violet-blue. Stamens at the top of the tube, slightly hairy at the very bases of the filaments, or on the corolla below their insertion; anthers acute. Ovary glabrous, stigma shortly two-lipped.—J. D. H. Fig. 1, Portion of corolla and stamens; 2, calyx ani ovary; 3, stigma :—all enlarged. | | | | elearning ES a em Ne Na cg ee MS. del. INFitds lith F vent Brooks Day &Soninp LReeve & C2 London a : Tas. 6678. FRAXINUS Magziesii. Native of North China. Nat. Ord. OLEaAcER.—Tribe Frax1IneEx. Genus Fraxrinvs, Linn.; (Benth. et Hook. f. Gen. Pl. vol. ii. p. 676.) Fraxinvs (Ornus) Mariesii ; petiolis paniculisque tenuissime puberulis, foliolis . 2-jugis lateralibus subsessilibns ovatis obovatis oblongisve acutis obtusis v. acuminatis integerrimis v. supra medium serratis utrinque glabris, terminali petiolulato obovato v. oblanceolato, paniculis confertis foliis subzquilongis ramis gracillimis strictis erecto-patentibus, fl. ¢ calyce minuto, corolla lineari- oblonga v. oblanceolata obtusa v. subacuta, staminibus petalis zequilongis. The subject of this Plate is a small tree which is likely to become a favourite in our parks and ornamental grounds, from its profusion of white flowers, in which respect it rivals its near ally the Manna Ash of 8. Europe, a tree much more rarely cultivated than it should be. The sec- tion of “Flowering Ashes’’ to which it belongs are probably, with one exception, all hardy, being natives of north temperate regions all round the globe, except America east of the Rocky Mountains, and are all beautiful trees. Of these the best known is the S. European Manna Ash, mentioned above, which extends along the Mediterranean region from Spain to Turkey. In North India it is replaced by the F. floribunda, Wallich, which occurs along the whole range of the Himalaya. In N. China this again is replaced by F. Bungeana, A. DC., and in S. China, Hongkong, by F’. retusa, a species which is probably not hardy; in Japam by F. Sieboldiana, Blume, and in California by F’, depetala. The absence of any representation in America east of the Rocky Mountains, whilst one is present to the west of that range, is one of the remarkable exceptions to the well-known fact of the Flora of the Hastern United States being more: nearly allied to that of N. E. Asia, than is that of the Western States. MARCH lst, 1883, The nearest ally of F. Mariesii is the Chinese fF’. Bungeana, which differs in the slender long petiolules of the leaflets, which are also more strongly serrated ; otherwise the species are, in so far as can be judged from males alone, very alike ; I have seen no fruits of either. F. Mariesii is a discovery of Mr. Maries, when travelling for Messrs. Veitch in China, who sent dried specimens from the province of Kiu Kiang, together with seeds, from which the plants were propagated, which afforded the Plate here produced; they flowered in Mr. Veitch’s nursery at Coombe Wood in May last. Descr. A small tree, glabrous in all its parts except the petioles, rachis of the leaf, and branches of the panicle, which are covered with a very fine pubescence, hardly visible to the naked eye, branches rather slender. Leaves four to six inches long; petiole and rachis very slender; leaflets two pairs and an odd one, one to three inches long, sessile or narrowed into an exceedingly short petiole, ovate obovate or lanceolate, obtuse acute or acuminate, glabrous, quite entire or serrated beyond the middle, pale green. Panicles very numerous from the uppermost axils, about as long as the leaves, strict, erect; branches erecto-patent, slender, strict. Flowers (3g only seen) shortly pedicelled. Calyx minute, four-cleft, lobes puberulous. Petals five to six, one-fourth of an inch long, linear-oblong or oblanceo- late, obtuse or subacute, white. Stamens two to four, about as long as the petals, filaments slender; anthers ovate. emale flowers, fruit not seen.—J. D. H. Figs. 1 and 2, Flowers with five and six petals respectively; 4 and 5, ba:k and front views of anthers :—all enlarged. — ae * + ay &.Sen L . oOKS 1) moant By vincent OF a aad “OT ba ST ae wet ee AU ak Reeve &' T aks ee aaa ee " Tas. 6679, COMPARETTIA MACROPLEOTRON. Native of New Granada. Nat. Ondi OrcHIDEZ.—Tribe VANDEX. Genus CompareErtia, Pepp. et Endl.; (Benth, et Hook.f. Gen. Pl. vol. iii. p. 558, ined.) CompParETTIA macroplectron; foliis lineari‘oblongis acutis crasse coriaceis supra convexis marginibus recurvis subtus pallide ferrugineo-irroratis, racemo gracile pedunculato pendulo subsexfloro, bracteis parvis, sepalo postico oblongo acuminato, lateralibus in laminam cymbiformem acuminatam labello suppo- sitam dorso in calcar unicum longissimum productam connatis, petalis obovatis acuminatis pallide roseis rubro-punctatis, labello amplo roseo maculis pallide rubris consperso, ungue brevi utrinque auriculato medio carina elevata acuto, lamina transverse oblonga breviter 2-fida sinu acuto lobis undulatis. C. macroplectron, Reichb. f. et Triana in Gard. Chron. 1878, vol. ii. p. 524, e¢ 1879, vol. i. p. 398; Williams Orchid Album, t. 65. _ The genus Comparettia consists of but few species, of which this is far the handsomest; it inhabits the rich Orchid districts of the Andes, from Mexico to New Granada, where the species here figured was discovered by Senor Triana. Though a much larger flowered plant, it is much inferior in the colour of the flower to DL. falcata, Poepp., figured at Plate 4980 of this work, the vivid hues of the lip in which are scarcely to be surpassed : it further differs remarkably from that plant in the great length of the spur. O. macroplectron was, I believe, first imported into and flowered in England by Messrs. Low, but the specimen here figured was sent in 1881 to the Royal Gardens by Mr. Jeuman, when Superintendent of the Jamaica Botanical. Gardens in that island, and it flowered in October of last year. . 7 | Desor. Pseudobulbs none; base of very short stem clothed with distichous rigid bases of oldleaves. Leaves two to three, four to five inches long, by one-half to one and a MARCH lst, 1883, quarter inch broad, thickly coriaceous, linear-oblong, acute, convex above, with a deep central furrow, margins recurved, green above, beneath pale and faintly streaked with rusty yellow. Racemes four- to six-flowered, pendulous from a slender curved peduncle of about the same length ; sheaths few, small, distant, scarious; bracts one-sixth to one-fourth of an inch long, membranous or minute and tooth-like. Flowers distichous, nearly two inches long from the tip of the dorsal sepal to the end of the lip, pale rose-coloured speckled with red; pedicel and ovary together nearly an inch long. Dorsal sepal oblong, acute, pale; two lateral sepals combined into a white boat-shaped acuminate lamina under the lip, from the base of the back of which descend a long nearly straight or curved spur two inches long, concealed within which again are the two slender spurs of the lip itself, which extend for more than half its length. Petals about as long as the dorsal sepal, oblong, acuminate, brightly speckled with red. Lip very large, shortly clawed, claw with two small side auricles and a mesial longitudinal ridge; blade of the lip transversely oblong, narrowed at the base, cleft at the broad rounded end, the cleft acute, its lobes short, acute, margins waved; the lip is a deeper rose-colour than the petals, and has larger and less vivid spots; the spurs of the lip are very slender, and papillose towards the tips, which are shortly villous.—J. D. H. Fig. 1, Column, and cl f li - “ ' ceceies Valdracd: aw of lip, &c.; 2, anther-case; 3 and 4, pollinia :—all - 6680. 4 g Son & ks Day ent Broo Enc. Ci Les London. & CS L Keeve Tas. 6680. SAXIFRAGA coRTUSIFOLIA. Native of Japan. Nat. Ord. SaxtFraGacex.—Tribe SAXIFRAGEE. Genus Saxrrraca, Linn.; (Benth. et Hook. f. Gen, Pl. vol.i. p. 635.) Saxirraca (Hydatica) cortusifolia ; estolonifera, paleaceo-pilosa v. glabrata, foliis omnibus radicalibus crasse petiolatis rotundatis basi cordatis v. subreniformibus breviter 5-c -lobis crassis setosis denum glabratis, lobis crenatis rotundatis v. rarius subacutis, vaginis brevibus longe ciliatis, scapo valido, panicula ampla ramosa ramis elongatis erecto-patentibus, sepalis liberis oblongis obtusis, petalis totis albis anguste linearibus acutis 1-3 ceteris multoties longioribus, carpellis ultra medium connatis, stylis continuis elongatis rectis, stigmatibus parvis. S. cortusifolia, Sieb. e¢ Zucc. Fl. Jap. Fam. Nat. vol. i. p. 190, Ykumayu-ssai, Soo Bokf. vol. viii. fol. 12-15 ; Maxim. Mel. Biol. dec. xii. p. 599. A very near ally of the old “Strawberry Saxifrage,” 8. sarmentosa, L. (Plate 92 of this work), and still more near S. Fortunei (Plate 5877), which, indeed, Professor Maximovicz has doubtfully regarded as a variety of it; but differing from the former in the want of strawberry-like runners, and form of the leaves; and from the latter in the much smaller flowers with entire petals. Allare remarkable for the inequality of the petals, of which one or more exceed the rest by many times their length; a peculiarity in the floral development repeated in a plant of widely different affinity, lately figured in this work, the Chionographis japonica, Plate 6510. All are natives of South China and Japan. oe S. cortusifolia is, probably, a very variable plant, several forms of it being figured in the Japanese botanical work quoted as the Soo Bokf., differing greatly in the form and cutting of the lobes of the leaf. The specimen here figured was communicated by Messrs. Veitch, who raised it from Japanese seed sent by their admirable collector, Mr. Maries. It flowered in October. Desor. A stout herbaceous perennial, more or less clothed MakcH Ist, 1883. with coarse cellular hairs on the leaves and scape below, and with finer ones on the panicle above. oots without stolons. Stems none. Leaves on stout petioles, orbicular with a cordate base or subreniform, two to three inches in diameter, shallowly five- to many-lobed, the lobes rounded and obtuse or triangular and acute, crenate or toothed ; nerves radiating from the petiole, bright green above, fading to bright red-brown or red; petiole two to three inches long, sheath half to three-quarters of an inch, ciliate with long hairs. Scape long or short, stout, bearing a large open panicle often seven to eight inches long and five to six broad; branches erecto-patent; bracts ovate, ciliate. Flowers on slender pedicels, one-third to one-half of an inch across the smaller petals. Sepals nearly free, oblong, obtuse, green, about half the length of the smaller petals. Petals linear, subacute, white, unspotted, the one to three longer ones one-half to three-quarters of an inch long. Filaments slender ; anthers bright red-brown. Ovary free; carpels united to above the middle, ending in straight suberect styles with small capitate stigmas.—J. D. H. Figs. 1 and 2, Anthers ; 3, ovary :—all enlarged. 6681. VincenlL Brooks Day & Son Imp AB del INFitaalith af Tas. 6681. MEDINILLA -AMABILIS. Native of Java. Nat. Ord. MgtastomMacEz.—Tribe MEDINILLEZ. Genus Mepininia, Gaud.; (Benth. et Hook. f. Gen. Pl. vol. i. p. 759.) MepinitLa amabilis; glaberrima, ramulis 4-gonis angulis crispato-alatis, foliis amplis oppositis sessilibus late obovato- v. elliptico-oblongis acutis quintupli- nerviis marginibus undulatis basi obtusis v. cordatis, nervis crassis, paniculis maximis terminalibus erectis pyramidatis crasse pedunculatis ramosis multifloris, pedunculo rachi ramisque (primariis verticillatis) crassis teretibus ultimis roseis, bracteis 0, floribus crasse pedicellatis amplis roseis, calycis tubo hemispherico limbo annulari truncato integerrimo v. obscure sinuato, petalis obovato-oblongis, staminibus 10 antheris pallide violaceis. M. amabilis, Dyer in Gard. Chron. 1874, parti. p. 372, fig. 81; Bull Retail List of New, §e., Plants, 1874, p. 13. Though differing in habit, this is quite as striking a plant as the M. magnifica (Plate 4533), which it excels in the size of the flowers, but falls far short of in wanting the beautiful coloured bracts of that species. It is much more nearly allied to M. speciosa, Blume (Bot. Mag. Plate 4321), which differs in the long internodes with smooth margins, _and in the pendulous panicle of smaller flowers; and to M. javanensis, Plate 4569, also a small-flowered species with four-angled internodes and truncate petals. Our specimen formed an erect shrub, but so many species are scandent that this may be so in a fully developed condition. When published by Mr. Dyer the native country of this species was unknown, and as it could not be matched with any described species, it might well have been supposed to have come from some of the little explored islands to the eastward of the Malayan groups. Now that we are in- formed by Mr. Bull that it is a native of Java, 1t cannot but surprise us that so striking a plant should inhabit an island so well known botanically, and have remained un- APRIL Ist, 1883. described so long. No less than eight Javan species are - enumerated in the Catalogue of the Buitenzorg Garden in Jaya, and sixteen are described as natives of that island by Miquel, but I am unable to refer M. amabilis to any of these. The specimen figured flowered at the Royal Gardens in August last ; it was presented by Mr. Bull, who imported the plant upwards of ten years ago. _ Descr. Quite glabrous, shrubby. Stem and branches four-angled ;. angles with short crisped or crenately waved _ wings. Leaves very large, a foot long by six to erght inches broad, sessile, obovate- or elliptic-oblong, acute, © often concave, quintuple-nerved, margin wavy, nerves very stout, texture thick, colour very bright-green ; base cuneate or cordate. Panicles terminal, erect, peduncled, pyramidal, much branched, a foot high, by six to nine inches broad; peduncle as thick as the finger, cylindric, smooth ; branches horizontal, whorled, and branchlets stout terete pale, the ultimate ones rosy, bracts none. Flowers shortly peduncled, rose-coloured, one and a half to two inches in diameter. Calyz-tube hemispheric, limb a short thin erect ring obscurely five-lobed or quite truncate. Petals obovate- oblong, obtuse, concave, thick. Stamens ten; anthers pale violet, slender, upcurved, connectives bigibbous at the base ; outta anthers about one-third smaller than the longer.— Fig. 1, Flower cut vertically; 2 : : i ] d wignadouie pitebipel cally; 2, calyx; 3 and 4, — ; 5, tip of style an | Lo3) 8 P fy 3 ce 3 or Tas. 6682. HOYA LINEARIS. Native of the Himalaya. Nat. Ord. AsciePraDEx.—-Tribe ManspENIEx. Genus Hoya, Linn.; (Benth. et Hook. f. Gen. Pl. vol. ii. p. 776.) Hoya linearis ; plus minusve hirsuta, ramis elongatis gracillimis pendulis flaccidis simpliciusculis, foliis 14-2-pollicaribus breviter petiolatis angustis teretibus dorso canaliculatis, umbellis terminalibus subsessilibus laxis multifloris, sepalis brevibus ovato-lanceolatis hirsutis, corolla alba convexa intus glabra v. papillosa, lobis brevibus obtusis, coronz processubus stellatim patentibus. H. linearis, Wall. in Wight Contrib. p. 373 Cat. 8155; Don. Prodr. Fl. Nep. p- 130; Dene. in DC. Prodr. vol. viii. p. 637. Var. sikkimensis ; corollaintus glabra, corona processubus subcylindraceo-ovoideis obtusis. Hook. f. in Fl. Brit. Ind. vol. iv. p. 53 (ined.). The genus Hoya attains its maximum in transgangetic India, and there are still many beautiful species to be im- ported, especially from Assam, Burma, and the Malay Peninsula and Islands. Westward the genus rapidly diminishes in number of species, and is confined to the hotter and damper valleys of the Himalaya. In the most recent examination of the Indian Hoyas (Flora of British India, ined.) there are described seventeen species from the country extending from Burma to Malacca ; thirteen inhabit the Khasia Mountains and Assam ; ten are found in Sikkim ; four of the latter in Nepal, and only two of these enter Kumaon, which is the western as well as northern limit of the genus; five are known in the mountains of the Deccan Peninsula, and only two in Ceylon. By far the most gorgeous species are natives of Borneo and the Moluccas, from whence the allies and rivals of H. imperialis, namely H. grandiflora, Blume, H. Ariadne, Dene., A, lutea, Dene., are to be obtained. oe H. linearis was founded by Wight on Wallich’s Nepal APRIL lst, 1883. specimens. I have examined these in Wight’s Herbarium, and find that the corolla is papillose within and its coronal lobes broader and flatter than in the Sikkim specimens ; unfortunately, however, these flowers are detached from the leaves, and may probably belong to another species (H. lanceolata). On the other hand the form of the coronal processes is not so constant in some Hoyas, as that species can safely be founded on it alone; and I have therefore adopted the course of regarding the Sikkim plant as a variety of the Nepal one. I need not remind the reader that Sikkim and Nepal are coterminous provinces, with almost identical vegetation, and that it is extremely im- probable, having regard to the distribution of Hoyas, that a strictly endemic species of it should exist in Nepal alone. The specimen figured flowered in Messrs. Veitch’s es- tablishment in October last. Descr. More or less hirsute with soft spreading hairs. Stems tufted, pendulous, very slender, flexuous, a foot long and upwards. Leaves one and a half to two inches long — by one-eighth to one-sixth of an inch in diameter, shortly petioled, cylindric, subacute, deeply grooved beneath, dark green. flowers in a sessile terminal lax umbel ; pedicels oue to one and a half inch long. Calyzx-lobes small, hirsute, ovate-lanceolate. Corolla half an inch in diameter, white, recurved, glabrous within; lobes short, broad, obtuse. Coronal processes stellately spreading, obtuse, subcylindric, very pale pink.—J. D. H. Fig. 1, Calyx; 2, corona viewed from above, and 3, from the side:—all enlarged — a 6683. ) &Son imp MS. del. JN Fitch Vincent Brooks Day | LReeve & C® London. Tan. 6683. LAGLIA MoNOPHYLIA. Native of Jamaica. Nat. Ord. OrncHIDEZ.—Tribe EpIDENDBER. Genus Lziia, Lindl. ; (Benth. et Hook. f. Gen. Pl. vol. iii. p. 533, ined.) LxL1a monophylla; rhizomate repente ramoso, caulibus pluribus gracilibus erectis 1-foliatis infra folium longe vaginatis, folio anguste lineari-oblongo obtusiusculo, scapo elongato gracili uni-(rarissime bi-)floro vaginis remotis cylindraceis appressis aucto, perianthio aurantiaco-coccineo 1-14 poll. diametro, sepalis petalisque patentibus subequalibus oblongis subacutis, labello parvo columnam amplectente, lobis lateralibus angustis rotundatis terminali brevissimo recurvo rotundato, disco papilloso, clinandrio dorso crenulato. L. monophylla, WV. E. Brown in Gard. Chron, vol. xviii. (1882), p. 782. TRIGONIDIUM monophyllum, Griesb. Fl. Brit. W. Ind. p. 629. OcrapEsMIa monophylla, Benth. in Gen. Pl. vol. iii. p. 526. Unlike as this pretty plant is to most of its congeners, I am unable to find any character by which it should be removed from the genus to which Mr. N. E. Brown has referred it; except indeed, as may well be held in many cases, habit should be made available. This, however, is allowable only when the characters which habit affords are trenchant, and not those of a transitional nature, or such as may be expected to occur in a genus, from certain tendencies shown amongst its species. Now in the case of Lelia there are species showing a strong tendency to the habit of L. monophylla, notably the beautiful L. cunna- barina, Plate 4302,in which the pseudo-bulbs are suppressed, and the usually large lip of Lelia is represented by an organ little larger in proportion to the size of the flower than is that of L. monophylla. The red colour of the perianth of L. monophylla, too, so unusual in Lelia, is represented by one as vivid, though of a much yellower tint, in L. cinnabarina. APRIL Ist, 1883. a L. monophylla is a native of the mountains of Jamaica, where it was discovered by the late Dr. Bancroft upwards of half a century ago, and communicated to Sir W. Hooker. It has since been collected by Mr. Morris, Director of Gardens and Plantations, and by Mr. G. Syme, the Super- intendent of the Botanical Gardens in Jamaica, growing on trees at elevations of 3000 to 5000 feet above the sea. Living specimens communicated from those Gardens by Mr. Morris in 1881 flowered at Kew in October of the following year. Desor. Pseudo-bulbs none ; rhizomes forming a branched matted mass sending up tufts of leafing and flowering stems. Stem including the flowering scape six to ten inches high, as thick as a crow-quill, rigid, erect; basal part below the leaf one to two inches long, clothed with long tubular appressed sheaths speckled with pink. Leaf solitary, suberect, sessile, two to three inches long by one-half to two-thirds of an inch broad, narrowly linear-oblong, obtuse, coriaceous, midrib strong beneath, deep green above, paler beneath. Scape much longer than the leaf, slender, with two or three speckled sheaths one-half to one inch long, similar to those below the leaf, the uppermost enveloping the base of the ovary. Flowers suberect, one to two inches in diameter, vivid orange-scarlet all over, except the purple anther-cap. Sepals and petals similar, spreading, oblong, subacute. Lip very small, embracing the column, lateral lobes very narrow, rounded; terminal minute, spreading, rounded, papillose on the disk. Colwmn with the dorsal margin of the clinandrium crenulate.—J. D. H. _Fig. 1, Column and lip; 2, clinandrium; 3, anther-cap; 4 and 5, front and back view of pollinea :—ald enlarged. 1 | r] ; : i = | ce 4 » ~ 99 THT: 1 43 “i 6 So np MS. del JN Ritch ith Vincent Brooks Day &900 Imp i L.Reeve & C? London. Tas. 6684. HAMAMELIS VIRGINIANA, Native of the United States. Nat. Ord. HAMAMELIDER. Genus Hamametis, Linn. ; (Benth. et Hook. f. Gen, Pl. vol. i. p. 667.) HaMAMELIs virginiana ; fruticosa v. subarborea, ramulis ultimis petiolis nervisque foliorum subtus furfuracev-puberulis, foliis ovalis oblongis obovatisve grosse crenato-dentatis v. serratis obtusiusculis basi cuneatis v. cordatis ineequilatera- libus, nervis paucis validis, calycis lobis patentibus pallidis, capsula calyce persistente vix duplo longiore. H. virginiana, Linn. Sp. Pl. p. 124 (1753); Zorr. et Gr. Fl. N. Am. vol. i. p. 597; G. B. Emerson Trees and Shrubs of Massachusetts, ed. 2, vol. ii. p. 472, cum ic. pict. H. virginica, Linn. Syst. Nat. ed. xiii. p. 129 (1767); Ait. Hort. Kew. vol. i. p. 167; Schkuhr Handb, vol. i. p. 88, t. 27; Lodd. Bot. Cab. t. 598; Barton Fl. N. Am. vol. iii. p. 21, t. 78; Loudon Arboret. p. 1007, t. 756, 757 ; DC. Prodr. vol. iv. p. 268; A. Gray Man. Bot, ed. 5, p. 173. H. dioica et androgyna?P Walter Carolina, p. 255. Hi. corylifolia, Monch. Meth. p. 273. H. macrophylla, Pursh, Fl. p. 116. TRILorus virginiana, nigra, rotundifolia et dentata, Raf. New. Fl. vol. iii. pp. 15-17. : This, the common Witch Hazel of the United States, derives its name from its resemblance to the English hazel in leaf, a circumstance which led to its use as a divining- rod in the early days of the American Colonies. It abounds in moist woods, and especially along the banks of streams east of the Mississippi from Canada to Louisiana, sometimes attaining twenty feet in height. Like so many other Eastern American trees and bushes, it puts on gorgeous colour at the fall of the leaf, and contributes not a little to the variegated hues of the forests in autumn. G. B. Emerson, in his account of the trees and shrubs of Massachusetts, says of it, “ Amongst the crimson and yellow hues of the falling leaves there is no more remark- able obje@é than the Witch Hazel, in the moment of its APRIL Ist, 1883, parting with its foliage, putting forth a profusion of gaudy yellow blossoms, and giving to November the counterfeited appearance of spring. The union on the same individual of blossoms, fading leaves, and ripe fruits, not very common in any climate, led Linnzus to give to an American plant a Greek name, significant of the fact of its producing flowers together with the fruit.”—Vol. u. . 472. In Plate 6659 of last year’s volume of this work, the rare H. japonica is figured, and the slight diagnostic characters which separate it from this are alluded to. Of these the chief are the more numerous leaf-nerves, broader revolute brown calyx-lobes, and shorter fruiting calyx of the Japan plant. 7 The Witch Hazel, though rare enough in modern gardens, is a very old denizen of England, having been introduced in 1736. It flowers annually in Kew in winter, but in very various months. Descr. A bush or small tree, attaining twenty feet; branchlets puberulous, bifarious, slender. Leaves very irregular in form, from rounded obovate to ovate elliptic or oblong, usually unequally two-lobed at the base, three to six inches long, sometimes nearly as broad, margin waved, coarsely toothed or lobulate ; nerves strong, five to seven pairs, stellately pubescent, at length glabrous ; petiole rather short; stipules lanceolate. Flowers in small globose peduncled axillary involucrate heads, polygamous. Caly# one-quarter of an inch in diameter, with a brown scale-like bract at its base; tube pubescent, obconic ; lobes broadly ovate, obtuse, brown externally, pale within, ciliate. Petals strap-shaped, golden yellow, one-half to two-thirds of an inch long. Stamens four, alternating with as many incurved staminodes. Ovary hairy; styles recurved. Cap- sule ovoid, invested half-way up by the enlarged calyx.— ag EE 7 specie iin : Fig. L Flower; 2, petal; 3, stamen and staminodes; 4 and 5, stamens; 6, staminode ; 7, ovary ; _8, vertical section of young carpel ; 9, ripe fruit ; 10, seed ; 11, embryo ; 12, ripe truit of H. japonica ; 13, seed of ditto; 14, embryo of ditto; —all enlarged. : 6685. | Vincent Brooks Day & Son imp MS.del JNFitc hth g as) G ~ — és O 8 5 4 Tas. 6685. CADIA ELtisrana. Native of Madagascar. Nat. Ord. Leguminosx%.—Tribe SopHOREX. Genus Cap1a, Forsk.; (Benth. et Hook. f. Gen. Pl. vol. i. p. 560.) Capia Ellisiana; glaberrima, ramis ramulisque gracilibus, foliis impari-pinnatis foliolis 7-9 elliptico- v. oblongo-lanceolatis breviter petiolulatis obtuse acumi- natis nitidis, petiolo basi incrassato, tacemis paucifloris breviter pedunculatis, floribus gracile pedicellatis, calyce campanulato breviter 5-lobo, lobis late ovatis acutis, petalis spathulato-obovatis calyce duplo longioribus roseis apicibus dilatatis subtruncatis, leguminibus oblanceolatis falcatis in stipitemi gracilem longe productis stylo elongato-subulato. C. Ellisiana, Baker in Journ. Linn. Soc, Bot. vol. xx. p. 135. The genus Cadia is remarkable amongst Leguminose for its regular flowers, resembling a good deal those of a Mallow or Sida. Only three species are known, natives of eastern tropical Africa, southern Arabia, and Madagascar. C. Ellisiana differs remarkably from its congeners in the very few and large leaflets; those of the African species, U. varia, are it twenty to forty pairs and very narrow, whilst in the other Madagascar species, C. pubescens, they are in eight to ten pairs and broadly oblong. From a note in the Hookerian Herbarium it appears that the latter species was in cultivation in England about half a century ago, in the once famous garden of Mr. Barclay, of Bury Hill. C. Ellisiana was discovered in Madagascar by the eminent missionary, traveller, and author, the Rev: W. Ellis, who ve dried specimens to the Herbarium of the Royal ardens in 1870. The specimen here figured was kindly communicated by Mr. Day, of Tottenham; it flowered as a small bushy pot plant in December, 1882. Descr. Apparently a small slender perfectly glabrous bush, branches woody. Leaves alternate, four to six inches long, pinnate with an odd leaflet; petiole very short; swollen at the base; rachis slender, slightly flexuous, APRIL Ist, 1883. terete; leaflets distant, alternate, spreading, very shortly petiolulate, three to four inches long, by one to one and a half broad, elliptic-oblong or lanceolate, obtusely acuminate, base acute, rather hard, shining, midrib stout ; nerves very slender, finely reticulated; stipelle none; stipules minute. Flowers one and a half inches long, in axillary few-flowered short and shortly peduncled racemes, nodding or pendulous ; pedicels one-half to one inch long, very slender. Calyx campanulate, pale green, terete, shortly five-lobed ; base acute; lobes broadly ovate, acute, erect. Petals twice as long as the calyx, obovate-spathulate, convolute, forming a campanulate corolla, rose-red; tips broad, almost truncate. Stamens subequal, filaments slender; anthers included, ellipsoid, yellow. Pod (young) three inches long, oblan- ceolate, falcate, narrowed into a very slender stalk, tip suddenly and obliquely contracted into a slender subulate style.—J. D. H. . Fig. 1 and 2, anthers; 3, calyx and young pod ; 4, young seed :—all enlarged. Vincent Bro oks Day & Son Imp MS. acl IN FED Lith g a=) 6 | oO: O 8 o 5 ce | shalt, ef Fi prs Tas. 6686. DADALACAN THUS MACROPHYLLUS,. Native of Burma. Nat. Ord. AcanrHacEx.—Tribe RUELLIER. Genus Dapatacantuvs, 7. Anders.; (Benth. et Hook. f. Gen. Pl. vol. ii. p. 1082.) DzxDALACANTHUS macrophyllus ; strictus, erectus, minute pubescens, foliis ellip- tico-lanceolatis -ovatisve obscure subserrulatis v. integerrimis acuminatis basi longe productis, spicis paniculatis strictis elongatis continuis v. interruptis, bracteis laxe imbricatis appressis ovatis obovatisve grosse venosis obtusis subacutis v. mucronatis integerrimis glanduloso-pubescentibus, calyce minuto ad medium 5-fido lobis lanceolatis acuminatis, corolle violacee tubo gracillimo bracteis multo longiore, fauce brevi modice ampliato, lobis oblongis obtusis. D. macrophyllus, 7. Anders. in Journ. Linn. Soc. Bot. vol. ix. p. 487. Erantuemum macrophyllum, Wall. Cat. 7179; Nees in Wall, Pl. As. Rar vol. iii. p. 106, e¢ in DC. Prodr. vol. xi. p. 446. A tall herb, native of the drier forests of the upper part of the Malay Peninsula, extending northward from Moul- mein in Tenasserim to Pegu, and eastward into Burma, flowering in the dry season. It belongs to a class of Acanthaceous plants that are very suitable for winter decoration, flowering freely under proper treatment, which consists very much in careful watering at the time when in their native country little or no rain falls. Several species are in cultivation under the names of Hranthemwm_and Justicia, as D. nervosus, Plate 1358, and D. strictus, Plate 3068. : D. macrophyllus has been long cultivated at Kew, having been introduced, no doubt, from the Calcutta Botanical Garden; it has flowered freely in the Palm House and elsewhere during the winter months. Desor. Erect, two to three feet high, sparingly branched, more or less puberulous with appressed scattered very small hairs on both surfaces of the leaves, and with spreading short glandular hairs on the stem branches above bracts and inflorescence generally. Leaves petioled, lower five to May Ist, 1883. nine inches long, elliptic-lanceolate, acuminate, base of the blade decurrent on the petiole, margin sometimes obscurely serrulate or denticulate. Spikes long-peduneled, strict, erect, three to eight inches long, narrow, glandular-pube- rulous ; bracts loosely imbricating, one-half to three-fourths of an inch long, appressed, ovate or obovate, tip rounded acute or mucronate, green, strongly veined; bracteoles narrowly lanceolate equalling or rather longer than the calyx. Calyx minute, about one-tenth of an inch long, cleft to the middle into five lanceolate erect glandular- pubescent lobes. Corolla one and a quarter to one and a half inches long, erect, pale violet-blue; tube very slender, curved; throat short, moderately inflated; limb reflexed, about three-quarters of an inch in diameter; lobes oblong, obtuse, with darker violet veins. Filaments about as long as the corolla-lobes. Ovary slender, glandular-pubescent, —J. D, A, Fig. 1, Bract, bracteoles, and calyx ; 2, portion of corolla and stamens ; 3, stigma ; 4, ovary :—all enlarged, 6687 Nay > ie ~ ¢ « \ \ oe, ‘@ & Ge >. Ge AAR? Vincent Brooks Day & Son. imp 4 pe &. oH tis hi =a Se : j . \ a - ts . pete En - é y \< Sy gx ss AN — re / Fe . ‘ > yp \ 4 wy 6 Net i ¢ —_— ; —, f . : * ) a Ne a a , i if i] f 2 g 3 g AB 9: Oo oS i 4 ~ MSad bv Ack bth Tas. 6687. GREVILLEA ANNULIFERA. Native of Western Australia, Nat. Ord. Prorracem.—Tribe GREVILLEZ. Genus Grevittes, Br.; (Benth. et Hook. f. Gen. Pl. vol. iii, p. 180.) GREVILLEA (Cycladenia) annulifera; frutex glaberrimus, foliis pinnatis, segmentis 5-11 remotis divaricatis anguste linearibus rigidis pungentibus marginibus revolutis subtus 2-sulcatis, racemis laxe multifloris breviter pedunculatis solitariis paniculatisve, floribus gracile breviter pedicellatis flayis, perianthio brevi glaberrimo intus basi subvilloso segmentis angustis revolutis apicibus dilatatis, toro pulvinari, ovario longe stipitato glaberrimo, stylo longissimo, stigmate disciforme laterali. G. annulifera, F. Muell. Fragment. vol. iv. p. 85; Benth. Fl. Austral. vol. v. p- 460. A rigid wiry-leaved shrub, characteristic of the scrubby vegetation of many parts of Australia. It belongs to a small section of the large genus Grevillea, which numbers upwards of one hundred and sixty species (almost without exception natives of that continent), in which the racemes are usually panicled and the flowers are not unilateral on the rachis. Two species only belong to it, the present and G. leucopteris, with tomentose branches and segments of the leaves four to ten inches long; both are natives of the Murchison River, on the west coast of Australia, a subtropical region. G. annulifera was raised from seed sent by Baron Mueller in 1880, and flowered in the Royal Gardens in July of last year. Descr. A shrub six to eight feet high, everywhere glabrous or nearly so, and somewhat glaucous ; branches stiff, terete. Leaves spreading and recurved, three to five inches long, pinnate; segments an inch long, distant, rigid, spreading, linear-subulate, pungent, dark green above, glaucous beneath with a strong midrib; petiole one-half to one inch long. Racemes three to four inches long, shortly peduncled, panicled at the end of the branches, subcylindric, May Ist, 1883. lax-flowered, rachis pale green. Jlowe7s sulphur-yellow, shortly pedicelled, arranged all round the rachis. Perianth very short, one-third of an inch long; limb strongly revo- lute; lobes minutely puberulous, linear with a dilated ovate obtuse antheriferous tip; tube villous at the base within. Torus cushion-shaped. Ovary gibbous, stipitate. Style upwards of an inch long, curved, very stout, with an oblique disciform stigma.—J. D. H. Fig. 1, Flower ; 2, segment of perianth ; 3, top of style and stigma ; 4, torus arid ovary :—all enlarged. 6688. i | | agrees [> PD del. IN Bitch ‘ Vincent Brooks Day & Son bp 5 LReeve & C2. Loudon a —— Tab, 6688. SAXIFRAGA LINGULATA var. cochlearis. Native of the Maritime Alps. Nat. Ord. SaxtFRAGACEH.—Tribe SaXIFRAGES. Genus Saxrrraca, Linn. ; (Benth. et Hook. f. Gen. Pi. vol. i. p. 635.) Saxirraca lingulata ; caudicibus ceespitosis crassis foliorum vestigiis vestitis, ramis brevibus foliosis glabris v. tenuiter glanduliferis, foliis rosulatis lineari- v. obovato-spathulatis acutis obtusis v. linearibus apicibus rotundatis integerrimis v. crenulatis calcareo-crustatis, caulinis paucis linearibus, caulibus gracilibus, floribus corymboso-paniculatis gracile pedicellatis, calycis glabri lobis ovatis v. oblongis obtusis marginibus membranaceo-ciliolatis, petalis obovatis albis sepalis multoties longioribus. Var. cochlearis ; minor, rubro- v. purpureo-glandulosa, panicula thyrsoidea, foliis basilaribus linearibus apice in laminam rotundatam v. late spathulatam dilatatis. S. lingulata var. cochlearis, Engler Monog. Gatt. Sazxifrag. p. 237. S. cochlearis, Reichb. Fl. Germ. Excurs. p. 559 ; Bertol. Fl. Ital. vol. iv. p. 456; Ardoino Fl. Alp. Marit. p. 149. Sazifraga lingulata is a widely-distributed plant of the Mediterranean region, varying much and assuming con- siderably different forms in the regions it inhabits. The Apennines seem to be the centre of its geographical range, from whence it extends to Sicily in one direction, and westward along the Maritime Aips to Provence in the other, The var. cochlearis is a small state of the plant, confined, as far as is known, to the alpine regions of the mountains north of Nice and Mentone, from the Col de Tenda to Mount Mularé. an A The specimen here figured was communicated by Mr. Jas. Atkins, of Painswick, who flowered this rare plant in June of last year, and who communicated two sub- varieties; a smaller with the leaves only one-half, an inch, figured on the right-hand side of the Plate; the other, the eh figure, having leaves three-quarters to one inch ong. MT ia \ g MAY Ist, 18835. Drscr. Densely tufted; rootstocks short, much branched, clothed below with withered remains of old leaves. Leaves densely rosulate, spreading, one-half to one inch long, linear with a dilated rounded or spathulate tip, thickly coriaceous, glaucous blue with cartilaginous margins, edged with a crust of lime, quite glabrous or the young slightly hairy. Flowering-stems from the centre of the rosettes of leaves, five to seven inches high, very slender, bright red-brown, as are the branches, peduncles, and pedicels of the thyrsoid or subcorymbose erect open panicle; bracts and leaves on the flower-stem small, erect, linear, red-brown. Flowers one-half to three-quarters of an inch in diameter. Calyx red-brown, tube hemispheric ; lobes small, ovate, obtuse. Petals spreading, obovate, tip rounded, pure white. Filaments short; anthers small. Styles short, recurved.—J. D. HH, Fig. 1, Vertical section of flower ; 2, stamen; 3, style; 4, transverse section of ovary :—all enlarged. Le Vincent Brooks Day & Sonkmp MS del INFta hin LReeve & @° London Tas, 6689. UTRICULARIA birtpa. Native of India and China. Nat. Ord. LENTIBULARINEX. Genus Urricunarts, Linn; (Benth. et Hook. f. Gen. Pl. vol. ii. p. 987.) Urricurarra bifida; erecta, dense cespitosa, glaberrima, foliis scapo multo brevioribus filiformibus obtusis viridibus, surculis repentibus vesiculiferis, scapis rigidis 2-5-pollicaribus remotifloris, pedicellis brevibus marginatis fructiferis decurvis, bracteis minutis, floribus breviter pedicellatis aureis, sepalo superiore late oblongo concavo obtuso, inferiore obovato, corolla labio superiore parvo rotundato, inferiore brevi 2-lobo, palato magno turgido, calcare 3 poll, longo lente curvo v. fere recto, sepalis fructiferis late elliptico-ovatis, seminibus obovoideis testa laxa scrobiculata. U. bifida, Zinn. Herb. ; A. DC. Prodr. vol. viii. p- 21; Oliv. in Journ, Linn. Soe. vol. iii. p. 182, Hxel. Syn. U. humilis. U. biflora, Wall. Cat. 1498, non Roxb. U. diantha, A. DC. 1. c. p. 21, Excl. Syn. U. Wallichiana, Benj. in Bot. Zeit. 1845, p. 213, non Wight. U. brevicaulis, Benj. in Linnea, vol, xx. p. 303. U. antirrhinoides, Wall. Cat. 1498 6. A very singular little plant, forming, under cultivation, mossy matted tufts of leaves in a pot of sodden sandy soil, above which the wiry rigid stems with yellow flowers, something like those of a miniature Linaria, rise in profusion. Besides these conspicuous organs, there issue from near the base of the leaves slender transparent threads bearing the characteristic bladders of the Utricularias, which, no doubt, entrap minute aquatic animals, as do those of our English floating species of the genus. Like so many other water-loving plants, it has a very wide range, from Nepal, Assam, Chittagong (where I gathered 1t in company with Dr. Thomson in 1850) to Malacca, and it 1s also found in Ceylon, China, Japan, Borneo, and the Philippine Islands. It is very nearly allied to another Indian species, Uz Wallichiana, which differs chiefly in having erect fruiting pedicels. MAY Ist, 1883, Seeds of U. bifida were received from Mr. Ford, Superin- tendent of the Hongkong Botanical Gardens in 1881, which germinated freely; and the plants they produced flowered abundantly in September, 1852. . Drsor. Forming densely-matted masses of thread-like rhizomes giving off tufts of leaves and bearing obliquely orbicular very minute pedicelled bladders; mouth of the bladders lateral, overhung by two subulate processes depending from the upper lip. Leaves erect, one to two inches long, filiform, or slightly thickened upwards, one- nerved, obtuse, bright green. capes very numerous, two to five times as long as the leaves, slender, rigid, erect, simple or very sparingly branched, naked. Flowers distant, pedicelled, pedicels recurved in fruit. Sepals in flower small, upper about one-tenth of an inch long, shortly oblong, obtuse, concave, lower smaller obovate. Corolla bright yellow with a very large and prominent hemispheric orange-yellow palate; upper lip reflexed; lower very short, two-lobed, like two pendulous auricles from the palate ; Spur one-fourth to one-third of an inch long, stout, nearly straight, subacute, Fruiting-sepals one-fourth of an inch long, broadly ovate, acute or obtuse, enclosing the shortly oblong capsule. Seeds very numerous, obovoid, testa lax closely fitted.—J. D. H. Figs. 1, 5, and 6, Bladders: 2 ovary ; 3, stamens; 4, flower; 7, fruiting cal m + atta > 3 > > d > ? > fos and pedicel ; 8, capsule; 9, placenta and seeds i—ali enlarged. : TOT Sng BI I i saat Vincent Brooks Day & Son 7 Selene ice Me RR a Tas. 6690. SPIRANTHES EUPHLEBIA. Native of Brazil. Nat. Ord. OrcuipEx.—-Tribe NEoTTIEZ. Genus SprrantuEs, Linn.; (Benth. et Hook. f. Gen. Pl. vol. iii. p. 596.) SprranTHEs (Stenorhynchus) exphlebia ; caule robusto superne cum inflorescentia pubescentibus, foliis rosulatis lineari-oblongis subacutis undulatis, vaginis elongatis acuminatis superioribus bracteiformibus, bracteis elongato-lanceolatis, racemo brevi densifloro, sepalis ovato-lanceolatis longe acuminatis infra medium cum ovario in tubum villosum connatis petalisque dimidiato-lanceolatis paullo brevioribus albis brunneo pulcherrime venosis, labello petalis multo minore, ungue gracili elongato, lamina lanceolato-panduriformi acuminata. S. euphlebia, Reichd. f. in Flora, 1883, p. 16. A singular plant, belonging to a section of the genus Spiranthes in which the perianth 1s decurrent on the ovary ; a tendency to which structure may be seen in S. aphylla (Plate 2797), avd S. speciosa (Plate 1374), and S. orchioides (Plate 1036); whilst in 8. grandiflora (Plate 2730) it is carried to as great an extent as in 8. euphlebia. This plant was received from Messrs. Shuttleworth, Carden, and Co., who imported it from Brazil with S. speciosa, and it flowered in the Royal Gardens in November of last year. Descr. Stout, erect, twelve to eighteen inches high. Leaves all radical, five to six inches long, by one and a half to two inches broad, linear- or obovate-oblong, contracted into a very short broad petiole, acute, rather fleshy, glabrous, undulate, pale green with distant white blotches. Scape light greenish-brown, glabrous below, above pubescent ; sheaths numerous, erect, dark brown, lower amplexicaul with lanceolate acuminate tips; upper narrower, Semi- amplexicaul, lancevlate, passing into the bracts. Raccmes two to three inches long and nearly as broad. Flowers not numerous, but crowded, horizontal, very shortly pedicelled ; bracts nearly as long as the perianth-tube, lanceolate, erect, May lst, 1883. dark brown. LPerianth pubescent externally, white with red-brown veins on the free portions of the sepals and petals. Sepals united into a tube half an inch long, witha gibbosity at the base on the anterior face ; free portions spreading, lanceolate, finely acuminate. Petals inserted at the mouth of the calycine tube, semi-lanceolate, acuminate, erect; forming with the posterior sepal an ovate shallow erect hood. Lip very small, inserted at the very base of the calyx-tube; claw long, concealed in the tube; limb ver small, recurved, lanceolate and contracted at the middle on each side, veined like the sepals and petals.—J. D. H. Fig. 1, Flower ; 2, éalyx tube, column, and lip (very inaccurately represented) ; 3, column showing the stigma ; 4, anther ; 5 and 6, pollen masses :——all magnitied. > © So one’ etl tanetmrgn ea “NP “ ba) A.B. del, JN Fitch hth. Vincent Brooks Day & Son imp. LReeve & C° London. Tas. 6696. CEPHASLIS tomentosa. Native of Guiana. Nat. Ord. Rusracrz.—Tribe PsycHoTrRiEZx. Genus CepHztis, Swartz; (Benth. et Hook.f. Gen, Pl. vol. ii. p. 127.) CrepH2xuis (Bracteocardis) tomentosa ; hirsuta, foliis breviter petiolatis ellipticis v. elliptico-lanceolatis utrinque acuminatis, nervis numerosis, stipulis utrinque 2-nis elongato-lanceolatis erectis, capitulis longe pedunculatis, pedunculis axillaribus v. terminalibus 1-cephalis, involucri bracteis 2 magnis late ovatis subacutis v. cordato-reniformibus coccineis hirsutis, bracteolis spathulatis v. oblongis hirsutis, calycis lobis brevibus, corolla tubulosa flava limbo brevissimo 5-dentato, dentibus triangularibus patulis, antheris linearibus subsessilibus dorsifixis. C. tomentosa, Willd. Sp. Pl. vol. i. p. 977; Vahl Eelog. vol. i. p. 19; DOC. Prodr, vol. iv. p. 533. Catticocca tomentosa, Gmel. Syst. vol. i. p. 371. Tapocomea tomentosa, Aubl. Guian. vol. i. p. 160, t. 61. A very singular plant, congeneric with that yielding the medicinal Ipecacuanha, but of very different appearance, a native of tropical America, whence it extends from Mexico to Guiana on the east, and Peru on the west side of the Andes; also found in Trinidad, but in no other of the West Indian Islands. It belongs to a small group of the genus (which is reduced to Psychotria by many authors), to which the sectional name of 7'apogomea has been applied by Mueller Argan in Martius’ Flora of Brazil (Fasc. lxxxiv.), distinguished chiefly by the bracts; it includes five species so strikingly alike that they may prove to be varieties of one; of these two have the calyx-lobes much longer than its tube, whilst in the other two the calyx-lobes are no longer than the tube. C. tomentosa is one of the last group, but differs from Mueller’s description in having tufts of hairs in the corolla-tube. C. tomentosa was introduced into cultivation by Messrs. Veitch, who imported it from British Guiana, and sent the JUNE Ist, 1883. specimen here figured to Kew to be named in September, 1882. Descr. A shrub, hirsute throughout, with long soft hairs, especially in the branches and peduncle. Leaves six to ten by two to four inches long, rather membranous, elliptic or elliptic-lanceolate, acuminate at both ends; nerves very numerous, eight to sixteen pairs, slender, arching; petiole one-half to one and a half inches long, stout; stipules one-half to three-quarters of an inch long, in pairs on each side of the stem, narrowly subulate-lanceolate, erect. Pe- duncle solitary, axillary or terminal, one to four inches long, stout, erect. Bracts two, opposite, spreading, one to one and a half inches long, one to two inches broad, broadly ovate or subreniform or orbicular-ovate, acute or acuminate, scarlet, rugose, hirsute; bracteoles irregular, short, hairy, spathulate. Flowers densely crowded, three-fourths of an inch long. Calya-lobes short. Corolla twice as long as the calyx-lobes, tubular, yellow, pubescent ; lobes five, very small, triangular-ovate, spreading; tube with tufts of hairs within about the middle. Anthers linear, subsessile near the mouth of the corolla, peltately attached. Ovary small, two-celled; style slender; stigmas short, linear. Drupe blue.—J. D. H. Fig. 1, Head cut vertically, of the natural size; 2, bracteole ; 3, bracteoles and flower ; 4, vertical section of flower (inaccurate as to lower part); 5, tuft of hairs of interior of corolla-tube; 6, anthers; 7, transverse section of ovary :—all enlarged. AB. dd IN. Bitch lth. Vincent Brooks, Day &Son-inp ae L Reeve & C° London. Baad es Da ate lo Tas. 6697. ACER INSIGNE. Native of Persia. Nat. Ord. SapInDACER.—Tribe ACERINEE. Genus Acer, Linn.; (Benth. et Hook. f. Gen, Pl. vol. i. p. 409.) AcER insigne; ramulis validis glaberrimis, alabastri squamis magnis lineari- oblongis rubris, foliis gracile petiolatis ambitu reniformi-rotundatis ad medium palmato-5-lobis subtus glaucis, lobis oblongis v. oblongo-lanceolatis grosse obtuse serratis, floribus in paniculas terminales pyramidatas dispositis, petalis linearibus sepala ovata vix superantibus, filamentis glaberrimis, ovario pubescente, samaris glabris v. pilosiusculis alis subdivergentibus. A. insigne, Boiss. et Buhse, Aufz. p. 46; Boiss. Fil. Orient. vol. i. p. 947 ; G. Nicholson in Gard. Chron. 1881, vol. ii. p. 75. A. velutinum?, Van Volzem in Gard. Chron. 1882, vol. i. p. 744. The subject of this plate has been much discussed amongst botanists and arboriculturists, but its name and place have, I think, been definitely settled by Mr. G. Nicholson (of this establishment), who communicated to the “ Gardener’s Chronicle” a very valuable account of the cultivated Maples, including this species. The specimens were communicated by M. J. Van Volxem from his fine establishment in Belgium, and though still young it pro- claims itself to be one of the handsomest species of the genus in cultivation, being conspicuous in late spring for the size and beautiful colour of the bud-scales, and tender green of its pale foliage. M. Van Volxem says of it, that it is the hardiest of the eighty species and varieties of Maples cultivated by him, having withstood the disastrous winters of 1879-80 and 1880-1; and being a late and cautious grower, it had never even been nipped by the late frosts. Our Kew experience of the plant accords with M. Van Volxem’s, but Dr. Masters, whose garden is at a considerably higher level than Kew (Haling), says that this is not his experience. At this date (May 18th) of this very exceptionally late spring, the buds are not even JUNE lst, 1883. swollen, and will probably not burst for some weeks yet, whilst most of the other Maples are in young leaf. According to M. Van Volxem, the earliest notice of this plant under cultivation is in Vilmorin’s Catalogue of 1867, where it is said to be a native of Pontus, at an elevation of 1500 metres; M. Van Volxem’s own plants were raised from seed collected by Balansa, he believes, in Lazistan.> Boissier gives the mountains of North Persia (provinces of Talysch, Ghilan, and Asterabad) as the habitat of A. msigne ; and woods of Ghilan in South Persia as that of the var. velutina (under which name this has been culti- : vated). I am indebted to Dr. Masters for the specimen figured, which flowered in his garden on May 23rd, 1882, before the plants did at Kew in the same year, and which were also received from M. Van Volxem. Descr. A tree. Branchlets rather stout, terete, dark brown ; buds ovoid, stout.. Leaves five to six inches in diameter, rounded-reniform in outline, palmately divided to the middle into five to seven oblong acute coarsely obtusely serrated lobes, glabrous above, beneath more or less tomentose. Flowers one-fourth of an inch in diameter, green, in terminal pyramidal panicles three to four inches long, appearing with the leaves, polygamous, the males with long slender exserted stamens, the hermaphrodite with very short stamens. Sepals ovate, obtuse. Petals hardly longer than the sepals, small, linear. Filaments quite glabrous ; anthers small. Ovary hairy.—J. D. H. . Fig. 1, Male flower; .2, the same cut vertically; 3, female flower; 4, stamens » ovary; 6, young fruit; 7, diagram of floral organs :—all enlarged. Vincent Brooks,Day &Son imp. LReeve & C° London ween _S =) ba Ni ee, ene Tas. 6698. GREVILLEA ponicea, Br. Native of New South Wales. Nat. Ord. Proreacrx.—Tribe GREVILLEZ. Genus GreviLLEA, Br.; (Benth, et Hook. f. Gen. Pl. vol. iii. p. 180.) GREVILLEA (Lissostylis) punicea; ramulis gracilibus foliisque subtus et inflorescentia sericeis, foliis subsessilibus elliptico-lanceolatis acutis v. obtusis et apiculatis costa subtus prominula, floribus ad apicem pedunculi cernuis subumbellatim capitatis, pedicellis brevibus, perianthii coccinei tubo angusto sulcato intus tomentoso, limbi lobis tubo brevioribus lineari-oblongis revolutis, toro recto, ovario glaberrimo gracili stipitato, stylo elongato puberulo, stigmate discoideo. G. punicea, Br. in Trans. Linn. Soe. vol. x. p. 169, et Prodr. Fl. Nov. Holl. p. 376; Meissn. in DC. Prodr. vol. xiv. p. 354; Benth. Fl. Austral. vol. v. p. 468 ; Bot. Reg. t. 1319; Lodd. Bot. Cab. t. 1357 ; Reichb. Icon. Exot. t. 105. LysanTHE speciosa, Knight, Prot. p. 118. As is the case with so many beautiful Australian plants, this, which was introduced so long ago as 1825, has long since been out of cultivation, having shared the fate of the “ hard-wooded’’ class of greenhouse and conservatory shrubs which require a rather special treatment. It is a native of Port Jackson itself, and extends thence westwards to the Blue Mountains. Its nearest ally is G. sericea, Br., to which G. dubia, Br. (Plate 3798), is referred, and it may prove to be only a brilliantly coloured variety of that plant with larger flowers and longer styles, the geographical area inhabited by them being the same. The seeds from which the specimens here figured were raised were received by Dr. Schomburgk, of the Adelaide Botanical Garden, in 1880, and the plant flowered in March of this year in the Temperate House of the Royal Gardens. Descr. A shrub; branches slender, together with the leaves beneath and inflorescence clothed with a fine silky pubescence of appressed hairs attached by the middle. Leaves alternate, one to two and a half inches long, by one- third to two-thirds of an inch broad, oblong or elliptic-. JULY Ist, 1883, lanceolate, rarely oblanceolate, obtuse or subacute, with usually an apiculus, smooth and shining above, midrib strong beneath, nerves very obscure, when dry rusty brown beneath with recurved margins; petiole very short. Pe- duncles terminal, slender, one-fourth to one-half of an inch long, curved, bearing a much shortened umbelliform raceme of brilliant scarlet flowers; pedicels one-sixth to one-fourth of an inch long. Perianth tubular, tube one-half of an inch long, grooved, villous within; lobes half the length of the tube, oblong, obtuse, revolute, glabrous within. ® ov iat nd ee Se gee a 5 a ae Tas. 6699, GYPSOPHILA CERASTIOIDES. Native of the Himalaya. Nat. Ord. CanYorpHYLLEX.—Tribe SILENER. Genus Gypsornita, Linn.; (Benth. et Hook. f. Gen. Pl. vol. i. p. 146.) Gypsopuita (Heterochroa) cerastioides ; perennis, tota cano-tomentosa, rhizomate lignoso, ramis diffusis prostratis et ascendentibus foliosis, foliis obovatis spathulatisque obtusis in petiolum angustatis utrinque pubescentibus enerviis, cymis subcapitatis sessilibus v. breviter pedunculatis foliaceo-bracteatis, rarius nudis evolutis et corymboso-paniculatis, calycis semiquinquefidi lobis oblongis subacutis ciliatis, petalis calyce duplo longioribus obcordato-spathulatis 3-nerviis, stylis 2-3, seminibus latis atris tuberculatis. G. cerastioides, Don Prodr. Fl. Nep. p. 213; Hook. f. Fl. Brit. Ind. vol. i. p. 217. Acosmra rupestris, Benth. in Wall. Cat. n. 644; Cambess. in Jacquem. Voy. Bot. p. 26, t. 28. i Timzosta rupestris, Klotzsch in Bot. Reis. Pr. Waldem. p. 138, t. 33. This belongs to a small section of the large genus Gypso- phila, established by Bunge for the reception of a few Asiatic species, characterized chiefly by the hairyness, the leafy cymes, and campanulate five-fid calyx, and which he regarded as of generic value. Other characters attributed to Heterochroa by its author are either variable or inconstant as to their presence, as a slight irregularity of the corolla, polygamous inflorescence, a scarious calyx, and the coloured petals which suggested the name. G. cerastioides is a. very common Himalayan plant, extending from Kashmir to Sikkim, at elevations between 6000 and 12,000 feet. The flowers vary a good deal in size, and in colour from white to lilac, always with three red or purplish veins. The specimen figured was from the Joad collection, which flowered at Kew in May of last year. There are also plants at Kew raised from seeds sent from the Royal Botanical Garden, Calcutta, by Dr. King, col- lected in Sikkim. The plant is a very free flowerer, and well adapted for the rock garden. JULY Ist, 1883, Dnscr. A low densely pubescent herb, clothed with spreading soft hairs. ootstock short, woody, with a fusiform woody root. Branches numerous from the crown of the rootstock, three to eight inches long, decumbent at the base, then prostrate or suberect, leafy, simple or dichotomously branched. Leaves pubescent on both sur- faces, radical long-petioled, one to one and a half inches long, spathulate or oblanceolate; cauline one-third to two- thirds of an inch long, obovate or spathulate, obtuse or rounded at the apex, narrowed into a short petiole, nerves very obscure. Cymes terminal, usually sessile between the uppermost pair of leaves, rarely peduncled and evolute, becoming panicled or corymbose; pedicels usually very short, longer in the evolute cymes. Flowers erect, one-third to nearly two-thirds of an inch in diameter. Calyx cam- panulate, five-cleft to the middle; lobes oblong ovate, subacute, ciliate. Petals twice as long as the calyx, obovate- spathulate, white or lilac with three pink veins. Stamens shorter than the calyx; anthers small. Styles two in our specimens (three are figured by Klotzsch). Capsule oblong, rather longer than the calyx. Seeds broad, flat, black.— J. DH, Fig. 1, Calyx and stamens ; 2, and 3, stamens; 4, pistil:—all enlarged. - & Son bap: MS. del, JN Fitch lth. Vincent Brooks,Day & - L Reeve & C° London. Tas. 6700. ~ TORENIA riava. Native of Cochin China and India. Nat. Ord. ScRoPHULARINEEZ.—Tribe GRATIOLER. Genus Toren, Linn.; (Benth, et Hook.f. Gen. Pl, vol. ii. p. 954.) TorEnta flava; caulibus suberectis v. prostratis elongatis glabris nodis inferioribus radicantibus, foliis petiolatis ovatis grosse crenatis glabris v. parce puberulis, floribus axillaribus solitariis et in racemos terminales dispositis, pedicellis calyce brevioribus, calyce oblongo plicato angulis non alatis, corolla tubo exserto superne et intus purpureo limbi aurei lobis rotundatis, filamentis longioribus basi unidentatis. T. flava, Ham. in Wall. Cat. 3957, A, B; Benth. Scroph. Ind. p. 38, et in DC Prodr. vol. x. p. 411. ‘ T. Bailloni, Godefroy in Ill. Horticole, vol. xxv. (1878), t. 324; E. Morren in ot ga Horticole, vol. xxix. (1879), pp. 22 et 29, t.1,£.2; Floral Magazine, » t. 331. PerRIsTEe1Ra racemosa, Griff. Notul. vol. iv. p. 120. The species of the beautiful genus Torenia are very difficult of discrimination, being variable in habit and in the size of the flower. In the first published plate of this plant (in the “Illustration Horticole”’), it is represented as suberect, with the flowers all towards the ends of the branches, and hence, through the reduction of the floral leaves, subracemose ; thus precisely according in habit and inflorescence with native specimens from India and Eastern Asia. In the “ Belgique Horticole ” there is a good figure of it (vol. xxix. t. 1), which represents the plant as erect, but with axillary flowers; and, lastly, in the ‘ Revue Horticole” (1879, p. 69) an excellent wood-cut represents it as with pendent branches and solitary axillary flowers, which accords with the habit of the plant as grown at Kew. T. flava was discovered in Assam by Buchanan Hamilton three-quarters of a century ago, and has since been found to extend southward to Tenesserim, and eastward to Siam and China. It was introduced into cultivation by M. Linden, JULY Ist, 1883. who received the seeds from M. Godefroy in Cochin China in 1876, and it is now a common stove plant, flowering in summer and autumn. Descr. Branched from the base, glabrous or sparsely hairy. Stems and branches erect, from a decumbent rooting base, or prostrate, or pendulous, acutely four-angled, one to one and a half inches long. Leaves one to nearly two inches long, petioled, ovate or oblong, acute or obtuse, coarsely crenate; petiole half as long as the blade or shorter. Flowers axillary and solitary, or subracemose at the ends of the branches, in distant pairs on an erect rachis with small bracts or floral leaves; pedicels usually shorter than the calyx, thickened in fruit. Oalyx one-half to three-fourths of an inch long, narrowly oblong, tube with five deep furrows and acute ribs or keels; lobes short, subulate. Corolla variable in length, tube sometimes twice as long as the calyx, rather broad, red-purple above, dirty yellow beneath ; limb one inch in diameter and less, bright golden yellow, with a purple eye. Longer filaments with a tooth at the base.—J. D. H. Fig. 1, Corolla laid open; 2, ovary and disk :—both enlarged. 6707. Vincent Brooks Day & Son kup re 5 eel oO: OQ ca @ = he ae fej be TRINITY TTT IIT TSAI ENTS Tas. 6701. ERANTHEMUM oporneensnz. Native of Borneo. Nat. Ord. AcantHacex.—Tribe Justiciex. Genus Eranruemum, Linn.; (Benth. et Hook. J. Gen, Pl. vol. ii. p. 1097.) ErantHEemum borneense ; ramulis glabris, foliis breviter crasse petiolatis ovato- oblongis acuminatis basi acutis v. rotundatis coriaceis costa crassa nervis utrinque 8-10, spica simplici densiflora, rachi stricta et calycibus puberulis, } floribus albis non secundis confertis, calyce 3 poll. longo segmentis subulatis, corolla tubo pollicari pubescente fauce non ampliata, limbi vix bilabiati 13-poll. diam., laciniis elliptico-oblongis obtusis inferiore majore, antheris purpureis, staminibus abortivis ad basin fertilium minutis, ovario glaberrimo. This belongs to a genus whose species are very difficult . of discrimination, and whose Indian ones have lately been | __— ¢arefully revised by Mr. C. B. Clarke for the “ Flora of British India.” Of these several have been figured under false names in this Magazine. Thus Plate 5957 represents, under the name of L. palatiferum, Nees (according to Mr. Clarke), two species, neither of them the true palatiferum of Nees, the right-hand one being H. cinnabarinum, Wall, and the left-hand one E. malaccense, Clarke. I quite concur in Mr. Clarke’s opinion as to neither of the plants figured on this Plate being the true palatiferwm, but find it difficult to believe that they are specifically distinct from one another. Another is H. crenulatum var. grandiflorum (Plate 5440), which is the EB. Parishii, Clarke (Asystasia Parishii, T, Anders. in Journ. Linn. Soc. vol. ix. p- 526). From the two first of these E. borneense differs in the form of the strict stout spike, the flowers of which are not secund, and from H. Parishii it differs in the corolla-tube not being funnel-shaped above. A much nearer ally is the L. Ander- soni, Masters (Bot. Mag. Plate 5771), which has a glabrous 7. corolla tube, and a spotted lower lobe of the corolla limb, and very long lanceolate leaves narrowed at both ends. Eranthemum borneense was discovered in N.W. Borneo JULY Ist, 1883, by Mr. Curtis, when collecting for Messrs. Veitch, by whom: the plant was sent to Kew in May of last year. Descr. A nearly glabrous shrub; branches terete, smooth, green. Leaves four to six inches long, very shortly petioled, ovate-oblong, acuminate, quite entire, base rounded or acute, glabrous, studded with raphides, thickly coriaceous, bright pale green above, paler beneath with a very stout broad midrib, nerves eight to ten pairs strong beneath arched. Spike four to six inches long ; peduncle and rachis strict, stout, erect, finely pubescent, unbranched. lowers crowded all round the rachis, forming a conical inflorescence; bracts and bracteoles minute, subulate. Calyx one-third of an inch long, pubescent; lobes subulate, acute. Corolla white, with a faint lemon tinge on the middle of the lower segments; tube an inch long, quite cylindric, pubescent, throat not dilated; limb an inch and a half in diameter, obscurely two-lipped, quite flat, segments oblong obtuse, the lower largest. Fertile stamens with purple anthers; rudimentary stamens minute at the base of the fertile. Ovary glabrous.—J. D. H. Fig. 1, Calyx, bracteoles, and style; 2, interior of portion of corolla-tube with stamens ; 3, fertile anther ; 4, pes and disk :—all satenaed. 6702. MS del JN Bitch lith. ith Vincent Brooks Day & ee : LReeve & C° London. ‘ Tas. 6702. SAXIFRAGA MARGINATA, Native of Southern Italy and Greece. Nat. Ord. SaxrFraGacex.—Tribe SaxIFRAGER. Genus Saxrrraca, Linn. ; (Benth. et Hook. J. Gen. Pl, vol. ii, p. 635.) Saxtrraca (Kabschia) marginata; glanduloso-pubescens, caspitosa, caudiculis lignosis dense foliosis, foliis radicalibus rosulatis cuneato-obovatis obtusis basi ciliatis cartilagineo-marginatis caulinis linearibus erectis, caule florifero erecto, floribus corymbosis, calycis nigro-glandulosi lobis oblongo-ovatis obtusis, petalis amplis obovatis 5-7-nerviis staminibus triplo longioribus, capsula late ovoidea. S. marginata, Sternb. Sawifr. Suppl. vol. i. t.1,£.1; Moretti Tent. Saxifr. 35; Bertoloni Fl. Ital. vol. iv. p. 460; Ten. Fl. Nap. t. 234; Engler Monog. Gatt. Saxifr. p. 262. ‘ S. cotyledon, Ten. Cat. Hort. Neap. App. vol. ii. p. 86. S. Boryi, Boiss. Diagn. Ser. 2, p. 65; Fi. Orient. vol. ii. p- 801. . Savifraga marginata belongs to a section of the genus as divided by Engler in his valuable monograph published in 1872, called Kabschia, in which the leaves are pitted and Secrete lime along the margins and at the tip, and have perennial shoots with alternate leaves. About eighteen Species belong to this section, most of them natives of dry calcareous mountains in the south of Europe, and the Levant, from whence they spread eastwards to the Himalaya. Mr. Ball, in a note attached to the specimen in the Kew Herbarium, remarks that its nearest ally is 8. scardica, Griseb., with which it should perhaps be united, and that it differs from its other ally, S. media, in the inflorescence and large white flowers, which latter are erroneously coloured red (possibly through the discoloration of the pigments) in Sternberg’s great work. 8S. scardica (a native of Greece) differs, according to Engler, in having deeply keeled acute leaves. S. marginata is a native of Mount Taygetus in Greece, from whence, however, I have seen no specimens; those I have seen are from the Abruzzi in Italy, collected by JULY Ist, 1883. Tenore, and the mountains above Amalfi, at an elevation of 3500 feet. The specimen figured was presented by Mr. Maw, and flowered in the Royal Gardens in March last. Mr. Maw informs me that Mr. F. N. Reid, of Minori, is the collector and introducer of the plant from the mountains not far from Minori. eae Duscr. Densely tufted; shoots perennial, hard. Leaves, radical glabrous, forming rosettes one-half to one inch in diameter, densely coriaceous, cuneate-obovate, obtuse, not keeled below, ciliate at the base, margin and tip cartilagi- nous, and marked with a series of pits covered with a white calcareous incrustation. Flowering-stems two to four inches high, stout, glandular-pubescent, laxly clothed with erect appressed linear obtuse glandular-pubescent cauline leaves. Flowers corymbose, shortly pedicelled, one-half to three-quarters of an inch in diameter; pedicels and calyces clothed with black glandular hairs. Calya campanulate, _cleft to the middle, lobes ovate acute. Petals obovate, five to seven-nerved, spreading and recurved, white. Stamens much shorter than the petals, filaments subulate. Styles conical, stout, erect, stigmas terminal. Capsule broadly ovoid.— J. D. H, Fig. 1, Portion of leaf; 2, calyx; 3, stamen; 4, ovary :—all enlarged. | meal ~ ~~ immer oa Tas. 6703. CAMPANULA Jacopma. Native of the Cape de Verd Islands, Nat. Ord, CamPpANULACEZ.—Tribe CAMPANULER. Genus CampanvLa, Linn.; (Benth. et Hook, f. Gen. Pl. vol. ii. p. 561.) Campanuta (Medium) Jacobea; fruticulosa, strigoso-hirta, caule noduloso lignescente cavo, ramis diffusis herbaceis foliosis, foliis oblongis v. ovato-oblongis obovato-spathulatisve obtusis v. subacutis supremis 3-amplexicaulibus, calycis tubo brevi cyathiformi laciniis anguste lanceolatis strigoso-ciliatis, corolla campanulata quali calycis laciniis 3-plo longiore, filamentis plano-filiformibus basi dilatatis fere glaberrimis, capsula depressa seminibus ovatis. C. jacobea, Chr. Sm. in Tuck. Voy. p. 251; Webb in Hook. Niger FT. p. 148, t. 12, icon in Hook. Ic. Pl. t. 772, iterata, As coming from a comparatively low level, in a thoroughly tropical and indeed a very hot archipelago, Campanula Jacobea forms a remarkable exception to the rule that the genus to which it belongs is eminently one of temperate and, indeed, cold latitudes. It is certainly one of the last vegetable forms that might be expected to occur in the torrid and generally arid Cape de Verd Islands, in lat. 15° N., and which forms geographically an insular continuation of the Saharan region. In this, as in other respects of its botany, the Cape de Verd Islands display an affinity with the Floras of the temperate Atlantic Islands to the north- ward of them (Canaries, Madeira, and Azores), which is totally out of harmony with their physical conditions, and thus affords one of the strongest proofs known of a previous land-connexion, whose effects on the Flora have not been obliterated by subsequent geographical segregation. The late Mr. P, B. Webb, who published the first Florale of the Cape de Verds, founded principally on the collections made by Christian Smith in 1816, by myself in 1839, and by Vogel in 1841, and which appeared in the “ Niger Flora,” states that nearly one-fifth of the species then known belong to Canarian genera or forms, only a tenth to the Arabo- JULY Isr, 1883, Nubian, and a twelfth to the forms of the Mediterranean region. Amongst these forms common to the temperate Atlantic Islands the Campanulacee hold a most conspicuous place, as instanced by the beautiful Campanula Vidalii (Plate 4748) being peculiar to one spot in the Azores Islands; Musschia aurea (Plate 6556), and M. Wollastoni (Plate 5606), being both confined to Madeira; and Canarina Campanula (Plate 444) being restricted to the Canary Islands. Nor is this continuity of vegetable affinities con- fined to the Campanulacee; it extends to Composite, Crucifere, and other conspicuous Orders. Campanula Jacobea is arather common Cape deVerd plant, _ inhabiting 8. Nicolas, Brava, 8. Antonio, S. Vincent, and 8. Jago, in which last I gathered it (in 1839) on arid rocks about 2000 feet above the sea-level. It was introduced into cultivation by our valued correspondent, Max Leichtlin, who communicated seeds to Kew, which produced (in a cold frame) the flowering specimen here figured in March of this year. The flowers in a native state vary in colour from pale greenish-yellow to a deep blue; those that were pro- duced at Kew were of the colour represented in the flower at the side of the Plate. Dusor. An undershrub, two to three feet high ; stem below woody, hollow, gnarled, brittle; branches green, angular, rather soft, leafy ; all parts, except the corolla, hispid with white spreading hairs. Leaves one and a half to two and a half inches long, sessile or subsessile, oblong ovate or obovate-oblong, obtuse or subacute, narrowed at the base; upper cordate, half-amplexicaul. Flowers axillary on curved pedicels two to three inches long, nodding or drooping. Calya-tube very small; segments one-half to two-thirds of an inch long, erect, narrowly lanceolate, margins at the base reflexed, sinus sometimes produced backward into an auricle. Corolla campanulate, one to one and a half inches long, deep blue or pale greenish, lobes very short and broad. laments slender, dilated and slightly hairy at the base. Style pubescent.—J. D. H. Fig. 1, Flower from a native specimen ‘ 2, and 3, stamens; 4, pistil:— all but Jig. 1 enlarged. 6704 Vincent Brooks Day & Son Imp M.S. del, JN Fitch lith Tan. 6704. LICUALA Grannis. Native of New Britain. Nat. Ord. PatMex.—Tribe CoryPHES. Genus Licvata, Thunb.; (Benth. et Hook. f. Gen. Pl. vol. iii. p. 928.) Licvata grandis; glaberrima, caudice erectosuperne vaginis vetustis foliorum obtecto, foliis perplurimis erecto-patulis, petiolo 3-pedali gracili glaberrimo, marginibus infra medium spinosis, spinis brevibus validis rectis v. curvis, lamina orbiculari v. semi-orbiculari concavo basi cuneato v. truncato creberrime plicato, marginibus breviter fissis, lobis obtuse 2-fidis, ligula brevi late ovata acuta crassa, spadicibus axillaribus foliis paullo brevioribus gracilibus glaberrimis, ramulis floriferis distantibus paniculatim ramosis sessilibus, spathis 2-pollicaribus lanceolatis— acuminatis brunneis, floribus 4 poll. longis viridibus cum _pedicello brevissimo articulatis, calyce tubuloso-campanulato ore truncato sublobato, petalis calyce brevioribus late ovatis acutis marginibus crassis, staminibus sinubus cyathi magni 6-lobi crasse coriacei insertis, filamentis subulatis lobis triangularibus cyathi zquilongis, antheris oblongis, ovario obovoideo e carpellis 3 leviter coherentibus, stylo brevi filiformi integro. L. grandis, H. Wendl. MSS.—André Illustr. Horticol. t. 412. Paritcnarpia grandis, Hort. Bull. - The subject of the present Plate is one of the most striking Palms that have ever been introduced into this country; it is graceful in habit, with a bold crown of brilliantly green leaves, the rounded cup-shaped form of which, delicately folded in innumerable plaits, and doubly cut round the edges, are characters quite unlike those of any other Palm known in cultivation. The precise date of its introduction is not known; it was exhibited at the International Horticultural Show at Brussels in 1876 by Mr. Bull, from whose possession it passed into that of Mr. Wills, and from him to the Royal Gardens, Kew, where it — one of the chief ornaments of the Tropical House oe @ The genus Licuala, consisting of about thirty known species, is very badly represented in the Palm Houses of Kurope; most are small Palms of very elegant habit, natives of the hotter regions of Eastern Asia, and from AuGUsT Ist, 1883, thence spread through the South Sea Islands, whence, no doubt, many new species are to be obtained. P. grandis flowered for the first time in Mr. Wills’s establishment at Anerley in February, 1881, but did not _ ripen seeds. Desor. Whole plant six feet high to the base of the top- most petiole. Trunk, three feet and a half to the base of the leaves, ten inches in circumference, leaf-bearing for nearly half of its length, clothed shortly below the leaves with the sheaths of the old leaves, which are semi-amplexicaul and about three inches long. Leaves about twenty in the crown, erect and slightly spreading, deep bright green; petiole two and a half to three feet long, slender, concavo- convex, armed with short stiff nearly straight or curved sometimes irregularly forked spines along the margins from the base to the middle, ending in a short ovate acute concave thickly coriaceous ligule; blade suberect, three feet in diameter, and about two long, orbicular or semi- orbicular, concave from the incurving of the sides and more or less of the whole blade, closely plaited and a little wavy, base cuneate or truncate, margins cleft into bifid lobes about an inch long, lobules of the lobes very obtuse. Spadizes several, rising from amongst the leaves and nearly as long as they are, suberect ; rachis as thick as the little finger, cylindric, terete, quite smooth, giving off at intervals of a foot or less flowering panicles five to six inches long. Spathes at the bases of the panicles two or more, two to three inches long, lanceolate, acute, concave, brown, striated. Flowers one-third of an inch long, jointed on to very short pedicels or sessile on the branches of the panicle. Calye tubular-campanulate, terete; mouth trun- cate, slightly lobed. Petals as long as the calyx, ovate, acute, concave, very thick, with broad margins and an inflexed tip. Stamens very small, inserted between the triangular teeth of a six-lobed coriaceous cup; filaments subulate, as long as the teeth of the cup; anthers oblong.’ Ovary of three slightly cohering wedge-shaped carpels, united by a very short entire style; stigma simple.—J. D. H., : rind 1, Top of petiole and base of leaf blade; 2, branch of panicle and flower ; » Hower spread open ; 4, calyx cut open and petals in bud; 5, petal; 6, staminal fa a pesmi 7, ovary ; 8, the same with the carpels disunited :—all but fig.1 MS. del. J. NFitch hth Vincent. Brooks, Day & Son imp, 7 L Reeve & C° London. Tan. 6705. ALOE PRATENSIS. Native of the Cape of Good Hope. Nat. Ord. Lriracen2—Wibe ALOINER. Genus Atox, Linn. ; (Benth. et Hook.f. Gen. Pl, vol. iii. p. 776.) ALOE pratensis ; acaulis, foliis permultis dense rosulatis oblongo-lanceolatis acumi- natis semipedalibus viridibus glauco tinctis immaculatis obscure verticaliter lineatis dorso superne tuberculato-aculeatis margine aculeis magnis patulis rubro-brunneis armatis, pedunculo valido simplici bracteis vacuis multis scariosis ovatis acuminatis praedito, racemo denso simplici, pedicellis ascenden- tibus flore seepe longioribus, bracteis magnis ovatis acuminatis, perianthii splendide rubri tubo brevissimo campanulato, segmentis lanceolatis, genitalibus demum breviter exsertis. A. pratensis, Baker in Journ. Linn. Soc. vol. xviii. p. 156. This is a well-marked and very handsome new species of the dwarf acaulescent group of Aloes, allied to A. humiiis and A. aristata. We first received it from Mr. Thomas Cooper, of Reigate, in whose rich collection it flowered several years ago. In 1872, Professor McOwan sent two fine specimens for the Herbarium, gathered on the summit of the Boschberg, at an elevation of 4500 feet above sea- level. Lately it has flowered again in the collection of Mr. Justus Corderoy, of Blewbury, near Didcot, from whose specimen the present drawing was made. _-Desor. Acaulescent. Leaves sixty or eighty in a dense rosette, oblong-lanceolate, acuminate, the outer ones five or six inches long, the inner ones growing gradually smaller, an inch and a half broad at the base, exclusive of the spines, narrowed gradually from the base to the point, firm in texture, an eighth of an inch thick in the middle, green with a slight glaucous tinge, obscurely lineate vertically on both back and face, not spotted, furnished on the margin with large red-brown deltoid cuspidate horny spines, a few of which extend to the back of the leaf near its tip. Peduncle short, stout, simple, a foot or more in length, AUGUST Ist, 1883. furnished with copious ascending scariose ovate acuminate empty bracts. Haceme dense, simple, finally half a foot or a foot long; pedicels ascending, often longer than the flowers ; bracts of the inflorescence just like those of the peduncle. Perianth cylindrical, bright red tipped with green, an inch and a quarter long; segments lanceolate, united only in a short cup at the base. Stamens and style finally a little exserted from the perianth ; anthers minute, oblong, orange-yellow.—J. G. Baker. ? Fig. 1, The whole plant, much reduced 3 2, a flower, slightly enlarged ; 3, an anther, viewed from the face ; 4, an anther, viewed from the back; 5, pistil :—ad/ enlarged. 6706, © Race” % 4. A.B. del JNFitch Lith. Vincent Brookes Day & Son Imp. LReeve & C° London. Sia ential ee: aM ge 0 eR Tas. 6706. DENDROBIUM xevoturum. Native of the Malay Peninsula. Nat. Ord. OncHipex.—Tribe EpIpDENDREX. Genus Denprosium, Sw. ; (Benth. et Hook. f. Gen. Pl. vol. iii. p. 498.) DEenpDRoBIUM (Eudendrobium) revolutum; caulibus cespitosis robustis sulcatis evaginatis, internodiis brevibus, foliis 1-2-pollicaribus sessilibus 3-amplexicau- libus oblongis ovato-oblongisve obtusis emarginatisve subtus carinatis enerviis, fluribus solitariis oppositifoliis, sepalis petalisque ovato-lanceolatis subacutis recurvis albis, sepalo dorsali ceteris paullo majore, labello petalis multo majore oblongo-quadrato convexo apice truncato angulis rotundatis, lobis lateralibus ad basin medii parvis oblongis obtusis, disco exarato lineis 3 rubris ceterum ree caleare petalis subsequilongo fere recto subacuto, columna brevi obtusa, D. revolutum, Lind/. in Bot. Reg. vol. xxvi. (1840), Mise. p-51; Part. Fl. Gard. Le. Xylog. n. 42; Walp. Ann. vol. vi. p. 291. A very singular form of Dendrobium, one of asmall group which inhabits the Malayan Peninsula and Islands. Its nearest ally is the D. wnijflorum, Griff. (Notul. vol. iii. p. 305, and Ic. Pl. Asiat. t. 303), which differs in the much broader Sepals, petals, and lip, and is a native of Mount Ophir, Malacca. This or D. wniflorum may further prove to be the same as one of two plants from Penang, distributed by Wallich under his number 2002, with the name of D. bifariwm, Lindl., and which consist respectively of a Dendrobium without flower or fruit, but with axillary bracts, as in D. uniflorum and revolutum, and another plant with terminal and axillary short racemes, which Lindley subse- quently rightly identified with a Hong-Kong one, and which is his Appendicula bifaria (Kew Journ. Bot. vol. vii. p. 35). D. revolutum is a native of Singapore, whence it was first introduced into England nearly fifty years ago by the veteran collector Cuming, and cultivated by the Messrs. Loddiges. The specimen here figured was received from C. Peche, Esq., of Moulmein, in 1882, along with other orchids. The original Singapore specimen preserved in AUGUST Ist, 1883. Lindley’s Herbarium at Kew is identical with our plant as to flower, but has a more slender stem and narrow leaves three and a half inches long. A specimen from the Rev. Mr. Parish, collected presumably in Moulmein, is undis- tinguishable from that here figured in stem, leaves, and form and size of flower, but according to a drawing which accompanies it, the lip is a dull green without the thin red streaks. D. revolutwm flowered in the Orchid House of the Royal Gardens in July of the present year. Descr. Pseudo-bulbs none. Stems tufted, a foot long, as thick as a goose-quill, deeply furrowed ; internodes one- quarter to two-thirds of an inch long, not swollen; sheaths none. Leaves numerous, distichous, one to two inches long (three and a half inches in Lindley’s specimen), oblong or linear- or ovate-oblong, obtuse or retuse, semi-amplexicaul, keeled by the midrib, striate when dry. flowers solitary, axillary, three-fourths of an inch long from the tip of the dorsal sepal to that of the hp; bracts caducous; pedicel slender, decurved, with the ovary two-thirds of an inch long. Sepals and petals white, reflexed upwards, lanceolate, acute, nearly equal, except the dorsal sepal, which is rather the longest and broadest. Lip nearly quadrate, convex, bright yellow-green, tip truncate with rounded angles; lateral lobes small, marginal lobes towards the base of the median; disk with three furrows and red bands; spur as long as the sepals, nearly straight, subacute. Colwmn very small, prone upon the labellum, and about one-third of its length.—J. D. H, Fig. 1, Flower with sepals and petals removed; 2, column and spur; 3, pollen- masses; 4, anther-case :—al/ enlarged. SS SS ww / ee Oe aN | RON SON # (40 fp HP) $9 0-9 Ne i) fi Vig fy, ay =1,\\ae, Vas PT ‘Wa ‘ res LReeve & C° London. 6707. a: rc Son imp- Vincent Brooks,Day & Son imp a Tan. 6707. ALLIUM MAcLEANI. Native of Cabul. Nat. Ord. Lintacez.—Tribe ALLIEZ. Genus Auiium, Linn.; (Benth. et Hook. f. Gen. Pl. vol. iii. p. 802.) Attium (Molium) Macleanii; bulbo globoso, foliis 4-5 lanceolatis glabris pedalibus, pedunculo tereti 2-3-pedali, umbello globoso maultifloro pedicellis strictis elongatis, spathe valvis oblongo-lanceolatis pedicellis multo brevioribus, perianthii parvi pallide purpurei segmeatis oblongo-lanceolatis flore expanso nears genitalibus perianthio 14-2-plo longioribus, filamentis conformibus eas ovario viridi trilobato granulato, ovulis in loculo geminis collatera- ibus. This is a fine new tall many-flowered Allium, of which the bulbs were brought from Cabul by Colonel Maclean. It was flowered for the first time last summer by Mr. James Wilson, of St. Andrews, from whose plant the present drawing was made. It does not resemble any known European, Oriental, or Himalayan species, but we have, in the Kew Herbarium, a closely-allied undescribed species from Beluchistan, gathered by Dr. Stocks, and it also nearly resembles two of Dr. Regel’s new species from Central Asia, A. stipitatum and A. Swwarowi, both of which have lately been figured in the Gartenflora, on Plate 1062. Desor. Bulbs symmetrical, solitary, globose. Leaves four or five, contemporary with the flowers, evanescent, lanceolate, green, about a foot long, an inch or an inch and a half broad, flat, glabrous both upon the surfaces and margins. Peduncle terete, flexuose, moderately stout, two or three feet long. Umbel dense, globose, three or four inches in diameter; spathe-valves two, oblong-lanceolate, membranous, evanescent, much shorter than the pedicels, which are stiff and slender, and attain a length of one and a half or two inches. Perianth mauve-purple, a quarter of an inch long; segments oblong-lanceolate, acute, spreading horizontally when fully expanded, furnished with a distinct auaust lst, 1883. one-nerved keel down the back. Filaments pale mauve- purple, uniform, linear, much longer than the perianth- segments; anthers small, oblong. Ovary greenish, orbicular, deeply lobed, with a pair of collateral ovules in each cell.— J. G. Baker. Fig. 1, A flower complete; 2 and 3, stamens; 4, pistil:—alZ more or less enlarged, 6708. ‘ i \ L al MS.del.J.N Fitch hth. Vesa Brooks,Day & Son imp. LReeve & C° London. Se 4 i Tas. 6708. NYMPHA‘A oporata, var, minor floribus roseis. Native of the United States. Nat. Ord. NympH#acEx.—Tribe NyMPHzz. Genus Nympuma, Linn.; (Benth. et Hook. f. Gen. Pl. vol. i. p. 46.) Nyrupxma odorata, foliis orbicularibus basi ad petiolum fissis marginibus inte- gerrimis, stipulis rhizomati appressis late triangularibus v. subreniformibus apice emarginatis, floribus albis odoratis, sepalis oblongis cum petalis et antheris obtusis, stigmatum appendicibus brevibus incurvis, seminibus stipitatis oblongis arillo multo brevioribus. N. —— Ait. Hort. Kew. vol. ii. p. 227; Bot. Mag. t. 819; A. Gray, Man. ed. 5, p. 56. Var. rosea; petalis roseis. N. odorata var. rosea, Pursh. Fl. N. Am. vol. ii. p. 369. The rose-coloured varieties of the European Nymphea alba, and of the American JN. odorata, have attracted much attention in this country, and I have taken the opportunity of figuring the latter in order to correct the misapprehension raised by the figure and description of N. odorata var. minor published in 1814 in this work at Tab. 1652, which is there described as var. B. rosea, but which is not the true variety of that name. WN. minor, DC. itself is only a small- leaved and flowered state of N. odorata, passing into it by every gradation, as remarked by Gray; and the rose-colour of the flowers is not confined to it, though possibly more usual in the smaller than in the larger states of the species. The plate, Tab. 1652, is, no doubt, referable to var. minor, and is a narrow-petalled state of that variety, but the calyx and petals, though described as rosy externally, are figured as pure white. This is the more remarkable, as the de- scription says, “ That it is really the rose-coloured variety of odorata of Pursh is certain, being the product of roots brought from America by himself. This excellent botanist describes the flowers as being externally of a rose colour ; but in our plant neither calyx nor petals had any such avGusT Ist, 1883. stain.” The author of the description in the Magazine - goes on to state that the difference may have arisen from cultivation, for that the deep purple of the under-surface of the leaves, from want, perhaps, of sufficient air and intensity of light, did not, as described by Pursh, extend to the peduncles. To me it appears far more probable that Pursh brought the wrong plant, than that imported roots changed their character so suddenly as to produce in two successive years, first rose-coloured and then pure white flowers. = N. odorata extends throughout Eastern North America, from Newfoundland to Florida, which renders its absence in the western half of the continent very remarkable, as water-plants are so easily disseminated; and the same remark applies to the equally common American Nuphar advena, which is, however, represented by another species in Western America. The var. rosea is more local than the white-flowered form. There are specimens from Pursh in the Kew Herbarium from the Bass and Wardings Rivers, gathered in 1808, and Gray says that varieties with pinkish or rarely bright pink flowers and leaves often crimson underneath occur, especially at Barnstable in Massachusetts. Chapman does not mention it as a native of the Southern United States. | The Royal Gardens are indebted to Mr. Kennedy, who as done so much for the introduction of water-plants into this country, for the specimen from which this figure is taken, and which flowered in the tropical Water-Lily House ~ nearly all the summer.—J. D, H. Fig. 1, Outer, and, 2, inner stamens ; 8, vertical section of torus, with stamens and ovary :—a// enlarged. 6709. i Vincent Brooks Day & Son, imp S.del . AN Bitch, bth, Tarn. 6709, CRINUM HILDEBRANDTII. Native of the Comoro Islands. Nat. Ord. AMARYLLIDEX.—Tribe AMARYLLEX. Genus Crinum, Linn.; (Benth. et Hook. f. Gen. Pl. vol. iii. p. 726.) Crinum (Platyaster) Hildebrandtii; bulbo ovoideo collo elongato, foliis 8-10 synanthiis lanceolatis glabris sesquipedalibus vel bipedalibus, scapo gracili ancipiti subpedali, umbellis 6-10-floris, pedicellis subnullis vel brevissimis, spathw valvis lanceolatis reflexis, perianthii albi tubo recto cylindrico 6-7- pollicari, limbi segmentis lanceolatis horizontaliter patulis tubo subtriplo brevioribus, filamentis purpureis perianthii segmentis brevioribus, stylo exserto. _C. Hildebrandtii, Vatke in Monats. Konigl. Acad. Wissen. Berl. 1876, p. 863 ; Baker in Gard. Chron. 1881, p. i8v. This is a well-marked new species of Crinum, allied to C. americanum and erubescens, but from a totally different part of the world. It was discovered about 1875 amongst the mountains of Johanna Island, at an elevation of 3000 feet above sea-level, by the late Dr. Hildebrandt, who, after a series of courageous explorations in Somali-land and other little-known regions of Hast Tropical Africa, visited Madagascar, and after making in the island large and valuable collections, died a couple of years ago at Antana- narivo, worn out by his exertions. It was sent home by him about 1875 to the Botanic garden at Berlin. I am not aware that any of the original stock ever reached this country; but it was rediscovered by Sir John Kirk in 1878, and it was from bulbs presented by him to Kew, which flowered in November, 1881, and again in the winter of 1882, that our drawing was made. Descr. Bulb ovoid, two or three inches in diameter, with a neck finally half a foot long. Leaves eight or ten, contemporary with the flowers, lanceolate, bright green, firm in texture, a foot and a half or two feet long, two or two and a half inches broad at the middle, narrowed gradually to the apex, quite glabrous on the margins. ‘SEPTEMBER Ist, 1883. Peduncle slender, lateral, ancipitous, about a foot long; — -umbel of six to ten nearly or quite sessile flowers; spathe- _ valves two, lanceolate, reflexed. Perianth pure white, erect, with a cylindrical tube six or seven inches long; _ segments of the limb lanceolate, spreading horizontally when fully expanded, two or three inches long, under half an inch broad. Filaments bright purple, shorter than the perianth-segments; anthers linear, three-quarters of an inch long. Style finally exserted beyond the perianth-— segments; stigma capitate.—J. G. Baker. Fig. 1, Front view of an anther; 2, back view of an anther; 3, apex of style, with stigma :—all enlaryed. a Oe anita ei 10. eae Sea NNT Cy kes Day 4 Broo ES Tas. 6710. TULIPA Kotpakowsgyana, Native of Turkestan. Nat. Ord. Littacex.—Tribe TuipPex. Genus Toxtpa, Linn. ; (Benth. et Hook. f. Gen. Pl. vol. iii. p. 818.) Tutira Kolpakowskyana; bulbo magno ovoideo, tunicis castaneis exterioribus intus parce adpresse-strigosis, caule valido uniflo® glabro, foliis 3-4 margine obscure ciliatis, inferiori lanceolato subpedali, superioribus linearibus, flore leviter odoro ante anthesin subnutante, perianthio magno campanulato splendide rubro vel luteo segmentis subconformibus oblongis acutis exterioribus magis patulis, filamentis glabris, ovario crasso trigono, stigmatibus magnis crispatis. _T. Kolpakowskyana, Regel in Act. Hort. Petrop. vol. v. p. 266; Gartenflora, vol. xxvii. (1878), pp. 293, 336, t. 951; Gard. Chron. 1880, f. 11l et 113; Baker in Gard. Chron. 1883, vol. i. p. 789. This new Tulip from Central Asia is a very fine plant, and likely to prove quite hardy in our English climate, and to become a popular favourite. It is a near ally of 7. _ Gesneriana, with which it quite agrees in bulb and general habit, differing in its earlier time of flowering and in the Segments being narrowed gradually to an acute point. It is likely that it will prove equally variable with T. Ges- neriana in the colouring of the flower. Mr. Elwes, who supplied the specimen for the present figure, says :—“ The colour is either bright cherry red, with a black eye, purplish- black anthers and filaments; or yellow, flamed reddish on the back of the three outer segments ; or pure yellow, with blackish eye and yellow anthers and filaments.” It is a native of Turkestan, and was introduced to the St. Peters- burg garden by Dr. Albert Regel and Fetisow about 1877. Descr. Bulb ovoid, about an inch in diameter, with = brown membranous tunics, slightly strigose inside. Stem erect, terete, one-flowered, about a foot long. Leaves three or four to a stem, slightly glaucous, unspotted, obscurely _ Ciliated on the margin, glabrous on the face and back, the lowest lanceolate, about a foot long by an inch broad, the SEPTEMBER lst, 1883. : upper ones linear. Peduncle glabrous, erect, six or nino © inches long. Bud slightly nodding. Flower faintly scented, campanulate, two or two and a half inches long in the cultivated plant; all the segments oblong and acute, an — inch or more broad at the middle, the three outer, when | the flower expands, spreading away from the three inner. Segments in the typical red-flowered form, as figured, with a faint yellow-black blotch filling up the whole claw. Stamens about an inch long, the glabrous filament often shorter than the linear anther. Ovary large, stout, with three large much-crisped stigmas.—J. G. Baker. Fig. 1, Bulb; 2 and 3, bates of perianth segments :—all of the natural size ; 4, stamen, and 5, ovary :—both enlarged. MS. del, J. N Fitch, lith. L Reeve &C° London. Tas. 6711. LEUCOIUM HYEMALE. Nate of the Maritime Alps. Nat. Ord. AMARYLLIDACER.—Tribe AMARYLLES. Genus Levcoium, Linn. ; (Benth. et Hook. f. Gen. Pl. vol. iii. p. 720.) Leucorum (Ruminia) hyemale; bulbo globoso tunicis membranaceis, foliis 2-4 synanthiis vernalibus anguste linearibus glabris facie canaliculatis, pedunculo gracili 1-2-floro, pedicellis cernuis, spathe valvis linearibus, ovario turbinato, perianthii segmentis albis oblongis dorso viridulis laxe multinervatis, exte- rioribus acutis, interioribus paulo brevioribus obtusis, antheris conniventibus lanceolatis filamentis brevissimis, stylo cylindrico, stigmate papilloso, semi- nibus dimidiato-oblongis nigris punctatis carunculatis. L. hiemale, DC. Fl. Franc. Suppl. p. 326, er parte; Bertol. Fl. Ital. vol. iv p-6; Moggridge Cont. Fl. Mentone, t. 21. GALANTHUS autumnalis, Allioni Auct. ad Fl. Pedem. p. 33, exel. syn. Acts hyemalis, Rem. Amaryll. p. 55; Kunth Enum, vol. v. p. 475. Ruminia hyemalis, Parlat. Fl. Ital. vol. iii. p. 85. R. niceensis, Jord. et Fourr. Icones, p. 26, t. 65, f. 108. This graceful little Snowflake is one of the rarest of Kuropean plants. It is confined to a small strip of rocky shore reaching from Nice to two miles east of Mentone. The name “‘ hyemale”’ conveys a wrong idea, for it does not flower till April, and for that reason M. Jordan has proposed to change it to “ niceensis.” The first specimens I remember to have seen at Kew were flowered in the herbaceous ground in the spring of 1871, from bulbs brought home by our valued correspondents, now both deceased, Messrs. M. and J. T. Moggridge, the latter of whom figured it beautifully for the first time in his illus- trated book on the plants of Mentone. Lately Mr. Geo, Maw has supplied us with a good stock, and it is from his Specimens that the present drawing has been made. Descr. Bulb globose, under an inch in diameter, with several membranous brown tunics. Leaves two to four, contemporary with the flowers, erect, narrow linear, SEPTEMBER lst, 1883. - glabrous, six or twelve inches long, channelled down the face. Peduncle slender, erect, one- or two-flowered; pedicels cernuous ; spathe-valves two, linear. Ovary green, turbinate. Perianth white; segments oblong, imbricated, half an inch long, tinged with green on the back and laxly many-veined, the three inner rather shorter and more obtuse than the three outer. Stamens epigynous; anthers lanceolate, bright yellow, permanently connivent; filaments very short. Style cylindrical; stigma minute, terminal, papillose. Fruit a membranous turbinate capsule. Seeds dimidiate-oblong, black, punctate, furnished with a con- spicuous fleshy white carunculus.—J. G. Baker. Fig. 1, An outer segment of the perianth; 2, an inner segment; 3, pistil and stamens; 4, an anther, viewed from the front; 5, one of the loves of the epigynous disk :—all enlarged. 6772. > eae aR OOS i cee a naan mE M.S. del, IN. Ritch hth L. Reeve & C° London. = ane eee Tas. 6712. PRIM ULA FioriBunpa. Native of the Western Himalaya. Nat. Ord. Primutacex.—Tribe PrimvuLez. Genus Prruvuta, Linn. ; (Benth. et Hook. f. Gen. Pl. vol. ii. p. 631.) Primvta floribunda; glanduloso-pubescens, foliis vernatione conduplicatis ellipticis ovatisve acutis v. obtusis ia petiolum latum angustatis irregulariter crenato- dentatis, floribus in verticillos superpositos involucratos dispositis gracile pedi- cellatis, involucri bracteis sessilibus foliaceis ovatis lanceolatisve acutis, calycis segmentis ovatis acuminatis fructiferis reflexis, corolla flave tubo gracili piloso calyce duplo longiore, limbi lobis obcordatis, capsula globosa, dein conico- ovoidea ad basin latam 5-valve, valvis membranaceis, seminibus minutis angu- latis granulatis, — P. floribunda, Wall. Tent. Fl. Nep. t. 33, et Cat. no. 1825; Duby in DC. Prodr. vol. viii. p. 35; Hook. f. Fl. Brit. Ind. vol. iii. p. 495, xix. parti. p. 113, f. 17; Gard. C) ron, N.S, vol. xix. p. 113, f. 17. P. obovata, Wall. Cat no. 610. AnpDRosack obovata, Wall. MSS. P. floribunda belongs to a small section of the genus in which the leaves, instead of having revolute margins in vernation, are complicate, having them folded down the middle on the upper face. The species are remarkable for inhabiting comparatively very low elevations in warm countries. Thus the plant here figured is found at lower elevations in the Himalaya than any other of the numerous Species that inhabit that rich region, occurring between 2500 and 6500 feet along the whole division of the range which extends from Kumaon to Kashmir; occurring also in Affghanistan, where it was collected by Griffith on the banks of canals at Pushut. Its nearest allies are P. verticillata, Forsk (Plate 2842, which is the same as P. Boveana, Dene.), a native of the mountains of Arabia, and P. simensis, Hochst. (P. verticillata var. simensis, Masters in Gard. Chron, 1870, p. 597, and our Plate 6042), which is an Abyssinian plant. The specimen here figured was received from the Royal SEPTEMBER lst, 1883. Botanical Gardens of Edinburgh, and flowered at Kew in a cool frame in March, continuing in flower till May. Descr. Whole plant clothed with more or less glandular jointed soft hairs. Rootstock woody, as thick as the little finger, covered with the withered bases of the petiole. Leaves three to six inches long, spreading, membranous, ovate or elliptic, rarely spathulate or obovate, contracted into a very broad petiole of variable length, coarsely crenate-toothed; nerves prominent, reticulate. Scapes numerous, four to eight inches high, slender, bearing two to six superposed whorls of three to six flowers, subtended by an involucre of three or four bracts. Bracts a quarter of an inch to an inchlong, sessile, ovate or lanceolate, acuminate, toothed, usually three-nerved. Pedicels slender, spreading, unequal. Calyx a quarter of an inch long, cleft nearly to the base into five ovate acuminate membranous sepals, which are spreading or recurved. Corolla golden yellow, tube slender, one-third to one-half of an inch long, hairy; limb half an inch in diameter, flat; lobes obcordate, quite entire, mouth small. Anthers linear, sessile; style long or short, stigma capitate. Oapsule globose, after dehiscence conico-ovoid from a broad base, split to the base into five membranous subacute valves. Seeds minute, angular, black, granulate.—J. D. H. Fig. 1, Calyx; 2, pistil; 3, capsule and calyx; 4, seels :—all enlarged. 6778. AB.del, JN Fitch ith. L.Reeve & C° London Tas. 6713. SENECIO concoror. Native of South Africa. Nat. Ord. ComposiT“.—Tribe SENECIONIDEX. Genus Sznxcio, Linn.; (Benth. et Hook. J: Gen. Pl. vol. ii. p. 446.) SENECIO concolor ; herbaceus, glaber v. sparse pubescens, radice perennante, caule gracili superne ramoso angulato, foliis radicalibus caulinisque inferioribus anguste oblanceolatis obtusis in petiolum angustatis subtus purpurascentibus integerrimis v. sinuato-dentatis, superioribus sessilibus linearibus obtusis, supremis ad dichotomias a basi lata lanceolatis acuminatis argute dentatis, corymbis glanduloso-pubescentibus, pedicellis elongatis divaricatis, capitulis radiatis 1 unc. latis, involucro subhemispherico pauci-calyculato glanduloso, bracteis anguste linearibus acuminatis, fl. radii 10-12 ligula oblonga obtusa purpurea, fl. disci albis antheris purpureis, acheniis puberulis. 8. concolor, DC. Prodr. vol. vi. p- 407, excel. var. 8; Harv. et Sond. Fil. Cap. vol. iil. p. 363, in part; N. E. Brown in Gard. Chron. N.S. vol. xii. part 1, p- 615 (sub S. speciosus), et vol. xx. p. 75. This is a handsome South African species of Senecio belonging to the group which includes 8. speciosus (Plate 6488). In Harvey and Sonder’s “ Flora Capensis,’’ these two plants were confounded together, an error which was detected by Mr. N. E. Brown, who well describes the differences between them in the volumes of the _“Gardener’s Chronicle” quoted above. At first sight they reach the gorgeous S. pulcher (Plate 5959) of Temperate South America, but that species differs widely in its yellow _ disk-flowers, those of 8. concolor being white with purple anthers, a fact which would militate against the adoption of the specific name, were it not that the said colour of the anthers being that of the rays just sufficiently justifies its retention. S. concolor is a native of the mountainous district of _ Tulbaghe to the north-east of Capetown, where it was disco- vered by the collector Dregé about fifty years ago ; and it has Since been found by T. Cooper, when collecting for the late Mr. Wilson Saunders. The specimen was raised from SEPTEMBER Ist, 1883. South African seed, which flowered in the Royal Gardens in a cool frame in July of last year. Duscr. Root perennial. Stem one to two feet high, angular, and as well as the leaves sparsely pubescent, corymbosely branched above. Radical leaves four to six inches long, narrowly oblanceolate, obtuse, narrowed into a long or short petiole, quite entire or sinuate-toothed ; upper leaves sessile, linear, obtuse, irregularly toothed ; uppermost at the axils of the corymb, sessile and semi- amplexicaul, lanceolate, acuminate, toothed. Heads many, long-pedicelled, in a lax open corymb, about one inch in diameter, pedicels spreading and involucres glandular- pubescent. Involucre hemispherical, calyculate by a few subulate bracts at the base ; receptacle convex. lowers of the ray ten to twelve ; rays distant, linear oblong, obtuse, purple; flowers of the disk not numerous, white, with purple anthers. Achenes striate, puberulous.—J. D. H. Fig. 1, Involucre with bracts removed ; 2, ray-flower ; 3, its style arms; 4, disk- flower ; 5, stamens; 6, pappus-hair; 7, achene and flower :—all enlarged. ee 5 a ae 6714. MS. del.J.N-Fitch hth. 5 w) od e an} a Co fi ina} € og & L Reeve & C° London. Tas. 6714. ; SALVIA. poxntvrana. Native of Bolivia. Nat. Ord. Lasrarz.—Tribe MonarpeEx. Genus Satvia, Linn.; (Benth. et Hook.f. Gen. Pl. vol. ii. p. 1194.) Satvra (Calosphace) boliviana ; erecta, suffruticosa, cano-puberula, foliis ovato- a cordatis petiolatis rugulosis crenulatis, supra glabris, racemis pyramidatim NEN, paniculatis densifloris glanduloso-puberulis, verticillastris multifloris, calycis Nene purpureo-virescentis labio superiore ovato acuto, inferiore equilongo bicuspidato, corolla coccinea calyce quadruplo longiore glaberrima, labio superiore brevi ae porrecto obtuso concavo, inferiore vix duplo-majore breviter 3-lobo, lobis rotundatis. Pe a, 8. boliviana, Planch. in Flore des Serres, t. 1148. Under Plate 5947, the name Salvia boliviana will be found cited as a synonym of S. rubescens, Humb., Bonpl., and Kunth, a native of almost the same country, and so near an ally that, in the absence of specimens, the two Species may well be confounded, if indeed they really differ Messrs. Henderson, however, show that there are decided differences between them, as may be seen by a comparison of the plates. In habit, stature, foliage and pubescence, they are strikingly alike, as they are in the general characters of the inflorescence and structure and colour of _ the flowers; but the panicles of S. boliviana are much denser-flowered, the calyces larger with longer lips, and _ the corolla twice as long and straighter, with a smaller lower lip. Itis for the size and number of the flowers much the handsomer plant, and indeed few species of the Splendid genus to which it belongs can vie with it in the size, colour, and beauty of the inflorescence, though for size of flower it is far surpassed by S. longiflora, R. and P., the red corollas of which are four to five inches long: it is -& native of the Bolivian Andes at elevations of 10,000 to OCTOBER Ist, 1883. : - Specifically. Beautiful specimens of 8. boliviana, sent by — 12,000 feet. S. boliviana was introduced by Van Houtte, and raised from seed collected by Waresewicz, presumably in Bolivia; but this, according to Planchon, who published it in 1856, is not certain. ve - Desor. A branched undershrub, sparingly hoary on the stem petioles and leaves beneath, glandular-pubescent on the inflorescence. Leaves three to six inches long, ovate- cordate, acute, wrinkled, crenulate; petiole slender, one to three inches long. Panicle subsessile, two feet high, branched ; branches densely clothed with crowded whorls of flovers. Flowers many in a whorl, pedicelled, suberect ; pedicel shorter than the calyx. Calyx three-quarters of an inch long, between funnel- and bell-shaped, dull purple or green and purple, base acute, tube deeply grooved and strongly nerved ; lips one-third as long as the tube, recurved, broadly ovate, upper entire acute, lower with two small subulate teeth. Corolla four times as long as the calyx, tubular, slightly curved, glabrous, bright scarlet; upper lip very small, concave, obtuse, horizontal; lower about twice as long, broad, shortly three-lobed, lobes rounded. Stamens with one anther-cell slightly exserted, filaments a _ very short; arms of the connective much longer than the filament, quite straight; barren arm rather shorter than — : | the other; staminodes two, minute, capitellate. Style very slender, bearded below the tip.—J. D. H. | _Fig. 1, Portion of corolla, stamens, and staminodes; 2, anthers; 3, disk and pistil :—all enlarged. . M.S. del, J.N-Fith kth. L-Reeve &-C° London, Vincent Brooks, Day & Son imp. Tas. 6715. DENDROBIUM CARINIFERUM, var. Wattti. Native of Munipore. Nat. Ord. OrcuipEx.~-Tribe EPIDENDRER. Genus Denprozium, Sw.; (Benth. et Hook.f. Gen. Pl. vol. iii. p- 498.) DENpronium cariniferum ; caulibus fasciculatis elongatis, internodiis 1-1}-polli- caribus cylindraceis, foliis alternis lineari-oblongis planiusculis apicibus minute 2-dentatis, vaginis supremis plus minus nigro-hirsutulis, floribus apices versus caulis aphylli solitariis v. 2-nis brevissime edicellatis 2-poll. diametr. albis, sepalis oblongo-lanceolatis acuminatis tateralibus subfalcatis, petalis equilongis latioribus ellipticis, labello albo striis flavis v. subcinnabarinis cuneato-flabellato, lobis lateralibus obtusangulis intermedio parvo obovato crispulo venis incrassatis papillosis, calcare fere recto robusto obtuso, columna recta apice tridentata, dentibus lateralibus ovatis dorsali longiore angustiore. Dz cariniferum, Reichb. f. in Gard. Chron. 1869, p. 611. Var. Wattii; foliis angustioribus, vaginis fere glaberrimis, floribus majoribus, __ labello flavo fasciato lobo medio longiore oblongo apice 2-lobo. Dendrobium cariniferum is very nearly allied to the well- known D. longicornu, Lindl., one of the commonest Indian Species, remarkable along with, some allies for the short stiff black hairs on the leaf-sheaths ; nor should I be sur- rised if these two species were found to be connected Y 4 series of varieties. As it is, however, the form of the Perianth is too different to justify D. cariniferum being regarded as a variety. Dr. Reichenbach mentions D. -Xanthophlebium, Lindl., and D. Williamsoni, Day and Rehb., as comparable with it. . D. cariniferum is a native of Burma, whence we have Sowers collected at Bhamo, a district not far to the east- Ward of Munipore, where the subject of the present plate Was procured, and which I think can only be regarded as ® variety of the plant originally described by Reichenbach. It differs in the larger flowers, rather longer spur, the yellow bands on the lip, and the longer narrow mid-lobe of the latter, and the faintly hairy sheaths. The specimen ‘Sured came with a collection of orchids from Dr, Watt, “OCTOBER Isr, 1883. F.L.S., of the Education department of India, whilst attached to a mission engaged on the boundary survey of the kingdom of Munipore, on the eastern frontier of British India, a country previously quite unknown botanically. It flowered in October, 1882, soon after arrival. Drsor. Stems tufted, a foot and upwards long, rather slender; internodes one to one and a half inch long, cylindric, grooved when dry. Sheaths as long as the internodes, very sparsely clothed with a short furfuraceous black pubescence. Leaves alternate, three inches long, narrowly oblong, dull green, nearly flat, tip minutely notched; blade sessile on the sheath. lowers shortly pedicelled towards the ends of leafless stems, single or in pairs, two inches in diameter, pure white with golden streaks on the lip. Sepals oblong-lanceolate, acuminate, spreading. Petals as long as the sepals, rather broader, elliptic, acute. Lip as long as the petals, convolute, cuneate when spread open with rounded rather crisped lateral lobes, and an oblong two-lobed small narrow mid- lobe ; veins papillose ; spur three-quarters of an inch long, straight, stout, obtuse, greenish at the tip. Column stout, tip three-fid, lateral teeth ovate acute, dorsal narrower and longer. Anthers puberulous.—J. D. H. Fig. 1, Column ; 2, front view of apex of ditto; 3, anther-case; 4, undeveloped pollinia :—all enlarged, Ay, aa ee pr Hd Vincent Brooks Day & Son Imp MS del JN Fitch bth LReeve & C°London Tas. 6716. KNIPHOFIA Letcurnintt. Native of Abyssinia. Nat. Ord. Lintacrm.—Tribe HEMEROCALLER. _ Genus KnrpHoria, Moench; (Benth. et Hook. f. Gen. Pl. vol. ii. p. 775.) Kytrnorta Leichtlinii; acaulis, foliis 4-pedalibus patulis linearibus subtriquetris obtuse carinatis longe attenuatis lzete viridibus non glaucescentibus, marginibus levibus, scapo tereti fusco-viridi sesquipedali, floribus pendulis in spicam -densain cylindraceam obtusam confertis, pedicellis 0, bracteis parvis ovato- lanceolatis scariosis, perianthio 3-pollicari pallide aureo-miniato elongato- campanulato ore breviter obtuse 6-lobo, tubo supra ovarium vix constricto, genitalibus perianthio paullo longioribus. K. Leichtlinii, Baker MSS. _ The genus Kniphofia has attained a prominent place in gardens since the introduction in 1707 of the first species, K. Uvaria (see Plate 758, 4816, 6553), and the little XK. pumila (Plate 764), introduced in 1774; and it now numbers upwards of sixteen species, whilst its geographical limits, which were for long supposed to be confined to South Africa, have been extended far to the north of the tropic in Abyssinia. It cannot be said that the genus has grown in beauty as it has in extent, for none of the species hitherto cultivated at all compares with the old K. Uvaria In size, colour, freedom of growth, or hardiness. _ KK. Leichtlinii is a native of Abyssinia, where it was dis- overed, and roots sent to the garden of the Grand Duke f Baden-Baden by the well-known traveller Schimper. The specimen here figured flowered in the Royal Gardens in September, 1881, from a plant presented by that admirable cultivator, Herr Max Leichtlin, of Baden-Baden. As a species it is perhaps nearest to the South African K: pumila, — Dnscr. Stem none; crown of leaves at the base one to oe and a half inch in diameter. Leaves four feet long, Spreading all round, about three-quarters of an inch in “OcToRER Ist, 1883, diameter at one-third distance above the base, dilating at the base into a broad membranous sheath, and gradually narrowed to the tip; triquetrous, not deeply or sharply keeled, bright green, not at all glaucous, margins quite entire. Scape three to four feet high, naked, or with an occasional linear scarious or membranous bracteal leaf sometimes four to five inches long, dull green, minutely speckled with red, giving it a brown look. Spike three to four inches long, by one and a half to two inches in diameter, quite cylindric and obtuse ; flowers quite sessile, pendulous; bracts a quarter of an inch long, ovate, acute, with long points, membranous, deflexed. Perianth three- quarters of an inch long, narrowly bell-shaped, slightly contracted above the base, dull pale vermilion red and yellow; mouth shortly broadly four-lobed, lobes obtuse erect. Stamens shortly exserted, for not more than twice the length of the perianth-lobes; anthers shortly oblong. Style rather longer than the stamens, stigma minute.— JDO: Fig. 1, Section of leaf; 2, flower; 3 and 4, anthers; 5, pistil; 6, transverse section of ovary :—all enlarged. 6777. Vincent Brooks Day& Son ine. L Reeve & C2 London iy, ae a: eas aa Poin it M S.del, INFta kth. Tas, 6717. GLYPHOSPERMA Pataurr, Native of Northern Mexico. Nat. Ord. Linracrm.—tTribe ASPHODELER, Genus GiyrHosrrerma, S. Watson in Proc. Amer, Acad. vol. xviii. p. 164. GuyrHosPprrma Palmeri ; glaberrima, caule gracili gramineis fistulosis basi longe membranaceo-vaginatis, racemis laxifloris, pedicellis erecto-patentibus, perianthii segmentis oblongis obtusis albis nervo medio dilatato fusco-viridi, filamentis exterioribus brevibus basi in appendicem membranaceam late oblongam fimbriatam dilatatis, interioribus longioribus appendice angustiore, stigmate magno 3-globoso, capsula subglobosa, seminibus 3-gonis faciebus subrugoso-undulatis. G. Palmeri, §. Wats. 1. e. parce ramoso, foliis elongatis ceaneormeeeree ee enaEa A very singular hardy plant, the type of a new genus, - deseribed after the publication of the last volume of the “Genera Plantarum,” in which it would otherwise have _ been included. Its position in the great natural order of Liliacee is in the subtribe Anthericew of the tribe Aspho- - delew, and it will stand next to Anthericum itself, to which Indeed it seems to be very closely allied, differing chiefly in the structure of the filament. _ Glyphosperma was discovered by Dr. HE. Palmer, one of the most enterprising and successful botanical explorers of the North American continent, in sandy valleys at the town of Saltillo, in Cohuila (a province of Mexico), during oe journey in South-Western Texas and Northern Mexico. eeds received from the Botanical Gardens of Cambridge University, Massachusetts, were raised at Kew in 1881," and flowered in February, 1882. It is not an attractive lant, but as a near relative of the European Anthericum has a special botanical interest. In the description of the flowers given in the American journal, these are said 0 be of a light salmon colour; as cultivated at Kew they are nearly white. ? Desor. Root of fascicled fleshy fibres. Leaves twelve to OCTOBER Ist, 1883. eighteen inches long, by one-sixth to a quarter of an inch broad, slender, soft and grass-like, concave im front, convex on the back, hollow, bright green, base rather broader with sheathing membranous margins. Stem eighteen to twenty-four inches high, slender, erect, sparingly paniculately branched, naked below; branches long, slender, suberect, with membranous ovate bracts a quarter to half an inch long at the forks and bases of the pedicels. Racemes slender ; flowers very remote; pedicels rather longer than the bracts, slender. Perianth three-— quarters of an inch in diameter, cleft to the base into’ oblong obtuse white spreading segments with a broad central greenish-brown nerve, the outer segments rather the narrower. Stamens much shorter than the perianth; outer the shortest, suddenly dilated at the base into a broadly oblong fimbriated membranous appendage; inner (both appendage and filament) longer; anthers short, oblong, attachment dorsal, versatile, slits introrse. Ovary globose, sessile, three-celled ; style slender, equalling the stamens, deciduous; stigma large, capitate, three-lobed ; ovules two in each cell, pendulous. Capsule nearly globose, three-angled, membranous, loculicidal, cells one- to two- seeded. Seeds triquetrous, dark, sides and back subrugosely pitted.—J. D. H. Fig. 1, Stamens and ovary; 2, longer and, 3 and 4, shorter stamens ; 5, ovary; 6, transverse section of ditto; 7, capsule; 8 and 9, seeds :—all enlarged. ee Le ee 5 thon ee ee a ae a B 0% e fea mY) ~Q ets ms Fa is § S 8 pa Ps at e 3 pa & a AB del, IN Rich Tas. 6718. ASTER DIPLOSTEPHIOIDES. Native of the Himalaya. Nat. Ord. Compositz.—Tribe ASTEROIDEX. Genus AstrrR, Linn.; (Benth. et Hook. J. Gen. Pl. vol. ii. p. 271.) Aster (Alpigenia) diplostephioides ; glanduloso-pubescens v. -tomentosa, v. -villosa, a an . rhizomate robusto, caule simplici erecto robusto folioso l-cephalo, foliis Mager radicalibus oblongo- vy. obovato-oblongis v. oblanceolatis acutis in petiolum ae * angustatis caulinis sessilibus linearibus oblongo-linearibus obovato-ob ongisve, at capitulo 2-3-poll. diam., involucri bracteis lanceolatis exterioribus interdam en foliaceti: ligulis purpureis elongatis 2-seriatis, acheniis oblongis compressis oe, _-erostatis sericeis, pappi setis sordidis extimis brevibus rigidis. fa A. diplostephioides, Benth. in Gen. Pl. vol. ii. p. 272; Clarke Comp. Ind, p. 45; Hook. f. Fl. Brit. Ind. vol. ii. p. 251. : Hetzrocuxra diplostephioides, DC. Prodr. vol. v. p- 282. Dirtoparrvs diplostephioides, Herb. Ind. Or. Hook. J- vol. v. p. 7, in part. This is the handsomest and one of the commonest of the Alpine Composite of the Himalaya, abounding in moist Situations at various points along the southern face of the range from Kashmir to Sikkim, at elevations of 8000 to 11,000 feet in the north-west, but ascending to 16,000 feet in Sikkim. Like its congeners, it varies a good deal in hairyness, breadth and length of its leaves, and size of head, ut it is otherwise a remarkably constant Species. Its _hearest ally is the A. Heterocheta, Benth., which is the _ Himalayan representative of the European and North Asian — A, alpinus. Many of the heads contain ray-flowers with Imperfect stamens, and some with a second ligule smaller than and opposite to the normal one (see fig. 3), the corolla _ thus becoming bilabiate. ___ the specimens here figured were raised from seed gathered in Sikkim by H. Elwes, Esq., and presented by him to the Royal Gardens. They flowered profusely in ay and June, quite equalling the finest specimens from their native country. Dr. Aitchison, who sends dried OCTOBER Ist, 1883. specimens from Kashmir, states in a note that the roots are extensively used in that country in washing clothes. Dzscr. Whole plant softly glandular-pubescent or tomen- tose or even villous. ootstock stout, short and erect, or elongate prostrate and covered with the fibrous remains of old leaves. Stem solitary, simple, stout, six to eighteen inches high, leafy. Hadical leaves two to four inches long, very variable in breadth, from obovate to oblanceolate, acute, quite entire, narrowed into a long or short petiole; cauline two to three inches long, sessile and semiamplexi- caul, linear-oblong, acute. Head solitary, inclined, two to three inches in diameter. IJnvolucre broadly hemispherical ; bracts lanceolate, herbaceous, outer subfoliaceous, all appressed. Receptacle convex. Ray-flowers very numerous, in about two series, tube very short; ligule slender, one inch long, pale bright-purple, tip obscurely toothed. Disk- flowers small, with purple heads before expanding. Achenes one-eighth of an inch long, oblong, flattened, not ribbed or winged, obtuse, silky; pappus-hairs short, dirty white, rigid, scabrid, outer very short rigid.—J. D. H. Fig. 1, Vertical section of involucre and receptacle ; 2, ray-flower; 3, another with imperfect stamens and a second ligule ; 4, style-arms of ditto; 5, disk-flower ; 6, stamens of ditto; 7,style-arms of ditto; 8, achene and pappus; 9, hair of pappus: —all enlarged. 6719. al neat: t Brooks Day &Son.¥mP Vancen th hth. AB. del IN Fit L.Reeve & C® London Tas. 6719. JASMINUM rtoripum. Native of Japan and China. Nat. Ord. OLEAcER.—Tribe JaAsMINER. Genus Jasminum, Linn.; (Benth. et Hook. f. Gen. Pl. vol. ii. p. 674.) JasMInuM floridum; fruticosum, suberectum, glaberrimum, ramulis angulatis, foliis 3-foliolatis pinnatisve foliolis acuminatis y. apiculatis coriaceis enerviis marginibus obscure scaberulis costa valida, foliolo terminali ovato: paulo majore, lateralibus ellipticis v. rarius obovatis sessilibus v. subpetiolulatis, cymis sub- erectis paucifloris, floribus pedicellatis, calycis glaberrimi lobis tubo 5-costato equilongis setaceis, corolle auree tubo calyce 4-plo longiore, limbi lobis 5 ovatis subacutis. J. floridum, Bunge Enum, Pl. Chin. p. 42; DC. Prodr. vol. viii. p. 313 ; Miquel Prolus. Fl. Jap. pp, 151,559; Franch. et Sav. Enum. Pl. Jap. vol. i. p. 314. J. Subulatum, Lindl. in Bot. Reg. 1842, Append. n.58; DC. 7. ce. p. 312. This yellow-flowered Jasmine belongs to a group of Asiatic forms of which G. humile, Linn., is the type, the latter a plant to which many supposed Indian species have been referred by Clarke in the “ Flora of British India” (vol. iii. p. 602). It differs from that plant (see Plate 1731) in the rarely pinnate leaves, smaller flowers, and slender calyx-teeth. It was discovered by Bunge during his journey to China, and published by him in 1831; but his description seems to have been overlooked by Lindley, who gave a curt diagnosis of it in the Appendix to the Botanical Register in 1842 under the name of J. subulatum. The plant was introduced from China by the Hon. W. Fox Strangways, afterwards Earl of Ilchester, an ardent horticulturist, whose garden at Abbotsbury in Dorset-. shire was famous for its collection of rare and interesting plants. Besides authentic specimens collected by Bunge himself, there are other North China ones in the Kew - Herbarium from Fortune and Bretschneider, and Japanese ones from the Herbarium of Leyden. J. subulatum grows freely on a south wall at Kew, without protection, and flowers in July. OCTOBER Ist, 1883, Descr.