JOURNAL OF THE ARNOLD ARBORETUM HARVARD UNIVERSITY EpIToRIAL BOARD A. C. SMITH, Editor P. C. MANGELSDORF I. W. BAILEY E. D. MERRILL J. H. FAULL H. M. RAUP I. M. JOHNSTON A. REHDER C. E. KOBUSKI K. SAX VOLUME XXIV JAMAICA PLAIN, MASS. 1943 Reprinted with the permission of the Arnold Arboretum of Harvard University KRAUS REPRINT CORPORATION N ork 1968 No. No. No. No. Oo 0 DATES OF ISSUE (pp. 1-117, 1 pl.) issued January 15, 1943. (pp. 119-242, 6 pl.) issued April 15, 1943. (pp. 243-374, 12 pl.) issued July 15, 1943. (pp. 375-518, 6 pl.) issued October 15, 1943. Printed in U.S.A. TABLE OF CONTENTS THE AMERICAN SPECIES OF Drimys.. By A. C. Smith ............4.. PLANTAE PAPUANAE ARCHBOLDIANAE, XI. By EF. D. Merrill and L. M. PBEM a eg SEO Aen eee Cae OC KEN dh + i eee Upeteeeeeameeen ees STUDIES IN THE THEACEAE, XIV. NoTES ON THE WEST INDIAN SPECIES OF TERNSTROEMIA. By Clarence E. Kobuskt 1... 0... cccvcccececees PAPUAN GRASSES COLLECTED BY L. J. Brass, III. By Agnes Chase .... NEW PHANEROGAMS FROM Mexico, V. By Ivan M. Johnston .......... SCHIZOMUSSAENDA, A NEW GENUS OF THE RUBIACEAE. By Hut-Lin Li... SALIX FLORIDANA CHAPMAN, A VALID SpEciES, With one plate. By PEON TS TS xt icais winder a4 Sy ae RGD RA da OM eae e's KarELIN (1801-1872) anv Krrirov (1821-1842), Explorers oF SIBERIA AND MippLe Asia. By Vladimir C. Asmous ..........0 0005 Taxonomic NoTEs ON THE OLD Wor-Lp SPECIES OF WINTERACEAE. By oe Os a ee ee ee rr ee eee ee re eran NovELTIES IN AMERICAN EUPHORBIACEAE. By Leon Croizat ........ THE FAMILY HIMANTANDRACEAE. With six plates. By J. W. Bailey, CHGVIOHE TE. NGS, G00 Ai CS Ee cro OS mons Vaden pee oe PLANTAE PAPUANAE ARCHBOLDIANAE, XII. By E. D. Merrill and L. NE PRES. ne Pas 4 a keen ed ois Cid ETE EO eS New AND NoTEworRTHY POLYPETALAE FROM BrITISH GUIANA. By N. PO GROUU 50 6.55.5 bend sexe oe Pk s woke eae OR REDE ORs NOTEWORTHY SPECIES FROM MEXICO AND ADJACENT UNITED STATES, 2 By fvdn Ml. Jonson’ soa ec cek cee dae ss. 0s dae Dees ee 6 PUBLICATION DATES FOR THE BOTANICAL PARTS OF THE PACIFIC RAIL- ROAD Reports, By Jan: JORMSION @ isa os 5s ce tko ke cere ge wowed A SECOND SUMMARY OF THE SCROPHULARIACEAE OF NEW GUINEA. With five plates. By Francis W. Pennell .........0. ccc cece cnces A Stupy oF CYTOLOGY AND SPECIATION IN THE GENUS PoPputus L. With four plates: By 2. Chalmers SW esa eh 6654s 04% Cede ee ses PLANTS OF COAHUILA, EASTERN CHIHUAHUA, AND ADJOINING ZACATECAS AND Duranoo, I. By Ivan M. Johnston .............. THE COMPARATIVE MORPHOLOGY OF THE WINTERACEAE, I. POLLEN AND STAMENS. With three plates. By J. W. Bailey and Charlotte G. Nast STUDIES OF PaciFic ISLAND PLants, II. NoTES ON THE PACIFIC SPECIES Ore teen. By ACs ae ee ee ek eB ae ee eae eee 103 107 119 165 190 207 218 rey 243 ra bs 306 iv TABLE OF CONTENTS Notes ON THE Fiora oF INpo-Cu1naA. By Hui-Lin Li ........ ccueee: Be PLANTS OF COAHUILA, EASTERN CHIHUAHUA, AND ADJOINING ZACA- TECAS AND Duranoo, II. By Ivan M. Johnston ......... 000s eee eee PLANTAE PAPUANAE ARCHBOLDIANAE, XIII. By E. D. Merrill and L oes @ 6 6 ee Ole SE ee Oe EO. 2 ae Re Re ES DD. Oo OE SR Be SS 4 41o Oo 88 SB Nores ON THE FLoRA OF Kwancsi Province, Cu1na. By Hui-Lin Li.. 444 SrupIEs OF SoUTH AMERICAN PLANTS, X. NoTewortTHy MyrisTIca- CEAE AND VACCINIACEAE. By 4. C. Smith ich eeebeeaeaeaeRrense ses 460 Tue CoMPARATIVE MORPHOLOGY OF THE WINTERACEAE, II, CARPELS. With six plates. By J. W. Bailey and Charlotte G. Nast ..........-. ForsytrHiA VAHL, NOMEN GENERICUM CONSERVANDUM. By Alfred AMIE ois oh os 8 Eee ae ROR bd oO EEE a EKS ERED SERS Roy.e’s “ILLUSTRATIONS OF THE BOTANY OF THE HIMALAYAN Moun- CAINS. YT Ca 1. SPCOPR aos vata nd vane enn es eonened Ves ss , Tue ARNOLD ARBORETUM DURING THE FiscaL YEAR ENpDED JUNE 30, 1943 Oboe eRe ee oe eee ee ROS Ae Sy OSS O42 ORO Oe 6. 9- 2k ® OSE: DODO. 0 SG OR SS BIBLIOGRAPHY OF THE PUBLISHED WRITINGS OF THE STAFF AND STU- ENTS JOLY 1, VOTE — TONE Dy 1948 6 oc 5 cece in sh aides ea piewees 498 STAFF OF THE ARNOLD ARBORETUM, 1942-43 2.0.0.0... 000s cece eee 501 FRE ook oe RNS ee Ce SEER CAD EREROEDEE TET OES 503 JOURNAL OF THE ARNOLD ARBORETUM VoL. XXIV JANUARY, 1943 NumBeErR 1 THE AMERICAN SPECIES OF DRIMYS A. C. SMITH With three text-figures Tue family Winteraceae is composed of six genera, of which only one, Drimys J. R. & G. Forst., is found in both hemispheres. The family is a very homogeneous one, the various genera having in common a distinct type of wood structure, leaf vascularization, staminal structure and vascu- larization, and pollen grain. Prof. I. W. Bailey and the writer (1, 10) have already expressed agreement with the prevalent opinion that the Winteraceae is entirely distinct from the Magnoliaceae, and a study of the family as a whole is in preparation. The scope of the present paper is merely a taxonomic revision of the American species, which belong entirely to the genus Drimys. A large part of my discussion is based upon the careful analyses made by Prof. Bailey, who has prepared material in sub- stantial quantities for anatomical study. An attempt to correlate the anatomical characters with the gross morphology and the geographic dis- tribution has been made. I am also indebted to Dr. I. M. Johnston for assistance during the preparation of the manuscript. Often cited as an illustration of a genus with a bihemispheric-Antarctic distribution, Drimys also illustrates the varying degree of differentiation which may be found in two sections of a widespread genus. The repre- sentatives in the New and the Old Worlds have a great deal in common, and attempts to break up the complex into two genera — Drimys in America and Tasmannia in the Old World — are not generally accepted, nor does this division seem merited. However, it is obvious that two good sections, or perhaps subgenera, are recognizable. The American repre- sentatives of Drimys are hermaphrodite trees or shrubs, with always per- fect flowers, and the stigmatic surface of the carpels is limited to the apical or subapical region, the small stigma being usually short-stipitate. The Old World species, on the other hand, are dioecious or polygamo-dioecious (the staminate flowers usually bearing sterile carpels, the pistillate flowers being either with or without functional stamens), and the stigmatic surface is extended along the entire ventral suture of the carpel. 2 JOURNAL OF THE ARNOLD ARBORETUM [VOL. XXIV The fact that the above-mentioned characters are so firmly fixed in the western and eastern hemispheres respectively seems to indicate that the original division of the genus into these two populations was ancient. In its Old World area (Australia, New Guinea, Borneo, the Philippines, and perhaps a few adjacent islands), Drimys shows great polymorphy and about 36 well marked species are recognizable. This variation extends to great diversity in foliage and floral characters. In America, on the other hand, no such extensive variability is evident, and a smaller degree of specific stability has been evolved. It is obvious that the genetic composition of the genus is much more diverse in the Old World than in the New. To this extent, Drimys is an excellent illustration of the degree to which the poten- tial polymorphy of a group may vary in different parts of its area. Many students have taken Drimys to include some very diverse elements in the Old World, but, as already expressed (10), I find it advisable to follow van Tieghem (11) and Hutchinson (7) in segregating the genera Bubbia, Belliolum, Exospermum, Zygogynum, and the New Zealand species (neferred by van Tieghem to “Wintera Forst.”). With these elements re- moved, Drimys is sharply distinguished from other members of the Winteraceae by having a calyx which completely encloses the bud, com- posed of two (or rarely three) sepals which are papyraceous to mem- branaceous in texture. Occasionally these sepals are calyptrate and soon deciduous, but in most American specimens they are more or less per- sistent, often remaining attached to one another at their basal margins while losing their connection with the torus; on mature plants the sepals are thus often found as a coherent unit encircling the pedicel but free from it. Many of the Old World species customarily lose the sepals entirely before anthesis. The remaining genera of Winteraceae have a more ordinary calyx, composed of two to several more or less deltoid or irregular lobes which persist through anthesis and which do not enclose the bud, or at least not after the very earliest stages of ontogeny. The stamens of Drimys are composed of a carnose essentially terete filament, to the apex of which the two subvertical locules are laterally adnate, quite free from one another and dehiscing laterally or subextrorsely. In other members of the Wintera- ceae the stamens show various and often conspicuous modifications. The combination of calyx- and stamen-characters here discussed serves to set Drimys apart from the rest of the family in such a sharp manner that there can be no serious question of merging other genera with it. Drimys was founded by J. R. and G. Forster upon two species, D. Winteri from the Straits of Magellan and D. axillaris from New Zealand. Since these two species are not congeneric, the genotype of Drimys must be designated. Van Tieghem (11), who first broke up the older generic con- cept, took D. Winteri to be the genotype, referring D. axillaris to “Wintera Forst.” (not Wintera Murr.). In this latter decision he is thwarted by the International Rules, since Wintera Murr. was proposed specifically to re- place Drimys J. R. & G. Forst., and “Wintera Forst.” is merely an in- correct use of Murray’s generic name. The typification of Drimys has been discussed by Dandy (in Jour. Bot. 71: 119-122. 1933), who has 1943 ] SMITH, AMERICAN SPECIES OF DRIMYS 3 proposed the generic name Pseudowintera for D. axillaris and its allies in New Zealand. There has been a vast difference of opinion among taxonomists as to the nomenclatural subdivision of the American population of Drimys, which ranges from Cape Horn to southern Mexico, with representatives in Juan Fernandez and in eastern Brazil, adjacent Paraguay and Argentine, and on Mt. Roraima. No specimens have yet been reported from Bolivia or Ecuador, but the discovery of the genus in these countries seems possible, in view of the fact that a specimen from the Andes of northern Peru has recently been collected. I have seen no specimens from Honduras, El Salvador, or Nicaragua, but this may be due to our poor material from these regions. In general, the genus may be said to occur in mountains throughout the western hemisphere south of Mexico; toward the south it occurs at or near sea-level. In certain regions it is very common; such areas are the Magellanic region, central Chile, Minas Geraes, Colombia, and Costa Rica. Elsewhere in its range the genus occurs sporadically, but future collections will show whether the above-mentioned centers are actual or whether they merely represent the best-known parts of the generic range. Among the early students who considered the genus, some, such as De Candolle (2, 3), were inclined to recognize several species with distinct geographic areas; the number of specimens available to such workers was very limited and naturally they had an incomplete idea of the amount of variability within any given portion of the population. Then followed a period in which it was customary to refer all American members of the genus to D. Winteri, as varieties, forms, or merely unstable variants. This trend, given weight by Hooker (6), persisted until Miers (8, 9) considered the genus as a whole. With his customary narrow specific delimitation, Miers arranged the population into nine distinct species, separating them into four groups on the basis of the position and branching of the inflo- rescence (one division including the New Zealand D. axillaris, which must be removed from the genus). An examination of the material now avail- able shows definitely that no satisfactory specific lines can be based upon the position of the inflorescence. Miers utilized the terminal versus the axillary position of the inflorescence, but it appears that the inflorescence is always terminal at its inception, the umbels (or single flowers) being borne about the growing point of the branchlets. As the plant develops, this grow- ing point protrudes through the cluster of inflorescences, leaving them lateral and often pseudoaxillary. Sometimes the inflorescences thus appear in two or more whorls toward the apices of branchlets, and whether they are terminal or lateral appears to depend merely upon the stage of develop- ment. It seems likely that in certain parts of the population (e.g. the Magellanic area, etc.) growth is sharply seasonal, and in these parts the inflorescences are most likely to appear terminal. In other areas (e.g. Colombia, etc.) growth is more or less continuous, and the inflorescences develop with a more loose arrangement rather than all at one time at the apex of the branchlets. Therefore, the apical or lateral position of the I JOURNAL OF THE ARNOLD ARBORETUM [VOL, XXIV flowers can be given little weight in a taxonomic consideration. Whether the flowers are single or aggregated into umbels or fascicles is also suscep- tible to variation in the same individual and therefore cannot be too rigidly interpreted, although to be sure there are definite trends in this respect in different geographic areas. Thus, practically all the Magellanic specimens have the flowers single, while those in the higher Andes of Chile and Argentine have a strong tendency in this direction. In the rest of the population the flowers are predominantly umbellate, but the single-flowered character is shown here and there throughout. Miers’ treatment has not been accepted by other workers. Eichler (4), taking up the whole American population for his treatment in Flora Brasiliensis, referred it all to D. Winteri, recognizing five forms. The most recent regional treatment of importance is that of Hauman (5), who, dis- cussing the Argentine plants, recognized two species, D. Winteri and D. brasiliensis, the former with two varieties and one form, the latter with two varieties. The various treatments of other workers need not be examined in detail; the current tendency in herbaria is to follow the line of least resistance and refer all the material to D. Winteri. From a casual examination of the material in any single herbarium, one would indeed have difficulty in following any other course, as the population appears remark- ably homogeneous. And yet, any two specimens are likely to be quite different in such details as number and size of floral parts, but to the casual observer these differences do not seem concomitant with geographic distri- bution and thus they are commonly disregarded. Differentiation in the various geographic areas, to be sure, is incomplete, and one searches in vain for definite and rigid characters upon which a classification can be based. In the following paragraphs I shall consider the various parts of the plant in turn, pointing out the degree of variability, if any, which occurs in different parts of the population. Hasit. The American representatives of Drimys are shrubs or low trees, most often occurring in cool moist temperate forest. Individuals growing in very exposed situations apparently trend to be gnarled and often to have the leaves closely crowded toward the apices of branchlets. Other individuals are more symmetrical and have the leaves scattered along the branchlets. This character is very likely a reflection of environment and is not dependable. In general, the more southern members, as_ the Magellanic population, have a more compact habit, with stouter branchlets and petioles; the Colombian specimens, which are comparatively large, also have uniformly thick branchlets. The branchlets throughout are brownish to cinereous, sometimes glaucous when young, subterete or essentially so, and usually longitudinally striate or rugulose. Fot1ace. The leaves are alternate and often irregularly crowded, some- times appearing essentially whorled about the growing points of the branchlets. The length and thickness of the petiole varies substantially in any geographic area or even on an individual. In general, the most south- ern part of the population has the strongest petioles, but the proportion of 1943 ] SMITH, AMERICAN SPECIES OF DRIMYS 5 length to diameter of this organ is too variable to receive systematic attention. The leaf-blades are coriaceous in varying degrees, variously shaped but most often oblong or elliptic to obovate, with a stout costa and immersed or faintly prominulous secondary nerves. The degree to which the sec- ondaries are immersed bears a vague correlation to geographic distribution, but this character is quite undependable and cannot be considered any- thing more than a trend, subject to local fluctuation. The direction of the secondaries has a certain stability in each region. In color, the leaf-blades vary on the upper surface from pale green to dark brown, usually being glaucous beneath when youn The lower surface of the leaf- blades has a slightly different aspect in the different parts of the population, and an analysis of this character is found to be of use. Although it is an obscure character and furthermore is not rigid and entirely dependable, nevertheless it may serve as a subsidiary criterion. In using this character, the lower surface of the leaf-blades should be examined under a magnification of about 50 diameters. The stomata are always depressed, and the depression is filled with wax-like and very finely granular material. It is due to these stomatic areas that the lower leaf-surfaces, not only in Drimys but throughout the family, appear to be “punctate” with white or pale dots when dry. In Drimys Sect. Wintera, the stomatic areas appear to vary in size from about 0.02 to 0.05 mm. in diameter The lower leaf-surface between the stomata may be essentially free of wax-like granular material, or this material may cover the entire surface in a more or less uniform layer. In the latter case the entire surface appears to be whitish or glaucous. It should be noted that the glaucous appearance is frequently lost in herbarium specimens, due to variations in methods of drying. In general, the stomatic areas are more conspicuous in the southern populations (D. Winteri and D. confertifolia), while in D. granadensis and D. brasiliensis they are often obscure. In most specimens of D. brasiliensis the lower epidermis is papillate, the papillae being club-shaped or knob-like protuberances arising from epi- dermal cells and distributed between the stomatic areas. The papillae may be covered with wax-like granules, like the plane surfaces mentioned above. The above-described characters of the lower leaf-surface are not suffi- ciently well fixed in each part of the population to be considered more than trends, although the extreme forms are readily recognized. I am indebted to Prof. Bailey for the above analysis. INFLORESCENCES. I have already remarked on the inconstant nature of the position and type of the inflorescence — whether terminal or lateral, umbellate or single-flowered. These differences may be taxonomically used only with great caution and at best they demonstrate somewhat inconse- quential trends rather than fixed characters. The proportionate length of the peduncle and pedicels varies greatly on the same individual. The in- florescences are usually subtended by imbricate papyraceous bracts, which 6 JOURNAL OF THE ARNOLD ARBORETUM [VOL. XXIV are generally oblong and obtuse, sometimes up to 15 mm. long and 7 mm. broad. When the inflorescences are umbellate, the pedicels are subtended by a whorl of bracteoles similar to the bracts but smaller, not exceeding 10 by 4mm. Both bracts and bracteoles are very early caducous and are seldom seen on herbarium material; they appear to offer no points of differ- ence in the various populations, although they may be a little more per- sistent toward the south. Sepats. The sepals are usually two, rarely three, and vary in texture from membranaceous to papyraceous; they may be essentially opaque and apparently eglandular or with conspicuous glands. In shape they are usu- ally suborbicular-deltoid, the variations in size being fairly constant in different geographic areas. In general, the specimens from the northern part of the range have thicker and larger sepals than those from the south, but there are many individual exceptions to this generality. Perats. The petals are uniformly white and are extremely variable in number, ranging from 4 to 17 and occasionally being as many as 22 or 25 (in forms from Peru and Panama). They are whorled on the torus and from 1- to 3-seriate. Although the number of petals is inconstant within any given geographic population, there are certain broad tendencies which may be noted. For instance, specimens from Chile, Patagonia, and Juan Fernandez have the petals 4-14 in number, while in other parts of the range, according to my observations, the petals are 8-17, and rarely as many as 25. The matter of petal-size is too variable in each geographic region to make any generalization possible, although it may be noted that the largest petals have been found in the Colombian population. In texture, it may be observed that the southernmost specimens have the petals usually pellucid-glandular or apparently eglandular, while specimens from the north and from Brazil have the glands usually opaque and more obvious. STaMENS. The torus is uniformly subglobose or short-cylindric, the stamens occurring in several (2-4 or rarely 5) whorls, being 15-50 (rarely to 65) innumber. There appears to be an incipient tendency toward more numerous stamens in the northern part of the range. The southern speci- mens have 15-40 stamens, the northern and Brazilian specimens 18-50 (sometimes as many as 65). The filaments are carnose and essentially terete, more or less glandular with immersed and inconspicuous glands. The distal portion of the filament, to which the anther-locules are attached and to which I shall refer as the connective, offers a more or less dependable character in its glandular marking. Specimens from Chile, Patagonia, and Juan Fernandez have the connective eglandular or with very inconspicuous and essentially colorless glands, which are scarcely apparent, even under considerable magnification. The northern and Brazilian specimens, on the other hand, have the connective with numerous immersed glands and toward the apex usually bear a few conspicuous yellowish superficial glands. These are often very obvious under small magnification and only rarely lacking. A specimen from Mt. Roraima has the connective produced into a small apiculum, but otherwise this organ is essentially truncate. The 1943] SMITH, AMERICAN SPECIES OF DRIMYS 7 anther-locules are elliptic to oblong, variable in size within rather narrow limits which appear to have only inconsequential geographic significance. The stamens are often noted as yellow by collectors. Carpets. The carpels are usually arranged in a single whorl around the blunt apex of the torus, being from 3 to 12 in number (rarely 2-24). The only geographic significance which can be attached to the number of carpels is found in the more common occurrence of high numbers toward the north (up to 24 in a single Panama specimen). However, the great variation in number of carpels which is found in any geographic area indicates that this character is nearly useless for taxonomic purposes. The shape of the carpels is essentially uniform throughout, and their size is similarly quite uniform. The stigma is either lateral toward the ventral apex or sub- terminal. Sometimes it is sessile, sometimes short-stipitate, sometimes obviously exceeding the body of the carpel and sometimes exceeded by that blunt surface. In general, the southern specimens have the stigma lateral or at least exceeded by the body of the carpel, while the northern and Brazilian specimens have the stigma obviously stipitate, subterminal, and exceeding the body of the carpel. Carpellary characters are not firmly fixed in geographic regions, and the above-mentioned trends are at best only incipient points of differentiation. The ovules are biseriate on the two ventral placentas, varying from 6 to 26 in number. As regards the number of ovules, a distinct geographic differentiation is discernible. The Juan Fernandez specimens have uniformly (16—)18-26 ovules, while in the remainder of the population the ovules are less than 16 (except for one or two Chilean plants which have 18 ovules). In Chile and Patagonia the ovules are 9-16(—18); in the northern mountains and in Brazil the ovules are 6-12. Fruits are very uniform throughout the range of the genus in America and offer no stable characters for specific identification. Usually only a few carpels per flower develop, but sometimes all reach maturity. The carpels become obovoid or ellipsoid and often slightly falcate berries, 6-15 mm. long and 4-8 mm. broad at maturity. They are dark purple or reddish black, at length becoming deep black, and as a rule they are short- stipitate to obtuse at base and rounded to obtuse at apex. The pericarp becomes soft and subcarnose at maturity and is often conspicuously yellow- glandular. The seeds are usually fewer than the ovules (often reduced to 2 or 3 in number) and are imbedded in a thin evanescent pulp; they are black or castaneous, polished, inequilaterally obovoid and usually strongly falcate, 3-5 mm. long, 1.5-2 mm. broad, acute or subacute at base, rounded at apex, and with a thin and brittle testa. Miers (9: 127) has described in detail the structure of the seed, although his terminology may not be accepted by morphologists. The characters discussed in the above para- graph are so uniform throughout the American species that they are not repeated in the specific descriptions given below. ConcLusIoNns. From the above notes it is perceived that there are no clear-cut characters in the American population which can be associated 8 JOURNAL OF THE ARNOLD ARBORETUM [VOL. XXIV with geographic areas. It seems likely that the various geographic popula- tions of Drimys in America have slightly different genetic compositions, as indicated by the diverse trends which I have pointed out above. None of these trends has been carried far enough to be recognized as an absolute character, but nevertheless they can be used in classification, provided that they are recognized as merely trends or tendencies and are not taken as definite rigid characters. Single specimens, taken at random from the range of the genus in America, often defy classification, but when numerous specimens from each area are examined one perceives the direction of morphological trends. It might almost be assumed that, given enough time and continuation of the present-day geographic isolation, the various geo- graphic populations of Drimys will become narrower in their respective tendencies until even casually selected individuals will be rigidly char- acterized. The question which faces the taxonomist is whether species or even subspecific units should be established on characters which, instead of being firmly established, are merely indicated by broad general trends. The conclusion at which I have arrived is somewhat intermediate between the despairing attitude of Hooker and most recent herbarium workers and the optimistic viewpoint of Miers that several good species are discernible. I am able to recognize four major groups which, in my opinion, are sufficiently stable and recognizable to be designated as species. ‘These groups are (1) the Juan Fernandez population, (2) the population from Chile and southern Argentine, (3) the population from Peru to western Venezuela and Mexico, and (4) the Brazilian, Paraguayan, and northern Argentinian popu- lation, this latter including specimens from Mt. Roraima. From the lack of definite morphological barriers it may be assumed that these populations would be interfertile, but the fact remains that they are not interfertile in nature simply because of their present-day geographic isolation from one another. The morphological trends in each population, although often trivial and obscure, are nevertheless quite apparent. Within each of the above-mentioned populations (except the small and compact group from Juan Fernandez) I have been able to recognize several minor groups which I designate as varieties. The morphological tendencies within each of these varieties are not emphatic, but each variety is geographically restricted and shows a certain amount of incipient differ- entiation. In citations of literature, I have taken the liberty of correcting the spell- ing of the generic name, when necessary, to Drimys (the original spelling) from Drymis or Drymys. I have examined most of the illustrations por- traying the American representatives of the genus and have referred these to the proper subdivision as treated in the present paper. A few plates are not available to me, while many others are so inadequate that they do not permit positive identification; these latter are not cited. The great bulk of the illustrations has been referred to Drimys Winteri, but it is obvious that many do not portray the Magellanic variety upon which this name is based. 1943] SMITH, AMERICAN SPECIES OF DRIMYS 9 Citations of specimens are reasonably complete for the larger American herbaria, but of course additional collections of most entities will be found in European institutions. I am greatly indebted to the directors and curators of the following institutions for the loan of material: Arnold Arboretum (A); Field Museum of Natural History (F); Gray Herbarium (GH); Missouri Botanical Garden (M); New York Botanical Garden (NY); University of California (UC); U. S. National Herbarium (US). The parenthetical letters indicate the place of deposit of the cited specimens. ee See ; confertifolia ; interi var. andina; 4. sc Winteri var. chilensis ; ; 7. D. granadensis var mexicana; 8. D. granadensis var. chiriquiensis; 9. D. pronadenss var. peruviana; 10. D. brasiliensis var. campestris; 11. D. brasiliensis var. retor 12. D. brasiliensis var. angustifolia; 13. D. brasiliensis var. roraimensis. From oan $ series of base maps, 201HCW. 10 JOURNAL OF THE ARNOLD ARBORETUM [VOL. XXIV TAXONOMIC TREATMENT eT - R. & G. Forst. Char. Gen. 83. 1776; Forst. f. in Nova Acta Reg. Soc. Sci. 1825; Lindl. Nat. Syst. Bot. ed. 2. 17. 1836; Meisn. Pl. Vasc. Gen. 3 (pars alt. 5) 1836; Spach, Hist. Nat. Veg. 7: 436. 1839; Endl. Gen. Pl. 839. 1839, Enchir. Bot. 428. 1841; Gay, Fl. Chil. 1: 60. 1845; Lindl. Veg. Kingd. ed. 2. 419. 1847; Miers in Ann. Mag. Nat. Hist. III. 2: 37. 1858, Contrib. Bot. 1: 126. 1861; Benth. & Hook. f. Gen. Pl. 1: 17. 1862; Eichl. in Mart. Fl. Bras. 13(1): 133. 1864; Baill. Hist. Pl. 1: 156, 190. 1867-69; Prantl in E. & P. Nat. Pfl. III. 2:19. 1891; ee in Bull. Sci. Fr. & Belg. 27: 222 seq., pro parte. 1896; v. Tiegh. in Jour. de Bot. 14: 280-290. 1900; Pilger in E. & P. Nat. Pfl. Nachtr. 2: 108. 1906; Lsihfeabh in oath — 1921: 190. 1921; Hauman in Comun. Mus. Nac. Buenos Aires 2: 45, Wintera a. Syst. Veg. ed. 14. 507. 1784; Pers. Syn. Pl. 2: 84. 1806; Humb. & Bonpl. Pl. Aequin. 1: 205. 1808; Lindl. Introd. Nat. Syst. Bot. 26. 1830. In the above citations I have listed the most important references to the genus as a whole, omitting those in which only the Old World species are considered. The genus is readily divided into two sections as follows Plants hermaphrodite, the flowers always perfect; carpels with the stigmatic surface limited to the apical or subapical region, the stigma small, subpeltate, often short- stipitate; flowers solitary or fasciculate or arranged in umbels; ~~. species. gi Sstai Aba pice is inte Pasce seep larwheay o.n/ Sia) 9.9e9 igus lara vo:6 ial dca. 8diw al guerarp Gum seravane’alardivear end Section Wi wien, Plants dioecious or polygamo-dioecious, the staminate flowers usually oe sterile carpels, the pistillate flowers either with or without functional stamens; carpels with the stigmatic surface extended along the ventral suture, the stigma not stipi- tate; Howers solitary or fasciculate, never in umbels; Old World species.......... SESW GEES cack bee ae cess Seen Haas seaGis SHAG MOAR AS arewenk Section Tasmannia. The present treatment is concerned in detail only with the Section Wintera. A sectional name for the Old World representatives was appar- ently first proposed by F. v. Mueller (Pl. Indig. Col. Vict. 1: 20. 1860) as Drimys Sect. Tasmannia, based on Tasmannia R. Br. ex DC. Reg. Veg. Syst. Nat. 1: 445. 1817. The more detailed synonymy of the Section Wintera follows: — Sect. Wintera (Murr.) DC. Reg. Veg. Syst. Nat. 1: 443. 1817, Prodr. 1: 78. Pan ee Commers. ex Lam. Encycl. 2: 330, as synonym. 1786. Magallana Commers. ex DC. Reg. Veg. Syst. Nat. 1: 443, as synonym. 1817; Endl. Enchir. Bot. 428, as synonym. 1841; non Cav. Winterana Sol. ex Endl. Enchir. Bot. 428, as synonym. 1841; non L. Drimys Sect. feng ee Vv. grees in a ae Bot. 14: 289. 1900; Pilger in E. & P. Nat. Pfl. Nachtr. 2: Drimys Sect. Monoplewr Vv. “Tiegh in Jour. de Bot. 14: 289. 1900; Pilger in E. & P. Nat. Pfl. Nachtr. 2: Drimys Sect. esa mens Vv, Tigh in Jour. de Bot. 14: 289. 1900; Pilger in E. & P. Pfl. Nachtr. 2: 108. ve fen attempt to ae the genus Drimys into groups was made in 1817 by De Candolle, who erected the Section Drimys on D. axillaris and the Section Wintera on D. Winteri and three other American species. In 1943 ] SMITH, AMERICAN SPECIES OF DRIMYS 11 1824 De Candolle maintained the same classification, except that he used the sectional name Exudrimys for D. axillaris, The fact that De Candolle selected the New Zealand species of the Forsters as the basis of his Section Drimys (or Eudrimys) does not affect the typification of the genus. No further serious attempt to break up the genus into sections was made until 1900, when van Tieghem proposed four sections, oe ae to be based on neither essential a ates nor His Section Eudrimys is based upon D. Winteri, D. angu ie a a Ba World species, but, since it excludes D. ae it is not the same entity as De Candolle’s Section Eudrimys. Van Tieghem was the first student to realize that D. Winteri and D. axillaris are not congeneric, and he definitely retained the generic name for the first of these entities. Drimys axillaris and two other New Zealand species were referred by Dandy to his newly proposed Pseudowintera in 1933 KEY TO THE AMERICAN SPECIES Sepals membranaceous or submembranaceous; petals 4-14, eglandular or sparsely pellucid-glandular ; stamens 15-40, the connectives eplandular or rarely with a few very inconspicuous colorless apical glands; stigma usually lateral near apex of carpel, subsessile or short-stipitate, exceeded or equalled by the body of the aa ovules 9-26; lower leaf- surface appearing white- or gray-punctate, due to the a Ovules (16—)18—26 on elongate placentas; inflorescence always umbellate; leaf-blades narrowly oblong or elliptic or obovate-lanceolate, usually — 2 by 1.3-3.5 cm.; Vian Berna ng ez... sr sy2 ornate tae eee eine eee ces wae ina a . D. confertifolia. Ovules 9-18 on short or slightly elongate placentas; inflorescence Bee or fascicu- ees or Pony flowers single; leaf-blades various; Chile and adjacent southern BAe UA Sa teA ranlaes fae olay OCR LAE Rae eRe EOI Sua laiathe grerararemetoin 2. D. Wintert. surface usually not obviously punctate, the stomatic areas not conspicuously paler han the rest of the Jeaf-surface Leaf-blades clliptic-oblong or narrowly so, 5-16(-17.5) by 1-5.5 cm., usually obtuse ndary 4.5-10(-12) by 5-11(-13) mm.; southern Mexico to western Venezuela and 1) | (ea eee ARR re rere rth erie MIR ROO 3. D. granadensis. Leaf-blades variously shaped, often arene obovate, sometimes nearly lanceolate, rarely exceeding 11 by 4 cm., rounded or broadly obtuse or emarginate at apex, the secondary nerves 6—10(—14) per ary often obscure; lower leaf-surface often papillate; peduncle less than 40 mm. long; sepals 4-7 by 4-8 mm.; southeastern Brazil, adjacent Paraguay and Argentine, and Mt. Roraima region............. caus Did Unna nd dog iehGisuc. aS gt GIN ORIEN Re Aree aT tote AION Apnoea ate . D. brasiliensis. 1. Drimys confertifolia Phil. in Anal. ive! Chile fags re May 1856, in Bot. Zeit. 14: ept. 1856, in Ann. Sci. Nat. IV. 7: 100. Drimys fernandeziana Steud. in Flora 139: 408. July ue Drimys Fernandezianus Miers in Ann. Mag. Nat. berks TI. 2: 48. 1858, eae Bot. 1: 137. pl. 27B. 1861; Pilger in E, & P . Pfl. Nachtr. 2: 108, fernandeziana. 1906. 12 JOURNAL OF THE ARNOLD ARBORETUM [VOL. XXIV Drimys Winteri var. fernandeziana Steud. ex Reiche, Fl. Chil. 1: 27.1 Drimys Winteri var. confertifolia Johow, Estud. Fl. Juan Fernandez ee 245. 1896; Skottsb. Nat. Hist. Juan Fern. and Easter Isl. 2: (Phanerog. Juan Fern. Isl.) 127. 21. Tree, often large, up to 15 m. high, the trunk probably often 50 cm. in diameter, the branchlets brownish, rugulose, subterete, 2-4 mm. in diameter toward apices; leaves crowded toward apices of branchlets: petioles rugu- lose, shallowly canaliculate, 3-14 mm. long, 1-2 mm. in dia meter, often narrowly winged, slightly swollen at base; leaf-blades coriaceous, dark brown or olivaceous above when dried, slightly paler to glaucous beneath and appearing distinctly punctate, narrowly oblong or elliptic or obovate- lanceolate, (3—)5—12 cm. long, (0.8—)1.3-3.5 cm. broad, attenuate at base and decurrent on the petiole, obtuse or rounded at apex, slightly recurved above, prominent beneath, the secondary nerves 6—10 per side, ascending at an ‘angle of 40-55°, prominulous or rarely immersed on both surfaces, usually anastomosing toward margin, the veinlets immersed or inconspicu- ously prominulous beneath; inflorescences clustered at apices of branchlets, umbellate, the peduncle 7-40 mm. long, the flowers 3—6 per inflorescence, orbicular-ovate, 6-8 mm. long and broad, inconspicuously apiculate at apex; petals 7 or 8 (rarely to 12), membranaceous, sparsely and obscurely pellucid-glandular, oblong, 8-14 mm. long, 2.5-5 mm. broad, obtuse at apex; stamens 30-40, 3- or 4-seriate, the filaments eglandular, 1.5-3 m long, the connective eglandular or essentially so, the locules 0.8—1.2 mm. long; carpels 3—6, obovoid, about 3 mm. long at anthesis, the stigma lateral near apex, short-stipitate, not exceeding the se of the carpel, the ovules 18-26 (rarely 16) on elongate placentas. (Fic. 2, a-f.) DisTRIBUTION: Juan Fernandez; the plant is said by Skottsberg to be one of the commonest forest trees on Masatierra, ranging from 200 m. upward to the highest ridges, while on Masafuera it is not seen much lower than 500 m. and occurs up to about 1200 m. In addition to the collections cited below, the species is represented by material obtained by Philippi (the type collection), Germain, and Johow; Miers cites Cuming 1328, and Skottsberg lists several of his numbers which are not available to me. Juan Fernanpez: Masatierra: Bertero 1453 (type coll. of D. fernandeziana Steud.; also cotype coll. of D. Fernandezianus Miers, M, NY), Moseley (F, GH), Reed (GH) ; Cumberland Bay, Hastings 255 (NY, UC, US); Salsipuedes, Skottsberg 88 (US), 88b (NY); Portezuelo, Skottsberg 6 (NY); aia of Yunque, Bock 49 (F, GH, M, NY, US); Masafuera: Chapin 1074 (NY lo. This species was independently proposed by Philippi, Steudel, and Miers within a period of two years; furthermore, Steudel and Miers used the same specific epithet and based their concepts upon the same collection. Drimys confertifolia is a biological entity with considerable stability of number and form of parts. Of all the groups in Drimys in America, this most obviously merits specific rank and can be submerged in a continental species only if all the American representatives are combined. Its closest relative is D. Winteri (and especially var. chilensis), with which it has in common eglandular stamens, a lateral stigma not exceeding the body of the carpel, obscurely glandular petals, and a lower leaf-surface with conspicu- ous stomatic areas. Drimys confertifolia is further characterized by its 1943 ] SMITH, AMERICAN SPECIES OF DRIMYS 13 crowded narrow leaves, always umbellate flowers, an essentially fixed num- ber of petals (usually 7 or 8), few carpels, and numerous ovules. The last is the most definite character and, in spite of its trivial nature, seems depend- able enough to be the principal basis of the species. 2. Drimys Winteri J. R. & G. Forst. Char. Gen. 84. 1776. petioles rugulose, canaliculate, 3-27 mm. lon - slightly swollen toward base; leaf-blades coriaceous or th TREN CA, 4 Fic. 2. a-f. Drimys confertifolia, drawn from Bock 49: a. flowering branchlet, x %; b. flower, X 1%; c. detached calyx, x 1/2; d. stamens, extrorse and introrse views, X 5; e. carpel, x 5; f. carpel, longitudinal section, x 5. g-k. Drimys Winteri var. andina, drawn from Werdermann 1245: g. stamens, introrse and extrorse views, x 5; h. carpel, x 5; i. carpel, longitudinal section, xX 5; j. fruit, showing four mature carpels, x 14; k. seed, X 3. pale green to dark brown above when dried, glaucous or at least paler be- neath and usually appearing distinctly punctate, usually obovate-oblong to elliptic, (4-)6—-15(-18) cm. long, (1.3—)1.8-6.5(—7) cm. broad, attenuate to obtuse at base and decurrent on the petiole, obtuse or rounded and some- 10-70 mm g; obscurely pellucid-glandular, sometimes copiously so, broadly ovate to sub- 14 JOURNAL OF THE ARNOLD ARBORETUM [VOL. XXIV orbicular or reniform, 4-7 mm. long, 4-12 mm. broad, apiculate to rounded at apex; petals 4— 14, membranaceous, sparsely pellucid- -glandular, oblong to narrowly obovate, = 20 mm. long, os 6(-7) m road, obtuse at apex; ni 15-40, 2— 4- seriate, the filaments carnose, eglandular or nearly , 0.8-3 mm. long, the connective eglandular or rarely with a few very eG ae colorless apical glands, the Maes 0.5-1 mm. long; elaine (2—)3-10, obovoid or ellipsoid, 2—3.5 mm. long at anthesis, the stigm lateral near apex or rarely subterminal, pelteite. ieee or short- “stpilate, exceeded or equalled by the body of the carpel, the ovules 9-18 on short or slightly elongate placentas. DisrripuTIoN: Central Chile (Coquimbo) southward to Cape Horn and in adjacent Argentine from Neuquén southward. The type was collected by the Forsters on Cook’s other collections and had been freely mentioned in literature. The old common name has tonic and antiscorbutic properties and was widely used medicinally in Shien, I have not been able to limit the species D. Winteri to the southern form upon which it was originally based, but on the other hand I prefer not to extend the specific concept to include all the American representatives of the genus. As mentioned in the preliminary portion of this treatment, the specimens of Drimys from Chile and adjacent southern Argentine seem sufficiently distinct from the remainder of the population to merit specific recognition as D. Winteri. Within this complex, at least three groups are discernible which appear to merit varietal recognition. Although these three groups have different aspects which make them recognizable, these aspects are difficult to analyze and do not have a basis in definite clear-cut characters. ESSENTIAL DIAGNOSTIC CHARACTERS OF THE VARIETIES Tree, ee compact, sometimes up to 17 m. high; leaves crowded on distal portions of Ta chlets; branchlets stout, 4-6 mm. in diameter toward apices; petioles stout, mm. in diameter, 3-15 mm. long; leaf-blades coriaceous or thick-coriaceous, g pats mm.; ovules 10-18; southern Chile (south of lat. 42° and adjacent PTRONUNC 550 Aas bates cea eerste na panies oe tedak voleakyeeeaice ar. punctata Shrub or al tree, less than 5 m. high, the ening often seen leaves evenly distributed along branchlets ; branchlets 3-5 m n diameter toward apices; peti- oles 1-2 mm. in diameter, 5-18 mm. long; Teaf-blades coriaceous, pale green to olivaceous or pale brown above when dried, conspicuously pale and glaucous be- or faintly prominulous on both surfaces; flowers single, rarely umbellate; petals 4-9, 8-18 by 2.5-5 mm.; ovules 10-12; nate Chile and adjacent Argentine (lat. about 38° to 41°) at high devations (760-2300 m.).......... 2b. var. andina. Shrub or tree 3-15 m. high; leaves evenly dis aie along branchlets; branchlets 3—5 mm. in diameter toward apices; petioles 1-3 mm. in diame er, 5-27 mm. long; leaf-blades coriaceous, pale or dark green above when dried, glaucous or at least paler beneath, often exentally hase usually conspicuously revolute at margin 1943 ] SMITH, AMERICAN SPECIES OF DRIMYS 15 toward base, the secondary nerves (5—)7-15 per side, erecto-patent or ascending at an angle of met usually prominulous and obvious on both surfaces; anfio- rescences umbellat the Pie very rarely single; petals 6-14, 6-20 by 2-5 mm. ovules 9-16; a Chile (lat. about 30°30’ to 44°40’) at SS ee AIP CULES sais sers eee eer e ee Co ee rere: Siac ec aiies a ce isis 31d) 9 ahaPern tee arene ogee eraenes chilensis. 2a. Drimys ae var, punctata (Lam.) DC. Reg. Veg. Syst. Nat. 1: 443. 1817, Prodr. IL: 1824; Hauman in Comun. Mus. Nac. aera oe 2: 48. 1923; Hauman Ay eee in An. Mus. Nac. Buenos Aires 32: 228 Winteranus cortex a Hist. Gen. Pl. 1858. 1586; oa ane 750: 16052 Laurifolia Magellanica cortice acri Bauhin, Pinax Theatr. Bot. 461. 1623. Arbor laurifoliae Magellanicae . . . Jonston, Dendr. Hist. Nat. 232. 1662. Periclymenum rectum fae en rinis . . . Sloan in Phil. Trans. Roy. Soc. London 17 (204) : 923, pl. 1. Boigue Cinnamomifera a fructu Feuillée, are Méd. . $Y) 6.1725. Cortex Winteranus Gars. Fig. Pl. Anim. Med. 1: 27. pl. 35B Drimys Winteri J. R. & G. Forst. Char. Gen. f. 42, m-z. ae Forst. f. in Nova Acta Reg. Soc. Sci. Ups. 3: 181. 1780; L. f. Suppl. 269. 1781; Lam. Encycl. Fl. Antarct. 2: 229. 1845; Gay, Fl. Chil. 1: 63. 1845; Carson, I'l. Med. Bot. 1: pl. 5. 1847; Dec. Bot. Voy. Pole Sud 2: 64. pl. 19 (in Atlas). 1853; A. Gray, Bot. . Expl. Exped. 1: 24. 1854; Good, Family Flora 2: pl. 89. 1854; Steud. in Flora 39: 408. 1856; Miers in Ann. Mag. Nat. Hist. III. 2: 45. 1858, Contrib. Bot. 1: 135. pl. 25A. 1861; Eichl. in Ma oe Fi. Bras. 13(1): 133. 1864; Baill. Hist. Pl. 1: 157. f. 200-202. 1867-69, Traité Bot. Méd. Phan. 503. f. 1192-1194. 1884, Dict. Bot. 2: 474, 475. 1886; Franch. in Bot. Miss. Sci. Cap Horn, 322. — Dujard.-Beaumetz & Egasse, Pl. Méd. 249. f. 312-315. 1889; Prantl in E. & P.N Pfl, III. 2: 19. 1891; Reiche, Fl. Chil. 1: 26. 1896; Speg. in An. Mus. Nac. eee Aires 5: 46. 1896; De Wildem. Bot. Phan. Terres Mazel. 18, 102. 1905; Macloskie in Rep. Princeton Univ. Exped. Patagonia 8: 419. f. 71 (excl. fr.). A Pilger in E. & P. Nat. Pfl. Nachtr. 2: 108. 1906; Karsten & Schenck, Veg.-Bi ow? pl. 14. 1907; Skottsb. in Kungl. Sv. aoe Handl. 56(5): 226. 1916; a at in Bull. Soc. Bot. Belg. 58: pl. 11. 19 Winterana aromatica Soland. ex nel in aaa Obs. and Inq. 5: 46. f. 1. 1776; non Drimys aromatica F. v. Muell. (18 Wintera aromatica Murr. Syst. Ver. ed. 14. GR a Apparat. Medic. 4: 557. 1787; Forst. f. in Comment. Soc. Reg. Sci. Goett. 9: 34. pl. 7. 1787; Willd. Sp. PI. 2: 1239. 1800; Pers. Syn. Pl. 2: 84. 1806; Humb. & Bonpl. Pl. Aequin. 1: 209. 1808; Nees, Pl. Offic. 2: pl. 372. 1828. Drimys punctata Lam. Encycl. 2: 330. 1786, Ill. 2: pl. 494. 1797. Drimys aromatique Descourt. Fl. Pitt. & Med. Ant. 1: 188. pl. 40. 1821. Drimys Winteri f. magellanica Eichl. in en Fl. Bras. 13(1): 134. ce ks ee 1864; Macloskie in Rep. Princeton Univ. Exped. Patagonia 8: 420 Drimys ‘Qvomatica Descourt. ex Baill. Hist. Pl. 1: 157. 1867-69. Drimys polymorpha Spach ex Baill. Hist. Pl. 1: 157. 1867-69. Drimys Winteri var. Morenonis Kuntze, Rev. ie 3(2): 2. 1898; Macloskie in Rep. Princeton Univ. Exped. Patagonia 8: 420 Drimys Winterana Thell. in Bull. Herb. Boiss. I. 8: ene 1908. a often compact, sometimes up to 17 m. high, the branchlets stout, 4—6 mm. in diameter near apices; leaves Saleh on distal portions of Pancho: petioles 3-15 mm. long, stout, 1.5—4 mm. in diameter; leaf- blades Siemet or thick-coriaceous, dark brown above when dried, glaucous to pale or dark brown beneath, obovate or obovate-oblong, (4-)6-13(-14) cm. long, (1.5—)2-5.5(-7) cm. broad, subattenuate to ob- 16 JOURNAL OF THE ARNOLD ARBORETUM [VOL. XXIV tuse at base, usually heel! and narrowly revolute at margin toward base, the seco ndary nerves 7-11 per side, ascending at an angle of 35-45°, immersed or faint east or faintly prominulous above, immersed or prominulous beneath, the veinlets immersed; flowers single, clustered near apices of branchlets, the yi ape rarely umbellate and then with 2 or 3 flowers on peduncles less than 10 mm. long, the pedicels 10-37 mm. long; sepals 5—7 mm. long, 5-12 mm. broad: petals 5-7, 8-15 mm. long, 3.5— 6(—7) mm. broad; stamens 20-35, the filaments 0.8- 3 mm. long; carpels 3-9, the ovules 10-18. DistriBpuTION: Southern Chile from lat. about 42° (Chiloé) southward to Cape Horn, and in the adjacent Argentine section of Tierra del Fuego. The specimens cited below represent only a fraction of those recorded, as the plant has been obtained by essentially all collectors in the region (see above-cited references by Hauman, Spegazzini, De Wildeman, Skottsberg, etc. It is apparently abundant at sea-level in the Magellan region, and according to some writers it also ascends the hills to at least several hundred meters. The following citations are arranged, in general, from northwest to southeast. Cue: Chiloé: Chiloé I., Huite, Cunningham (NY); Aysen: Wellington I., Eden Harbor, Ball (NY, US); Magellanes: Cerro Paine, Donat 398 (F, GH, NY); Straits of Magellan, without detailed seeigg Moreno (NY, type of D. Winteri var. Morenonis), Lenormand (M), Andersson (NY, US), Douglass (GH); Penins. Munoz Gamero, Puerto Tamar, Safford 358 (US); ans Cordova, Borja Bay, Lee (US) ; Brunswick Penins., Fortescue Bay, Safford (NY, US); Port Gallant, Blake (GH); Punta Arenas, Blake (GH); Port Famine, Lee (US); Hoste I., Hardy Penins., Orange Bay, U. S. E Expl. cad (GH, M, NY, US), Hyades (NY), Collector? (F) ; Hermite I., Hooker (F, G pean Tierra 3 Fuego: La Maire Straits, Banks & Solander (co- type coll. of Winterana aromatica, GH, US). I AMES: Canelo, ouchkouta (wood), liouch (leaves), usskitta, ciila, shdahlku, shélakudhr. The second and third names were apparently first recorded by Franchet, the last four by Spegazzini. The first variety founded upon the Magellanic form of D. Winteri was var. punctata, based upon D. punctata Lam. This binomial was based upon a specimen collected by Commerson in the Magellan region, sent to Lamarck by Jussieu. Lamarck’s description and plate leave no doubt that this species is identical with the Forsters’. Thus, while the type of the variety is Commerson’s plant and the type of the species is the Forsters’, there can be no doubt that the same entity is involved and that var. punctata is to be construed as the typical variety of the species. Garsault’s name cited above is not intended as a binomial in the Linnaean sense, ‘“cortex” not being proposed as a genus. The entire work of Garsault may be excluded from nomenclatural consideration, since the Linnaean system of binary nomenclature for species was not consistently employed (Int. Rules Bot. Nomenclature Art. 68 [4]. 1935). Therefore Thellung’s combination Drimys Winterana, based on oo “binomial,” is not acceptable to supplant the binomial D. Winter A great deal of confusion has been caused by Murray’s substitution of the binomial Wintera aromatica for Drimys Winteri. Not liking the generic name Drimys, Murray simply substituted Wintera, which thus can have no other connotation than as a direct synonym of Drimys J. R. & G. Forst. Murray’s specific epithet is derived from Winterana aromatica Soland., ~— 1943 | SMITH, AMERICAN SPECIES OF DRIMYS 17 published in the same year as Drimys Winteri Forst. Which of these two specific epithets has strict priority is not known to me, but at any rate the use of Drimys aromatica for the Magellanic plant (as proposed by Baillon in 1867-69) is excluded by the earlier Drimys aromatica F. v. Muell. (1860) for an Australian species. The typical variety of D. Winteri is characterized by its stout branchlets, its crowded and coriaceous leaves, of which the petioles are thick and the blades dark brown and usually obovate, with ascending secondaries, and its usually single flowers with comparatively few petals. These few characters impart to the plants an impression quite distinct from that given by the other two varieties described below. 2b. Drimys Winteri var. andina Reiche in Anal. Univ. Chile 100: 535. Apr. 1898, FI. Chil. 2: 371. 1898. Drimys Winteri var. quinoensis Kuntze, Rev. Gen. 3(2): 2. Sept. 1898. Drimys Winteri var. chilensis {. andina Hauman in Comun. Mus. Nac. Buenos Aires 2:50. 1923; Hauman & Irigoyen in An. Mus. Nac. Buenos Aires 32: 228. 1923. oblong or -lanceolate or elliptic, (4—)6-11.5 cm. long, (1.3—)1.8-4.5 cm. broad, acute to attenuate at base, not conspicuously recurved at margin toward base, the secondary nerves 5—7 per side, ascending at an angle of 35-45°, faintly prominulous or immersed on both surfaces, the veinlets immersed: flowers single, rarely 2—4 in umbels (on peduncles up to 25 mm. long), clustered near apices of branchlets, the pedicels 10-70 mm. long; sepals 5-6 mm. long, 5-7 mm. broad; petals 4-9, 8-18 mm. long, 2.5—5 mm. broad; stamens 15-40, the filaments 1-2.5 mm. long; carpels (2—)3-8, the ovules 10-12. (Fic. 2, g-k.) Distrisution: Mountains of south-central Chile (Cautin and Valdivia) and adja- cent Argentine (common in region of Lake Nahuel Huapi); Reiche also mentions the variety from Llanquihue, and Hauman reports it from the Rio Aluminié in Neuquén. The plant is said to occur from 760 to 2300 m., in open woods or in forest, often asso- ciated with Nothofagus and Araucaria. Cautin: Rio Quino, Kuntze (NY, type of D. Winteri var. quinoensis, US); Bafios de Trolguaca, Sargent (A, M); along road from Termas de Trolguaca to Laguna Malleco, Morrison & Wagenknecht 17480 (GH) ; Volcan de Trolguaca, Pennell 12785 (GH); Volcan Llaima, Werdermann 1245 (A, F, GH, M, NY, UC, US); west foot of Volcan Llaima, West 4900 (GH, M, UC); Valdivia: Dept. Osorno, Cor- dillera Pelada, Morrison 17639 (GH) ARGENTINE: Rio Negro: Region of Lake Nahuel Huapi, Cordini 131 (US); Puerto Blest and vicinity, Cabrera & Job 268 (NY), Parodi 11783 (GH), West 4730 (GH, M); between Puerto Blest and Lake Todos los Santos, Elwes (A) ; Laguna Frias, Cerro Riggi, Cabrera 6047 (F); Brazo Viento, Cantaros, Lake Nahuel Huapi, Ljungner 947 (NY). NATIVE NAME: Canelo. The two varietal names andina and quinoensis were both published in 1898, but the first has priority. Reiche did not cite a type, but there seems no doubt that the present variety is the one described by him. 18 JOURNAL OF THE ARNOLD ARBORETUM [VOL. XXIV The var. andina is characterized by its small compact habit; it is dis- tinguished from var. punctata by having the leaves comparatively spaced, the branchlets and petioles less robust, and the leaf-blades thinner and paler in color and more definitely elliptic, without the strongly recurved basal margins. It is apparently a montane form and in many respects sug- gests a link between the other two varieties of D. Winteri, but on the whole it has sufficiently strong characteristics to make recognition advisable. As a matter of fact, Prof. Bailey’s anatomical study of preparations of the leaves of this variety incline him to believe it unusually well marked and homogeneous. He finds it to be more stable and more readily characterized than the other two varieties of D. Winteri. A collection from the vicinity of the south shores of Lake Argentine, Santa Cruz, Argentine (Furlong 62 [GH, NY]) does not fit well into any of the proposed varieties of D. Winteri, but I believe that it is best placed with var. andina, although it occurs far south of otherwise known localities of this'variety. It differs from the rest of the material of this variety in having the leaf-blades somewhat darker above (as in var. punctata), the margins slightly more conspicuously revolute toward base, the secondaries slightly more obvious, the flowers umbellate on peduncles up to 30 mm. long, the stamens only 14 and with unusually large locules, and the ovules 14, I have not included these extreme variations in the above description of var. andina. Future collections may permit the more accurate placing of the Furlong specimen. 2c. Drimys Winteri var. chilensis (DC.) A. Gray, Bot. U. S. Expl. Exped. 1: 24. 1854; Eichl. ex Kuntze, Rev. Gen. 3(2): 2. 1898; Eichl. ex Hauman in Comun. Mus. Nac. Buenos Aires 2: 49. 1923; Eichl. ex Hauman & Irigoyen in An. Mus. Nac. Buenos Aires 32: 227. 1923. Drimys chilensis DC. Reg. Veg. Syst. Nat. 1: 444. 1817; Deless. Ic. Sel. 1: 22. pl. 83. 1820; DC. Prodr. 1: 78. 1824; Hook. in Bot. Misc. 3: 134, pro parte. Steud. in Flora 39: 408. 1856; Miers in Ann. . Nat. Hist. III. 2: 47. 1858, Contrib. Bot. 1: 136. pl. 26C. 1861; Pilger in E. & P. Nat. Pfl. Nachtr. 2: 108. 1906 Drimys Winteri sensu Hook. f. in Curt. Bot. Mag. 80: pl. 4800. 1854; Demilly in Rev. Hort. n. s. 12: 18. f. 3, 4.1912; non J. R. & G. Forst. Drimys paniculata Steud. in Flora 39: 408. 1856. Drimys chilensis var. latifolia Miers in Ann. Mag. Nat. Hist. III. 2: 47. 1858, Contrib. Bot. 1: 136. 1861. Drimys Winteri {. chilensis Eichl. in Mart. Fl. Bras. 13(1): 135. pl. 30, f. 1. 1864. Drimys magnoliaefolia Kunth ex Eichl. in Mart. Fl. Bras. 13(1): 135, as synonym. 1864. Drimys Winteri chilensis Macloskie in Rep. Princeton Univ. Exped. Patagonia 8: 420, excl. spec. 1905. Shrub or tree 3-15 m. high, the branchlets 3—5 mm. in diameter toward apices; leaves usually scattered along distal portions of branchlets; petioles 5-27 mm. long, 1-3 mm. in diameter; leaf-blades coriaceous, pale or dark green above when dried, sometimes fuscous, glaucous or at least paler be- 1943 ] SMITH, AMERICAN SPECIES OF DRIMYS 19 per side, erecto-patent or ascending at an angle of 40—60°, usually prominu- lous and obvious on both surfaces, rarely subimmersed above, the veinlets immersed or obscurely prominulous on both surfaces; inflorescences often densely crowded at apices of branchlets, very rarely axillary, umbellate (flowers occasionally fasciculate, rarely single), the peduncle (0O—)8—50 mm. long, the flowers (1—)3—8(-12) per inflorescence, the pedicels 10-55 mm. long, rarely branched and 2-flowered ; sepals 4-7 mm. long, 4-9 mm. broad; petals 6-14, 6-20 mm. long, 2-5 mm. broad; stamens 24-35, the filaments 1-2.5 mm. long; carpels 4-10, the ovules 9-16. DistRIBUTION: Central Chile, from Coquimbo (lat. about 30°30’) to Aysen (lat. about 44°40’), often near the coast, at altitudes up to 700 m. (rarely to 1000 m.). The plant is said to grow in forests or in woods, often in sheltered locations or near water. Cute: Coquimbo: Dept. Ovalle, Fray Jorge, Munoz B117 (GH); Acon- : Valparaiso and vicinity, Cuming 8644 (NY), Ball (NY), Harvey (GH), Buchtien (US), Claude-Joseph 3692 (US), Behn (F); Las Zorras, near Valparaiso, Harshberger 1036 (NY, US); Cerro Campana, Philippi & Borchers (F);Santiago: Nujfioa, vicinity of Santiago, Claude-Joseph 1755 (GH, US); Melipilla, Gay 171 (GH); Esmeralda, near Melipilla, Reed (GH) ; “Winganis,” Hastings 355 (NY, UC, US); Rio Clarillo, Grandjot (M); Rungue, Cerro El Roble, Montero 173 (GH, M); Colchagua: Tagua-tagua 229 (type coll. of D. paniculata, M, NY); - Camarico, Rio Claro, Moreira (GH); Rio Claro, Reiche? (A); Nuble: Chillan, Philippi (US); near Racinto, West 5117 (GH, M, UC); Concepcion: Vicinity of Concepcién, Germain (F); Bio-Bio: Angol, Kuntze (NY, US); Cautin: Temuco, Claude-Joseph 1178 (US); Valdivia: Philippi (GH); Valdivia and vicinity, Buchtien (UC), Junge (M), Lechler 550 (US); Rio Calle-Calle, Buchtien (F, US); Corral, Gunckel 1795 (UC), 3498 (M), Thaxter (GH); Amargos, Gunckel 86 (F); Antilhve, Sargent (A); Panguipulli, Hollermayer 1926 (US); Chiloé: Dept. Llanquihue, road from Hotel Ensenada to Cochamo and Laguna Patos, Morrison 17580 (GH); Isla de Chiloé, Castro, Pennell 12605 (GH, NY, US); Aysen: Ins. Magdalena, Calqueman, Werdermann 73 (A, F, GH, NY, M, UC, US) ; without definite locality: Dombeys.n. or 601 (type COLL. of D. chilensis, F), Gay (GH). CULTIVATED SPECIMENS: Nicholson (cult. Kew) (A); Anderson (cult. J. I. Hort. Institute, England) (M); cult. Hort. Berol. (M) ; cult. Jardin des Plantes, Caen (US). NatTIve NAMES: Canelo, boighe. Although the specimens cited above cannot be given specific recognition, they appear to represent a well-marked variety of D. Winteri, character- ized primarily by the slender habit, the numerous and comparatively spread- ing and obvious secondary nerves of the leaf-blades, the predominantly umbellate inflorescences, and the more numerous petals. The ranges of this variety and var. punctata apparently overlap in Chiloé and Aysen, but, in general, var. chilensis occurs only toward the north of the range of the species and does not ascend to as high an elevation as is characteristic for var. andina. Prof. Bailey calls my attention to the fact that four of the above-cited specimens (Munoz B117, West 5117, Pennell 12605, and Werdermann 73) demonstrate anatomical characters in the leaf which are more to be ex- pected in var. punctata than in var. chilensis. However, in the gross morphological characters which I have used to separate the two varieties, the four specimens agree better with var. chilensis than with var. punctata, that is, they have ample and umbellate inflorescences, comparatively & a x mi fa = S 20 JOURNAL OF THE ARNOLD ARBORETUM [VOL. XXIV numerous petals, and more or less spreading secondary nerves. Thus it appears that the anatomical and morphological characters within D. Winteri are not always correlated in such a way that the two varieties under discussion are obvious. To be sure, one might expect the occurrence of unusually variable individuals where the ranges of the two varieties overlap, and therefore the disagreement of characters found in thé Pennell and Werdermann specimens, from Chiloé and Aysen, is not unexpected. That the West and Munoz specimens (the latter the most northern known collec- tion of D. Winteri) should show anatomical characters of var. punctata is a phenomenon which I cannot explain at present. 3. Drimys granadensis L. f. Suppl. 269. 1781. Shrub or small tree up to 13 m. high, the branchlets brownish or cinere- ous, sometimes glaucous when young, a ea subterete (or short lateral ones sometimes flattened), 2-7 mm. in diameter toward apices; petioles rugulose, flattened to obviously ne caida above, often narrowly winged distally, 4-25 mm. long, 1-3 mm. in diameter; leaf-blades thick-coriaceous to subcoriaceous, olivaceous to brown above when dried, glaucous or pale beneath and appearing uniform in color rather than punctate, elliptic- oblong or spe oe so, 5—-16(—17.5) cm. long, 1—5.5 cm. broad, acute to attenuate at base and ca on the petiole, usually obtuse at apex and narrowly recurved at margin, the costa shallowly canaliculate to nearly plane above, prominent beneath, the secondary nerves 8-19 per side, ascending to erecto-patent, prominulous to immersed on both surfaces, often freely anastomosing, the veinlets immersed or prominulous; inflo- rescences terminal or axillary, umbellate or fasciculate or 1-flowered, the peduncle often slightly flattened, 7—65(—90) mm. long, the flowers 1—6(—8) per inflorescence, the pedicels 5—60(—90) mm. long; sepals papyraceous to submembranaceous, more or less opaque, usually oe ously yellow-glandular, suborbicular- deltoid, 4.5—-10(-12) mm. long, 5— 11(—13) mm. broad, rounded to obscurely ‘apiculate at Sons ‘petals 8- 17(-25), membranaceous or submembranaceous, opaquely yellow-glandu- lar (sometimes obscurely so), oblong to elliptic- or ovate-oblong, 5—20(—25) mm. long, 1.5—8(—11) mm. broad, cuneate to obtuse at base, obtuse at apex; torus short-cylindric, usually conspicuous; stamens 25—50(-—65), 2—4(—5)-seriate, the filaments carnose, somewhat flattened, often sparsely yellow-glandular, 0.5—3 mm. long, the connective glandular and usually with a few obvious apical yellow glands, the locules 0.3—-1 mm. long; carpels 3—12(—24), obovoid, 2-5 mm. long at anthesis, usually contracted at base, rounded at apex, the stigma gee eae or obliquely terminal on a short stipe 0.3-0.7 mm. long, exceeding the body of the carpel, the ovules 7-12 on short placentas. ISTRIBUTION: Southern Mexico to western Venezuela and Peru; five varieties are here circumscribed. The type of the species was collected by Mutis in Colombia; it falls into the variety grandiflora, which thus, although not based upon the type of the species, is nevertheless the typical variety. In the original publication of this species the name was spelled grana- densis, but in 1817 De Candolle took up the spelling granatensis, which has been followed by most writers using the name. There appears to be no reason for this change, and throughout this paper I have used the original 1943 ] SMITH, AMERICAN SPECIES OF DRIMYS 21 spelling, regardless of the spelling used by the cited aug in order to avoid further complications of the synonymy. Various writers have accredited the specific name to Mutis, but in the original Siblication Mutis is mentioned merely as the collector. ESSENTIAL DIAGNOSTIC CHARACTERS OF THE VARIETIES sie etita tending to be thick (3-7 mm. in diameter toward apices) ; leaf- geet coria- faces, rarely obscure, freely anastomosing toward margin; inflorescences axillary or congested toward apices of branchlets but comparatively scattered; flowers usually umbellate, rarely single; sepals thick in texture, never membranaceous, averaging large (6-10[-12] by 7-11[-13] mm.) ; petals comparatively few, 8-13(-15), large (9-20[-25] by 4-8[-11] mm.); stamens 25-50(-60), the anthers comparatively large, He locules 0.6-1 mm. long; carpels 5-12(-14), 2.5-5 mm. long at anthesis; ge eee eeu aie area ey Fraiire, re reat agetrsb St aorone see sina nce a. grandiflora. oa oe e mm, in diameter toward apices; leaf-blades coriaceous, elliptic-oblong, 5 0.5 by 1.5-3.5 cm., rounded or definitely obtuse at apex, the s econdary nerves eee and scarcely visible; flowers single, aggregated at apices of branchlets ; sepals submembranaceous, about 8 by 9 mm.; petals ae 10, 9-12 by 3-5 mm.; stamens about 30, the anthers with locules 0.5—0.6 m aes carpels about 6, 2-2.5 mm. long at anthesis; western Venezuela.............+.+- 3b. var. uniflora. Branchlets 2-5 mm. in diameter toward apices; as blades dampened narrowly elliptic-oblong, = aa 16(-17. 2 by 1.5-4.5(—5.5) cm., obtuse or subacute at apex, the secondary nerves obvious on both Rae or usually so, freely anastomosing n comparatively small (4.5-8 by 5-9 mm.) ; petals 9-17, comparatively small (6-17 by 1.5-6 mm.); stamens 25-45(-55), the anthers with locules 0.5-0.8 mm. long; carpels 5-12, 2-3 mm. long at anthesis; southern Mexico to Costa RGA ree ies, 0 var. mexicana. oblong, 6-12(-14) by 1.5-4(-5.5) cm., obiuse at apex, the secondary nerves hat f . branchlets; flowers umbellate, rarely single; sepals submembranaceous, compara- tively small (5-6 by 6-7 mm.); petals numerous, 14-25, small (5-8 by 1.5-2.5 mm.) ; stamens numerous, 50-65, the anthers small, with locules 0.3— te mm, long; carpels 8-24, about 2 mm. long at anthesis; Chiriqui region in Panama........... bea AR AN ares Keaniaciat sol chat Stents hens Ai eee eR Pe ee See OSE var. ee Branchiets about 4 mm. in diameter toward apices; leaf-blades coriaceous, oblong- la late, S5— , obtuse at apex, the secondary nerves faintly prominulous n both surfaces; inflorescences aggregated at or toward apices of branchlets, the flowers umbellate; sepals s embranaceous, 8-9 m long and broad; petals numerous, about 22, the outer and larger ones 1C-13 by 5—7 mm.; stamens about 40, the locules 0.6-0.7 mm. long; carpels 3-7, 2— 2.5 mm. long at ‘ethene: Peru. he aitasds eet tea ehy aria Goce wos eeeia og eae ATCT ENG EN eRe ayers 6 Sey nars aye 3e. var. peruviana. 3a. Drimys granadensis var. grandiflora Hieron. in Bot. Jahrb. 20: Beibl. 49: 10, s D. granatensis Mutis var. g. 1895. Drimys granadensis L. f. Suppl. 269. 1781; Lam. Encycl. 2: 330. 1786; DC. ae Veg. Syst. Nat. 1: 444. 1817; H. B. K. Nov. Gen. & Sp. 5: 53. 1821; DC. Prodr. 1: 78 1824; Endl. En ue Bot. 430. 1841; Miers in Ann. Mag. Nat. Hist. TIT. 2: 43. 1858, Contrib. Bot. 1: 133. pl. 27A. 1861; Tr. & Pl. in Ann. Sci. Nat. IV. 17: 24. 1862; Cortés, Fl. Colomb. 1: 86. 1898; Pilger in . Aa Nat. Pfl. Nachtr. 2: 108. 1906; U.S. Bur. Pl. Industr. Pl. Immigr. 132: 11 aida | gramadensi hae Syst. Veg. ed. 14. 507. ae. Willd. ee Pl. 2: sere ‘ad _ Pl. 2: 84. 1806; Humb. & Bonpl. Pl. Aequin. 1: . pl. 58. 22 JOURNAL OF THE ARNOLD ARBORETUM [VOL, XXIV Drimys Winteri {. granadensis Eichl. in Mart. FI. Bras. ena’ 135. pl. 31, f. 1. vets Drimys Winteri var. sages sues Eichl. ex Dusén in Arc us. Nac. Rio 13: excl. spec. 1905; Pittier, Man. Pl. Us. Venez. 159. 1926 Tree (or sometimes shrub) up to 13 m. high, hie branchlets stout (3-7 mm. in diameter toward apices) ; leaves scattered along branchlets; petioles 5-15 mm. long, often stout (1-3 mm. in diameter) ; leaf-blades coriaceous. or thick-coriaceous, usually shining and fuscous above when dried, elliptic- oblong, (5—) 7-14. 5 cm. long, (1—)1.5-5.5 cm. broad, obtuse or subrounded at apex, usually sharply but narrowly recurved at margin, often strongly so toward base, the secondary nerves 8-19 per side, ascending or erecto- patent at an angle of 40-60°, prominulous or nearly plane above, prominu- lous and obvious (rarely obscure) beneath, freely anastomosing towar margin, the veinlets immersed above, faintly prominulous or obscure be- neath; Ex site ae near apices of branchlets but not crowded at actual apex, umbellate or sometimes 1-flowered or fasciculate, the peduncle 16- 50(_ 90) mm. long, the flowers 3—6 per inflorescence (or single), the pedi- a 15-60(—80) mm. long; sepals papyraceous, 6—10(—12) mm. long, 7— 11(-13) mm. broad (or slightly narrower when 3 rather than 2); petals 8-13(-15), 9-20(-25) mm. long, 4-8(—11) mm. broad; stamens 25— 50(—60), the filaments 1.2—-3 mm. long, the locules 0.6-1 mm. long; carpels 5-12(—14), 2.5-5 mm. long at anthesis, the ovules 7-12. DistrisuTION: Mountainous parts of Colombia, in all three Cordilleras, in temperate forests, shrub-zone (paramillo), or on slopes of paramos, at altitudes of 1500-3300 m.; in parts of the range, especially in Cundinamarca. It is reported as eae ear the tree- ~ a often found in association with such typical paramo plants a reer of Espele COLOMBIA: = orte de Santander: Between Pamplona and Toledo (divide between sage erate and Orinoco drainage), Killip & Smith 19897 (A, GH, NY, US); Santande Western slope of Paramo Rico, Killip & Smith 17817 (A, GH, NY, US); uci ieee: Vicinity of Bogota, Triana (NY, US), Hartweg 877 (NY), Holton 673 (GH, NY), Dawe 140 (US), Ariste-Joseph (US), Schultze 14 (US), Cuatrecasas 5440 (US); Guadelupe, above Bogota, Ariste-Joseph (US); San Miguel, W. of the savanna of sg a Cuatrecasas 6687 (US); Monserrate, near Bogota, Garcia 4813 (US); Fuentes de San Francisco, Ariste-Joseph A106 (GH, US) ; Sibaté, Popenoe 1109 (US) ; western oe of Paramo de Cruz Verde, Cuatrecasas 343 (US); Paramo de Guasca, Garcia 6278 (US), Killip 34077 (A, US), Balls 5749 (US) 5 above ‘Ubague, Pennell 1897 (GH, NY, US); Usaquén, Garcia weer (US); “Rosalito,’ near Paramo de Ruiz, Pennell 2963 (GH, M, NY, US); eae te Vicinity of Medellin, Toro 718 (NY); pent Elena, yee 1202 (US); San Pedro, Daniel & Tomds 1255 (A), 1305 (F); Caldas: “Pinares, above Salento, Pennell 9222 (GH, NY, US); El Cauca: Rio Paez — Pittier 1367 (US); Mt. El Trueno, Pennell 7542 Leas “Paletara,”’ Pennell 6945 (GH, NY, US); without definite lo ty : Mutis 1049 (US), 2525 (US), 3839 (TYPE COLL. of D. granadensis L. f., ee "4483 (US), 4609 (US), Purdie (GH). ATIVE NAMES: Canelo, canela de pdramo, aji, palo de aji, quinon, cupis. Several writers have briefly mentioned the tonic and stimulant qualities of this plan The first varietal name which appears referable to the biological entity described above is Hieronymus’ var. grandiflora. The original description of this variety clearly indicates that the typical form of the species (as 1In sorting the Mutis collection in the Madrid Herbarium, Mr. E. P. Killip wer pres arbitrary numbers to the specimens. He has selected the best Mutis specimen of t species as the type; all the Mutis numbers here cited are essentially identical. 1943 ] SMITH, AMERICAN SPECIES OF DRIMYS 23 represented by Mutis’ material) was under consideration. The type of the variety is Lehmann 7469 from Sibaté, Dept. Cundinamarca; this lard must be construed also to include the Mutis type of the species. Dusén’ reference to D. Winteri var. granadensis, although accompanied by Hite: of Brazilian specimens, appears to be the first use of the epithet granadensis as a variety; Eichler’s earlier use of this epithet in a trinomial was as a form. 3b. Drimys granadensis var. uniflora (Turcz.) comb. n oa uniflora Turcz. in Bull. Soc. Nat. Mosc. 27(2) : "280. 1854; Pilger in E. & P. . Pfl. Nachtr. 2: 108. 1906; Knuth in Rep. Sp. Nov. Beih. 43: 331. 1927. eet tree (?), the branchlets 2-5 mm. in diameter toward apices; leaves coriaceous, olivaceous to pale brown above when dried, elliptic-oblong, 5.5-10.5 cm. long, 1.5—3.5 cm. broad, rounded or obtuse at apex, narrowly recurved ater more conspicuously so toward base, the secondary nerves 8-12 per side, erecto-patent at an angle of about 45°, usually im- mersed and obscure on both surfaces, sometimes faintly prominulous be- neath, the veinlets immersed; flowers single, clustered at apices of branch- lets, the pedicels 25-50 mm. long: sepals submembranaceous, about 8 mm. ong and 9 mm. broad; petals about 10, 9-12 mm. long, 3-5 mm. broad; stamens about 30, the filaments carnose, somewhat flattened, 1—-1.5 mm. long, the locules 0.5—0.6 mm. long; carpels about 6, 2—2.5 mm. long at anthesis, the carpel-wall densely glandular, the ovules 9 or 10. DisTRIBUTION: State of Trujillo, Venezuela; known only from the type collection. VENEZUELA: Trujillo: Near Agua d’Obispo, alt. about 2700 m., Linden 1444 (TYPE COLL., F, GH). As pointed out in the preceding diagnoses of varietal characters, var. uniflora differs from the typical Colombian variety chiefly in its more slender habit, obscure secondary nerves, single and terminal flowers, thinner sepals, slightly smaller petals, smaller anther-locules, and smaller carpels at, anthesis. On the basis of the present material, the Trujillo specimen is maintained as a variety, but its status cannot be satisfactorily decided with- out more ample material from the Venezuelan Andes. The weakness of such a character as single versus umbellate flowers is indicated by such a collection as Killip & Smith 19897, from the part of Colombia adjacent to Venezuela. This collection has some branchlets with ample and obviously umbellate inflorescences, while other branchlets have the flowers con- sistently solitary, either fasciculate or single. The leaves of this collection also tend to resemble those of Linden 1444, having the secondaries only weakly apparent; nevertheless the inflorescences (or single flowers) are scattered along the branchlets and not aggregated at apices. 3c. Drimys granadensis var. mexicana (DC.) comb. n Drimys mexicana DC. Reg. Veg. Syst. Nat. 1: 444. re “Moc. & Sessé ex DC. Prodr. 1: 78. 1824; Hemsl. Biol. Centr. Am. Bot. 1: 14. 1879 Drimys granadensis var. nip a? paper aane & Cham. in Linnaea 5: 211. 1830; Hemsl. Biol. Centr. Sti . 1: 14. 1879; non St. Hil. Drimys Winteri sensu Goyen nl ee ee 1909; Standl. in Contr. U. S. Nat Herb. 23: 276. 1922, in Field Mus. Publ. Bot. 18: 438. 1937; non J. R. & G. Forst. Shrub or tree 2-13 m. high; branchlets 2-5 mm. in diameter near apices; 24 JOURNAL OF THE ARNOLD ARBORETUM [VOL, XXIV ii usually scattered on branchlets; petioles (5—)8—25 mm. long, 1-2 n diameter; leaf-blades subcoriaceous, shining or dull and fuscous or dark ne above, narrowly elliptic-oblong, (5— )7-16(-17.5) cm. long, 1.5— 4.5(—5.5) cm. broad, obtuse or subacute at apex, slightly recurved at margin, often strongly but narrowly revolute toward base, the secondary nerves (8—)10-16 per side, ascending or erecto-patent at an angle of 40— 55(—60)°, prominulous or nearly plane above, usually obvious, prominu- lous and obvious beneath, freely anastomosing near margin, the veinlets immersed or faintly prominulous; inflorescences aggregated at or near apices of branchlets, umbellate or rarely 1-flowered, the peduncle 7— 65(—75) mm. long, the flowers (1—)2—6(—8) per inflorescence, the pedicels 5-60 mm. long (up to 90 mm. when flowers are single); sepals submem- ipeaiiei to papyraceous, 4.5-8 mm. long, 5-9 mm. broad; petals 9-17, 6-17 mm. long, 1.5—-6 mm. broad; ace 25—45(-55), the filaments he yellow-glandular, often eglandular, 0.7-3 mm. long, the locules .5-0.8 mm. long, lateral to oblique; carpels 5—i2, 2-3 mm. long at anthesis, the ovules 7-12. (Fic. 3, b-f.) BUTION: Southern Mexico (Veracruz and Guerrero) to Costa Rica, in moun- tains at altitudes of 1150-3000 m.; usually occurring in moist forest, but noted in oak and pine forest in Guerrero by Hinton; common in Costa Rica. Mexico: Veracruz: Inter Huatamalco et Tinzutlan (Teziutlan?), Liebmann 1984 (US); Guerrero: Distr. Galeana, Teotepec, Hinton 14441 (F, GH); Distr. Galeana, Piedra Ancha, Hinton 14235 (GH); Oaxaca: Distr. Feotitlan, Cumbre de los Frailes, Conzatti 2101 (F, US); Distr. Cuicatlan, Cerro La Raya, Cuyamecalco, Conzatti 3475 (US); northwestern slope of Mt. Zempoaltepec, Nelson 666 (US); Chiapas: Ghiesbreght 117 (GH, NY); Cerro de Huitepec, Ghiesbreght 518 (GH. M); Saxchanal, Sierra Madre, Matuda 4287 (M, NY) 78 de Tanetze, Hartweg 444 (NY) Gu apa: Summit of Sierra de las Minas, vicinity of Finca \Plan- ados, aaa . (F). NicaraGcua: No specimens seen; the fact that Goyena mentions D. “Winter?” in his Flora ie hen bra indicates that he probably saw a specimen of the present variety from that c Costa ete Paramos del Abejonal, Tonduz 7897 (US); Tijar, Quirds 152 (F); El Roble, Stork 2034 (F); Alajuela: Palmira, Alfaro Ruiz, Austin Smith 4139 (F), 4123 (F, M), H524 (F); vicinity of Fraijanes, Standley & Torres 47632 (US); Volcan de Poas and vicinity, Tonduz 10937 (US), Standley 34604 (NY, US), Stork 2503 ee aig 599 (A, F); Vara Blanca de 7 Skutch 3585 (M, NY); Here : Volcan de Barba, ee 2130 (US); Cerro de Las Lajas, orth of San Isidro, es & Valerio 51443 (A, US); Cerros de Zurqui, northeast of San Isidro, Standley “a Valerio 50414 (US), 50617 (US), 50635 (US); San José: La Palm e San Ramon, Brenes 4078 (F), 4122 (F), 4452 (F), 5718 (F) ; ty Rosa de Copey, Preis pie (12174) (GH, NY, US); above Los Lotes, north of El Copey, Standley 42578 (US), 42798 (US); Las Nubes, Standley 38789 ( a Valerio 1398 (F); Laguna de la Chonta, northeast of Santa Maria de Dota, Standley 42319; Cerro de las Vueltas, Standley & Valerio 43654 (US); north of El Alto de Cabeza de Vaca, on Rio Sucio, Dodge & Thomas 4948 (M); a del gains Pittier 7338 (12300) (GH, Set Cerro Gallito, Valerio 1005 (F); Ca ago: Cartago and vicinity, Stevens 79 (US), Stork 367 (US), 404 (US); Alto oe La Estrella, Standley 39058 (US); satiate slope of Volcan Irazt, Standley 36628 (US); Santa Clara, Torres 185 (F). CULTIVATED SPECIMEN: Zabel (cult. Bot. Gart. Muenden) (A). TIVE NAMES: Chilillo, chachaca, palo picante, palo de chile, muelo (in Mexico) ; quiebra-muelas, chile, muelo (in Se Rica). Standley reports on native medicinal uses in the cited discussions of D. Winteri 1943 | SMITH, AMERICAN SPECIES OF DRIMYS 25 While this entity does not appear to merit specific recognition, it never- theless has certain tendencies which permit its separation from the Colom- bian variety. In general, it is more slender in habit, with thinner and pro- portionately narrower leaf-blades, these tending to be more pointed at apex. The sepals are usually thinner in texture and smaller on the average, the petals are more numerous (on the whole) and somewhat smaller, the anther-locules average smaller, and the carpels are smaller at anthesis. The above-mentioned characters are far from satisfactory as varietal criteria, but nevertheless the two entities, when ample material is examined, give different impressions, and one is generally able to place specimens without knowledge of the geographic source. There appear to be no differ- ences of consequence between Mexican and Costa Rican specimens. _ 3. a. Drimys granadensis var. chiriquiensis, drawn from the type: flowering branchlet, x 14. b-f. Drimys granadensis var. mexicana, drawn from Skutch 3585: b. flowering branchlet, x 1%; c. flower, with some petals removed, x 1, d. stamens, extrorse and introrse views, X 5; e. carpel, x 5; f. carpel, longitudinal section, x 5. g-j. Drimys brasiliensis var. campestris, drawn from Mexia 5791: g. flower, with some petals removed, - h. stamens, extrorse and introrse views, X 5; 7. carpel, xX 5; j. carpel, longitudinal section, < 5. k-m. Drimys brasiliensis var. roraimensis, drawn from the type: k. stamens, extrorse and introrse views, x 5; /. carpel, X 5; m. carpel, longitudinal section, x 5. 3d. Drimys granadensis var. chiriquiensis var. nov. Frutex vel arbor parva, ramulis apicem versus 2-4 mm. diametro, saepe conspicue cicatricosis; foliis apicem ramulorum versus plerumque confertis; sicco olivaceis vel pallide brunneis, elliptico-oblongis, 6-12 (—14) cm. longis, immersis; inflorescentiis apicem ramulorum versus axillaribus umbellatis vel raro 1-floris, pedunculo 10-45 mm. longo, floribus (1—)2—4 per inflore- 26 JOURNAL OF THE ARNOLD ARBORETUM [VOL. XXIV camp pedicellis 7-30 mm. longis; sepalis submembranaceis, 5-6 m long , 6-7 m mm. latis; petalis 14-25, 5-8 mm. longis, 1.5—2.5 mm. ae Pe 50-65, 3- = seriatis, filamentis eglandulosis 0.5—1.2 mm. longis, connectivo glandulas luteas 2 vel 3 interdum obscuras apice gerente, loculis 0.3—0.5 mm. longis; carpellis 8-24 falcato-ellipsoideis vel obovoideis sub anthesi circiter 2 mm. longis, ovulis 10-12. (Fic. 3, a. DisTrRIBUTION: Known only from Chiriqui, Panama. PanaMA: Chiriqui: Bajo Chorro, Boquete District, alt. about 1800 m., David- son 127 (A, TYPE, F), Jan. 14, 1938 (shrub or tree, in rain-forest; petals white; stamens yellow), Davidson 328 (A, F, M) (small tree, in rain-forest); between Alto de las Palmas and top of Cerro la Horqueta, alt. 2100-2268 m., Pittier 3232 (US) (in humid forest) The biological entity described above is more closely related to var. mexicana than to other varieties of D. granadensis. It is characterized by its comparatively small and aggregated leaves and small floral parts, but principally by the unusual number of its petals, stamens, and carpels. The type specimen is extraordinary in having as many as 25 petals, 65 stamens, and 24 carpels, but other cited specimens show that substantial variation in these numbers is to be expected. On the whole, the Chiriqui specimens show such definite trends in the direction indicated above that they seem worthy of varietal recognition. 3e. Drimys granadensis var. peruviana var. nov. Frutex ad 70 cm. altus, ramulis apicem versus circiter 4 mm. diametro; foliis secus ramulos dispositis, petiolis 6-11 mm. longis, 1-2 mm. diametro, basim versus paullo incrassatis; laminis coriaceis, supra in sicco olivaceis et nitidis, oblongo-lanceolatis, 5-9 cm. longis, 1-2 cm. latis, apice obtusis, margine anguste revolutis vel abrupte recurvatis, nervis secundariis utrinse- cus 12-15 angulo 45—50° erecto-patentibus supra leviter prominulis vel immersis subtus plerumque prominulis, venulis immersis; inflorescentiis ramulorum apice vel apicem versus aggregatis umbellatis, pedunculo crasso mm longis; sepalis submembranaceis, 8-9 mm. longis et latis; petalis circiter 22 et 3-seriatis, exterioribus 10-13 mm. longis et 5-7 m m. latis, interioribus paullo minoribus; staminibus circiter 40, filamentis LS mm. longis, i mm. longis; carpellis 3—7, sub anthesi 2—2.5 mm. longis, ovulis plerumque 12. sdugessnaabeleuanee Known only from the type collection, Dept. Cajamarca, Peru. PERU: Cutervo, trail between Socota and Tambillo, alt. 3200 m., Stork & Horton ee “(UC TYPE), Dec. 14, 1938 caaeiion: shrub to 70 cm. high, in shrub-land; petals white; stamens yellow; leaves nearly pure white be- neath; only one specimen observed) The single Peruvian specimen described above is characterized by narrow oblong-lanceolate leaf-blades, numerous and comparatively short and broad petals, and comparatively few and small carpels. Its position in D. grana- densis is indicated by such characters as the glandular anther-connective and the texture of the lower leaf-surface. It seems amply distinguished from the bulk of the population referred to this species, but this conclusion should be further checked when additional collections of Drimys are made in Peru and Ecuador. 1943] SMITH, AMERICAN SPECIES OF DRIMYS 27 4. gine peru Miers in Ann. Mag. Nat. Hist. III. 2: nee 1858, Contrib. Bot. 1: 1861; Pilger in E. & P. Nat. Pfl. Nachtr. 2: 108 oe sen D sensu St. Hil. Pl. Us. Bras. pl. 26-28. oe ot ‘Bras. Merid. 1: 24. 1825; Spach, Hist. Nat. Veg. 7: 437. 1839; non L. f. Shrub or small tree, the branchlets brownish or cinereous (or suaagietrs when young), rugulose, subterete, comparatively slender (1.5—5 mm. in di- ameter toward apices) ; petioles rugulose shallowly canaliculate; leaf. ade: coriaceous or thin-coriaceous, glaucous beneath or at length pale brown, often papillate beneath with mate ae shaped or knob-like papillae, nearly lanceolate, rarely exceeding 11 cm. in length and 4 cm. in breadth, acute or attenuate at base and decurrent on the petiole, ee or aiieere umbellate (flowers sometimes single or fasciculate), the peduncle less than oi mm. long, the flowers up to 6 per inflorescence, the pedicels 5-40 mm. g (50-80 mm. in var. roraimensis); sepals membranaceous to papyra- Re usually obscurely glandular, 4-7 mm. long, 4-8 mm. broad, rounded to apiculate at apex; petals 8-14 (rarely to 20), sony eer ‘opaquely yellow-glandular, oblong to elliptic-oblong, 6-17 mm. long, 2-6 mm. broad, obtuse at apex; stamens 18-50, 2—4-seriate, the filaments carnose, pean flattened, 0.5—2.5 mm. long, the connective glandular, i conspicuously ial -glandular at apex, the locules ellipsoid, 0.4—0.8 mm. lo ong: carpels 9(—13), obovoid, 1.5-2.5 mm. long at anthesis, rounde led a apex, the in lateral near apex or subterminal, usually short- ee (sessile in var. roraimensis), the ovules 6—12, on short placentas DIsTRIBUTION: Southeastern Brazil ne adjacent Paraguay aid Argentine, with one variety from Mt. Roraima on the boundary of Venezuela, Brazil, and British Guiana ; four varieties are recognizable. The type of D. granadensis var. campestris St. Hil., for reasons pointed out below, is here selected as the type of D. brasiliensis and its typical variety (var. campestris). The Brazilian population of Drimys was first treated by St. Hilaire, who considered his Brazilian specimens to be conspecific with the Colombian ones (D. granadensis) and different from the Chilean- Magellanic ones (D. Winteri). St. Hilaire recognized four Brazilian varieties. He considered the most common of these to be var. campestris, which is described in detail, whereas the remaining varieties are discussed only as to their points . difference. As long as these varieties are considered under D. granadensis, the question of the typification of a Brazilian species does not arise. But Miers, in erecting D. brasiliensis, founded it upon St. Hilaire’s concept (exclusive of var. montana, which Miers considered specifically distinct ) without designating which of St. Hilaire’s varieties he wished to accept as the type. The Brazilian plant has not generally been considered as a species, and’ as far as I can ascertain no author has attempted definitely to typify it. Hauman was content to accept it as outlined by Miers, with the difference that he again submerged var. montana. Since no author has selected a type for D. brasiliensis, it therefore becomes necessary to do so. St. Hilaire clearly 28 JOURNAL OF THE ARNOLD ARBORETUM [VOL. XXIV considered var. campestris to be the most common of his Brazilian varieties, and since this variety is the only one he fully described, I believe that it may be taken as the principal basis of St. Hilaire’s concept and considered the type of D. brasiliensis Miers. Var. campestris is said to grow in Minas Geraes, but no definite locality is given. It grows “dans les lieux découverts (campos), le plus souvent sur le bord des ruisseaux.”’ A specimen in the herbarium of the New York Botanical Garden, collected by St. Hilaire and marked “Drymis Granatensis var. campestris,” may thus be taken as a portion of the type collection of D. brasiliensis Miers. St. Hilaire’s second variety, var. sylvatica, is said to differ from var. campestris in having its leaf-blades proportionately narrower and its petals larger. A comparison of St. Hilaire’s two plates discloses only inconsequen- tial individual differences. A portion of the type collection of this variety (NY) also shows that the differences between it and var. campestris are trivial. I have no hesitation in submerging var. sylvatica. St. Hilaire’s third variety, var. axillaris, is said to occur in the vicinity of Villa Rica (‘‘sur les montagnes ferrugineuses’”). It is not illustrated, nor have I seen specimens referable to it, but I find only the most inconse- quential individual differences pointed out in St. Hilaire’s description. St. Hilaire’s fourth variety, var. montana, is said to occur in the moun- tains of the Serra Negra, on the boundary of the States of Minas Geraes and Rio de Janeiro. It is said to be characterized by small leaves and re- duced (and sometimes 1-flowered) inflorescences, which are axillary rather than terminal. These differences also appear to be trivial, and I find no reason to maintain the variety. The Brazilian specimens were next considered by Miers, who proposed the name D. brasiliensis to include three of St. Hilaire’s four varieties (excluding var. montana). The varietal names were transferred from D granadensis to D. brasiliensis by Miers without comment. Var. montana was erected. as a distinct species by Miers, who differentiated it on the grounds that “. . . it differs from D. brasiliensis, not only in the size and form of its leaves, but in its axillary inflorescence, and in the number of the parts of its smaller flowers.” These differences appear to be entirely inconsequential, the matter of axillary versus terminal inflorescence being susceptible to great variation in Drimys, and the number and size of floral parts being dependable only within very broad limits. The variation in the size and shape of leaves is often conspicuous even on the same individual. Therefore I have no hesitation in referring D. montana to D. brasiliensis as a synonym. The remaining Brazilian specimens available to Miers were placed in two species, D. retorta and D. angustifolia. Both are very much reduced in foliage and appear to be reasonably good varieties of D. brasiliensis. Eichler considered the genus as a whole, referring all the American speci- mens to D. Winteri. He considered the bulk of the Brazilian material to be identical with the Colombian plants, which he referred to the forma granadensis. However, he recognized Miers’ two species D. retorta and 1943 ] SMITH, AMERICAN SPECIES OF DRIMYS a D. angustifolia to the extent of keeping them as forms of D. Winteri (the first as f. revoluta) ; both are well illustrated in Flora Brasiliensis. Hauman, in discussing the occurrence of D. brasiliensis in the Argentine, recognized two varieties, based respectively on St. Hilaire’s varieties compestris and montana. The differences pointed out by him seem inconse- quential when an extensive series of collections is considered. On the basis of the material available to me, and taking into considera- tion previous descriptions and illustrations of this complex, I believe that the bulk of the Brazilian material may be referred to a single a designated as var. campestris, the typical variety of the species. Miers two species D. retorta and D. angustifolia are given varietal rank, and a fourth very distinct variety is described on the basis of collections from Mt. Roraima. ESSENTIAL DIAGNOSTIC CHARACTERS OF THE VARIETIES Leaf- oe narrowly a ia peo or oblong or elliptic, (3—)4-11(-14) cm. long, (0.8-)1.2-4(-5) cm. broad florescences usually terminal and umbellate, the peduncle up to 40 mm. long, the pedicels 5-40 mm. long; stamens spe a truncate connective; stigma short-stipitate ; Bahia to Paraguay, Misiones, and Rio Grande do Sul.......... 4a. var. campestris. Leaf-blades narrowly elliptic- or Pigne: lanceolate, (2—)2.5-5.5 cm. long, (0. 2—)0.3- 1. 5 ° _ es appearing ries the peduncle inconspicuous, up ong, the pedicels 15=, ng; Snes with a truncate connective; stigma short-stipitate; Minas and Sac 01 C0 one wm Re es Sed cs cot es Oracle ee eae ree 4b. var. retorta. Leaf- blades ce or linear- lanceolate, 4-10 cm. long, 0.5 —0.6 cm. broad, obtuse or faintly p fe) usually single; southeastern Brazil ................. ar. eon Leaf-blades oblong-elliptic, 6-11 cm. long, 2.5-5 cm. broad, obtuse or rounded at apex, faintly recurved at margin, the secondary nerves usually prominulous on both sides, spreading at an angle of 55—70°; inflorescences axillary, the flowers single or paired on a slender peduncle, the pedicels 50-80 mm. long; stamens with the connective apiculate, densely glandular, and exceeding the locules by about 0.15 mm.; stigm Sessile s Vit, GROLAlM Aa. -<-2., acesetice icine the apeeehere setts cue sea) (ayers 4d. var. VOrGGERSES. 4a. Drimys declares var. campestris (St. Hil.) Miers in Ann. Mag. Nat. Hist. III. 2: 48. 1858, Contrib. Bot. 1: 137. pl. 25B (as D. brasiliensis). 1861; Hauman in Cera ee Nac. Buenos Aires 2: 50. 1923; Hauman & Irigoyen in An. Mus Nac. Buenos Aires 32: 226 Drimys heraae var. campestris St. Hil. Pl. Us. Bras. pl. 26. 1825, Fl. Bras. Merid. 1 . 1825. Drimys Petes var. sylvatica St. Hil. Pl. Us. Bras. pl. 27. 1825, Fl. Bras. Merid. Drimys eianddemd: var. axillaris St. Hil. Pl. Us. Bras. sub pl. 26. 1825, Fl. Bras. Mer 82 ene Pandenae var. montana St. Hil. Pl. Us. Bras. pl. 28. 1825, Fl. Bras. Merid. Pans Winteri sensu Vell. Fl. Flum. 240. 1825, Fl. Flum. Ic. 5: pl. 132. 1827; non eRe rst. Drimys aa aes sensu Spach, Hist. Nat. Vég. Phan. Atlas, pl. 60. 1846; non L. f. 30 JOURNAL OF THE ARNOLD ARBORETUM [VOL. XXIV Drimys sig sete mies ra Miers in Ann. Mag. Nat. Hist. III. 2: 48. 1858, Contrib. Bot. 1: 137. Drimys ene te sp pee Miers in Ann. Mag. Nat. Hist. III. 2: 48. 1858, Contrib. Bot. 1: 1861. Drimys pessoa a. in Ann. Mag. Nat. Hist. III, 2: sees 1858, Contrib. Bot. 1: 133. 1861; Pilger in E. & P. Nat. Pfl. Nachtr. 2: 108. Drimys Winteri var. semiglobosa Dusén in Arch. Mus. Pe a 13: 1905. Drimys brasiliensis var. montana Hauman in Comun. Mus. Nac. Buenos Aires 2: 50. 1923; Hauman & Irigoyen in An. Mus. Nac. Buenos Aires 32: 227. Shrub or tree, up to 13 m. high, the branchlets 2—5 mm. in a toward apices; leaves scattered or crowded along distal portions of branch- lets, usually evenly distributed and not clustered in whorls; petioles 3— leaf-blades coriaceous or thin-coriaceous, pale brown to greenish and usually shining above when dried, narrowly elliptic-obovate or oblong or elliptic, (3—)4-11(-14) cm. long, (0.8—)1.2-4(—5) cm. broad, rounded or broadly obtuse or faintly emarginate at apex, narrowly recurved to conspicuously revolute at margin, often more obviously so toward base, the secondary nerves 6—-10(—12) per side, erecto- -patent at an angle of 40- 50°, scarcely spicuously anastomosing toward margin, the veinlets immersed; rescences usually aggregated at apices of branchlets, rarely axillary, um- bellate (flowers rarely single, occasionally fasciculate), the peduncle up to 40 mm. long, usually obviously flattened, the flowers (1—)2—6 per inflo- rescence, the pedicels 5-40 mm. long; sepals membranaceous or sub- membranaceous, obscurely opaque- or pellucid-glandular, suborbicular or deltoid-orbicular, 4-7 mm. long, 4-8 mm. broad; petals 8-14 (rarely to 20), opaque-yellow-glandular or very sparsely so, 7-17 mm. long, 2—5 mm. broad; stamens 20—40(—50), the filaments 0.5-2.5 mm. long, the con- nective yellow-glandular (usually conspicuously so at apex, sometimes scarcely so); carpels 3—8(—13), the stigma conspicuous, on a stipe usually 0.2—0.5 mm. long, the ovules 6-12. (Fic. 3, g-j.) DistrRIBUTION: Southeastern Brazil (Bahia to Parana [and Rio Grande do Sul, according to Eichler]), adjacent Paraguay, and Misiones in northern Argentine, at altitudes between 800 and 1250 m. (according to collectors’ incomplete data, but prob- ably found both lower and higher); occurring in forests, woods, or campos, often on shores of streams; one to be fairly common in parts of Minas Geraes. Brazit: Bah : Rio de Contas, Bom Jesus, Liitzelburg 268 (NY); Minas Geraes: St. Hilaire (TYPE COLL. of D. granadensis var. campestris, NY), St. Hilaire (TYPE COLL. of - granadensis var. sylvatica, NY), Gardner 4402 (M, NY, US), Claussen (F, NY), 1064 (GH); Rio Tejuco, Ackermann [Mart. Herb. Fl. Bras. 288] H, M, NY), Vauthier 489 (GH) ; Diamantina, Olaria, Mexia 5791 (A, GH, M, ahs, Mun. Santa Luzia, Mello Bites 7452 (F); Caldas, Regnell 145 (US), Mosén 331 (NY); Rio de Janeiro: Vargem, Organ Mts., Miers 4606 (US); Sao Paulo: Lund (NY); Serra de Cubatao, oe ig (GH, NY); Alto da Serra, Hoehne 1205 (A, US); Butantan, Hoehne 3839 (GH); Jardim Botanico, Sao Paulo Hoehne 28700 (F, NY); Parana: _ Pinhaes, pees definite locality: Sellow (M), Burchell 4748 (GH), “Riedel (A), Collector? Me ParRAGUAY: Sierra de Amambay, eck 9992 (A), 10586 (A). RGENT cimens seen, but those cited by Hauman indi- cate the occurrence of the variety in Misio 1943] SMITH, AMERICAN SPECIES OF DRIMYS 31 NATIVE NAMES: Casca d’Anta, ll curvillo (in Brazil). St. Hilaire has discussed native uses of this plant, and his data are repeated by subsequent writers Collectors of the above- fie: specimens note this plant as a inh or tree, as low as 50 cm. high in open situations on campos and up to 13 m. high in the forests. Probably this difference in habit has been the principal reason why St. Hilaire and other writers have distinguished varieties within this entity, which, on the basis of the material I have seen, cannot satisfactorily be further divided. The majority of the specimens which I refer to D. brasiliensis is charac- terized by having the lower surfaces of the leaf-blades distinctly papillate. Papillae are obviously present in the specimens of var. retorta and var. roraimensis, but they are lacking in the following specimens of var. cam pes- tris: Lutzelberg 268, Claussen 1064, Miers 4606, Burchell 3567, Hoehne 1205 and 28700, and Dusén 14504. The remaining specimens of var. cam- pestris have the lower leaf-surfaces clearly papillate. Whether the presence or absence of such papillae is a fundamental character cannot be stated at present, but quite possibly the population under discussion should be broken up into varieties on this basis. On the other hand, the papillate and the non-papillate specimens present no geographic pattern, nor is this char- acter accompanied by any other. In leaf-size, number and size of floral parts, etc., there is considerable variation within var. campestris, but such variation in different organs is not correlated and therefore, in the present state of our knowledge, not usable for further subspecific division. 4b. Drimys brasiliensis var. retorta (Miers) comb. n Drimys retorta Miers in Ann. Mag. Nat. Hist. III. 2: a0 ee Mess Bot. 1: 134. pl. 260B. 1861; Pilger in E. & P. Nat. Pfl. Nachtr. 2: 108. Drimys Winteri {. revoluta Eich]. in Mart. Fl. Bras. 13(1): one # Be f. 2. 1864. Drimys ledifolia Eichl. in Mart. FI. Bras. 13(1): 136, as synonym. Shrub to 3 m. high, the branchlets 1.5—4 mm. in diameter ok apices; leaves crowded on branchlets, especially distally ; petioles 3-11 mm. long, ./-1.5 mm. in diameter; leaf- blades coriaceous, dark green above when dried, narrowly elliptic- or oblong- lanceolate, (2—)2.5-5.5 cm. long, growing points, appearing axillary, fabeete (or siete sometimes single) , the peduncle rugulose, inconspicuous, up to 15 mm. long or obsolete, the flowers (1—)2—6 per inflorescence, the pedicels sear 15-33 mm. long: sepals papyraceous, opaque, obscurely glandular, suborbicular- ovate, 5-6 mm. long, 4-7 mm. broad; petals 8-11, conspicuously opaque- yellow- glandular, 6-12 mm. long, 25 mm. broad; torus cylindric, conspicuous; stamens 30-40, the filaments 1.5-2.5 mm. long, eglandular, the connective copiously and minutely yellow-glandular at apex; carpels 3—7, the stigma short-stipitate (stipe 0.3-0.7 mm. long), the ovules 6 or 7. DistriBuTION: Minas Geraes, Brazil; probably restricted in area. Miers also cites a collection by Bowie from Sao Paulo. Eichler cites Claussen 340 and Sellow, both from Minas Geraes Brazit: Minas Geraes: Claussen s. n. or 1503 (coTypE COLL., F); Serra do 32 JOURNAL OF THE ARNOLD ARBORETUM [VOL. XXIV Itacolomy, Mun. Ouro Preto, Mello Barreto 9083 (F) (shrub 3 m. high, common; flowers white). A few of the specimens referred to the typical variety of D. brasiliensis (var. campestris) have unusually small and strongly revolute leaf-blades, thus indicating a transition between that variety and var. retorta. The existence of such specimens (e. g. Mello Barreto 7452, 10069, Mexia 5791) indicates that D. retorta can be accepted as no more than a variety, and probably not a very stable one. 4c. Drimys brasiliensis var. angustifolia (Miers) comb. n n. Mag. Nat. Hist. ITI. 2 46. 1858, Contrib. Bot. 1: 135. pl. 260A. 1861; Pilger in E. & . Nat. Pfl. Nachtr. 2: 108. 1906. Drimys Winteri {. angustifolia Eichl. in Mart. Fl. Bras. 13(1): 136. pl. 31, f. 3. bd, | 3 — Rg = os 2 SS = i) > Q o = wn oa =) Branchlets slender; leaves scattered along branchlets dona Mtg slender, narrowly winged, 8-10 mm. long; leaf-blades elongate- inear- lanceolate, 4-10 cm. long, 0.5-0. es cm. broad, obtuse or faintly Rescind at apex, slightly recurved at margin but essentially plane, the secon dary nerves entirely immersed and obscure; inflorescences aggregated at apices of branchlets, the flowers single or rarely paired on short inconspicuous peduncles, the pedicels about 12 mm. long; sepals ovate; petals 9 or 10; stamens about 18; carpels about 5 STRIBUTION: Known only from a single unnumbered collection of Sellow from southeastern Brazil, without detailed locality, cited by Miers and Eichler. I have seen no material of this plant, the above notes being taken from the descriptions and illustrations of Miers and Eichler. It appears to be sufficiently distinct to be recognized as a variety of D. brasiliensis. Both Miers and Eichler discuss it as an even more extreme form than D. retorta. 4d. Drimys brasiliensis var. roraimensis var. — granadensis sensu Oliver in cc ia. ‘Soc. II. Bot. 2: 271. 1886; N. E. Br. in Trans. Linn. Soc. I]. Bot. @: 8. 1901; non Drimss. ales sensu Ule in Bot. ee 52: Beibl As: 49. 1914; Knuth in Rep. Sp. Beih. 43: 331. 1927; non J. R. & G. he parva (?), ramulis apicem versus 2—4 mm. diametro; foliis apicem ramulorum versus confertis; petiolis 5-15 mm. longis, 0 mm. dia metro; laminis subcoriaceis, supra in sicco fuscis vel fusco-viridibus, oblongo- -ellipticis, 6-11 cm longis, 2.5-5 cm. latis, apice obtusis vel rotundatis, margine obscure. recurvatis, nervis secundariis utrinsecus 7-14 angulo 55—70° patentibus utrinque prominulis vel subplanis, venulis immer- sis vel utrinque leviter prominulis; inflorescentiis ut videtur axillaribus et solitariis, floribus singularibus vel pedunculo gracili circiter 35 mm. longo binis, pedicellis gracilibus 50-80 mm. longis; sepalis papyraceis ovato- deltoideis circiter 5 mm. longis et 6 mm. latis; petalis 10-12 obscure glandulosis, 10-16 mm. longis, 3-6 mm. latis: staminibus 35—50, filamentis sparse luteo-glandulosis 1.5—2 mm. longis, connectivo dense glanduloso in apiculum circiter 0.15 mm. longum dense et minute luteo-glandulosum ieee, ee circiter 9, stigmate sessili subterminali, ovulis 10-12. (Fic. 3, k—-m.) eusebieas Known only from Mt. Roraima, on the Venezuela-Brazil-British Guiana boundary. VENEZUELA (or adjacent countries): Amazonas: Mt. Roraima, The Ledge, im 1943] SMITH, AMERICAN SPECIES OF DRIMYS 33 Thurn 242 (US, Type), 1884; Rondon Camp, upper slopes, alt. about 2100 m., Tate 500 (NY) (in humid temperate forest). The variety described above is quite distinct from other American material of Drimys, being characterized by the apiculate and very densely glandular connective of the stamens. The long pedicels are also note- worthy, as is the fact that the stigma is essentially sessile, whereas in other specimens from the northern part of the range of the genus the stigma is short-stipitate. As my description is based upon only two specimens (of which the Tate collection is sterile), the rigidity of these characters remains to be seen. The relationship of this Roraima plant seems to be with the Brazilian rather than the Andean-Mexican species, as evidenced by the papillate lower leaf-surface and the rounded or broadly obtuse leaf-apex. It seems conceivable that this Roraima form may prove to merit specific status when more ample material is available. EXCLUDED SPECIES Drimys VASCULARIS Parment. in Bull. Sci. Fr. & Belg. 27: 229, 306. pl. 11, f. 39, 40. 1896. In a footnote on page 229 of the above-cited publication, Parmentier states: “Etiquette: ‘Drimys.— Brésil; Martins; cortex aromaticus.’ (Unicum).” The description is detailed as far as anatomical details are concerned, but the habit-sketch (f. 39) cannot possibly be taken to repre- sent a species of Drimys. On p. 229 we read: ‘“‘N’ayant eu ama disposition que des fleurs mal conservées, trés petites, il m’a été impossible d’en reconnaitre tous les caractéres; j’ai néanmoins pu m/assurer que ce sont bien des fleurs de Drimys, surtout 4 cause de la forme de leur calice.” In view of this uncertainty, Parmentier would have been wiser not to have proposed the species at all; in fact, had Parmentier’s work in its entirety never been published, taxonomy would have benefited from the omission. Van Tieghem’s remarks (11: 284, 285) in this connection are of interest. PRINCIPAL LITERATURE CITED 1. Battey, I. W. a _C. Smitu. Degeneriaceae, a new family of flowering plants from Fiji. Jour. geet Arb. 23: 356-365. pl. 1-5. 2. CANDOLLE, A. pe. Magnoliaceae (in part). Reg. Veg. Syst: Nat. 1: 442-446. 1817. _ —————. Magnoliaceae (in part). Prodr. 1: 78.1 Ercuuer, A. G. Winteraceae. Mart. Fl. Bras. as: 127-140. pl. 30-32. 1864. 5. Hauman, L. Note sur le ‘““Drimys eral Forst. et les espéces voisines. Comun. Mus. Nac. Buenos Aires 2: 45-52. 6. Hooxer, J.D. Magnoliaceae. FI. ae = 229-230. 1845 WwW e) fe Hurcnnson, J. The family Winteraceae. w Bull. 1921: 185-191. 1921. 8. Miers, J. On the Winteraceae. Ann an ag. Dee Hist. III. 2: 33-48, 109-115. rer 9. On the Winteraceae. Contrib. Bot. 1: 123-145. pl. 25-27. 10. SMITH, A. C. Studies of Papuasian plants, V. Jour. Arnold Arb. 28: Oe: 1942. _ TrecHEM, P. van. Sur les dicotylédones du groupe des Homoxylées. Jour. de Bot. 14; 259-297, 330-361. 1900. — _ ARNOLD ARBORETUM, Harvarp UNIVERSITY. 34 JOURNAL OF THE ARNOLD ARBORETUM [ VOL. XXIV PLANTAE PAPUANAE ARCHBOLDIANAE, XI* E. D. MERRILL AND L. M. Perry With seven text-figures THIs paper, consisting of a consideration of the Ranunculaceae and the Begoniaceae, is a continuation of the series being published on the plants collected by the Archbold Expeditions in New Guinea; a few plants from the Solomon Islands are included in the discussion. RANUNCULACEAE Clematis Linnaeus Clematis Gouriana Roxb. ex DC. var. malaiana Miq. Ann. Mus. Bot. Lugd.-Bat. 6. 1869. Clematis Spies Linn. var. javana (DC.) O. Ktze. Verh. Bot. Ver. Prov, Brandenb. 6: 100. ; K. Schum. & Hollr. Fl. Kais. Wilhelms Land 47. 1889; K. Schum, & Lauterb. “4 Tans Schutzg. Stidsee 311, 1900. Clematis Gouriana sensu Kaneh. & Hatus. Bot. Mag. Tokyo 52: 354. 1938, non Roxb. NETHERLANDS NEW GuINEA: Balim River, Brass 11788, ig one 1938, alt. 1600 m., climbing over stone walls in secondary forest. British New GuINeEA: Rona, Laloki River, Brass 3611, April 1933, alt. 450 m., light rain-forests on valle slopes, climbing over small trees and bushes (branches eoerumaied: pale crinkled leaves). In view of the consistent texture and lack of nileaanes the leaves in this species, as represented by a considerable number of collections from India and China, we believe it is more advantageous to maintain Miquel’s variety for this material with leaves less coriaceous and obviously pubescent. Clematis Seager er DC. Reg. Veg. Syst. Nat. 1: . 1817; Benth, 7 rr 137, 7. Muell. Pap. PL. 2: oe 1886; F. M. oa Queensl. Fl. 1: 899 Chonan a DCHA..2 British NEw GuINeEa: a, . River, Tarara, Brass 8423, December 1936, scrambling in rain-forest second growths The leaves of the collection are thinly chartaceous and broader than in most Australian specimens examined, but the flowers of this staminate material agree very well with those of most collections so designated. The sepals have a distinct mucro 0.5—1 mm. long. Clematis papuasiea sp. nov. Frutex scandens; ramis leviter sulcatis subteretibus: ramulis hornotinis parce pubescentibus vel glabratis ; foliis 3-foliolatis glabris vel interdum pilis brevibus paucis conspersis chartaceis vel subcoriaceis, 10-17 cm. longis et 5—9 cm. latis; foliolis ellipticis vel ovato-ellipticis utrinque angus- tatis vel basi rotundat ato-cuneatis, apice acuminatis vel acutis, margine integris, 5-nervatis, nervis prominulis 2 interdum basim + 7 mm. supra * Botanical i of the Richard Archbold Expeditions. See Jour. Arnold Arb. 23: 383-416. 1943 ] MERRILL & PERRY, PLANTAE ARCHBOLDIANAE, XI 35 ortis, venis manifestis, reticulo inconspicuo; petiolulo 1.5—-2.5 cm. longo parce pubescente vel glabro: petiolo 8-12 cm. longo; paniculis axillaribus 20-25 cm. ee axi, ramulis et pedicellis subcrispe pubescentibus, pedi- cellis 1.5-2.5 c _ longis: floribus 1—3-fasciculatis; sepalis 4 patentibus lineari-oblongis, a 8 mm. longis, 2 mm. latis, apice obtusiusculis apiculatis, extus dense minute pubescentibus; staminibus 3-seriatis, filamentis 3 mm. 6 cm. longum atten British NEw a “Thu, Vailala River, Brass 1010, February 1926, climbing over rain-forest see (large vine; leaves pale and shining) ; Buna District, Lane-Poole 179. Sotomon Istanps: Bougainville: Koniguru, Buin, Kajewski 2174, August in rain-forest; Ysabel: Meringe, Brass 3168 (typE), November 1932, const to 300 rain-forest on limestone hills (scandent; leaves fleshy and very glossy; flowers white, faintly perfumed) ; same locality, Brass 3411, December 1932, alt. 200 m., rain- forest clearing, climbing over low bushes (leaves thick, pale, very glossy, with slechily recurved margins; fruit pale green). This material has been passing for Clematis Pickeringti A. Gray. With several Fijian collections for comparison, including Gray’s fragmentary type, we find ourselves unable to accept the Papuasian plant here cited as representing that species. The anther-appendages of C. Pickering are minute (less than 0.5 mm. long) in all the collections we have seen. In C. papuasica they are more like those of C. aristata DC. but very narrowly club-shaped towards the tip, while the leaves are larger and quite different from those of the Australian species. It should be noted that the plumose style is shorter in the Papuan material and the achenes are smaller; probably this is owing to a difference in stage of development. Clematis phanerophlebia sp. nov. Frutex scandens inflorescentia excepta glaber; ramulis leviter sulcatis; foliis coriaceis 3-foliolatis vel interdum simplicibus; ee lanceolato- oblongis vel anguste ellipticis, 5-13 c m. longis et 2—5.5 cm. latis; costa valida, nervis utrinque 2 subparallelis, fere a_ basi nee ortis plus connectivo aristato; ovario ovoideo complanato dense pubescente, stylo 6-7 mm. longo piloso, stigmate recurvo glabro; achaeniis circiter 14 ovoideis, 2 mm. longis, 1 mm. latis, pubescentibus, in stylum persistentem pilis longis plumosum curvatum + 3 cm. longum attenuatis. NETHERLANDS NEw GUuINEA: 9 km. ee of Lake Habbema, Brass 10772, October 1938, alt. 2700 m. pier in secondary forest; Bele River, 18 km. north- 36 JOURNAL OF THE ARNOLD ARBORETUM [ VOL. XXIV east of Lake Habbema, Brass 11235 (TYPE), November 1938, alt. 2300 m., occasional in secondary forest. These collections are unlike others we have examined in their definitely coriaceous leaves and the conspicuous venation. Not only are the primary veins prominent, but the horizontal veins are more obvious than usual. The staminodes do not have the long clavate appendage characteristic of C. papuasica but are more like those of C. aristata DC Clematis Archboldiana sp. nov. Frutex scandens; ramulis novellis, pect petiolulis, axi inflorescentiae, pedicellis fulvo- flocculoso- tomentosis; ramulis teretibus; foliis coriaceis 3-foliolatis, superioribus interdum simples foliolis ovatis obtusis basi rotundatis, 2.5-6 cm. longis et 1.2—3.7 c latis, supra glabratis (minute flocculosis), subtus dense ferrugineo- Flocctiloso- tomentosis: costa valida, conspicuis vel subobscuris 2-4 cum costa conjuncto; reticulo subobscuro: petiolo 1.5—5 cm. longo, petiolulo terminali 1—1.5 cm. longo, laterali 0.7—1 cm. longo; inflorescentiis paniculatis axillaribus terminalibus pedicellis bus vel staminodiis(?) glabris circiter stylos aequantibus, filamentis com- pressis linearibus 5 mm. longis, antheris vix 1 mm. longis, loculis marginali- mm. infra apiculum obtusum positis; achaeniis numerosis (+ 28), immaturis 2 mm. longis et 1 mm. latis, compressis, aie saa apice in stylum persistentem een vix 2 cm. longum attenu NETHERLANDS NEW Gurnea: Bele River, 18 km. northeast of on Habbema, Brass 11366 (TYPE), November 1938, alt. 2200 m., common climber in young secondary rain- forest. This collection of pistillate material is past the flowering stage and only by a careful search of the duplicates were we lucky enough to find a flower showing the few stamens still adhering. These appear to be sterile, but at least they give a clue to the type of stamens to be expected in the staminate plant. The general habit of the species is similar to that of the other species of the region belonging to the Section Flammula Prantl, but the crisp somewhat flocculose tomentum is unlike the type of pubescence in any of the species available for examination. Ranunculus Linnaeus Five species of Ranunculus Linn. have been reported from New Guinea. As usual, we have at hand little material for comparison, and again the original diagnoses sometimes lack definition of specific characters. We have been unable to apply the descriptions of R. Muelleri Benth. and R. tridens Ridl. to any of the collections before us. All the species represented have flowers borne on leafless scapes, petals with a yellow upper surface, and sepals spreading or ascending but not reflexed. The species are mostly of Australian alliance. Ranunculus perpusillus sp. nov. Planta pumila acaulis: caudice 1—2 cm. longo fibris vestito; foliis omni- 1943 | MERRILL & PERRY, PLANTAE ARCHBOLDIANAE, XI 37 bus basalibus; petiolo 1.5 cm. longo (basi vaginante 5 mm. longa inclusa) patenti-piloso; lamina 5—6 mm. longa tripartita, segmentis integris lineari- bus vel anguste lanceolatis obtusiusculis interdum consperse Pilosis ; scapis 1-2, unifloris aphyllis patenti-pilosis folia subaequantibus vel in fructu quam follis longioribus ; sepalis 2.5-3 mm. longis, 1 mm. latis, concavis + patentibus apicem versus parce pilosulis; petalis 5 mm. longis, [ 1.2m latis, oblongo-linearibus, apice obtusis, basim versus paullo angustatis, basi squamula minuta nectarium tegente praeditis: staminibus 5, circiter 2.5 mm. longis; receptaculo brevi; achaeniis paucis + 4, oblique ovatis com- pressis, stylo apice tantum leviter recurvo., NETHERLANDS NEW GUINEA: 2 km. east of Wilhelmina-top, Brass & Mvyer-Drees 10381 (TYPE), September 1938, alt. 3700 m., amongst short grasses (flowers yellow). This species somewhat resembles Ranunculus Millani F. v. Muell., of the Australian mountains and Tasmania, but a comparison with authentic material of that species, in the Gray Herbarium, collected by von Mueller, shows a real contrast in floral characters. The peduncle of R. Millani is much shorter than the petioles, the petals are about as broad as long, and the plant as a whole is less pubescent. Ranunculus bellus sp. nov. Planta nana acaulis; rhizomate brevi; foliis dense rosulatis Pave lamina oblonga vel late lanceolata, 5 mm longa, mm. lata, utrinque hir suta, sensim in petiolum basi dilatatum 4 mm. longum e et 2 mm. latum extus adpresse hirsutum confluente; flore sessili terminali; sepalis uninerviis 5 oblongis, 4 mm. longis, 1.2 mm. latis, extus praecipue apicem versus costa hirsutis; petalis 5 lineari-spathulatis, 5 mm. longis, 0.5 mm. latis, 3- nervils, ‘nnectario parvo haud obvio ad medium laminae posito; staminibus 5; filamentis 3 mm. longis; achaeniis novellis 12-15, levibus, 1 mm. longis, in rostrum subaequilongum tenuem fere rectum angustatis, maturis semi- ellipticis, 2 mm. longis, 1 mm. hi compressis, in rostrum leviter recurva- ; receptaculo hirsuto subplan NETHERLANDS NEw GuINEA: 7 km. northeast of Wilhelmina-top, Brass & Myer Drees 9867 (tvPE), September 1938, alt. 3560 m., gregarious in alpine bogs (flat rosettes 1.5—2 cm. diameter; flowers yellow This plant may be of the ae of Ranunculus recens Kirk of New Zealand. Both are small plants, but that of New Guinea is smaller and densely covered with pubescence, the very small leaves are entire, the scape is apparently absent, and the achenes are cultriform. In this plant the petiole as such is practically lacking except for the broad sheathing base. Ranunculus angustipetalus sp. nov. Planta parva acaulis; Run valde abbreviato; radicibus fibrosis; foliis omnibus basalibus; lamina crasse chartacea fere glabra, se tg et subtus praecipue ad costam ale. oblonga, 1-1.5 cm. longa, 0.5 cm. lata, basi sensim in petiolum brevem (3-8 mm. longum) + adpresse ea nee angus- tata, basi vaginante 0.8-2 cm. longa extus dense adpresse hirsuta; scapis solitariis aphyllis unifloris circiter folia aequantibus parce adpresse hir- tellis; sepalis 5—6 mm. longis, 2 mm. latis, margine membranaceis, ad apicem angustatum parce hirsuts petalis anguste oblongis, 9-10 mm. longis, 2.5 mm. latis, 1 mm. supra basim squamula nectarium tegente praeditis; 38 JOURNAL OF THE ARNOLD ARBORETUM [ VOL. XXIV staminibus 15—20 circiter 5 mm. longis; achaeniis + 18, stylo apice leviter recurvo. NETHERLANDS NEW GUINEA: 7 km. northeast of Wilhelmina-top, Brass & Myer- Drees 9866A (TYPE), September 1938, alt. 3560 m., few plants in alpine bog (petals long and narrow, underside red The fruit of this species is immature. The petioles and basal sheaths are densely appressed-hirsute, but the leaf-blades are almost glabrous. Another distinctive character is in the long narrow petals. The species obviously is of the same group to which Ranunculus amerophyllus F. v. Muell. belongs, but closer than that we cannot place it. — amerophyllus F. v. Muell. Trans. Roy. Soc. Vict. ar 1. 1889; Kew . 1899: 96. 1899; Ridl. Trans. Linn. Soc. Bot, II. 9: 10. ecceeine New Guinea: Lake Habbema, Brass 9245, aes nn alt. 3225 m., forming small carpets on wet grassy shores of lake (lower side of petals purple-brown) ; 7 = northeast of Lippe top, Brass & Myer-Drees ¢792, September 1938, alt. 3560 m., in wet grassy valley; 11 km. northeast of Wilhelmina-top, Brass & Myer-Drees 9709 jomeside also 9740, same locality), September 1938, alt. 3400 m., in grass on moist western slope (corolla yellow within, the outer upper part dark), British NEw GutneEA: Mount Albert Edward, auvatinwest slope, Brass 4266, June 1933, alt. 3680 m., sporadic on wet grasslands, common (leaves erect; petals bright yellow inside, reddish brown outside) ; Murray Pass, Wha rton Range, Brass 4647, July 1933, alt. 2840 m abundant on grasslands (petals reddish brown beneat The collections from British New Guinea were identified by Mr. C. T. White, who noted in his list that these were ‘‘a good match for the scrappy type-material received on loan from the National Herbarium, Melbourne.” The leaves are 1-1.5 cm. long and 0.3 cm. broad, with petioles 2-3 cm. long. The collections cited from Netherlands New Guinea are plants 6-15 cm. tall, with leaves 1.5—2 cm. long and 0.6—0.8 cm. broad, and with petioles 3-9 cm. long. The flowers appear to agree well with those of the British New Guinea plants, and, although we have no mature achenes, we believe these all belong to the same species, with the possible exception of Brass & Mvyer-Drees 9740, a plant with leaves coarsely 3-dentate and in general more pubescent. Ranunculus habbemensis sp. nov. Caudex brevis; foliis omnibus basalibus petiolatis; petiolo 1.5—-4 cm. longo strigoso; lamina chartacea supra consperse subtus -+ dense strigosa, variabili, obovato-cuneata vel oblongo-cuneata, 2—3 cm. longa, 0.8—1.8 ¢ lata, apice grosse dentata (dente medio 3-5 mm. * 3-7 mm., dentibus lateralibus + 2 * 2- ae vel interdum 5-dentata, basi late breviter cuneata, margine integra; scapis 1-3 aphyllis unifloris 8-18 cm. longis parce strigosis sepalis ovato-oblongis, 6.5 cm. longis, 2—2.5 cm. latis, extus strigillosis; petalis 12-14 mm. longis, 5-6 mm. latis, basi squamula oblonga nectarium tegente praeditis; staminibus + 35, circiter 4 mm. longis, filamentis complanatis; achaeniis numerosis 2.5 mm. longis, oblique aes compressis, rostro 1 mm. longo apice leviter recurvato LANDS NEw GuINEA: Lake Habbema, Brass 9589 (TYPE), heicoss 1938, alt. ee m., plentiful on alpine grassland. Possibly this species is close to Ranunculus Muelleri Benth., but the pubescence is of stiffish hairs, the sepals are half as long as the petals, and the achenes are recurved at the stigmatic tip of the beak. 1943 ] MERRILL & PERRY, PLANTAE ARCHBOLDIANAE, XI 39 Ranunculus perindutus sp. nov. Planta acaulis; rhizomate descendente; foliis omnibus basalibus charta- ceis saepe dense adpresse vel subpatenter villosulis: petiolo 2—5 cm. longo; lamina oblonga vel elliptica, basi obtusa, grosse ee dentata, dente medio 5-6 mm. longo et 3-8 mm. lato , dentibus ceteris paullo minoribus: scapis unifloris aphyllis 3—7 cm. eli in fructu 10-14 cm. longis, adpresse hirsutis; sepalis patenti-adscendentibus late ovatis, 6 mm. longis, 3 mm. latis, mar- gine membranaceis obtusiusculis, Ree hirsutis, intus 3-nerviis; petalis oblongis, 8-9 mm. longis, 2.5—-3 mm. latis, apice obtusis, basi leviter angus- 3—4 mm. longis; achaeniis numerosis immaturis oblique ovatis, stylo sensim recurvato. NETHERLANDS New Gurnea: 11 km. northeast of Wilhelmina-top, Brass & Myer- Drees 9727, September 1938, alt. 3400 m., rather dry grassy valley (corolla yellowish within, the outer part reddish): 7 km. morbeas of Wilhelmina-top, Brass & Mvyer- Drees 10027 (TYPE), September 1938, alt. 3560 m., abundant on grassy slopes (petals brown beneath) ; 2 km. east of Wilhelmina- top, Peas & Myer-Drees 10132, September 1938, alt. 3800 m., common on grassy banks of stream This species differs from Ranunculus babes in the finer and more profuse indument and somewhat in the leaves being more evenly incised- dentate along the margin, rather than having the dentations confined to the terminal part of the margin. Brass 4354, Mount Albert Edward, alt. 3680 m., gregarious on alpine slopes (peduncles purple; flowers small, pale yellow striped underneath with purple-brown), is a plant with indument similar to the type, but with stout petioles, small flowers and achenes. We have been uncertain where to place the collection. Ranunculus perindutus var. papuanus var. nov. A forma typica recedit petiolo longiore, lamina suborbiculari trilobata lobo terminali 6-12 mm. a o 5-7 mm. lato, lobis lateralibus inciso- lobatis vel dentatis) palmatim 3-—5-nervata, supra fere glabra (consper- sissime pilosa), subtus ze hirsuta, petiolo patenti-hirsuto, floribus et fructibus ut in typo British New Guinea: Mount Albert Edward, Brass 4353 (type of var., New York Bot. Gard.), June 1936, alt. 3680 m., common along banks of small alpine stream (peduncles purple; petals reddish brown beneath). Ranunculus Lowii Stapf in Hook, Ic. Pl. 23: pl. 2261. 1893; Trans. Linn. Soc. Bot. II. 27. 1894; van Steenis, Bull. Jard. Bot. Buitenz. III. 13: 239. 1934, vel. aff. NETHERLANDS NEW GurNeEa: 5 miles northeast of Wilhelmina-top, Brass 9395, August 1938, alt. 3400 m., gregarious along a grassland stream (small yellow flowers) ; 7 km. northeast of Wilhelmina-top, Brass & Myer-Drees 10030, September 1938, alt. 3560 m., common on wet grassy slopes; Bele River, 18 km. northeast of Lake Habbema, Brass 11422, alt. 2200 m., common on mossy rocks in river and on forest paths. This material differs from the original description and the one Bornean specimen examined in having the leaves strigulose-hirsute on both surfaces and in its somewhat smaller flowers. The cited specimens are also close to Ranunculus perindutus, described above. Ranunculus coacervatus sp. Planta acaulis; ian crasso brevi; foliis omnibus basalibus subcoria- 40 JOURNAL OF THE ARNOLD ARBORETUM [ VOL. XXIV ceis; petiolo + 3 cm. longo patenti-villosulo, pilis luteis; lamina 1—1.3 cm. longa et 1.3-1.8 cm. lata, orbiculari-reniformi, 3—5-lobata, lobis grosse 2- vel 3-dentatis, utrinque + villosula, margine copiose villosula, venis_ pri- mariis palmatis: - scapis unifloris 3-5 cm. longis patenti- -villosulis: sepalis late ovatis leviter concavis, 3-3.5 mm. longis et 2 mm. latis, fere glabris, pilis paucis conspersis ; petalis oblongis, 6-7 mm. longis et 3 mm. latis, obtusis, basi angustatis squamula nectarium tegente praeditis; staminibus + 20 circiter 3 mm, longis; achaeniis numerosis oblique obovatis com- pressis, rostro brevi valde recurv NETHERLANDS NEW GUINEA: 11 cs northeast of Wilhelmina-top, Bra Drees 9727A (TYPE), September 1938, alt. 3400 m., rather dry grassy nice ant yellow within, the upper outer part reddish). Amongst the New Guinean material, this species is perhaps closest to Ranunculus perindutus, but the leaves are broader than long and differently lobed, the flowers are smaller, the pubescence is distinctly yellow and widely spreading, and the achenes are broader toward the apex. Ranunculus a var. oe (Hook.) Benth. Fl, Austr. 1: 12. 1863; dway Tas . Fi. Ranunculus ashen ig uk Bot. 1: 244. 1834; Hook. f. Fl. Tasman. I: 7. 1860. NetuertAnps New Guinea: Lake Habbema, Brass 9203, August 1938, alt, 3225 m., in a mossy bog (small rosette herb; petals brown beneath). British NEw GUINEA: Mount Albert Edward, Brass 4267, June 1933, alt. 3680 m., rather rare grassland herb in wet soil (leaves flat-spreading ; petals yellow inside, brown outside) ; same locality, Brass 4355 (peduncles purplish; flowers deep yellow, shaded purple-brown beneath). We have named these collections with some hesitancy. They differ from the original description in not —— a reflexed calyx, and the petals are longer than the sepals. As far we may judge from the diagnosis of Ridley’s subvar. papuanus, these collections could not possibly belong to it. Ranunculus lappaceus var. oe Hook. f. Handb. N. Z. Fl. 7. 1864; Cheese- n, Man ma .N. Z. Fl. 4 ogee multiscapus ae i. FI. N. Z. 1: 9, t. 5. 1852. NETHERLANDS NEW GUIN 9 km. northeast of Lake Habbema, Brass 10546, October 1938, alt. 2800 m., open bouldery bed of a forest-stream (petals brown be- neath). This variety or its neon nas ee previously reported from British New Guinea, Kew Bull. 1899: 899. This variety differs from the last, according to the specimens a ng in that the former has leaves definitely 3-foliolate, somewhat thicker in texture, and almost sericeous-villous. Ranunculus uncostigma sp. nov Planta acaulis stolonifera; Seite omnibus basalibus chartaceis, Abies dense maturis parce adpresso-pilosis, longe petiolatis; petiolo 8-15 c longo; lamina tripartita vel trifoliolata; foliolis petiolulatis; foliolo ae rotundato-cuneato grosse 3- dentato, foliolis lateralibus interdum bilobatis ac grosse dentatis; scapis + 16 cm. longis parce et adpresse pilosis; ala- bastris sub anthesi: sepalis ovato-ellipticis 4 mm. longis obtusis concavis, margine late membranaceis, fere glabris; petalis 5 mm. longis, 4 mm. latis, rotundato-ellipticis, basi obtuse angustatis squamula nectarium tegente praeditis; staminibus + 15 circiter 2 mm. longis; achaeniis numerosis, 1943 ] MERRILL & PERRY, PLANTAE ARCHBOLDIANAE, XI 41 2.5 mm. longis, vix 2 mm. latis, oblique obovatis compressis, rostro brevis- simo retrorse uncinato. NETHERLANDS NEW GuINEA: 9 km. northeast . Lake Habbema, Brass 10748 (TYPE), October 1938, on a native clearing in the fore This species differs from Ranunculus ne var. multiscapus Hook. f. in the obovate achenes with very short hooked beak. In this character it is more like R. diffusus DC., but the plants are all scapose. BEGONIACEAE Forty-three species of Begonia have been described from Papuasia. Nine of these are illustrated by partly diagrammatic sketches for the purpose of comparing modes of inflorescence, and five are represented by habit sketches. Thus, under present conditions, we find ourselves faced with the necessity of identifying most of our material from the original descriptions alone. To aid others in the interpretation of this difficult group, our species- descriptions are supplemented by text-figures. Some described from stami- nate material alone are assigned temporarily to the Section Petermannia. The first two species defined do not seem, in their combination of characters, to fall entirely within the limits of any Asiatic section given in the latest work on this family in the Pflanzenfamilien, but are perhaps nearest Sphenanthera and Platycentrum. Only one species of Symbegonia Warb. is represented in the material at hand. Begonia Linnaeus Begonia physandra sp. nov. Fig. 1, a-e. Planta acaulis, foliis scapisque floriferis instructa; foliis membranaceis orbiculari-ovatis, 12-18 cm. longis et 9-16 cm. latis, apice acutis vel breviter acuminatis, basi vix aequalibus oblique cordatis, margine duplicato-serrato- denticulatis breviter setulosis interdum sinuato-sublobatis, supra con- spersissime setulosis (setulis 1 mm. longis), ae prope basim sparsim hirsutis, nervis basalibus 6 vel 7 bi-trifurcatis, lateralibus utrinsecus 3; petiolo 10-12 cm. longo fere glabro; stipulis ochraceis: scapo usque 30 cm. inflorescentiis flores ¢ atque @ gerentibus; bracteis late sa 8-9 mm. longis membranaceis; floribus ¢ : pedicello ae Cm, tepalis 4, exterioribus ellipticis 1.5 cm. longis et 1.1 cm. latis, oat Lio Ci; longis et 1.1 cm. latis obovatis retusis; staminibus 60 fasciculatim in columnam 1.5 mm. connatis; filamentis 1 mm. lo ngis subaequalibus, connectivo 1 mm. longo apice evidenter inflato, thecis longitudinaliter de- hiscentibus inter filamentum et connectivum inflatum positis; floribus @ ante anthesim: pedicello + 1 cm. longo; tepalis 4 ut in floribus ¢ ; stylis 3 in columnam brevem connatis deinde in crura spiraliter papillosa par- titis; capsula verisimiliter matura 1 cm. longa et lata, alis 3 aequalibus rotundatis 2 mm. medio latis. British New Gurnea: Mafulu, Brass 5199 (TYPE in NYBG), October 1933, alt. 1250 m., crevices in limestone rock faces, common (plant very fleshy; leaf-stalk and peduncle reddish pink, lamina pale green; flowers delicate pale pink) In floral characters this species and Begonia Archboldiana very closely resemble each other, but they seem to be distinct in vegetative characters; 42 JOURNAL OF THE ARNOLD ARBORETUM [VOL, XXIV the former has not variegated leaves, the hairs on the upper surface of the leaf are shorter, stouter and much more scattered than in the latter, and the bracts of the inflorescence are almost three times as broad and probably white rather than ochraceous. Begonia Archboldiana sp, nov. Fig. 1, f-k. Planta acaulis, foliis scapisque floriferis instructa; foliis membranaceis variegatis orbiculari- ovatis, usque 12 cm. longis et 9. 5. cm. latis, apice acutis vel breviter acuminatis, basi subinaequalibus leviter oblique cordatis, mar- gine irregulariter subsinuatis vel interdum sinuato-sublobatis (lobis 5 parvis duplicato-serrato-dentatis setulosis), supra consperse setulosis (setulis 2—3 mm. longis interdum crispulis), subtus glabris vel costa nervisque prope basim setulosis; nervis basalibus circiter 6 bifurcatis, lateralibus utrin- secus 3; petiolo usque 18 cm. longo, glabro vel sparsissime hirtello; Rae: ochraceis lanceolatis 1 cm. longis apice longiuscule acuminatis ; sca 2 lanceolatis 6 mm. longis acuminatis; floribus ¢ : pedicello 1—2.5 cm. longo; tepalis 4 glabris, exterioribus ellipticis 1-1.5 cm. longis et 8 mm. latis, interioribus 1—1.2 cm. longis et 6—8 mm. latis obovatis retusis; staminibus 50 fasciculatim in columnam 1-2 mm. connatis; filamentis | mm. longis a. habit, x %4; b. flower, x Y; r of stamens, eran d. single ao enlarged; e. capsule, X 1%. f-k. Eun Arehboldiana Merr. & Perry, drawn from the type in NYBG: f. habit, x %4; g. & flower, x ™%; A. cluster of i aaa enlarged ; z. single stamen, enlarged; j7. 2 flower, x 1%; k. bea x WY. lLg@q. Begonia acaulis Merr. & Perry, drawn from the type: J. habit, x 14; m. 8 flower, x %; n. cluster of stamens, enlarged; 0. single stamen, enlarged; ». 9 flower, x 1%; qg. capsule, x ™%. 1943 ] MERRILL & PERRY, PLANTAE ARCHBOLDIANAE, XI 43 subaequalibus, connectivo 1 mm. longo apice evidenter inflato, thecis longi- tudinaliter dehiscentibus inter filamentum et connectivum inflatum positis; floribus @: pedicello + 1 cm. longo; tepalis 4 ut in floribus ¢ ; stylis 3 circiter 3 mm. in toto longis, basi in columnam 1 mm. connatis subinde in crura 2 mm. longa spiraliter papillosa partitis; ovario 4.5—-6 mm. longo et 4—5 mm. lato, alis 3 circiter 0.5 mm. latis; capsula immatura 7 mm. longa et lata subrotundata, alis inconspicuis. British New GurneEa: Bella Vista, Brass 5470 (type in NYBG), November 1933, alt. 1450 m., wet banks of stream in forest (growing in small clump; leaves variegated green and brown; petiole and peduncle red; flowers white; seen only in one locality). This species and Begonia physandra differ from the others we have ex- amined in that the stamens are at the apex of a short column and the con- nective of the anthers is inflated at the apex; also the styles seem to be united almost to the point where the apex is divided into two parts. In the other species examined, although the three styles may be shortly connate at the base, they soon separate so that they appear free a short distance before the appearance of the stigmatic surface, which in most cases forms a band around the apical branches, these being spirally twisted. Begonia acaulis sp. nov. § Diploclinium. Fig. 1, l-q. Planta acaulis, foliis scapisque floriferis instructa; foliis membranaceis oblique orbiculari-ovatis, apice obtusiusculis, basi inaequalibus oblique cordatis, margine crenato- sinuatis et duplicato- dentatis ciliatis, supra con- sperse crispule albido-pilosulis, subtus costa nervisque consperse pilosulis, nervis basalibus 4-6 bi-tri-furcatis, lateralibus utrinsecus 3; petiolo 5—10 cm. longo consperse piloso; stipulis ochraceis; scapo usque 20 cm. longo in sicco complanato sparsim piloso; inflorescentiis flores atque @ gerentibus; bracteis ovato-oblongis 4 mm. longis, margine ciliatis; floribus g : pedicello 1.5 cm. longo; tepalis 4 extus sparsim pilosulis, exterioribus late ellipticis 1.1 cm. longis, interioribus 9 mm. longis obovatis emarginatis; . longi rotundato-cuneatis; floribus @: pedicello 1.5—2 cm. longo; tepalis ut in floribus ¢ ; stylis 3 vix 3 mm. longis basi connatis, apice in crura 2 circiter 1.5 mm. longa spiraliter papillosa fissis; ovario suborbiculari 0.5 mm. dia- metro consperse piloso alato; capsula 1 cm. longa et 2 cm. lata, alis 3 valde inaequalibus quarum 2 minoribus, basi atque apice ultra loculos 2 mm. productis; alis minoribus aequalibus, obtuse subtriangularibus, margine superiore 5-6 mm. longis, medio 3 mm. latis, una majore elongata, margine superiore 1.8 cm. longa, medio 1.2 cm. lata. a New Gutea: Rona, Laloki River, Brass 3599 (type), March 1933, alt. 450 co on rock plant in light Pan tereaa (whole plant very fleshy; stem, lanes a ata and lower part of main leaf-nerves reddish; petals pink; fruit pinkish wh This species undoubtedly belongs in the same group with Begonia Sharpeana F. v. Muell., but the latter is a much more pubescent species, the fruit of which is characterized by a large wing about twice as broad in proportion to its length as in our species. Begonia Brassii sp. nov. § Diploclinium. Fig. 2, a-f. a erecta gracilis; cauli simplice vel apicem versus pauci-ramoso et crispule hirtello deorsum glabro, nodis imis radicante; foliis tenuiter char- 44 JOURNAL OF THE ARNOLD ARBORETUM [VOL. XXIV taceis fere membranaceis lanceolato-ellipticis, 3.5—-9 cm. longis et 1—3.5 cm. latis, apice acutiusculis, basi valde obliquis, latere exteriore in lobum brevem (5 mm. longum) productis nervis basalibus plerumque 3, latere nue cuneatis vel subobtusis nervis basalibus 1 vel 2, lateralibus 4 ascendentibus, margine irregulariter remotiuscule subduplicato-dentatis aide we supra glabris, subtus costa nervisque hirtellis; petiolo 1—3 cm. longo hirtello; stipulis ovatis 5 mm. longis ochraceis; inflorescentiis terminalibus vel in axillibus superioribus 3—5 cm. longis racemosis flores ¢ atque 2 gerentibus; bracteis albis late ovatis + ongis semiamplexicaulibus; floribus ¢ : pedicello circiter 8 mm. longo glabro; tepalis 4 oblongis exterioribus 8 mm. interioribus 4 mm. longis; staminibus 4, filamentis 2 mm. longis liberis, antheris 0.5 mm longis ovatis vel subrotundatis: floribus 9: immaturis; pedicello 5 mm. longo; tepalis 3 vel 4 ellipticis, 8-9 mm. longis, 4.5 mm. latis, apice obtusis; stylis 3 erectis liberis quove 2 mm. supra basim partito, brachiis haud tortis stigmaticis subchartaceis complanatis 2 mm. longis, margine irregulariter erosis obscure papillosis; ovario 2-3 mm. longo glabro, alis inaequalibus; capsula cernua 6 mm. longa, alis 2 aequalibus + rotundatis 3 mm. medio latis, una 1 cm. longa et 4 mm. lata chartacea viridescente. poner New Guinea: Bele River, 18 km. northeast of Lake Habbema, Brass 11228 (TYP November 1938, alt. 2300 m., forest undergrowth, plentiful in moist gullies ments white). The flowers, both staminate and pistillate, of Begonia Brassii and B. oligandra closely resemble each other in the very few stamens and the unequal wings of the capsule; two wings are alike and more or less follow the contour of the ovary, while the third is less developed towards the base of the ovary, but in the dried flower apparently lies projecting upward against the tepals, the margin being inconspicuously 2- or 3-dentate some- what like the margin of a minute leaf. In fruit this wing stands straight out between the other two and is greenish, whereas the two smaller ones tend to be straw-colored in the dried specimens. The style-branches in all the flowers examined are flattened and not in any case twisted, as is usual in the other species of the genus. Begonia oligandra sp. nov. § Diploclinium. Fig. 2, g-k. Herba erecta gracilis ramosa; radice subcrassa; caule rufescente glabro nodis imis radicante; foliis breviter vel longiuscule petiolatis, petiolo l usque 4.5(—8) cm. longa et 2.5(—5) cm. lata, palmatim 4—6-partita, lobis pinnati-partitis vel bipinnatifidis, lobis ultimis integris vel apicem versus 1- vel 2-inciso-serratis; stipulis ochraceis ovatis + 4 mm. longis caducis; inflorescentiis racemosis terminalibus et in axillis superioribus, 2—4 cm. longis, flores ¢ atque @? gerentibus; bracteis late ovatis vel fere orbiculari- bus circiter 1 cm. longis membranaceis albis; floribus ¢ : pedicello eh 7 mm. longo glabro; tepalis 4 glabris, exterioribus 2 late ovatis 4 m longis latisque obtusiusculis, interioribus lanceolato-oblongis 3 mm. ies et 1.5 mm. latis; staminibus 6-8 basi 0.5 mm. connatis, filamentis 2.5 mm. longis, antheris suborbicularibus 0.5 mm. diametro; floribus 9: bracteis ongis; pedicellis 5 mm. longis; tepalis 4, 2 majoribus ovatis obtusis 7 mm. longis, 2 minoribus lanceolatis 3-5 mm. longis; stylis 3 ad basim 1943 | MERRILL & PERRY, PLANTAE ARCHBOLDIANAE, XI 45 liberis, quove 2 mm. supra basim partito, brachiis circiter 2 mm. longis erectis subtortis papillosis; ovario mm. longo; alis inaequalibus, 2 minoribus angustis 0.5 mm. latis rotundatis, una majore oblique desinente, pide eos 4 mm. longa inferiore minute 2- vel 3-denticulata. NETHERLANDS NEw GuINEA: 15 km. southwest of Bernhard Camp, Idenburg River, ae pps (tyPE), January 1939, alt. 1600 m., on mossy rocks in a rain-forest stream (flowers white); Valley of Bele River = 20 km. north of Lake Habbema, Brass 10829, October 1938, alt. 2200 m., plentiful in forest shade on low banks of stream Gonen white). Fic. 2. a-f. Begonia oer Merr. & Perry, drawn from the type: a. leaf, x %; b. & flower, X ™%; c. cluster of stamens, enlarged; d. @ flower, x 1%; e. one style, enlarged; f. capsule, . 6 —k. Begonia oligandra Merr. & ry, drawn r e e: g. leaf, x wer, X 1%; 7. cluster of stamens, enlarged; j. 2 flower, x 1%; k. one style enlarged, l. Begonia otophora Merr. & Perry, drawn from the ae habit, x %. n. Begonia diffusiflora Merr. & Perry: m. habit, drawn from the type, x 4; n. ani oe from Brass 6713, X VY. Among the described Papuasian species, this suggests B. Warburgi Lauterb. & K. Schum. in the palmate-pinnatifid or bipinnatifid leaves; this character was so distinctive that Lauterbach & Schumann give only a brief description of the fruit: capsule broadly winged, red, 12-13 mm. long. owever, if the wings had been conspicuously unlike in size they would surely have mentioned it. Unfortunately none of the plants belonging to the above cited numbers show mature or even partly mature fruits. The ovary has two wings more or less conforming to its contour and a third oblique and somewhat elongate wing projecting or directed upward against the larger tepals in the young flowers, its outer margin is uneven or 46 JOURNAL OF THE ARNOLD ARBORETUM [VOL. XXIV minutely denticulate; the whole is very much like that found in B. Brassii. e immature flowers do not show papillose styles and sometimes they appear irregular in form, but at maturity they are similar to those of other species of Begonia. Begonia otophora sp. nov. § Petermannia. Fig. 2,1. Planta 50 cm. alta; ramulis crispe ferrugineo-hirtellis; foliis usque 8 cm. longis et 3.5 cm. latis, lanceolato-ellipticis, apice acutis, basi latere ex- teriore angustatis deinde in lobum orbicularem 1—1.5 cm. productis nervis basalibus 4 vel 5, interiore rotundatis vel obtusis nervis basalibus 1 vel 2, lateralibus utrinsecus 4 vel 5, margine duplicato- serrato-dentatis vel irregulariter breviter incisis, setulosis, supra conspersissime setulosis, subtus costa nervisque crispe hirtellis: petio olo + 5 mm. longo hirtello; 'stipulis oblongo-lanceolatis 1 cm. longis, apice setosis, ochraceis, glabris: inflore- scentiis ¢ tantum visis, terminalibus 3 cm. longis immaturis pauciramosis paucifloris; bracteis ut stipulis: pedicellis 0.8—1.5 cm. longis crispe hirtellis; tepalis 2 + hirtellis ovatis obtusis 1.1 cm. longis; staminibus paucis circiter 8 basi connatis, antheris oblongis. NETHERLANDS NEw Guinea: 4 km. southwest of Bernhard Camp, Idenburg River, Brass 13218 eau March 1939, alt. 850 m., rare in rain-forest flood-plain (ascending herb 50 cm. high; upper surface ‘of leaves dark brownish green, the lower surface red; flowers white). Begonia diffusiflora sp. nov. § Petermannia, Fig. 2, m,n. Planta 50 cm. alta; ciate ferrugineo-hirsutis, pilis + 4 mm. lon gis ; foliis + 16 cm. longis et . latis, ellipticis, utrinque angustatis, apice acuminatis, acumine + 2 cm. e ngo, ‘basi in naequalibus, in latere exteriore in lobum brevem 5 mm. longum rotundatum productis nervis basalibus 3, in nteriore cuneatis vel rotundato-cuneatis nervo basali uno, lateralibus ores 6 aut @ gerentibus: inflorescentis 4 dichotomo-ramosis 8 cm. longis et 12 cm. latis + 30-floris, ramulis sparsim hirtellis vel sursum fere glabris; floribus pedicellatis ; eee 2 suborbicularibus 5—7 mm. diametro, extus basim versus sparsim pilosis; staminibus 25—30 basi breviter connatis, filamentis antheris subaequilongis, antheris 1 mm. longis oblongis emargi- natis, rimis 2 antherae aequilongis; inflorescentiis @ bifloris; pedicellis 3 cm. longis sparsim pilosis; tepalis verisimiliter 5 (3 tantum ‘visis) late ovatis 1 cm. longis; stylis 3 basi breviter connatis apice in crura 2 brevia patenti-erecta spiraliter papillosa ea ovario 1.5 cm. longo ellipsoideo; alis 3 inaequalibus ultra ovarium 3 mm. productis, una majore rotundata 7 mm. medio lata, 2 minoribus ee 5 mm. medio latis. British New Guinea: Fly River, 528 mile Camp, Brass 6713, 7010, May 1936, alt. 80 m., heavily shaded gully in ridge-forest undergrowth, uncommon (30 cm. high; flowers pink) ; Palmer _ 2 miles below Black River Junction, Brass 7318 rene July 1936, alt. 100 m., a rare species, epiphytic or terrestrial in ridge-forests (fleshy herb 50 cm. high; inition of Rin plants “reddish brown beneath; flowers pink). In several characters this plant seems to agree with Begonia filibracteosa Irmsch., but the staminate inflorescence is distinctly dichotomously branched, the flowers have fewer stamens with longer lines of dehiscence, 1943 ] MERRILL & PERRY, PLANTAE ARCHBOLDIANAE, XI 47 and the @ flowers are practically glabrous, although when younger they may have had a few scattered hairs. Begonia calliantha sp. nov. § Petermannia. Fig. 3, a, b. Planta suffruticosa circiter 2 m. alta; ramulis + dense et crispule rufo- hirsutis; foliis 11-12.5 cm. longis et 4-5 cm. latis, oblongo-ellipticis vel ovato- ellipticis, apice acuminatis, acumine + 1 cm. longo, basi inaequalibus, latere exteriore in lobum brevem (6 mm. longum) rotundatum productis, nervis basalibus 3 vel 4, inter’ iore late cuneatis vel leviter rotundato- cuneatis nervis basalibus 2, lateralibus utrinsecus 4 valde ascendentibus, margine indistincte duplicato-serrato-dentatis setulosis, supra glabris vel consperse minuteque glanduloso- pubescentibus, subtus dense minute pustu- latis, costa venisque crispe + dense pilosis; petiolo 0.5—1 cm. longo dense crispe hirsuto; stipulis 2—2.5 cm. longis, 4—5 mm. latis, lineari-oblongis apice in setam rs 3 mm. longam sensim angustatis; inflorescentiis terminali- bus circiter 7 cm. longis racemosis; floribus ¢ tantum visis; pedicellis 2 cm. longis crispe hirtellis, basi bracteis glabris 2.5—3 cm. fae et 1-1.2 cm. latis lanceolato- ellipticis apice setulosis; tepalis 2 glabris 3 cm. longis et 2.5 cm. latis, ovatis, basi retusis, apice 0 obtusis; staminibus 50-60, a mentis basi 2 mm. connatis parte superiore liberis, exterioribus 0.5 m interioribus 1-1.5 mm. longis, antheris 2.5-3 mm. longis oblongis em rimis 24 antherae aequilongis. British New Guinea: Mount Tafa, Mavi, Brass 4986 (TYPE in NYBG), September 1933, alt. 2225 m., bed of a small stream in forest (large fleshy shrub about 2 m. high; branches, petioles and peduncles with reddish brown hairs; flowering bracts suffused with red; petals carmine) Begonia Randiana sp. nov. § Petermannia. Fig. 3, c,d Planta suffruticosa usque 1 m. alta, ramosa, ex toto ferrugineo-hirsuta ; foliis oblongo-lanceolatis, 5-10 cm. longis et 1.5—3 cm. latis, apice acutis, basi latere exteriore in lobum brevem (5 mm. longum) cordatum productis nervis basalibus 2 vel 3, interiore rotundatis nervo basali uno, lateralibus lanceolatis 8 mm. longis, apice abrupte caudatis; inflorescentiis terminali- bus flores ¢ atque @ gerentibus + 5 cm. lon ngis secetar floribus ¢: pedicello 1-2 cm. longo; tepalis 2 ovatis late obtusis 1.5—2 cm. longis; staminibus 20-25 basi 2 mm. connatis, plamentie ie 1.5 mm. longis, antheris 1.6 mm. longis oblongis leviter obovatis obtusis, rimis 4 antherae aequalibus; floribus @: tepalis 5 oblongo-lanceolatis, 1.8 cm. longis et 6 mm. latis, obtusis; stylis 5 mm. longis 3, basi breviter connatis sursum liberis, apicem versus in crura 2 brevia (2 mm. longa) ascendentia spiraliter papillosa fissis; ovario late ellipsoideo 8 mm. longo, alis 3 subaequalibus, margine depen horizontaliter truncatis, basi rotundatis, 4 mm. medio latis; capsula cernua 1.3 cm. longa, 1.5 cm British NEw ee NEA: East Mount Tafa, Brass 4136, May 1933, alt. 2100 m., in a moist forest gully (compact small fleshy shrub + 50 cm. high; branches purple- red and whole plant covered with long red hairs; petals pinkish white); Mount Tafa, Brass flowers white) ; Mafulu, Brass 5508, November 1933, alt. 1100 m., floor plant in lower level forests, rare (low spreading shrub 50-70 cm. high; indumentum red; flowers pale pink). 48 JOURNAL OF THE ARNOLD ARBORETUM [VOL. XXIV The collection designated as the type differs from the other two chiefly in its leaf-margins being less deeply incised. In general habit the species seems to approach closely Begonia fruticella Ridl., but it is quickly dis- tinguished from that species by having wings similar in size and shape. Dedicated to Dr. A. L. Rand, assistant leader of the Expedition. a, 6. Begonia calliantha Merr. & Perry, drawn from the type in NYBG: a. leaf, showing lower surface, X 1%; b. portion of 2 inflorescence, xX . c,d. Begonia Randiana Merr. & Perry, drawn from the type: c. habit, showing ¢ inflo- rescence, X 12; d. Q flower, X “%. e, f. Begonia Richardsoniana Merr. & Perry, drawn from the type: e. habit, x ™%; f. 2 flower, x 4. Begonia Richardsoniana sp. nov. § Petermannia. Fig. 3, e, {. Planta erecta 60-70 cm. alta; ramulis dense ferrugineo-hirsutis; foliis 9-15 cm. longis et 4.5—6 cm. latis oblongo-ellipticis, apice subabrupte rotundatum cordatum productis nervis basalibus 3 vel 4, intericre cuneatis vel rotundato-cuneatis nervis basalibus 1 vel 2, lateralibus circiter 5, utrinque consperse setulosis subtus costa nervisque hirtellis; margine minute duplicato-serrato-dentatis setulosis; petiolo 1-2 cm. longo hirsuto; stipulis hirtellis 1 cm. longis lanceolatis, apice 5 mm. caudatis: inflorescentiis axil- lari : + 4 . longis racemosis: bracteis circiter 6 mm. longis stipulis similibus; pedicellis rufo-hirtellis; tepalis 2 late rotundatis, 1.5 cm. longis, 2 cm. latis, consperse hirtellis; staminibus 50-60, filamentis + 1 mm. longis antheris subaequalibus, antheris oblongis emarginatis basi angustatis, rimis fere 14 antherae aequilongis; inflorescentiis ? : flore unico 1943] MERRILL & PERRY, PLANTAE ARCHBOLDIANAE, XI 49 viso consperse setuloso; pedicello 2 cm. longo hirtello; tepalis 5 lanceolato- ellipticis 1.5 cm. longis ‘ciliato- setulosis; stylis 3 circiter 5 mm. ongis, basi connatis sursum liberis, apice in crura 2 brevia patentia spiraliter papillosa fissis; ovario 1.5 cm longo et 0.6 cm. lato, oblongo; alis 3 subaequalibus subtriangularibus, margine superiore leviter oblique et horizontaliter truncatis vix 1 cm. longis, basi cuneatis, 3 mm. medio latis, margine setulosis ETHERLANDS New GUINEA: 4 km. southwest of Bernhard Camp, Idenburg River, Brass 13423 (type), March 1939, alt. 850 m., occasional on shady banks of rain-forest streams (erect to 60-70 cm.; all parts including petals sprinkled with red hairs; @ flowers pink; ¢ pink to white) Dedicated to Mr. W. B. Richardson, mammologist of the Expedition. Begonia oxyura sp. nov. § Petermannia. Fig. 4,a,b Planta ascendens ramosa; ramulis crispe eu pee -hirsutis; foliis char- taceis lanceolato-ellipticis, 9-16 cm. longis et 3-7 cm eae apice abrupte aoe acumine 2—3 cm. os basi 7 mm. apicem versus 1 mm. lato, basi valde inaequalibus, uno latere nic: auriculatis, lobo 1.5-2.5 cm. longo, nervis basalibus 4 vel 5, altero rotundatis nervis basali- bus 2, lateralibus utrinsecus 2 vel 3, margine sinuatis remote dentatis veri- similiter setulosis utrinque crispe subadpresse hirtellis, subtus costa venisque dense hirsutis; petiolo + 1 cm. longo hirsuto; stipulis ovatis, 6 mm. longis, 4 mm. latis, hirsutis; inflorescentiis terminalibus + 6 cm. longis, cymoso- paniculatis, paucifloris, flores ¢ atque & gerentibus pedunculo brevissimo : tepalis 2 Gare ellipticis, 13 1. cm. longis, 6 mm. latis, hirtellis; ein + 60 basi breviter connatis, filamentis 1 mm. vel ultra longis, antheris 1 mm. longis obovatis emarginatis : floribus @ totis hirtellis: tepalis 5 oblongo- lanceolatis, 1.3 cm. longis; stylis 3, basi breviter connatis ellipsoideo 1.2 cm. ene et 0.7 cm. lato, alis 3 subaequalibus; ee 233 medio latis. NETHERLANDS New GuINEA: 4 km. southwest of Bernhard Camp, Idenburg River, Brass 13217, 13457 (type), March 1939, alt. 850 m., on banks of a rain-forest stream (13217: climbing to 3 m.; 13457: herb 60 cm. high; flowers white). These collections suggest Begonia torricellensis Warb., but they differ in having very distinctly acuminate leaves and fruits with very much narrower wings. Begonia montis Bismarckii Warb. Fl. Deutsch. Schutzgeb. Siidsee Nachtr. 322. 1905. NETHERLANDS NEw GUINEA: 4 km. southwest of Bernhard Camp, Idenburg River, Brass 13397, March 1939, alt. 850 m., common in undergrowth of flood-plain rain- forest (herb 70-80 cm. high; flowers white or pale pink). This collection seems to be a very good match for a fragmentary speci- men collected by Schlechter from the Bismarck Mountains in Northeastern New Guinea. Begonia suffrutescens sp. nov. § Petermannia. Fig. 4, c-e. Planta suffruticosa usque 50 cm. alta ramosa; ramis ramulisque crispule hirsutis, pilis brunneis; foliis rien 1.5-4.5 cm. longis, 0.5—2 cm. latis, lanceolatis vel subovatis, apice acutis vel acuminatis interdum obtusiusculis, 50 JOURNAL OF THE ARNOLD ARBORETUM [VOL. XXIV superioribus solitariis vel binis, pedunculis vel pedicellis + crispe hirtellis 2 cm. longis prope basim bracteis minimis ochraceis instructis; tepalis 2 ovatis 1.5—-1.7 cm. longis glabris albis; staminibus 4-8, filamentis 11.5 mm. longis + connatis, antheris -- 2 mm. longis apiculatis, rimis fere antherae aequalibus; floribus ¢ plerumque solitariis ex axillibus superiori- Fic. 4. a, b. Begonia oxyura Merr. & Perry: a. habit, drawn from Brass 13217, xX 2; b. Q flower, drawn from the type, x 4. c-e. Begonia suffrutescens Merr. & Perry, drawn from the type: c. habit, x 1%; d. Q flower, xX 4; e. capsule, xX V4. . inflorescence, showing 9 flower and immature ¢ flower at base, X 4. h. Begonia pinnatifida Merr. & Perry, drawn from the type: habit, x 1% bus, pedunculo circiter 1.5 cm. longo crispe hirtello; tepalis 5 lanceolato- ovatis, 9-11 mm. longis, 3-4 mm. latis, glabris, albis; stylis 3 circiter 6 mm. longis, in parte inferiore 2 mm. connatis, apice in crura 2.5 mm. longa erecta in summo apice papillosa fissis; ovario ellipsoideo, 7 mm. longo, 4—4.5 mm. lato, pilis longiusculis sparsim obsito, alis 3 margine superiore truncatis basi rotundatis, sparsim pilosis, in fructu una ala latiore margine superiore 8 mm., ceteris 5 mm. longis; seminibus minute reticulatis. ETHERLANDS NEW 15 km. southwest of Bernhard Camp, Idenburg River, Brass 12030 (tyPE), January 1939, alt. 1750 m., rain-forest, common on banks of 1943 ] MERRILL & PERRY, PLANTAE ARCHBOLDIANAE, XI 51 streams and slopes of ravines (30-50 cm. high; flowers white); 6 km. southwest of Bernhard Camp, Idenburg River, Brass 12985, ebicsdrats eee alt. 1050 m., on banks of a rain-forest stream Poca to 20-30 cm.; flowers w Amongst the descriptions of en Beane. this species most nearly approaches B. monantha Warb., but in that the stamens are many and the anthers ovate. We have found no formal description of the fruit of B. monantha, but Irmscher gives a sketch of it in his article on inflorescences, Bot. Jahrb. 50. Suppl.: 573, figs. 24 a—c. 1914. Begonia serraticauda sp. nov. § Petermannia. Fig. 4, f, g. Planta glabra usque 1 m. alta ramosa; caule in sicco rufo-brunnescente, nodis eet: foliis tenuiter chartaceis oblongis vel oblongo-ellipticis, 8-18 cm. longis, 2-7 cm . latis, basi cuneato-rotundatis leviter inaequalibus, structis, apice sensim caudato-acuminatis, acumine 3—4.5 cm. longo basi 4—6 mm. lato, margine indistincte (acuminis distincte) remotiuscule serratis, nervis primariis in latere exteriore 7—9, interiore 6—8 ascendentibus, venulis ultimis distincte clevatis; petiolo 5-7 m mm. longo; stipulis oblongo- -lanceo- — 7 AUT a oO wn, Qa 3 jet) =e n go = QO i.) Sj << io) i n c 72) ay ut 2 ° a. ion c 77) Oc Le =3 QO i os) > oO = oO a, jee) truncatis, basi rotundatis; capsula cernua, 1.8 cm. longa, 2—2.3 cm. lata. NETHERLANDS NEw GUINEA: 6 km. southwest of Bernhard Camp, Idenburg River, (ascending herb 50-60 cm. high; flowers pink, white or pale pink streaked with darker pink). In some characters this species suggests Begonia strictinervis Irmsch., but the acumen of the leaves is about twice as long as in the latter species, the base of the leaf is not sufficiently auricled to show three basal nerves on the larger side of the blade, the inflorescence is only very few-flowered (in the specimens cited not more than two were seen), the stamens are more than twice as many, and the wings do not extend beyond the apex of the capsule. Begonia pinnatifida sp. nov. § Petermannia. Fig. 4, h. Planta glabra ramosa nodis inferioribus ic ns; ramis gracilibus in sicco + striatis vel angulatis; foliis pene See oe vel fere mem- branaceis, 4—5.5 cm. longis et 1-1.5 cm. latis, lanceolatis, parte tertia inferiore excepta pinnatifidis, laciniis Wen vel i: vel 2- dentatis setulosis, inferioribus circiter 7 mm. longis sursum decrescentibus, terminalibus linearibus; petiolo 1-1.5 mm. longo; stipulis 8 mm. longis linearibus longiuscule setulosis; inflorescentiis terminalibus; floribus ¢ non visis; 52 JOURNAL OF THE ARNOLD ARBORETUM [VOL, XXIV pedicello floris @ 1.3 cm. longo; tepalis 5 fere aequalibus late lanceolatis, circiter 9 mm, longis et 3 mm. latis, apice acutis breviter setulosis; stylis basi tantum connatis, 3 mm, lo ongis, a apicem versus latioribus, in crura 2 brevia patenti-erecta spiraliter papillosa fissis; ovario ellipsoideo 8 mm. longo utrinque angustato alis toto circumdato, alis 3 subaequalibus, 11 mm. longis + 5 mm. medio latis; placentis bilamellatis British NEw aes Pairies River, 2 miles below Black River Junction, Brass 7051 (TYPE), June 1936, alt. 100 m., gregarious in considerable communities in forest ground cover of the more elevated ridges (flowers pale pink; only one plant found in ower A striking species readily recognized by the rather small almost sessile lanceolate leaves pinnatifid in the upper two-thirds. The single specimen collected has only one @ flower, which is pale pink with translucent strongly veined wings, which project about 1.5 mm. beyond the base and the apex of the ovary. Oe stilandra sp. nov. § Petermannia. Fig. 5, a—d. Planta usque | m. alta glabra; ramulis in sicco leviter striatis supra nodos nae foliis 8-14 cm. longis, 3—5.5 cm. latis, oblongo-lanceolatis, apice acuminatis, acumine + 1 cm. longo, basi valde inaequalibus, latere ex- teriore in lobum 1.5—2.5 cm. longum rotundato-cordatum productis nervis basalibus 5, interiore rotundatis nervis basalibus 2, lateralibus utrinsecus 2 vel 3, margine duplicato-serrato-dentatis breviter setulosis: petiolo 2—4.5 cm. longo: stipulis caducis haud visis; inflorescentiis termina libus + 9cm longis pauciramosis flores ¢ atque @ gerentibus; bracteis caducis; flori- bus ¢: pedicello + 1 cm. lon 0; epaue ¢ ovatis vel ellipticis, 1.7 cm. S i antheris 3 mm. longis ee emarginatis; floribus @: pedicello 2(—5) cm. longo; tepalis 5 lanceolato-ellipticis + 2 cm. lo ngis, apice acutis; stylis 3 circiter 7 mm. longis, basi 1.5 mm. connatis, apice in crura 2 erecta 3 mm. longa spiraliter papillosa fissis; ovario 1.1 cm. longo ellipsoideo; alis sub- aequalibus 3, basi rotundatis, ultra ovarium 3 mm, productis, apice hori- zontaliter truncatis rotundatis, 3 mm. et 4 mm. medio latis. NETHERLANDS NEw Guinea: 15 km. southwest of Bernhard Camp, Idenburg River, rating 12301 (type), January 1939, alt. 1750 m., occasional in rain-forest gullies (up to . high; petioles, nerves and margins of eaves: peduncles and pedicels red; flowers fon are et with red); 18 km. southwest of Bernhard Camp, Idenburg River, Brass 12499, February 1939, alt. 2000 m., undergrowth of a gully (plant 1 m. high; flowers pink, streaked with red). At a glance this species is scarcely to be distinguished from Begonia simulans Merr. & Perry, but a more careful examination shows the rather distinct character of the staminal column, the fewer and much longer anthers, and the less broadly winged fruit. Begonia simulans sp. nov. § Petermannia. Fig. 5 Planta ultra 35 cm. alta glabra; aia in sicco sulcatis ferrugineis; basalibus 4 vel 5, interiore rotundatis vel obtusis nervis basalibus 2 vel 3, lateralibus utrinsecus 3, margine duplicato-serrato-dentatis; costa et petiolo 1943 ] MERRILL & PERRY, PLANTAE ARCHBOLDIANAE, XI 53 angulum + 90° formantibus; ana 1.5-3 cm. longo ; stipulis caducis; inflorescentiis terminalibus . longis ramosis flores atque gerentibus; floribus ¢ : pedicello 1— ci cm. longo; tepalis 2 suborbicularibus, basi cordatis, + 1 cm. longis oe staminibus 70, filamentis exteriori- S 5 mm. interioribus 1.5 mm. longis, antheris 1.2 mm. longis obo- vatis -obtusis; floribus @: Saree usque 5 cm. longo; tepalis 5 lanceolato- ovatis 1-1.2 cm. longis; stylis 3 circiter 6 mm. longis, basi 2 mm. connatis, Fic. 5. a-d. Begonia stilandra Merr. & Perry, drawn from the oe Saye d): a. habit, x 1%; b. one stamen, enlarged; c. capsule, x ™%; d. Q flower, drawn from Brass 12499, x ea e-i. Bego nia simulans Merr. & Perry, drawn from the type: e. leaf, x “; f. 6 flow x 14; g. single stamen, enlarged; hk. @ flower, x ™%; i. capsule, x Ye jen. ens Sandy Merr. & a drawn from the type: j. leaf, x %; k. & flower, x 1%; 1. single stamen, enlarged; m. Q flower, X %; n. capsule, x ™%. ovarilo o minoribus, basi ultra oductis, apice horizontaliter truncatis; capsula 20 cin, longa et lata, alis 2 minoribus 7 mm. medio latis, una majore 9 mm. medio lata apice in crura 2 circiter 2 mm. longa spiraliter papillosa fissis; 0.8-1.4 cm. longo ellipsoideo, alis 3, quarum 2 paull ovarium + 3 mm. pro iene New Guinea: Balim River, Brass 11835 (type), December 1933, alt. 1800 m., a few plants in forest shade (branches, petioles and leaf-nerves beneath red: flowers pink). The species is to be compared with Begonia naumoniensis Irmsch., with which it has many characters incommon. It may be readily distinguished, however, by the smaller leaves with distinctly dentate margin a less cordate base: the more elongate anthers, and the larger ? flower o4 JOURNAL OF THE ARNOLD ARBORETUM [ VOL, XXIV Begonia pediophylla sp. nov. § Petermannia. Fig. 5, j-n. Planta parva glabra; foliis lanceolato- oblongis, 6-13 cm. longis, 2—4.5 cm. latis, apice abrupte acuminatis, acumine saepe angusto 0.5-1.5 cm longo, basi inaequalibus, latere exteriore in lobum 1-2.3 cm. longum rotundatum productis nervis basalibus 3 vel 4, interiore rotundato-cuneatis vel obtusis nervis basalibus 1 vel 2, lateralibus utrinsecus 3 vel 4, margine penal serrato-denticulatis ; petio olo 1—-7.5 cm. longo; stipulis lanceolato- oblongis + 7 mm. longis; inflorescentiis terminalibus et axillaribus pauci- floris + ° 3 cm. longis, flores ¢ et @ gerentibus; bracteis 1 cm. longis ovato- oblongis pedicellis 1—1.5 cm. longis; floribus ¢ : tepalis 2 late ovatis 1 cm. 5 ellipticis, 10 mm. ongis, 6 mm. latis; stylis x] circiter 6 mm. een basi 2 mm. connatis, apicem versus latioribus, apice in crura 2 brevia (2 mm longa) patenti-erecta spiraliter papillosa fissis: ovario | cm. longo 5 mm. lato ellipsoideo, alis 3 subinaequalibus; capsula 1 .4 cm. longa et lata, alis mar- gine — subtruncatis rotundatis, basi rotundatis, 2 mm. atque 3 mm. medio lat British New Guinea: Wharton Range, Murray Pass, Brass 4577 (TYPE), July 1933, alt. 2840 m., forest shade (fleshy small shrub; branches, petioles, leaf-margins and nerves beneath red, also peduncles and pedicels; flowers very pale pink, marked with darker lines). The shape of ‘the anthers, with inflated sacs and gaping sutures, is very much like that pictured for Begonia naumoniensis Irmsch., as is also the indistinctly denticulate margin of the leaves. The new species differs in the smaller leaves, the number of stamens, and the much smaller fruits with narrower wings. Begonia media sp. nov. § Petermannia. Fig. 6, a-c. Planta circiter 1 m. alta; ramulis elena parce crispe hirtellis cito foliis 12-24 cm. longis, 4.5-11.5 cm. latis, ovato- ellipticis vel basalibus 1-3, lateralibus utrinsecus 3 vel 4, margine duplicato-serrato-den- tatis, supra glabris, subtus costa nervisque sparsim hirtellis; petiolo 1-3 cm. longo sparsim crispe hirtello; stipulis oblongo- lanceolatis 1.3 cm. longis 1-1.3 cm. longis, cordatis, glabris vel sparsim hirtellis; staminibus 70-80 basi breviter late connatis; filamentis 0.4-1 mm. longis, exterioribus quam interioribus brevioribus, antheris 1.6 mm. longis oblongis emarginatis ; floribus @ non visis; pedicello 2 cm. longo; capsula cernua novella sparsim hirtella matura fere glabra, 1.5 cm. longa, 1.8 cm. lata; alis 3 subaequalibus basi rotundatis, ultra ovarium 2 mm. glee margine superiore hori- zontaliter truncatis rotundatis, medio 5—6 mm. latis British New Guinea: Mafulu, Brass 5435 eons in NYBG), November 1933, alt. 1250 m., uo in oak forest, rare (about 1 m. high; branches, peduncles, petioles and pers nerves beneath red; flowers pink). 1943 | MERRILL & PERRY, PLANTAE ARCHBOLDIANAE, XI 55 Begonia tafaensis sp. nov. § Petermannia. Fig. 6, d-f. Planta 1 m. alta glabra; ramulis in sicco striatis; foliis 11-21 cm. a 4.5-7 cm. latis, oblongo- ellipticis, apice acuminatis, acumine + 2 ¢ longo, basi valde inaequalibus, latere exteriore in lobum usque 3.5 cm. longum rotundatum productis nervis basalibus 5, interiore obtusis nervis basalibus 2, lateralibus utrinsecus 3 vel 4, margine minute denticulatis subsinuatis; petiolo 2-3 cm. longo; stipulis caducis haud visis ; inflore- bus, margine superioribus + 6 mm. longis, 4 mm. medio latis, valde venosis. British NEw Guinea: Mount an. Brass 4017 (TyPE in NYBG), May 1933, alt. 2100 m., fairly common in tall forest seas plant 1 m. or more high; stems, petioles, peduncles and pedicels red; flowers pink); same locality, Brass 5109, September 1933, alt. 2400 m., damp places in valley forest, rare (erect fleshy sparsely branched shrub about 1 m. high ; large pink flowers). : a—c. Begonia media Merr. & Perry, drawn from the type: a. leaf, x \%; b. g flower, x 1%; c. capsule, x %. d-f. Begonia tafaensis Merr. & Perry, drawn from the type (except d): d. leaf, drawn from Brass 5109, X %4; e. & flower, x 4; f. cap- sule, xX ‘’ g-t. Begonia slowoneaGe Merr. & Perry, drawn from the type: g. leaf, xX %; h. & flower, x %; i. capsule, x %. j-m. Begonia Alla eae Merr. & Perry, drawn from the type: j. habit, xX 4; k. 3 flower, x 1%; 1. 2 flower, x 4; m. capsule, X 14 56 JOURNAL OF THE ARNOLD ARBORETUM [VOL, XXIV This species is fairly close to Begonia media Merr. & Perry, but it lacks the pubescence, the margin of the leaves more nearly approaches an entire condition, and the stamens are fewer. It may be near B. Vandewateri Ridl., but the plant is glabrous, although the leaf-veins on the lower surface are somewhat verruculose. Begonia salomonensis sp. nov. § Petermannia. Fig. 6 Planta 1-2 m. alta glabra; ramulis in sicco alates foliis 10-27 cm. longis, 5.5—-11.5 cm. ie ovato-ellipticis acutis, basi latere exteriore in lobum 2—4 cm. longum rotundato-cordatum productis nervis basalibus 5, interiore rotundatis vel cuneatis nervis basali- bus 2, lateralibus utrinsecus + 3, margine inconspicue serrato-denticulatis interdum sinuatis; petiolo 1.5—-4 cm. longo; stipulis haud visis, caducis; inflorescentia ¢ folio opposita, 8.5 cm. longa, subcymosa; floribus é cir- citer 20; pedicello — 1.5 cm. longo; tepalis 2 subrotundatis 1.2 cm. longis; staminibus 35 basi connatis, filamentis brevibus 0.6—0.8 m longis, antheris een 1.6-1.8 mm. longis emarginatis, rimis incites 0.4 mm, longis; inflorescentia 9: axi 4 mm. longa; floribus @ non visis; pedicello 2.7 cm. longo; capsula 1.5—1.7 cm. ne. 2.5 cm. lata; alis 3 inaequalibus, basi rotundatis, ultra ovarium 3 mm. productis, in apicem sat acutum desinentibus, 2 brevioribus 7 mm. medio latis, margine superiore 1 cm. longis, una latiore 9 mm. medio lata, margine superiore 1.5 cm. longa SoLtomMon Istanps: Ulawa: Brass 2950 (type), October 1932, swampy rain- forest, on coral limestones (fleshy shrub 1-2 m. high; flowers white; fruits red) Begonia brachybotrys sp. nov. § Petermannia. Fig. 6, j—m. Herba 80 em. oe mrs glabro in sicco sulcato; foliis tenuiter chartaceis glabris, 10-20 c _ long s, 6-16 cm. latis, oblique ovato-ellipticis, apice abrupte breviter ete basi latere exteriore in lobum latum cordatum productis, interiore breviore cordato-rotu tundato, costa et petiolo angulum 130-140° formantibus, pa matim 7—9-nerviis, nervis a basi 13 longitudinis dichotomo-ramosis, margine subsinuatis + rato-denticulatis; petiolo glabro + 15 cm. longo, folii laminae fere spain stipulis caducis probabiliter eens similibus; inflorescentiis axillaribus flores ¢ et gerentibus, axi 1-3 cm. longa, ramis brevissimis; bracteis novellis 1.5 cm. longis ovatis obtusis caducis; floribus ¢ : pedicello usque 2 cm. longo; tepalis 2 glabris rotundatis 1 cm. longis latisque; staminibus 50-60, fila- mentis inaequalibus usque 1.5 mm. longis, antheris 0.8 mm. longis late ellipticis retusis, rimis antherae subaequilongis; floribus @ : pedicello + 2 cm. longo; tepalis 5 ellipticis 9 mm. longis, apice rotundatis; stylis 3 basi connatis sursum liberis 3 mm. longis, apice in crura 2 circiter 1 mm, longa patenti-erecta spiraliter papillosa fissis; ovario 6-7 mm. egy ellipsoideo, alis 3 subaequalibus; capsula 1.5 cm. longa, 1.6—-1.8 cm. lata, alis apice oe truncatis obtusis, basi 3 mm. ultra loculos ae 3—4 mm. medio la sn New Guinea: Bernhard Camp, Idenburg River, Brass 14112 (TYPE), April 1939, alt. 55 m., bank of a small stream in rain-forest (herb 80 cm. high; flowers nk). Britis New Guinea: Mafulu, Brass 5429, November 1933, alt. 1250 m., oak forest ground cover (about 50 cm. high; stems, petioles and cedunwies red; leaves dark green; small pink flowers and red fruits). This species should be compared with Begonia strictiformis Irmsch. from 1943 | MERRILL & PERRY, PLANTAE ARCHBOLDIANAE, XI 97 the North Celebes; the Papuasian material is glabrous with axillary in- florescences, fewer stamens, and leaves minutely denticulate. Begonia novoguineensis sp. nov. § Petermannia. Fig. 7, a, b. Planta 60 cm. alta; ramulis parce hirsutis dein glabratis; foliis ovato— ellipticis, 16— 29 cm. ‘longis, 10-15 cm. latis, apice breviter subabrupte acuminatis, acumine 2 cm. longo basi 1 cm. lato, basi latere exteriore in lobum 2-5 cm. longum rotundato-cordatum nervis basalibus 5, interiore rotundatis nervis basalibus 2, lateralibus utrinsecus circiter 5, margine sinu- atis inconspicue serrato-denticulatis setulosis, supra glabris, subtus costa nervisque sparsim setulosis; petiolo 2-7 cm. longo parce hirsuto; stipulis + 1 cm. longis anguste oblongis, apice setulosis caducis; inflorescentiis 3 tantum visis usque 30 cm. longis, racemoso-panicula tis, axi ramisqu sparsim hirtellis, ramulis pedicellisque minute glanduloso- pilosis, bracteis parvis stipulis similibus: pedicello 5-7 mm. longo; tepalis 2 late orbiculari- Teese minute hirtellis vel glabratis; staminibus circiter 60, filamentis quam antheris brevioribus, antheris 1 mm. longis oblongo- obovatis een ae rimis 14 antherae aequilongis. NETHERLANDS NEw Guinea: Hollandia, Brass 8841 (1ypPE), June 1938, alt. 50 m., deep ravine (60 cm. high; leaves red beneath; flowers white). Among the descriptions of Papuasian species of Begonia, perhaps this is to be compared to B. brevirtmosa Irmsch., but it is a much less pubescent plant with about twice as many stamens; the young leaves are rather densely hirsute but very quickly become glabrate. Begonia subelliptica sp. nov. § Petermannia. Fig. 7, c-e. Planta 1 m. alta foliis novellis exceptis glabra; foliis novellis 5 c longis, ee costa nervisque hirtellis, maturis late obovatis vel ellipticis, 20-25 cm. longis, 13-16 cm. latis, aoe obtusis vel rotundatis, basi latere exteriore in lobum 5—6 cm. m, longum undato-auriculatum productis nervis basalibus 6, interiore rotundatis ey basalibus 3 vel 4, lateralibus utrin- secus 4, margine subsinuatis integris; petiolo 5-7 cm. longo; stipulis oblongis + 3 cm. longis, apice obtusis, breviter setosis; inflorescentiis 9-15 cm. longis flores ¢ atque @ gerentibus; floribus ¢ in ramis brevissimis fasciculatis; pedicello usque 2 cm. longo; tepalis 2 suborbicularibus 1.3—1.8 cm. diametro: staminibus 30-35 basi connatis, filamentis 1-1.5 mm. longis, longa et lata, _ 3 subaequalibus medio 6 mm. latis, basi atque apice angulis rotundat NETHERLANDS Mes GuInEA: 4 km. southwest of Bernhard oe Idenburg River, Brass 13396 (TYPE), March 1939, alt. 850 m., undergrowth of flood-plain rain-forest (single clump 1 m. high; leaf-veins red bene flowers white, veined with pink). Begonia Somervillei Hemsl. Kew Bull. 1896: 17. 1896. Sotomon Istanps: San Cristobal: Waimamura, oe 20644, August 1932, steep rocky or gravelly slopes sheltered by rain-forest, ver wy fleshy shrub growing often in dense masses; stems and petioles veddish inflorescence pale ink). Described from New Georgia and recorded only by the original de- scription 58 JOURNAL OF THE ARNOLD ARBORETUM [VOL. XXIV Begonia Augustae Irmsch. Bot. Jahrb. 50: 350, f. 2, A-G. 1913. Br New GutneEA: Oroville Camp, Fly River, Brass 7392, 7417, August 1936, plentiful on steep river bank of red clay (robust plant over 1 m. high; leaves dark green, very glossy above; flowers and fruit red in 7392, lowers white in 7417). North- eastern New Guinea. This should also be compared with Begonia sogerensis Ridl. =) > ZD / TaN Mag sey fy mm y Pe ae Nee \ on ee. ees ; . a, b. Begonia novoguineensis Merr. & Perry, drawn from the type: a. habit, x 4; b. 6 flower, x “%. c-e. Begonia subelliptica Merr. & Perry, drawn from the type: c. habit, x 14; d. 6 flower, x 1%; e. capsule, x %. f-j. Symbegonia papuana Merr. & Perry, drawn from the type: f. leaf, x ™%; g. g flower, x ™%; h. cluster of stamens, enlarged; 7. 2 flower, x ™%; j. capsule, x 4. Begonia spilotophylla F. vy. Muell. Descr. Not. Pap. Pl. 4: 67. 1876; D’Albertis, uin. 2: 398. 1880; non sensu K. Schum. & Lauterb. (fide Irmscher, Bot. Jahrb. 50: 345. 1913). British New Guinea: Fly River, 528 mile Camp, Brass 6702, 6730, May 1936, alt. 80 m., occasional in forest undergrowth on ridges, gregarious and very abundant in semi-shade on steep slopes above river (very conspicuous fleshy herb 30-40 cm. high; leaves spotted with silver, the veins purple; flowers pink) papillose lobes; otherwise as in the original description. These parts had apparently fallen before the original specimens were collected. 1943 ] MERRILL & PERRY, PLANTAE ARCHBOLDIANAE, XI 99 Symbegonia Warburg Symbegonia papuana sp. nov. Fig. 7, f-j. Planta 30-50 cm. alta; caule, ramulis, petiolis et axi inflorescentiae + dense et crispule ferrugineo- hirtellis foliis chartaceis inaequaliter oblongo- 0.5-1.5 cm. longum rotundatum productis nervis basalibus 3, interiore rotundatis vel cuneatis nervis basalibus 1 vel 2, lateralibus utrinsecus 3 vel 4, margine remotiuscule denticulatis interdum repandis, supra consperse et crispule subhirtellis vel pilosis, subtus costa nervisque crispe hirtellis; inflorescentiis terminalibus usque 7 cm. longis; bracteis glabris late ovatis membranaceis verisimiliter albis; floribus 8: pedicello brevi; tepalis 2 ovato-ellipticis, circiter 1 cm. longis, consperse et pain versus dense crispule hirtellis; staminibus + 15, fila- mentis in columnam brevem connatis, antheris late oblongis obtusis 1 mm. longis; floribus @: pedicello 0.5 (fructus 1-1.5) cm. longo; alec campanulato in sicco usque 1.5 c . longo (lobis inclusis 5 mm. longis obtusis) et 0.8 cm. lato, extus acne crispe pilosulo; stylis 3, basi 1 mm. connatis, deinde in crura 2 stricto- ae 5 mm. longa torta partitis; ovario ellipsoideo 1 cm. longo, 0.6 cm. lato, sparsim piloso, alato; capsu m. longa et lata, alis subtriangularibus aequalibus, basi aren “apice acutiuscule angulatis apiculatis, margine superiore 6—7 mm. longis, 3 mm. medio latis. NETHERLANDS NEw Guinea: 15 km. southwest of Bernhard Camp, Idenburg River, Brass 12161 (type), January 1939, alt. 1750 m., common in rain-forested gullies (plant 30-50 cm. high; leaf-nerves red beneath; flowers white). This plant appears to be most like Symbegonia strigosa Warb., but it has a much shorter indument and larger and differently proportioned fruits. ARNOLD ARBORETUM, HARVARD UNIVERSITY. 60 JOURNAL OF THE ARNOLD ARBORETUM [VOL, XXIV STUDIES IN THE THEACEAE, XIV NOTES ON THE WEST INDIAN SPECIES OF TERNSTROEMIA CLARENCE E. KoBuskI In 1896, Urban (Bot. Jahrb. 21: 521-544) presented an excellent and rather complete treatment of the West Indian species of Ternstroemia. The present contribution is hardly more than a review based upon Urban’s work. As a result of study of the American species as a whole, I feel that Urban placed too much significance on the extent of connation in the petals and on other variable characters, using them extensively in his key to the species. Furthermore, the new species, which were described under the joint author- ship of Krug and Urban, were often based on minor and variable charac- ters. Nearly every number collected by C. Wright in Cuba was designated as a new species or variety. These species are not outstanding and in several instances have been reduced to synonymy in this paper. presentation of the South American and the Mexican and Central American groups (Jour. Arnold Arb, 23: 298-343, 464-478. 1942), com- plete description of all the species were offered, many of them for the first time. However, in the present paper, because of Urban’s very care- fully drawn descriptions, it is unnecessary to continue this practice, and instead only the salient characteristics, along with discussions of specific relationships and differences, are recorded. Here, for the first time, to my knowledge, is mentioned a pubescent species of Ternstroemia, T. pubescens from Santo Domingo. KEY TO THE SPECIES A. Pedicels, bracteoles, calyx-lobes, lower surface of leaves and current year’s growth covered with a short villous pubescence (Santo Domingo) ...... 1. T. pubescens. AA. Entire plant strictly glabrous. Ovary and fruit one- or three-celled. Cc. re three-celled. D. Leaves membranaceous, not granular-punctate; stigma subcapitate, tri-crenate; each ovary cell single-seeded (Trinidad, es Guiana). z. ava hidgeig Diavbia lana esleecisie ys eee te a ened eae ners «ead . delicatula. DD. 7 heavy-coriaceous, densely eine ster bins on ie surfaces ; three-parted, evolute; ovary cells more than one-seeded (Guade- lou age art St. Kitts, Dominica)................3. T. elliptica. CC. Ovary shane Ea teioe & ¥eapnale snare Ns wk eae oe 4. T. parviflora. BB. Ovary two- or fou C. Ovary four- arr (Tobago, PEMIdad) .0s'sf<04s sh eee dos 5. T. oligostemon. CC. Ovary two-ce D. Pedicel oth ene bracteoles in two opposite pairs eae Rico)....... Sta Sip vara Gre ge bia Goa Heenan ox earaio Goe Fie eins Sarin a ee . heptase pala. DD. Pedicel with two opposite bracteoles. . Flowers and fruit sessile or subsessile (Jamaica)....7. T. subsessilis. EE. ene and fruit distinctly pedicellate. . Calyx- pi remarkably large, the smallest over 1 cm. long (1.2-1.7 cm.). 1943 | KOBUSKI, STUDIES IN THE THEACEAE, XIV 61 G. Calyx- ei Egon denticulate, up to 17 mm. long; brac- ie g, ovate, eglandular: pedicels 1.5—2.0 cm. (Jam ie Pe a et ee Ce ee ee AA . calycina GG. ates fens eglandular, 10-12(-14) mm. long; bracteoles minute, not over 3 mm. long, yaa pee 6-8 cm. long Glamaica’), x 5<.Ae'< ce, oa, Girne eater aan . I. rostrata. FF. Calyx-lobes under 1 c g. G. Calyx-lobes and peicdies eglandular H. aie elliptic-oblong, 2—3 times fonces than broad, acute apex, up to 12 cm. long (Porto Rico) .10. T. luquillensis. HH. pee broadly ovate-elliptic, suborbicular, rounded and lightly emarginate at apex, 3-4 cm. long, 3-4 cm. wide CEL ALE ee Soci chats ob do se auacttigh care 11. T. Barkeri. GG. Calyx-lobes and bracteoles glandular-denticulate. ee long, conspicuous, linear, foliar, up to 6 m ng UD) bcs con reat efor eg ee W220 Nashii HH. eae — over 3 mm. long, not foliar and usually inconspicuo I. Largest oe less than 3 cm. long. . Outer calyx-lobes very small, ca. 2.0-2.5 mm. long; bracteoles not over 1.5 mm. long, not keeled GEV ATE ie 53 ce carsaciacdove ib taten av ee 13. T. Selleana. JJ. Calyx-lobes 4-6 mm. long; bracteoles 2-4 mm. long, keeled. . Leaves rounded, spathulate, not revolute; brac- teoles long- deltoid, ca. 3 mm. long (Haiti)..... ee ee eee er ee 14. T. gracilifolia. KK. ination thick-coriaceous, ovate or broadly ovate, inte bracteoles shortly triangular, acute, m. long (Cuba)........... Poo?" eas. II. Largest ee well over 3 cm. long. J. Pedicels less than 1.5 cm. long. K. Pedicels ae — 0.5-0.9 cm. long, usually averaging 0 . Leaves omen ‘orbicular (Cuba) Roea nr aay 3 lg un a iatireia olay ee . I. baracoénsis. LL. Leaves elliptic-oblong, aeually “tae —3 times ] (Cuba)..... 17. T. cernua. KK. Pedicels 1.0-1.5 cm. long; calyx- lobes : mm, or 18. lessyG@Uba) Settee sc . microcalyx. JJ. Pedicels longer than = cm., usually much longer, in some cases u o8c K. en hg lobes spline sharp- ene (Porto CO) Pawnee tienen erie were eneioe T. Stahlii. KK. ae. lobes ee rounded or oe Leaves with 12 or 13 pairs of veins, clearly visible on the ae surface pha ieeeienets CM eOR ey Ar ie Brees Ae Cae. LL. Leaves with 5-8 pairs of veins, ‘usually in- conspicuous on the lower surface . Leaves rounded or very obtuse at the base ; ae 6-12 mm. long; fruit semi- oval (Jamaica)........... 21. T. Hartii. MM. Leaves Baie at the base; petiole 3-7 . long; fruit conical (Cuba, Haiti, Santo fone seit ae St. Jan, St. 62 JOURNAL OF THE ARNOLD ARBORETUM [VOL, XXIV 1. Ternstroemia pubescens, sp. nov. Ramuli grisei, glabri, hornotinis brunnescentibus breviter villosis. Folia elliptica vel obovata, apice ramulorum congesta, coriacea vel subcoriacea, (2.5—) 5-6 cm. longa et 1.5-3.0 cm. lata, supra glabra opaca (ut videtur rubida), subtus breviter villosa, pallidiora, apice obtusa, basi in petiolum protracta, margine integerrima vel subrevoluta, costa supra impressa (in toto manifesta), venis 5 vel 6 paribus, supra obscuris, subtus pauce mani- festis, petiolis 8-14 mm. longis, villosulis. Flores parvissimi, in foliorum axillis solitarii, pedicellis 8-14 mm. longis breviter villosis, bracteolis 2 oppositis vel suboppositis ca. 1 mm. minusve longis villosulis triangularibus vel subtriangularibus sparse glanduloso-denticulatis; sepala 5, imbricata, subaequalia, exterioribus villosulis ca. 2.5 mm. longis et 2.0 mm, latis leviter coalita, ca. 3.5 mm. longa, quam calyce pauce longiora; stamina ca. 30, filamentis antherisque ca. 1 mm. longis; ovarium parvum, 2-loculare, glabrum, basi 1.5—2.0 mm. diam., in stylum 1.5 mm. longum attenuatum, stigmatibus bipunctiformibus. Fructus ignotus. DistrRIBUTION: Santo Domingo. Santo Dominco: Cordillera Central, Prov. Monte Cristi, Moncion, Lagunas de Cenobi, common in forest, alt. 1100 m., FE. L. Ekman H-12879 (TYPE, US), June 17, 1929. The astounding distinguishing feature of this species is the presence of a short villous pubescence on the lower surface of the leaves, the current year’s growth of branchlets, the pedicels, bracteoles and calyx-lobes. This separates the species from all others in the genus. To my knowledge it is the first record of any kind of pubescence in Ternstroemia. Very closely related is T. microcalyx Krug & Urban. In the latter species the sepals are equally as small but are entire, lacking the distinct glandular denticulations on the margin as in 7. pubescens. Also, the petals in T. microcalyx are 7 mm. long, twice as long as the petals in T. pubescens, which barely exceed the calyx-lobes in length. In 7. microcalyx the petiole is considerably shorter (5-8 mm.) and the attenuation of the leaf-base into the petiole is more pronounced. 1: 70. 1929.— Kobuski in Jour. Arnold Arb. 23: 308. 1942 Mokofua delicatula (Choisy) O. Kuntze, Rev. Gen. PI. 1: 63. 1891. Taonabo delicatula (Choisy) Szyszylowicz in Nat. Pflanzenfam. HI. 6: 118. 1893. DistripuTion: Trinidad, French Guiana. Trrnipap: Forests near Arima, alt. 600 m., H. F. A. Eggers 1381 (NY, US). Frencu Gutana: Cayenne, Martin s.n. (isotype, FM; photos, FM, G). This species is described as having membranaceous, obovate-elliptic leaves, narrowed at the base into a long petiole (6-15 mm. long), obtuse or very shortly acuminate at the apex, 5—9 cm. long and 2-4 cm. wide, quite distinctly crenulate in the upper half, and with lateral nerves prominu- 1943 ] KOBUSKI, STUDIES IN THE THEACEAE, XIV 63 lous on both surfaces. The flowers are fairly numerous, crowded on the branchlets. The peduncle is slender, 1-2 cm. long, recurved. The 5 sepals are more or less equal, 5—6 mm. long, obtuse at the apex, with eglandular entire margins. The ovary is globose-conical, 3-celled, contracted into a tyle ca. 4 mm. long which is topped by a subcapitate tri-crenate stigma. Each cell of the fruit is single-seeded. The membranaceous leaves, the long petiole, the crowded flowers, the thin, recurved pedicels, the eglandular sepals, and the tri-crenate, ‘sub- capitate stigma are the distinguishing characters for identification. This is the only species which is found both in South America and the West Indies. However, its closest relationship is with T. Browniana Kobuski of British Guiana. Both have entire, scarious-margined, eglandular, small (S mm. long) calyx-lobes, 3-celled ovaries.and fruit with a single seed to each locule, and slender pedicels. Ternstroemia Browniana differs in having a punctiform rather than a subcapitate, tri-crenate stigma, and in the coriaceous, veinless leaves, shorter and rounded at the apex. 3. Ternstroemia elliptica Swartz, Prodr. 81. 1788; Fl. Ind. Occ. 2: 929. 1800. — Vahl, Symb. 2: 61. 1791. — De Candolle in Mém. Soc. Phys. Hist. Nat. Genéve Jahrb. 21: 535. 1893. — Melchior in Nat. Pflanzenfam. ed. 2, 21: 142. 1925. Mokofua elliptica (Swartz) O. Kuntze, Rev. Gen. Pl. 1: Amphania integrifolia Solander Mss. ex oo in Mém. Soc. Phys. Hist. Nat. Genéve, 1: 410 (Mém. Ternstr. 18). 18 DIsTRIBUTION: Guadeloupe, Martinique, . Kitts, Dominica. GUADELOUPE: Trois-Riviéres, alt. 300-600 m., Pére Duss 2987 (FM, NY, US), 1893 (grand bel arbre, rare; feuillage trés vert.; dans ‘ik haute région, comme a ie Savane a Mulets, cet arbre Sak a état @arbriesen rabougri). — Soufriére, somets volcaniques humides, alt. 1100 , H. Stehlé 322, 1023 (NY), Févr.-Sept. 1936 (2 m., arbrisseau rabougri a cette altitude). — Savane a Mulets forét dense ventée, alt. 1100 m., H. Stehlé 1524 (US), 8 Février 1937 (rabougrie). Martin1quvE: Bois de Fonds Saint: Denis, de Case Pilote et de la fontaine Absalon, alt. 300-600 m., Pére Duss 638 (NY, US), 1882- 1883; Pére ae 171 ae Mo, NY, US; not Duss 171, Berlin), 1887. St. Kirts: Upper donee of Mt. ae tie Bp Britton & J. F. Cowell 532 (NY, US). Dominica: Dr. Imray 280 (G, neh (fide Urban). This species is characterized by coriaceous leaves, 4.5—-9.0 cm. long and 2-4 cm. wide, obovate to obovate-elliptic, granular-punctate on both sur- faces, very obtuse at the apex, contracted at the base into a petiole 5-10 mm. long, the margin revolute, entire, the veins (ca. 7 pairs) obsolete or prominulous on the lower surface; peduncles 1-2 cm. long, the bracteoles ovate, the 5 sepals unequal, semiorbicular, 4-7 mm. long, ca. 5 mm. wide, the outer lobes glandular-denticulate, the petals 5, obovate, 8-10 mm. long, 6-8 mm. wide, the stamens numerous, 2—4-seriate, the filaments unequal, the inner filaments nearly 3 times longer than the anthers, the outer fila- ments about equal to anthers in length; ovary semiglobose or conical, 3-celled, tapering through the style to a 3-parted, evolute stigma which sur- passes considerably the style in diameter; fruit three-celled, up to 18 mm. diam., the seeds few The characters significant in identification are: the three-celled ovary 64 JOURNAL OF THE ARNOLD ARBORETUM [VOL. XXIV and fruit, the 3-parted evolute stigma, the long petiole, the granular punctations on both leaf-surfaces, the very numerous stamens in 2—4 series, and the eglandular sepals and bracteoles. Cited above is Duss 171 from various American herbaria. Evidently this specimen must differ from Duss 171 as found in the herbarium at Berlin, since Urban (1893) cited the number as belonging to his new species T. oligostemon, which, in turn, is very different from the present species. According to the labels and dates, Duss made frequent collections over a period of years, in different localities, assigning a single number to the massed collections. 4. haart parviflora Krug & in Bot. Jahrb. 21: 523. 1896. — Melchior Nat. Pflanzenfam. ed. 2, 21: 142. DistripuTIon: Cuba. Cusa: Loma del Pinal Mayan, along road, C. Wright 2110 (1sotypEs, G, M), large bush, 10 ft.; flowers whitish rose, tinged with yellow at center. rov. Santa Clara: Palm Barren, N. L. Britton & J. F. Cowell 10178 (NY, US), March 1911. — Santa Clara to Loma Cruz, N. . poi E. G. Britton & J. F. Cowell 10220 (NY, US), March 23, 1911.— Palm Barren, N. L. Britton, E. G. Britton & P. Wilson 6168 (NY, US), March 1910 (shrub 2 m.). Prov. Pinar del Rio: on top of Cajalbana, Bros. Léon & Charles 4955 (NY), April 6, 1915 (shrub 4-5 ine — Hato Abajo, J. T. Roig 3185 (G, NY, US), Apr. 7, 1924. Prov. Orien streamlets or edge of deciduous thickets, J. A. Shafer 1282 (FM, NY, US), oP (FM, NY), 1691 (NY), 3189 (FM, NY, US), Apr.-Dec. 1909 (shrub 1-3 m.). In his original description, Urban states that the ovary is one-celled, seven-ovulate. This character seems to hold for the type. However, such is not the case in all specimens. After dissecting several ovaries from each specimen, I find that Shafer 1282 and 1691, as well as Britton, Britton and Cowell 10220, possess single-celled ovaries. Shafer 1424 and 3189, Bros. Léon and Charles 4955 and Britton, Britton & Wilson 6168 have two- celled ovaries, while Britton & Cowell 10178 have both single-celled and two-celled ovaries, with the larger number single-celled. The ovary is very minute (1 mm. or less long), conical in shape, and tapering into a style ca. 2 mm. long. Because of the surrounding subligneous calyx-lobes and the flatness of the ovary, dissections are very difficult. The pedicels are very slender and are 2.5-3.0 cm. long. The bracteoles are ca. 2 mm. long, narrow and acute at the apex. Although not constantly so, there is a tendency for one of the bracteoles to be placed as much as 2 mm. below the sepals. Nearly every specimen shows this arrangement. The calyx-lobes are 3-5 cm. long and ovate, and the outer lobes are some- what apiculate. The anthers also are long- apiculate (1 mm.). Most closely allied to this species is T. microcalyx Kr. & Urb., which can be separated by the shorter stockier pedicel (1.0—1.5 cm. long), sealed calyx-lobes, and longer petals. The petals of T. parviflora scarcely exceed the calyx in length. 5. Ternstroemia oligostemon Krug & Urban in Bot. Jahrb. 21: Melchior in Nat. Pflanzenfam. ed. 2, 21: 142. 1925. —R.O. Wiliams A Enea & Tobago, 1:70. 1927.— Kobuski in Jour. Arnold Arb, 23: 327. DistrRiBUTION: Tobago, Trinidad. 1943 |] KOBUSKI, STUDIES IN THE THEACEAE, XIV 65 Tospaco: The Widow, W. E£. Broadway 4154 (FM, Mo, US), Sept. 29, 1910 (shrub with white, sweet-smelling flowers).— Easterfield, W. E. Broadway #369 (FM), Dec. 16, 1912 (bark of trunk rough and dark in color; leaves glossy-green).— Slopes of main ridge above Parlatuvier, relict forest paueieriig cultivations, V. Y. Sandwith 1916 (NY), Oct. 24, 1937 (middle-sized hee with white flowers).— Exact locality missing, F. A. “Durity” 12620 (NY), Jan. 2 This species is ene by. obovate or narrowly obovate-elliptic leaves, 6-10(—14) cm. long and 2.5—5.0 cm. wide, shortly or obtusely acuminate at the apex, long-attenuately tapering at the base into a petiole 8-13 mm. long, the margin subrevolute, crenulate or occasionaliy entire, frequently glandular, the 10-15 pairs of rather straight veins conspicuous on the lower surface, sometimes obsolete above; the texture of the leaves is thick-chartaceous and the surface is free from granular punctations. The flowers are white with a sweet odor and the pedicels measure 1.0—2.5 cm. in length. The sepals are suborbicular, 5-6 mm. long and about 5 mm. wide and, like the narrowly ovate bracteoles, devoid of glandular denticula- tions. The petals are about 7 mm. long. The stamens (ca. 20) are about 5 mm. long, the filaments measuring only 1 mm. in length while the anthers are 4 mm. long, linear, and taper gradually to the apex. The ovary is conical, 4-celled, each cell having one or two ovules and tapering into the style, which is crowned by an entire stigma slightly exceeding the style in diameter. The fruit is globose, 12-20 mm. in diameter, 4-celled with one or two seeds in each cell, only one of which usually fully matures. One of the types of this species, as cited by Krug and Urban, is Pére Duss 171 from Martinique. Before me are several specimens of this collection (supposed isotypes, FM, Mo, NY, US), which belong not to this species, but to T. elliptica. Perhaps there may be some confusion in the label of the Berlin specimen, since all seven sheets of Duss 171 in American herbaria are true 7. elliptica. On the label of two specimens in the New York and U. S. National herbaria are two numbers, 171 and 638. There is no difference in the material, but Duss 638 has been cited by Urban under T. elliptica. I doubt very much whether 7. oligostemon actually grows in either Martinique or Guadeloupe, from which it has been cited. Williams cites material from Trinidad (none of which I have seen), and this, with that from Tobago, perhaps gives the correct geographical distribution for the species. Krug & Urban’s description is very complete. They state, however, that the ovary and fruit are 2-celled or incompletely 4-celled and that the num- ber of ovules and seeds in either case is four. All material sectioned by me showed the ovary and fruit to be clearly 4-celled, with one or two ovules in each cell. In the first, eight seeds were found, four of which were fully mature, while the other four, although immature, were of considerable size. In other cases, a single seed was found in each cell. The distinguishing characters of 7. oligostemon are the four-celled ovary and fruit, the eglandular sepals and bracteoles, the entire stigma, and the 10-15 pairs of lateral veins of the thick-chartaceous leaves. Its closest ally is T. delicatula of Trinidad and French Guiana. This latter species can be 66 JOURNAL OF THE ARNOLD ARBORETUM [VOL, XXIV distinguished by the 3-celled ovary, the tricrenate stigma, and the thin papery leaves with 7 or 8 pairs of lateral vein 6. Ternstroemia capri do Krug & Urban in Bot. Jahrb. 21: He 1896. — Urban, nd. Occ. 4: 411. 1910. — Melchior in Nat. Pflanzenfam. ed. 2, 21: 142. 1925. Taonabo ergo eh & Urb.) Britton in Britton & Wilson, Sci. em Porto Rico & Virgin Isl. 5: DISTRIBUTION: nie “i Porto Rico: — de Luquillo, in Lappe montis Jiminez, P. Sintenis 1425 (1so- types, FM, G, Mo, NY, US), June-July 1885.— Luquillo Mts., P. Wilson 151 (FM, NY), July 1902. oe W. E. Hess Ae L. Stevens 2949 (NY), Aug. 28, 1913. According to the name and Urban’s subsequent interpretation, this species is characterized by seven sepals and a single pair of bracteoles. However, to my mind, the more correct interpretation is to consider the flower as having the customary number of sepals (five) and two pairs of bracteoles. The outer pair of bracteoles are unequal, opposite, ovate or triangular, keeled, eglandular, and about 1 mm. long. The bracteoles of the second or inner pair alternate with those of the outer pair and are subrotund, measuring 2 mm. or less in length, being also eglandular. The — them- selves are imbricate, eglandular, se vuln varying from 3—5 mm. in length. The pedicels are curved, 10-18 ng Closely allied is T. subsessilis, which can ce separated by the single pair of bracteoles, the two-parted style, and the subsessile flowers. 7. Ternstroemia subsessilis (Britton), comb. n Taonabo subsessilis Britton in Britton & Wilson, ‘oe Surv. Porto Rico & Virgin Isl. 5: 581. 1924 DistTRIBUTION: Porto Rico. Porto Rico: Luquillo Mts., rocky summit of Mt. Yunque, V. L. Britton & E. M. Bruner 7627 (NY, TyPE), Feb. 1923 (shrub 1 m. high; petals white, 1 cm. long).— Sierra de Naguabo, Rio Prieto and adjacent ren Seainees ng top of peak, alt. 1000 m., J.A. Shafer 3648 (NY, US), Aug. 1914 (small t This interesting species is coun is ee or subsessile flowers and fruit. This character, along with the two-parted style, is sufficient to separate T. subsessilts es all other species of the genus in the West Indies. The suborbicular eglandular calyx-lobes are very minute, the inner lobes not over 3 mm. and the outer lobes about 2 mm. long. The bracteoles resemble the calyx-lobes in shape but seldom measure over | mm. in length. Britton states that the calyx-lobes (inner) measure 5 mm. and the petals measure 10 mm. In the type specimen I could find no calyx-lobes measur- ing more than 3 mm. and the petals were lacking. The fruit is conical, tapering to a decided point. Because of the lack of material, no dissections have been made to determine the number of cells of the ovary and the number of ovules. 8. ee calycina Fawcett & Rendle in Jour. Ne"? 60: i Fl. Jam. 21 926. — Melchior in Nat. Pflanzenfam. ed. 2, 21: 142. oe Jamaica Jamaica: W. Harris 10979, 11035 (1sorypres, NY). Long ovate calyx-lobes (13-17 9-12 mm.) and bracteoles (7-9 mm long) are the distinctive characteristics of this species. The calyx-lobes 1943] KOBUSKI, STUDIES IN THE THEACEAE, XIV 67 are glandular-denticulate, while the bracteoles are distinctly eglandular. The pedicels are rather short (1.5-2.0 cm. long), and the leaves are obovate-elliptic, rounded or very obtuse at the apex, sharply contracted at the base into a petiole 5-8 mm. long. 9. hace gic rostrata Krug & Urban in Bot. Jahrb. 21: 533. 1896. — Melchior in Pflanzenfam. ed. 2, 21: 142. 1925.— Fawcett & Rendle, Fl. Jam. 5: 184. oe DIsTRIBUTION: Jamaica. W. Harris 10259 (FM, NY, US); 10317 (FM, NY, US); N. L. Britton 2339 (NY); N.L. Britton & A. Hollick 2168 (NY) The fruit of this species is spheroidal or roundish-ovoid, rostrate at the apex. Krug & Urban record the pedicel as 3-5 cm. long. In all the specimens cited above, the pedicels are 6-8 cm. long, seldom less, and as much as 3 mm. diameter at the apex. The calyx-lobes are intermediate between those of 7. granulata and T. calycina (10-12 [-14] 7-10 mm.) in size and are eglandular. The bracteoles are comparatively minute, measuring not over 3 mm. in length, and acuminate. The leaves are obovate to obovate-elliptic, 7-12 cm. long, 3.0—5.5 cm. wide, obtuse, and occasionally emarginate at the apex, tapering at base into a petiole 5—7 mm. long. 10. Ternstroemia luquillensis Krug & Urban in Bot. Jahrb. 21: 531. 1896. — Urban Fl. Ind. Occ. 4: 411. 1910. — Melchior in Nat. Pflanzenfam. ed. 2, 21: 142. 1925. ee Ce ae Urb.) Britton in Britton & Wilson, Sci. Gury. Porto Rico & Virgin Isl. 5: ieee one Porto pie orto Rico: Sierra de Luquillo, in monte Jimenez, in silvis, P. Sintensis 1523 (1so-SYNTYPES, M, NY, US), 1331 (1so-synTyPEs, G, } S), July-Aug. 1885. — Sierra de Luquillo, in woods, alt. 600 m., H. F. A. Eggers 1224 (US), May 1883. Most species of Ternstroemia are characterized by obovate leaves. In this species the leaves are elliptic, up to 12 cm. long, usually 2.5—3.5 times longer than broad, acute at the apex rather than obtuse or rounded, with black punctate dots on the lower surface. The midrib above is impressed the whole length of the leaf. The margin is entire, flat or slightly recurved. The pedicels are slender, 3-9 cm. long, usually compressed. The bracteoles are ovate or suborbicular, 4-5 mm. long, 3-5 mm. wide, with a midrib evident near the apex and prolonged into a short apicule. The sepals are unequal, up to 9 mm. long and 11 mm. wide, and eglandular. 11. Ternstroemia Barkeri Ekman & Schmidt in Rep. Spec. Nov. 24: 78. 1927. DISTRIBUTION: Haiti. Haiti: Massif de la Hotte, western ae ae top of M. Formond, alt. 2225 m., E. L. Ekman H-7483 (isotype, US), Jan. 1 This species is characterized A ae eptie (or rarely broadly ovate- elliptic) nearly rotund leaves, 3-4 cm. long and 3-4 cm. wide, rounded and lightly emarginate at the apex, obtusely and abruptly contracted at the base into a petiole 3-5 mm. long, with the margin revolute, entire or nearly so, and the veins inconspicuous. The pedicels are 2-4 cm. long. The bracteoles are unequal, one subrotund, the other triangular, ca. 3 mm. long, 68 JOURNAL OF THE ARNOLD ARBORETUM [VOL, XXIV 2-3 mm. wide, entire, not glandular-denticulate. The calyx-lobes are sub- equal, 8-9 mm. long, 7-8 mm. wide, broadly ovate, the margins scarious without glandular-denticulations. The petals are lanceolate, acuminate, 12-13 mm. long, connate at base. The stamens number ca. 50; filaments up to 8 mm. long; anthers ca. 4 mm. long. The ovary is semi-globose, bi-loculate. The nearest relative is 7. baracoénsis O. C. Schmidt, which can be sepa- rated from the present species by the glandular-denticulate bracteoles and calyx-lobes, the very short pedicels (5—6 mm.), and the conspicuous veins. 12. beeen Nashii Urban in Rep. Spec. Nov. 13: a Auer Fl. Ind. Occ. 8: 36. 1920. — Melchior in Nat. Pflanzenfam. ed. 2, 21: Risener Haiti. : Marmelade, Camp No. 4, pineland, alt. 850 m., G. V. Nash & N. Taylor 1307 (1sotyprE, NY), Aug. 1-2, 1905 (shrub 1-2 m.).— Massif du Nord, Marmelade, Jalousiére, alt. 1000 m., E. L. Ekman H-8254 (US), May 24, 1927 The outstanding feature of this species is the presence of the long brac- teoles (up to 6 mm.), by which it can be quickly separated from T peduncularis DC., its nearest relative. The leaves of T. Nashii are coria- ceous, obovate-elliptic to obovate, 4-7 cm. long and 1.5—3.0 cm. wide, rounded at the apex and tapering at the base into a petiole 2-3 mm. long, the margin revolute and glandular-punctate, the veins inconspicuous. The peduncles (3.5—5.0 cm.) immediately suggest T. peduncularis, but the linear, glandular-denticulate bracteoles mentioned above distinguish it. The calyx-lobes are unequal, apiculate, up to 10 mm. long and 7-9 mm. wide, glandular-denticulate. The ovary and fruit are globular, tapering into the style. Urban suggests a relationship between this species and his 7. apleura. The type specimen resembles the type specimen of 7. apleura. However, subsequent collections show larger leaves with more conspicuous veining. 13. Ternstroemia Selleana Ekman & Schmidt in Rep. Spec. Nov. 24: 79. 1927. DistTRipuTIon: Haiti. Haiti: Massif de la Selle, gr. Crete-au-Piquants, Port-au- ft top of M. Malanga, alt. 1475 m., E. L. Ekman H-7391 (1sotype, US), Dec. 16, 1926.— Massif de la Selle, Ganthice, along path Badeau to Saltrou, alt. 2000 m., E. . Ekman H-3101 (US), Jan. 27, 1925 This species is characterized by small, broadly obovate or suborbicular leaves, usually 2—3 cm. long (rarely 3.5 cm.) and ca. 2 cm. wide, rounded (or nearly so) and lightly emarginate at the apex, attenuated at base into a petiole 4—5 mm. long, the margin revolute, slightly denticulate and plane toward the apex, the veins 4 or 5 pairs (inconspicuous in Ekman H-3101). In the type specimen the pedicels vary from 1.0—1.5 cm. in length; how- ever, in Ekman H-3101 the pedicels are considerably shorter (0.5—0.8 cm.). The bracteoles are unequal, 1.0-1.5 mm. long, scarious-margined and sparsely (if at all) glandular-denticulate. The calyx-lobes are unequal and suborbicular, the outer lobes smaller, ca. 2.5 mm. long, sparsely glandular-denticulate, the inner lobes 3.0-3.5 mm. long, the margin scari- ous. The young fruit is conical, up to 1 cm. long and only one-half as wide. 1943 | KOBUSKI, STUDIES IN THE THEACEAE, XIV 69 The nearest relative is T. gracilifolia O. C. Schmidt. This latter species can be separated by the longer pedicels and bracteoles, the larger, triangular calyx-lobes, and the semi-globose fruit. 14. Ternstroemia gracilifolia O. C. Schmidt in Rep. Spec. Nov. 22: 95. 1925. DIstRIBUTION: Haiti. Hartt: Massif de la Selle, Pétionville, M. La Visite, alt. 2050 m., E. L. Ekman H-1410 (1isoTyPE, US), Aug. 9, 1924 This species is characterized by small, coriaceous, spathulate leaves, 1.5—3.0 cm. long and 1.5—2.2 cm. wide, rounded at the apex, narrowed at the base into a petiole 2-3 mm. long, the margin both revolute and glandular-denticulate along the entire length, the veins inconspicuous. The pedicels are 2.0-3.5 cm. long. The bracteoles are long-deltoid, ca. 3 mm. long, carinate, glandular-denticulate. The calyx-lobes are unequal, the outer lobes subcordate-triangular, ca. 6 mm. long and 5 mm. wide, strongly glandular-denticulate, the inner lobes slightly longer, somewhat apiculate at the apex, and scarious-margined. The immature fruit is globose. Closely allied is T. Selleana Ekm. & Schmidt, which can be separated by the smaller, rounded bracteoles and calyx- -lobes, only sparsely, if at all, glandular-denticulate, the shorter pedicels, the elongated fruit, and the leaf margin plane and denticulate only at the apex. 15. rity flavescens Grisebach, Cat. Pl. Cuba, 35. 1866. — Sauvalle, Fl. Cub. 1873. — Urban in Bot. Jahrb. 21: 530. 1896. — Melchior in Nat. Pflanzenfam. ? 21: 142, 1925. Preiers vee clusiifolia Grisebach, Pl. Wright. 166. 1860. — Non H.B.K Taonabo flavescens (Griseb.) Szyszylowicz in Nat. Pflanzenfam. III. 6; 189. 1893. DIsTRIBUTION: Cuba. Cuspa: Near Mont Verde, C. Wright 1124 (isorypE, NY).— Prov. Oriente: Camp La Gloria, south of Sierra Moa, J. A. Shafer 8200 (NY), ie 1910 (straggling shrub 1 m The very small, thick-coriaceous, ovate to broadly ovate leaves (2.4 x 1.0-1.5 cm.) and the small flowers are the outstanding distinguishing char- acters of this species. The nearest relative is T. baracoénsis Schmidt, the leaves of which are considerably larger and subrotund. 16. Ternstroemia baracoénsis O. C. Schmidt in Rep. Spec. Nov. 22: 95. 1925. DIsTRIBUTION: Cuba. Cups: Prov. Oriente: as de Cuaba, near Baracoa, in pines, E. L. Ekman 4230 (photo of isotype, NY), ae 13, 1925. A photograph of the isotype (Stockholm) with a few leaves (NY) are the only available material for study. Close observation shows flowers to be present on the isotype. According to the description and the photo- graph, the outstanding characteristics are (1) the broadly elliptic or nearly rounded, coriaceous leaves, 3—5 cm. long and 1.8—3.0 cm. broad, rounded at the apex, obtusely contracted at the base into the petiole, the margin entire, slightly revolute, the midrib flat above, fading out toward the apex, raised below, the veins (5 or 6 pairs) tenuous and conspicuous below; (2) the pedicel short, 0.5-0.6 cm. long; (3) the bracteoles subcordate(?). 70 JOURNAL OF THE ARNOLD ARBORETUM [VOL, XXIV The nearly rounded leaves, the tenuous veins, and the very short pedicels are characters which clearly distinguish the species from its Cuban rela- tives. This species is probably the only Cuban species whose leaves are not twice as long as broad. Unfortunately, the description of the flowers was drawn only from buds and proved of little aid. Schmidt remarked that the bracteoles were subcordate; this seems very dubious The nearest relative of this species is T. flavescens Griseb. However, the latter species has much narrower leaves with inconspicuous veining and longer pedicels (1.0—2.5 cm.). 17. er cernua Grisebach, Cat. Pl. Cuba, 35. 1866. — Sauvalle, Fl. Cub. 10 prude in Bot. Jahrb. 21: 529. 1896.— Melchior in Nat. Pflanzenfam. 2,21: i cernua Meee ) Szyszylowicz in Nat. Pflanzenfam. III. 6: 189. 1893. apart Cuba. CuBA: ov. Pinar del Rio: near Retiro and Sumdero, C. Wright 2112 (ISOTYPES, : "NY, US). This species is characterized by obovate or elliptic-oblong, coriaceous leaves, nearly three times longer than broad (5-8 2-3 cm.), with 6-8 pairs of veins visible on the under surface. The petiole exceeds that of most species in length (5-10 mm.). The short, thick, recurved pedicels (0.4-1.0 cm. long and 1.5 mm. thick) also distinguish this species. The sharply pointed triangular bracteoles and the ovate, acuminate calyx-lobes are added features which separate this species from 7. peduncularis DC. 18. Ternstroemia microcalyx Krug & geet in Bot. Jahrb, 21: 531. 1896.—O. C. Schmidt in Rep. Spec. Nov. 22: 96. — Melchior in Nat. Pflanzenfam. ed. 2, 21: 142. 1925. — Non Airy-Sha Ternstroemia elliptica Grisebach, Pl. te 166. 1860, Cat. Pl. Cuba, 35. 1866. — n Swartz. Dicahee Cuba, Haiti. Cupa: Oriente, near La Guinea, C. Wright 1577 oe G, NY), Dec. 17, 1859 (tall shrub). — Southern Oriente a Pico Turquino, Fr. Leon 10737, 11073 (NY), July 1922.— Oriente, Sierra Maestra, alt. 1200 m., J. ” Roig & Bucher 6901 (NY), July 1935. — Oriente, Sierra Maestra, Bucher (244) 5720 (NY), July 8, 1931. Harri: Massif du Nord, Anse-i-Foleur, top of Mt. Colombos, alt. 900 m., E. L. Ekman H-4342 (US), _ 20, 1925.— Massif du Nord, Port-de-Paix, summit of Haut-Piton, alt. 1205 m., E. L. Ekman H-4623 (US), Aug. 9, 1925. The leaves of this species are thin-coriaceous, obovate-elliptic or elliptic- oblong, 4.5—7.5 cm. long and 1.5—3.0 cm. wide, obtuse or obtusely acuminate at the apex, narrowing at the base into a petiole 5-8 mm. long. The leaf- margin is plane and usually entire, with occasional slight evidences of serra- tion near the apex. The midrib is narrowly and deeply sulcate the whole length of the leaf above, raised below with 3—5 pairs of obscure nerves evident on the lower surface. The pedicels are 1.0—-1.5 cm. long and the small suborbicular bracteoles are less than 1 mm. long. The calyx-lobes are minute, measuring 3 mm. or less in length, rounded at the apex, with the margin of the outer lobes entire or occasionally obscurely glandular-denticu- late. According to a subsequent observation by Urban, the petals far exceed the calyx in length, measuring 7 mm. long. 1943] KOBUSKI, STUDIES IN THE THEACEAE, XIV 71 A close relative is T. parviflora, which can easily be distinguished by the usually single-celled ovary and fruit, the longer peduncle (2.5—-3.0 cm long), and the petals exceeding the le) in length. Another closely related species is T. pubescens. The calyx-lobes, bracteoles, pedicels, lower surface of the leaves, and the young branchlets of this latter species are covered with a soft villous pubescence. Also, the petals measure only 3 mm. long, barely exceeding the calyx in length, and the bracteoles and outer calyx- lobes are sharply glandular-denticulate, with the inner lobes scarious and subfimbriate. n 1939, Airy-Shaw (Kew Bull. 506) described T. microcalyx from Sarawak, apparently overlooking Krug & Urban’s earlier species of the same name. No material of Airy-Shaw’s species is available for my study, and since, as he states, his new species is so very closely allied to T. Robin- sonii Merrill from Amboina, I merely wish to draw attention to this later homonym rather than suggest a new combination. 19. brant oy at ae Krug & Urban in Bot. Jahrb. 21: ae 1896. Weuiiee FI. d. Occ. 4: 910. — Melchior in Nat. Pflanzenfam. ed. 2, 21: 1925. Perntroemia tts Krug & Urban in Bot. Jahrb. 21: on a es Fl. Ind. Occ. 1. ce. — Melchior, ]. c. — Syn paren: Stahlii (Krug : oe Britton in ie & Wilson, Sci. Surv. Porto Rico & Virgin Isl. 5: 581 Taonabo pachyphylla fae & Urban) Britton, 1. c. DIsTRIBUTION: Porto Rico Porto Rico: WN. L. Britton & E. G. Britton 9512, 9636, 9923, 9924 (NY).—WN. L. Britton & J. F. Cowell 1556 (NY, US).— WN. L. Britton, F. L. Stevens & W. E. Hess 2445 (NY, US).—E. G. Britton & D. W. Marble 722 (FM, NY, US).— P. Sintenis 349 (G, Isotype of T. pachyphylla).— W. E. Hess 3863 (NY).—A. A. Heller 4545 (AA, FM, G).—J. A. Stevenson 2118 (NY, US).— JL. R. Holdridge 38 (NY). The leaves are obovate, thick-coriaceous, 4-7 cm. long, rounded at the apex, tapering at the base into a stout petiole, 3-5 mm. long; the midrib is quite flat on the upper surface, fading out toward the apex, raised below; the surface is distinctly granular below; the margin is flat, occasionally remotely denticulate. The pedicels are stout, 5-12 mm. long. The brac- teoles are long-triangular, 2.5—3.5 mm. long, 1.0-1.5 mm. wide at the base, glandular-denticulate. The calyx-lobes are ovate, distinctly acute, occasionally decidedly acuminate, the outer lobes being glandular-denticu- late. The sharp apex of the calyx-lobes is an excellent diagnostic character. Ternstroemia pachyphylla Krug & Urban is undoubtedly a synonym of this species. In the type specimen the petioles and pedicels are slightly shorter. However, in all other respects the two species are identical. Heller 4545, jdenuaed by Urban (1910) as 7. StaAlii, is identical with the type of T. pachyphylla. 20. oe granulata Krug & Urban in Bot. Jahrb. 21: 534. 1896. — Melchior n Nat. Pflanzenfam. ed. 2, 21: 142. 1925.— Fawcett & Rendle, Fl. Jam. 5: 182. ise. DISTRIBUTION: Jamaica. Jamaica: Purdie s.n. (probable iso-syntype, G). This species is characterized by obovate-elliptic leaves, 7-9 cm. long and 72 JOURNAL OF THE ARNOLD ARBORETUM [VOL. XXIV 3-4 cm. wide, densely granular-punctate on both surfaces, obtuse at the apex, tapering quite abruptly at the base into a petiole 8-10 mm. long, with the midrib evident the entire leaf-length on both surfaces and 12 or 13 pairs of veins, clearly evident on the lower-surface; pedicels 3.5—4.5 cm. long, the bracteoles 2, suborbicular, 4-5 mm. long, 3—4 mm. wide, glandular- denticulate, not keeled (Purdie); sepals 5, subequal, somewhat orbicular, 8-9 mm. long, 8-11 mm. wide, glandular- -denticulate (outer sepals) ; petals 5, 12-13 mm. long, 8—9 mm. wide. Purdie s.n. (G) is probably an iso-syntype of 7. granulata, as originally formulated by Krug & Urban. This specimen has densely granular- punctate leaves, from which the species derives its name. However, the description calls for bracteoles which are more or less carinate on the dorsal surface. On bracteoles of the specimen cited above there is no evidence of a keel. Later (1908), Urban determined questionably a specimen col- lected by Prior near Brownstown. This specimen lacks any vestige of granular punctation on the leaves, and here also there is no evidence of a keel on the bracteoles. Fawcett & Rendle included both these entities under 7. granulata in their treatment of the Ternstroemiaceae for the Flora of Jamaica. Besides the leaves, the larger flowers (both calyx and corolla) and the larger number (12 or 13 pairs) of clearly visible veins should clearly distinguish this species from 7. Hartii, its nearest relative. 21. oe Hartii Krug & —— in Bot. Jahrb, 21: 532. 1896. — Melchior in . Pflanzenfam. ed. 2, 21: 1925.— Fawcett & Rendle, Fl. Jam. 5: 182. ee DISTRIBUTION: Jamaica. Jamaica: St. Georges, alt. 650 m., W. Harris 5767 (1so-syNTYPE, FM, NY), June 14, 1895 (tree 8 m.).—Troy, alt. 600 m., W. Harris 8786 (NY), Aug. 1904 (tree 1908 (small tree 6 m. with white fragrant flowers).— Ipswich, St. Elizabeth, alt. Om., W. Harris 12369 (FM, Mo, NY, US), June 13, 1916 (tree 8 m.).— Summit of John Crow Peak, vicinity of Cinchona, NV. L. Britton 266 (FM, NY, US), Sept. 1906 Sige 8 m. with white flowers).— Grove Place, near Mile Gully, alt. 500 m., W. Harris . L. Britton 10621 (FM, NY, US), Sept. 23, 1908 (tree 8 m.).—J. Hart 529 — — Near Brownstown, Prior s.n. (NY). This species is characterized by obovate or obovate-elliptic leaves, 6-11 cm. long, 3.0-5.5 cm. wide, opaque, obtuse or rounded at the apex, contracted abruptly or gradually at the base into a petiole 6-12 mm. long, with the surface free from granular punctations, the margin plane or slightly revolute and entire, and the veins obscure on both surfaces and, when visible, few in number; pedicels varying in length, 1.5—5.0 cm. long, usually somewhat carinate, the bracteoles 2, 3-5 mm. long, 2.5—3.5 mm. wide, ovate, the margin usually free from glandular denticulations; sepals 5, subequal, suborbicular, 6.0-7.5 mm. long and about as wide, the mar- gins of the outer sepals sparsely glandular-denticulate, usually entire, scarious; petals barely exceeding the hag in length ( Several of these numbers (Prior s.n., W. Harris 8786, 8987 ane 12369, and Harris & Britton 10621) have sn cited by Fawcett & Rendle (FI. 1943 | KOBUSKI, STUDIES IN THE THEACEAE, XIV 73 Jam.) under T. granulata. Prior s.n. was determined questionably by Urban (1908) as 7. granulata. Ternstroemia granulata can be separated from the present species by the dense granular punctations covering both leaf-surfaces, the highly revolute leaf-margin, and the copious (12 or 13 pairs) and clearly visible veins. The flowers are larger, especially as regards the corolla (12-13 mm.). 22. Ternstroemia peduncularis A. de Candolle in Mém. Soc. Phys. Hist. Nat. 9 Ternstroemia meridionalis Swartz Prodi: 81. 1788. — Non Mut sient Lai obovalis A. Richard in Sagra, Hist. Phys. Pol. Nat. Cuba, 221, t. 25. —Walpers, Rep. 5: 130. 1845.— Grisebach, Cat. Pl. Cuba, 36. 1866.— oe Fl. Cub. 10. 1873.— Krug & Urban in Bot. Jahrb. 21: 524. 1896. — bags n, FI. Ind. se bai 436. 1920.— Melchior in Nat. Pflanzenfam. ed. 2, 21: 142. 1925. — Syn. Fe Faust» var. excelsa Grisebach, Cat. Pl. Cuba, 36. 18 Ternstroemia obovalis var. ovulosa Wright in Grisebach, Cat. Pl. oy 36. 1866. Mokofua obovalis (A. Rich.) O. Kuntze, Rev. ie Pl. 1: 63. 1891. Mokofua peduncularis (DC.) O. Kuntze, loc sdnaiciey ae il DC. var. aes Krug & Urban in Bot. Jahrb. 21: 526. 1896. — Syn. no Ternstroemia obovalis var. a. genuina Krug & Urban, loc. cit. 21: 524. 1896. — yn. nov. Ternstroemia obovalis var. 8. Lindenii Krug & Urban, loc. cit. 21: 524. 1896. — Syn. nov. Ternstroemia obovalis var. Y. minor Krug & Urban, loc. cit. 21: 525. 1896.— Syn, nov Taonabo Leonis Britton & Wilson in Bull. Torrey ve ve 50: 42. 1923. Taonabo monticola Britton & Wilson, loc. cit. 50: Ternstroemia apleura Krug & Urban in Bot. Ja sue — 523, 1896. — Melchior in Nat. Pflanzenfam. ed. 2, 21: 142. 1925.— Syn Ternstroemia potrerillensis O. C. Schmidt in e are Nov. 22: 94. 1925.— yn. nov. Ternstroemia monticola (Britton & Wilson) Ekman ex Schmidt in Rep. Spec. Nov. 2:95. 1925.—Syn. nov Ternstroemia Ekmani Schinidt in Rep. Spec. Nov. 22: — Syn.n Ternstroemia Leonis (Britton & Wilson) Ekman ex aca in Rep. tet Nee: 22: ; — . nov. Ternstroemia rupicola Ekman ex Schmidt in Rep. Spec. Nov. 22:97, 1925.— nov DistripuTion: Cuba, Haiti, Santo Domingo, Porto Rico, St. Jan, St. Eustatius, aaa? Martinique CuBA: Prov sc csanta: ‘Cla Bro. Leon 782 (NY), 4642 (NY).— Bros. Leon o Gate 5291 (NY). mas ae M. Roco 8006, 8040, 8129 (NY). — Bros. Leon & Clement 6700 (NY).— Bro. Leon & - Acuna 13040 (NY).—E. L. Ekman 14016 (1soTyPE of T. ere NY).—J. T. Roig & M. Cremata 2194, 2220 (US).— A. Luna 552 (NY).—N. L. sie & J. F. Cowell 10263 (NY).— Smith & A. R. Hodgdon 3205 (G). Prov. 4 nie Pig E. L. Ekman 16388 (1sotyPE of T. Ekmani, NY).—N. L. Bri F. S. e & C. S. Gager 6909 (NY). rov. Oriente: Bro. Leon 10837 oe. Pee bee of T. monticola, 74 JOURNAL OF THE ARNOLD ARBORETUM [VOL, XXIV NY), 10910 (1sotyPE of T. Leonis, NY), 11076 (NY), eer (NY).—C. Wright 1125 (isotypes of T. obovalis var. minor, FM, G, Mo, NY), 21/11 (1sorypes of T. apleura, G, Mo, NY), 2114 (G, Mo, US). —J. T. Roig & G. C. Bucher 6689 (NY).—G. C. Bucher 88 (NY). Prov. Camaguey: WN. L. Britton & J. F. Cowell 13277 ,G, NY, US). Isle of Pines: A. H. Curtiss 429 (FM, G, Mo, NY, US). — hee pe 5133 (NY).—N. L. Britton & P. Wilson 15658 (FM, G, NY, US). Hartt: E. C. Leonard 7146 (NY, on 8849 (G, NY, US).—£. C. & G. M. Leonard 13379 (NY, US), 15825 (G, US). .L. Ekman H-1903 (US), H-8330 (US).—G.V. Nash 816 (NY).—G.V. Nash & } Po Taylor 1311 (FM, NY, US).—O. F. Cook, C. S. Sco- field & C. B. Doyle 92 (US).—G. 8S. Miller 304 (US). Santo Dominco: E. L. Ekman H-13043 (US).—M. adhe 1003 (NY), 1294 (FM, G, Mo).— Eggers 2411 (US), 2519 (NY, US).—W. L. Abbott 2226 (US).—H. von Tiirckheim 3401 (FM, G, Mo, NY, US).—E. J. SA 114 (US), 667 (FM, Mo, NY, US).—C. Wright, C. C. Parry & H, Brummel 171 (US). Porto Rico: P. Binsands 948 (FM, G, Mo, NY, US).— N.L. Britton & J. A. Shafer 1565 (FM, Mo, NY, US).—H. A. Gleason & M.T. Cook R-59 (NY). St. Jan: WN. L. Britton & vie 4. Shafer 532 (FM, NY, US). St. Eustatius: J. Boldingh 323 (NY). GuapELoUPE: Pére Duss 3651 (FM, NY, US). MARTINIQUE: Pére Duss 1825 (FM, Mo, NY, US) After long consideration, I find it expedient to combine under the name T. peduncularis DC. several formerly recognized species. The best known of these is JT. obovalis Rich. Urban (Bot. Jahrb. 21: 524-526. 1896) separates these two species on the granular-punctate surface of the leaves, the degree of prominence of the lateral veins, the plane or recurved margin of the leaves, the shape of the bracteoles, and the number of ovules in the ovary. None of these characters or any others listed by Urban consistently apply to either of the above mentioned entities. In the Haitian material, often on the same flower, bracteoles may be found, one of which is large and triangular-ovate, 4 mm. or more wide (far surpassing the pedicel in width), while the other is linear-acuminate, scarcely 1 mm. wide. In other specimens the larger bracteole may be subrotund. In the Santo Domingan material nearly all specimens have flowers with bracteoles equal or sub- equal, triangular, ca. 1.5 % 1.5 mm., while in the Cuban material the bracteoles vary from linear-lanceolate to subrotund. The pedicel may vary from 2 to 8 cm. in length. Specimens with pedi- cels 8 cm. long certainly appear vastly different from specimens whose pedicels measure only 2-3 cm. Yet the gradation through a large series of specimens shows this character insufficient for specific delimitation. Variation in veining, coupled with deciduous bracteoles, has been used as the basis of specific differentiation in 7. apleura. Deciduous bracteoles would seem to be an excellent specific character. Still, on the isotype of T. apleura (C. Wright 2111) in the Missouri Botanical Garden all the bracteoles are present and there is also evidence of venation. In T peduncularis itself, veining is often obscure, even to the extent found by Urban in T. apleura. On the other hand, some specimens have veins so glandular denticulation on the bracteoles and outer calyx-lobes can be found on a single specimen. Often the age of a specimen may cause this 1943]. KOBUSKI, STUDIES IN THE THEACEAE, XIV 75 variation. On fruiting calyx-lobes, the glandular denticulations of the slightly scarious margin are often worn off and the margins appear revolute or fimbriate. The species T. apleura Krug & Urban, T. Ekmani O. C. Schmidt, T. Leonis (Britton & Wilson) Ekman, 7. monticola (Britton & Wilson) Ekman, T. potrerillensis O. C. Schmidt, and T. rupicola O. C. Schmidt are separated on characters scarcely sufficient for specific delimitation. All these entities have obovate or obovate-elliptic leaves, rounded, obtuse, or obtusely acuminate at the apex, and tapering at the base into a petiole which averages 4-5 mm. long. The leaves of all are coriaceous or occasion- ally chartaceous-coriaceous, varying in thickness. The margin is usually entire, with occasional signs of serration, and flat or somewhat revolute. The pedicels in all the above listed entities (2-3 cm. long) vary little. The bracteoles (2-3 mm. long) likewise seldom vary more than a single millimeter either way. They are all triangular or deltoid and occasionally may be considered semi-ovate (7. rupicola). The calyx-lobes are always subequal and range from 4 to 7 mm. long. The outer calyx-lobes are always glandular-denticulate and the inner lobes eglandular. Tern- stroemia apleura, T. Leonis, T. monticola, and T. rupicola were proposed without any description of corolla and stamens. In most cases, the corolla is approximately 6-8 mm. long. Urban (Bot. Jahrb. 21: 521-551. 1896) based his key, to a considerable degree, on the coalescence of the petals at the base. The petals measure 6—8 mm. in length, and differentiation by means of the varying amount of coalescence of petals (as follows: 1/6, 1/4, 1/3, 2/5 or 1/2), is drawing too fine a line, considering the amount of known variation in the group and also the fact that in the majority of specimens the petals are lacking. The ovary and fruit characters show similar lines of variation. DUBIOUS OR LITTLE KNOWN SPECIES Ternstroemia buxifolia Ekman & Schmidt in Rep. Spec. Nov. 29: 13. 1931. DistripuTion: Santo Domingo. No specimens studied. According to the authors, this species is characterized by small coria- ceous leaves (1.8-3.0 * 0.9-1.6 cm.), elliptic to obovate, rounded and lightly emarginate at the apex, narrowed at the base into a petiole 3-5 mm. long, with the margin recurved and the veins inconspicuous. The pedicel is short, 4-6 mm. long, and the bracteoles are semi-elliptic, + 2 mm. long, membranaceous, fimbriate-serrulate. The sepals are unequal, the margin membranaceous-fimbriate, + 5 mm. long and 4 mm. wide. The petals are obovate or subobovate-cordate, 5-6 mm. long, and up to 5.5 mm. wide, with the margin membranaceous and fimbriate. The stamens number about 25. The ovary is semi-ovate or subconical, ca. 1.5 mm. long, uni- locular, 6-ovulate, attenuated at the apex into a style about 3.2 mm. long. The authors of this species suggest a close relationship with the Cuban T. parviflora Krug & Urban, because of the single-celled ovary. 76 JOURNAL OF THE ARNOLD ARBORETUM [VOL. XXIV EXCLUDED SPECIES — albo-punctata Grisebach, Cat. Pl. Cuba, 36. 1866 oo albo- punctata (Grisebach) Krug & Urban in Bot. Jahrb. 21: 537. Ternstroemia dentata Sprengel ex DeCandolle in Mém. Soc. Phys. Hist. Nat. Geneve, 1: 411 — Ternstr. 19). 1822 = Freziera undulata paces Swartz, FI. 1800. Ind. Occ. 2: Ternstroemia nll DeCandolle in Mém. Soc. Phys Nat. Genéve, 1: 411 i. 19). 1822 = Freziera adulats ees Swartz, Fl. Ind. Occ. 2: 974, Ternstroemia crenata Macfadyen, Fl. Jam. 1: 114. 1837 = Symplocos octopetala Swartz, Prodr. Veg. Ind. Occ. 110. 1788 ARNOLD ARBORETUM, HARVARD UNIVERSITY. 1943 ] CHASE, PAPUAN GRASSES, III 77 PAPUAN GRASSES COLLECTED BY L. J. BRASS, III* AGNES CHASE With four text-figures THE grasses here enumerated were collected in 1938-39, in Papua and in Netherlands New Guinea. Part I of Papuan Grasses collected by Mr. Brass, by A. S. Hitchcock, was published in Brittonia 2: 107-130. 1936, Part II, by Agnes Chase, in the Journal of the Arnold Arboretum 20: 304-316. 1939. The types of the species here described are deposited in the Gray Herbarium, with isotypes in the United States National Herbarium. Species previously collected by Mr. Brass in Papua are not included in the present paper, except when collected in Netherlands New Guinea. A few collections by J. and M.S. Clemens or by Mrs. Clemens are included when they represent species not before collected in New Guinea. Oreiostachys producta Pilger, Bot. Jahrb. Engler 62: 460. 1929. NETHERLANDS NEW GuINEA: Bele River, 18 kilometers northeast of Lake Habbema, alt. 2300 m., Brass 11072; abundant in oe margins, downfall openings, etc., scram- bling and tangled; flowering specimen. Eighteen kilometers southwest of Bernhard Camp, Idenburg River, alt. 2150 m., Brass 12662; scrambling to 5-6 m. in mossy forest, frequent at 1800 m., and on the highest point of the ridge at 2200 m., forming a high dense undergrowth, practically excluding the usual undergrowth and substage trees; sterile specim These ileceons agree well throughout with Pilger’s description. The palea is 2-keeled and sulcate toward the summit, the rachilla segment is prolonged and bears a rudimentary floret, the rachilla and rudiment reach- ing the apex of the palea. Henrard (Blumea 2: 71. 1936), in reestablish- ing the genus Chloothamnus Buse, reducing Oreiostachys Gamble to it as a synonym, states that because of the prolonged rachilla segment and rudi- mentary floret he hesitated to place O. producta in the genus Chloothamnus. Endemic Chloothamnus sp. NETHERLANDS New Guinea: Six kilometers southwest of Bernhard Camp, Idenburg River, alt. 1450 m., Brass 13020; ‘“‘upper limits of rain-forests; occasional open clumps of few stout stems up to + 4 cm. diam. at base, 7-8 m. long, upper part weak, resting on ee trees; internodes up to + 45 cm. long; leaves glaucous below; spikelets glauc T he specimen, which consists of an internode and two nodes of a stout culm and four flowering twigs, agrees with the generic description of Chioothamnus but differs from any known species in the open panicles, the stiff branches having pronounced pulvini at their base. An over mature specimen collected in “Lower regions of British New Guinea” in 1894 by MacGregor, no. 49, is apparently the same species. *Botanical Results of the third Archbold Expedition. 78 JOURNAL OF THE ARNOLD ARBORETUM [VOL. XXIV Dendrocalamus latifolius a & K. Schum. in K. Schum, & Lauterb, Fl. Deutsch. Schutzgeb. Siidsee 188. 1901. NETHERLANDS NEW any Hollandia and vicinity, alt. 10 m., Brass 8894; shrub about 1 m. tall, plentiful on dry gravel beds in river. The specimen consists of a single branch of inflorescence which agrees with Brass 7908, 8518 and 8660 from Papua, excellent specimens of D. latifolius, but the detached leafy shoot of Brass 8894 has blades only 15—20 mm. wide. Endemic. Dendrocalamus sp. NETHERLANDS New GuINEA: Four to six kilometers southwest of Bernhard Camp, Idenburg River, alt. 850-1200 m., Brass 12825, 13070, 13327; rain-forest, in flood plain and characteristic in rather open rain-forest, scrambling 2-20 m Schizostachyum lima (Blanco) Merr. pena ata Bot. 3: 62. 1916. Bambusa lima Blanco, FI. Filip. ed. 1. 271. Papua: Middle Fly River, Lake blerat — (listed as Schizostachyum sp. by Chase, Jour. Arnold Arb. 20: 305. 1939). Philippin ?Schizostachyum sp. NETHERLANDS New GuINEA: Four kilometers southwest to Bernhard Camp, Iden- burg River, alt. 900 m., Brass 13743; — o 4-6 m. in mossy forest; clumps of several stems about 2 cm. diameter at bas Sterile specimen, the culm thin-walled and roughish as in Schizostachyum, the overlapping slightly carinate sheaths with conspicuous slender spreading fragile fimbriae from the shoulder, the fimbriae arising from thick tubercu- late bases, and with a row of stiff hairs back of the very short ligule; blades somewhat plicate. Bromus scopulorum sp. nov. Perennis; culmi 50-125 cm. alti, tenues; vaginae sparse retrorse-pilosae ; ligula minuta: laminae planae, 15-20 cm. longae, 2-4 mm. latae; panicula subsimplex, 12-18 cm. onga, angusta, laxa, ramis tenuibus ‘previbus: spiculae 2-3 cm.. longae, 5—7-florae; glumae 7-9.5 mm. longae, 1—3- vel 5-nervia, ad marginem sparse pilosae; lemmata 10-13 mm. longa, 5-nervia, ad marginem dense hirsuta, arista 5-7 mm. longa. Perennial, loosely tufted with lax-leaved innovations, purplish at base; culms ascending, 50-125 cm. tall, slender, glabrous; sheaths shorter than the internodes, thin, the lower sparsely to rather densely’ retrorsely pilose, becoming shredded, the upper loosely pilose; ligule minute; blades flat, thin, lax, 15-20 cm. long, 2-4 mm. wide, delicately pilose toward the base, acuminate; ts purplish brown, nearly simple, 12—18 cm. long, narrow, lax, nodding, the short slender branches scaberulous; spikelets 2—3 c long, loosely 5—7-flowered, the slender rachilla segments 2.5—3 mm. lon pubescent; glumes 7 and 9. 5m mm. long, narrow, acuminate, the first 1- aan (short lateral nerves developed in some), sparsely pilose along the margin near the base, the second 3—5-nerved, pilose along the margin nearly to the summit; lemmas 10-13 mm. long, excluding the awn, 7-nerved, hirsute on the margin to the summit and at the very base, the back otherwise glabrous, the nerves scabrous toward the summit, the awn erect, slender, scaberulous, 5—7 mm. lon s & Myer-Drees 9825, collected in September 1938, on dry ledges of a limestone cliff, 7 kilometers northeast of top of Mt. Wilhelmina, alt. 3560 m. Nether- lands New Guinea 1943 | CHASE, PAPUAN GRASSES, III 79 Bromus sp. NETHERLANDS NEW GUINEA: Lake Habbema, alt. 3225 m., Brass 9127; common in forest glades and other sheltered places. Tall slender perennial with nodding panicle. Brachypodium pubifolium Hitchc. Brittonia 2: 108. 1936. NETHERLANDS NEw GuINEA: Lake Habbema, 3225 m. camp, Brass 9310; forest poe Bele River, 18 kilometers, sigs of Lake Habbema, 2200 m. camp, Brass 1426; on wet marshy aie in river. . Wilhelmina, 7-11 kilometers northeast of tn, alt. 3400-3560 m., Brass & Myer- eas 9714, 9827; rather wet grassy valley and dry ledge under Bee iane cliff. Endemic. Festuca nubigena Jungh. Nat. Geneesk. Arch. Neerl. Ind. 2: 51. 1845. NETHERLANDS NEW GUINEA: Lake Habbema, alt. 3225 m., Brass 9325, 9547; ee banks of streamlet and scattered over wet peaty flat; a slender tufts 40-80 cm. high. Mt. Wilhelmina, 11 kilometers northeast of top, alt. 3 8 = aR ao nn be s ay S x sd ® an 6 ai #® N alpine rane covering marshy hollows, 70-90 cm. high. Same, northern slopes, alt. 050 m., Brass & Myer-Drees 10066; wet shallow soil of old screes, 30 cm. high, Java, New Gusts, Festuca nubila Jungh. ex Steud. Syn. Pl. Glum. 1: 315. 1854. NETHERLANDS NEw GUINEA: Lake Habbema, 3225 m. camp, Brass 9128; common in moist forest glades. Mt. Wilhelmina, 4-11 kilometers northeast of top, alt. 3400- 3560 m., Brass & Myer-Drees 9715, 9824, 9845; wet grassy valley and forest glades, tufts up to 1 m. high, ari rena purple. Same, northern slopes, alt. 4050 m., Brass & wrk Drees 10061, 10071; very common on upper slopes, about 80 cm. high. Same, alt. 4050 m., Brass & Myer- Drees 10070; common in grass cover of old screes, panicle greenish purple. Java, New Guinea. This species is closely related to F. nubigena, but has taller culms, much longer leaves, — lax panicles and larger spikelets with hispidulous glumes and lemm Monostachya oreoboloides (F. Muell.) Hitchc. pone 2: 107. 1936. Festuca oreoboloides F. Muell. Trans. Roy. Soc. Vict. 1(2): 38. 1889. NETHERLANDS NEw GuINEA: Lake Habbema, ere m. camp, Brass 9184. Mt. Wilhelmina, 7-11 kilometers northeast of summit, alt. 3400-3900 m., Brass & Myer- Drees 9818, 9941; large bright green cushions among taller grasses of open summit. Same, sae slope, alt. 4100 m., Brass & Myer-Drees 10159. Philippines (Luzon), New Guin Poa eis Pilger, Bot. Jahrb. Engler 62: 459. 1929. NETHERLANDS New GuINEA: Mt. oe 7 kilometers northeast of top, alt. 3560 m., Brass & Myer-Drees 9844, End Poa egregia sp. nov. eel Perennis; culmi 18— a cm. alti; vaginae peer ligula 6-8 mm longa; laminae 10-16 cm. longae, involutae vel planae, 2-3 mm. latae, subpungentes; panicula laxa, nutans, 9-12 cm. longa, axi ramisque sub- capillaribus; pedicellis 2—3 mm. longis; spiculae 6-7 mm. longae, 2-florae ro- natae; lemmata 5.5-6.5 mm longa, lata, scaberrima, apice dentata vel minute lobata, mucronata, basi sparse lanata; palea lemmate brevior, carinis excurrentibus Tufted perennial; “culms 18-40 cm. tall, scabrous below the panicle, 80 JOURNAL OF THE ARNOLD ARBORETUM [VOL. XXIV leafy at the base; sheaths overlapping, strongly nerved, keeled, smooth, those toward the base crowded, thin, papery, loose, pale, final ly somewhat base of the panicle; shredded, the upper eee reaching nearly to the ligule 6— 8 mm, long, hyaline, lacerate, often split; blades 10-16 cm. long, the lower sometimes loosely involute, the others mostly flat, 2-3 mm. wide, scaberulous on the upper surface, smooth beneath, the apex acuminately boat-shaped, tipped with a fine stiff point; panicles lax drooping, 9 to 12 cm. long, the axis and branches subcapillary, flexuous, scabrous, the branches mostly in pairs, the pairs rather distant, the ultimate branchlets and pedicels angled, scabrous, 2-3 mm. long, the spikelets a ee ae spike- lets 6-7 mm. long, 2- flowered (rarely 3-flowered), broadly ovate to V-shaped; glumes equal, 5.5—6 mm. long, very scabrous, pie apex dentate SSS —— >< — _~ by y Re on é aya y ' ¥, y , if Oh a a te ae ‘y COP Mg te J 34 ty i a Py, £4 “LF as Sse as a > = Fic. 1. Poa egregia; spikelet, palea, and floret, x 10; from Brass & Myer-Drees 10206 or minutely lobed, bees ane excurrent as a short mucro; rachilla seg- ; lemmas 5.5-6.5 m m. long, broad, very scabrous, ments slender, smoo strongly nerved, the sa ed. lobed or aide the midnerve excurrent as a mucro, the base with sparse white cottony hairs 1-2 mm. long; palea shorter than the lemma, the scabrous keels SS as short mucros, the internerve toothed at apex, scaberulous on the Tyre: Brass & Myer-Drees 10206, collected in ea 1938, in “alpine grass- land; gregarious under shelter of rocks, 4150 m. alt., northern slope of Mt. Wilhelmina,” Netherlands New Guinea. There are two other collections of this species from the same ee Brass & Myer-Drees 10040, 10068, altitudes 4050 m. and 4100 m oe ee plentiful in wet grassy spots and under rocks on tussock- ane In no. 10068 a piece of the buried culm with old shredded sheaths . Nearly slopes. is attached at base, giving the appearance of a rhizomatous plant 1943] CHASE, PAPUAN GRASSES, III 81 mature caryopses were found with anthers about 1 mm. long, crushed with the stigmas at the summit, indicating closed fertilization. Poa lunata sp. nov. Fic. 2. ae eres culmi 25-35 cm. alti, erecti; vaginae imbricatae; ligula 2—4 onga; laminae 8—15 cm. longae, conduplicatae vel involutae: panicula deuecls: erecta, 6-8 cm. longa, circa 1-1.5 cm. lata, axi ramisque scabris, pedicellis 3 mm. longis; spiculae 5 mm. longae, circa 1.6 mm. latae, 2-florae; glumae 3.5 et 4.3 mm. longae, sublunatae, carina ad apicem scaberula; lemmata 3.5—-4 mm. longa, sublunata, acuta, glabra; palea lemma aequans, hyalina. Fic. 2 (left). Poa lunata; spikelet, palea, and floret, x 10; from Brass & Myer-Drees 10067. Fic. 3 (right). Poa multinodis; spikelet, palea, and floret, x 10; from Brass 9584. Tufted perennial; culms 25-35 cm. tall, erect, scaberulous below the s mm. long, hyaline, acute; blades ascending, 8-15 cm. long (uppermost shorter), folded or loosely involute, slender, smooth, the pis acuminately boat- shaped: panicle erect, narrow, rather densely flowered, the axis, wide, elliptic in outline, 2-flowered; glumes 3.5 and 4.3 mm. long, ‘almost lunate, the keel scaberulous toward the apex; rachilla segments slender, smooth; lemmas 3.5—4 mm. long, somewhat lunate, especially at maturity, acute, scaberulous on the keel toward the apex, otherwise glabrous; palea as long as the lemma, hyaline, the keels scabrous, terminal rachilla segment nearly as long as the palea. Tyre: Brass & Myer-Drees 10067, collected in September 1938; ‘common i small clumps under of old screes, 3950 m. alt., northern slopes of Mt. Wilhelmina,” Netherlands New Guin Poa multinodis sp. nov. Bice 3: Perennis, e rhizomatibus tenuibus; culmi graciles, basi decumbentes, ) multinodes, vaginae inferiores imbricatae; ligula 1 mm. longa, decurrens; 82 JOURNAL OF THE ARNOLD ARBORETUM [VOL. XXIV laminae planae vel conduplicatae, 2.5-8 cm. longae, 1-1.6 mm. latae; panicula erecta, 6—7 cm. longa, patens, ramis 5-25 mm. longis, pedicellis 0.5-1 mm. longis: spiculae 3 mm. longae, circa 1.3 mm. latae, 2-florae; glumae 3 et 3.7 mm. longae; lemmata 2.1—2.4 mm. longa, latiuscula, firma, acuta; palea lemma aequans, membranacea. Perennial with slender rhizomes; culms slender, decumbent at base, the lower part with numerous nodes 5-15 mm. apart, the upper 3 nodes dis- tant, scaberulous below the panicle; lower sheaths overlapping, si smooth, the upper about as long as the internodes or shorter; ligule 1 ong, hyaline, decurrent; blades lax, flat or folded, 2.5-9 cm. long, 1- nL U7 m. wide, minutely scaberulous toward the apex; panicle erect, 6—8 cm. ane open, the axis aa branches filiform, scabrous, the branches 5-25 mm. long, finally stiffly spreading or reflexed, the pedicels 0.5-1 mm. long spreading; spikelets 3 mm. long, about 1.3 mm. wide, leaden-purplish at maturity, 2-flowered; glumes 3 and 3.7 mm. long, the keels convex, scaberulous toward the apex; rachilla segments slender, smooth; lemmas m. long, rather broad, firm, acute, scaberulous on the keels toward the apex, otherwise glabrous, the intermediate nerves often obscure; palea as long as the lemma, thin-membranaceous, the internerve sulcate toward the summit, the keels scaberulous. Type: Brass 9584, collected in eng 1938, “in wet forest glade, Lake Habbema, 3225 m. camp,” Netherlands New Gui Poa erectifolia Hitchc. Brittonia oe 111. 1936. NETHERLANDS NEw Guinea: Mt. Wilhelmina, 7 kilometers northeast of top, alt. 3720 m., Brass & Myer-Drees 9945, often the dominant grass on n rather wet open sum- mits, siact in very stiff small clumps, 30-40 cm. high. emic. This specimen differs from Brass 4326 (the type) and Brass 4420 in having glabrous, coarser, longer blades (8-15 cm. long) and a panicle with longer branches. The decurrent ligule and the spikelets agree with those of the earlier collections. Poa crassicaulis Pilger, Bot. Jahrb. Engler 62: 458, 1929. NETHERLANDS NEW GUINEA: Northern slopes of Mt. Wilhelmina, alt. 3900 m Brass & Mvyer-Drees 10079; gregarious on edges of earth screes. Lake Habbema, 3225 m. camp, Brass 9338; alpine grassland, several plants on sandy bed of stream. Endemic. Brass & Mvyer-Drees 10079 consists of dwarf plants like the type, Keysser 4 from Sarawaket Mountains, Northeastern New Guinea, and Brass 4469, previously reported from Papua. Brass 9338, from a lower altitude, is a well developed plant, the lower sheaths closely imbricate as in the dwarf plants but the blades 5—7 cm. long. The culms are com- pressed, 12 and 14 cm. long, and the panicles are narrow, rather dense, and 8 cm. long. Poa pilata sp. nov Perennis, narcosis, 3-4 cm. alta; folia numerosissima; vaginae im- bricatae; ligula nulla; laminae squarrosae, conduplicatae, 10-20 mm. eure (plicatae) 0.5- 0. 8 mm. latae; panicula parva; een —4, eee 3.5 mm. longae, circa 1.2 mm. latae, 2—3-florae; glumae 1.6 et eae latae, 3-nerviae, acutae; lemmata acuta, 2—2.3 mm. longa, nervis intermediis inconspicuis; palea ‘lemmaque aequalia: segmentum superius rachillae productum. 1943 ] CHASE, PAPUAN GRASSES, III 83 Perennial in dense tufts, branching at base, glabrous as a whole; culms 3-4 cm. high above the surface of the bog, with old buried culms 1—4 cm long extending downward from the base; leaves very numerous, about 18—20 to a centimeter; sheaths closely imbricate, thin below and adhering to the culm; ligule obsolete; blades firm, squarrose, conduplicate, 10-20 mm. long, 0.5—0.8 mm. wide as folded, the midnerve thick, the apex acute, boat- shaped; panicle not more than 10 mm. long, of 1 to 4 erect spikelets, the rather stiff peduncle exserted 3-10 mm., the peduncle, axis, and pedicels compressed, scabrous; spikelets 3.5 mm. long, about 1.2 mm. wide, 2—3-flowered, glabrous, the rachilla segments rather thick; glumes 1.6 and 2 mm. long, firm, broad, 3-nerved, acute, the second somewhat boat-shaped at apex; lemmas acute, the intermediate nerves obscure, the lower lemma 2.3 mm. long, the upper about 2 mm.; palea about as long as the lemma; upper rachilla segment prolonged back of the palea Type: Brass & Myer-Drees 10153, collected in September 1938, in “alpine grass- land, abundant on boggy ground, alt. 4100 m., northern slopes of Mt. Wilhelmina,” Netherlands New Guinea. Also collected at Lake Habbema, 3225 m. camp, Brass 9554, 9580, very abundant and one of the characteristic plants of open alpine peat bogs. In these two collections the spikelets are defective, either partly eaten away or affected by fungus. Brass 9942, ‘tufted on barren seepage-wet slopes of sandstone, alt. 3850 m., 7 kilometers northeast of the Wilhelmina top,” consisting of tufts 1.5-3 cm. high, the lemmas all fallen, and Brass & Myer-Drees 10205, ‘forming loose clumps under rocks on alpine grassland, common but mostly sterile, alt. 4150 m., northern slope of Mt. Wilhelmina,” with long under-surface culms clothed with remnants of sheaths, and with blades 2-4 cm. long, are doubtfully referred here. This species is apparently related to Poa crassicaulis Pilger, but is much more delicate, the blades much finer, acute, the ligule obsolete. Poa spp. NETHERLANDS NEw Guinea: Mt. Wilhelmina, northeast of top, alt. 3720 m., Brass & Myer-Drees 9929, scattered on bare peaty ground on edges of dying forest; alt. 3850 m., Brass & Myer-Drees 10347, on limestone near waterfall. Both are tufted perennials, with small open panicles with 2-flowered purple spikelets; the lemmas of no. 9929 are glabrous, those of no. 10347 with very scanty cottony hairs at base. Deschampsia Klossii Ridley, Kew Bull. 1913: 268. 1913. NETHERLANDS New Gutnea: Lake Habbema, 3225 m. camp, Brass 9048, 9312; Habbema, 2800 m. camp, ida 10555, open beds of streams and on landslips. Mt. Trisetum flavescens (L.) Beauv. var. papillosum Hack. Bull. Herb. Boiss. 7: 702. 1899 NETHERLANDS NEw GuINEA: Lake Habbema, 3225 m. camp, Brass 9118; a few erect tufts in an old native camp. Japan. Differs from the species in the strongly papillose-scabrous lemmas. Agrostis Reinwardtii Van Hall; Miquel, Fl. Ind. Bat. 3: 750. 1855. NETHERLANDS NEw GuInEA: Lake Habbema, alt. 3225 m., Brass 9050, 9576; com- 84 JOURNAL OF THE ARNOLD ARBORETUM [VOL. XXIV mon tussock grass in alpine grassland. Mt. Wilhelmina, alt. 3400-4080 m., Brass & Myer-Drees 9674, 9717, 9864, 9928, 10064, 10069, wet valleys and forest glades on north and northeast slopes of mountain. Jav — avenacea Gmel. Syst. Nat. 2: 171 Avena nig G. Forst. Fl. bee pene ie 9. 1786. Not Agrostis filiformis Vill. Hist. Pl. Dauph. 2: 78. Agrostis sera Willd. ets ff 1: 94. 1809. NETHERLANDS New Guinea: Mt. Wilhelmina, 2—7 kilometers pr ronpaiar of top, alt. 3650-3700 m., Brass & Myer-Drees 9821, 9969, 10116; along n path and under native rock shelters. Nine kilometers northeast of Lake ht daa ere 2800 m., Brass 10726; native clearing. Australia, Polynesia; introduced in America Aulacolepis epileuca (Stapf) Hitchc. Brittonia 2: 117. 1936. Deyeuxia epileuca Stapf, Trans. Linn. Soc. Bot. II. 4: 7 1894, Poa epileuca Stapf, Hook. Ic. Pl. 27: pl. 2607, in she, 1899. NETHERLANDS New GuvutInEA: Lake Habbema, alt. 3225 m., Brass 9125, 9581; grassland and forest glades. Mt. Wilhelmina, alt. 3400-3900 m., Brass & Myer-Drees 9816, 10074; alpine grassland, 11 kilometers northeast of top. Borneo, New Guinea. Garnotia Mezii Janowski in Mez, Repert. Sp. Nov. Fedde 17: 86. 1921; 18: 27. 1922. NETHERLANDS New Guinea: Four kilometers southwest of Bernhard Camp, iden burg River, alt. 850 m., Brass 13216; rain-forest, common on banks of river. PAPuA Central Division: Diene, Ononge Road, alt. 50 pay Brass 3818 (listed as G. siete Brongn. by Hitchcock, Brittonia 2: 118. 1936). Endem Dichelachne novoguineensis (Pilger) Pilger, Bot. Jat Engler zai 1938. biel novoguineensis Pilger, Bot. Jahrb. Engler 62: 457. Pa ral Division: Mt. Albert Edward, alt. 3680 m., tae gr Bg ae listed by eee Brittonia 2: 117. 1936 as D. sciurea (R. Br.) LANDS New Gutnea: Nine kilometers northeast of Lake Habbema, a se Brass 10742; native clearing in forest. Mt. Wilhelmina, alt. 3400 m., eee & Myer. Drees 9802; sandy banks of stream 11 kilometers northeast of top. Endem Aristida Cumingiana Trin. & Rupr. Mém. Acad. St. Pétersb. VI. Sci. Nat. 5!: 141 1842. NETHERLANDS New Guinea: Balim River, alt. 1600 m., Brass 11741; common along paths on sandy long-deforested slopes. Southweateen Asia, Philippines, New inea. Cynodon Barberi Rang. & Tad. Jour. Bombay Nat. Hist. Soc. 24: 846. 1916. NorTHEASTERN New Gurtnea: Morobe District: Kajabit Mission, Clemens 10473 bis. India; new to New Guinea. Hierochloé redolens (Vahl) Roem. & er Syst. Veg. 2: 514. 1817. Holcus redolens Vahl, Symb. Bot. 2: NETHERLANDS NEW GUINEA: Lake nn 3225 m. camp, Brass 9461; abundant among tussock grasses in a limestone sinkhole. Mt. Wilhelmina, 7-11 kilometers north- east of top, alt. 3400-3560 m., Brass & Myer-Drees 9712, 9830; alpine grassland, com- mon among tussocks in moist situations. Northern slopes of Mt. Wilhelmina, alt. 4000 m., Brass & Myer-Drees 10062; common in wet situations, Hierochloé Horsfieldii (Kunth) Maxim. Bull. Acad. Sci. St. Petersb. 32: 627. 1888. Ataxia Horsfieldii Kunth, Rev. bre : 22. 1829, name only; Enum. Pl. 1: 39 8 me only; Kunth ex Horsfield in eres Pl. Jav. 8: pl. 3. 1838-1852. Miscookla? angusta Hitche. Bitoni : 118. 1936. NETHERLANDS NEW GUINEA: ke otha 4 3225 m. camp, Brass 9049, 9117, 9577; forest margins, glades and rr shore. NORTHEASTERN NEw GUINEA: Sara waket, Clemens 7261; bank of rivulet, alpine meadow. Java. 1943] CHASE, PAPUAN GRASSES, III 85 The type of Hierochloé angusta, Brass 4412, Mt. Albert Edward, Papua, is a slender specimen with glabrous foliage, narrow blades, and narrow panicle only 6—7 cm. long. The plate of Ataxia Horsfieldii shows a much larger plant with wider blades and looser panicle. The later New Guinea collections and additional specimens from Java show that the species is variable, ranging from narrow-leaved plants like Brass 4412, 9577, and Clemens 7261, to tall, broad-leaved plants like Brass 9049 and most of the Java specimens. The panicles range from small and almost spikelike, as in Brass 4412, Clemens 7261, and two Java specimens, to as much as 20 cm. long with branches to 8 cm. long, as in Brass 9049. The foliage in the type of H. angusta is glabrous and that of Ataxia Horsfieldii is de- scribed as glabrous, but some of the specimens from both Java and New Guinea are retrorsely pubescent on the sheaths and spreading-pubescent on the upper surface of the blades. This is the type species of the Section Ataxia (R. Br.) Hack., in which the lower floret is staminate or neuter and the second neuter and usually without a palea. In Hierochloé proper the lower florets are staminate. Arundinella furva sp. nov. Fic. 4. Perennis; culmi ascendentes vel erecti, 75-95 cm. alti; nodi strigosi; vaginae apice et margine hirsutae; ligula 0.5 mm. longa, longe ciliata; laminae planae, 5.5-10.5 cm. longae, 5-10 mm. latae; panicula erecta, 10-16 cm. longa, 1-1.5 cm. lata, fusca, axi ramisque 'scabris, pedicellis 1-3 mm. longis; spiculae 5-6 mm. longae: glumae acuminatae, primo 3-nervio, secundo paulo eee 5-nervio; lemma sterile acuminatum, 3-nervium; fructus 3 mm. lon .6 mm. latus, fuscus, callo piloso, lem- mate bidentato, aristato, ati ye mm. longa, prope basim geniculata. Perennial with extravaginal innovations, sometimes rooting at the lower nodes; culms ascending to erect, 75-95 cm. tall, terete, firm, smooth; nodes strigose; sheaths hirsute on the collar and on the margin toward the summit, otherwise glabrous, the lower pies Cake ligule a firm membrane 0.5 mm. long, ciliate with white hairs 3—5 mm. long, the hairs brittle and broken off in old sheaths; blades Peeing: firm, flat or the margins in- volute toward the apex, 5.5-10.5 cm, long, 5-10 mm. wide, slightly rounded at base, acuminate, the margins ha ae ‘and sparsely stiffly ciliate toward the base, the hairs mostly broken off; panicle long-exserted, erect, 10-16 cm. long, 1—-1.5 cm. wide, dusky purplish brown, the axis and branches erect, angled, scabrous, the branches slender, the lower distant, naked at base; pedicels 1-3 mm. long, angled, scabrous; spikelets 5-6 mm. long; glumes firm, acuminate, the first 3-nerved, the nerves scabrous, the second about 1 mm. longer than the first, 5- nerved, the nerves glabrous: sterile lemma slightly exceeding the first glume, acuminate, 3- nerved, its palea shorter, empty; fruit 3 mm. long, 0.6 mm. wide, dark purplish brown, minutely Se acpi roughened, the oa pilose, the ‘hairs white, 0.5—1 mm. long, the ma bidentate, the awn 3—4 mm. long, twisted at ‘base, geniculate just Raa the base (eae 5826a, collected in March 1937, at 2600 m. alt., Sarawaket, Morobe District, Northeastern New Guinea. A second collection from the same region is Clemens 5250, from “open place, Basu Tamanac, Sarawaket,” alt. 2300 m., Jan. 31, 86 JOURNAL OF THE ARNOLD ARBORETUM [VOL. XXIV This species belongs in Arundinella proper as limited by Keng (Nat. Cent. Univ. Science Reports, Biology 2: 20. 1936). It somewhat re- sembles A. fuscata Nees, but is taller and nearly glabrous, with longer spikelets and much larger fruit. It differs from all the species known in the very short twisted column of the awn, the geniculum being scarcely 1 mm. above the base of the awn. Fic. 4. Arundinella furva; pas first glume, second glume, sterile floret, and fruit, 10; from Clemens 5826a Digitaria violascens Link; Hort. Berol. 1: 229. Paspalum chinensis Nees in Hook. & Arn. Bot. Beeches Aa 5 231, 1836. sa minutiflorum Steud. Syn. Pl. Glum. 1: 17. 1854; not P. minutiflorum . 1831. Piel errim A. Camus, Not. Syst. Lecomte 4: 48. 1923; not D. chinensis Hornem. 1819. NETHERLANDS New GuINeEA: Balim ease alt. 1600 m., ibe — sandy soil on deforested a. ot common. NorTHEASTERN New Guinea: Morobe iidet: Ogao, alt. 2000 m., Clemens 10359. ane and southern Asia, East Indies, Philippines ; introduced in poms tropics and subtropics. Panicum auritum Presl, Rel. Haenk. 7 305. 1830. se sccaeastti New GuIneEA: Bernhard Camp, Idenburg River, alt. 50 m., Bras 3942; co n swamp forests of river silt Ath. ascending to 2 m. East Indies, southeastern ren to Philippines. Panicum zizanioides H.B.K. Nov. Gen. & Sp. 1: 100. 1815. NETHERLANDS New GvuINEA: Bernhard Camp, Idenburg River, alt. , Brass 13946; abundant in semi-open swampy forest of river flood plain; saat sr ascend- ing to 1m. Tropical America and Africa, India, New Guinea. Ichnanthus vicinus (F. M. Bailey) Merr. Enum. Phil. Fl. Pl. 1: 70. 1922. anicum vicinum F. M. Bailey, Syn. Queensl. FI. Seay “ 82. 1890. NETHERLANDS ine GuinEA: Hollandia and vicinity, alt. 50 m., Brass 8909; 1943 ] CHASE, PAPUAN GRASSES, III 87 abundant on shaded sandy banks in moist ravine. Four kilometers southwest of Bern- hard Camp, Idenburg River, alt. 850 m., Brass 13210; occasional on flooded rocky banks of river. Southern Asia, East Indies, coaied: Australia. ee contracta (Wight & Arn.) Hitchc. Mem. Bishop Mus. 8: 199. f. 90. ee contractum Wight & Arn. Linnaea 10: Litt. 117. 1836. NETHERLANDS NEw GutneEa: Nine kilometers northeast of Lake Habbema, alt. o abou m., Brass 11824; plentiful on sandy vai deforested bee erect tufts 40 cm. tall, ee Asia, Japan, East Indies, Philippine Isachne albens Trin. Icon. Gram. pl. 85. 1827. NETHERLANDS NEw GuIneEa: Bele River, 18 kilometers northeast of Lake Habbema alt. 2200 m., Brass 11559; common in open secondary forest, scrambling or in suberect clumps 1-1.5 m, tall. Southern Asia and East Indies Isachne Brassii Hitchc. Proc. Linn. Soc. N. S. Wales 54: 146. 1929. ERLANDS NEw Gu : Bernhard Camp, wie River, Brass 14055 [no data on this label, other than aries locality]. Endemi Plant larger than previous collections, he culms to 50 cm. long, blades to 7 cm. long and 7 mm. wide, the panicle 7 cm. long. Isachne Brassii Hitchc. var. villosa Hitchc. Brittonia 2: 123. 1936. NETHERLANDS NEW GuINEA: Fifteen ann southwest of Bernhard ean s open rock slide; more densely villous than usual. Endemi Isachne globosa (Thunb.) Kuntze, Rev. Gen. Pl. 2: 778. 1891. Milium globosum Thunb. FI. Japon. 49. 1784 Tsachne australis R. Br. Prod. Fl. Nov. Holl. 196. 1810. NETHERLANDS NEw GUuINEA: Nine kilometers | northeast of Lake Habbema, alt. and in old gardens. Balim River, alt. 1600 m., Brass 11823; na kras on deforested slopes. China to Philippines and East Indies, New Guinea and Aus Isachne grisea K. Schum. in Schum. & Lauterb. Nachtr. Fl. Deutsch. Schutzgeb. Siidsee 57. 1905. Papua: Central Division: Murray Pass, Brass 4642 (listed by Hitchcock, Brittonia 2: 123. 1936, under J. ae ela Hack.). NORTHEASTERN NEW GUINEA: Morobe Dis- trict: Sattelberg, J. & M. S. Clemens 312; forest, Sarawaket, J. & M. S. Clemens 097. Endemic. Isachne micrantha Merr. Philip. Jour. Sci. Bot. 5: 168. 1910. RLANDS NEw GuINEA: Lake Habbema, alt. 3225 Brass 9556; locally Prarenee on open bi ground, prostrate. Nine kilometers elke of La ie Hab- bema, alt. 2800 , Brass 10740; plentiful in native clearing in forest. Eighteen ieee ceiheee of Lake Habbema, alt. 2200 m., Brass 11583; abundant in native gardens. Four kilometers southwest of Bernhard Camp, Idenburg tenes alt. 850 m., Brass 13201; matted on flood-washed rocks on river bank. NorTHEASTERN NEw GuInEA: Morobe District: Yunzaing, Clemens, Sept. 1936; wet ae a Philippines, a Isachne scabrosa Hook. f. Fl. Brit. Ind. 7: 23. 1896. Papua: Central Division: Mt. Tafa, alt. 2400 m., Brass 4871; plentiful on open 88 JOURNAL OF THE ARNOLD ARBORETUM [VOL. XXIV banks of small stream flowing over landslide debris. Big aiteriaee New GUvuINeEA: Morobe District: Ogeramnang, alt. 1800 m., J. & M. S. Clemens 6958a; wet open forest trail. India, New Guinea Isachne stricta Elmer, Leaflets Philip. Bot. 2: 463. 1908. NorTHEASTERN New GuINEA: Morobe District: Yunzaing, — oe a & M.S. Clemens 4105; in seepage over rock slope, rare. Ogeramnang, alt. 1700 m., Clemens 402. Samanzing, alt. 1500-1800 m., Clemens 9208, 9239; ‘eo 5 cepetteae f rivulet. Philippines, New Guinea The only collection previously known (the type), from Dumaguete (Cuernos Mts.), Island of Negros, Philippines, is very immature and has longer blades than the overmature Clemens specimens, but on the whole they agree very closely. Echinochloa crusgalli (L.) sera = Agrost. 53, 161, 169. 1812. Panicum crusgalli L. Sp. Pl. 175; NETHERLANDS NEW GUINEA: aL River, alt. 1600 m., Brass 11793, 11803; com- mon in ditches, erect, 1 m. tall. Nearly awnless form. Warm regions of both hemi- spheres. Imperata cylindrica (L.) Beauv. Ess. — 177. 1812. Lagurus cylindricus L. Syst. Nat. ed. 10. 2: 1759 Imperata arundinacea Cyrillo, Pl. Rar. ae. z 27. 1792. NETHERLANDS New Guinea: Northern slopes of Mt. Wilhelmina, alt. 3200 m., Brass & Myer-Drees 10235; covering beaches of gravel and sand, Wamena River. Nine kilometers northeast of Lake Habbema, alt. 2600 m., Brass 10902; on old landslip in forest. Bele River, 18 kilometers northeast of Lake Habbema, alt. 2200 m., Brass 11491; dominant grass on old garden lands. Warm regions of the eastern hemisphere. Saccharum spontaneum L, Mant. PI. 2: 183. 1771. NETHERLANDS NEw GutneEa: Eighteen kilometers northeast of Lake Habbema, alt. 2200 m., Brass 11374; very abundant in tall thickets on abandoned garden land, 2.5-3 m. high, Bele River. Balim River, alt. 1600 m., Brass 11778; abundant on alluvial soil of river banks. Four kilometers southwest of Bernhard Camp, Idenburg River, alt. 850 m., Brass 13264; colonizing sand and gravel beaches. Bernhard Camp, Idenburg River, alt. 50 m., Brass 13791; in dense pure stands, 7-8 m. high, on recent silt deposits of river banks. Warm regions of Asia, the East Indies, Philippines. jaca spontaneum var. klagha (Jungh.) Hack. in DC. Monogr. Phan. 6: 116. 1889. Saccharum klagha Jungh. ex Steud. Syn. Pl. Glum. 1: 405. 1854. NETHERLANDS New Guinea: Hollandia and vicinity, Brass 8920. Java. Differs from the species in the slightly larger spikelets with shorter less silky hairs. Eulalia leptostachys (Pilger) comb. n Pollinia leptostachys Pilger, Bot. Jahrb. Engler 52: 170. 1914. NETHERLANDS NEW GUINEA: siess kilometers northeast of Lake Habbema, alt. 2600 m., Brass 10901; a few tufts on dry open landslip in forest. Bele River, 18 lometers northeast of Lake Habbema, alt. 2200 m., Brass 11363; covering high, gravelly, formerly forested banks of river, ascending and tangled. eee River, alt. 1600 m., Brass 11825; locally abundant on long-deforested slopes. Endem Microstegium gratum (Hack.) A. Camus, Ann. Soc. te Lyon 68: 201. 1921. Pollinia grata Hack. in DC. Monogr. Phan. 6: 175. Eulalia grata Kuntze, Rev. Gen. Pl. 2: 775. 1891 1943 | CHASE, PAPUAN GRASSES, III 89 Four kilometers southwest of Bernhard Camp, Iden- NETHERLANDS NEW GUINEA: ae seral rain-forest on sandy burg River, alt. 850 m., Brass 13720; occasional in flood banks. Southern China to India and East Indie Andropogon intermedius R. Br. Prodr. Fl. Nov. Holl. 202. 1810. Balim River, alt. 1600 m., Brass 11616, 11805, 11845, NETHERLANDS NEW GUINEA: China to India, East Indies, Philippines and Australia. common on deforested slopes. U.S. NaTIonaL HERBARIUM, WasuincrTon, D. C. 90 JOURNAL OF THE ARNOLD ARBORETUM [VOL. XXIV NEW PHANEROGAMS FROM MEXICO, V IvaAN M. JOHNSTON Milla Bryani, sp. nov Planta 3—9 dm. sia erecta; foliis se a revolutis gue sone laevi- bus 2-4 dm. longis; scapo apice 1—3-floro saepe infra medium aspero; bracteis subulatis 5-8 mm. longis ; floribus albis lineis set ee 5 notatis 16-18 cm. longis 1- “3 (saepe ca. 2) cm. longe hapa gator 4 gracili basim versus 1.5 mm, crasso summum ad apicem sub anth crasso, lobis alee subaequalibus 14-18 mm. longis 4.5—6. 6 mm. latis medium versus vel paulo supra medium latioribus utrinque contractis; staminibus exsertis Pts ad faucem affixis; antheris oblongis in sicco ca. 3 mm. longis (sub aqua ad 7 mm. longis) extus vesciculari- rugulosis; mm. apicem versus gradatim attenuatis; filamentis a 2 (vel 3) in faucem corollae decurrentes gerentibus. Coanutmta: Western base of Picacho del Fuste, on mountain side, Johnston 8364; head of Canon del Cuervo Chico, rocky slopes and crests, Johnston 8529 (TypE, Gray Herb.) ; Corte Blanco fork of Charretarras Canyon, Sierra Madera, grassy rocky flat forming in oak-thickets, Johnston 9123; ridge of Sierra de la Fragua north of Puerto Colorado, rocky soil in openings among brush and pines, Johnston 8777; Canyon del Agua, Sierra Madera, Muller 3203 Differing decisively from és widely ranging Milla biflora Cav. in its well developed exserted filaments and more slender and elongate flower. The filaments bear two plates of tissue on their inner surface. These plates narrow as they extend upward toward the base of the anther. The summit of the immature ovary bears three lines of minute conic trichomes. These are more prominent than those frequently present on the ovary of M. biflora. The pale green lines down the middle of each perianth-segment of M. biflora are usually evidently three-nerved. In the proposed species these nerves are very inconspicuous. Milla biflora has been collected in various parts of Chihuahua, but the only station in Coahuila known to me is in the Sierra de Hechiceros on the Chihuahua border. The species here proposed ranges well to the east of the known range of M. biflora and appears to be endemic to the limestone mountains of north-central Coahuila. I have associated with this species the name of my companion ae much of my field work in Coahuila in 1941, Prof. Kirk Bryan of the partment of Geology and Geography of Fucourd University. His ade. lating companionship and his geologist’s pick, frequently used for botanical purposes, contributed greatly to the pleasure and botanical success of the weeks we travelled together. It is a pleasure to associate his name with one of the plants he helped me collect. Nolina texana Wats., var. compacta (Trel.), comb. no N. erumpens compacta Trel. Proc. Amer. Philos. Soc. 50: 418. 1911. 1943 ] JOHNSTON, NEW PHANEROGAMS FROM MEXICO, V 91 N. affinis Trel. ].c. 417. N. caudata Trel. l.c. 417. Differing from typical V. texana, of the eastern portions of the Edwards Plateau, in its more robust habit and in the more elongate, much larger, and more densely and abundantly branched female inflorescences. The ascend- ing branches of the inflorescence are much more rigid and much more abundantly and stiffly short-branched. Except for Thompson’s collection from Marathon (which is typical NV. erumpens), all of the material of the var. compacta originally cited by Trelease belongs to the present plant. Trelease’s N. affinis is a mixture of the present variety and N. micrantha. The actual type-sheet of N. affinis, at St. Louis, however, entirely repre- sents the present variety. The var. compacta ranges from the western parts of the Edwards Plateau, in Texas, west to southern Arizona and south into northern Chihuahua Nolina micrantha, sp. nov. Planta acaulis 6-10 dm. alta; foltis linearibus numerosis duris 5—13 dm. laevibus vel scabris; panicula 4-6 dm. longa 10-15 cm. diametro; ramis rigidis numerosis laevibus gracilibus ascendentibus vel fete ascendentibus, superioribus saepe simplicibus ad 15 cm. longis, inferioribus saepe 10-15 cm. longis ramosis (ramulis 2-12 gracilibus ascendentibus 3-7 cm yarn bracteis 1—3 dm. longis basi scariosis dilatis ad 1 cm. latis alibi fili- formibus; floribus ex axillis fing secundariarum minutarum scario- sarum erosarum 1-2 vel rariter 3 mm. longarum erumpentibus; perianthii lobis 2—2.5 mm. longis oblongis apice ae masculi ochroleucis, feminei costa rosea mediali notatis; capsula purpurascenti 3-4 mm. alta 5—6 mm. lata, pedicello 2.5-4 mm. longo ca. 2 mm. infra perianthum articulato; seminibus globosis ca. 3 mm. diametro capsulas chartaceas inflatas dirum- pentibus. CuinvuaHua: Vicinity of Santa Eulalia, 1908, Palmer 139; rocky hills, Bachimba Canyon south of Chihuahua, Pringle 2 in pt. (G); Organos, base of grassy hills with large oaks, Stewart & Johnston 2072; Sierra Hechiceros, Rancho Encampanada, sunny hillside, Stewart 193. Coanvutta: Sierra Hechiceros, vicinity of Rancho El Tule, rocky slopes and flats, Stewart 490 and Johnston & Muller 1326 (type, Gray Herb.). A well marked species, probably most closely related to V. texana, from which it differs in its distinctly smaller flowers, looser larger inflorescence with less rigid, less twiggy, more slender and elongate branches, pur- purascent capsules, and minute less lacerate bractlets. Trelease’s original publication of NV. affinis is based upon specimens rep- resenting both the present species and Nolina texana var. compacta. The material at St. Louis, which Trelease designated as the type of his V. affinis, is representative of N. texana var. compacta. It is a composite sheet of Pringle 1 and 2. At the Gray Herbarium the sheet of Pringle 2 is half fruiting material of N. texana and half the present plant. The Gray Herbarium sheet of Pringle 1 is entirely male flowering material of NV. texana. According to Pringle’s field notes his two sheets, nos. 7 and 2, were collected April 2 and May 22, 1885, in Bachimba Canyon, which is about 35 km. southeast of Chihuahua City. 92 JOURNAL OF THE ARNOLD ARBORETUM [VOL. XXIV Dasylirion heteracanthum, sp. nov. Planta robusta D. leiophyllo affinis; foliis 8-11 dm. longis supra basim ampliatam 2-3 cm. latis plus minusve opacis viridibus, margine spinis appa g divaricatis rectis vel antrorse arcuatis munitis, spinis gracilibus longis 5-15 mm. distantibus saepe lutescentibus rariter —— versus i sea fructu skies ek oe 6-7 mm. longo 4-5 m lato, sinibus apicalibus latis haud profu CoauuIta: Western base of Picacho del Fuste, trunk up to 3 ft. tall, scape 10-15 ft. tall, sites on rocky slopes and flats, Soknsian 8428 (type, Gray Herb.). TExas: Persim n Gap area, Brewster Co., July 30, 1938, Sperry 1321; Chisos Mts., July 5, 1931, Mueller 7958. In Texas this plant occupies the area between D. texanum Scheele, of the Edwards Plateau, and D. letophyllum Trel., of western trans-Pecos Texas. It has the fruit of D. texanum but much longer and broader non-glossy leaves, of which the marginal thorns are distinctly divergent and straight or weakly curved, rather than ascending, stout, and strongly up-curved. The proposed species differs from D. leiophyllum in its somewhat broader non-lustrous leaves and in the absence of abundant stout strongly curved retrorse marginal thorns. Its fruit may be similar to those of D. texanum and D. leiophyllum or narrower with a deep apical notch. Dasylirion Stewartii, sp. no Planta robusta; foliis metralibus supra basim 2-3 cm. lata viridibus vix lucentibus margine spinis validis brunnescentibus conspicue retrorseque curvatis armatis; fructibus a 7 mm. longis 4-5 mm. latis obovatis apice profunde et anguste emarginatis, alis 1-2 mm. latis. HUILA: Vicinity of Santa Elena, eastern foothills of the Sierra de las Cruces, 1941, Stewart 823 (type, Gray Herb.) and 841; 7 km. north of Santa Elena, Johnston & Muller 331. There is only one described species of Dasylirion with retrorse thorns on the leaf-margins, D. leiophyllum, of western trans-Pecos Texas and Chihuahua. From that species, D. Stewarti differs conspicuously in its larger size, its very much coarser and more strongly armed non-lustrous leaves, its more deeply notched fruit, and its detached more south- easterly range. The plants of the Sierra de las Cruces, where it abounds on the limestone foothills, have a trunk becoming a meter tall and a large head of light green non-lustrous leaves. The flowering stalk becomes several meters tall. There is a vinata at San José, at the southeastern base of the Sierra de las Cruces, where for many years D. Stewartii has been used for the preparation of the alcoholic liquor ‘‘Sotol.” To a botanist who has not observed and lived with Dasylirion in the field, the fact that various species differ in the direction of their leaf-thorns may seem of minor importance. To those living with these plants the differences are very real indeed. In areas having species with antrorseiy armed leaves, horsemen and cattle brush these plants with impunity. One may even grasp a handful of their leaves to help one up a steep slope. The collect- ing of the stem-crown for sotol-making or the gathering of the flowering stems (‘‘garochas’’) for their many uses (from corks to building material) is a simple task. About the Sierra de las Cruces, however, where D. 1943 ] JOHNSTON, NEW PHANEROGAMS FROM MEXICO, V 93 Stewart is the only species, all this is very different, for the thousands of cats-claws on the leaves of that species rake savagely the flanks of any animal brushing this plant. Any rider, unprotected by heavy leather chaps, has his legs and thighs unmercifully clawed and perhaps his clothes torn, if he is brushed, while on some narrow trail, against one of the massive clusters of viciously armed leaves. One who collects this plant, either for the herbarium or for the making of sotol, unless he is very cautious and deliberate, bears some scratches after his encounter with the plant. Because of its retrorse leaf-thorns, the plant has won the same respect that is accorded to such cacti as Opuntia. Direction of leaf-thorns do make a difference! With this handsome plant I have associated the name of my good friend, Mr. Robert M. Stewart, of Santa Elena. Through his effort the area about Santa Elena has now become botanically the best explored in all of northern Coahuila. It is a pleasure to associate his name with one of the most common and conspicuous plants in that area. Dasylirion Stewartii, var. glaucum, var. nov A forma typica differt foliis pallidis conspicue glaucis. CoAHUILA: 3 m. northwest of El Oro, on road to Esmeralda, 1939, White 1970. CutHuAHuA: Mouth of Canon del Rayo, Sierra Diablo, 1941, Stewart 957 (TYPE, Gray Herb.) The above cited collections have the same fruit as the plant about Santa Elena, but their leaves are very glaucous rather than pale green. Perhaps also the thorns may be less coarse and the leaf-margin between them more denticulate. This glaucous plant is so strikingly different that I believe it merits a name. Phorodendron flavum, sp. nov. Planta dioica fulvescens, partibus junioribus omnino velutinis_pilis stellatis minutis mollibus fulvis dense obtectis, partibus vetustioribus tarde subglabrescentibus pilis sparsis pallidioribus donatis; caulibus lignosis rigidis saltem ad 3 dm. longis ascendenter ramosis, internodiis 1-3 cm. longis inferioribus 4-7 mm. crassis; foliis oblongo- vel ovato-ellipticis quam internodiis saepe longioribus, majoribus 3.5—3.8 cm. longis 1.3—1.5 cm. latis, 1.5—2.3 mm. longe et 3—4 mm. late petiolatis; lamina crasse coriacea fulve fusco-viridescenti, medium versus vel paulo infra medium latiore, basi rotundata vel angulata in petiolum abrupte contracta, apice rotunda vel non raro plus minusve acuta, subtus (in sicco) plus minusve prominenter costata; spicis femineis (masculis non visis) ad axillas solitariis vel pluri- bus, ad anthesim 10-14 m. longis, fructiferis ca. 2 cm. longis, 3- vel raro 5- vel 6- articulatis; Herbie in series 2 vel 3 dispositis 8-12 pro articulo; baccis subglobosis ca. 4 mm. diametro glabris laevibus perianthio clauso basi ciliato coronatis. ae Vicinity of Durango, on Quercus, Nov. 1896, Palmer 777 (TYPE, Gray . Coanurta: Sierra Negras, 9 km. south of Parras, on Quercus, Stanford, Retae-tova ¢& Northcraft cee hills 11 km. northeast of Jimulco, on Quercus, Stanford, Retherford & Northcraft 7 This species ae to the Boreales-Pluriseriales-Flavescentes of Tre- lease. The type-collection is cited and illustrated by Trelease, Monogr. 94. JOURNAL OF THE ARNOLD ARBORETUM [VOL, XXIV Phor. 42, tab. 41b (1916), as an aberrant form of P. tomentosum (DC.) Engelm. I do not believe that the species proposed here is very closely ae to P. tomentosum. ‘That species, based upon material collected near Catorce, S.L.P., “supra Mimoseas,” is the common parasite on Leguminosae in the intermontane desert valleys of northern Mexico. It is a grayish green plant with proportionately broader leaves and a thinner grayish indument. The present species is a montane plant, growing on oaks, and apparently reaching southwestern Coahuila from the highlands of Durango. Its very dark green herbage, its more coriaceous, more elongate leaves, and its abundant softer tawny velvety indument set it off pi cane ay from P.tomentosum. The three specimens cited form a very uniform series Gilia Stewartii, sp. nov. Planta erecta 1-3 dm. alta, ut videtur biennis, stricte ascendenter ramosa minute inconspicueque glandulifera basim versus fruticulosa; foliis numero- sis firmulis pinnatipartitis; foliis radicalibus congestis sub anthesi saepe delapsis 2—5 cm. longis saepe bipinnatisectis, lobis distantibus saepe 1 mm. latis raro latioribus; foliis caulinis saepe pinnatifidis sursum reductis, infra medium caulis 3—5 cm. longis, lobis saepe linearibus 3- vel 4-jugatis 5—20 cm. longis ca. 1 mm. latis; floribus numerosis laxe paniculatis; pedicellis 1-3 cm. longis ascendentibus rigidulis glandulis minutis dense obsitis; calyce fere ad basim partito 4-5 mm. longo, lobis cuneatis strictis margine corolla lilacina vel violacea usque ad basim fere partita quam calyce plus duplo longiore, lobis 7-12 mm. longis 2—5 mm. latis elongatis medium versus latioribus, apice acutis vel late acutis, basi subito in unguem angus- tatis; filamentis exsertis filiformibus quam antheris oblongis valde longiori- bus; ovario glabro; capsula ellipsoideo-ovoidea apicem lobis calycis attin- gente vel paulo superante; seminibus numerosis minutis sub aqua mucila- ginosis. 6 mi. north of Hot aera Brewster Co., Innes & Warnock 546; stony hills near Oultman Canyon, Hudspeth Co., Chas. Wright. pial ices ills near Chihuahua, Aug. 11, 1885, Pringle 530; 12 mi. south of Camargo, White 2196; 1 km. north of Victoria, Stewart é& Johnston 2004; Canon del Rayo, Sierra Diablo, Stewart 904 and 950. Duran nco: Cerro de San Tenacio, July 1910, Purpus 4595. COAHUILA: km. north of Eutimias, Stewart 1750; 15 km. east of La India, Llano de Guaje, Stewart 1184; near Tinaja Blanca, Sierra de las Cruces, Stewart 2235; Santa Elena, Sierra de las Cruces, Johnston & Muller 236; south base of Picacho de San José, Johnston & Muller 801; 5 mi. south of San José, Johnston & Muller 1258 (TYPE, Gray Herb.) ; Cafion del Gringo, Sierra Planchada, Stewart 1049; Canon de Hidalgo, Sierra Mojada, Stewart 1096; Sierra Mojada, Jones 348; Tanque Jerico, north margin of Canada de Cuervo Grande, Johnston 8345; Puerto Colorado, Johnston 8708; Soledad, 1880, Palmer 845; Saltillo, 1898, Palmer 312; Saltillo, 1878, Parry 8; 2 mi. west of Saltillo, White 1060; 4 mi. north of Pena, Johnston 7718. Hipartco: Ixmiquil- pan, 1905, Purpus 1398. GuANAJUATO: Jaral, 1887, Schumann 351 A well marked species of the desert limestone mountains, growing on slopes and on outwash near their bases. It appears to favor silty soils. The lilac or pale violet or lavender corolla-lobes are elongate and taper to a point. The shape and color of its corolla-lobes, as well as its deeply cut calyx, which is equalled or over-topped by the capsule, readily distinguish 1943] JOHNSTON, NEW PHANEROGAMS FROM MEXICO, V 95 the new species from G. rigidula Benth. Its pinnate leaves, with few distant slender elongate lobes, as well as its glanduliferous calyx, its abundant basal branching, and its lower stature, readily distinguish it from G. incisa Benth., probably its closest relative. Materi al from the eastern half of Coahuila appears to have smaller corollas (7-8 mm. long) than that from other areas. The corollas are usually 9-12 mm. long. The species is named in honor of Mr. Robert Stewart, who has made numerous collections of this charming little plant. Gilia platyloba, sp. nov. Planta erecta 2-3 dm. alta, ut videtur biennis, stricte ascendenter ramosa minute inconspicueque glandulifera ceterum glabra basim versus fruticu- losa; foliis firmulis; foliis radicalibus congestis sub anthesi saepe delapsis; foliis caulinis pinnatis vel bipinnatis, infra medium caulis 2—6 cm. longis 1—2.5 cm. latis, lobis 2—4-jugatis linearibus vel anguste cuneatis integris vel sparse breviterque incisis; floribus numerosis laxe paniculatis, pedicellis 1—3 cm. longis rigidulis dense glanduliferis; Si fere ad basim partito 5—6 mm. longo, lobis strictis cuneatis margine membranaceis partibus mediali- bus viridibus trinervatis et glanduliferis; ea caerulea usque ad basim partita quam calyce plus quam duplo longiore, lobis obovatis 13-17 mm longis 7—9 mm. latis supra medium latioribus apice rotundis vel obtusis basi in unguem angustatis; filamentis exsertis filiformibus quam antheris luteis oblongis valde longioribus; capsula late ellipsoideo-ovoidea apice lobos calycis attingentibus vel paulo superantibus; seminibus minutis numerosis sub aqua mucilaginosis. Coanumta: Saltillo, 1898, oc 799 (tTypE, Gray Herb.); Fraile, Stanford, ZACARECAS: Con ncepcion del Oro, 1904, Palmer 282; 18 km. west of ga oa . Oro, poi cone ee é& Northcraft 602; Cedros, Lloyd 85. Duranco: Dura 1896, Palm Related to 2 Stewartii, from which it differs chiefly in the shape of the corolla-lobes and their larger size and dark blue color. From G. rigidula Benth., with which it has been confused, the new species is readily dis- tinguished by its cleft, inconspicuously glanduliferous calyx, and its more elongate capsule which equals or surpasses the calyx in length. From G. incisum Benth., another relative, it differs in its pinnate leaves and very large corollas. Gilia aggregata Spreng., var. texana Speeoer , comb. nov. Callisteris texana Greene, Leaflets 1: 160. 190 This is the variant of G. aggregata aad in rocky arroyos in the oak-belt of the Sierra Madre of Tamaulipas and Nuevo Leon, in the desert ranges of Coahuila, and north into trans-Pecos Texas. Gilia calothyrsa, sp. nov. Herba biennis 3—5 dm. alta basim versus ramosa; ramis pluribus erectis Strictis pilis minutis crispis albis mollibus — foliis pinnatifidis; foliis caulinis inferioribus 2—3 cm. longis 1.5—2 cm. latis, rhachi lineari utrinque segmenta 3 vel 4 anguste linearia 0.5.0.7 m mm. lata gerente; foliis superioribus gradatim reductis supremis simplicibus linearibus; floribus in glomerulis 3—10-floris sessilibus vel ad 6 mm. longe pedunculatis gestis, in 96 JOURNAL OF THE ARNOLD ARBORETUM [VOL. XXIV thyrsum elongatum 10-18 cm. longum subsecundum dispositis; calyce sparse inconspicueque glandulifero 5-7 mm. longo, lobis 2-3 mm. longis subulatis spinescentibus herbaceis quam tubo membranaceo brevioribus; corolla violaceo-purpurea saepe 1.5 (raro ad 2) cm. longa salviformi, tubo 2-3 mm. crasso plus minusve curvato, limbo 10-13 mm. diametro, lobis patentibus ovatis 3-5 mm. latis quam tubo duplo longioribus apice rotundis apiculatis; staminibus 5 ad tubum corollae valde inaequaliter affixis haud vel vix exsertis; stylo vix exserto basim versus pilis brevibus sparsis ornato; capsula et seminibus ignotis. Coanvutta: Sierra de las Cruces, rocky slope about the summit of the highest peaks, flower light purple, Stewart 1044 (Type, Gray Herb.). Curuuanua: Just east of Organos, local on rocky flat, flowers violet, Stewart & Johnston 2054; Sierra de los Organos, LeSueur 1391. A species related to G. Macombi Torr., G. Thurberi Torr., and G. Pringlei Gray, and occurring in an area to the east of that occupied by these species. It is probably closest to G. Pringlei, from which it differs in ‘ts coarser more branched stems, smaller leaves, and short salverform (rather than trumpet-shaped) corollas with flat rounded apiculate (rather than curved lance-ovate attenuate) lobes. It is a beautiful and attractive plant and merits cultivation. Nama Marshii (Standley), comb. nov. Nama biflorum var. Marshii Standley, Field. Mus. Pub. Bot. 22: 167. 1940. This species is most closely related to NV. propinquum Mort. & Hitchc., having similar long-petiolate leaves and more or less cordate blades. The leaves, however, are thinner, green, and somewhat shaggy villous or gla- brescent. The pedicels are more elongate and the stems are more slender and flaccid. Nama serpylloides Gray, var. confertum, var. nov. A varietate typica differt floribus confertis; pedicellis crassioribus 1—2 mm. longis maturitate vix elongatis; foliis cum pilis gracilioribus longioribus abundantibus velutinis; caulibus rigidioribus. Coanutta: 2 miles west of Cuatro Cienegas, spreading over a low bank of alkaline gypseous soil, leaves fleshy, 1938, Johnston 7126 (type, Gray Herb.) ; a mile west o porate : J ine lent, corolla pale pink, 1941, Johnston 8868; Cuatro Cienegas, 1939, Marsh 2016 A form evidently related to N. serpylloides var. velutinum Hitchc. (to which it was referred by the author of that variety), but differing in its coarser more loosely branched and more rigid branches, its denser yellowish (rather than grayish) velutinous indument, and especially in its perma- nently short-pedicellate congested flowers. In typical N. serpylloides and in the var. velutinum, the pedicels are slender, eventually spreading, and become 1-2 cm. long. The leaf-blade of the var. confertum is more succu- Jent than in the var. velutinum, and perhaps even more revolute and be- coming more pronouncedly boat-shaped. Phacelia infundibuliformis Torr., var. phanerandra, var. nov. A varietate typica differt filamentis lobos corollae evidenter sed breviter superantibus antheras aurantiacas conspicuas proferentibus. 1943 JOHNSTON, NEW PHANEROGAMS FROM MEXICO, V 97 Coauvutta: Sierra de las Cruces near Tinaja Blanca, frequent on arroyo-banks, March 12, 1942, Stewart 2241 (type, Gray Herb.). Texas: 14 mi. east of Castolon, Brewster Co., frequent along creek, Cutler 749. This variety occurs far to the east of the known stations for typical G. infundibuliformis and appears to be a geographic race distinguished by its protruding stamens. In other characters it agrees closely with the typical form of the species. Phacelia robusta (Macbride), comb. nov, Phacelia integrifolia var. robusta Macbr. Contr. Gray Herb. 49: 25. 1917. A coarse glandular herb on rocky places, along arroyos, and about cliffs. It has been associated with P. integrifolia Torr., from which it differs in being non-gypsophilous and in having larger salverform (rather than sub- tubular) corollas and larger non-corrugated seeds. From trans-Pecos Texas (Chisos and Chinati mountains) it extends far south in Coahuila and Chihuahua. Under the name “P. integrifolia var. arenicola,” Brand, Pflanzenfam. 59 (IV. 251): 81, f. 17 (1913), has given a mediocre illus- tration of P. robusta, probably based on material collected near Chihuahua City by Pringle or by Palmer. Phacelia pallida, sp. nov. longe petiolatis, superioribus duplo minoribus onge petiolatis; cymis terminalibus pluribus densifloribus; calyce ca. 4 mm. longo, lobis oblongis ciliatis dorso glanduliferis cum setis vestitis ca. 1 mm. longe pedi- cellatis, fructiferis ad 6 mm. longis, lobis spathulatis capsulam evidenter superantibus; capsula ovoidea ca. 4 mm. longa hispidula; seminibus 4 nigris ca. 3 mm. longis corrugatis; corolla ca. 6 mm. longa, tubo basi 1.5 mm, apice 3-4 mm. crasso, 4 mm. longo, lobis ad 2 mm. longis ascendenti- bus; staminibus longe exsertis. Coanurita: Gypsum beds on the escarpment of Cafiada Oscuro near Tanque La Luz, fleshy grayish non-glandular herb confined to gypsum, corolla lavender-white, Johnston 8486 (typE, Gray Herb.). A relative of P. integrifolia Torr., characterized by its practically gland- less herbage, branching habit, large gray pallid frequently lobed petiolate leaves, and few terminal cymes. Many of the lower leaves have a pair of small lobes borne on the petiole just below, and separated from, the blade proper. Phacelia petiolata, sp. nov. Herba glandulifera 1-3 dm. alta e radice lignosa annua erumpens; cauli- bus pluribus erectis vel decumbentibus sparse ramosis foliosis pilis minutis vix rigidis abundantibus glanduliferis et pilis longioribus divergentibus sparsioribus vestitis; foliis numerosis evidenter petiolatis; lamina glandulis minutis sessilibus utrinque obsita pilis erectis vel ascendentibus gracilibus vestita, in ambitu late ovata vel elliptica, medium versus latiore, basi late 98 JOURNAL OF THE ARNOLD ARBORETUM [VOL. XXIV acuta, obtusa vel reniformi, margine irregulariter crenata et non raro paulo lobulata; circinnis saepe terminalibus solitaribus vel geminatis densi- floris; calyce pilis brevibus rigidulis ascendentibus vestito glandulifero, ad anthesin ca. 3 mm. lon ngo ca. 0.8 mm. longe pedicellato, fructiferi ca. 5 mm. longo quam capsula conspicue longiore, lobis spathulatis ad apicem 1.3—1.7 mm. latis; corolla 6-8 mm. longa, tubo 4—5 mm. longo cylindrico apice 3.5-4 mm. diametro basi 1 5 mm. crasso, lobis reas mm. diametro ascendenti- bus; staminibus longe exsertis; seminibus nigris 2-3 mm. longis margine carinaque corrugatis; capsula ovata ca. 3 mm. longa hispidula. Coanvuimta: San Lorenzo de la Laguna, 1880, Palmer 851; 12 mi. south of Ojinaga, abundant on bank of saline clays, corolla pale lilac, Johnston 8040 (TypE, Gray Herb.) ; 11.5 mi. south of Ojinaga, a few plants about a limestone ledge in deep arroyo, Johnston 8036. A relative of Phacelia integrifolia, readily recognized by its broadly elliptic distinctly petiolate leaves, much branched low growth-habit, thick- ened woody root, sparse cymes, and black corrugated seeds. The lilac corolla has a moderately ampliated tube and throat. Phacelia teucriifolia, sp. nov. Annua herbacea erecta; caulibus solitariis vel pluribus saepe simplicibus 10-25 cm. longis rectis rigidulis pallidulis, cum pilis minutis gracilibus adpressis inconspicuis sparse vestitis; foliis basalibus ignotis; foliis caulinis 4—7-pinnatifidis vel pinnato-lobatis adpresse minuteque ieeechei apie ort inferioribus petiolatis 4-6 cm. longis in ambitu oblanceolatis, mediis e superioribus sessilibus gradatim reductis in ambitu oblongis vel og. summum ad 4 cm. longis, lobos 3—5-jugos ovatos vel saepe lanceolatos gerentibus; cymis racemiformibus maturitate laxifloris; pedicellis 8-12 m longis ascendentibus rectis vel curvatis; calyce sub anthesi 5—6 mm. aie ca. 1.5 mm. lato, lobis oblongo- lanceolatis cee hispidulis margine cilio- latis, fructiferis herbaceis accrescentibus 7—12(—15) mm. longis erectis vel ascendentibus quam capsula subduplo vel plus duplo longlon bus corolla rotato-campanulata 7-10 mm. longa 12-14 mm. diametro, lobis latis rotundis integris ascendentibus; staminibus sparse ciliatis 6-9 mm. longis; ovario dense piloso; stylo usque ad medium partito ciliolato; capsula sub- globosa 4-6 mm. longa sparse adpresse hispidula; seminibus 10—20 irregu- lariter prismaticis 1.5—2.5 mm. longis nigris papillatis irregulariter foveo- tis. Coanutta: Muzquiz, 1935, Marsh 138a; Muzquiz, April 12, 1936, Marsh 2120 (type, Gray Herb.) and 2135. Texas: 4.7 mi. west of Menard, 1929, Cory 640; Tarrant County, 1923, Ruth 459. Related to P. strictiflora Gray, and ranging to the west and south of that species. It differs from its relative in its erect or strictly ascending stems, less conspicuous less dense paler non-viscidulous indument of more appressed paler hairs, and its loosely ascending rather than strict fruiting pedicels. The plant dries a light green. The color, texture, and shape of its stem-leaves are suggestive of those found in forms of Teucrium cubense L. ARNOLD ARBORETUM, HaArvarD UNIVERSITY. 1943] LI, SCHIZOMUSSAENDA 99 SCHIZOMUSSAENDA, A NEW GENUS OF THE RUBIACEAE Hu1-Lin Lr IN connection with a study of the accumulated unnamed collections of Chinese material in the herbarium of the Arnold Arboretum, my attention was called to a series of specimens which had been variously named. Some of them had been correctly determined as Mussaenda dehiscens Craib of the Rubiaceae, but others, although manifestly representing the same species, had been referred to Emmenopterys Rehderi Metcalf of the Rubia- ceae and Schizophragma macrosepalum Hu of the Saxifragaceae. In view of the anomalous position of this dehiscent-fruited rubiaceous species in Mussaenda, a genus characterized by the indehiscent more or less fleshy berry-like fruits, a critical examination was made of all available material. As a result of this study, I have concluded that a distinct genus is rep- resented, which is here described. At the same time the synonymy of the species is adjusted. All specimens cited are deposited in the herbarium of the Arnold Arboretum. This study was made possible by a grant from the Milton Fund of Harvard University to Dr. E. D. Merrill of the Arnold Arboretum. Schizomussaenda gen. nov. Inflorescentia terminalis cymosa trichotomo-racemosa, ob florum quo- rundam calycis lobum unicum in laminam amplam dilatatum conspicue 4—6-bracteata, ramulis ultimis erectis paribrnibus subscorpioideis vel scorpioideis, bracteis bracteolisque lineari-lanceolatis pilosulis persistenti- bus vel deciduis. Flores sessiles vel subsessiles, calycis tubo elongato- turbinato puberulo, margine 5-lobato, lobo inte rdum unico in laminam amplam petiolatam producto, lamina elliptica vel ovata, alba, apice acuta, basi cuneata rotundata vel subcordata, 5-nervia, in nervis tantum obscure puberula, laminae petiolo supra canaliculato, subtus sulcato, calycis lobis normalibus lanceolato-oblongis acutis erectis; corolla hypocrateriformi, g een peltata carnosa. ale nigro-brunnea, turbinata vel oblongo- obovata, apice loculicide dehiscens; seminibus numerosis, minutis, testa fragili brunnea foveolata. Frutex, ramis quadrangularibus pallide brunneo-cinereis parce lenti- cellatis, ramulis dense subadpresse pilosis; foliis tenuiter chartaceis na tico- oblongis vel oblanceolatis, apice acuminatis, basi cuneatis ve cordatis, supra viridibus, subtus pallidioribus, costa a nervisque supra rae elevatis pilosis, subtus prominentibus laxe pilosis, nervis lateralibus utrinse- cus 8-10 adscendentibus prope margine arcuatis et conjunctis, anastomo- santibus, rete venularum utrinque subconspicuo; petiolis canaliculatis 100 JOURNAL OF THE ARNOLD ARBORETUM [VOL. XXIV adpresse pilosis; een caudato-lanceolatis integris adpresse pilosis, per- sistentibus vel dec ne species in nee Burma, northern Siam, Tonkin, and southwestern and southern China (Yunnan, Kwangsi, and Kwangtung). Schizomussaenda dehiscens (Craib) comb, n Mussaenda dehiscens Craib in Kew Bull. 1916: 263. 1916; Pitard in Lecomte, FI. Gén. Indo-Chine 3: 174, fig. 12, 2-3. 1923; Chun in Sunyatsenia 1: 306, fig. 5. 1934. Mussaenda Roxburghii sensu Drake del Castillo in Jour. de Bot. 9: 216. 1895; non Hook. f. (1880). Mussaenda glabra sensu Pierre ex Pitard in Lecomte, He ae Indo-Chine 3: 174. n syn. sub Mussaenda dehiscente; non be (17 Greenea tegen eae ex Pitard in Leco omte . Gén. eae 3: 174. 1923, nome Schizophragma eS I Hu n Jour. Arnold Arb, ll: 48, 1080: Hu & Chun, Ic. Pl. Sin. 4: 13, t. 163. 1935. ulin Rikdert Metcalf in Lingnan Sci. Jour. 11: 528. 1932. Bu Keng Tung Territory, Meh Lui watershed, J. F. Rock 2303 (syntype of Pasa Rehderi Metcalf), Feb. 10, 1922. Sram: Chiengmai Prov., between Meh Soi and Hue San, J. F. Rock 1854 (syntype of Emmenopterys Rehderi Metcalf), Jan. 5, 1922. Inpo-Cuina: Tonkin, Ha-coi, Chuk-phai, Taai Wong Mo Shan, W. T. Tsang 26900, Oct. 16-22, 1936, 29128, May 21-31, 1939, 29248, June 10-22, 1939, Tonkin, Tien-yen, Kau Nea Shan, Ww. T. Tsang 27253, Jan. 1-9, 1937, 30521, Sept. 23 - Oct. 7, 1940; Tonkin, Dam-ha, Se i Wong Mo Shan, Lung Wan Village, W. T. Tsang 29897, 30004, May 19 - July 5, 1940, 30214, July 18 — Sept. 9, 1940; Sontoy, A. Pételot 6600, Dec: 2, 1940. CHIN Yunn nan: Menglieh, A. Henry 12825 (isoparatype of Mussaenda dehiscens Craib) : Pieng-pien Hsien, H. 7. Tsai 61574, Aug. 22, 1934; Fo-hai, C. W. Wang 74949, July 1936; Che-li Hsien, Sheau-meng-yeang, C. W. Wane 75983, Sept. 1936; * Che- li Hsien, You-louh-shan, C. W. Wang 78096, Sept. 1936; Jenneyeh Hsien, Meng- la, C. W. Wang 80681, Nov. 1936; Kwangsi: Shih Wan Tai Shan, south of Macias. R. C. Ching 7871 (merotype of Schizophragma pile i Hu), Oct. 15, 1928; Shang-sze District, Shih Wan Tai Shan, near Hoh Lung Village, W. T. Tsang 22627, July 3, 1933; Shih Wan Tai Shan, Nam She Village, Ww. T. Tsang 24509, 24576, Oct. 22-31, 1934; Chen-pien District, S. P. Ko 56004, Nov. 4, 1935; Kwang - tung: Ma Hou Ho, Shih Wan Tai Shan, H. Y. Liang 69546, July 11, 1937. Craig described Mussaenda dehiscens in 1916, basing it on Kerr 2522 from Siam and also Henry 12825 from Yunnan and Balansa 2683 and 2684 and Wilson 13642 from Tonkin. Among these cited specimens, the Henr number is the only one actually available to me for study. This particular sheet was also studied by Hutchinson and was then determined by him simply as Mussaenda sp. in connection with his investigation of the Chinese species of that genus, published in Sarg. Pl. Wils. 3: 395—400. 1916. Inthe same year Craib published his Mussaenda dehiscens, Craib’s name was accepted for the Indo-Chinese plants in 1923 by Pitard, who also published Pierre’s manuscript name Greenea hoaensis in synonymy. Chun redescribed the species on the basis of Kwangtung material in 1934, but cited no specimens. Not having seen Craib’s type, and noticing certain differences between the Kwangtung plant and several particulars of Craib’s and Pitard’s descriptions, he was somewhat doubtful as to the disposition of his material. With ample material from the different localities now available for study, I can only conclude that all the specimens above cited represent a single species. 1943 ] LI, SCHIZOMUSSAENDA 101 After a critical examination of the material and an examination of all species of Mussaenda in the herbarium of the Arnoid Arboretum, it is felt that a separate genus should be established for this species. The relation- ship of this proposed new genus, Schizomussaenda, to Mussaenda is close, but the inclusion of the plant in the latter, in view of the manifest differ- ences, is scarcely warranted. In vegetative as well as in floral characters, it resembles certain species of Mussaenda. The large petaloid calyx-lobe is a character common to both genera and increases their superficial re- semblance. However, this new genus differs manifestly from Mussaenda in the elongated scorpioid branches of the inflorescence and in its loculi- cidally 2-valved capsular fruits. The inflorescences of Mussaenda are strictly cymose, and the fruits are fleshy berries, indehiscent and areolate at the top. The calyx-teeth are frequently persistent in Schizomussaenda, while they are usually deciduous in Mussaenda. Hu placed the plant under discussion in the Saxifragaceae when he described it as Schizophragma macrosepalum in 1930; it was well illus- trated by him in 1935. His descriptions are brief, but from the excellent illustration and from an examination of fragments of the type in the herba- rium of the Arnold Arboretum, it is possible to determine the status of his species; it is in all respects the same as Schizomussaenda dehiscens (Craib) Li. Type material of Emmenopterys Rehderi Metcalf is in the herbarium of the Arnold Arboretum. All specimens so named by Metcalf represent Schizomussaenda dehiscens (Craib) Li. Emmenopterys Oliver is mani- festly different from either this new genus or Mussaenda, notably in its paniculate cymes, large broad infundibular corolla with imbricate lobes, rounded ciliate calyx-lobes, large capsular fruits, and winged seeds. The genus Emmenopterys therefore remains a monotypic one. The distribution of the single species, EK. Henryi Oliver, represented in this herbarium by numerous specimens from Chekiang, Anhwei, Kiangsi, Hunan, Hupeh, Szechuan, Yunnan, Kweichow, and Fukien, is limited to eastern, central, and southwestern China. In the scorpioid-cymose inflorescences Schizomussaenda suggests Greenea Wight & Arn., in which genus Pierre placed it. Greenea has longer and more distinctly scorpioid inflorescence-branches, while its floral and fruit structures are very different. The fruits of both are two-valved, but in Greenea they are small, globose, completely and septicidally separating into two valves, with each valve again splitting at its tip, while in Schizo- mussaenda the fruits are larger, oblong, and loculicidally dehiscent for only about one-third their length. In Greenea the flowers are white, the calyx- tube globose, and the corolla-tube glabrous within, with the lobes twisted in the bud; in Schizomussaenda the flowers are yellow, the calyx-tube elongate, and the corolla-tube villose inside and with valvate lobes. In Greenea one of the calyx-lobes is slightly longer than the others, but none of them is accrescent, and the large petaloid sepal, so characteristic of Mussaenda, Emmenopterys, and Schizomussaenda, is entirely lacking. Summarizing the above discussion, this new genus is related on the one 102 JOURNAL OF THE ARNOLD ARBORETUM [VOL. XXIV hand in its vegetative and floral characters to Mussaenda, differing in the inflorescences and fruits; in its general facies, except in the scorpioid arrangement of its flowers, it is strongly suggestive of Mussaenda, in the latter character suggesting Greenea of the Rondeletieae. Schizomussaenda is evidently much closer to Mussaenda than to Greenea, but in its dehiscent capsular fruits it transcends the characters of the Mussaendeae; however, it seems best to retain it in the Mussaendeae in spite of its dehiscent fruits. In its combined characters it seems to be remote from the Rondeletieae. ARNOLD ARBORETUM, HARVARD UNIVERSITY. 1943 | BALL, SALIX FLORIDANA CHAPMAN 103 SALIX FLORIDANA CHAPMAN, A VALID SPECIES CARLETON R. BALL With one plate Tue purpose of this paper is to bring together the synonymy of Salzx floridana Chapman and to discuss the various treatments of this species. An amplified description, based on all available collections, is given. Salix floridana Chapman, Flora Southern U. S. 430. ne Salix Chapmanii Small, Man. Southeastern ee: 14. Salix astatulana Murrill & Palmer in Jour. Arnold Pe 32; 580. 1941. In 1860 Dr. A. W. Chapman of pea described “Salix Floridana, n. sp.” (1. c., above), and he repeated the description without change on page 430 of Edition 2 (1883) and page 453 of Edition 3 (1897), as follows: *“S, Floridana n. sp. Leaves ovate-lanceolate, acute, smooth above, glaucous beneath, finely serrate, rounded at the ae the petioles pubescent ; stipules small, caducous: fruiting ament oblong, dense; capsule ovate- lanceolate, smooth. — Rocky banks, West Florida, fruiting in April. — Shrub 3°-12° high, Leaves thin, 2’ 3 long. Fruiting aments 2’—3’ long, 1’ in diameter, enveloped in the copious wool of the seeds. Flowers not seen.”’ The leaf description (‘“ovate-lanceolate, acute, . . . rounded at the base . . .”), taken with that of the glabrous capsules, indicates a willow unlike any other species known in the southern states. Apparently the species was not collected again in the 41 years from 1860 to 1900, inclusive. With the twentieth century, there began a second and more confused 41-year period for S. floridana. In 1903, Small described it (Flora SE. U. S. 342; also ed. 2, 1913) much as Chapman had and credited it, for some reason, to middle as well as western Florida. Chapman, lacking staminate specimens, made no attempt to indicate relationships. Small keyed it as having two stamens and placed it next to S. cordata. In 1902, Dr. Roland M. Harper collected his no. 1381 in Pulaski Co., Ga., and, in 1938, his no. 3634 in a ‘“‘semi-calcareous swamp of small creek about % mile east of Cedar Springs, Early Co., Ga., April 11, 1938.” Both numbers represent full-grown foliage and were distributed (usually 2 sheets of 1381) as S. floridana. The writer has seen these collections in each of five herbaria (Field Museum, Gray, Mo. Bot. Gard., N. Y. Bot. Gard., and U. S. Nat.). One sheet of 1381 carries vigorous shoots with enormous leaves, reaching a maximum size of 6 & 18cm. Early in 1904, Dr. Harper published notes (Bull. Torrey Bot. Club 31: 21-22. 1904) on his no. 1381, but he does not mention the larger leaves, lacking on Chap- man’s fruiting specimen. “Salix Floridana Chapm. I refer tentatively to this almost unknown species specimens collected in wet woods at the outer (eastern) base of the 104 JOURNAL OF THE ARNOLD ARBORETUM [VOL. XXIV sand-hills of the Ocmulgee in Pulaski County below Hawkinsville, June 27 (no. 1381). My specimens were slender erect trees about ten feet tall and two inches in diameter, with tasteless bark roughish below and smooth above. The twigs were very brittle not only at the bases but ee No trace of fruit was found, but my material, as far as it goes, seems to be a perfect match for the type-specimen in the Torrey Herbarium, collected by Dr. Chapman in West Florida. In 1913, Small published two more small volumes, Shrubs of Florida and Florida Trees. Salix floridana Chapman was described oo in both (pages 9 and 13, respectively), and in the second Small adds: “. . . found in southern Georgia.” He probably refers to Harper’s collection i in Pulaski County, which is just south of the center of the state. Schneider, in January, 1918 (Bot. Gaz. 65: 21) lists S. floridana as a synonym of S. longipes Shuttleworth. In 1919, he says (Jour. Arnold Arb. 1: 25) that S. longipes “has been again described by Chapman (1860) as S. floridana and by Small (1913) as S. amphibia.” He gives no reason for his conclusions and his annotation on the Torrey Herbarium isotype is dated 1919, after the above-cited papers were printed. Neither the Gray Herbarium isotype nor the Arnold Arboretum sheet of Harper 1381 are annotated at all by Schneider. In 1933, Small (Man. SE. Flora 414) described S. Chapmanii in essen- tially the same words previously used in describing S. floridana, and on p. 1504 he says: “Type, Middle Fla., Chapman, in herb. C(olumbia) U(niversity).” This specimen is the type of S. floridana. In this Manual, Small lists S. floridana as a synonym of S. longipes. He nowhere explains how the type of a synonymous species can be made the type of a later new species. Small placed his species in the Cordatae, with two stamens. In 1941, Murrill and Palmer described and figured Salix astatulana sp. nov.,! discovered by Dr. Murrill in Lake and Levy Counties of Central Florida. The authors state that their species ‘“‘appears to be most nearly related to Salix longipes’’ but is “‘a very different plant in its foliage,” which is true also of S. floridana Chapman. The description of leaves, aments, and fruits closely parallels the description of S. floridana Chapman The writer borrowed the pistillate and staminate types from the Arnold Arboretum, and portions of the isotypes were generously contributed by Dr. Murrill, of the University of Florida. ‘The types consist of several twig fragments plus detached mature leaves obviously from other plants or branches. The flowering specimens represent the juvenile stages of S. floridana, as the Chapman type and the Harper collections represent maturity. The following amplified description is drawn up from all available authentic material, including two isotypes of S. floridana (and therefore of S. Chapmanii) from the New York Botanical Garden and the Gray Herbarium, Harper 1381 and 3634 from the five herbaria named above, and the types of S. astatulana from the Arnold Arboretum and fragments 1Murrill, William A., and Ernest : ee A New Willow from Florida. Jour. Arnold Arb, 22: 580-581. 7 fig. Oct., 1943 ] BALL, SALIX FLORIDANA CHAPMAN 105 of the isotypes from the University of Florida. The type specimen of S. floridana cannot be located at the Missouri Botanical Garden. Shrub or small tree, 2—4 m. tall; branchlets brittle (Harper), the older yellowish brown or grayish brown and sparsely pubescent or glabrous, the younger dark brown to blackish (as dried) and more or less pubescent; bud-scales 2-5 mm. long, colored and clothed as the branchlets; stipules, on vigorous shoots, 5-10 mm. long, semilunate, glandular- serrulate. eaves lanceolate, broadly lanceolate, or ovate- lanceolate, mostly 5-12 cm. long and 2—4 cm. wide, on puberulent or pubescent petioles 0.7-1.5 cm. long (not 4 cm. as indicated in text-figure of S. astatulana); the lowest leaves on a given branchlet ovate, obtuse, 1.5-3 cm. long; the next higher or median leaves oval or elliptic-oval or somewhat obovate, obtuse to acute, 5—7 cm. long by 2.5—3 cm. wide; the remainder or normal leaves lanceolate to broadly lanceolate, acuminate, and 5—12 cm. long by 2.5—4 cm. wide or, on vigorous shoots (Harper 1381), broadly lanceolate and acuminate, 12—16 cm. long and 4—5 cm. wide, or the largest broadly elliptic and acute, 17-18 cm. long and 6 cm. wide, on puberulent petioles up to 2.5 or 3 cm. long; all leaves rounded to truncate to somewhat cordate at base, glandular-crenate- serrulate on the margins (serrulations averaging 3.5 to 7 per cm. on smaller and 2.5—4 per cm. on larger leaves), sometimes with small lobes near the eee of the "Bide (as in S. pseudomonticola Ball) or with solitary glands or isolated pieces of glandular foliaceous tissue (remnants of once basal lobes) gis a m. long, on the sides of the petiole 3-7 mm. below the blade and in me usually densely pubescent while unfolding, becoming pro- gressively ees to glabrate with age; the yellowish midribs prominent eath and usually remaining finely pubescent above, especially toward ‘he ae Sales beneath, becoming dark green above in age, the greenish yellow secondaries and tertiaries forming a coarse raised network on both surfaces as in S. discolor but never forming the fine flat mosaic of vein- islets so characteristic of S. longipes, S. amygdaloides, S. nigra, and related species. Aments coetaneous, leafy- pedunculate, 3.5-6 cm. long, 1.5 cm. wide in flower, the pistillate 2—2.5 cm. wide in fruit; peduncles 0.5—1 cm. long, pubescent, bearing 1-3 small leaves 1-3 cm. lon ng; flower-scales oblong- obovate, about 2 mm. long, yellowish to yellowish brown, rounded or sometimes truncate at apex, glabrate outside except on margin and base, densely villose inside; stamens 3 or 4 to 6 (sometimes only 2), filaments 5-7 mm. long, sparsely pilose at base; capsules ovate-lanceolate, 5-8 mm. long, glabrous, brown at maturity, the style 0.1-0.2 mm. long, bifid, the stigmas very short, the pedicel 2-4 mm. long, sparsely pilose, becoming glabrate; gland 1, ventral, 0.6—1 mm. long, stout, cylindric. Salix floridana has lanceolate to ovate-lanceolate or broadly elliptic leaves with coarse venation, while the leaves of S. longipes are linear- lanceolate to narrowly lanceolate and with a very fine mosaic of vein-islets. The capsules of S. floridana are larger, the stamens fewer, and the flower- scales more glabrate. It is not certain that S. floridana is most nearly akin to S. longipes and other members of the Section Bonplandianae, It prob- ably belongs to the Section Triandrae, represented by S. triandra L. of Eurasia and other species. 106 JOURNAL OF THE ARNOLD ARBORETUM [VOL. XXIV In any case, S. floridana is a species apparently on the verge of ex- tinction. The type locality (per Gray Herbarium isotype) is Marianna, Jackson Co., northern Florida. It has been found once in each of two counties in southern Georgia, and in two counties of central Florida. Dr. Harper says the Pulaski County location probably has been destroyed. The species is relatively rare, if existent, at the other localities mentioned. EXPLANATION OF PLATE Salix floridana Chapman; isotype in Gray Herbarium. U.S. DEPARTMENT OF AGRICULTURE, WASHINGTON, D. C. Jour. Arnotp Ars. Voi. XXIV PLATE I 2! asl ale! als tia ly tobatadedatadelbedadntS fad bithe shuld Lal ea a | 9 R R. Ba ase | ix flori ApRAn read. pf if - avidently an isotype with the label 43 ; se ate 4 ah owing re type locality "Uarianna® : ich is in Jacicson Sounty acninst the s Toa and Alabaua State boun laries. ee Stig Cote Re BU ae SALIX FLORIDANA Chapman | 1943] ASMOUS, KARELIN AND KIRILOV 107 KARELIN (1801-1872) AND KIRILOV (1821 - 1842) EXPLORERS OF SIBERIA AND MIDDLE ASIA VLADIMIR C, ASMOUS On September 11, 1842,* there died in a small town, Arzamas, in central Russia, after a short illness, a student of St. Petersburg University—Ivan Petrovich Kirilov. He was on his way by stage from Siberia to Moscow, and in the absence of any relatives the police buried his remains; his death was unnoticed, and it seemed that he was forgotten by everybod One hundred years have passed, but the name of this youth still lives in the annals of the history of science. It is true that his name is usually connected with that of his senior partner, the more widely known explorer and botanist, Grigorij Silych Karelin. Their joint contributions to science are great and their famous expedition of 1840-45 into the Altai, Dzungaria, and Semirechensk regions is justly considered one of the most fruitful and important of the nineteenth century. Without exaggeration it may be said that they discovered and explored an enormous region for science. These two members of one of the most perfect teams of botanists were very different men by reason of their age, social position, and temperament, and they met by mere chance. Karelin came to St. Petersburg in 1837 and there met a modest, lonesome, and apparently very poor student. Talking with him, he was struck by his intelligence, seriousness, and deep knowledge of botany. He recognized in this boy a future scientist of great promise, and, being a man of generous heart and quick impulse, he immediately took him under his protection. “Don’t be surprised, my dear,” he wrote to his wife, “I am bringing with me a young man, whom I want you to take into our family as our son. He is I. P. Kirilov, an orphan, a poor devil, a great lover of botany, and a student at St. Petersburg University. He is like a fair girl in character but is unusually clever...’ From that time “Vanichka” was a member of the hospitable family of the Karelins and followed his “daddy,” as he affectionately called Karelin, in all his travels. A boundless enthusiasm for the study of nature united these men. Very little is known about the short life of Kirilov. He was born in 1821 (or 1822) in Yalturovsk in Siberia, where his father was a chief of police; he studied in Tobolsk and later in Irkutsk, where he met the well known botanist N. S. Turczaninow, who instructed him in botany from 1835 to 1837. He collected with Turczaninow on the southern shores of Lake Baikal in 1835, and the next year he made another expedition into the western Baikal Mountains. In the preface to his Flora Baikalensi-Daurica, Turczaninow says (p. 20): “Mr. Kirilow a rempli cette mission avec un zéle *All dates in this paper are according to the Julian calendar (old style), which was in general use in Russia before the revolution of 1917. 108 JOURNAL OF THE ARNOLD ARBORETUM [VOL. XXIV et un succés remarquables, ayant trouvé plusieurs especes échappés a son prédécesseur.” In 1837 Turczaninow brought Kirilov to St. Petersburg and helped him to enter the University. Karelin esteemed his young assistant very highly. “Best regards to you,” he wrote to A. V. Richter, “from I. P. Kirilov, the most industrious, most energetic, and the smartest of all students that I have ever met in this world.” In the expedition of 1840-45, Kirilov was in charge of botanical collections; he made almost all the identifications, and the well known Enumeratio plantarum was written by him under the supervision of Karelin and Turczaninow. There is no doubt that in the untimely death of Kirilov science lost a botanist of unusual promise. The life of Grigorij Silych Karelin is more colorful than that of his young assistant. He was born in January, 1801, in Petersburg Province, a son of the conductor of the concert band, but he lost his parents when he was eight years old. He was placed by his elder brother in the First Cadet Corps, from which he was graduated with distinction in 1817 as a second lieutenant of artillery. He was assigned to the Office of Military Settle- ments, but his chance of making a brilliant military career was ruined when he wrote some derisive verses, supplemented by a cartoon, about the sec- retary of war, Count Arakcheev, a very powerful man in the last years of the reign of Alexander I. This became known to the “dreadful count,” and Karelin was sent on February 20, 1822, into virtual exile to the small town of Orenburg on the southeastern border of Russia. This exile seemed to be a disaster, but actually it gave Karelin a chance to become a scientist and explorer. Deprived of the comfort and gay life of the capital, he turned to the study of natural history, to which he always had a strong inclination. He was fortunate in finding an excellent teacher in the person of E. F. Eversmann, a future professor of natural history at Kazan University. Due to his extraordinary abilities, Karelin became in a comparatively short time an expert in botany, zoology, and mineralogy, and soon he started field work in natural history. He corresponded with many outstanding Russian botanists, such as Ledebour, Fischer, Meyer, Bunge, and Turczaninow, and sent them specimens from the Caspian region. His collections of Caspian plants are preserved in the herbarium of the St. Petersburg Botanical Garden. Besides his natural history studies, Karelin was engaged in a number of other activities which prove his unusual versatility. Fortunately two con- secutive governors of the Orenburg region, Count Sukhtelen and Count V. Perovsky, both capable administrators, recognized the outstanding abilities of Karelin and utilized them fully in the development of that half-civilized part of Russia. Karelin made surveys and descriptions of various Caspian regions, ex- plored mineralogical resources, and made a study of steel and munition plants in the lower Ural region. In 1826 he was permitted to resign from the military service. After that, he made a journey with Professor Evers- mann into the Kirghiz steppes (the so-called Bukeev Orda) and made a good map of that region. In 1829 he accompanied the expedition of the 1943 | ASMOUS, KARELIN AND KIRILOV 109 Norwegian Professor Christopher Hansteen and Lieutenant Due for as- tronomical and geodetical observations in the lower Volga and the Ural regions and travelled in Bashkiria and Orenburg and Perm Provinces. In 1831 he explored the basin of the Tobol River. He also successfully man- aged intricate diplomatic relations with semi-independent khans of the Kirghiz steppes. It may be noted here that Karelin was very popular with nomadic tribes of the Caspian region. He possessed all the qualities which appeal to the imagination of oriental peoples: he was a good looking, power- fully built, energetic man, a skillful hunter and horseman, and, although he was generous and mild in dealing with other people and had a very gay and pleasant disposition, he was always ready to defend himself vigorously against any aggression. He inspired not only love but also respect and fear. In 1831 Karelin was employed by the Asiatic section of the State Depart- ment and soon started a series of his explorations of the Caspian Sea regions, which separated him from his family for months at a time, for he had been married some years and was the father of two daughters at that time. In 1832 he was at the head of an expedition including four ships and a detachment of one hundred and seventy Ural Cossacks. He explored the eastern shores of the Caspian Sea, made a number of good maps, and pre- pared descriptions of the adjoining regions. Karelin in 1834 commanded another expedition in the same region, with a special mission to build a fortress on the eastern shore of the Caspian Sea in order to protect Russian settlements from the raids of nomadic tribes of the Kirghiz steppes and Chiwa. After careful investigations he selected Kara-su Bay for that purpose and on May 2, 1834, founded a fortress named by him Novo-Aleksandrovsk, which was completed, supplied, and garrisoned in less than three months. This enterprise was not only a com- plete military success, but it did not disturb the relations between Russia and Chiwa, because diplomatic parleys conducted by the emissaries of Karelin with the Khan of Chiwa prevented the bloodshed which was feared. In 1836 Karelin was charged with the exploration of the eastern and southern shores and the islands of the Caspian Sea. He corrected the maps of these regions, travelled far inland, explored the steppes of Turkmenia, and made a survey of the old estuary of ancient Oxus or Amu-Darya. This particular map is a very valuable contribution to the science of geography. Finally he visited the shores of Asterabad Bay and laid the groundwork for the establishment of regular trade relations between Russia and Persia. All these varied activities never prevented Karelin from continuing his scientific researches; he prepared extensive botanical and zoological col- lections, while his diaries include valuable data on the flora and fauna of the regions visited. His travels had made the name of Karelin widely known and he was elected to membership in many scientific societies. The Russian government recognized his services and rewarded him with a grant of 6,000 roubles and a pension of 900 roubles a year. Emperor Nicholas I invited him for a lunch and gave him a valuable diamond ring as his per- sonal gift. 110 JOURNAL OF THE ARNOLD ARBORETUM [VOL. XXIV No wonder that in 1839 the oldest scientific society in Russia, the Société de Naturalistes de Moscou, invited him to take charge of a scientific expe- dition for the exploration of the Altai, Tarbagatai, and Sayan Mountains, and Dzungaria. Karelin willingly accepted and soon an agreement was reached as to the itinerary of the expedition and its financial support. Karelin was to receive 3,500 roubles a year plus all expenses of the expe- dition. Besides that, he retained his regular salary from the Finance De- partment, where he ‘had been employed since 1838. He was to collect botanical, zoological, mineralogical, and geological specimens, ship his col- lections every two months, and submit a monthly report. The agreement was for a period of two years. It may be noted here that, although the Sayan Mountains were included in the itinerary of the expedition and there are some references in literature concerning Karelin’s travels in this region, neither he nor any of the members of his expedition ever visited that region. The researches of Lipsky, Romanovsky, and Lipschitz and the study of Karelin’s diaries prove this conclusively. After careful preparations, which took several months, Karelin started his famous expedition on March 15, 1840, from Orenburg, going eastward through Troitzk, Petropavlovsk, and Omsk to Semipalatinsk. In addition to Kirilov, the party included a Cossack officer, G. A. Maslennikov, a very skillful hunter, and G. D. Karaulov, a zoological collector and preparator. I make no attempt to give a detailed itinerary of Karelin’s travels, but will merely summarize his explorations for each year. Fortunately he wrote many letters, sent his reports regularly to the Society of Naturalists of Moscow, and kept a diary of his travels. These letters and some of his reports are samples of brilliant, colorful scientific language. It is to be regretted that Karelin published so little and that all his manuscripts were destroyed by a fire in 1872. In 1840 Karelin explored the Tarbagatai and Narym Mountains and the Semipalatinsk region. Kiriloy made independent explorations to Lake Nor-Zaissan and to the northern slopes of the Tarbagatai Range. The re- sults of the first year were very good. Fifty-two boxes of collections, in- cluding 38,000 botanical specimens representing 1,127 species, were sent to Moscow. In 1841 the party explored the Alatau Mountains and the Semirechensk region. Besides his regular staff, Karelin had about fifty Cossacks who served as a convoy to the expedition, but he trained some of them as col- lectors and hunters. Of these men we should mention especially Captain S. M. Abakumov, who became a proficient botanical and ornithological collector. The results of the second year were even better than those of the first, although the expedition was many times attacked by “barantachi” (rebellious Kirghizs). About 55,000 botanical specimens were sent to Mos- cow. In the fall Kirilov was sent with some collections to Krasnoyarsk, where he worked under direction of Turczaninow on the preparation of the Enumeratio plantarum. The correspondence between Karelin and Turc- zaninow proves that the latter contributed greatly to this work, which is considered one of the best in Russian botanical literature. It lists 1891 1943 | ASMOUS, KARELIN AND KIRILOV 111 species and includes descriptions of eight new genera and 220 new species. Lipsky is of opinion that the influence and constructive criticism of Turc- zaninow, the best Russian botanist of that time, added very much to the value of this work. In 1842 Karelin was again in the Alatau Mountains, in eastern Altai, and in Dzungaria (Bayan Aul and Karakalinsk regions). All his diaries of this year are missing; probably they were lost with other papers (letters, reports, surveys) which Kirilov had with him when he died so suddenly at Arzamas, apparently of cholera. This tragedy, which deprived the expedition of a key assistant, was a severe personal blow to Karelin, who loved Kirilov no less than his own children. Sophia G. Karelina says in her recollections that her father was so distressed on receiving the news of Kirilov’s death that he became hysterical, tried to drive his head against the wall, and his companions had to keep him under close watch for many days, fearing that he might commit suicide. After this violent period he became apathetic and morose and was not able to work. This depressed condition continued for some months but gradually passed. After the death of Kirilov, the work on the identification and description of the plants, which had been done mostly in the winter months, stopped. The botanical collections of 1842-44 were partly described later by S. S. Shchegleev.* It is a peculiar fact that after the death of Kirilov, Karelin never published a botanical paper in the remaining 30 years of his life (1842-72). This does not of necessity mean that he suddenly lost interest in botany. Although he is usually considered as a zoologist par excellence, this is hardly correct. At least he considered himself a botanist in the first place, and his earlier publications, his correspondence with the best Russian botanists of the time, and especially his diaries, where botanical observations always play a dominant role, prove that he was right in that respect. It must be borne in mind that he was manifestly an outdoor type, a man of action, a born traveller and explorer, and not a cabinet worker. He started to write regularly when he was over fifty years old and partially incapacitated as a traveller by a severe attack of rheumatism. In 1843 Karelin made an expedition through the Kokbetinsk region to Lake Nor-Zaissan, described it, and explored the Upper Irtysh for 400 miles from its source to Ust’ Kamenogorsk. There are no data on the number of specimens in the collection; it is known only that it contained 1678 species. Maslennikov made a separate expedition to the sources of the Lepsa River in the Alatau Mountains, where he collected zoological and botanical specimens. *Shchegleev, S. S. [Stschégléew, S. S.] 1854a. as as ad Floram Altaicam. Dissertatio. i-ii, i-iv, 1-119. e chapter is in Latin, the rest in Russian; supplement to Karelin & Kirilov 1841 & 1 1854b. peers ie a la flore Altaique. Bull. Soc. Nat. Moscou 27(1): Li “t jel of a chapter in Latin in the original work, with a preface in Frenc 112 JOURNAL OF THE ARNOLD ARBORETUM [VOL. XXIV Karelin explored the basin of Buchtarma River in 1844 and travelled in Dzungaria and in the border regions of northeastern China. Maslennikov again visited the Alatau Mountains and collected plants in the valleys of the Lepsa, Djamantash, and Tentek Rivers. There are no data on the size of the botanical collections assembled. The expeditions having continued for almost five years, Karelin en- thusiastically insisted that the work should be prolonged for at least one year more. This suggestion met a very unfavorable reception from all sides. The Society of Naturalists of Moscow helped Karelin in many ways and gave its moral support, but, after spending about 18,000 roubles on the expeditions, it discontinued financial aid in the middle of 1842. The only source of money was Karelin’s salary, but even this meager supply became uncertain. The Secretary of Finance, from whose department Karelin was drawing his regular salary of 3,000 roubles, frowned on his scientific ac- tivities and advised him many times to return to his regular work in St. Petersburg, but Karelin always refused on some pretext. The long con- troversy came to a sudden end when the Finance Department asked Prince Gorchakov, Governor of Western Siberia, to induce Karelin to return to St. Petersburg. The Governor, who had a very strong personal dislike of Karelin, was very willing to do this. He provided a police escort and sent him out of Siberia in June, 1845. This was the sad end of the famous expedition. How it could happen that the famous explorer, honored per- sonally by Emperor Nicholas I, was deported in such a humiliating way, by an arrogant provincial official, is very strange. Lipsky, the best biog- rapher of Karelin, hints vaguely that there must have been some less obvious factors. A very careful study of all available documents relating to this deportation does not support this allegation, and we do not feel justified in making further speculations on that subject. As an aftermath of this unhappy affair, Karelin was retired from the Finance Department on November 14, 1845. There are no complete data on the collections of Karelin and Kirilov, which are considered the richest ever made in that formerly almost unknown region. The dossier of that expedition, which was at one time in the archives of the Society of Naturalists of Moscow, was lost. Fortunately many copies of letters, reports, and some manuscripts, which were in the possession of Karelin’s daughters, were saved. In one of his letters to Count Stroganov, Karelin gives the following data on his collections for three years (from May 9, 1840 to March 16, 1843): animals — 240, birds — 1669, insects — 9766, fishes — 8, snakes — 34, lizards — 169, plants — 90,142, seeds — 442, and minerals — 474. It should be noted that the number of plants in this particular list is apparently wrong; it must be larger. The number of botanical specimens for the first two years alone (1840-41) totaled 93,000. These collections are incorporated in the herbaria of Moscow and St. Petersburg Universities, the St. Petersburg Botanical Garden, and the Academy of Sciences. Many thousands of duplicates were distributed to the principal herbaria of Europe, as well as to some in America, thus making Karelin’s expedition widely known. 1943] | ASMOUS, KARELIN AND KIRILOV 113 After his forced retirement, Karelin joined his family, which had moved in 1842 from Orenburg to his small estate in Trubitsyno, near Moscow. Here he spent six years in the company of his wife and four daughters, working on his collections. It was apparently a happy period of his life, because the recollections of his daughters give us a picture of him as a very devoted father and husband and a man of gay, pleasant disposition, who loved rural life and its simple pleasures. But still his inborn longing for the study of nature and new places was stronger than his family ties. In 1852 he wrote to Count Perovsky, then the Governor of the Orenburg region: ‘For six years I have been living in Moscow and its vicinity and I feel now an irresistible desire to travel once more. I want to make a short trip this summer through the Ural steppes to the Caspian Sea. My Sua is to explore the Inder Lake and the northern shores of the Caspian . .” He asked the permission of Perovsky to make this trip, and, pecan being granted, Karelin departed on July 20, 1852, telling his daughters: ‘In six months, children, I shall be back, and now good-bye.” He never came back. He lived for twenty years a virtual hermit in the small town of Guriev, travelled occasionally in the Ural Cossack region, made some ornithological observations, and worked very assiduously on the description of his travels. It is known that he prepared for publication eleven large volumes of manuscripts, but lack of financial support pre- vented their publication. He suffered very much from severe rheumatism and was bedridden for the last two or three years of his life. His house and all his manuscripts and collections were destroyed by fire in the summer of 1872. This was too much for an old and sick man, for he failed to survive this final blow and soon died, on December 17, 1872 Some facts regarding Karelin’s life are strange and can hardly be ex- plained in a satisfactory way, especially his self-exile to Guriev. The persons closest to him, his daughters, frankly confess that they were at a loss to find any reasons for the sad, solitary end of his life. There is no doubt that Karelin was a very complex human being and not as well balanced and happy as he seemed to be. The only personal comment regarding this ast period of his life is the following excerpt from one of his last articles written in Guriev in 1868: “In 1852 I came for a short visit to the estuary of the Ural River, in order to make some observations on the migration, breeding, and moulting of birds. But I found such a wide field for other scientific explorations and such peace and freedom, which I needed for the arranging of the extensive materials collected on my Blo that instead of two years I stayed here more than sixteen years . . . This and another sentence in Karelin’s letter of June 30, 1841, to Count Stroganov give us some hints for the better understanding of the character of this remarkable man. In that letter Karelin wrote: “My expedition is a great success. I am writing to you from the height of 9,000 feet, in the neighborhood of icebergs and eternal snow, but surrounded by such wonder- ful and rare flowers that some days I walk hatless in an ecstasy of reverie...” It seems to us that nature was the only great and real love of 114 JOURNAL OF THE ARNOLD ARBORETUM [VOL. XXIV this enthusiastic scientist. On the altar of this passionate, all consuming love he sacrificed his happiness and his life. BIBLIOGRAPHY OF WORKS BY KARELIN AND KIRILOV ELI, G. S. 1829. pera gee des Coléopteéres ~ par Mr. Karélin dans les steppes des Kirguises, ntre le Volga et l’Oural. Bull. Soc. Nat. Moscou 1: 169-170. 1833. On the seal trade in the northeastern part of the Caspian Sea In Russian; reprinted in Zapisk. Russk. Geogr. Obshch. Geogr. 10; ne 153. 1883. 1839. Enumerats plantarum quas in Turcomania et Persia Boreali legit. Bull. Soc. Nat. Moscou 12: 141-177. A eae arranged list of 973 speci 1840. Lettres de Mr. Karéline, voyageur de la Société, Bull. Soc. Nat. Moscou 13: 495- ae Three letters containing notes on the vegetation, 1841a. Pers et Suchtelenia, ae nova aectaiti a G. Karelin descripta. Bul c. Nat. mescirs ri 7. pl. 1 ves of Turcoma 1841b. Travels of Mr. Karelin i in he altal and Sayan Mountains (sic!). Otechestven- yia Zapiski 16 (Sect. ““Smies 1-4. ch Russian; this anonymous article i is an excerpt of the next entry; no men- of Sayan Mountains in the text. 1841c. Vosare de Mr. a Bull. Soc. Nat. Moscou 14: 559-573. Six letters of Kare 1842. Herrn Karelin’s nen, zur sen: des og ge — Altai und der Sajanischen Gebirge. Arch. Wiss. Kunde Russland 2: 399. German translation of some reports and a a Kardin, with some additional notes. 1843. Turkmenien oder das Land in Osten des oy es Meeres. (Nach Karelin’s tizen). Arch. Wiss. Kunde Russland 3: : full German translation by W. Schott te ani 2 of Karelin’s work which was published in Russian 40 years later; see Karelin 1883. 1847. Extrait du journal d’un voyage, fait en Djoungarie ou Sungarie par Grégoire Karélin en 1841. In Jubilaeum semisaecularem doctoris ce et philoso- phiae Gotthelf Fischer de Waldheim celebrant sodales Societatis Caesareae Naturae Scrutatorum Mosquensis die x/xxii Februarii anno 1847. Art. 2, 1-17. pl. 1, 2. in folio. Description of two days’ travel in the Alatau Mountains, with spear eee of mae and illustration of Waldheimia eget and A plotaxis a a reviewed by V. Lipsky in his Fl. Asiae Med., pp. 55-58. 1902 1867-— a fot of the article by A. Riabinin on ore — a the ie Cossack reine. Uralskiia Voiskovyia ara ti 1867: 43: 3-7, : 5-7, no. 52: 6-9; 1868: no. 1: ee no. 7: 4-7, no. 10: Pe . no,:.212 6. no, 22: 2-6, no. 51: 6-9, no. 52: 6-7, no. 53: tie it. In Russian; for amplification see ene entr 1875. Review of the article by A. Riabinin, “Natur al products of the Ural Cossack “ice excerpted from his in “Ural Cossack region,” 2 pts. 1866. Trav. Soc. Nat. St. Petersb. 6: 186-29 In ae aggre se jeans by Prof. A. N. Beketov and _N. Bogdanov. Ani tant work with a quite misleading title; includes enumeration of minerals, ee (3 lists), od animals and birds (345 species), mposed by Karelin. 1883. Travels of G. S. Karelin in the rai Sea. Zapisk. Russk. Geogr. Obshch. Geog Edited by Prof. M. N. Bo ‘ase Descript ion in Russian of Karelin’s ex- peditions of 1832 and 1836; includes an enumeration of 280 plants. 1943] ASMOUS, KARELIN AND KIRILOV 115 1889. A journal of scientific investigations of part of the Kirghiz Steppes made by ouncilor Karelin. Izv. Russk. Geogr. Obshch. 25: 503-512. fa Russian; a copy of a report by Karelin on his exploration of ‘the sources of the Tobol ives in 1831, under command of Col. Gens. 1905. A bole autobiographical note. In V. Lipsky, Fl. Asiae Med. pp. 599-601. Composed on January 5, 1852, in Tarusovo. found and ibaa by Lipsky. KareELin, G. S., and I. P. Krrimov. 1841. Enumeati plantarum anno 1840 in regionibus Altaicis et confinibus collec- arum. Bull. Soc. Nat. Moscou 14: 369-459, 703-870. Reieediakads of 959 species, including two new genera, 88 new species, and e new varieties. 1842a. Tetras generum plantarum novorum, “7 nk Compositarum Rossiae indi- gen . Bull. Soc. Nat. Moscou 15: 128. Cancrinia » Waldheimia, Richteria, a de gen. nov. from the Alatau Mountai 1842b. Enumeratio Sern um in desertis Songoriae orientalis et in jugo summarum Alpium rae — 1841 collectarum. Bull. Soc. Nat. Moscou 15: 129-180, 321-453, 503 eda 932 species, including description of 6 new genera (Pachy- pteris, Spirorhynchus, Cryptospora, Bryomorpha, Ammolirion, and Henningia) and 132 new species and varieties. 1843. Nova plantarum genera Rossiae indigena. Ann. Sci. Nat. II. Bot. 19: 311-316. Includes description of some new genera and species from Dzungaria; for amplification see Karelin and Kirilov 1842b. BIOGRAPHIES OF KARELIN AND KIRILOV ANONYMOUS. 1897. Karelin, Grigorij Silych. Russkil Biograficheskii Slovar’ [8]: 521-522. BEKETO EAN: 1873. ont note on Karelin. Trav. Soc. Nat. St. Pétersb. 4: 1895. Karelin, Grigorij Silych. Entsikl. Slovar’ Brockhaus & Efron cf 492. Bocpanov, M.N. 1875. Survey of the expeditions and natural history investigations in the Aralo- aspian region. Trudy Aralo-Kaspiisk. Ekspedits. 1: 1-53. In Russian; oo biographical notes and data on the expeditions of Karelin, pp. : 1883. Brief tei sketch of Karelin. Zapisk. Russk. Geogr. Obshch. Geogr. 10 in preface. See Karelin 1883, in preceding bibliography of his works. Borop1n, I. P. 1908 Collectors and collections of the Siberian flora. Trav. Mus. Bot. Acad. Sci. —245. Includes biographical notes and data on collections of Karelin — pp. 42-43, and Kirilov — pp. 46-47. HAnsTEEN, C. 1854. Reise-Erinnerungen aus Sibirien von Prof. Christoph Hansteen. Deutsch von Dr. N. Sebald. i—viii, 1-215. Translation of several articles published in Norsk Folke-Kalender 1849-55, describing the author’s travel in Siberia; for biographical data on Karelin see chap 1857. Souvenirs d’un voyage en Sibérie par Christophe Hansteen .. . Traduits du norvégien par M-me Colban et revus par MM. Sédillot et Da: la-Roquette. I-xv, 1-428. map 116 JOURNAL OF THE ARNOLD ARBORETUM [VOL. XXIV Translation of the articles published in a Folke-Kalender 1849-57; pp. 315-373 concern Karelin and his explora 1859. rye Erindringer af Christopher erg i-xviii, 1-387. : ; This is a revised and more complete edition of the tens s “Recollections” ; chapters 25 and 26 include biographical notes and data on Karelin’s explora- tions. Karetina, 5. G. 1873. Russian man in the eastern border-land: Sketch of the life and the activities we S. Karelin. Russkii Arkhiv 1]: 1318-1344, 01313-01319. very va — biography by the daughter of Karelin; reprinted in V. a, 1905, pp. 609-630, with addition of pp. 637-651 KarELINA, S. G., E. G. BEKETova, and A. P. Bocpanovy. 1889. Grigorij Silych Karelin. Izv. Obshch. Estestv. Antrop. & Etnogr. 57: 1-4. Reprinted in V. Lipsky 1905, pp. 604-608; first two authors are the daugh- ters of Karelin KoseEko, D. F 1890. Tavel of Karelin in oo aeaiiad Sea in 1836. Zapisk. Vost. Otd. Russk. Arkheol. Obshch. 5: 79- In Russian; eiehiigs some references to the vegetation. Reprint 1-6. 1890. LINDEMANN, E. 1884. Dritter Bericht iiber den Bestand meines Herbariums. Bull. Soc. Nat. Moscou Zz 65-312. Slides brief pane data on Karelin under no. 366 (p. 309), and on Kirilov under no. 383 (p. Lipscuit7z, S. J. 1940. Société de naturalistes de Moscou (1805-1940). Apergu historique. 1-131. —4|. 14 portraits. A historical sketch in — including some data on the expedition of Karelin and Kirilov, pp. 49-55. Lipsky, V. I. 190Sa. To ee Silych, his life and ene bs V. Lipsky, Flora Asiae Mediae, Tiflissk. Bot. Sad. 7(3): ere a ae most exhaustive ke — nexedtin including autobiography ian his biography by S. G. Karelina, itineraries, hence lene letters, n extensive a by E. O. Romanovsky ted 1- 190 1905b. Kirilov, Ivan Petrovich. In V. Lipsky, Flora Asiae Media - 3, pp. ee A biographical sketch in Russian, based partially on a letter of N. Turczaninow to Karelin Romanovsky, E. O. 190Sa. A conclusion to the letter of Prince P. D. Gorchakov to Karelin. In V. Lipsky, perp ereeginer is 3, pp. 726-742 udy in Russian of the letters and a pertaining to the deporta- of Karelin from Semipalatinsk in S 1905b. “Karelia” 1829-1905. In V. Ae Flora Asiae Mediae pt. 3, pp. 787 y complete bibliography containing (1) works by Karelin, and (2) papers describing the life of Karelin or based on his works and collections. 1943 ] ASMOUS, KARELIN AND KIRILOV 117 LIST OF PLANTS NAMED IN HONOR OF G. S. KARELIN Genus: Karelinia Less. (= Pluchea Cass.) in Compositae. Acantholimon Karelini Bu unge, Alfredia Karelini Led., Ammodendron ; y., Astragalus Karelini Fisch., Atraphaxis Karelini Jaub. et pach, Carex Karelini Meinsh., Chara Karelini Less., Cousinia Karelini Less., Corydalis Kareliniana Turcz., Echinospermum Karelini Fisch. et Mey., Ferula Karelini Bunge, Frittillaria Karelini Bak. F. gibbosa), Halimocnemis Karelini Moq. Tand., Karelinia petalum Karelini Fisch., Salix Karelini Turcz., Saussurea Karelinii Stsch., Suaeda Kare- liniana Fzl., Statice Rarebni Stsch., Tamarix Karelini Bunge, Zygophyllum Karelini Fisch, LIST OF PLANTS NAMED IN HONOR OF I. P. KIRILOV* Genus: Kirilowia Bunge (= Kirilovia Lindl.) in Chenopodiaceae. Species: Carex Kirilowii Turcz., Halimocnemis Kirilowii Fenzl, Kirilowia eriantha Bunge, K. pilosa Bunge (Panderia pilosa), K. villosa Benth. & Hook., Lepidium Kirilowii Trautv., Pyrethrum Kirilowii Turcz. (Tridactylina Kirilowii C. H. Schultz), Salix Kirilowiana Stsch. ARNOLD ARBORETUM, HARVARD UNIVERSITY. *Borodin made a mistake in listing in his Collectors and collections of the Siberian flora (p. 47) Sedum Kirilowii Regel and Senecio Kirilowii Turcz. as plants named in iri : : coveries in China, pp. 346-352), were named in honor of Porfirij ae aah (1801-1864), a een of the 11th Russian Ecclesiastic Mission to China, who travelled with Bunge in 1830 through Mongolia to Peking and who ener in Chine from 1830 to 1841 Herder, in his Biographische Notizen (in Bot. Jahrb. 9: 438. nia cites baal Joh. Porph.” This mysterious collector is really a mixture of the two above-named Kirilovs. Biographical data and even first and middle names are ao mixed u JOURNAL OF THE ARNOLD ARBORETUM Vout. XXIV APRIL, 1943 NuMBER 2 TAXONOMIC NOTES ON THE OLD WORLD SPECIES OF WINTERACEAE A. C. SMITH With six text-figures As implied by the title, this treatment is not monographic, its scope being primarily to bring together references to the taxonomic literature, to indicate the acceptable name for each species, to discuss the typification of species and genera, to mention the known distribution, and to cite the specimens available in American herbaria. From some regions there is a deplorable lack of available herbarium material in this country, and conse- quently my remarks must often be based upon those of previous workers. Some revision of specific lines will be inevitable when European herbaria can again be consulted, and doubtless a certain amount of revision will be dictated by future collections throughout the range of the family. For some of the genera in certain regions, such as New Guinea and Australia, enough material is available to make feasible the preparation of preliminary keys, but these are presented with the reservation that modification and expansion will be essential. Prof. I. W. Bailey and the writer have in preparation a treatment of the inter-relationships of the six genera which make up the Winteraceae and the place of the family in the Ranales. Consequently, in the present paper I omit comprehensive generic descriptions and detailed discussions of gen- eric relationships. During the preparation of this work, I have repeatedly called upon Prof. Bailey for advice, and many of the conclusions expressed are the result of his painstaking preparation and examination of material for microscope study. It is hoped that the present paper will provide an outline of the classification of the family and will bring up to date the sometimes complicated synonymy. The Winteraceae has an interesting bihemispheric and presumably palaeoantarctic distribution, which I have recently discussed (5). In the Old World, species are found in the area roughly outlined by the Philip- pines, Borneo, New Guinea, the Solomon Islands, New Caledonia, New 120 JOURNAL OF THE ARNOLD ARBORETUM [VOL. XXIV Zealand, Tasmania, and eastern Australia, All of the six known genera occur in this region, while only one, Drimys, extends to America, where it is found from Cape Horn to sonthenn Mexico. According to my interpre- tation, the family now contains about 88 species, of which only four are American. The type genus is Drimys (of which Wintera is a synonym), and the type species of Drimys is D. Winteri J. R. & G. Forst. of southern South America. This species, therefore, is the nomenclatural basis of the family. Many students have included Drimys and Illicium L. in the same family, subfamily, or tribe. There appear to be no sound morphological, anatomi- cal, or genetic reasons for this broad concept. The wood structure, nodal anatomy, pollen grain, carpellary structure, and many other characters of Illictum remove it from the Winteraceae. Whitaker (8) has pointed out that Jllictum cytologically bears no resemblance to either Drimys or mem- bers of the Magnoliaceae, being suggestive, in its chromosome number, of Schizandra and Kadsura. ‘Therefore the genus is not considered in con- nection with the present study; whether it should be placed in the Schizandraceae or in an independent family must be decided by future study The directors and curators of the following institutions have kindly loaned herbarium material, which is cited in this paper as indicated by the parenthetical letters: Arnold Arboretum (A), Field Museum of Natural History (F), Gray Herbarium (GH), Missouri Botanical Garden (M), New York Botanical Garden (NY), University of California (UC), and U.S. National Museum (US). WINTERACEAE Lindl. Nat. Syst. Bot. ed. 2. 17, pro parte. 1836; Miers in Ann. Mag. Nat. Hist. HI. 2: 33, pro parte. non Contrib. Bot. 1: 123, pro parte. 1861; Eichl. in Mart. FI. ins, 13(1): 127. 1864; Hutchinson in Kew Bull. 1921: 185, pro parte. 1921, Fam. FI. Pl. Dicot. 81, pro parte. 1926. Wintereae . Br. ex DC. Reg. Veg. Syst. Nat. 1: 548, pro parte. 1817; Lindl. Introd. Nat. Syst. Bot. 26, pro parte. 1830, Nixus Pl. 9, pro parte. 18 Pt le Trib. Jllicteae DC. Prodr. 1: 77, pro parte. 1824 Magnoliaceae Trib. Wintereae R. Br. ex Meisn, Pl. Vasc. Gen. 3 (pars alt. 5), pro parte. 1836; Benth. & Hook. f. Gen. Pl. 1: 17, pro parte. 1862. Magnoliaceae Subordo Illicieae DC. ex Endl. Gen. Pl. 838, pro parte. 1839. Magnoliaceae Trib. Illicieae Sect. Winterineae Spach, Hist. Nat. Veg. 7: 435. 1839. Magnotacen — Wintereae Lindl. Veg. Kingd. ed. 2. 419, pro parte. 1847, ed. 3. 419, Pant oie 4 ‘Wicieae Prantl in E. & P. Nat. Pfl. III. 2: 18, pro parte. 1 Magnoliaceae Subfam. Drimyoideae Harms in Ber, Deutsch. Bot. Gesell. 16: 358. 1897. Drimytacées v. Tiegh. in Jour. de Bot. 14: 354. Drimytacées Trib. Drimytées and Trib. oe v. Tiegh. in Jour. de Bot. 14: 354. 1900 Drimytaceae Diels i in Bot. Jahrb. 55: 13 — Subfam. Drimydoideae nents in Vaxternas Liv 5: 349, pro parte. The aia interpretations of the taxonomic position of the group now known as the Winteraceae are indicated by the above synonymy. Most of the early writers linked Drimys and IJllicium in the same tribe or section, 1943 ] SMITH, OLD WORLD SPECIES OF WINTERACEAE 121 but the classification of Spach, in 1839, is interesting because of his pro- posal of different sections of the Tribe Illicieae for these two genera. Harms’ concept of Magnoliaceae Subfam. Drimyoideae (1897) is synony- mous with the Winteraceae in the modern sense. The most precise delimi- tation of the family, however, has been that of van Tieghem (6), who apparently neglected to use the Latin form of his ““Drimytacées” anywhere in his treatment. Fic. 1. Approximate distribution of the genera of Winteraceae. From Goode’s series of base maps, no. 108 KEY TO THE GENERA IN THE OLp WorLp Calyx submembranaceous or papyraceous, calyptrate, completely enclosing the bud, at length splitting into 2 or 3 ee an em often caducous; plants dioecious or polygamo- dioecious; oi aa free, with the igmatic surface extended along the ventral suture; closing th ; plants hermap ree odite ; carpe s often wit a short ae ridge (or elliptic or subpeltate stigma in Lee filaments carnose, flattened. Carpels free, sometim mes appressed-contiguous (in Bubbia and Exospermum), not developing into a syncarp. Inflorescence terminal or eae cham the flowers or inflorescence-rays aggre- gated around the growing poin Anther- fetes apical, horizontal or eer at the apex of distally enlarged fi laments, not exceeded by the connectiv Carpels usually free even in young flowers, rarely appressed-contiguous at anthesis ; aay ie essentially corresponding to the eis stig- MALICISUTLACE = iar. fps z cteys, had sees eione coe sa write ars . Bubbia. Gace: ed) -contiguous, free only after anthesis; placentation pee and Scattered: on distal’Suriacesi<..c sci ascte ee eee ct care oe xospermum., Anther-locules vertical, extrorse-lateral, exceeded apically by the connective . ee em re ety hic: Se eee Belliolum. Inflorescence axillary; flowers fasciculate (rarely solitary), often arising from branchlets of iia VeOAlS = Crowt le nee erste eee ices 3-3 . Pseudowintera. Carpels firmly concrescent, the placentation primarily on the dorsal surface; fruit a syncar 6. Zygogynum. iz JOURNAL OF THE ARNOLD ARBORETUM [VOL. XXIV 1. DRIMYS Drimys J. R. & G. Forst. Char. Gen. 83. 1776. The Old World representatives of the genus all belong in the Section Tasmannia, which is separable from the American Section Wintera as pointed out in my recent treatment of that group (4: 10). I have already listed the principal references to the genus Drimys as a whole, and conse- quently the following references pertain only to the Old World portion of the genus. Drimys Sect. Tasmannia (R. Br.) F. v. Muell. Pl. Indig. Col. Vict. 1: 20. 1860; Baill. Hist. Pl. 1: 160. ag 69. Tasmannia R. Br. ex DC. Reg. Veg. Syst. Nat. 1: 445, 547. 1817, ex DC. Prodr. 1: 78. 1824; Lindl. Nat. Syst. Bot. ed. 2. 17. 1836; Meisn. Pl. Vasc. Gen. 3 (pars alt. 5). 1836; Spach, Hist. Nat. Veg. 7: 433. 1839; Endl. Gen. Pl. 838. 1839, Enchir. Bot. 428. 1841; Lindl. Veg. Kingd. ed. 2. 419. 1847; Hook. f. Fl. Tasm. 1:10. 1855; Miers in Ann. Mag. Nat. Hist. III. 2: 109. 1858, Contrib. Bot. 1: 138. 1861. Drimys J. R. & G. Forst. sensu Benth. Fl. Austral. 1: 49. 1863; F. M. Bailey, Queensl. Fl. 1: 18. 1899. Drimys Sect. Winterana Baill. Hist. Pl. 1: 160. 1867-69. Drimys Sect. Eudrimys v. Tiegh. in Jour. de Bot. 14: 288, pro aa 1900; Pilger E. & P. Nat. Pfl. Nachtr. 2: 108, pro parte. 1906; non DC. (18 Drimys occurs in the Old World in Australia and Tasmania, a Guinea, the Philippines, Borneo, Celebes, and Amboina. Its occurrence in other high eastern Malayan islands is possible, but thus far no other regions are represented in the herbaria examined by me, nor have published records of other occurrences been found. It is a typically montane genus, reaching elevations of 3800 m. in New Guinea and Borneo, but descending to sea-level in the southern part of its range in Tasmania. Six species are known from Australia and Tasmania, 29 from New Guinea, and one from the Phil- ippines-Amboina region. In order to make this treatment more usable, I propose to discuss and key the Australian and the New Guinean-Malayan species separately. Bs e genus. Tasmannia was originally based on 7. aromatica R. Br. and . insipida R. Br., Australian species which are referable to Drimys i (Poir.) Baill. and D. insipida (R. Br.) Pilger respectively. The Sections Tasmannia and Wintera are sharply differentiated, but their common origin is indisputable and the separating characters do not seem generic in quality. The total variability of Drimys in the Old World, especially in New Guinea, is considerable, particularly when the region is compared to America, where, in an area extending from southern Mexico to Cape Horn, no more than four species can be recognized. I have attempted to use essentially similar standards for specific delimitation in the two hemispheres. In spite of the greater number of Old World species, it is much easier to draw specific lines in Sect. Tasmannia than in Sect. Wintera, while intraspecific variability seems much less pronounced in the Old World than in the New. From this fact one might assume that isolat- ing mechanisms have been at work longer in Sect. Tasmannia than in 1943] SMITH, OLD WORLD SPECIES OF WINTERACEAE 123 Sect. Wintera and that extensive interchange of genetic material between parts of the population ceased earlier in the Old World than in the New. Following De Candolle’s treatments, many subsequent writers main- tained the genus Tasmannia as distinct from Drimys, but modern students have submerged it. I believe that it is well retained as a section with a status similar to that of the American Section Wintera (Murr.) DC. Baillon proposed to divide Drimys into four sections, but one of these, Sect. Winterana, is difficult to typify from his brief treatment. I assume that he meant to base it on “Winterania” lanceolata Poir., an Australian species, and consequently I list it as a synonym of Sect. Tasmannia. Van Tieghem’s four sections of Drimys are all based exclusively on American species with the exception of Sect. Eudrimys, which, curiously enough, includes the most extreme forms of the genus. The Old World representa- tives of van Tieghem’s Section Exdrimys are referable to Mueller’s Sect. Tasmannia, but the actual type of Sect. Eudrimys v. Tiegh. is the American D. Winteri. AUSTRALIAN SPECIES The six recognizable Australian species are quite distinct from the New Guinean representatives, all being characterized by having their pistillate flowers lacking stamens (a feature of only a few New Guinean species). However, the Australian species do not appear to form a single coherent group, and it is not to be assumed that they were derived from a single recent prototype. Drimys lanceolata and its two allies (D. stipitata and D. Vickeriana) are entirely distinct from any New Guinean species and appear to have no close relatives; they have probably been isolated for a long time from the main trends of evolution in the Section Tasmannia. The only Australian species which appears to have a close affinity. with the New Guinean species is, as might be expected, D. membranea, of Queensland, which has much in common with D. hatamensis Becc. This relationship has already been suggested by Diels (in Bot. Jahrb. 54: 242. 1916). However, D. hatamensis (like its closest New Guinean allies D. dictyophlebia Diels and D. coriacea Pulle) has pistillate flowers with at least three carpels, while those of D. membranea have a single carpel. There are also differences in the shape of the perianth-parts and fruits, but in foliage the Queensland species and D. hatamensis are remarkably similar. Ridley (in Trans. Linn. Soc. II. Bot. 9: 12. 1916) has pointed out the possible relationship of his D. densifolia to D. insipida (i. e. D. dipetala), but the Australian species differs in its narrower leaves, larger petals, more numerous stamens in staminate flowers, and usually solitary carpel. The actual relationship of these two species is probably quite remote, in spite of the similarity of their leaf-bases. It seems desirable to redescribe three of the older Australian species and one novelty, but I do not find it necessary to repeat Vickery’s excellent descriptions (7) of D. purpurascens and D. stipitata. 124 JOURNAL OF THE ARNOLD ARBORETUM [VOL. XXIV Key TO THE AUSTRALIAN SPECIES Leaf-blades with (5—) 7-18 short anastomosing secondary nerves, these erecto-patent at an angle of (20-)30-45°, the blades (4—)6—20 cm. long; petals 2, very rarely 3. Leaf-blades gradually narcowed toward a suddenly obtuse and often auriculate base ; carpels 1 (rarely 2) in both staminate and pistillate flowers; fruit 1-carpellate, ellipsoid, usually 13-20 mm. long, obtuse at base, with (8—-)15-27 seeds ........ sori dshssdic asian ssi spiisg lds AR Hops 4ON AND GRIT SRS Sg GAA: dee ghatat fry CI Biet eAET aa 1. D. insipida. Leaf-blades acute to attenuate at base Petals up to 8 mm. long at anthesis; filaments 0.53.5 mm. long; carpels 1 (rarely 2 or 3) in both staminate and pistillate flowers; aul | 1-carpellate, often nearly subglobose, not more than 10 mm. long, rounded at t base, ee with 4-7 BABS) foo anaia Gun arers cea icuhepnaaie ew aase space gape Re De ata Ses 2D. mbranea. Petals 10-12 mm. long; filaments 2-6 mm. long; carpels 2-8 in bo th peers and pistillate flowers ; a uit 2-8 (usually 3- or 4-)-carpellate, “ay carpels oblong- obose, 10-15 mm. long, short-stipitate .............+-. . D. purpurascens. Leaf- tere mane 3-7 ease secondary nerves, these sharply ais ing at an angle of 0-20° or completely immersed and obscure, the blades not exceeding 11 cm. in non ie to attenuate at base, — auriculate Sepals 3.5-6 mm. in diameter; petals 4-9 mm. long, 1.5-3.5 mm. broad; stamens in staminate flowers 15-45; fruiting — with at least 6 seeds; leaf- blades rarelv less than 4 cm. long and 1 cm Petals fic staminate flowers 5-8, n pistilate cage usually 4; carpels in both minate wn pistillate ee 1, rarely 2 or 3, subglobose or ellipsoid, sessile, oa stigm ridge occupying the dite pa and ventral edge; fruit 1-carpe nate, pene subglobose, rounded at base .......... 4, D. lanceolata. Petals 2; carpels in staminate flowers 1 or 2, in pistillate flowers 2-8, obovoid- ellipsoid, obviously stipitate, the stigmatic ridge obliquely apical or extending base of ovary; fruit 2—-8(usually 3- or 4-)-carpellate, the carpels oblong- ellipsoid, conspicuously BUTERA CES rs tndeaaarnris,abensiataroirere eee 5. D. stipitata. Sepals 2.5-3 mm. in diameter; petals 2, not exceeding 3 mm. in length and 1 mm. in breadth at anthesis; samen s in staminate flowers 10-12; carpel in staminate flowers 1, subsessile; fruit 1-carpellate, subglobose, with about 3 seeds; leaves pace the blades small, up to 16 mm. long and 5 mm. broad .......... scenes pussies counsel fo SRE eget onabenstahey atevance ace creterreesene iar cota tahwaane agmiaae Si miaverate 6. D. Vickeriana. 1. Drimys insipida (R. Br.) Pilger in E. & P. . Pfl. Nachtr. 2: 108. 1906; Druce in h. Cl. Brit. Isles aaae. er 1017; Domin in Bibl. Bot. 22 [Heit 89]: 115. 1925; Vickery in Proc. Linn. San ~ S. Wales 62: 82. 1937. Tasmannia monticola A. Rich. Sant. Aabedlaly. 50. ‘18s te = 19. 1833) ; Muell. Pl. Indig. Col. Vict. 1: 21, as synonym Drimys dipetala F. v. Muell. Pl. indi, Col. Vict, le 21. 1860; Benth. FI, Austral. 49 i 27: 227, 301. 1896; F. M. Peon Queensl. Fl. 1:18. 1899; Pilger in E. & P. Nat. Pfl. Nachtr. 2: 108. 1906; F. M. Bailey, peer _ Queensl, Pl. 21. f. 7. 1913; Maiden & Betche, ee N. S. Wales Pl. 79. Shrub or small tree, to 3 m. or more high, the branchlets subterete, lets; petioles rugulose, shallowly canaliculate, often inconspicuous, 0.5—4 mm. long, 0.7—2 . in diameter; leaf- blades chartaceous, brownish or 1943 ] SMITH, OLD WORLD SPECIES OF WINTERACEAE 125 DRIMYS * INSIPIDA eee ih cee ; + MEMBRANEA ; PURPURASCENS LANCEOLATA STIPITATA VICKERIANA x > 4 / Fic. 2. Approximate known distribution of the Australian and Tasmanian species of Drimys. From Goode’s series of base maps, no. 107. hie and faintly Sr riadiee or obscure on both surfaces; flowers single, numerous, congested around the growing point of branchlets, at length pseudolateral, subtended by numerous bracts, these papyraceous, oblong, 5-11 mm. long, obtuse, soon caducous, the pedicels slender, 10—25 mm. long at anthesis (sometimes shorter in pistillate plants), up to 30 mm. 126 JOURNAL OF THE ARNOLD ARBORETUM [VOL. XXIV long in fruit; staminate flowers: sepals 2, submembranaceous, densely but obscurely yello ow-glandular, ee deltoid, i 7mm. long and broad, obtusely apiculate at apex; petals submembranaceous, eglandular to densely glandular- punctate, Leeann or spatulate-linear, 7.5-13 mm. long, 1.5-2.5 mm. broad, conspic uously narrowed at base, ‘obtuse at apex; stamens usually 30-38, 3- or 4-seriate, the filaments subcarnose, ligulate, obscurely pellucid- glandular, 1-5 mm. long, the locules 1-2 mm. long; carpel 1 (rarely 2), sterile, ellipsoid, slightly falcate, often yellow-glandular, 2.5—4 mm. long at anthesis, the stigmatic ridge elongate: pistillate flowers: sepals as in staminate but usually longer than broad, obtuse at apex; petals similar but smaller, up to 10 mm. long, 1-1.5 mm. broad; stamens none; carpel 1, ellipsoid, about 3 mm. long at anthesis, obtuse at apex, the stigmatic ridge extending from apex nearly to base, the ovules about 28; fruit 1-carpellate, ellipsoid, at maturity (9—)13—20 mm. long and (S—)7—10 mm. broad, obtuse at base and apex, obscurely marked re by the stigmatic ridge, the pericarp carnose, copiously yellow- -glandular, the seeds (8—) 15-27, loosely imbedded in sparse mucilaginous pulp, coriaceous, black, shining, obovoid, slightly or strongly falcate, 3-3.5 mm. long, 1.5— c am broad, acute at base, rounded at apex. DistriBuTION: Southeastern Queensland and eastern New South Wales, from about lat. 24° to 35°30’, from sea-level to about 1500 m. in mountains; usually reported as occurring in rain- forest. The type was collected by Brown at or near Port Jackson. Austratia: Queensland: Fraser Island, Epps 229 (NY); Tinana Creek, White 3476 (A); Imbil, Wilson (A); Eumundi, Simmonds (A); Tallebudgera, White 1866 (A); — Plateau, Lamington National Park, White 6062 (A, NY); eae a ham’s Gap, Main Range, White 6862 (A, NY); Mt. Spurgeon, White 10737 (A); Greville, he. 9949 (A), Everist 556 (A); Tambourine Mt., White 3568 (A)% National ee neni Range, White (A); Mistake Range, White (A), Bailey (US); New So Wales: Richmond River, Henderson (UC); Upper Williams River at ce White 11473 (A); Wentworth Falls, Maiden (UC), Burges (NY); Moonam- bale, Maiden (A); Port Tackson, Caley (A) NaTIVE NAME: Pepper shrub. White reports the sepals as red, the petals paler red, and the stamens yellow; other collectors have not mentioned the flower-color. The fruit is usually noted as purple to black at maturity, but some collectors indi- cate that it is white (probably only when juvenile). The first occurrence of the name Tasmannia dipetala in literature is De Candolle’s reference to it, in the Prodromus, as a synonym of T. insipida. In transferring the species to Drimys, Mueller unfortunately selected the epithet dipetala and has been followed by many students. The correct transfer of the epithet insipida was apparently first made in 1906, Subse- quently to Pilger’s publication of the binomial Drimys insipida, both Druce and Domin proposed the combination as new. Richard’s description and illustration of Tasmannia monticola portray an apparently hermaphrodite flower, with numerous stamens and two fertile carpels. In staminate flowers of D. insipida one occasionally finds two carpels, but these are always sterile; the fact that Richard illustrates ovules suggests either faulty observation or a very unusual individual, since there can be no doubt of the identity of his plant with D. insipida. 1943 ] SMITH, OLD WORLD SPECIES OF WINTERACEAE 127 2. Drimys membranea F. v. Muell. Fragm. Phyt. Austr. 5: 175. 1866; F. M. Bailey, Syn. Queensl. Fl. 5. 1883; Parment. in Bull. Sci. Fr. & Belg. 27: 227, 302, as D. membranacea. 1896; F. M. Bailey, Queensl. Fl. 1:18. 1899; Pilger in E. & P Nat. Pfl. Nachtr. - 108, as D. membranacea. 1906; F. M. Railey, Compr. Cat. Queensl. Pl. 21. 19 Shrub or tree up to ee m. nigh, the branchlets subterete or slightly angled, rugulose, brownish, 1.5—-4 mm. in diameter near apices; leaves often more or less congested toward oe ‘of branchlets, the petioles stout, 1-2 mm broad, often flattened and narrowly winged, 1-7 mm. long; leaf- blades chartaceous or subcoriaceous, brownish when dried, narrowly obovate, (4—)6-13 cm. long, (1—)1.5-4.3 cm. broad, gradually attenuate at base and decurrent on the petiole, obtusely cuspidate or short-acuminate at apex, slightly recurved at margin, the costa broad, slightly raised or shallowly canaliculate above, usually subprominent beneath, the secondary nerves (S5—)8—-14 per side, erecto-patent at an angle of 30—45°, prominulous on ee surfaces, freely anastomosing near margin, the veinlets reticulate, faintly prominulous on both surfaces; flowers single, clustered aroun nd growing point of branchlets, at length hcalciol ara subtended by bracts, these papyraceous, oblong, about 5 mm. long, soon caducous, the pedicels slender, 12-33 mm. long (sometimes shorter in pistillate plants) ; staminate flowers: sepals 2, submembranaceous, eglandular or obscurely yellow- glandular, suborbicular-deltoid, 4-5.5 mm. long and broad, obtuse or rounded at apex; petals 2, similar to sepals in texture, obovate-linear, about & mm. long and 2—3.5 mm. broad at anthesis, narrowed to base, obtuse or rounded at apex; stamens 25-35, 3- or 4-seriate, the filaments subcarnose, subterete-ligulate, obscurely yellow-glandular, 0.5—3.5 mm. long, the locules 0.7-1.3 mm. long; carpels 1 or 2 (or 3, ex Mueller), sterile, obovoid- ellipsoid, 2.5-3 mm. long at anthesis, the stigmatic ridge obvious, elongate; pistillate flowers: sepals and petals similar to staminate in texture, the sepals ovate-oblong, 3.5-6 mm. long, 2.5-3 mm. broad, the petals about & mm. long and 2—2.5 mm. broad; stamens none; carpel 1, ellipsoid, 2.5—4 mm. long at anthesis, short-stipitate, the stigmatic ridge obvious, extending from apex nearly to base, the ovules 14-36 (or possibly sometimes more, with some aborted) ; fruit 1-carpellate, oblong-ellipsoid to nearly subglobose, 6-10 mm. long and 5—7 mm. broad at maturity, rounded at base and apex, the stigmatic ridge elongate, obscure, the pericarp carnose, obscurely yellow-glandular, the seeds usually 4—7 (with many aborted), black, shin- ing, obovoid, slightly falcate, 3-3. 5 mm. bee and about 2 mm. broad at maturity, subacute at base, rounded at apex. DISTRIBUTION: Eastern Queensland, from about lat. 16° to 18°, at elevations of 800-1600 m. (or perhaps oe down to sea-level); in rain- foret or low bush, sometimes common (Kajew AusTRALIA: Queensland: Thornton Peak, Brass 2291 (A); Gadgarra, Peer- amon, Atherton, Kajewski 1065 (A, NY, UC); Mt. Bartle Frere, Kajewski 1291 (A, NY); Bellenden Ker, near summit, White (A); Rockingham Bay, Dallachy (GH, NY): The sepals and petals are reported as white by Brass, green by Kajewski; the mature fruit is said to be black. The young leaves, bracts, and some- times the whole plant are often tinged with purple. Mueller’s original description is based on an apparently staminate speci- men collected by Dallachy “ad fontes fluminis Mackay-River,’ whereas 128 JOURNAL OF THE ARNOLD ARBORETUM [VOL. XXIV the Dallachy specimens cited above, from Rockingham Bay, are pistillate. The type specimen must have very young leaves, as none of those seen by me could be considered membranaceous. Mueller describes the petals as 2 or 3, but all my specimens have them 2 Drimys membranea is doubtless a close relative of D. insipida, which it resembles in leaf-shape and texture, differing primarily in the quite different leaf-base. Both species have the sepals and petals of the pistillate flowers narrower than those of the staminate. In D. membranea both sepals and petals are shorter and usually proportionately narrower. ‘The fruit of . membranea appears to be consistently smaller and with fewer seeds than that of D. insipida. 3. Drimys purpurascens Vickery in gine Linn. Soc. N. S. Wales 62: 78. f. 1; pl. 5. 1937; Fraser & Vickery, 1]. c. 288. DistriputTion: Thus far known sue — a restricted area on the Mt. Royal Ranges in the vicinity of the Barrington Tops, New South Wales, at an altitude of 1350-1500 m AustTrRaALIA: New South Wales: Barrington Tops, Boorman (US), White 11472 (A) The original description is very complete, being based upon several col- lections from the same locality; the type is Fraser & Vickery (in May, 193 The species is readily distinguished from its allies, D. instpida and D. membranea, by its more numerous carpels and several- carpellate fruits, as well as by its usually broader leaf-blades and broad subalate petioles. White indicates that the species is very common locally in both rain-forest and Eucalyptus forest. 4. — lanceolata (Poir.) Baill. Hist. Pl. 1: 159. f. 205-207. 1867-69; Parment. Bull. Sci. Fr. & Belg. 27: 225, as synonym. 1896; Pilger in E. & P. Nat. Pfl. Nacht 2: 108. 1906; Ewart, FI. Vict. 517. 1930; — in Proc, Linn. Soc. N.S. Wales 62: 82. 1937; Fraser & Vickery, ]. c. 288 Winterania lanceolata Poir. Encycl. 8: 799. 1808. Tasmannia aromatica R. Br. ex DC. Reg. Veg. Syst. Nat. 1: 445. 1817; Deless. Ic. Sel. 1: 22. pl. 84. 1820; DC. Prodr. 1: 78. 1824; Lindl. Bot. Reg. 3 l. 43. 1845; Hook. f. Fl. Tasm. 1: 11. 1855; Miers in Ann. Mag. Nat. Hist. IIT. ‘3: 110. 1858, Contrib. Bot. 1: 139. 1861; Baill. Hist. Pl. 1: 159, as synonym. 1867-69; Meredith, Bush Friends Tasm. Ser Ult. pl. 17. 1891. Drimys aromatica F. v. Muell. Pl. Indig. Col. Vict. 1: 20. 1860; Benth. Fl. Austral. 63% lg v. Muell. Nat. Pl. Vict. 1: 19, 187. f. 44. 1879, Key Syst. Vict. Pi: 2: 6. pl. 3. 1885, op. cit. 1: 121. 1888; C. Moore, Handb. FI. N. S. Wales 13. 1893 ; said in Bull. Sci. Fr. & Belg. 27: 225, 298. pl. 11, f. 41. 1896; Rodway, Tasm. Fl. 5. 1903; De Wildem. in Ic. Sel. Hort. Then. i 127. pl. 191. 1906; Maiden & Betche, Census of N. S. Wales Pl. 79. 1916; Ewart, Handb. For. Trees Vict. For. 116. 1925; Johnstone in Jour. Roy. Hort. Soc. 62: 96. f. 25. 1937. Drimys aromatica var. aromatica Parment. in Bull. Sci. Fr. & Belg. 27: 226. 1896. ?Drimys xerophylla Parment. in Bull. Sci. Fr. & Belg. 27: 226, 299, nomen sub- nudum. 1896; Vickery in Proc. Linn. Soc. N. S. Wales 62: 83, as synonym. 1937. hrub or small tree, 2-10 m. high, the branchlets aceon or slightly angled, rugulose, reddish brown or purplish, slender, 1-3 mm. in diameter toward apices; leaves scattered, the petioles rugulose, dusllowis canalicu- late, 2-15 mm. long, 0.7—-2 mm. in diameter, often swollen at base; leaf- blades subcoriaceous or chartaceous, pale green or yellow-green when dried, oblanceolate or narrowly elliptic-obovate, (3—)4-11 cm. long, 0.6—-3 cm. 1943] SMITH, OLD WORLD SPECIES OF WINTERACEAE 129 broad, attenuate at base and decurrent on the petiole, obtuse or subacute at apex, narrowly recurved at margin, the costa subplane or slightly raised above, more obviously elevated beneath, the secondary nerves 3—7 per side, elongate, sharply ascending at an angle of 10-20°, inconspicuously anas- tomosing toward margin, immersed or prominulous above, prominulous beneath, the veinlets immersed or obscurely prominulous beneath: flowers single, aggregated around growing point of branchlets, at length sa lateral, subtended by bracts, these papyraceous, oblong, obtuse, 4-13 m long, soon caducous, the pedicels slender, 8—25 mm. long (staminate eae ers) or 4-12 mm. long (pistillate flowers and fruits) : staminate flowers: sepals 2 (rarely 3), membranaceous, densely but obscurely pellucid- petals 5—8, resembling sepals in texture, linear-oblong or narrowly obovate, 4-9 mm. long, 1.5—3.5 mm. broad, obtuse at apex; stamens 15-28, 2- or 3- ua! iy filaments eglandular, 0.7-3.5 mm. long, the locules ellipsoid, m. long, the carpel 1 (rarely 2 or perhaps 3), sterile, ellipsoid, 0.7—-1 mm. long at anthesis, the stigmatic ridge obvious, occupying entire rounded apex and extending to base; pistillate flowers: sepals as in stami- nate or ma, narrower; petals 4 (in all available specimens), as in staminate but 3.5—5.5 mm. long and 0.7—2 mm. broad; stamens none; carpel 1 (rarely 2), subglobose or ellipsoid, about 1.5 mm. in diameter at anthesis, rounded at base and apex, the stigmatic ridge extending over apex along entire ventral edge, the ovules 10-18; fruit 1-carpellate, oblong- subglobose or subglobose, often appearing obscurely bilobed, 5-10 mm. long and 5—8 mm. broad at maturity, rounded at base and apex, the stig- matic ridge elongate, the pericarp subcarnose, rugulose, obscurely yellow- glandular, the seeds 6—18, dark castaneous or black, shining, obovoid, strongly falcate, 2.5-3.5 mm. long, 1.3—2 mm. broad, acute at base, rounded at apex DistrRIBUTION: New South Wales, Victoria, and Tasmania, extending southward from about lat. 31°, at elevations up to 1200 m. in the north, occurring down to sea- level in Tasmania; usually found in wet forest in New South Wales and Victoria; ane in Tasmants and forming dense thickets on margins of streams in rich humid VT eared LIA: South Wales: Hastings River, Moore (GH); Braid- wood, Baker mise ‘aie ioal Mt., Braidwood, Boorman (US); Bago, de Beuzeville 201 (A); Tumbarumba, Cambage (GH); Victoria: Kuntze 20113 (NY); Mt. Baw Baw, Melvin (GH); Mt. Mueller, near Mt. Baw Baw, Mueller (GH); Tasmania: R. Browns. n. or 2918 (type coll. of Tasmannia aromatica, F, GH, M, NY), Gunn (A, F, GH, M, US), Archer (GH); Golden Valley, toward Westbury Road, Rodway 125 (A); Mt. Wellington, Gunn 777 (GH, M), Oldfield (US); without definite locality: Labillardiére (tyPE coLL., GH), Paterson (A). NATIVE NAMES: Pepper-tree, native pepper, mountain pepper, wild pepper-corn. Mueller describes the petals as white with a red or green streak down the middle; colored plates show the petals as white, but none of the speci- mens seen by me have adequate color-notes. Many of the descriptions cited above, such as those of Hooker, Mueller, and De Wildeman, are based on a more comprehensive concept than admitted in my description; these authors include in the species material from the Victorian Alps which is much reduced in foliage and floral char- 130 JOURNAL OF THE ARNOLD ARBORETUM [VOL. XXIV acters and which I describe below as D. Vickeriana. The species which Vickery has described as D. stipitata is also included in some of the early concepts of the present species, as indicated by references to the petals as 2-8 in number; I believe that D. /anceolata never has fewer than 4 petals. Mueller describes the ovaries as 1-11 and in some of his plates shows 4 carpels; his concept doubtless included specimens which are referable to D. stipitata, but even there no more than 8 carpels have otherwise been reported. 5. Drimys stipitata Vickery in Proc. Linn. Soc. N. S. Wales 62: = ‘2.1937: Drimys aromatica var. pedunculata Maiden in Agric. Gaz. S. Wales 5: 600 (Dorrigo For. Res. 8). 1894; Maiden & Betche, Census N. Ps Wales Pl. 79, 1916. DISTRIBUTION: Fairly common in onan New South Wales between about lat. 29° and 32°, at elevations of 600-120 and also occurring near the boundary with Victoria perhaps at slightly higher ita, probably to be found elsewhere in New South Wales and in adjacent Victor AustrRALiA: New South Wa ; es: Dorrigo Forest Reserve, Beilsdown Creek, Maiden in 1893 (type coll. of D. aromatica var. pedunculata, A); Dorrigo State Forest, toward Wild Cattle Creek, White 7572 (A, NY); Mt. oo i line to about 2100 m., Maiden & Forsyth (UC); Snowy River, Cheel 813 (A The original description is ample and is based upon mee ee collections, the type of the species being Maiden (in 1895), collected at Guy Fawkes. Although D. stipitata is scarcely distinguishable from lanceolata in foliage, the differences in number of petals and carpels, and especially in the shape of the carpels, are quite obvious. The carpels of the present species are conspicuously stipitate in fruiting specimens, and this character is also apparent in both staminate and pistillate flowers. However, there can be no doubt that D. lanceolata and D. stipitata are close relatives, and I believe that they are too far separated in Vickery’s key (7: 83). The pistillate flowers, as in other Australian species, lack stamens, while carpels in the staminate flowers (1 or 2 in my material) are sterile. 6. Drimys Vickeriana sp. nov. Fu Drimys aromatica var. alpina commen in “Bull Sci. Fr. & Belg. 27: 226, 300, nomen subnudum, 1896. Drimys ismcuoiote var. parvifolia Vickery in Proc. Linn. Soc. N. S. Wales 62: 83. Frutex compactus, ramis crassis multiramulosis, ramulis subteretibus cinereis apicem versus 1—3 mm. diametro cicatricibus foliorum delapsorum copiose ornatis; foliis dense congestis, petiolis rugulosis semiteretibus 1—3 mm. longis 0.8—1 mm. diametro, laminis coriaceis siccitate fuscis oblongis vel anguste ellipticis, 8-16 mm. longis, 2~5 mm. latis, basi acutis vel secundariis utrinsecus circiter 3 adscendentibus utrinque immersis vel supra inconspicue impressis, venulis obscuris; floribus singulis aggregatis termi- nalibus demum hep ae ei bracteis submembranaceis pellucido- glandulosis obovatis, 3—4 mm. longis, 2—2.5 mm. latis, apice rotundatis, mox caducis; pedicellis gracilibus teretibus 3— 5 mm. longis; floribus ¢_ solis visis: sepalis 2 submembranaceis eglandulosis suborbicularibus 2.5-3 mm 1943 ] SMITH, OLD WORLD SPECIES OF WINTERACEAE 131 diametro, apice rotundatis; petalis 2 ee obovato-oblongis, sub ant thesi 2.5—3 mm. longis et circiter 1 mm. apice rotundatis; staminibus 10-12, 2-seriatis, filamentis cia “egandulos 0.5-1. 5 mm. longis, loculis ellipsoideis 0.6-0.8 mm. longis; ca arpello unico sterili ellipsoideo sub anthesi circiter 1 mm. longo, basi et apice obtuso, carina stigmatum apicali-ventrali circiter 0.5 mm. longa; fructibus 1- -carpellatis subglobosis maturitate 4-5 mm. diametro, pericarpio subcarnoso ruguloso 4) y Mi] 5, ei pine re A] Wb 57) we Fee Zs Go Fic. 3. a-e. Drimys Vickeriana, drawn from the type: a. flowering branchlet, x 2; b. staminate flower, x 3; c. stamens, introrse and extrorse views, x 5; d. sterile carpel, x 5; e. sterile carpel, longitudinal section, x 5. f-i. Drimys microphylla, drawn from the type: f. flowering branchlet, x 4; g. staminate flower, xX 2; h. stamens, extrorse and introrse views, X 5; i. sterile carpel, X 5. j-n. Drimys obovata, drawn from the type: 7. flowering agence x 4; k. young staminate flower, x 14; J. mature stam- inate flower, X 13; m. stamens, introrse and extrorse views, x 5; n. sterile carpel, x SO .eP: slaps Brassii, ae from the type: o. fruit, showing three carpels, x 1; p. seed obscure glanduloso, seminibus circiter 3 castaneis nitidis obovoideis leviter falcatis, 2.5-3 mm. longis, 1.5—2 mm. latis, basi obtusis, apice rotundatis. DISTRIBUTION: eee portion of the Australian Alps, Victoria, at elevations of about 1200-1500 m AUSTRALIA: Vic ria: Mt. Baw Baw, Mueller (US); Mt. Mueller, near Mt. Baw Baw, J. G. rae (cam Ge pee in 1893 (GH, Type, UC), French in 1895 (GH, NY, UC). No specimen is cited with Parmentier’s brief note on D. aromatica var. alpina, but the specimen I have selected as the type of the new species bears this herbarium name; the type of D. lanceolata var. parvifolia is J. Staer in April 1911, from the Upper Yarra. In order to avoid ambiguity I have thought it better to propose the above-described entity as a new 132 JOURNAL OF THE ARNOLD ARBORETUM [VOL. XXIV species rather than to take up one of the varietal names. The species is named for Miss Joyce W. Vickery, in recognition of her work on the Australian Drimytes. Additional specimens are cited with her varietal description, and she describes the leaf-blades as 8-23 mm. long, but none of those available to me exceed 16 mm Drimys Vickertana is very distinct in its compact habit, small crowded leaves, small floral parts, reduced number of stamens and seeds, etc. Like lisemataten it has a subglobose 1-carpellate fruit which is rounded at base, while it resembles D. stipitata in having only two petals. It appears to me to be one of the most distinct species of the genus, and I am unable to consider it merely a variety of either of its relatives. NEW GUINEAN AND MALAYAN SPECIES The Section Tasmannia reaches its greatest development in New Guinea, in its total variability, number of species, and number of indi- viduals. Until the extensive exploration of New Guinea began, no more than forty years ago, the genus was supposed to occur there only sparsely, as represented by a very few collections referred to D. hatamensis Becc. and D. piperita Hook. f. We are now aware that the genus is one of the predominant elements in many of the montane regions of New Guinea, having been collected at all elevations between 800 and 3800 m._ Its occurrence toward the lower limit of this altitudinal belt is presumably sparse, and therefore it was not observed in quantity until explorers gained access to the interior mountains. In this treatment I am able to recognize 29 species from New Guinea, although many of these are known to me only from the original descriptions. This number contrasts with the six species known from Australia and Tasmania and the single species known from the Philippines, Borneo, Celebes, and perhaps Amboina. Key TO THE NEw GUINEAN AND MALAYAN SPECIES sara agar oS probably always ann tic. the leaf-blades 5-10 mm. long. Pet . 2: t 3 mm. long; stamens about 8, 1- or 2-seriate; leaf- gene 5-7 mm. SRENSSAASAES SHG Mecane BAe a: chimp: eats Show civaus cick Sutny: bean edrand-denesnonbanasionss is . vaccinioides. oe 6, 4-5 mm. long; stamens 14-18, usually 3-seriate; leaf- ae (5- )6-10 mm. MAIN nic ce vas tonetssseasd ws onatieaarcsdal ate ata ome ere) paw dearaaaeea seen eee sions microphylla Small-leaved species, sometimes epiphytic, usually sclerophyllous, ‘the leaf-blades 0.9—)1—4 (rarely to 5.5) cm. long. Leaf-blades (9—)10-18 mm. long, 4-12 mm. broad; petals 2-4, up to 8 mm. long; stamens in staminate flowers 18-27, in hermaphrodite flowers 13-18 .......... gs esigel ead dees calmed eaghs Ses aos MO eaery anastasia acas is dheS ante siadein tact aedinneye raise aniceasneos 9. D. buxifolia. Doubtfully distinct from preceding ..................00-0000.. 10. D. Versteegii. 11. D. reducta. Leaf-blades (1.5—)2—4(—5.5) cm. lon Petals none (rarely 1); stamens in dtewinate flowers 4—6; leaf- ore lanceolate- oblong, obtusely acuminate at apex........... 00.00 cee ueee oligandra. Petals stamens in staminate flowers probably 12-27; leaf- blades elliptic- or oblong-obovate, obtuse or rounded at apex. Leaf- bois with obvious venation, (10—)15—25 mm. broad; pee in pistillate owers none; petals 4—-4.5 mm. long; carpels 2-4; ovules - 1G: oieiow sinus Leaf-blades with immersed venation. 1943] SMITH, OLD WORLD SPECIES OF WINTERACEAE 133 Carpels in hermaphrodite flowers 5 or 6; stamens et ape blades 15-22 mm. broad scstalfesatcesaitecnee-diiy Wiaterslaat € sieang a at quanta abeeaane a D. pittosporoides. Carpels os fruit) 1-3; seeds pa 24; petals in Meare ‘flowers 5.5-7 mm. long; leaf-blades (4—) 6-13 he OAC) cc. ceo nets. ne be Brassii. Petals 5 or more (rarely 4) ; aa in ret flowers 12-30 or Leaf-blades fistulose, strongly revolute at margins, 1-5 mm. broad; petals 10-12, the outer ones Broadest and sepaloid ...... 0.1.08 seed e.0 0 16. D. fistulosa. Leaf-blades more or less flattened, at least 5 mm. broad Flowers large, the petals about 18 mm. long and 7 mm. broad; stamens in i owers about 30, the carpel solitary .......... 17. D. elongata. Flowers smaller, the petals less than 10 mm. long. t or more, variable in size, the outer and inner series smaller than the middle series; stamens about 25; leaf-blades 5-10 mm. broad, with Obsolete: Nerves: . so. oe shavs cae d dade vanessa s onlides . D. myrtoides. ee 7-14; stamens in staminate flowers 19-22; leaf- blades 12-23 mm. — Ree etait Any ain & oan a ou abate cane mneene enna . D. arfakensis. mee Leaf- ‘ae obovate, about 2 cm. long and 1 cm. pies ie coriaceous ; tals linear-oblong or subspatulate, about 4 m mm. <0: (0 Lee ee IO ee oC RC ea ae er are ere a are “19. D . parviflora. Leaf- ae elliptic-obovate, 1.5-3 cm. long, 1-2 cm. broad, thick- coriaceous, with reticulate-prominulous nerves; petals oblanceolate or narrowly oblong, 3-5 mm. long, about 2.5 mm. Be ete eet ess FTN RE ee ee O54D: ed aan Leat- ares elongate-obovate or oblong-spatulate, 2- a cm, long, ad, coriaceous; petals narrowly spatulate, a mm. ae oe MAT DLOAG cia rec: k aoracchsa. sarane capaci eats hee .D. Lamii. ee verticillate, or at east ee pcan ks in clusters of Ne a aid 7 or 8. Pedicels about 1 cm. long; largest petals about 6 mm. long and : 1.7 mm. bro léat-blades. attenuate at base? . 4 )4.00204 3080.2. San beets aD: ee ledlaic. Pedicels 6—7 cm. long; largest sate about 14 mm. long and 5 mm. broad; leaf- blades broadly rounded at base ........... 0.000 ce eeeueceeeeee 23. D. rosea. tie alternate or subopposite, not vert. s 5 or more (sometimes 4 i ye he small, the petals 4— ‘i mm. long at anthesis, the stamens in staminate flowers usually 15-22. Petals 7-14; leaf-blades obovate-lanceolate, up to 6 cm. long hae 2.3 cm. BLO AC: orth Island: Kirk (GH); Wellington, Travers (GH); South Is nd: Otira Valley, Cockayne 183 (GH), 3470 (NY); Akaroa, Banks fairer Sad (TYPE COLL., GH, US), Kirk (A, F, M); Mt. Sinclair, Banks Peninsula, Meebold i. (NY); Hunter Hills, South Canterbury, Anderson 213 (A, M, NY, UC, US); ke Manipouri, Setchell (UC); without definite locality: Colne in Védel (US), Oliver (UC). NATIVE NAMES: Pepper-tree, craoutink (ex Raoul). In discussing Drimys axillaris, Featon uses the names pepper-tree and Maori painkiller, which are more likely to refer to var. colorata 1943 ] SMITH, OLD WORLD SPECIES OF WINTERACEAE 159 Dandy has referred Wintera monogyna v. Tiegh. to the synonymy of Pseudowintera Traversii, but I am more inclined to believe that it repre- sents the present variety. It is said to differ from Raoul’s species in its smaller and more rounded leaves and especially in its single carpel. The latter character has been noted in some specimens of var. colorata, and the leaf-shape is too variable to be of much consequence. Van Tieghem does not mention the stamens as being exceptionally few in number, a point which he probably would have emphasized if his plant represented P. Traversii. Furthermore the type of Wintera monogyna was collected by Hombron at Akaroa (the type locality of Raoul’s species), whereas P. Traversii has not been authentically reported from that part of the South Island. 2. Pseudowintera Traversii (Buchanan) Dandy in Jour. Bot. 71: 122. Hymenanthera Traversii Buchanan in Trans. New Zeal. Inst. 15: 339. 4 1-1b. 1883. Drimys Traversii Kirk in Trans. New Zeal. Inst. 30: 379. 1898; Cheesem. Man. N. Zeal. Fl. 30. 1906, ed. 2. 456. 1925, = N. Zeal. Fl. 1: pl. 8 Wintera Traversii Cockayne in Bull. N. Zeal. State For. Sere, A(2): 43. 1928, in DistRIBUTION: South Island, apparently limited to the northwestern portion, from near the northern tip of the island southward to the Buller River region, probably not occurring much farther south than latitude 42°; altitude up to about 900 m. The type was collected by Travers in the Collingwood district. Having seen no specimens referable to this species, I am acquainted with it only through the above references. The descriptions of Kirk and Cheeseman (in 1906) are quite adequate, and an excellent plate was pub- lished by Cheeseman in 1914. The species is characterized by its com- pact habit, being a shrub from 0.7 to 2 m. high, often straggling or semi- prostrate, with reddish branches and branchlets. The leaves are crowded and more or less imbricate, with petioles closely appressed to the branchlets and with coriaceous blades which are 2—3 cm. long, 0.8-1.3 cm. broad, and glaucous beneath. The pedicels are often solitary, sometimes paired ; the calyx is entire, the petals 5 or 6 and about 3 mm. long, the stamens 5 or 6 and uniseriate, and the carpel solitary. 5. EXOSPERMUM Exospermum vy. Tiegh. in Jour. de Bot. 14: 279, 333, 1900; Pilger in & P. Nat. Pfl. Nachtr. 2: 109. 1906; Hutchinson in Kew Bull. 1921: 190. 19 Exospermum is known only from the two New Caledonian ae upon which it was originally founded; the type is E. stipitatum. Van Tieghem’s classification (6: 354) has the genus most closely related to Zygogynum, with which it has in common “carpelles unis, 4 placentation médiane.”” In his discussion, however, van Tieghem points out that the carpels of Exospermum are only superficially united and not firmly concrescent as in Zygogynum, while the placentation of E. Lecarti (6: 339) is “en méme temps marginale, latérale et médiane pour chaque carpelle .. .”’ In effect, the genus is more suggestive of Bubbia than of Zygogynum and might con- ceivably be combined with the former, although for the present I feel justified in retaining it as outlined by van Tieghem. 160 JOURNAL OF THE ARNOLD ARBORETUM [VOL, XXIV 1, a stipitatum (Baill.) v. ig ex Pilger in . ' P. Nat. Pfl. Nachtr. . 1906; Hutchinson in Kew B 1921: 190. fig. Fic. 6, a-e. Peart stipitatum say in »Adanson 10: 334. 1873; vids in Ann. Mus. Col. Marseille II. 9: Drimys neo- Sree te ex Baill. in Adansonia 10: 335, as synonym. 1873. Drimys Lenormandii Vieill. ex Parment. in Bull. Sci. Fr. & Belg. 27: 231, 308. pl. 0, f. 35, pl. 11, f. 42, 43, nomen subnudum. 1 1896; Vieill. ex v. Tiegh. in Jour. Bot. 14: 333, as synonym. 1 ; Vieill. ex Guillaumin in Ann, Mus. Col. Marseille II. 9: 95, nomen. 1911. Drimys austro-caledonicus Vieill. (pro parte) ex v. Tiegh. in Jour. de Bot. 14: 333, nonym. 1900 DistRipuTION: New Caledonia; the type was collected by Vietllard at Wagap (ex Baillon), or “dans les montagnes de Ti-Ouaka prés de Wagape” (ex van Tieghem) ; a single leaf of this is available (A). Van Tieghem also cites Vieillard 2281 (GH), the source of the name Drimys Lenormandii; from a comparison of the foliage, one may suspect that this is the same collection as the type, which was unnumbered. Van Tieghem’s description of this species is very detailed and accurate, although my observations of the gynaecium lead me to believe that he attaches too much importance to the regularity of the carpel-arrangement. In one flower available to me there are 6 carpels in a single whorl, in second flower there are 7 carpels, of which one has apparently been pushed into the center by pressure. Van Tieghem reports the carpels as occurring in two whorls of 3-5 carpels each. No petals are available on our material, but van Tieghem describes these as occurring in three tetramerous whorls, implying a degree of regularity which is not found in the related genera. In this species the placentation is said to be limited to the external face of the carpels, but actually the ovules also occupy a portion of the distal lateral faces and the apical-ventral angle. In his treatment of the plant, van Tieghem neglected to make the actual combination Exospermum stipitatum, apparently through an oversight, for he repeatedly mentions ‘“Exosperme stipité’ and gives Zygogynum stipitatum as a synonym. It appears that Pilger was the first to use the correct Latin binomial. 2. Exospermum Leearti v. Racioy in Jour. de Bot. 14: 334. 1900; Pilger in E. & P. Nat. Pfl. Nachtr. 2: 10 TRIBUTION: New Ca ae. lent ed only from the type collection, Lécart 141, Bese detinite locality; probably a suman leaf (A) under this name, but te Lécart 144, is actually from the same collection. Van Tieghem mentions that this is ees in foliage to the preceding, but differs from it by its usually solitary and short-pedicellate flowers, fewer carpels, and more extensive placental surface. The ovules are said to be situated at the internal angle of the carpel, on the lateral faces, and also on the external face. This is interpreted, by van Tieghem, as a transitional stage between the carpel of Bubbia and Belliolum (which he supposes always to have the ovulation along the ventral angle) and that of Exo- Spermum stipitatum, in which the ovules are supposedly situated only on the external face of the carpel. The carpels of E. Lecarti are only weakly united, and in this respect the species is similar to some species is Bubbia, i.e. B. montana (Lauterb.) A. C. Sm. and B. pachyantha A. C. Sm. It 1943 | SMITH, OLD WORLD SPECIES OF WINTERACEAE 161 appears that the ovulation in Bubbia and Belliolum is more diverse than supposed by van Tieghem, and the placental surface is not always restricted to the ventral angle of the carpel in those genera. Consequently, the primary characters upon which Exospermum is founded do not sharply distinguish the genus from Bubbia and Belliolum, although the stamens amply separate it from the latter. However, I do not propose to unite Exospermum with Bubbia; although it doubtless represents an extr trend from a Bubbia-like ancestor, it seems to be sufficiently characterized by its ovulation to merit generic status. However, I believe that its closest alliance is with Bubdia rather than with Zygogynum. a) 3 oO 1G. 6. a-e. Exospermum stipitatum, drawn from Vieillard 2281: a. branchlet with two flowers past anthesis, x 4; b. flower, past anthesis, the petals and stamens having fallen, X 2; c. stamens, extrorse and introrse views, x 5; d. carpel, x 2; e. carpel, Zygogynum Vieillardi, drawn from Franc 1740: f. branchlet with solitary terminal young flower, x 4; g. flower with calyx and petals removed, xX 12; h. stamens, extrorse and introrse views, X 5; 7. longitudinal section of young flower, showing torus with stamens and fused carpels, < 2; j. enlarged section of 7, showing two stig- mas, one locule (with one row of ovules removed), and the connecting canal, x 4. 6. ZYGOGYNUM Zygogynum Baill. in Adansonia 7: 298. 1867, Hist. Pl. 1: 160, 190. 1867-69; Prantl in E. . Nat. Pfl. III. 2: 19. 1891; v. Tiegh. in Jour. de Bot. 14: 279, 340. 1900; Pilger in E. & P. Nat. Pfl. Nachtr. 2: 109. 1906; Hutchinson in Kew Bull. 1921: 191. 1921. 162 JOURNAL OF THE ARNOLD ARBORETUM [ VOL. XXIV Zygogynum Sect. Monanthum v. — in Jour. de Bot. 14: 341. 1900; Pilger in E. & P. Nat. Pfl. Nachtr. 2: 109. nd Nh ie Sect Pleianthum v Tiegh. in Jour. de Bot. 14: 341. 1900; Pilger in E. & P. . Pfl. Nachtr. 2: 109. Sena ie been generally eee by workers on the New Cale- donian flora as a good genus. It is indeed the most distinct genus of the family in many respects, with a unique type of carpellary specialization. No species have been added to Zygogynum since it was amplified by van Tieghem to include six species. In Zygogynum the carpels are firmly concrescent and the ovules are limited to the external face of the locule; van Tieghem interprets these facts as a continuation of the trend begun in Exospermum, which may indeed be true, although the remarkable syncarpy of Zygogynum is only faintly suggested by the loosely coherent carpels of Exospermum. ‘The two genera have a common aspect in their reduced inflorescences, the flowers being either solitary and terminal or few in a terminal umbel (perhaps more properly described as single and clustered around the growing point). The two sections proposed by van Tieghem are based on solitary versus aggregated flowers, a division which seems arbitrary and not very useful, since the flowers in the second group are often reduced to one soon after anthesis. The principal basis of speciation may eventually be found to occur in the gynaecium, as suggested by van Tieghem (6: 347-348), the number and disposition of the carpels varying from species to species. Baillon’s paper discussing his new species does not include a formal generic description, nor does the generic name appear as an independent entity in the text, being first mentioned as such in a brief summary (op. cit. oi However, the description of Zygogynum Vieillardi may be taken as a descriptio generico-s pecifica. The species are here briefly discussed in the order proposed by van Tieghem. 1. Zygogynum Vieillardi Baill. in Adansonia 7: 298. pl. 4. 1867, Hist. Pl. 1: 161. Z. Viedlardit. 1906; Guillaumin in Ann. Mus. Col. Marseille II. 9:95, 1911. Fic. 6 DistrIBUuTION: New Caledonia; the type collection is pes 187, from moun- tains near Balade. Guillaumin adds citations of Pancher 17 and 283 from Mt. Koghi, neither of which I have seen, and Balansa 2763 from Mt. Mou , of which a fragment (A) seems very possibly to represent a species, although it is also suggestive of Z. Bailloni. The only specimen in American herbaria which I can positively refer to Z. Vieillardi is Franc 1740 (A, UC), one Prony. The species is well described and figured by Baillon; it is characterized by its 10-12 concrescent carpels with elliptic or subcapitate stigmas. 7: saa Bailloni v. Tiegh. in Jour. de Bot. 14: 340. 1900; Pilger in E. & P. . Pfl. Nachtr. 2: 109, as Z. Baillonii. 1906 ISTRIBUTION: New Caledonia; the type was -gollected by Pancher in 1870, ap- parently without number or definite locality, and is represented by a leaf (A) which M Mou, a sterile specimen which may be referred to Z. Bailloni with reasonable certainty. 1943] SMITH, OLD WORLD SPECIES OF WINTERACEAE 163 Zygogynum Bailoni is compared by van Tieghem to Z. Viellardi, from which it differs in having its leaf-blades more coriaceous and glossy, and in having 4 carpels with sessile linear stigmas rather than 10-12 carpels with elliptic stigmas. This is the only species of the genus elaborated in detail by van Tieghem (6: 341-345); it is said to have a very short and stout pedicel, 8 petals in two whorls, and carpels concrescent except at the apices. The difference in stigmatic characters between this species and the remain- ing species of Zygogynum causes van Tieghem (6: 348) to speculate on its generic status. On the basis of his discussion, one might assume that Z. Bailloni is the most primitive species of the genus in its retention of a linear stigmatic ridge. 3: ga a Seay bicolor v. es in Jour. de Bot. 14: 341. 1900; Pilger in E. & P. . Pfl. Nachtr. 2: 10 oe New ae ee only from the type collection, Lécart 41 (A, leaf), without definite locality. Zygogynum bicolor is said by van Tieghem to resemble 2. Viedllardi in its solitary flower on a short stout pedicel, but it is distinguished by having its leaf-blades very pale beneath and is further characterized by its very numerous stamens, 147-168 in 7 or 8 whorls (6: 346). 4. oe pomiferum Baill. in apne 10: 334. 1873; v. Tiegh. in Jour ot. 14: 340. 1900; Pilger in E. & P. Nat. Pfl. Nachtr. 2: ‘109. 1906 ; ene in Ann. Mus. Col. Marseille a 9: 95. ae : DistRIBUTION: New Caledonia; the species was originally based by Baillon on two collections, Balansa 2328 (A, TYPE COLL.), from Kanala (alt. 800 m.), and 2804, from the type, deferring the second to his Z. Balansae. Guillaumin cites a collection of Lecard from Bourail as Sune Z. pomiferum. The original description is ample, the species being distinguishable from all others except the following by its comparatively broad leaf-blades. The type collection is in fruit only. cy mee ynum stoma ae v. Tiegh. in ia de Bot. 14: 340. a bey in E.& P Nat. Pfl. Nachtr. 2: 109, 1906; Bak. f. in Jour. Linn. Soc . 45: 268. 1921. DistRIBUTION: New ledonia; the type collection is Balansa 2804, from Mt. Mou, alt. 700 m. Baker cites Compton 1776, from Mt. Panié, as representing co species. Zygogynum Balansae is compared by van Tieghem with Z. pomiferum ; it has similarly large leaves and flowers grouped in a simple sessile umbel, but it is said to differ in having the leaf-blades less coriaceous, longer, nar- rower, distally attenuate, and with the lateral nerves more distant and - iculées.” It is further characterized by its very numerous carpels and large ee these being up to 4 cm. in diameter, according to van Tieghem (6: 3 6. ae te He ee v. Tiegh. in Jour. de ae 14: 341, as Z. spatulatum. 900; Pilger in E. & P t. Pfl. Nachtr. 2: 109. 1906. pent austro- caledonicus aa (pro parte) ex v. ee in Jour. de Bot. 14: 341, as synonym DIsTRIBUTION: New release reported only from the original collection, Vieillard 2266 (GH, TyPE COLL.) from Wagape. 164 JOURNAL OF THE ARNOLD ARBORETUM [ VOL. XXIV Zygogynum spathulatum resembles Z. pomiferum and Z. Balansae in having its flowers aggregated, but it is distinguished by its narrow spatulate leaf-blades, which are rounded at apex and attenuate at base. The carpels are about 20 in number. pm WH an ~a PRINCIPAL LITERATURE CITED Burtt, B. L. Bubbia haplopus. Hook. Ic. Pl. 34: pl. 3315 (pp. 1-3). 1936. Danpy, J. E. The Winteraceae of New Zealand. Jour. Bot. 71: 119-122. 1933. Smiru, A. C. Studies of Papuasian Plants, V. Jour. Arnold Arb. 23: 417-443. 1942. The American species of Drimys. Jour. Arnold Arb. 24: 1-33. f. 1-3. 1943. ——————.. La Distribution géographique et ]’Histoire des Winteraceae. Boissiera, 1943 (in ei ; a P. vA Sur = ch lédones du groupe des Homoxylées. Jour. de Bot. 14: 259-297, "4 361. . ieee, Joyce W. Two new species and one new variety of Drimys Forst., with notes on the species of Drimys and Bubbia van Tiegh. of south-eastern Australi and Lord Howe Island. Proc. Linn. Soc. N. S. Wales 62: 78-84. f. 1, 193 . bearer: T. W. Chromosome number and relationship in the Magnoliales. Jour. d Arb. 14: 376-385. f. 1-4; pl. 80. 1933 ARNOLD ARBORETUM, Harvarp UNIVERSITY. 1943 | CROIZAT, AMERICAN EUPHORBIACEAE 165 NOVELTIES IN AMERICAN EUPHORBIACEAE LEON CROIZAT THE new species, trinomials, and records in this work have accumulated with few exceptions in the herbarium of the Arnold Arboretum of Harvard University in the course of routine determinations. They are published primarily to validate the manuscript names under which many of them have been cited in letters to various correspondents. Some of the entities dealt with here belong to critical groups which are worthy of more detailed consideration, or which should be critically revised. Unless otherwise stated, all the types are deposited in the herbarium of the Arnold Arboretum. Ditaxis Vahl ex A. de Jussieu Te Se eases (Muell.-Arg.) Pax & Hoffm. in Pflanzenr. 57 (IV. 147. vi): 65. ; O'Donnel & Lourt. in Lilloa 8: 67. 1942 Arasthamnia. breviramea Muell.-Arg. in Linnaea 34: 146. 1865, in DC. Prodr. 15(2)3 6. ParaGuay: Fortin Lopez de Filippis, Rojas 8438; Fortin Tte. Montania, Rojas 8479. The record is apparently new for Paraguay. The material cited agrees with a photograph of the Herzog specimen from Bolivia identified as Ditaxis breviramea by Pax, in Med. Rijks. Herb. 40: 22. 1921, and repro- duced as plate 1 in the excellent monograph by O’Donnel & Lourteig. Bernardia Adanson Bernardia Gentryana sp. nov. Arbuscula ad 5 m. alta, innovationibus strictis stellato- vel fasciculato- puberulis. Foliis tenuiter membranaceis ovatis vel ovato-lanceolatis eke stellato-puberulis vel glabratis margine inaequaliter dentate: serratis, 3.5— cm. longis, 1.5—2.5 cm. latis, nervis adscendentibus ca. 7-jugis eraciibus, glandulis cicatricoso- crateriformibus i in basi laminae 2, petiolo ca. 3—5 mm longo. Floribus ¢ ignotis. Floribus @ subsolitariis brevissime pedicel- latis, perianthii squamulis 8-10 in serie duplici, ovatis puberulis costulatis a mm. longis latisque, ovario globuloso depresso ad 2 mm. lato fere totidem longo pallide luteo-tomentello, stylis 3 quove lunulato apice in laciniis 3(—6) partito ad 1.5 mm. m. longo: capsula submatura c mm. magna, semine cordiformi 5 mm. longo, 3.5-4 mm. lato, pallide brunneo- marmorato Mexico: Sinaloa: Nuevo Mundo, Gentry 5372 (TYPE in Gray Herb.). This cannot be Bernardia aspera Pax & Hoffm., B. incana Mort., B. mexicana Muell.-Arg. (at least as illustrated by Pringle 3700), B. obovata Johnst., or B. viridis Millsp., as it disagrees with each one of them in its thinly membranous, ovate to ovate-lanceolate leaves, which are ultimately larger in size. Bernardia Brandegei Millsp. ex Brandeg., in Proc. Cal. Acad. Sci. IT. 3: 172. 1891, is a nomen nudum replaced by B. viridis at publica- tion, as shown by the notes that appear on the photograph of the type of B. viridis Millsp. preserved in the Gray Herbarium. 166 JOURNAL OF THE ARNOLD ARBORETUM [VOL. XXIV Bernardia amazonica sp. nov. Fruticulus vel frutex ad 1 m. altus, ramulis strictis puberulis. Foliis lanceolatis vel obovato-lanceolatis Gene chartaceis vel subcoriaceis 5—10 2 in cymulis sessilibus axillaribus, perianthii squamulis in serie duplici 9 vel 10 ovatis margine integro hispidis, 2 mm. longis, 1-2 mm. latis, ovario vix 1 mm. longo latoque cum stylis confluente, stylis 3 ad | 1 mm. longis apice divaricato-partitis. VENEZUELA: Amazonas: Puerto Ayacucho, Williams 13142. This was distributed as representing B. Jacquiniana Muell.-Arg., which is a very different species. It suggests B. axillaris (Spreng.) Muell.-Arg. in habit and foliage, but manifestly differs from that species in the venation, the texture of the leaf, and in its indumentum. As shown by a Brazilian specimen collected by Riedel, in our herbarium, B. axillaris has glabrous leaves with an immersed venation and differently shaped marginal teeth. Alchornea Swartz Alchornea cyclophylla sp. nov. Arbor videtur glabra vel glabrescens. Foliis subcoriaceis brunneis utrinque glabratis in axillis nervorum barbulatis late rotundato-ovatis, apice breviter apiculato-acuminatis, basi leviter cordatis, margine obscure crenato-serratis, ca. 15 cm. longis, 12—13 cm. latis, nervis ca. 4- vel 5-jugis adscendentibus, primo jugo laminae tertium superum attingente caeteris penninerviis, glandulis in lamina hic inde sparsis parvis, petiolo 5.5—-8 cm. longo, stipulis subglandulosis minimis deciduis. Inflorescentiis ¢ ignotis. Inflorescentiis 2 spicatis puberulis vel glabratis, floribus solitariis vel binis ee bracteolatis, calycis lobis triangulari-acuminatis 4( 5), vix nm. longis latisque, ovario ovoideo glabrescente, tenello vix nes i salevile demum glabro, 2-cocco, stylis 2 integerrimis carnosis epapillosis ad 8 mm. longis ail basim ipsissimam liberis Costa Rica: Alajuela: Palmira, Austin Smith 28706. This differs from A. latifolia Sw. in the styles being cleft to the base and in its foliage. The Central American species are much in need of a critical study. Cleidion Blume Cleidion denticulatum Standl. in Field Mus. Publ. Bot. 4: 218. 1929. The holotype, Cooper 12239, is poor. Its crowded malpighiaceous hairs and the large, easily separable bundles of the columella are strongly rem- iniscent of Bernardia. The loose seeds on the type-sheet, however, have the characters of Cleidion. Better material is needed to determine the correct generic position of this aneen Cleidion oblongifelium (Standl.) comb. n Alchornea oblongifolia Standl. in Carnegie Tnst, Wash. Publ. 461: 66, 1935. The @ flower ending the rachis of the inflorescence has manifestly cleft 1943 ] CROIZAT, AMERICAN EUPHORBIACEAE 167 styles, such as characterize Cleidion. The comparatively long and narrow leaves conform to those of this genus. If generic value is denied to the nature of the style, this being entire in Alchornea, and cleft in Cleidion, it becomes impossible to separate the two groups which both tradition and an aggregate of characters have rightly maintained as distinct genera. This plant is endemic to British Honduras. Cleidion prealtum sp. nov. Arbor ad 30-35 m. alta, innovationibus parcius puberulis citissime glab- ratis vel glabris, cortice pallide brunneo sat lenticellato. Foliis 7-14 c longis, 2—5 cm. latis, obovato-oblongis vel ellipticis, apice breviter acumi- natis, basi plus minusve rotundatis, junioribus membranaceis brunneis vel olivaceis, adultis (e folio singulo) forsan coriaceis, subtus pallidioribus, in venis leviter puberulis glabratisve supra glabratis vel glabris secus costam hic inde pustulato-glandulosis, venis gracilibus ca. 6-jugis, petiolis herbaceis puberulis 2—4 cm. longis, stipulis setaceis ad 3-4 mm. longis. Inflorescentiis 8 spicatis gracillimis 8-10 cm. longis, floribus in cymulis saepius pauci- floris secus rhachem dissitis; perianthio subsessili 3- vel 4-lobo valde delicato puberulo ca. 3.5 mm. lato totidemque longo vel minore, staminibus ca. 50, antheris lateraliter dehiscentibus, filamentis ca. 2 mm. longis; pistillodio, glandulis nullis. Inflorescentiis 9 spicis simplicibus ad 3 cm. longis, subtus bracteis ca. 2 vel 3, linearibus vel subsetaceis, 2 mm. longis, in axillis in- ear semper flore evoluto carentibus, apice flore terminatis; perianthio a. 3-4.5 mm. lato, lobis 5 vel 6 interdum 2 plus minusve inter se adnatis, (ie eu ances ad 2 mm. longis, basi etsi disco nullo tumido-saccatis ; ovario ovoideo ca. 3 mm. longo et 2 mm. lato, luteo-tomentello, stylis 3 quove 7 intus longe grosseque papilloso, papillis haud processiformibus. zonas: Municipality of Humayta, near Tres Casas, Krukoff 6458 Q ees 6357 86,6391 6. Also here probably belong Krukoff 6602, 6649, and 6570, all from the Municipality of Humayta near Livramento on the Rio Livramento. The material cited was distributed as representing Alchornea Hilariana Baill. and A. brachygyne Pax & Hoffm., the misdeterminations being probably suggested by photographs illustrating plants with similar foliage. The 9 flower and the leaves of C. prealtum are strongly reminiscent of Epiprinus Griff. from tropical Asia, a genus which stands out as a natural unit of few species but is otherwise closely allied with Cleidion. Cleidion Woodsonianum sp. nov. Arbuscula 4—5-metralis, pilis brevissimis in innovationibus am glabra. Foliis utrinque acuminatis ellipticis, 7-11 cm. longis, 1.5-4 c latis, apice breviter acuminato-caudatis, basi truncatis vel vix re. latis, hic inde in lamina ipsa glandulosis, pallide olivaceis, supra sub lente 0.5-1.5 cm, longo. Inflorescentia ¢ ignota. Tao @ ad 15 cm. longa, gracillima, floribus 3 vel 4 tantum, bracteis minutissimis lineari- triangularibus fultis; perianthii lobis (videtur) 5 minimis lineari-subulatis, petalis glandulisque nullis, ovario puberulo ovoideo ca. 3 mm. longo totidemque lato, stylis 3 ca. 8 mm. longis quove fere ad basim partito; fructu capsulari, columella gracili delapsa ad 4-5 mm. longa, epicarpio 168 JOURNAL OF THE ARNOLD ARBORETUM [VOL. XXIV sublevi olivaceo sub lente puberulo, semine ovoideo subquadrangulo ca. 4 mm. magno apice acutato. PanaMA: Canal Zone: Vicinity of the Salamanca Hydrographic Station, Rio Pequeni, Woodson, Allen & Seibert 1587. This suggests certain species of the Old World, such as C. leptostachyum Pax & Hoffm. from the Fiji Islands. The type-material was originally dis- tributed with doubt as representing Alchornea costaricensis Pax & Hoffm. Jatropha Linnaeus Jatropha hippocastanifolia sp. nov. Frutex fere metralis. Foliis fere ad basim partitis, 5-7-lobis, margine duplicato-dentatis vel denticulatis vel dentato-serratis longiuscule ciliato- glandulosis, pallide olivaceis utrinque pilis albidis simplicibus sat longis mollisque indutis, 15 cm. longis, 18 cm. latis, juvenilibus multo minoribus, lobo medio maximo cum lateralibus imbricante 12 cm. lon ngo 6 cm. lato ca. 12-nervio,Mobis caeteris minoribus externis ca. 4—5 cm. longis 2.5 cm. latis vel minoribus, petiolo herbaceo ad 17 cm. longo aeque ac lamina induto, hic inde glandulis fasciculatis capitulatisve ornato, basi stipulis glandulosis dissectis insignito. Inflorescentiis cymosis gracilibus velutinosis ad 15 cm. longis, bracteis longe piloso-glandulosis vix 1 cm. longis 2 mm. latis cpp Floribus ¢ albo- -hispidis pubescentibusve, sepalis ca. 2—3 mm. longis 1 m latis integris vel margine denticulis ae glandulosis vel se err notatis, petalis atro-purpureis ca. 5 mm. Jongis 3 mm. latis basi abrupte coarctatis vel angustatis pilosulis, ieee ae 10 in acie duplici filamentis breviter liberis demum in columnam connatis, submaturis ad 6 mm. longis, glandulis rotundatis discretis 5 oppositisepalis. Floribus @ ut 4, sepalis semper neque raro tantum ciliato-glandulosis, ovario globuloso costulato hic inde pilis albidis simplicibus ornato, levi, ca. 2 mm. longo atoque, disco irregulariter interrupto subintegrove margine hic inde bilabiato vix 0.75 mm. alto, stylis pro more gracilibus glabris ad 2.5 mm. en stigmatibus primum partitis dein crure quove iterum 2- vel 3-lobulat Paracuay: Chaco Paraguayo: Oruro, Rojas 8559, To discuss this new species with finality, a critical consideration should be given of several species, including J. gossypiifolia L. My new species suggests the entity called J. intercedens by Pax but differs from it in three characters that, considered jointly, have specific significance. These char- acters are: (1) the style, which has bipartite, usually suberect stigmas in J. gossypufolia and its allies, has here spreading, 2- or 3-lobulate stigmas; (2) the foliage; the leaf-lobes of J. hippocastanifolia are much narrowed at the base and enlarged at the apex, the shape of the leaf being accordingly unlike that of J. gossypiifolia and its allies; (3) the dark-purplish petals. Jatropha Paxi Jatropha Aabellifolia on & Hoffm. in Pflanzenr. 42 (IV. 147): 52. 1910, non Steud. 1840 w name is needed, as J. flabellifolia Pax & neernat is a later homonym of J. flabellifolia (Pohl) Steud, , Nomencl. ed. 2, 1: 799. 1840. Jatropha Hoffmanniae nom sepa sae aera ‘Pax & Hoffm. in Pflanzenr. 85 (IV. 147): 191. 1924, on Brandeg. 1920. 1943 | CROIZAT, AMERICAN EUPHORBIACEAE 169 Brandegee’s J. longepedunculata, in Univ. Cal. Publ. Bot. 7: 328. 1920, is a mere orthographic variant of J. longipedunculata Pax & Hoffm., which, consequently, is a later homonym. Micrandra Bentham Micrandra Benth. (1854) has been proposed for a a by Mans- feld, in Kew Bull. 434. 1935, against Micrandra Benn. (1844). Micrandra santanderensis sp. nov. Arbor in sylvis primaevis, innovationibus glabratis cea es Foliis el- lipticis apice plus minusve breviter acuminatis basi cuneato-rotundatis vel rotundatis firme chartaceis, 7-14 cm. longis, 2.5—-6 cm. . latis, brunneis vel obscure olivaceis, margine integris, totis nucle nervosis, nervis utrinque ca. 8-jugis anastomosantibus obscuris, primo jugo adscendente caeteris latius patentibus, in axillis conferte penicillatis, petiolo 2—7 cm. longo, apice sub lamina glandulis 2 pustulosis ornato, stipulis triangularibus minimis. . ee racemosis ut videtur polygamis ad 25-35 cm. longis. Floribus : sepalis 5 puberulis triangulari-rotundatis vix 1 mm. eng petalis 5 in at brunnescentibus quam sepalis duplo longioribus, staminibus ca. 5. ribus 2 post anthesim tantum visis, involucris floralibus illis ¢ (ut videtur) similibus, staminodiis ca. 5 setaceis oa disco minimo parcissime glan uloso, ovario truncato-ovoideo ca. 3 mm. longo et 2 mm lato, stylis in ovarium enifuent ib brevissimis ae vix bilobis. ain MBIA: Santande Vicinity of Puerto Berrio, between Carare and ed ena Rivers, alt. 100-700 m., , Haught 2189 (TYPE); vicinity of Barranca Berm Spaeniae Valley, between Sogamoso and Carare hives alt. 100-500 m., Haught er The two specimens here cited appear to differ at first on account of their differently colored foliage, but there are no floral or other differences. The conspicuous axillary tufts of hairs on the leaves of this new species are not found on M. elata Muell.-Arg., which is endemic to southern Brazil, or on M. siphonioides Benth., to judge from the photographs of the type- specimens which I have seen through the kindness of Mr. B. A. Krukoff. Manihot Miller Manihot orinocensis sp. nov Specimen suppeditat eid mancum quam frustulum vix melius totum glaberrimum cortice tenello haar subnitido elenticellato. Foliis pro more generis parvis ca. 6 cm. latis, 5—6 cm. longis, 3-lobatis, lobis margine in- tegris revolutisve, mediano elliptico- -lanceolato ca. 3 cm. longo et 1.5 cm, lato, lateralibus basi plus minusve anisophyllis caeterum lanceolatis, medio sat dilatatis, ca. 2.5-3 cm. longis et 1.5 cm. latis, subtus glaucescentibus, supra ruguloso- impressis, membranaceis, nervis ca. 8—10-jugis patentibus, petiolo ca. 2.5-3 cm. longo, stipulis ut videtur subnullis vel nullis. Perian- thio ¢ primum in nflato, in anthesi plena a age ca. 10 cm. longo fere totidem lato pallido, lobis late lanceolatis ad 3 . longis, disco bene lobulato, staminibus ca. 5-7 mm. longis, plus minis ‘10. Caetera desunt. VENEZUELA: Amazonas: Upper Orinoco, Fu uer Ayacucho, “a tree 4 m. high, growing on granitic rocks around Pt». Ayacuch ae 13132. The type specimen, hardly better than a scrap, was sent by Mr. H. Pittier with the suggestion that the species may be new. I deferred its publication, 170 JOURNAL OF THE ARNOLD ARBORETUM [VOL. XXIV wishing to check it against material representing M. saxicola Lanj., the description of which suggested that it was uncomfortably close to the pre- sumed new entity. Stahel 107, “cultivated from cuttings in the Agricultural Experiment Garden in Paramaribo, Surinam,” identified at distribution as M. saxicola, is certainly not M. orinocensis, which differs in the texture and lobing of its leaves. Tetrorchidium Poeppig Poeppig & Endlicher are said to have published this genus in 1842 (see Pax & Hoffmann in Engl. & Prantl, Nat. Pflanzenfam. ed. 2. 19C: 184. 1931), which is erroneous. The genus was actually published in 1845 by Poeppig alone, which is fully established by the title-page of the third volume of the Nova Genera ac Species Plantarum and associated data. Tetrorchidium gorgonae sp. nov. Arbuscula vel frutex 3—4 m. altus, innovationibus puberulis indumento pabgieeicn adpresso simplici gees glabrescentibus griseis. Foliis 10-22 cm. lon 2.5—6.5 cm. latis, utrinque parce pubescentibus vel glabratis, supra viridibus, subtus pallide viriditas subnitidis, oblanceolatis sat abrupte caudato-acuminatis obvie distanterque serrato- dentatis, dentibus subcallosis utrinque ca. 4 vel 5, nervis ascendentibus vel patulis utrinque ca. 6-jugis, sub margine anastomosatis, trabeculis conspicuis, petiolo 1-2 cm. longo apice utrinque glandulis baculiformibus luteis insignito parcius hispido; stipulis late triangularibus, vix ultra 1 mm. longis totidemque latis. In- Horescentia in fructu tantum visa gracili ad 5 cm. longa; perianthio sub- —2.5 mm. lato, pedicello ca. 2 mm. longo, columella acuminata ad 5 mm. longa, semine lenticulari ca. 5 mm - magno, testa nigra profundius ates foveolata, in arillo sat tenui roseato immersa; epicarpio immaturo (ut videtur) le COLOMBIA: ae rino: Island of Gorgona, Killip & Garcia 33214 (tTyPE in U.S. Nat. Herb.). A very distinct species, with comparatively narrow, small leaves, their margins with sharp teeth. In these characters it may be at once distin. guished from 7. macrophyllum Muell.-Arg., T. rubrivenium Poepp., and the species next described. Tetrorchidium boyacanum sp. Arbuscula glaberrima, a eae subherbaceis. Foliis utrinque virid- ibus, 9-12 cm. longis, 4.5—5.5 cm. latis, obovatis vel elliptico-obovatis, apice breviter apiculatis, basi longiuscule cuneatis, firme chartaceis, nervis utrinque 6- vel 7-jugis jugo basali valde adscendente caeteris plus minusve patulis sub margine obscure anastomosatis, laminae margine glandulis pus- tulosis paucioribus in quarto supero praesertim insignito quapropter folii apice primo intuitu plus minusve profunde dentato-serrato, petiolo canalicu- lato glandulis 2 pustulosis anticis ornato 1-1.5 cm. longo. Inflorescentia § tantum visa, ad 15 cm. longa, gracili, ramosa, glaberrima; floribus ca. 3—6 in axilla Sah minutae utrinque glandulis luteis notata, calyce sub- sessili ca. 2.5 mm. lato, lobis 3 rotundato-ovatis subcucullatis ca. 1—1.5 mm longis totidemque lati, staminibus 3, pistillodio (?). CotomsiA: Boyaca: El Umbo, 130 miles north of Bogota, “in high thick forest, tree 12-16 {t., 4-6 a diam.,” Lani 47 1943 ] CROIZAT, AMERICAN EUPHORBIACEAE 171 This somewhat suggests 7. rubrivenium Poepp., but it is altogether un- like that species in its leaf-margins. Tetrorchidium popayanense sp. nov. Arbuscula videtur, innovationibus subherbaceis, strigulosis, indumento perbrevi luteo valde adpresso. Foliis pallide olivaceis, 16-23 cm. m. longis, 7—9 cm. latis, longe obovatis vel oblanceolato-ellipticis, apice petie: acumi- natis, basi longe cuneatis, firme chartaceis subtus sub lente vix pubescen- tibus, supra glabratis vel glabris subnitidis, nervis manifestis ca. 7—-9-jugis, eglanduloso pubescente 2-3 cm. longo. Inflorescentia gracili pubescente 7-10 cm. longa parcius ramosa, é tanto visa. Floribus subsolitariis, calyce ca. 2.5 mm. lato pubescente pedicello ca. 1.5—2 mm. longo fulto, lobis 3 ovato-acuminatis, ca. 1-1.25 mm. longis, 1 mm. basi latis, staminibus 3 oppositilobis sessilibus vel subsessilibus ligulam centralem minutam (an pistillodium?) circumdantibus; bractea sub pedicello ane uaten Cer: Bea mm. lata glandulis insignita cum illis in lamina congruent CotomsiA: El Cauca: Highlands of Popayan, (?) Rio ae oe Lehmann B7664. The type locality is not better indicated. The characters of the foliage suggest those of T. euriphyllum Stand]. of Central America, but the pri- mary nerves are less numerous and the leaf-blade is differently shaped, more markedly cuneate at the base, and with different marginal glands; the glands on the floral bracts are also different. Tetrorchidium jamaicense sp. nov. Arbor ad 8 m. alta glaberrima. Foliis integris primum tenuiter membra- naceis demum firme Lane eae ellipticis vel elliptico-obovatis, 7-12 cm 34.5 cm. latis, apice brevius rotundato-acuminatis, basi longe ) glandulis cicatricosis ornato, stipulis minimis vel subnullis. Inflorescentia 6 tantum visa more generis gracili, effusa glabra parcius ramosa ad 18 cm. longa; floribus glomerulatis ad 4—8, glomerulis sat distantibus (proximis in thachi inferiore 1-2 cm. remotis), perianthio ca. 5 mm. lato, lobis 3 ellip- ticis vel obovato-ellipticis margine intus subplicatis, staminibus sessilibus 3(—4), antheris more generis sat magnis. Jamaica: Road to Holly Mount, Harris 8991. This new species is certainly the plant which Fawcett & Rendle (FI. Jam. 4(2):317. f. 105. 1920) and Pax & Hoffmann (in Engl. & Prantl, Nat. Pflanzenfam. ed. 2. 19C: 186. 1931) identify as representing T. rubri- venium Poepp. It differs from Poeppig’s species, however, as represented by Poeppig 1915 and Klug 3713, in having glabrous inflorescences, elliptic rather than triangular perianth-lobes, and entire leaves which are more coriaceous. Sapium P. Browne Sapium Bourgeaui sp. nov Arbor vel frutex glaberrimus. Foliis ellipticis, apice recurvatim glandu- 172 JOURNAL OF THE ARNOLD ARBORETUM [VOL. XXIV loso-cucullatis utrinque fere aequo jure rotundato-acuminatis, supra obscure subtus pallide olivaceis, margine sat conferte aristato-serratis, aristulis nigricantibus marcescentibus, hic inde glandulis pustulosis ornatis, ca. 15 cm. longis, 3—4 cm. latis, nervis delicatis at perspicuis latius adscendentibus ca. 15-jugis, petiolo 3-4 cm. longo apice glandulis 2 patentibus conicis onusto, stipulis late rotundato-auriculatis margine valde coriaceo-scariosis. Capsulae coccis delapsis (an revera hujus loci? soluti tantum adsunt) duris, ca. 10 mm. longis, semine arillo secedibili rubro induto ca. 7 mm. longo latoque. Mexico: Veracruz: Orizaba, Santa Ana, Bourgeau 3020. This collection is mentioned by Hemsley in the notes under S. mexicanum, in Hook, Ic. 27: sub pl. 2680, p. 2. 1901. Hemsley states that it is neither that species nor S. lateriflorum Hemsl. It is certainly not S. macrocarpum Muell.-Arg. (S. mexicanum Hemsl.), S. appendiculatum Pax & Hoffm., or S. pedicellatum Huber. The reflexed glandular tip of the leaf is a distinctive character. ie ick Cuatrecasasii sp. nov. magna, innovationibus cicatricosis glabris saltem sub apice gaat eine glandulosis magnis ornatis. Foliis 7-15 cm. longis, 2.5—5.5 ¢ latis, subcoriaceis, apice fere planis vix emarginatis, venulosis, supra otis olivaceis, subtus brunneo-lutescentibus, ellipticis utrinque sat obtuse acu- minatis glaberrimis, margine totis crenato-glandulosis crenis haud profundis glandulis marginalibus hic inde obviis, nervis gracilibus patentibus saepius haud anastomosantibus utrinque ca. 20 ultimis vix perspicuis, petiolo florescentia spicata 2-sexuali sat crassa. Floribus ¢ ca. 12 in axilla squamu- lae cujusvis glandula utrinque valde carnosa ad 4—5 mm. longa, perianthio longe campanulato ca. 2-3 mm. longo et 2 mm. lato, lobo antico apap staminibus 2 ad 3 mm. longis. Floribus 9? in anthesi ignotis submaturis ad 10 mm. longis 5 mm. latis, ovario glaberrimo nigro ovoideo stylorum cica- trice subproducta notato, perianthii lobis 3 ovatis subscariosis intus medio crasse costatis, glandula utrinque ellipsoidea sat magna. CoLtomBIA: Putumayo: Valle de Sibundoy, alt. 2200 m., Cuatrecasas 11671. This does not agree with any other species known to me from the region. The comparatively short petioles, the robust spikes, and the produced scars left by the fallen style on the ovaries are characteristic. Sapium myrmecophilum sp. nov. Arbuscula semimetralis. Foliis 5-8 cm. longis, 1-3 cm. latis, ellipticis subcoriaceis, apice subplanis vel retusis, utrinque brevius acumin atis, ob- scure conferteque crenulatis raro hic inde glandulosis, nervis paeacune ca, 15-jugis, petiolo vix 1 cm. longo vel minore glandulis 2 conicis patentibus pustulosis, stipulis auriculatis. Inflorescentia spicata bisexuali ad 10-15 cm. longa. Floribus ¢ ca. 9 vel 10 in axilla bracteolae latae parvae, perianthio aperiente vix 1—1.5 mm. longo, staminibus 2. Floribus ? sub- sessilibus in anthesi haud visis: perianthii lobis scariosis (videtur) 3, ovario maturescente globuloso depresso ca. 0.5 cm. magno, apice cicatrice minima haud producta notato. Coromsia: El Vichada: 60km. south of Orocué, Haught 2772. 1943 ] CROIZAT, AMERICAN EUPHORBIACEAE 173 This is described as a spreading shrub growing on ant-hills in the open llanos. It is characterized by the close leaf-crenation and the very short petioles. eae Bed ae ieee in aia Ic. 27: pl. 2678. 1901; Huber in Bull. Herb. s. II. 6: 439. f. 32. Sapam hamatum ae “Ar Pax & Hoffm. in Pflanzenr. 52 (IV. 147. v): 229. fig. 43 D,E. 1912. Syn ce biglandulosum var. Dias Muell.-Arg. in Linnaea 32: 116. 1863. Peru: Huanuco: Between Huanuco and Pampayacu, Kanehira 12; Pampa- yacu, eanehie iva 28; San Martin: Zepelacio, Klug 3374; Loreto: Lower Rio Huallaga, Williams 4771. This is another of the entities which have been confused under the loosely applied name S. Hippomane. The identifications are made on the strength of the illustrations and the descriptions. The leaves are longer, narrower and thinner than are those of S. Marmieri. A specimen from Colombia, collected by Cuatrecasas along the Rio Guamues, Putumayo, may belong here, but it lacks 9 flowers and fruits. Pax & Hoffmann err in replacing S. Poeppigiti Hemsl. (1901) by S. hamatum (Muell.-Arg.) Pax & Hoffm. (1912). The name which is published first in a given rank has priority, and cannot be replaced by a later combination even though the basinym, in this case a trinomial, happens to be the oldest name. Sapium aereum Kl. ex Muell.-Arg. in Linnaea 32: 119. 1863; Pax & Hoffm. in Pflanzenr. 52 (IV. 147. v): 233.1912 Brazit: Amazonas: MHumayta, Krukoff 6158, 6296, 6307; Sao Paulo de Olivenga, Krukoff 8311. This is an exceptionally critical entity which it would be desirable to compare with Klotzsch’s own specimen. Only the last of the collections cited was distributed as S. aereum, all others being referred to S. Hippo- mane, While it seems quite likely that S. glandulosum (L.) Morong (S. Hippomane G. F. W. Mey. et auct.) and S. aereum are close, they appear to differ in the texture of the leaf and, to judge from the fruits of Pittier 11832 and Krukoff 8311, also in the fruit, this being possibly larger in 8. aereum and somewhat differently shaped. Ina very definite sense S. aereum connects S. glandulosum and S. Marmieri, differing from the latter primarily in its leaves on the whole being smaller and narrower. Good fruiting ma- terial is essential to a final elaboration of all these entities. The vernacular name “Tapuru” appears on the label of Krukoff 6158. A specimen which might belong here and strongly suggests the characters described and illustrated for S. Taburu Ule (in Tropenfl. 9: Beih. 6:13. fig. 3 D, E. 1905) is Klug 1668, Colombia, Putumayo, Umbria. I strongly suspect that eventually it may be shown that S. aereum and S. Taburu are uncomfortably close if not identical. Pax & Hoffmann express the belief, Pflanzenr. 52 (IV. 147. v): 232.1912, that S. Taburu is hardly separable from the entity they identify as S. Hippomane. In my opinion, this is the result of the two authors lacking a clear understanding of the ranges of these species. Unquestionably, a great simplification of the taxonomy of this group follows if S. glandulosum (S. Hippomane) is excluded from the Amazonian ranges of Brazil, Colombia and Peru. 174 JOURNAL OF THE ARNOLD ARBORETUM [VOL. XXIV Sie ae capa Huber in Bol. Mus. Goeldi 3: 367. 1902, in Bull. Herb. Boiss. I. 6: 1906; Pax & Hoffm, in Pflanzenr. 52 (IV. 147. v): 256. 1912. ee seis Gleason in Bull, Torrey Club 60: 364. 1933. Syn. Nov. eRU: Loreto: Alto Rio Itaya, Williams 3490; Lower Rio Huallaga, Williams 4904, Killip & Smith 29265. Brazit: Matto Grosso: source of the Jatuarana River, Krukoff 1656 (type collection of S. Leitera Gleason) ; aed Rio Purus, Krukoff 5717; Amazonas: Sao Paulo de Olivenga, Krukoff 8098, 8428. COLOMBIA: Putumayo: Puerto Ospina, Cuatrecasas 10784; Tolima: Curvas de Gualanday (Ibagué-Girardot), Pérez-Arbelaez & Cuatrecasas 6490. This species is of economic importance as a potential source of rubber, for which it has been tapped in the past. The type was collected in the region of the Rio Ucayali and the Rio Huallaga in Amazonian Peru. I match the descriptions with Williams 3490 and 4904, which I accept as representing this species. The leaf is essentially oblong to elliptic and more or less obtusely rounded at the tip in these two specimens which, once again to judge from the descriptions and the figures (see for instance Hemsley in Hook. Ic. 29: pl. 2899. 1909), can hardly be separated from S. eglandulosum Ule in Tropenfl. 9: Beih. 6: 14. 1905. The foliage of Killip & Smith 29265 differs from that of the Williams specimens in being distinctly rounded to short round-elliptic, with the tip of the blade often retuse, but the remaining characters agree so well that, the range being in common, it must be considered that all these specimens are conspecific. As is well-known, considerable foliar differences are apt to occur in the same species of Sapium depending upon conditions of growth. All the collections cited from Brazil have leaves that tend to match those of Killip & Smith 29265, but leaves of a pattern intermediate between those of this specimen and the Williams material are present in Krukoff 8428. The Colombian collections well match those from Peru, the record from Tolima being interesting as an extension of the range, heretofore supposedly restricted to the Andean regions of Peru, Brazil, and Colombia. Sapium utile Preuss, to judge from Hemsley’s plate (in Hook. Ic. 29: pl. 2896. 1909), is represented in our herbarium by a Lehmann specimen from Colombia, forests of Choc6-Micay and Timbiqui, which differs from S. Marmieri in the more or less evidently serrulate leaf-margins as well as its longer and narrower leaves. It is altogether likely that the records of S. Hippomane from Peru, Brazil, and Colombia are based to a large extent on misdeterminations of S. Marmieri and its allies. Sapium aucuparium Jacq. Enum. Pl. Carib. 31. 1760, p. p. typ., excl. syn. Plumier. Sapium jamaicense Sw. Adn. Bot. 62. 1829. Syn. Nov Jacquin’s binomial has been extensively eee the discussion of Hemsley, in Hook, Ic. 27: pl. 2650. 1901, and the treatment of Pax & Hoffmann, in Pflanzenr. 52 (IV. 147. v): 229. 1912, merely adding to the confusion. The original publication reads as follows: “aucuparium. I. SAPIUM. Plum. ic. 171. f. 2. Brown. Jam. 1. p. 338.,” the generic name being followed by the conventional abbreviation to designate a woody perennial. - the time when this publication was issued, one of its synonyms, “Plum. ic. 171. 1943 ] CROIZAT, AMERICAN EUPHORBIACEAE 175 f. 2.,” had already been cited by Linnaeus under Hippomane glandulosa, Sp. Pl. 1191. 1753, which leaves Jacquin’s binomial standing solely upon Browne’s “Sapium 1. Arboreum foliis ellipticis glabris, petiolis biglandulis, floribus spicatis.” (Hist. Jam. 338. 1756). This synonym has been over- looked by most authors, but not by Fawcett & Rendle, Fl. Jam. 4 (2): 325. 1920, who place it in the synonmy of S. jamaicense Sw. This binomial, consequently, falls under S. aucuparium Jacq. hree years after the publication of S. aucuparium, as quoted, Jacquin again dealt with the same binomial, Select. Amer. Hist. 249. pl. 158. 1763, repeating the original references but adding Hippomane glandulosa Linn. and Plukenet’s “Tithymalus arbor americana, mali medicae folio . . Jacquin’s illustration and description here apply to a very different plant than the one he identified in 1760 as S. aucuparium. Naturally, this plant cannot bear the binomial which was misapplied to it by Jacquin and very numerous other authors. I discuss it as S. biglandulosum (L.) Muell.-Arg. ”) Sapium biglandulosum (L.) Muell.-Arg. in Linnaea 32: 116. 1863, excl. var. fere omn. Hippomane biglandulosa L. Sp. Pl. ed. 2. 1431. 1763, p. p. typ., quoad syn. Jacq. Sapium aucuparium Jacq. Select. Amer. Hist. 249. pl. 158. 1763, quoad ic. descr. excl. syn. omn., non S. ee Jacq. Enum. PI. Carib. 31. oy roe: talicifolium H. B. K. Nov. Gen. & Sp. 2: 52. 1817. Syn. N Sapium Moritzianum Kl. in Seem. Bot. Voy. Herald 100. 1852; Huber i in Bull. Herb. Boiss. II. 6: 358. f. 19. 1906; Pax & Hoffm. in Pflanzenr. 52 (IV. 147. v): 230. 1912. be Nov. Panama: Coclé: EI Valle de Anton, Las Uvas, Allen 2575; Perlas Islands, Pedro Gonzales, die rh CotomsBiA: Magdalena: siti? Marta, H.H. Smith 1916; Boyaca: Orocué, Haught 2826. VENEZUELA: Ara : Ca rbanchito, Pittier 11802, Cagua, pei 12291; Distrito Federal: he Pittier 12401 Linnaeus is the author of both Hippomane glandulosa, 1753, and Hip- pomane biglandulosa, 1763. Although the latter epithet might have been mistakenly applied for the former, it proves impossible to treat it as a clear unintentional error under the current Rules of Nomenclature, particularly so in that it has been extensively used in botanical literature under different generic names. The correct application of S. glandulosum (L.) Morong is discussed below. The original publication of H. biglandulosa reads as follows: “Hippomane biglandulosa foliis ovato-oblongis basi biglandulosis. Sapium arboreum, foliis ellipticis glabris, petiolis biglandulis, floribus spicatis. Brown. jam. 338. Sapium aucuparium. Jacq. amer. 31. t. 158. Mancanilla lauri foliis oblongis. Plum. gen. 50. ic. 171. f. 2. Tithymalus arbor americana, mali medicae foliis amplioribus tenuissime crenatis succo maxime venenoso. Pluk. alm. 369. t. 229. f.8. Habitat in America calidiore.” The synonyms and S. aucuparium, to which they belong. Since no specimen of H. glandu- losa or H. biglandulosa is extant in the Linnaean herbarium (see Jacks. Ind. Linn. Herb. 86. 1912), H. biglandulosa rests solely upon the plate and description of S. aucuparium Jacq., 1763 non 1760. It is fortunate that 176 JOURNAL OF THE ARNOLD ARBORETUM [VOL. XXIV Jacquin’s misapplication can easily be corrected by the reinstatement of S. biglandulosum (L.) Muell.-Arg. in the sense here proposed. Mueller-Argoviensis followed S. biglandulosum with a trinomial 2 Meveri- anum, essentially based upon Meyer’s S. Hippomane. ‘This is taxo- nomically not correct, but, as is well-known, a new combination stands (Art. 54, Amsterdam Rules 1935) even if it involves a misapplied specimen. Accordingly, the type of S. diglandulosum is the plant figured by Jacquin, growing near Cartagena in Colombia, ‘‘inque ipso suburbio Xiximani ante macellum.”’ The type-variety, on the contrary, is S. biglandulosum var. Meverianum. Sapium salicifolium H. B. K. has generally been treated as a doubtful synonym of S. Moritzianum. The type material was collected at Morales on the banks of the Rio Magdalena, and is without @ flowers or fruits. Its description so closely agrees with the material I have seen that I do not hesitate to accept it as representing S. biglandulosum. ‘The existence of some varieties under this binomial is likely. The Venezuelan plant, for instance, would seem to have slightly different leaves on the whole, as noted by Huber, in Bull. Herb. Boiss. II. 6: 358. 1906, in his discussion of S. aucuparium., Sapium glandulosum (L.) Morong in Britt. & Mor. in Ann. N. Y. Acad. Sci. 7: 227. Hippomane tiedisiag L. Sp. Pl. 1191. 1753, p. p. typ., quoad syn. Pluk., Sapium eles e G. F. W. Mey. Prim. FI. Esseq. 275. 1818; aie in oes Herb. Boiss. IL "6: 360, - 21, 1906; Pax & Hoffm. in Pflanzenr. 52 (IV. 147. v 231; ie p. p. Syn, N — at Mul “Are in Linnaea 34: 217. 1865; Hemsl. in Hook. Ic. 27: pl. 2650. 1900. Syn. Persil net teas Huber i in Bull. Herb. Boiss. II. 6: 362. f. 22. 1906. Syn. Nov. BARBADOS: _ Forester’s Hall Eggers 7238. Vereen Distrito Federal: Naiguta, Pittier 7 Hippomane glandulosa L. rests exclusively upon two synonyms, “Man- canilla lauri foliis oblongis. Plum. gen. 50” and ‘‘Tithymalus arbor ameri- cana, mali medicae foliis amplioribus tenuissime crenatis, succo maxime venenoso. Pluk. alm 369. t. 229. f. 8. Raj. suppl. 428.” Urban used one of these polynomials, Plumier’s Mancanilla, in the synonymy of his own S. caribeum, Symb. Ant. 3: 309. 1902, and referred the other, op. cit. 306, to S. Hippomane G. F. W. Meyer. Sapium Hippomane Meyer was a new name for Hippomane biglandulosa L., the Linnaean binomial being cited by Meyer under his own. Under the current Rules, the correct transfer of Hippomane biglandulosa to Sapium can be effected only by publishing S. biglandulosum, which was done by Mueller-Argoviensis but not by Meyer. Meyer’s name, conse- quently, is illegitimate, and falls now under S. glandulosum (L.) Morong, which is typified by Plukenet’s Tithymalus as interpreted by Urban. Here also belong S. suberosum Muell.-Arg., based on a diseased condition of the entity under discussion. Huber comments that the entities he understands as S. Hemsleyanum and S. Hippomane are not certainly distinct as species, but might easily prove to be varieties. This is possible, but the material 1943 ] CROIZAT, AMERICAN EUPHORBIACEAE Lie I have seen so far is too scanty to justify the publication of trinomials in this difficult group; Eggers 7238, from Barbados, cited by Pax & Hoffmann, is certainly very close to Pittier 11832 from the coast of Venezuela. I cannot follow Pax & Hoffmann in accepting S. glandulosum (which they call S. Hippomane) for the Amazonian forms of Brazil and Peru. Everything indicates that Pax & Hoffmann confuse S. glandulosum with S. Marmiert, The former would seem to have an essentially coastal range, restricted to the Guianas, Venezuela, and some of the West Indian islands, while the latter, as noticed elsewhere in this paper, is primarily an Ama- zonian type. Index Kewensis lists S. glandulosum Morong as an error for S. biglandu- losum Muell.-Arg. and accepts as valid the combination of Druce in Rep. Bot. Exch. Club Brit. Isl. 1913, 3: 423. 1914. I cannot accept this interpretation. It is true that Morong treats H. glandulosa and H. biglan- dulosa as synonymous, but the combination he made conforms with the requirements of Art. 44[2] of the current Rules of Nomenclature in being followed by a full reference to Hippomane glandulosa L.; the remaining two citations can be excluded as misapplications without affecting in the slightest the validity of the new combination. The fact that Morong’s transfer was effected for a misapplied specimen does not make this transfer illegitimate. I have not seen authentic material of S. obtusilobum Muell.-Arg., but Huber’s illustration, in Bull. Herb. Boiss. II. 6: 357. f. 17. 1906, suggésts that this species might fall here as a trinomial if not as a straight synonym. Sebastiania Sprengel Sebastiania huallagensis sp. nov. Arbuscula ca. 6-metralis innovationibus glaberrimis. Foliis elliptico- lanceolatis, apice sat abrupte acuminatis, basi cuneatis, margine integris, 6-9 cm. longis, 2.5—-3.5 cm. latis, nervis gracilibus ca. 10-14- -jugis, petiolo ca. 1.5 cm. longo apice glandulis 2 a en pustulosis sat magnis or- nato. a ace ae bisexuali ad 8 cm. longa. Floribus ¢ ca. 6-8 in axilla squamulae ca. 1.5 mm. lata, aes minuto subsessili 3-lobato, staminibus aitenilcbic 3 basi connatis. Floribus Q singulis pedicello ca. 0.5 cm. longo, ovario levissimo ca. 4 mm. longo et 1.5 mm. lato, basi squamis imbricatis 3—5 circumdato, in stylis 2—3 crassiusculis divergentibus abeunte. Peru: San Martin: Juan Jui, Alto Rio Huallaga, Klug 4243. Distributed as representing Alchornea sp. ?, which it is certainly not. The sum of the characters suggests Sebastiania, but better material is needed to confirm this disposition of it. Sebastiania anisandra (Griseb.) Lillo in Seg. Contr. Conoc. Pe nl 16. 1917. Actinostemon anisandrus Pax in Pflanzenr. 52 (IV. 147. v): Dactylostemon anisandrus Griseb. in Abh. Ges. Wiss. Gotting. oe o 1879. Paracuay: Alto Paraguay: San Lazaro, Rojas 5490. The Rojas specimen, collected “entre rocas calcareas semi-sombrias,”’ is a good match for an Argentine specimen, Venturi 1350, from Tucuman, 178 JOURNAL OF THE ARNOLD ARBORETUM [VOL. XXIV Famailla, originally distributed as representing S. anisandra. A younger state of the same species is apparently represented by Venturi 5349, identified by Lillo himself. This record seems to be a new one for the flora of Paraguay. Euphorbia Linnaeus (excl. Chamaesyce) Euphorbia pelerer Vell. Fl. Flum. 5: pl. 74. 1827; Muell.-Arg. in Mart. Fl. Bras. 11(2 Euphorbia ae minor Muell. -Arg. op. cit. 689. Syn. No — anomala Salzm. ex Boiss. in DC. Prodr, ea or 1862; Boiss. Ic. Euph. 5. pl. 38. 1866 mee is a widespread species, very close to E. lancifolia Schlect. of Mexico and Central America. It is convenient to break it up in three subspecies with a broad geographical background. Euphorbia insulana subsp. typica subsp. nov. Cyathiis ca. 2.5 mm. longis, inflorescentiis saepissime abbreviatis bracteis subfoliaceis. RAzIL: Ceara: Maranguapé, Drouet 2594; Parana: Guaratuba, Dusén 13518; Sao Paulo: Ilha Queimada, Gehrt 4579. The type is Vellozo’s figure. Gehrt 4579 is altogether true to Mueller’s description of minor, but impresses me as having been taken from a weak shoot of the plant. Euphorbia insulana subsp. tovarensis (Boiss.) comb. n Euphorbia tovarensis Boiss. Cent. Euph. 19. 1860; in DC. "Prodr. 15(2): 59. 1862. CotomsBiA: Santander: Between El Roble and Tona, Killip & Smith 19427. This trinomial is very near F. lancifolia, resembling it in the rather diffuse and robust inflorescence and in the comparatively large cyathia. Bang 2208, collected at an unrecorded locality in Bolivia, also belongs here; this saree is erroneously listed as FE. geniculata in Bull. N. Y. Bot. Gard. 4: 441 Euphorbia insulana subsp. pileomayensis subsp. n A formis totis foliis bractealibus discedit saepius longe ellipticis, cyathiis minoribus, inflorescentiis magis delicatis. ParaGuay: Pilcomayo River, Morong 867 (tTypE); Between Rio Apa and Rio Aquidaban, Fiebrig 4393. ARGENTINA: Formosa, (?) Jorgensen 3081; Chaco (Argentina ?): Fontana, Meyer 232 The habit sets this new subspecies rather sharply apart from the others, but a broad concept of specific limits, necessary in this case, forbids its being treated as a full-fledged species. Euphorbia Mandoniana Boiss., of which I have seen only the meagerest scraps, may prove to be an extreme alpine form of this complex. Euphorbia Huanchahana (KI. & Garcke) Boiss. in DC. Prodr. 15(2) +: 103. 1862. Tithymalus huanchahanus K\. & Garcke in Abhandl. Akad. Wiss. Berlin 71. 1860. As in many species of this genus in the South American range, it proves to be impossible to adopt for this entity a narrow concept of specific limits. The material I have at hand indicates the existence of two main aggregates, one localized in Peru, the other in southern Bolivia and northern 1943 | CROIZAT, AMERICAN EUPHORBIACEAE 179 Argentina. In addition, the aggregate of Peru and Bolivia is divided into two forms, one glabrous, the other rather pubescent, which bear to each other a varietal relationship Euphorbia Huanchahana subsp. typica subsp. nov. Foliis minutis saepissime margine serratis glabris I have seen a photograph of the type, ollie in “Canta Prov. Peru.” This material is to all appearances well matched by a Peruvian specimen from Matucana, Dept. Lima, Savatier 1356. Euphorbia Huanchahana subsp. penazuelensis subsp. nov. Foliis carnosulis margine integris subintegrisve indumento sat conferto a subsp. typica discedit. ARGENTINA: Tucuman: Sierra Calchaquies, Pefias Azules, 3400 m., Burkart 5306 (TYPE); Catamarca: Andalgala, Cerro Negro, alt. 3500 m., Jorgensen 1232. The habit is that of an alpine plant, the branches being rosulate and the rootstock much thickened. Euphorbia Huanchahana var. peperomioides var. nov. Pusilla, plus minusve rosulata a subsp. penazuelensi, cujus est, qua- cumque notis caeteris totis optime convenit glabritie primo intuitu recedit. Borivia: Mandon 1068. This variety belongs to subsp. penazuelensis, with which it agrees in habit and foliage, differing only in indumentum. The Mandon material I have seen is probably identical with the Weddell specimen from Bolivia cited by Boissier. gers feck ea Lam. Enc. Méth. 2: 421. ae — in DC. Prodr. 15(2): ; Muell.-Arg. in Mart. Fl. Bras. 11(2): ae species is closely allied to E. sean i. emend. Spreng., which ranges throughout Argentina and Chile. It is restricted in its range to the regions immediately adjacent to the mouth of the Rio de la Plata in Uruguay and Argentina. It falls into two readily separable groups. Euphorbia caespitosa subsp. typica subsp. nov. Foliis obovato-ellipticis vel spathulatis, apice rotundatis. Urucuay: Vicinity of Montevideo, Fruchard 182, Arechevaleta 5194a. The cited asco agrees perfectly with Lamarck’s type in the herbarium of the Paris Muse Euphorbia caespitosa subsp. ventanicola subsp. nov. Cum subsp. typica in floralibus optime convenit, sed foliis apice bene acuminatis, tees natali alieno primo intuitu distincta : Aires: Cerro Naposta, Sierra de la Ventana, Von Rentzell 1082 (TYPE) ; Pigiié, Burkart 4706. This is a well-marked form, readily recognizable by the characters of the foliage and by the range, which centers in the Sierra de la Ventana. It is likely that this plant is included in part by Boissier in his concept of E. portulacoides acutifolia Boiss., in DC. Prodr. 15(2): 103. 1862, and is the one not altogether correctly identified as E. caespitosa by Spegazzini, Contr. Fl. Sierra Vent. 54. 1896; Contr. Fl. Tandil 47. 1901. E£. portula- 180 JOURNAL OF THE ARNOLD ARBORETUM [VOL. XXIV codes Spr. [sic] normalis O. Ktze. is based upon a plant collected in the Tandil, O. Kuntze, Rev. Gen. 3: 286. 1898, which I have not seen but which most likely belongs here. This trinomial is validly published and must be used for the typical form of E. portulacoides L. emend. Spreng., despite Kuntze’s probable misapplication. sce sciadophila Boiss. in DC. Prodr. 15(2): 57. 1862; Muell.-Arg. in Mart. as, 11(2): 687. pl. 97. 1874. Pekin Tucuman: La Criolla, Rodriguez 502. This species is common in southeastern Brazil and in Paraguay, but I have seen only the specimen cited from Argentina. The record seems to be new. The affinities of E. sciadophila with the Peruvian E. adtanthoides Lam. require careful study. Euphorbia spathulata Lam. Enc. Méth. 2: 428. 1788; Boiss. in DC. Prodr. 15(2): > Muell.-Arg. in Mart. Fl. Bras. 11(2): 701. 1874; Croiz. in Torreya 42: 16. 1942, in nota. Euphorbia a bi Fisch. & Mey. in Ind. Sem. Hort. Petrop. 2: 37. 1836; Boiss. in DC. Prodr. 15(2): 135. 1862; Nort. in Missouri Bot. Gard. Rept. LL: 106. pl. 22, os oo. Wheeler in Kearn. & Peebl. Fl. Pl. Arizona 539. 1942. Syn. Nov. The suspicion I have already voiced that E. spathulata is merely an introduced weed in the regions of the La Plata and that it is the same as E. dictyosperma Fisch. & Mey. of the southeastern United States is con- firmed. No differences can be found to separate such specimens, for instance, as Culwell & Timmons 3065 (Central North Texas) and Lombardo 3903 (Montevideo), Scala 90, and Burkart 3747 (Mouth of the Parana). Euphorbia invaginata sp. nov. Herbacea, glabra, caulibus fistulosis striatis hic inde ceraceis. Foliis carnosulis ligulatis vel longius elliptico-obovatis subeveniis, margine integ- ris, apice mucronatis, basi longe acuminatis, epetiolatis, 5-6 cm. longis, 1-1. 75 cm. latis, nervo medio validiusculo, stipulis petiolaribus subnullis vel nullis. Inflorescentiis terminalibus effusis ad 15 cm. longis bracteato- c longis, bracteis subpetaloideis pallidis hic inde albicantibus tenuissime ve- nulosis late ovato-cordatis ad 2 cm. longis totidemque latis mucronulatis. Cyathiis pions ee singulis bracteis occultatis invaginatisque, ad 4 mm. longis et 2 mm. latis, cylindrico-campanulatis, nectariis 4 vel 5 stipitatis uae eee corrugatis parvis appendice petaloidea nulla, pedicello ca. 1.5—2 mm. longo; capsula glabra levi, coccis delapsis ad 7 mm. longis angustis, semine valde elongato angusto ambitu tetragono, vix 1.5 mm crasso, 6 mm. longo, arillo albicante hic inde granulato-leproso, caruncula rotundata bene umbonata stipitataque Paraguay: Chaco: Picuyba, Rojas 7268. This new species belongs to Boissier’s Sect. Stachydium, which includes E. comosa Vell., E. lupulina Boiss., E. Gollmeriana Boiss., E. foltiflua Ule, and the African E. phyvlloclada Boiss. From all the American species F. invaginata differs in the length of the seed. In foliage it most closely resembles E. Gollmeriana Boiss. and E. folitflua Ule. 1943 ] CROIZAT, AMERICAN EUPHORBIACEAE 181 Euphorbia aureocincta sp. nov. Herbacea hirta fistulosa, serius glabrata. Foliis (ut videtur) miro modo ludentibus, nunc more Amaranthi ssp. obcuneatis vel grosse quadrangulis, margine profundius irregulariter lobulato-dentatis, 3-6 cm. longis, 2-3 cm. latis, tum exquisite elliptico-lanceolatis margine integris 5-12 cm. longis 0.5-1.5 cm. latis, apice acutis, basi breviter cuneato-angustatis, petiolo semper brevi vix 1.5 cm. longo hirtulo. Inflorescentiis coarctato-capitulatis, bracteis lineari-lanceolatis acutis, 3-7 cm. longis, 0.5—1 cm. latis, integer- rimis, basi pulchre aureis; cyathio ca. 3 mm. longo fauce 2.5-3.5 mm. lato, lobis lacerato-ciliatis, nectario unico sat plano, ovario in anthesi subincluso, capsula depresse rotundato-trigona ca. 5 mm. longa et lata, stylis vix 1.5 mm. longis ad tertium inferum partitis; semine 3.5 mm. longo, 2 mm. lato, quadrangulo, arillo albicante vel pallide brunneo toto induto, basi truncato, apice longiuscule acuminato, sub apicem atque ad medium leviter constricto- zonato, hic inde verruculoso-lineato. ParaGuay: Carapegua, Callistro, Rojas 3379 (type). ARGENTINA: Jujuy: Quebrada del Chanhi, Schreiter 10990. This is a well-marked form, but its ultimate rank, whether binomial or trinomial, is a matter of speculation. It belongs to the group of E. elliptica Lam. (E. geniculata Ort.; E. prunifolia Jacq.), and its taxonomic status would seem to match exactly that of E. zonosperma Muell.-Arg. Unlike that species, which is widely distributed, E. aureocincta appears to be restricted to Paraguay, Argentina, and possibly Bolivia. The Schreiter specimen cited above requires verification, for it represents a state with leaves of amaranthoid pattern not resembling, at a glance, the typical form, Rojas 3379, which has only narrowly lanceolate leaves. However, both in Rojas 3379 and Schreiter 10990 the floral parts are identical, and some of the leaves are very similar. Euphorbia heterophylla L. B elliptica f. hirticaulis O. Kuntze, Rev. Gen. 3: 286. 1891, probably belongs here. Euphorbia acerensis Boiss. in DC. Prodr. 15(2) : 55. 1862. ARGENTINA: Tucuman: Villa Lujan, Venturi 524 (? 324); Salta: Rio Toro y Rio Blanco, Vattuone 17. The cited material was misdetermined as representing E. adianthoides Lam. All the species in this group are closely related, and the existence of intermediates between E. acerensis Boiss. and E. Poeppigi Boiss., which ranges from the Amazonian regions of Peru to Bolivia, is probable. Euphorbia pentadactyla Griseb. in Abhandl. Gesell. Wiss. Goettingen 24: 63, 1879. ParaGuAy: Gran Chaco: Carandaity, Rojas 7287. This species resembles /. aureocincta Croiz. but is easily recognized as distinct on account of its long filiform simple styles. Tshe record seems to be new for Paraguay. Earlier records are all from Argentina. Euphorbia Milii Des Moul. in Bull. Hist. Nat. Soc. Linn, Bordeaux 1: 27. pl. 1. 1826; Desf. Cat. Hort. Paris. ed. 3. 475. 1829; Croiz. in Jour. Arnold Arb. 21: Euphorbia splendens Boj. ex Hook. in Bot. Mag. 56: pl. 2902. 1829; Denis, Euph. Iles Austr. Afr. 82. 1922. Paracuay: Asuncion, cultivated in the Botanical Gardens, Rojas 1264. 182 JOURNAL OF THE ARNOLD ARBORETUM [VOL. XXIV The reasons calling for the reinstatement of Des Moulins’ neglected name have been given in my paper cited above. Euphorbia Hinkleyorum t. M. Johnst. in Contr. Gray Herb. n. s. 70: 72. 1924. ARGENTINA: Jujuy: Tilcara, Cerro Pefia Alta, Venturi 49106. The classical locality is Mt. Chachani, near Arequipa, Peru. This is a new record for Argentina, and the species may be expected from Bolivia. The forms in this group bear an interesting relationship to E. claytonioides N.E. Br. of Angola in West Africa. Euphorbia pampeana Speg. in Rev. Jard. Zool. Buenos-Aires 1: 30. 1893. Urucuay: Canelones: Las Brujas, Lombardo 1959. This is probably a new record for Uruguay. The polymorphism of this species under conditions of experimental cultivation is hardly credible; the leaves vary from obovate to narrow-linear and from manifestly pubescent to fully glabrous, as I have observed the species in cultivation. Euphorbia a Mart. in Spix & Mart. Reise Brasil 2: 612. 1828, im nota; Boiss. in DC. Prodr. 15(2): 176. 1862; Muell.-Arg. in Mart. Fl. Bras. L1(2): 692. pl. 4 1874; Mansf. in Monatschr. Kakt. -Gesell. 3: 244, 1931 Euphorbia vhinsaloides Glaz. in Bull. Soc. Bot. France 59(Mém. 3g): 638. 1912, nec alior. Brazit: Bahia: Queimadas, Rose & Russell 19848 (in herb. N. Y. Bot. Gard.). The peculiar phosphorescent sap of this plant, noted by Martius and by Glaziou, is often mentioned in the literature, but I have seen only the cited specimen which may belong here. The place of publication of the binomial is variously reported, but I am satisfied that the reference alae above is correct, for the Latin description is given in the footnote cited; “‘p. 726,” cite by Boissier, Index Kewensis, and most authors, merely contains Martius’s comments on the phosphorescent properties of the latex. Mansfeld puts this species in the Sect. Pteroneurae together with E. Weber- baueri Mansf., E. Sipolisii N. E. Br., and E. pteroneura Berger. My understanding, on the contrary, is that E. phosphorea has a distinct position of its own. Euphorbia orizabae Boiss. in DC. Prodr. 15(2) : 147. 1862. GUATEMALA: Quiché: Nebaj, 6400 ft., Skutch 1734; Chimaltenango: Cerro de Tecpam, alt. 2400-2700 m., Standley 61046; Quezaltenango: Ostuncalco, alt. 2700 m., Standley 66410. The record is apparently new for Central America. The peculiar velu- tinous indumentum of the branchlets and floral parts immediately separates this species from the forms around E. campestris Cham. & Schlecht. Chamaesyce S. Gray emend. Croizat The difference in habit between Chamaesyce and Euphorbia in a narrow sense is said by Wheeler, in Rhodora 43: 99. 1941, to have been caused by a process of reduction in the main axis, as follows, “When by pro- gressive reduction of the main axis subg. Chamaesyce finally arrived at the habit of branching after the first pair of true leaves appeared, the plant was obviously too small to produce all the elaborate foods necessary for a 1943 | CROIZAT, AMERICAN EUPHORBIACEAE “183 production of a cyathium with its reproductive structures requiring abun- dant protein, fats, and carbohydrates; so we find that the cyathium which would otherwise terminate the main axis is omitted.” This account does not require explicit refutation for the benefit of any- body acquainted with plant physiology. The ultimate destination of food is ruled in living organisms by highly complex metabolic equations, and no plant is ever so bereft of “abundant protein, fats, and carbohydrates” as to be incapable of yielding one flower, or cyathium, in lieu of one or several vegetative buds. The Chamaesyce which, according to the explana- tion just quoted, is so weak (let us notice: phylogenetically) as to deny itself the luxury of an apical reproductive structure, is vital enough to produce up to five or six buds set around the portion of the stem which ought to bear the apical cyathium but is said to be incapable of doing so. These buds, in their turn, may yield an internode which is immediately floriferous, so that several cyathia may be brought forth immediately above the point at which not a single one could arise on account of the lack of proteins, fats, and carbohydrates, if the explanation of Wheeler were to be accepted. This is not all; Chamaesyce includes at least one-third of the species commonly treated as Euphorbia and is the most widespread of the Euphor- biaceae, with the exception, perhaps, of Euphorbia Sect. Tithymalus in the sense of Boissier. Its vitality is astounding, and its morphologic range exceedingly varied, including fugacious annuals barely a few inches long, and trees in which a true woody trunk appears formed by the ultimate fusion of the internodal growth peculiar to the group. There is not the slightest evidence to favor the belief that this group has been derived in evolution from some other aggregate already differentiated as Euphorbia in the modern sense; its range, morphology, and physiology point to its being one of the archetypes of the Euphorbiaceae, certainly not a mori- bund offshoot of some “Section” of the Linnaean genus. The interpetiolar stipules of Chamaesyce do not seem to be homologous with ordinary stipules but to have arisen in evolution by the reduction and specialization of a quaternate foliar verticil, this in itself being an indication that the theory of progressive reduction advanced by Wheeler neglects the fact that specialization and differential growth, rather than reduction, are involved in the shortening of the axes of greens It will be obvious that, treated as a section, a subgenus, or a s, Chamaesyce is not to be interpreted as suggested by Wheeler; 7 ms abate morphology, and life-history contradict this interpretation on the strength of factors which have nothing to do with the taxonomic and nomenclatural preferences of an author. Chamaesyce may be treated in subordination under Euphorbia by any botanist who accepts traditional values as absolute, and it is not my inten- tion to dispute the legitimacy of such a point of view so long as it is know- ingly held. I accept Chamaesyce as a genus for the following reasons: (1) it includes not less than 600 species and manifestly stands for one of the largest aggregates in the Euphorbiaceae; (2) the difference is fully as 184 JOURNAL OF THE ARNOLD ARBORETUM [VOL. XXIV great between Euphorbia and Chamaesyce as it is between Mallotus and Macaranga, Glochidion and Phyllanthus, Alchornea and Cleidion, Cnido- scolus and Jatropha, and the like (this vital fact is generally unknown to local students of Euphorbia); (3) the peculiarities of the stem-abortion of Chamaesyce, so far dismissed as “habit,” are of far-reaching phylo- genetic and morphological significance; (4) the species under C pragniees with few exceptions (probably not more than 10-15 species in the called by Boissier Euphorbia sect. Zygophyllidium) are readily identifiable in the herbarium; (5) the characters of the nectaries on the cyathium, which are currently used to segregate from Euphorbia about 50 species of Monadenium and Synadenium and a single species of Diplocyathium (see Pax & Hoffm. in Engl. & Prantl, Nat. Pflanzenfam. ed. 2. 19e: 43-44. 1931), could consistently be used to break up the Linnaean genus into many genera (Dactylanthes, for instance), thus reintroducing in its classi- fication the confusion which Boissier sought to eliminate. To reject spuri- ous “floral characters,” full of unwelcome possibilities for classification, and to take up in their stead broad morphologic and phylogenetic concepts is sound and conservative taxonomy. Chamaesyce chamaerrhodos (Boiss.) comb. nov. Euphorbia chamaerrhodos Boiss. Cent. Euph.. . 1860, in DC. Prodr. 15(2): 51 1862, Ic. Euph. 13. pl. 25. 1866.1 ParaGuaAy: Carapegua, Rojas 3352. The collection cited is excellent evidence of the dimorphism of this species, the crowded short florigerous axes being unlike the long and sterile shoots. The former strongly suggest the growth of Chamaesyce potentilloides (Boiss.) comb. nov. (Euphorbia potentilloides Boiss.), the latter that of C. Airta (L.) Millspaugh. Chamaesyce Selloi (Boiss.) comb. n Euphorbia Selloi Boiss. in DC. Prod. 15(2): 50. 1862, Ic. Euph. 13. pl. 22. 1866. This is a collective species with numerous forms. The one described below differs from the type, illustrated by Sel/o 170, in the characters of the seed Chamaesyce Selloi var. brevisemina var. nov. mine ovoideo potius quam trigono-acuminato in faciebus inter costulas iano potius quam impresso a formis typicis recedit. ARGENTINA: Entre Rios: Concordia, Burkart 822. Chamaesyce Meyeniana (KI.) comb. nov. a hig KI. in Nova Acta Acad. Leop.-Carol. Nat. Cur, 19: Suppl. 3 (Meyen. Obs. Bot.) ; Boiss. in DC. Prodr. 15(2): 42. 1862. aiestiilee Chaco Paraguayo: Puerto Casado, Rojas 2171; Isla Poi, Rojas 7070. The former specimen particularly is an excellent match for such Bolivian 1See Briquet, in Bull. Soc. Bot. Suisse 50a: 57, footn. 1. 1940, for the date of this work. Pritzel errs in both editions of the “Thesaurus,” giving the date for the Icones as . The “Centuria Euphorbiarum” is overlooked by Pritzel and by most bibliographers. 1943 J CROIZAT, AMERICAN EUPHORBIACEAE 185 collections as Pentland (?) 109 and D’Orbigny 1207. ‘This is a new record for Paraguay. Chamaesyce Ejichleri (Muell.-Arg.) comb. no Euphorbia Eichleri Muell.-Arg. in Jour. Bot. “12: 232. 1874. Paracuay: Chaco: Puerto Casado, Rojas 2170; Loma Pora, Rojas 2969. ARGENTINA: Tucuman: Tapia, Venturi 2320; alta: Oran, Schreiter 10991. This appears to be a new record for Paraguay. The identifications were made on the basis of a photograph of Lorentz 301, in the Delessert herbarium, and the description. Chamaesyce Lorentzii (Muell.-Arg.) comb. Euphorbia Lorentzii Muell.-Arg. in Jour. oe 12: 231. 1874. Urucuay: locality °?, Arechevaleta 5192 a. ARGENTINA: e Belgrano, Parodi 9879; Tigre, Parodi 11095, Hicken 441, Burkart 5711; Los Talas, Marelli 39; Belgrano Bits, Burkart 3632; Delta Parana, Rapa 8357. The record for Uruguay is new, I believe. The determinations were based on a photograph of Lorentz 466, from the Berlin herbarium, and the description. This species tends to be restricted to very moist habitats. Chamaesyce emarginata (KI. & Garcke) comb. Anisophyllum emarginatum Kl. & Garcke in Abhandl, Akad. Berlin 24. Euphorbia emarginata Boiss. in DC. Prodr. 15(2): 32. 1862; Muell. a in oes FI. Bras. 11(2): 681. 1874. Urucuay: Rio Negro: Isla del Pedion, Rosengutt B 1472. ARGENTINA: Entre Rios: Gualeguaycht, Burkart 4146. The Burkart record requires confirmation, as the determination was effected from fragmentary material. The identifications were made from the descriptions and on the basis of a photograph of Sellow, the type specimen in the Berlin herbarium. Chamaesyce hirtella (Boiss.) comb. n Euphorbia hirtella Boiss. Cent. Euph. : 1860, in DC. Prodr. 15(2): 24. 1862. Urucuay: Canelones: Las Brujas, Lombardo 1958. This is an exceedingly critical entity which probably connects two or three species that may be discussed later. The record is apparently new for Uruguay. Chamaesyce Duckei sp. nov. Perennis basi lignosa, caulibus stricte adscendentibus eee in- novationibus molliter albo-lanulosis citius glabra atis. Foliis novellis mem- branaceis denon albo-lanulosis vel glabratis, manifeste petiolatis, eee ad 1.5 cm. longa, ca. 0.3 cm. lata, lanceolata vel elliptico-lanceolata vel anisophylla, margine subintegra, petiolo gracillimo ca. 2-3 mm. longo, stipulis linearibus vel triangularibus minutis. Cyathiis subsolitariis longe campanulatis ad 1-1.5 mm. longis, fauce ca. 1 mm. la is, nectariis ellip- soideis centro impressis, appendicibus petaloideis plus minusve profunde laciniato-sectis albicantibus, flore @ obpyriformi albicante tomentello vel lanuloso, capsula submatura glabrescente ovoideo-trigona ad 2 mm. longa et 1.5 mm. lata, stylis gracilibus ad 1.5 mm. longis ut videtur integris. Brazit: Para: Furnas, on the Middle Tapajoz, Ducke 18534. The characters of this plant are outstanding, and that it represents a new 186 JOURNAL OF THE ARNOLD ARBORETUM [VOL. XXIV species seems to be obvious. The material, however, is hardly satisfactory for a generalized description, because it shows a stage in which the new growth is barely beginning, but the old branchlets have already lost their leaves. It is altogether likely that the leaves and stipules of a free grown shoot will not be found to agree closely with those here described. Chamaesyce Barberiana sp. nov. Herba annua vel potius perennans vix ultra pedalis suberecta multicaulis, caulibus in sicco stramineis vel pallide brunneis crispule albido- puberulis, internodiis ipsis maximis vix 3.5—4 cm. longis, stipulis interpetiolaribus in laciniis subintegris acutatis 3 vel 4 dissectis; foliis more generis basi aniso- phyllis, apice obtuse acuminatis vel rotun datis, membranaceis, 0.5—2 cm longis, 0.5-1 cm. latis, ellipticis vel rot tundato- ellipticis nequaquam tilagineo sat obtuse distanterque serrato. Inflorescentiis apicalibus capituli- formibus ca. 1—1.5 cm. longis fere totidem latis, confertis minutissime bracteolatis saepius dichotomis dein iterum 2- vel 3- " artitis: cyathio _ vel puberulo longiuscule campanulato raro subinflato c mm, lato, nectariis diminutis appendice rotundata albicante ee dae lobis minutissimis subtruncatis, floribus ¢ paucis; capsula evidenter longi- ore quam lata ca. 2 mm. longa, basi ca. 1.25 mm. lata, stylis vix 1 mm. constrictis, columella gracili ca. 1.5 mm. longa rubello ca. 1—-1.25 mm. longo, 0.4—-0.6 mm. basi lato, faciebus transverse ruguloso-insculptis. Paraguay: Chaco Paraguayo: Irendagué, Rojas 7213 (TYPE). ARGEN- TINA: Santiago del Estero: C.. Pellegrini, Venturi 5663 Tucuman: Burruyaco, Venturi 769 Entre Rios: Parana, Burkart 439; San Luis: Sierra del Gigante, pe 67; Cordoba: Casquin (?), Rodrigo 251. This in the main is the entity which I have mistaken, in Lilloa 6: 299. 1941, for C. indica (Lam.) Croizat. My error is not entirely unaccount- able, because the vegetative parts of these plants are practically identical. However, the seeds of the two species, which only recently I have had the yas of studying to my satisfaction, are altogether unlike. Seeds re iam Oe ica are more or less ovoid and dark in color, while those of tg pe ie are narrow, pointed, and reddish brown. Chamaesyce Barberiana is a strong species which closely resembles no other of its range. In Boissier’s monograph it would take its place immedi- ately next to C. Berteriana (Balb.) Millsp. of the West Indies. The specific name honors Dr. Andrés Barbero, President of the Sociedad Cientifica del Paraguay, to whom so much is owed by all students of the natural history of that Republic. Chamaesyce portucasadiana sp. nov. Planta certissime perennis e caudice lignoso ramos plures duros repentes brevissime albicanti-tomentellos vel rarius glabratos edens ad 30 cm. longos et ultra, stipulis setaceis triangularibus inconspicuis. Foliis saepius valide costatis ellipticis vel ovato- ellipticis, sealed petiolulatis, 0.4—-1 cm. longis, 0.2—0.7 cm. latis, plus minusve profundius serratis adpresse setulosis. Cyathiis cupuliformibus in axillis singulis vel subsingulis, ca. 2 mm. longis 1943 ] CROIZAT, AMERICAN EUPHORBIACEAE 187 et latis, puberulis, nectariis late albo-appendiculatis, ovario rotundato- trigono albicante tomentello vix 1.5 mm. longo latoque, stylis brevibus apice bilobis Paraguay: Chaco Paraguayo: Puerto Casado, Rojas 2152. This plant was originally identified as representing grag ee thymtifolta L., a determination probably influenced by Chodat & Hassler’s earlier acceptance of this species for the region. A full discussion of FE. thymtfolia is here impossible, but on the basis of Metz 67, an Asiatic specimen which Boissier cites under that binomial, in DC. Prodr. 15(2): 47. 1862, it is obvious that C. portucasadiana has characters wholly incompatible with those of Linnaeus’ species as represented by the Metz collection. The description of E. argillicola Chod. & Hassl., if at all correct, cannot apply here. Chamaesyce oranensis sp. nov. Perennans lignescens, rosulata vel repens suberecta, tota hispidulo- velutinosa pallide olivacea vel grisea, internodiis pro more nec u aos maximis 1—2 cm. longis. Foliis rotundato-ellipticis, 0.5—1 cm. longis, m. latis, velutino-puberulis, margine sat grosse serratis, subsessilibus, tiple setaceis minutis deciduis. Cyathiis in eta pluribus aggregatis campanulatis valde tomentellis ca. 1.5 mm. longis, nectariis rotundatis minimis appendice petaloidea subnulla, flore @ ae stylis brevissimis glabris partitis; capsula ovato-trigona ca. 1.25 mm. longa 1 mm. basi plus minusve lata, semine ellipsoideo ee ie nee ruguloso ca. 1—1.25 mm. longo : = 75 mm. lato. ARGENTINA: Sa a: Oran, Venturi 5555 (TYPE). ParaGuay: Chaco Paraguayo: Nee Rojas 7224. The floral characters of this new species are not outstanding, but the habit is distinctive and is immediately recognizable. The internodes are usually only 0.5 cm. long, and the stems become manifestly woody with age. Chamaesyce catamarcensis sp. nov. Humilis glaberrima, caules verosimiliter annuos e radice perenni edens. Foliis crassiusculis integerrimis linearibus, apice obtuse rotundato-apiculatis, 7-14 mm. longis, 1-1.5 mm. latis, petiolo vix 1-2 mm. longo, stipulis inter- petiolaribus fimbriatis minutis. Cyathiis i in axillis singulis ob internodiorum brevitatem in pseudocymulis apicalibus congestis vix 1 mm. longis, nectariis 4 vel 5 exappendiculatis vel parcissime appendiculatis in involucrum Jonge decurrentibus, staminibus paucis; flore @ elongato trigono glaberrimo, stylis 3 brevissimis partitis; capsula matura ca. 2 mm. longa et 1.25 mm. lata, gynophoro 1.5—-2 mm. longo, semine quadrangulo apice valde acumi- nato basi truncato, in one rugis profundis horizontalibus ad 6-10 ornato, arillo albicante, testa rubrobrunnea. ARGENTINA: Catamarca: Andalgala, Jorgensen 1621. This resembles C. caecorum but has blunter leaves and a different seed. Chamaesyce caecorum (Boiss.) comb. Euphorbia caecorum Mart. ex Boiss. in DC. Prodr. 15(2): 51. 1862; Muell.-Arg. in . Fl. Bras. 11(2): 675. pl. 92. 1874; oe Ic. Euph. eee 23. 1866; Chod. & Hassl. in Bull. Herb. Boiss. II. 5: 681. 1905. fp + 188 JOURNAL OF THE ARNOLD ARBORETUM [VOL. XXIV The spelling caecorum is to be retained as the one used by Boissier in the original publication. Mueller’s reference to the place of publication is garbled, confusing as it does the unpublished “Pl. Med. Bras. t. 73 ined.,” cited by Boissier, and the “Icones Euphorbiarum.” This species is frequent in Brazil and probably not rare in Paraguay, witness: Rojas 6339, Sierra de Amambay. I have so far not seen it from Argentina. The ternate and quaternate verticils, illustrated by Mueller and Boissier, on the lower nodes suggest a theoretical primitive condition, antedating the transformation of two leaves of the verticil into interpetiolar stipules. Chamaesyce hirta (L.) Millsp. in Field Mus. Publ. Bot. 2: 303. 1909. Euphorbia hirta L. Sp. Pl. 454. 1753; Boiss. in DC. Prodr. 15(2): 21. 1862 (as E. pilulifera); Wheel. in Contr. Gray Herb. 127: 67. 1939, in Rhodora 43: 169. This widespread weed has been confused both in herbaria and in the literature with C. pilulifera (L.) Small. This confusion arose through accepting a concept of E. pilulifera L. based on the plant described in the Amoenitates Academicae 3: 114. 1756, rather than on that of the Species Plantarum (1753), which has priority. As Boissier points out (op. cit. 20), the plant originally determined as E. pilulifera in the Linnaean herbarium actually represents E. parviflora L., which was not published until 1759. To E. pilulifera L. and the combinations based upon it, E. parviflora L. must be added as a synonym. Chamaesyce hirta L. subsp. procumbens (Boiss.) Croiz. in Lilloa 6: 299. 1941. Chamaesyce hirta L. var. procumbens (Boiss.) Mold. in Rev. Sudam, Bot. 6: 178. 1940. ArcENTINA: Buenos Aires: Villa Ortuzar, Parodi 12819; Tucum an: Villa Lujan, Venturi 167, Trancas, Venturi 4386, Tapia, Rodriguez 526; °& : Oran, Rodriguez 96, Candelaria, Venturi 3659; Cordo ba: Unquillo, Bruch 5005. CULTIVATED: Croizat s. n. This characteristic form is weaker and smaller than the typical plant and has a fairly thickly arillate seed, the testa of which is dusty-grayish rather than brick-colored. It is particularly abundant in Argentina, the collections cited being representative. In some of its most diffuse states (for instance, Rodriguez 526, Bruch 5005, and Croizat s.n.) this entity is close to Chamaesyce microcephala (Boiss.) comb. nov. (Euphorbia micro- cephala Boiss. in DC. Prodr. 15(2): 1262. 1866), which in its turn does not seem to differ enough from the form called by Wheeler E. Airta var. destituta, in Contr. Gray Herb. 127: 70. pl. 4, C 1. 1929). Chamaesyce hirta var. laeticineta var. nov. Nectariis saepius appendicibus petaloideis albicantibus sat magnis in- signitis, foliis saepius sub apicem rhombeo-dilatatis Paracuay: Chaco Paraguayo: Puerto Casado, Rojas 2819. I have not seen material representing Euphorbia Karwinskyi Boiss., which, according to Wheeler, in Contr. Gray Herb. 127: 71. 1939, should not be far remote from E. kirta var. nocens Wheel. and somewhat suggests this new variety in the descriptions. In its most characteristic state this 1943 ] CROIZAT, AMERICAN EUPHORBIACEAE 189 variety is easily recognizable by the white petaloid appendages of the nectaries on the cyathium. Chamaesyce serpens (H. B. K.) Small, Fl. Southeast. U. S. 709, 1333. 1903. Euphorbia sag H. B. K. Nov. Gen. & Sp. 2: 41 [folio], 52 sedges 1817; Boiss. . 15(2): 29. 1862; Wheel. in Contr. Gray Herb. 136: 198. 1941. PARAGUAY: < 4 aco Paraguayo: Lopez de Filippis, Rojas 8278; Puerto Casado, Rojas 2161. The first of these specimens is an absolute match of the typical plant collected at Cumana. In this plant the stipules definitely tend to be triangular-truncate, not laciniate-partite. Rojas 2161 is a microphyllous state and evidently a perennial from a comparatively thick rootstock. This suggests that the species is annual only where conditions are unfavorable. Chamaesyce serpens var. montevidensis (Boiss.) comb. Euphorbia ovalifolia montevidensis Boiss. in DC. Prodr. 15(2) : 43. 1862. Euphorbia serpens var. fissistipula Thell. in Bull. Herb. Boiss. Il. 7: 755. 1907. Syn. Nov. Urucuay: Sha an Casaretto 453 (type number) ; Arechevaleta 5204, Lombardo 222, Legrand 394. ARGENTINA: Buenos Aires: Mar de la Plata, Hicken 642; Loberia, fen (Alboff) s. n. It is possible that C. serpens and C. ovalifolia cannot be distinguished with finality as separate species, but it seems clear that the var. monte- vidensis rather agrees with the former than with the latter on account of the habit and foliage and the less evolute petaloid appendages. Lombardo 222 bears the local name ‘‘Yerba Meona.”’ This same name is given by Larrahaga, Escr. D. A. Larrafiaga, Inst. Geogr. Uruguay 2: 165. 1923, to his E. diuretica, which is described altogether too briefly but is said to be “pubescens.” Clearly, E. diuretica is not E. serpens or any of its forms, for these are glabrous. The binomials of Larrafiaga are published with descriptions so sketchy that, in this group, it proves impossible to place them without access to authentic material for study and comparison. EXCLUDED FROM THE EUPHORBIACEAE Ayenia pusilla L. Syst. ed. 10. 1247. 1759 Tragia eee Hert. in Rev. Sudan: Bot. 3: 166. 1936, nomen; op. cit. 5:34. 7. Syn. Nov. Iam a to Senor A. Lombardo for data, drawings and notes which provide definite proof that Herter’s species is not euphorbiaceous but is a well-known sterculiaceous plant, Ayenia pusilla L. The reduction here made is based on Chebataroff 6352 in our herbarium, bearing the original sketches and comments of Sefor Lombardo. ARNOLD ARBORETUM, Harvarp UNIVERSITY. 190 JOURNAL OF THE ARNOLD ARBORETUM [VOL. XXIV THE FAMILY HIMANTANDRACEAE I. W. BatLey, CHARLOTTE G. Nast, AND A. C. SMITH With six plates THE present paper is the second of a proposed series discussing the inter- relationships of the families of woody Ranales. We have already briefly discussed the position of the Himantandraceae as a relative of the Mag- noliaceae and the Degeneriaceae (1). These three families form a compact group within the Ranales, being more closely related to each other, on the basis of important morphological details, than any one of them is to other families The most important contributions to our knowledge of the Himan- tandraceae were made by Diels (3, 4, 5), with whose conclusions (5: 134) that the closest relative of the group is the Magnoliaceae we are in essential agreement. Diels has discussed Himantandra in considerable detail, and therefore we shall emphasize those points which he was unable fully to observe, and especially those characteristics of Himantandra which we interpret differently. The first part of this paper presents a diagnosis of the technical char- acters of Himantandra, the sole genus of the family, and the two known species. Only the essential citations to literature are given, as fuller cita- tions were recently listed (7) and the status of the generic name was dis- cussed. In the second part of this paper we shall examine the internal morphological features of the genus, with special reference to points not made entirely clear by Diels. Specimens cited in this treatment are de- posited in the herbarium of the Arnold Arboretum. The morphological and anatomical portions of this study have been prepared by the first two authors, the taxonomic portion by the third author, while the conclusions are the result of collaborative discussions. I Himantandra F. v. Muell. Pap. Pl. 2: 54. 1890 Galbulimima F. M. Bailey in Queensl. i Age Bot. Bull. 9: 5. 1894. Trees, the branchlets slender, subterete or faintly angled distally, densely lepidote; scales covering the young branchlets, petioles, lower surface of leaf-blades, and external parts of inflorescence (except stamens and stami- nodes), these scales peltate, eee rae. iarectgue dark at center, paler toward margin, the stalk very minute, the body composed of 30-56 radiating flattened laterally coalescent haire: stipules none; leaves alter- nate, simple, pinnate-nerved; petioles slender, rugulose; leaf-blades coria- ceous or thin-coriaceous, entire and faintly recurved or plane at margin, the costa prominent beneath, the secondary nerves 7—16 per side (interspersed 1943 ] BAILEY, NAST, & SMITH, HIMANTANDRACEAE 191 with other similar but weaker or obscure laterals), spreading, anastomosing toward margin (either freely or obscurely so); flowering shoots axillary, customarily with 1 terminal flower, with 2 (sometimes 3) alternating bracts, the bracts subcoriaceous, oblong, 1-3 mm. long, occasionally folia- ceous, with obscure axillary buds, these buds rarely developing into sub- sidiary flowering axes with two scales and an apical flower; pedicel similar to the flowering shoot in texture; calyx subcoriaceous, ovoid-conical, obtuse or umbonate at apex, calyptrate, rupturing along an irregular line near base and leaving a small undulate or irregularly lobed calycine remnant attached to the torus, glabrous within, densely and uniformly lepidote without; corolla similar to calyx in texture, shape, and indument, slightly smaller than and closely enveloped by the calyx, similarly calyptrate; torus carnose, flaring to the attachment of the calyx and corolla, thence columnar 2-seriate, castaneous, carnose, sharply reflexed after anthesis; stamens numerous, several- seriate, closely appressed, similar to outer staminodes i in texture and shape, rapidly elongating and reflexed after dehiscence of the perianth, the pollen-sacs 4, paired, extrorse, immersed in the sporophyll- tissue, linear, obtuse at base and apex, dehiscing ee alee inner staminodes about 13-20, 1-3-seriate, similar in texture to the outer stami- nodes, See cae gradually narrowed to an acute ne usually erect and more r less coherent at base; carpels spirally oe on the conical texture, sometimes cohering in a gelatinous mass, the locule 1, the ovule 1 (rarely 2, but the second seldom developing), anatropous, attached to the ventral margin at various levels in different carpels; fruit an ellipsoid or subglobose syncarp, up to 25 mm. in diameter at maturity, rounded or obtuse at base and apex, the pericarp coriaceous, 0.5—1. eUnueK. red, rugulose when dried, fesidets without, the scales long persistent, the carpels completely coalesced, often imbricate and superposed in 2 or 3 ranks, the exterior ones appearing shorter than the interior, the dissepiments coria- ceous, persistent, the endocarp cartilaginous, the seeds solitary Sy possibly rarely 2), with oily endosperm and small embryo near the hilum KEY TO THE SPECIES Leaf-blades usually oblong-elliptic, (6—) 7-15 cm. long, (3—)4—7 cm. broad (2-2.5 times as long as broad), obtuse to acute at base, rounded to acute at apex; scales on at least contiguous, only rarely not touching; outer staminodes about 12-23; stamens 90-130, 6-25 mm. long; inner staminodes 15-20; alee 9-15; New Guinea (and probably North Moluccas). .........+-+.+0005s A. Belocavecns. Leaf-blades oblong-lanceolate, 7-11.5 cm. long, 2-4 cm. broad pan 3 times longer outer staminodes about 7; stamens about 40, 6-9 mm. long; inner staminodes about.13% carpels/=10; Queensland. «<< sales. sce nae ca eee rene 2. H. baccata. 192 JOURNAL OF THE ARNOLD ARBORETUM [VOL. XXIV . Himantandra Belgraveana (F. v. Muell.) F. v. Muell. Pap. Pl. 2: 54. 1890. Eupomatia Belgraveana F. v. Mu ie in Austral. Jour. Pharm. 2: 4. 1887, in Bot. —_ Galbulimima Belgraveana Sprague in Jour. Bot. 60: 138. Himantandra nitida Bak. f. & Norman in Jour. si ie ae 2. 1923. Galbulimima nitida Sprague in Jour. Bot. 61: 200. Tall tree, up to 25 m. or more high; ious straight or subflexuose, 2-4 mm. in diameter toward apices, om brown or castaneous or at lengt th fusco-cinereous; scales 0.15—0.4 mm, in diameter, crowded, usually com- pletely obscuring the surface, the aoe of adjacent scales often imbri- cate; petioles 1-2 mm. in diameter, 8-24 mm. long, deeply or shallowly canaliculate; leaf-blades coriaceous, brown or dark olivaceous, smooth or d sely and minutely papillose, and shining or dull abov e when dried, castaneous- or fuscous-lepidote beneath, ee rae or obovate- )- elliptic, (6-)7—15 cm. long, (3—)4—7 cm. broad, obtuse to acute at base, rounded to acute and sometimes ieee G mucronulate at apex, the costa impressed or deeply canaliculate above, the secondary nerves 8-16 prominulous or immersed beneath, the veinlets immersed, occasionally form- ing a faintly prominulous reticulum above and rarely beneath: flowering shoots 1.5—6 cm. long in senaget of flower or fruit, the vegetative portion slender, rugulose, 1-2 mm. in diameter, up to 25 mm. long, the pedicel gradually swollen distally . 3 mm. in diameter, 8-16 mm. long at anthesis, up to 20 mm. long in fruit; calyx 9-16 mm. long and 8-13 mm. in diameter at anthesis; outer staminodes oa 12-23, 1- or 2-seriate, oblong-ligulate, 5- mm. long at anthesis and probably ‘often longer, L. 5—2 mm. broad near base, gradually narrowed to a sharp and often unequally ae or rostrate apex, sometimes sparsely pelucid-g landular; stamens 90-1 usually 6- or 7-seriate, 6-25 mm. long, 1.5- ? mm. broad near base, often with numerous and obvious sclereids and obscurely or obviously striate, the pollen-sacs 0.8—-1.8 mm. long, the lower edge 0.6—3 mm. distant any om the base of the cea inner staminodes 15-20, 1—3-seriate, 5—7 n long, 0.5—1.3 mm. broad near base; carpels 9-15, 4— 6 mm, long at ciiese the ovary 1.5— - mm. long; fruit with seeds (in all our specimens ) solitary, flattened, _submembranaceous, suborbicular, 3-4 mm. in diameter, appar- ently ster eee New Guinea, and probably also some of the islands to the west. Diels (5: 131) reports that Watbur rg (no. 17770) collected loose flowers which are probably referable to the species at Sibela, on Batjan, an island ar of Halmahera ; extension of typical New Guinean elements to this region is frequ NETHERLANDS New Gutnea: Biak I., Seroei, alt. about 50 m., Neth. Ind. For. Serv. 30722, 30898; Japen I., Seroei, alt. about 370 m., Ne th. Ind. For. Serv. 30406 ; 6-15 km. southwest of Bernhard Camp, Idenburg River, alt. 1300-1800 m., Brass & Peas 11195 (tree 25 m. high, frequent in primary forest on slopes of a ridge, the tru 34 cm. diam., the crown not wide-spreading; bark 5 mm. thick, dark brown, fairly smooth; wood white; fruits red), Brass 12103 (tree to 25 m. high, abundant in mossy forest flowers white; fruits orange- -brown), Brass & Versteegh 12572 (tree 21*m. high, occasional in primary forest on slopes of a ridge, the trunk 51 cm. diam., the crown fairly small; bark 9 mm. thick, gray, smooth; wood light brown; flowers yellow; fruits green). NorTHEASTERN NEW rey Sepik River region, Hauptlager Malu, alt. 50-100 m., Ledermann 10884a (frag.) ; Morobe District: Yunzaing, alt. 1200-1350 m., Clemens 3586, 3678, 6498, 6503 (large trees, the trunk to m.; fruit red) ; Ogeramnang, alt. 1750-1800 m., Clemens 4991, 5538; between 1943] BAILEY, NAST, & SMITH, HIMANTANDRACEAE 193 Ogeramnang and Tobou, alt. 1500-1800 m., Clemens 6584a; Matap, alt. 1500-1800 m., Clemens 11100, 41200 (tall trees; ‘inflorescence’ brown; flowers russet-green). British NEw GuINEA: Central Division, Mt. Tafa, alt. 2400 m., Brass 4916 (tall tree, plentiful in valley forests, with slender trunk and thinly foliaged crown; staminodes and stamens cream-colored; fruit brown). In studying the above-cited specimens, we have noted certain differences which we have tried to correlate with the different geographic areas, think- ing that more than one nomenclatural division of the genus might be discern- ible in New Guinea. However, our attempts to divide the New Guinean population have not succeeded, and we have reached the conclusion that only one species is represented. The material from the Morobe District has the upper surface of the leaves usually dull and conspicuously rugulose-papillose, while the remain- ing collections have this surface comparatively shining and essentially smooth. However, there are exceptions to this generalization, and the texture of the upper surface appears to be subject to individual variation, possibly being dependent upon the size and distribution of stone-cells. The degree to which the secondary nerves are immersed is also subject to great individual variation, although in general the Morobe collections have more completely immersed nerves. When young, the leaves are infolded with the two halves of the upper surface closely appressed. Although mature leaves are always strictly glabrous on the upper surface, these young folded leaves sometimes bear small many-branched stellate hairs before they open. Such hairs are often found in material from the Morobe District, but they are apparently always lacking in the other specimens cited. On the basis of size and number of floral parts, no important differences are found among the available collections, the species being very variable in this respect. The greatest variability is found in the size of the stamens and outer staminodes, which elongate rapidly after the dehiscence of the corolla. The longest stamens we have observed are 18 mm. long, but Diels (4) portrays the stamens of the type collection as about 25 mm. long, and we have no reason to doubt the accuracy of this observation. From our study of the available material and the earlier descriptions, therefore, we are inclined to believe that Himantandra is represented in New Guinea by only one species. Himantandra Belgraveana has as its type a specimen collected by Forbes (no. 759 according to Mueller, no. 795 according to Diels [4] and Baker [2]), collected in the vicinity of Sogere, British New Guinea. The original description does not give dimensions, but Diels’ description in 1912 (4) is adequate. Himantandra nitida is based upon Forbes 828a from the same region; according to Baker and Norman this differs from the earlier species “by the shining broader coriaceous leaves and much longer stamens.” A comparison of the description of H. nitida with our concept of H. Bel- graveana does not demonstrate differences of any consequence. 2. Himantandra baccata (F. M. Bailey) Diels in Bot. Jahrb. 55: 128. 1917. Galbulimima baccata F. M. Bailey in Queensl. Dept. Agr. Bot. Bull. 9: 5. 1894. Tree up to 17 m. high, the branchlets 1.5-3 mm. in diameter toward 194 JOURNAL OF THE ARNOLD ARBORETUM [ VOL. XXIV apices, brownish; scales 0.13—0.17 mm. in diameter, comparatively scat- tered, the margins of adjacent scales not imbricate, rarely contiguous; petioles 0.7-1 mm. in diameter, 8-20 mm. long, shallowly canaliculate; leaf-blades thin-coriaceous, dark brown and shining above when dried, castaneous-lepidote beneath, oblong-lanceolate, 7—-11.5 cm. long, 2—4 cm. broad, acute to attenuate at base, subacute to short-acuminate at apex, the costa shallowly impressed or slightly raised above, the secondary nerves 7-10 per side, prominulous above, less conspicuously so beneath, the vein- lets immersed or faintly uaa ie above; flowering shoots up to 2 cm. long at anthesis, the vegetative portion angled, 5-13 mm. long, the pedicel shorter; calyx up to 10 mm. long and slightly less in diameter at anthesis; outer staminodes about 7, l-seriate, lanceolate, 4-6 mm. long or paged longer after anthesis, a stamens about 40, several-seriate, 6—9 m long, the pollen-sac s 1. 5—2 mm. long; inner staminodes about 13, 6-8 mm ious narrowed at sae aaa 7-10, about 2 mm. long at anthesis: fruit with seeds “with a loose outer ragged coat; testa smooth, cartilaginous; albumen copious, oily. Embryo not particularly small near the hilum, apical with reference to the position of the seed in the berry.” (ex F. M. Bailey) DISTRIBUTION: Queensland, Australia. AUSTRALIA: Queensland: North Queensland, Gadgarra, Peeramon, Atherton, White 1561. In addition to the preceding specimen, which is the only one we have seen, the following are cited by other writers, all from Queensland: Eumundi, Arundeil (tyPE); Boar Pocket and Evelyn, Heberton District, J. F. Bailey; Kin Kin, North Coast Line, Francis. Our description is based primarily upon the White collection, which is in fruit; we have also incorporated the characters and dimensions recorded by F. M. Bailey and Sprague (see Smith [7] for citations). INADEQUATELY KNOWN SPECIES HIMANTANDRA PARVIFOLIA Bak. f. & Norman in Jour. Bot. see ee 2.1923. Galbulimima parvifolia Sprague in Jour. Bot. 61: 200. This species, known to us only from the end eer is based on Forbes 355, from Meroka, British New Guinea. The leaves described seem closer to those of H. baccata than to those of H. Belgraveana, but they are even smaller than any described for H. baccata, being similar in pro- portions. The species is said to differ from H. baccata in its smaller leaves and flowers, but the dimensions given for the flowers do not indicate this to be the case. No numbers of floral parts are given. From the locality, one would expect this to be a depauperate form of H. Belgraveana, but the leaf-proportions do not suggest this. If it represents H. baccata, the occurrence of this species in New Guinea will be noteworthy. Himantandra parvifolia may quite possibly be a good third species of the genus, but for the time being we are inclined to believe it an extreme varia- tion of H. Belgraveana, which, as illustrated by the specimens cited above, seems best interpreted as a very variable species. II As indicated above, we are much better acquainted with the New 1943] BAILEY, NAST, & SMITH, HIMANTANDRACEAE 195 Guinean species than with the Australian, and consequently the following notes are based primarily upon H. Belgraveana, of which we have ample recently collected material. The Australian species and H. Belgraveana are very closely related and show only minor differences, and for this reason we do not doubt that remarks on the morphology of one species apply equally well to the other. Stem. In Himantandra baccata and H. Belgraveana, as in Degeneria and the Magnoliaceae,! the primary vascular cylinder is a dictyostele, being constituted of discrete bundles that are separated by relatively wide gaps. Each bundle is capped externally by slender thick-walled fibers and is subtended internally by vertically elongated, thin-walled parenchyma. During the earlier stages of the formation of the secondary body, the external arcs of fibers tend to become united into a continuous ring of sclerenchyma by the sclerification of the intervening arcs of parenchyma. The bulk of the pith is composed of large comparatively thin-walled cells, but nests and transversely oriented plates of sclereids are of common occurrence, particularly in the nodal parts of the stem. The cortex ‘s characterized by having numerous spherical secretory cells and more or less abundant sclereids. Crystalliferous parenchyma occurs in the cortex, phloem, and pith, usually in close association with the sclerenchyma. Each small crystal-bearing cell or chamber contains a single rhombohedral crystal of calcium oxalate that is jacketed by a thick sheath of lignified cellulose. As noted by Diels (5), the origin of the cork is superficial, probably hypodermal. The rays of the first-formed secondary xylem are narrow, with a high ratio of uniseriate to biseriate, and are markedly heterogeneous. On the con- trary, in wood from large stems (fig. /0), there is a high ratio of fusiform, nearly homogeneous triseriate and tetraseriate rays, and uniseriate rays are much reduced in size and number. The vessels of the first-formed sec- ondary xylem are smaller, more numerous, and occur in more extensive radial seriations than they do in the later- formed wood (fig. 9). Further- more, the vessels of the metaxylem and of the first-formed secondary xylem commonly exhibit a higher ratio of scalariform to porous perforations and of scalariform and opposite to alternate lateral pitting than do the vessels of the later-formed wood, where scalariform perforations and transitional types of lateral pitting are evanescent or vestigial. It should be noted in this connection that the discrepancies in Diels’ (5) and McLaughlin’s (6) de- scriptions of the wood of Himantandra may have been due in part to differ- ences in the type of material examined by them. ‘The wood fibers of Himantandra are comparatively thin-walled fiber tracheids, having small circular bordered pits. The wood parenchyma is of a broad banded apo- tracheal type (fig. 9). More or less numerous strands of crystal-bearing cells occur in association with the wood parenchyma. 1Whenever mentioned in the following pages, the family Magnoliaceae is intended 1 the restricted sense of Dandy, Hutchinson, and others, viz. exclusive ot the W ae Illicium, Schizandraceae, and Tetracentron. 196 JOURNAL OF THE ARNOLD ARBORETUM [VOL. XXIV In herbarium specimens of Himantandra, there is less conspicuous flaring of the rays in the secondary phloem than in comparable material of Degeneria and of most Magnoliaceae, and stratified hard and soft bast are less precociously developed. It is significant, however, that in larger stems the phloem is distinctly stratified and has flaring rays. Furthermore, the sieve tubes are of the same structural type as in the Magnoliaceae and Degeneria. Crystalliferous parenchyma occurs along the surfaces of the hard bast. LEAF AND NODAL ANATOMY. In Himantandra Belgraveana and H. baccata, three traces enter the base of the petiole, leaving three gaps in the cauline vascular cylinder, i. e. the stems have typically trilacunar nodes. The three traces divide forming 6-8 vascular bundles that become oriented into a more or less cylindrical foliar dictyostele (fig. 8). As in Degeneria and the Magnoliaceae, the vascular strands that branch outward from the median trace are segregated in opposite sides of the foliar dictyostele. In other words, one or more of them retain a normal orientation of xylem and phloem and form part of the abaxial surface of the foliar stele, whereas the remaining ones develop an inverted orientation of xylem and phloem and form part of the adaxial surface of the foliar vascular cylinder. Thus, the vascularization of the petiole and midrib is of a fundamentally different type than that which occurs in such ranalian plants as Tetracentron, where a medullated foliar dictyostele is formed by the closure of an adaxially ex- panding arc of vascular tissue. The young leaves of Himantandra are adaxially folded, i. e. conduplicate (fig. 3). They do not unfold until they have attained a considerable size, not infrequently a length of 8 centimeters or more in the case of the larger- leaved specimens. The exposed abaxial surfaces of the conduplicate leaves, from very early stages of their development, are provided with a dense coating of peltate scales (fig. 3). These scales are persistent on the un- folded mature leaves (fig. 1), but are smaller and less crowded in H. baccata than in H. Belgraveana. The adaxial or upper surfaces of mature leaves of all investigated specimens of Himantandra are glabrous, but the immature leaves of certain collections of H. Belgraveana, viz. Clemens 3586, 3678, 4991, 5538, 6498, 6503, and 6584a, bears scales or stellate hairs on their ventral surface during certain stages of their conduplicate development. The ray cells of these scales or stellate hairs are not firmly coherent and drop off during subsequent development of the leaf. However, the basal cells or stalks are persistent and are more or less widely scattered among the epidermal cells of the upper surface of the mature leaf. The stomata of both 1. baccata and H. Belgraveana have a very peculiar and highly characteristic distribution. As shown in fig. 2, they occur in discrete, nearly circular clusters that subtend each of the peltate scales on the lower surface of the leaf. Crystal-bearing cells, of the same morpho- logical type as in the stem, are more or less abundant in the leaf. They tend to occur characteristically in pairs or small clusters in the lower epidermis (fig. 7), and in strands along the sclerenchymatous sheaths of the 1943] BAILEY, NAST, & SMITH, HIMANTANDRACEAE 197 veins and veinlets. Numerous clusters or nests of sclereids are scattered throughout the mesophyll of all the Clemens collections of H. Belgraveana, but they are absent or of less frequent occurrence in other material ex- amined by us. Spherical secretory cells are abundantly developed in the leaf, as in the other organs of the plant. FLOWERING sHOoOoTS. The solitary bisexual flowers of Himantandra, as of Degeneria and certain genera of the Magnoliaceae, e. g. Michelia and Elmerrillia, are borne at the apex of axillary shoots. These flowering axillary shoots are provided with two (occasionally three) scales which have more or less rudimentary buds in their axils. Since the scales fre- quently develop into typical leaves, they may be interpreted as reduced foliar organs. In exceptional instances, one of the buds develops a sub- sidiary flowering axis bearing two scales and an apical flower. The flowers are separated from the upper scale or leaf by an internode of con- siderable length, which may be designated as the pedicel in contrast to the essentially vegetative nodes and internodes that subtend it. The pedicel flares toward the base of the torus, forming a circular flange (figs. 11, 12), to which the calyptrate calyx is attached. A second internal flange pro- vides an attachment for the calyptrate corolla. The carpel-bearing, cone- like apex of the torus (fig. 12) projects from the concave upper surface of the broadly columnar part of the receptacle, to which the stamens and staminodes are attached. The axillary flowering shoot contains a dictyostele of many small bundles (figs. 15-18) similar to that of a typical vegetative branch, except for a short distance in the basal part of the pedicel. Here the bundles are constricted into four large vascular strands (fig. 17). Three traces (figs. 15, 16) enter! the first bract, leaving three gaps in the stele, just as in the case of the leaves of ordinary vegetative shoots. The three traces of the second bract (or leaf) initiate their departure at a slightly higher level and from the opposite half of the stele. Although these traces fluctuate considerably in their subsequent behavior, two of them (commonly the median and one lateral) tend to divide, forming two additional traces that extend upward through the cortex of the pedicel (figs. 15-18). A third set of three traces departs from the stele just above the level of the first node (fig. 16). These traces are detached from the same half of the stele as the three traces of the first scale and extend upward through the cortex of the second internode, the second node, and the pedicel (figs. 16-18). Thus, there are five cortical bundles in the base of the pedicel, to which is soon added a sixth bundle which departs from the same side of the stele as the median trace of the second scale (figs. 16, 17). As will be shown subsequently, these six cortical bundles of the pedicel vascularize the outer calyptra. Since the foliar appendages of Himantandra have a % phyllotaxy and are attached to trilacunar nodes, it is evident that the flowering shoot and 1The terminology used is purely descriptive and bears no ontogenetic implications regarding downward or upward development of procambium, phloem, and xylem. 198 JOURNAL OF THE ARNOLD ARBORETUM [VOL. XXIV pedicel have four distinct sets of three traces, each set attached alternately to opposite sides of the stele. The lateral traces of the fourth set exhibit more or less conspicuous fusion to the traces of the second set. ‘Therefore, the outer calyptra of the flower represents a pair of fused appendages, either bracts or sepals. It should be emphasized in this connection, how- ever, that if the homologous appendages of Degeneria are typical sepals, the outer calyptra of Himantandra should similarly be designated as calyx. Furthermore, the calyptrate calyx of Drimys is obviously composed of two fused sepals. The vascularization of the torus is extremely complex and _ variable. There is a network of variously oriented bundles which divide, anastomose, redivide, reanastomose, and shift position throughout the torus. The number and arrangement of the bundles varies to a certain extent in differ- ent flowers, indicating a lack of stabilization within the ebay A basic or average condition is, therefore, illustrated in figs. 18-23. The six cortical bundles of the pedicel (fig. 18) either bifurcate or break up into several branches (fig. 19). These branches divide laterally into smaller strands (fig. 20) and internally into strands which extend upward through the base of the torus (fig. 21). The lateral strands may divide or anasto- mose in the base of the outer calyptra, but eventually they enter its free part as numerous small strands variable in size and number (fig. 21). The internally directed branches are usually eight in number, exhibiting considerable diversity in their relations to the branches of the six cortical bundles of the pedicels. For example, cortical bundle no. 1 in figs. 18-20 bifurcates laterally, one branch of which forms an internal strand. Cortical bundle no. 2 divides laterally and produces two internally directed strands, whereas cortical bundle no. 3 gives rise to no internal strands. To these eight peripheral strands, four additional strands are added from the central stele (blackened strands of figs. 19-21), making an outer ring of twelve strands in the part of the torus subtending the inner calyptra (fig. 2 These twelve bundles divide laterally (fig. 22), and some of them may be joined by a few tracheal elements to an average of five smaller internal bundles (unstippled strands of figs. 20-22) which depart from the stele at a higher level than the four bundles referred to above. The five smaller internal strands, however, are only feebly and temporarily attached to the vascular system of the inner calyptra and subsequently extend upward through the torus (fig. 23). The lateral branches of the twelve bundles of the inner calyptra divide and anastomose laterally, giving rise to an indeti- nite number of small strands which enter the free part of the inner calyptra (fig. 23). Simultaneously with the lateral divisions, a few inter- nally and upwardly directed branches are formed. Thus, at the bases of both the outer and the inner calyptras, a certain amount of vascular tissue remains in the torus to become traces or parts of traces for the succeeding appendages. The basic pattern in the vascularization of the inner calyptra evidently consists of four sets of three traces. There are apparently four median 1943 ] BAILEY, NAST, & SMITH, HIMANTANDRACEAE 199 traces that are attached to the central dictyostele and four pairs of lateral traces that are joined to the cortical system of calycine bundles. Such an interpretation is strengthened by comparisons with the flowering axis of Magnolia, Liriodendron, and other Magnoliaceae, where complex systems of cortical bundles are characteristically present. In these mag- noliaceous plants, the dorsal trace of the 3-veined carpels is attached to the central dictyostele, whereas the two lateral traces tie into the cortical system of vascular bundles. This indicates that the inner calyptra of Himantandra is composed of four fused appendages, and comparisons with homologous members of Degeneria demonstrate that it is a corolla. We are unable to follow Diels (5) in homologizing the calyptras of Himantandra with the bud-scales of Michelia Figo (Lour.) Spreng., since the scales of both vegetative buds and flower-buds are clearly of stipular origin in the Magnoliaceae. In a former comparison between the floral axes of Degeneriaceae, Mag- noliaceae, and Himantandraceae (Bailey and Smith, 1), we failed to rec- ognize fully the vascular complexities of Himantandra. Subsequent de- tailed investigations of more abundant and adequate material have shown that this genus resembles the Magnoliaceae rather than Degeneria, although its vascular complexities appear to be less stereotyped and stable than in many Magnoliaceae. The flowering shoots and pedicels of Degeneria do not have complicating systems of cortical bundles. STAMENS AND STAMINODES. The columnar region of the torus upon which the stamens and staminodes are borne contains the terminus of the increasingly complex network of vascular strands. The strands in this region of the torus comprise (1) upward extensions of the inwardly directed branches of the corollaceous vascularization (figs. 22, 23), (2) upward extensions of the bundles which become temporarily attached to this system, and (3) additional traces detached from the central dictyostele, which loses its identity as a cylinder by the branching, rebranching, and dispersal of its constituent bundles. Traces from the strands in the peripheral regions vascularize the outer staminodes and lower stamens. The upper stamens and inner staminodes have traces that arise from the dispersed bundles of the dictyostele. Three traces from three separate strands enter the base of each fertile microsporophyll and likewise a majority of the sterile ones. In the case of the broad outermost staminodes and the innermost awl- shaped ones, the traces are sometimes reduced to two or one. The stamens of Himantandra are not differentiated into filament, anther, and connective, and are best described as much elongated, narrowly lanceo- late sporophylls (fig. 25). This was recognized by Diels, who states (5: 9): “Es ist unangebracht, bei diesen Sporophyllen uberhaupt von Kon- nektiv oder Anthere zu reden. Denn der Blattcharakter ist kaum gestort, ” Each microsporophyll bears two pairs of vertically elongated Spakancia Aha are immersed beneath the abaxial surface of the sporophyll. Dehiscence is longitudinal and extrorse. In transverse sections cut at the level of the sporangia (fig. 5), the microsporophylls of Himantandra exhibit Oo =} 200 JOURNAL OF THE ARNOLD ARBORETUM [VOL. XXIV close similarities to those of Degeneria, not only as regards their general topographical features, but also concerning specific peculiarities of their endothecia. Three veins enter the base of the microsporophylls as in Degeneria, but there is more extensive branching of the veins in the sporophylls of the Himantandraceae than in the much shorter micro- sporophylls of the Degeneriaceae. Although the details of the vasculariza- tion fluctuate considerably from flower to flower of different collections and from stamen to stamen of the same flower, the marginal veins rarely extend beyond the lower third of the sporophylls of Himantandra (fig. 25) and tend to anastomose with the median vein or its branches just above the level of the sporangia. The paired sporangia are situated between the median and marginal veins and thus, as in Degeneria, cannot be regarded as slightly displaced marginal, or terminal, structures. Furthermore, in the Himantandraceae, as in the Degeneriaceae, the veins and veinlets are not directed toward the sporangia and do not establish connections with the endothecia. The staminodes of Himantandra resemble the microsporophylls in gen- eral form and texture (figs. 24, 26), but their median and lateral veins commonly exhibit less extensive branching. Furthermore, in the outermost broad sterile sporophylls and the innermost awl-shaped ones, the lateral veins frequently are much reduced in length or are absent. The sterile sporophylls resemble the fertile ones in having numerous spherical secretory cells, more or less abundant nests of sclereids, and in being devoid of peltate scales, which are such characteristic features of the other organs of the plant. The occurrence of staminodes within the fertile microsporophylls has been noted in Degeneria, which, like Himantandra, differs from the Mag- noliaceae in this respect (Bailey and Smith, 1). The fact that in Himan- tandra sterile microsporophylls occur outside, as well as inside, the fertile ones does not appear to be of great significance, as in all respects except their sterility these staminodes are similar to the stamens. To interpret the outer staminodes as petals, Sprague (7) seems to have no justification. Therefore, we are in agreement with Diels (5: 129) in interpreting these outer appendages as sterile microsporophylls. The pollen of Himantandra is provided with a single germinal furrow and therefore is of the monocolpate type. As in the Magnoliaceae, the form and the dimensions of the pollen fluctuate during expansion and contrac- tion of the grains. When fully expanded the pollen tends to be nearly spherical, with diameters of from 30 to 38 microns. As the tenuous floor of the furrow invaginates during contraction, the grains become ellipsoidal, whereas when it evaginates the outlines of the grains become triangular in certain planes of orientation. The exine is thin and comparatively homo- geneous, but, as in the case of many of the so-called smooth exines of Magnoliaceae, it exhibits minute pits.or granulations when examined under high magnification in lactic acid. Carpets. The young carpels, like the young leaves, of Himantandra 1943 ] BAILEY, NAST, & SMITH, HIMANTANDRACEAE 201 are adaxially folded, viz. conduplicate, but the margins and the ventral surfaces of the free parts of the carpels (fig. 6) commonly are less closely approximated than those of the immature leaves (fig. 3). The adaxially oriented margins at the base of the carpels are adnate to the cone-shaped apex of the torus (fig. 7). At this level of the floral axis, there is more or less lateral concrescence of carpels, a tendency which becomes markedly intensified during the development of the fruits. The free parts of the carpels between the level of adnation and the base of the style not infre- quently remain open at anthesis (fig. 4). The glandular cells of the plume- like style (figs. 13, 14) extend downward along the free margins and adjacent ventral surfaces of the carpel to the level of attachment of the large, much flattened, anatropous ovule. A transverse section of this free open part of the carpel (fig. 4) resembles a transverse section of the megasporophyll of Degeneria except that the ovule is attached closer to the margins of the conduplicate carpels than are the numerous ovules of Degeneria. In the Degeneriaceae, one is concerned with a seemingly primi- tive, conduplicate, 3-veined megasporophyll of comparatively unmodified form, bearing numerous ovules on its adaxial or ventral surface and having stigmatic structures along its margins and adjacent parts of its free ventral surfaces. With the reduction in the number of ovules to a single one (rarely two) in Himantandra, there appears to have been a concomitant narrowing of the sterilized upper *5 to 4 of the megasporophyll. This style-like projection beyond the broader base of the sporophyll still exhibits a conduplicate structure in transverse sections and retains its stig- matic margins. It should be noted in this connection that the styles of the Magnoliaceae likewise exhibit a conduplicate structure. The free dorsal surfaces of the carpels of Himantandra are coated below the level of the style with numerous dark brown peltate scales (figs. 4, 7, 11, 13, 14). The abaxial parts of the carpels contain more or less numerous nests of sclereids, such as occur in the tissue of the torus (fig. 7). Spherical secretory cells are of common occurrence in the carpels, as in other parts of the flower. The level of attachment and the orientation of the large, much flattened, anatropous ovule fluctuate considerably from carpel to carpel and from flower to flower of different collections of H. Belgraveana. Thus, the ovule may be attached at a higher level where the carpel is open (fig. 4), or at a lower one where the carpel is adnate to the torus. The vascular system in the cone-shaped, carpel-bearing, apical part of the torus is simple in contrast to its complexity in subtending regions. The vascular strands remaining after departure of traces to fertile and sterile microsporophylls briefly reassemble at the top of the columnar part of the torus into a weakly defined cylinder of bundles, most of which are dorsal bundles of carpels. The dorsal traces of all of the carpels, except the 2 or 3 distal ones, enter the megasporophylls without branching. A variable number of bundles (4—8) left in the center of the torus divide in various ways to form two (rarely one) small ventral traces for each of the carpels. The dorsal bundles of the 2 or 3 uppermost carpels arise also from these 202 JOURNAL OF THE ARNOLD ARBORETUM [VOL. XXIV central strands, but these dorsals first give off ventral traces to lower carpels of the same orthostichies. The carpel of Himantandra, therefore, is a modified 3-veined megasporophyll having a well-developed dorsal vein and two more or less reduced ventral ones. The dorsal vein extends upward as far as the middle or lower third of the style. It is much enlarged for a short distance in the region of the junction of the style and ovary. The ventral veins occasionally terminate in the ovule (especially when one ventral only is present), but usually they continue short distances in the margins of the carpels above the attachment of the ovule (fig. 14). How- ever, the ventral veins rarely if ever extend upward into the style. Fruit. Soon after anthesis, the styles apparently atrophy and the basal portions of the carpels become increasingly concrescent. The mature fruit is a subglobose or somewhat elongated syncarp, upon the surface of which the outlines of the outermost imbricate carpels can be only indistinctly, if at all, perceived. The whole exterior surface is more or less persistently lepidote. The lower carpels appear shorter than those at the apex of the fruit, the constituent carpels being irregular in shape and apparently often distorted by mutual pressure. The original conical apical portion of the torus elongates, carrying the distal carpels upward and thus somewhat distorting the spiral arrangement. Sometimes the carpels are 2- or 3-ranked and strictly superposed. All of the fruits available to us are dried, in which condition they are hard and coriaceous; according to Diels (5: 129) they are fleshy when fresh and somewhat suggestive of the syncarps of Annona. The inner walls of the carpels thicken after anthesis and in dried fruits form coriaceous dissepiments. During development of the fruit the carpels are apparently under lateral pressure, and the locules eventually appear as mere slits, much narrower in proportion than they are in the flower (fig. 7). The seeds, in all specimens examined by us, are solitary, greatly flattened, submem- branous and suborbicular. In dried material we have not been able to perceive whether such seeds are fertile, and for the present we can neither add to nor verify Diels’ statements (5: 130). RELATIONSHIPS OF THE HIMANTANDRACEAE. In studying the relation- ships of families, it is essential to weigh evidence from all organs and parts of the plants. In the past, excessive emphasis has not infrequently been placed upon similarities between one or two morphological features without regard to outstanding differences in other parts of the plants, or con- versely to stress differences in one organ or tissue without allowing for similarities in other organs or tissues. It should be noted in this connec- tion that certain of the morphological similarities within the Ranales appear to be due to retentions of structures that characterized the primitive ranalian stock, whereas others represent parallel specializations from a common ancestry. Thus, the retention of vesselless xylem, in itself, does not provide adequate evidence for combining Trochodencron, Tetracentron, and the Winteraceae in an independent order, viz. Homoxylées of van Tieghem (9). Nor are the specialized calyptrate structures of Drimys, 1943 | BAILEY, NAST, & SMITH, HIMANTANDRACEAE 203 Eupomatia, and Himantandra necessarily indicative of close relationship. Furthermore, certain superficial similarities or differences between specific organs prove to have been misleading when the ontogeny and the internal structure of these organs are carefully investigated. There are numerous similarities between the Degeneriaceae, Magnolia- ceae, and Himantandraceae. Many of these similarities (e. g. presence of spherical secretory cells, sclerenchymatous medullary diaphragms, stratified phloem, wood fibers with small bordered pits, superficial origin of periderm, monocolpate pollen, stomata with subsidiary cells oriented parallel to the guard cells, etc.), taken independently, are not necessarily indicative of close relationships, since they occur in other representatives of the Ranales. However, the.totality of the similarities does indicate that the three fam- ilies are more closely related to one another than to other ranalian families. In fact, the three families form a compact group within the Ranales com- parable to that composed of the Monimiaceae, Lauraceae, Gomortegaceae, and Hernandiaceae. The structure of the stem, including the cortex, pith, and vascular tissues, is of a basically similar type in the Degeneriaceae, Magnoliaceae, and Himantandraceae, and differs markedly from that which occurs in other ranalian families, with the possible exception of the Annonaceae. The wood of Degeneria is of a comparatively primitive type, whereas that of Himantandra, with its transitions to porous perforations and alternate lateral pitting of the vessels, is obviously more highly specialized. The woods of the numerous representatives of the Magnoliaceae provide a graded series of transitions between these structural extremes. However, the range of morphological variability of the stem is no greater than in single families or even genera of the dicotyledons and therefore, by itself, does not provide cogent arguments for differentiating the plants into three families or even for excluding them from close relationship to the Annonaceae. The vascularization of the leaf in the Degeneriaceae, Magnoliaceae, and Himantandraceae is of a characteristic and basically similar type and serves to differentiate the three families from other ranalian families (including the Annonaceae) which have secretory cells and monocolpate pollen. Throughout the Magnoliaceae the vascularization of the foliar organs is complicated by the presence of stipules and provides a reliable means for differentiating the vegetative shoots of magnoliaceous plants from those of Degeneria and Himantandra. ‘The peltate scales, crystalliferous paren- chyma, and peculiar stomatal arrangements of Himantandra differentiate its vegetative organs from those of Degeneria and the Magnoliaceae. It should be admitted, however, that such differences in the vegetative organs, by themselves, do not afford a thoroughly reliable argument for segregating the plants into separate families rather than into tribes of a single family. Only when combined with outstanding differences in the reproductive organs is there a summation of evidence in favor of separate families. The flowers of Degeneria and Himantandra, as of Michelia and Elmer- 204 JOURNAL OF THE ARNOLD ARBORETUM [VOL. XXIV rillia, are borne at the apex of axillary shoots. These shoots, as the terminal flowering ones of Magnolia and Liriodendron, are essentially vegetative, since they exhibit various stages in the reduction of typical leaves to scales (Himantandra) or to stipular bud-scales (Magnoliaceae). The flowers of Degeneria and Himantandra have clearly differentiated pedicels, whereas those of the Magnoliaceae are sessile on the last vegetative node. The flowers of Degeneria are provided with distinct sepals and petals, those of Himantandra with a calyptrate corolla enclosed within a calyptrate calyx, and those of the Magnoliaceae with tepals or subsimilar sepals and petals. The tepals of the Magnoliaceae usually have a conspicuously petaloid texture and internal structure, whereas the homologous parts of Degeneria and Himantandra are coriaceous and provided with very numerous nests of sclereids. The immature flowers of the latter genera are not enclosed within a bud, whereas those of the Magnoliaceae are enveloped within one or more pairs of stipular bud-scales. There are no staminodes in the flowers of Magnoliaceae, whereas Degeneria has numerous inner staminodes and Himantandra both inner and outer ones. The microsporophylls of Degeneria and Himantandra are not differentiated into filament, anther, and connective, and their sporangia are immersed beneath the abaxial surface of the sporophyll. On the con- trary, the microsporophylls of the Magnoliaceae are typical stamens with conspicuous protuberant anthers, but they tend to retain the 3-veined type of vascularization that characterizes both the fertile and sterile sporophylls of Degeneria and Himantandra. The floral axis of the Degeneriaceae and Himantandraceae, unlike that of most Magnoliaceae, is short, and the torus is characterized by having a conspicuous concavity. In Himantandra the cone-shaped, carpel-bearing apex of the torus projects beyond this concavity, whereas in Degeneria the solitary carpel is attached within it. In the latter genus, the carpel is a 3-veined, conduplicate megasporophyll of relatively unmodified form, bearing numerous ovules on its morphologically adaxial surface. The attachment of the ovules is remote from the free stigmatic margins of the sporophyll. The numerous (rarely reduced to two, e. g. Pachylarnax) carpels of Himantandra and the Magnoliaceae have well-differentiated styles, which are plume-like in Himantandra and commonly provided with more or less decurrent stigmatic surfaces in Magnoliaceae. As contrasted Such morphological divergences are impressive, but a detailed study of the carpels of Himantandra indicates that they probably represent speciali- zations of the 3-veined, conduplicate type of carpel encountered in De- generia. With reduction in the number of ovules to one or a few more or less basally attached ones, there appears to have been a concomitant narrow- ing of the upper sterilized part of the conduplicate megasporophyll, forming styles which retain a conduplicate structure and stigmatic margins. Reduc- tion of the “decurrent” stigmatic surfaces in certain of the Magnoliaceae 1943 | BAILEY, NAST, & SMITH, HIMANTANDRACEAE 205 leads to the formation of a style with a nearly apical stigmatic surface. In Himantandra, as in many Magnoliaceae, there is more or less adnation and concrescence of carpels both preceding and following anthesis. In Degeneria, part of the maturing seeds are attached by slender much elongated funicles, suggestive of the suspended seeds of certain Magnolia- ceae. The pollen of the Degeneriaceae, Magnoliaceae, and Himantandra- ceae is of a similar monocolpate type, that of Himantandra more closely resembling the pollen of certain Magnoliaceae than of Degeneria. Outstanding differences in the carpel, calyx, and corolla render difficult the inclusion of Degeneria and Himantandra in a single family, in spite of obvious similarities in the form of the floral axis, the stamens, and the staminodes. Furthermore, numerous floral differences form a serious obstacle to including these genera in the Magnoliaceae. Aside from certain similarities in the pollen, in the vascularization of the stamens, and in the carpels of Himantandra, there is scant floral evidence for inferring close relationship to the Magnoliaceae. Such evidence is amply provided, how- ever, by the vegetative organs. Thus, the summation of evidence from both vegetative and reproductive organs indicates that in the Degeneria- ceae, Himantandraceae, and Magnoliaceae we are concerned with three distinct but closely related families. As will be shown in subsequent papers, similar summations of evidence indicate that such ranalian plants as the Winteraceae, Jllictum, the Schizandraceae, and Tetracentron are only remotely elated to this compact group of chrea families. To include them within the Magnoliaceae, as some investigators have done, broadens this family even beyond the limits of a natural sub-order. PRINCIPAL LITERATURE CITED . Batrey, I. W., and A. C. Smiru. Degeneriaceae, a new family of flowering plants from Fiji. Jour. Arnold Arb, 23: 356-365. pl. 1-5. 1942 Baker, E. G. Himantandraceae (of Dr. H. O. Forbes’s New Guinea Plants). pee Bot. 61: Suppl. 2-3. 1923. . Diets, L. nie primitive Rana der australischen Flora. Bot. Jahrb. 48: Beibl. 107: 7-13. 1912. 4. ———— Die Anon von Papuasien. Bot. Jahrb. 49: 113-167 (Himantandra, pp. 164-165. f. 6). 5. ————— Ueber die ee eerie a it Verbreitung und ihre systematische Stellung. Bot. Jahrb. 55: 134. f. 1. 1917. . McLaucuHiiy, R. P. ea anatomy fe the woods of the Magnoliales. Trop. Woods 34: 3-39. 1933 . SmitH, A.C. A comentinniell note on the Himantandraceae. Jour. Arnold Arb. 23: 366-368. 1942 . SpracuE, T. A. Galbulimima baccata F. M. Bailey. Hook. Ic. Pl. 31: pl. 3001. 915. —_ dR Ww a ~ 1°,¢) . TIEGHEM, P. vAN. Sur - Perera du groupe des Homoxylées. Jour. de Bot. 14: 259- As 330- 361. ‘oO 206 JOURNAL OF THE ARNOLD ARBORETUM [ VOL. XXIV EXPLANATION OF PLATES 1 plates illustrate Himantandra Belgraveana (F. v. Muell.) F. v. Mue The hee are een raphed from or drawn from various nest were these being tail n each ¢ PLaTE I Fic. 1. Clemens 6584a. Dorsal surface of partially cleared leaf, showing peltate scales . crystal-bearing cells of the epidermis, x 260. Fic. Brass & Versteegh 11195. ower epidermis of fully cleared leaf, showing circular dae of stomata, x 260 Prate II a 3. Clemens 5538. Transverse section of young conduplicate leaf, x 34. Clemens 11100. Transverse section of flower above the level of adnation of the “conduplicate carpels, eri free stigmatic margins and the attachment of an ovule, x 100. 1c. 5. s & Versteegh 11195. Transverse ieee of a fertile microsporophyll, showing as sporangia and four short arcs of endothecia, x 100. PriaTE III Clemens 3678, Transverse section of immature flower, showing open con- duplicate carpels, = 37. Fic. 7. Brass & Versteegh 11195. Transverse section of older flower, showing adnation and coalescence of carpels, x 37 PLATE IV Fic. Ledermann 10884a. Transverse section of basal part of the midrib, show- ing foliar vascular dictyostele, x 50. Fic. 9. Y. U. 15717. Transverse section of secondary xylem from a large stem, x 50. a 10. Y.U. 15717. Tangential longi- tudinal section of the same piece of wood, x PLATE V Fic. 11. Brass 12103. Flower with calyptrate calyx, sealekeg corolla, pre ome and stamens removed, approx. xX 10. Fic. 12. Half o e flower as in viewed from cut auirkace, showing shape of torus and attached ince and distal Be approx. X 10. Fic. 13. Clemens 3586. Carpel with short and comparatively smooth style, approx. X 15. Fic. 14. Carpel from flower of fig. 11, showing plumose style, position of ovule (micropyle, micr.), ventral bundle, ven. bn., and ovule trace, ov. tr. approx. x 15. PiaTE VI Fics. 15-23. Diagrams of successive segments through flowering shoot pe base of torus, showing average or basic vascular condition in Himantandra r bract traces, lo. br. trs.; upper bract traces, up. br. trs.; bud trace, bu. tr.; cotical bundles, cor. bn.; outer calyptra, o. cal.; inner calyptra, in. cal. Fic. 24. ce 12572. Outer staminode, approx. 6. Fic. 25. Brass 12572. Stamen, approx. x 6. Fic. 26. Brass 12572. Inner staminode, approx. x 6. BroLocicaAL LABORATORIES AND ARNOLD ARBORETUM HARVARD UNIVERSITY. Jour. Arno.ip Ars. Vou. XXIV PLaTE I Oy J G « ae a —_ ae as SS fo} HIMANTANDRA BELGRAVEANA PLATE I] Jour. Arnotp Ars. Vot. XXIV yeas , De wet IRS : ty vas a oe Re .. he Ly SN ae > Ul be A OTL RS Sa stg . RAVEANA HiMANTANDRA BELG PLATE III XXIV Jour. Arnoutp Arp. Vou. aK eC SARA Sz, iy 2 Y 7 SS ms re & Y ie s = oh ma o>, i exe: 6 rf, Mazus japonicus, described from oad is ue a a of warm tem- perate climates, and has become adventive to the New World. M. goodent- folius is more definitely tropical and oriental. I had suspected that it would prove to be Loureiro’s rugosus from Cochinchina, but his description of the leaf-shape precludes that possibility. *1. Mazus goodenifolius (Hornemann) comb. n Gratiola goodenifolia Hornemann, Enum. PI. Han 19. 1807. Original pee ot seen, but its diagnosis? quoted in Willd. . Pl. Hort. Berol. where it is included as a synonym of ipa ne Willd., there ieee I suspect from the alteration of Willdenow's primary diagnosis to “H. foliis obovatis basi integerrimis, calycibus patulibus pedunculisque glabris,” that the latter was based primarily upon material of M. japonicus, since the omitted account of an incised-serrate narrow leaf-blade would denote the only be to M. japonicus. In both the corolla would be bicolorous, the upper lip blue, the lower white. An oriental weed, widespread over New Guinea. Collected in 1938 by L. J. Brass in Netherlands New Guinea, no. 11403 from Bele River, north- east of Lake Habbema, and no. 12925 from Bernhard Camp on the Idenburg River. Also gathered by Mary S. Clemens in the Morobe District ot Northeastern New Guinea, no. 4975 in 1937 from Ogeramnang, and no. 11286F in 1940 from Matap. 6. Artanema D. Don (Genotype, Torenia fimbriata Hook., from Australia.) 1. Artanema longifolium (L.) Vatke. Earlier than my record (in Jour. Arnold Arb, 20: 78. 1939), this wide- ranging Indo-Malayan plant had been gathered by Branderhorst in 1907 at Merauke in southeastern Netherlands New Guinea and reported by Diels and Lanjouw in Nova Guinea Bot. 14: 534. 1928 7. Lindernia Allioni With the including of //ysanthes Raf. and the arising of several problems of interpretation, it seems desirable to consider this genus rather fully. The following key distinguishes all species that I have seen from New Guinea. A. Capsule globose to ee hig not or only slightly exceeding the calyx, mesa filaments bearing a B. Sepals united about 24 ae ie PlaDrOUSs caressa aeresus 1. L. crustaceu. 5“Gratiola Neca ia foliis obovato-lanceolatis inciso-serratis basi integerrimis. racemis terminalib 250 JOURNAL OF THE ARNOLD ARBORETUM [vOL, xxiv BB. Sepals distinct nearly to bas s oval to van crenate-serrate to nearly entire, rounded or sub- cordate at base; bracts oval, the flowers axillary; capsule semiglobose ; corolla 9-10 mm. long; sepals and angles of stem hirsute with long non- glandular hairs, the divaricate pedicels nearly glabrous........ 2. L. hirta. CC. Leaf-blades ovate to nearly oblong, serrate-dentate; bracts subulate, the rs in evident racemes; capsule ellipsoid-ovoid to ovoid; corolla, 3-5 mm, long; pedicels glandular-puberulent or -pubescen ae D. Sepals hirsute with mostly glandless hairs; entire surface of stem and leaves hirsute with spreading glandless hairs, the main blades usually 3-6 cm. cra and narrowed at base, only the uppermost rounded-cordate ANC, SCSSUCl 6 co 55 65 545 hale ete bea ee ee alee aee 3. -s vi DD. Sepals peeeee glandular-puberulent to glabrous; wi are r (1-2 cm. ie only the lower narrowed at base unded to sessile bases............... cece eceecveees 4. L. AA. aie cae longer than wide, much exceeding the sepals, which are distinct arly to base. B Leaf-blades sessile or oo corolla 5-10 mm. long; stems ascending or erect, often rooting at low es C. Blades ovate to at ea crenate, sage or cordate at base; anterior . lon 5. L. cordifolia. filaments anther-bearing ; osteila a whale acaie ba =e anterior fila- . Blades oblong to oblanceolate, eens narrowed at base; ments without anthers; corolla smaller D. ee of as satiny: to dentate, the teeth appressed and not pro- longed; corolla Win 5 VOT Sooty ask aa ok bo 6. hk ws ae 6. L. anagallis. DD. en of ee cea and seed serrate, the teeth spreading and ed into setaceous tips; corolla 5 mm. long......... . L. ciliata. BB. Leaf- blades ane? elliptic, sharply serrate, but the teeth not setaceous- tipped; corolla 13-15 mm. long; anterior filaments ee “arapee stems extensively aL a flowering portions abruptly erect...... . L. antipoda. QO o) 1. Lindernia crustacea (L.) F. v. Muell. This widespread tropical weed, cited by Schlechter (1. c. 106) and me (in Brittonia 2: 181. 1936, in Jour. Arnold Arb. 20: 79. 1939) from many localities throughout New Guinea, is among tions from } Mrs. Clemens’ recent collec- Morobe; there are also several collections made by Netherlands botanists in western New Guinea at the Gray Herbarium. . Lindernia hirta (Cham. & Schlecht. :, comb, nov, Gratiola pusilla Willd. cur. L. Sp. Plant. ed. 4. 1: 105. 1797. ‘Habitat in ae ad scaturigines.” D ve of a sa plant of the species now consider Basis of Lindernia pusilla Willd.) Schlechter in Bot. Jahrb. 59: 106. on “unfor- tunately preoccupied by L. pusilla (Thunb.) Merr. in Philip. Jour. Sci. Bot. 11: 312. 1916 [1917]. Although intended for the present species and citing Gratiola pusilla Willd. as a synonym, the latter was based upon Selago pusilla Thunb. ieee Plant. Cap. 99. 1794-1800,” the part containing: p. 99 actually published in 1800; Thunberg’s brief diagnosis “‘S. foliis ovatis serratis pilosis, flore terminali subsolitario” is impossible for our plant, as this has leaf-blades crenate to entire and an inflorescence of several pairs of long-pediceled flowers, while its occurrence is far from South Africa Torenia hirta Cham. & Sctiles collected by Chamisso & Eschscholtz on the Romanzoff Expedition. ies now considered. —— scabra Benth. Scroph. Indicae 36. 1835. The name long applied to this ht. in Linnaea 2: 571. 1827. “E. Luconia retulimus’”’; Clearly the 1943 ] PENNELL, SCROPHULARIACEAE OF NEW GUINEA Zl Recorded by Schlechter (1. c. 107) from the Bismarck Archipelago, and recently collected at Boana, Morobe District, Northeastern New Guinea, by ary S. Clemens, no. 41468a (Mich) ; also at Balim River, Netherlands Ne Guinea, by L. J. Brass, no. 71821 (AA, ANSP). ¥3: Tes viscosa (Hornemann) Boldingh, es mnigineaiigenilit Java 165. 1916, omen; Merrill, Enum. Philip. Fl. Pl. 3: 4 1923, cum syn Gratiote viscosa Hornemann, Enum. PI. Hort. po 19. 1807. Descriptio seen as quoted in account of Hornemannia viscosa (Hornem.) Willd. Enum. or Berol. 654, 1809, where its habitat was given as “in India orientali.” ieee Vandellia hirsuta Buch. Ham. ex Benth. — Indicae 36. 1835. The specific epi- het long applied to this species, and m rare at in its allusion to the copious hairiness rather than to the yp Sie glandular A common Indo-Malayan species occurring east to western New Guinea, as shown by specimens in the Gray Herbarium from Manokoeari (R. F. Janowsky 502) and Piorienbivak near the Mamberamo River (H. J. Lam 509), Netherlands New Guinea. *4. Lindernia papuana sp. nov. Pirate I, A. Herba annua, 0.5-1 dm. longa, ramosissima; caulis quadrangulatus, angulis hispidulus; folia oblongo-ovata, acuta, serrato-dentata, glabrata (subtus proxime venis hispidula), laminis 1-2 cm. longis, 6-8 mm. latis, 6In Boldingh’s Coane voor de Landbouwstreken op Java,” Batavia, i-viii. 1-204, October, 1916, a number of , binomials appear in his key to the families, genera, and species but in no case are dies names indicated as new, nor in any case is a name- bringing synonym given; they are merely followed by the abbreviation “Bold.,” and “Bloeiwijze bijna geheel zonder bladen.................... Lindernia viscosa Bold. Bloemen in de bladokzels van goed ontwikkelde bladen....Lindernia pusilla Bold.” In so far as Boldingh’s binomials were actually new, they were entered in Index Kewensis, Suppl. 9, 1935. Those in the Scrophulariaceae are Jlysanthes procumbens Bold. p. 164, and Lindernia viscosa Bold., L. pusilla Bold., Microcarpaea minima Bol and Stemodia verticillata Bold. p. 165. It is manifest that Boldingh attempted ie if these Boldingh names of 1916 should be accepted as validly published, due to their presentation in a most unorthodox manner. His method of publication transcends the provision of the International sai of Botanical Nomenclature that requires, in trans- ferring specific names from one genus to another, that the name-bringing synonym must be cited. They may be ete as illegitimate names, but in view of the fact that ae are now listed in Index Kewensis, Suppl. 9, 1938, sometimes with the name-bring- ing synonym added, it does seem desirable to accept them and to complete the record as has been done in hans ase. To complete the record in all cases will be difficult, for in the case of Lindernia oere Bold., who can say whether it was his intent to base this on Gratiola ete Willd. (1797), or on Selago pusilla Thunb. (1800), or on both? The Willdenow and Thunberg entities are actually two entirely different species; the first is a Lindernia, but the second apparently does not belong in this genus. As pub- lished by me in 1916 [1917], Lindernia pusilla Merr. must be typified by Selago pusilla Thunb., and the entry in Index Kewensis, Suppl. 9, 1938, for the pe aecuae Boldingh- Merrill transfers cites Thunberg’s name as the one synonym. — E. D. Mer 252 JOURNAL OF THE ARNOLD ARBORETUM (VOL, XXIV basi rotundatis, sessilibus; racemus terminalis, florum 3-7 paribus com- positus, sparse glandulari- puberulentus: bracteae subulatae; pedicelli 5-8 mm. longi, adscendentes; sepala 2.5 mm. longa, lineari-lanceolata, acuta, glabrata; corolla 3-4 mm. longa, alba, glabra, labio supero rotundato fere integro, labio infero trilobato, lobis triangulari-ovatis; stamina glabra, omnia antherifera; capsula 2.5 mm. longa, ellipsoideo-ovoidea, glabra; semina 0.25 mm. longa, flava, cylindrica, truncata, obsolete reticulata. Low much-branched herb. Stems diffusely ascending, 0.5—1 dm. long, four-angled, the angles slightly winged and bearing ascending short stiff glandless hairs. Leaf-blades oblong-ovate, serrate-dentate, obscurely and callosely ciliate, glabrate, beneath slightly paler and proximally with veins somewhat stiff-pubescent, mostly 1-2 cm. long, 6-8 mm. wide, rounded to sessile bases, only the lower attenuate proximally. Inflorescence a raceme of 3 to 7 pairs of flowers, the rachis and pedicels sparsely glandular- puberulent, the latter ascending, 5—8 mm. long; bracts (above the short wide lowermost one) subulate, 0.5-1.5 mm. long. Sepals 2.5 mm. long, linear-lanceolate, acute, minutely and obscurely pilose to glabrous. Corolla 3-4 mm. long, whit te, glabrous, the tube slightly widened horizontally, anteriorly 2-ridged; upper lip scarcely retuse at the truncately rounded apex, the lower slightly longer, the lobes triangular-ovate, widely deflexed- spreading. All filaments antheriferous, the posterior short, ascending, the anterior forming by their attachment the antero-lateral ridges of the corolla that distally project as minute rounded knobs, the free distal portions of the filaments arched-ascending. Capsule 2.5 mm. long, ellipsoid-ovoid, glabrous. Seeds 0.25 mm. long, yellow, cylindric, truncate, obsoletely reticulate. NORTHEASTERN NEw GuINEA: Morobe District, Kajabit Mission, alt. about 300 n Mary S. Clemens 10907 (ANSP, type, AA), Dec. 25, 1939, in flower and fruit alee loose spreading mats along margin of slow rivulet). NETHERLANDS NEW rts Near Pioniorbivak, alt. 60 m., region of Mamberamo River, H. J. Lam 511 (GH In Schlechter’s account this was called Lindernia trichotoma nae Schlechter, based upon Tittmannia trichotoma Benth. in Wall. Numer. List no. 3943. 1831, a nomen nudum. That would be identical with the Indian species long known as Vandellia multiflora (Roxb.) G. Don, based upon Torenia multiflora Roxb. Fl. Ind. 3: 96. 1832, a plant described as with smooth stem and merely subserrate leaves, agreeing with J. D. Hooker’s statement that the leaves of the Bengal plant are entire or sinuate. Evi- dently the Papuan plant, with its stiffly hairy stem and rather sharply serrate-dentate leaves, cannot be this, nor do I identify it with any other known species. 5. Lindernia cordifolia (Colsmann) ag Gratiola cordifolia Colsmann, Prod he Grat. 15. 1793; repr. in Archiv Bot. 244. 17 Habitat in graminosis humidiusculis Zeylon{ale la D. Konig collecta}.” Leat- blades described as ‘‘obsolete serratis.” The plant, represented by Brass 5918, from Dagwa, Oriomo River, British New Guinea, appears to be this well-known Indo-Malayan species rather than Lindernia angustifolia (Benth.) Wettst., as identified by m in Brittonia 2: 182. 193 6. Lindernia anagallis (Burman f.) comb. nov. Ruellia anagallis Burman f. Fl. Ind. 135. 1768. “Habitat in Java and Amboina.” 1943 J PENNELL, SCROPHULARIACEAE OF NEW GUINEA 253 Based upon plants collected in Java by Kleinhof and on Rumphius’ description and rupee of the Amboina form, the latter because of the illustration being taken as the type. Unfortunately, the Academy lacks vol. 5 of Rumphius’ Herbarium Amboinense, but Merrill’s Interpretation of that work (p. 467. 1917) has identified Rumphius’ plant as the species now considered. Also, Dr. Merrill has kindly supplied me with a tracing of Rumphius’ ae In a special paper on the species proposed by Burman f. (in Philip. Jour. Sci. 19: 381. 1921), he says of Ruellia anagallis: ‘“‘Burman’s species is clearly identical with the very common and widely distributed form currently known as Bonnaya veronicaefolia Spreng.” (As will be shown below, I think npn me was mistaken in identifving as this plant the older Ruellia antipoda L.; nor is it Gratiola veronicifolia Retz., either). A common Indo-Malayan weed, e euine east to New Guinea. This is the plant called //ysanthes veronicaefolia (Retz.) Urb. by Schlechter (1. c. 108), who cites specimens from many parts of New Guinea, while I (in Brittonia 2: 182. 1936, in Jour. Arnold Arb. 20: 81. 1939) have cited alas oe e from British New Guinea under the names “‘veronicae- folia” and “antipoda.”’ Further collections are now at hand, viz. Clemens 10830a and 40615 (Mich) from the Morobe District of Northeastern New Guinea, and several specimens (GH) made by Netherlands collectors in western New Guinea. . Lindernia ciliata (Colsmann) comb. n Gratiola ciliata Colsmann, Prodr. Descr. ‘Grat . 1793; repr. in Archiv Bot. 2: 243. 1799. “E. Java. Konigius non invenit.’ fe ecellent description of the species now considered. A common Indo-Malayan plant that appears barely to reach New Guinea. This was reported by Schlechter (1. c. 109) as Jlvsanthes ciliata from ‘“‘Waighiou” Island, on the northern shore of Netherlands New ulnea 8. Lindernia antipoda (L.) Alst Ruellia antipoda L. Sp. Pl. 635. nie. “Habit Indiis.”” Based primarily upon account in L. Fl. Zeyl. 106. 1748. The ‘ara ne cern states that the leaves are oval, acutely and deeply serrate especially toward apex, at base nar- rowed, the stem is repent, the pediceled flowers several (5) to a aaah the cap- sule thrice as long as the cre and ne? ere rang large (being like those shown in Rheede’s Hort. Malabar. 9: tab. 58. , but four times larger). All these details are clearly distinctive e the species now considered. li veronicifolia Retz. Observ. Bot. 4: 8. 1786. Clearly identical with Ruellia ntipoda, as was recognized by Vahl, adele Plant. 1805 Gratiot ae Colsmann, Prodr. Descr. Grat. 12. 1793; eo in Archiv Bot. 2: 243. 1799 a oar in Java et India orientali.” Clearly distinctive of the species now consider The name chosen leads me to suppose that Colsmann realized the identity a this with Ruellia ~— Based upon this is /lysanthes ruelloides (Colsmann )* Schlechter in Bot. Jahrb. 59: 109. 1924, the name used sidered. eee reptans Roxb. FI. Ind. cur. Carey 1: 140. 1820. “A native of the Moluccas ; clon oe ee based upon this, has been the name longest used for this sp A common qeaehisevan weed, extending east to New Guinea. Re- TWith citation of “Konig” rather than “Colsmann.”’ 254 JOURNAL OF THE ARNOLD ARBORETUM [ VOL, XXIV ported by Schlechter (1. c. 109) from Netherlands and Northeastern New Guinea, and by me (in Jour. Arnold Arb. 20: 81. 1939) from British New Guinea. Recently collected by Mrs. Clemens, at Wantoal, no. 41093 (AA), and at Boana, no. 41083 (Mich), both in the Morobe District of Northeastern New Guinea. 8. Torenia Linnaeus This extensive Oriental genus is represented by at least three species in New Guinea. Although a sharp line between Lindernia (in its present enlarged sense) and Torenia is not easy to draw, I think that the two should be considered as generically distinct. Usually they are readily distinguishable by the calyx consisting of separate or only slightly united plane sepals in Li ndernia, whereas in Torenia the sepals are united nearly throughout and have the midvein of each raised into a ridge or a wing. But, in Lindernia, L. crustacea has sepals united over half their length, while i in Torenia the sepal-ridges may be mere ribs, as in the case of 7. crenata, below. In Torenia the corolla is usually larger and with angular open throat, whereas tracted therefrom, in which the bracts are linear and much smaller than the foliage leaves, whereas in Lindernia the bracts are usually foliose. In our first species, Torenia crenata, the small flowers, unwinged calyx, and foliose bracts all led me to consider it a Lindernia, but I now incline to place generic value on another feature of the calyx. In Lindernia the sepals, whether distinct or joined, do not invest the capsule, but have their tips somewhat spreading, whereas in Torenia the sepals do invest the capsule, being curved about it and with their connivent tips projecting above it. On this understanding our first species will find its place in Torenia. It shows that in that genus too there is a tendency toward the suppression of the anthers of the anterior pair of stamens. A. Calyx hirsute, the mid-veins of the sepals merely rib-like; corolla 7-8 mm long, violet; attached portions of anterior filaments projecting as short knobs; clearly racemose; leaf-blades crenate, cuneately narrowed to the pee petioles ; stem erect, with ascending branches................ 0.0000 cece euee .T. crenata. AA. Calyx finely pubescent or glabrous, _ the mid-veins of the sepals a into thin cels less than twice the length of the calyces; bracts subulate, the inflorescence (by suppression of an internode) usually seeming a 4-flowered cyme; leaf-blades dentate, the larger truncate to petioles at least 14 length of blades. B. Corolla 15-17 mm. long, violet or white; fruiting calyx anvie! ovoid, ee 16 mm. long, with 5 wings; leaf-blades acute, serrate-dentate, ‘ cm. ong; stem erect, laxly branched............... 0.000000 eeu Zi Tr violacea. BB. raed 10 mm. long, pink; fruiting calyx peed circular, 6-8 mm. long, with 3 wings; leaf-blades obtuse, crenate-dentate, 1-2 cm. long; stem exten- sively repent, the flowering branches ascending or eek, a ae T. polvgonoides. 1. Torenia crenata (Pennell) comb. nov. Prate I, B. Lindernia crenata Pennell in Jour. Arnold Arb. 20:79. 1939. Lake Daviumbu, 1943 | PENNELL, SCROPHULARIACEAE OF NEW GUINEA 255 Middle Fly mr British New Guinea, L. J. Brass 7824. Known only from the original collect 2. Torenia violacea (Azaola) comb. n Mimulus violaceus Azaolo ex Blanco, Fi. Filip. ed. 2. 357. 1845. ‘“Descubierta v descrita por el Sr. Azaola, ex Calauan For identification of the species now considered see Merrill, Species Binncoanné 347. 1918. Although not adopted by Torenia exappendiculata Regel in Acta Hort. Petrop. 5: 271 Parisiensi accepimus. Patria verosimiliter India orientalis.’ Described as with small white flowers. Torenia peduncularis Benth. in Wall. Numer. List, no. 3956. 1831, nomen nudum (‘““Maulmyne in Martabanica 1827”); Hook. f. Fl. Brit. a a 276. 1884. The latter cites specimens from Nepal to Assam and Penang, and credits a: species also to Java and the Philippine Islands. Flowers described as ‘ with white-flowered synonym, 7. alba Ham., from Wallich’s List. Torenia peduncularis is the name under which our species has been universally known A weedy plant, widespread over the Indo-Malayan subregion, and douse fully extending east to New Guinea. Reported by Schlechter (1. c. 104) fram Netherlands and Northeastern New Guinea; a single collection from the vicinity of Manokoeari, ee New Guinea (R. F. Janowsky 506), is in the Gray Herbarium. This, however, is a small plant, less than 1 dm. tall, more hairy, ae smaller, narrower, more closely serrate leaf-blades, and smaller corollas (10-12 mm. long) and calyces (11-12 mm. long). Perhaps it will prove distinct from the Indo-Malayan species, as is suggested by Schlechter’s comment that it seldom exceeds 1.5 dm in height, a small stature for 7. violacea. The only other specimen seen associable with it is from Bali (C. R. G. J. van Steenis 7588), at the Gray Herbarium. The problem can be solved only by someone with much more material for consideration than is available in this country. uo} = Las) = > 3. Torenia polygonoides Bent Torenia polygonoides Benth. in Wall. Numer. ae no. 3897. nomen nudum (‘Singapur 1822”), Scroph. Indicae 39. 1835. ‘Hab. ad ca Wallich.” A widespread Indo-Malayan species. Reported by Schlechter (1. c. 104) from Northeastern and by me (in Jour. Arnold Arb. 20: 78. 1939) from British New Guinea. 9. Detzneria Schlechter (Genotype, D. tubata Diels, of New Guinea) A monotypic genus of Northeastern New Guinea. 1. Detzneria tubata Diels in Bot. Jahrb. 62: 491. 1929. Saruwaket Range, Northeastern New Guinea, at 3600 to 4000 meters altitude. 10. Hebe Commerson This austral genus, so highly developed in New Zealand, is evidently one of the most characteristic groups of alpine heights in New Guinea. With the first species published in 1889 and only four described before 1930 the Archbold Expeditions have raised the number from New Guinea to twelve. Many more will appear as other alpine areas are reached, as 256 JOURNAL OF THE ARNOLD ARBORETUM [ VOL, XXIV each isolated highland has evidently ia its own species. The following key contrasts those known to A. Leaf-blades serrate-dentate, the teeth Aaron or reer petioles more spreading ; aa naaa of stem and inflorescence of up . Serrations spreading, the leaf-blades pn eoiet peduncles 10-30 m than twice length of bracts; sepals ee re to narrowly ae dish. C. Corolla red, its lobes as wide as or wider than long; sepals recdigge ovate; peduncles spreading; leaf-blades narrowly elliptic, 1.5—2 cm. long, on evi- dent aaa petioles; rachis and pedicels pubescent ee upcurved . A. rubra. brown hair >. Corolla ae pink, its lobes longer than wide; peduncles OT ea sepals 2) ‘o) Pe ee and leaf-blades elliptic-lanceolate, 0.5-1 cm. long, on ascending petioles; rachis and pedicels pubescent with: upcurved brownish or grayish hairs. . hymelacoides. BB. Serrations ascending or appressed, the leaf-blades more obscurely toothed; leaves loosely set, the blades not or hess nga longer than the intienndes: peduncles sscandins: mes the length of the bracts; 30-50 . lon sepals narrowly obovate. elliptic to ces ie corolla : Hité...4.45% Pr ree ae ee ee SSeS . A. albiflora. AA. Leaf-blades crenate-serrate to entire, the teeth rounded B. Leaf-blades oval to elliptic- ablane evidently peat serrate or cren Rac his and pedicels with brown spreading ri petioles very ren and wide, ascending against stem; leaves not glutinous. D. Corolla and sepals externally pubescent ; ane lanceolate- to orbicular- ovate 81.5 CM: JONG kes ocd o dh etoesesasioenewss 4. H. Lendenfeldit. DD. Corolla sclehnally glabrous; sepals glabrous or ciliate. E. Cor the rachis elongating; leaf-blades flat. F. Sepals partially ciliate to usually glabrous; pedicels equaling or olla pinkish or white, 8-14 mm. long; peduncles 20-40 mm. long, longer than the bractlets; leaf-blades elliptic to elliptic-oblong, 7-16 mm. long; stem distally; and inflorescence rufous-pubescent. flattened-constricted; leaf-blades crenate- 2 about % their length, the midrib evident............ H. polyphylla. GG. Racemes fewer-flowered, the pedicels ne mm. long; cap- — been than long; aa blades ce beyond the middle, idrib scarcely evident.............. 6. H. carstensensts. FF. eeu ciliate throug aa sarees shorter than the bractlets; eaf-blades oval or elliptic, 6-9 mm. long; stem and inflorescence more finely pubescent se with paler yi eee . ciliata. EE. Corolla dark purple, 7-8 mm. long; racemes 1-3- flowered ; peduncles 5 m. long, the rachis shost: the pedicels reaching 5—7 mm. long; agen Sroecait rounded to base; na blades crenate-serrate above neate base, somewhat involute................ 8. t rigi CC. Rachis and ‘pedicels with ascending or puennone hairs; leaves glutinous enuis Hairs of inflorescence brown, upcurved- ascending; sepals ciliate and pubescent on midrib externally; corolla red, 9-10 mm. long; leaf- ciliate; stems esac erect, 2—3 dm. tall, the nine as long as the inter- od 9. H. Br assit. RVs d Gira isa Sadat bs a ea Bcaloa pe carck vo va wow Ey SHES pe EIS o.0e wpe eee ‘This assumed to be probably true for Hebe Lendenfeldii, described as with leaves “on very short stalks,” and for H. carstensensis with leaves “‘sessile 1943 | PENNELL, SCROPHULARIACEAE OF NEW GUINEA 297 DD. Hairs of inflorescence grayish, minute, incurved-appressed ;" sepals minutely ciliolate; leaf-blades 0.6-0.7 cm. long, the petioles more evi- dent, ascending-spreading, le ie stem slender, diffuse, smaller, the leaves shorter ie n the intern E. Corolla white, 6-7 mm. ~~ : flowers several, in a pair of long- aici racemes at the apex of the uniformly finely pubescent FE RO Ee ee ee IST CU Occ Boe 1. tenuis. EE. pie purple (magenta), 8-9 mm. ae ; flower solitary10 at the apex of the bifariously puberulent stem........ 11. H. Vanderwateri. BB. ee blades narrowly lanceolate, obscurely beer to nearly entire; corolla mm. long; stems and branches densely foliose, me and densely See eee ee ase conde Se cynesctycercoutnw eevee Agee . A. diosmoides. 1. Hebe rubra Pennell in Brittonia 2: 184. 1936. Pratt II, A. British New Gurtnea: Mt. Albert Edward, L. J. Brass 4295 (type) and 5677; Murray Pass, Wharton Range, Brass 4620, 2. Hebe thymelaeoides Pennell in Brittonia 2: 186. 1936. Pirate II, B. British NEw Guinea: Mt. Albert Edward, L. J. Brass 4296 and 4297 (TYPE). *3. Hebe albiflora sp. nov. Prate III, A. Frutex ramosissimus, 6-9 dm. altus; caulis pilis adscendentibus-incurvis folia oblongo-lanceolata, acuta, serrato-dentata, fere glabra, subtus pallida, majora 2 cm. longa, 7-8 mm. lata; racemi 6-8 floribus pubescent with brownish upcurved Pre, the old bark becoming glabrate. Leaves numerous, not or only slightly longer than the internodes, the blades oblong- lanceolate, acute, serrate-dentate throughout with low teeth, flat, dark green and glabrous above, beneath pale and with pilose midrib, 2 em. long, 7-8 mm. wide, at base rounded to pubescent petioles 2-3 mm. long. Racemes brown- pubescent (with incurved hairs), 6—8-flowered, elongated the peduncle becoming 30 to 50 mm. long, the pedicels 5-8 mm. long, slightly exceeding the lance-oblong bractlets. Sepals 4—4.5 mm. long, elliptic-oblanceolate, acute, glabrous. Corolla 7-8 mm. long, white, widely campanulate, glabrous throughout, the upper lip obovate-circular, the three lower lobes slightly narrower, nearly elliptic. Stamens glabrous through- out, the anthers about half the length of the filaments. Capsule 4 mm. long, globose-ovoid. Seeds 0.5 mm. long, circular, flattened, brown. NorTHEASTERN NEw GUINEA: ae District, Ulap Trail, Matap, alt. 1500-1800 m., Mary S. Clemens 11347 (AA, TYPE), Feb—April 1940, in flower. 4. Hebe Lendenfeldii (F. v. Muell.) Pennell in Brittonia 2: 184. 1936. Based upon Veronica Lendenfeldii F. v. Muell. in Trans. . Soc. Victoria 1(2): 29. 1889, describing a plant collected by William MacGregor in 1889 on Mt. Victoria in British New Guinea. *5. Hebe polyphylla sp. nov. Prate III, B. Frutex ramosissimus, 2—8 dm. altus; caulis pilis patentibus ferrugineus; folia multa, elliptico- ies obtusa, crenato-dentata, glabra, majora 0.7-1.6 cm. longa, 5—7 mm. lata; racemi 5-10 floribus compositi; sepala 9Pedicels of Hebe Vanderwateri described as ‘“‘fein bestaubt.” 10“Semper ?”, asks Wernham. 258 JOURNAL OF THE ARNOLD ARBORETUM [VOL, XXIV 4-5 mm. longa, oblonga, irregulariter ciliata; corolla 8-11 mm. longa, alba, late campanulata, glabra; capsula 2—4 mm. longa, obovoidea. Stiff, much-branched shrub, 2-8 dm. tall, the upper branches ascending, densely foliose, the lower slender, diffusely spreading, with longer inter- nodes and pairs of minute subulate leaves. Stem distally pubescent with ferruginous spreading hairs, below that bifariously so but on the proximal half glabrate or glabrous. Leaves numerous, and close-set by reason of the short internodes, the lower stem marked by the slightly raised petiole- rudiments of the fallen leaves: blades elliptic-oblong, obtusely rounded, crenate-dentate, flat, glabrous, 0.7-1.6 cm. long, 5-7 mm. wide, at base semi-petiolate (cuneately narrowed with entire ciliate margins) to a clasp- ing base. Racemes brown-pubescent, 5—10-flowered, elongated, the peduncle becoming 20 to 40 mm. long, the pedicels 3-18 mm. long, about equaling to much longer than the linear-oblong bractlets. Calyx spongy (as judged by irregular wrinkling in drying) at base, the sepals (free above base) oblong, rounded, irregularly ciliate (mostly at apex), 4-6 mm. long. Corolla 8-15 mm. long, white, pinkish-tinged, widely campanulate, glabrous throughout, the upper lip nearly circular, the three lower lobes obovate-semicircular. Stamens glabrous, the anthers about 1 the length of the filaments. Capsule 2-6 mm. long, obovoid. NetHerRLANDS New GuINEA: 5 miles northeast of summit of Mt. Wilhelmina, alt. 3440 m., L. J. Brass 9401 (AA, TypE, ANSP), Aug. 1938, in flower and fruit (along streams in grassland) ; Snow Mountains, on and near Mt. Wilhelmina (seen also from 3 miles east of that summit), Brass 9414 (AA, ANSP), and 7 km. northeast of summit, Brass & Myer-Drees 9934 (AA, ANSP). 6. Hebe carstensensis (Wernham) Diels in Bot. Jahrb. 62: 491. 1929. Based upon Veronica carstensensis Wernham in Trans. Linn. Soc. II. Bot. 9: 121. 1916, describing a plant collected by C. Boden Kloss in 1912-13 on Carstensz Peak, Snow Mountains (Nassau Range), Netherlands New Guinea. *7. Hebe ciliata sp. nov. Prate IV, A. Frutex ramosus, 2—6 dm. altus; caulis pilis brevibus patentibus brunneus ; folia multa, ovalia vel inferiora elliptica, obtusa, crenato-dentata, glabra glabratave, majora 0.6-0.9 cm. longa, 5-7 mm. lata; racemi 4-8 floribus compositi; sepala 4-5 mm. longa, obovato-oblonga, ciliata; corolla 7—8 mm. longa, pallide violacea vel alba, late campanulata, glabra; capsula 2-3 mm. longa, obovoidea. Stiff shrub, 2-6 dm. tall, the rigid stems ultimately erect, the upper ? branches ascending-erect and densely foliose, the lower slender, diffusely sometimes pubescent beneath on the obscure midrib), 6-9 mm. long, 5—7 mm. wide, at base widely cuneate to the ill-defined short entire ciliate petioles. | Racemes brownish-pubescent, 4—8-flowered, elongated, the peduncle becoming 20-25 mm. long, the pedicels 2—5(—7) mm. long, mostly shorter than the obovate-oblong bractlets. Calyx spongy at base, the sepals 4-5 mm. long, obovate-oblong, obtusely rounded, ciliate throughout. 1943 ] PENNELL, SCROPHULARIACEAE OF NEW GUINEA 259 Corolla 7-8 mm. long, pale violet-purple to white, widely campanulate, glabrous throughout, the upper lip nearly circular, the three lower lobes nearly as large. Stamens glabrous, the anther less than half the length of the filament. Capsule 2-3 mm. long, obovoid. NETHERLANDS NEw Guinea: Mt. Wilhelmina, alt. 3400 m., L. J. Brass & E. Myer- Drees 9682 (AA, TyPE, ANSP), Sept. 1938, in flower and fruit (rather wet grassy place along a small river, the whole plant apparently somewhat violet-tinged, the corolla being pale violet within and nearly white externally); Mt. Wilhelmina, alt. 3900-4250 m., alpine grassland, northern slopes, Brass & Myer-Drees 10092, 10094 (both AA, ANSP), southern slopes, Brass & Mvyer-Drees 10098, 10101, 10104 (all AA, ANSP). No. 10092 differs from the others in the ciliation of the sepals being shorter and partial (as in other species), but the leaf-blades are oval as in H. ciliata. No. 10094 is said to be “common on old rock screes,” and no. 10/01 “plentiful on rocky limestone slopes.” *8. Hebe rigida sp. nov. PLATE IV, B. Frutex ramosissimus, rigidus; caulis pilis brevibus patentibus pubescens ; folia multa, oblongo- -elliptica, obtusa, crenato-dentata, glabra, majora 0.5-0.7 cm. longa, 3-4 mm. lata; racemi 1-3 floribus compost sepala 4-5 mm. longa, anguste oblonga, glabra; corolla 7-8 mm. longa, atro- purpurea, late campanulata, glabra; capsula 4 mm. longa, Bbovaides, Stiff shrub, 2—4 dm. tall, with many rigidly erect stems from the slightly spreading rhizomatous base, these distally with many ascending-erect black- ish purple branches. Stem pubescent with short spreading hairs, tardily glabrescent below. Leaves numerous and close-set (the short internodes of the lower part of the stem marked as in the other species), the blades oblong- eens obtuse, crenate-dentate, Pee: (with hardly evident midrib), 5—7 mm. long, 3-4 mm. wide, at base cuneate to the ill-defined short entire aie petioles, both blades a ana involutely hollowed. Racemes pubescent with short hairs, 1—3-flowered, short, the peduncle 4-12 mm. long, the pedicels 3—5 mm. long, hota than or equaling the linear-oblong bractlets. Calyx not spongy at base, the sepals 4-5 mm. long, narrowly oblong, obtusely rounded, the margin entire and glabrous. Corolla 7-8 mm. long, dark purple, widely campanulate, glabrous through- out, the upper lip nearly circular, the three lower lobes similar and nearly as large. Stamens eet the anthers less than half the length of the filaments. Capsule 4 mm. long, obovoid. NETHERLANDS ae Guinea: Northern slope of Mt. Wilhelmina, alt. 4100 m., L. J. Brass & E. Myer-Drees 10090 (ANSP, type, AA), Sept. 1938, in flower and fruit (common on Wiener: -grass slopes, often growing in moss-cushions). 9. Hebe Brassii Pennell in Brittonia 2: 185. 1936. PraTeE V, A. BritisH New Guinea: Mt. Albert Edward, L. J. Brass 4498 (TYPE). *10. Hebe tenuis sp. nov. PLaTE V, B Suffrutex repens, ramosus, 1—1.5 an . altus; caulis pilis minutis incurvis pubescens ; folia See rotundata, crenato-den ntata, glabra, glutinosa, majora 0.7—0.9 cm. longa, 4-6 mm. lata: racemi 3-7 floribus laxe com- positi; sepala 4 mm. lon aay oblanceolata vel obovata, glabrata; corolla longa, alba, campanulata, glabra; capsula 4 mm. longa, obovoidea. Suffrutescent and extensively repent, distally ascending, 1—1.5 dm. tall, laxly branched. Stems finely pubescent with minute incurved hairs, tardily glabrescent below. Leaves shorter than or about equaling the internodes (which are rather longer than those of the erect bushy species, and with nodes as clearly marked), the blades elliptic, rounded at apex, 260 JOURNAL OF THE ARNOLD ARBORETUM [ VOL. XXIV crenate-dentate, flat, glabrous (with evident midrib), somewhat glutinous, 7-9 mm. long, 4-6 mm. wide, at base cuneate to the short flattened ciliate NorTHEASTERN NEW GUINEA: Summit of Mt. Sarawaket, alt. 4100 m., Clemens 3642 (AA, type), Apr. 8, 1937, in flower (among open grass and shrublets). 11. Hebe Vanderwateri (Wernham) Van Steenis in Bull. Jard. Bot. Buitenzorg II. 13: 252. 1934 Based upon Veronica Vanderwateri Wernham in Trans. Linn. Soc. Il. Bot. 9: 121. 1916, describing a plant collected by C. Boden Kloss in 1912-13 on Carstensz Peak, Netherlands New Guinea. 12. Hebe diosmoides (Schlechter) Pennell in Brittonia 2: 184. 1936. Based upon Veronica diosmoides Schlechter in Bot. Jahrb. 59: 111. 1924, describing a plant collected by Sir William MacGregor in 1889 on Mt. Victoria in British New Guinea. 11. Veronica Linnaeus Since Veronica Archboldii was described seven years ago, several more members of this genus have been noted in collections from New Guinea, all of them similarly pertaining to the group of V. serpyllifolia L. From that species and its more cosmopolitan subspecies Aumifusa (Dickson) Vahl these all differ in the less hairy capsules, and, excepting the diminutive V. platycarpa, in the relatively wider and more toothed leaf-blades as well. What may be somewhat arbitrarily accounted the species of Veronica in New Guinea differ as follows: A. Capsule widest about midway of its length, often exceeded by the sepals; racemes becoming many-flowered; leaf-blades elliptic or slightly longer, crenate-dentate ; stems: -1—4 dm; tall ocd saris dda die ao WSS 20S en Se Oe ns STEMS Hes 1. V. Archboldii. . Capsule widest near the base, exceeding the sepals; racemes few-flowered; leaf- blades oblong-elliptic, crenate-serrate with few teeth; stems less than 1 dm. tall, the whole plant smaller............. 0. cee eee eee eee eee eee 2. V. platycarpa. 1. Veronica Archboldii Pennell in Brittonia 2: 182. 1936, The following, tentatively considered as subspecies, may prove specifi- cally distinct. In all the aspect is similar, and there is equal possibility that further collecting may break down the validity of the characters adduced. Analogous to the wide distribution of Veronica serpyllifolia and its subspecies, this is being considered as a single species occurring through- out the mountain ranges of New Guinea. The subspecies yet known may be distinguished as follows: A. Sepals about the length of the capsule (slightly shorter to longer than) ; corolla pale blue or white; pubescence of stem distally and of pedicels consisting of minute ascending-incurved hairs; leaf-blades little longer than wide, more evi- dently crenate-dentate.......... ccc c eee cee eee eee 1b. Subsp. ellipticophylla. > > 1943 ] PENNELL. SCROPHULARIACEAE OF NEW GUINEA 261 AA. Sepals much longer than the capsule; leaf-blades with fewer and shallower dentations. B. Leaf-blades slightly elongated, 114-2 times as long as wide; pubescence ae minute ascending-appressed hairs; corolla ‘‘pale purple, streaked with white.’ Beer ees een cect ee eee PT Gea wad 4 Steet ca ee nue aero eg glabrato; capsula 2.5 mm. longa, ov voidea : semina mm. lon Stem 7-8 dm. tall, scabrous-pilose with short broad. based stiff eer hairs, slightly branched distally. Leaves ascending, linear, obtuse, scabrous- pubescent, the largest 2—4 cm. long, 1-1.5 mm. wide. ‘Spikes elongated, scabro-pubescent, that of the main stem of more than 20 opposite or sub- opposite pairs of flowers. Bracts linear, attenuate, mostly 5-6 mm. long, about 24 the length of calyx, the lower long an exceeding calyx. Bracte- oles filiform, 3.5—-5 mm. long. Pedicels scarcely 0.5 mm. long. Calyx 6 mm. 13Already reported in Jour. Arnold Arb, 20: 83. 1939 - a variant of Buchnera urticifolia. These are the plants covered by contrast KAA” .o e key. 1943 ] PENNELL, SCROPHULARIACEAE OF NEW GUINEA 265 long, its tube with 5 very prominent scabro-pubescent ridges that become distally Be subulate scabro-pubescent calyx- lobes, four of which are a 2—2.5 mm. long, but the mid-posterior is more slender and short, 1.5 m long; etna surface of the tube membranous, sparsely minutely pilose. lobes finely violet-lined, the tube slender and about equaling calyx (5-4 mm. long), glabrous within calyx; throat tubular-campanulate, slightly enlarged on upper side, 4-5 mm. long, slightly decurved, externally pubescent, the hairs seemingly slightly gland-tipped; upper lip 2-3 mm long, arched, its lobes united over half their length, free and laterally up- curved, externally slightly glandular-pubescent, internally pubescent with appressed glandless hairs; lower lip 3.5-4.5 mm. long, deflexed-spreading (its laterally spreading lobes distinct from near base of lip), externally slightly glandular-puberulent, internally glabrous. Capsule 2.5 mm. long, ovoid, glabrous, enclosed within calyx-tube. Seeds about 0.5 mm. long,” irregularly tetrahedral, brown. British New GurIneA: Gaima, east bank of Lower Fly River, L. J. Brass 8256 (ANSP, type, AA), Nov. 1936, in flower and fruit (common in thick grass, open savanna-forest, in Jowland). In 1939 (Jour. Arnold Arb. 20: 83) I identified this plant as Stviga curviflora (R. Br.) Benth., an opinion I wish now to reconsider. Robert Brown’s brief description of Buchnera curviflora (Prodr. Fl. Nov. Holl. 438. 1810) should first be quoted: “‘Buchnera curviflora, scaberrima, foliis elongato-linearibus integerrimis patentibus, calycibus 5-striatis, labio supe- riore corollae retuso: inferiore 3-partito ter breviore.” Our plant differs from this in its leaves being ascending rather than spreading, and in its upper lip being 24 instead of 14 the length of the lower lip of the corolla. In 1835 (in forming the combination Striga curviflora in Compan. Bot. Mag. 1: 362) Bentham, who had seen only Brown’s specimens for his account, called the leaves subspreading (‘‘subpatentibus”’), thus indicating that they were likely somewhat ascending, and added that the corolla- tube was pubescent, while he retained in full force the statement about the relatively small upper lip of the corolla. Years later, with the help of more collections, Bentham again treated the matter in his Flora Australien- sis (4: 517) in 1869. There we learn that Brown’s plant, the type of the species, was gathered on islands in the Gulf of Carpenteria in North Australia, and that the species is now known both in that province and in Queensland. Again we have the emphasis placed upon the shortness of the upper corolla-lip as a main criterion (“less than half as long as the lower’), while the length of the corolla is now given as “nearly or fully 34 in.,” a size too large for our plant. On Bentham’s key of 1869 our species fits better the characterization of S. multiflora, which reads: “Corolla above % in. long, the upper lip more than half as long as the lower,’ except that the corolla is exactly 4% inch. But from S. multiflora Benth. of North Australia (as originally defined in Compan. Bot. Mag. 14Imperfect seeds, shaken from a capsule, are only 0.2-0.3 mm. long, but those lying in folder with specimen and presumably of this species have been described 266 JOURNAL OF THE ARNOLD ARBORETUM [vOL, XXIV 1: 363. 1835) our plant differs in not being much-branched, its leaves not spreading, its corolla not glabrous, and its habit not semi-decumbent. Finally, as to S. curviflora again, the scarcely decurved corolla of our plant must differ from that which suggested this name to Brown. On all these counts I think that our plant from New Guinea is different from either of these Australian species. Likely it differs in other characters as well, for Brown’s description is meagre and Bentham’s far from complete. 2. Striga Schlechteri sp. nov. Caulis ramosissimus, debilis; folia longa; calyx 5-costatus; corolla lutea. Stems much-branched, weak and rather tall (relative to S. /utea), the leaves longer, the calyx 5-ribbed, the corolla bright ee (but dry- ing dark blue-gray), and both corolla and capsule smaller NorTHEASTERN NEw GurINeEA: Constantinhafen, . alanis wn (TYPE, presum- ably in the Berlin Botanical Garden), March 1902, in flower and fru Other collections cited by Schlechter Sinn this as occurring pelsewuera) in Northeastern New Guine This brief characterization is all that is given by Schlechter (in Bot. Jahrb. 59: 114. 1924), but it seems sufficient to mark this as another new species. Certainly it can hardly be Striga multiflora Benth., above- mentioned, to which Schlechter assigned the plant, since Bentham’s account of this in his Flora Australiensis (4: 517. 1869) gave the corolla as over 14 inch long, a size much above that of S. /utea. On the other hand it is just possible that Schlechter’s plant was S. parviflora, but his identi- fication of it as S. multiflora and the different color assigned to the flowers lead me to suppose that it is something else. S. multiflora was originally described as having a glabrous corolla, a detail so modified in the Flora Australiensis as to lead to the suspicion that several things were included in the latter account. 3. Striga parviflora (R. Brown) Benth. in Compan. Bot. Mag. 1: 362. 1835. Based upon Buchnera parviflora R. Brown, Prodr. Fl. Nov. Holl. 1: 438, 1810, of tropical Australia, the type being stated by Bentham, FI. Austral. 4: 517. 1869, to have come from Keppel Bay, Queensland. As previously reported (in Jour. Arnold Arb. 20: 84. 1939), this was collected in British New Guinea at Port Moresby (Brass 8780), and now we may add several collections from near Kajabit Mission in the Morobe District, Northeastern New Guinea (Mary S. Clemens 10676, 10745, 41170) 4. Striga lutea Loureiro, Fl. Cochinch. 22. 1790. _ Type actually from Canton, China. Merrill (in Trans. Amer. Philos. Soc. II. 24(2): 353. 1935) puts this in the synonymy of Striga astatica (L.) Kuntze, but Linnaeus’ Buchnera asiatica was a composite of what- ever Strigae he knew, although his allusion to the corolla-limb being purple will likely prove distinctive. With which component to associate this earliest name must await more thorough revision. To collections cited by Schlechter (1. c. 115), all from Northeastern 1943] PENNELL, SCROPHULARIACEAE OF NEW GUINEA 267 New Guinea, may be added a recent one from the Kajabit Mission in the Morobe District (Mary S. Clemens 40771). 5. Striga Masuria (Buch. Ham.) Benth. in Compan. Bot. Mag. 1: 364. 1835. In Wallich’s Numerical List of Plants in the Museum of the East India Company, this oe appears as numbers 3876 Buchnera Wallichii Benth. and 3877 B. Masuria Ham., under date of 1830. Both names were nomina subnuda (localities only ae given), but the latter was validated by publication with description by Bentham in his Scrophularineae Indicae (p. 41) in 1835. Schlechter in 1924 (1. c. 115) seems to have been the first to validate the former, but his Striga Wallichii (Benth.) Schlechter does so only by including Bentham’s account of the other as a synonym. The correct name for the species therefore remains Masuria, the name generally used since 1835. A widespread oriental species that extends eastward to New Guinea, where it was reported by Schlechter from the northeastern part and has recently been gathered slightly farther south at the Kajabit Mission, Morobe, Northeastern New Guinea, by Mary S. Clemens (10547a, 40658, 40772) 16. Euphrasia Linnaeus This proves to be one of the characteristic genera of alpine heights throughout New Guinea. Like Hebe in the same situations, the kinship of the Papuan species is definitely with the flora of New Zealand. Also like Hebe, the genus will prove to be a large one in New Guinea, with many species locally endemic to various mountain areas. The clarity of the taxonomy of Euphrasia in New Guinea has been a welcome surprise to one who has puzzled over the difficult task of dis- tinguishing its species in the North Temperate Zone. The boreal species, all of which are annual, are closely similar in corollas, stamens, capsules, seeds, calyces, and leaves, so that one must appeal to secondary features of leaf-dentation, indumentum, and size to distinguish the many local entities. But in New Guinea the characters are as consequential and well-marked as in any other genus of this family. The species are perennial, the habit either erect or repent, the corolla with short or long tube, the calyx-lobes rounded or acuminate, and the anthers distinct or coherent, uniformly or unequally awned. Those as yet known from New Guinea may be dis- tinguished as follows: A. Corolla externally glabrous, 10-11 mm. long, the lips as long as or longer than i tube; anthers glabrous, exserted; leaf-blades 3-5-lobulate; stem to 2 dm emcee Peeh sient e iron eae gk aian et aA incest a sig 20a sa ob koa ear avasse OME Gen EN . E. papuana. AA. ca Arenas pubescent; anthers included, at least a orifices ciliate; leaf- blades 3-lobed, or the lower or all entire (all only in E. culminicola). B. Leaf- blades longer than wide, the lateral lobes less mie Y% the length of the wide median lobe; lower lip deflexed, usually exceeding the upper lip of the corolla; stem ascending or erect. C. Stems shrubby, 1-3 dm. tall; calyx-lobes obtuse; corolla 12-14 mm. long, white to yellow, externally resi subeoelcnt, the lower (8 mm.) slightly longer than the upper (6-7 mm.) lip................ 2. E. Lamii. CC. Stems suffruticose, less than 1 se tall; corolla violet to purple, evidently hairy externally 268 JOURNAL OF THE ARNOLD ARBORETUM [VOL. XXIV D. Anthers cohering, one awn of anthers of shorter stamens much longer and thicker than the other anther-awns; corolla 12-15 mm. long, the campanulately wanes throat and lips as long as or longer than the Halk tube; leaves glabrous. . Lower et es exceeding upper lip of corolla, its length about that roat. ish. G. Leat- ane with a pair of short tooth-like Ba lobes ; ephigee POG caja sc gengreestn hohe 246 tele s . cucullata. eaf- blades entire, spatulate or obovate... .4. : culminicola. FF. te lobes acuminate; corolla white or very pale pink........ 5. EE. Lower scarcely exceeding upper lip of corolla, its length about half - ia t of the decurved corolla-tube and -throat; calyx-lobes MAC 5 hoses cee eres ees ps esses eases 6. curviflora. DD. Sees: sia the awns all equal in length, short; ares Aa 11 mm. long, the slender throat gradually or not widening from the tube, which together are at least twice as long as the lobes E. Tube of corolla gradually widening to apex, its orifice not con- stricted; plant much-branched at base. F. Calyx-lobes apie corolla pale violet, the galea straight con- yepantd with th tt capsule little shorter than calyx; leaves 5-6 mm. long, gla en ds Nesta bate ciere raise eis ais age ee 7. E. rectiflora. FF. Calyx- jokes rounded - apex; corolla lavender to dark violet, the galea shorter and curved continuously with the tube; capsule eine than calyx (not iia the ee of its lobes) ; s 3-4 mm. long, puberulent.............. 8. E. spatulifolia. EE. Tube “OE corolla ae at mouth, leaves 3.5 mm. na glabrous; ms simple or sparsely branched............. 9. E. scutellarioides. wo ee) . Leaf-blades as wide as long, the hem oe 1% to Y% the length of te wide median ware lower lip deflexed-spreading, not or scarcely exceedin upper lip of the pale corolla; anthers distinct, one awn of anthers of ee pair slightly longer than the other anther-awns; stem repen C. Corolla 8-10 mm. long, slightly and mostly sparsely pilose externally ; orifice of anther-cells abine (the hairs less than 14 the width of the of the calyx- _— stems extensively repent, bifariously pubescent with recurved hairs. ....... 000 cece teen eee ener seesaw eens 10. E. humifusa. . Corolla 4-5 mm. long, hirsute- pubescent externally ; orifice of anther-cells QO ‘o) pubescent, the lobes rounded with margin strongly revolute and callose ; eaves 1-3 mm. long, pubescent, ultimately glabrous, the margin like that of the calyx-lobes; stems more shortly spreading............ 11. E. callosa. 1. Euphrasia papuana Schlechter in Bot. Jahrb. 59: 116. 1924. Collected by Sir William MacGregor in 1889 on Mt. Victoria in British New Guinea. 2. Euphrasia Lamii Diels in Nova Guinea Bot. 14: 538. 1928. Collected by H. J. Lam in 1920 at Doorman Peak, Netherlands New Guinea; two specimens cited but neither designated as type. Lam 1587, very abundant on flat sterile moorland, 3250 meters altitude, is also shown in his photograph in Die Vegetationsbilder 15: tab. 33. 1924, and evi- dently reaches the proportions given in the original description of 1928. Accordingly, I take it as the type. The published field-note states that the 1943 | PENNELL, SCROPHULARIACEAE OF NEW GUINEA 269 corolla was white or bright yellow, sometimes with lilac spots on the lips, and was yellow on the throat. In contrast, Lam 1644, gathered among stones on open alpine slopes at 3520 meters altitude, was noted in the field as with corolla white, occasionally bright yellow, yellow at the throat, and the tube with violet stripes to the margin of the upper lip; I suspect from the allusion to striping as well as the different environment that no. 16/4 is a different species and is probably the plant that I am now describing as Euphrasia cucullata, although unfortunately Mr. Brass has not told us the color-pattern of the latter. If so, the occasional bright vellow-flowered individuals may well be interspersed specimens of E. Lamii, such as might take slightly wetter spots. From Lam’s map in Die Vegetationsbilder, Doorman Peak is less than a degree northwest of Wilhelmina Peak. *3. Euphrasia cucullata sp. nov. Suffruticosa, ramosissima, diffusa, 5-10 cm. alta: caulis retrorse pube- scens; folia obovato-spathulata, 5-6 mm. longa, glabra, margine apicem versus valde revoluta (cucullata), utrinque pari loborum triangulari-rotun- datorum onusta, basi cuneata: flores pauci, axillares; calyx minute pilosus, 6-7 mm. longus, lobis ovatis rotundatis 2 mm. longis: corolla purpurea, capsula 7 mm. longa, glabra; semina 1.5 mm. longa. Suffruticose, much-branched below, the stems less than 1 dm. tall, pubescent with recurved hairs, diffusely ascending or decumbent. Leaves lute as to appear cucullate: larger leaves 5-6 mm. long, 2-3 mm. wide. Inflorescence of a few pairs of axillary flowers, these not closely successive. Pedicels 2 mm. long, pubescent. Calyx 6-7 mm, long, minutely pilose, the lobes 2 mm. long, ovate, rounded but with margin so recurved as at times to appear acutish. Corolla “purple,” externally hirsute-pubescent, but glabrous beneath throat and on lobes distally, internally finely pubescent below posterior sinus,'* elsewhere glabrous (except perhaps at base of tube), the tube 7-8 mm. long, narrow, slightly exceeding the calyx: upper lip 5 mm. long, slightly arched and hooded, the lobes free slightly (0.5 mm.) at apex; lower lip 7-9 mm. long, deflexed-spreading, the mid-anterior obo- vate, slightly longer than the semirectangular antero-lateral lobes, all retuse. Filaments glabrous (except probably at base); anthers all coherent, the ISTf the anthers of Euphrasia Lamii had been described in detail. probably it would have been possible to associate it with some of the following species. At present it is impossible to identify its variety Versteegii Diels (in Nova Guinea Bot. 14: 539. 1928), collected by Versteeg (no. 2473) in 1913 on the Orange Mountains (“Oranje-Gebirge”’) in Netherlands New Guinea. 16These are shorter and less divaricate than in Euphrasia mirabilis, the lobes of which are also placed about the middle of the leat’s length (not so distally as is implied in my original description of that plant). The leaf-blade is distally more strongly cucullate in £. cucullata than in E, mirabilis. 17Such fine pubescence beneath sinus near apex of upper lip is developed also in E. mirabilis. 270 JOURNAL OF THE ARNOLD ARBORETUM [VOL, XXIV longitudinal thin white ridges. NETHERLANDS New GurneA: Mt. Wilhelmina, 2 km. east of summit, alt. 3800 m., L. J. Brass & E. Myer-Drees 10118 (ANSP, type, AA), Sept. 1938, in flower (alpine grassland, plentiful in sterile shallow soil of sandstone crests) ; 3 miles east of summit, Wilhelmina, alt, 3650 m., Brass 9412 (AA, ANSP) (scattered over black boggy slopes). 4. Euphrasia culminicola Wernham in Trans. Linn. Soc. II. Bot. 9: 121, 1916. Collected by C. Boden Kloss in 1912-13 on Carstensz Peak, in Nether- lands New Guinea. 5. Euphrasia mirabilis Pennell in Brittonia 2: 188. 1936. Collected by L. J. Brass, no. 4271, in 1933 on Mt. Albert Edward, in British New Guinea. *6. Euphrasia curviflora sp. nov. Caules laxi, 8 cm. et ultra longi, pilis patentibus hirsutuli; folia glabra, oblanceolata vel obovato-spathulata, 5 mm. longa, margine apicem versus revoluta, utrinque pari loborum lanceolato-oblongorum brevium onusta, basi anguste cuneata; flores pauci, axillares; calyx glabratus, 7.5 mm. longus, lobis ovatis acuminatis 3.5 mm. longis; corolla violaceo-purpurea, extus pubescens, tubo 5 mm. longo angusto, labio superiore 4 mm. longo, inferiore vix longiore lobis retusis aucto; antherarum cohaerentium thecae aristas inaequales ferentes, orificiis ciliolatae; capsula 6 mm. longa, glabra; semina non visa. Stems lax, at least 8 cm. long, probably ascending, finely hirsute with spreading hairs. Leaves glabrous, oblanceolate to obovate-spatulate, nar- rowly cuneate to base, about midway of length with a pair of lance-oblong short lobes, the median distal portion rounded-ovate, the margin somewhat revolute and slightly cucullate, those seen 5 mm. long, 2—2.5 mm. wide. In- florescence of a few pairs of axillary flowers. Pedicels scarcely 1 mm. long, apparently glabrate. Calyx 7.5 mm. long, minutely pubescent below i becoming glabrous throughout, the lobes 3.5 mm. long, ovate, acuminate, slightly revolute. Corolla externally pubescent, hirsutely so on tube and minutely villose on galea, the lobes distally glabrate, internally pubescent below posterior sinus, the tube 5 mm. long, narrow, about equal- ing the calyx, distally campanulate, widening to a throat 4 mm. long; upper lip 4 mm. long, arched, the lobes free slightly at apex and laterally recurved 0.5 mm.: lower lip scarcely longer, deflexed-spreading, the mid- anterior slightly the widest, all retuse. Filaments glabrous (at least dis- tally); anthers all coherent, the cells ciliolate at margins of orifice, all awned (one awn of each posterior anther 0.3 mm. long, the others 0.1 mm. long, the long awn stouter and projecting farther down into the orifice of the corolla). Capsule 6 mm. long, 4 mm. wide, obovate-rounded to apex, flattened, glabrous. Seeds not seen. NorTHEASTERN NEw GuINnEA: Morobe District, Rawlinson Range, alt. over 3600 m., Mary S. Clemens s.n. (ANSP, Type), July 1941, in fawer (open wet hills and dale). 18About twice as long as the corresponding awns of E. mirabilis. 1943 ] PENNELL, SCROPHULARIACEAE OF NEW GUINEA 271 Of this I have seen only a few pieces, including a flower, a nearly ripe capsule, and another capsule long past dehiscence, all culled from the only collection of Euphrasia callosa, to be described below. As to color, the common label states: ‘‘mixture, purple & white, tube yellow of big fl.,” whence we know that this, the big flower, had a yellow corolla-tube, a color still evident on the anterior side of the throat. The edge of the lower corolla-lobes seems still a dark violet, whence I infer that the main part of the corolla was violet-purple. *7, Euphrasia rectiflora sp. nov. Suffruticosa, basi ramosa, erecta vel diffusa, 1-7 cm. alta; caulis retrorse pubescens vel glabrata; folia glabra, oblanceolato-spathulata, 5-6 m longa, margine apicem versus revoluta, utrinque pari loborum triangulari- oblongorum rotundatorum onusta, basi cuneata; flores pauci, axillares; calyx glaber, 7 mm. longus, lobis lanceolatis acuminatis 3 mm. longis; corolla violacea, extus minute pubescens, tubo 10 mm. longo angusto elongato, labiis 3 mm. longis, inferiore lobis rotundato-truncatis aucto; antherarum distinctarum thecae aristas aequales ferentes, orificiis cilio- latae; stylus minute pubescens; capsula 5-6 mm. longa, glabra: semina non visa. Suffruticose, less than 7 cm. tall, often minute, much-branched at base, to glabrate. Leaves glabrous, oblanceolate-spatulate, the upper nearly obovate, cuneate to base, about midway of length with a pair of triangular- oblong rounded lobes, the mid-blade distally Gee rounded, its margin revolute (but hardly cucullate) and becoming indurated, the larger leaves 5-6 mm. long, 2-3 mm. wide. Inflorescence of a few (1 or 2) pairs of axillary flowers, borne contiguously at the summit of the stems. Pedicels less than 1 mm. long, glabrous. Calyx becoming 7 mm. long, glabrous, the lobes 3 mm. long, lanceolate, acuminate, the margin strongly revolute. Corolla ‘“‘pale violet with yellow spot inside,” apparently lined, externally finely pubescent, the tube anteriorly and the lower lobes glabrous, inter- nally minutely pubescent below posterior sinus, the tube 10 mm. long, narrow, gradually widening distally, over twice the length of the calyx: upper lip 3 mm. long, narrowly arched, scarc cely or not hooded, the lobes free slightly at apex (0.5 mm.), tending to spread laterally; lower lip 3 mm. long, widely deflexed- spreading, the lobes 2 mm. long, rounded-truncate, slightly widening distally. Filaments glabrous (except perhaps at base) ; anthers distinct, the cells ciliolate at margins of orifice, all equally awned (awns slender, 0.3 mm. long). Style distally finely pubescent. Capsule 5-6 mm. long, 4 mm. ies poe flattened. Seeds not seen. awe E Lake Habbema, north of Mt. Wilhelmina, alt. 3225 m.,;.L, J. Brass ees (AA, TYPE, ANSP), Aug. 1938, in flower and fruit (among dwarf pensece of exposed boggy aineee 7 km. northeast a Mt. Wilhelmina, alt. 3560 m., Brass & Myer-Drees 9794 (AA, ANSP) (on very wet peat in grassy valley). *8. Euphrasia spatulifolia sp. nov. Suffruticosa, caespitosa, diffusa, 1-7 cm. alta; caulis De patentibus pubescens; folia minute pubescentia, oblanceolato- -spathulat mm. longa, margine apicem versus valde revoluta (cucullata), neiaaie pari 19From label of no. 9794; for no. 9192 stated as “pale purple-pink.” 272 JOURNAL OF THE ARNOLD ARBORETUM [VOL. XXIV loborum oblongorum onusta, basi cuneata; flores pauci, axillares; calyx hispidulus, 7 mm. longus, lobis oblongis rotundatis 3 mm. longis; corolla violacea, extus pubescens, tubo 9 mm. longo tenui elongato, labio superiore mm. , inferiore 4 mm. longo lobis rotundato-truncatis aucto; antherarum distinctarum thecae aristas aequales ferentes, orificiis ciliatae; sa. , forming clumps up to 1 dm. in diameter. Plant less than 7 cm. tall, branched throughout, the stems diffuse from base and ascending, pubescent with spreading slightly recurved hairs. Leaves minutely pubescent, oblanceolate-spatulate, cuneate to base, about midway of length with a pair of oblong rounded or obtuse lobes, the mid-blade distally broadly rounded, its margin strongly revolute and somewhat hooded, the larger leaves 3-4 mm. long, 1.5-2 mm. wide. Inflorescence of a few (1 or 2) pairs of axillary flowers. Pedicels 1 mm. long. alyx becoming 7 mm. long, minutely pilose with stiff hairs, the lobes 3 mm. long, oblong, truncately rounded, the margin narrowly revolute. Corolla “‘lavender”’ (no, 10044) or “dark violet” (no. 9731), with the ‘lowest petal orange at base,” externally grayish-pubescent, the throat anteriorly and the lobes distally glabrous, internally minutely pubescent below posterior sinus, the tube 9 mm. long, narrow, proximally very slender, distally widening to form throat and somewhat decurved, over twice the length of the calyx; upper lip 2 mm. long, arched and decurved 1 mm., then the lobes widely spreading, rounded; lower lip 4 mm. long, deflexed-spreading, the lobes 2-2.5 mm. long, rounded-truncate, slightly widening distally. Filaments glabrous (at least distally); anthers distinct, the cells ciliate at margins of orifice, all equally awned (awns slender, 0.2 mm. long). Style distally finely pubescent. Capsule 4-5 mm. long, 2-3 mm. wide, obovate, flattened. Seeds not seen. NETHERLANDS New Guinea: Northern slopes of Mt. Wilhelmina, alt. 3950 m., L. J. Brass & E. Myer-Drees 10044 (AA, TypE, ANSP), Sept. 1938, in flower and old fruit (shallow soil of old grassy scree) ; 11 km. northeast of summit of Mt. Wilhelmina, alt. 3400 m., Brass & Myer-Drees 9731 (AA, ANSP) (on rather wet sandy slope). 9. Euphrasia scutellarioides Wernham in Trans. Linn. Soc. II. Bot. 9: 122. 1916. Collected by C. Boden Kloss in 1912-13 on Carstensz Peak, Netherlands New Guinea. *10. Euphrasia humifusa sp. nov. longa, glabra; semina 1 mm. longa. Perennial, widely effuse. Stems up to 1 dm. long, wholly prostrate, par- tially repent, much-branched, bifariously pubescent with recurved- appressed hairs. Leaves glabrous or pilose proximally above on midrib or with a few hairs at tip of blade or lobes, widely ovate in inclusive outline, 1943 ] PENNELL, SCROPHULARIACEAE OF NEW GUINEA “id narrowly cuneate to a semi-petiolate or fully petiolate base, about midway of length with a pair of divergent oblong obtuse lobes, the mid- blade distally oval or rounded-ovate, its margin relatively slightly revolute; larger leaf- blades 2-3 mm. long and wide, the petioles sometimes reaching 1 mm. long. Calyx 3—4 mm. long, pilose with stiff hairs to usually glabrate, the lobes 1.5 mm. long, ovate or ovate-oblong, obtuse, so revolute as at times to appear acute. Corolla externally pinkish, internally white, the lips (or perhaps only lower lip) pink,?° externally finely pubescent (usually villosely so), the throat anteriorly and the lobes distally glabrous, internally minutely pubescent below posterior sinus, the tube 5 mm. long, narrow, straight, nearly twice length of calyx, distally abruptly widening to a campanulate throat 2 mm. long; upper lip 2.5 mm. long, straight or slightly decurved, one A lobes free only near apex (0.2—0.3 mm. long), upcurving ; lower li m. long, deflexed-spreading, the lobes 2—2.3 mm. long, oblong, retuse. "Filaments glabrous (at least distally ) ; anthers dis- of s which is about 0.2 mm. long). Style distally nearly glabrous (obscurely sparsely puberulent). Capsule 4 mm. long, 3 mm. wide, flattened, obovate-rounded, emarginate, the valves in dehiscence strongly recurved- spreading. Seeds 1 mm. long, oval with distally flattened end, blackish, with white longitudinal wing-like ridges. NETHERLANDS NEW GUINEA: 4 km. northeast of summit of Mt. We arner alt. 3650 m., L. J. Brass & E. Myer-Drees 9971 apd TYPE, AA), Sept. 1938, in flower and fruit (in shade of tussock grasses) ; 2 km. east of summit of Mt. Wilhelmina, Brass & Myer-Drees 10187 (AA, ANSP) (in alpine olan *11. Euphrasia callosa sp. nov. Herba perennis, effusa, prostrata; caulis 5 cm. longus, ramosus, hirsuto- pubescens; folia glabra glabratave, late ovata, 1-3 mm. longa, margine callosa apicem versus valde revoluta (cucullata), aes pari loborum oblongorum ovatorumve onusta, basi cuneata; flores pauci, irregulariter axillares; calyx hirsuto- -pubescens, 3—4 mm. longus, lobis oblongis ovatisve 1 mm. longis: corolla albida, extus pubescens, tubo 2.5—4 mm. longo recto, labiis 1.5—-2.5 mm. longis, inferiore lobis truncatis aucto; antherarum dis- tinctarum thecae aristas subaequales ferentes, orificiis ciliatae ; a Perennial, widely effuse. Stems up to 5 cm. long, wholly, ets. hirsute-pubescent on all sides with spreading hairs. Leaves glabrous, or slightly pubescent beneath laterally, widely ovate in inclusive outline, cuneate to a semipetiolate base, about midway of length with a pair of divergent pee: or ovate rounded lobes, the mid-blade distally ovate- rounded, the margin strongly revolute, even somewhat hooded, that of the several Paget! flowers, occurring irregularly at various nodes. Pedicels 1-2 mm. long, hirsute-pubescent. Calyx 3-4 mm. long, hirsute-pubescent on ribs, the lobes 1-1.2 mm. long, oblong to ovate, distally acutish to rounded, with revolute strongly callose margin. Corolla probably white 20Field-note to label for no. 9971: “fis. white within, the outside tinged with pink”; for no. 10187: ‘‘fls. very pale pink, lip darker 274 JOURNAL OF THE ARNOLD ARBORETUM [VOL. XXIV or whitish,2! externally pubescent, the throat anteriorly and the lobes distally glabrous, internally minutely pubescent below posterior sinus, the tube (and throat) 2.5-4 mm. long, straight, little longer than calyx; upper lip 1.5-2.5 mm. long, straight or nearly so, the lobes slightly distinct and recurved near apex; lower lip about as long, deflexed-spreading, the lobes 1-1.5 mm. long, truncate or shallowly retuse. Filaments glabrous (at least distally) ; anthers distinct, the cells ciliate on margins of orifice, the awns slightly unequal (as in E. humifusa). Style distally finely pubescent. Capsule 3 mm, long and wide, flattened, rounded, glabrous. Seeds 0.7—0.8 mm. long, grayish, with longitudinal white ridges. NorTHEASTERN New Guinea: Morobe District, Ulap Trail, Mary S. Clemens 41137 (ANSP, type, AA), Apr. 6, 1940, in flower and fruit. Presumably this locality is in the Rawlinson Range, from which Mrs. Clemens has sent to the Academy another collection made in July 1941, on “open wet hills and dale” at over 3600 meters altitude; it was this collec- tion from which the few pieces of Euphrasia curviflora have been ex- tracted. Still another collection, her no. 6047, gathered March 29, 1937, and credited only to the Morobe District at the surprisingly low altitude of 2400 to 2700 meters (“8—9000 ft.”’) is at the Arnold Arboretum. EXPLANATION OF PLATES All plates are photographs of herbarium specimens and are reproduced slightly over 4 actual size. PraTE I A. Lindernia papuana; type. B. Torenia crenata; type. Prate II A. Hebe rubra; isotype. B. Hebe thymelaeoides; isotype. PrateE III A. Hebe albiflora; type. B. Hebe polyphylla; type. PiaTE IV A. Hebe ciliata; type. B. Hebe rigida; type. PLATE V A. Hebe Brassii; isotype. B. Hebe tenuis; type. ACADEMY OF NATURAL SCIENCES, PHILADELPHIA, PA. 21 Type collection labeled ‘“fls. white with purple,” probably meaning white with purple lines. As to other collection, intermixed with Euphrasia curviflora, I take the present species to be the pale-flowered component, see discussion under that species. “IOA “AY GIONAY ‘waof AIXX Torte, Crnmote, CPanel, roa re einyn L é ine Cate vee tae DETER MeED He reamcie we peneRLL itary Viants of Papua (Hritish New Guinea), collected by the tos Fly River Expedition of the American Museum of Natural History, Mr, Richard Archbold, Leader, Vistriberted: bi thea A = Ne 7994. J.J. Baw te pteaber, 19a6 car Daviusbu, widdve Tly hiver. Common om wet rrase plains. ] aLVIg A. LINDERNIA PAPUANA B. TORENIA CRENATA Jour. ArNotp ARB. VoL. XXIV Spence: Zeb. NSP) PLATE II B. HEBE THYMELAEOIDES A. HEBE RUBRA A. HEBE ALBIFLORA POLYPHYLLA Univers Ne. 0401 Ld. Brass & HOM yer rere “Sapte 1988 Hale apokyrhayple Pammald, Ty PE lee northeast of »ilhemt a-top, 2440m, t rarmiend:oonnen under banks’ of at: of str tink ix ‘ayy @IONaYy ‘anof “IOA ATXX If] 4ivid Jour. AkNoLD ArB. VoL. XXIV PLATE IV B. HEBE RIGIDA A. HEBE CILIATA A. HEBE Brassu B. HEBE TENUIS H ee tennis Paral | AIXX ‘TOA ‘dy GIONay “yaof A ALVIg 1943 ] SMITH, CYTOLOGY AND SPECIATION IN POPULUS 275 A STUDY OF CYTOLOGY AND SPECIATION IN THE GENUS POPULUS L. E. CHALMERS SMITH! With four plates INTRODUCTION A stupy of the extent of interspecific hybridization within a genus has both practical and theoretical importance. It is of value in showing to what degree hybridization may be utilized within a genus to establish improved types and, at the same time, it is indicative of the relationships of the species themselves. In order that the study of the extent of hybrid- ization within the genus shall prove of maximum value, data on behavior of the F, and Fy, generations under controlled conditions should be available. Due to the time factor involved, such data are not available in most cases when dealing with forest trees. The study of genetic behavior of interspecific hybrids is of greatest value when coupled with a comparative study of the cytology of those hybrids. Studies of this sort have yielded many pertinent facts, particu- larly as critical evidence for the establishment of probable interspecific relationships. In addition it has led to a better understanding of the actual methods by which isolation and speciation have taken place. The basic assumption underlying this method of approach to the problem of interrelationships of species is that the pairing of the parental chromo- somes is a criterion of chromosome homology. This criterion of chromo- some homology, based on a study of pairing relationships at meiosis in F, species hybrids, is particularly valuable when supplemented with a study of chiasmata frequencies, chromosome configurations, and pollen sterility. The study of chromosome numbers, microsporogenesis, and the de- velopment of the male gametophyte of species within the genus supple- ments this program of research, making it more valuable from both points of view. The study of chromosome behavior and pollen sterility of the pure species serves as a basis with which to compare the cytological be- havior of the hybrids. The chromosome numbers will indicate the degree of polyploidy within the genus and indicate the probable success of any attempt to induce polyploidy. The present investigation is a study of the cytology of the genus Populus L. in general, and as such it is subject to the limitations imposed by the unavailability of certain species and hybrids for study. With these limitations in mind it is a study in particular of chromosome numbers and chromosome behavior in pure species and inter-specific hybrids, especially as these data are related to speciation within the genus. 1Maria Moors Cabot Foundation Fellow. 276 JOURNAL OF THE ARNOLD ARBORETUM [ VOL, XXIv MATERIALS AND METHODS The materials used in this study were obtained from two sources: (1) the Populus collection of the Arnold Arboretum, and (2) the Populus plantations of the Northeastern Forest Experiment Station at Frye, Maine. Cytological material of species and natural hybrids were obtained from the former location and material of artificial hybrids from the latter. Branches with flower buds attached were collected during the latter part of February and early March, placed in the greenhouse, and allowed to develop. Catkins were collected at appropriate times and fixed in 3:1 alcohol acetic and stored in the fixative at 2° C. until needed. Male catkins of Populus make excepuonally favorable material for cytological study, since one catkin contains many successive stages in the develop- ment of the pollen grain. Aceto-carmine smear preparations were used entirely in the study of meiotic chromosomes. Pollen mother cells in prophase stages were diff- cult to stain, and those having the chromosomes advantageously placed for study were rare. When favorable cells were found, the chromosomes were drawn with the aid of a camera ludica. The length of the chromo- somes was then measured by the use of waxed threads. For root tip studies, cuttings from the desired species were rooted in water or sand, the root tips collected and fixed in Navaschin’s solution, embedded in paraffin, sectioned at 10u and stained with crystal violet. A similar procedure of fixation, embedding, and sectioning was followed in the study of the development of the male gametophyte, except in this case the sections were stained with Haidenhain’s iron-haematoxylin. In the study of the development of the pollen tube, freshly shed pollen was sprinkled on slides which had received a thin coating of a sugar, agar, gelatin, and water mixture. The preparation of these slides has been described by Newcomber (1938). In this case a mixture of 2 gm. sugar, 5 gm. agar, and 0.5 gm. gelatin to 25 cc. of water was found to be satisfactory. After the pollen was planted, the slides were placed in a moist chamber until the pollen had germinated. It was then fixed with 3:1 alcohol acetic and stained with aceto-carmine. CHROMOSOME NUMBER AND MORPHOLOGY The first investigation of the chromosomes of Populus was made by Graf in 1921. He found the reduced chromosome number in P. tremula and P. canadensis, as determined from reduction divisions in the embryo sac mother cells, to be four. These counts have since proved to be erroneous. In 1924 Blackburn and Harrison, on the basis of chromosome number in seven species of Populus and seventeen species of Salix, estab- lished the fundamental reduced chromosome number in the Salicaceae as nineteen. In Salix, a polyploid series based on multiples of two, four and six was found. Since 1924 various workers have studied chromosome numbers in Populus. Table I summarizes the chromosome numbers which have been determined up to this time and lists the authority for each 1943 | SMITH. CYTOLOGY AND SPECIATION IN POPULUS 277 TABLE 1. PREVIOUSLY DETERMINED CHROMOSOME NUMBERS OF POPULUS SPECIES, WITH AUTHORITY AND DATE. Diploid Species Number Authority *P. alba 38 Von Wettstein (1933) *P. alba SS Peto (1938), van Dillewijn (1940) P. alba var. nivea aureo-intertexta 57 Peto (1938 P. balsamifera! 38 Meurman (1925) P. canescens 38 Peto (1938) P. canescens 57 Peto (1938 BE deltode var. missouriensis 38 Van Dillewijn (194 *P. Euge 38 Blackburn (1926), ae (1938) P. gelrica 38 Van Dillewijn (1940) *P. gene 38 Blackburn (1926) bal th eee eae 38 Peto (1938 P. lasiocarpa 38 Von Wettstein (1933) *P. nigra 38 Blackburn and orn (1924), van Dillewijn (194 *P. nigra var. italica 38 Van Dillewijn ca *P. robusta 38 Van Dillewijn (1940) P. serotina? 38 Blackburn (192 *P. serotina 38 Van Dillewijn (1940) P. Sieboldii 38 Nakajim *P. Simonii 38 Meurman (1925) P. tremula 38 Blackburn and Harrison (1924) P. tremula 38 Von Wettstein (1933), Muntzing (1936) P. tremula 57 Muntzing (1936), Tometorp (19- *P. tremuloides 38 Erlanson and rmann (1927), Peto (1938) *P. trichocarpa 38 Meurman (1927 * Count confirmed in the present study 1 P. balsamifera L.= P. deltoides Tarek. var. missouriensis Henry. 2 P. Eugenei probably = XP. canadensis Moench, var. Eugenei (Simon-Louis) Schelle 3 P. serotina Hartig= XP. canadensis Moench, var. serotina (Hartig) Rehd. count. Table II shows the distribution of chromosome numbers among the sections of the genus. Those determined by the writer are indicated in this table. In all, some forty-five species, varieties, and natural hybrids have been investigated. An examination of these numbers reveals that no polyploid series similar to that found in Salix exists in Populus. All species exist in the diploid form with the diploid number of chromosomes equal to thirty- eight. However, in the section Leuce, three species are found which possess triploid Sank also, with the unreduced chromosome number of fifty-seven. It should be pointed out that, in most cases, the chromosome numbers for any particular species have been determined from the examination of but one or, at the most, a few specimens of the species. It is possible that the examination of a species throughout its entire range might reveal 278 JOURNAL OF THE ARNOLD ARBORETUM [VOL. XXIV TABLE 2. A LIST OF CHROMOSOME NUMBERS OF POPULUS SPECIES AND VARIETIES, SHOWING THE DISTRIBUTION OF THESE NUMBERS AMONG THE SECTIONS OF THE GENUS. Chromosome Section Species Number, 2N Leuce P. alba 38, 57 P. ee var. nivea aureo- intertexta 57 *P. adenopoda 38 P. canescens (Ait.) Sm 38, 57 P. grandidentata Michx 38 P. Sieboldii Mi 38 P. tremula L. 38, 57 P. tremuloides Michx. 38 *P. tomentosa Carr. 38 Leucoides P. lasiocarpa Oliv. 38 Tacamahaca *P. acuminata Rydb 38 **P_ angustifolia James 38 **P_ candicans Ai 38 *P. cathayana Rehd 38 xP. generosa Henry 38 **P. Jackii Sarg 38 *P. koreana Rehd 38 *P. laurifolia Ledeb. 38 ae aximowiczii Henry 38 P. Simonii Carr. 38 **P. Tacamahaca Mill. 38 *P. Tacamahaca var. Michauxii (Dode) Farwell 38 P. trichocarpa Hook. 38 **P_ trichocarpa var. mili Henry 38 *P. Woobstii (Reg.) Do 38 Aegeiros *P. Andrewsii Sarg. 38 **P. angulata Ait. 38 xP. barbantica Houtz. 38 *P. berolinensis Dipp. 38 **P. canadensis Moe 38 *P. canadensis var. erecta (Selys-Longchamps) Rehd. 38 XP. canadensis var. Eugenei (Simon- ars — 38 *XP. canadensis var. marilandica (Poir.) 38 * P. canadensis var. regenerata (Schneid. ; ok 38 xP. canadensis var. serotina (Hartig) Rehd. 38 *P. deltoides Mar: 38 P. deltoides var. missouriensis Henry 38 < Populus canadensis and its varieties and < P. robusta are further examples. Peto (1938) reports similar hybrids in Canada between the European species P. alba and the native species P. grandidentata and P. tremuloides. It has been noted that female trees of species which have no male trees in the vicinity set viable seed. P. Maximowiczii is a good example of this fact, for in the Arnold Arboretum 288 JOURNAL OF THE ARNOLD ARBORETUM [VOL, XXIV it sets seed, some of which produce hybrid seedlings, although there are no male trees of this species in North America. At different times natural hybrids have been described from the field. This has been especially true in eastern Asia and North America, where the number of species of Populus is most abundant. From China the ‘‘species” P. Simonii is probably a natural hybrid, and & P. Woobstii is thought to be the cross P. laurifolia P. tristis. In order to determine the actual extent of natural hybridization among the North American species, a survey was made of the geographic distribution of the principal species and their natural hybrids, based upon a study of the herbarium sheets of Populus in the herbarium of the Arnold Arboretum. < Populus Andrewsii represents the cross P. Sargentii * P. acuminata. It has been collected from two stations in Colorado, Welsenberg and Mont- rose, both within the southern part of the overlap range of the parent species, which are also represented from these stations. X Populus Parryi has been collected from three localities in California, Canada de las Uvas, San Bernando, and Owens Lake. It is the result of the cross P. Fremontii * P. trichocarpa. K Populus Jacki (P. Tacamahaca X P. deltoides) has been collected from some twenty localities scattered over southern Quebec and Ontario, Vermont, and New York. This area represents but a small part of the overlap range. In many cases both parents have been collected from the same localities as the hybrid. The hybrid P. grandidentata *« P. tremuloides is somewhat similar in both these respects. It has been collected at twelve stations from Quebec and New England west to Ohio. The probable hybrid P. acuminata P. Wislizeni has been collected from one locality, Silver City, New Mexico. The cross P. candicans * P. Tacamahaca is represented by one collection made in the Arnold Arboretum. Four of these natural hybrids are the result of intersectional crosses, while two are crosses between species be- longing to the same section, P. grandidentata *« P. tremuloides and P. candicans * P. Tacamahaca. Any conclusion drawn from this study of natural hybridization are necessarily limited by the fact that only those herbarium sheets contained in the Arnold Arboretum herbarium were examined. In no case does the distribution of the hybrid cover the entire range of overlap between the parent species. In two cases the hybrid is represented by but two collec- tions. From the numerous artificial hybrids reported one might expect to find natural ae widespread. Their relative scarcity may be due to several reasons. 1. These hybrids are capable of reproducing themselves only through ered means. 2. Hybrids are scarce in those regions in which relatively little collecting has been done and abound in those regions where abundant collections have been made. 3. The most probable reason, however, is that while growing in the same general geographic region, the parent species may occupy different ecological habitats and overlap rather infrequently. An attempt will be made in a later part of this work to account for this lack of hybridization on the basis of 1943 | SMITH, CYTOLOGY AND SPECIATION IN POPULUS 289 TABLE 6. NATURAL AND ARTIFICIAL INTERSPECIFIC HYBRIDS WITHIN THE ENUS POPULUS ARRANGED TO SHOW CROSSING WITHIN AND BETWEEN SECTIONS Leuce Leuce Leuce Tacamahaca Tacamahaca Aegeiros xX x x x x Leuce Tacamahaca Aegeiros Tacamahaca Aegeiros Aegeiros 14 2 4 7 28 28 edaphic isolation. However, it can be shown that, in spite of such isola- tion, most of the possible hybrids occur between species of the same geographic region Artificial interspecific hybrids in this genus have been produced in abun- dance by different workers. Smith and Nichols (1941) list eighty-one artificial interspecific hybrids which have been produced and described by Henry (1914), Heimburger (1936, 1940), von Wettstein (1933), Schreiner (1934), and others. Table VI shows how these hybrids, along with the known natural hybrids, are distributed between and within the sec- tions of the genus. The significance of this distribution will be discussed in relation to speciation in a later part of this work. Material for a cytological study of some of the artificial hybrids pro- duced by Schreiner and his collaborators for the Oxford Pulp and Paper Company was obtained from Dr. E. J. Schreiner of the Northeastern Forest Experiment Station. The number of hybrids investigated was unfortunately limited to those which happened to come in flower over the period 1939-1941. Most of these were not the wide crosses which were desired for study. Those hybrids from which collections were made are described in Table VII, along with the natural hybrids investigated. The latter were obtained from the collections in the Arnold Arboretum. pairing and to study the various abnormalities which follow asynapsis. In each case the pollen sterility was determined by a count of two thousand pollen grains. In this connection it might be noted that the sterility was variable, differing somewhat with different collections from the same tree taken at the same or different times. Where possible, pro- phase stages of meiosis were studied to obtain some idea of chromosome pairing at the earlier stages. Table VIII summarizes the data on chromo- some pairing and pollen sterility obtained from both the natural and artificial hybrids studied. CYTOLOGY OF HYBRIDS In order that chromosomes may pair at meiotic metaphase, three gen- eral conditions must be realized: first, that genetically similar chromo- somes are present; second, that asynaptic genes do not influence the pair- JOURNAL OF THE ARNOLD ARBORETUM (VOL, xxIVv TABLE 7. A LIST OF THE NATURAL AND ARTIFICIAL HYBRIDS OF POPULUS INVESTIGATED, WITH DESCRIPTIONS OF THE CROSSES WHICH THEY REPRESENT. Name or number* Cross Description of cross 1. XP. Andrewsii P. Sargentii Between sections Tacamahaca Aegeiros; both parents native to P. acuminata North America. 2. XP. berolinensis P. laurifolia Cross within the section Aegeiros between geographically _ isolated P. nigra var. species. italica 3. XP. canadensis Cross within the section Aegeiros 4. XP. canadensis _P.. deltoides between geographically isolated var. Eugenei species, P. deltoides from North 5. XP. canadensis _P. nigra America, P. nigra from Europe & var. regenerata western Asia. 6. XP. Jackii P. Tacamahaca Intersectional cross Tacamahaca Aegeiros; parents native to North P. deltoides America. 7. P. nigra var P. nigra var. Within the section Aegeiros; both plantierensis italica parents varieties of the same Euro- x pean species nigra var. betulifolia 8. XP. robusta P. angulata Within the section Aegeiros oo geographically isolated speci P. nigra var. plantierensis P. Simonii od Supposed true species; native to north China. 10. XP. Woobstii P. laurifolia Cross within the section Tacama- haca; parents native to western Asia. P. tristis ? OP-—64 P. charkoviensis Both parents probably hybrids; OP-74 x cross might be written thus: (del- OP-113 P. plantierensis toides XX ni a (nigra var. italica X nigra var. betulifolia). OP-96 P. nigra Cross between sections Tacamahac OP-97 andA jae os eed, OP-98 P. laurifolia isolated spec OP-118 OP-99 P. charkoviensis Both parents probably hybrids within section Aegeiros; (deltoides P. clone robusta nigra) X (angulata X nigra var. plantierensis). 1943 ] SMITH, CYTOLOGY AND SPECIATION IN POPULUS 291 TABLE 7 (continued). Name or number* Cross Description of cross OP-102 BP: a X P. bero- Parents within the section Aegeiros; rare rossica male parent hybrid; deltoides x nigra var. italica OP-103 P. nigra X P. nigra Control cross. OP-104 P. nigra X Intersectional cross between geo- P. trichocarpa graphically isolated species OP-105 P. nigra baatanicorum Crosses pega 2 oe related vitrum X P. volga varieties of P. nig OP-106 P. nigra baatanicorum vitrum X P. plantierensis OP-109 P. Rasumowskyana X Female parent probably the hybrid P. caudina P. laurifolia x P. nigra; parents OP-110 P. Rasumowskyana X probably belong to section Aegeiros. unidentified cotton-wood OP-111 P. charkoviensis P. charkoviensis probably hybrid P. OP-114 x deltoides X P. ni gta; male parent P. incrassata closely related to P. nigra; both be- long to section Aegeiros. OP-112 P. deltoides Control cross. P. deltoides OP-116 P. charkoviensis Both parents probably hybrids; x< (nigra x deltoides) & (laurifolia x P. berolinensis nigra var. italica); both belong to section Aegeiros QOP=117 P. charkoviensis (nigra > deltoides) xX gues cross within the section Aegeiro P. deltoides OP-119 P. charkoviensis Female parent ee a both within section Aegeiro P. caudina * Entries numbered 1-10 are natural hybrids. The re yoann entries are artificial hybrids; clone numbers and parentages supplied by Dr. Schrein ing; and third, that, after pairing, chiasmata form in the pachytene chromosomes. In the present study, while it is recognized that the latter two condi- tions may play a part in the pairing behavior of the chromosomes at meiotic metaphase, no attempt has been made to study the chiasmata formation in the parental species and hybrids due to the extremely small size of the chromosomes. In general, it was noted that the univalents tend to be the smaller chromosomes of the complement. At this time not enough is known of the genetics of these hybrids to determine to 292 JOURNAL OF THE ARNOLD ARBORETUM [VOL. XXIV TABLE 8. MEIOTIC CHROMOSOME PAIRING, CHROMOSOME NUMBER, INVERSION BRIDGE FORMATION, AND POLLEN STERILITY IN NATURAL AND ARTIFICIAL HYBRIDS OF POPULUS. Pollen Name or Chro. Metaphase I Analysis Anaphase I Analysis Sterility Number No. I II III L B er cent 1. 19 0.72 18.64 0 0.72 0.14 1 20 2: 19 5.30 16.20 0.10 2.00 0.12 1 57 3. 19 1.84 18.08 0 0.60 0.12 2 17 4. 19 4.92 16.48 0.04 2.90 0.33 3 63 5. 19 3.92 17.04 0 3.69 0.04 1 56.5 6. 19 2.40 17.80 0 62 7. 19 0 19 0 6 8. 19 6.00 16 0 2.50 0.13 2 75 9. 19 1.76 18.12 0 31 10 19 14.24 11.88 ) 80 OP-64 19 0.28 18.86 0 0.16 0.23 1 5 OP-74 19 0.64 18.68 0 0.20 0.08 1 24 OP-113 19 1.14 18.43 0 0.16 0.23 1 22.4 OP-96 19 0.40 18.80 0 20 OP-97 19 1.00 18.50 0 0.40 0.20 1 16 OP-98 19 0.20 18.90 0 10 OP-118 19 0.80 18.60 0 0.40 0 0 25 — 19 1.00 18.50 0 26 OP-102 19 1.20 18.40 0 20.4 OP-103 19 0.20 18.90 0 5 OP-104 19 0.80 18.60 0 0.66 0.33 2 23 OP-105 19 0.20 18.90 0 0.26 0.06 1 10 OP-106 19 0 19 0 0.06 0 0 6 OP-109 19 0.60 18.70 0 0.86 0.53 3 12 OP-110 19 2.20 17.90 0 1.25 0.30 2 40.5 OP-111 19 0.20 18.90 0 0.40 0 0 OP-114 19 0.40 18.80 0 OP-112 19 0.20 18.90 0 0.46 0 0 6 OP-116 19 3.00 17.50 0 OP-117 19 1.40 18.30 0 1.00 0.26 3 OP-119 19 0.76 18.62 0 0.44 0.12 2 35 I, IJ, and III under metaphase ashes refer to the average number of univalents, bi- valents, and trivalents per cell. , and M under r anaphase analysis refer to the average number of lagging chromo cannes: eerie number of inversion bridges and maximum number of inversion bridges per cell. what extent asynaptic genes influence pairing relationships. Environmen- tal factors are also known to cause asynapsis. Two classes of genetic dissimilarity of the chromosomes are recognized. The first, which is purely genic and presumably arises through gene mutation, is usually not assigned a large role in asynapsis. The second type of dissimilarity is structural and is brought about by rearrange- ments of genic material within the chromosome. It is usually assumed that this type of dissimilarity plays the major role in asynapsis 1943 J SMITH, CYTOLOGY AND SPECIATION IN POPULUS 293 Darlington (1937) discusses the classification of hybrids at some length, dividing them into seven classes: numerical, structural, undefined struc- tural, complex, polyploid, numerical-structural, and Mendelian hybrids. Under this classification the interspecific hybrids in Populus considered here would be placed in the undefined structural hybrid class, these “ . . resulting from the union of gametes dissimilar as a result of changes which cannot be defined . . . simply because the structural differences between their chromosomes are too slight or too numerous to be detected.” The undefined structural hybrids are further broken down into those which show potentially complete pairing at metaphase I, those which show partial pairing, and those which have a potentially complete failure of pairing. Evidently the interspecific hybrids of Populus investigated thus far might be placed in the first two groups, although the larger number belongs to the second, for these hybrids show a partial and always variable pairing. Numerous examples may be cited for each of the hybrid classes listed above. Among the undefined structural hybrids which show potentially complete pairing are Salix viminalis *« S. caprea (Haakanson, 1929), Platanus orientalis * P. occidentalis (Sax, 1933), and Catalpa bignonioides x C. ovata (Smith, 1941). The hybrids Viola arvensis & V. rothmagensis (Clausen, 1931) and Ribes nigrum R. Grossularia (Meurman, 1928) are examples of undefined structural hybrids which show partial pairing. By the cytological examination of the interspecific hybrids from pachy- tene stage of prophase onward it is possible to demonstrate that a vary- ing number of bivalents and univalents are present (Figs. 1, 18, 21). Within a single hybrid the number of univalents present per cell at metaphase I may vary from none to thirty-eight (Figs. 78, 19, 21). Con- sidering the hybrids studied as a whole, the number of normal cells, normal in the sense that they contained nineteen bivalent chromosomes at metaphase I, varied from four to ninety-six per cent, with an average of fifty-three per cent. Univalent chromosomes were present in varying numbers in all the hybrids examined. Usually these univalents lie on either side of the metaphase plate (Fig. 18), come onto the plate after the bivalent: chromo- somes have divided, and then divide (Fig. 21). There is some evidence that some univalent chromosomes do not divide at anaphase I but go to the poles without lagging or dividing. On the basis of an examination of five hundred each of metaphase I and anaphase I figures (twenty-five each of twenty hybrids), it was found that more univalents were present at metaphase I than appeared as lagging univalents at anaphase I. The average was 1.65 univalents at metaphase I as compared to 0.96 univalents at anaphase I. Since no univalent chromosomes were observed dividing at anaphase II it seems likely that those univalent chromosomes which did not divide at anaphase I behave in a normal manner at the following division. After dividing, the lagging univalents may or may not reach the poles 294 JOURNAL OF THE ARNOLD ARBORETUM [VOL. XXIV TABLE 9. A COMPARISON OF SUPERNUMERARY SPORES AND UNIVALENT CHROMOSOMES IN SPECIES AND HYBRIDS OF POPULUS. Species or Univalents Supernumerary hybrid | spores per cell P. deltoides 0 0 P. alba (diploid) 0 0 P. nigra 0 0 P. canadensis var. P. deltoides X 1850 4.92 63 Eugenei P. nigra Artificial Hybrids: OP-67 P. nigra X 1925 1.00 16 P. laurifolia OP-114 P. nigra 1925 0.80 23 P. trichocarpa The failure of chromosome pairing in these hybrids, followed by a loss of chromosomes or unequal distribution of chromosomes to the microspores, results in deficiencies and duplications of entire chromosomes. In the case of deficiencies, at least, this would lead to the sterility of those microspores deficient for one or more chromosomes. The loss of frag- ments of chromosomes through the formation of inversion bridges would also result in deficiencies for parts of chromosomes. Peto (1938) notes that the pollen sterility in the hybrids within the section Leuce compares favorably with the sterility of the parent species. In the case of the hybrids considered here, it seems that the natural hy- brids have an average sterility which is considerably higher than that of the parent species. The artificial hybrids, on the other hand, possess sterilities corresponding to those of the species, ranging from 5—40 per cent with an average of 19.7 per cent. The natural hybrids, however, range from 6-80 per cent with an average of 46.7 per cent pollen sterility. It is known that the mutation rate increases with age (Cartledge and Blakeslee, 1934, and 1935). It might be expected that those physiological changes in the cell which condition this increased mutation rate might cause an increase in susceptibility to environmental influences, and, in addition, that structural changes occurring over a long period of time might accumulate to produce a greater pollen sterility. Certain natural and artificial interspecific hybrids of Populus are compared in Table X. Some of the common meiotic abnormalities found in the interspecific hybrids of Populus have been mentioned. Among these were asynapsis, with subsequent lagging univalent chromosomes at anaphase I and II, and irregularities in cytokinesis within the pollen mother cell which result in dyads, triads, and number of microspores in excess of four. A pre- 1943 ] SMITH, CYTOLOGY AND SPECIATION IN POPULUS 297 TABLE 11. A COMPARISON OF INTERSECTIONAL WITH INTRASECTIONAL CROSSES OF fas AND * CROSS BETWEEN NON-GEOGRAPHICALLY ISOLATED SPECIES H CROSSES BETWEEN GEOGRAPHICALLY ISOLATED SPECIES. Average Average Class of hybrid Number of number number Average hybrids univalents bridges Per cent Metaphase | Anaphase I Sterility Crosses within the section 13 3.22 0.19 37.9 Crosses between sections 7 0.90 0.17 25.0 sses between ally non- scosraphicaly isolated spec 3 5.78 0.14 54.0 cocious furrowing was a common abnormality of this sort. It was not uncommon to find that the furrowing process was well advanced before the completion of the second meiotic division. Muntzing (1936) and van Dillewijn (1940) describe cases of spindle fusion during the meiotic divisions in Populus, which result in microspores with the unreduced number of chromosomes. This is a possible cause for the occurrence of autotriploids within the genus. What appears to be a case of a third division in the pollen mother cell before microspore wall formation is shown in Fig. 22. Four spindles have formed and the thirty-eight chromo- somes present have apparently been distributed to the poles at random. DISCUSSION Cytological and genetical studies of interspecific hybrids have been used by many investigators to establish probable interspecific relation- ships in plants and animals. The cytological study of species hybrids based upon chromosome configurations and sterility counts has been particularly useful, since it can be used as a basis for the determination of the manner in which speciation has taken place. In the one varietal hybrid of Populus studied, P. nigra var. plantierensis (P. nigra var. italica * P. nigra var. betulifolia), the chromosome be- havior and pollen sterility is comparable to that of a pure species. Since Populus has been subdivided into four sections, and since the species within a section resemble one another more than they resemble those of other sections, it might be supposed that intrasectional hybrids would be more easily obtained and would show a lower percentage asynapsis and pollen sterility than intersectional hybrids. Table XI com- pares crosses between and within the sections Tacamahaca and Aegeiros, 298 JOURNAL OF THE ARNOLD ARBORETUM [vOL, XXIV which are perhaps less distinctly set off from one another than from the other sections of the genus. From the table it is clear that there is no significant difference in regard to asynapsis and pollen sterility between crosses within and those between these sections. A glance at Table VI will show that the majority of the crosses are inter- and intrasectional crosses involving species belonging to the two sections Tacamahaca and Aegeiros. This is to be expected, since these two sections contain more species than do the others. Further, the species producing the better timber trees of the genus are placed in these sec- tions. No hybrids are known either within the section Leucoides or be- tween species of this section and those of the other sections of the genus. Interspecific hybrids are known, however, within and between the sec- tions Leuce and the sections Tacamahaca and Aegeiros. Table VI seems to indicate that crosses within the section are more easily obtained than are intersectional crosses (except Tacamahaca and Aegeiros). Heimburger (1940) sees a definite limitation to species hybridization based on genetic affinities which cause crossing to follow a series similar to the series aspens —silver poplars — cottonwoods — balsam poplars. However, Johnson (1939) states that there appears to be little limitation to species hybridi- zation within the genus, as far as artificial hybridization is concerned. A comparison of the cytological behavior of hybrids between geographi- cally isolated species is of interest, inasmuch as it permits a study of the effects of isolation upon speciation over long periods of time. Table XI compares hybrids which result from crossing of geographically isolated species with hybrids resulting from the crossing of non-geographically isolated species, in regard to asynapsis, inversion bridge formation, and pollen sterility. It is apparent that there is no significant difference be- tween the two groups. Species of Populus native to North America cross readily with European and Asiatic species to produce hybrids which are as fertile as those resulting from crosses between native North American species. The term ecospecies, defined by Turesson (1922) as uniform types between which crossing is possible with a relatively high degree of fertility but which commonly are prevented from doing so by isolating barriers, either edaphic or geographical, would seem to apply to species of Populus. An examination of hybrids between certain species reveals a considerable amount of sterility; however, the Fj and backcross gen- erations which have been obtained show a segregation indicative of an exchange of genes between the two species. Species as discrete units can exist as such only by means of some isolat- ing mechanism. Various classifications of these mechanisms have been made (Sax, 1936; Dobzhansky, 1941). In general they may be divided into five classes: edaphic (adaptation to particular local habitats), geo- graphic, physiological (probably genetic, but in this case referring to flowering time), chromosomal (either numerical or structural), and purely genetic. 1943 | SMITH, CYTOLOGY AND SPECIATION IN POPULUS 299 TABLE 12. HABITATS AND BLOOMING TIMES OF CERTAIN SPECIES OF PopuLus WHICH OCCUPY THE SAME GEOGRAPHIC REGION Physiological Edaphic Species blooming time in ecological Arnold Arboretum habitat P. grandidentata April 20/40 Moist sandy soil, gravelly hillsides P. tremuloides April 20/40 Rich moist soil, borders of streams and swamps P. deltoides May 5/40 Low, river-bottomlands P. Tacamahaca May 4/40 Low, often inundated river-bottomlands, wamp borders Considering the three sections of the genus which have been studied, it is clear that artificial hybrids may be made in any direction. The F, hybrids have proved to be relatively fertile. However, at this time in- sufficient data are at hand to determine with certainty the viability of the second generation. It would seem that genetic isolation itself could not i Autotriploid forms of a number of species ‘within the section Leuce have been described. These, though relatively fertile, are unable to preserve their identity. No other polyploid forms are at present known in this genus. Polyploidy (numerical chromosomal isolation) is ruled out as a factor in speciation within this genus. Evidence has been advanced to show that Populus is a derived or secondary polyploid, so polyploidy may have played a part in the ancestral differentiation of the genus. The discovery of inversion bridges in the F, interspecific hybrids and the asynapsis present in most hybrids indicate considerable structural dif- ferentiation of the chromosomes of the different species. But, as in the case of genetic isolation, it does not appear to prevent the crossing of the species or the production of a relatively fertile F, generation. striking example of physiological isolation is found in this genus. The species included within the section Leuce are earlier in blooming time by two to three weeks than are those of the other species of the genus. They are thus definitely set off in nature. This isolation may be over- come artificially (Smith and Nichols, 1941). However, the major factor in isolation of the species of Populus seems to be isolation of a geographic and edaphic nature. Both types are essentially the same, geographic isola- tion being perhaps more complete and on a larger scale than edaphic isolation. The species P. grandidentata, P. tremuloides, P. deltoides, and P. Tacamahaca occupy a somewhat similar area in northeastern United States and the adjoining region of Canada. Table XII summarizes their habitats and blooming times. 300 JOURNAL OF THE ARNOLD ARBORETUM [VOL. XXIV Populus grandidentata and P. tremuloides are set off from the remaining two species by their time of blooming. Presumably they are themselves isolated by edaphic factors, since their habitats differ somewhat. However, the hybrid P. grandidentata < P. tremuloides does occur. Similarly the hybrid & P. Jackii (P. Tacamahaca X P. deltoides) occurs rather frequently, although presumably the parental species are separated by edaphic isolation. A consideration of evidence available would indicate that the first step in speciation in Populus may have been a physiological isolation of a group or groups of species from the general population, since the major geographic groups of Populus species all contain species belonging to the section Leuce. This physiological isolation was in turn followed by geo- graphic and edaphic isolation. The structural-chromosomal differentia- tion which has taken place since that time has been insufficient to pre- vent interspecific hybridization and the production of reasonably fertile hybrids. The slow accumulation of genetic differences through mutation has probably been the major factor in the differentiation of the species of Populus, but apparently these species can exist as discrete units only as a result of physiological isolation, in the case of the section Leuce, and geographic or edaphic isolation in the case of the individual species. ACKNOWLEDGMENTS The writer acknowledges with gratitude the many valuable suggestions and criticisms of Professor Karl Sax, under whose direction this investiga- tion has been carried out. The guidance of Professor Alfred Rehder in the study of the distribution of species of Populus and the occurrence of natural hybrids, and the kindness of Dr. Ernst J. Schreiner, in supplying cytological material of the various artificial hybrids, are gratefully acknowledged. SUMMARY The chromosome numbers of thirty-eight species, varieties, and natural hybrids of Populus have been determined, twelve of which were in con- firmation of previous work by other investigators. All species exist as diploids with an unreduced chromosome number of thirty-eight. In the case of three species, all within the section Leuce, triploid forms with an unreduced chromosome number of fifty-seven exist. The chromosomes of the hybrid P. nigra P. trichocarpa at the pachytene stage of the meiotic prophase vary in length from 30.6 to 8.5 u in length. One group of three and two groups of two chromosomes are of exactly the same length. No heteromorphic chromosome pair which might be interpreted as a sex-chromosome pair has been seen consistently. The occurrence of secondary association of chromosomes has been noted by other workers. Additional evidence for secondary polyploidy is found in the fact that morphological similarities exist among certain groups of chromosomes and that occasional trivalent associations of 1943 ] SMITH, CYTOLOGY AND SPECIATION IN POPULUS 301 chromosomes are found in hybrids and quadrivalent associations in the triploid form of P. alba. The instigation and progress of the meiotic divisions within the catkin are consistent within the species and within the section of the genus. These divisions are regular as a rule, but in a few species a certain amount of asynapsis and abnormal pollen sterility is encountered. This is not inter- preted as due to any genetic dissimilarity between the chromosomes. One chromosome of the complement is invariably associated with the nucleolus at meiotic prophase. In the majority of cases the nucleolus possesses a knob which projects from the point of attachment of the associated chromosome. The triploid form of P. alba shows a varying number of univalent, bivalent, trivalent, and quadrivalent chromosome configurations at meta- phase I. The fact that the pollen sterility of the triploid forms is somewhat less than that to be expected on the basis of univalent formation is ac- credited to the fact that the basic set of chromosomes is triplicated and thus genetic unbalance, due to the loss of whole chromosomes, is less likely to occur. Cytokinesis is of the type usually found in cases of simultaneous pollen cell formation. The process seems to be easily upset in the case of triploid forms and interspecific hybrids of Populus. A study of the development of the male gametophyte from the first microspore division up to the time of fertilization shows this to be typical of the process as found in the Angiosperms. The geographic distribution of the North American species of Populus has been investigated, especially as related to the occurrence of natural hybrids. The natural and artificial hybrids which have been reported are arranged in tabular form to show the extent of crossing within and between sections of the genus. The study of chromosome behavior at meiosis in ten natural and twenty- one artificial interspecific hybrids shows them to be variable in regard to synapsis. They are probably structurally undefined hybrids under Darlington’s classification. It has been demonstrated that the chromo- somes of the different species have been differentiated structurally and that inversion bridges are of relatively frequent occurrence. Pollen sterility within the artificial hybrids is of the same order as that within the parental species, but that of the natural hybrids is somewhat higher. An attempt is made to explain this fact on the basis of an accumulation of structural changes within the chromosomes over the relatively longer period of time these natural hybrids have been in existence as clones. No significant difference in pollen sterility, univalent formation, or inversion S Ww graphically isolated species and non- -geographically isolated species re- veals no significant difference. A review of the isolating mechanisms which may operate in this genus seems to indicate that geographic and edaphic isolation are those which 302 JOURNAL OF THE ARNOLD ARBORETUM [ VOL. XXIV separate the species, although one entire section is set off from the other sections of the genus by a physiological isolation. It seems from the evi- dence available that differentiation of the species of Populus has been low mutation. These species can exist as discrete units, however, only through the operation of geographic, edaphic and, in a few cases, physiological isolation. Genetic and structural-chromosomal isolation plays a relatively minor part in species isolation. LITERATURE CITED Bercstrom, I. (1940). On the progeny of diploid x triploid —. tremula with pie aig to the occurrence of tetraploidy. Hereditas 26: 01. CKB , K. B. (1926). On the occurrence of sex sheamsannlae in fowert ing plants with some suggestions as to their origin. Proc. Int. Congr. Plant Science Ithaca N. Y. - te d J. W. H. Harrison (1924). A areca sy account of the chromosomes and aacte behavior in the Salicaceae. Ann. . 38: 361-378. Ge aesnee S. C. (1937). Ett fynd av jatteasp ia tremula gigas) i Medelpad. CarTLEDGE, J. L. and A. F. erage Rrcalig Mutation i nae by ageing seed as shown by pollen abortion. . Nat. Acad. Sci. 20: 1935). Mutation rate a old Datura seeds. seh 81: 482 CasTETTER, E. F. (1925). Studies on — comparative cytology of the a and biennial varieties of Melilotus alba. Am. Jour. Bot. 12: 270-286. CavanacH, L. M. (1930). Abnormal eer of Populus grandidenta Michx. Proc. te) 116. CHAMBERLAIN, C. J. (1897). Contributions to the life history of Salix. Bot. Gaz. 23: 147-179 CLauseEn, J. (1931). Cyto-genetic and taxonomic investigations in melanium violets. Hereditas 15: 66. Darvincton, C. D. (1937). Recent advances in cytology, 2nd edition, P. Blakiston’s Son and Co. as Philadelphia 37). Chromosome ‘beliavior and structural hybridity in the Tradescantiae II, biped Genet. 35: —280. ———— and A. Morrer, tS Primary and secondary chromosome balance in Pyrus. pa Genet. 22: DiILtewijn, C. VAN narra 1 ake Studien in der Gattung Populus L. DoszHANSKy, T. (1941). Genetics and the origin of species. New York City: Columbia University Press. Ertanson, E. W. and F. J. HermMann (1927). The morphology . cytology of perfect gees in Populus tremuloides Michx. Papers Mich. Aca i. 8: 97-110. Farr, C. (1916). bree of the pollen mother cells of stain Dicotyledons. ma a Gard. 6: 253-317. GraF, J. (1921). Beitrage zur annie der Gattung Populus. Beih. Bot. Central. 4. Haakanson, A. (1929). Die pear onesie in der Kreuzung Salix viminalis x Caprea von Heribert Pe Hereditas 13: Hastincs, G. T. (1918). Some ania sale flowers. Torreya 18: HEIMBURGER, C. nen Report on Poplar hybridization. adr "ails ———— (1940). Report on Poplar hybridization II. Forestry Chronicle 16: 149-160. EITZ, E. (1931). Die Ursache der oe Zahl, Lage, Form und Grosse pflanzlicher Nukleolen. Planta 12: 775 1943 | SMITH, CYTOLOGY AND SPECIATION IN POPULUS 303 Henry A. (1914). The nen production of vigorous trees. and Tech. Inst. Ireland 15: Petre N. M. (1939). ene investigations on the genus Cicer. Ann. Bot. N.S. 271- JOHNSON, oa V. (1939). A nee list ee paige and aes interspecific hybrids in ce American forest-tree genera. . Jour : 411-4 Jounsson, H. (1940). Cytological ae — diplid ne eerie: Pips eee and of crosses beaelies them. Hereditas 26: 32 oe W. J. C. (1931). The aie sain er of chromosomes. Cytologia Jour. Dept. Agric. 3-384. Mc one B. (1934). The relation of a particular eae element to the development se the nucleoli in Zea Mays. Z. Zellforsch 21: 29 Mevurman, O. The chromosome behavior of some ics ene and their relatives with speci reference to the sex chromosomes. Comm. Biol. Soc. Sci. Fenn. 2: 1- a. Cytological studies in the genus Ribes L. Hereditas 11: 289-336. ——— (1933). Chromosome morphology, somatic doubling and secondary asso- ciation in Acer platanoides L. Hereditas 18: 145-173. Munrtzinc, A. (1934). Chromosome fragmentation in a Crepis hybrid. Hereditas 19: 2 (1936). The chromosomes of a giant Populus tremula. Hereditas 21: 383-393 NAKASIMA, G. (1937). Sera studies in some dioecious plants. Cytologia: Fujii. Jub. Vol.: 282-29 Nanor, H. K. (1936). oe ear ee oe secondary association and origin of cultivated rice. Jour. Genet. 33: 36. NEwcomeeEr, E. H. (1938). A ie io growing, staining and making permanent slides of pollen ee es Techn. 13: 89-91. sinc EHLE, H. (19 a eine in - Nature gefundene Gigasform von Populus emula. ee 21: 379- 1938). lees av skogstrad meddkat kromosomtal och Okad ou Svensk. Paperstidning NouarA, - (1924). Experimental studies on pollen of some Salix. Jap. Jour. Bot. 2: 1-3 ee N. (1938). ae studies in Oryzeae and Phalaridese IJ. Further studies in Oryza. Cytologia 9: 307-318. PAUL] RK. (1937): Seana in Tamarindus indica L. Cytologia 8: 48. Peto, F. H. (1938). Cytology of poplar species and natural hybrids. Canad. Jour. Res. 16: 445-455. ReuHp_ER, A. (1940). Manual of cultivated trees and shrubs. 2nd ed. Macmillan Co., ew ae rk. Ricuarpson, M. M. (1936). Structural hybridity in L. Martagon x L. Hansonit. Jour. Genet. 32: 411-450. Sax, K. (1932). The cytological mechanism of crossing over. Jour. Arnold Arb. 33). Species hybrids in Platanus and Campsis. Jour. Arnold Arb. (1936). The cytological analysis of species hybrids. Bot. Review I: Chromosome behavior and nuclear development in Tradescantia. Genetics 22: 523-533 SCHREINER, E. J. and ” B. Stout (1934). Descriptions of ten new hybrid poplars. Bull. Torrey Hot Club 61: 449-460. Seurm, A. G. (1930). A cytological study of Oryza sativa L. Cytologia 2: 1- SmitH, E. C. eal a ie romosome behavior in Catalpa hybrida ae Jour. Arnold Arb. 22: ————- and C. aii (1941). Species hybrids in forest trees. Jour. Arnold Arb. 22: 443-454. 304 JOURNAL OF THE ARNOLD ARBORETUM [vOL, XXIV Smitu, F. H. (1933). The relation of the satellites to the nucleolus in Galtonia candicans. Amer. Jour. Bot. 20: 188-195. Srespins, G. L. Jr. (1938). Cytogenetic — in Paeonia II. The cytology of the diploid species and hybrids. Genetics 23: 83-110. Swanson, C. P. (1940). The ieee of inversions in Tradescantia. Genetics Tesnivnen: G. a 937). The chromosome numbers of two new giant Populus tremula. Bot. Notiser 1937: 285-290. Turesson, G. (1922). The genotypic response of the plant species to the habitat. 50. WetrTstTEIN, W. von (1933). Die Kreuzungsmethode und die Beschreibung von Fy Bastarden bei Populus. Zeitschr. Zuchtung 18: 597-626 DESCRIPTION OF PLATES All drawings are at a magnification of x 2090. PLaTE I Fic. 1. Pachytene stage of meiosis of the hybrid P. nigra x P. trichocarpa. One chromosome is associated with the nucleolus at the junction of the knob and the nucle- olus proper. Failure of synapsis is indicated by arrows. Camera lucida drawing. os nd t Fic. 3. Metaphase of the first microspore division in P. acuminata. Fic. 4. Generative nucleus in the pollen tube of P. laurifolia twelve hours after germination. Fic. Metaphase of the division of the generative nucleus in the pollen tube of P. Lometiolis, Fic. 6. Anaphase of the division of the generative nucleus in the pollen tube of P laurifolia. Fic. 7. Pollen tube showing tube nucleus (at lower end of tube) and pa gametes of P. deltoides. Pate II Fic. 8. Late diakinesis in P. Sargentii. Nineteen bivalent chromosomes present, one of which is associated with the nucleolus. Fic. 9. Metaphase I in P. acuminata, show- F a f alba (diploid), with nineteen bivalent oes Fic . 12. Metaphase rj in P, alba (triploid). Nine univalent, seven bivalent, ten trivalent, me one quadrivalent chromo- somes are present. Fic. 13. Anaphase I in P. laurifolia, showing nineteen els omosomes at each pole. Fic. 14. reine II in P. alba (diploid). Fic. 15. Anaphase I in P. acuminata. Two lagging univalent chromosomes are shown in division Pirate III Fic. 16. Late diakinesis in the hybrid x P. Rasumowskyana x P. caudina, with nineteen bivalent chromosomes present. Fic. 17. Metaphase I in x P. Woobstii show- ing thirty-eight univalent chromosomes. Fic. 18. Metaphase I in P. nigra * P. lauri- nineteen bivalent chromosomes on the plate. Fic. 20. Regular ioe nig P. laurifolia, with nineteen chromosomes at each pole. Fic. ed ee I in P. nigra X P. laurifolia; thirteen univalent chromosomes pti on the plate; irregular distribution of chromosomes to the poles. Fic. 22. A third division bere the pollen mother cell in x P. charkoviensis - P. Piece with a random distribu- tion of the chromosomes to the poles. Fic. Anaphase II in x P. Rasumowskyana x P.caudina. Apparently two lagging chromosome have been lost at the first divi- sion and one is lagging at the second divisio Jour. ARNoLD ARB. VoL. XXIV PLATE J II| 2 CP ¢ wee, | Safe Se eS 7 6 ——— CO CYTOLOGY AND SPECIATION IN PopuLUS Jour. Arnotp Ars. VoL. XXIV PraTeE II CYTOLOGY AND SPECIATION IN POPULUS Jour. ARNOLD ARB. VoL. XXIV PLATE III 16 18 19 “ a i © osctt ° TSS Fh orgee 2! CyTOLOGY AND SPECIATION IN POPULUS Jour. ARNOLD ARB. VoL. XXIV PLATE IV 25 26 28 29 30 3] CYTOLOGY AND SPECIATION IN POPULUS 1943 | SMITH, CYTOLOGY AND SPECIATION IN POPULUS 305 PiaTE IV 4. Early anaphase I in xP. charkoviensis x XP. berolinensis, showing an ae bridge without a visible fragment. Fic. 25. Anaphase I in x P. charko- eae: . . f : vi erolinensis, with an inversion bridge and fragment I na- phase I in XP. char ory bu Re of an inversion brid Fic. 27. Ana ase I in . Rasumowskyana xX P. caudina, showing two inversion P. laurifolia. Tnversion bridge, no fragment. Fic. 30. Late anaphase I in charkoviensis X XP. berolinensis. Pade and fragment. Fic. 31. Unbroken inversion bridge left out in cytoplasm at the first meiotic division in x P. Andrewsii BIOLOGICAL LABORATORIES, Harvarp UNIVERSITY. 306 JOURNAL OF THE ARNOLD ARBORETUM [VOL. XXIV PLANTS OF COAHUILA, EASTERN CHIHUAHUA, AND ADJOINING ZACATECAS AND DURANGO, I IvaAN M. JOHNSTON In this, the first of a projected series of papers, I begin an enumeration and analysis of the vascular flora found on the great arid plateau lying between the Eastern and Western Sierra Madre of northern Mexico. Predominantly a region of Cretaceous calcareous rocks, it contains many broad silty valleys, most of them bolsons, with extensive areas of desert scrub dominated by Larrea and Flourensia, and many scattered limestone mountain ranges, some of which support oak-chaparral on the higher ridges and in their upper canyons, and a few of which are lofty enough for the development of small coniferous forests. Igneous rocks, scattered and local in the eastern half of the plateau, increase in abundance and fre- quency toward the base of the predominantly igneous Western Sierra Madre and prevail in large areas in eastern Chihuahua, where grasslands and grassy hills with liveoaks are the characteristic types of vegetation. The western limit of the region studied extends, roughly, from the area about Lake Guzman, in northwestern Chihuahua, southeast to near Chihuahua City and then southward in an irregular line west of Camargo and Jimenez to include the northern and eastern parts of the State of Chihuahua. Continuing southward, the limit passes west of Mapimi and Torreon to include the northeastern portions of the State of Durango. As the eastern limits of the area, I have followed the eastern boundary of the State of Coahuila. This includes parts of extreme eastern and north- eastern Coahuila which are not parts of the plateau. Since, however, the few collections available from these districts represent a flora which, in large part, has extended up onto the plateau in the east-central parts of Coahuila, it has seemed practical and interesting to include in the cata- logue, at least, records of all the collections available from the entire State of Coahuila. The southern boundary is indefinite; in practice it roughly follows the latitude of the southeastern portion of the State of Coahuila. This includes in our area the northern portions of the State of Zacatecas. The northern limit follows the international boundary. Although the eastern and western limits of the areas studied are roughly natural, the northern and southern limits are not so. The plateau flora treated continues northward from our area into southern New Mexico and into trans-Pecos Texas, with many of its characteristic species reaching southeastern Arizona and the Edwards Plateau and its escarpments in Texas. The Rio Grande is not a floristic boundary. Floristically the Big Bend area of Texas and the mountains along the Rio Grande to the northwest of it have the closest of relations with the area south of the river. Because of the paucity of col- 1943 ] JOHNSTON, PLANTS OF NORTHERN MEXICO, I 307 lections made about our southern limits, little can be said regarding the details of species-distribution in that region. It is clear, however, that a great many species of our area extend south into the extensive desert tracts of northern San Luis Potosi. A goodly number reach their southern limits in the dry valleys of northwestern Hidalgo and some even on the arid plateau of central Mexico, in western Vera Cruz and adjacent Hidalgo and Puebla. In publishing the present enumeration of species I am under no illusion that it approaches a nearly complete listing of all the species actually growing in the area. I shall, in fact, be surprised if it includes seventy-five percent of the total vascular flora. However, it will be vastly more com- plete and very much more detailed than Watson’s enumeration of Edward Palmer’s collections, Proc. Am, Acad. 17: 316-361 (1882) and 18: 96-191 (1883), published sixty years ago, the only listing of the flora to date. The present catalogue is based almost exclusively upon collections available at the Arnold Arboretum and the Gray Herbarium, particularly the latter. These include such classical collections as those of Berlandier, Gregg, Palmer, Pringle, and Purpus, and the less widely distributed recent collections from the area by L. H. Harvey, Harde LeSueur, E. G. Marsh Jr., C. H. Muller, Forrest Shreve, Stephen S. White, F. L. Wynd, F. L. Wynd & C. H. Mueller, and L. R. Stanford, K. L. ‘Retherford & R. D. Northcraft. Reported upon also are the extensive collections made since 1941 by Mr. Robert Stewart in Coahuila and Chihuahua and those made in Coahuila and Chihuahua by Dr. C. H. Muller and me in 1940, and by me alone in 1941. Collections available from the area probably total well over 15,000 specimens. ‘They do not represent, however, a satis- factory sampling of the flora of the whole area. There are available few if any collections from the Laguna District, the valleys of the Rio Florida, Rio Conchos, and Rio Grande, or from that very promising but unexplored large tract of desert country west of Ojinaga and east of the El Paso- Chihuahua City highway. The majority of the species missing from this catalogue will be discovered in these districts. It is recognized that the present catalogue can be only an incomplete preliminary one. I believe, however, that it will be adequate as a basis for a general discussion of the composition and origins of the flora. These general subjects, as well as matters regarding the geography and geology of the terrain, floristic areas, major plant-associations, collectors’ itineraries, etc. will be covered in the concluding numbers of this series of papers. My work on the flora of the intermontane plateau of northern Mexico has been carried on in close cooperation with Dr. Forrest Shreve, of the Desert Laboratory of the Carnegie Institution. One of the objectives of the present catalogue is to supply taxonomic and phytogeographical data for the detailed ecological survey of the intermontane plateau deserts of northern Mexico and adjacent United States being prepared by Dr. Shreve. In furtherance of the work I have had three seasons of field work in the area, in 1938, 1940, and 1941, financed by the Carnegie Institution and the Arnold Arboretum and by a grant from the William F. Milton Fund. 308 JOURNAL OF THE ARNOLD ARBORETUM [VOL. XXIV POLY PODIACEAE by C. A. WEATHERBY Woodsia mexicana Fée, Mém. Fam. Foug. 7: 66. t. 26, f. 3 (1857). Coanvuita: Sierra del Pino, crevices of limestone cliffs just below crest of high ridge Rica, Cafion Madera, scarce in shady rock-crevices in canyon, Stewart 2462. Zacatecas: Concepcion del Oro, in earth in shade of rocks and bushes in elevated canyon, Aug. 1904, Palmer 257. Western Texas to Arizona and south to San Luis Potosi and Vera Cruz. The two Coahuilan collections have the fronds glandular-pubescent be- neath. They belong, accordingly, to the phase of the species described as W. pusilla Fourn. Bull. Soc. Bot. France 27: 329 (1880), which outside our area has been collected in San Luis Potosi and in southern Arizona. In its glandularity this phase suggests W. Plummerae. It has, however, the deeply laciniate indusia characteristic of W. mexicana. Woodsia Plummerae Lemmon, Bot. Gaz. 7: 6 CHIHUAHUA: Wet ledges in the hills northwest Bs i nahie Pringle 455 and 834. Ranging from trans-Pecos Texas (Davis Mts.) to Arizona and south into northern Mexico. Cystopteris fragilis (L.) Bernh. in Schrad. Neu Jour. Bot. 1°: 26. t. 2, f. 9 (1806). CoanvuiLa: Sierra del Carmen, Canon Sentenela, Wynd & Mueller 521. The collection cited is young and poorly developed, but it appears to belong with the Arizona phase of this cosmopolitan species described as subsp. tenutfolia Clute. Dryopteris augescens (Link) C. Chr. var. Lindheimeri (C. Chr.) Broun, Ind. N. 2 (1938). D. normalis C. Fo a Lindheimeri C. Chr. Dansk. Vidensk. Selsk. Skr. Naturv. Afd. 10: 182 (1913). Coanvuita: Sierra Hechiceros, Cafion Indio Felipe, along creek in shady canyon, m Grande west of Las Delicias, by water, scarce, becoming 1 m. tall, Stewart 2797; El Tordillo, western margin of Valle de Delicias frequent in shade near water, Stewart 2870 The largest and most luxuriant fern in our area. It is known from southern Texas (as far east as Houston), Coahuila, Tamaulipas, and San Luis Potosi. Phanerophlebia umbonata Underw. Bull. Torr. Bot. Cl. 26: 211 (1899). Coauutta: Rancho Agua Dulce, wooded canyon on east slope of Sierra San Manuel, Felipe, shade at base of cliffs in deep canyon, Stewart 523, Johnston & Muller 13062. Mountains of Nuevo Leon, Tamaulipas, and Coahuila, and Chisos Mts., Texas. Phanerophlebia auriculata Underw. Bull. Torr. Bot. Cl. 26: 212 (1899). OAHUILA: Sierra Mojada, Cafion Calabasa, fairly common in shade in deep canyon about 100 m. below crest, Stewart 2198. CHimuAnuA: Canyon in Mapula Mts., southwest of Mapula Station, Oct. 1886, Pringle 831 (ISOTYPE). 1943] JOHNSTON, PLANTS OF NORTHERN MEXICO, I 309 Ranging a our area northward in western Chihuahua into Arizona and New Mex Asplenium Palmeri Maxon, Contr. U. S. Nat. Herb. 13: 39 en AHUILA: Mountains 6 mi. east of Saltillo, 1880, Palm 435; San Antonio de los Alamos, under rocks in shaded gulch at base of high ett) ae tuff cliffs, fronds prostrate, rooting at tip, Johnston 8272. CuutuAHUA: Canyons in hills Rorihwest of Chihuahua, Oct. 23, 1885, Pringle 444 Ranging from central Texas to Arizona and south to Central America. Asplenium resiliens Kunze, Linnaea 18: 331 (1844). CoaHutLa: Rancho Agua Dulce, Sierra San Manuel, Wynd & Mueller 351; Sierra n im pf Q oO joe ind io) oO a wn =] oO st) tal wn c B =; > c eis — =) aaa a] 8 ~~ 3 is:) s N ~~ a ae ° uo} oO » Oo pas 3 ° co i=] o bo 3 ae a ' t 2474. Ranging from Pennsylvania, Kansas, and Arizona south along the Andean chain to Argentina (including A. Lealii Alston). Asplenium exiguum Bedd. Ferns So. India t. 146 (1863). CoaHvuILaA: Sierra Madera, Canon — Agua, sparse in rock-crevices in moist anaes wooded canyon, Muller 3251. CHIHUAHUA: Deep shaded damp glen at hea canyon next south of the large central canyon in the Mapula Mts., southwest of ae station, Nov. 4, 1886, Pringle 833. A rare fern known only from scattered stations in Arizona, Sonora, Chihuahua, Coahuila, and Federal District, and from southern India and northern China. Gymnopteris hispida (Mett.) Underw. Our Native apy 6. 84 (1900). Gymnogramma hispida Mett. ex Kuhn, Linnaea 36: 72 Bommeria hispida Underw. Bull. Torr. Bot. Cl. 29: 633 ee Coanuita: Sierra Cruces, Canon Tinaja Blanca, shelter of ledge in open canyon, Johnston & Muller 281. CuraHuanua: Sierra Rica, Cafion adera, common in shaded places in canyon, Stewart 2466; Piramide, base of rock-masses, Johnston 8146; 8 mi. northwest of Cruces, base of tuff cliff, Johnston 7977; Sierra Encinillas, 7 km north of Fierro, among rocks on hillside, Gieware 795; near Chihuahua, Privcie 465. This species ranges from western Texas to Arizona and south into urango. In our area, at least, the species appears to be confined to areas of igneous rocks. Pellaea cardiomorpha Weatherby, as nov. Pteris cordata Cav. Descr. 267 (1802). Pellaea cordata (Cav.) J. Sm. Cat. Kew Ferns 4 (1856), non Fée (1850-52). CoauvuiLa: Sierra del Carmen, Cafion Sentenela, Wynd & Mueller 590. Cut- HUAHUA: Sierra Rica, Canon Madera, scarce in shady rock-crevices in canyon, 310 JOURNAL OF THE ARNOLD ARBORETUM [VOL. XXIV Stewart 2525; hills about 8 mi. northeast of Chihuahua, Oct. 17, 1885, Pringle 448. ZACATECAS: Pico de Teira, southwest of Cedros, Sept. 1908, Lloyd 247 (US). The new name for this species, P. cardiomorpha, is put forward with some diffidence. Pellaea cordata (Cav.) J. Sm. is definitely illegitimate, but, following Hooker, most authors have regarded P. sagittata (Cav.) Link as synonymous with it. If this be correct, the name P. sagittata, which is quite clear under Pellaea, should be taken up. But the material at hand indicates that the two species proposed by Cavanilles really differ in several characters, most of which, as Hooker long ago pointed out in regard to some of them, are not as constant as one could wish, but which, taken together, seem to give adequate grounds for separation. I have accordingly preferred to coin a new name in place of P. cordata, which has no indubitable synonym. The two species may be distinguished as follows: Rhizome- scales bright brown in mass (contrasting with those of bud and stipe), atte or obtusely triangular in outline, especially so as seen from the commisural face, averaging about 50 pw in Sincwier bicpergaed eigts a ass Geercisatels sfea'are Pellaea cardiomorpha. Rhizome-scales pale brown, not contrasting with those of bud and stipe, mostly rather globose or the larger broadly ellipsoid, varying considerably e size, 65-80 u, commonly AbOUE 75 Us cers ga cance 54a-9t ous ae naw ies negae eds Pellaea sagittata. In addition to the above enumerated characters, the pinnae of P. cardio- morpha tend to stand at a broad angle to the rachis, those of the fertile fronds of P. sagittata to be more or less strongly ascending. In both, the lower leaf-surface may be either glabrous or pubescent with white hairs. In mature and well developed material the spore-characters hold con- sistently. As here defined, P. cardiomorpha becomes a species mainly of northern and central Mexico, extending north to the Davis Mts., Texas, and south in eastern Mexico to Hidalgo, Michoacan, and Gaznia,. Pellaca sagittata ranges from San Luis Potosi and Zacatecas south to Guatemala and south- ward along the Andes to Bolivia. Pellaea intermedia Mett. ex Kuhn, Linnaea 36: 84 (1869). CoaHuILA: Sierra del Pino, Cafon Ybarra, arroyo banks, Stewart 1821; Sierra Alamos, about shaded tuff cliffs, Taknston & Muller 859 and 900; ado 1880, Palmer 1426; Carneros Pass area, 1880, Palmer 1427; 4 km. east of Fraile, Stanford et al. 354; Sierra Negras, 9 km. south of Parras, Stankoed et al. 161. CHIHUAHUA: Sierra Santa Eulalia, limestone ledges, Pringle 461. ZacaTEcAs: Mountain 18 km. west of Concepcion del Oro, Stanford et al. 576; Cedros, ravines, Lloyd & Kirkwood 135. Ranging from trans-Pecos Texas to Arizona and south into our area and eastward into the mountains of Nuevo Leon. The type of P. intermedia is the rare glabrous phase of the species. Our plants belong to the common forma pubescens (Mett. ex Kuhn) Broun. 1943 ] JOHNSTON, PLANTS OF NORTHERN MEXICO, I 311 Pellaea ovata (Desv.) thera Contr. Gray Herb. nee 34 (1936). Pellaea flexuosa (Kaulf. ex C. & S.) Link, Fil. Sp. 60 (18 CoaHutiLa: Sierra San Manuel, Rancho Agua Dulce, isis: & Mueller 318; western base of Sierra Guajes 8 km. east of Buena Vista, igneous hillside, not common, Stewart 1467. From central and southern Texas south through eastern Coahuila and the eastern Sierra Madre to Central and South America. Pellaea atropurpurea (L.) Link, Fil. Sp. 59 (1841). ILA: Sierra San Manuel, Rancho Agua Dulce, Wynd & Mueller 358; western base of Sierra del Carmen 8 cae east of Hac. Encantada, shade in canyon, Stewart cliff- ba vices: Stewart 1111; Sierra Mojada, Canon Hidalgo, in shaded canyon below crest, Stewart 1065. CHraHuUAHUA: Sierra Rica, Cafion Madera, rock-crevices in shaded canyon, Stewart 2475. Ranging from Vermont and western South Dakota south to Guatemala. Pellaea Wrightiana Hook. Sp. Fil. 2: 142 (1858). 1rA: Sierra Hechiceros, Rancho E] Tule, about rocks on sunny hillside, Johnston & Muller 1309. CuHrHuAHUA: Sierra Virus one plant on steep rocky east slope 3 mi. east of Rancho Virulento, Johnston 8090 Ranging from central Texas to Baja Cae Apparently a plant of igneous rocks. Pellaea ternifolia (Cav.) Link, Fil. Sp. 59 (1841). CHIHUAHUA: Grassy summits of the Sierra Santa Eulalia, southeast of Santa Eulalia, Nov. 5, ae Pringle 446; cool rocky slopes of mountains near Chihuahua, Oct. 1886, Pringle 9 From es Arizona south along the western Sierra Madre, extending to Peru, Argentina, and northern Chile. Apparently a plant of igneous rocks. Pellaea microphylla Mett. ex Kuhn, Linnaea 36: 86 (1869). CoaHuizta: Sierra San Manuel, Rancho Agua Dulce, Wynd & Mueller 320; Hill- coat Mesa, west of Encantada Ranch, Marsh 1454; high mesa 14 km. northwest of Buena Vista, common on open hillside, Stewart 1435; Sierra Madera, Cafion Charretera, rocky bed of arroyo, abundant, Johnston 8930; Sierra Gavia, under rocks on canyon floor, Johnston 7206; Puerto San Lazaro, scattered on open talus slope, Muller 3079; Sierra del Pino, summit of great western escarpment about 10 mi. north of La Noria, under rocks, Johnston & Muller 552; Sierra del Pino, crest of eastern ridge about 4 mi. Mojada, Cafion Hidalgo, shade in canyon below crest, Stewart 1066; east ede of Valle Acatita, crevices in limestone 2 km. northeast of Parritas, Stewart 2767; margin of 312 JOURNAL OF THE ARNOLD ARBORETUM [VOL. XXIV Valle Delicias, 1 km. northwest of mouth of Canon Blanco, frequent in arroyos, 1136; high northwestern end of Sierra Diablo, rocky hillside, Stewart 986; Sierra Santa Eulalia, limestone hillside, Pringle 440 and 458; pass 19 mi. east of Timeties, limestone hillside, oe 7854. Zacatecas: valley 15 km. west of Concepcion del Oro, Stanford et a Centering in our area and extending eastward into the Sierra Madre of Nuevo Leon, and northward to the south escarpment of the Edwards Plateau and trans-Pecos Texas. Confined to limestone. Notholaena delicatula Maxon & Weatherby, Contr. Gray Herb. 127: 7 (1939). Coanuita: Sierra Madera, Charretera Cafion, steep north slope in conifer forest, on are about 8500 ft. alt., Johnston 9046; Lerios, July 1880, Palmer 1387 (TYPE) ; Carneros Pass area, March 1880, Palmer 1385. Endemic to the mountains of southeastern Coahuila and northern Nuevo Leon. The record from Jalisco, Maxon & Weatherby, 1. c., was caused by an error on one of Pringle’s labels. Though indicated to be from Jalisco, the collection actually came from near Monterey, Nuevo Leon. Notholaena limitanea Maxon, var. mexicana (Maxon) Broun, Ind. No. Am. Ferns 119 (1938). Notholaena limitanea subsp. mexicana Maxon, Amer, Fern Jour. 9: 72 (1919). Coanuita: Sierra Madera, Canon Charretera, on rocks on steep north slope in imu Stanford et al. 107. CHIHUAHUA: Siert ra Santa Eulalia, limestone ledges, Sept. 13, 1885, Pringle 451 (1isoTYPE). ZACATECAS: mountain 18 km. west of Concepcion del Oro, Stanford et al. 574; Cedros, canyons, Kirkwood 140. Ranging from our area into Durango and possibly Tamaulipas. Among the cited collections, Johnston 7269 is exceptionally stout and strict for this variety. It is, however, approached by some individuals of the type collec- tion, and in all technical details, especially the strongly reticulate-rugose spores, it entirely agrees with them Notholaena aurea (Poir.) Desv. Mém. Soc. Linn. Paris @: 219 (1827). VERNACULAR NAMES: Canaguala; Canawala. CoanuiLa: Sierra del Carmen, Canon Sentenela, Wynd & Mueller 511; Mesa Hechiceros, “Cafion Indio ipe, common at base of ae and on talus, Stewart 39 and 135; Sierra Hechiceros, Rancho El Tule, about rocks on arid hillside, Johnston & stone cliff, Johnston 7980; 11 mi. northeast of Camargo, Agua cliff, igen 7896; rocky hills near Chihuahua, Oct. 1885, Pringle 462 Ranging from Texas and Arizona soil to Argentina. Palmer reports 1943 ] JOHNSTON, PLANTS OF NORTHERN MEXICO, I 313 that this fern is sold in the market at Saltillo, a decoction of the plant being taken internally for ‘‘pain in the stomach and for coughs.” Notholaena sinuata (Lag.) Kaulf. Enum. Fil. 135 (1824). VERNACULAR NAMES: Nacahuela; Lengua de Cervo. UILA: Sierra del Carmen, Cafion Sentenela, Wynd & Mueller 510; Sierra 3 km. southwest of Fraile, in arroyo, Stanford et 336; Sierra del Pino, Canon Ybarra, arroyo banks, Stewart 1821a; Sierra Madera, Cafion Charretera, moist ledges, Johnston 9097; Cafion de Jara, east of Socorro, Schroeder 10; ra Cruces, near Santa Elena, shady arroyo, Stewart 292; Picacho de San José, crevices of cliffs, Stewart 1110; Sierras Negras, 9 km. so Otte of Parras, Stanford et al. 203; Picacho de Jimulco, summit, Stanford et al. 105. CutHuaHvua: 11 miles northeast of Beer ee cliff, Johnston 7923. Zacatecas: Cedros, canyons, Lloyd & Kirk- wood 138 South- sa Texas to Arizona and southward in the Andean region to northern Argentina. Notholaena sinuata var. integerrima Hook. Sp. Fil. 5: 108 (1864). Coanumwa: Rancho Agua Dulce, Sierra San Manuel, Wynd & Mueller 321; Sierra Azul, Buena Vista Ranch, July 8, 1938, Marsh 1250; Soledad, 1880, Bane 1402; Saltillo, 1880, Palmer 1401; Buena Vista, 1848, Gregg 297 in pt.; San Antonio de los side Valle Acatita, Stewart 2731 and 2751; Puerto pirigsiens south of Las Dee. on slopes, Stewart 2963; mouth of Cafion Blanco, north end of Valle Delicias, Stewart 2904; Lorenzo de Laguna, rey Palmer 1409, Curauanua: Chihuahua, Pringle 464 in pt. Zacatecas: Mounta 8 km. west of Concepcion del Oro, Stanford et al. 575; cone canyons, Lloyd ood 136 in pt. and 137. Southern Oklahoma (Arbuckle Mts.) and central Texas to southeastern Arizona and southward, mostly along the eastern Sierra Madre, to Vera Cruz. Hooker’s name, NV. sinuata var. integerrima, has very generally been applied to the plant here classified as V. sinuata var. cochisensis. Tha application can no longer be maintained. When he proposed var. Liebmann, Gregg [297] and Seemann [1928]. Of these, only the Lieb- mann specimen is labelled as belonging to the variety. It is a single small frond with oblong, quite entire pinnae, the scales of the lower surface like those of typical NV. sinuata, but those of the upper relatively broad-bladed and persistent as in var. cochisensis. The Seemann material is similar, though much more ample, the sheet containing four complete individuals. herbarium, consists of a detached frond similar to the Liebmann specimen and an entire plant of var. cochisensis. Had Hooker cited this last Gregg specimen particularly or accounted for it in his description, it might have been designated as type and the usual application of his name maintained. 314 JOURNAL OF THE ARNOLD ARBORETUM [VOL. XXIV But one can hardly reconcile his statement “pinnae entire or nearly so’ with var. cochisensis, in which the pinnae, though tiny, show at least one conspicuous lobe. In view of this and of Hooker’s having labelled only the Liebmann specimen, it must be taken as type and the epithet integerrima Pa, accordingly. eld observation and a restudy of material in the Gray Herbarium indi- ms that rather numerous specimens with shallowly lobed pinnae, which have hitherto either been associated with var. cochisensis or regarded as dwarfed individuals of typical N. sinuata, actually belong with var. integerrima, as represented by the Liebmann and Seemann collections. They are lie these collections in their combination of scale-characters, in their small size, and, except for the lobing of the pinnae, in habit. They are accordingly here placed in var. integerrima. So understood, that group becomes a reasonably consistent, if not altogether happily named, variety, intermediate in characters between typical V. sinuata and var. cochisensis, grading into both, and with the mainly Texan and northeast-Mexican range above indicated. In central Mexico, typical N. sinuata also produces a phase with entire pinnae (JN. laevis of authors, not Mart. & Gal.; N. crassifolia Moore & Houlst.; NV. pruinosa Fée). Notholaena sinuata var. cochisensis (Goodding) beeen comb. nov. Notholaena cochisensis Goodding, Muhlenbergia 8: Notholaena sinuata var. crenata Lemmon, Ferns ae Slope 7 (1882), nomen udum Vessueuade NAMES: Canelilla; Doradillo. Between Rancho Santo Domingo and Hac. Piedra Blanca, Wynd ¢ 1410; Sierras Negras, 9 km. south of Parras, Stanford et al. 194; Sierra Jimulco, 11 km. northeast of Timulco, Stanford et al. 42, CuHrauaHua: Sierra Rica, Dec. 1882, Newberry; sovanamrnd adie Palmer 357: pass 19 mi. east of age limestone, mi. north of Gee. haere sandstone. rocks, Johnston 7792. ZACATECAS: Valley 15 km. west sd a del Oro, Stanford et al. 548; Cedros, canyons, Lloyd & Kirk- wood 138 i This is re plant which has long been called NV. stnuata var. integerrima. The three recognizable variants of NV. sinmuata may be distinguished as follows: Pinnae 1 cm. or more long, ovate, commonly subacute and cut 4-—™% to the midrib into 4—6 pairs of oblong lobes; scales of the upper surface of the lamina with narrow central portion or reduced to stellate processes, usually soon deciduous, those of the 1943 ] JOHNSTON, PLANTS OF NORTHERN MEXICO, I 315 ower coe lanceolate, up to 1.5 mm. long; rhizome-scales pectinate-ciliate or SSELMU ALC arcesiiratenat see eeyaae tele, iat etaeres ase s lel nc apenas see a atialay as eneteyerapeRs N. sinuata (typ:cal). Pinnae beers less than 1 cm. long, very obtuse, with 1-3 pairs of broadly ovate lobes or entire; scales of the upper cpa with caer broad central portion, usually persistent till full maturity of the frond. Pinnae oblong, entire or with about : pairs of shallow lobes; scales tn lower surface and rhizome as in the typical variety................0eeceees ar. integerrima. Pinnae subquadrate, nearly or quite as broad as long, with 1 or 2 eaciy 3) pairs of lobes; scales of the lower surface ovate, 0.5 mm. long; rhizome-scales entire OD MEAT VSO erstrcui einen Se. 584s -2y rd 60-8 alae rereeeee peege var. cochisensis. ood many field observers are of the opinion that var. cochisensts should be treated as a distinct species, and their contention has been strengthened by the recent discovery that the variety is poisonous to stock, the typica] form not. Nevertheless, judged by the usual taxonomic evidence, var. cochisensis is so connected min the typical variety, through var. integerrima, that the traditional treatment of it as a variety only is not unreasonably conservative. Notholaena Aschenborniana Klotzsch, Linnaea 20: 417 (1847). Coanvumta: Sierra San Manuel, Wynd & Mueller 337 (US); Sierra Gavia, 5 mi. ) limestone, Stew 2768 on Blanco, Sierra Margaritas, shade of cliffs, Stewart 2915; Sierra Negras, 9 km. south of Parras, Stanford et al. . CHIHUAHUA: Santa Eulalia, limestone feces Pringle 466 and 469 Western Texas to Arizona and south to coded Mexico. ones Schaffneri (Fourn.) Underw. var. Nealleyi (Seaton) Weatherby, comb. Rey tae pete Beaton ex Coulter, Contr. U.S. Nat. Herb. 1: 61 (1890). CoaHuiLta: Moun ‘4 mi. west of Cuatro Cienegas, shaded rock-crevices in small canyon, ae ees Sierra i sheltered on north-facing limestone ledges at Santa Elena, Johnston & Muller 20 The type of V. Nealleyi came from Limpia Canyon, Jeff Davis Co., Texas (Nealley 560). These, at least, are the data accompanying the specimen designated as type in the U. S. Nat. Herb. The poms number has been changed from 894 to 560. As published, the type was said to come from the Chinati Mts. and to be numbered 894. Other sectors of this fern have been made at Goodenough Springs, Val Verde Co., Texas (Nealley 123), and from Barranco de Santa Maria, Zacuapan, Vera Cruz (Purpus 6199). They may be distinguished from typical NV. Schaffnert as follows: Rhizome-scales narrowly linear-attenuate, joa and ee pectinate-ciliate ; median pinnae with 4-6 pairs of free pinnules............ Schaffneri (typical). Rhizome dene linear- subulate, sparsely iv inconspicuously ee -ciliate ; median innae usually with 1-3 pairs of free pinnules......... N. Schaffneri var. Nealle yi. The Noaies and Purpus specimens, mentioned above, are small and 316 JOURNAL OF THE ARNOLD ARBORETUM [VOL. XXIV have passed as immature individuals. The two collections from Coahuila, owever, have fronds up to 22 cm. long and freely soriferous, and are obviously full grown. The characters of the variety are retained even in this mature state. Davenport, Bot. Gaz. 16: 54 (1891), observed that two plants were involved in this species-aggregate, but unfortunately he supposed spar igiede rather small type material to be the same as Nealley’s specimens and gave a new name (N. Schaffnerit var. mexicana) to the typical variety of N. Schafine Notholaena Grayi Davenp. Bull. Torr. Bot. Cl. 7: 50 (1880). CoaHutiLa: Soledad, Sept. 1880, Palmer 1388; San Antonio de los Alamos, under rocks, dry basalt in upper canyon, Johnston & Muller 926. Cuinuanua: Sierra pene rocky hillside 6 km. north of Fierro, common in crevices, igneous rocks, Stewart 790; cliffs of volcanic tuff, 8 mi. northwest of Cruces, Johnston 7984; 11 mi. ail of Camargo, lava cliff, Johnston 7902; 6 mi. west of Piloncillo, lava hillside, Johnston 7880; rocky hills near Chihuahua, Pringle 463 in pt Ranging from Texas and Arizona south through Chihuahua and Sonora to Jalisco. Notholaena aariie ewes Contr. U.S. Nat. Herb. 17: 605 (1916). Coa , Sept. 1880, seul 1389 (ISOTYPE). CHIHUAHUA: Rocky hills near shai rt “il 1885, Palmer 4 Known from Tamaulipas, Ee Chikashia, and Arizona. Notholaena oo (Mart. & Gal.) Hook. Sp. Fil. 5: 110 (1864). OAHUI a Juarez, Sept. 1880, Palmer; Muzquiz, Marsh 351 (US); moun- tains northeast deri Sept. 1880, Palmer 1380; Sierra Gavia, 5 mi. north of Saucillo, under rocks on terrace in canyon, Johnston 7205; gorge just east of Socorro, on cliffs, Johnston 8849; western extremity of Sierra Madera, rig narrow canyon 2 km. northeast of Puertecito, ledges on canyon-wall, Johnston 931 Ranging from Texas and New Mexico south to alan Notholaena neglecta Maxon, Contr. U. S. Nat. Herb. 17: 602 (1916). Coauvumta: San Lorenzo Canyon, 6 mi. southeast of Saltillo, a few plants in narrow arrow canyon m. southeast of Puertecito, ges on canyon-wall, one colony, Johnston 9319a; Sierra pone canyon 5 uthwest of Santa Elena, crevices of shales on shad canyon-wall, local, Johnston & Muller 822; La ica, Sierra 520 (US). CHrmuanHua: Sierra Santa Eulalia, limestone cliffs, Sept. 9, 1885, Pringle 452. Ranging from southeastern Arizona south into Chihuahua and into eastern Coahuila. The collection from the Sierra de la Fragua is an unusually narrow-bladed form with relatively small basal pinnae. Notholaena Standleyi Maxon, Amer. Fern Jour. 5: 1 (1915). Coauvuita: Near Santo Domingo, igneous hill, Wynd & Mueller 467; Saltillo, summit of mountain, shaded crevices of sandstone, May 1898, Palmer 184; Saltillo, 1905, Palmer 754; Carricito, north-facing ledge of lava, Johnston é Muller 163; eastern foothills of Sierra Cruces, vicinity of Santa Elena, shaded rock-crevices, Stewart 347; Sierra Cruces, Canon Tinaja Blanca, hillsides and along arroyo, Stewart 330 and 624, Johnston & Muller 296; base of tuff cliffs 3 mi. northwest of San Antonio 1943] JOHNSTON, PLANTS OF NORTHERN MEXICO, I 317 de los Alamos, Johnston & Muller 857; La Botica, base of Sierra Margaritas, limestone cliffs, Stewart 2893; canyon-mouth, Cafion Blanco, Sierra Margaritas, crevices on slope, Stewart 2907; canyon 6 mi. west of Viesca, Johnston 7744; Picacho de Jimulco, about summit, Stanford et al. 89; San Lorenzo de la Laguna, 1880, Palmer 1379. Cut- HUAHUA: Sierra Rica, Dec. 1882, Newberry; Sierra San Carlos, road to mines, base of limestone cliff at canyon-mouth, Johnston & Muller 37; Serra Encinillas, 7 mi. — Sw —_ — = =] ° a ec a Oo pf n cc ° —- @, a’) 3 p ad gg 7) pa < fp 2h in ~ i=) a = a ~ Ss = NI Co S a Q p i | ° =] ce =) v2) om =) a = aa northwest of Santa Fe, crevices of limestone, common, Stewart 2618. Ranging from Texas and western Oklahoma to Nevada and Arizona and south through western Mexico to central Mexico. ae Greggii (Mett. ex Kuhn) Maxon, Contr. U. S. Nat. Herb. 17: 606 (1916). : Pellaea Greggii Mett. ex Kuhn, Linnaea 36: 86 Allosorus Greggii (Mett. ex Kuhn) Kuntze, Rev. ie 2: 806 (1891). Notholaena Pringlei Davenp. Bull. Torr. Bot. Cl. 13: 132. t. 58 (1886). Cheilanthes Davenportii Domin, Bibl. Bot. 20[Heft 85]: 133 (1915). Coauutmta: Monclova, Aug. , Palmer 1383; 10 mi. north of Cuatro Cienegas, Wynd 747; Lomas del Aparejo, ae side of Tine de Guaje, dry limestone ledges on sunny hillGdes Johnston & Muller 774; Tanque La Luz, south end of Cafada Oscuro, limestone ledges between gypsum on escarpment, Johnston 8503; Sierra Cruces, limestone ledges near Santa Elena, Johnston & Muller 206; south base of Picacho de San José, in arroyo, confined to gypsum, Johnston & Muller 817; San José, under basaltic rocks on rocky hillside, Johnston & Muller 994; Sierra Planchada, 6 mi. north- east of Esmeralda, limestone ledges on hillside, Johnston & Muller 833; Sierra Mojada, Jones 519 (US); Cerro Zapatero, July 1910, Purpus 4633; El Coyote, eastern margin of Valle Acatita, crevices on slope, Stewart 2743; Rancho Las Uvas, east side Valle a CHIHUAHUA: Sierra Rica, Dec. 1882, Newberry; Sierra Santa Eulalia, dry calcareous ledges and bluffs, April 23, 1885, Pringle 441 (type of N. Pringlei); Sierra a Eulalia, calcareous bluffs, Nov. 15, 1888, Pringle 857; Cation del Coyote, 20 km. north- west of Santa Fe, crevices of limestone, common, Stewart 2614. DuRANGo: Rocks hill Bah als of Mapimi, April 17, 1847, Gregg 467 (1soTYPE of N. Greggii); Lerdo, Cerro el Raymundo, Chaffey 58 in pt. (US) ; 7 mi. southwest of Chocolate, shaded slope, Shreve 9113. This species is practically confined to our area. Outside, it has been found on the northern side of the Rio Grande at the mouth of Boquillas Canyon in Texas. While evidently not confined to it, the species is fre- quently found on or near gypsum. The type of V otholaena Greggit, judg- ing from the date on the type-specimen, was collected near the Durango- Chihuahua state-line northwest of Mapimi, between Jaralito and Arroyo de Cerro Gordo. Notholaena bey oboe Maxon, Proc. Biol. Soc. Wash. 18: 205 (1905). CoaHutILa: Western base of Picacho del Fuste, ees ee mountain-side, com- mon on all gypsum beds and confined to them, Johnston 8354; south end of Canada clu 8. Mulle er 243; Rancho del Covote, eastern margin of ‘Valle pons crevices on gypsum, common, Stewart 2732. 318 JOURNAL OF THE ARNOLD ARBORETUM [ VOL. XXIV Outside of our area this fern is known only from the type-collection, made by Pringle in the mountains of southern Nuevo Leon, 15-20 miles south of Doctor Arroyo. The plant appears to be a marked gypsophile. In the Sierra Cruces, near El Fuste, and in Cafiada Oscuro, the plant was abundant and luxuriating on gypsum and confined to that substratum. It forms dense clumps which may become as much as a meter in diameter. Cheilanthes alabamensis (Buckl.) Kunze, Linnaea 20: 4 (1847). Coanutta: Rancho Agua Dulce, wooded canyon on east slope of Sierra San Manuel, Wynd & Mueller 377; ravine near Puerto Santa Anna, Hac. Mariposa, Wynd & Mueller 219; Sierra Guajes, Cafion Milagro, faces of cliffs, Stewart 1714; Caracol Mts., 1880, Palmer 1419; Soledad, Sept. 1880, Palmer 1420; Saltillo, shaded clay bank in ia arroyo, 1898, Palmer 366 in pt.; Saltillo, Sierra del Pueblo, moist rock crevices near ground, 1904, Palmer 433 in pt.; San Lorenzo Canyon, 6 mi. southeast of Saltillo, shaded places about tuff cliffs, Johnston & Muller 894. Cumauanva: Sierra Almagre, about rocks in deep shaded canyon, Johnston & Muller 1193; Sierra Santa Eulalia, shaded places, Nov. 2, 1885, Pringle 449. This fern ranges from Virginia to Florida, west to Missouri and Arizona, and south into Nuevo Leon, Coahuila, and Chihuahua. —. i raaneacaciaaki (Desv.) Maxon ex Weatherby, Contr. Gray Herb. 114: 4 (19 aye NAME: Sanguinaria. Saltillo, shaded clay bank in deep arroyo, 1898, Palmer 366 in pt chased in market un name ‘“‘Sanguinaria,”’ Sept. 1898, Pal 368; mountains 6 mi east of Saltillo, 1880, Palmer 1418; base of mountains southeast of Saltillo, road to Diamante Pass,, Johnston 7268; San Lorenzo Canyon, southeast of Saltillo Hidalgo, shade in canyon below crest, common, Stewart 1067; Sierra Negras, 9 km. south of Parras, Stanford et al. 209. Cuimuanua: Sierra Almagre, under rocks on shaded canyon-floor, Johnston & Muller 1152; Sierra Santa Eulalia, shaded places, Nov. 2, 1885, Pringle 449. Zacatecas: Mountain 18 km. west of Concepcion del Oro, Stanford et al. 573; Cedros, Lloyd 125 Entering our area from the south and southeast, extending north from Guatemala through eastern Mexico and reaching its northern limit in Coahuila and Chihuahua, where it grows with the related C. alabamensis and, at times, is separated with difficulty from that more northerly ranging species. Palmer reports that small bunches of this fern are sold in the market at Saltillo under the name “Sanguinaria,” a decoction of the plant being drunk ‘‘to purify the blood.” Cheilanthes aemula Maxon, Contr. U.S. Nat. Herb. 10: 495 (1908). Coanuta: Sierra Guajes, Cafion Milagro, on cliffs, not common, Stewart 1710; 1943 | JOHNSTON, PLANTS OF NORTHERN MEXICO, I 319 Mt. Caracol, 1880, yess neces Sierra Hechiceros, Canon Indio Felipe, base of talus- slope, not common, Stewart 155. Ranging con ae (escarpment of Edwards Plateau) south through eastern Coahuila and the Sierra Madre of Nuevo Leon and Tamaulipas to eastern San Luis Potosi. Cheilanthes horridula Maxon, Amer. Fern. Jour. 8: 94 (1918). Cheilanthes aspera Hook. Sp. Fil. 2: 111. t. 108a (1852), non Kaulf. (1831). CoaHuILa: Mountains 24 mi. northeast of Monclova, 1880, Palmer 1422; hillside 2 mi. west of Sacramento, road to Cuatro Cienegas, Johnston 7092; Sierra Gavia, 5 mi. north of Saucillo, under rocks on slope, Johnston 7207; Saltillo, Sierra del Pueblo, crevices, 1904, Palm mer 433 in pt.; General Cepeda, high bluff, Palmer 326 in pt. Picachos Colorados, under rocks below cliffs, Johnston & Muller 112; near Sante Elena, Sierra Cruces, limestone ledges, Johnston & Muller 204; south hace of Picacho de San , dry arroyo bank near gypsum exposures, Johnston & Mudler 816; open limestone can west of Viesca, Johnston 7743; Las Uvas, east side Valle Acatita, sb acid heed 2697. CHIHUAHUA: Bachimba Canyon, rocky hills, Oct. 31, 1885, Pringle 447 mi. northeast of Camargo, lava cliff, Johnston 7903a. DURANGO: 23 mi. north of ene under sandstone rocks on slope, Johnston 7793; Raymundo Hill, Lerdo, alt. 1650 m., Nov. 25, 1911, Chaffey 58 in pt. A local and rather + are ica ranging from central Texas to south- western New Mexico and Durango. Cheilanthes moncloviensis Baker, Ann, Bot. 5: 210 (1891). CoaHvuILaA: Soledad, Sept. 1880, Palmer 1378 (1soTYPE). Known also from Puebla. Cheilanthes Wrightii Hook. Sp. Fil. 2: 87. t. 71/0a (1852). OAHUILA: Near Santo Domingo, igneous hill, Wynd & Mueller 472; Sierra Cruces, Canon Tinaja Blanca, common among grass on sunny open gravelly terrace in upper canyon, Johnston & Muller 288; Sierra Cruces, crest north of Puerto Bajito at head of Canon Tinaja Blanca, common on grassy sunny rocky slope, Stewart 1949. CHIHUAHUA: Sierra Virulento, about rocks on crest of ridge, Johnston 8073; 8 mi. northwest of Cruces, sandstone cliff, Johnston 7985; Sierra Encinillas, 6 mi. north of Fierro, among rocks on hillside, errs common, Stewart 794; rocky hills northwest of Chihuahua, Oct. 7, 1885, Pringle 445; 11 mi. northeast of Camargo, about lava cliff, Johnston 7903. Arizona to Texas and south to Durango. In our area the species is con- fined to areas with igneous rocks and frequently grows with short grass on sunny gravelly terraces and slopes. Cheilanthes meifolia D. C. Eaton, Proc. Am. Acad. 18: 185 (1883). CoaHumLa: Rancho Agua Dulce, wooded canyon on eastern slope of Sierra San Manuel, Wynd & Mueller 350. Known also from Nuevo Leon, Tamaulipas, and San Luis Potosi. Cheilanthes Feei Moore, Ind. Fil. p. xxxviii (1857). CoauuiLa: Canon Chojo Grande, 27 mi. southeast of Saltillo, growing out of small hole in an exposed rock at base of canyon, 1904, Palmer 374; Saltillo, exposed rocks, 1904, Palmer 432; Puerto Colorado, faces of sandstone eae ee 8693; San José, crevices of north-facing basalt crags on slope, fronds flat against rock, on dry cliff of volcanic rock, fronds geeky appressed seanict rock, Johnston & Muller 1203: Widely distributed in western United States and extending south into adjacent Mexico. 320 JOURNAL OF THE ARNOLD ARBORETUM [VOL. XXIV Cheilanthes tomentosa Link, Hort Berol. 2: 42 (1833). Coauuita: Sierra Hechiceros, Cafon Indio Felipe, about rocks in deep wooded eanyon, Stewart 130 and 137, Johnston & Muller 1363; Rancho Agua Dulce, Sierra San , dry arroyos, Wynd & Mueller 337. CurauAnvua: Chihuahua, northwestern hills, Oct. 23, 1885, Pringle. Ranging from Virginia and Georgia west to Arkansas and Arizona, and south into northern Mexico. Cheilanthes castanea Maxon, Proc. Biol. Soc. Wash. 32: 111 (1919). CoanutLa: Sierra Guajes, Cafon Milagro, on os not common, Stewart 1711; Soledad, 1880, Palmer 1390 in pt.; Caracol Mt., 1880, _Palmer 1391 in pt.; Saltillo, r. Carneros Pass, ledges, Piste 2777; Carneros Pass area, 1880, Palmer 1390 (ISOTYPE) ; Sierra del Pino, La Noria, shady bushy arroyo-bank, Johnston & Muller 477; Sierra Jimulco, Stanford et al. 43. ZACATECAS: Concepcion del Oro, high up in canyon in shady moist places, 1904, Palmer 260 in pt.; Concepcion ~ ia 1902, Palmer 388; mountain 18 km. west of Concepcion del Oro, Stanford et a Ranging from Texas to Arizona and south to ene and Hidalgo. Cheilanthes Eatoni Baker, Syn. Fil. 140 (1867). Coanutta: Soledad, 1880, Palmer 1394, 1395, 1396; east of La Rosa, Wynd & Mueller 43; hills near Teen shaded clay bank in deep arroyo, 1898, Palmer 367 ; e of mountains southeast of ans road to Diamante Pass, limestone ledge, John nite n & Muller 1308; Sierra Pechicerns. Cafion Indio Felipe, base of cliffs, ee Muller 162; Sierra del Pino, Cafion Ybarra, dry hillside, Stewart 1875; Sierra del Pino, under rocks on ridge- crest 4 mi. northeast of La Noria, Johnston & Muller 653; Sierra Picacho de San José, crevices of cliffs, Stewart 1112;*San José, about basalt crags on paaritige Johnston & Muller 980; San Antonio de los Alamos, under pe lava rocks in pen upper re Johnston & Muller 903; Sierra Negras, 9 km. south of Parras, pr arie et al, in pt.; ag ra de Parras, July 1910, a ae CHIHUAHUA: Sierra Santa Sie Oct. 27, 1885, Pringle; rocky hills near Chihuahua, Oct. 1885, Pringle ee in raed Meoqui, LeSueur 1147. Zacatecas: Cedros, canyons, Lloyd & Kirkwood 1 ice gore Oklahoma and Texas west to Arizona and south to Durango and San Luis Potosi. Cheilanthes jamaicensis Maxon, Contr. U. S. Nat. Herb. 24: 51 (1922). Coanutta: Sierra de la Gloria, March 4, 1939, Marsh 1964; Sierra Madera, Canon del Agua, abundant in rock-crevices in moist densely wooded canyon, Muller 3252; mountains 6 mi. east of Saltillo, 1880, Palmer 1418 in pt Here first reported from Mexico; previously known only from Jamaica and from Santo Domingo (var. domingensis C. Chr.). The geographical distribution of the species is unusual; one would not, off hand, expect a local West Indian species to appear, apparently just as locally, in the mountains 1943] JOHNSTON, PLANTS OF NORTHERN MEXICO, I 321 of northeastern Mexico. However, this is not unprecedented; C. notho- laenoides, though much more common than C. jamaicensis in the Mexican highlands, similarly occurs in Jamaica and Hispaniola. Since its nearest relatives are Cordilleran, C. jamaicensis, in spite of its rarity on the main- land, may reasonably be classed with those continental species which have outlying stations in the West Indies. Cheilanthes myriophylla Desv. Berl. Mag. 5: 328 (1811). CuIHvuAHUA: Hills northwest of Chihuahua, cool cliffs, Oct. 16, 1886, Pringle 829 ZACATECAS: Concepcion del Oro, shaded moist places among rocks and bushes high in canyon, Aug. 1904, Palmer 260 in pt. and 25 Ranging from our area to Durango and San Luis Potosi and along the Andes to Chile and Argentina. Differing from C. villosa in having the upper surface of the fronds glabrous (rather than bearing coarse hairs) and scales of the lower surface fibrillose Cheilanthes villosa Davenp. Cat. Davenport Herb. Suppl. 45 (1883). Cc A: Sierra Guajes, Canon Milagro, on cliffs, not common, Tider 1709; basalt hill, Johnston & Muller 979; San Antonio de los Alamos, under basalt rocks in open canyon, Johnston & Muller 904; La Botica, limestone cliffs, scarce, Stewart 2895; Bieras Negras, 9 km. south of Parras, Stanford et al. 202 in pt.; Picacho de Finules: summit, Stanford et al. 106 in pt.; Jimulco, April 28, 1885, Pringle. CHIHUAHUA: Sierra Rica, Dec. 1882, Newberry; 8 mi. northwest of Garces: about tuff cliff, dicate 7978, Sierra Saiite Eulalia, April 6, 1885, Pringle; Sierra Santa Eulalia, Nov. 2, 1885, Pringle 459; hills west of Chihuahua, about head of aqueduct, May 8, 1885, Sas Ranging from trans-Pecos Texas (Davis Mts.) to southern Arizona, and south into our area. Cheilanthes Lindheimeri Hook. Sp. Fil. 2: 101. t. 07a (1858). CHIHUAHUA: 1 mi. west of Poza de Villa, under rocks on small igneous hill, Johnston & Muller 1386; 3 mi. south of Piramide, terrace along rocky arroyo, under rocks, Johnston 8113; 11 mi. northeast of Camargo, lava cliff, Johnston 7924; Chihuahua, rock-crevices, shady riverbank, 1908, Palmer 358 Texas to Arizona and south to Sonora, Durango, and San Luis Potosi. In our region found only in areas of igneous rock. Cheilanthes lendigera (Cav.) Sw. Syn. Fil. 128, 328 (1806). CHIHUAHUA: Mapula Mts., southwest of Mapula station, central canyon on shaded — a cool cliffs, Oct. 21, 1886, Pringle 828 and 835. exas (Chisos Mts.); Arizona — along the western Sierra Madre, Penver northwestern South Ameri Cheilanthes mexicana mee Bull. Torr. Bot. Cl. 15: 227 (1888). CH :-. Portrer aM Sierra gee Eulalia, northeast of eae station, verge ce a ae cliff near hie ummit, Oct. 12, 1886, Pringle 827 (Typ Only the type epee seen. re gh, in eeanne ie species, Davenport compared it with C. viscida and C. Parishii, it is much more 322 JOURNAL OF THE ARNOLD ARBORETUM [VOL. XXIV closely related to C. lendigera and C. Schaffneri Moore (Myriopteris rufa Fée, non C. rufa Don; C. cinnamomea D. C. Eaton). From the former it differs in its compact habit, smaller pinnules, and nearly rudimentary indusium. There seem to be no very satisfactory characters whereby to separate it from the latter as represented by Schaffner 911 and 914, from San Luis Potosi, referred to C. cinnamomea by Eaton; more material may show that C. mexicana should be reduced to synonymy under C. Schaffneri. Cheilanthes pyramidalis Fée, Mém. Foug. 7: 38. t. 25, f. 3 (1857). IHUAHUA: Mapula Mts., large central canyon southwest of Mapula station, cool rocky slopes, Oct. 1886, Pringle 832. Previous students of ferns have usually treated C. pyramidalis as a syno- nym of C. marginata; even Fournier treated it as only varietally distinct. It is not a very strong species. True C. marginata of South America, how- ever, has a broadly deltoid lamina, ovate to short-linear ultimate segments, and ‘strongly ciliate indusia rey are usually decurrent on the rachillae. Cheilanthes pyramidalis of Mexico is distinguishable by its narrowly deltoid to deltoid-lanceolate lamina and its strong tendency to develop elongate-linear ultimate segments. There is much variation in the degree of ciliation and decurrence of the indusium (in Fée’s type, as he figures it, it is strongly ciliate but not at all decurrent), but it is always somewhat ciliate. The species has been collected in the western states of Mexico and in Vera Cruz and Guatemala, and apparently it reappears in Venezuela (Fendler 90). The geographic relationship between C. pyramidalis and C. marginata is not unlike that between Notholaena nivea and N. incana. At its extreme northern limit, C. pyramidalis passes into var. arizonica (Maxon) Broun, characterized by its slender habit, deltoid-ovate lamina, elliptical to oblanceolate ial segments, and merely papillate-denticu- late, non-decurrent indusi Pringle’s collection (832) from the Mapula Mts. does not have the elongate segments of typical C. pyramidalis, but it does possess relatively narrow fronds and ciliate, more or less decurrent indusia, and therefore it is referred to the typical variety rather than to var. arizonica. Maxon, Amer. Fern Jour. 8: 117 (1918), cites Pringle 1442 as intermediate a characters. There are two sheets of this collection in the Gray Herbarium, containing three individuals, two of which are very good C. pyramidalis. The third, though suggesting the variety, has the relatively narrow frond of the typical form, and the indusia, though only weakly decurrent, are definitely ciliate. Cheilanthes Kaulfussii Kunze, Linnaea 13: 145 (1839). Cuinvuanvua: Rocky hills northwest of Chihuahua, at base of cliffs in shade, Pringle 457 and 826 Ranging from Central America north to Nuevo Leon, Durango, and Chihuahua; trans-Pecos Texas (Davis and Chisos Mts.). Cheilanthes leucopoda Link, Fil. Sp. 66 (1841). Coanurta: Sierra Jimulco, 11 km. northeast of Jimulco, Stanford ¢ et al, 82; steep open north canyon, 6 mi. west of Viesca, Johnston 7745, CHIHUAHUA Sierra Santa 1943 | JOHNSTON, PLANTS OF NORTHERN MEXICO, I 323 Eulalia, in soil about pian a Pringle 442. DurRaNco: 7 mi. southwest of Choco- late, shaded slope, Shreve From our area ranging hut in Durango, reaching San Luis Potosi. It extends north to the southern escarpment of the Edwards Plateau in Texas. Adiantum Capillus-Veneris L. Sp. Pl. 1096 (1753). VERNACULAR NAMES: Culantrillo; Silantrillo. Coauutta: Muzquiz, Marsh 1138; Sierra Madera, Canon del Agua, along edge of water in upper canyon, Muller 3249; Cuatro Cienegas, Marsh 2021; Saltillo, 1880, Palmer 1430; Saltillo, shady narrow arroyo, abundant on wet rocks, 1898, Palmer 71 ; Chojo Grande, 27 mi. southeast of Saltillo, common on wet canyon-wall and about waterfall, 1904, Palmer 360; Sierra Hechiceros, Cafion Indio Felipe, along creek and bank by water, Stewart 2801; San Lorenzo de la Laguna, 1880, Palmer 1431. Cut- HUAHUA: Sierra Almagre, Ojo del Almagre, locally common about spring, Johnston & Muller 1210; Chihuahua, moist crevices on shaded river bank, 1908, Palmer 331. ZacaTEcAS: Cedros, Lloyd & Kirkwood 114. Widely distributed in the warmer parts of both hemispheres. Palmer reported that this fern was sold in the market at Saltillo under the name “Silantrillo” and notes that it was ‘‘used to assist menstruations in fe- males.”’ Adiantum tricholepis Fée, Mém. Foug. 8: 72 (1857). Coauuimta: Hac. La Rosita, Wynd & Mueller 296; La Mariposa, Wynd 691. CHIHUAHUA: Sierra Santa Eulalia, age — Pringle; rocky ledges in the hills north- east of Chihuahua, Oct. 10, 1885, Pringle 4: Known from Texas (south pee of the Edwards Plateau), Tamaulipas, Coahuila, Nuevo Leon, Vera Cruz, Yucatan, Morelos, Guerrero, Jalisco, Sinaloa, and Chihuahua. Polypodium peltatum Cav. Descr. 244 (1802 Polypodium polylepis Roem. ex Kunze, rena 13: 131 (1839). Coauuita: Mountain 24 km. northwest of Fraile, on a log, Stanford et al. 413. Ranging northward along the eastern Sierra Madre from central and southern Mexico. Polypodium erythrolepis Weatherby, Contr. Gray Herb. 65: 11 (1922). 11a: Canon Sentenela, Sierra del Carmen, Wynd & Mueller 599 and 610; Sierra del Carmen, Aug. 26, 1936, Marsh 626 (US). CuHiHUAHUA: Portrero Peak, northeast of Mapula station, cold cliffs, Sept. 10, 1886, Pringle 825 (TYPE). Ot ise known from western Chihuahua, adjacent Sonora, and Durango. e above-cited collections from Coahuila, together with one from western Chihuahua (LeSueur 1128), go very far to break down the differences between P. erythrolepis and P. peltatum. In them, the abun- dant, ovate, deeply lacerate-margined scales of the former, which seemed so distinctive when it was proposed, nearly disappear and are replaced by suborbicular ones. The surviving distinctions are: P. erythrolepis, stipe nearly as long as the blade, costa green on the lower surface; P. peltatum, stipe conspicuously shorter than the blade, costa black on lower surface. 324 JOURNAL OF THE ARNOLD ARBORETUM [VOL. XXIV In addition, P. erythrolepis tends to have narrower rhizome-scales with narrower, more definitely erose-serrulate hyaline margins; but this is only a tendency. Furthermore, the collection here cited under P. peltatum (Stanford et al. 413) is also transitional in that the costa, though some- what darker than the leaf-tissue, is green beneath and the orbicular scales of the under surface of the lamina are more or less erose-serrulate. In all probability, P. erythrolepis would best be treated as a variety of P. peltatum Polypodium guttatum Maxon, Contr. U. S. Nat. Herb. 17: 575 (1916). VERNACULAR NAME: Canahuala. CoauuILa: Sierra del Carmen, Canon Sentenela, Wynd & Mueller 553; Sierra Madera, Cafion Charretera, on rocks in moist shaded canyon under oaks at lower edge of pine-belt, Johnston 8985; shady canyon near Saltillo, abundant, 1898, Palmer 65 (ISOTYPE) ; medicinal herb bought in Saltillo market, 1898, Palmer 651%; Carneros Pass area, 1880, Palmer 1373; mountain 25 km. northwest of Fraile, Stanford et al. 371. Ranging from Hidalgo and Guanajuato northward along the eastern Sierra Madre into eastern Coahuila; Oaxaca; Baja California. Palm ports this plant as sold in the market at Saltillo. Infusions are fae as tea and used externally as a remedy for pain in the joints and particularly those of the shoulder. Polypodium plesiosorum Kunze var. Bakeri Davenp. Garden and Forest 4: 556 (1891). CoanuiLa: Sierra de la Gloria, Marsh 1926. Known from Michoacan, Jalisco, and Nuevo Leon. a rage | Facer (L.) Watt, var. Michauxianum Weatherby, Contr. erb. 124: Des HUILA: Sierr on a ae el, Rancho Agua Dulce, Wynd & Mueller 368; Caracol Mts., 1880, Palmer . Saltillo, baggies del Puebla, shaded crevices of detached rocks cit summit, Nov. 3, 1904, Palm Ranging from Mersin. tinue and Missouri southward and through eastern Mexico to Guatemala Polypodium thyssanolepis A. Br. ex Klotzsch, Linnaea 20: 392 (1847). CutHuAHUA: Cold cliffs in rocky hills northeast of Chihuahua, Oct. 26, 1885, Pringle 443 Ranging from southern Arizona to western Texas (Chisos Mts.) and southward to Costa Rica and Andean South America. SCHIZEACEAE by C. A. WEATHERBY Anemia mexicana Klotzsch, Linnaea 18: 526 (1844). CoanvuttaA: Rancho Agua Dulce, Sierra San Manuel, Wynd & Mueller 319; Hac. eiatiey dae near Puerto Santa Anna, Wynd & Mueller 229; Caracol Mt., 1880, Palmer eae from central Texas south to Hidalgo and Morelos. MARSILIACEAE by C. A. WEATHERBY Marsilea Fournieri C. Chr. Ind. Fil. 418 (1906). Marsilea minuta Fourn. Bull. Soc. Bot. France 27: 329 (1880), non L. (1771). 1943 ] JOHNSTON, PLANTS OF NORTHERN MEXICO, I 325 CoanurLa: Cerro de Cypriano, July 1910, Purpus 4525. Curauanua: Wet places near Chihiehus Pringle 1121. The species is also known from San Luis Potosi and Jalisco. The Mexi- can material of Marsilea at hand is scanty and often without fruit or other- wise unsatisfactory; determinations in the genus are therefore tentative and subject to correction. Marsilea mucronata A. Br. Am. Jour. Sci. I. 3:55, f.2 (1847). CoanuiLa: Torreon, 1898, Palmer 467. As Braun has suggested, M. mucronata may be no more than a variety of M. vestita. Baker so treated it, but without making the proper nomen- clatural combination. The two are geographically separated, M. vestitu on the Pacific Slope, 1. mucronata in the high plains and eastern Rockies with outlying stations in the Great Basin. Within these areas the char- acters of pubescence given by Braun, the relatively abundant, long, slender and somewhat spreading hairs of M. vestita, the sparse, short, broad and appressed hairs of M. mucronata, hold so consistently that it seems much more natural to give M. mucronata some recognition than to reduce it out- right to M. vestita, as has commonly been done in recent years. The species ranges from southern Saskatchewan and Alberta south to Texas, New Mexico, and Arizona. Wright (2112) collected the species in low eround near oe Elizario, Texas. It is to be expected elsewhere in the low ground along the Rio Grande at our northern boundary Marsilea sp. Cuinuanua: Pond just east of Organos, growing in water up to a foot deep, blades floating on ey of pond, common, Stewart & Johnston 2048; Rio Conchos near Camargo, White 2244. The two above-cited specimens are sterile. They suggest both M. uncinata and M. mexicana but are not definitely determinable. PSILOTACEAE by C. A. WEATHERBY Psilotum nudum (L.) Griseb. Abh. Ges. Wiss. Gottingen 7: 278 (repr. 130) (1857). CHIHUAHUA: Hills about 8 mi. northeast of Chihuahua, growing from seams of rock in canyon, Oct. 1885, Pringle 450 EQUISETACEAE by C. A. WEATHERBY aie maint A. Br. Am. Jour. Sci. 46: 87 (1844). CoAHUIL uzquiz, Marsh 229 and va Sierra Hechiceros, Cafion del Indio Felipe, aa at edge of creek, scarce, Stewart 3 Widely ranging in the United States ue extending south through Mexico to Guatemala. SELAGINELLACEAE by C. A. WEATHERBY sit aan rupincola Underw. Bull. Torr. Bot. Cl. 25: 129 (1898). Sierra Cruces, Cafion de Tinaja Blanca, ledges of igneous rock, st bf ems Meahine: Towasion & Muller 307. Curavanua: 20 km. north of Chihuahua, vol- 326 JOURNAL OF THE ARNOLD ARBORETUM [VOL. XXIV canic hills, rocky talus at ere = cliff, more or less erect, Stewart & Johnston 2122; Chihuahua, 1908, Palmer 38 in pt.; Sierra Azul, southwest of Mapula, crevices of igneous rock, Pennell 18646 (US) Meoqui, 1936, LeSueur 1146. Arizona and western New Mexico south along the western Sierra Madre to Durango and Guanajuato. A species apparently confined to igneous rocks. Its stems are assurgent to nearly erect and are ascendingly branched. The shoots are symmetrical and equally clothed on all sides by appressed leaves. The leaves are terminated by elongate white setae which form a conspicuous tuft at the end of sterile shoots. Selaginella viridissima Weatherby, sp. nov. Caules graciles, foliis inclusis circa 1 mm. diametro, elongati (ad 15 cm. longi), prostrati tegetem magnam intricatam laxam formantes, parce ramulis plerumque brevibus (1 cm. vel minus longis). Folia uniformia, arcte adpressa, saturate viridia, plana vel leviter convexa, oblongo- me earia, acuta vel obtusiuscula, pler mque 1.6—2 mm. longa, 0.3—0.4 m lata, dorso coins sulcata, seat margine ciliis Soaks 0.1 mm. vel minus longis folii apicem versus ad denticulos reductis praedita. Seta terminalis nulla. Spicae apice caulis ramorumque gestae usque ad 1 cm longae. Sporophylla ovato- deltoidea, acuminata, e basi leviter dilatata subsagittata subabrupte in acuminem longam contracta, convexa, utroque margine crebre minuteque serrulato-ciliolata, 1.8-2 mm. longa, 0.3—0.4 mm. lata, sulcae medianae utroque latere vitta pallida ornata, sine seta terminali 7 pao microsporangia intermixta. Macrospori 0.4—0.45 . diametro, ies dense leviterque reticulato-rugosi. Microspori auran- tect circa 40 uw COAHUILA: er Hes los Osos, west end of Sierra Fragua, 2-3 km. north of Puerto Colorado, forming mats in shaded canyon, Sept. 1, 1941, Johnston 8683 ; Sierra Mojada, Cafion Calabasa, fairly common on shaded cliffs 100 m. below the crest, hanging in mats 1 m. in diameter, Oct. 27, 1941, Stewart 2204 (type, Gray Herb A plant with slender elongate much branched aie a stems forming loose mats. The minute dark green leaves are acute, devoid of setae, and closely appressed to the rather wiry elongate stems. It grows on limestone at the two stations where it has been collected. A pretty species, related to S. extensa and S. Sartorii, from both of which it may be distinguished by its muticous leaves. From S. mutica and its immediate allies, S. viri- dissima differs in its much longer, relatively narrower, and plane leaves. Selaginella macrathera Weatherby, sp. nov. Caules repentes, ad 8 cm. longi, usque ad apicem parce radicantes, foliis inclusis circa 1.5 mm. diametro, bipinnatim crebreque ramosi (spatiis inter ramos ca. 5 mm.). Folia uniformia, laxe adpressa, hang beaten oblongo-linearia, seta exclusa plerumque 1.8-2.2 mm. longa, 30.4 lata, acuta, ventro plana, dorso leviter convexa conspicue nimeedicre sulcata, basi fasciculum pilorum brevium ciliis marginalibus similium margine utroque 10-12 ciliis brevissimis 0.1 mm. vel minus longis apicem folii versus ad denticulos hyalinos reductis ae apice in setam gracilem m. longam scabriusculam desinentia. Spicae ad 1 cm. longae apice caulis Cami ie superiorum gestae. Sporophylla anguste deltoidea, 1.8-2 mm. longa, basi leviter sagittata 0.6—-0.8 mm. lata, valde convexa 1943 ] JOHNSTON, PLANTS OF NORTHERN MEXICO, I 327 vix Carinata, dorso leviter sulcata, oes breviter crebreque serrulato- ciliolata, seta ut in foliis praedit Megasporangia absentia vel pauca unicum visum apicem versus nee gestum. Megaspori visi immaturi leviter, latere altero valde crasseque reticulato-rugosi. Microsporangia multa; microspori aurantiaci, ca. 40 u diametro, irregulariter tuberculati. CuIHvuAHUA: Sierra del Virulento, 2-3 mi. east of Rancho Virulento, ledges on north-facing lava cliffs, common and forming i Aug. 11, 1941, Johnston 8067 (TYPE, Gray Herb.). A plant with creeping stems. The shoots are symmetrical and equally clothed on all sides with appressed leaves bearing a very long white ter- minal seta. In spite of its repent habit, the species apparently belongs to the group of S. rupincola, from all members of which it is distinguished by its combination of very short cilia and very long terminal seta Selaginella habia Hieron. Hedwigia 39: 298 (1900). CoaHuILA: El ens ee 13, 1939, spec 1173 (US); Sierra Gavia, 5 mi. north of Gauci: rock So ohnsion 7208; Sierra San Vicente, Cafion Espantosa, Schroeder 72; Saltillo, ae ea, (US); aera del Pino, 4 mi. northeast of La Noria, ane de ‘cliffs, Sohiaeh 8854; Sierra Mojada, April 19, 1892, Jones 485 (US); 5 km. south of Sierra Mojada, Harvey 1265a. Cuimuafiua: Sierra ‘Almagre, moist limestone ledges in shaded canyon, Johnston & Muller 1192; east slopes of Sierra Santa Eulalia 2 km. north of San Antonio, Harvey 1507. Zacatecas: Cedros, stony hills, Lloyd & Kirkwood 142; Lloyd 20 (US). Ranging from the Edwards Plateau and its escarpments, in Texas, west to southeastern New Mexico, and south through our area and the moun- tains of northeastern Mexico to San Luis Potosi, and possibly to Puebla. The type specimen, Wright 829, was collected June 25, 1849, “on hills near Turkey Creek, on flat rocks slightly covered with earth.” This locality is near the present town of Cline, in western Uvalde County, Texas. The species appears to grow only on limestone. It is a creeping plant carpeting the ground under sheltering rocks or on ledges on north-facing cliffs. The erect fruiting spikes, 1-3 cm. long, are commonly produced in great abundance. The rather firm leaves have a short slightly tawny terminal seta. The leaves tend to be laterally arranged and the shoot is hence somewhat dorsi-ventral. Selaginella Sheldoni Maxon, Proc. Biol. Soc. Wash. 31: 171 (1918). CoanurLa: Picacho de Jimulco, summit, 13 ssi east of Jimulco, Stanford et al. 118, CHtHuaHuA: Chihuahua, 1908, Palmer 38 in Southwestern Oklahoma, central and western Texas, and New Mexico. A creeping species with somewhat dorsi-ventral shoots. The leaves tend to be laterally spreading, and are terminated by a slender elongate white seta. ost of the known stations for the species are in areas of igneous rock. Selaginella Parishii Underw. Bull. Torr. Bot. Cl. 33: 202 (1906). Coauutta: Saltillo, Mil 105 (US); Cerro Vega, west of Saltillo, crevices of sand- 328 JOURNAL OF THE ARNOLD ARBORETUM [VOL. XXIV stone, Pennell 17272 (US); mountains near nae June 1909, Nil (US). ZacaTEcas: Near Concepcion del Oro, sheltered rocky ledges, plant very dark green, 1904, Palmer 306 (IsoTYPE); Tarey Canyon, near Cedros, ie of slate rock, Feb. 7, 1911, Chaffey (US). An endemic species with relatives in sasha Mexico and southwestern United States (cf. Maxon, Smithsonian Misc. Coll. 72: no. 5, p. 4. 1920). A prostrate repent plant ‘with strongly dorsi-ventral shoots. The rather broad and thin acute leaves, without setae, are laterally widely spreading under favorable nani but curve upward and become more or less connivent when The specimens ae associated with the type collection of S. Parishi differ from it somewhat in gross appearance, and at one time they were annotated by Dr. Maxon as constituting a possible new species. In details, however, they are very close to the Palmer isotype; the more conservative course is to leave them in S. Parishii pending a thorough revision of the Mexican species of this group. Selaginella lepidophylla (Hook. & Grev.) Spring, Monog. Lycopod. 2: 72 (1849). VERNACULAR NAMES: Flor de la Pefia; Siempre Viva. Coanutta: Muzquiz-La Mariposa, Dec. 5, 1936, Marsh 1041; Sierra Encantada west of Buena Vista, July 14, 1938, Marsh 1414; 6 mi. north of Hipolito, limestone outcrop on slope, Johnston 7236; La Rosa, dry mountain slope, Wynd & Mueller 45; Picacho del Fuste, north-facing bank of cemented gravels, common, Johnston 8442; one kr of Cafiada Oscuro near Tanque La Luz, steep slopes of escarpment, common on and off gypsum beds, Johnston 8494; west end of Sierra Fragua, Aguaje del Pajarito, anor hie limestone eae Johnston 8806; Cahon Blanco, Sierra Margaritas, open slopes, common, Stewart 2914. CuHimuaHuA: Sierra San Carlos, road to mine, on cliff near parece mouth, Johnston & Muller 41. Zacatecas: Cedros, rocky hills, Kirkwood 134. Western Texas and New Mexico south to southern Mexico. A common plant on north-facing dry rocky slopes and ledges in limestone areas. The plant avoids the direct sun but grows in open situations in which it can only have water available during and for a short time after desert showers. Because it avoids direct sunlight and commonly occurs in abundance only on north-facing situations, it serves as a handy and rather reliable indicator of direction to a traveller in the desert mountains where it flourishes. During most of the year the plant is an inconspicuous brownish ball of brittle inrolled leaves as big as one’s fist. Only after a rain, when the fronds unroll and reveal their green upper surfaces, forming flat bright green rosettes and magically bringing unexpected verdure to gray cliffs and banks, does one realize how common and abundant it is in a region. The plant is a slow growing perennial and probably grows for a good many years. Some old plants have their rosettes lifted as much as 5 cm. above the substratum by the accumulation of half decayed fronds of seasons past. A surprising amount of dirt and gravel collects within the rosette about the base of the old fronds. Selaginella pilifera A. Br. Ind. Sem. Hort. Berol. App. 20 (1857). Selaginella Pringlei Baker, Handb. Fern Allies 88 (1887). 1943 ] JOHNSTON, PLANTS OF NORTHERN MEXICO, I 329 Selaginella pilifera var. Pringleit (Baker) Morton, Amer. Fern Jour. 29: 15 (1939). Coanuira: Yerda Spring, near Muzquiz, Marsh 270; Muzquiz-Mariposa, Marsh 1042; Saltillo, Arséne 10677 and Palmer 321 (US, fide Morton) ; western end of Sierra 8748. CHIHUAHUA: Sierra Santa Eulalia, March 30, 1885, Pringle 211 (isotype of DE en Sierra Almagre, moist shaded limestone cliffs in deep canyon, Johnston & Muller 1 ae Texas and adjacent southeastern New Mexico south to northern Sonora, San Luis Potosi, Nuevo Leon, and northern Tamaulipas. Appar- ently confined to limestones. A plant with habit similar to S. lepidophylla, but with more slender, less rigid stems and paler green, bristle-tipped leaves. In western Coahuila and adjacent Chihuahua it is uncommon and found on sheltered moderately moist cliffs in the oak-belt, and not with Yucca, Dasylirion, Hechtia, Euphorbia antisyphilitica, Notholaena sinuata, etc., the associates of Selaginalla lepidophylla, on the lower and open slopes of the mountains. The type of S. pilifera is given as based on “‘Specimina Texana in mon- tosis ad fluvium Rio Grande infra El Paso uno cum S. lepidophylla a cl. Wright anno 1849 collecta comm. Dr. G. Engelmann.” In the Gray Herbarium there is only a single collection of S. lepidophylla made by Charles Wright during 1849. This is his no. 827, collected from “high rocky bluffs of Devils River, July 22, 1849” in southern Val Verde County, Texas. His field-notes for 1849 have no entry which can be identified as pertaining to another collection of this species. It is possible, therefore, that the type of S. pilifera actually was collected in Val Verde County, Texas, rather than near the Rio Grande (presumably in the Quitman Mts.) below El Paso, as originally stated. Morton has discussed the relationship of S. pilifera and S. Pringlei and has concluded that these two species differ only in trivial details, the former having entire, the latter having minutely serrulate margins on the lateral leaves. Except for the type, all the material he cites as belonging to typical S. pilifera comes from eastern Coahuila, Tamaulipas, and Nuevo eon. The material from trans-Pecos Texas, New Mexico, Chihuahua, and San Luis Potosi he places in the var. Pringlei. Recently, however, Stephen White (522) has collected material in the valley of the Rio Bavispe, in northeastern Sonora, which has distinctly serrulate leaves. Since the characters of leaf-margin are weak at best and are not geographi- cally correlated, it seems best to permit S. Pringlei to subside into synonymy. Z o PINACEAE Pinus cembroides Zucc. Abh. Akad. Wiss. Miinchen 1: 392 (1832). Pinus osteosperma Engelm., in Wislizenus, Mem. Tour Mex. 89 (1848). VERNACULAR NAME: Pifion. Coanvuma: Sierra Encantada, Stewart 1434, Marsh 1358; Sierra Madera, Canon del Agua, Muller 3229; Sierra del P ino, Johnston & Muller 523, Stewart 1243; Sierra Gavia, Wynd & Afiielicy 165, Muller 3064; Sierra San Vicente, Cafion Espantosa, Schroeder 95; 6 mi. east of Saltillo, 1880, Palmer; Chojo Grande near Saltillo, 1905, Palmer 768; Buena Vista, Gregg; Carneros Pass, Pringte 2659 and 4018, Pilner: near 330 JOURNAL OF THE ARNOLD ARBORETUM (VOL. XXIV General pcan on mesa, Pringle 13664; summit of Picacho de Jimulco, oo et al. 10. Curmuanua: Sierra Rica, Stewart 2506; Sierra Diablo, Stewart From aan, ee Mexico, and trans-Pecos Texas pers : Hidalgo. A small tree, usually 5-10 m. tall, commonly growing along arroyo-banks, on ridges, and on steep open slopes, usually associated with Juniperus. In western Coahuila and eastern Chihuahua the tree is seldom abundant in any locality. Pinus sleriores Gordon, Pinetum 204 greet Shaw, Gard. Chron. III. 38: 122. fig. (1905), Pines of Mexico 7. tab. 2 (1909). Pinus latisquama Engelm. Gard. Chron. II. 18: 712. fig. (1882). TUILA: West end of Sierra Fragua just ‘north of Puerto Colorado, abundant, Johnston 8735; Sierras Negras, 9 km. south of Parras, Stanford et al. 148; General Cepeda, Nelson 6140; Carneros Pass, Palmer 1299 in 1880 (type of P. ee Pringle 2293 ‘i 13207A, Shaw. Zacatecas: Pico de Teira, southwest of Cedro 1908, Lloyd 3 This ite swell marked pinyon-pine is known only from scattered sta- tions in our area, and from Hidalgo and the peak of Orizaba in east- central Mexico. In our region it was first collected in March 1880, in the Carneros Pass area by Palmer. His material became the type of Pinus latisquama Engelm. The trees, which rarely become more than 7 m. tall, have a broad rounded crown whose silhouette from a distance is more suggestive of an oak tree than a pine. The ellipsoidal cones, russet when fully ripe, are borne on stalks and at the ends of the long supple brittle pendulous branchlets. The trunk becomes 2—6 dm. thick and commonly branches less than 2 m. above the ground. The bark is grayish, somewhat furrowed on the trunk and smooth on the branches. Where it has been found, the pine grows with scrub oaks and is confined to sheltered slopes and canyons. Pinus Ayacahuite Ehrenb. ex Schlechtend. Linnaea 12: 492 (1838). VERNACULAR NAMES: Acanita; Pinaveta. OAHUILA: Sierra del Carmen, Cafion Sentenela, Wynd & Mueller 630; Sierra del Carmen, Sept. 12, 1936, Marsh 821; Sierra Madera, Muller 3210, Johnston 8998; Carneros area, March 1880, Palmer; sierra 26 km. northwest of Fraile, Stanford et al. 456; General Cepeda, Nelson 6136. I have seen cones for only one of the cited collections, Johnston 8998. This has seeds with the wing at least 10 mm. long. The form of the species growing in the western Sierra Madre, from Arizona to Durango, has the wing on the seeds only a few millimeters in length and has been distinguished from the typical plants under the name var. brachyptera Shaw (= P. strobiformis Engelm.). Some plants from the Sierra Madre of Nuevo Leon (Muller 1244, 2283) also have seeds with very short wings. The variety is probably also represented in Coahuila. The species, with its varieties, ranges from Central America northward along the eastern Sierra Madre into Coahuila and along the western Sierra Madre into Arizona. It commonly attains a height of 15 m. and in favor- able situations may approach 30 m. In Coahuila it associates with Pseudotsuga to form the forests on cool shaded north-slopes in the higher mountains. Along canyons and on open slopes its lower altitudinal limit is several hundred meters above that of Pinus arizonica and about 100 m. below that of Pseudotsuga. 1943 | JOHNSTON, PLANTS OF NORTHERN MEXICO, I 331 Shaw, Pines of Mexico 12 (1909), reports Pinus flexilis from the moun- tains south of General Cepeda upon the basis of Nelson 6136. That speci- men, in my judgment, appears referable to P. Ayacahuite. It has seeds with a broad wing about 8 mm. long, according to Shaw’s manuscript notes. Pinus Greggii Engelm. ex Parlatore in DC. Prodr. 162: 396 (1868) ; Shaw in Sargent, s and Shrubs 2: 53. tab. 124 (1907); Shaw, Pines of Mexico 28. tab. 21 (1909 ‘ CoaHUIL San Antonio de los Alanzanes, abundant, 30-50 ft., ue 31, 1848, Gregg 402 nea. Canon de las Iglesias, near Saltillo, Shaw, Pringle 1 0142. A species known only from the Sierra Madre of Nuevo Leon and adja- cent Coahuila, and perhaps Hidalgo. It is a 3-needle pine with sessile re- flexed long-persistent tardily opening cones 6-12 cm. long. The cones are light colored (usually café au lait) and lustrous. The needles are very slender and 7-10 cm. long. Pinus arizonica Engelm. in Wheeler, Rep. U. S. Geol. Surv. W. of 100th Merid. 6: 260 (1878). VERNACULAR NAMES: Pino; Pino Real. Coanuma: Sierra del Carmen, Cafion Sentenela, Wynd & Mueller 650; Sierra del Carmen, Sept. 12, 1936, Marsh 830; west of Buena Vista [ ?Sierra Encantada], Marsh 2290; Sierra del Pino, Johnston & Muller 446; Sierra Madera, Muller 3208, Johnston 8935; Sierra Gloria, Marsh 1931; Sierra Caracol, 1880, Palmer; Chojo Grande near Saltillo, 1905, Palmer 769; Carneros area, Palmer, Pringle 2826; mountains south of General Cepeda, Shaw, Pringle 10139. Widely distributed and frequently the dominant pine in the eastern Sierra Madre of Nuevo Leon and Tamaulipas, south at least to Miqui- huana and Doctor Arroyo. Also in the Chisos Mts. of Texas, southern New Mexico and Arizona, and northeastern Sonora. In northeastern parts of Mexico this pine has passed mostly as P. Montezumae, P. pseudostrobus, and P. ponderosa. Watson, Proc. Am. Acad. 18: 158 (1883), reported it from Coahuila as P. Montezumae and P. teocote. I am unable to separate the pine of Coahuila and the eastern Sierra Madre from typical P. arizonica of Arizona. Sudworth, Pine Trees of the Rocky Mts. Region, U. S. Dept. Agr. Bull. 460: tab. 16, 17 (1917), gives an excellent illustration of the Arizonan plant. It agrees perfectly with Coahuilan material. In general appearance the Coahuilan plant much resembles forms of Pinus ponderosa growing in the Rocky Mountains. Its bark is the same. It differs from Pinus ponderosa in its somber brownish (rather than russet), more or less asymmetric, frequently stalked cones, weak, non-pungent umbo on the cone-scales, 3—5 needles, usually glaucescent branchlets, and more southern distribution. From P. Montezumae our tree differs in its smaller and pro- portionately broader cones, usually glaucescent branchlets, and northern range. From P. pseudostrobus it differs in its coarser more rigid non- pendulous foliage, more rigid and woody short-stalked or sessile cones, and northern distribution. In northeastern Mexico P. arizonica is to be con- fused only with P. Hartwegii, a tree of high altitudes in the Sierra Madre, which has very coarse loose needle-sheathes, conspicuous long-persistent bud-scales, non-glaucescent branchlets, somewhat thinner less rigid cone- scales, and cones averaging slightly smaller. 332 JOURNAL OF THE ARNOLD ARBORETUM [ VoL. XXIV In Coahuila P. arizonica is probably the most common pine, forming open forests in the open valleys and on the drier slopes and ridges in the higher mountains. From its selections of habitats it appears to be in- tolerant of shade. It commonly grows 10-20 m. tall, with a clear trunk 4—10 dm. thick for a quarter or third of its total height. Pseudotsuga taxifolia (Lam.) Britt. Trans. N. Y. Acad. Sci. 8: 74 (1889). VERNACULAR NAMES: Guayamé; Hallarin. Coanvutta: Sierra del Carmen, Cafion Sentenela, Wynd & Mueller 632; Sierra del Carmen, Sept. 12, 1936, Marsh 822; Sierra Madera, Muller 3221, Johnston 8995; Sierra sloria, Marsh 1885; Carneros area, March 1880, Palmer; mountains 26 km. northwest Growing on slopes and along canyons in cool shaded places in the higher mountains, forming trees 10-30 m. tall. From Hidalgo extending north in the eastern Sierra Madre into our area, and north into the Chisos Mts. of Texas. Widely distributed in western United States. Abies sp. VERNACULAR NAME: Huallame. Vicinity of Carneros Pass, tree 40 ft. tall, 18 inches diameter, et al. 45 The two collections are unaccompanied by cones. They appear to be identical, however, with a very distinct Abies collected, in 1938, by Prof. Maximino Martinez in the Sierra Madre near Santa Catarina, between Monterey and Saltillo. The new species involved will soon be published in Mexico City. The foliage of the present species is not distichous. Its numerous crowded short rigid leaves ascend from all sides of the coarse branchlets in a manner more suggestive of a Picea than an Abies. Its short leaves bear numerous stomates on the flattened or broadly convex upper surface, and their vascular bundles, though clearly juxtaposed, remain distinct for most of their length. The hypoderm seems unusually well thickened under the middle third of the lower leaf-surface. These are all characters which permit the species to be quickly distinguished from A. religiosa, of central Mexico, and from the other, unnamed, Coa- huilan species of the genus, the only Mexican plants to be confused with it. Among the species found in the United States, the present fir most sug- gests A. lasiocarpa. hat northern high altitude species, however, has more pointed less regularly arranged leaves, whose resin-canals are large and distant from the lateral margins of the leaf. I doubt if it has any close relationship with the present Coahuilan species. It may be noted that Palmer’s collection from “the Sierra Madre 40 miles south of Saltillo,” cited as Abies religiosa by Watson, Proc. Am. Acad. 18: 158 (1883), and by Rehder, Jour. Arnold Arb. 20: 283 (1939), is identical with the Palmer collection which I have cited with more explicit geographical data above. Abies coahuilensis sp. nov. Arbor ad 30 m. alta habitum Pseudotsugae taxifoliae simulans; trunco ad 9 dm. crasso in parte inferiore cortice fusco rugoso crasso praedito, in 1943 | JOHNSTON, PLANTS OF NORTHERN MEXICO, | 333 parte superiore pallido sublevi; ramulis brunneis hirtellis eos A. religiosae simulantibus; foliis subdistichis e ramulis sub angulo 60—90° abeuntibus tosis, subtus conspicue bisulcatis costa prominente margine recurvo serie- bus stomatum 4—5 congestis, intus canalibus resiniferis solitariis subepi- dermalibus ad utrumque marginem faciei inferioris donatis, fascias fibro- vasculares conjunctas gerentibus, hypodermate sub facie superiore folii interrupta solum sub epidermate partium marginum et partis mediae Sa inferioris continua donatis; strobilis subsessilibus subcylindricis ca. 10 c longis supra basim ca. 4 cm. diametro; squamis 24-28 mm. latis 14-19 mm. longis, margine exteriore hirtellis sursum curvatis, alis minute eroso-denticu- latis, margine interiore fere recto utrisque lateribus basi unguis 4-6 mm. longi et sinibus rotundis 1-2 mm. profundis 2~3 mm. latis donatis; bractea squamae haud vel vix exserta quam squama 2/5—4/5 longa, apicem versus 6-7 mm. lata deinde basim versus gradatim attenuata, apice truncata erosa mucronata; seminibus 7—8 mm. longis, alis 12-13 mm. ‘latis ca. 1 cm. longis. AHUILA: Corte Branco fork of Charretera Canyon, Sierra Madera, frequent above 7500 it. alt., Sept. 14, 1941, Johnston 9050; head of La Pipa fork of Charretera Canyon, Sierra Madera, dense cool shady conifer forest on steep north slope, Sept. 13, 1941, Paknsion 9010 (rvpE, Arn. Arb.) This fir is frequent in the dense conifer forests on the northern slopes of the main ridge of the Sierra Madera in the drainage of Charretera Canyon. The tree grows mixed with Pinus Ayacahuite, Cupressus, and Pseudotsuga, but it is very much less common than these other trees. In appearance it simulates the Pseudotsuga so closely that I was unable to distinguish them at any distance and was able to make positive identifica- tion in the field only after examining the terminal buds on the branchlets, observing cones or cone-axes on the trees, or discovering cones or cone- scales beneath the trees. Timber has been cut and dragged out of the forests of the Sierra Madera for many years. Questioning men who know the forests and have cut timber there, I could find no evidence that this Abies had ever been distinguished by the local people from the more common and very similar appearing Pseudotsuga, well known to them as ‘““Guayamé.”’ This species, and the Abies previously listed, were recognized as unnamed species and were described before I learned that Prof. Maximino Martinez was at work on a monograph of the Mexican species of the genus. Material of the two species of Abies was sent Prof. Martinez, and from the notes, specimens, and photographs he so obligingly sent in return I was readily able to identify the species I report from the Carneros Pass area and from northwest of Fraile with his material from Santa Catarina which he will soon publish as a new species. With this identification Prof. Martinez agrees. We are in disagreement, however, regarding the identification of the Abies of the Sierra Madera. Prof. Martinez identifies it with material collected by J. H. Faull near El Salto, in southwestern Durango, which will be described as a new species in the near future. Through the courtesy of Prof. Faull I have been able to make a detailed 334 JOURNAL OF THE ARNOLD ARBORETUM [VOL. XXIV study of his collections from El Salto which Prof. Martinez identifies with the present plant of the Sierra Madera. The Durango collections obviously represent a good undescribed species. Its vegetative characters suggest a relationship with A. religiosa. It differs from that species, however, in proportionately broader cone-scales and very short non-exserted bracts. In shape and size of the scales, bracts, and seeds, the Durango plant is very much like that from Coahuila. The vegetative characters, however, differ in a number of striking details. The Coahuilan plant has twigs which are dusky and duller brown in color, and which are not glabrous but evidently hispidulous. The leaves have a much thicker epidermis, are heavier and firmer in texture, and are green. They are not glaucous when young. Their petiolular base, better developed than in the Durango tree, is conspicuously erect, appressed to the stem below the middle, and above departing from the stem in an abrupt curve. The leaves of the Durango species are usually straight or nearly so and spread from their point of attachment. The Coahuilan tree has the lower surface of the leaf with very prominently thickened midrib and margins, and accordingly very deeply and narrowly bisulcate. The lower surface of the leaf of the Durango tree has a very much less thickened and prominent midrib and margins, and the intervening grooves are shallow and broad, bearing 4-10 rows of stomates. The upper leaf-surface in the Coahuilan plant bears few if any stomates, whereas that from Durango has several rows of them down the middle. In gross appearance the plants also differ. Specimens of the Durango plant are suggestive of A. religiosa. Those of the Coahuilan tree suggest Pseudotsuga or some the Abies of the United States. The habit of the trees appear to differ also. Professor Faull tells me that the tree at El Salto has a distinctive local name, is well known and distinguished by the local people, and has the characteristic habit permitting it to be instantly recognized as an Abies, The Coahuilan tree grows intermixed with Pseudotsuga and simulates that tree to a truly remarkable degree. The two have not been distinguished by local people knowing the forests, and I must confess that I should not have been aware than an Abies was growing with Pseudotsuga in the Sierra Madera had I not chanced upon Abies cones cut down by squirrels. Geographical distribution also suggests that distinct species of Abies are present in the Sierra Madera and about El Salto. The flora of the coniferous forests of the Sierra Madera is made up largely of species that have migrated along the Sierra Madre Oriental or have extended south from the United States by other routes. There is some evidence that a small proportion of the species may have reached the Sierra Madera by migrations from the Sierra Madre Occidental, but this group of species 1s made up of plants otherwise found in the forests of northern Chihuahua and adjoining Arizona. Since other species show absolutely no evidence of direct floristic connections between the Sierra Madera and the El Salto area, far away in the Sierra Madre Occidental in southwestern Durango, 1943] JOHNSTON, PLANTS OF NORTHERN MEXICO. I 335 this fact lends additional support to the belief that the Abies of Coahuila and Durango are different. The precise relationships of A. coahuilensis are not certain. Among the Mexican species it is probably most closely related to the undescribed plant of Durango. It is readily distinguished from A. religiosa of central Mexico by its non-exserted cone-bracts, proportionately shorter cone-scales, smaller seeds, and markedly bisulcate leaves. In many ways, however, it shows closer relationships with A. concolor and A. grandis, of the western United States. From the former it differs in its slender brownish his- pidulous twigs, more slender green bisulcate leaves, and few or absent stomates on the upper leaf-surface. Its hispidulous twigs, more slender acutish leaves, not markedly glaucous beneath, and proportionately broader cone-scales readily separate 4. coahuilensis from A. grandis. TAXODIACEAE Taxodium mucronatum Ten. Ann. Sci. Nat. IIT. 9: 355 (1853). VERNACULAR NAME abin CoaHvUIL ac. Wea riposa, Wynd 694; Muzquiz, Sabinas pee Marsh 406; Sabinas, along Sabinas River, Johnston 7040; Villa Juarez, Marsh 2 Reported in wet places near Parras, Fedde Repert. oe oo 14: 100 (1915). To be expected also along the Rio Nazas west of Torreon. CUPRESSACEAE Cupressus arizonica Greene, Bull. Torr. Bot. Cl. 9: 64 (1882). VERNACULAR NAMES: Cedro; Pinabeta; Tasco Coanvuma: Sierra del Carmen, Cafion Sentenela, Wynd & Mueller 502; Sierra Madera, Muller 3193, Johnston 8925; mountains near Saltillo, Pringle 13612; Carneros area, 1880, Palmer 1293; Sierra Encarnacion, Nelson 3894a; sierras 24 km. northwest of Fraile, Stanford et al. 383; Sierra Parras, Purpus 4987. CHIHUAHUA: Sierra Rica, Cafion Madera, Stewart 2464 and 2479; Sierra Santa Eulalia, Pringle 178. This species ranges from Texas (Chisos Mts.) and Arizona south to Zacatecas and San Luis Potosi. It appears to differ from C. Benthami, of central Mexico, in its larger and more leathery cones and somewhat coarser usually paler foliage. In the Sierra Madera I found this cypress common in the luxuriant coniferous forests on north slopes, where it grew with Pinus Ayacahuite and Pseudotsuga taxifolia and formed straight single trunks, commonly attaining 20-30 m. in height. About the lower edge of the conifer-belt it was occasional along arroyos associated with Pinus arizonica. In such situations it rarely reached 10 m. in height and was broadly conical in form. The younger branches are smooth and brown. The trunks of younger trees have irregular furrows in the thick persistent laminated old bark. The tall trees in the dense forest have a tight check- ered bark. Mr. Stewart reports that the tree was common on Sierra Rica along the shady bottom of Cafon de la Madera and there formed a tree rarely up to 20 m. tall with a trunk 12 dm. thick. In that locality it was locally called ‘‘Pinabeta.”. Two of Mr. Marsh’s collections, nos. 803 and 1999, from the Sierra del Carmen and Sierra Gloria, are sterile but seem to represent this species. 336 JOURNAL OF THE ARNOLD ARBORETUM [VOL. XXIV Juniperus pachyphloea Torr. U. S. Rep. Explor. Miss. Pacif. 4: 142 (1857). VERNACULAR NAMES: Cedro; Tascate. CoaH Sierra del Carmen, Cafion Sentenela, Wynd & Mueller 535; west ot Buena Vista Ranch { ?Sierra Encantada], Marsh 1359 and seen ; Sierra del Pino , com- mon in pine forest, Johnston & Muller 528, Stewart 2294, > Carneros Pass area March 1880, Palmer 1296. CHIHUAHUA: Sierra Rica, a ae rl scarce on open slopes, Stewart 2549. The above-cited specimens, agreeing with most Texan collections, have resin exuding from only a few scattered leaves or from none at all. Other- wise the plant agrees well with the “Alligator Juniper” of Arizona and New Mexico, the type of which came from the Zuni Mts. in western New Mexico. It is a large tree with heavy trunk covered with characteristic checkered bark. It is closely related to J. Deppeana Steud. (based on J. mexicana C. & S., not Spreng.), a Mexican tree, also with checkered bark, growing in the states of Vera Cruz, Puebla, and Hidalgo, and apparently also in Zacatecas, Durango, Chihuahua, and Sonora, which differs slightly in the less conspicuous resin-glands on its smoother less prominently keeled leaves. In J. pachyphloea the leaves are usually sulcate on either side of the gland and consequently appear to be three-ridged. Only in Sonora and Chihuahua do the ranges of J. Deppeana and J. pachyphloca appear to approach one another. The type of J. Deppeana came from the margin of the plateau in western parts of Vera Cruz, between Las Vigas and Perote, northwest of Jalapa and north of Cofre de Perote. Curiously it does not appear to have extended its range northward into the Sierra Madre of Nuevo Leon or Tamaulipas. Juniperus flaccida Schlechtend. Linnaea 12: 492 (1938). VERNACULAR NAMES: ‘Tascate; Cedro. Coauurta: Sierra del Carmen, Sept. 7, 1936, Marsh 794; Sierra San Manuel, Rancho Agua Dulce, Wynd & Mueller 359; Sierra del Carmen, 8 km. east of Hac. Encantada, Stewart 1585; Hillcoat Mesa, west of Hac. Encantada, Marsh 1425; Mesa Grande, 40 km. northwest of Hac. Encantada, Stewart 1617; Sierra Eavantada, Stewart 1424; west of Rancho Buena Vista [ ?Sierra Encantada], Marsh 1360; Sierra del Pino, Muller 3209, Johnston 8936; Sierra Mojada, Stewart 1058; mountains near Saltillo, northwest of Fraile, Stanford et al. 390; General Cepeda, Nelson 6122; Sierra Pata Jimulco, 11 km. northeast of Jimulco, Stanford et al. 133. Cuimuanua: Sierra Almagre, Johnston & Muller 1176; Sierra Diablo, Stewart 942. Ranging from central Mexico (the type came from the mountains of Hidalgo), this tree extends northward into the Sierra Madre of Chihuahua and through our area into the Chisos and Davis Mountains of Texas. The leaves are decussate and the branchlets are distichous, making the leafy branchlets flat and more or less fan-like. The conspicuously two-ranked smooth elongate acute cuspidate leaves, the pendulous (‘‘weeping’’) leafy branchlets, and the large resinous multi-seeded non-baccate fruits all unite in permitting the ready recognition of the species. It is a tree with reddish fibrous bark. In our area it commonly becomes 4-8 m. tall and appears 1943] JOHNSTON, PLANTS OF NORTHERN MEXICO, I 337 to favor limestone. It grows scattered on slopes or more commonly along arroyo-banks, in sheltered places in the oak and lower pine belt. Juniperus Ashei Buchholz, Bot. Gaz. 90: 329 30). Juniperus occidentalis var. conjungens nee oe Acad. Sci. St. Louis 3: 590 877). Juniperus tetragona var. oligosperma Engelm. 1. c. 591. CoanumLa: Saltillo, frequent in highlands, shrub 5-10 ft., Gregg 106 (isotype of var. conjungens) ; escarpment near mines, Potrero de la Mula, tree 12 ft., Johnston 9195; Sierra San Manuel near Rancho Agua Dulce, Wynd & Mueller 360; near Puerto Santa Anna, Hac. Mariposa, Wynd & Mueller 284. This is the well known “cedar” of the Edwards Plateau of central Texas, which has passed as J. sabinoides, J. mexicana, and J. tetragona. These names, however, properly apply to very different species of southern and central Mexico. From our area the species extends north into central Texas and from thence to Missouri. Under the name J. mexicana, its dis- tribution in the United States has been discussed by Hopkins, Rhodora 40: 425 (1938). It forms a small tree and has dark blue globose berries about 8 mm. in diameter. Juniperus erythrocarpa Cory, Rhodora 38: 186 (1936). VERNACULAR NAME: Tascate. CoanuiLa: Sierra Hechiceros, common along canyons, Johnston & Muller 1290, Stewart 168 and 169; Castillon, one tree on gypsum flat by corrals, wees & Muller r Rancho El Pino, southeast of Sierra Rica, frequent, Stewart 2426 and 2574; low hills 13 mi. west of San Carlos, Johnston & Mu ler 28. Forming a dense rounded bush 10-15 dm. tall or a tree up to 6 m. high. The fruit is not blue, but at maturity it is brownish or reddish, juicy, and commonly about 8 mm. in diameter. Berries with the seed more or less exposed are very common. Submature fruits are usually ovoid. This plant occurs in the Chisos, Chinati, and Davis Mountains of trans-Pecos Texas. I believe the type of J. erythrocarpa, from the Chisos Mts., is a form of this species collected late in the season, with the berries large, perhaps because they are fully developed. Mr. Cory, who formerly treated this species as J. gymnocarpa, is not satisfied that I am correct in identify- ing it with the plants he described as J. erythrocarpa. If his suspicions are correct our plant is without a name, for the name J. gymnocarpa (Lemmon) Cory is based upon a phase of true J. monosperma from the Sandia Mts., New Mexico. Juniperus monosperma (Engelm.) Sargent, Silva No. Am. 10: 89 (1896). CoauurLa: Carneros Pass, Pringle 2305; Sierra Parras, Purpus 1104; Sierra Negras, 9 km. south of sda Stanford et al. 150. CuHutHuAHuA: Sierra Santa Eulalia, Pringle 710. ZACATECA Near — de las Bocas, 20 mi. S.W. of Concepcion del Oro, Shreve 9374; Cedros, Kirkwood 1 In its typical form J. eel ranges in New Mexico and into adjoin- ing Arizona and Colorado. It has coppery bluish immature fruits, which 338 JOURNAL OF THE ARNOLD ARBORETUM [VOL. XXIV on maturity form a coppery-blue distinctly fleshy berry with a single plump seed. The old dried fruits are raisin-like. They are usually glaucous and, ea blue, have a reddish tone that is very conspicuous if comp ared with the blackish blue mature berries of J. Asheit. The Mexican rater I have cited is not typical J. monosperma and belongs to a group of un- named forms, obviously closely related to J. monosperma, which occur in western Oklahoma, trans-Pecos Texas, Sierra Madre of western Chihuahua south into Durango, and in our area. The collections from Santa Eulalia Mts., from near Parras, and from Picachos de las Bocas have glaucescent foliage. The material from near Carneros has yellowish green non-glaucous foliage very suggestive of J. erythrocarpa. Possibly it was subjected to excessive heat in drying and the waxy bloom destroyed. Its fruit seems to agree well enough with the other forms of J. monosperma that I have here associated with it. EPHEDRACEAE Ephedra trifurea Torr. ex Wats. Bot. King Exped. 329 (1871). VERNACULAR NAME: Hitomorial. Coauvutta: Sierra del Carmen, Aug. 29, 1936, Marsh 694; gypsum ridge east of Laguna Jaco, Johnston & Muller 1076; 21 mi. west of El Oro, road to Guimbalete, shen 2010; Laguna del Rey, gypsum on _ Stewart 3015. CHIHUAHUA: 10 mi. south of Ojinaga, clays, Johnston & Muller 13; wed of Chihuahua, 1908, Palmer 68, Pringle 868; 12 mi. south of Camargo, citi 233. A bush 10-15 dm. tall with a loose eons habit, ranging from trans- Pecos Texas to Arizona and south into adjoining Mexico. In Coahuila the plant is frequent on gypsum and on gypseous clays. During my several visits in Mexico, between July and October, I have never found a fruiting plant. The plant is easily distinguished in our area by having its leaves 3 at a node, elongate, persistent, and becoming shredded in age, by its coarse branches, and by its pungent terminal bud. This species and E. Torreyana have the scales of the cones dry and papery. Ephedra Torreyana Wats. Proc. Am. Acad. 14: 299 (1879). CHIHUAHUA: 10 mi. south of Ojinaga, clays, a gray-green bush 1-2 ft. tall, Johnston & Muller 14. This species probably occurs in the valley of the Rio Grande between Ojinaga and El Paso. It has been collected from western Texas to Arizona and Utah, frequently in gypseous soils. It is a small bush with slender widely divergent branchlets and short spreading ternate leaves. Ephedra aspera Engelm. ex Wats. Proc. Am. Acad. 18: 157 (1883). VERNACULAR NAMES: Popotillo; Cafiutilla; Pitamoreal; Hintimoreal. CoaHurma: El Berrendo, White 1800; Puerto San Lazaro, Wynd & Mueller 143; April 11, 1847, Gregg 414; Sierra Parras, March 1905, Purpus 1102; Sierras Negras, 9 km. south of Parras, Stanford et al. 168. CHiHuAHUA: Sierra San Carlos near the mines, Johnston & Muller 60; Santa Eulalia plain, Wilkinson 118; crest of Santa 1943 J JOHNSTON, PLANTS OF NORTHERN MEXICO, I 339 Eulalia Mts., Pringle 38. Zacatecas: 15 km. west of Concepcion del Oro, Stanford et al. 521; Cedros, Kirkwood 24, Kirkwood & Lloyd 86 This is the common Ephedra on rocky limestone slopes in Coahuila. Commonly a bush 8-10 dm. tall, with leaves opposite and cone-scales thick but not fleshy. The species ranges in southern New Mexico and trans- Pecos Texas south on the plateau to San Luis Potosi. Ephedra pedunculata Engelm. ex Wats. Proc. Am. Acad. 18: 157 (1881). CULAR NAMES: Comida del Vibora; oe Tepopote; Canatilla; Sangui- naria; Retamo Real; Hintimoreal; Itamoreal; Pit eal. CoaHuU Villa Juarez, 1880, Palmer 1290; San de Jara, west of meee Cienegas, pa 8837, 8841, 8847 ; Cuatro Ciensees Marsh 2057, Sierra Gavia, 5 mi. north of Saucillo, Fohnston 7220; Saltillo, 1880, Palmer 1289; Saltillo, 1898, “Palmer 283; Valle de los Guajes, 8 km. east of Puerto del Aire, Stewart 1319; Santa Elena, & Muller 310; La Botica, limestone slope, Stewart 2939. Curnuanua: Santa Eulalia plain, Wilkinson 117 in pt.; Bachimba Canyon, Pringle 134. Zacatecas: Cedros, Lloyd 75 and 214; near Concepcion del Oro, 1902, Palmer 372. Duranco: Between Mapimi and Teviener, Apr. 18, 1867, Gregg 484 (Mo). Usually scrambling up through bushes and frequently reaching a height of 3 or 4 meters. Its branches cascade over the top of the supporting vegetation and become very conspicuous when covered with an abundance of red juicy fruits. At Ocampo it is very common in the hedge rows about the town. The plant is not always lofty. In Canon de Jara, on very arid cemented gravels, I observed plants of this species forming depressed mats a meter broad and scarcely a decimeter high. Even with this unusual habit the species was readily recognized by its pedunculate fleshy red cones. Ephedra compacta Rose, Contr. U.S. Nat. Herb, 12: 261 (1909). VERNACULAR NAME: Hitamo Real. vegan Battlefield near Buena Vista, rocky soil, May 19, 1848, ier aa Sierras Negras, 9 km. south of i Stanford et al. 1694; Sierra Jimulco, km northeast of onc. Stanford et al. 3 A depressed spreading aon bush usually less than 5 dm. tall. The species is known from the States of Coahuila, San Luis Potosi, Puebla, and Oaxaca. It has opposite leaves and a sessile cone that produces two seeds and becomes red and fleshy at maturity. Ephedra antisyphilitica Berl. ex C. A. Mey. Mém. Acad. Sci. St. Pétersb. VI. Sci. Nat. 5: 291 (1846). To be expected in northeastern Coahuila. Widely distributed in Texas and collected near the Rio Grande at various points between Laredo and the Big Bend. A bush becoming a meter tall, with opposite leaves and a sessile, single-seeded fleshy red cone. ARNOLD ARBORETUM, Harvarp UNIVERSITY. 340 JOURNAL OF THE ARNOLD ARBORETUM (VOL. XXIV THE COMPARATIVE MORPHOLOGY OF THE WINTERACEAE I. POLLEN AND STAMENS I. W. BaILEy AND CHARLOTTE G. Nast With three plates INTRODUCTION THE genera Drimys, Pseudowintera, Belliolum, Bubbia, Exospermum, Zygogynum, Tetracentron, and Trochodendron are the only known living representatives of the dicotyledons that have retained a primitive vessel- less type of secondary xylem. In fact, it was upon the basis of their ex- ceptional wood structure that van Tieghem (6) segregated them in three families of a distinct order, the Homoxylées. Tetracentron and Trochoden- dron are monotypic, whereas the six winteraceous genera are now repre- sented by approximately 88 species. Thus, the Winteraceae may no longer be regarded as a few bizarre relics, since they are a flourishing family, having representatives in Mexico, Central and South America, New Zea- land, Australia, New Caledonia, New Guinea, the Solomons, the Philip- pines, and adjacent regions. There has been much uncertainty in the past concerning the relation- ships and the morphological significance of the Winteraceae. Now that much new material has been accumulated, it seems desirable to institute a detailed re-investigation of the family. Our colleague, Dr. A. C. Smith (4, 5), has published two extensive taxonomic revisions of the family. In so doing, he assembled a large amount of material from American herbaria, which has provided us, in turn, with a wide range of accurately determined specimens, upon which to base a comprehensive study of the comparative morphology of the flowers, leaves, and stems of the Winteraceae. The first paper of our series deals with the pollen and stamens of the family. The succeeding paper will discuss the remarkable carpels of the Win- teraceae, which rival their vesselless wood in morphological significance. The herbarium specimens upon which our studies are based have been listed in Dr. Smith’s papers and need not be relisted here. POLLEN Wodehouse (7, 8) has advanced the intriguing hypothesis that there are two basically different types of pollen morphology. The single-grooved or monocolpate type (variously modified by phylogenetic changes) charac- terizes the gymnosperms from the Bennettitales to the Coniferales and is of common occurrence in monocotyledons, but is confined among dicoty- ledons to certain representatives of the Ranales. On the contrary, the 3-grooved or tricolpate type (and its derived forms) is characteristic of most dicotyledons. In recent comprehensive surveys of the pollen of 1943] BAILEY & NAST, MORPHOLOGY OF THE WINTERACEAE, I 341 various dicotyledonous families, we have accumulated considerable evi- dence in support of certain aspects of this hypothesis. It is evident, for example, that plants of ranalian affinities may be divided upon the basis of their pollen morphology into two distinct categories: I. WITH MONOCOLPATE OR DERIVED TYPES OF POLLEN Winteraceae Annonaceae Hernandiaceae Lactoridaceae Degeneriaceae Myristicaceae Austrobaileya Piperaceae Magnoliaceae Monimiaceae Canellaceae Saururaceae Himantandraceae Lauraceae Calycanthaceae Cabomboideaze Eupomatiaceae Gomortegaceae Chloranthaceae Nymphaeoideae Il. WITH TRICOLPATE OR DERIVED TYPES OF POLLEN Schizandraceae Trochodendraceae Ranunculaceae Menispermaceae Tllictum Eupteleaceae Lardizabalaceae Nelumbonoideae Tetracentron Berberidaceae All of the plants in the first category, with the exception of the aquatic Cabomboideae and Nymphaeoideae, have secretory cells of the well known ranalian type. In the second category, such cells occur in the Schizan- draceae, Jilicium, and Tetracentron only. Wodehouse (7) homologizes the monocolpate pollen of angiosperms with similar one-furrowed pollen of the lower gymnosperms. In so doing, he assumes that the single germinal furrow is on the distal face of the pollen grains, i.e. the exposed outer surface of the pollen grains during the tetrad stage of development. The pollen of the Winteraceae is shed in tetrahedral tetrads, Figs. 1-13, and each of the four grains is provided with a circular germ pore in its distal (outer) face. Wodehouse inter- prets the pollen of Drimys as of a modified monocolpate type, and infers from this that the single germinal furrow of other ranalian plants is on the distal face of the grains. It is significant in this connection, however, that one of our co-workers, Mr. S. J. Golub, finds that the pollen of the Annonaceae not infrequently tends to be more or less coherent in tetrag- onal tetrads at the time of shedding. These tetrads, Fig. 14, demonstrate that the germinal furrow of annonaceous pollen, Fig. 15, is on the proximal (inner) face of the pollen grains; this raises the question whether such is not likewise the case in the Myristicaceae, Magnoliaceae, and other related ranalian families. The tetrads of the Winteraceae are firmly coherent, and only in one instance (Drimys brasiliensis var. campestris (St. Hil.) Miers, Hochne 28700) have we encountered a few dissociated tetrads. As indicated in Fig. 13, the isolated pollen grains have, in addition to the dis- tally located circular germ pore, proximal facets that closely resemble those of annonaceous pollen, compare Figs. 13 and 15. In other words, it cannot be assumed a priori that the distal germ pore of Drimys developed by a simple reduction in the size of the germinal furrow of Magnoliaceae, since the germinal furrow of annonaceous pollen is not a direct homologue of the distally oriented circular germ pore of winteraceous pollen, but rather of its unthickened proximal facets, compare Figs. 12, 13 with Figs. 14, 15. The morphological specializations of monocolpate types of pollen are numerous and diverse, apparently leading to the formation of dicolpate 342 JOURNAL OF THE ARNOLD ARBORETUM [VOL. XXIV (Calycanthaceae, Monimiaceae, monocotyledons), belted (Monimiaceae, Eupomatiaceae, Nymphaeaceae, monocotyledons), polycolpate (Chloran- thaceae, monocotyledons), and acolpate (Chloranthaceae, Monimiaceae, Lauraceae, Hernandiaceae, monocotyledons) types. Such phylogenetic trends in the specialization of angiospermic pollen can be clarified only by intensive investigations of a wide range of Ranales and monocotyledons. Furthermore, it is essential to determine the effects of contacts not only within tetrads, but also within groups of contiguous tetrads. In the case of the Winteraceae, the problems of phylogeny are compli- cated by the fact that the pollen of all investigated genera and species is shed in permanent tetrads. Since the structure of the individual grains of such tetrads frequently is much modified through excessive specialization, there are no reliable means of determining what the morphological charac- teristics of the ancestral free grains may have been. Nor is it possible to solve the difficulty by comparisons with the permanent tetrads of Lac- toridaceae, Hedycarya (Monimiaceae), or Victoria (Nymphaeaceae ), for in these tetrads specialization has progressed along different lines. The tetrads of the Winteraceae are morphologically unique among plants of ranalian affinities and cannot justifiably be cited as evidence of closer relationship to the Magnoliaceae than to other ranalian families. e most comprehensive previous investigation of the pollen of the Winteraceae is that of van Tieghem (6), who studied representatives of all six genera of the family. Although providing no illustrations or de- tailed. descriptions of the pollen, he noted certain significant morphological differences within the family. Thus, he emphasized the fact that the pollen of Drimys Winteri, D. brasiliensis, and D. granadensis forms pro- tuberant papillae when moistened, whereas that of D. membranea, D. piper- ita, Pseudowintera,' Bubbia, Belliolum, Exospermum, and Zygogynum does not. In addition, he states that the pollen of Belliolum, Exospermum, and Zygogynum has a granular exine, whereas that of Drimys, Pseudv- wintera, and Bubbia exhibits a verrucose sculpture. Our own investigations of numerous species of the genus Drimys indicate that in general the tetrads of the Old World Section (Tasmannia), Figs. 2-5, are conspicuously smaller than the tetrads of the New World Section (Wintera) of the genus, Fig. 1. In the case of Sect. Tasmannia, Figs, 2, 3, and 5, as in Pseudowintera, Bubbia, Belliolum, Exospermum, and Zygogynum, the entire floor of the circular pore bulges outward more or less uniformly during re-expansion of the pollen, whereas in Sect. Wintera the central part of this floor bulges rapidly and precociously, leaving a con- Sstricting rim or collar of presumably thicker or less elastic material, Figs. 1, 12, and 13. The individual pollen grains of Drimys, Figs. 1-5, 9, II, and 13, Pseudowintera, Fig. 8, and Bubbia, Fig. 7, are provided (be- tween their distal germ pore and their adnate proximal facets) with a broad zone or belt, Fig. 13, of coarsely reticulate thickening, whereas those of Exospermum and Zygogynum, Figs. 6 and 10, have minutely re- 1Pseudowintera Dandy, i. e. Wintera sensu v. Tiegh., non Murray. 1943] BAILEY & NAST, MORPHOLOGY OF THE WINTERACEAE, |} 343 ticulate thickening. The pollen of Belliolum crassifolium ( Baill.) v. Tiegh., B. haplopus (Burtt) A. C. Sm., Fig. 11, and B. Burttianum A. C. Sm. is coarsely reticulate and resembles that of the former category of genera. Therefore, we are unable to follow van Tieghem (6) in describing the pollen of Belliolum as granular rather than as verrucose. Since he pro- vides no illustrations or detailed descriptions, it is difficult to determine just what he had in mind in using the unqualified general terms ‘‘verru- queuse” and ‘‘granuleuse”. The more or less conspicuously buttressed reticulate thickenings, Figs. 1-5, 7-9, 11, and 13, of the tetrads of Drimys, Pseudowintera, Bubbia, and Belliolum are composed of rows of more or less coalesced rods, appearing linear or granular at different focal levels, Fig. 16. Furthermore, the reticulate thickening appears more or less gran- ie in surface view, depending upon the degree of coalescence in its con- stitutent rods and upon the amount of buttressing. In certain species of Bubbia, e.g. B. Clemensiae A. C. Sm., B. longifolia A. C.Sm., and B. mono- carpa A. C. Sm., Fig. 16, the pollen has a finer mesh of more numerous, ee partly coalesced rods. The reticulate thickenings of such tetrads are conspicuously granular appearing at lower focal levels. Similarly, in the case of Exospermum and Zygogynum, the exine appears finely re- ticulate, Fig. 10, or minutely granular, Fig. 6, at different focal levels. There is, however, in the material that we have studied, a wide structural gap between the minutely granular-reticulate exines of Exospermum and Zygogynum and the coarsely granular-reticulate exines of the other four genera of the Winteraceae. There are families of dicotyledons in which the pollen is of very con- siderable taxonomic significance, not only in the differentiation of sub- families and tribes, but also of genera and species. Our investigations of numerous collections of all four species of the New World Section (Win- tera) of Drimys and of ten of the thirteen taxonomic entities recognized by Smith (4) indicate that, although the pollen of these plants may be easily differentiated from that of other representatives of the family, it is difficult to distinguish species and varieties within the Section Wintera. In the case of the Old World Section (Tasmannia) of Drimys, Pseudowin- tera, Belliolum, and Bubbia, the size and form of the tetrads, Figs. 2—5, the diameter of the germ pore, Figs. 9 and 11, the distribution of wart-like thickenings on the floor of the germ pore, Figs. 9, 11, and 16, the detailed structure of the reticulate thickenings, Figs. 9, 11, and 16, and other characters fluctuate more or less from species to species. More material must be examined, however, before attempting to construct a key for dif- ferentiating species and genera. Our investigations do suggest that the pollen of Sect. Wintera of Drimys, on the one hand, and of Exospermum and Zygogynum, on the other hand, represent two stabilized specializations from the more varied and generalized types of pollen encountered in Bellio- lum, Bubbia, Pseudowintera, and Sect. Tasmannia of Drimys. STAMENS In the Degeneriaceae (Bailey and Smith 1) and the Himantandraceae 344 JOURNAL OF THE ARNOLD ARBORETUM [VOL. XXIV (Diels 3, Bailey, Nast, and Smith 2), the stamens are not differentiated into filament, anther, and connective, but are essentially 3-veined micro- sporophylls of comparatively unmodified form. The two pairs of slender, vertically elongated sporangia are immersed beneath the abaxial surface of the sporophylls. They are situated between the median and lateral veins, and neither these veins nor their branches are directed toward the sporangia, ‘Thus, the narrow shields of endothecia are not in contact with vascular tissue. Dehiscence is longitudinal and extrorse. The closely allied Magnoliaceae exhibit various modifications of such primitive 3- veined microsporophylls, leading to the formation of more typical stamineal organs. The much enlarged, conspicuously protuberant, paired sporangia (thecae) are lateral on a much constricted part (connective) above the broad base (filament) of the microsporophyll. The thecae may be turned slightly outward or inward, and the longitudinal dehiscence, therefore, fluctuates between extrorse and introrse. In certain representatives of the family, the lateral veins of the modified microsporophylls are much reduced and may at times be eliminated, leaving a single-veined stamen, such as characterizes so many of the dicotyledons, Although the stamens of the Winteraceae vary considerably in external form, Figs. 17-24, they are throughout the family of the single, dorsally- veined type. Four of the genera, Bubbia, Fig. 22, Pseudowintera, Fig. 23, Exospermum, Fig. 24, and Zygogynum have short, comparatively broad, more or less truncated and apically flaring microsporophylls. The pro- tuberant sporangia are attached to the broad apex of these sporophylls and are oriented either at right angles to the dorsal vein, Figs. 22 and 23, or in various diagonal positions, Fig. 24. Dehiscence is, therefore, apical and transverse or obliquely apical. On the contrary, the stamens of Belli- olum, Fig. 21, are generically characterized by their more elongate form and particularly by having their laterally attached sporangia oriented parallel to the long axis of the sporophyll. Dehiscence is longitudinal and more or less conspicuously extrorse. The microsporophylls of these five genera of the Winteraceae have no constricted part that may be designated as connective, and the sporangia are not excessively protuberant beyond the outlines of the sporophylls. The stamen illustrated in Fig. 21 resembles in form the microsporophylls of Himantandra and Austrobaileya. It differs from those of the former genus in its more protuberant sporangia and in having no lateral veins, from those of the latter genus in its unbranched median vein, which does not extend beyond the level of the sporangia. In such species of Belliolum as B, crassifolium (Baill.) v. Tiegh. and B. Burttianum A. C. Sm. the un- vascularized upper part of the sporophyll is considerably reduced in length. This suggests that the types of stamens illustrated in Figs. 22-24 may have developed phylogenetically by elimination of this part of the micro- sporophyll, with concomitant shifting of the sporangia from longitudinal lateral orientations to obliquely apical and transversely apical ones. The microsporophylls of Drimys, Figs. 17-20, fluctuate considerably in length, not only in different species, but also within the same flower. They 1943] BAILEY & NAST, MORPHOLOGY OF THE WINTERACEAE, I 345 are characterized, however, by having markedly protuberant thecae that are attached to the much constricted upper part of the sporophyll. The subapical thecae are oriented parallel to the long axis of the sporophyll or at acute angles to it. Dehiscence is, therefore, approximately longitudinal- lateral and more or less conspicuously extrorse. The microsporophylls of the New World Section (Wintera) of the genus are relatively broad, Figs. 17-19, but those of the Old World Section (Tasmannia) occasionally are much elongated and narrow, Fig. 20. The latter are more typically stamin- eal, Ni exhibiting differentiation into filament, connective, and anthe The median (dorsal) vein of winteraceous stamens may extend through- out the sporophyll without branching, Figs. 18, 21, 22, and 24, or it may give off one, Fig. 19, or more, Figs. 17, 20, and 23, chart branches that are directed toward the thecae. Branching of the dorsal vein is in general more extensive and conspicuous and occurs at a lower level in Pseudowintera and certain species of Bubbia, e.g. B. pachyantha A. C. Sm., than in other repre- sentatives of the Winteraceae. Spherical secretory cells, Fig. 18, are of common occurrence in the microsporophyll, as in other organs, of the Winteraceae. Their contents usually are dissolved during the clearing and mounting of the stamens and, therefore, are invisible in most figures of Plate III. The coriaceous floral appendages of certain species of Bubbia, Exosperum, and Zygogynum contain very numerous sclereids or clusters of sclereids. As indicated in Fig. 24, the stamens of such flowers may contain more or less numerous sclerenchymatous cells. It should be emphasized in conclusion that there appear to be two distinct trends of specialization in the microsporophylls of the Winteraceae, leading in Pseudowintera, Bubbia, Exospermum, and Zygogynum to the formation of broadly truncated sporophylls bearing transversely oriented apical sporangia, and in Drimys to apically constricted sporophylls bearing later- ally attached subapical sporangia. LITERATURE CITED — . Barrey, I. W., . C. SmirH. Degeneriaceae, a new gaa of flowering plants from fees jou. eee Arb. 23: 356-365. pl. 1-5. —_—— Nast, and A. C. Smitn. The i ied tencieanas Jour. Arnold rea ov 190-206. pl. 1-6. 1943. 3 Ls, L eber oe cee haar, ihre Verbreitung und ihre systematische Stellung. Bot. Jahrb. 55: el O177 4. SmitrH, A.C. The aa. species of - Jour. Arnold Arb. 24: 1-33. f. 1-3. 1943 ————.. Taxonomic ne on the Old World species of Winteraceae. Jour. Arnold Arb. 24: 119-164. f. 1-6. 1943. 6. TIEGHEM, P. van. Sur ee dicotylédones du groupe des Homoxylées. Jour. de Bot. 14: 259-297, 330-361. 1900. 7. WopenouseE, R. P. Pollen grains. McGraw-Hill, N. Y. 1935. 8 Evolution of pollen grains. Bot. Review 2: 67-84. f. 1-8. 1936. 346 JOURNAL OF THE ARNOLD ARBORETUM (VoL. XXIV EXPLANATION OF PLATES Pirate I Unstained tetrads mounted in lactic acid and photographed at a magnification of 1180. 1c. 1. Drimys brasiliensis var. campestris (St. Hil.) Miers, Hoehne 28700. Fic. 2. Drimys Beccariana Gibbs, Brass 11294. Fic. 3. Drimys oligandra A. C. Sm., Brass 12975. Fic. 4. Drimys sige Hook. f., Williams 754. Fic. 5. Drimys obovata A. C. Sm., Brass 11295. Fic. é: Zovoesnum Vieillardi Baill., Fra nc 1740. Fic. 7. Bubbia megacorpa A .C, Sm., Bhs 10249. Fic. 8. per rare axillaris var. colorata (Raoul) A. C. Sm., Rival in 1843. onl Piate IT rawn with camera lucida from pollen mounted unstained in lactic acid. Fic Drimys lnceolat (Poir.) Baill., Baker in 1890. Tetrad showing detail of one secre grain. x 1180. Fic. 10. Zygogynum Vieillardi Baill., Franc 1740. Drawn at a higher focal level than Fig. 6, showing finely reticulate exine. X 1180. Fic. 11. Belliolum haplopus (Burtt) A. C. Sm., Kajewski 1994. ™% 1180. Fic. 12. Drimys brasiliensis var. campestris (St. ) Miers. Hoehne 5 Outline of tetrad showing protuberances. x 617. Fic. The same. Single grain from dissociated tetrad, showing apeia i from aa germ pore and the structure of proximal facet. . 14. Asimina pirate a A. Gray, a 1143. Outline of tetragonal tetrad, ara proximal p on of germinal furrows. xX 187. Fic. 15. ame Detail of single grain rtd pene tetrad, eae proximal furrow, xX 480. Fic. 16. Bubbia monocarpa A. C. Sm., Kanehira & Hatusima 12105. Detail of one grain of tetrad; (a) granular appearance at lower focal level. Xx 1180 Priate III Stamens cleared in hot dilute NaOH and mounted unstained in diaphane. Magni- fication * 24. Fic. 17. Drimys So goon Bock 49. Fic. 18. Drimys grana- densis var. grandiflora Hieron., Arc 1202, Fic. 19. Drimys Winteri var. chilensis (DC.) A. Gray, Werdermann 73. Fic. 20. Drimys stipitata Vickery, White 7572. Fic. 21. Belliolum haplopus (Burtt) A. C “Sa. Brass 2959, Fic. 22. Bubbia Clemensiae A. C. Sm., Clemens 4596. Fic. 23. Picidowitee axillaris var. oe C. Sm., Kirk. Fic. 24. Exostermun stipitatum (Baill.) v. Tiegh., Vieidlard 2281 BIOLOGICAL LABORATORIES, HARVARD UNIVERSITY. Jour. ArNotp ARB. Vor. XXIV PLATE I COMPARATIVE MORPHOLOGY OF THE WINTERACEAE PLaTE II Jour. Arnotp Ars. VoL. XXIV 15 Recs 3 () 8% 20 @ CE j ¢ OM oe o ee Oe eee vd 0 o 4 we fs °. esate gore? Me eeeceeseeneeneeeettt a ee wid te eeeneee® INTERACEAE y THE W COMPARATIVE MORPHOLOGY OF Prare III ARNOLD ARB. VoL. XXIV JR. Jou — Ty keephoas Sys Sen oe — ie Ones tS WINTERACEAE THE COMPARATIVE MORPHOLOGY OF | | : . | ; . | 7 . : 1943] SMITH, PACIFIC ISLAND PLANTS, II 347 STUDIES OF PACIFIC ISLAND PLANTS, IP! NOTES ON THE PACIFIC SPECIES OF PIPER A. C. SMITH In attempting to name a series of specimens of Piper L. from Fiji, kindly forwarded by the Curator of the Bernice P. Bishop Museum, it was found desirable to prepare a consideration of the known species of the genus in Fiji. In the course of this study, the species from adjacent Pacific groups were examined, and notes on two of the difficult complexes are here included. A revision of all the Pacific species is highly desirable, but this can scarcely be undertaken without examination of extensive collections and of types deposited in European herbaria. I am indebted to the authorities of the following institutions for the privilege of studying herbarium material, the place of deposit being indicated by the parenthetical letters: Arnold Arbore- tum (A), Bishop Museum (Bish), Gray Herbarium (GH), New York Botanical Garden (NY), University of California (UC), U. S. National Herbarium (US). PIPER PUBERULUM (BENTH.) BENTH. AND ITS VARIETIES The most common species of § Macropiper in Fiji, Samoa, and Tonga is the shrub with the following essential characters: petioles 1-4 cm. long, vaginate from one-half to nearly their entire length; leaf-blades ovate, of moderate size, generally up to 15 by 10 cm. but sometimes up to 22 by 17 cm., either puberulent beneath or glabrous on both surfaces, obtuse to rounded or subcordate at base, and with 5 or 7 (sometimes 9) nerves diver- gent from the petiole; spikes axillary, usually solitary but sometimes (espe- cially in distal axils) paired, comparatively long, usually 7-17 cm. long at anthesis excluding peduncle (both staminate and pistillate), rarely 4-19 cm. long (scarcely mature when less than 7 em.) This is the plant commonly passing in herbaria and literature as P. Mac- gdlivrayi C. DC. An examination of the various treatments of this species demonstrates that de Candolle’s binomial must be replaced by P. puberylum (Benth.) Benth. ex Seem. The first description referable to this species was that of Bentham in 1843, of Macropiper puberulum, based on a Fijian collection of Hinds and Barclay. De Candolle, in his later considerations of the species, obviously should have made use of this specific epithet, but instead he proposed the name Piper Macgillivrayi, which has been associated with the species through practically every consideration up to the present. That de Can- dolle was aware of Bentham’s earlier name is obvious from his citation of Macropiper puberulum in synonymy, both in Seemann’s Flora Vitiensis (1868) and in the Prodromus (1869); the manuscript for Seemann’s work 1See Bull. Torrey Bot. Club 68: 397-406. 1941. 348 JOURNAL OF THE ARNOLD ARBORETUM [VOL. XXIV may possibly not have been seen by de Candolle before publication. In this work we find the binomial Piper puberulum Benth. occurring twice, once parenthetically on page 262 in the “explanation of plate 75,” and again on the plate itself. This mention of Piper puberulum, since it is accompanied by a detailed plate, is here accepted as an authentic transfer of Bentham’s Macropiper puberulum. 1 have no doubt that Seemann used the binomial Piper puberulum in good faith on his plate, but was deterred from taking it up in his text because of his discovery of de Candolle’s manuscript name.” Numerous varieties have been proposed within the comprehensive con- cept of P. Macgillivrayi, based upon Fijian and Samoan specimens. For the most part these varieties appear properly placed, but I believe that var. fasciculare Warb. (10:609) is best removed from the species to P. Timothi- anum, as stated below in my detailed consideration of the Fijian species. Var. glabrum Warb. (10:609) appears to be both a homonym and a syno- nym of var. glabrum C. DC.; cotype material of Warburg’s variety (Rein- ecke 75 [US|) does not differ from the glabrous Fijian form upon which de Candolle’s varietal name is based. I am unable to pass upon the proper position of the following Samoan varieties: abbreviatum Warb., scandens Warb. (for these see 10: 609), subrotundifolium C. DC. (4: 264), and upoluanum C. DC. (nomen?, see 5: 258). Students of the Samoan flora should consider whether these are worth retaining as trinomials under P. puberulum. The following varieties of P. Macgillivrayi have been based upon Fijian collections: parvifolium C. DC. and glabrum C. DC. (2: 335). The first of these probably represents a depauperate form of the common glabrous- leaved variety of P. puberulum, but the second is difficult to interpret. De Candolle’s description of var. glabrum reads merely: ‘‘foliis utrinque glabris,” but the only specimen he cites is “Seemann 567 ! in h. DC.” Macropiper puberulum Seem. in Bonplandia 1861, p. 259 is cited as a synonym. On the basis of Seemann 567 in the Kew Herbarium, Bentham’s description of Macropiper puberulum, and Seemann’s description and plate in Flora Vitiensis (1868), one might suppose that var. glabrum is actually typified by the puberulent-leaved form. However, it is obvious from the varietal name and from the phrase “foliis utrinque glabris” that de Can- 2Qne might suspect that de Candolle avoided Bentham’s specific epithet because of an earlier Piper puberulum, but I cannot find that this is the case. No such bi- 1861. Because Maximowicz’ binomial in 1886 is a later homonym of P. puberulum Benth. ex Seem. (1868), the Hongkong plant should be known as Piper hongkongense C. DC. (2: 347). This latter binomial is accounted for in de Candolle’s key (S: 201); tions were deposited in Seemann’s herbarium, it seems very likely that Piper hong- kongense and Chavica puberula are based upon parts of the same collection. 1943 | SMITH, PACIFIC ISLAND PLANTS, II 349 dolle did not intend this interpretation. The specimen of Seemann 567 in the Gray Herbarium is a mixture, having large puberulent leaves from one plant and smaller glabrous leaves from another. I believe, therefore, that de Candolle’s specimen of this collection was the glabrous form, and propose to interpret var. glabrum according to his obvious intent and his description, that is, excluding the synonym Macropiper puberulum and the puberulent-leaved portion of Seemann 567. In Fiji, P. puberulum is divisible into two varieties, which I designate below as var. typicum and var. glabrum. PIPER LATIFOLIUM L. F. AND ITS ALLIES The nomenclatural confusion which has been attached to this binomial is due to the fact that it first appeared in the Emendanda to the younger Linnaeus’ Supplementum Plantarum (1781) and_ thus replaced that author’s Piper methysticum as described on page 91 of the same work. One is therefore justified in considering P. methysticum L. f. as a name published in synonymy and in taking P. latifolium L. f. as the correct name for the Tahitian plant described on page 91 of Linnaeus’ work. This plant is characterized by its several axillary spikes and cannot be confused with the widely cultivated “kava” or “yanggona,” which was first botanically described by G. Forster (Pl. Esc. Ins. Oc. Austr. 76. 1786) as Piper methy- sticum. It does not appear necessary to take Forster’s name as a later homonym of P. methysticum L. {., which, having been corrected by the author in the same original work, has no nomenclatural status. Practically all modern taxonomists who have considered the matter are in agreement with Moore (6), whose lucid discussion of the problem indicates that Piper methysticum Forst. f. is the correct name for the common cultivated “kava.” In a consideration of the Pacific species of Piper, one of the most diffi- cult problems is to fix the geographic limits of P. latifolium. Although the species was originally based on a single collection from Tahiti, numerous writers have taken the species to include plants from as far west as Tonga and the New Hebrides. This extension of the range was probably first indicated by G. Forster (FI. Ins. Austr. Prodr. 5. 1786). C. de Candolle, in 1869 (2: 335) notes the range as “in Ins. Tahiti, ins. Societatis, Ami- corum, Novarum Hebridum, Timor,” but subsequently (5: 172) there is an indication of uncertainty, as he states the range merely as “Tahiti, etc.” The only Tahitian specimens I have seen which match the original description and de Candolle’s interpretation in his key (5: 172) are U. S. Expl. Exped. 3, in part (GH) and Setchell & Parks 274 (UC), the latter being cited as such by Setchell (9: 163). Setchell implies that the species is endemic to Tahiti. However, I believe that F. Brown’s reference of Marquesan specimens to P. latifolium (1: 17) is correct; the several speci- mens which Brown cites from the Austral Islands are not now available to me, and they may possibly be similar to the Raratongan plants discussed below. Another species which must be considered in connection with P. Jati- 350 JOURNAL OF THE ARNOLD ARBORETUM [VOL. XXIV folium is P. tristachyon C, DC. (2: 335), at least as regards its Tahitian components, the species having been based on material from both Tahiti and the Hawaiian group. According to de Candolle’s key (5), P. trista- chyon differs from P. latifolium primarily in its leaf-blades being pubescent beneath. The Tahitian form of P. tristachyon appears to be represented by Setchell & Parks 341 (UC) (see Setchell, 9: 163), Tilden 429 (GH), and U. S. Expl. Exped. 1 § (GH). While P. tristachyon is superficially distinct from P. latifolium on the basis of its crispate-pilose lower leaf-blades and petioles, it is perilously similar in its other characters, such as leaf-shape and petioles almost completely vaginate. In general, its leaf-blades are slightly broader in proportion than those of P. latifolium and with less pro- nounced apices. The probability that these two entities are not specifically distinct is strengthened by the occurrence in Tahiti of a plant precisely re- sembling P. tristachyon in all details except its completely glabrous habit. This is represented by U. S. Expl. Exped. 1 @ (GH, US), and Setchell & Parks 212 (UC) and 340 (UC). The latter two specimens have been re- ferred, and probably correctly, by Setchell (9: 163) to P. excelsum var. tahitianum C. DC. This variety appears not to be conspecific with P. excel- sum Forst. £. of New Zealand, which has quite different leaves and has fruits immersed in the rachis (C. DC., 5: 171). I believe that P. excelsum var. tahitianum should definitely be separated from the New Zealand species and placed in the synonymy of P. tristachyon, of which it is no more than a gla- brous form. One may consider the advisability of referring all the Tahitian plants here discussed to P. latifolium, which would then be characterized chiefly by its long and nearly completely vaginate petioles, broad many- nerved leaves, and several (3-5) axillary spikes. The three Tahitian entities here discussed (P. latifolium, P. tristachyon, and P. excelsum var. tahitianum), on the basis of material now available and without consultation of the types, are kept apart only with difficulty. An essentially similar conclusion has already been expressed by Nadeaud (Enum. Pl. Indig. Tahiti 41. 1873). The occurrence of P. latifolium on Raratonga in the Cook Islands has been noted by Cheeseman (in Trans. Linn. Soc. I. Bot. 6: 293. 1903) and Wilder (in Bishop Mus. Bull. 86: 38. 1931). The plant observed by them is apparently common on Raratonga and is represented by: H. E. & S. T. Parks 22036 (GH, UC, US), 22211 (UC), and 22301 (A, UC, US), and Wilder 3 (A, NY, UC). Superficially it differs from the Tahitian forms of P. latifolium in having its petioles only one-third to one-half vaginate; its staminate flowers have consistently 3 or 4 stamens, while those of the Tahitian specimens have either 2 or 3 stamens. For the present I have not seen enough material to decide whether a reasonable concept of P. lati- folium may be extended to include this Raratongan form or whether the latter should be separated as a subspecific unit. The occurrence of P. latifolium in the New Hebrides, noted by Forster in 1786, has been further recorded by several writers, including Miquel (Syst. Piper. 219. 1843), whose concept of the species included even such forms as P. guahamense C. DC. (2: 336). Guillaumin has more recently men- 1943 ] SMITH, PACIFIC ISLAND PLANTS, II 351 tioned P. haan from the New Hebrides (in Bull. Soc. Bot. Fr. 66: 275. 1919, op. cit. 74: 703. 1927, in Jour. Arnold Arb. 13: 82. 1932). Among fhe eer upon which Guillaumin’s concept was based, Kajew- ski 3, 436, and 718 (all A) are available to me, and the most detailed examination fails to reveal any consequential characters by which this New Hebrides plant can be distinguished from a concept of P. latifolium which includes the various Tahitian and Raratongan forms discussed above. While my conclusions are admittedly based upon insufficient material, for the time being I follow earlier students in thus accrediting P. latifolium with a range extending from the Marquesas to the New Hebrides, although its absence from Fiji, among the collections now available from that group, must remain surprising. One may anticipate that examination of abundant Pacific material and comparison with the historic collections will reveal lines upon which this present concept of P. /atifolium may be intelligibly ivided. Tue FIJIAN SPECIES OF PIPER The only previous treatment of the Fijian species of Piper is that of de Candolle in 1909 (3). In this paper five new Fijian species were described, two of which I cannot accurately place, the types not being available. I am able to recognize ten indigenous Fijian species, the total thus being probably twelve. An additional three species, which occur in Fiji either in cultivation or as weeds, are included in this consideration, being the first three species in my key. The indigenous Fijian species fall into the Sections Eupiper and Macropiper, as outlined by de Candolle (5). In the present treatment I describe three new species, propose a new name for P. polysta- chyum C. DC., and take up P. puberulum as an older name than the well- known P. Macgillivrayi C. DC Spikes leaf-opposed, solitary; leaf-blades plinerved or pinnate-nerved, at least the inner nerves partially pacients: stipules sometimes free and then the petioles unwinged. Inflorescence-scales copiously pilose; leaf-blades narrowly oblong-elliptic, mmequi- rally rotund-subcordate at base, scabrid above, puberulent beneath (at least on nerves), pinnate-nerved, the lateral nerves 4-7 per side, ascending; weed, Native Lo 7Amenica. (SSL fens1) os ico 54% oes ose wie ono rome 1. P. aduncum. Inflorescence-scales glabrous; leaf-blades smooth above, not scabrid, papi pie incipal nerves ve nieve for less than half the length of the costa (pinnate- nerved in no. 7) (§ Eupiper Erect shrub; ae blades large, 136 25 x 10-20 cm. at maturity, santas cordate at base, minutely puberulent on nerves beneath, the principal nerves 9-13, freely spreading from petiole except the 3 innermost, these loosely aan for 5-15 soe mature spikes (excl. peduncle) 2-6 cm. long; in Fiji only in cultivation 202m Scandent ohne. (except no. 7); leaf-blades not exceeding 14 x 10 cm. (rarely t — \) ct oOo — co >5 oO = ee =] 2 U Pp [=] oO Lan 1 < oO wn un | + a oO 5 =) om ~~ io) =) oO n => ia} 3. ta w) ° =] ei = ia} — oO 3 o o ° = pS i Spikes at pie 2 cm. long and usually much lane on peduncles at ae 6 mm. long; leaf-blades plinerved; scandent plan Fruits costing fully embedded in pulp oe concrescent with He rachis; filaments as broad as anthers; in Fiji only in cultivation...... . P. Betle. Fruits no more than semi-immersed in the se much narrower than anthers; indigenous in Fij 5, not a filaments 352 JOURNAL OF THE ARNOLD ARBORETUM [ VOL. XXIV Stipules free, inconspicuous, 5-12 mm. long; leaf- —o with the inner nerves usually long-concurrent, the costa with obvio peoeetiog nerves, i vein- lets usually prominulous on both surfac ova and fruits semi- immersed in the rachis; stamens pane 4, sre : per Fake the meas small, 0.15-0.25 x 0.3-0.4 mm. (42 inflorescence not known Plant nee throughout, or inflorescence-rachis sparsely pilose....... SN ee ee nee 4. P. insectifugum. Branchlets distally, petioles, peduncles, and leaf-blades on both surfaces crispate-hispid, the upper ne surface eventually se apiloenens inflorescence- ieee densely pilose................4. 5. P. crispatum — free or adnate to petiole, ae ae , 15-22 mm. long; leat. blades early plinerved, oe inner 3 nerves jc hvunenk for only 7-20 mm., the ar without important lateral nerves, the veinlets obscure or slightly impressed above; ovaries apparently frees stamens apparently 2 per flower, the anthers comparatively large, about 0.25 x 0.7 mm....... 5 tea aN Goeas's wine tara whe ai oS i BAG ap iw Seal eal ach tana eG oie ea P.s — ae least 2 ) 1-1.5 cm. long, on peduncles 2-4 mm. long; ovaries free, not sed in the rachis; leaf-blades essentially pinnate-veined, with 2—4 pairs eT SBCUD:. fo 454e ens eee acasawdeh au saaae ae generi. one axillary: leaf- blades with nerves freely spreading from the petiole; stipules ate to petioles, these at least partially vaginate; indigenous in Fiji (§ Macro- fi per). Spikes solitary, sometimes paired in distal leaf-axils. ‘Leaf-blades hispid-pilose on both surfaces; inflorescence-scales ciliate-setose; car- pels conspicuously narrowed toward apex and with obscure stigmas.......... pind Niet a We weak SS a wa Ea kee wee Gee a ewes 8. P. oxycarpum. — eos glabrous at least above; inflorescence-scales not ciliate-setose; carpels sentially rounded at apex, Bee obvious stigmas. peduncle, rarely only 4 cm. but vie aaees mature; floral parts meen: large, the scales ae mm, in diamet leaf-blades (7—)8-15(—22) by (3—)4-10(-17) cm., 5—9-nerved. Leaf-blades puberulent beneath.............. 9a. P. pub sa i var. hate Leaf-blades glabrous on both surfaces........ 9b. P. puberulum var. glabru Spikes 2.5-5.5 cm. long at maturity, excluding peduncle; floral parts smaller, a. scales 0.35-0.7 mm. in diameter; leaf-blades 6-11 - 2-5.5 cm., 3- or 5- d . P. melanostachyum. Spikes 3 or more per leaf-axil, rarely only 2 Petioles of mature leaves 8-17 cm. long, usually vaginate only in the lower quarter; leaf-blades up to 25 b ae cm., 11-13-nerved, cordate at base veep so on larger blades) ; — (at least ¢ ) 10-22 per leaf-axil.......... 11. P. vitiense. Petioles shorter, 1-4.5 c least more than half their length; leaf-blades up to 17 by 15 cm., (5—)7—9- nerved, obtuse to subcordate at base; spikes (both ¢@ and 9) usually 3-5 per leaf-axil, fae Spikes (both and 2) 0.8-3. 5 cm. long (excl. peduncle) ; stigmas glabrous or sparsely a ee ee eer ra erie 12. P. hianum. Spikes (at least 2) 5-8 cm. long (excl. peduncle) ; a densely and obvi- lOUSIY: PHOSEse-.5.o:5-tse se Seis Hesse Ruka eles eee as oi . P. kandavuense. 1. go shee ng: aduncum L. Sp. Pl. 29. 1753; C. DC. in ig Prodr, 16(1): 9; B. E. Parham in Agr. Jour. Dept. Agr. Fiji 9(3): 1938 DistRIBUTION: Common throughout a large part of tropical a Of recent introduction into Fiji; no to Parham, in 1938: “During the past five years this species of Piper has been noted as an aggressive weed plant in the south-eastern part of Viti Levu, it has apparently spread rapidly with Suva as the cent Fiyt. Vitt Levu: Rewa: Lami, Parks 20060 (Bish); between Suva and Lami, 1943 ] SMITH, PACIFIC ISLAND PLANTS, II 353 Gilles pie 2079 (A, Bish); 4 mi. west of Suva, sien be (Bish); Rewa or Kombalevu, alt. 400 m., Paks 2 (Bish NATIVE NAME: Yanggona ni Onolulu Biceetite to ‘Parham: e. “Honolulu Piper,” a misnomer, as the species is probably not found in Hawaii). As it occurs in Fiji, the plant is a shrub or ainda tree up to 8 m. high, occurring on roadsides or in bush-land, most often near cultivation. It has not been reported from any other Pacific group. 2. Piper (§ Eupiper) methysticum Forst. f. Pl. Esc. Ins. Oc. eas 76. 1786, FI. Austr. Prodr. 5. 1786; Seem. Fl. Vit. 260. 1868; C. DC. DC. Prodr. 16(1): 354. 1869, in Candollea 1: 1923; non L. f. Suppl. 91 i synonym of L. latifolium L. f. in Emendanda]. 1781. aia rmethssticum Miq. Comm. ee 6. pl. 4, D. ae Syst. Piper. 217. E. Parham in Agr. Jour. Dept. Agr. a 8(1): 2. ISTRIBUTION: Throughout the Pacific Islands from New ae and Micronesia eastward. The species is found only in cultivation, at least in Fiji, and its source is men, giving the localities of Tahiti and the Tongan and Hawaiian groups. There appear to be no Fijian specimens in American herbaria, but the plant is found in every Fijian village where conditions are suitable. I have cited above only the basic literature referring to P. methysticum and treatments specifically discussing the plant in Fiji. The nomencla- tural problems pertaining to the binomial have been competently discussed by Moore (6). F. Brown’s account (1: 18-19) discusses the numerous varieties cultivated in the Marquesas. Seemann (8: 260-261) has described the use of the plant in Fiji, while Parham (7) has recently written an interesting account of the species in Fiji, considering its varieties, methods of cultivation, disease-control, etc. 3. Piper (§ Eupiper) Betle L. Sp. Pl. 28. 1753; C. DC. in DC. Prodr. 16(1): 359. 1869, in Candollea 1: 189. 1923; Ouisae hing in Philip. Jour. Sci. 43: 85. 1930; Jan in Agr. Jour. Dept. Agr. Fiji 8(4): 49. 1937. DistrR1BUuTION: Malaya to India, widely elevate throughout the tropics. The common betel pepper is used and cultivated to a certain extent by the Indian popula- tion of Fiji, as indicated by the discussion of Jan cited above. I have seen no herbarium specimens of the plant from Fiji. 4. Piper (§ Eupiper) insectifugum C. DC. ex Seem. FI,, Vit. 262. 1868, in DC. Prodr. 6(1): 354. 1869; Billow in Gartenflora 45: 575. 1896; C. DC. in Jour. Linn. Soc. Bot. 39: 164. 1909, in Candollea 1: 178. 1923 TION: Fs common in Fiji, where it occurs in forest or open woods a The occurrence of the species in Samoa is noted only by Billow, as , indicated above, and possibly it is endemic to Fiji. Fiyt. Virr Levu: Seemann 569 8 (type cotyt.,GH); Tholo North: Vicinity of Nandarivatu, Degener & Ordonez a ster. (A, NY), ane es fr. (A, NY, WCAUS)s (Grecainoce 867 ster. (A); Rewa: Korombamba Mt., Gillespie 2315 ster. (A, Bish). Kanpavu: Above anne and Ngaloa Bays, pa 75 8 (Bish, GH, NY, UC, US). Vanua Levu: Mbua: Seatovo Range, Smith 1545 3 (Bish, GH, NY, UC, US); Thakaundrove: Savu Savu Bay region, Degener & Ordonez 354 JOURNAL OF THE ARNOLD ARBORETUM [VoL. XXIV 13907 8 (A, NY, UC, US). Taveunr: Western slope between Somosomo and Wairiki, Smith 841 ¢& (Bish, GH, NY, UC, US). Wuirxovut pDEFINITE LOCALITY: Gillespie 2209 & (A, Bish), 2225 ster. (Bish), 3876 ¢@ (A, Bish). This distinctive climbing species of § Eupiper is not correctly placed in de Candolle’s key (5: 178). The stigmas are 3 and sessile, rather than 2 and on a style, while the stamens are 3 or 4 per flower. The presence of 4 stamens in flowers of § Eupiper is not indicated by de Candolle (5: 176), but there can be no doubt of the proper place of P. imsectifugum in this section. Its actual alliance is difficult to ascertain, but its leaves are some- times remarkably similar to those of P. Betle; in inflorescence characters the two species are quite different, and P. Betle is not indigenous in Fiji. 5. Piper (§ Eupiper) crispatum sp. nov. Frutex scandens, ramulis apicem versus, petiolis, laminis utrinque, et pedunculis pilis stramineis vel pallide brunneis crispatis multicellulatis m. longis debiliter hispidis; ramulis subteretibus gracilibus nodis conspicue incrassatis et mox disarticulatis, internodiis apicem ramulorum versus 1—3.5 cm. longis; stipulis apice ramulorum lanceolatis ad 1 cm. longis hirtellis mox caducis; foliis alternatis, petiolis paullo canaliculatis 0-16 mm. longis, laminis chartaceis in sicco brunneis ovatis, 9-13 cm. longis, 6-8 cm. latis, basi inaequilateraliter rotundatis, apice gradatim acuminatis (acumine ipso 1-2 cm. longo ad apicem nervis marginalibus , Margine integris, supra demum subglabrescentibus, plerumque 5-pli-nerviis, nervis paullo supra basim orientibus, costa utrinque valida superne nervos secundarios laterales conspicuos utrinsec cus 2-4 utrinque culis 10-17 mm. longis, spicis sub anthesi gracilibus 4—5 cm. longis, rhachi pilis multicellulatis circiter 0.5 mm. lo ongis dense pilosa; bracteis primo imbricatis membranaceis peltatis inconspicue glanduloso-punctatis 1—1.2 mm, diametro breviter stipitatis; ovario in rhachi semi-immerso rotundato- conico sub anthesi circiter 0.4 mm. diametro, stigmatibus ut videtur 3 minutis. DISTRIBUTION: Known only from the type collection. Fiji. WutTHOUT DEFINITE LOCALITY: Gillespie 3092 @ (A, Bish, TYPE), 1927-28 (woody vine, scrambling on tree Although doubtless a close relative of P. insectifugum, this plant seems specifically eigen by virtue of its crispate-hispid parts, as mentioned in my key. The numerous specimens of P. insectifugum examined bear no trace of the desea pubescence of the new species. 6. Piper (§ Eupiper) stipulare sp. nov. Frutex dioecus scandens ubique praeter rhachem inflorescentiae inter- dum obscure pilosam glaber, ramulis gracilibus subteretibus nodis incras- satis, internodiis apicem ramulorum versus 1.5—6 cm. longis; stipulis liberis vel raro petiolo adnatis conspicuis oblongis 15-22 mm. longis inter- dum subpersistentibus; foliis alternatis, petiolis gracilibus 12-17 mm. longis, laminis chartaceis in sicco brunneo-olivaceis ovatis vel elliptico- ovatis, (7—)10—-14 cm. longis, (4—)6-10.5 cm. latis, basi inaequilateraliter obtusis vel rotundatis, apice cuspidato- -acuminatis (acumine ipso 5-10 1943] SMITH, PACIFIC ISLAND PLANTS, II 355 mm. longo), margine integris, 7-pli-nerviis, nervis cum costa supra paullo subtus valde elevatis, interioribus 7-20 mm. concurrentibus apicem attin- gentibus, aliis antea evanescentibus, rete venularum obscuro vel subtus leviter prominulo; inflorescentiis 4 et 2 apicem ramulorum versus oppo- sitifoliis, pedunculis 7-10 mm. longis, spicis sub anthesi gracilibus 4-5 cm. longis; bracteis membranaceis peltatis obscure pellucido-punctatis 0.7—0.8 mm. diametro breviter (ad 0.2 mm.) stipitatis; staminibus ut videtur 2, antheris subsessilibus subreniformibus vel transverse ellipsoideis, circiter 0.25 0.7 mm.; ovario ut videtur libero obscure luteo-glanduloso ovoideo- subgloboso sub anthesi circiter 0.7 mm. diametro, stigmatibus 3 sessilibus 0.3 mm. longis. DISTRIBUTION: ee only from Viti tees Fiji. has Leyu: Parks 20879 & (Bish); Namosi: 2 miles from Namuamua, in woods near Namosi trail, oe 300 m., pes se, ae decomposed spikes (A, Bish) (thick vine, climbing on tree); N athe iri: 7.5 miles from Suva, near road ast ner village, in oo alt. 150 m., Gillespie 2423 Q (A, Bish, TYPE), aie, 21 LOD Tes bee om is probably most closely allied to P. Graeffei Warb. and the several other Samoan species of § Eupiper proposed by C. de Candolle. However, it is distinguished from all of these by its large and often per- sistent stipules and its much shorter spikes. 7. Piper (§ Eupiper) Degeneri A. C. Sm. in Sargentia 1: 10. 1942. DISTRIBUTION: Known only from the type collection. Fijt. Vanua Levu: Thakaundrove: Eastern drainage of Yanawai River, alt. 150 m., Degener & Ordonez 14096 2 (A, TYPE, NY). As remarked in the original consideration, this very distinct and appar- ently rare species has no close relatives in the Pacific. 8. Piper (§ Macropiper) oxycarpum C. DC. in Jour. Linn. Soc. Bot. 39: 164. 1909, in Candollea 1: 1 DIstTRIBUTION: Endemic to Fiji and probably limited to the higher art in the interior of Viti Levu. The type is Gibbs 604, from Nandarivatu, Tholo N Fijt. Vitr Levu: In forest at 1250 m., Parks 20738 9 (A, aed Tho North: Nandarivatu, in open bush, alt. 1000 m., Parks 20572 2 (Bish). Wirmour DEFINITE LOCALITY: Gillespie 3839 2 (Bish) This very distinct species is at once distinguished from all other members of § Macropiper by having its branchlets distally, petioles, peduncles, and leaf-blades on both surfaces conspicuously hispid-pilose, its inflorescence- scales densely ciliate-setose, and its carpels conspicuously narrowed toward the apex and bearing 2 or 3 very obscure stigmas. Other essential charac- ters of the species are as follows: petioles 1-3 cm. long, one-half to three- quarters vaginate; leaf-blades ovate, 8-17 cm. long, 5-12 cm. broad, sub- cordate at base, gradually acuminate at apex, 7- or sometime 9-nerved; spikes (at least @) solitary, 5-11 cm. long excluding peduncles, these slender, 2.5—5 cm. long. According to de Candolle the type collection is from a shrub 2 m. high. 9. Piper (§ Macropiper) puberulum (Benth.) Benth. ex Seem. Fl. Vit. 262, as syno- nym, and fl. 75. 1868; non P. puberulum Maxim. (1886). Macropiper puberulum Benth, in Hook. Lond. Jour. Bot. 2: 235. 1843. 356 JOURNAL OF THE ARNOLD ARBORETUM [VOL. XXIV Piper Macgillivrayi C. DC. ex Seem. Fl. Vit. 262. 1868; C. DC.8 in DC. Prodr. 16(1): 335. 1869; Engl. in Bot. Jahrb. 7: 450. 1886, in Forschung. “Gazelle” 4: Siphon, 25. 1889; C. DC. in Denkschr. Akad. Wiss. Wien 85: 264. 1910; Turrill in Jour. Linn. Soc. Bot. 43: 35, 1915 DistripuTiIon: Fiji, Samoa, Tonga, and probably some of the adjacent groups. In Fiji the species is reported as a low erect shrub up to 3 m. high, occurring at alti- peat from sea-level up to 900 m. or possibly higher. Var. typicum occurs in thickets n the edges of forest, apparently only below 500 m., being especially common in ee thickets. Var. glabrum usually occurs in the forest a nd is not reported from spelled “yaqoyaqona”’). The two varieties recognize Fiji are not very sharply differentiated and their value is dubious. Both varieties occur in Samoa, but I have seen only var. glabrum from Tong The necessity of replacing ite well-known binomial P. Macgillivrayi is pointed out in my discussion above, where I also consider the typification af the species and the two varieties which are known from Fiji. 9a. Piper puberulum var. typicum nom. nov Macropiper puberulum Ad a in Hook. Lond. Jour. Bot. 2: 235. 1843; nee Syst. Piper. 221. 1843; Seem. in Bonplandia 9: 259. 1861, in Jour. Bot. 2: 1864. Piper dale Benth. ex Seem. FI. Vit. 262, as synonym, and fl. eS 1868; low in Gartenflora 45: 575, nomen. 1896. Piper Maceillivrayi C. DC. ex Seem. FI. Vit. 262. 1868, in Candollea 1: 172. 1923. ae laminae subtus puberulae. Viti Levu: Parks 20173, in part, 9 (Bish), rt 2 (Bish); Lautoka: Reed pe Natalau, Degener 15005 @ (A, NY, UC, US); olo West: Mbulu, De- gener 15042 9° (A, NY, UC, US). Kanpavu: Above Lhieaet and Ngaloa Bays, ‘Smith 56 9 (Bish, GH, NY, ‘UC, US), 115 : (Bish, GH, NY, UC, US); Mt. Mbuke Levu, er 210 2 (Bish, GH, NY, UC, US). Ovarau: U.S. Expl. Exped. 1, in part, 9 (GH). Koro: East coast, Smith 1105 2 (Bish, GH, NY, UC, US). Vanua Levu: U.S. Expl. Exped. 1,in part 9? (GH); Thakaundrove: Savu Savu Bay region, Degener & Ordonez 13871 fr. (A, NY, UC, US). Vanua MBaravu: Smith 1408 9 (Bish, NY). FurLanca: Smith 1137 9 (Bish, NY). WurHouTt DEFINITE LOCALITY: Seemann 567, in part, 2 (cotype coll. of Piper Macgillivrayi, GH), Prince (GH). It should be noted that some specimens here cited (e.g. Smith 115 and Degener & Ordonez 13871) bear essentially glabrous leaves on the same branches with puberulent leaves. The possibility that the degree of pubescence is merely a concomitant of shade conditions is thus indicated, and it may be questioned whether the two varieties have any genetic foundation. 9b. Piper puberulum var. pci (C. DC.) comb. Piper Macgillivrayi var. glabrum C. DC. in DC. Prod 16(1): 335, excl. pe Macropiper puberulum. 1869; Warb. (as var. nov.) in Bot. Jahrb. 25: iy C. DC. in Jour. Linn. Soc. Bot. 39: - 1909, in Denkschr. Akad. — n 85: 264. 1910, in Candollea 1: 172, 19 Piper “Mailers sensu aie in oe ce ‘Soc. Bot. 30: 189. 1894; Burkill n Jour. Linn. Soc. Bot. 35: 52. ’The cited references to P. Macgillivrayi, with the exception of the first, cannot be referred to a definite variety and therefore are listed under the species as an inclusive concept. 4The numerous Tongan specimens I have seen belong to var. glabrum, and it seems likely that only this variety occurs in Tonga; hence I have cited Niterabure referring to Tongan collections here. 1943 ] SMITH, PACIFIC ISLAND PLANTS, II 357 and cpa glabrous on both surfaces. Fiy EVU: Gillespie 2687 2 (Bish), Parks 20173, in part, fr. (Bish), ae 9 ae 20452 fr. (A, Bish), 20731 fr. (Bish), 20735 9, fr. (A, Bish); Tholo North: Vicinity of Nandarivatu, Parks 20606 fr. (Bish), sos aaa & Ordonez 13569 fr. (A, NY, UC, US), Degener 14361 fr. (A), 14659 fr. (A, NY); Namosi: Voma Mt., as 2927 ? (Bish);Serua: Vicinity of Ngaloa, Degener 15140 8 (A, NY), 15179 $, 3% (A, NY, UC, US); Rewa: Mt. Korombamba, Gillespie 2235 fr. ay, Kanpavu: Above Namalata and Ngaloa Bays, Smith 167 9 (Bish, GH, NY, UC, US). Ovarau: U. S. Expl. Exped. 2 (GH). Vanua Levu: Thakaun- drove: Savu Savu Bay region, Smith 331 9 (Bish, GH, NY, UC, US), 395 i “i (Bish, GH, NY, UC, US), Degener & Ordonez 13829 fr. (A, NY), 13908 9, fr. (A UC, US), 13967 fr. (A, NY); Maravu, near Salt Lake, Degener & Ordonez on ‘ (A, NY, UC, US). Wirnout peFrnite Locatity: Seemann 567, in part, Q (TYPE of Piper Macgillivrayi var. glabrum, GH), Gillespie 2697 9 (A, ae 2698 Q (Bish), 2974 fr. (Bish), 3004 2 (Bish), 3307.4 9 (A, Bish), 4658 9 (A, B 10. Piper (§ Macropiper) oe C. DC. in Jour. Linn. Soc. Bot. 39: 162. 1909, in Candollea 1: 172. DIstRIBUTION: Endemic to a and a limited to Viti Levu. The type is Gibbs 703, from Nandarivatu, Tholo Nor Fijt. Vitt Levu: Tholo No ae : Nandarivatu, alt. 1000 m., Parks 20546 fr. (Bish); Tholo ba aiden nes of Mbelo, near Mpc Tabualewa 15556 & (A, NY US); Rewa: Korombamba Mt., alt. 400-550 m., Gillespie 2217 6 (A, sa) ee. e) (A. Bish). WiTHOUT DEFINITE LOCALITY: U.S S. Expl. Exped. 3 $ (G According . ae Candolle, this is a slender shrub 1.5 m. high; the above- cited collections have no habit data. The plant probably occurs in woods or forests at middle elevations, although the Tabualewa and U. S. Exploring Expedition collections may have been obtained near sea-level. The essen- tial characters of the species are as follows: petioles 0.8—2 cm. long, vaginate one-half or nearly all their length; leaf-blades ovate-oblong, 6-11 cm. long, 2—5.5 cm. broad, acute to obtuse at base, gradually acuminate at apex, 3- or S-nerved from the petiole; spikes solitary, axillary, slender, short (2.5—5.5 cm. long excluding peduncle, even at anthesis or in fruit). In floral characters, P. melanostachyum differs from P. puberulum only in its slightly smaller parts, the peltate scales being 0.35-0.7 mm. in diameter; the minute stamens and the stigmas are always three. Although this plant may be only a montane derivative from the common P. puberulum, I am inclined to agree with de Candolle in granting it specific status, at least until more adequate material establishes a complete series of forms between the two entities. 11. Piper (§ Macropiper) vitiense nom. nov Piper latifolium sensu Seem. FI. Vit. 261, quoad spec. vit. 1868; no Piper polystachyum C. DC. in Jour. Linn. Soc. Bot. ee 162. io in Candollea 923; A. C. Sm. in Bishop Mus. Bull. 141: 25. 1936; non Piper poly- stachyon Ait. Hort. Kew. 1: 49. 1789 (= papi pe ey 5Degener 15179 is remarkable for its polygamo-monoecious reat some spikes having only staminate flowers while others on the same plant have hermaphrodite normal ovary. s is y specimen of § Macropiper I have seen with hermaphrodite flowers, but it scarcely weakens the characters of the section as defined by de Candolle (5: 171). 358 JOURNAL OF THE ARNOLD ARBORETUM [VOL. XXIV DistrisuTION: Endemic to Fiji, or possibly also in the New Hebrides. Occurring in Fiji at elevations of 600 to 1100 m. in forest, often common locally. The type is Gibbs 794, from Nandarivatu, Tholo North, Viti Levu Fiyt. Vitt Levu: Namosi: Naitarandamu Mt., Gillespie 3360 92 (A, Bish). Vanua Levu: T : akaun - rove: Mt. Mariko, Smith 458 6 (Bish, GH, NY, US). TAVEUNI: Seemann 566 ster. (GH); Mt. Manuka, Smith 791 @ (Bish, NY). WirH- OUT DEFINITE LOCALITY: need 3123 g (A, Bish). See also Smith in 193 ew name is needed for de Candolle’s species because of the earlier a. a Ait. The epithets polystachyon and polystachyum must be considered orthographic variants, according to Article 70 of the International Rules of Botanical Nomenclature, 1935. Piper vitiense, a member of the general alliance of P. latifolium L. f., differs from that species and its other relatives in its long-petiolate large- bladed leaves and its numerous long-pedunculate staminate inflorescences. Mature leaves of our specimens have the petioles up to 17 cm. long and the sheaths 2.5—3.5 cm. long; in general the petioles are vaginate only in the lower quarter, while P. latifolium has sheaths usually nearly as long as the petioles. The largest leaf-blades of P. vitiense now available are up to 25 by 28 cm. and 13-nerved. The number of staminate spikes in the leaf- axils is somewhat more variable than the 14 described by de Candolle. Our material shows these spikes to be about 10-22 in number, giving the species its most distinctive character. The staminate spikes are up to 6 cm long and are borne on slender peduncles up to 5 cm. long. The only avail- able pistillate specimen, Gillespie 3360, has broken detached spikes, which offer no unusual character except as to number (which one may anticipate approaches the number of staminate spikes) ; the stigmas are 3, as usual in this section of the genus. 12. Piper (§ Macropiper) Timothianum A. C. _ in Sargentia I: 1942. Piper Macgillivrayi var. fasciculare Warb. in aa Jahrb. 25: 609, as Ci edie 1898; C. DC. in Denkschr. Akad. bees Wien 85: 264, as “fascicularis.’”’ 1910, in Ann. Cons. Jard. Bot. Genéve 15: as “fascicularis. ” 1012; Turrill in Jour. Linn. Soc. Bot. 43: 35, as ae " ers C. DC. in Candolles 1: 172. 1923; Christoph. in Bishop Mus. Bull. 154: 5. 1938 Piper fascicularis (sic) vel a. Rechinge er in Karsten & Schenck, Vegeta- tionsbilder 6: pl. 5. ee n P. fasciculare Rudge, Pl. Guian. Rar. 1: 9. pl. 4. O05 (= Lacistema sp P. fasciculatum Ruiz & Pav. Syst. Veg. 1: 362. 1798. Piper Macgillivrayi var. eases (sic) forma 6 C. DC. in Jour. Linn. Soc. Bot. 62. 19 DistRIBUTION: Fiji and Samoa. In Fiji the species is common locally in pa forest and ridge-thickets of Viti Levu at elevations of 550-1200 m.; it is a shrub 2-5 m. high In Samoa (as P. Macgillivrayi var. fasciculare) it is said to occur in some abundance on Savaii and Upolu, in essentially similar habitats at elevations up to 1500 Fiyt. Vitr Levu: Tholo North: Nandarivatu, Degener & a 13570 @ (A, TypE, NY, UC, US), Parks 20777 & (Bish), ee fr. (Bish), Gillespie 4214 i (A, Bish) ; Nauwanga, Degener 14360 fr. (A, NY, UC, US), 14620 fr. Y Nandrau, Degener 14891 fr. (A, NY); Namosi: Vicin ity of Namosi, Gillespie 2688 @ (A, Bish), Parks 20238 fr. (Bish), 20257 fr. (Bish) ; Korombasambasanga Mt., B. E. Parham 2212 fr. Sate Vanua Levu: Thakaundrove-Mathuata boundary: Korotini Range, Smith 548 Q (Bish, GH, = UC, US). WitrHout DEFINITE LOCALITY: Gillespie 2782 9 (Bish), 3/24 fr. (Bish In proposing this entity as a new species in oe 1 considered its simi- 1943 ] SMITH, PACIFIC ISLAND PLANTS, II 359 larity to the Samoan plant which has been passing as P. Macgillivrayi var. fasciculare, but it seemed to me at that time, as at present, that the plant cannot be placed in “P. Macgillivrayt” (i.e. P. puberulum, as defined in the present treatment) without undue expansion of that concept. The other varieties of P. puberulum have the spikes usually solitary, but sometimes those at the upper nodes are paired. Piper Timothianum, on the other hand, has the spikes normally 3—7 per axil, very rarely 2. Several students of the Samoan flora, including Christophersen in 1938, have remarked that the number of spikes may vary from 1 to 4, but I have not observed fewer than 2 (and this very rarely) in the cited Fijian material. Furthermore the spikes (excluding peduncles), both staminate and pistillate, are only 0.8-3.5 cm. long. Christophersen finds that Samoan plants may have the pistillate spikes up to 5 cm. long and the staminate up to 10 cm. Piper puberulum, in the sense adopted by me, has the spikes between 4 and 19 cm. long, but the spikes of either sex are rarely less than about 7 cm. long. Although the two species are doubtless closely related and quite possibly interfertile, I fail to see how the present entity can be included in P. puber- ulum without expanding that concept to an unwarranted degree, perhaps even submerging it in P. latifolium L. f. Few students of Piper will wish io combine species to this extent, in which case the whole Section Macro piper would scarcely be divisible into species. Apparently only Rechinger, in 1908, has thought P. Macgillivrayi var. fasciculare worthy of specific rank; he used the specific epithets “fascicu- laris” and ‘“‘fasciculatum” indiscriminately, but neither is available for use in Piper. The plant was collected at Nandarivatu by both Gibbs and im Thurn, whose specimens were referred to Warburg’s variety by de Candolle and Turrill. 13. Piper (§ Macropiper) kandavuense sp. nov. Frutex 3 m. altus ubique inflorescentia excepta glaber, ee teretibus nodis valde incrassatis, internodiis apicem ramulorum_ versu cm. longis; foliis alternatis, petiolis 2-3 cm. longis fere ad ai conspicue vaginantibus (alis 3-4 mm. latis superne ad petiolum abrupte decurrenti- bus), laminis chartaceis in sicco olivaceis late ovatis, 10-15 cm. longis, 8-14 cm. latis, basi truncato-subcordatis, apice cuspidato- acuminatis, margine integris, 7(vel inconspicue 9-)-nerviis, nervis e basi divergentibus utrinque conspicue elevatis, rete venularum utrinque haud_ prominulo; inflorescentiis @ solis visis in axillis foliorum apicem ramulorum versus 4 vel 5 aggregatis, pedunculis validis glabris 1-2 cm. longis, spicis paullo post anthesin 2-3 mm. diametro 5—8 cm. longis; rhachi pilis pallidis 0.2—0.4 mm. longis sparse pubescente; bracteis liberis peltatis membrana- ceis circiter 0.8 mm. diametro breviter stipitatis; ovario globoso-ellipsoideo circiter 1 mm. diametro (immaturo), apice rotundato, stigmatibus 3 patentibus circiter 0.3 mm. longis dense et conspicue brunneo-pilosis et ciliatis coronato. DISTRIBUTION: Known only from the type collection. Kanpavu: Mt. Mbuke Levu, alt. 200-500 m., Smith 219 9 (Bish, GH, TYPE, NY. UC, US), Oct. 23, 1933 (shrub 3 m, high, in Hie pee The specimen above described belongs among the allies of P. latifolium 360 JOURNAL OF THE ARNOLD ARBORETUM [VoOL. XXIV L. f., but in several details it differs from my concept of that species. On the whole, it has shorter petioles than P. latifolium, at least on leaves of comparable size and maturity, and its petiolar sheaths are slighly broader in proportion and more abrupt distally. In the material of P. latifolium which I have seen from the eastern Pacific, the spikes, both staminate and pistillate, are never more than 3, but the original description states that the spikes are 5 or more; whether the original specimen was staminate or pistillate is not stated. Although the stigmas of P. latifolium are glandular- puberulent, they are never as conspicuously pilose as those of Smith 219. In view of these differences, and especially the difference pertaining to the stigmatic character, I doubt if Smith 219 can be referred to P. latifolium. No Fijian specimen which has yet come to my attention seems to agree precisely with material of P. /atifolium from the eastern Pacific, but Smith 219 seems closest, among Fijian plants, to Linnaeus’ species, the limits of which are not vet entirely understood, as stated above. INSUFFICIENTLY KNOWN ENTITIES FROM FIJI PIPER a maeor awe MacciLiivrayi C. DC. var. pARvIFOLIUM C, DC, in DC. Prodr. (1): fi ae S a treatment of this is as follows: “ . . . limbis 0,06 longis, 0,03 latis 5—7-nerviis . . . In ins. Fijee (Barclay ! in h. Kew.).” Leaves with these small dimensions have been observed among the available Fijian collections only on plants referred to P. melanostachyum C. DC., in which the leaf-blades are not 7-nerved. It seems probable that P. M acgilli- vrayi var. parvifolium is a very depauperate individual of P. puberulum var. glabrum. PIPER (§ reno pig — C. DC. in Jour. Linn. Soc. Bot. 39: 163. 1909, in andollea 1: 17 According to de “Candolle, this species is characterized by its small leaf- blades (8 3.5 cm.), which are densely hirtellous beneath and 7-nerved, its hirtellous petioles and peduncles, its short pistillate spikes (3.5 cm. long), and especially its hirsute ovaries. On the basis of the original description this appears to be a distinct species, suggestive of P. oxycarpum and possibly P. puberulum var. typicum. No Fijian material available to me can be referred to P. Gibbsiae, which I hesitate to place without seeing the type, Gibbs 722, from Nandarivatu, Tholo North, Viti Levu. PIPER Pe rica et ries C. DC. in Jour. Linn. Soc. Bot. 39: 163. 1909, in andollea 1: aos the prea ae amie and de Candolle’s key (5: 173), one may assume that this species is a close relative of P. Gibbsiae, differing chiefly in its slightly larger (13 5.8 cm.) and more obviously acuminate leaf- blades, longer pistillate spikes (6 cm. long), and more sparsely pilose ovaries. Without examining the type, it is inadvisable to draw conclusions as to the value of the species, which is based on Gibbs 599, from Nanda- rivatu, Tholo North, Viti Levu. 1943 ] SMITH, PACIFIC ISLAND PLANTS, II 361 PRINCIPAL LITERATURE CITED 1, Brown, F.B.H. Flora of of Polynesia, III. Dicotyledons. Bishop Mus. Bull. 130: Peter 17-20. . CANDOLLE, . DE. a a Prodr. 16(1): 23565_471. 1869. 2 3, ———__ peraceae (in Gibbs, A oo to the montane flora of Fiji). Jour, tee eae Bot. 39: 162-167. 4, ————. Pi eraceae Ae Snr ota he und Zoologische Ergebnisse . . .). Denkschr. Akad. Wiss. Wein 85: 264-269 [reprint 3: 90-95]. 1910 5, ———___., a eieia clavis ie Candollea 1: 65-415, 1923. 6. Moore, J. W. Taxonomic studies of Raiatean plants. Bishop Mus. Occ. Pap. 10(19): 1-8. 1934. ParHAM, B. E. V. Wilt disease of ““Yangona.” Agr. Jour. Dept. Agr. Fiji 8(1): 2-8. 1935 sJ 8. SEEMANN, B. Flora Vitiensis: Piperaceae, 259-262, 1868. 9. SeTcHELL, W. A. Tahitian spermatophytes ner by W. A. eee CyB: Setchell, and H. E. Parks. Univ. Cal. Publ. Bot. 12: Piper, 163. 10. Warsurc, O. Piperaceae (in Reinecke, Die nee der eae ae Jahrb. 25: 609-612. 1898. ARNOLD ARBORETUM, HArvARD UNIVERSITY. 362 JOURNAL OF THE ARNOLD ARBORETUM [VOL. XXIV NOTES ON THE FLORA OF INDO-CHINA Hut-Lin Li Tuts paper is based almost entirely on a part of the very excellent and extensive collections of botanical material from the extreme northeastern part of Tonkin, adjacent to the Kwangtung border, assembled by Mr. W. T. Tsang on the second, third, and fourth Lingnan Indo-China Expeditions. These expeditions were sponsored by the Botanical Survey of Lingnan University in co-operation with the Arnold Arboretum and were supported by grants from the latter institution. The second expedition was in the fall of 1936, the third in the spring and early summer of 1939, and the fourth from May to November, 1940. All the material of the first two expeditions, when received from the field, was stored in Canton in order that the necessary herbarium labels could be prepared. The fourth expedi- tion was actually in the field when the Japanese occupied Indo-China, but Mr. Tsang succeeded in returning to Hong Kong with all of his material. Because of the rapidly deteriorating conditions in the Orient, all of the material from the three expeditions was assembled in Hong Kong, and, through the active interest of Prof. F. A. McClure, the Arnold Arboretum share of the collections was shipped to the United States in January 1941. Because of the critical situation in Canton and the increasingly critical one in Hong Kong, time did not permit the actual transcription of the field notes for the numbers involved on the fourth and last expedition; we do, however, have the localities and the inclusive dates of collection for each locality, and we were thus in a position to have the necessary printed herbarium labels prepared. In the three collections there is a total of about 2000 numbers. Of the second and third expedition collections we normally have four sets of specimens for each number; but the number of duplicates of the fourth collection is very much larger, often running from ten to fifteen specimens for each number. Mr. Tsang, on all three expeditions, operated in the coastal regions in the vicinity of Ha Coi and the mountainous region inland from Ha Coi and Tien Yen, much of the material being from the mountain ranges immedi- ately south of the juncture of the Kwangsi-Kwangtung-Tonkin boundaries. Naturally, in the collection as a whole, a great many Chinese elements are represented in the form of genera and species originally described from Kwangtung, Kwangsi, and neighboring provinces, as well as the Island of Hainan. When the entire collection is studied, group by group, many addi- tions to the Indo-Chinese flora will result. All specimens cited are depos- ited in the herbarium of the Arnold Arboretum. This study was made possible through a grant made from the Milton Fund of Harvard University to Dr. E. D. Merrill, Director of the Arnold 1943 J LI, NOTES ON THE FLORA OF INDO-CHINA 363 Arboretum, to be utilized in completing the identification work on the recently received botanical collections from various parts of China and neighboring regions. PROTEACEAE Helicia Loureiro Helicia Henryi Diels, Repert. Sp. Nov. 13: 528 Helicia pallidiflora W. W. Smith, Notes Bot. ne) ea 10: 179. 1918. Inpo-Cu1na: Tonkin, northwest of Mon-cay, Pac-si and vicinity, W. T. Tsang 26961, Oct. 1-8, 1936, 7 ft. high, fairly common, growing in thickets, on dry clayey soil, fruits yellow or black; Taai Wong Mo Shan, Chuk-phai, W. 7. Tsang 27078, Oct. 23-31, 1936, 27252, Nov. 10-17, 1936, 29299, July 1-13, 1939, 7-9 ft. high, fairly common, growing in thickets, on dry clayey or sandy soil, fruits vellow or black. Yunnan, Kwangsi, Hainan. New to Indo-China. Helicia vestita W. W. Smith, Notes Bot. Gard. Edinb. 10: 181. 1918. HINA: Tonkin, Dam-ha, Sai Wong Mo Shan, Lung Wan Village, W. T. ee 30083, May 18 — July 5, 1940. Yunnan. New to Indo-China. Helicia Tsangii sp. nov. Arbor parva circiter 3-5 m. alta, ramulis ee dense ferrugineo- tomentosis serius glabrescentibus; foliis chartaceis vel subcoriaceis, breviter petiolatis (S-10 mm.), anguste ablonee ee vel oblongo- oblanceolatis, 17-26 cm. longis, 5.5-9.5 cm. latis, apice plus minusve abrupte acuminatis, basi angustatis, acutis vel cuneatis, margine crasse et remote serratis, supra glabris subnitidis, in sicco olivaceis, subtus glabris tiis axillaribus erectis ad 16 cm. longis, dense subcastaneo-tomentosis, multifloris, bracteis bracteolisque ovato-lanceolatis, ad 2—3 mm. longis, scentibus, solitariis vel binis vel plerum mque 2-4-fasciculatis; floribus circiter 15 mm. longis, albis, extus leviter tomentosis; antheris circiter 1.5 mm. longis; ovario circiter 1 mm. longo glabro, stylo gracili glabro; squamis hypogynis oblongo-quadratis, basi leviter cohaerentibus; fructibus sit eines subglobosis, circiter 1 cm. diametro, brunneis. NDO-CHIN Tonkin, northeast of Mon-cay, Pac-si and vicinity, W. T. Tsang en Sept. 7 30, 1936, 10 ft. high, abundant, alas in thickets, fruits brown: Ha-coi, Taai Wong Mo Shan, Chan Uk Village near Chuk-phai, W. T. Tsang 28974, May 3-10, 1939, 29174 (tTypE), June 1-9, 1939, 10-15 ft. high, fairly common, growing in thickets, on dry clayey soil, flowers white, fragrant. A species allied to Helicia silvicola W. W. Smith, but distinguished by the much broader, narrowly obovate to oblong-oblanceolate, coarsely toothed, short-petioled leaves, and by the longer flowers, which are hairy on the outsid LORANTHACEAE Elytranthe Blume Elytranthe cochinchinensis (Lour.) G. Don var. tonkinensis (Lecomte) comb. nov. Elytranthe ampullacea G. Don var. peyenions pear FI. Gén. Indo-Chine 5: 205. ee ener Tonkin, Tien-yen, Kau Nga Shan and vicinity, W. T. Tsang 27491, 364 JOURNAL OF THE ARNOLD ARBORETUM [VOL. XXIN Jan. 1-9, 1937, 2 it. high, fairly common, on trees in thickets, fruits purplish-red, flowers fragrant. Three varieties are recognized by Lecomte in Indo-China. The other two are Elytranthe cochinchinensis (Lour.) G. Don var. puberula (Le- comte) comb. nov. (E. ampullacea G. Don var. puberula Lecomte, FI. Gen. Indo-Chine 5: 205. 1915), from Cambodia, and var. Harmandii (Le- comte) comb, nov. (EZ. ampullacea G. Don var. Harmandii Lecomte, |. c. from Laos. Danser (Bull. Jard. Bot. Buitenz. III. 16: 5. 1938) refers all three to the type of Macrosolen cochinchinensis (Lour.) van Tieghem = Elytranthe cochinchinensis (Lour.) G. Don, as representing different forms of a polymorphic species. But the specimens from Indo-China show enough differences to prove that Lecomte is not unjustified in proposing these varieties. Loranthus Linnaeus Loranthus cordifolius Wall. in Roxb. Fl. Ind. 2: 222. 1824. Inpo-Cutna: Tonkin, Dam-ha, Sai Wong Mo Shan, Lomg Ngong Village, W. T. Tsang 30430, July 18 — Sept. 9, 1940; Tien-yen, Kau Nga Shan and vicinity, W. T Tsang 30570, Sept. 23 — Oct. 7, 1940. Eastern india. New to Indo-Chin This belongs in Scurrula Linn. in accordance with Danser’s achease of classification. Loranthus tienyensis sp. nov Frutex parasiticus, ramis ramulisque teretibus dense castaneo-tomen- tosis; foliis firmiter chartaceis, petiolatis, juventute utrinque breviter dense ferrugineo-tomentosis vel subtus secus costam tomentos sis, maturitate mox glabris ellipticis, 2.5-4.5 cm. longis, 1.5—2.3 cm. latis, utrinque late rotundatis, in sicco supra olivaceis, subtus paullo pallidioribus, costa supra obscura subtus elevata, nervis lateralibus obsoletis vel subobsoletis; peti- olo circiter 7 mm. longo ferrugineo-pubescente; inflorescentiis axillaribus aah plerumque bifloris, pedunculis teretibus circiter 5 mm. longis nse breviter subcastaneo- tomentosis: pedicellis teretibus vatataae 7 mm ane bracteis minutis; calyce subellipsoideo 2-3 mm. longo, margine rac corolla dense breviter subplumoso-tomentosa, ad 4.5 mm. longa, 3 mn gsi apice 4 4-lobata, lobis obtusis 1 mm. latis; filamentis ee 1m _lon ngis, antheris oblongis 1.5 mm. longis; stylis glabris fili- formibus, alae lobis aequalibus vel paullo longioribus, stigmate capitato. Inpo-Cutna: Tonkin, Tien-yen, Ho Yung Shan and vicinity, W. 7. Tsang 30689 (TYPE), Oct. 13 — Nov. 22, 1940. A very distinct species, characterized by its small elliptic leaves, which are rounded at both ends, without distinct lateral nerves, and with a dense tomentum along the lower portion of the midrib beneath, the mature leaves otherwise being wholly glabrous. It is remotely allied to Loranthus noto- thixoides Hance, differing, among other characters, in the larger leaves and very much longer flowers. In Danser’s classification it falls into Scurrula Linn. ANNONACEAE Goniothalamus Hooker f. & Thomson Goniothalamus chartaceus sp. nov. Frutex vel arbor parva, ramis ramulisque glabris nigris; foliis sub- 1943 | LI. NOTES ON THE FLORA OF INDO-CHINA 365 chartaceis glabris breviter petiolatis be es oblongo- pr venti vel lan- ceolatis, 11-17 cm. longis, 1.7—2.8 cm. latis, breviter obtuse acuminatis, basi acutis, margine leviter revolutis, in sicco olivaceis a eee concolori- bus, minute puncticulatis, costa supra leviter impressa subtus distincte elevata, nervis lateralibus utrinsecus 10-12, utrinque subconspicuis, tenui- bus, fere ad medium inter costam atque marginem curvato-anastomo- santibus, venis tertiariis inconspicuis; petiolo circiter 5 mm. longo; floribus axillaribus solitariis, pedicellis circiter 1.2 mm. longis, glabris, prope basim 3-bracteatis bracteis 1-1.5 mm. longis acuminatis; ee mm. 4 mm. latis, fere liberis, oieas petalis exterioribus liberis pee longe acuminatis, circiter 1.8 cm. longis, petalis ae oe coalitis, ovato- triangularibus, breviter acuminatis, circiter 1 ongis; staminibus numerosis circiter 1.5 mm. longis; carpellis numerosis minutis brunneo-tomentosis Inpo-CuHina: Ton ‘kin, Dam-ha, Tins Wong Mo Shan, Lung Wan Village, W. 7. Tsang 30097 (TYPE), May 18 - July 5 A species characterized by its pe narrow, puncticulate leaves and long and slenderly acuminate outer petals, being quite unlike any previously described species from this region, perhaps most closely allied to Gonio- thalamus elegans Ast. HAMAMELIDACEAE Embolanthera Merrill Embolanthera glabrescens sp. nov. utex vel arbor parva, glabra, ramis brunneo-cinereis teretibus, ramulis gracilibus obscure brunneis; foliis firmiter chartaceis glabris, petiolatis, lanceolatis vel oblongo-lanceolatis, 7-12 cm. longis, 1.5—4 cm. latis, longe acuminatis, basi plerumque perspicue inaequilateralibus, uno latere acutis, altero rotundatis vel late acutis, margine integris subcarti- supra subconspicuis, subtus conspicuis; petiolis canaliculatis, longis; inflorescentiis terminalibus solitariis spicatis multifloris, 8-12 cm. longis, glabris, pedunculis 1—-1.5 cm. longis; floribus her maphroditis sessili- bus, calyce toto glabro, circa 3.8 mm. longo, infra cum ovario connato, ad basim 2-partito, lobo uno apice breviter fisso, lobis apice ciliatis; petalis perigynis saepissime 5 raro 4—6, in alabastro corrugato-involutis, maturis luteis linearibus, circa 2 cm. longis, 1-1.5 mm. latis, breviter acuminatis, yngo, connectivo breviter producto, thecis . Esp rubro- efinner basifixis, locellis 4; staminodiis nullis; ovario semi-infero 2-loculari supra pube escente: stylis 2 glabris 6 mm. longis cylindricis acuminatis, ovulo in loculo quove singulo pendulo; pees capsulari, basi annulato, ovoideo, in valvis 2 dehiscente, 8-10 mm. lon 1 mm. crasso, epicarpio levi corneo crasso, endocarpio corneo see calycis limbo circumscisso-deciduo, semine ignoto. Inpo-CH1InA: Tonkin, Tien-yen, Ho Yung Shan and vicinity, W. 7. Tsang 30709 (TYPE), Oct. 13 — Nov. 22, 1940 This is an interesting nadibion to the flora of Indo-China. The genus 366 JOURNAL OF THE ARNOLD ARBORETUM [ VOL. XXIV Embolanthera was described from a single Philippine collection from Palawan, its type species being E. spicata Merr. Asa genus, it is strongly characterized by the spicate inflorescences, manifestly auriculate bases of the petals, membranaceous irregularly 2- or 3-lobed calyces, and the absence of staminodes. The present species differs from E. spicata Merr. in the narrower, more slenderly acuminate, and generally fewer-nerved leaves, shorter petioles, glabrous spikes which are mostly terminal, and glabrous calyces. The fruits were previously unknown, but unfortunately I am not able to describe the seeds, for in the abundant material now avail- able the seeds are all fallen. This new species considerably extends the range of the genus. The type was collected at Tien-yen in northeastern Tonkin, near the Kwangtung- Kwangsi border. It is highly probable that the same species, or related ones, may eventually be found also in southern Kwangsi, when the latter area is more extensively explored. The flora of Kwangsi is particularly close to that of Tonkin, as is shown by numerous species in recent collections being present in both areas. STERCULIACEAE Reevesia Lindley Reevesia macrocarpa sp. nov. Arbor, ramis glabris teretibus, ramulis glabris; foliis firmiter chartaceis, utrinque Pras pallidis, nitidis, oblongo-ellipticis, 13-18 cm. longis, 4.5—-6 cm. latis ie basi ae aneraa | leviter race costa tertiariis utrinque elevatis; aera 2.5-4.5 cm. longo, pa floribus ignotis; a pg pedicellatis lignosis obovoideo-oblongis, 5.5—6 cm. longis , 2.5-2.7 latis, 5-lobatis, apice rotundatis, basi acutis, extus griseo- Parsee ETI circiter 4.5 cm. longo; seminibus (cum alis ) circiter 3 cm. longis, alis brunneis circiter 2.2 cm. longis, 0.7 cm. latis, oblongis, apice rotundatis Inpo-Cuina: Tonkin, Da m-ha, Nae Mo Shan, Lomg Ngong Village, W. T. Tsang 30473 (TYPE), July 18 — Sept. 9, A species distinguished in ee al genus by its rather large entirely glabrous leaves and the large fruits. It is nearest to Reevesia longipetiolata Merr. & Chun of Hainan, but it differs in its vegetative characters as well as in its larger fruits. This i is the second actual record of Reevesia as occur- ring in Indo-China. Gagnepain, in Lecomte, Fl. Gén. Indo-Chine 1: 486. 1910, includes the description of Reevesia thyrsoidea Lindl. on the basis of a Bon specimen which perhaps came from Tonkin. He states: ae Py origin tonkinoise de cette espéce n’est pas certaine, le P. Bon ayant herborisé a Hong-Kong.” Merrill, Jour. Arnold Arb. 19: 53. 1938, has credited Reevesia pubescens Nast to Tonkin. DILLENIACEAE Actinidia Lindley Actinidia tonkinensis sp. nov. Frutex scandens, ramis glabris, ramulis junioribus subdecidue breviter 1943] LI, NOTES ON THE FLORA OF INDO-CHINA 367 puberulis; foliis chartaceis, longe petiolatis, ae vel elliptico-ovatis, 7-12.5 cm. longis, 4.5—6.8 cm. latis, apice acutis vel breviter acuminatis, basi angustatis, margine infra medium eee sursum distanter serrulatis, in sicco olivaceo-viridibus, utrinque subconcoloribus vel subtus paullo pallidioribus, supra glabris subnitidis, subtus minute consperse stellato- puberulis, nervis lateralibus utrinsecus 6-8 gracilibus utrinque manifestis subtus elevatis, venis tertiariis plus minusve parallelis, supra subconspic- uis, subtus distinctis petiolo 2.2—4.8 cm. longo, primo puberulo demum su ygla ro; inflores centiis dense subferrugineo- pubescentibus, cymosis, 4—5 cm. longis, 5—20-floris; pedunculis 2—3 cm. longis; floribus ¢ 5-meris, circiter 1 cm. diametro, pedicellis 0.7—1 cm. longis; sepalis ovatis obtusis extus dense pubescentibus, circiter 4 mm. longis; petalis oblongis glabris, circiter 5 mm. longis et 2 mm. latis, apice rotundatis; staminibus circiter 40, l-seriatis, filamentis 2-3 mm. longis gracilibus, antheris oblongo- ovatis 1 mm. ongis ; ovario subgloboso dense pubescente; floribus herma- phroditis non visis. Inpo-Cuina: Tonkin, Dam-ha, ie Wong Mo Shan, Lung Wan Village, W. T. Tsang 29907 (TYPE), May is July 5, A species apparently in the ae of A. latifolia (Champ.) Merr., but distinguished, among other characters, by the leaf base being acute or broadly acute instead of cordate or broadly rounded, the lower surface less pubescent, with scattered stellate hairs, and the more delicate and lax inflorescences with longer and more slender peduncles and pedicels and somewhat smaller flowers. FLACOURTIACEAE Bennettiodendron Merrill Bennettiodendron cordatum Merr. Jour. Arnold Arb. 20: 352. 1939. npo-CHINA: Tonkin, Ha-coi, Chuk-phai, Taai Wong Mo Shan, W. T. Tsan 27043, Oct. 16-22, 1936, 27122, Oct. 23-31, 1936, 29261, June 23-30, 1939, 5-30 ft. high, fairly common, growing in thickets, in sandy soil ; ane ha, Sai Wong Mo Shan, Lung Wan bed W. i i pis 30058, May 18 — July 5, 1940. The type, a flowering specimen, was from Mount Bavi, Tonkin; the above- cited Pitecaons are all in fruit. Infructescences narrowly panicu- late, 9 to 12 cm. long, sparingly pubescent, ultimately glabrous or nearly so, the longest branches not exceeding 2 cm. in length. Fruits globose, dark brown, glabrous, about 7 mm. in diameter. THYMELAEACEAE Wikstroemia Sprengel Wikstroemia nutans Champ. in Hook. Jour. Bot. Kew Gard. Misc. 5: 195. 1853. Inpo-Cu1na: Tonkin, Tien-yen, Kau Nga Shan, W. T. Tsang 27340, Dec. 13-22, 1936, 4 ft. high, fairly common, in thickets, flowers yellow. Kwangsi, Kwang- tung, Hainan. New to Indo-Chi ARALIACEAE Dendropanax Decaisne & Planchon Dendropanax parviflorus (Champ.) ae Fl. Hongk. 137. 1861; Merr. Brittonia 4: 132. 1941; Li, Sargentia 2: 45. 368 JOURNAL OF THE ARNOLD ARBORETUM [VOL. XXIV Hedera parviflora Champ. ex Benth. in Hook. Jour. Bot. Kew Gard. Misc. 4: 122. 1852. ae parviflora Harms in Engl. & Prantl, os ee 3(8): 41. 1894. Textoria parviflora Nakai, Jour. Jap. Bot. 1 Inpo-CHINA: bbe onkin, northwest of Mon-cay, es si and oe W. T. Tsang 26981, Oct. 1-8, 1936; Ha- col, Chuk-phai, Taai Wang Mo Sha . T. Tsang 27241, Nov. 10-17, ery Kwangtung and Kwangsi. New to Indo- eis CORNACEAE Cornus ee Cornus hongkongensis Hemsl. Jour. Linn. Soc . 23: 345, 1888. Benthamia japonica Sieb. & Zucc. var. sinensis ey in Hook. Jour. Bot. Kew Gard. Misc. 4: 165. 1852. sioehisagiy a Hutchinson, Ann. Bot. 6: 93, 1942. npo-CHinA: Tonkin, Mount Bavi, A. Pételot 2147, June 24, 1939; Dam-ha, Sai ae Mo Shan, Lung Wan eee W.T. Tsang 29942, May—July, 1940. Southern and eastern China. New to Indo-Chin This species has been much hee with Cornus capitata Wall., a species of wide distribution, which also occurs in Tonkin. It differs from Wallich’s species chiefly in having a truncate, entire calyx. In addition, it can be distinguished by its leaves being generally broader, more coria- ceous, slightly lustrous above and pale green, not grayish nor whitish beneath. In leaf form, size, and length of acumen, the two species are similar. SAPOTACEAE Madhuea J. F. Gmelin Madhuea Tsangii sp. nov. Arbor ramulis atrobrunneis glabris; foliis ad ramulorum apices sub- verticillatim oo chartaceis vel subcoriaceis, petiolatis, obovatis, 4.5—-6.5 cm. longis, a5. 3.5 cm. latis, apice obtusis vel late rotundatis, deorsum angustatis, basi cuneatis, utrinque glabris, subtus minutissime puncticulatis, costa subtus valde prominente, nervis lateralibus supra inconspicuis, subtus gracilibus, utrinsecus circa 12- 1S rectis prope mar- lobis 4 biseriatis ovatis, 5 mm. latis, toto pubescentibus; corollis exsertis, 8 mm. longis, glabris, tubo 2-3 mm. longo, petalis 8 oblongis, 5 mm. longis, 2.5 mm. latis, subrotundatis; staminibus 16 fauce insertis, filamentis 1 ongis, antheris 2.5 mm. longis acuminatis; ovario ovoideo pubes- cente 8- incalan: stylis 1 cm. longis, basi pubescentibus; fructu ignoto Inpo-Cu1na: Tonkin, Dam-ha, Sai Wong Mo Shan, Lomg Ngong Village, W. 7. Tsang 30271 (TYPE), July 18 ~ Sept. 9, 1940. In the pubescent ovary and obovate leaves, this new species resembles Madhuca Thorelii (Merr.) H. J. Lam and Madhuea cambodiana (H. Le- comte) comb. nov. (Payena cambodiana H. Lecomte, Fl. Gén. Indo-Chine 3: 912. 1930). The former is an incompletely known species which, on the basis of the original description, differs from the present species in the smaller leaves, shorter pedicels, and smaller flowers. The latter has larger 1943 | LI, NOTES ON THE FLORA OF INDO-CHINA 369 leaves with loosely arranged veinlets, as well as shorter pedicels and smaller S Sideroxylon Linnaeus Sideroxylon Wightianum Hook. & Arn. var. tonkinense var. nov. A typo speciei differt foliis lanceolatis, ad 13-16 cm. longis, 3-4 cm. sg longe acuminatis, basi valde attenuatis, petiolis 1.5—2 cm. longis. npo-Cuina: Tonkin, Ha-coi, Chuk-phai, Taai Wong Mo Shan, W. T. Tsang ea a ae 16-22, 1936, 10 ft. high, fairly common, in thickets, on dry sandy soil, flower The ae - the species was from Kwangtung. This variety differs an the typical form in the much more lanceolate leaves. Lecomte, FI. Indo-Chine 3: 887. 1930, gives an extensive description of Cee Wightianum Hook. & Arn. var. Balansae Lec. but his description applies to a form distinctly different from the one above characterized, its leaves being but 10-12 cm. long, obtusely acuminate, and its petioles ae 8-12 mm. in length. SARCOSPERMATACEAE Sarcosperma Hooker f. Sarcosperma laurinum (Benth.) Hook. f. in Benth. & Hook. f. Gen. Pl. 2: 655. 1876; Lam & Varos, Blumea 3: 195. 1938 Reptonia laurina Benth. Fl. Hongk. 208. 1861. Inpe-Cuina: Tonkin, Ha-coi, Chuk-phai, Taai Wong Mo Shan, W. T. Tsang 27162, Nov. 1-9, 1936, .. ft. high, fairly common, in thickets, een pale yellow, fragrant; Tien-yen, enn Nga Shan, W. T. Tsang 27415, Dec. 23-29, 1936, 10 ft. high, fairly common, in thickets, es light yellow, fragrant; Tien-yen, Ho Yung Shan, W. T. Tsang 30726, Oct. 13 — Nov. 22, 1940. Kwangtung, Kwangsi, Hainan, and southern Yunnan. New to i on EBENACEAE Diospyros Linnaeus Diospyros Morrisiana Hance, Walp. Ann. 3: 14. 1852-53, Jour. Bot. 18: 299. 1880. Inpo-Cuina: Tonkin, northeast of Mon-cay, Pac-si, W. T. Tsang 26973, Oct. 1-8, 1936, 10 ft. high, fairly common, in thickets on dry clayey oe fruit yellow; Ha-coi, Chuk-phai, Taai Wong Mo Shan, W. T. Tsang 27313, Nov — Dec. 2, nase 10 ft. high, fairly common, in thickets, fruit yellow; Tien-yen, Kau Ne Shan, W. Tsang 27385, Dec. 13-22, 1936, 15 ft. high, fairly common, in thickets, on steep ee fruits yellow: ; same locality, W. T. Tsang ne Sept. 23 — Oct. 7, 1940; Dam-ha, Sai Wong Mo Shan, Lung Wan Village, W. Tsang 29809, May 18 — oe 5, 1940. Kwangtung, Kwangsi, Fukien, Chekiang, ee New to Indo-Chi Diospyros potingensis Merr. & Chun, Sunyatsenia 5: 164. 1940. Inpo-Cuina: Tonkin, northeast of Mon-cay, Pac-si, W. T. Tsang 26925, Oct. 1-8, 1936, 10 ft. high, fairly common, in thickets, on dry sandy soil, fruits yellow: Ha-coi, Chuk-phai, Taai Wong Mo Shan , W. T. Tsang 27159, Nov. 1-9, 1936, 28996, May 3-10, 1939, woody, 20 ft. high, fairly common, in thickets, on dry sandy soil, fruits yellow; Dam- ha, Sai Wong Mo Shan, Lomg Ngong Village. W. T. Tsang 30191, July 18 — Sept. 9, 1940. Hainan. New to Indo-China STYRACACEAE Rehderodendron Hu Rehderodendron indochinense sp. nov. Arbor circiter 13 m. alta, ramulis glabris subcinereis; foliis paren glabris utrinque concoloribus elliptico-oblongis, 7-10 cm. longis, 3-3. 370 JOURNAL OF THE ARNOLD ARBORETUM (VOL. XXIV latis, falcato-acuminatis, basi anguste acutis, margine minute distanter glanduloso-denticulatis, nervis lateralibus utrinsecus 6-8 curvatis circiter ad marginem arcuato-anastomosantibus, cum venulis reticulatis eyo perspicuis petiolis 5-7 mm. longis glabris: paniculis axillaribus ad 5 c ongis, dense substellatim cinereo-tomentosis, pedicellis 6-10 mm, a bracteolis ad basim pedicelli lanceolatis, cinereo-tomentulosis, m. longis, deciduis; calyce campanulato 4 mm. alto, 5-dentato, dentibus tri- angularibus acuminatis; corolla 5-partita, lobis elliptico- oblongis obtusis, .4 cm. longis mm, latis, utrinque substellatim cinereo-tomentulosis ; staminibus 10, corollae tubo adnatis, exsertis, alternis longioribus, stylis cinereo- -tomentulosis, 1.5 mm. longis, ‘stigmate ‘capitato: ovario 5-loculari; fructibus glabris magnis Rete eid oblongis, 7.5 cm. longis, 2.8 cm. crassis, apice planis vel leviter depressis, in sicco rubro- brunnescentibus, 10-cos- tatis, exocarpio duro 1 mm. cCrasso, mesocarpio 8-10 mm. crasso inter processos endocarpii fibroso-spongioso, endocarpio lignoso 8-10 mm crasso, processis circiter 10 longitudinalibus 8-10 mm. latis et 1 mm. crassis ornato; seminibus oblongo-linearibus, 5 cm. longis. Inpo-Cu1na: Tonkin, Chapa, A. Pételot 6258 (TypE, flowering specimen), in forests, alt. about 1500 m. , February 1931; Ha-coi, Chuk-phai, Taai Wong Mo Shan, W. sang 27094, Oct. 23-31, 1936 (fruiting specimen), a tree 40 ft. ‘high, fairly common, growing in thickets, on dry loamy soil, fruit brownish yellow This species is allied to Rehderodendron kwangtungense Chen: R. Hui Chun, and R. praeteritum Sleumer, all from Kwangtung, but it may be distinguished by its entirely glabrous, much smaller leaves and the larger, longer, and relatively narrower fruits. This is the second species of the genus known from Indo-China. The other one is R. macrocarpum Hu, a species extending from Szechuan through Kweichow to Kwangsi, which: § is represented by A. Pételot 4767 from Tonkin. 3 Huodendron Rehder Huodendron parvifolium sp. nov. arva circiter 7 m. alta inflorescentiis exceptis eae ramulis wpe teretibus; foliis chartaceis oblongo-ellipticis, 5.5—7.5 cm. m. longis, cm. latis, utrinque subopacis subconcoloribusque, distincte acumi- distinctis, venis tertiariis transversis, utrinque subconspicuis; petiolis 1-1.3 cm. longis glabris in sicco nigris; floribus ignotis; infructescentiis axillaribus puberulis, racemosis, a cm. longis; fructibus ovoideis cinereo-puberulis, 7.5 mm. longis, 5 mm. latis, loculicide dehiscentibus, pedicellis 0.7-1 cm. longis, manifeste recurvis; calycibus persistentibus puberulis, aan ak 4 mm. longis, minute 5-dentatis; seminibus brunneis, 2—3 mm. longi INDO-CHINA: nkin, ie of Mon-cay, Pac-si and vicinity, W. T. Tsang 26886 (TYPE), tae a 30, 1936, a small tree. 20 ft. high, fairly common, in thickets, on dry clayey soil, fruit light gray. This is the second species of this characteristic Chinese genus to be known from Indo-China. It differs from the other Indo-Chinese species of the genus in its smaller leaves, which are dull on both sides, in the rela- tively larger fruits, which are racemosely arranged in short, simple infruc- tescences, and in the very small calyx teeth. 1943 ] LI, NOTES ON THE FLORA OF INDO-CHINA 371 Styrax Linnaeus Styrax argentifolius sp. nov. Frutex circiter 3-5 m. altus, ramulis novellis dense adpresse furfuraceo- lepidotis, indumento cinereo- brunn neis; ramis gracilibus glabris; foliis firmiter chartaceis, supra glabris viridibus opacis, subtus dense minute adpresse lepidulotis ee avn ento cinereo-albido nitidis, oblongis, 7-17 cm. longis, 2—5 cm. latis, longe acuminatis, basi acutis, margine integris, nervis lateralibus ae 6-8, supra subconspicuis, subtus_ elevatis prominentibus, curvatis, arcuato- anastomosantibus, venis tertiariis dense reticulatis, utrinque subconspicuis; petiolis 0.7-1 cm. longis, adpresse furfuraceo-lepidotis; inflorescentiis ignotis; infructescentiis axillaribus vel terminalibus, ad 6 cm. longis, dense adpresse furfuraceo- lepidotis; ee subovoideis distincte rostratis, ad 2.5 cm. longis et 1.8 cm. crassis, den adpresse lepidulotis, calyce deciduo minuto, a6 mm. longo, te eee a eae ae extus sae lepidoto. NDO-CH Tonkin, Ha-coi, Chuk-phai, Taai Wong Mo Shan, W. T. Tsang i Oct. pu 31, 1936, ooo July 1-13, 1939, 10-16 ft. re fairly common, in thickets, on moist sandy soil, ea dirty white to gray; Dam a oe Mo Shan, Lomg Ngong Village, W. T. Tsang 30238 (tyre), July 18 — 3 This species ee tines. as suberifolius Hook. & i st southern China, but may be readily distinguished by its appressed furfuraceous- lepidote indumentum never being stellate, and by its larger, distinctly rostrate fruits. SYMPLOCACEAE Symplocos Jacquin Symplocos Delavayi Brand, Repert. Nov. Sp. 3: 218. 1906. Replies eaae Tonkin, Ha-coi, Chuk-phai, Taai Wong Mo Shan, W. 7. Tsang 206, Nov. 10-17, 1936, Saniall tree, 20 ft. high, fairly common, growing in thickets, rine black. Yunnan, sarneneete Tibet, and northern Burma. New to Indo-China. Symplocos indochinensis sp. nov. Subgen. Hopea, § Bobua, Lodhra. Arbor 5-7 m. alta, ramis cinereo-brunneis, ramulis novellis ferrugineis, longe patule villosis, ramis vetustioribus saree foliis chartaceis breviter petiolatis oblongo- ellipticis, 7-12 cm. lon 2—4 cm. latis, acuminatis, acutis, margine minute Efe denticulatis ‘vel integris, utrinque eticbae levibed supra parce pilosis vel glabrescentibus haud nitidis, subtus consperse villosis, costa supra impressa, nervis lateralibus utrinsecus circa 4 vel 5 arcuato-anastomosantibus, supra impressis, subtus subtus elevatis; petiolis brevibus ad 5 mm. longis, dense patule ferrugineo-villosis; inflorescentiis axillaribus glomeratis paucifloris sessi- libus, axillaribus et in axillis defoliatis in ramulis annotinis; floribus sessili- bus, bracteis late ovatis dense pubescentibus, 1 mm. rie calycis tubo crasso circa 1 mm. longo, lobis late ovatis pubescentibus, 1 mm. longis: petalis 5 oblongis, 3 mm. longis, utrinque glabris; staminibus circa 25, filamentis ume liberis glabris, circa 4 mm. longis; disco annulari cinereo-pubescente, ovario 3-loculari, stylo 4 mm. longo; fructibus glo- bosis (ee ee 6 mm. diametro, calyce persistente. Inpo-Cuina: Tonkin, northeast of Mon-cay, Pac-si, W. T. Tsang 26902 (TYPE), Sept. 27-30, 1936, a small a 17 ft. high, fairly common, in thickets on ae clayey soil, flowers white, fragrant; Ha-coi, Chuk-phai, Taai Wong Mo Shan, W. T. Tsang 372 JOURNAL OF THE ARNOLD ARBORETUM [VOL. XXIV 27027, Nov. 10-17, 1936, a tree 20 ft. high, fairly common, in thickets, fruits heron ak Chan Uk Village near Chuk-phai, Taai Wong Mo Shan, W. 7. Tsang 29130, 21-31, 1939, a tree 15 ft. high, fairly common, in thickets, on dry cea soil, ets aie ae ro Sai Wong Mo Shan, Lung Wan Village, W. 7. Tsang 30047, Mz: — July 5, 1940. aa ee bee of the branches and leaves, and in the sessile glomeru- late inflorescences, this species is apparently close to S. yunnanensis Brand. It differs from the ‘latter by its thinner, much shorter, and relatively broader leaves. Most of the inflorescences are in the ails of fallen leaves, and the smooth, globose sessile fruits are all borne on the older leafless branches, OLEACEAE Linociera Swartz Linociera verticillata Gagnep. Bull. Soc. Bot. France 79: 788. 1932 [1933], et in Lecomte, Fl. Gén. Indo-Chine 3: 1072. f. 122, 1. 1933 In HINA: Tonki Tien-yen, Ho Yung Shan and vicinity, W. T. Tsang ie, a 13-22, 1940. pee Newt o Tonkin Olea Linnaeus Olea cordatula sp. nov, Arbor parva circiter 10 m. alta, ramis ramulisque dense breviter pube- scentibus, consperse lenticellatis; foliis amplis rigidis coriaceis subsessili- bus vel brevissime petiolatis late oblongo-oblanceolatis, 14-29 cm. longis, 4.5-9.5 cm. latis, acuminatis, basi anguste cordatis, cone remote dentato-serratis, supra costa nervisque valde impressis exceptis glabris, in sicco olivaceo- brunneis, subtus paullo pallidioribus perspicue breviter molliter pubescentibus, costa supra impressa subtus distincte elevata, ) dense pubescente, supra canaliculato; inflorescentiis paniculatis axillari- bus, ad 6 cm. longis et 2.5 cm. latis, molliter pubescentibus, floribus (im- maturis) minutis, pedicellis 1 mm. longis; calycibus 0.5 mm. altis ad medium 4- lobatis, lobis ovatis acutis extus pubescentibus; corolla pallide lutea, 1 mm. longa, 1.5 mm. diametro, ad medium lobata, lobis acutis valvatis margine revolutis; antheris subsessilibus ad 0.5 mm. longis; ovario ovoideo, stylo brevi, stigmate inconspicuo ; fructibus ovoideis nigris glabris, 1-1.2 cm. longis, 5—6 cm. crassis. Inpo-Cutna: Tonkin, Ha-coi, Chuk-Phai, Taai Wong Mo Shan, Cha Village, W. T. Tsang 29241 (rvPE), on 10-22, 1939, a tree pi - high, fairly common, in thickets, on dry clayey soil, flowers pale yellow; — ha, Sai Wong Mo Shan, Lung Wan Village, W. T. Tsang 30081, May 18 — July 5, 1940, with young fruits; Dam-ha, Sai Wong Mo Shan, Lomg Ngong Village, W. T. ae 30170, July 18 — Sept. 9, 1940, with mature fruits. This species is characterized by its large broadly oblong-oblanceolate rigid coriaceous distinctly toothed leaves, which are narrowly cordate at the base, nearly sessile, and softly pubescent beneath. The flowers, prob- ably not fully developed, show the corolla divided to about the middle. It seems to be more appropriate to refer this species to Olea rather than to Linociera, although it suggests no close relationships to any of the described species of either genus. 1943] LI, NOTES ON THE FLORA OF INDO-CHINA 373 Ligustrum Linnaeus Ligustrum retusum Merr. Lingnan Sci. Jour. 14: 49. 1935. ndo-Cuina: Tonkin, Tien-yen, Ho Yung Shan ie vicinity, W. T. Tsang 30644, Oct. 13 — Nov. 22, 1940. Hainan. New to Indo-Chin RUBIACEAE Xanthophytopsis Pitard ear Balansae Pitard in Lecomte, Fl. Gén. Indo-Chine 3: 90. fig. 10, 1922; Chun & How, Sunyatsenia 4: 13. pl. 4. 1939 INDO- oe Tonkin, Tien-yen, Kau Nga Shan and vicinity, W. T. Tsang 30583, Sept. 23 — Oct. 7, 1940; Tien-yen, Ho Yung Shan and vicinity, W. T. Tsang 30704, Oct. 13 — Nov. 22, 1940. The second collection of this new genus from Tonkin. This species has also been recorded from Kwangtung, near the Indo-Chinese border. Xanthophytopsis kwangtungensis Chun & How, Sunyatsenia 4: 14. pl. 5. 1939. Inpo-Cuina: Tonkin, northeast of Mon-cay, Pac-si and vicinity, W. T. Tsang 26293, Oct. 1-8, 1936, a shea 2 ft. high, abundant, growing in thickets on dry clayey soil, Wowes wie: Gileless: Ha-coi, Chuk-phai, Taai Wong Mo Shan and vicinity, W. T. Tsang 27037, Oct. 16-22, 1936, 29015, May 3-10, 1939, Sours Aug. 1-31, 1939, a shrub 2 ft. high, fairly common, growing in thickets, on dry clayey soil, flowers ‘white, fruits brown; Dam- A Sai Wong Mo Shan, Lung Wan Village, W. T. Tsang 29880, May 18 - Fas. 194 This species, ae second one of the genus, was originally nao from western Kwangtung, near the Tonkin border. New for Indo-Chin Randia Linnaeus Randia Pamseaia Champ. ex Benth. in Hook. Jour. Bot. Kew Gard. Misc. 4: 194. INDo- in iwA: Tonkin, Dam-ha, Sai Wong Mo Shan, Lomg Ngong Village, . T. Tsang 20420, . ly 18 — Sept. 9, 1940. This is a fruiting specimen; its leaves are larger than are eos of the Chinese form. Kwangtung. New to Indo-Chi artes acuminatissima Merr. Philip. Jour. Sci. 15: 259. 1919. NbDO-CuHINA: Ton kin, Dam-ha, Sai Wong Mo Shan, Lung Wan Village, W. T. ran 29904, May 18 — fie 5, 1940. China: Kwangtung, Hainan. New to Indo- Chin Mussaenda Linnaeus Mussaenda erosa a in Hook. Jour. Bot. Kew Gard. Misc. 4: 193. 1852. kin, Tien-yen, Kau Nga Shan, W. T. Tsang 27461, Jan. 1-9, 1937, climber, 7 ft. high, fairly common, growing among scattered shrubs, fruits black; same locality, W. T. Tsang 30540, Sept. 23 — Oct. 7, 1940; Ha-coi, Pani Wong Mo Shan, W. T. Tsang 29071, May 11-20, 1939, 29550, Sept. 11-23, 1939, climber, 7-10 ft. high, fairly common, growing in thickets, feults yellow; Damc-ha, eal Wong Mo Shan, Lung Wan Village, W. T. Tsang 29990, May 18 — July 5, 1940. Southern China. New to Indo-China Mussaenda longipetala sp. nov. Frutex scandens, ramulis teretibus perspicue subpatule ciliato-villosis ; foliis NET Se ste vel submembranaceis, in paribus aequalibus, oblongo- ovatis vel elliptico-ovatis, 8-12 cm. longis, 3.5—6 cm. latis, i tis, basi late acutis vel subrotundatis, utrinque perspicue molliter villosis, nervis lateralibus utrinsecus 6-8, curvato- adscendentibus, utrinque con- spicuis, venis tertiariis subconspicuis vel inconspicuis; petiolis 0.5-1 cm 374 JOURNAL OF THE ARNOLD ARBORETUM [VOL. XXIV longis dense villosis; stipulis linearibus 6-8 mm. longis caducis; inflore- scentiis terminalibus cymosis compactis circiter 5 cm. longis, breviter ramo- sis, perspicue patule albido-villosis vel ciliatis, bracteis bracteolisque lineari- bus 5 mm. longis, floribus sat numerosis subsessilibus confertis; calycis tubo crasso, 2 mm. longo, dense ciliato, lobis normalibus 4 vel 5 linearibus, 6-8 mm. longis, 1-2 mm. latis, dense 'villosis, longe acuminatis, uno interdum iedak ovato, 4.5-5.5 cm. longo, acuminato, utrinque longe consperse villoso, stipitato; stipite perspicue ciliato ad 2 cm. longo, nervis 5— corollae tubo circiter 3 cm. longo et 2 mm. lato, su i extus perspicue villoso, intus superne leviter pubescente, lobis 5 lanceolatis, 1.2 cm. longis, 1.5 mm. latis, longe acuminatis, extus villosis: staminibus medio tubi affixis, antheris 4 mm. longis, basi bifidis; stylo tubi longitudi- nem aequante, glabro, apice vix lobato Inpo-Cu1na: Tonkin, Dam-ha, -. Ww ong Mo Shan, Lung Wan Village, W. T. Tsang 29811 (TYPE), May 18 - July 5, This species is near M ee ell Pierre, differing in the leaves being mostly rounded at the base, the much smaller petaloid sepals, the much narrower and longer corolla-lobes, and the stamens inserted near the middle of the corolla-tube, which is slender throughout and only slightly enlarged from the insertion of the anthers upward. Urophyllum Wallich Urophyllum chinense Merr. & Chun, Sunyatsenia 2: 19. pl. 10. 1934. Inpo-Cutna: Tonkin, Ha-Coi, Taai Wong Mo Shan and vicinity, W. T. Tsang 27220, Nov. 10-17, 1936, 29219, June 10-22, 1939, 29516, Sept. 1-10, 1939, a shrub 5-7 ft. high, fairly common, in thickets, flowers white, fragrant, fruits yellow or black; Tien-yen, Kau Nga Shan, W. T. Tsang 27434, Dec. 23-29, 1936, a shrub 5 ft. high, abundant, in thickets, feuiits yellow; Dam- Sai Wong Mo Shan, Lung Wan Village, W. T. Tsang 30094, May 18 — June 5, 1940; Tien-yen, Ho Yung Shan, W. T. Tsang 30673, Oct. 13 — Nov. 22, 1940, Also hae by the following collections from Kwangsi Province: W.T. Tsang 23879, 24055, 24690. It was originally described from Kwangtung specimens. New to Indo-China Gardenia Ellis Gardenia stenophylla Merr. Philip. Jour. Sci. 19: 678. 1922. Inpo-Cutwa: Tonkin, Ha-coi, Chuk-phai, Taai Wong Mo Shan, W. T. Tsang 27063, Oct. 23-31, 1936, nn May 3-10, 1939, 29019, May 11-20, 1939, 29598, Sept. 11—23, 1939, a shrub 1.2-2 ft. high, fairly common, growing in thickets, in sandy soil, flowers white, fragrant, fruits yellow; Dam-ha, Sai Wong Mo Shan, W. T. Tsang 29820, May 18 — July 5, 1940, 30402, July 18 — Sept. 9, 1940. Hainan. New to Indo-China. Psychotria Linnaeus Psychotria rubra (Lour.) Poir. var. lanceolata var. nov A typo speciei differt foliis oblongo- aneeolats = 16 cm. longis, 2-3 cm. latis, apice longe acuminatis, basi longe a Inpo-Cu1na: Tonkin, Ha-coi, Taai Wong Mo pel Chan Uk Village near Chuk-phai, W. T. Tsang 28959 (type), May 3-10, 1939, a shrub 4 ft. high, abundant, growing in thickets on sandy soil, flowers pale yellow, fragrant. ARNOLD ARBORETUM HarvARD UNIVERSITY. JOURNAL OF THE ARNOLD ARBORETUM VoL. XXIV OCTOBER, 1943 NuMBER 4 PLANTS OF COAHUILA, EASTERN CHIHUAHUA, AND ADJOINING ZACATECAS AND DURANGO, II IvAN M. JOHNSTON TYPHACEAE Typha truxillensis H.B.K. Nov. Gen. et Sp. 1: 68 (1815). CHIHUAHUA: 3 mi. west of Camargo, White. Widely distributed in our area along the rivers and elsewhere about per- manent water. NAIADACEAE Naias guadalupensis (Spreng.) Morong, Mem. Torr. Bot. Cl. 3: 60 (1893). CoaHuiLa: Monclova, in the river, White 1768. CHIHUAHUA: 3 mi. west of Camargo, White 2279, A submerged aquatic, widely distributed in America. POTAMOGETONACEAE Zannichellia palustris L. Sp. Pl. 969 (1753). Coanutta: Monclova, Marsh 1688. An aquatic of saline waters, world-wide in distribution. Ruppia maritima L. Sp. Pl. 127 (1753). CoauuILa: Laguna de Jaco, washed up on the beach, Stewart & Johnston 1978. A nearly cosmopolitan species, usually in saline waters. Potamogeton pectinatus L. Sp. Pl. 127 (1753). Collected in ponds in the Rio Grande bottoms, near San Elizario (Wright 1895). Widely distributed over the world in brackish waters. Potamogeton illinoensis Morong, Bot. Gaz. 5: 50 (1880). CoanuiLta: Monclova, Marsh 1672, det. by E. C. Ogden. Widely distributed in the United States and ranging south to Central America. Potamogeton nodhaue Poir. in Lam. Encyc. Suppl. 4: 535 (1816). a Hechiceros, Posegay Encampanada, along creek, Stewart 196; Ojo Caliente, Oct. ic or Thurber An aquatic, nearly aoe in Paiste eueion: 376 JOURNAL OF THE ARNOLD ARBORETUM [VOL. XXIV ALISMACEAE oo cordifolius (L.) Gris. Abh. K. Ges. Wiss. Goettingen 7: 257 (1857). Torreon, periodically flooded ono 1898, Palmer 466. CHIHUAHUA: Saas a pond, Oct. 11, 1852, Thurber 8 Lophotocarpus calycinus (Engelm.) J. G. Smith, Lophot. U.S. 3 (Sept. 1899). CoauuiILA: Hermanas, Marsh 2260. Eastern United States west to South Dakota and New Mexico, and south in Coahuila Lophotocarpus fluitans (Engelm.) J. G. Smith, Lophot. U.S. 1 (Sept. 1899). The type of this species, of southern New Mexico and trans-Pecos Texas, was collected by Wright (nos. 1899 and 679) in ponds in the bottom-land of the Rio Grande near San Elizario, Texas. Sagittaria longiloba Engelm. ex Torr. Bot. Mex. Bound. 212 (1859). This species has been repeatedly collected in the wet bottom-lands along the Rio Grande between El Paso and old Fort Quitman, Texas. It ranges from central United States south into Mexico. The type came from near San Elizario, Texas. GRAMINEAE — page ona (Fourn.) Scribn. & Merr. U. S. Dept. Agric., Div. Agrost. Bull. 24:30 (Jan. 1901); Scribn. Bull. Torr. Bot. Cl. 28: 246 (April, 1901). AHUILA: Saltillo, 1898, Palmer 5, 266; Parras, May 15, 1847, Gregg. ZACATECAS: Valley 15 km. west of Concepcion del Oro, Stanford et al. 556 A common, chiefly ruderal species of central Mexico. Collections have been generally identified as B. laciniatus Beal, but that is a montane plant obviously distinct from the weedy species concerned here. Bromus sp. CHIHUAHUA: Sierra Organos, 1937, LeSueur 211 in pt. “The collection is similar to the plant of Arizona and New Mexico referred to B. carinatus. Bromus sp. CoAHUIL Mesa Grande, 40 km. northwest of Hac. Encantada, common in eee Stewart 1633; Hillcoat Mesa; west of Encantada Ranch, July 25, 1938, Marsh 1 Lae to the plants of the Chisos and Davis Mountains of Texas pass- ing as B. marginatus and B. polyanthus. Bromus anomalus Rupr. ex Fourn. Mex. Pl. 2: 126 (1886). CoanvuILa: Sierra del Carmen, Aug. 26, 1936, Marsh 628; Hillcoat Canyon, west of Buena Vista Ranch, July 13, 1938, Marsh 1309; trail between Encantada Mesa and Fresno Mesa, July 20, 1938, Wh 1399; Sierra Glens Marsh 1945, 1947; Carneros Pass area, July 1880, Palmer 1372 ene del Pino, La Noria, in shaded arroyo and tera, rocky arroyo in oak belt, Johnston 8926. CHTHUAHUA: Sierra Organos, 1937, LeSueur 211 in Widely distributed in western United States and south to southern Mexico. A very variable species, particularly in the amounts and distri- bution of indument. The material from the Sierra del Pino and the Sierra 1943] JOHNSTON, PLANTS OF NORTHERN MEXICO, II 377 Madera represents a hairy robust form with broad leaves and a large drooping panicle. Brachypodium mexicanum (R. & S.) Linx, Hort. Berol. 1: 41 (1833). CoaHvutta: Sierra del Carmen, Aug. 26, 1936, Marsh 613; Sierras Negras, 9 km. south of Parras, Stanford et al. 230 Coahuila and Nuevo Leon south to Central America. A very variable species with forms differing greatly in appearance, apparently even in a single locality. The cited collections have very narrow leaves and short- awned lemmas. Festuca ligulata Swallen, Am. Jour. Bot. 19: 436 (1932). Coanurma: Mountains 24 km. northwest of Fraile, Stanford et al. 405. A coarser, densely tufted plant, with the spikelets larger than in the type of the species from the Guadalupe Mts., Texas, but a aes better referred to F. ligulata than to the more northern F. Thurbe Poa sp. COAHUILA: at ma 1905, Purpus 1112; Sierra de Parras, April 1905, oC 1146; Sierras Negras, 9 km. south of Parras, eee et al. 167. Zacatecas: 15 km west of Concepcion naa Oro, Seaford et al. 477 I am unable to name this species. The collection from the Sierras Negras has been identified as P. involuta Hitchc. Poa sp. CoAHUILA: 6 mi. east of Saltillo, 1880, Palmer 1366. The cited specimen has been identified as P. Ruprechtti Peyr. Poa Bigelovii Vasey & Scribn. Descr. Cat. Grasses U.S. 81 (1885). Coanuita: Saltillo, 1905, Palmer 532. Oklahoma and western Texas to southern California and south into northern Mexico. The species has been repeatedly collected about El Paso, Texas, and is to be expected in adjacent northern Chihuahua. Poa annua L. Sp. Pl. 68 (1753). CoaHuILaA: Saltillo, 1905, ine a Saltillo, 1898, Palmer 6; Saltillo, Gregg. CuinvuAHuaA: Chihuahua, 1908, Palm A European grass, widely ae in the United States and Mexico. Eragrostis obtusiflora Scribn. U. S. Dept. Agric., Div. Agrost. Bull. 8: 10. t. 5 (1897). CHIHUAHUA: Margin of Laguna de Santa erie April 20, 1852, Wright 193 (ISOTYPE) ; near Laguna Santa Maria, 1899, Nelson 6 Known only from saline soils in eon Chihuahua, southwestern New Mexico, and el Arizona. It much resembles Déstichlis stricta in boner ha Eragrostis eee Buckl. Proc. Acad. Nat. Sci. Phila. 1862: 97 (1863). CoaHvuiLta: Don Martin Dam, Harvey 932. Kansas and New Mexico to Texas and northeastern Coahuila. Eragrostis reptans (Michx.) Nees, Agrost. Bras. 514 (1829). Coanuita: Don Martin Dam, mud flats, Harvey 927, 928. Kentucky to South Dakota and Texas, south into northeastern Mexico. 378 JOURNAL OF THE ARNOLD ARBORETUM [ VOL. XXIV pita ieee? (Koel.) Link, Hort. Berol. 1: 187 (1827). CoaH Near Don Martin Dam, Harvey 948; Sabinas, Nelson 6823 (US); Saltillo, bene’ Palmer 389; valley-floor east of Puerto Caballo, near bushes by ephemeral charco, Johnston 8330; Sierra Cruces, 4 mi. west of Santa Elena, black Joam on flats, Stewart 828; north of Sierra Cruces, west of San Rafael, on sabaneta, Johnston te Muller 1038; 7 mi. south of Jaco, about mogote, Johnston & Muller 1110. Cut- AHUA: Rancho El Pino, southeast of Sierra Rica, slopes, Stewart 2399; Piramide, south of Camargo, arroyo, Harvey 1377. Duranco: Tlahualilo, barren hills, Pittier 475 (US) A European weed, widely introduced in America. Where I have seen this plant in Coahuila and Chihuahua, however, it behaves like an indige- nous species, associating with indutable native species and growing with them in remote undisturbed places where a single introduced species is cer- tainly not to be expected. Eragrostis diffusa Buckl. Proc. Acad. Nat. Sci. Phila. 1862: 97 (1863). Coanutira: Saltillo, 1898, Palmer 811, 812; 7 mi. south of Jaco, about a mogote, Johnston & Muller 1109; Torreon, low ground along the Rio Nazas, 1898, Palmer 5 , A Almagre, wet sand in canyon, Johnston & Muller 1214; Chihuahua, Pringle 416, LeSueur 78; 3 mi. north of Charca Piedra, under bushes on silty plain, Johnston 7929; Camargo, banks of the Rio Conchos, Harvey 1404; 50 km. west of Camargo, Harvey 1414; Jimenez, banks of the Rio Florido, Harvey 1313 Central Texas to Arizona and south into aarthers Mexico. pases sp. COAHUILA ere 1898, Palmer 376; Sierra del Pino, La Noria, meadows and open hillsides, Stewart 1205. HIHUAHUA: Rancho El Pino, southeast of Sierra Rica, slopes, Stewart 2400; canyon west of Organos, damp gravelly arroyo, Stewart & Johnston 2081. Closely related to E. diffusa and perhaps only a form of it, differing in its dense elongate inflorescence. The branches of the panicle are very short and strict and bear crowded strictly ascending spikelets. In typical F. diffusa the panicle is open, with elongate spreading branches. I have seen the plant from Coahuila, Chihuahua, trans-Pecos Texas, and New Mexico. Eragrostis mexicana (Hornem.) Link, Hort. Berol. 1: 190 (1827). : Monclova, 1939, Marsh 1834; ape 1898, Palmer 409—412; Saltillo, 1905, Palmer 710; San Lorenzo Canyon, 6 mi. southeast of Saltillo, about old zoat pen in canyon, 1904, Palmer 398; Choice Grande, es mi. southeast of Saltillo, 1904, Palmer 334, 335; Parras, 1880, Palmer 1367. Texas to Arizona and south through Mexico to South America. Eragrostis neomexicana Vasey, Contr. U. S. Nat. Herb. 2: 542 (1894). CoanvutILa: Sierra del Carmen, El Jardin del Sur, Sept. 3, 1936, Marsh 766. Western Texas to Arizona. Eragrostis caudata Fourn. Mex. Pl. 2: 115 (1881). Eragrostis Palmeri Wats. Proc. Am. Acad. 18: 182 (1883). Eragrostis erosa Scribn. ex Beal, Grasses No. Am. 2: 483 (1896). U Villa Juarez, 1880, Palmer 1368 (type of FE. Palmeri); Sierra del Pino, La Noria, arroyo banks, Johnston é Muller 664; Sierra Cruces, 5 mi. south of Santa 1943 | JOHNSTON, PLANTS OF NORTHERN MEXICO, II 379 Elena, rocky flat among bushes, Johnston & Muller 1378; western base of Picacho del Fuste, brushy rocky slope, Johnston 8413; Sierra Madera, Cahon Charretera, edge of thickets on rocky flat, Johnston 9062; west end of Sierra Fragua, Aguaje Pajarito, rocky ridge, Johnston 8676; high rocky west ridge of Sierra Fragua, north of Puerto Colorado, Johnston 8760; Sierras Negras, 9 km. south of Parras, Stanford et al. 135. CHIHUAHUA: Sierra Santa Eulalia, Oct. 1885, Pringle 415 (isotype of EF. erosa) Southern and western Texas south into Chihuahua, Coahuila, and north- ern Tamaulipas. An isotype of E. caudata (from Matamores) at the Gray Herbarium is evidently conspecific with the type of E. Palmert. From iso- typic material of E. erosa they differ only in their slightly smaller spikelets. Eragrostis intermedia Hitchc. Jour. Wash. Acad. 23: 450 (1933). CoauuiLa: Allende, Marsh 2237; Sierra del Carmen, Sept. 2, 1936, Marsh 800; Santo Domingo, igneous hill, Wynd & Mueller 476; Palm Canyon near Muzquiz, Marsh 1510; Rancho Santa Teresa, south of Castahos, Wynd & Mueller 200; Saltillo, 1909, Arséne; Saltillo, 1898, Palmer 408; Sierra del Pino, La Noria, hillsides and along arroyo, Tounste n & Muller 498, Stewart 1203. Central Texas west to Arizona and south into northern Mexico. A densely tufted perennial with tall erect culms. Habitally very similar to E. caudata but differing in having hairy nodes in the panicle, spreading spikelets, and a more open usually proportionately broader inflorescence. Some of the collections from northeastern Coahuila have rather small spikelets and approach FE. lugens Nees, a widely distributed species in tropical America, which extends northward through Mexico to eastern Monanthochloé littoralis Engelm. Trans. Acad. Sci. St. Louis 1: 437 (1859). COAHUILA: 4 mi. west of Cuatro Cienegas, common in strongly saline and gypseous soil on flat, Johnston 7129. This species has been known only from salt marshes about the Gulf of Mexico and along the Pacific coast of Mexico and adjacent United States. The material from Cuatro Cienegas is sterile, but in all vegetative details it agrees with material from coastal salt marshes. The plant grows only a few centimeters high, from well-developed scaly rhizomes, and covers small areas of very saline gypsiferous soil. Distichlis texama (Vasey) Scribn. U. S. Dept. Agric., Div. Agrost. Cir. 16: 2 (1899). Coanutta: Torreon, large masses on sandy banks of Rio Nazas, 18-24 inches high, with runners rooting at the nodes, Oct. 1898, Palmer 507. A coarse grass with long trailing ae growing in sandy places. The species has been collected near the R @ Grande at Presidio and Castolon, Texas, and hence it may be oe in northern Coahuila and nor: eastern Chihuahua. Distichlis stricta (Torr.) Rydb. Bull. Torr. Bot. Cl. 32: 602 (1905). Coanumra: Cuatro Cienegas, saline soil, Johnston 7125, Harvey 1234, Marsh 2080; Laguna de Jaco, salt flats at south end of lake, Johnston & Muller 1089. CHIHUAHUA: Laguna de Santa Maria, 1899, Nelson 6416 A salt grass widely distributed over western United States and Mexico. It has been collected at many stations along the Rio Grande. 380 JOURNAL OF THE ARNOLD ARBORETUM [VOL. XXIV Arundo Donax L. Sp. Pl. 81 (1753). VERNACULAR NAME: Carrizo. Coan Palm Canyon, near Muzquiz, Marsh 975; Monclova, 1880, Palmer 13-'5 ; Monclova, Harvey 1132. Texas to California and southward. A plant of the Old World, now widely established in the warmer parts of America. Well established along the Rio Grande and elsewhere about ponds and streams in our area. Phragmites communis Trin. Fund. Agrost. 134 (1820). Collected along the Texan bank of the Rio Grande and hence to be ex- pected in northern Coahuila and Chihuahua. Widely distributed in the warmer parts of the world. Melica montezumae Piper, Proc. Biol. Soc. Wash. 18: 144 (1905). Melica alba Hitchc. Contr. U. S. Nat. Herb. 17: 367 (1913). AHUILA: San Lorenzo Canyon, 6 mi. southeast of Saltillo, 1905, Palmer 551; Sierra Mojada, April 19, 1892, Jonas: 482 (US). Curuuanua: Sierra Santa Eulalia, shaded places, April 6, 1885, Pringle 430 (IsoTYPE) ; Chihuahua, Wilkinson (US). Edwards Plateau and Big Bend, Texas, south into our area. Piper and Hitchcock independently named this species, basing their names on the same group of specimens and indicating the same collections as the type. The species has been taken to be endemic to our area, but Mr. W. S. Boyle, who is monographing the genus, has properly indicated, through his identi- fication of the Gray Herbarium material, that the species is also present in Texas Melica nitens Nutt. ex Piper, Bull. Torr. Bot. Cl. 32: 387 (1905). JILA: — arroyo south and west of Sierra Azul, Buena Vista Ranch, July 8, 1938, ‘Marsh 1230, 1260. Eastern sisi States west to Kansas and Arizona and south through eastern Coahuila to Nuevo Leon. Triodia pulchella H.B.K. Nov. Gen. et Sp. 1: 155 (1816). VERNACULAR NAMES: Zacate borreguerro; Zacate pelillo; Zacatito. uILA: Sierra del Carmen, Aug. 29, 1936, Marsh 692; between Santo Domingo and Piedra Blanca, open country, Wynd & Mueller 496; Cuatro Cienegas, Marsh 2050; a Stewart 840; Puerto Ventanillas, south of Las Delicias, limestone slope, Stewart 2967 ; Parras, 1880, Palmer 1359. CuHimuaHuA: Laguna Santa Maria, Nelson 6414; i- huahua, LeSueur 11; 20 mi. south of Camargo, Harvey 1399. DuRAnco: Torr rocky hills, Hiickeock 7547 (US); Tlahualilo, barren hills, Pittzer 480; nie San Ignacio, Purpus 4616 (US). Zacatecas: Concepcion del Oro, very commo Palmer 263; valley 15 km. west of Concepcion del Oro, Stanford et al. 560; na footslopes and hills, Lloyd 89 (US). Western Texas to southern Nevada and southern California, south to central Mexico. A common but unobtrusive widely distributed, almost ubiquitous, grass among the desert scrub on dry slopes and in desert valleys. A capable xerophyte that flowers throughout the summer and appears to remain unaffected by long droughts. Although it is frequently locally abundant, horses and cattle ignore it-if any other food is available. During 1943] JOHNSTON, PLANTS OF NORTHERN MEXICO, II 381 long dry spells the plants appear to become shaggy-white- villous. The shaggy indument disappears after a rain and is apparently composed of myriads of hair-like water-soluble crystals which are products of tran- spiration. Triodia pilosa (Buckl.) Merr. U. S. Dept. Agric., Div. Agrost. Cir. 32: 9 (1901). Coanumra: Don Martin Dam, Harvey 933; calcareous soil near Piedras Negras, Pringle 8306; Puerto Santa Anna, Marsh 942; Yerda Spring, Marsh 296; Hillcoat Mesa, west ef aeaee ae Fily 25, 1938, Marsh 1448; Canon Espantosa, Sierra San Vicente, Schroeder Kansas and sane to Nevada and Arizona, south into northeastern Mexico. Triodia avenacea H.B.K. Nov. Gen. et Sp. 1: 156 (1816). OAHUILA: 3 km. southwest of Fraile, in arroyo, Stanford et al. 331. ZACATECAS: Concepcion del Oro, ie mesa, 1904, Palmer 280; valley 15 km. west of Concepcion del Oro, Stanford et al. 5 Northern oe ad Nuevo Leon southward to central Mexico. A low spreading plant, with stolons. Triodia grandiflora Vasey, Contr. U. S. Nat. Herb. 1: 59 : Triodia Nealleyi Vasey, U.S. Dept. Agric., Div. Bot. Bull. 122: ¢. 36 (1891). COAHUILA: Saltillo, 1898, stony hillside, Palmer 414, 813; Saltillo, 1905, Palmer Muller 297; a foothills of Sierra Cruces, north of Santa Elena, rocky flats, Johnston & Muller 1384; west of Santa Elena, sunny hillside, Stewart 827. Cut- HUAHUA: Sierra Viena rocky slope, Johnston 8093A ; Sierra ue era Aug. 12, 1885, Pringle 406. Zacatecas: Concepcion del Oro, 1904, Palmer Although I am pees Hitchcock in delimiting this species, I am con- vinced that it is an aggregate containing several undifferentiated species. Typical T. grandiflora is a plant with the habit of T. pilosa, having usually pale well-developed spikelets with acute or subulate lemma-lobes. Triodia Nealleyi is a species more closely related to T. avenacea and has a spicate crowded inflorescence, in which the individual spikelets are less obvious, smaller, usually reddish, and the lemma-lobes elongate-spreading and obtuse. Both of these re are present in our area. Plants from Chi- huahua and Arizona are distinguishable, but are unnamed. Certain plants from the Sierra Guajes, Sierra del Pino, and Sierra Madera are also separable, but without a name. The aggregate of forms here included ranges from western Texas to Arizona and south in eastern Mexico to Hidalgo and Oaxaca. Triodia texana Wats. Proc. Am. Acad. 18: 180 (1883). CoaHuiLta: Rio Grande Valley near Piedras a lies 9019; Allende, Marsh shel 11 mi. south of Allende, ee lined arroyo, Johnston 7017; Verda Spring, Marsh 6; Monclova, 1880, Palmer 1371; near Rancho sel South of Castafios, moist nn in desert, Wynd & Mueller 178. 382 JOURNAL OF THE ARNOLD ARBORETUM [VOL. XXIV Central and southern Texas and northeastern Mexico. Triodia albescens Vasey, U.S. Dept. Agric., Div. Bot. Bull. 122: t. 33 (1891). umLa: Rio Paaaal Valley near Piedras Negras, Pringle 9023; 21 mi. south of Sabinas, pore 704 Texas and ia to Colorado and New Mexico, south into northeastern Coahuila. Triodia mutica (Torr.) Scribn. Bull. Torr. Bot. Cl. 10: 30 (1883). . Sierra del Carmen, Sept. 13, 1936, Marsh 908; Hillcoat Mesa, west of Encantada Ranch, July 25, 1938, Marsh 2270, northwest of Fronteras, road to Natadores, silty Larrea rap Johnston 7174; near iano silty bajada, Johnston 7091; Santa Teresa, south of Castahos, Wynd & Mueller 196; 3 mi. east of Cuatro Cienegas, rocky bajada, psa 7110; between Hac. La Rosa and Hac. Lechuguilla, dry desert, Wynd & Mueller 62; 14 mi. east of Paila, Shreve & Tinkham 9891; hills 20 mi. west of Saltillo, Shreve & Tinkham 9820; mountains west of Saltillo, 1880, rocky flat, Johnston 8414. Cuinuanva: Sierra Santa Eulalia, dry calcareous soil, Pringle 405; arroyo 20 km. south of Camargo, poe 1376. Duranco: Tlahualilo, barren hills, Pittier 468 (US) Texas to Arizona and ers into northern Mexico. Blepharidachne Bigelovii (Wats.) Hack. in DC. Monogr. Phan. 6: 261 (1889). CoanvuiLa: Several miles west of Buenavista, on road between San Antonio de los Alamos and Puerto Caballo, banks of gypsiferous shales, small clumps 1-3 inches broad, pale, frequent, leaves very pungent, Johnston 8309; south of Laguna de Leche, confined to gypsiferous shales, rigid, erect, local, leaves pungent, Johnston 8615; north- ern foothills of the Sierra Cruces, about 10 mi. north of Santa Elena, gypsiferous shales, local, Johnston 9411; east base of Picacho de San José, gypsiferous shales, Johnston 9401. Texas: Rustler Springs, Culberson Co., 1928, Cory 1238; rocky hills near Frontera, north of El Paso, in small compact bunches, May 4, 1852, Wright 2028 (tyPE); rocky hills near Frontera, May 4, 1852, Bigelow; Frontera, July 1852, Parry. Known only from the collections cited. Where I have seen the plant it was confined to thin gypsum seams in Upper Cretaceous shales. Since gypsum is present in the areas in Texas where it has been collected, the probabilities are that the species is gypsophilous. The plant forms very strict stiff tufts less than a decimeter tall. The pale rigid leaves have a pungent tip. Because of its distinctive appearance it is readily recogniz- able, even in the sterile state. Cottea pappophoroides Kunth, Rév. Gram. 1: 84 (1829). Coauutta: Sierra Hechiceros, Cafion Indio Felipe, sides of dry arroyo, Stewart 175; gypsum beds in the valley between La Vibora and Matrimonio Viejo, Johnston 0340; 16 mi. south of Laguna del Rey, gypsum plain, Johnston 7816; Rancho Las Uvas, Valle Acatita, frequent on gypsum flats, Stewart 2695. pains Chihuahua, rocky hills near Millers Dam, Sept. 12, 1885, Pringle 420; 20 km. south of Camargo, Harvey 1395. Duranco: Torreon, rocky hill, Hitchcock Oe (US). Southern and western Texas to Arizona and south to southern Mexico; also in South America. The type came from Peru. Although obviously not confined to gypsum, the species frequently occurs on gypsum in Coahuila, and where I have seen it, it is locally confined to that substratum. On gypsum the plants form a very dense caudex of stem-bases and cleisto- 1943 ] JOHNSTON, PLANTS OF NORTHERN MEXICO, II 383 genes that becomes 3-7 cm. in diameter, although supporting only a rela- tively few leafy stems. Plants from other substrata develop very loose caudices or none at all. I can detect no other differences between these plants. Pappophorum Wrightii Wats. Proc. Am. Acad. 18: 178 (1883). Coanuita: Mt. Carmel Canyon, Rio Grande, Parry; Saltillo, in graveyard, 1898, Palmer 395; near Rosario, about mogote, Jonnie 8823; 42 mi. west of Saltillo, flat, Johnston 8256; a Berueey La Vibora and sini set Viejo, margin of ez, banks of the Rio Florido, Harvey 1329; 6 mi. west of Piloncillo, lava hillside, pi 7876 Central ewe to Arizona and south to Oaxaca; western South America. As with Cottea, this grass, although not restricted to gypsum, is encoun- tered most frequently about gypsum beds and usually in greater abundance there than on other substrata. oO oO aa i co 6S = = = o> is) Ss Co Do on ac) @ 4 a -c & =m co “as en! io) x = Pappophorum mucronulatum Nees, Agrost. Bras. 412 (1829). CoanuILa: Cuatro Cienegas, Marsh 2048; west of Puerto de las Monjas, mouth o sae aad ore Saltillo, dry ground near ieee field, Hitchcock 450; Saltillo, ommon praveyard, 1898, Palmer 377; near La Rosa, Shreve & Tinbham 9904; eee (ee. Palmer 1 Texas to Arizona oar northern Mexico. Pappophorum bicolor Fourn. Mex. Pl. 2: 133 (1886). Coanuita: Don Martin Dam, Harvey 939; 21 mi. south of Sabinas, bank of arroyo, Johnston 7047; Hermanas, Marsh 1591; Monclova, 1880, Palmer 1362; near Rancho Santa Teresa, south of Castafios, Wynd & Mueller 203; hills 20 mi. west of Saltillo, Shreve & Tinkham 9834; on plain 1 mi. south of Ocampo, in mogote, Johnston 8885 ; 7 mi. south of Jaco, near mogote, Johnston & Muller 1107. Texas to Arizona and south into northeastern Mexico. Scleropogon brevifolius Phil. Ann. Univ. Chile 36: 206 (1870). VERNACULAR NAMES: Colo del Zorro; Zacate del Burro. OAHU Sierra . ae Sept. 13, 1936, Marsh 898; Muzquiz, Marsh 1118; Saltillo, colonies in depressions on mesas, 1898, Palmer 386; Chojo Grande, 27 m Souehease of Saltillo, fr places on mesas, a Palmer 340; Parras, Oct. Palmer 5005. CuiHuauHua: Candelaria, Stearns 254 (US); mae Ahumada, eur 72; Santa Eulalia Plains, 1885, Wilkinson (US); 15 km. savin of Camargo, Harvey 1401, 1402. ZACATECAS: Ccdras, Lloyd 169 (US) Western Texas to Colorado and Arizona and south to southern Mexico; Argentina. A common and characteristic grass of the silty valley soils in Coahuila, especially of the flat area where some run-off temporarily accumu- lates during rains. Frequently associated with tobosa (Hilaria mutica) and common about the margin of well-developed tobosa flats. The saba- netas of Coahuila, level grassy places of varying size scattered in the desert scrub on the gentle slopes of the major valleys or in the broad open canyons, are usually dominated by this grass. The plant spreads by rhizomes and 384 JOURNAL OF THE ARNOLD ARBORETUM [ VOL. XXIV large areas may be covered by a pure colony of the plant. The awns are usually stramineous but occasional plants have the awns pink and so permit an observer to determine the extent of an individual plant in the colony. I have noted plants covering three or four square meters and so dominating its particular area that adjoining plants of the species scarcely transgress upon it. The plants are extremely prolific and during the summer the female plants are a mass of fruiting inflorescences; although useless as animal food, they are an attractive element in the desert scene. ee sp. UIL Hillcoat ~ west of Buena Vista Ranch, July 13, 1938, Marsh vies "Sierra Gloria, Marsh The cited specimens ne to the group of A. arizonicum and A. spica- tum, but differ from them in their large, elongate, attenuate, awn-tipped glumes. Elymus canadensis L. Sp. Pl. 83 (1753). CoauutLa: Sierra del Carmen, Cafion Sentenela, Wynd & Mueller 529; Sierra del Carmen, Aug. 9, 1936, Marsh 635; Hillcoat Mesa, west of Encantada Ranch, July 25, 1938, Marsh 1440; Saltillo, in orchard, 1898, Palmer 260; — a July 16, 1848, Gregg 263. CurnHuanua: 5 km. west of Camargo, Harvey Widely distributed in the United States, extending ber into Chihuahua, Coahuila, and Nuevo Leon. Sitanion Hystrix (Nutt.) J. G. Smith, U. S. Dept. Agric., Div. Agrost. Bull. 18: 15 (1899). ILA: Sierra del Carmen, Sept. 8, 1936, Marsh ie Hillcoat Canyon, west of cacti, spikes nodding, Johnston oe —— 15 km. west £ Concepcion del Oro, 18-30 inches tall, Stanford et al. 5 Western United States se adjacent Mexico; south along the eastern Sierra Madre to central Mexic Koeleria cristata (L.) Pers. Syn. Pl. 1: 97 (1905). CoauurILa: Sierra del Carmen, Cafon Sentenela, Wynd & Mueller 539; Sierra del Carmen, Aug. 26, 1936, Marsh 631; Hillcoat Canyon, west of Buena Vista Ranch, July 13, 1938, Marsh 1315; Hillcoat Mesa, west of Encantada Ranch, July 25, 1938, Marsh 1445; Sierra Gloria, Marsh 1902, 1944 Widely distributed in the United States; in Mexico extending south in the mountains to Central America. Sphenopholis obtusata (Michx.) Scribn. Rhodora 8: 144 (1906). Coauvutta: Rio Grande Valley at Piedras Negras, April 17, 1900, Pringle 8285. Widely distributed in the United States and south to southern Mexico. Trisetum deyeuxioides (H.B.K.) Kunth, Rév. Gram. 102 (1829). Hitchcock, Contr. U. S. Nat. Herb. 17: 325 (1913), reports a collection of Pringle (no. 1432) from wet banks of a stream in the Mapula Mts. In his published diaries Pringle mentions collecting the species in the Mapula Mts. on Oct. 30, 1886. The species is known from the mountains of Chihuahua and south to southern Mexico. 1943 ] JOHNSTON, PLANTS OF NORTHERN MEXICO, II 385 Avena fatua L. Sp. Pl. 80 (1753). CoanvulILa: Saltillo, old field, April 1898, Palmer 8. A European weed, widely introduced in the United States and Mexico. Danthonia mexicana Scribn. Proc. Acad. Nat. Sci. Phila. 1891: 301 (1891). Coanuita: West base of Picacho del Fuste, coarse tufts on limestone ledges on north slope, Johnston 8382; Carneros Pass, limestone ledes Sept. 20, 1890, Pringle 3279 (ISOTYPE) ; Sierra de Barras, April 1905, Purpus 1125 in pt. A rare species, known only from the stations ae above, and from Tehuacan, Puebla. Agrostis semiverticillata (Forsk.) C. Chr. Dansk. Bot. Arkiv 43: 12 (1922). Coanumwa: Muzquiz, Sabinas River, 1936, Marsh 410; Muzquiz, 1938, Marsh L157, 1169; Hermanas, 1939, Marsh 1621; Monclova, 1939, Marsh 1697; Saltillo, 1905, Palmer 527 ; Saltillo, 1898, Palmer 8006; San Juan de la Vaqueria, May 25, 1847, Gregg fil, Paras: 1880, Palmer 2019; Pam ras, Feb. 1905, Purpus 1111. Cee: Chihuahua, low meadows, 1908, Paley 29; Chihuahua, wet river bank in shade, 1908, Palmer 160; 2 km. west of Jimenez, Harvey 1315. A species of the Old World, now widely distributed in wet soils in the warmer parts of America. Agrostis exarata Trin. Gram. Unifl. 207 (1824). Coanuita: Sierra del Carmen, Cafion Sentenela, Wynd & Mueller 547. From Alaska south through western United States into northern Mexico. Agrostis hiemalis (Walp.) B.S.P. Prelim. Cat. N. Y. 68 (1888). CoanuvuiLa: Sierra del Carmen, Cafion Sentenela, Wynd & Mueller 544. Boreal North America south into the mountains of northern Mexico. Polypogon monspeliensis (L.) Desf. Fl. Atlant. 1: 67 (1798). CHIHUAHUA: 2 km. west of Jimenez, Harvey 1317. A European weed, widely distributed in the United States and northern Mexico Polypogon elongatus H.B.K. Nov. Gen. et Sp. 1: 134 (1815). Coanuita: Saltillo, along water in — in garden, 1898, Palmer 2. CuHrmuAHua: Presa de Chihuahua, 1936, LeSueur 15 Wet soils from southern ae south through Mexico, reaching South America. Lycurus phleoides H.B.K. Nov. Gen. et Sp. 1: 142. t. 45 (1815). Lycurus phleoides var. glaucifolius Beal, Grasses No. Am. 2: 271 (1896). CoaHuILa: Sierra del Carmen » Aug. 14, 1936, Marsh 658; limestone hill near Santo of 13, 1938, Marsh 1274, 1285; Mesa Grande, 40 km. northwest of Hac. oe HIHUAHUA: rocky hills near Chihuahua, May 28, 1885, Pringle 426 (isotype of var. glaucifolius); Chihuahua, 1935, og 76. cae Valley 15 km. west of Concepcion del Oro, Stanford et al. Ranging from Oklahoma mae western Texas west to Arizona and south 386 JOURNAL OF THE ARNOLD ARBORETUM [VOL. XXIV in Mexico to Guanajuato (the type locality), Hidalgo, and Puebla. The species is frequent on rocky soils in our area. Hitchcock, Contr. U. S. Nat. Herb. 17: 305 (1913), reports L. phala- roides H.B. K. from Cedros, Zac. (Lloyd 179). The report needs verifica- tion. Perhaps a slender specimen of L. phleoides is involved. Muhlenbergia biloba Hitchc. Contr. U.S. Nat. Herb. he _ (1913). Bealia mexicana Scribn. in Hack. True Grasses 103 (189 CurHvuanvua: Hills northwest of Chihuahua, Oct. 7, i Pringle 819 (ISOTYPE). Known from a few stations in Baja California, Chihuahua, and Durango. Muhlenbergia texana Buckl. Proc. Acad. Nat. Sci. Phila. 1862: 91 (1863). CuinvuAHvA: Volcanic hills 20 km. north of Chihuahua, open canyon, in gravel of stream-bed, Stewart & Johnston 2139; hills northeast of Chihuahua, wet ledges, Oct. 7, 1885, Pringle 399; rocky hills northwest of Chihuahua, gravel bars of stream, Oct. 21, 1885, Pringle 400. Trans-Pecos Texas to Arizona and south along the Sierra Madre, in Chihuahua and Sonora, to Durango. Muhlenbergia crispiseta Hitchc. No. Am. Fl. 17: 440 (1935). CurnuAHuA: Mapula Mts., thin soil of summits, Nov. 11, 1886, Pringle 824. Known from a few collections in San Luis Potosi and the mountains of Chihuahua. Muhlenbergia implicata (H.B.K.) Kunth, Rév. Gram. 1: 63 (1829). IUAHUA: Portrero Peak, east of Mapula station, rocky banks of stream, Oct. 12, 18. North through Mexico to Hidalgo, Durango, and Chihuahua. Muhlenbergia i Scribn. Bot. Gaz. 9: 187 (1884). Coanutma: Along seepage on limestone ledges at top of escarpment at west side of Potrero de la Mula, ‘locally abundant, spree Johnston 9250. Curmuanua: Pira- mide, shaded crevices at base of large rock-masses, Johnston 8122; Sierra Santa Eulalia, thin dry soil of ledges, 1885, Prats 404. Trans-Pecos Texas to Arizona and south to Central Mexico. Muhlenbergia arenacea (Buckl.) Hitche. Proc. Biol. Soc. Wash. 41: 161 (1928). Coanutta: Sierra del Carmen, Sept. 13, 1936, Marsh 907; northeastern foothills of the Sierra Cruces, 5 mi. south of San se silty flat in arroyo, shins ston & Muller 1032; 3 mi. east of San José, silty flats, Johnston 8 HIHUAH 50 km. n of Jimenez, in arroyo, Harvey 1375. Zacatecas: Valley 15 km. went of Concepcion del Oro, Stanford et al. 517. Western Texas and adjacent New Mexico south into our area. Muhlenbergia asperifolia (Nees & Meyen) Parodi, Rev. Fac. Agron. Buenos Aires 6: 117 (1928) DurANnco: Mapimi, dense masses in bottom of damp arroyo, 1898, Palmer 554. Western United States south into northern Mexico; also in southern South America. The species has been collected along the Rio Grande near E] Paso and is to be expected in northern Chihuahua. ~ glauca (Nees) pe Rep. Sp. Nov. 17: 214 (1921). OA Sierra de la Paila, Oct. 1910, Purpus 5006; Sierra Madera, Canon Pe anc gravelly bed of arroyo, one plant, Johnston 8906; Slerta del Pino, La Noria, 1943 ] JOHNSTON, PLANTS OF NORTHERN MEXICO, II 387 shaded arroyo-bank, gravelly soil, Johnston & Muller 466. Cutnuanua: Rocky hills northeast of Chihuahua, cold wet ledges, Sept. 28, 1885, Pringle 395. Trans-Pecos Texas to Arizona and south to central Mexico. Muhlenbergia Emersleyi Vasey, Contr. U. S. Nat. Herb. 3: 66 (1892). HUILA: Sierra del Carmen, Aug. 9-26, 6, Marsh 624, 655; trail from southern extremity of Hillcoat Mesa to Buena Vista ale ane July 27, 1938, Marsh 1511; Sierra Madera, Cafion Charretera, bed of arro nd y flats, Johnston 8950, high on canyon side, 1904, Palmer 401; Sierra del Pino, La Noria, Stewart 1208, Johnston & Muller 462, 587. CutHuanua: Encampanada, Sierra Hechiceros, sunny open slopes, Stewart 202; Piramide, sheltered crevices about base of rock-masses, Johnston 8118; Organos, rocky open canyon, Stewart & Johnston 2066. Trans-Pecos Texas to Arizona and south to Durango and Hidalgo. A species of the oak-belt, forming coarse clumps in rocky soil, commonly at the edges of thickets or on sheltered arroyo-banks. The material from eastern Coahuila has a denser stiffer plumbeous, rather than pinkish, panicle, and shorter awns than typical M. Emersleyi. This aberrant eastern material, well exemplified by Palmer 401, may deserve nomenclatural recognition. Muhlenbergia lanata (H.B.K.) Hitchc. No. Am. Fl. 17: 459 (1935). CuIHvuAHUA: Rocky hills northeast of Chihuahua, cool slopes, Oct. 10, 1885, Pringle 391. Known from scattered stations in Chihuahua, and from San Luis Potosi to Puebla. Muhlenbergia abata sp. nov. Planta perennis gracilis humilis e rhizomatibus gracilibus oriens; cauli- bus numerosissimis gracilibus stricte ramosis saepe 1-3 dm. longis rigidulis laxe decumbentibus vel procumbentibus; vaginis quam internodiis ™%4 brevioribus vel eis non raro subaequilongis, maturitate solum partem infra medium internodii culmi amplectantibus, margine scabridulis; ligula ad 1 mm. longa apice rotundata basi decurrente; lamina rigidula plus minusve curvata, 3-6 cm. longa, 1-2 mm. lata | saepe arcte involuta, subtus glabra supra minute scabr ae paniculis scabridulis 2-4 cm. ongis paucifloris eee angustis subspicatis infra medium brevissime stricteque pauci- mosis; spiculis ca. 3 mm. longis strictis acutis elongatis 0.3-5 mm. longe pedicclintis: glumis subaequilongis hyalinis pallidis obscure uninervatis acutis 1.8-2 mm. longis; lemmatibus plumbeis obscurissime nervatis elongatis, supra medium sparse minuteque scabridulis, alibi glabris, apice acutis vel breviter sed distincte rostratis. Texas: Big Springs, 1902, Tracy 8218; San Elizario, in field, Sept. 26, 1849, Wright 746. New Mexico: Cook’s Spring, northern Luna Co., Nov. 3, 1887, Bigelow; Ft. Bayard Watershed, Grant Co., 1905, Blumer 1781; Mangas ae 18 mi. north- west of Silver City, Grant Co., Metcalfe 774; valley: of the Rio Grande 10-100 mi. Herb.) above El Paso, Wright 1982 (tTypE, Gray . CxsravuaHua: Chihuahua, Oct. 1935, LeSueur 50 El B , northeast of El re, Bavispe Area, Santos 2134 San Luis Potosr: 14 mi. northw edral, dense pure col depression near road on desert plain, 1938, Johnston 7609; valley of San Luis Potosi, 1876, Schaffner 1025 in pt. This is the species accepted as M. repens by Hitchcock, No. Am. FI. 17: 451 (1935) and Man. Grasses U. S. 362. fig. 737 (1935). As discussed 388 JOURNAL OF THE ARNOLD ARBORETUM [VOL. XXIV under the following species, the name ‘‘M. repens” properly applies to the plant which Hitchcock called M. utilis. From the true M. repens (that is, M. utilis), the present plant differs in its distinctly larger spikelets, scabrid lemmas and pedicels, looser paler acute glumes more than half as long as the lemma, somewhat larger ligule, and coarser stems and leaves. It ranges in western Texas and southern New Mexico south through Chihuahua to San Luis Potosi. Muhlenbergia repens (Presl) Hitchc. in Jepson, Fl. Calif. 1: 111 (1912). Muhlenbergia utilis hia Hitchce. ose _ Acad. 23: 453 (1933). ie sacatilla Fourn. Mex. P]. 2: 101 86). : Parras, May 16, 1847, eames Parras, thick masses on alkali bottom, ‘ton, "Sta 452. CurmuaHua: Valley of the Sacramento near Chihuahua, by stream, Nov. 6, 1885, Pringle 418 Central Texas, oeiieen California (where probably introduced), Durango, San Luis Potosi, and central Mexico. Hitchcock has treated this plant as M. utilis, cf. No. Am. Fl. 17: 451 (1935) and Man. Grasses U.S. 362. fig. 738 (1935), and applied the name M. repens to the plant I have called M. abata. The original ae gre . Sporobolus repens Presl, and Scribner’s illustration, Ann. Mo. Bot. . 10: 53. t. 30 (1899), of the isotype of Presl’s species at St. Louis . little doubt as to the precise identity of the species. It is obviously one of the forms of M. utilis found in central and southern Mexico. Muhlenbergia montana (Nutt.) Hitchc. Bull. U. S. Dept. Agric. 772: 145, 147 (1920). CHIHUAHUA: High summits of the Sierra Santa Eulalia, 1885, Pringle 392. Western United States south into Chihuahua and Sonora. areal Porteri spats in Beal, Grasses No. Am. 2: 259 (1896). Dam, Harvey 946; 2 mi rthwest of Frontera, road to eastern aren of Llano de Guage near La Pistola, forming tangled masses supported by bushes in mogote, Johnston & Muller 357, 764; San Antonio de los Alamos, one colony at base of tuff cliffs, Johnston 8265; 4 mi. west of Lag. de Leche, sprawling or vining in protection of shrubs, scattered on shrubby desert hillside, Muller 3285; Torreon, large masses at base of bushes, 1898, Palmer 511. Curauanua: Presidio del Norte Dinaca).. July 1852, Parry; Juarez, dry mesa, Sept. 26, 1902, Pringle 11233; Chihuahua, hills and aed Pringle 478 (US) ; Paral: Chihuahua road, 10 km. north of Rio San Pedro, Harvey Texas and ANG to California and south into northern Mexico. A common grass in silty valley soils, usually growing in the shelter of bushes. The globose entangled masses of stems, 3—4 dm. in diameter and supported features of the mogotes in Coahuila. The plant, when covered with its very abundant open airy purplish panicles, is conspicuous and attractive. Muhlenbergia arizonica Scribn. Bull. Torr. Bot. Cl. 15: 8 (1888). Cuinvuanua: Rocky hills northeast of Chihuahua, thin dry soil, Sept. 16, 1885, Pringle 402. 1943] JOHNSTON, PLANTS OF NORTHERN MEXICO, II 389 Arizona southward in the mountains of Sonora and Chihuahua to Sinaloa and Durango. i nia slaeaites Buckl. Proc. Acad. Nat. Sci. Phila. 1862: 91 (1863). CoAHUI Western base of Picacho del Fuste, silty places on pe tufted, not common, Foheion ee tableland north of Canon del Cuervo Chico, common on wide grassy valley, Johnston 8538; between Palos Blancos and San Paes east of Cuesta Zozaya, common on grassy valley on tableland, Johnston 9273, 9275; foot slopes at Laguna Jaco, fairly common, Stewart & Johnston 1962; eastern foothills of Sierra Cruces, 8 mi. north of Santa Elena, one flat, Johnsto ne Muller 1024; 3 mi. east of de Villa on Coahuilan boundary, silty plain, Johnston 8180; 2 mi. south of San Fer- pear silty plain, Johnston a Chihuahua, plains, Pringle 479 (US); arroyo 50 km. orth of Jimenez, Harv Kansas to Texas es ate and south into Zacatecas. Muhlenbergia setifolia Vasey, Bot. Gaz. 7: 92 (1882). CoAHUILA: Sierra del Pino, La Noria, banks of arroyo, Johnston & Muller 662, 665; Western Texas south into Coahuila. The oe is closely related to M. rigida and apparently separable from it by no single cter. It range is mostly just beyond the northern limit of u. rigida, but it grows with that species, along the northeastern limits of the latter, in eastern Coahuila. It is a smaller more slender plant than M. rigida, with looser tufts of stems and leaves, filiform involute leaf-blades, and narrower fewer- flowered green or brownish (not purple) panicles. Muhlenbergia rigida (H.B.K.) Kunth, Rév. Gram. 1: 63 (1829). Coauutmta: Sierra del Carmen, Sept. 8, 1936, Marsh 719; ie Grande, 40 km. northwest of Hac. Encantada, meadows and se Het common, Stewart 1628, 1630; Sierra del Pino, La Noria, gravelly flats among clumps of ae oaks, Johnston & Muller 659; Puerto San Lazaro, dominant grass on Bete slopes, Muller 3095; north end of Carneros a among cacti, not common, Johnston 7289. CHIHUAHUA: Sierra Organos, south of Organos at base of oak-clad slope, coarse tufts, rocky places, Stewart & Johnston 2065; Sierra Santa Eulalia, Sept. 17, 1885, Pringle Trans-Pecos Texas to Arizona and saute to Central America. The species appears to be absent in northeastern Mexico and to reach its eastern limit along the western base of the Sierra Madre in Coahuila and Nuevo e€ It has been collected in Hidalgo. In eastern Coahuila it is con- nected by intergrades with the closely related and generally more northerly ranging M. setifolia. Muhlenbergia dubia Fourn. ex Hemsl. Biol. Centr. Am. Bats 3: 540 (1885). Sierra Madera, Cafion Charretera, coarse tufts in rocky arroyo-bottom just below pine- belt, 3-4 ft. tall, Johnston 8975, 9069; Saltillo, among large rocks on i) Ln] rt) 390 JOURNAL OF THE ARNOLD ARBORETUM [VOL. XXIV outer rim of treeless mountain, 1898, Palmer 416; Saltillo, deep ravines, 1898, Palmer 79; San Lorenzo Canyon, 6 mi. southeast of Saltillo, high up canyon, large bunch canyon side, 1904, Palmer 341; north end of Carneros Pass, coarse tufts between bushes, Johnston 7288. HIHUAHUA: Rocky hills northeast of Chihuahua, cool slopes, Oct. 20, 1885, Pringle 403. Trans-Pecos Texas to New Mexico and adjoining Mexico, south through Nuevo Leon and eastern Coahuila to eastern San Luis Potosi. The type of M. dubia came from the Chinantla, Puebla. I have seen no authentic material and no collections from south of San Luis Potosi. Our plant is the same as the Texan material described as M. acuminata Vasey. Perhaps that name is the proper one for our present plant. Muhlenbergia peaespaie Hitchc. No. Am. Fl. 17: 470 (1935) ; Johnston, Jour. Arnold Arb, 22: 155 (1941). utta: Locally common on the gypsum ridges east of Laguna de Jaco, John- ston & Muller 1074, Stewart & Johnston 1963; 10 mi. east of Fraile, abundant on valley floor, local, Johnston 7305; 6 mi. north of La Ventura, common on gypsum plain, local, Johnston 7642, Shreve & Tinkham 9607. Known only from scattered stations in Coahuila, San Luis Potosi, Nuevo Leon, and southern Tamaulipas, apparently confined to gypsum. Muhlenbergia parviglumis Vasey, Contr. U. S. Nat. Herb. 3: 71 (1892). CoanuILa: Sierra del Carmen, Sept. 9, , Marsh 717; Sierra Madera, Canon Charretera, banks of arroyo in oak-belt, mes gare Folnsion 9076. Known from Uvalde, Val Verde, and Jeff Davis Counties, Texas, and from Nuevo Leon and eastern Coahuila. Muhlenbergia polycaulis Scribn. Bull. Torr. Bot. Cl. 38: 327 (1911). Cuimuanua: Hills northeast of Chihuahua, cool wet ledges, 1885, Pringle 394. Trans-Pecos Texas to Arizona and south in the mountains of Baja Cali- fornia, Sonora, and Chihuahua to Durango. Muhlenbergia pauciflora Buckl. Proc. Acad. Nat. Sci. Phila. 1862: 91 (1863). Coanuma: Sierra Mojada, Canon San Salvador, abundant on slopes, Muller 3312. Trans-Pecos Texas to Arizona and south in the mountains of Baja California, Sonora, and Chihuahua. The type of the species (Wright 732) was collected “‘in declivities in the mountains near El Paso, Sept. 12, 1849.” eee monticola Buckl. Proc. Acad. Nat. Sci. Phila. 1862: 91 (1863). CoanvuILA: Camp near Mt. Carmel canyon, Oct. 1852, Parry; Sierra del Carmen, Sept. 1, 1936, Marsh 872; limestone hill near Santo Domingo, Wynd & Mueller 453; Muraquls Marsh 549; Sierra Madera, Canon del Agua, among rocks in oak-pinyon belt, in lower canyon, Muller en 3259; Cuatro pie Marsh 2053; Puerto San cliffs, Johnston & Muller is Sierra Cruces, ester foothills near Santa Elena, among bushes along arroyo, Johnston & Mu 238; Sierra Cruces, Cano aja Blanca, about rock ledges on crest at head of canyon, Johnston & Muller 298; Sierra Mojada, Cafon San Salvador, abundant on slopes, aad 3312, CHIHUAHUA rra 1937, LeSueur; Sierra Santa Eulalia, 2 km. north of San Antonio, Harvey 1513; Sierra Santa Eulalia, dry limestone ledges, Aug. 1885, Pringle 396 1943] JOHNSTON, PLANTS OF NORTHERN MEXICO, II 391 Trans-Pecos Texas to Arizona and south into northern Mexico. In its extreme form, typical M. monticola is separated from typical M. tenuifolia, of central Mexico, by having narrow inflorescences with strict branches, Strict spikelets, and green acute lanceolate glumes. Muhlenbergia tenuifolia has purple inflorescences, which have spreading or ascending branches on which the spikelets are divaricate or even reflexed. Its glumes are deep purple, smaller than in M. monticola, and commonly denticulate and obtusish and abruptly apiculate at the apex. In our area, the ranges of . monticola and M. tenuifolia meet and the species intergrade very badly. I have arbitrarily referred to M. monticola those plants with narrow green or weakly purplish inflorescences (i.e., those with strict panicle-branches and strict spikelets), and to M. tenuifolia those plants having a usually darkly colored panicle with spreading branches and spikelets. e of M. monticola (Wright 731) was collected in Limpia Canyon in the Davis Mts., Texas. This typical form has been illustrated by Hitch- cock, Man. Grasses U. S. fig. 788 (1935). Very similar plants have been collected elsewhere in trans-Pecos Texas. Material from Arizona, how- ever, differs in having a distinctly looser panicle. Vasey, U.S. Dept. Apric., Div. Bot. Bull. 131: ¢. 79 (1892), has an illustration (sub M. calamagro- stidea) of the Arizonan form. From Arizona this aberrant form extends south into the Sierra Madre of Sonora and Chihuahua, where the inflo- rescence becomes larger and more open and the spikelets divaricate or even reflexed. These large plants, except for the green, not purple, panicles, are remarkably similar in gross aspect to some forms of M. tenuifolia ae about Mexico City, the type locality of that species. It is clear that the two species, M. monticola and M. tenuifolia, intergrade in the northern states of Mexico and that, if they are both to be recognized, this can be justified only for convenience and performed in an arbitrary manner. Muhlenbergia tenuifolia (H.B.K.) Kunth, Rév. Gram. 1: 63 (1829). VERNACULAR NAME: Zacate espumilla. CoanuiLa: Mouth of Cafion La Cruz, 20 km. south of Ocampo, gravelly bed of large arroyo, Johnston 9187; Cafion Bocatoche, o open arroyo, Muller 3119; La Rosita, Shreve & Tinkham 9591; 2 mi. west of Saltillo, Harvey 1097; Saltillo, ee of garden under trees, 1898, Palmer 393,; Sierra Cruces, near Santa Elena, hillsides, Stewart 284; San Antonio de los Alamos, eae flat above tuff cliffs, Johnston 8255; aoe 1880, Palmer 1348; Sierra Parras, Oct. 1910, Purpus 5007; Sierra Negras, 9 km. south of Parras, Stanford et al. 165. Cutmuanvua: Rocky hills near Chihuahua, May e 1885, Pringle 428; hills and plains near Chihuahua, Oct. 23 ae pissy 397. ZACATECAS: Valley 15 km. west of Concepcion del Oro, Stanford et al, : Ranging from central and southern Mexico ate into our area. Over most of its range a well marked and readily recognized species, but in our area completely intergrading with the more northern M. monticola. The species is a weak perennial and, like M. monticola, ee sheltered places at bases of cliffs, along rocky arroyo banks, or on slopes i in deep canyons. Muhlenbergia elongata Scribn. in Beal, Grasses No. Am. 2: 251 (1896). CHIHUAHUA: Rocky hills east of Chihuahua, ledges, 1885, Pringle 398 (1soTYPE). Known only from near Chihuahua and from extreme southwestern parts of the state (Palmer 159). 392 JOURNAL OF THE ARNOLD ARBORETUM [VOL. XXIV Muhlenbergia Marshii sp. nov. Planta perennis; culmis ca. 1 m. altis erectis teretibus glabris dense caespitosis simplicibus, basi ad 3 mm. crassis internodiis 1-1.5 dm. longis; rigidulis utrinque scabridulis; panicula spiciformi 2.5—-4 dm. longa 3-6 mm. crassa, haud vel vix interrupta, basi e vagina superiore saepe haud exserta, ramis infra medium paniculae 2—4 cm. longis strictis multifloris; spiculis strictis 0-0.5 mm. longe pedicellatis (aristis glumarum exclusis) ca. 4 mm. longis; glumis subaequalibus 3 mm. longis pallidis subhyalinis obscure medio-nervatis (nervis prominentulis scabridis) lanceolatis, paullo supra basim latioribus deinde sursum in aristam rectam 0.3-0.7 mm longam gradatim contractis, vel non raro Summum ad apicem basim aristae CoanvuiLa: Sierra del Carmen, Sept. 8, 1936, E. G. Marsh Jr. 746 (TYPE, Gray Herb.). Texas: Davis Mts., H. O. Canyon above Sawtooth, soil in cracks of rocks in stream-bed, tough tightly rooted clumps, July 1936, Hinckley. A member of the species-complex passing as M. rigens, among the mem- bers of which it is readily distinguished by its short-awned glumes and lemmas and extreme eastern occurrence. The basal portion of the inflo- rescence bears elongate strict branches and is not exserted from the upper- most leaf-sheaths. In these characters it agrees with true M. rigens of central California and closely related forms from southern California and southern Arizona and adjacent Mexico. True M. rigens has a somewhat interrupted inflorescence composed of rather elongate strict branchlets, and it appears to be confined to western middle California. Muhlenbergia mundula sp. nov. OAHUILA: Sierra Hechiceros, Cafion Indio Felipe, side of dry arroyo, common, Stewart 174. Curmauanua: Rancho El Pino, 10 km. southeast of Sierra Rica, rocky slope, frequent, Stewart 2407; by streams near Chihuahua, Oct. 13, 1885, Pringle 417 (type, Gray Herb.); Quicorichi, Rio Mayo, Gentry 1931; southwestern Chihuahua, 1885, Palmer 21. Sonora: Canon Bellota, Sierra Cabellera, Bavispe Area, Santos 2096. New Mexico: Berendo Creek, Black Range, Sierra Co., Metcalfe 1391. ARI- zona: Chiricahua Mts., Rigg’s Ranch, Blumer 1491; Pinal Creek, Miami, Harrison & 1943 ] JOHNSTON, PLANTS OF NORTHERN MEXICO, II 393 Kearney 6342; Mule es Goodding 907; Rincon Mts., Manning Camp, Blumer 3397; White Mts., Griffiths 5 This species ania most of the plants of Arizona, New Mexico, and northern Mexico which have passed as M. rigens. The plant illustrated by Hitchcock, Man. Grasses U.S., as M. rigens belongs to M. mundula. It is readily distinguished from true M. rigens of central California, and from closely related unnamed forms from southern California and southern Arizona, by having the spike well exserted from the upper leaf-sheaths and by having the lower branches of the panicle only 5-15 mm. rather than 20-30 mm. long. In appearance the species much resembles M. leptoura, of northwestern Chihuahua, but it differs from that species in having the glumes distinctly shorter than rather than equalling or surpassing the Jemma. Blepharoneuron tricholepis (Torr.) Nash, Bull. Torr. Bot. Cl. 25: 88 (1898). CHIHUAHUA: Mapula Mts., thin soil on summits, Oct. 26, 1886, Pringle 822 Colorado and Utah south through Arizona, New Mexico, and trans- Pecos Texas into the mountains of northern Mexico. The species is known from the Davis, Chinati, and Chisos Mountains of Texas and is, accord- ingly, to be expected in the mountains of northern Coahuila and north- eastern Chihuahua Sporobolus microspermus (Lag.) Hitchc. Jour. Wash. Acad. 23: 453 (1933). San Antonio de los Alamos, colony in loose gravelly soil on flats above tuff cliffs, Johnston 8244. CHIHUAHUA: Near Rancho El Pino, 10 km. southeast of Sierra Rica, rocky slope, Stewart 2411; Los Medanos, 1935, LeSubuy 74. As currently accepted, this species ranges in western United States and south to Costa Rica. bo a Wa ery CuHinuaAHua: Wet places near Chihuahua, ware 25% 1885, Pringle 429; Meoqui, 1936, LeSueur 140; 60 km. north of Escalon, Harvey Texas (Uvalde to Brewster pees south through Mexico to South America. Cenchrus echinatus L. Sp. Pl. 1050 (1753). schahaaiae aera 1880, Palmer 1343; Monclova, 1939, Marsh 1831. Chase, Contr. U. S. Nat. Herb. 22: 61 (1920), reports the species from Torreon ae 7558). Texas to Arizona and south into tropical merica Cenchrus eewellioens Benth. Bot. Voy. Sulphur 56 (1840). VERNACULAR NAME: Chancaquilla. 418 JOURNAL OF THE ARNOLD ARBORETUM [VOL. XXIV Coanurta: On desert 25 mi. southwest of Sabinas, Wynd & Mueller 218; Rancho Agua Tiles: valley floor, Wynd & Mueller 404; 20 mi. northwest of Hac. La Babia, valley floor, Wynd & Mueller 444; Yerda Spring, 1936, Marsh 287; Hac. Encantada, abundant on flats, 1941, Stewart 1733; Monclova, 1939, Marsh 1823; near Esmeralda, fairly common along arroyo, Stewart 2179; Cafion Agua Grande, west of Las Delicias, on flats, common, Stewart 2825. Cuimuanua: 1935, LeSueur 7; 20 km. south of Camargo, 1939, Harvey 1393. Chase, Contr. U. S. Nat. Herb. 22: 71 (1920), reports the species from Saltillo. This species is probably indigenous to Mexico and Texas and was formerly much less generally distributed than at present. It has be- come a widely distributed and obnoxious weed along roads and about towns in waste ground. Chase refers the common, apparently indigenous Cenchrus of central United States to C. pauciflorus, but that seems doubt- fully correct, for the broader darker green leaves and the shape and arma- ture of the burs of that plant are more suggestive of C. echinatus. eo brevifolia Vasey, Bull. Torr. Bot. Cl. 13: 26 (1886). Imperata Hookeri (Anderss.) Hack. in DC. Monogr. Phan. 6: 97 (1889). calmed in the bottoms of the Rio Grande on the Texan side of the river between El Paso and old Fort Quitman, and almost certainly to be found on the Chihuahuan side also. Andropogon hirtiflorus (Nees) Kunth, Rév. Gram. 1: Suppl. xxxix (1830). Coanumta: Sierra del Carmen, Canon Sentenela, Wynd & Mueller 548. Cut- HUAHUA: Sierra Organos, common on oak-clad slopes south of Organos, Stewart & Johnston 2069; rocky hills northeast of Chihuahua, Aug. 29, 1885, Pringle 383. Trans-Pecos Texas to Arizona and south into tropical America. Our plants represent the Mexican var. feensis (Fourn.) Hitchc. The plant closely resembles A. scoparius and A. cirratus, from which it differs chiefly in the scabrid strigose hairy glumes. Andropogon cirratus Hack. Flora 68: 119 (1885). Curmuanva: Rocky hills northeast of Chihuahua, Oct. 17, 1885, Pringle 382. Southeastern Arizona to trans-Pecos Texas (east to the Davis Mts.) and south into Chihuahua and eastern Sonora. Closely related to A. scoparius and probably only a well-marked geographical variety, differing in having the hairs on the spikelet and pedicels scanty or nearly absent. Andropogon scoparius Michx. Fl. Bor. Am. 1: 57 (1803). CoaHUILA: Sierra del Carmen, Aug. 26, 1936, Marsh 607; Hillcoat Canyon, west bottom and on rocky flats among scrub-oaks, Johnston & Muller 449, 661; tableland north of Canon Cuervo Chico, ae slopes of low rounded limestone hills, Johnston 58, Eastern United States west to Idaho and northern Arizona, apparently entering Mexico only in northern Coahuila. Our material falls into the var. neomexicana (Nash) Hitchcock, cf. Rhodora 37: 143 (1935). Andropogon virginicus L. var. tenuispatheus (Nash) Fern. & Grisc. Rhodora 37: 142 uma: Cafion Agua Grande, west of Las Delicias, near water, erect, 3 m. tall, scarce, Stewart 2818. 1943 ] JOHNSTON, PLANTS OF NORTHERN MEXICO, II 419 Wet ground from southeastern United States to California and south into tropical America. Andropogon ternarius Michx. Fl. Bor. Am. 1: 57 (1803). CoanuiLa: Sierra de los Guajes, Cafion Madera, fairly abundant on hillsides, Stewart 1504; Sierra Madera, Canon Charretera, rocky bed of open arroyo in oak belt, common, becoming 4 ft. tall, Johnston 9074. Delaware to Missouri and south to Florida and central Texas, entering Mexico only in northern Coahuila Andropogon Hallii Hack. Sitzungsb. Akad. Wiss. Wien 891: 127 (1884). CurHuAHuA: Los Medanos, 1935, LeSueur 61. Sandy places from North Dakota to Utah, and south to Arizona and trans-Pecos Texas and northern Chihuahua Andropogon Gerardi Vitman, Summa PI. 6: 16 (1792). Andropogon furcatus Muhl. ex Willd. Sp. Pl. 4: 919 (1806). CoanuILa: Sierra del Pino, meadows in the pine forests north of La Noria, com- mon and conspicuous, Johnston & Muller 542, Stewart 1226 Widely distributed in eastern and central United States. Known in Mexico only in Coahuila Andropogon saccharoides Sw. Prodr. 26 (1788). Andropogon barbinodis Lag. Gen. et Sp. Nov. 3 (1816). Andropogon perforatus Trin. ex Fourn. Mex. Pl. 2: 59 (1886). VERNACULAR NAME: Zacate aceite. CoaHuILaA: Sierra del Carmen, July 29, 1936, Marsh 638; Hillcoat Canyon, west of Buena Vista Ranch, July 13, 1938, Marsh 1313; Hillcoat Mesa, lying west of Encantada Ranch, July 25, 1938, Marsh 1435; Hermanas, Marsh 1628 and 2254; Monclova, 1880, Palmer 1347; Monclova, Marsh 1692; desert near Rancho Santa Teresa, Wynd & Mueller 207; 2 mi. west of Saltillo, Harvey 1096; Saltillo, 1898, Palmer 4, 261, 810; Sierra del Pino, La Noria, Stewart 1212, Johnston & Muller 667 ; Sierra Madera, Cafion Charretera, bed of arroyo, Johnston 9075; 10 km. southwest of El Oro, on bajillo, Stewart 3028; Sierra Jimulco, 5 km. northeast of Jimulco, Stanford et al. 132. Cut- HUAHUA: Vicinity of Rancho El Pino, 10 km. southeast of Sierra Rica, rocky slopes, Stewart 2410; near Juarez, pet 30, 1888, oe 1994; Agua Caliente, 1935, LeSueur ae Chihuahua, 1935, LeSueur 2; arroyo 20 km. south of Camargo, Harvey 1382, ; 6 mi. west of Piloncillo, grassland, ARE 7879, ZACATECAS: Concepcion del Ge. ‘1904, Palmer 202. Alabama and Missouri west to southern California and south to Argen- tina. A variable widely spread species which I am here accepting in the broad sense used by Hackel in his monumental treatment of the genus. Attempts to segregate out certain forms, such as A. barbinodis, by stress- ing length of peduncle, hairiness of the nodes, shape of panicle, size of spikelets, etc., have been singularly unsuccessful but persistent. The char- acters used show little tendency to vary together and some of them are probably associated with the vigor and rapidity of growth. Significantly, these segregates and the restricted species have practically the same geo- graphical distribution in Mexico and the United States and commonly may be detected in the same locality. Some plants of A. saccharoides have a conspicuous pore developed on the glumes and have been distinguished as . perforatus. The distribution of the form is sporadic and may occur in 420 JOURNAL OF THE ARNOLD ARBORETUM [VOL. XXIV plants referred either to A. saccharoides or to A. barbinodis. Pitted glumes are known in other species of Andropogon. I see no reason why the de- velopment should be given specific recognition in the present case. Sorghum halepense (L.) Pers. Syn. Pl. 1: 101 (1805). CoanHvuILa: Sierra del Carmen, Sept. 8, 1936, Marsh 760; trail from the southern end of Hillcoat Mesa to Buena Vista iia deatastnnn: July 27, 1938, Marsh 1508; Santa Anna Canyon, Marsh 436; Monclova, Marsh 1663; Saltillo, weed in field, Hitchcock 5649 (US). CuHrmuanua: Arroyo 20 km. south at Camargo, Harvey 1398 A Mediterranean grass, now widely introduced into the warmer parts of America. A serious weed in irrigated lands, particularly in the Laguna District. Sorghastrum nutans (L.) Nash in Small, Fl. S. E. U.S. 66 (1903). Coaunurta: Palm Canyon near Muzquiz, Marsh 986. Eastern United States and south into Mexico. Heteropogon contortus (L.) Beauv. ex R. & S. Syst. Veg. 2: 836 (1817). Coanuita: Sierra del Carmen, Aug. 22, 1936, Marsh 583; igneous hill near Santo Domingo, Wynd & Mueller 470; Palm Canyon, 3 near Mascut Marsh 993; Puerto del Norte, Cuatro Cienegas, Raves 3 206; Monclova, 1880, Palmer 1346; Puerto Santo Lazaro, Sierra Gavia, Muller 3070; limestone hills near Santa Rosa, Shreve & Tinkham Sierra Organos, 1937, LeSueur 161; Sierra Santa rte Pringle 480; Meoqui, 1936, LeSueur 141; 13 km. southwest of Jimenez, Harvey 13 Florida i Arizona and southward; ey aan in the warmer parts of the world. Although growing on limestone, this species is more abundant on igneous rocks, particularly basalt. Usually growing on rocky slopes and at times dominating large areas. Heteropogon melanocarpus (Ell.) Benth. Jour. Linn. Soc. Bot. 14: 71 (1882). Hitchcock, Contr. U. S. Nat. Herb. 17: 212 (1913), cites a collection from the Mapula Mts., Chihuahua, Pringle 820. The species is widely dis- tributed in the warmer parts of the world and extends north through west- ern Mexico to Arizona. Trachypogon greninngs (H.B.K.) Nees, Agrost. Bras. 342 (1829). AHUA: ocky flat just _ ee Organos, locally common on ledges, Stewart é& Johnston 2059; eae LeSue Southern and eastern Texas; oe Mexico to Argentina. Elyonurus barbiculmis Hack. in DC. Monogr. Phan. 6: 339 (1889). CurHuAHUA: Rocky flats just east of Organos, locally common about ledges, leaf- tufts bright green, Stewart & Johnston 2058; west of Chihuahua, 1935, LeSueur 14; Cerro Coronel, Chihuahua, rocky hills, Aug. 5, 1885, Pringle 423 Trans-Pecos Texas to Arizona and south to atte Manisuris altissimus (Poir.) Hitchc. Jour. Wash. Acad. 24: 292 (1934). Coauuita: Sabinas River, near Muzquiz, 1936, Marsh 404 Wet places in the warmer parts of the world; introduced into America. The species has been collected repeatedly on the Texan bank of the river in the Big Bend of the Rio Grande. 1943 | JOHNSTON, PLANTS OF NORTHERN MEXICO, II 421 Hackelochloa speae (L.) Kuntze, Rev. Gen. 2: 776 (1891). CHIHUAHUA: Open canyon in igneous hills 20 km. north of Chihuahua, sprawling in moist gravel, rare, Sean & Johnston 2128; hills near Chihuahua, Pringle 1057 (US). Arizona south through Chihuahua to Central America. A weedy grass widely distributed in the warmer parts of the world. Said to be introduced in our area, but, if so, introduced at a very early date, for it was collected at unfrequented places in southeastern Arizona by Charles Wright as early as 1851 Coix lacryma-jobi L. Sp. Pl. 972 (1853). Coanuita: Saltillo, July 1880, Palmer 1337. A species of the Old World tropics, widely cultivated in America for its bead-like fruits and frequently spontaneous Tripsacum dactyloides L. Syst. Nat. ed. 10, 1261 (1759). Tripsacum dactyloides var. occidentale Cutler & Anderson, Ann. Mo. Bot. Gard. 28: 258 (1941). Coanuita: Sierra del Carmen, Canon ahaipeliee Wynd & Mueller 536; Sierra En- cantada, 7 km. west of Buena Vista, fairly common in wet canyon, Stewart 1450; Santa Anna Canyon, Marsh 438; Palm Canyon, near Muzquiz, Marsh 9 Connecticut to Iowa and south to Florida and through ae onl north- eastern Mexico to San Luis Potosi. Hitchcock, and recently Cutler & Anderson, have placed the Tripsacum of northeastern Mexico in T. lanceo- latum Rupr. I am, however, unable to separate Texan specimens from those collected in Coahuila, Nuevo Leon, Tamaulipas, and eastern San Luis Potosi. Characters in the size, shape, and surface of the segments of the female inflorescence readily separate these specimens from the more south- erly and westerly 7. anceolatum. ARNOLD ARBORETUM, HARVARD UNIVERSITY. 422 JOURNAL OF THE ARNOLD ARBORETUM [ VOL. XXIV PLANTAE PAPUANAE ARCHBOLDIANAE, XIII* E. D. MERRILL AND L. M. PERRY MELASTOMATACEAE Our study of the Melastomataceae as represented by the material from the Richard Archbold Expeditions to New Guinea and the specimens col- lected by Brass and Kajewski in the Solomon Islands follows the basic work of Mansfeld, Bot. Jahrb. 60: 105-143. 1925. We have found nothing new in the Osbeckieae, Oxysporeae, or Sonerileae. In the Dissochaeteae the only new records we have are of Medinilla Gaudichaud. The genus is so diverse or variable in character that we have accepted Mansfeld’s inter- pretation, although we are not wholly convinced that Hederella Stapf rightfully belongs here. In the Papuan material the new species may be readily placed in Mansfeld’s key, and for the convenience of future workers we have inserted a running key patterned after that of Mansfeld. For the consideration of the Solomon Islands material, it may be helpful to note one particular point. Towards the end of Mansfeld’s key, p. 118, one finds the caption, ‘‘Flores bracteis persistentibus stipati” (flowers surrounded by persistent bracts). The only authentic material available for comparison in this group was a very fragmentary specimen of M. Schlechteri Mansfeld, an isotype, and in the unnamed collections a specimen which we determined as representing M/. Pulleana Mansf. In both of these species the bracts are always at the nodes of the inflorescences, the ultimate pair being at the base of the pedicel. On the other hand, in much of the Solomon Islands material the inflorescences are characterized not only by persistent bracts similarly placed, but in addition have a pair of persistent bracteoles (usually more showy and larger than the bracts) at the base of the calyx. This same feature is found in a number of Philippine species and also in those of Polynesia. Taken together, the species probably form a definite section of Medinilla, with a geographical range south from the Philippines, includ- ing the Solomon Islands, and eastward to western Polynesia (Fiji and Samoa). Another distinctive group in the Philippines, represented by Cephalomedinilla Merr., which we now believe ought to be considered as a section of Medinilla, also occurs in the Solomon Islands. In most of the species with setose nodes, it has been somewhat difficult to characterize the pubescence satisfactorily. Mansfeld has used the term plumose-pilose, or, if the trichomes were shorter, furfuraceous. In most cases in our work this has been designated as subplumulose-pilose, for the projections forming the “feathery” part are mostly very short, sometimes hardly even barbellate, and are found either all along the main hair, or, in some instances, only at the base of it. *Botanical Results of the Richard Archbold Expeditions. See Jour. Arnold Arb. 24: 207-217. 1943. 1943 ] MERRILL & PERRY, PLANTAE ARCHBOLDIANAE, XIII 423 In the Astronieae there are several new species of Astronidium A. Gray, and in the Memecyleae one new species of Memecylon Linnaeus. Medinilla Gaudichaud A. Leaves verticillate, opposite, or often appearing alternate, mostly equal in size, or if unequal, similar in shape ; inflorescence bracteate or not, the Hower. not bracteolate B. Plants glabrous, or 1f oon the nodes not setose. aves verticillate or opposite D. Leaves verticillate. Medinilla cauliflora Hemsl. Kew Bull. 1895: 135. 1895. SoLomon Istanps: Bougainville: Kupei Gold Field, Kajewski 1671, 1718, April 1930, alt. 950 m. and 1000 m., common on rain-forest trees; Koniguru, Bui Kajewski 2142, August 1930, alt. mmon on taller trees a rain-for ae Guadalc al: witho ae ot "Kajewski 2644, May 19 The ere may be summarized as follows: plant up to on m. long; petals white; calyx light green; fruit dark red to black, up to 9 mm. long and 8 mm. diameter. This appears to be the first record of any collection of this species since the original description. biameerna! ae ai Flora 509. 1831; Cogn. Monog. ays 574. 1891; . Nov. Guin. aes 203. 1924, Bot. Jahrb. 60: 119. Soran IsLtanps: Bou ville Kugumaru, Buin, sae 1986, July 1930, alt. 150 m., rain-forest me seadents fruit white when ripe, almost globose, 1 cm. diameter). "Malay sia and New Guinea. D. Leaves always opposite. E. Leaves sessile or subsessile. gaara a ae Bak. . Trans. Linn. Soc. II. Bot. 9: 55. 1916; Manstf. Bot. Jahrb. 60 1925; vela han New Guinea: Balim River, Brass 11754, causes 1938, alt. 2100 m., and pedicel red); 15 km. southwest of Bernhard Camp, Idenburg River, Brass 11899, January 1939, alt. 1800 m., mossy forest, frequent in open situations (large shrub 2 m high; calyx and pedicels oa petals white). With no material for comparison, we find it difficult to distinguish Medinilla Forbesii Bak. {., M. novo-guineensis Bak. {., and M. Bakeriana Mansf. Both specimens cited above have cymose sh Rn OR in lateral fascicles at the nodes. The other two species, according to the descrip- tions, have fascicled flowers. The leaves of Brass 11754 are smaller (11 X 6 cm.) than those of Brass 11899 (19 & 10 cm.), but the structure of the flowers is the same. Medinilla Peekelii Mansf. Notizbl. Bot. Gart. Berl. 10: 282. 1928. SoLoMon IsLtanps: Ysabel: Maruto, Brass 3395, December 1932, alt. 300 m. (epiphytic shrub with pale fleshy leaves; flowers pale purple; fruit smooth, ie red). The type was described from a tee tion made in the Bismarck Archipelag E. Leaves petiola . Flowers ate ee Medinilla Hollrungiana Mansf. Bot. Jahrb. 60: 120. 1925. NETHERLANDS NEW GuINEA: Boemi, 40 km. from Nabire, Kanehira & Hatusima 424 JOURNAL OF THE ARNOLD ARBORETUM [VOL. XXIV 12728, March 1940, alt. 300 m., in forest; Bele River, 18 km. northeast of Lake Habbema, Brass 11355, November 1938, alt. 2200 m., common in grassy second growths on river banks (upright serra - . high; leaves feshiy and brittle, the average size + 14 xX 6 cm.; flowers pink, h red calyx and pedicel). British New E creek in ie ower forest, rare (sparsely foliaged shrub 1 m. tall; leaves fleshy ; numerous lateral aie of reddish pink flowers); Palmer River, 2 miles below junction of Black River, Brass 7114 (det. es aig June 1936, alt. 100 m., occasional in a special swamp forest community in the ridges (semiscandent epiphytic shrub; leaves fleshy ; flowers dark pink; fruit ae Described from Northeastern New Guinea Medinilla tenuipedicellata Bak. f. Trans. Linn. Soc. I]. Bot. 9: 53. t. 3, f. 44-47. NETHERLANDS NEW GuINEA: 15 km. southwest of Bernhard Camp, Idenburg River, Brass 11878, 12066, January 1939, alt. 1800 m., mossy forest, gregarious in semi-shade neve protruding + 20 cm. above the thick ground moss; flowers pale purple- ink; —the second collection a shrub 60 cm. tall; calyx white, rimmed with red; sahil pink). Part of the material of these collections is an exact match for the plate, but the rest shows considerable variation in the size of the leaves, some of which are as large as 11 cm. long and 4 cm. broad. Medinilla Versteegii Mansf. Bot. Jahrb. 60: 125. 1925. NETHERLANDS NEw GuINneEA: 4 km. southwest of Bernhard Camp, Idenburg River, Brass 13714, March ane alt. 850 m., frequent on trees along river in rain-forest (epiphytic shirals about 1 m. high; flowers white; fruit red) ; Bernhard Camp, Idenburg River, Brass 13996, — ere alt. 50 m., frequent in flooded rain-forest of river plain (epiphytic shrub 2 m. high; flowers pinkish white; fruit red). British New GuINeEA: Palmer River, 2 rs below junction of Black Sivan Brass 7198, 7254 (det. Markgraf), July 1936, alt. 100 common on river bank trees (large epiphytic shrub or small tree with brittle eaves terminal panicles of waxy white flowers; fruit red, 6-7 mm. diameter). In Brass 7254 the inflorescences are lateral and axillary. The species has been reported babel for both Northeastern New Guinea and Netherlands New Guinea. Medinilla exigua sp. nov. Arbuscula epiphytica 2 m. alta glaberrima multiramosa; ramis teretibus cinereis; ramulis angulatis vel sulcatis sara: foliis oppositis repent ak ellipticis, 1.2-3 cm. longis, 0.7—1.5 cm. latis, basi anguste c is, apice obtusis, trinerviis, nervis supra eed subtus xr ee petiolo 4—9 mm. longo; floribus in cymas axillares vel terminales pauci- floras (1-3) dispositis; pedunculo communi 3-6 mm. longo, bracteis minutis; gto + 4 mm. longis; calycis tubo anguste obconico vix 3 mm. longo, limbo truncato 1 mm. longo; petalis 4, pint circiter 1 cm. lon aa hes eins staminibus 8, antheris 3.5 mm. lon S postice calcaratis, calcare 1 . longo, antice inappendiculatis ; ache im- maturis a re NETHERLANDS New GUINEA: 18 km. southwest of Bernhard Camp, Idenburg River, Brass 12696 (type), February 1939, alt. 2050 m., rain-forest of a ravine (profusely branched epiphytic shrub 2 m. high, with fragile white flowers and fleshy red fruit). This species is readily ai Saal by the small leaves, the angular branchlets, and the reduced cym F. Flowers es, Medinilla Erpetina ie eau Linn. Soc. 28: 87. t. 7, f. 94 d. 1871-73; Cogn. Monog. Phan. 7: 589. Erpetina radicans Naud. Pile Se Nat. III. 15: 299. t. 14. 1851. 1943 | MERRILL & PERRY, PLANTAE ARCHBOLDIANAE, XIII 425 SoLoMon IsLtANnps: Ysabel: Mount Marescott, Brass 3260, December 1932, alt. leaves dark green, thick and somewhat fleshy; flowers purple; fruit red, fleshy) ; Tiratona, Brass 3531, December bi alt. 600 m., mountain Teanebs, common (small root-climber; flowers reddish); Bougainville: Lake Luralu, Koniguru, Buin, Kajewski 2066, August 1930, alt. 1500 m., on rain-forest ee common (vine; petals pink; stamens light yellow; style light red). We suspect this is the species represented by Medinilla nodosa Fosberg, the main difference being in the more obtuse posticous appendage of the anther of the latter. However, since neither type is available for examina- tion at present, it seems best only to call attention to the very strong resemblance between the two. Fosberg suggests that his species is closest to M. acutifolia Hemsl. from the Solomon Islands. From the context, the latter name is undoubtedly an error for M. cauliflora Hemsl. C. Leaves, although opposite, often appearing alternate; inflo- rescence mostly borne on verrucae (Hederella Stapf). Medinilla longistylis Mansf. Bot. Jahrb. 60: 124. 1925. British New GuINeEA: Palmer River, 2 miles below junction of Black River, Brass 7044 (det. Me eae), June 1936, alt. 100 m., on a ridge crest (climbing to the crown of a very tall tree, the slender branches pendent 6-8 m. below the limbs of the tree; upper surface of leaves shining, the nerves deeply impressed above, prominent below; flowers pink). The s tig is recorded previously only from the type, col- lected in Northeastern New Gui Medinilla lysipetala (F. v. Muell.) Mansf. Bot. Jahrb. 60: 124. 1925; vel. aff. Catanthera lysipetala F. v. Muell. Jour. Bot. 24: 289. 1886. Medinilla anomala Cogn. Monog. Phan. 7: 1185. 1891. Hederella Forbesii Stapf in Hook. Icon. 25: t, 2415. 1895. NETHERLANDS NEw Guinea: 15 km. southwest of Bernhard Camp, Idenburg River, Brass 12302, January 1939, alt. 1800 m., frequent in mossy forest (root-climbing epiphyte; leaves convex; unopened flowers a dark reddish pink); 8 km. southwest of Bernhard Camp, Idenberg River, Brass 12726, February 1939, alt. 1600 m., common in open situations in mossy forest (leaves stiff, convex; flowers dark rose, not opening widely The material cited above and other material in our herbarium, from Northeastern New Guinea, show a considerable amount of variation, a we have been unable to distinguish more than one species in it. We are not at all sure that it belongs to Medinilla lysipetala (F. v. Muell.) Pere but it seems best to place it here provisionally. It is to be noted that the type was collected near the base of the Owen Stanley Range, whereas the material above cited shows a higher altitude. Mueller describes the leaves as strongly 5-nerved from near the base, but these collections have obvi- ously 3-nerved leaves. The inflorescences are axillary as well as lateral. B. At least the nodes setose or hairy. G. Leaves sessile or subsessile. Medinilla arfakensis Bak. f. in Gibbs, Phyt. & Fl. Arfak Mts. 158. 1917. NETHERLANDS NEw GuINEA: 15 km. southwest of Bernhard Camp, Idenburg River, ah Sagi January 1939, alt. 1500 m., rain-forest (epiphytic shrub 1.5 m. high; red; flowers white). Noxrunasiean New Guinea: Kani Mountains, as 17037 (isotype of M. Brassii Markgr.), December 1907, alt. 1000 m. 426 JOURNAL OF THE ARNOLD ARBORETUM [ VOL. XXIV tisH New Guinea: Bella Vista, Brass aaihes November 1933, alt. 1450 m., oak forest fringe (shrub 1.5 m. high; flowers pale p These collections appear to suit the ie aati of Medinilla arfakensis Bak. f. reasonably well. All have sessile leaves, small 5-merous flowers, and anthers with a posticous upwardly recurved spur. We have examined exact duplicates of Schlechter 17037 (the type-number of M. Bras ssi Markgr.) in the herbarium of the New York Botanical Garden and in our own herbarium, and also the single specimen of Brass 5114 cited in the original description. It would seem that Markgraf used the latter collection for most of his description of M. Brassii, but, wishing to retain the type at Berlin, designated Schlechter’s specimen as the type. The two collections do not belong to the same species. Unfortunately the specific name must o with the type designated, rather than with the collection to which it more logically belongs. Medinilla Lorentziana Mansf. Nov. Guin. Bot. 14: 206. 1924, Bot. Jahrb. 60: 128. 1925 B u New GuINEA: Palmer River, 2 miles below junction of Black River, Brass 6934, a (det. Markgr.), July 1936, alt. 100 m., epiphytic in ridge forests, fairly common (large loosely branched shrub; bark niberoe: deeply furrowed; leaves con- cave, recurved, pale underneath; panicles terminal, conspicuous ; peduncle and _ pedi- cels red; flowers pale waxy pink). Type from Netherlands New Guinea, with a variety occurring also in Northeastern New Guinea. Medinilla leucantha sp. nov. Frutex epiphyticus; ramulis valde compresso-tetragonis, quadrialatis (alis approximatis), nodis dense setosis; foliis oppositis similibus sessilibus, basi pulvino persistente reflexo circumdatis, lamina anguste elliptica, 18- 40 cm. longa, 8-13.5 cm. lata, utrinque angustata, basi subcordata, apice acu- minata, acumine 1 cm longo, novella subtus in costa, nervis ac acumine minute furfuracea, cito glabrata, 9-13-plinervia, nervis supra manifestis subtus perspicuis; inflorescentiis terminalibus vel axillaribus paniculatis 6-12 cm. = fere glabris, interdum parce furfuraceis, minute pustulatis ; pedunculo communi 2-5 cm. longo, ramis 1-1.5 cm. longis, saepissime quaternis, in peer 3-5 dispositis; bracteis minutis; pedicellis + 5 mm. longis; calycis tubo cupuliformi 3 mm. longo, imbo 2 mm. longo truncato; ae 5 oblanceolatis, circiter 7 mm. longis; foc ah 10, antheris 3 mm. longis, antice appendices duas subulatas gerentibus, postice calcaratis, calcare uncinato gracili 1 mm. longo; fructibus subglobosis + 6 mm. diametro. NETHERLANDS NEw GuINEA: Bernhard Camp, Idenburg River, Brass 13770 (TYPE), April 1939, alt. 60 m., rain-forest (large sar pr shrub with greenish white flowers and red fruit) : 4 km. southwest of Bernhard Camp, Idenburg River, Brass 13288, March 1939, alt. 850 m., Cae epiphyte on ae trees along river, and high on trees of forest (flowers translucent white); Dalman, 45 mi om ire, Kanehira & Hatusima 12261, March 1940, alt. 500 m., in Agathis forest (epiphyte 1 m. tall; flower white) The leaves of Medinilla leucantha closely resemble those of M. Teys- mannii Miq., according to the original description of the latter species, but the first may be readily distinguished by the much shorter inflorescence, the 1943 ] MERRILL & PERRY, PLANTAE ARCHBOLDIANAE, XIII 427 considerably smaller white flowers, and the anticous subulate appendages of the anthers. G. Leaves petiolate. Medinilla albida sp. nov. Frutex 1-2.5 m. altus; ramulis tetragonis vel subteretibus interdum angus- tissime alatis, novellis subplumuloso- pilosis cito glabratis, maturis cinereis, nodis dense setosis: foliis chartaceis oppositis in quoque pari aequalibus vel subaequalibus; petiolo 7-12 mm. longo, novello piloso cito glabrato, basi pulvino angusto persistente reflexo circumdato; lamina oblongo-1 anceolata vel lanceolato-elliptica, 9-23 cm. longa, 4-9 cm. lata, basi late cuneata, apice breviter acuminata, acumine 0.5—1 cm. longo, supra minute furfuracea vel glabra, subtus minute furfuracea et nervis pilosa, 7-plinervia, nervis supra manifestis subtus perspicuis; inflorescentiis terminalibus + 7.5 cm. longis, paniculatis, axi pedicellisque ++ furfuraceis, nodis inferioribus seto- sis: bracteis minutis; pedicellis + 4 mm. longis; calyce 3 mm. longo, ae cyathiformi, limbo truncato; petalis 5, obovato-ellipticis, 7 mm. longis; staminibus 10, antheris 2.5 mm. longis, antice mange sae ne a calcaratis, calcare leviter uncinato, 0.7 mm. longo; stylo 4.5 mm. longo; fructibus ‘subglobosis + 6mm _ diamet tro. NETHERLANDS NEw GUINEA: 6 km. southwest of Bernhard Camp, Idenburg River, Brass 12944, 12993 (type), February 1939, alt. 1200 m. and 1050 m., banks of rain- forest stream (shrub 1-2.5 m. high; flowers white; fruiting panicle wholly red). The species suggests Medinilla plumosa Mansf., but the latter has defi- nitely sessile leaves. Then again there is some resemblance between this and the description of M. schraderbergensis Mansf., but the pubescence of the latter is of simple hairs. Medinilla Mansfeldiana sp. nov. Verisimiliter arbor parva; ramulis dense hirsuto-setosis; nodis longe barbatis; foliis ellipticis, 10-20 cm. longis,.4.5—10 cm. latis, utrinque paullo angustatis, basi obtusiusculis, apice breviter acuminatis, S-nerviis vel sub- quintuplinerviis, supra glabris, nae praecipue costa nervisque parce gee venis obscuris; petiolo 1-1. Hie ee parce setoso; susie eatin pedicellis brevibus, 2-5 mm. longis, dense setulosis; calyce cyathiformi, ongo, longe an petalis non visis; staminibus 10, filamentis 3.5 mm. longis, antheris 4 mm. lo ongis postice vix ‘calcaratis breviter obtusis, antice breviter biauriculatis; stylo 9 mm. longo; fructibus subglobosis. NorTHEASTERN NEw GuINEA: Goridjoa, Schlechter 19744 (type), June 1909, alt. 1200 m., mountain woods. The species apparently is closely related to Medinilla sogeriensis Bak. f. and M. Schlechteri Mansf. It may be distinguished from the first by the larger inflorescence on the older branches, and from the second by the petiolate 5-nerved leaves. M. Schlechteri Mansf. has 7—9-plinerved leaves. Medinilla Markgrafii sp. Medinilla Brassi Ma paloue 2: 142. 1936, quoad Brass 5114, excl. spec. typ. Frutex interdum scandens 1-2 m. altus; ramulis cinereis vel fuscescenti- 428 JOURNAL OF THE ARNOLD ARBORETUM [VOL, XXIV bus obtuse angulatis vel novellis valde compressis glabris nodosis, nodis setosis; gs subcoriaceis gol oppositis ellipticis vel oblongo- ellipticis, 12-22 cm. longis, 4-10 cm. latis, basi cuneatis vel obtuse cuneatis, apice breviter acuminatis vel meee) a 7-plinerviis, bia subtransversis supra interdum manifestis subtus obscuris; petiolo + 1.5 cm. longo, basi pulvino angusto persistente reflexo circumdato: stipulis interpetiolaribus setas ad nodos tegentibus; inflorescentiis paniculatis + 10 cm. longis, axillaribus vel terminalibus, bracteatis, ad nodos + setulosis; bracteis inferioribus + 1.5 cm. longis sursum minoribus, subtus apicem versus interdum + pube- tetrameris; calyce 2.5-3 mm. longo, novello consperse a pilosulo, maturo glabro vel subfurfuraceo, truncato; petalis + 5 m m. longis, albis; staminibus 8, antheris lineari-oblongis, 2.5-3 mm. nee apice paullo angustatis, postice calcaratis, calcare brevi obtuso non recurvo; stylo glabro; fructibus globosis + 5 mm. diametro. British New oe Mount Tafa, Brass 4018 (Type in herb. New — Bot. Gard., isotype in herb. A. A.), May 1933, alt. 2310 m., common on edge of rest house clearing (weak reer ees 1—2 m. tall; upper ie of leaves iridescent a the lower side pale; flowers white; pedicels reddish, unripe fruit dark ame ange Brass 5114, September 1933, alt. 2400 m., in a landslip shrubbery, rare ‘(shrub 1 ; peduncle red; petals white; fruit green). T hese two collections belong to a single species, which, according to Mansfeld’s key for Medinilla, falls near M. warica Mansf., and, Sees ng to that of Baker f., near M. rubiginosa Cogn. However, M. kgrafit differs from both of these in pubescence, but we cannot elles a ae affinity at present. Brass 5114 appears to have been used largely in the description of M. Brassii Markgr.; unfortunately it is not conspecific with the type designated for that species. Medinilla rubiginosa Cogn. Monog. Phan. 7: 598. 1891; Mansf. Bot. Jahrb. 60: NETHERLANDS NEW GUINEA: 9 ae rrgungped of Lake Habbema, Brass 10786, 10870, October 1938, alt. 2750 m. and 2650 m., common in moist open spots of forest undergrowth (tree 2.5-3 m. high; eres red; flowers white); Bele River, 18 km. northeast of Lake Habbema, Brass 11535, November 1 1938, alt. 2200 m., abundant in brushy second growths (shrub or tree 2-4 m. high; panicles red; flowers white; fruit en); Angi, Arfak Mountains, Kanehira & aia 13609, 13767, 13926, April 1940, alt. 1900 Previously known only from the type-collection. A. Leaves heey) each pair dimorphic (exceedingly unequal in size and unlike in shape), except in M. tulagiensis; inflorescence with both bracts and bracteoles. The remaining species of Medinilla in this treatment are all from the representatives of this section have thus far been reported from New Guinea. KEY TO THE SOLOMON ISLANDS SPECIES WITH BRACTEOLATE FLOWERS Inflorescence open, usually racemose; calyx-limb tru Leaves of each pair somewhat unequal in size, none. similar...... M. tulagiensis. 1943] MERRILL & PERRY, PLANTAE ARCHBOLDIANAE, XIII 429 Leaves of each pair exceedingly unequal in size, the smaller usually ovate or ovate- orbicular and sessile or subsessile. Larger leaf of each pair sessile or subses Branchlets and inflorescence fone ue leaf of each pair = 25 cm. long.. Bes eevee acca eR eae 26S eb n6 a x6 4 TORE Eee, ee PO Pe PSEC acct aO On M. Aajeweki, Branchlets and inflorescence pilose; larger leaf of each pair 6.5-13 cm. Jong.... A BAMA clo afetag SRE a ev NCUANR ova es boa Fa) oes a8 Sr cada epee am eae ae eee RSE M. luraluensis. Larger leaf of each pair obviously petiolat Plant apparently glabrous; inflorescence oe Mm. longs his. ease ¢ M. sae At ce the nodes and the calyces pubescent ; pea ee smaller, up to 10 ¢ lon fae Beackecies large, 1.5—2.3 cm. long. Bracteoles pink; leaves with a long narrow acumen, almost glabrous be- Meath) wen Mature: <5 ¢ 4 4s% sesso eee eee ee ee oe M. calliantha. Bracteoles dirty cream-color or greenish white; leaves short-acuminate, pubescence + persisting on the lower surface. se elliptic or lance-elliptic, rounded at base; floral bracteoles 1.5 cm. TD ese re ee cere ee ease 3 0°b.0o0'G dad eae er eae eee ae M. oe ieee ovate-elliptic, cordate at base; floral bracteoles 2—2.3 cm. long. Pee Pee CT neato aa ce «ice eaves aiodca a: td Ga gO ORD RE ara ee te) chee oe M. vagans. Floral bracteoles small, 5-6 mm. long. Larger leaf of each pair lanceolate; inflorescence 1.5 cm. long; plant very Sparsely -pubescent.5 v::sAcsuinioeaeseorer eaten eiatwua se ai araiales « M. lancifolia. Larger leaf of each pair lance-elliptic; inflorescence + 10 cm. long; aa lets, lower surface of leaves, and inflorescence obviously pubesce M EE Oe ee re eo en ee IO ae ere ee : Hee. ata capitate (very compact) ; calyx-limb 4-lobed. Larger leaf of each pair petiolate; flowers large, the calyx 1.5 cm. Pris Be See eke syoustdcca oils. nt DIB d ages ies 95 han bia os coe RRO aN eae ed eae Rete tat eh Shere 5 ates . fais Larger leaf of each pair sessile or subsessile; flowers smaller, the calyx 7 mm. long ne er ane REPEC 7) a 9 ce) CCT ET OC a RCI M. ee Medinilla tulagiensis sp. nov Frutex scandens; eal novellis brunnescentibus barbellato-pilosis, vetustioribus: cinereis value nodis barbellatis demum glabratis; foliis cm. latis, petiolo 0.5—-1.5 cm. longo, caeterum ut majoribus; aap an axillaribus racemosis solitariis vel interdum duobus in axillis, + longis; axi ed eee ea novellis subplumuloso- -pilosulis deinde Sat ralie: bracteis oblanceolatis, + 1 cm. longis; pedicellis + 1 cm. longis; bracteolis 1-1.3 cm. longis, lpi, basi elongato-cuneatis, parce pubescentibus; floribus 4-meris; calyce 4 mm. longo, minute su plumuloso- piloso, limbo a 4- dentato; RY in alabastro 5 mm. longis; staminibus 8, antheris m. longis, postice calcaratis antice inappendiculatis; ovario 4- loculato; fructus subglobosis + 7 mm. diametro. SoLomon Istanps: Tulagi: Brass 3521 (type), January 1933, alt. 50 m., rain- forests, common aad climber with ar rather fleshy leaves; bracteoles white; aren pink ; fruit whit Medinilla oe sp. nov. Frutex scandens; ramulis teretibus glabris nodis barbellatis demum glabris; foliis sessilibus vel subsessilibus glabris chartaceis valde disparibus: majoribus ellipticis, + 25 cm. longis, 11-12 cm. latis, utrinque paullo 430 JOURNAL OF THE ARNOLD ARBORETUM [ VOL. XXIV angustatis, basi rotundatis vel subcordatis, apice acutis vel breviter acumi- natis, subseptuplinerviis, venis subtransversis supra inconspicuis subtus rotundatis, mucronatis, quintuplinerviis; inflorescentiis axillaribus brevi- bus: bracteis obovatis obtusis, 6 mm. longis, 5 mm. latis; pedicellis + 1 cm. longis; bracteolis ut bracteis; fructibus subglobosis, 7 mm. diametro; seminibus semiconicis, complanatis, apice rotundatis, vix 1 mm. longis, 0.6-0.8 mm. latis arene Bou inville: Kupei Gold Field, Kajewski 1633 (TYPE), April a6. alt. 900 m. aes climber ascending 4 m.; bracts white; pedicels and petals purple). This species is readily recognizable by its strongly unequal and sessile leaves, its short open inflorescence, and its rather large somewhat hood- shaped seeds Medinilla luraluensis sp. nov. Frutex scandens; ramulis teretibus nodosis glabratis, novellis pilosis, pilis crassis subplumulosis, nodis novellis barbellatis demum glabris; foliis subcoriaceis valde disparibus: majoribus subsessilibus vel breviter petio- latis (petiolo 3-5 mm. longo), 6.5-13 cm. longis, 2.5—6 cm. latis, basi cordatis paullo inaequalibus, apice acutis vel breviter acuminatis, supra glabris, subtus basim versus costa pubescentibus, quintuplinerviis ; minori- bus sessilibus subrotundatis vel ovatis, + 2 cm. longis et 2.5 cm. latis, cordatis, hase supra glabris subtus nervis + + pilosis; inflorescentiis axillaribus + 10 cm. longis; axi pedicellisque parce pilosulis; bracteis ovato-orbicularibus basi breviter cuneatis, 8 mm. longis, 6 mm. latis, subtus consperse pilosulis; pedicellis 1-1.3 cm. longis: bracteolis ut bracteis; calyce in alabastro pilosulo, 2.5 mm. longo; petalis 3.5 mm. longis; stamini- bus 8, antheris postice calcaratis; ovario 4-loculato; fructibus subglobosis 5 mm. diametro. Sotomon Istanps: Bougainville: Lake Luralu, Peet ee 2061 sik Pavan 1930, alt. 1500 m., rain-forest, common (climbing shrub or vine; leaves with purple veins on lower siace: bracts showy pink; fruit white with patie ak n calyx- The bracts and bracteoles of this species are smaller than in most of the group of species with dimorphic leaves. Medinilla anisophylla sp. nov. Frutex scandens glaber; ramulis ae ean ey nodosis; foliis chartaceis, valde disparibus: majoribus 12-1 ongis —8.5 cm. latis, basi emarginatis vel rotundatis, apice ia. acumine fe 1 cm. longo, quintuplinerviis vel subseptuplinerviis, venis vix manifestis; petiolo cm. longo; minoribus ovatis, + 2 cm. longis latisque, basi subcordatis, apice acutis, subsessilibus vel brevissime petiolatis; inflorescentiis axillari- bus racemosis, 10-17 cm. longis, bracteis + 1 cm. longis, lanceolatis; pedi- cellis + 1 cm. longis; bracteolis eile agrees circiter 1.5 cm. diametro; calycis limbo 4-denticulato; antheris (tantum uno viso longo, postice crasse calcaratis, antice heaton pas fructibus 5- 7 mm. iat Sotomon Istanps: San Cristobal: Puepue River, Brass 2793 (TYPE), Ga 1932, alt. 50 m., riverine rain-forest, common (profusely flowering loosely 1943 ] MERRILL & PERRY, PLANTAE ARCHBOLDIANAE, XIII 431 branched shrub, scandent; leaves fleshy, pale green; each flower between two large fleshy greenish white persistent bracts; corolla pink; filaments purple and red). Medinilla calliantha sp. nov. utex scandens; ramulis novellis dense et grosse ee -pilosis, ste oe sub ae subplumulosis, cito glabratis teretibus nodos setulosis; foliis valde disparibus: majoribus chartaceis ellipticis, 13- 20. cm. longis, 6.5-12 cm. latis, pee Po hindatic vel obtusis, apice obtusis deinde abrupte acuminatis, acumine 1.5—2 cm. longo sublineari, novellis dense patenti-pilosis cito ‘glabratis, maturis utrinque glabris vel subtus costa nervisque parce pilosis, 5—7- plinerviis; petiolo + 1 cm. longo, glabrato; minoribus ovatis, 4.5 cm. longis, 3 cm. latis, sessilibus caeterum ut majori- spathulatis, roseis; axi pedicellisque dense et grosse patenti-pilosis; pedi- cellis circiter 1 cm. longis, floribus 4-meris decussatim oppositis; bracteolis ovato-orbicularibus, circiter 2 cm. longis latisque, basi rotundatis, apice obtusiusculis, utrinque consperse subplumuloso-pubescentibus vel interdum conspersissime pilosis; calyce cyathiformi, + 5 mm. longo, dense piloso; petalis 1 cm. longis, 6 mm. latis, ellipticis; antheris 6 mm. longis, postice 1.5 mm. calcaratis, antice minute biappendiculatis; stylo + 8 mm. |] , apice ee. stigmate minuto SoLoMON Istanps: Ysabel: Tiratona Brass 3220 (TYPE), 3328, 3540, Novem- ber and December 1932, alt. 600 m., mountain forests, common (large stiffly branched climber; bark corky, ie hick: young ee covered with brown hairs; fruit in 3220 yellow, in pe! white). Medinilla calliantha var. bella var. nov. forma typica differt ramulis novellis parce subplumuloso-pilosulis; foliis glabris; ‘inflorescentiis + pilosulis. Sotomon IsLtanps: Bo nee aera Without field label, Kajewski 1746A; uadalcanal: ulolo, Tutuve Mountain, Kajewski 2504 (type of var.), April 1933, alt. 1200 m., rain-forest, common (climbing shrub, very showy; veins of leaves pink ; flowers pin), This variety closely resembles the species but is much more nearly gla- brous, with slightly smaller flowers and fruit; the leaves tend to be nar- rower, the innermost pair of nerves arising from the midrib 2.5 cm. above the base, whereas in M. calliantha they are not more than 2 cm. above the base. Medinilla pubiflora sp. nov. Frutex scandens; ramulis teretibus nodosis cinereis, novellis brunneis dense piloso-hirsutis, pilis sub lente subplumulosis, deinde glabratis; foliis valde oo majoribus ee ellipticis vel lanceolato-ellipticis, 14-17(—27) cm. longis, 7.5(—12 cm. latis, basi rotundatis interdum sissime subtus (costa nervisque + dense) brunneo-pilosis, 5—7-plinerviis, nervis supra eens subtus prominulis, venis subtus manifeste clathra- tis; petiolo 1-1. ‘lo ongo, dense ee minoribus cet be sub- sessilibus late a carbicuian yee 2.5(—4) cm. longis, 2.5(—3) cm. latis, 5-nerviis, basi cordatis, apice obtusis apiculatis; inflorescentiis Seance racemosis, + 4 cm. longis: axi dense, bracteis et bracteolis utrinque pilosis; bracteis vix 1 cm. longis, cuneatis interdum foliiformibus; pedi- 432 JOURNAL OF THE ARNOLD ARBORETUM [VOL, XXIV cellis 4 mm. longis; bracteolis ovatis, 1.5 cm. longis latisque; floribus tan- tum in alabastro visis; calyce 5 mm. longo, dense piloso, tubo cyathiformi, limbo truncato; petalis 4; staminibus 8, antheris postice longiuscule crasse calcaratis, antice non visis SoLoMON IsLANpDS: Boug shat ville: Koniguru, Buin, Kajewski 2153 (TYPE), August 1930, alt. 900 m., rain-forest, common (vine or semi-scandent shrub; flowers dirty cream-color, covered with fine hairs); Kugumaru, Buin, Kajewski 1958, July 1930, alt. 150 m., rain-forest, common (scandent shrub; bracts dirty cream-color; petals pe purple) Kieta, pe pee 1564, March 1930, alt. 100 m., in gullies in rain- forest, common (s up to 2 m. high; bracts white, covered with brown hair, giving them a ales appearance; petals ae blue; anthers dark blue). In general habit, Medinilla pubiflora calls to mind M. vagans, but the pubescence is more evenly distributed and denser, the base of the leaf is rounded rather than cordate, the inflorescence is shorter, and the bracteoles are smaller than in the latter species. Medinilla vagans sp. nov. Frutex vagans; ramulis teretibus, novellis obtuse angulatis sulcatis, parce patenti- pore cito glabratis, nodis barbatis; foliis valde disparibus: majori- bus ovato-ellipticis usque 11 cm. longis, 5.5-8 cm. latis, basi cordatis, apice abrupte breviter acuminatis, acumine 5-10 mm. longo, supra glabris vel distincte subclathratis; petiolo + cm. heen subtus glabrato supra patenti-piloso ; minoribus 3 cm. longis, 2.5 cm, latis, subsessilibus vel brevi- ter petiolatis, caeterum ut majoribus; inflorescentiis cymosis axillaribus, circiter 5 cm. longis, paucifloris (verisimiliter 2), pedunculo ad 1 cm. supra basim bibracteato, bracteis caeterum 4 basi pedicellorum, subovato-orbicu- laribus, + 7 mm. longis latisque basi interdum anguste cuneatis minibus 9 (in duobus floribus dissectis), antheris (in alabastro) 4 mm. longis, postice obtuse breviter calcaratis, calcare verruculoso, crasso, antice biauriculatis; stylo 5 mm. longo. SoLtoMon IsLtAnps: Ysabel: Tataba, Brass 3438 (Type), January 1933, alt. 50 m., amongst regrowth trees on a rain-forest clearing (large rambling shrub; leaves dull; bracteoles white; petals and filaments pale pink; anthers blue; fruit greenish white; a very showy gaat, with brown ae. This species is fairly easy to recognize by the ovate-elliptic cordate leaves in unequal pairs and the pubescent cymose (subracemose) inflorescence with rather large white bracts. Medinilla lancifolia sp. nov. Frutex scandens; ramulis subteretibus cinereis nodosis glabris, nodis minute stellato-pubescentibus deinde glabratis; foliis valde disparibus: angustatis, basi cuneatis, apice obtuse acuminatis, novellis consperse es a cito glabratis, vel consperse minute papillatis, tripli- nerviis vel interdum subquintuplinerviis; petiolo usque 5 mm. longo glabro; minoribus sessilibus ovatis usque 1.7 cm. longis, 1 cm. latis; cent 1943 ] MERRILL & PERRY, PLANTAE ARCHBOLDIANAE, XIII 433 oper cadae + 1.5 cm. longis, racemosis, novellis consperse eau pube- entibus; bracteis albido-viridescentibus, usque 6 mm. longis et 3 mm. latis cp camer semen rte consperse minute pubescentibus: pedicellis 2 mm. oie bracteolis ut bracteis; calyce minute pubescente, tubo cyathiformi, + 3 mm. longo, limbo vix 2 mm. longo; petalis 4, obovatis, 6 mm. longis, apice abrupte acutis; staminibus 8, neal 4 mm. longis; stylo + 7 mm. longo, apice angustato: stigmate mir SoLoMON IsL_anps: Bougali wilie : Kupei Gold Field, Kajewski 1699 (TYPE), April 1930, alt. 950 m., growing aoe crevices in tall rain-forest trees (petals mauve; anthers blue; bracts cream-green) In the short bracteate inflorescence the species somewhat suggests Medinilla involucrata Merr., but it is amply distinct from that species in the size and venation of the leaves as well as in the lack of pubescence. Medinilla rubescens sp. nov. Frutex scandens; ramulis novellis dense subplumoso-pilosis deinde gla- bratis nodosis; foliis valde disparibus: majoribus chartaceis lanceolato- ellipticis, 9-14 cm. longis, 3.5—6 cm. latis, basi rotundatis vel emarginatis, apice acutis vel breviter acuminatis, supra costa nervisque praecipue ad basim pilosis, subtus (costa nervisque dense) ferrugineo-pilosis, 5—7-pli- n dense pilosulo; minoribus sessilibus vel breviter petiolatis (petiolis 2-3 mm. longis), ovatis, 1.5-3 cm. longis, 1—2 cm. latis, peti ats ut majoribus; inflorescentiis axillaribus, paniculatis vel cymosis, 5—10 cm. longis, ramis paucis racemiformibus; axi pedicellisque niloedte vel pube- nodis bracteatis: bracteis oblanceolatis basi cuneatis, 5 mm. longis, 2 mm. latis, glabratis; bracteolis late ovatis obtusis, circiter 5 mm. longis et 4 mm. latis, stellato-pubescentibus; calyce 2 mm. longo, cyathi- tormi, dense pubescente; petalis 4, ellipticis, obtusis, 4-5 mm. longis; staminibus 8, antheris 3 mm. longis, antice biauriculatis, postice breviter calcaratis, calcare crasso verruculoso; fructibus subglobosis, + m longis SOLOMON ISLANDs: - uadalcanal: Uulolo, Tutuve Mountain, Kajewski 2514 (type), April 1931, alt. 1200 m., rain-forest, common (scandent shrub; flowers and bracts pink; small green ales 6 mm. diameter). Medinilla cephalantha sp. nov. Frutex scandens; ramulis teretibus, novellis dense hirsutis cito glabratis, brunneis deinde cinereis nodosis _ nodis setosis; foliis valde disparibus: acuminatis, novellis dense hirsutis, maturis glabris, 7- plinerviis, nervis saepe ad 1-2 cm. inter se distantibus, ‘utrinque perspicuis, venis oblique trans- versis manifestis; petiolo 1.5—2. 5c m. longo, hirsuto; minoribus sessilibus vel subsessilibus, Cato abel ae 3 cm. longis, 2.5 cm. latis, basi cordatis, apice rotundatis subinde brevissime acuminatis; inflorescentiis sessilibus e ramulis vetustis defoliatis orientibus vel interdum axillaribus, capitatis, interdum oppositis, 2.5—-6.5 cm. longis, dense multifloris; floribus subsessilibus vel breviter pedicellatis, pedicello + 4 mm. longo, hirsuto; bracteis ut bracteolis, 1.5-1.7 cm. longis, late ese vel ellipticis, apice obtusis, basi sensim anguste cuneatis, subtus hirsutis; calyce 1.5 cm. longo, dense hirsuto, limbo 4-lobato vel 4-fido, intus piloso, lobis rotundatis retusis, 434. JOURNAL OF THE ARNOLD ARBORETUM [VOL, XXIV petalis in swage tantum visis glabris; staminibus 8 aequalibus, antheris sub anthesi 6 mm. longis apice poro aperientibus, postice obtuse inconspicue calcaratis ie 0.5 mm. longo, crasso), antice biauriculato, auriculis minute verruculosis; stylo + 1.5 cm. longo. Sotomon Istanps: Ysabel: Kakatio, Brass 3255 (type), mi i 1932, alt. 900 m., common in rain-forests (large scandent shrub; bracteoles pink; flowers white) ; Guadalcanal: Sorvorhio Basin, Kajewski 2705, January 1932, af 300 m., in wet gullies of rain-forest, common (small tree or large shrub; inflorescence pink); San Cristobal: Hinuahaoro, Brass 3022, September rors alt. 900 m., mountain rain- forests, common (scandent shrub with long drooping branches; flower pink On account of the variability within the genus Medinilla Gaudichaud, we are now inclined to believe that the Philippine Cephalomedinilla Merr. is probably best considered as a section of Medinilla. This species and M sessilis from the Solomon Islands clearly belong to the same section, but may be readily distinguished from the Philippine species by the stronger dimorphism of the pairs of opposite leaves, the smaller of these being ovate-orbicular rather than similar in shape to ‘the larger ones. Medinilla sessilis sp. nov. Frutex scandens; ramulis teretibus + hirsutis cito glabratis, nodis dense barbatis; ioliis valde epi berries vel subsessilibus, basi pulvino persistente reflexo circumdat majoribus ellipticis utrinque angustatis, basi subcordatis, apice pean ese acumine + 1 cm. longo, supra glabris, subtus costa oe elias dense) consperse pilosis, 5—7-plinerviis, nervis inter + 1 cm. distantibus, venis clathratis subtus prominulis; minoribus suborbicularibus vel ovato- orbicularibus fere citer nme pose m , limbo 3—4 mm. longo, 4-lobato, intus hirtello; petalis 4; stamini- bus 8, antheris postice calcaratis, antice verisimiliter ee (sta- minibus immaturis, appendicibus non visis) ; ovario pagel piloso MON IstaAnDs: Bougainville: Koniguru, Buin, Kajewski 2023 (type), August 1930, alt. 850 m., rain-forest, common (scandent; aa purple). This species is readily distinguished from Medinilla cephalantha Merr. & Perry by the sessile or subsessile larger leaf of each pair; also, the retlexed narrow base ets the leaf-attachment is much more Hinton here than in the other specie Astronia Blume Astronia papetaria Bl. Rumphia 1: 20. t. 6. 1835, var. novo-guineensis var. nov. A forma typica differt foliis minoribus, 8-15 cm. longis, 1.5—4 cm. latis, in quoque pari vix aequalibus; petiolo 1.5-2 cm. longo ad ramuli inser- tionem non calloso-verrucoso; calycis lobis Sietoe ban, late triangularibus, acutiusculis. NETHERLANDS New Guinea: 4 km. southwest of Bernhard Camp, Idenburg River, Brass 13292, 13454 (Type of var.), Mar. 1939, alt. 900 m., frequent in Agathis forest undergrowth, and occasional in rain-forest of ridges (tree 3 —4 m. high; leaves brown beneath; flowers pink) ; cm. southwest of Bernhard Camp, Idenbure River, Brass 13671, March 1939, alt. 750 m., common in rain-forest of slopes (tree 5-6 m. high; leaves brown underneath; flowers pink). 1943 ] MERRILL & PERRY, PLANTAE ARCHBOLDIANAE, XIII 435 The collections cited above show a strong similarity to Blume’s plate of Astronia papetaria from the Moluccas, but differ as indicated above. Astronia atro-viridis Mansf. Bot. Jahrb. 60: 131. 1925. NETHERLANDS NEw GUINEA: 9 km. northeast of Lake Habbema, Brass & Aisi 10466, October 1938, alt. 2750 m., frequent in primary forest; Bele River, 18 km. north- east of Lake Ha bbema, Brass & Versizevh 11151, November 1938, alt. 2300 m. winded substage tree of primary forest; 15 km. southwest of Bernhard Camp, Idenburg River, white; fruit yellow-green). British New Guinea: Mount Tafa, Brass 4953 In these collections the leaves vary greatly in size from those of the original material, in some cases being as small as 4 X 2 cm.; again, occa- sionally the leaves are almost densely lepidote, and only slightly, if at all, furfuraceous, but the characters are too inconstant to be of value. At the apex for a very short distance the margins are rolled to meet, causing the apex to appear almost like an appendage attached to the rest of the leaf by a constriction. Astronidium A. Gray Astronidium nigrescens (Mansf.) Markgr. Notizbl. Bot. Gart. Berl. 12: 48, 49. 1934. Everettia nigrescens Mansi. Bot. Jahrb NETHERLANDS NEw GUINEA: 15 km. southwest of Bernhard Camp, Idenburg River, Brass 12091, January 1939, alt. 1800 m., frequent in rather open rain-forest ravines (tree 4-5 m. high; inner surface of balals white, the outer surface pink; stamens and pistil white). Described from Northeastern New Guinea. Astronidium novo-guineense sp. nov. Arbor usque 10 m. alta; ramulis teretibus vel infra nodos subangulatis atro- cinereis glabris; foliis subcoriaceis ellipticis vel leviter obovato- ellipti- ] furaceo-lepidotis, triplinerviis, nervis in laminae parte centrali 1.5—2 cm. a costa dispositis, supra insculptis, rel be perspicuis, venis clathratis =e | remotis, supra inconspicuis subtus prominulis, vena marginali 1—2 mm. intra marginem disposita, reticulo conferto; inflorescentiis ae a cymoso-paniculatis, + 10 cm. longis latisque, glabris, pedicellis 6-7 mm. longis; calyce urceolato, a 2.5-3 mm. longo, limbo 1 mm. longo truncato; petalis 5, oblongis, 6 mm. longis; staminibus 10, in alabastro filamentis 4 mm. longis eee seule complanatis, antheris + 5 mm. longis (in ala- bastro apice reflexis) , postice calcaratis, calcare crasso, 1 mm, longo; stylo 5 mm. longo; ovario 4- vel 5-loculato. NETHERLANDS NEw GUINEA: 18 km. southwest of Bernhard Camp, Idenburg River, Brass 12695 (tTypE), February 1939, alt. 2150 m., mossy forest, common in gullies (up to 8-10 m. high; flower-buds white); 4 km. southwest of Bernhard Camp, Idenburg River, Brass 13312, March 1939, alt. 900 m., abundant in Agathis forest and more open parts of mossy forest (tree 6—7 m. high) This species is very close to Astronidium palauense (Kaneh.) Markgr. (including A. carolinense (Kaneh.) Markgr., which, from a comparison of the isotypes, appears to be the same species). It differs in having an urceolate, not cupular, calyx, and a much closer reticulum in the leaves than is characteristic of the Micronesian material. 436 JOURNAL OF THE ARNOLD ARBORETUM [VOL. XXIV Astronidium insulare sp. nov. Arbor usque 17 m. alta; ramulis teretibus, novellis inter nodos com- pressis leviter sulcatis et minute lepidotis; foliis oppositis ellipticis, 9-16 cm. longis, 4.5-7.5 cm. latis, basi obtusis subinde cuneatis + 5 mm. de- currentibus, apice acutis vel breviter acuminatis, apiculatis, supra glabris, subtus minute lepidotis, triplinerviis, nervis in laminae parte centrali 2—2.5 cm. a costa dispositis, supra distinctis, subtus prominulis, venis clathratis + 1 cm. remotis, supra manifestis subtus prominulis, venulis inconspicuis; petiolo 2-2.5 cm. longo; inflorescentiis immaturis 5 cm. longis, terminali- bus, dense lepidotis; pedicellis 2 cm. longis; calyce 4 mm. longo obpyri- formi, apice 5-lobato, lobis 0.4 mm. longis, + 1.5 mm. latis, mucronulatis; ovario 5-loculato. SoLtomon Istanps: Bougainville: Koniguru, Buin, Kajewski 1999 (tTyPE), August 1930, alt. 800 m., rain-forest, common (small tree up to 17 m. high; buds green). The species is perhaps most like the description of Astronidium novae- hannoverae (Engl.) comb. nov. (Astronia novae-hannoverae Engl. Bot. Jahrb. 7: 468. 1886), from the Bismarck Archipelago. However, the calyx of the flower-buds, although still not approaching anthesis, appears to be about twice as large as that described for the latter species. We have not found any reference to Pages species either in Mansfeld’s “Die Melasto- mataceen von Papuasien,” Bot. Jahrb. l.c., or in Markgraf’s ee hasan Astronidium A. Gray,” Notizbl. Bot. Gart. Berl. 12: 47—50. Astronidium montanum sp. nov. Arbor usque 7—8 m. alta; ramulis tetragonis vix Seri minute lepidotis; foliis tenuiter chartaceis, 10-15 cm. longis, 3.5—6 cm. latis, minute pellucido- punctatis, subtus minute papillatis parce minute oe basi cuneatis, apice obtuse acuminatis, trinerviis, nervis in laminae parte centrali 1- cm. a costa dispositis, venis marginalibus (2 vel 1) circiter 2—5 mm. intra marginem manifestis, venis clathratis + 1 cm. remotis; petiolo 2—2.5 cm longo, gracili; inflorescentiis terminalibus cymoso-paniculatis, + 8 cm. longis latisque, glabris, ramis gracilibus; pedicellis circiter 7 mm. longis; bracteis non visis; calyce cyathiformi, 5-6 mm. longo, 5 mm. diametro, limbo subirregulariter 4-lobato, petalis 6, oblanceolato- oblongis, 12 mm. longis, apice obtusis; staminibus 12, filamentis complanatis, 9 mm. longis, antheris 7 mm. longis, linearibus, apice reflexis, postice calcaratis, calcare 1 mm. longo; stylo 10 mm. longo; ovario 5- vel 6-lo oculato. SoLoMoN Istanps: Guadalcanal: Uulolo, Tutuve Mountain, Kajewski 2515 (TYPE), January 1931, alt. 1200 m., rain-forest, common (small tree 7-8 m. high; flowers light green). In habit, Astronidium montanum suggests A. victoriae (Gillespie) A. C. Sm., of the Fiji Islands, but the leaves of the former are not rounded or obtuse at the base, and the flowers are about twice as large and lack the lepidote character of those of the Fijian species. Astronidium muscosum sp. nov. Arbuscula 3 m. alta; nodis perspicue setuloso-pilosis, internodiis, basi setuloso-pilosa excepta, glabris, valde compressis sulcatis; foliis coriaceis late ellipticis vel obovato-ellipticis, 18-29 cm. longis, 10-16 cm. latis, basi rotundatis vel obtusis, apice acutis vel breviter acuminatis, supra glabris 1943] MERRILL & PERRY, PLANTAE ARCHBOLDIANAE, XIII 437 subtus nervis venisque pilosis deinde glabratis, quintunerviis vel quintupli- nerviis (nervo marginali non incluso), nervis supra insculptis subtus per- prominulis, venulis subtus distinctis; petiolo 4—7 cm. longo, basi (1 cm.) ee ee caeterum glabrato; inflorescentiis paniculatis terminalibus, ‘10-12 cm. longis latisque, ramis oppositis + crispe pilosis; floribus sub- sessilibus ad ramulorum hirtellorum apicem dense glomeratis bracteatis, bracteis caducis; calyce clavato,.5 mm. longo, tubo 3.5 mm. longo basim versus minute consperse setuloso, lobis 5 obtusiusculis; petalis 5 in ala- bastris 34 connatis; staminibus 10, filamentis 3.5 mm. longis complanatis, antheris laesis eae calcaratis, calcare 1.2 mm. longo, obvio reflexo apice expanso; stylo 4 OLOMON ISLANDS: San edstabet : Hinuahaoro, Brass 3035 (TYPE), September 1932, alt. 900 m., mountain rain-forest, rare (large shrub or small tree 3 m. high, with stiff ascending branches). Probably also belonging here is Kajewski 2507 from Uulolo, Tutuve Mountain, Guadalcanal. The specimen has almost glabrous leaves and flower-buds, and the receptacle is densely pilose around the base of the calyx In leaf-outline and in contour of the flower-buds, Astronitdium muscosum suggests A, Brassii Markgr. of New Guinea, but the latter has chartaceous triplinerved leaves, a smaller and much more open inflorescence, and lacks the obviously coarsely hairy petiole-bases and nodes which are so character- istic of our species. The specific name is chosen to indicate the last men- tioned character. Astronidium salomonense sp. nov. Arbor usque 15 m. alta; ramulis novellis valde compressis tetragonis anguste alatis, minute lepidotis; foliis subcoriaceis ellipticis, 8-14 cm. longis, 3.5-7 cm. latis, basi cuneatis, apice abrupte breviter acuminatis, supra glabris vel ‘utrinque minute lepidotis, triplinerviis, nervis in laminae parte centrali 1.5-2.5 a costa remotis, venis subtransversis clathratis utrin- et ramulis valde compressis tetragonis; pede circiter 1 cm. longis; alabastris tantum visis; calyce ovali, 9 mm. longo, 6-7 mm. diametro, apice oe brevibus fissuris aperiente; petalis 6; staminibus 12; ovario culato Sotomon IsLtanps: Bougainville: Kieta Gold Field, Kajewski 1703 (TYPE), April 1930, alt. 1000 m., rain-forest, common (small tree up to 15 m. high; flower-buds green). The general habit of Astronidium salomonense is similar to that of 4. aneityense (Guillaumin) A. C. Sm., of the New Hebrides, but the leaves of the former are more nearly coriaceous and opposite, the flower-buds are larger, and the branchlets are definitely tetragonous. Astronidium sessilifolium sp. nov. Arbor usque 10 m. alta, glabra; ramulis novellis valde compressis, leviter sulcatis, parce minute lepidotis: foliis chartaceis sessilibus obovato-ellipticis, 15-25 cm. longis, 5-10 cm. latis, basim versus angustatis, apice obtusiusculis vel forsan acutiusculis, subtus minute granulosis, triplinerviis, nervis a costa supra basim 2.5— 6 cm. ortis, in laminae parte centrali 3 cm. a costa 438 JOURNAL OF THE ARNOLD ARBORETUM [VOL. XXIV distantibus; venis ascendenti- patentibus, circiter 1 cm. remotis, subtus prominulis, nervo marginali 4-7 mm. intra marginem disposito ; inflore- scentiis terminalibus, circiter 15 cm. longis et 10 cm. latis; axi, ramis ramu- lisque subangulatis valde compressis, sulcatis; pedicellis 5-8 mm. longis; alabastris globosis, + 6 mm. diametro, calyce apice vix aperto; geen 6- vel 7-loculatis, depresso-globosis, 4— 5 mm. altis, 7-8 mm. diametro, apice calycis limbo recto (3 mm. longo) margine leviter 6-lobato ue seminibus 0.8 mm. longis, lineari-angulato-clavatis Sotomon Istanps: Bougainville: Siwai, a tae 193 (ser. no. 22983) (rypPE), January 1933, shrub or small tree near water; Koniguru, Buin, Kajewski 2163, August 1930, alt. 900 m., rain-forest, common (small tree up to 10 m. high; the flower- buds have a disagreeable odor when crushed) This species, in the shape of the leaves and the lack of a petiole, suggests the Fijian Astronidium sessile (A. C. Sm.) A. C. Sm., but the main nerves in the latter lie 0.8-1.5 cm. within the margin, whereas in the former they are almost half way between the midrib and the margin; the flowers too are smaller in the Solomon Islands material and the bracts of the young inflorescence are oblong rather than orbicular. Astronidium anomalum sp. nov. Arbor parva 6-7 m. alta glabra; ramulis cae gs brunneis; foliis tenuiter coriaceis lanceolato- ellipticis, 5-8 cm. S, 3 cm. latis, utrinque angustatis, basi obtuse cuneatis, apice Berd 7. breviter acumi- 1 gine is, in sicco supra olivaceo-viridescentibus, subtus brunnescentibus, nervis primariis utrinsecus 11-14 late patentibus fere subtransversis, supra subobscuris, subtus manifestis, reticulo subtus vix manifesto, con nferto, vena margin nali 1-1.5 mm. intra marginem dis- posita ; petiolo 0.8—1.7 cm. longo, gracili, supra canaliculato; inflorescentiis 4.5—7 cm. longis, 4-6 cm. latis, terminalibus cymoso- -paniculatis, axi, ramis ramulisque valde compressis, ‘subangulatis : pedice 1.5-2 mm. longis; floribus non visis; fructibus minute lepidotis vel glandulosis, depresso- cuneatis, — — vel suboblique truncatis, + angulatis; placentis 3, circiter 1 m ongis. Sotomon’ ISLAND Guadalcanal: Uulolo, Tutuve aN Kajewski 2623 (TYPE), May 733 1, alt. 1500 m., rain-forest (small tree up to 6-7 m. high, with es a twisted habit; fruit cream-green, about 34 mature) Although the fruit is small, in structure it is like that of Astronidium ie Gray. The leaves, however, are not triplinerved, as one usually finds in his genus, but have only the midrib obvious; the lateral pinnately ride erves are easily seen on the lower surface but are not at all raise Memecylon Linnaeus Memecylon papuanum sp. nov. Arbor parva circiter 9 m. alta, glabra; ramulis teretibus, novellis inter- dum inconspicue angulatis brunnescentibus: foliis coriaceis late ellipticis, 12-20 cm. longis, 5.7-11 cm. latis, basi cuneato-obtusis, apice abrupte acuminatis, costa supra impressa, subtus conspicua, venis primariis utrinque subobscuris vel vix manifestis, utrinsecus -+- 12; petiolo circiter 5 mm. 1943 ] MERRILL & PERRY, PLANTAE ARCHBOLDIANAE, XIII 439 ve crasso; Het axillaribus brevissimis, 5-7 mm. longis, bracteis 1.5m ovatis acutis; pedicellis 1 mm. longis: ee ovoideis, } mm. ton is, vix "4 mm. Gis alyce obconico, 3 mm. longo, truncato; disco stamina circumdante costato; petalis 4 late ovatis, 2.5 mm. longis, 3 mm. latis, obtusiusculis; staminibus 8; fructibus pedicellatis, a globosis 5 mm. longis, 6 mm. ‘diametro) calycis limbo (vix 1.5 mm. longo) coronatis. NORTHEASTERN NEW GurtneA: Mountains near Yaduma, Schlechter 19291, April 1909, alt. 300 m. British New Gutvea: Ihu, Vailala River, Brass 977 (TYPE), February 1926, rain-forest (small slender tree 30 feet high, with thick pale leaves). Memecylon papuanum seems to be most like the descriptions of the Javanese M. excelsum Bl. and M. floribundum Bl., but these have larger fruits, less dense inflorescence, and longer pediceled flowers. ARNOLD ARBORETUM, Harvarp UNIvERSITY. 440 JOURNAL OF THE ARNOLD ARBORETUM [VOL. XXIV FERNS OF THE SECOND ARCHBOLD EXPEDITION TO NEW GUINEA* E. B. CopELAND Tue ferns of the First Archbold Expedition to New Guinea were dis- cussed by Dr. Carl Christensen, in Brittonia 2: 265-317. 1937. These were from the high mountains of British New Guinea, and, from the 343 numbers collected, Christensen described 40 new species. The Third Archbold Expedition collected in Netherlands New Guinea, mostly at high altitudes. From an incomparable wealth of more than 900 field numbers, I described 109 species as new. Publication of these began in the Philippine Journal of Science but was interrupted by war. To record and guard the names, I published brief diagnoses of 87 species, still awaiting publication and illustration in Manila, in the University of California Pub- lications in Botany (18: 217-226. 1942). The Second Archbold Expedition collected at low altitudes, although far from the coast, in the plains and foothills far up the Fly River. Such country is poor in ferns as compared with the mountains, and the ferns which do occur in the lowlands are mostly species of wide range. It is therefore not surprising that the 171 collection numbers of this expedition include no more than five definitely new species. Descriptions of these and comment on a few other species follow. All the numbers cited are represented in the Gray Herbarium, and the types of new species, unless otherwise indicated, are deposited in the author’s herbarium Cephalomanes Ledermanni (Brause) comb. Trichomanes Ledermanni Brause in Bot. Jahrb. ‘36: 35. 1920. British New Guinea: Fly River, 528-mile Camp, alt. 80 m., in ridge forests, Brass 6663. Related to C. atrovirens Presl (Trichomanes rhomboideum J. Sm.), but distinguished, as correctly indicated by Brause, by smaller size, lax vena- tion, and small, obconic involucres. The sori of our specimen are more abundant than on Brause’s type, and therefore they occupy a larger part of the frond and occupy the ends as well as the acroscopic sides of the pinnae; some occur even below the ends, on the basiscopic sides. Trichomanes maluense Brause is distinguished in part by just such a more ample production of sori. Whether or not its rather feeble other differences are more significant, I do not venture to guess. Cyclosorus gregarius sp. nov. C. rhizomate adscendente, sicco 6 mm. crasso, apice paleis fuscis lineari- lanceolatis glabris debilibus 3-4 mm. longis vestito; stipitibus approxi- matis, usque ad pinnas reductas 25 cm., ad pinnas normales 70 cm. altis, *Botanical Results of the Richard Archbold Expeditions. 1943 ] COPELAND, FERNS OF NEW GUINEA 441 rhachibusque glabris; fronde, pinnis basalibus remotis abrupte reductis exclusis, ee . cm, alta et 25 cm. lata, pinnata, pinna apicali caeteris con- forme ore; pinnis normalibus remotis, alternantibus, sessilibus, inferioribus re 15 cm. lon ngis et 15 mm. latis, ’gradatim acuminatis, basi late cuneatis, leviter crenato-lobatis lobis crenulatis, herbaceis, ‘costa superne setulis inconspicuis inflexis praedita, aliter glabrescentibus, venulis acroscopicis 3, basicopicis 2 anastomosantibus; soris medialibus vel infra- medialibus, indusio parce et breviter ciliato, caduco. riTISH NEw GuINEA: Fly River, 528-mile Camp, alt. 80 m., ae 6759 (TYPE), “oregarious in clumps over 1 m. high, on mud in shaded creek bott tom Indusia can be detected only on the youngest sori. Lindsaea subtripjnnata sp. nov. L. gregis L. heterophyllae Dry. et. orbiculatae (Lam. ) Mett., fronde apice rotundatis, venis em, soro continuo ‘vel rarius interrupto, indusio cum margine conterm British New Gui ree , Was parse ra Western Division, Brass 8491 (TYPE), common on cae of pallies in rain-for The stipe is about 30 cm. and the fit aeont 25 cm. long. Great as is the variety of fronds referred to L. orbiculata and L. hetero- phylla, L. subtripinnata seems sufficiently distinguished by its small pin- nules and the absence of larger undivided pinnae. The free venation is correlated with the fine dissection of the frond. I have no New Guinean specimen of either L. heterophylla or L. orbiculata, but the former has been reported from the island. The group runs riot in New Caledonia. Oleandra subdimorpha sp. nov. Epiphytica, caudice gracili, paleis supra basim peltatis, nigris marginem lacerum versus pallescentibus ad ramos laterales breves imbricatis ad frondium fertilium paullo longioribus; fronde sterili ca. 18 cm. longa et 4 cm. lata, basi subinaequaliter rotundata, apice abrupte in caudam angus- tissima 3 cm. longam contracta, coriacea, glabra, venis arcte approxi- bus, indusiis late reniformibus, oblique insertis, atrocastaneis, Coriaceis. BritisH NEw GurINneEa: Palmer River, 2 miles below junction with Black River, alt. 100 m., Brass 6886 (TYPE, in Gray Herb.), “stiff climbing epiphyte.” A relative of O. Werneri Ros., but less dimorphic, the base of the sterile frond broader, the sori farther from the margin. Humata papuana sp. nov. H. gregis H. repentis, rhizomate gracili late repente, paleis atrofuscis lanceolatis 3 mm. longis tum demum deciduis vestito, deinde glauco; frondi- bus remotis, dimorphis, i i usque ad 5.5 cm. longis, sparse et decidue squamiferis, laminis deltoideis usque ad 5 cm. longis, pinnatis pinnis infimis tantum pinnatifidis sessilibus apice rotundatis coriaceis glabris, segmentis sequentibus lobatis, superiori- 442 JOURNAL OF THE ARNOLD ARBORETUM [ VOL, XXIV bus integris; frondium fertilium stipitibus 9 cm. altis, gracilibus, laminis 7 cm. longis late deltoideis basi tripinnatifidis, soris et axialibus et ad bases dentium brevium nao or ila indusiis quam longis multo latioribus, etenim marginem ee British New Guinea: Palmer River, 2 miles below junction with Black River, alt. 100 m., Brass 6087 (TYPE), “matted on branches of tall as trees.” Brass 6593, Fly River, 528-mile Camp, alt. 80 m., “creeping in moss mats high on canopy trees, common,” is a depauperate form of the same species, the sterile aa at most 2 cm. long, on stipes 7 mm. lon Related to H. kinabaluensis, which has the teeth subtending the sori more completely suppressed, and to H. pusilloides, which has them much more conspicuous. Humata alpina var. edentula Ros. is like H. kinabaluensis in suppression of the teeth; judging by a single specimen, the sterile frond is more contracted, but with longer pinnae. ? Polypodium neglectum Blume, Enum. Pl. Jav. 121. 1828, Fl. Jav. Fil. 133. pl. 54, f. 1. 1828. British New Guinea: Palmer River, alt. 100 m., common on branches of tall trees, Brass 6881. The identification is by description and doubtful. The rhizome is “repens, filiforme, tenue, ramosum, paleis lineari-lanceolatis acutissimis ... imbricatis albo-scariosis . . . vestitum,” quoting, with omissions, Presl, Epim. 124; Presl’s description is likely to have been based on a “Manila” plant of Meyen. Van Alderwerelt’s description, Malayan Ferns 435, fits Brass’ plant in most respects. Backer & Posthumus, Varenflora voor Java 195, reduce P. neglectum to P. stenophyllum Blume, which seems most unlikely to be correct. Brass’ plant is certainly not P. stenophyllum., P. redimiens Brause is also known to me from description only. This description fits Brass’ plant as to the fronds, but the rhizome is said to be “pallidum,” “auffallend bleich,” while that of Brass’ plant is partly fuscous, mostly black; and the paleae are said to be “clathratis, deltoideis margine spinuloso-dentato,” all of which is inappropriate. However, I suspect its identity with our plant. There is near affinity to Polypodium pyrolaefolium Bergsmann, the type of Crypsinus; and, still nearer, to P. Whitfordi Copel., of Luzon. Selliguea Archboldii sp. nov. S. gregis S. Feet, rhizomate late repente, paleis nigris, basi peltatis fusco- ) ceis, basi cuneatis, stipitibus 6 cm. longis, venis haud occultis; frondibus fertilibus 10-12 cm. longis et 12—15 mm. latis, basi attenuatis; soris super- ficialibus, e costa ad eg a protensis. British New Guinea: Fly River, 528-mile Camp, alt. m., Brass 6836 (TYPE, in Gray Herb.), “creeping epiphyte, common on branches of eh canopy trees; fronds very stiff.” Most like S. feezoides Copel., of Fiji, Samoa, and Tahiti, but smaller, with smaller, darker and narrower paleae. 1943 ] COPELAND, FERNS OF NEW GUINEA 443 a ane dispar ee in Nova Guinea 8: 155. 1909; v. A. v. R. in Bull. Jard. t. Buitenz. II. 1: 4. pl. 2, f. 2, 3.1911 H NEw Ee Palmer River, alt. 100 m., Brass 6872, ey (2935; 7361; epiphy tie, ee on mossy branches of canopy trees; very unifor The fronds are short-stipitate rather than subsessile, es the conformity with Christ’s description is reasonably close. I find nothing like the lid over the soral cavity, nor the great tufts of hairs described and figured by van Alderwerelt. The indument of the nether surface of the sterile frond is persistent. The sori are in an irregular row, or in two or three hardly dis- tinguishable rows. On fully fruiting fronds, the sori come into contact as they expand. UNIVERSITY OF CALIFORNIA, BERKELEY, CALIFORNIA. 444 JOURNAL OF THE ARNOLD ARBORETUM [VOL. XXIV NOTES ON THE FLORA OF KWANGSI PROVINCE, CHINA Hut-Lin Li Kwancsi Province, in southern China, bordering on Kwangtung to the east, Yunnan to the west, and Tonkin to the south, received comparatively little attention from botanical collectors in the early years of the botanical exploration of China. In recent years, however, extensive and important collections have been assembled from Kwangsi, particularly through the initiative and interest of Prof. W. Y. Chun, Director of the Botanical Institute, Sun Yatsen University, Canton, Dr. F. P. Metcalf of Lingnan University, Canton, and Dr. A. N. Steward of the University of Nanking, Nanking, China. Various expeditions organized by these men, and supported, in part, by grants made from the Arnold Arboretum of Harvard University, have operated in most parts of Kwangsi. Yet it is clear that the area has not been thoroughly covered from a botanical standpoint, and the desirability of additional future explorations is indicated. The material assembled at the Arnold Arboretum, on which this study is based, represents that institution’s share of the collections made under codperative arrangements with the several Chinese institutions. This study is based on representatives of a few selected families of plants and clearly indicates what may be expected in the form of additions to our knowledge of the flora of China as the work of identification progresses. Twenty-six new species and two new varieties are described, nine of the species having been so designated by Dr. E. D. Merrill in his preliminary work on the collections. This study was made possible by a grant from the Milton Fund of Harvard University to Dr. Merrill, to assist him in preparing data for publication on the very extensive collections of Chinese botanical material assembled at the Arnold Arboretum in recent years. PROTEACEAE Helicia Loureiro Helicia vestita W. W. Smith var. mixta var, nov. A typo differt foliis brevioribus latioribus integris vel sursum irregulariter pauce dentatis. ‘AN: Man-ning, S. K. Lau 28252, Nov. 26, 1936, a tree 10 m. high, in forest, fruit green. Kwanctunc: Shih Wan Tai Shan, H. Y. Liang 69841, July 23, 1937, a tree 12 m. high, in mixed forests. Kwanost: Shang-sze District, Shih Wan Tai Shan, near Iu Shan Village, W. 7. Tsang 22430, June 2-7, 1933, a tree 22 ft. high, fairly common in thickets, flowers yellow; Tseung-yuen, Liow Shiang, C. Wang 39624 (TYPE), June 30, 1936, a tree 20 m. high, in thin woods, flowers white. These specimens closely resemble each other and represent a form differ- ing from the Yunnan type in that the leaves are shorter and relatively broader (about 10-16 cm. long and 5.5—6 cm. broad), entire or with only a few shallow distant teeth near the apex. 1943 ] LI, NOTES ON THE FLORA OF KWANGSI 445 ANNONACEAE Orophea Blume aii anceps Pierre, Fl. For. Sapeet 1: t. 46. 1881; Finet & Gagnep. in mte, Fl. Gén. Indo-Chine 1: 117. ANGSI: Pin-lam, S. P. Ko 55657, ne . 1935, a shrub on forested slopes, fruits d. Although three species of Orophea are known from Hainan, this is the first record of the genus in continental China. Indo-China. HAMAMELIDACEAE Corylopsis Siebold & Zuccarini Corylopsis cordata Merrill in herb. sp. nov. Frutex 2-3 m. altus, ramulis glabris rubro-brunneis parce lenticellatis; foliis subchartaceis petiolatis glabris utrinque subconcoloribus oblongo- acute acuminatis, basi distincte cordatis, margine sinuato-dentatis, dentibus longe mucronulatis, nervis lateralibus utrinsecus 7—9 laxis, inferioribus parce ramosis, cum costa supra leviter impressis, subtus elevatis perspicuis, venulis dense reticulatis tenuibus, supra leviter elevatis, subtus perspicuis; petiolis 2—2.5 cm. longis glabris: floribus ignotis; infructescentiis sub- spicatis vel racemosis, 3—3.5 cm. longis, ee: circa 1 cm. ane pubescentibus vel glabrescentibus: capsulis 1 cm. longis, 8 mm. crassis, glabris, brunneis subsessilibus vel breviter crasseque pedicellatis: pee ra nigris, 8 mm. longis, laevibus, nitidis. Kwancsi: Shang-sze ene Shih Wan Tai Shan, near Iu Shan Village, W. 7. Tsang 22261 (TYPE), May 1 » 1933, a fairly common shrub 2 m. high in thickets; Shih high, fairly common in thickets; Shih Wan Tai Shan, Nam She Village, W. 7. Tsang 24747, Nov. 26, 1934, like the preceding number A species close to Corylopsis Wind Hemsley, differing in the broader leaves, which are glabrous on both surfaces and more strongly toothed, the shorter infructescences, and the smaller fruits. Eustigma Gardner & Champion Eustigma jogger! Oliv. in se ie Pl. 20: ¢. 1954, 1891; Guillaum. in Lecomte, Fl. . Indo-Chine 2: 710 ee Lin Yuin District, a ive N. Steward & H.C. Cheo 696, June 14; 1933, a shrub 6 m. high, in valley, alt. 1000 m., fruits (immature) green. This species was originally described from Tonkin, in Indo-China. New to China. SIMARUBACEAE Brucea J. F. Miller Brucea acuminata sp. nov. Frutex, ramis rubro-brunneis subdense albo- ae aide foliis 40-45 cm. longis, thachibus teretibus puberulis, petiolis 7—8 ‘lon ngis, teretibus puberulis; foliolis circa 15, oppositis, breviter paicliiaes chartaceis, oblongo-lanceolatis, 5-8 cm. longis, 1.5-2.5 cm. latis, longe graciliter acuminatis, basi obtusis vel late acutis, aequalibus vel subobliquis, margine 446 JOURNAL OF THE ARNOLD ARBORETUM [VOL. XXIV integris, supra atro-viridibus, subtus viridibus, utrinque minute consperse pubescentibus, nervis lateralibus utrinsecu s 8-10, supra subconspicuis, subtus elevatis distinctis, venis tertiariis ea inconspicuis, subtus con- spicuis vel obscuris, petiolulis ad 3 mm. longis; floribus ignotis; infruc- tescentiis axillaribus (ut videtur, plerumque in axillis defoliatis) andes elongatis, ad 15 cm. longis, rhachibus parce puberulis vel glabratis, pedicellis 4-5 mm. longis, puberulis, calyce persistente minuto 4-partito, fructibus ovoideis, 8-9 mm. lon gis, 6-7 mm. crassis, in sicco brunneis (ex collectore rubris), extus glabris in sicco subreticulatis. Kwancsr: Ching Hsi District, S. i _ 56114 (Type), Dec. 10, 1935, a shrub along roads in the margins of thickets or fore This species is apparently pr to Brucea mollis Wall., originally de- scribed from India, its variety tonkinensis Lecomte being “recorded from Indo-China and from southern China. The new species is distinguished by its much smaller, narrower, longer acuminate, and shorter petiolulate leatlets and its slender infructescences. STERCULIACEAE Reevesia Lindley Reevesia tomentosa sp. nov. Arbor circa 12 m. alta, ramis teretibus stellato-tomentosis, ramulis dense stellato-tomentosis, indumento ferrugineo; foliis subcoriaceis oblongo- ovatis, 8-14 cm. longis, 3-6 cm. latis, acutis vel obtusis, basi rotundatis vel obscure subcordatis, supra olivaceis, disperse stellato-tomentosis, sub- tus pallidioribus dense brunneo- tomentosis, nervis lateralibus utrinsecus basi acutis, extus dense stellato-tomentosis, indumento ferrugineo; pedi- cellis 2.5-3 cm. longis; seminibus circa 2.6 cm. longis, alis brunneis circa 2.2 cm. longis, basim versus 0.8 cm. latis, oblongis, apice oblique rotundatis. Kwanocsi: Yung District, Ta Tseh Tsuen, A. N. Steward & H.C. Cheo 922 (TYPE), Sept. 3, 1933, a tree 12 m. high, valley roadside, alt. 350 m. A species allied to Reevesia pubescens Mast., but the leaves are more densely tomentose beneath and also scattered stellate-tomentose above, and the mature fruits are densely covered by brownish stellate hairs. FLACOURTIACEAE Hydnocarpus Gaertner Hydnocarpus Merrillianus sp. nov. Arbor, ramulis teretibus dense fulvo- Selgaeieigate foliis chartaceis oblongo- -ilipticis, 18-25 cm. longis, 6.5—11.5 latis, abrupte acutis, basi late acutis, margine integris leviter ee wi supra atro- viridibus glabris, subtus viridibus parce pubescentibus, venis lateralibus utrinsecus 7 vel 8, supra conspicuis, subtus elevatis distinctis, valde arcuatim adscen- dentibus, venulis reticulatis, utrinque perspicuis; petiolis 1.5-3.5 ¢ longis, dense fulvo- pubescentibus: floribus ignotis; fructibus magnis axil- laribus solitariis globosis, junioribus dense fulvo-pubescentibus, maturis 1943 ] LI, NOTES ON THE FLORA OF KWANGSI 447 castaneo-velutinis, 8 cm. diametro, pericarpio 5 mm. crasso; seminibus numerosis compresso-ovoideis, 2.5 cm. longis, 1.7 cm. latis; pedicellis 1 cm. longis. WANGcsI: Tai Chin Shan, S. P. Ko 55311 (Tyree), June 14, 1935, 55421, July 4, 1935, a tree, in woods or borders of woods on slopes. This is the second species of the genus known from China and the first one from continental China, ce aes H ydnocar pus hainanensis (Merr.) Sleumer, being known from Hainan. Thi is new species is characterized by the large, entire leaves with ieee ne eee petioles, and the large globose fruits. PASSIFLORACEAE Passiflora Linnaeus Passiflora Papilio sp. nov. Suffruticosa scandens glabra, ramis subligneis gracilibus 2.5 mm. dia- metro, ramulis ultimis 1 mm. diametro; foliis subchartaceis, petiolatis, supra in sicco olivaceis, subtus pallide glaucescentibus minute consperse puberulis, 3-5 cm. longis, 9.5-12 cm. atis, basi rotundato-truncatis, apice ee retusis in lobos 2 ovatos magnos divergentes rotundato-acuminatos abeunti- bus, quove 5—7 cm. longo, 2.5—4 cm. lato, margine integris, costa ae in mucronulum brevissimum abeunte, nervis lateralibus circa 3, jugo maximo bus glandulas binas ferentibus; cirrhis gracilibus glabris ad 6 cm. longis; floribus ignotis; fructibus globos sis, 1-1.2 cm. diametro, pedicellis gracilibus, 1 cm. longis, medium versus articulatis: aa a 5 mm. longis, cinereo- nigris foveolatis. Kwancsi: Tai Chin Shan, S. P. Ko 55426 (type), July 7, 1935, scandent on trees on slopes. A very distinct species, characterized by the broad, divergently 2-lobed leaves, which suggest a butterfly in shape, and the small fruits. The field label has notes on the flowers, but the specimen studied has only detached fruits, some of them with remnants of the calyx. The available flowering parts are too fragmentary for description, although, judging from the unique shape of the leaves as compared with other Chinese species, the flower is apt to be of interesting structure. Passiflora kwangsiensis sp. Passiflora cupiformis sensu Chun, Sunyatsenia 4: 184. 1940, pro parte; non Masters. Suffruticosa scandens glabra, ramis subligneis. 3 mm. diametro; foliis chartaceis glabris late ellipticis vel leviter obovato-ellipticis, 8-11 cm. longis, 7-9.5 cm. latis, latissime rotundatis vel truncato-rotundatis, obscure undulatis, basi rotundatis ad modum angustissime peltatis, 3— 5-nerviis, integris, supra in sicco olivaceis, subtus pallidis, costa nervisque utrinque elevatis distinctis, nervis inferioribus ramosis, venulis dense reticulatis, utrinque elevatis conspicuis; petiolis 4-5 cm longis, in partibus inferiori- bus glandulas binas ferentibus; cirrhis gracilibus glabris usque ad 7 cm. S ad ca . diametro, glabris; pedicellis 1.5 cm. longis, medium versus articulatis: seminibus 3.5 mm. longis, pallidis, foveolatis. 448 JOURNAL OF THE ARNOLD ARBORETUM [VOL. XXIV Kwan Ling Yuin District, S. K. Lau 28577 (type), July 10, 1937, scandent in light woods, traits green A species apparently close to Passiflora cupiformis Mast., but differing in the vegetative details, the leaves being broadly elliptic to obovate-elliptic, broadly rounded or truncate-rounded at their apices and sometimes even undulate, their bases being broadly rounded and sometimes very narrowly peltate. THY MELAEACEAE Wikstroemia Endlicher Wikstroemia paniculata sp. nov. _Frutex, ramis ramulisque teretibus glabris gracilibus, ramulis ultimis metro; foliis oppositis chartaceis breviter petiolatis oblongo- ellipticis vel eset AE ad 5.5 cm. longis et 1.6 cm. latis, plerumque acutis, basi acutis vel rotundatis, margine leviter revolutis, utrinque glabris, supra viridibus, subtus paullo pallidioribus, nervis lateralibus circa 20 utrinque subconspicuis in venam a margine ipso circa 1 mm. remotam cum margine parallelam anastomosantibus, venulis obscuris; petiolis ad 3 mm. longis; inflorescentiis terminalibus vel lateralibus paniculatis valde ramosis, ad persistentibus ; floribus luteis parvis, ad 4 mm. longis, 4-meris, perianthii tubo circa 4 mm. longo et 1.5 mm. crasso, ae ‘pubescente, lobis 4 minutis 0.5 mm. longis; antheris 8, 2-seriatis, linearibus, 0.5 mm. longis; ovario glabro; fructu immaturo ovoideo, 6 mm. ongo. K WANG Ching Sai Village, S. P. Ko 55710 (type), Sept. 7, 1935, a shrub in open places near slopes, flowers yellow A distinct species, strongly characterized by its leaves with lateral veins united into a single vein parallel with and close to the leaf-margins, and by the much-branched panicles bearing rather small flowers. ALANGIACEAE Alangium Lamarck Alangium Chungii sp. nov. Frutex vel arbor parva, ramulis ultimis atro-brunneis gracilibus teretibus leviter adpresse tomentosis vel glabrescentibus; foliis chartaceis longe valde inaequilateralibus, 3—6-nerviis, margine integris, supra glabris costa nervisque interdum parce tomentosis exceptis, nervis lateralibus utrinque 4—6 prope marginem anastomosantibus, utrinsecus conspicuis, venulis dense reticulatis, utrinsecus perspicuis; petiolis 5-10 cm. longis, teretibus minute adpresse tome ntosis; inflorescentiis axillaribus adpresse tomentosis vel subtomentosis, ad 8 cm. longis, 1- vel 2-ramosis, 4—7-floris, pedunculis 2-3.5 cm. longis, pedicellis 1—2 cm. longis; floribus 2—2.5 cm. longis; calycis tubo infundibuliformi, 2 mm. longo, leviter tomentoso, margine minute 5—7-lobato; petalis 6 vel 7 basi leviter cohaerentibus, lanceolatis, 2—2.5 cm longis, 1.5 mm . latis, extus tomentosis, intus glabris; staminibus 6 vel 7, circa 1.8 cm. longis, filamentis 6 mm. longis, dilatatis dense villosis, antheris linearibus, 1.2 cm. longis, connectivo villoso; disco su bgloboso: ovario 1-loculari, stigmate capitato 4-partito; fructu ignoto KwancsI: no data, Z. S. Chung 82038 (TYPE). 1943] LI, NOTES ON THE FLORA OF KWANGSI 449 A species related to Alangium platanifolium (Sieb. & Zucc.) Hance and A. barbatum (C. B. Clarke) Harms, differing from the former in the strictly entire leaves and the smaller Beer and from the latter in the longer petiolate leaves, larger flowers, and the densely villose filaments. CLETHRACEAE Clethra Linnaeus Clethra Liangii sp. nov. Frutex 2—2.5 m. altus, ramis brunneis, ramulis glabris vel novellis plus minusve tomentosis; foliis chartaceis oblongis vel late oblongo-lanceolatis, 6-12 cm. longis, 1.8- 3.5 cm. latis, acuminatis, deorsum plus minusve angustatis, basi acutis, distanter serrulatis, deorsum integris, supra atro- viridibus primo minute stellatis, subtus pallide viridibus primo tomentosis, utrinque mox glabris, costa supra impressa, subtus valde elevata, nervis lateralibus utrinsecus 8-12, supra leviter impressis, subtus perspicuis, rare anastomosantibus, venulis subconspicuis vel obscuris; petiolis 6-10 mm. longis; inflorescentiis 1—7 terminalibus racemosis, a cm. lineari-obovatis, 5 mm. longis, glabris; filamentis 3.5 mm. longis, inferne dilatatis, antheris 1.5 mm. longis; ovario dense pubescente; stylis ad 6 mm. longis, glabris, stigmate minute 3-lobato; fructu immaturo 3 mm. diametro, pubescente, stylo persistente, 5 mm. lon ngo. Kwanctunc: Ta Mien Shan, Shih Wan Tai Shan, H. Y. por. 69645 (TYPE), July 14, 1937, a shrub 2 m. high, in dense forest, flowers white. Kwancsr: Pin- lam, Ching Sai, S. P. Ko 55527, Aug. 22, 1935, a shrub 2.5 m. high, on forested slopes, alt. 900 m., flowers white. A species possibly most closely allied to Clethra Bodinieri H. Lév., differ- ing, among other characters, in the numerous racemes with dense brown non-appressed indumentum and stouter pedicels. Clethra Ea sp. nov. Frutex, ramis robustis brunneis junioribus dense breviter substellatim fulvo- pipe taba foliis subchartaceis lanceolatis, circa 15 cm. longis et 4 cm. latis, longe acuminatis, basi subrotundatis vel late acutis, margine mosantibus, supra eabennepue: subtus perspicuis, venulis sab conepicnis petiolis i 2 cm. longis, pubescentibus; racemis circa 7, subfasciculatis, calyce 2.5 mm. longo, 5-dentato toto subalbido-pubescente; petalis 5 obovatis, 5 mm. longis, apice valde truncatis; filamentis gracilibus 4-5 mm. longis, antheris 1 mm. longis; ovario pubescente: stylis 3 mm. longis, glabris, stigmate integro. 450 JOURNAL OF THE ARNOLD ARBORETUM [VOL. XXIV Kwancst: Ling Wan District, S. K. Lau 28767 (Type), in 1937, no field notes available. This species is very close to Clethra kaipoensis H. Lev. , differing chiefly in the more narrowly lanceolate leaves, with more eins lateral veins and closer denticulations, and the elongated lanceolate bracteoles. COMBRETACEAE Combretum Linnaeus Combretum kwangsiense sp. nov. _ Frutex scandens, ramis cinereo-albidis, glabris, cortice longitudinaliter moso, ramulis dense lepidotis, lepidibus minutis: foliis chartaceis — antes ellipticis vel late oblongo- ellipticis, 14-17 cm. longis, 7-10 c latis, rotundatis, basi late acutis, margine leviter revolutis, supra olvaceo- floribus ignotis; sued anaes racemosis simplicibus axillaribus, 6-8 cm longis, polycarpicis, pedunculis 1.5—2 cm. longis, minute lepidotis, fructibus in stipitibus circa 1 mm. longis, luteo-brunneis, e collectore luteis, sparse minute glandulosis (glandulis flavidis), nitidis, in ambitu ellipticis vel elliptico-ovoideis, ad 15-18 mm. longis et latis, 4- alatis, utrinque rotundatis. Kwancsr: Yang District, Ch’ang ne. oo & Cheo 1194 (type), Oct. 23, 1933, vine, on rocks in forest, alt. 200 m., fruit y A species allied to Combretum Aljredit Hance, but distinguished by the larger, broader leaves, smaller infructescences, and much smaller fruits. EBENACEAE Diospyros Linnaeus Diospyros siderophyllus sp. nov. Arbor parva 5 m. alta, partibus junioribus fructibusque exceptis glabris nica ee ramis ‘teretibus nigris glabris, ramulis ultimis circa 1.5 brunneis glabris vel breviter uae hirsutis; foliis sub- coriaceis, See 8-14 cm. longis, 2-4 cm. latis, breviter obtuse acumi- natis, basi acutis, supra in sicco atro-olivaceis, glabris, subtus paullo pallidioribus glabris vel consperse breviter adpresse hirsutis, costa supra impressa, subtus valde elevata, nervis lateralibus utrinsecus 10-12, gracili- bus curvato-adscendentibus anastomosantibus, supra subconspicuis vel in- sutis; fructibus axillaribus vel in axillis defoliatis solitariis sessilibus glo- bosis, circa 2 cm. diametro, dense breviter adpresse brunneo-hirsu - 5- vel 6-locellatis; seminibus circa 8 mm. longis et 5 mm. latis, compressis, albumine aequabili; sepalis 4 sub fructu patulis valde coriaceis tee tri- angularibus, circa 8 mm. longis et 6 mm. latis, acutis hir Kwancsi: Pin-lam, S. P. Ko 55679 (type), Sept. 1, 1935, a oats tree 5 m. high, in forests on or near slopes; On Tak, S. P. Ko 55773, Sept. 19, 1935, a small tree 5 m. high, in similar habitats. In the vegetative characters, this species resembles Diospyros Roi H. 1943 ] LI, NOTES ON THE FLORA OF KWANGSI 451 Lecomte, differing in the leaves being generally narrower, olivaceous when dry, and with more numerous lateral veins. It differs further in the fruit, with its persistent calyx, which is densely brownish-appressed-hirsute, while the seeds are fewer in number. STYRACACEAE Styrax Linnaeus Styrax oligophlebius Merrill in herb. sp. nov. Frutex 2.5 m. altus, ramulis novellis dense breviter stellatim brunneo- tomentosis; foliis chartaceis vel subcoriaceis, supra glabris viridibus niti- dis, subtus dense stellatim subfulvo- tomentosis oblongis, 4-6 cm. longis, 1.5—2.5 cm. latis, breviter acuminatis, basi acutis, integris, nervis laterali- bus utrinsecus 5 vel 6, cum costa supra subconspicuis leviter impressis, subtus elevatis prominulis, venis tertiariis utrinque obscuris; petiolis 0.8— 1.3 cm. longis, dense breviter stellatim tomentosis; inflorescentiis infructe- scentiisque ignotis; fructibus globosis, circa 1.2 cm metro, globosis vel subovoideis, rotundatis, extus dense cinereo-tom ie eens persistente cupulato, 6 mm. alto, cinereo-tomentello leviter Gene lobato; pedi- cello circa 3 mm. longo. Shang-sze District, Shih Wan Tai Shan, Tang Lung Village, W. T. Tsang 24489 (TYPE), Oct. 1-16, 1934, scattered shrubs, about 2 m. high, fairly common. A distinct species, strongly characterized by its rather small, coriaceous, few-nerved leaves, which are green, glabrous, and glossy above and densely and brightly brownish-tomentose beneath, with short crowded stellate hairs. SYMPLOCACEAE Symplocos Jacquin Symplocos kwangsiensis Merrill in herb. sp. nov. Subgen. Hopea, § Bobua, Lodhra. Frutex circiter 2 m. altus, ramis nigris, primo plus minusve pubescentibus, vetustioribus glabris, ramulis nove is dense brunneo-pilosis atque ciliatis; foliis chartaceis utrinque subconcoloribus, supra nitidis, subtus longe ciliatis, oblongo-ovatis vel late ovato- lanceolatis, 2.5-4 cm. longis, 1-1.5 cm. latis, longe acute acuminatis, basi late acutis vel rotundatis, mar- gine glanduloso-serrulatis, costa supra leviter impressa pilosa vel glabrata, nervis lateralibus utrinsecus 3 vel 4 utrinque subconspicuis arcuato-anasto- mosant scentiis axillaribus in ramulis hornotinis fasciculatis subsessilibus pauci- floris; floribus sessilibus, bracteis late ovatis, dense pubescentibus, 1 mm. longis: calycis tubo crasso, circa 1 mm. longo, lobis 5 late ovatis pubescenti- bus, 1 mm. longis; petalis 5 albis oblongis, 3.5 mm. longis, utrinque glabris; ei circa 20-25, filamentis liberis, glabris, circa 4 mm. longis; disco annulari cinereo- pubescente; ovario 3- loculari, a 5 mm. longo; fructibus ovoideis, 6 mm. longis, 4.5 mm. crassis, viridibu Shang-sze District, Shih Wan Tai ae Tang Lung Village, W. T. H.Y. Liang 70044, Aug. 7, 1937, shrub, 2 m. high, in dense woods, fruits green to black. A distinct species, apparently allied to Symplocos glandulifera Brand and S. yunnanensis Brand, both of Yunnan, the latter extending also to 452 JOURNAL OF THE ARNOLD ARBORETUM [VOL. XXIV Kwangsi and Indo-China. It may be readily distinguished from both of these, among other characters, by its unusually small leaves. Symplocos mollipila sp. nov. Subgen. Hopea, § Bobua, Lodhra. Frutex vel arbor parva, ramulis novellis teretibus gracilibus dense fulvo- villosis; ramis vetustioribus plus minusve pubescentibus, ata ia pa molliter pilosis, costa supra leviter impressa dense pubescente, subtus elevata, nervis lateralibus utrinsecus circa 10, utrinque subconspicuis, prope marginem anastomosantibus; petiolis 2-3:mm. longis, dense villosis; flori- bus ignotis; infructescentiis axillaribus fasciculatis subsessilibus 1—4-fruc- tigeris, bracteis minutis, late ovatis, 1.5 mm . longis, pubescentibus, fructi- bus ellipsoideis, 1 cm. longis, 7.5 mm. crassis, parce pubescentibus vel glabrescentibus, leviter longitudinaliter sulcatis, 3-locularibus, lobis calyci- nis persistentibus rotundatis, 1.5 mm. longis, pubescentibus. wancsi: Ling Wan District, S. K. Lau 28722, 28725 (TYPE), 1937, no field notes available. A species apparently close to Symplocos glandulifera Brand, differing in the shorter leaves, which are not glandular on the margins and which have broader, sometimes rounded bases, as well as in the shorter fruits. Symplocos punctato-marginata A. Chev. ex Guillaum. Bull. Soc. Bot. France 79: 932; Lecomte, Fl. Gén. Indo-Chine 3: 1004. 1933; Merr. Lingnan Sci. Jour. 15: 424. 1936. Symplocos Stewardii Sleumer, Repert. Sp. Nov. 42: 266. 1937, syn. nov. Kwancsi: Yung District, Ta Tseh Tseun, A. N. Steward & H.C. Cheo 771 (iso- syntype of S. Stewardit Sleumer), Aug. 8, 1933, a shrub 5 m hia te valley forests, alt. 540 m., flowers white, fragrant, 865 (isosynty pe of S. Steward Sleumer), ion 1933, a tree 12 m. high, in forests, alt. 540 m., flowers white, fragrant; Shang District, Shih Wan Tai Shan, near Hoh Lung Village: W. T. Tsang 22569 gece of S. Stewardii Sleumer), June 26, 1933, a shrub 10 ft. high, fairly common, in thickets, flowers white; Shih Wan Tai Shan, Tang Lung Village, W. T. Tsang 24189, Sept. 4, 1934, a shrub 15 ft. high, fairly common in thickets, flowers white, fragrant, fruits black. Originally described from Indo-China. In recording the species from Kwangtung, Merrill has also noted the occurrence of Chevalier’s species in Kwangsi, mentioning Steward & Cheo 771 and 865. This was apparently overlooked by Sleumer. An additional specimen, besides those noted by Merrill and by Sleumer, Tsang 24189, shows that, together with the other specimens, the Kwangsi plant is virtually the same as the Indo-Chinese species. Symplocos myriadenia Merr. Univ. Calif. Publ. Bot. 10: 428. 1924. Shang-sze District, Shih Wan Tai Shan, near Hoh Lung Village, W. T. Tsang 2 22568, June 26, 1933, 22648, July 6, 1933, a small tree 9-15 ft. high, fairly com- mon in thickets; Ling Wan District, S. K. Lau 28627, 1937. Indo-China. New to gsi. crn anomala Brand, var. nitida var. nov. o differt foliis 8-12 cm. longis, 3-5 cm. latis, supra valde nitidis, ace calycibusque glabris. 1943 | LI, NOTES ON THE FLORA OF KWANGSI 453 Kwancsi: Waitsap District, Tong Shan, near Sap-luk Po Village, W. T. Tsang 22738, Sept. 8, 1933, 22752, Sept. 10, 1933, a shrub 5-9 ft. high, in thickets, flowers white, ee tru black; Shang-sze District, Shih Wan Tai Shan, Tang Lung Village, W. ang 24389, Sept. 30, 1934, 24423 (type), Oct. 1-16, 1934, a shrub 9-15 ft. Meee ah common in thickets, flowers white, fragrant. This differs from the typical form of the species, which occurs in Szechuan, Kweichow, Hupeh, Hunan, Kiangsu, Anhwei, Chekiang, Fukien, Kwangsi, and Hainan, in the larger strongly shining leaves and the glabrous inflorescences and calyces. RUBIACEAE Xanthophytopsis Pitard Xanthophytopsis kwangtungensis Chun & How, Sunyatsenia 4: 14. pl. 5. 1939. Kwancsi: Shang-sze District, Shih Wan Tai Shan, W. T. Tsang 22306, May 16, 1933, 22485, June 17, 1933, 23966, July 11-30, 1934, 23975, Aug. 8, — 24532, Oct. 22-31, 1934. A woody plant 1-1/% ft. high, fairly common in thicket This species, originally described from Kwangtung, is the ae species of the genus, which was originally described from Indo-China material. New to Kwangsi. The specimens above cited are all from various localities in the Shang-sze District, close to the Kwangtung border. Ophiorrhiza Linnaeus Ophiorrhiza succirubra King ex Hook. f. Fl. Brit. Ind. 3: 82. 1880. Kwancsi: Waitsap District, Sze Tze Shan, near Tung Chung Village, W. T. Tsang ce oa fed, fractant’ Yao Shan, C. Wane 40467, Dec. 14, 1936, near streams, flowers shit These specimens seem to represent the same entity as Henry 11345 from Yunnan, which Dunn, Jour. Linn. Soc. Bot. 39: 471. 1911, has identified as representing King’s species. Himalayan region to Yunnan, and, if our identification is correct, also in Kwangsi. Ophiorrhiza kwangsiensis Merrill in herb. sp. nov. Herba prostrata crepe 15-18 cm. alta ramosa, caulibus circiter 1 mm. diametro teretibus glabris, ramulis ultimis circa 0.5 mm. diametro plus minusve em curvato-hirsutis; foliis in oe subaequalibus chartaceis vel submembranaceis cordato- ovatis, 1.5-1.75 cm. longis, 1—1.5 cm. latis, acutis, basi cordatis, utrinque glabris, in sicco supra subolivaceis, inconspicuis; petiolis 0.5—1.5 cm. longis, glabris gracilibus; stipulis caducis; inflorescentiis terminalibus breviter pedunculatis (pedunculo sub fructu ad 12 mm. longo) cymosis paucifloris breviter pubescentibus, floribus imma- turis circiter 2.5 mm. longis, pedicellis puberulis ad 1 mm. longis; bracteis bracteolisque linearibus vel lineari-lanceolatis acuminatis circiter 5 mm yes obscure consperse pubescentibus; sepalis 5 oblongo-lanceolatis acutis ongis; corolla immatura 3 mm. longa; capsula pedic ellata, circa 6 mm. lata et 2 mm. alta, breviter puberula, pedicellis ad 5 mm. Kwancsi: Shang-sze District, Shih Wan Tai Shan, Hoh Lung Village, W. T. Tsang 454 JOURNAL OF THE ARNOLD ARBORETUM [ VOL. XXIV 22425 (typPE), June 4, 1933, 5 in. high, fairly common in thickets on steep slopes ; Shih Wan Tai Shan, Tang Lung Village, W. T. Tsang 24388, Sept. 30, 1934, fairly common on steep slopes, flowers pale yellow. A species characterized by its habit and by its small leaves and flowers. Luculia Sweet Luculia intermedia Hutchinson in Sargent, Pl. Wils. 3: 408. 1916. cst: Pin-lam, S. P. Ko 55584, Aug. 23, 1935, a shrub 1 m. high, in woods on slopes; Ching Sai Village, S. P. Ko 55718, Sept. 7, 1935, a shrub on slopes, flowers white. Burma and Yunnan. Adina Salisbury Adina Metcalfii Merrill in herb. sp. nov. Frutex circa 2 m. altus, ramulis novellis castaneis, obscure tetragonis, glabris vel subglabris; foliis chartaceis petiolatis utrinque glabris, oblongis costa supra leviter impressa, subtus elevata, nervis lateralibus utrinsecus 8-10, adscendentibus prope marginem anastomosantibus, supra subcon- spicuis, subtus elevatis, venis tertiariis utrinque subconspicuis; petiolis 1.5-2.5 cm. longis, tenuibus; inflorescentiis terminalibus, ad 8 cm. ongis, glabris, capitulis circa 1.5 cm. diametro, 5—7-racemosim dispositis, interdum foliis reductis subtentis, pedunculis gracilibus, 2.5-5.5 cm. longis; calyce hirsuto, lobis oblongis, circa 1 mm. longis, obtusis; corollae tubo circa 4mm. longo, glabro, lobis 5 ovatis glabris, circa 1 mm. longis; staminibus fauce corollae insertis, antheris apiculatis inclusis; stylis exsertis, circa 8 mm. longis, stigmate subgloboso. K "e Ch’uan District, Pai-yun-an and vicinity, W. T. Tsang 27683 (TYPE), June 18, 1937, a shrub about 2 m. high, fairly common in thickets, flowers yellow, fragrant. In the racemosely arranged heads, this new species is allied to Adina racemosa Miq., differing, however, in the much narrower, long attenuate leaves and the glabrous corollas. Mussaenda Linnaeus Mussaenda anomala sp. nov. pallidioribus, nervis lateralibus utrinsecus 8-10, supra conspicuis, subtus elevatis curvato-subadscendentibus, venulis reticulatis, supra subconspicuis, bracteis caducis, bracteolis acuminatis, lanceolatis pubescentibus ad | cm. longis, deciduis; pedicellis 2-3 mm. longis; calycis tubo oblongo, circa 5 m. longo, adpresse subhirsuto, lobis plerumque 5, omnibus petaloideis, in lamina ampla petiolatis productis albis ovato-ellipticis, 2-4 cm. longis, 1.5—2.5 cm. latis, acutis, basi acutis vel cuneatis 5-nerviis, margine ner- visque plus minusve pubescentibus, stipite 1.5—2.5 cm. longo; corollae tubo 1943 | LI, NOTES ON THE FLORA OF KWANGSI 455 (alabastro) circa 1.2 cm. longo et 4 mm. crasso, superne ampliato, extus dense adpresse pubescente, intus superne dense ‘sulphureo- -piloso, inferne glabro, lobis plerumque 5, ovatis, breviter acuminatis, circa 3 mm. longis (immaturis), extus pubescentibus: staminibus 4 vel 5, in tubo insertis, antheris elongatis, 3 mm. longis, inclusis, subsessilibus; ovario 2-loculari, disco annulari, stylis circa 6 mm. longis, ‘inclusis, stigmatibus 2 linearibus compressis, 4 mm. longis; fructu immaturo 6 mm. longo, 4 mm. crasso, seminibus ignoti KWANGSI: Thy: -yuen, Yao Shan, C. Wang 39567 (TYPE), June 27, 1936, climbing on trees. In the large, broad, thin leaves, this species superficially resembles Mussaenda Esquiroli H. Lév. (M. Wilsonii Hutchinson). Its one out- standing character, in which it differs from all other known representatives of the genus from China and Indo-China, and for that matter from most previously known representatives of the genus, is that not one but all of the calyx-lobes are accrescent and petaloid. This character has been noted in the Philippine Mussaenda philippica Rich. var. aurorae Sulit, Philip. Jour. Forestry 2: 39. ¢. 3. f. 1. 1939 Mussaenda kwangsiensis sp. nov. Frutex scandens, ramulis teretibus dense adpresse pubescentibus; foliis tenuitet chartaceis in paribus aequalibus oblongo-lanceolatis vel lanceolatis, 8-11 cm. longis, 2.5—4 cm. latis, longe acute acuminatis, basi attenuatis vel cuneatis, supra sparse adpresse pubescentibus, subtus consperse molliter pubescentibus, nervis lateralibus utrinsecus 6-8 curvato-adscendentibus, utrinque conspicuis, venis tertiariis a petiolis 5-8 mm. longis, adpresse pubescen Lone, axillis plerumque folia 2—4 valde reducta gerenti- bus; stipulis linearibus, 6 mm. longis, ‘Gee inflorescentiis terminalibus cymosis compactis, circa 4 cm. longis, vix ramosis, perspicue adpresse pube- scentibus, bracteis bracteolisque linearibus, 0.5-1.5 cm. ongis; floribu sessilibus confertis; calycis tubo oblongo, circa 5 mm. longo, dense pube- scente, 5-lobato, lobis normalibus linearibus, 2.5—3 cm. longis, 1-2 mm. latis, see ee longe acuminatis, lobis petaloideis paucis ovatis, saltem ngis, 5—7-nerviis, acuminatis, utrinque consperse pubescentibus, stipitatis: corollae tubo 2—2.5 cm. longo, 1.5 mm. lato, sursum breviter ampliato, extus perspicue cinereo-pubescente, intus superne villoso, lobis 5 ovatis, 3 mm. longis, 1.5 mm. latis, acuminatis vel mucronatis; staminibus inclusis, antheris 4-5 mm. longis, filamentis glabris; stylo brevi, 5 mm longo, gla ro. Kwancsi: Tseung- iim Yao Shan, C. Wang 40448 (TYPE), Nov. 9, 1936, scandent in thickets, flowers yello A species sie cciliys in the group with Mussaenda hirsutula Miq., differ- ing in the longer and narrower leaves and in the very slender, extremely long normal calyx-lobes, which mostly exceed the corollas in length. Mussaenda densiflora sp. nov. Frutex scandens saltem 2 m. altus, ramis teretibus perspicue villosis; foliis membranaceis vel tenuiter chartaceis in paribus aequalibus, late oblongo-lanceolatis vel anguste oblongo-ellipticis, 8-13 cm. longis, 3-5 cm. latis, longe acute acuminatis " basi acutis, plerumque late acutis, raro sub- rotundatis, supra conspersissime breviter ciliatis, subtus praesertim secus 456 JOURNAL OF THE ARNOLD ARBORETUM [VOL. XXIV costam nervosque molliter pubescentibus, nervis lateralibus utrinsecus 8-10, curvato-adscendentibus, utrinque conspicuis, venis tertiariis inconspicuis vel subconspicuis; petiolis 1-2 cm. longis, pubescentibus; stipulis linearibus, ongis, caducis; inflorescentiis terminalibus cymosis compactis, subcapitatis, circiter 6 cm. longis, breviter ramosis, perspicue molliter pube- scentibus, bracteis bracteolisque linearibus, 1-1.5 cm. longis; floribus Kwanost: Tai Ching Shan, S. P. Ko 55121 (type), May 25, 1935, a small scandent shrub, in woods, alt. 1250 ft., flowers yellow; Ching Sai Village, S. P. Ko 55711, a climber, fruit green. This species is allied to Mussaenda subsessilis Pierre of Indo-China, differing chiefly in the much smaller petaloid sepals and the much: longer and narrower corolla-lobes. A collection from Tonkin, Indo-China, W. T. Tsang 29049, is referable to this same species. The fruits have been de- scribed from S. P. Ko 55711, of which the leaf-bases are distinctly rounded rather than broadly acute. Randia Linnaeus Randia salicifolia sp. nov. Frutex erectus glaber, ramis ramulisque gracilibus teretibus, ramulis circa 1.5 mm. diametro; foliis chartaceis glabris breviter petiolatis lanceo- latis, 15-19 cm. longis, 1.5—3 cm. latis, sursum longe angustatis, apice acute acuminatis, basi acutis, supra atro-olivaceis, subtus pallidioribus, nervis lateralibus utrinsecus 9-12 gracilibus, utrinque subdistinctis, prope mar- ginem arcuato-adscendentibus, reticulis obsoletis; petiolo 5-8 mm. longo; stipulis triangularibus, longe acuminatis, circa 6 mm. longis; floribus igno- tis: infructescentiis oppositifoliis depauperato-cymosis, circa 1.5 cm. longis, fructibus junioribus globosis, circa 8 mm. diametro, in siccitate nigris, nitidis; pedicellis 4 mm. longis, bracteis minoribus oblongis circa 1 mm. longis. Kwanost: Ping-nan District, C. Wang 40398 (type), Nov. 2, 1936, a shrub, in dense forests, fruits green. This species is manifestly close to Randia Henryi Pritzel, differing par- ticularly in its elongated narrow leaves and reduced infructescences. Ixora Linnaeus Ixora Tsangii Merrill in herb. sp. nov. Frutex parvus 1 m. altus, inflorescentiis leviter pubescentibus exceptis glaber, ramis teretibus 3 mm. diametro, internodiis 2.5-3.5 cm. ongis; foliis chartaceis oblongo-lanceolatis, 13-20 cm. longis, 3-6 cm. latis, longe acumi- natis, basi late acutis, subolivaceis subopacis, nervis lateralibus utrinsecus 1943 | LI, NOTES ON THE FLORA OF KWANGSI 457 14-16, supra distinctis, subtus elevatis, prope marginem arcuato-anastomo- santibus: petiolis 1—1. 5 cm. longis; stipulis circa 8 mm. longis deorsum oblongo- ovatis subabrupte caudato-acuminatis caducis; cymis terminalibus sessilibus e Higgs ramosis, circa 3.5 cm. longis, leviter pubescentibus tricho- tome ramosis S primariis haud 1 cm. longis, floribus Sia aie in ramulis ote in triadibus dispositis, pedicellatis, pedicellis 3-5 m longis, bracteis lineari-lanceolatis acuminatis circa 3 mm. longis, aaa minoribus; calycibus glabris circa 1.5 mm. longis, lobis ovatis acuminatis quam tubo brevioribus; corolla alba (ex collectore) , tubo gracili 1.5--1.8 cm. longo haud barbato, lobis reflexis circa 5 mm. longis subrotundatis: antheris exsertis lanceolatis circa 3.5 mm. longis, stylis exsertis, ramis 1.5 mm. longis Kwancsi: Shang-sze District, Shih Wan Tai Shan, Tang Lung Village, W. 7. Tsang 24240 (TYPE), Sept. 8, 1934, a fairly common shrub in thickets, about 1 m. high, flowers white, fragrant This species is allied to Jxora hainanensis Merr. & Chun of Hainan, differ- ing in the leaves having more numerous, prominent, and more oblique lateral nerves, and in the much shorter flowers with subrounded corolla- lobes. Moreover, the inflorescences are sessile, while in J. Aainanensis they are distinctly pedinediate. H.Y. Lia z 70086, from Shih Wan Tai Shan, Kwangtung Province, unfortunately with immature flowers, may represent the same species. Psychotria Linnaeus Psychotria kwangsiensis sp. nov. Frutex parvus erectus ubique glaber, ramis ultimis crassis, 4 mm. dia- metro; foliis chartaceis Sages longe petiolatis ellipticis, circa 26 cm. longis et 12 cm. latis, apice acutis vel acuminatis, basi longe attenuatis, supra olivaceo-viridibus, subtus paullo pallidioribus, nervis lateralibus utrinsecus circa 16, utrin ue conspicuis, prope marginem tenuiter curvato- arcuatis, venulis utrinque obscuris; petiolis 4-5 cm. longis; stipulis de- ciduis; floribus ignotis ; infructescentiis terminalibus oe sublaxe cymoso- paniculatis, circa 7.5 cm. longis, pedunculis circa 4.5 cm. longis, bracteis lanceolatis acuminatis, circa 2.5 mm. longis, m margine (enter cili- pedicellatis, 1 cm. longis, 4-5 mm. crassis, longitudinaliter sulcatis, glabris, calycis lobis lanceolatis circa 1 mm. longis plus minusve persistentibus coronatis; seminibus circa 1 cm. longis, plano-convexis, dorso leviter 4- costato, albumine haud ruminato. KWANGSI: en Pien District, S. os Ko 56011 (type), Nov. 5, 1935, on slopes in forested ravines, probably small in siz A species strongly pes by its large leaves and its characteristic fruits Lasianthus Jack Lasianthus Tsangii Merrill in herb. sp. nov. Frutex erectus circa 1 m, altus, ramulis inflorescentiis et foliis subtus villosis, indumento interdum sordide brunneo vel in venulis pallido, ramulis ultimis teretibus 3 mm. diametro; foliis subcoriaceis petiolatis oblongo- lanceolatis, 9-12.5 cm. longis, 3— 4.2 cm. latis, acuminatis, basi acutis, supra glabris viridibus subnitidis, subtus paullo pallidioribus praesertim 458 JOURNAL OF THE ARNOLD ARBORETUM [ VOL. XXIV secus costam nervosque molliter villosis, nervis lateralibus utrinsecus 5—7, supra leviter impressis, subtus elevatis, perspicuis, curvato-adscendentibus, venis tertiariis parallelis, supra indistinctis, subtus elevatis; petiolo 8-10 mm. longo dense subadpresse hirsuto; inflorescentiis axillaribus sessilibus paucifloris, bracteis lanceolatis, dense villosis, circa 1 cm, longis; floribus sessilibus; calycis tubo circa 4 mm. longo piloso, lobis 5, anguste lanceo- latis acuminatis crasse Ciliatis circa 3 mm. longis, persistentibus; fructibus subovoideis glabris circa 4 mm. diametro. Kwanost: Shang-sze District, Shih Wan Tai Shan, Na Wai Village, W. T. Tsang 23940 (type), July 11-30, 1934, a shrub about 1 m. high, fairly common in thickets, fruits blackish blue. This species is characterized by its prominently nerved leaves, which are glabrous above and prominently villose beneath, with sharply ascend- ing lateral nerves, its axillary, few-flowered inflorescences with elongated, persistent, lanceolate, and densely villose bracts, and its persistent pubescent calyx-lobes. It resembles L. Koi Merr. & Chun in vegetative characters, but the leaves of the latter are narrowly caudate-acuminate, while the inflo- rescences are more crowded, more numerously flowered, and with numerous narrow and villous bracts. Lasianthus kwangsiensis Merrill in herb. sp. nov. tibus arcuato-anastomosantibus plerumque dense ciliatis, venis tertiariis oblongo-ovatis circa 1.5 mm. longis; staminibus tubo insertis, antheris subexsertis; stylis tubo corollae subaequilongis, stigmatibus ciliatis S- lobatis. Kwanosr: Shang-sze District, Shih Wan Tai Shan, Nam She Village, W. T. Tsang 24679 (tvpE), Nov. 18, 1934, a shrub 3 ft. high, in thickets, fairly common, flowers white, fragrant. This species is near Lasianthus Fordii Hance, but it may be distinguished, among other characters, by its corolla being prominently hirsute. Paederia Linnaeus Paederia pertomentosa Merrill in herb. sp. nov. Suffruticosa vel herbacea scandens, circa 3.5 m. alta, caulibus et ramis et foliis subtus dense breviter tomentosis, caulibus teretibus 2 mm. diametro, indumento sordide substramineo, ramulis circa 1 mm. diametro; foliis char- taceis, ovato-ellipticis vel oblongo-ellipticis, acute acuminatis, basi plerum- que rotundatis, haud cordatis, interdum leviter decurrentibus, 6-11 2.5—5 cm., supra subolivaceis consperse puberulis ad costam dense puberulis, 1943 ] LI, NOTES ON THE FLORA OF KWANGSI 459 subtus densissime breviter subalbido- tomentosis, nervis primariis utrinsecus subglomeratim dispositis, glomerulis inter se 1-3 cm. distantibus at minusve confertis breviter pedicellatis; floribus rosaceis; calycibus dense tomentosis, dentibus triangularibus, acutis, intus glabris; corollae tubo extus dense puberulo, 5 mm. longo, lobis ovatis acutis, 1-1.2 mm. longis. SOUTHERN Kiancsi: Hong San, J. L. Gressitt 1471 (tyPE), June 23, 1936, in thick- ets, alt. 840 m.; Lung-nan District, Oo Chi Shan, near Lam Uk Village, S. K. Lau 2 Oct. 1-25, 1934, a semi-woody climber, rare on dry steep slopes in forests. KWAN Nam Tan-yuen, C. Wang 40918, June 26, 1937, scandent, in forests; Ling-chuan District, Hai-yan-shan, Lian-chai-miao, W. T. T ane 27825, July 13-19, 1937, climber, 3 ft. high, fairly common in thickets on steep slopes. This is one of the very tomentose forms formerly referred to Paederia tomentosa Bl. = P. scandens (Lour.) Merr. and to P. foetida Linn., but manifestly it is so different from these that there seems to be little justi- fication in extending the limits of either species to take this extreme form. It is allied to P. Cavaleriet H. Léev., differing among other characters in the leaves being densely short-white-tomentose beneath. ARNOLD ARBORETUM, HARVARD UNIVERSITY. 460 JOURNAL OF THE ARNOLD ARBORETUM [VOL. XXIV STUDIES OF SOUTH AMERICAN PLANTS, X NOTEWORTHY MYRISTICACEAE AND VACCINIACEAE A. C. SMITH Turoucu the kindness of the authorities of the U.S. National Herbarium and the Instituto Botanico of Bogota, a series of Colombian specimens rep- resenting the Myristicaceae and Vacciniaceae has been made available to me for study. Most of these specimens were collected in the Comisaria of Putumayo by J. Cuatrecasas and in the Department of Antioquia by R. D. Metcalf and J. Cuatrecasas. One new species is based upon a collec- tion from Antioquia by Brother Daniel, while an Ecuadorean plant collected by A. Rimbach is also described as new. Eleven new species are here described; of interest is the discovery in Colombia for the first time of the genera Semiramisia and Ceratostema (sensu vero). In the following pages the place of deposit of specimens is indicated by parenthetical letters as follows: (A), Arnold Arboretum; (Col), Instituto Botanico, Universidad de Colombia, Bogota; (US), U. S. National Herbarium. MYRISTICACEAE ee parvifolia Markegraf in Notizbl. Bot. Gart. Berlin 9: 964. 1926; A.C. in Brittonia 2: 417. 1938, 3: 339. 1939 easels Putumayo: Selva wot del rio San Miguel, en el afluente izquierda Quebrada de la Hormiga, alt. , Cuatrecasas 11139 (Col, US); Mocoa, bosque higrofilo en la Quebrada del rio Malo, alt. 570-600 m., Cuatrecasas 11314 (A, Col, US). Borrvia: La Paz: 7. Larecaja, Tuiri, near Mapiri, alt. 490- 750 m., Krukoff 10734 (A, etc.). In my monograph of 1938 I listed this species only from Peru and adja- cent Brazil; the above-cited collections from the Amazonian portions of Colombia and Bolivia demonstrate that the species has a fairly wide range. In 1939 I reported the plant from Venezuela, and another collection from that country (Wdaliams 10210 [A], from National Park, alt. 850-1100 m.) is now available. Dialyanthera parvifolia is therefore now known to have a fairly extensive distribution along the western edge of the Amazon basin from Bolivia to Colombia and continuing northward to Aragua in Venezuela. —— ae higese (A. DC.) phone in Aled Acta Acad. Leop.-Carol. 68: 188. 1897; .in Brittonia 2: 472. Panes Putumayo: ee higréfila del rio Putumayo; Puerto Porvenir, arriba de Puerto Ospina, hacia la Loma, alt. 230-250 m., Cuatrecasas 10746 (Col, US). The cited collection extends to Colombia the range of V. peruviana, pre- viously recorded from Amazonian Peru and Brazil, but only from the southern tributaries of the Amazon. The Cuatrecasas specimen has leaf- blades up to 40 by 12.5 cm. (larger than those previously known), and its tomentum is perhaps somewhat more persistent throughout; nevertheless it agrees with earlier collections of the species in all essential details. 1943 | SMITH, SOUTH AMERICAN PLANTS, X 461 haa lear pels in os Acta Acad. Leop.-Carol. 68: 231. 1897; A. C. Sm. ittonia 2: 474. MBIA: Putumayo: Selva higrofila del rio Putumayo; Puerto Porvenir, arriba de Puerto Oipine, hacia la Loma, alt. 230-250 m., Cuatrecasas 10653 (Col, US). The cited specimen is of especial interest as being the first Colombian collection which can be referred to V. calophylla without doubt. Other- wise the species has a range in Amazonian Brazil, Venezuela, and Peru. In 1938 I referred to V. calophylla the type of V. incolor Warb., a sterile juvenile specimen from Villavicencio, and thus the species has already been reported from Colombia, but only inadequately so. The Cuatrecasas collec- tion, being in fruit, permits a correction of my earlier description. The pubescence of the fruit is much coarser than previously indicated, the indi- vidual hairs being somewhat more than 1 mm. in length, copiously jointed, and with numerous minute lateral branches, somewhat like the pubescence illustrated for V. loretensis A. C. Sm. (Brittonia 2: f. 7, g. 1938). Appar- ently these hairs are at length deciduous, leaving the fruit closely tomen- tellous. VACCINIACEAE Semiramisia pulcherrima sp. nov Frutex ad 50 cm. altus dinate filamentis exceptis glaber, ramulis teretibus gracilibus ut videtur elongatis; petiolis subteretibus rugulosis 3-4 mm. longis; laminis subcoriaceis ovatis, 4.5-6 cm. longis, 2.5—3 cm. latis, basi rotundatis vel late obtusis, apice radatim. acuminatis, margine leviter folii versus costa conjunctis, costa et nervis secundariis supra leviter im- pressis subtus elevatis, nervis marginalibus indistinctis et rete venularum immersis vel subtus paullo prominulis; inflorescentiis apicem ramulorum versus axillaribus racemosis 5—8-floris, basi bracteis paucis ovatis acutis circiter 1.5 mm. longis subtentis, rhachi subtereti 1-1.5 mm. diametro 1—2 cm. longa; floribus alternatis basi bracteatis, bracteis papyraceis elongato- deltoideis 1.5-2 mm. longis acutis parce glanduloso- -marginatis; pedicellis teretibus 8-15 mm, longis apicem versus bibracteolatis (bracteolis ut brac- teis sed minoribus), basi gracilibus, distaliter in calycem gradatim incrassa- diametro, limbo papyraceo erecto-patente lobis inclusis 5-6 mm. longo inconspicue nervato, lobis inconspicuis in cuspidem 0.5—0.8 mm. longam apiculatis margine biglandulosis, glandulis linearibus 0.5—-2 mm. longis; corolla carnosa campanulato-cylindrica sub anthesi 40-50 mm. longa, basim versus 10-15 mm. ut videtur apice ad 20 mm. diametro, lobis deltoideis acutis 6-10 mm. longis et latis; staminibus corollam fere subaequantibus; filamentis liberis 6-8 mm. longis, 1—1.5 mm. latis, ubique praeter basim pilis circiter 0.2 mm. longis puberulis; thecis crassis circiter n mm. longis basi leviter incurvatis; tubulis gracillimis (basi circiter 0.4 mm. apicem versus circiter 0.25 m m. diametro) 25-30 mm. longis, poris eminalibie vel leviter obliquis Aeron stylo corollam subaequante gracili truncato CotomsiA: Putumayo: Alta cuenca del rio Putumayo, filo de la Cordillera entre El] Encano y Sibundoy; paramo de San Antonio del Bordoncillo, alt. 3250 m., 4 Enero 1941, Cuatrecasas 11771 (Col, US no. 1798516, Type), fruitex de 0.50 m.; corola crasa rosado-anaranjada. In its distinct and pilose filaments, S. pulcherrima resembles S. Kar- 462 JOURNAL OF THE ARNOLD ARBORETUM [ VOL. XXIV steniana K\., from which it differs in its smaller and fewer-nerved leaf- blades, shorter pedicels, and much larger flowers, especially the larger calyx and broader corolla. From the remaining species of Semiramisia, the new species differs in its separate and pilose filaments, as well as in details of foliage, its more complex inflorescence, and the proportions of its calyx and corolla, etc. Semiramisia pulcherrima is the first recorded specimen of the genus from Colombia, it having previously been known from the Andes of Venezuela, Ecuador, and Peru. Ceratostema amplexicaule sp. nov. Frutex, ramulis gracilibus teretibus molliter et breviter albo-pilosis; foliis sessilibus vel minutissime siactering laminis subcoriaceis ovato- oblongis, 5—7.5 cm. longis, 3—4.5 cm. latis, basi profunde cordatis et am- plexicaulibus, apice obtusis, eae leviter recurvatis, utrinque molliter pilosis vel puberulis ut videtur demum glabrescentibus, nervis secundariis utrinsecus circiter 4 basim versus orientibus cum costa supra subimmersis bracteis bracteolisque, pedicellis, calyce et corolla extus) pilis 0.5—0.8 mm longis molliter albo-pilosis; rhachi leviter angulata 2.5—4.5 cm, longa 7— ‘7, flora; bracteis sub pedicellis papyraceis deltoideis 2-3 mm. longis et latis acutis intus glabris; pedicellis subteretibus 10-17 mm. longis, cum calyce obscure articulatis, paullo infra medium vel basim versus bibracteolatis, bracteolis suboppositis ut bracteis sed minoribus et obscure pauciglandu- loso- ee calycis tubo cupuliformi obscure 10-costato sub anthesi circiter 3 mm. longo et 5 mm. diametro, limbo subpatente lobis inclusis circiter 3 mm. longo intus glabro, lobis 5 deltoideis acutis, circiter 2 mm. longis et 4 mm. latis, secus margines praeter apicem versus glandulis linearibus praeditis, sinibus acutis; corolla crasse carnosa urceolato-cylin- drica vel juventute leviter angulata, sub anthesi 25-30 mm. longa et basim versus 6—7 mm. diametro, distaliter gradatim angustata, intus glabra, demum profunde 5-lobata, lobis subulatis ad 15 mm. longis et basi 3 m latis, apice subacutis; staminibus corollam subaequantibus_ vel pane exsertis, filamentis membranaceis glabris mox liberis ligulatis 6-8 mm. longis, thecis valde granulosis 9-10 mm, longis 1-1.5 mm. crassis, tubulis gracillimis circiter 0.2 mm. diametro 13-14 mm. longis basim versus saepe tuberculato-granulosis, poris ovalibus oblique terminalibus circiter 0.7 mm longis dehiscentibus; stylo corollam subaequante gracili (circiter 0.5 mm. diametro) truncato. CotomBiA: Putumayo: Vertiente oes de la Cordillera, bosques higrofilos entre Mocoa y Sac heraies, alt. 600-700 m., 29 Diciembre 1940, Cuatrecasas 11407 (Col, US no. 7798807, TYPE), frutex; corola oe -anaranjada. In its subsessile leaf-blades, which are deeply cordate and amplexicaul at base, the new species resembles only C. peruvianum Gmel., the remaining species of the genus having leaf-blades cuneate to attenuate at base. In their pubescence, C. amplexicaule and C. peruvianum are essentially similar. However, the new species differs sharply from C, peruvianum in its very small calyx-lobes, those of Gmelin’s species being 10-15 mm. long and 6-9 mm. broad. In other respects, also, the flowers of C. peruvianum are 1943 | SMITH, SOUTH AMERICAN PLANTS, X 463 substantially larger than those of the new species, the corolla and stamens being about 40 mm. long. Furthermore, the leaf-blades of the new species are more nearly sessile and more obtuse at apex than those of C. peruvt- anum, The genus Ceratostema Juss. (sensu Sleumer in Notizbl. Bot. Gart. Berlin 12: 278-282. 1935, et A. C. Sm. in Bull. Torrey Bot. Cl. 63: 307- 308. 1936; non sensu falso A. C. Sm. in Contr. U. S. Nat. Herb. 28: 335- 348. 1932) has previously been known only from Ecuador (this being probably true even for C. peruvianum, the genotype). It should he noted that the present species falls into the genus Englerodoxa Hoer. as treated by me in 1932 (op. cit. 350-352), a synonym of Ceratostema Juss., which is now known to contain six species. The numerous other species which have been referred to Ceratostema belong to Pellegrinia, Demosthenesia, Plutarchia, etc. (see Sleumer, loc. cit. 1935, and A. C. Sm., loc. cit. 1936). Psammisia flaviflora sp. nov. Frutex scandens forsan epiphyticus ubique praeter ain giaber, ramulis subtereiibus gracilibus (apicem versus 2-3 mm. diametro) ; petiolis crassis (2-3 mm. diametro) semiteretibus 6-12 mm. longis; laminis charta- ceis oblongo-ellipticis, 13-20 cm. longis, 4.5-8 cm. latis, basi acutis et in petiolum decurrentibus, apice abrupte caudato- acuminatis (acumine gracili 1—1.5 cm. longo acuto), margine leviter recurvatis, 5- vel 7-pli-nerviis, ner- S nervisque supra paullo elevatis et saepe insculptis subtus prominentibus, rete venularum copioso utrinque prominulo; inflorescentiis ut videtur api- cem ramulorum versus axillaribus subfasciculatis vel obscure breviracemosis, thachi ad 4 mm. longa Seah breviore; floribus paucis bracteis papyra- ceis deltoideis circiter 1.5 & 1.5 mm. subacutis pauciglanduloso- -marginatis subtentis; pedicellis rugulosis crassis (1-2 mm. diametro) subcurvatis 15-20 mm. longis paullo supra basim eee erate oppositis bracteis similibus; calyce coriaceo sub anthesi 8-10 mm. longo, tubo cupuli- formi 4—6 mm. longo et circiter 7 mm. secs fen erecto- -patente lobis inclusis 3-4 mm. longo, lobis deltoideis acutis 2-3 mm. longis et 3-4 mm. latis, sinibus acutis; corolla carnosa subgloboso-urceolata, sub anthesi 7—8 longa et circiter 6 mm. diametro, basim et apicem versus contracta, lobis 5 deltoideis circiter 1.5 1.5 mm. subacutis; staminibus 10, fila- mentis liberis submembranaceis ligulatis circiter 3. 5 mm. longis margine superne ciliolato-puberulis antheras apice thecarum affixis, connectivis brevibus omnibus bicalcaratis (calcaribus subacutis conspicuis saepe antrorsis), antheris circiter 4 mm. longis, thecis valde granulosis circiter mm. longis et 1.3-1.5 mm. crassis, tubulis distinctis gracillimis brevibus (circiter 1 mm. longis) acutis per rimas ovales dehiscentibus; stylo crasso corollam subaequante truncato. Ecuapor: Guayas(?): Western Cordillera, valley of Rio Chimbo, alt. 800 m., Rimbach 67 (A, TYPE), shrub, climbing high among forest trees; ts ot ae tube bright red, the calyx-lobes greenish, the corolla and lobes yel The closest relative of this very distinct new species is the recently de- scribed P. occidentalis A. C. Sm. (in Am. Jour. Bot. 27: 542. 1940), from western Colombia. However, P. flaviflora has leaf-blades with the sec- ondary nerves oriented nearer the base and more prominent on the upper 464 JOURNAL OF THE ARNOLD ARBORETUM [VOL. XXIV surface, while its inflorescence has fewer flowers and a shorter rachis. The flowers of the new species have longer pedicels and are substantially larger throughout, the calyx-lobes being entirely different in shape. Other small- flowered species of Psammisia with subfasciculate inflorescences — P. Pennellii A. C. Sm. and P. caudatula Sleumer — have quite distinct foliage as well as minor differences in floral proportions. Psammisia ferruginea A. C. Sm. in Contr. U. S. Nat. Herb. 28: 391. pl. 10. 1932. CorompBiA: Putumayo: Vertiente oriental de la Cordillera, entre Sachamates San Francisco de Sibundoy, Quebrada de Susunga, alt. 1600-1800 m., Cuatrecasas 11447 (Col, US), arbusto de ramas scandens; pedunculos y caliz ‘oaadniehpdenos: corola rosada. This very distinct species has previously been known only from the De- partments of El Cauca and Narifo, and therefore the new record is of unusual interest; the type is a Lobb specimen of uncertain origin, but probably from the Pacific slope of Colombia. Psammisia columbiensis Hoer. in Bot. Jahrb. 42: 303. 1909; A. C. Sm. in Contr. U.S. Nat. Herb. 28: 398. 1932. CoromsBiA: Putumayo: Vertiente oriental de la Cordillera, entre Sachamates San Francisco de Sibundoy, Quebrada de Susunga, alt. 1600-1800 m., Cwuatrecasas 11446 (A, Col), arbustito de ramas péndulas; pedunculos, calices y corolas rojos, apice blanco. This species has previously been recorded only from the type, collected by Lehmann in the “Central Andes of Popayan,” Dept. El Cauca, alt. 2500-2800 m. The present collection agrees with the type in all essential characters, including the connate filaments, but has its leaf-blades slightly broader, 2.5—4.8 cm. broad. Psammisia Cuatrecasasii sp. nov Frutex ramosus ubique abi filamenta bracteas bracteolasque glaber, ramulis crassis (apicem versus circiter 8 mm. diametro) subteretibus; petiolis crassis (4-5 mm. diametro) circiter 2 cm. longis; laminis coriaceis siccitate olivaceis late ovato-oblongis, 22-27 cm. longis, 12—14 cm. latis, basi rotundatis vel obtusis et in petiolum paullo decurrentibus, apice ut videtur obtuse cuspidatis, margine anguste recurvatis, 7—9-pli-nerviis, nervis infimis e basi orientibus summis costa ad 5 cm. concurrentibus, costa ale supra subplanis subtus valde prominentibus, rete venularum sub- immerso subtus leviter prominulo; inflorescentiis axillaribus racemosis 6—9-floris, rhachi crassa subtereti circiter 4 cm. longa, pedicellis sub anthesi 25-30 mm. longis, bracteis subcoriaceis oblongis circiter 6 mm. longis et 3 mm. latis apice rotundatis margine obscure ciliolato-puberulis subtentis, paullo supra medium bibracteolatis, bracteolis suboppositis papyraceis deltoideo-oblongis circiter 3 2 mm. acutis margine ciliolato-puberulis et pauciglandulosis; calyce coriaceo late cupuliformi, tubo circiter 2 mm iametro, limbo patente lobis inclusis 3-4 mm. longo, lobis praeter apicem versus glanduloso-incrassatis; corolla carnosa cylindrico- urceolata sub anthesi 21-27 mm. longa, basim versus circiter 7 mm. dia- metro, supra ad 4 mm. angustata, lobis 5 incrassatis deltoideis subacutis circiter 3 3 mm.; staminibus 10, filamentis liberis subcarnosis ligulatis 6—7 mm. longis margine superne puberulis, connectivis superne alternatim 1943 ] SMITH, SOUTH AMERICAN PLANTS, X 465 conspicue bicalcaratis Sooty 0.7-1 mm. longis acutis antrorsis) , thecis valde granulosis 8—9 mm. longis basi i inconspicue tuberculatis, tubulis leviter cohaerentibus circiter "4 mm, longis per rimas ovales =; mm. spas dehiscentibus; stylo filiformi sub anthesi conspicue exserto 25-30 m longo truncato. CoLoMBIA: Putumayo: Alta cuenca del rio Putumayo en el Valle de Sibundoy extremo E., junto a San Francisco, alt. 2200 m., 1 Enero 1941, oe ante 11562 (Col, Type), arbusto ramoso; pédunculo, caliz y corola carmin, extremo Psammisia Cuatrecasasii is at once distinguished by its large ee pro- portionately broad 7—9-pli-nerved leaf-blades. In foliage it most suggests Ulbrichiana Hoer., but it has even broader leaves, larger bracts, and larger and much more conspicuously spurred stamens. Perhaps a closer relative of the new species is P. falcata (H. B. K.) KI., a species with leaf- blades only 3.5—7 cm. broad and 5-—7-pli-nerved, usually longer inflo- rescences, and smaller bracts. Psammisia aestuans sp. nov. anes (?) ubique praeter filamenta glaber, ramulis gracilibus (apicem s | mm. vel minus diametro ) subteretibus; petiolis gracilibus leviter carelicula fe 2—5 mm. longis; laminis subcoriaceis in sicco olivaceis vel saepe metallicis ovatis, 3-5 cm. longis, 1.2-2.2 cm. latis, basi rotundatis vel late obtusis, apice acumine gracili attenuato 1-2 cm. lon ngo conspicue prae- ditis, margine anguste recurvatis, 3- vel 5-pli-nerviis (nervis exteriori- S basim versus 5-7 mm. diametro ae Se eee. lobis 5 elongato-deltoideis acutis circiter 2 & 1.5 mm.; staminibus 10 corollam fere aequantibus, filamentis submembranaceis liberis ligulatis circiter 2 mm. longis et 1—-1.5 mm. latis margine superne minute ciliolatis, connectivis angustis omnibus superne bicalcaratis (calcaribus acutis vel subacutis granulosis 5.5-6 mm. longis crassis (circiter 1.5 mm. diametro ) basi in- curvatis, tubulis liberis gracilibus 7—7.5 mm. longis per rimas ovales 0.7—1 mm. longas dehiscentibus; stylo filiformi corollam subaequante truncato; fructibus immaturis coriaceis subglobosis 7-8 mm. diametro, calycis limbo persistente coronatis. Coromsia: Antioquia: a Ceja, Diciembre 1939, Hermano Daniel 2178 (US no. 1778630, TYPE), corola en el o roja, en el apice verde. Psammisia aestuans is so distinct from the other species of Psammisia that one places it here with hesitation; yet, on the basis of floral characters, there can be no doubt of its place in ffs genus. The small, long-acuminate, 466 JOURNAL OF THE ARNOLD ARBORETUM [ VOL. XXIV few-nerved leaves suggest those of no other species of Psammisia, but the flowers are typical for the genus, although the inconspicuous calyx-lobes and the long anther-tubules are unusual. Plutarchia angulata sp. nov. rutex, ramulis subteretibus apicem versus pilis 0.4-0.7 mm. longis dense cinereo-pilosis demum glabrescentibus; petiolis 1-3 mm. longis in- crassatis (1.5-2 mm. diametro) ut ramulis pilosis; laminis subcoriaceis in 5 cm. longis, 2.2-4 cm. latis, basi leviter cordatis, apice obtusis vel subrotundatis, margine anguste recurvatis, supra minute puberulis mox glabris, subtus praecipue costa ut petiolis hispidulo-pilosis demum glabrescentibus, 7- vel 9-pli-nerviis, costa supra leviter impressa subtus elevata, nervis secundariis basim versus orientibus curvatis supra subimmersis subtus prominulis, venulis obscuris vel subtus paullo prominulis; inflorescentiis apicem ramulorum versus axillaribus vel subterminalibus 2—5-floris breviter racemosis, basi bracteis paucis papyra- ceis ovatis acutis pilosis 2-3 mm. longis circumdatis, rhachi subtereti rugu- losa 5—25 mm. longa ut ramulis dense pilosa vel puberula; floribus bracteis papyraceis anguste oblongis acuminatis 3-4 mm. longis extus puberulis subtentis; pedicellis subteretibus dense pilosis 8-20 mm. longis basim versus bibracteolatis, bracteolis suboppositis bracteis similibus sed minori- bus mox caducis; calyce cum pedicello articulato 12-15 mm. longo extus pilis albidis mollibus circiter 0.3 mm. longis dense piloso demum sub- glabrescente, tubo 4—6 mm. longo basi rotundato alis 4 conspicuis 2-3 mm. latis sinibus oppositis ornato, limbo 8-9 mm. longo erecto intus glabro fere ad basim 4-lobato, lobis subcoriaceis elongato-deltoideis basi 5-8 mm latis forsan accrescentibus ad apicem acutum gradatim angustatis, sinibus acutis: corolla tenuiter carnosa tubulosa 4-angulata, sub anthesi 17-21 mm. longa et 5-6 mm. diametro, extus pilis 0.5—1 mm. longis densissime villoso- velutina, intus glabra, lobis 4 oblongo-deltoideis subacutis circiter 2 >< 2 mm.: staminibus 8 similibus quam corolla paullo brevioribus, filamentis liberis carnosis glabris ligulatis 2-3 mm. longis, antheris 12-17 mm. iongis, thecis minute granulosis 4-7 mm. longis et circiter 1 mm. diametro, tubulis latis flexilibus plerumque quam thecis circiter duplo longioribus per rimas elongatas dehiscentibus; disco inconspicuo glabro; stylo filiformi corollam subaequante, stigmate truncato vel minute subpeltato. CoromsBiA: Putumayo: Alta cuenca del rio Putumayo, filo de la Cordillera entre El Encano y Sibundoy; paramo de San Antonio del Bordoncillo, alt. 3250 m., 4 Enero 1941, Cuatrecasas 11733 (Col, US no. 1798515, TYPE), frutex; caliz y corola rosados. Although P. angulata does not bear a close superficial resemblance to the other species of Plutarchia, its staminal characters indicate that it can belong to no other genus. It differs from the other species of the genus in its 4-merous flowers, its winged calyx-tube, and its angled densely pubescent corolla, while its proportionately broad cordate subsessile leaf-blades, which are soft-pilose beneath, are also characteristic. Plutarchia pubiflora (Wedd.) A. C. Sm. is perhaps the closest ally of P. angulata, but there are numerous obvious differences between the two species. Cavendishia Cuatrecasasii A. C. Sm. in Rev. Acad. Colomb. Ci. Ex. Fis.-Quim. Nat. 5: 38 1943 ] SMITH, SOUTH AMERICAN PLANTS, X 467 Since the publication of this well-marked species, two additional collec- tions have come to my attention: CoLomsBiA: Putumayo: Vertiente Ria easy de la Cordillera, entre Sachamates y San Francisco de Siandey, alt. 1600-1750 m., Cuatrecasas 11464 (A, Col, US), hee de ramas divaricadas; bracteas y flores rosado cardenas; Huila- Caqueta: Cordillera Oriental sobre el filo divisorio, en Gabinete, alt. 2300-2450 m., Cuatrecasas 8479 (Col, US), gran frutex; bracteas rosadas; caliz muy largo, rosado; corola, base y apice blanco rosado, tercio superior roja. These specimens make desirable a slight amplification of the original description, as follows: petioles up to 15 mm. long; leaf-blades up to 18 cm. long and 9 cm. broad; corolla often only 22 mm. long, the stamens pro- See shorter than those originally described. These slight varia- tions are no more than individual. Cavendishia speciosa sp. nov. Frutex ad 5 m. altus ubique praeter filamenta glaber, ramulis teretibus gracilibus (apicem versus 2—3 mm. diametro); petiolis subteretibus rugosis incrassatis (2-3 mm. diametro) 5-8 mm. lene laminis coriaceis in sicco fuscis anguste oblongis, 8-14 cm. longis, 2—3.6 cm. latis, basi obtusis, apice caudato-acuminatis (acumine gracili 10-15 mm. lon 20), margine anguste et basim versus conspicue revolutis, 3-pli-nerviis, ie paullo supra basim orientibus adscendentibus costa apicem versus inconspicue conjunctis, costa nervisque supra impressis subtus valde elevatis, nervis marginalibus inter- dum visis sed immersis, rete venularum immerso; inflorescentia axillari vel subterminali multiflora, rhachi crassa (4-6 mm. diametro) basi florum 30-40 incrassata; bracteis sub floribus membranaceis copiose reticulato- venosis obovato-oblongis, 30-40 mm. longis, 18-30 mm. latis, apice rotun- datis vel conspicue bilobatis, dorso glandulas minutas subglobosas sessiles saepe copiose gerentibus; pedicellis teretibus crassis 6-7 mm. longis ut videtur ebracteolatis (bracteo lis non visis forsan mox caducis); calyce 11-12 mm. longo, tubo breviter cylindrico 3—4 mm. longo et circiter 4.5 mm. diametro, limbo submembranaceo erecto lobis inclusis 7-8 mm. longo, lobis deltoideis acutis circiter 2 mm. longis et 3.5 mm. latis glandulas plures albas sessiles margine gerentibus, sinibus rotundatis; corolla tenuiter carnosa cylindrica, sub anthesi circiter 30 mm. longa et basim versus dia metro, See angustata, lobis 5 oblongis subacutis circiter 2 1.5 mm.; staminibus sae corolla multo tee filamentis ligulatis aes yete 4 mm. et 7-8 mm. longis superne angustatis intus et margine distaliter Sigg, antheris alternatim circiter 11 mm. et 10 mm. longis, thecis 4-5 mm. longis, tubulis quam thecis paullo longioribus per rimas elongatas ovales dehiscentibus; stylo filiformi corollam subaequante, stigmate minute peltato CotomsBiA: Antioquia: Between Valdivia and Yarumal, alt. 2000 m., moist canyon, Feb. 20, 1942, Metcalf & Cuatrecasas 30101 (A, TYPE, US), shrub 4-5 m. high; bracts vivid red, with brown glands; calyx white; corolla white and rose. This beautiful and spectacular species is one of the most distinct in Cavendishia, being characterized by its thick 3-nerved leaf-blades, its membranaceous reticulate-veined bracts, its elongate glandular-margined calyx-limb, and its large showy corollas. Its closest relative is doubtless C. Kalbreyeri Mansf., also from Antioquia, from which it differs in its more elongate inflorescence with more numerous flowers, its larger and 468 JOURNAL OF THE ARNOLD ARBORETUM [VOL. XXIV thinner bracts, its calyx with glandular rather than thick-margined lobes, its larger corollas, and its shorter and differently proportioned anthers, those of C. Kalbreyeri having tubules much longer than the thecae. Cavendishia rosea sp. nov. Frutex ad 5 m. altus ubique praeter filamenta glaber, ramulis eo apicem versus 3-4 mm. diametro; petiolis inconspicuis incrassatis 2—5 m longis; oer eens siccitate olivaceis ovato-oblongis, 6-9 cm. longis, 2.5—4.3 cm. latis, basi conspicue cordatis, apice obtuse cuspidatis, margine leviter eae 5—7-pli-nerviis, nervis infimis patentibus debilibus, nervis superioribus costa ad 2 cm. concurrentibus vel e basi orientibus, costa nervisque supra prominulis vel subplanis subtus prominentibus, rete venu- larum utrinque paullo prominulo, venulis brevibus e costa saepe patentibus; inflorescentia apicem ramulorum versus axillari racemosa 20—30-flora, rhachi angulata 1.5-2.5 mm. diametro 8-9 cm. longa basi pedicellorum incrassata; floribus bracteis papyraceis ius 25- 32 mm. longis et 8-12 mm. latis acutis conspicue punctatis subtentis; pedicellis teretibus 10-14 mm. longis basim_ versus igen steamer bracteolis papyraceis elliptico-oblongis, 4-6.5 mm. longis, 2-3 mm. latis, apice rotundatis et minute apiculatis; calyce seers ‘cylindrico leviter 5-angulato sub anthesi circiter 5 mm. longo, tubo 4-5 mm. diametro, limbo erecto papyraceo lobis inclusis 2-3 mm. ees lobis saepe incurvatis late deltoideis subacutis angustata, lobis deltoideis subacutis circiter 0.7 1.5 mm.; staminibus corollam fere aequantibus alternatim leviter inaequalibus, filamentis = membranaceis ligulatis intus parce puberulis alternatim 2-2.5 mm. 5-6 mm. longis, antheris alternatim 11-12 mm. et 10-11 mm. ne thecis 3-4 mm. longis, tubulis quam thecis plus minusve duplo longioribus per rimas elongatas dehiscentibus; stylo filiformi corollam subaequante, —_ minute subpeltato Cou Antioquia: Between Valdivia and Yarumal, alt. 2200 m., shaded hillside, Feb. 20, 1942, Metcalf & Cuatrecasas 30123 (A, type, US), shrub 4-5 m. high ; stems red-streaked; leaves green with red margins and reddish tinge above; bracts red; corolla rose-red ; maturing calyx greenish yellow. The new species is related only to C. subamplexicaulis A. C. Sm., also from northwestern Colombia, with which it has in common an elongate inflorescence and cordate-based leaf-blades. However, C. rosea differs from its ally in its proportionately narrower leaf-blades, which are less obviously clasping at base, have fewer and more prominent secondary nerves, and are cuspidate rather than obtuse at apex. The rachis of the new species is more slender, and the bracts and corollas are slightly larger; the anther-proportions are different from those of C. subamplexicaulis, in which the thecae and tubules are nearly equal in length. These two closely related species appear to have no other immediate allies. Cavendishia Dugandiana sp. nov. d 6 m. altus, ramulis fusco-cinereis apicem versus gracilibus et cinereo- -puberulis; petiolis subteretibus puberulis 2-4 mm. longis; laminis parvis coriaceis in sicco olivaceis anguste oblongis, 2—4 cm. longis, 0.8-1.4 cm. latis, basi rotundatis vel obscure subcordatis, apice obtusis et saepe 1943 ] SMITH, SOUTH AMERICAN PLANTS, X 469 minute mucronulatis, margine subplanis, supra inconspicue scabridis et parce brunneo- glandulosis, subtus pilos minutos brunneos dispersos gerenti- bus et interdum secus nervos basim versus puberulis, 3- vel obscure 5- -pli- nerviis, nervis secundariis prope basim orientibus et costa supra leviter im- pressis subtus elevatis, rete venularum immerso; inflorescentia apicem ramulorum versus axillari breviter racemosa 2—4-flora , basi bracteis pluri- oribus maximis oblongis ‘ad 2 cm. longis et 0.8 cm. latis apice rotundatis vel leviter emarginatis; rhachi glabra leviter angulata sub anthesi ad 8 mm. longa, floribus bracteis eis basi rhachis similibus subtentis; pedicellis puberulis et parce albo-glandulosis, 2—3.5 mm. longis, basim versus uni- vel bibracteolatis, bracteolis linearibus circiter 3 mm. longis et 0.4 m latis conspicue albo- glanduloso-marginatis; floribus extus albo- ibaalis: calyce 5—6 mm. longo, tubo cupuliformi sub anthesi circiter 3 « 3 mm limbo suberecto intus glabro lobis inclusis 2—3 mm. ongo, lobis 5 deltoideis acutis, 1-1.5 mm. longis, circiter 2 mm. latis, margine glandulas albas lineares patenter gerentibus, sinibus rotundatis: corolla tenuiter carnosa intus glabra cylindrica, sub anthesi 10-12 mm. longa et 4—5 mm. lata, apice paullo contracta, lobis deltoideis acutis circiter 1 & 1.5 mm. stamini- bus 10 quam ee paullo brevioribus, filamentis membranaceis ect circiter 1.5 mm. et 4 mm. longis margine puberulo-ciliolatis apice angustatis, antheris aeaee circiter 9 mm. et 8 mm. longis, tubulis quam thecis paullo longioribus per ar ious dehiscentibus : stylo filiformi corol- lam subaequante subtrunca CoLomsra: Antioquia: oe ween Yarumal and Medellin, alt. 2700 m., near stream-bed on paramo, Feb. 20, 1942, Metcalf & Cuatrecasas 30159 (A, TypPE, US), shrub 4-6 m. high; bracts light rose-colored; calyx green, with silvery hairs; corolla red, green-tipped. Cavendishia Dugandiana is characterized by its small leaves, pilose flowers, and linear glandular-margined bracteoles. Its closest relatives appear to be C. Killipit A. C. Sm. and C. scabriuscula (H. B. K.) Hoer., from both of which it is distinguished by its smaller and fewer-nerved eae blades, fewer-flowered inflorescences, shorter pedicels, smaller flowers, calyx-lobes with linear glands, etc It is a pleasure to dedicate this species to Dr. Armando Dugand G., Director of the Instituto Botanico, Universidad Nacional de Colombia, in recognition of his valuable work on the flora of Colombia. Satyria arborea sp. nov. Arbor ad 12 m. alta ubique praeter inflorescentiam glabra, ramulis crassis subteretibus cinereis; petiolis rugosis valde incrassatis (2.5-3 mm. dia- metro) 3-5 mm. longis: laminis coriaceis elliptico- oblongis, 11-12 cm. longis, 3.3—4 cm. latis, basi gradatim acutis, apice obtusis, margine valde (pilis 0.1-0.25 mm. longis), copiosis, in axillis foliorum mox de pany dispositis, racemosis, 10—25-floris; rhachi leviter angulata gracili 5-20 m longa basim versus interdum ramosa, basi bracteis pluribus imbricatis 470 JOURNAL OF THE ARNOLD ARBORETUM [ VOL. XXIV papyraceis ovatis acutis pauciglanduloso-marginatis 1-2 mm. longis et latis ornata: floribus bracteis oblongis acuminatis circiter 1.5 X 0.7 mm. sub- tentis: pedicellis gracilibus sub anthesi 13-18 mm. longis basim versus bibracteolatis; calycis tubo cupuliformi 1.5—2 mm. longo et circiter 3 mm. diametro, limbo papyraceo intus glabro subpatente lobis inclusis 1-1.5 mm. longo, lobis 5 inconspicuis apiculatis, sinibus complanatis ; corolla tenuiter carnosa intus glabra cylindrico-urceolata, sub anthesi 8-11 mm. longa et basim versus 2-3 mm. diametro, lobis 5 deltoideis subacutis circiter 0.5 1 mm.: staminibus quam corolla multo brevioribus, filamentis glabris in tubo membranaceo 2.5—-3 mm. longo connatis, antheris alternatim circiter 3 mm. et 3.5-4 mm. longis, tubulis thecas subaequantibus per rimas latas ovales dehiscentibus; stylo filiformi corollam subaequante, stigmate minute peltato. COLOMBIA: tioquia: Between Valdivia and Yarumal, alt. 2200 m., along roadside in partial shade, Feb. 20, 1942, Metcalf & Cuatrecasas 30131 (A, TyPE, US), e 10-12 m. high; calyx and corolla rose-colored, finely white-pilose, the corolla white distally. Satyria arborea is apparently most closely allied to the recently de- scribed S. Allenii A. C. Sm. from Panama (in Ann. Mo. Bot. Gard. 28: 451. 1941), from which it differs in its arborescent rather than epiphytic habit, shorter petioles, slightly larger leaf-blades with more highly connate secondary nerves, longer and more copiously flowered inflorescences, longer pedicels, and longer anthers (these being about twice as long in S. arborea than in S. Allenii). Another relative of the new species is S. breviflora Hoer., but the two plants differ in many details of foliage and inflorescence ; the flowers of S. breviflora are larger throughout and are glabrous, at least at anthesis, while those of S. arborea are persistently puberulent. Themistoclesia epiphytica sp. nov. ter racemosa 4—7-flora (floribus raro ad 1 reductis), rhachi pedicellisque lus minusve hispidulis; rhachi gracili plerumque 3-5 mm. longa, basi bracteis pluribus papyraceis oblongis acutis circiter 2 mm. longis circum- pidulis subtentis; pedicellis gracilibus 6-13 mm. longis medium versus bibracteolatis, bracteolis ut bracteis sed minoribus margine hispidulis; lyce 5-6 mm. longo extus pilis 0.15-1 mm. longis plus minusve dense hispidulo etiam interdum sparse brunneo-glanduloso, tubo obconico leviter 5-angulato 3.5—4.5 mm. longo 2.5—3 mm. diametro, limbo papyraceo erecto- patente lobis inclusis circiter 1.5 mm. longo, lobis 5 apiculatis 0.3—0.7 mm. longis, sinibus complanatis; disco pulvinato minute vel conspicue hispido (pilis ad 0.5 mm, longis); corolla tenuiter carnosa praeter lobos parce 1943 ] SMITH, SOUTH AMERICAN PLANTS, X 471 hispidulos glabra, 9-10 mm. longa, 4-5 mm. diametro, lobis 5 deltoideis subacutis circiter 1 & 1.5 mm.; staminibus quam corolla paullo breviori- bus, filamentis glabris membranaceis filiformi-ligulatis alternatim circiter 3 mm. et 4 mm. longis, antheris 5—5.5 mm. longis, thecis 1.5—2 mm. longis, tubulis quam thecis fere duplo longioribus per rimas ovales 0.7-1 mm. longas dehiscentibus; stylo filiformi corollam subaequante truncato, CotomspiA: Narifio: Paramo del Tabano, alto de la Cordillera, entre Pasto y El Encano, vertiente occidental, alt. 3200 m., 11 Enero 1941, Cuatrecasas 11899 (A, type, Col), friitex epifito, ramoso péndulo; corola vermell6n; Putumayo: Alta cuenca del rio Putumayo, filo de la Cordillera entre El Encano y Sibundoy ; paramo de San Antonio del Bordoncillo, alt. 3250 m., Cuatrecasas 11725 (Col, US), frutex epi- fito scandens; corola vermellon. The genus Themistoclesia, which in 1932 (in Contr. U.S. Nat. Herb. 28: 439-444) I supposed to consist of only six species, has since been greatly expanded; in the most recent treatment (Sleumer in Bot. Jahrb. 71: 389- 393. 1941) 17 species are recognized. Themistoclesia epiphytica is char- acterized by its epiphytic habit, proportionately long calyx-tube, and long filaments. It is probably most closely related to T. Pennellit (A. C. Sm.) Sleumer, from which it differs in its larger and acuminate leaf-blades, longer pedicels, slightly larger calyx and corolla, unequal filaments, and somewhat smaller and differently proportioned anthers. Themistoclesia peruviana A. C. Sm., another ally of the new species, differs in its more per- sistently hispid habit, short pedicels, short filaments, differently propor- tioned anthers, etc. ARNOLD ARBORETUM, HARVARD UNIVERSITY. 472 JOURNAL OF THE ARNOLD ARBORETUM [VOL. XXIV THE COMPARATIVE MORPHOLOGY OF THE WINTERACEAE II. CARPELS I. W. BAILEY AND CHARLOTTE G. NAST With six plates INTRODUCTION IN a previous paper, Bailey and Smith (1) called attention to the remarkable stamens and carpel of Degeneria, suggesting that they might prove to be of considerable significance in interpreting the floral morphology of the Ranales. In this genus of the monotypic family Degeneriaceae, both the stamens and the carpel appear to be primitive, palmately 3-veined sporophylls of but slightly modified form. The lamina of the megasporo- phyll is adaxially folded or conduplicate and bears numerous ovules on its morphological upper surface. In other words, the ovules are not attached to the margins of a classical, involute, sealed sporophyll, but to the ventral surface of the megasporophyll as in certain of the Pteridospermae. Carpels of a fundamentally similar type occur in the Tasmannia section of Drimys and in certan species of Bubbia. Other representatives of the Winteraceae exhibit various trends of specialization in the modification of these primitive ranalian megasporophylls. The numerous species of the six genera of the family provide abundant material for comparative studies and demonstrate that the salient trends of specialization in the megasporophylls of the Winteraceae are unlike those which characterize the Magnoliaceae and the Himantandraceae (Bailey, Nast, and Smith, 2). MATERIAL AND METHODS The herbarium specimens upon which our floral studies are based have been listed in Dr. Smith’s papers (3, 4, 5) and need not be relisted here. The vascularization of carpels and other floral organs is commonly recon- structed by the laborious study of serial sections. We have found, how- ever, that such investigations may be facilitated and much accelerated by carefully controlled clearing of flowers or parts of flowers. In the case of material from herbarium specimens, the following procedure is helpful and widely applicable to both flowers and leaves. The dry flowers or leaves are first heated in water until thoroughly saturated and freed of air. They are then transferred to a dilute aqueous solution of NaOH and placed in sealed bottles in an incubator at 55° C. until cleared to the desired degree. They are next washed free of NaOH and transferred to vials of 95% alcohol for visual study. Permanent mounts can be made by passing the material through absolute alcohol, diaphane solvent to diaphane or through absolute alcohol, toluene to clarite. The clarity of the vascularization depends upon the refractive index of the medium and the consistency of the tissues. 1943] BAILEY & NAST, MORPHOLOGY OF THE WINTERACEAE, II 473 Commonly the venation shows best in alcohol, and the unmounted speci- mens may be turned for examination at all angles. Staining of the material is unnecessary either for visual examination or for photomicrography. The method is adequate except in cases where organs are excessively hairy or where they contain numerous clusters of sclereids, as in the floral parts of certain species of Bubbia, Exospermum, and Zygogynum. In dealing with such material, one is forced to rely largely upon serial sections. CARPELS OF THE TASMANNIA SECTION OF DRIMYS There is a conspicuous tendency in many ranalian families for the leaves to be adaxially folded or conduplicate during the earlier stages of their ontogenetic development. In such species of the Tasmannia section of Drimys as D. piperita Hook. f., the carpels resemble in external form these conduplicate young leaves. There is a similar differentiation of the mega- sporophylls into stipe (petiole), Fig. 7, and conduplicate lamina, compare Figs. 1 and 12. e more or less closely approximated ventral ‘surfaces! of the conduplicate megasporophyll frequently are not extensively and firmly concrescent prior to and during anthesis. Thus, the conduplicate lamina may be spread open without serious or extensive rupture and dis- tortion of the carpel or of its constituent tissues, Fig. 17. The carpels are vascularized by three veins, a median vein and two lateral veins. The median vein frequently bifurcates and has numerous conspicu- ous branches of considerable length, Fig. 17. The two lateral veins com- monly have short branches that are directed both outward toward the margins of the megasporophyll and inward toward the branches of the median vein, Figs. 1 and 3 and left half of Fig. 17. In certain cases, the lateral veins have extensive branches that run parallel to them, right half of Fig. 17. The ovules are remote from the margins of the megasporophyll and are invariably attached between the median and the lateral veins, i.e. in the parts of the carpel where the branches of the median and lateral vascular systems tend to overlap and anastomose. The ovules are vascu- larized in part by extensions of the veinlets of the lateral systems (a in Figs. 17 and 18), in part by extensions of the veinlets of the median system (6 in Figs. 17 and 18), and in part by strands arising from anastomosed 1In order to avoid confusion in morphological descriptions, it is essential to recog- nize that the hoes ventral and dorsal are used in two distinct ways, (1) in referring to the upper and lower surfaces of flat, cladified appendages, and (2) in designating parts or sides of folded meeasporophyls viz. carpels. There are ontogenetic and phylogenetic implications in both usa We shall refer to he eae or morphologically adaxial surface of leaves and sporo- phylls as ventral, to the lower or morphologically abaxial surface as dorsal. In con duplicate ranalian carpels, the exposed outer surfaces are, therefore, dorsal and the internal ones ventral. In dealing with conduplicate cua carpels, we shall refer to the primitively orsal whereas in certain speci eit forms, Figs. 20-23, their actual orientation may be in part terminal or even abaxia 474 JOURNAL OF THE ARNOLD ARBORETUM (VOL. XXIV branches of the median and lateral systems (c in Figs. 17 and 18). The details of the vascularization, both of the carpels and of the ovules, fluc- tuate considerably from carpel to carpel of the same species and of the same flower. Thus, the ovules may be vascularized at times largely by the median system, by the lateral systems, or by varying combinations of these systems. As shown in Fig. 12, the free margins of the conduplicate megasporophylls are provided with conspicuous, glandular-appearing, papillate cells or hairs, which extend backward from the margins for varying distances over the exposed dorsal surfaces of the conduplicate megasporophylls. That the papillae are glandular and function as a stigmatic surface is demonstrated by adhering pollen at anthesis, Fig. 2, and by pollen-tubes which penetrate the mat of papillae. Thus, the carpels are provided with extensive stig- matic crests (actually double), which extend from the region of the stipe along the i aS adaxial parts of the sporophyll and slightly overtop its apex, Figs. 1 and 2. The fertile oe have a fundamentally similar conduplicate form, placentation, and vascularization throughout the 15 species of the Tas- mannia section of Drimys that we have studied. There are variations in the length of the stipe, in the size and form of the conduplicate lamina, in the extension of the outer stigmatic surfaces, in the concrescence of the approxi- mated ventral surfaces, in the number and form of the ovules, and in the details of the vascularization, but only in two of the investigated species are the deviations of considerable magnitude. The carpels of D. stipitata Vickery are characterized by their excessively elongated stipe; those of D. lanceolata (Poir.) Baill. by their unusually fleshy conduplicate lamina of nearly globular form, Fig. 27. The sterile megasporophylls of staminate flowers usually are smaller, but they have a similar conduplicate, palmately 3-veined lamina, Fig. 2. Although no ovules are formed, the stigmatic surfaces are conspicuously developed and are encrusted with firmly adherent pollen at anthesis, Fig. 2. In the more rudimentary forms of sterile carpels, the branches of the median and lateral veins may be feebly developed or absent, thus resembling the venation of fertile carpels during the earlier stages of their ontogeny. CARPELS OF THE WINTERA SECTION OF DRIMYS In the Tasmannia section of Drimys, the carpels are adaxially folded or conduplicate and may be spread open into megasporophylls of but slightly modified form. When unfolded, Fig. 17, their venation resembles that of a palmately 3-veined appendage. The elongated locule of the folded carpel is oriented approximately parallel to the long axis of the megasporophyll, and the numerous ovules are attached to two placental ridges that are situ- ated between the median and lateral veins. The carpels throughout the Wintera section of Drimys have a funda- mentally similar vascularization and placentation, but the external stigmatic surfaces are restricted to the adaxially projecting, subapical, ventral part of the carpels, Fig. 6. The approximated ventral surfaces of the condupli- 1943] BAILEY & NAST, MORPHOLOGY OF THE WINTERACEAE, II 475 cate carpels are firmly concrescent, Fig. 14, except at the level of the stig- matic projection, Fig. 13, and therefore the megasporophylls cannot be un- folded as in the case of the more primitive sporophylls of the Tasmannia type. At the level of the stigmatic projection, Fig. 13, there is a cleft-like opening or a loose suture which extends outward from the locule as in Drimys piperita, Fig. 12, of the Tasmannia section of Drimys. Serial trans- verse sections indicate that the closure of the carpels progressed upward from the base and downward from the apex of the conduplicate lamina, and commonly also centripetally, since vestiges of the cleft-like opening tend to persist internally, Fig. 14, after they have been completely eliminated externally. These conclusions regarding closure may be verified by the serial sectioning of Tasmannia type carpels, many of which exhibit incipient stages of concrescence. With the closure of the cleft-like opening, the car- pels retract, and eventually eliminate, the stigmatic crests from the sealed parts of the megasporophylls. Thus, the subapical projection of the Wintera type of carpel is not to be interpreted as a style-like outgrowth, but rather as a persistent remnant of the extensive adaxial stigmatic crests of Tasmannia type megasporophylls, Fig. 19. CARPELS OF BUBBIA, BELLIOLUM, EXOSPERMUM, AND ZYGOGYNUM Various transitional stages in the closure of conduplicate carpels and in the restriction of their stigmatic crests occur in the genus Bubbia, but in this genus, as in Belliolum, Exospermum, and Zygogynum, there is in addition a more or less pronounced abaxially directed deformation of the conduplicate megasporophylls. The carpels of Bubbia Archboldiana A. C. Sm. (Brass 12712) resemble those of the Tasmannia section of Drimys in their vascularization, placen- tation, and in having extensive stigmatic surfaces, Fig. 20. They differ in their angular external form and in their conspicuously broadened and flattened apices. There are, however, no significant modifications in the longitudinal orientation of the locule, the placental ridges, or the median and lateral veins. The carpel of Bubbia megacarpa A. C. Sm. (Brass 10249) likewise has extensive stigmatic margins, Fig. 27, but it exhibits a profoundly modified form, due to the overtopping of the shortened dorsal side of the sporophyll by its over-extended, conduplicate, ventral side. In other words, there is an abaxially directed deformation of the megasporo- phyll which produces a short, apically much broadened carpel. The locule, the placental ridges, the lateral veins, and the stigmatic crests all show pronounced abaxial curvatures. Owing to these concomitant deformations from longitudinal to approximately transverse orientations, it is evident that the apparently terminal parts of the carpel, Fig. 21, actually are homologues of the ventral parts of the primitive carpels illustrated in Fig. 1. The true apex of the carpel is curved around onto the dorsal side of the megasporophyll. The massive median trace dissociates in the base of the carpel, Fig. 21, into numerous vascular strands, the majority of which extend upward toward the transversely oriented parts of the placental ridges. Their recurved ends either terminate in the placental ridges or 476 JOURNAL OF THE ARNOLD ARBORETUM [VOL. XXIV anastomose with the short downwardly directed branches of the lateral veins. Comparatively few branches of the median vein are directed diagonally toward the longitudinally oriented basal parts of the placental ridges. Most of the ovules are vascularized by veinlets of the lateral systems. The carpels of other species of Bubbia, as of Belliolum and Zygogynum, exhibit more or less conspicuous abaxially directed deformations and, in addition, much restricted stigmatic crests which tend to assume a trans- Heed terminal orientation. Although the carpels of Bubbia longifolia A. C. Sm. (Brass 13868) have less exaggerated abaxial deformation, Figs. 10 and 22, and therefore a less modified median vein than that of B. mega- carpa, Fig. 21, the stigmatic crests and the ovules are restricted to the diagonal upper part of the distorted megasporophylls. The approximated ventral surfaces in the lower ventral part of the conduplicate carpel are concrescent and there is no cleft-like opening extending outward from the locule except in the upper part of the megasporophyll which subtends the stigmatic crests. The placental ridges and ovules are likewise restricted to the upper part of the sporophyll. The ovules are vascularized in part by veinlets of the lateral systems and in part by extensions of the median system, Fig. 22. The single, terminal megasporophyll of Bubbia mono- carpa A. C. Sm. (Kanehira & Hatusima 12105), Fig. 9, resembles the carpels of B. longifolia both in its abaxial deformation and its internal structure. It demonstrates, as does the single terminal carpel of B. mega- carpa, that the distorted forms of the megasporophylls in polycarpellate species are not due solely to excessive compression of adjacent organs during ontogenetic development. The immature carpels, illustrated in Figs. 7 and 8, indicate furthermore that the abaxial deformations are of phylogenetic rather than purely ontogenetic development. In Bubbia Clemensiae A. C. Sm. (Clemens 5157 and 4596), abaxial deformation coupled with concomitant modifications of the lower part of the megasporophylls have produced a more nearly symmetrical carpel, Fig. 23. Externally it is difficult to distinguish the sealed, crestless, adaxial side of the conduplicate sporophyll from its dorsal side. Furthermore, the lateral veins not infrequently are fused in the lower closed part of the carpel and separate at a higher level, thus simulating the bifurcation of the median vein. The transversely oriented placental ridges extend downward into the locule for a considerable distance, Fig. 15. Therefore, the attach- ment of the ovules is more remote from the stigmatic margins and the ovules are vascularized by more downwardly extended veinlets of the lateral and median systems. The carpels of Bubbia Whiteana A. C. Sm. (Brass 2278), Figs. 11 and 24, resemble the megasporophylls of B. Clemensiae in their concealed abaxial deformation and in their much modified median and lateral vascular systems, but differ from them in having less extensive terminal stigmatic crests and ovules that are attached at a higher level of the locule. The ovules, as in B. Clemensiae, are vascularized by extensions of both the lateral and median systems. 1943] BAILEY & NAST, MORPHOLOGY OF THE WINTERACEAE, II 477 Restriction of the stigmatic crests is carried to an extreme in the short, terminally broadened, fleshy carpels of Bubbia auriculata v. Tiegh. (Vieillard 2280) and B. semecarpoides (F. v. Muell.) Burtt (Kajewski 1216). There is a pronounced abaxially directed deformation in the ventral part of the conduplicate carpel, as indicated by the curvature of the lateral veins and the diagonal orientation of the placental ridges, Fig. 25, but the conduplicate ventral part of the carpel does not extend across the broad terminal face of the megasporophyll and does not overtop a shortened dorsal side as in B. megacarpa, Fig. 21, or B. Clemensiae, Fig. 23. In most species of Bubbia, as in the Tasmannia section of Drimys, the placental ridges are closely correlated in orientation and extension with the stigmatic crests. In certain carpels, however, e.g. those of B. pachyantha A.C. Sm. (Brass 4371) and B. isoneura v. Tiegh. (Vteillard 17), there are more or less conspicuous unconformities, as in the megasporophylls of the Wintera section of Drimys, Fig. 19. In other words, the placental ridges persist for varying distances in the sealed, crestless, ventral part of the megasporophylls. Such unconformities between the orientation and exten- sion of the placental ridges and the stigmatic crests occur at times in the carpels of Belliolum, Fig. 26. Although the carpels of Bedliolum in general resemble those of the more highly specialized species of Bubbia (viz. those having more or less restricted, terminally oriented crests), the attachment of the ovules tends to be at lower levels and the branches of the lateral veins are more downwardly extended, as in Bubbia Clemensiae, Fig. 23. The coriaceous megasporophylls of certain polycarpellate species of Bubbia, e.g. B. pachyantha, are closely crowded and firmly coherent both preceding and during anthesis. Thus, as stated by Smith (3), “the gynae- cium has the appearance of a compound ovary with a 3- or 4-parted stellate stigma.” Such gynaecia closely resemble that of Exospermum stipitatum (Baill.) v. Tiegh. (Viedlard 2281). There is, accordingly, no such sharply defined morphological distinction between coherent (Exospermum) and free (Bubbia) carpels as hypothesized by van Tieghem (6). The indi- vidual carpels may be readily separated after clearing treatments and each is provided with an independent epidermal layer. Only in the gynaecia of Zygogynum are the carpels fused into a concrescent mass without internal evidences of sutures, Fig. 16. The ovules of Exospermum stipitatum are not restricted in their attach- ment to conspicuous stigmatic ridges, but are scattered over the walls of the locule, a modified type of placentation that is suggestive of certain Nymphaeaceae and Lardizabalaceae. The cleft-like opening at anthesis is partly closed externally and does not extend outward from the locule to the stigmatic surface as in Zygogynum spathulatum v. Tiegh. (Vieillard 2266), Fig. 16. In this, as in other species of Zygogynum, the shortened placental ridges, Fig. 16, are situated on the abaxial side of the locule. The ovules are not attached to the dorsal part of the carpel, however, as hypothesized by van Tieghem (6), but to a morphologically ventral part of the conduplicate megasporophylls that has been deflected into an 478 JOURNAL OF THE ARNOLD ARBORETUM [VOL. XXIV abaxial orientation and thus overtops the much shortened morphologically dorsal part of the carpel. The carpels of Pseudowintera fluctuate considerably in form. In general, those of P. axillaris var. colorata (Raoul) A. C. Sm., Fig. 4, tend to resemble the megasporophylls of the Wintera section of Drimys, whereas those of P. axillaris var. typica A. C. Sm., Fig. 5, exhibit more pronounced abaxially directed deformation as in certain species of Bubbia. SIGNIFICANCE OF INTERNAL PAPILLATE SURFACES The conduplicate megasporophylls of Degeneria (Bailey and Smith, 1) have more or less conspicuously flaring free margins and are characterized by having short, glandular-appearing hairs that are distributed inwardly from the margins along the approximated ventral surfaces as far as the flanks of the placental ridges. Thus, the cleft-like opening that extends outward from the locule is partly occluded by interlocking papillae, and pollen does not have direct access to the locule in most cases. The pollen grains become attached to the outer glandular projections and the pollen- tubes penetrate apparently through the mat of interlocking papillae. In the Winteraceae, the free margins of the conduplicate lamina (in unsealed parts of the carpels) are more closely approximated and the stigmatic papillae extend backward from the margins over the exposed dorsal surfaces of the sporophylls, Figs. 12 and 13. There are, in addition, more or less numerous papillate cells along the ventral surfaces of the conduplicate megasporophylls, Figs. 12 and 13. These projecting cells commonly jacket both flanks of the placental ridges even in sealed parts of the carpels, Fig. 14. In regions of incipient closure (phylogenetic, not ontogenetic) the papillae not infrequently appear to enlarge and to inter- lock and possibly at times to play an initial role in the developing suture. Unfortunately, herbarium specimens do not provide adequate material for studying the finer cytological and histological details of the closure of carpels or of the penetration of pollen-tubes. Such details can be clarified only by the study of living and adequately killed and fixed material. Fur- thermore, it is essential that the carpels of Degeneria and the Winteraceae be studied in all stages of their ontogenetic development and during the changes that they undergo subsequent to anthesis. It should be emphasized in this connection that there is considerable variation in the form of winteraceous carpels, in the details of their vascu- larization, in the extent of their closure, etc., not only in material from different collections of the same species, but also in different carpels from the same flower. Therefore, our descriptions and illustrations represent average or typical conditions. Numerous variations in the structural de- tails of particular genera and species may be anticipated when more abundant and complete collections of these remarkable plants become available. DISCUSSION AND CONCLUSIONS The carpels of the Tasmannia section of Drimys are conduplicate mega- sporophylls of but slightly modified form and closely resemble the mega- 1943] BAILEY & NAST, MORPHOLOGY OF THE WINTERACEAE, II 479 sporophyll of Degeneria. In both cases, the megasporophyll is clearly differentiated into stipe and adaxially folded lamina, Figs. 1 and 2. When spread open, the lamina exhibits a palmately 3-veined vascularization such as characterizes both the microsporophylls and the sterile sporophylls (staminodes) of the Degeneriaceae and Himantandraceae. The numerous anatropous ovules, Fig. 18, are attached to more or less conspicuous placen- tal ridges that are situated between the median and the lateral veins, Fig. 17. The ovules are vascularized in part by short branches of the two lateral veins, in part by branches of the median vein, and in part by strands origi- nating near anastomoses of the lateral and median vascular systems, the ratios of the three types of vascularization fluctuating from carpel to carpel. The conduplicate form, placentation, and vascularization of the megasporophyll do not conform with the classical interpretation of the angiosperm carpel as an involute megasporophyll bearing marginally attached ovules. In the Winteraceae and Degeneriaceae, the ovules are borne on the morphological upper surface of the megasporophyll, between the lateral and median veins, Fig. 17, and remote from the margins of the sporophyll, Figs. 12, 13, 15, and 16. It should be noted in this connection that the broad, palmately 3-veined microsporophylls of the Degeneriaceae and Himantandraceae are not differentiated into filament, anther, and con- nective, and that they bear four slender elongated sporangia that are im- mersed beneath the dorsal surface of the sporophyll, midway between the median and the lateral veins. Thus, in these primitive ranalian carpels and stamens, neither the megasporangia nor the microsporangia are borne upon the margins of the sporophylls. It should be noted, in addition, that there is no conclusive evidence at present for inferring marginal attachments in ancestral angiosperms rather than ventral and dorsal ones as in certain of the Pteridospermae. In the Winteraceae, the chief trends of specialization of the primitive ranalian megasporophyll lead toward closure of the conduplicate sporo- phyll (by concrescence of its approximated ventral surfaces) and con- comitant restriction of its external stigmatic surfaces. In Bubbdia, Belliolum, Exospermum, and Zygogynum these trends of specialization are complicated by more or less pronounced abaxially directed deformation which results in an apically much broadened carpel bearing more or less terminally or even abaxially (Zygogynum) oriented stigmatic crests. In the more specialized forms, the ovules tend to be attached to transversely or even abaxially oriented placental ridges in the upper part of the carpel. On the contrary, in the Himantandraceae and Magnoliaceae (the closest relatives of the Degeneriaceae) the specializations of the primitive ranalian megasporophyll lead toward a pronounced constriction of the upper part of the conduplicate lamina. This constricted, sterilized, upper part, viz. style, has more or less extensively “decurrent” stigmatic surfaces and still exhibits a conduplicate structure. The few remaining ovules are thus con- fined to the fertile, lower, broader part of the conduplicate carpels, which may remain partly open (Himantandraceae) or be firmly sealed (Mag- noliaceae). 480 JOURNAL OF THE ARNOLD ARBORETUM [VOL. XXIV Our detailed investigations of the numerous representatives of the Winteraceae support the suggestion (Bailey and Smith, 1) that the re- markable megasporophyll of Degeneria may afford significant clues for interpreting the diverse carpellary structures of the Ranales. The occur- rence of fundamentally similar types of conduplicate megasporophylls throughout the Tasmannia section of Drimys provides a broad basis for comparative investigations of the various ranalian families. If the dico- tyledons are monophyletic, the megasporophylls of the Degeneriaceae and Winteraceae should prove to be equally significant in studying the car- pellary specializations of other orders. LITERATURE CITED 1. Battey, I. W., and A. C. Smitu. Degeneriaceae, a new family of flowering plants from Fiji. jue Arnold Arb. 23: 356-365. pl. 1-5. 1942. ————, C. ast, and A. C. Smitn. The family Himantandraceae. Jour. Arnold Arb. “ba, 190-206. pl. 1-6. 1943. 3. Smiru, A. C. Studies of Papuasian plants, V. Jour. Arnold Arb. 23: 417-443. 1942. The American species of Drimys. Jour. Arnold Arb. 24: 1-33. f. 1-3. 1943. —--- xonomic notes on the Old World species of Winteraceae. Jour. Aen Pats 24: 119-164. f. 1-6. 1943 6. TiEGHEM, P. vAN. Sur les dicotylédones is groupe des Homoxylées. Jour. de Bot. 14: 259-297, 330-361. 1900. EXPLANATION OF PLATES PiaTE I Carpels cleared in dilute NaOH and apg unstained in 95% alcohol. Fic. 1. Drimys piperita Hook. f., Ramos and Edano 38897. Two attached carpels, showing stipe and venation of conduplicate lamina, x 20. Fic. 2. Drimys macrantha AC. stigmatic surface 24. Fic. 3. Drimys insipida (R. Br.) Pilger, Caley. Detached young fruit, rn at left outwardly projecting branches of lateral vein, x 17. PLATE II Carpels cleared in dilute NaOH and mounted unstained in diaphane. 4. phialdoge cen axillaris var. colorata (Raoul) A. C. Sm., Kirk. Two attached carpels, typica A. C. ‘Sm., bgpea Two attached carpels, showing lateral view of vasculariza- tion, X 20. Fic. 6. Drimys confertifolia Phil., Moseley. Two attached carpels, show- ing vascularization aad apex of torus, x 20. Puiate III Carpels cleared in dilute NaOH and photographed unstained in 95% alcohol. Fic. 7. Bubbia monocar pa A. C. Sm., Kanehira and Hatusima 12105. Young carpel, showing early stage in the deodineuent of median and lateral vein 24. or 8. The same. Somewhat older carpel, showing extensions of the vasculaneation, x same. Carpel showing vascularization at anthesis, x 24. Fic. 10. Bubble longifolia C. Sm., Brass 13868. ature detached carpel, showing vascularization, Fic. 11. Bubbia Whiteana A. C. Sm., Brass 2278. Two somewhat coherent carpels, showing vascularization, x 17 Jour. Arnotp Ars. Vor. XXIV Prate | CoMPARATIVE MorRPHOLOGY OF THE WINTERACEAE Pirate I] Jour. Arnotp Ars. VoL. XXIV THE WINTERACEAE F C MorPHOLOGY ARATIVE Comp Prate III XXIV Jour. ArNotp Ars. Vou. THE WINTERACEAE COMPARATIVE MorpHOLOGY OF Piare IV Jour. Arnoip Ars. Vor. XXIV a, es ‘ eae = Nate, : Oye ey as : © is “ POOLE a Eee: oS bie’ as, aT , a ae = NG “4 my Sere Fans ne ic rae Sais ELLE Re Se] (tye ok a So Rose Saas nee & eee Bee e Aa Sere s = SS Sa: S i y NS Bets Os Bs CK os v7 ate FS Cee ts : e i oy pve ve Se, Poe ages e Sacre eS aN: ii Reet eee lies; " Re is = ae em . sii sao SSN SS » 2 a » : 2; Een RS BE IRE Lo ea SIN ~ ge chs 3: WN S Se ee we : x SS “ S EET ww ¥: cf Ta. a Zee pa Lt oe a Cage ~ > J oe hy ti ars OSH, ee Testes . A Ke BS Uf, Pe spies Sekagee SSS LS eal EST ee Jie san ae a Cue, je see Se Ste KS es = iS, ee Se ie aS Ve : Pa AE 3. Sgr po — Se cere oe THE WINTERACEAE CoMPARATIVE MORPHOLOGY OF Jour. ARNotp Ars. VoLt. XXIV Piate V -——_— ~~ _— — — ere ERE EE RY Roast Se : WINTERACEAE CoMPARATIVE MORPHOLOGY OF THE Jour. Arnotp Ars. Vou. XXIV Piate VI CoMPARATIVE MorpHo.tocy OF THE WINTERACEAE 1943] BAILEY & NAST, MORPHOLOGY OF THE WINTERACEAE, II 481 Pirate IV Sections of rag re-expanded carpels, stained in Haidenhain’s haematoxylin and safranin. Fic. 12. Drimys piperita Hook. f., Ramos and Edano 38897. Transverse section of pres carpel, showing stigmatic surfaces and ovules, x 50. Fic. 13. Drimys granadensis var. mexicana (DC.) A. C. Sm., Tonduz 7342. eee section of conduplicate, open, Be part of carpel, showing stigmatic surfaces and attachment of ovules, x 50. Fic. 14. The same. Lower sealed part of carpel, ate internal vestige of cleft and aia papillae, x 50. Fic. 15. Bubbia Clemensia m., Clemens 4596. Longitudinal section, showing cleft-like opening, downwardly project- ing stigmatic ridges, and ovules, x 24. Fic. 16. Zygogynum spathulatum v. Tiegh., Vieillard 2266. Transverse pete of gynaecium, showing parts of three ra carpels, x 40 PLATE V 17. Composite diagram of opened Tasmannia type carpels, showing typical i placentation, and vascularization of a cleared Wintera type carpel, showing restriction of the stigmatic crests to a subapical projection. Broken lines indicate the extent of the stigmatic crests in primitive Tasmannia type carpels. PiaTE VI ams of cleared carpels, showing the extent and orientation of the stigmatic et in placental tissue. and by broken lines as they enter the funicles. A. adaxial side of carpel. Magnification x 18. Fic. 20. Bubbia Archboldiana ‘i C. Sm., Brass 12712. Fic. 21. Bubbia megacarpa A. C. Sm., Brass 10249. Fic. 22. Bubbia longifolia A. C. Sm., Brass 13868. Fic. 23. Bubbia Clemensiae A. C. Sm., Clemens 4596. Fic. 24. Bubbia sags? A. C. Sm., Brass 2278. Fic. = Bubbia aupieulat v. Tiegh., Vieillard 228 26. Belliolum haplopas (Burtt) A. C. Sm., Brass 2959. Immature carpel wih eee vascularization. Fic. 27. inte anceolatn (Poir.) Baill., Boorman. BIoLocIcAL LABORATORIES, HarvarpD UNIVERSITY. 482 JOURNAL OF THE ARNOLD ARBORETUM [VOL. XXIV FORSYTHIA VAHL, NOMEN GENERICUM CONSERVANDUM ALFRED REHDER Tue fact that Forsythia Vahl needs conservation, on account of the older homonym Forsythia Walter of 1788, seems so far to have been overlooked ; at least, no proposal for its conservation has been put forward, which is probably not strange, since up to 1930 there was no necessity to conserve the name, because Walter’s name is a clear synonym of the older Decumaria L. (1762) and the so-called homonym rule (Internat. Rules Bot. Nomencl. ed. 3, p. 19, Art. 61. 1935) was not adopted until 1930. There can be no doubt that the name should be conserved, for the genus contains some of the best known ornamental shrubs brightening in early spring the gardens in temperate America and Europe, and the name is well known in botanical and horticultural and even general literature. Though not a large genus, containing only six or seven species, it includes a con- siderable number of named varieties of spontaneous as well as garden origin, the latter partly hybrids. The name will certainly be accepted by a large majority as a nomen conservandum, when proposed for conserva- tion at the next International Botanical Congress. It seems, therefore, advisable to make herewith a formal proposal which should prevent the taking up the next oldest name, Rangium Jussieu, by some author, and the creation of a number of new combinations which can with certainty be expected to be relegated to synonymy by the next Botanical Congress. So far, only one author, namely Ohwi in 1932, seems to have taken up Jussieu’s name and made a number of combinations. Forsythia Vahl, Enum. Pl. 1: 39 (1805) versus Forsythia Walter, Fl. Carol. 154 (178 Rangium Jussieu in Dict. Sci. Nat. o4, 200 (1822 Type species: F. suspensa (Thunb. ) Vahl bDiessiviie suspensum Thunberg). Forsythia Vahl has been accepted by all later authors up to 1932, when Ohwi (in Act. Phytotax. Geobot. 1: 140) took up Rangium. Forsythia Walter has not been accepted by any author and has always been treated as a synonym of Decumaria Linnaeus (Sp. Pl. ed. 2, 1663. 762) Rangium Jussieu, based on the monotypic Forsythia Vahl, remained with- out specific epithet until Ohwi (1. c.), in 1932, took up the name and made the following combinations: Rangium suspensum (Thunb.) Ohwi, |. c. = alba hin suspensa Vahl, |. c Rangium viridissimum (Lindl.) Ohwi, 1. c. = Forsythia viridissima Lindl. in Jour. Hort. Soc. Lond. 1: 226 (1846). Rangium Pidgeon {Rehd.] Ohwi, 1. c. = Forsythia viridissima var. koreana in Jour. Arnold Arb. 5: 134 (1924).—Syn.: F. koreana (Rehd.) Nakai in a Mag. Tokyo, 40: 471 (1926). 1943] REHDER, FORSYTHIA VAHL 483 Rangium ovatum (Nakai) Ohwi, 1. c. = Forsythia ovata Nakai in Bot. Mag. Tokyo, 1917). Rangium japonicum (Mak.) Ohwi, |. c. = Forsythia japonica Makino in Bot. Mag. Tokyo, 28: 105, fig. 4 (1914). ARNOLD ARBORETUM, Harvarp UNIVERSITY. 484 JOURNAL OF THE ARNOLD ARBORETUM [VOL. XXIV ROYLE’S “ILLUSTRATIONS OF THE BOTANY OF THE HIMALAYAN MOUNTAINS” WILLIAM T. STEARN Tue “Illustrations of the Botany and other Branches of the Natural History of the Himalayan Mountains, and of the Flora of Cashmere” (2 vols. quarto; London) by John Forbes Royle (1799-1858) stands with Roxburgh’s “Plants of the Coast of Coromandel” (1795-1819), Wallich’s “Plantae Asiaticae rariores” (1830-1832), Wight’s “Icones Plantarum Indiae Orientalis” (1838-1853),1 and Wight’s “Illustrations of Indian Botany” (4840-1850) as one of the most important illustrated works on the flora of India. Royle was a pioneer economic botanist. His work is not so much a descriptive systematic flora as an attempt to reveal “the immense resources of British India, both as regards whatever is necessary for the Agriculture, Manufactures, and Internal trade of the people, as for the supply of a much extended External Commerce.” In it “the Geo- graphical Distribution of Plants, as connected with Climate, is considered, their Useful Properties detailed, and the principles which should guide their culture in new situations deduced.” Medicinal plants receive special attention. Many new species came to light during the preparation of the work and are concisely described in its pages. It was issued in eleven parts, costing £1. each, between 1833 and 1840. An unnumbered page of the Introduction states the text-content of each part and its date of issue but gives no information about the plates. This is an omission of some im- portance. The plates illustrate in colour many of the new species de- scribed in the text; they sometimes appeared before the corresponding descriptions and, because they contain figures of floral dissections, the valid publication of certain botanical names dates not from the text but from the earlier issued plates.2, As Dr. T. A. Sprague remarks, the most satis- factory way to determine the details of issue of a work of this kind is to examine a copy still in the original wrappers. No such copy of Royle’s work being known, he endeavoured to ascertain the issue of the plates by a survey of contemporary journals. Notices in Loudon’s Gardeners’ Maga- zine, vols. 9-16 (London, 1833-1840), enabled him to fix with precision the issue of 30 out of a total 100 plates. He assumed that the remaining 70 plates were issued in numerical sequence. Since the publication of 1For dates of publication of Wight’s “Icones” see Merrill in Jour. Arnold Arb. 22: 222-224. 1941. 2In this respect Royle’s “Illustrations” is by no means unique. Webb and Berthelot’s “Histoire naturelle des Iles Canaries” (1835-1850) is another important work in which a number of names were first published on the plates; for fuller details see Stearn in Jour. Soc. Bibl. Nat. Hist. 1: 58-59. 1937. 1943 ] STEARN, BIBLIOGRAPHICAL NOTES 485 Sprague’s paper (“‘The Dates of Publication of Royle’s Illustrations,” in Kew Bull. 1933: 378-390. 1933), parts 1-10 in wrappers as issued have come into the present writer’s hands. They show that the plates were not issued in numerical sequence. ‘This find necessitates some modification, fortunately not extensive, of Sprague’s account The contents and dates of publication of the parts are as follows: Part I. (Sept. 1833): pp. 1-40; pls. 4, 11-18, 22. Part II. (March, 1834): pp. v—xii, 41-72; pls. 1, 19-21, 23-28. Part III. (June, 1834): pp. xili-xx, 73-104; pls. 2, 5, 29, 31-35, 37, 38. Part IV. (Sept. 1834): pp. 105-136; pls. 30, 39, 40, 42, 44-46, 64, 76 as 75 Part V. (Jan. 1835): pp. 137-176; pls. 3, 41, 48-51, 57, 62, 63, 74. Part VI. (April, 1835): pp. 177-216; pls. 7, 36, 43, 55, 56, 58, 60, 61, 75 as 75a (Phlomis, Salvia), and View of the Himalayan Moonta ar ti to Vol. 1) Part VII. (Aug. 1835): pp. 217-248; pls. 8, 9, 47, 52, 59, 65, 67-69, 71, 77. Part VIII. (Dec. 1835): pp. 249-288; pls. 53, 54, 66, 70, 72, 73, 79 (63a), 80, 87, 88. Part IX. (May, 1836): pp. 289-336; pls. 10, 81, 82, 83 (Procris), 84-86, 90, 100 (83, Putranjiva). Part 2x. (Feb. 1839): pp. 337-384; pls. 89, 91-96, 98 (84a), 99 (78a), and Plan of the H.E.I.C. Botanic Garden at Saharinpore (Frontispiece to Vol. 2 Part XI. (1840, before July): pp. xxi-IV’nxx, 385-472, title-pa san dedications, preface, synoptic table of contents, list of plates, list of plants figured; pls. 6, 97 [details of this part obtained from eg oe Gard. Mag. 16: 348. 1840 (July), Sprague in Kew Bull. 1933: 382. Hence the dates of the ae of the plates and the parts in which they were contained are as follo Plate 1 (II, March, 1834), 2 i on 1834), 3 (V, Jan. 1835), 4 (I, Sept. 1833), 5 (III, June, eee 6 (XI, 1840), 7 (VI, April, 1835), 8-9 (VII, Aug. 1835), 10 (IX, May, 1836), 11-18 in Sept. 1833), 19-21 (II, March, 1834), 22 (I, Sept. 1833), 23-28 (II, March, 1834), 29 (III, June, 1834), 30 (IV, Sept. 1834), 31-35 (III, June, 1834), 36 (VI, April, 1835), 37-38 (III, June, 1834), 39-40 (IV, Sept. 1834), 41 (V, Jan 1835), 42 (IV, Sept. 1834), 43 (VI, April, 1835), 44-46 (IV, Sept. 1834), 47 (VII, Aug. 1835), 48-51 (V, Jan. 1835), 52 (VII, Aug. 1835), 53-54 (VIII, Dec. 1835), 55-56 (VI, April, 1835), 57 (V, Jan. 1835), 58 (VI, April, 1835), 59 (VII, Aug. 1835), 60-61 (VI, eke 1835), 62-63 (V, Jan. 1835), 64 (IV, Sept. 1834), 65 (VII, Aug. 1835), 66 (VIII, mt Dec. 1835), 74 (V, Jan. 1835), 75 as 75a (VI, April, 1835), 76 as 75 (IV, Sept. 1834), 77 (VII, Aug. 1835), 78 (IV, Sept. 1834), 79-80 (VIII, Dec. 1835), 81-86 (IX, May, 1836), 87-88 (VIII, Dec. 1835), 89 (X, Feb. 1839), 90 (IX, May, 1836), 91-96 (X, Feb. 1839), 97 (XI, 1840), 98 as 84a, 99 (X, Feb. 1839), 100 as 83 (IX, May, 1836). The dates of publication of Royle’s new species can be readily ascertained from the above. As Sprague points out, the new species figured by Royle “fall into two categories: (1) those with figures accompanied by analyses, which date from the publication of the plate, where this is earlier than the corresponding text; (2) those without analyses, which date from the publication of the description (if any) in the text.’ Of the dates which Sprague gives for the 134 new species figured by Royle, only 24 need amendment. The following are corrected citations for these: 486 JOURNAL OF THE ARNOLD ARBORETUM [VOL. XXIV A plotaxis pecehincn DC. ex Royle, t. 59, sine anal. (Aug. 1835), p. 251, nomen Dec. 1835); DC. Prodr. 6: 542 (Jan. 1837),° as A. gnaphalodes. Astragalus fsieetle Royle, p. 199, t. 36 (April, 1835). Campanula cashmeriana Royle, t. 62 (Jan. 1835), pp. 253-254 (Dec. 1835). Cerasus cornuta Wall. ex Royle, t. 38 (June, 1834), pp. 205, 207 (April, 1835). Chaptalia gossypina Royle, p. 18, nomen (Sept. 1833), p. 246, t. 59 (Aug. 1835), pp. 250, 251 (Dec. 1835). Circaea cordata Royle, p. 211, t. 43 (April, 1835). Codonopsis rotundifolia Royle, t. 62 (Jan. 1835), pp. 253-254 stig 1835). Cucumis pseudo-Colocynthis Royle, pp. 218, 220, t. 47 _ Cyanathus lobatus Royle, t. 69 (Aug. 1835), p. 309 (May, 1 Dendrobium alpestre Lindley ex Royle, pp. 362, 365, t. bn ae 1835), p. 370 (Feb. 1839), non Swartz (1799). Deutzia corymbosa R. Brown ex Royle, t. 46 (Sept. 1834), p. 216 are 1835). Gaultheria trichophylla Royle, t. 63 (Jan. 1835), pp. 257-260 (D 835). Holostemma Brunonianum Royle, p. 276, nomen, t. 66, sine anal. yon 1835), Decaisne DC. Prodr. 8: 533 (March, 1844 Kohautia coccinea Royle, p. 241 (Aug. 1835), t. 53 (Dec. 1835). Lonicera bracteata Royle, pp. 236-237 i t. 53 (Dec. 1835). Osmorrhiza laxa Royle, p. 233, t. 52 (Aug. 1835). Picrorhiza Kurroa Bentham in ey t. 71 eres 1835), p. 291 (May, 1836); Bentham, Scroph. Ind. p. 47 (? Aug. 1835). Primula elliptica Royle, t. 76 as t. 75 (Sept. 1834), pp. 310, 311 org 1836). Primula rosea Royle, t. 76 as t. 75 (Sept. 1834), p. 311 (May, 1 eae utilis Royle, t. 38 (June, 1834), pp. 202, 206 (April, 1835). Rheum spiciforme Royle, p. 37, nomen (Sept. 1833), t. 78 ries 1834), pp. 315, 316, ae (May, 1836). Roscoea alpina Royle, p. 19, nomen (Sept. 1833), pp. 357, 361, t. 89 (Feb. 1839). Roscoea lutea Royle, p. 361, t. 89, “named R. spicata in plate, by csharneeevitaee (Feb. 1839). “Roscoea purpurea” Royle, pp. 357, 361, t. 89 (Feb. 1839), non Smith (1806). Plate 92 exists in three states. One has the name Lilium Thomsonianum in lithographed lettering (e.g. at Royal Botanic Gardens, Kew; Arnold Arboretum). Another has the name Fritillaria Thomsoniana instead, the word Fritillaria and the final a@ of Thomsoniana being handwritten but Thomsonian lithographed (e.g. at Lindley Library of Royal Horticultural Society; Linnean Society of London; British Museum, Bloomsbury ; British Museum [Natural History|, S. Kensington; University Library, Cambridge, England; Royal Botanic Garden, Edinburgh; Bodleian Library, Oxford).