7 | oe ; : dia Pas le ae ia ic ena! - i ‘ ¢ Nate oe oa ‘e = | re ie ay Pao, ; ras eae - aif wy, ee 7 » hh - i“ +? re : 7 7 ie i apemutiy °D°W SStW LS apertung 9 Ireoyy AqTnIz Sano *zozaza ayy Suturetdxe suot,oesueiy, ey} FO kdoo s,fkzeiqtT ey} ut eqoU eB peztESUT sey oteyj UeTIeIQTT 2844 pue osnoy uoxsuTTIing 7© kyoToog weeuuTy 243 FO SeOTFFO ou4 qe kepasaysex petted I *paqoeqtoo 8q TTEM JueteqeyS 34 qutidezr yeuy ut pue OO6L uoszepuy “ae kq ,Souzeg jo ATOYSTH Udi Gutsejouue Jo sseoord 9yy ur we T °,seureg FO, sojonb oste ,uourgey fo Tepsp ayy IO £IOYSTH, YUS0eT sO Youu SEY UE StAser “fd pue ayoujzooy AyjsueT & oney CHt ested € *TON ‘og¢e_ ‘£eatang +keag ° S 30 3 - se 3 OTT yo Kz04STH ItTeyR UT U0ZATIG pue Kaytskesg payenjodied useq JuoT Ss Iolia STYyy *sauo0d ou} SuTurezqgo exeqzTTToes prnom yorum AqytuTxXoid eSoTo UT SeM aoeTd uopUaH pue ajep 7yeYUR JNoqe er9yy SSeuTsNG fkzasainu e uo Surkiied azem ATTWey syseTO ayz ATOZ Youreg 10F qutadstw e St Seudeg 4243 “‘4qQnop puofeq ‘petty -jaS MoU aAeYyY IT “Spunoud Atesanu Sty FO uotytsod atqtssod ayy yo susts fue pemoys sdewu ou pue ‘eweu S,eyxte[TD peuotjzuem spszooed usz4 TIM Te@ooT ON °ewW paxeTdszed Juot quewa1e4s sty} sioysTy Seuseg ojJUT Yoreeser sTqerepTsuod 4no petszzeo Sey oym auo Sy *a0eTq uopuey 4@ 9074 ye0a9 ayy FO Sauo0d oy} WOTF pesTeI pey sy YOTYM Sooty aeped pro aeak eaty fo SeTjatyuenb eSzeT yATM poompooy je o4yeySse Ss,puomyoTY Fo e3nd out pettddns 19odL ut ‘seusgeg Jo azeyojng ‘exseTD Sewer uTezze0 e@ yey pezeqS ST YT owNTOA STH ul Se ee *UOSUTT [OD Je}yeg O4eT OY FO QdTAOSNUeM 944 WoTy SojZON GZ2-42edd OL °TOA suotzoesueay, AZETOIOS UPeUUTT ‘its reeq *£IOJSTH Teanjey go f£104STH 943 BOF AAOeTOOS ayy Skreqzairseg au, €Q6L Uit2 Tequazdes HL°M°S Uuseyg 4yseg peoy Aqsoq SHE 2224409 euTqpooN UAONAdS Tavy AHL “NOP, “LY aA 2 muapisany ALAIOOS AYOLSIH AIVLLYOW ¥® SANUVA ; in ” x ne j ’ “hy . ’ | , %, \ hy Wott : a itenive : t] wa) Thee ; Ms? yo CE REMRREME UN ot E REE Sie ne, ie | hy ” aye ” 4 se mes iv ‘RAN ion ery ® aes svar) vibe La A C, Bi bai) 1 bet Diy Ad Winks pl aide sas Pe 2a hie ' Lee THE TRANSACTIONS OF THE LINNEAN SOCIETY OF LONDON. VOLUME X. LONDON: PRINTED BY RICHARD TAYLOR AND CO., SHOE-LANE, FLEET-STREET. SOLD AT THE SOCIETY’S HOUSE, NO. 9, GERRARD-STREET, SOHO; BY WHITE AND COCHRANE, FLEET-STREET ; AND LONGMAN, HURST, REES, ORME, AND BROWN, PATERNOSTER-ROW. a MDCCCXI. aes alse . Ba vies , ( iii ) Il. PLS. - - - - - = 2 RP CoOoN: TeBsNs TiS, Lops Bad Cuaracrers of a Liliaceous Genus called Brodiea. By James Edward Smith, M.D. F.R.S. P.L.S. - p- Remarks on the Sedum ochroleucum, or AeZwov ro pungov of Dioscorides : ina Letter to Alexander MacLeay, Esq. Sec. L.S. By James Edward Smith, M.D. F.R.S. p- A Determination of Three British Species of Juncus, with Jointed Leaves. By the Rev. Hugh Davies, F.L.S. _ p. On the Proteacee of Jussieu. By Mr. Robert Brown, Lib. L.S. - - - - - . - p- On a remarkable Variety of Pedicularis sylvatica: in a Letter to Alexander MacLeay, Esq. F.R.S. and Sec. L.S. By James Edward Smith, M.D. F.R.S. PS - - - - - - - p- PART 10 15 227 iv CONTENTS. Pea RT ET: VI. A Botanical Description and Natural History of the Malabar Cardamom. By Mr. David White, Surgeon on the Bombay Establishment. Communicated by the Directors of the Hon. East India Company. With ad- ditional Remarks by William George Maton, M.D. VE LS:5 GG. - - : - p- VII. Some Account of the Herbarium of Professor Pallas. By Aylmer Bourke Lambert, Esq. F.R.S. and 4.8. V.P.L.S. - - 7 e * p. VIII. Some Remarks on the Synonyms and native Country of Hypericum calycinum. By James Edward Smith, M.D. F.R.S. and P.L.S. ~ - - - p- IX. Notes relating to Botany, collected from the Manu- scripts of the late Peter Collinson, Esq. .R.S. and com- municated by Aylmer Bourke Lambert, Esq. F.R.S. and A.S. V.P.LS. . - - Pp. X. A Description of several Species of Plants from New Holland. By Edward Rudge, Esq. F.R.S. and LS. p. XI. Some Remarks on the Physiology of the Egg, communi- cated in a Letter from John Ayrton Paris, M.B. to William George Maton, M.D. V.P.L.S. $c. $e. pe XII. Some 229 256 266 270 283 304 CONTENTS. XII. Some Observations on the Parts of Fructification in Mosses ; with Characters and Descriptions of Two new Genera of that Order. By Mr. Robert Brown, Lib. Linn. Soc. . - - - - = p: XIII. Description of Seven new Species of Testacea. By William George Maton, M.D. F.R.S. § A.S. and V.P.L.S. - - : 2 m p- XIV. An Account of several Plants, recently discovered in Scotland by Mr. George Don, A.L.S. not mentioned in the Flora Britannica nor English Botany. By James Edward Smith, M.D. F.R.S. P.L.S. - p- XV. Descriptions of Seven new Species of Apion. By the Rev. William Kirby, F.L.S. - - p: XVI. Account of Ormosia, a new Genus of Decandrous Plants belonging to the Natural Order of Leguminose. By Mr. George Jackson, F.L.S. = Pa p: XVII. An Account of a new Genus of New Holland Plants named Brunonia. By James Edward Smith, M.D. FURS. ‘PLS. - - - - - - p: XVIII. A Description of Duchesnea fragiformis, constitut- ing anew Genus of the Natural Order of Senticose of — Linneus, Rosacee of Jussieu. By James Edward Smith, M.D. F.R.S. P.L.S. SO! Sa - p. XIX. Ob- 312 325 333 347 358 365 vi CONTENTS. XIX. Observations on some Species of Menziesia, hitherto considered as belonging to the Genus Andromeda, by Ol. Swartz, M.D. Bergian Professor of Botany at Stock- holm, F.M.L.S. - = = = Sie, p- Additional Note by the President - ~ p: XX. Some Observations on the Genus Andrea; with Descrip- tions of four British Species. By William Jackson Hooker, Esq., dB = = = = p- XXI. Some Account of an Insect of the Genus Buprestis, taken alive out of Wood composing a Desk which had been made above twenty Years. Ina Letter to Alexander Macleay, Esq. F.R.S. and Sec. L.S. by Thomas Marsham, D’sq. Treas. LS. - — - - - p: XXII. Extracts from the Minute-Book of the Linnean So- ciety of London - = = = p- Catalogue of the Library of the Linnean Society, continued from Page 328 of Vol. IX. of the Society’s Transac- tions - = = = = : x e p- List of Donors to the Library of the Linnean Society p: Donations to the Museum of the Linnean Society - p- 375 379 381 399 404 408 411 413 TRANS- TRANSACTIONS OF THE LINNEAN SOCIETY. I. Characters of a new Liliaceous Genus called Brodica. By James Edward Smith, M.D. F.R.S. P.L.S. Read April 19, 1808. I wave had occasion, in treating of the distinctions between a calyx and corolla, Introduction to Botany, 263, to. advert.:to a new genus of the liliaceous family, furnished with internal pe- tals. It consists of two species, both which I have received, in a dry state, from Mr. Menzies, who discovered them in 1792 in New Georgia on the west coast of North America. The same liberal friend, to whom the Linnean Society, as well as myself, has so often been obliged, perceiving I had, in the place above mentioned, fallen into an error respecting the number of the in- ternal petals, which are 3, not 6, bas favoured me with his ori- ginal drawings, made from living plants on the spot, with dis- sections. By these | am enabled better to understand the sub- ject than I could from dried specimens, which I had been un- willing to submit to the process of boiling and anatomizing, till I might have occasion to investigate them thoroughly for precise description. Hence the divided inner petals of one of them VOU. xX. ; B misled 9 Dr. Smiru’s Characters of a new Liliaceous Genus misled me. Mr. Menzies at the same time has communicated a suggestion of Mr. Salisbury’s, that these supposed petals are barren filaments. It will appear, from the following characters and remarks, how far this idea is probable or not. In the first place, as these plants form a most indubitable new genus, of the Liliaceous, or Patrician, order, I have called it Brodiea, after James Brodie, Esq. F.L.S., of Brodie in North Britain, a gentleman whose scientific merits, whose various dis- coveries, and whose liberal communications on every occasion tending to elucidate the botany of his country in particular, re- quire no elaborate display before the Linnean Society. Bropiza. Trianpria Monogynia. Sect. 2; flores inferi. Narcissi. Juss. 54. Sect. 1; germen superum. Calyx nullus. Corolla infera, tubulosa; limbo sexfido, regulari ; corona triphyll4 in fauce. Capsula trilocularis, polysperma. 1. B. grandiflora*, coronz foliolis indivisis. Radix bulbosa, globosa, solida, tunica multiplici, nervosa. Folia bina, radicalia, vaginantia, lineari-lanceolata, acuta, invo- luto-canaliculata, glabra, feré pedalia. Scapus solitarius, foliis pauld brevior, teres, glaberrimus, subsexflorus, plus minus tor- tuosus. Pedicelli umbellati, patentiusculi, filiformes, uniflori, longitudine varii. Bractee ad basin umbelle, plures, lanceo- late, scariose, nervose, acuminate, pedicellis longe plerum- que breviores. Flores Galanthi magnitudine, pulehré cyanei, erecti. Corolla semisexfida; tubo pallescente, laciniis regulari- bus, subequalibus, latd lanceolatis, patenti-recurvis ; fauce co- * Hookera coronaria, Salish. Par. t. 98. ronata Ney lh) Kew ig Sams Nee i called Brodiaa. 3 ronata foliolis tribus, petaloideis, erectis, oblongis, uniformibus, indivisis, diluté flavescentibus, limbo dupld brevioribus, cum staminibus altermantibys. Filamenta tria, brevissima, fauce, in- ter corone foliola, inserta. Anthere verticales, fulve, oblonge, corona pardm breviores, kilobes) lobis extus longitudinalitér de- hiscentibus, haud absolute bilocularibus. Germen pedicellatum, elliptico-trigonum, _ triloculare, seminibus columellz insertis. Stylus cylindraceus, longitudine fer’ staminum. ‘Stigma trigo- num, trilobum. \ 2. B. congesta, corone folioli S Radix et herba feré prioris condensata, brac- teis majoribus, latis, pedicellos superantibus. Flores cyanei, co- ronda dilutiore, nec flavescente, foliolis semibifidis, acutis an- theras longé superantibus, at limbo dupld, ut i in priore, brevio- ribus. Stamina parim e fauce prominentia inter corone foliola. Bo The three petal-like leaves, which crown the tube of the corolla in this genus, are, without doubt, analogous to the cup in Nar- cissus, the membranous expansion attached to the base of the stamens in Pancratium, and still more precisely to what Jussieu calls squamule, and Linneus nectarium, in Tulbaghia. I see no more reason to reckon them ‘ba en filaments i in one case than in the others ; though, if my Brodi a grandiflora were the only lilia- ceous plant furnished with th they might, with great appear- ance of probability, be taken’ . But Brodiea congesta guards us against this error, proaches a step nearer to Pancratium and Tulbaghia. ree genera indeed bear the same relationship to the other liliacee, that Gnidia, Struthiola and Quisqualis do to Daphne _the rest of its natural order. 1 If 4, Dr. Smirn’s Characters of a new Liliaceous Genus If the petals of Gnidia prove Daphne to have a coloured calyx, these correspondent parts in the Liacee must receive correspon- dent names. Jussieu therefore is consistent when he denomi- nates the analogous part in the lliacee and in Daphne a calyx, and so is Linneus when he calls it in both instances a corolla; but the latter errs against all consistency and analogy when he terms calyx in Gnidia what he had, in the preceding page, named corolla in Daphne. Mr. Salisbury’s rule, given in the first paper of our 8th volume, that the stamens are never inserted into the calyx, is one of the best upon the subject, yet not with- out its difficulties, some of which, from a love of truth alone, I beg leave to suggest. If we admit this rule in rosaceous. flowers, and the more I have thought on the subject the more I feel disposed to do so, we can hardly allow it in Ribes, whose whole faded calyx, perfectly homogeneous and indivisible, sticks tothe top of the fruit, retaining the withered petals and sta- mens, which are together inserted into its sides. If we say ana- logy proves the lower half of this pretended calyx to be a recep- tacle, a similar mode of reasoning will prove the tube of Pan- cratium, Narcissus, Tulbaghia, and of my Brodiea to be a re- ceptacle also, the limb only being the calyx, and the crown @ corolla. If this be granted, the lower part of the corolla, as it is usually called, in Hemerocallis, Agapanthus, Amaryllis, Hya- cinthus, &c.; even the claws of such few, if any, polypetalous liliacee as really have their stamens inserted there, must also be a receptacle, and the upper part a calyx; which is too paradoxi- . cal to be allowed. I say nothing of the spatha belonging to some of these liliaceous genera, because even when present I do not think it can invalidate my argument. Their generic charac- ters are independent of it, as those of the wmbellifere are of their involucra and involucella. I have therefore, in describing the called Brodiea. 5 the Brodigze, used the word bracteé instead of spathe, as more agreeable to. nature. These difficulties do not trouble the generality of practical botanists; but theoretical ones, before they can found new ge- nera, or even understand the old ones to any purpose, are, and always have been, obliged to consider them, and may be glad of any suggestions on subjects concerning which the chief leaders in botany have never agreed together, nor scarcely been consistent with themselves. I am persuaded the line of discrimination betwixt a calyx and corolla is, in many cases, not to be drawn, for this plain reason, that Naturé in such cases unites both the parts into one, the inner surface performing the functions of a corolla, the outer those of a calyx. This is a suggestion of Linnzus, but he has not illustrated it so fully as it deserves. I need not repeat here what is already before the public in another place, Introduction to Botany, 264, 266, and 267; nor shall I now add any thing more than a wish, that a subject so interesting to the physiological as well as the systema- tical botanist might be pursued by both to their mutual as- sistance. _ Norwich, March 5, 1808. HU. Remarks: ( 6.) I]. Remarks on the Sedum ochroleucum, or AsiCwov ro psxeov of Dioscorides ; in a Letter to Alexander Mac Leay, Esq. Sec. Linn. Soc. By James Edward Smith, M.D. F.R.S. P.L.S. Read November 1, 1808. ‘ Dear Sir, I sxe.leave through your hands to welcome my brethren of the Linnean Society on their first meeting for the ensuing season, and to communicate at the same time an article of botanical intelligence rather interesting to those who are solicitous about natural genera, as well as to those who have endeavoured to ascertain the plants of ancient Greek authors. Jacquin in his Hortus Vindobonensis, v. 1. 35. ¢. 81, has de- scribed and figured a plant by the name of Sempervioum sedi- forme, which subsequent compilers of botanic systems have im- plicitly adopted by that name. It has even found its way into the Hortus Kewensis, v. 2. 149, being far from uncommon in the English gardens, where it flowers copiously every summer in the open ground. The excellent author above mentioned remarks, that “the appearance of its leaves” (he might have said its whole habit) “is that of a Sedum,” but that “the flower has “ exactly the character of a Sempervivum, the petals being 6 or “©'7, with broad bases, and an equal number in the parts of “ the calyx, as well as the germens, and double the number of “stamens.” He also asserts that “there are no nectariferous “ scales.” ‘The Dr. Smitn’s Remarks on the Sedum ochroleucum. 7 The plant has so entirely the appearance of a Sedum and not of a Sempervivum, and I have always thought those genera so natural, and so well marked by the technical character of nec- tariferous scales at the base of the germen in the former, which the latter wants, that I have often regretted to read Jacquin’s account, which I presumed was correct. But meeting with this plant in Dr. Sibthorp’s Greek herbarium, it became necessary to investigate its characters myself. In the winter time I could only examine one of his specimens by means of hot water; but there, to my great! satisfaction, I found the nectariferous scales as evident as in any Sedum whatever; and on dissecting living flowers last summer in my garden, the same character was every where obvious. Jn number of parts indeed this flower wanders a little from the character of that genus, and from its class De- candria, having often, when cultivated, as many petals, sta- mens and pistils as Jacquin describes, or even more, though this is chiefly the case in the first flowers of the cyme, and not so much in the external ones. I have therefore introduced the plant in question into the second part of the Prodromus Flore Grace, p. 312, by the name of SepUM OCHROLEUCUM, foliis glaucis sparsis acutis: inferioribus teretibus; superioribus ellipticis depressis, laciniis calycinis acutiusculis. It is curious that Linnzus, in a manuscript note, has referred this plant of Jacquin to his own Sedum rupestre, a very different species, which he had &dopted from Dillenius’s Hortus Eltham- ensis; see Engl. Bot. t. 170 and ¢. 1802. Dr. Sibthorp, who was well acquainted with his learned friend Jacquin’s plant, mentions it in his papers as one of the most common 8 Dr. Smirn’s Remarks on the Sedum ochroleucum. common species in various parts of the continent of Greece, as well as in almost all the Greek islands, growing on rocks and walls near the sea-side. At Athens it is pounded and applied as a cooling cataplasm to bruises or to gouty limbs, being called Koaraweida by the Athenians of the present day. Its most general names however in modern Greek are Awégarro and Yrapvran. The three species of AsZwov or Sempervivum in Dioscorides seem to have been misunderstood. The Ist, Asoo ro weya, hi- therto taken by Matthiolus and others for the Common House- leek, Sempervivum tectorum, is justly referred by Dr. Sibthorp, as well as Clusius, to Sempervivum arboreum, with which the de- scription of Dioscorides, more full than usual, most admirably agrees, and not at all with the ¢ectorum. The 2d, AsZwov ro paxeov, or Sempervivum minus, was taken by Matthiolus for Sedum album, and by Dr. Sibthorp, not without much doubt, for Sem- pervivum hirtum; but I have no scruple at all in referring it to my present Sedum ochroleucum, a plant probably not known to Matthiolus. Dioscorides says “it grows on walls, stones and “ banks, as well as about shady enclosures. Several slender “stems,” he adds, “ spring from one root, thickly encompassed with little round succulent sharp-pointed leaves. It throws out, moreover, a stem towards the middle, about a span high, with an umbel of slender (greenish or) pale yellowish flowers. Its leaves have the same virtues with the former.”—The virtues alluded to of “ the former,” or Sempervivum arboreum, are cool- ‘ing and astringent ; whence Dioscorides recommends that plant in inflammatory eruptions and the gout, for which the Sedum ochroleucum is used at present, as mentioned above. The 3d, Aewov éregov, which is described as “ heating, acrid “ and exulcerating, with very small thick leaves,’ seems to be Sedum acre, as Matthiolus and Clusius judged, though Dr. Sib- thorp 66 as 6c “ce Dr. Smitn’s Remarks on the Sedum ochroleucum. 9 thorp took it for our Sedum ochroleucum, on the authority of a figure in the celebrated Imperial manuscript of Dioscorides at Vienna, which he considered as of great authority. The quali- ties however recorded of this 3d AsQwv are quite at variance with those which Dr. Sibthorp himself attributes to the Sedum — ochroleucum, and which agree with those ascribed by Dioscorides to his second species. I remain, J. E. Smitm Norwich, October 28, 1808. VOL. X. c Ill. 4 ( 10 ) III. A Determination of Three British Species of Juncus, with jointed Leaves. By the Rev. Hugh Davies, F.L.S. Read November 1, 1808. Iy the course of a morning’s walk having been fortunate in an opportunity of examining the knotty-leaved division of the ge- nus Juncus, by finding all the species on nearly the same spot, I am induced to request leave to lay before the Linnean Society the result of my observations. Here then I must premise, that the want of an opportunity of examining them in a proper state, and comparing them together, I take to have been the cause that what seem to me to be di- stinct species have been treated as varieties only, by men of eminence in the science of botany. Jn consequence of the attention which I bestowed on them, I am*much inclined to suppose that I can determine into three very distinct species, what have been deemed two varieties only of the species J. articulatus, Linn. Sp. Pl., Sm. Fl. Brit., and Leers Fl. Herborn.; but are considered as two species, indeed, by Dr. Sibthorp, viz. compressus and nemorosus ; and two species, likewise, by Mr. Relhan, viz. compressus and articulatus. My three species I shall at present distinguish as FIRST, SE- coNnb, and THIRD. 8 In the rrrst the branches of.the panicle are strong, erect, fewer, and less diffuse than in the other two; the capsule is large, of a deep reddish brown colour, and finely glossed; of an Mr. Davizs’s Determination of Three British Species of Juncus. 11 an oval triangular shape, terminated by a short blunt point; the stalk of 4—6 joints. This is Juncus articulatus, Fl. Brit., Fl. Herborn.; and com- pressus of Sibthorp and Relhan. Moris. s. 8. t. 9..f. 2. Scheuchz. $31.4. R. Syn. 433. 8. but I cannot refer to the Sp. P/., where the definition is petalis obtusis. In the seconp the panicle is more branched, the branches more slender, and spreading, the divisions of the calyx nar- rower and longer, the capsule smaller, much more taper-pointed, and Jighter-coloured; culm of fewer joints, that, and the leaves, less compressed. It is a taller plant, sometimes above three feet high, and it ripens later. This I take to be Moris. s. 8. ¢.9. f. 1. certainly Scheuchzer, p- 334. 4. who says: “ Calami tribus quatuorve communiter ge- niculis distincti,—Flosculi nunc dilutids nunc obscurids fusci aut spadicei,—Vasculum seminale triquetrum, in acutum mu- cronem terminatum.” It is likewise J. articulatus of Relhan; and nemorosus of Sibthorp.. ‘ My rurrp differs from both the former in several particulars: —The panicle is much lighter-coloured ; the peduncles, which are divaricated, and even bent back, are evidently thicker than those of the seconp, the panicle of which resembles this more than that of the rrrst. Then the smallest capsule of this ;—the pale-coloured bunches of florets,—and particularly the elliptic obtuse segments of the calyx, with a broad scariose margin, fully distinguish it from the other two. It is, besides, a firmer plant, the nodes in the leaves being scarcely perceptible with- out a considerable degree of pressure ;—the culm and leaf are quite round, and it never has more than two joints in the stalk! I find no description of this species besides the short one in Fl. Brit. articulati var. 8. “ culmo erectiore, panicula ramosiori, c2 tloribus 12 Mr. Davies’s Determination of floribus minoribus, pallidioribus et obtusioribus.” At the same time I cannot admit it to be these following, which are there re- ferred to, viz. Moris. s. 8. ¢. 9. f. 1. nor Relhan’s articulatus, who gives his from Leers, petala acutissima. Nor is it R. Syn 433. No. 9. entirely ;—it is Doody’s plant there mentioned, which he tells us he found in Peckham-field, “cum glumis albis.” Jt may, by the definition, be Haller’s plant, No. 1523, < foliis tere- tibus articulatis, panicula repetito-ramosa ;” but his description evidently comprehends the seconp as well as this. Withering’s 5th var. of articulatus, p. 347. “ husks white,” seems to be this plant. These references prove that this species has not hitherto escaped notice; but I wonder that the character, from whence I was inclined to take its trivial name, has not been noted by any writer I have seen ! As I wished to avoid the confusion which naturally arises from repeatedly changing names, my design was to have named the three species ;—the First, compressus; the sECcoND, nemo- rosus—both after Dr. Sibthorp; and my ruairn, divaricatus—a trivial appellation which I think particularly suitable to it. I communicated this my idea, of three species, to my respected friend Dr. Smith, who gave it as his opinion that they ought to be separated, and that the same thought had occurred to Ehr- hart, who has made three species of them, under the following names :—lampocarpus, (my FIRST); acutiflorus, (my SECOND); obtusiflorus, (my THIRD); which accord exactly with my, no- tion. . These names I now adopt; and, as I have not seen Ehrhart’s definitions, I define them as follows. Juncus, Three British Species of Juncus. 13 Juncus, &c. ** Culmis foliosis. + Folits nodoso-articulatis. lampocarpus. J. foliis compressis, panicul4 terminali composita Ehrh. Calam. — erecta, calycis foliolis tribus exterioribus ovato- No. 126. lanceolatis, acuminatis; interioribus, scarioso- marginatis obtusiusculis, capsula ovata triquetra stylo brevi terminata fusco-purpurea nitida, cul- mo 3—6-folio. acutiflorus. J. foliis compressiusculis, panicula terminali su- Ehrh. Calam. _ pradecomposita diffusa, calycis foliolis omnibus No. 66. lanceolatis acuminatis, capsuld ovato-oblongé triquetra mucronata, culmo 3—4-folio. obtusiflorus. J. foliis terretibus,“ panicula terminali suprade- Ehrh. Calam. —composita, pedunculis divaricato-refractis ! caly- No. 76. cis foliolis ellipticis obtusis, capsula ovato-acu- minata triquetra, culmo bifolio ! The capsules of lampocarpus are by much the largest; those of acutiflorus are evidently larger, and, more elongated, than those of obtusiflorus ; (i. e.) the largest and strongest plant bears the smallest capsule. The branches of the panicle in lampocarpus are sometimes but once divided, but frequently twice, and even thrice, as well as in the two other species. : When lampocarpus happens, from some: accidental cause, to flower late in the season, so as not to perfect its large and po- lished capsules, it may be distinguished by a disposition to be- come 14 Mr. Davies’s Determination of Three British Species of Juncus. come viviparous, and branching at the joints,—a property which I never observed in either of the other two species. Another character,whereby obtusiflorus may be known, even at a distance, is, that where it is found in any plenty, a number of the panicles are frequently seen entangled together, so as not easily to be disengaged ; this proceeds from the extreme divari- cation of the branches of the panicle. IV. On (1) IV. On the Proteacee of Jussieu. By Mr. Robert Brown, Lib. L.S. Read Jan. 17, 1809. Tue Linnean system of botany, though confessedly artificial, has not only contributed more than all others to facilitate the knowledge of species, but, by constantly directing the attention to those essential parts of the flower on which it is founded, has made us acquainted with more of their important modifications than we probably should have known, had it not been generally adopted, and has thus laid a more solid foundation for the esta- blishment of a natural arrangement, the superior importance of which no one has been more fully a with than Linneus himself. There are still, however, certain circumstances respecting the stamina and pistilla, which appear to me to have been much less attended to than they deserve, both by Linnzus and succeeding botanists. What I chiefly allude to is the state of these organs before the expansion of the flower. The utility of ascertaining the internal condition of the ovarium before foecundation will hardly be called in question, now that the immortal works of Gertner and Jussieu have demonstrated the necessity of minutely studying the fruits of plants in attempting to arrange them ac- cording to the sum of their affinities, as in many cases the true nature of the ripe fruit, especially with respect to the placenta- tion of the seeds, can only be determined by this means. Its importance is indeed expressly inculcated by many botanists, who, 16 Mr. Brown, on the Proteacee of Jussieu. who, however, have frequently neglected it in practice: nor do I find any one who has steadily kept it in view, except Aubert Du Petit-Thouars in his excellent work on the plants of Mada~- gascar and the Isles of France and Bourbon. The bursting of the antherz has, it is true, been generally observed, and many of its most unusual modes have been in- troduced into the characters of genera; but the examination of these organs, at a still earlier period, has been universally neg- lected; and hence the very imperfect knowledge which, even now, is possessed of their real nature in two of the most re- markable families of plants, the Orchidee and Asclepiadee. Examples of the great advantage of observing the antheree in this early stage will hereafter be given in my general remarks on the order which is the proper subject of this essay. But I trust I shall be pardoned for here introducing some account of their structure in Asclepiadex, as it will enable me not only to brmg forward the most striking proof of the importance of this consi- deration with which I am acquainted, but also, as I apprehend, to decide a question which has long occupied, and continues to’ divide, the most celebrated botanists. The point in dispute is whether this order, comprehending Asclepias, Cynanchum, Pergularia, Stapelia, and several genera, at present confounded with these, ought to be referred to Pentan- dria or Gynandria, and, if to the latter, whether the anther are to be considered as five or ten; all of which opinions have had advocates of the greatest name in the science. According to Linneus, Jussieu and Richard they belong to Pentandria. Linneus has assigned no reason for his opinion, which, how- ever, it appears he retained after he became acquainted with the observations of Jacquin and Rottboell; but it is probable he was Mr. Brown, on the Proteacee of Jussieu. 17 was induced to adopt it more from the consideration of the close analogy these plants have with the manifestly pentandrous Apocinee, than from regarding them as strictly referable to this class ; for, in his natural generic characters of Asclepias and Pergu- laria, he very clearly describes both these genera as gynandrous. Jussieu has entered more fully into the subject, but seems also to have been chiefly guided by this analogy and the observations of others; as he concludes by expressing his doubts, respecting both the origin and use of the parts. _ Richard, whose description of these organs I find in Persoon’s Synopsis, has indeed come nearer to the solution of the question; his account, however, of the origin of the lateral processes here- after mentioned, proves that this description was not altogether formed on actual observation. Jacquin, ‘the first botanist that submitted these plants to mi- nute examination, and whose figures well illustrate most points of their structure, has adopted a very different opinion, referring them to Gynandria, in which he is followed by Koelreuter, Rottboell and Cavanilles, all of whom likwise agree with him in considering them as decandrous; while Dr. Smith, in his late valuable Introduction to Botany, who conceives that “ no plants can be more truly gynandrous,” regards them as having only five anthere. And lastly Desfontaines supposes the five glands of the stigma to be the true antherz, considering the attached masses of pollen as mere appendages to these. All the authors who thus refer them to Gynandria seem quite confident in the justness of their views; and yet the inspection of a single flower bud overturns, as it appears to me, with irre- sistible evidence, the conclusion they had formed from premises apparently so satisfactory. My attention, while in New Holland, having been much en- VOL. x. D gaged 18 Mr. Brown, on the Proteacee of Jussieu. gaged by the plants of this family, the species in that continent being both numerous and with difficulty reducible to established genera: I there observed the following facts concerning them, all of which I have, since my return to England, confirmed by the examination of different species of the same tribe. The observations of Jacquin on this subject being generally known, it must be unnecessary to enter into a minute description of those organs which are well exhibited by his figures in every respect, except as to the origin of the supposed antherz. Ifa flower bud of any plant of this family, while scarcely half the size it attains immediately before expansion, be carefully examined, it will be found that the polleniferous sacs, as they are termed by Jacquin and his followers, in which they suppose the anthere to be merely immersed, are really the organs by which the foecundating matter is secreted: for at this period they are perfectly closed, and consequently all communication cut off between the stigma and their contents now consisting of a turbid fluid or pulpy mass. If the stigma be at the same time observed, the gland-like bodies which originate in its grooved angles are already visible; but, instead of having the cartilaginous or horny texture which they at length acquire, are as yet semi-fluid, and of hardly a determinate form. ‘Near’ the base of each side of these grooves a more superficial depression is observable, which, though in some cases extremely short, is'in others of considerable length, and generally forms a right angle with the corresponding groove. In these depressions, the processes by which, at a more advanced stage, the contents of the antherze are connected with the stigma, are immersed, and at this period they are found to be semi-fluid. By degrees the glands, as well as their lateral processes, acquire a firmer consistence, and the inferior or outer extremity of each of the processes, being extended beyond its de- pression Mr. Brown, on the Proteacee of Jussieu. 19 pression or furrow, on the bursting of the opposite cell of the corresponding anthera, firmly attaches itself to its contents, now become a regular mass of a waxy consistence. If the accuracy of this:statement be admitted, it will probably be allowed that the Asclepiadee cannot be regarded as gynan- drous, especially in the sense in which they are so considered by botanists; but Jest it should not be thought completely satisfac- tory, it: may be added, that, in a still earlier’stage of the flower bud I bave found the foecundating matter already. secreted -in the cells of the anther, while the glands of the stigma, as well as their processes, were absolutely) invisible. »oAs to the question of their being pentandrous or Jeusedneiss every ‘analogy;must lead: us, to refer them to the former class ; nor indeed have they, when not considered as. gynandrous, been ever supposed to belong to Decandria. | An ‘eeconomy, in'many respects similar to that now Secale obtains also in Orchidew,, in which, ,however, the processes con= necting the anther with the stigma, where they exist, are in many cases derived from the masses of pollen themselves ;. but in others they as) seat nyse from the mri or its glandular appendage:.) The result of my wera ri of nari two interesting orders of plants, I hope ‘hereafter to submit to the Society; and I now proceed to the proper subject of the present paper. The natural order of Protem, or, as it is. less exceptionably called, Proreacex, was first established in the Genera Planta- rum of the celebrated Jussieu ; and the description there prefixed to it will, with a few alterations, still apply to the order, now that .it has received so many additions, not only. in species, but in very distinct genera, several of which were first published by ‘ D2 Dr. Smith 20 Mr. Brown, on the Proteaceae of Jussieu. Dr. Smith, in the 4th vol. of the Society’s Transactions, and others are in the present paper submitted to the consideration of botanists. The general description and definition of the order will be most advantageously placed at the head of its systematic arrange- ment; before entering upon which, I shall offer some remarks on its geographical distribution, and likewise on such modi- fications of structure in the different organs as appear to be of the greatest importance in indicating or characterizing genera. The geography of plants being as yet in its infancy; the smallest addition to our knowledge of a subject which promises to become of considerable importance, will probably be received with indulgence; and in this persuasion I venture to make the following observations on the order before us. In the first place; it is remarkable that the ProrEacex are almost entirely confined to the southern hemisphere. ‘This observation originated with Mr. Dryander, and the -few exceptions hitherto known to it, occur considerably within the tropic. ‘The fact is the more de- serving of notice, as their diffusion is very extensive in the southern hemisphere, not merely in latitude and longitude, but also in elevation; for they are not only found to exist im all the great southern continents, but seem to be generally, though very unequally, spread over their different regions: they have been observed also in the larger islands of New Zealand and New Caledonia; but hitherto neither in any of the lesser ones, nor in Madagascar. As in America, they have been found in Terra del Fuego, in Chili, Peru, and even Guiana, it is reasonable to conclude that the intermediate regions are not entirely destitute of them. But with respect to this continent, it may be observed, that the number of species seems to be comparatively small, their organization but little varied; and further, that they have a much Mr. Brown, on the Proteacee of Jussieu. 21 much greater affinity with those of New Holland than of Africa. ; Of the botany of South Africa, scarce any thing is known, except that of the Cape of Good Hope, where this family occurs in the greatest abundanee and variety ; but even from the single fact of a genuine species of Protea having been found in Abys- sinia by Bruce, it may be presumed, that in some degree they are also spread over this continent. With the shores, at least, of New Holland, under which I include Van Diemen’s Island, we are now somewhat better ac- quainted, and in every known part of these, Proteacez have been met with. But it appears that, both in Africa and. New Holland, the great mass of the order exists about the latitude of the Cape of Good Hope; in which parallel it forms a striking featuré in the vegetation of both continents. What I am about to advance repecting the probable distribu- tion of this family in New Holland, must be very cautiously re-' ceived ; as it is in fact chiefly deduced from the remarks I have myself made in captain Flinders’s Voyage, and subsequently d uring my short stay in the settlements of New South Wales and Van Diemen’s Island, aided by what was long ago ascertained by Sir Joseph Banks, and by a very transitory inspection of an herba- rium collected on the west coast, chiefly in the neighbourhood of Shark’s Bay, by the botanists attached to the expedition of captain Baudin. | q - From knowledge so acquired I am inclined to hazard the fol- lowing observations. ' The mass of the order, though extending through the whole of the parallel already. mentioned, is by no means equal in every part of it; but on the south-west coast forms a more decided feature 22 Mr. Brown, on the Proteaceae of Jussieu. feature in the vegetation of the country, and contains a far greater number of species than on the east:—and in that part of the south coast, which was first examined by captain Flinders, it seems to be more scanty than at either of the extremes. On the west coast also, the species upon the wholeare more simi- lar to those of Africa than on the east, where they bear asomewhat greater resemblance to the American portion of the order. From the parallel of the mass, the order diminishes in both directions; but the diminution towards the north is probably more rapid on the east than on the west coast. Within the tropic, on the east coast, no genera have ai been observed, which are not also found beyond it; unless that section of Grevillea, which I have called Cycloptere, be considered asa genus. Whereas at the southern limit of the order several genera make their appearance, which do not occur.in its chief paraliee The most numerous genera are also the most widely diffused. Thus Grevillea, Hakea, Banksia, and Persoonia, extensive in species in the order in which they are here mentioned, are spread nearly in the same proportion; and they are likewise the only | genera that have as yet been observed within the tropic. Of such of the remaining genera, as consist of several species, some, as Isopogon, Petrophila, Conospermum, and Lambertia, are found in every part of the principal parallel, but hardly exist beyond it. Others, as Josephia and Synaphea, equally limited to this parallel, have been observed only towards its western ex~- tremity ; while Embothriwm (comprehending for the present un- der this name all the many-seeded plants of the order), which is chiefly found on the east coast, and makes very little progress towards the west, advances to the utmost limit of south latitude, and there ascends to the summits of the highest mountains. Genera Mr. Brown, on the Proteaceae of Jussiew. 23 Genera consisting of one or very few species, and which ex- hibit generally the most remarkable deviations from the usual structure of the order, are the most local, and are found either in the principal parallel, or in the highest latitude. The range of species in the whole of the order seems to be very limited ; and the few cases which may be considered as ex- ceptions to this, occur in the most extensive genera, and in such of their species,as are most strictly natives of the shores. Thus Banksia integrifolia, which grows more within the influence of the sea than any plant of the order, is probably also the most widely extended, at least in one direction, being found within . the tropic, and in as high a latitude as 40°. It is remarkable, however, that with so considerable a range in latitude, its ex- tension in longitude is comparatively small: and it is still more worthy of notice, that no species of this famil y has been found common to the eastern and western shores of New Holland. The celebrated traveller Humboldt is the first who has. ex- pressly pointed out a remarkable difference in the distribution of the species of plants. is} He observes that, while the greater number grow irregularly scattered and mixed with each other, there are some which form considerable masses, or even’ extensive tracts, to the nearly ab- solute exclusion of other species. Of plants growing thus in society, the greater number occur in the temperate zones ; and of these, the most decided instances will readily present them- selves to every botanist. I venture to add, that such as exist within the tropic, are found, either at considerable heights or on the sea-shores, To this class very few of the Proteacez can be said to belong. Protea argentea of Linnzus is the most striking example among the 24 Mr. Brown, on the Proteaceae of Jussieu. the African species; and my friend Mr. Ferdinand Bauer has observed a similar tendency in Protea mellifera. Among the New Holland species, Banksia speciosa is the sole instance, and even that only in certain circumstances, of this manner of growth. The favourite station of Proteacee is in dry stony exposed places, especially near the shores, where they occur also, though more rarely, in loose sand. Scarcely any of them require shelter, and none a good soil. interioribus brevissimé ciliatis. Calyx uncialis, unguibus laminisque glabris : Aristis albo-barbatis. Stylus glaber apice simplici. 25. P. acaulis, caulibus abbreviatis ramis depressis, foliis ob- ovato-oblongis marginatis venosis basi attenuatis, involucris hemisphericis inclinatis ; bracteis obtusis glabris, calycibus muticis. Scolymocephalus Africana foliis oblongis glabris humilis et procumbens. Herm. Cat. 19. Scolymocephalus Africanus Lauri folio humilis et procumbens. ~ Raj. Hist. 3. Dendr. p. 9. Lepidocarpodendron ; acaulon; foliis paucis, latis, nervo et _ marginibus rubris ornatis ; fructu parvo. Boerh. Lugd. Bat, 2. p. 191.* c. tab. Scoly mocephalus s. Lepidocarpodendron acaulon. Weinm. Phyt. 4. p. 291. f. 898. b. bona. Protea caule unifloro foliis lanceolatis. Roy. Lugd. Bat. 186. Leucadendron acaulon. Wachend. Ultraj. 204. Linn. Sp. Pl. ed. i. p. 92. ed. ii. p. 135.* Syst. Nat. xii. t. 2. p. 110. omissa in Mant. et Syst. Veg. xiii. Protea acaulis. Thunb. Diss. n. 49.* Prod. 27. Willd. Sp. Pl. 1. p- 529. rays Protea nana. Lam. Illust. Gen. 1. p. 283. n. 1208. Poiret. En- cyc. Botan. 5. p. 639. Protea glaucophylla. Salisb, Parad. 11. Has. In Afric Australis collibus, prope Promont. B, Spei. (v. v.juxta Simons Bay.) ; a N *26. P. elon- 90 Mr. Brown, on the Proteacee of Jussieu. *26. P. elongata, caulibus nanis, foliis elongato-lanceolatis (pe- dalibus) planis marginatis venosis levibus ; basi valdé atte- nuata lineari, involucro hemispherico inclinato; bracteis glabris obtusis, calycibus brevissimé aristatis. Has. In Afric Australis humidis elevatioribus. Roode Zant Cascade. D. Niven. (v. s. in Herb. Hibbert.) Oxzs. Nimis aftinis P. acauli. *27. P. angustata, caulibus nanis, foliis lanceolato-linearibus planis, marginatis venosis levibus, involucro hemisphzrico inclinato: bracteis glabris obtusis, calycibus muticis: un- guibus extis glabris margine lanatis. Hap. In Africe Australis montosis solo fertiliori; Hout Hoek. D. Niven. (vy. s. in Herb. Hibbert.) Oxzs. An species distincta a P. acaule ? *28. P. revoluta, caulibus nanis, foliis canaliculato-semiteretibus levibus, involucro hemispherico inclinato: bracteis glabris obtusis, calycibus muticis: unguibus extts glabris margine lanatis. Has. In Africe Australis montibus aridis. D. Niven. (v. s. in Herb. Hibbert.) , Desc. Fruteav humilis, basi divisus. Rami adscendentes, gla- bri, vix longitudine foliorum. Folia 6—9 uncias longa, acu- ta, impunctata, marginibus recurvis, simplicibus, canalicu- lata, infra medium teretiuscula parimque attenuata. Invo- lucrum brevissimé pedunculatum magnitudine pruni mino- ris. Calycis lamine sericee. Stylus glaber, apice simplicis *29, P. tenuifolia, caulibus nanis, foliis canaliculato-semiteretibus scabris,, Mr. Brown, on the Proteaceae of Jussiet. ol scabris, involucro hemispherico: bracteis tomentosis, caly- cis unguibus laminisque hirsutis : aristis brevissimis. Has. In Africe Australis montibus sterilibus. D. Niven. (v. s. in Herb. Hibbert.) Desc. Folia numerosa, punctis elevatis utrinque scabra, mar- ginibus revolutis canaliculata, basi planiuscula, spithamea v. dodrantalia. Involucrum erectum, sessile, magnitudine po- mi minoris, tomento ferrugineo tardiis deciduo. Calyx ses- quiuncialis laminarum villis brevioribus, aristis (mucronibus potids) duabus lamina quadruplo brevioribus. Stylus glaber, apice simplici. *30. P. levis, caulibus nanis decumbentibus, foliis elongato- linearibus lzvibus aveniis marginibus recurvis, involucro hemispherico: bracteis obtusis subsericeis, calycibus sub- uncialibus muticis. Has. In Africé Australi. D. Masson. (v. s. in Herb. Banks.) Desc. Caulis brevissimus, decumbens (Masson.) glaber. Folia secunda, glauca, spithamea, acuta, marginibus levibus non incrassatis, basi attenuata plana. Involucrum sessile, erec- tum, magnitudine pomi minoris ; Bracteis primim subseri- ceis, demim glabriusculis, marginibus brevissimé ciliatis. Calyx unguibus extis glabriusculis, margine lanatis ; Laminis villosis. *31. P. scabra, caulibus nanis, foliis elongato-linearibus scabris obsoleté venosis, margine subrecurvis, involucro turbinato- hemispherico: bracteis obtusis tomentosis, unguibus calycis hirsutis: aristis lamind dimidio brevioribus. Has. In Africa Australi, prope Promont. B. Spei. Guk Row- burgh M. D. (v.s.in Herb. Soc. Linn.) n2 Desc. 92 Mr. Brown, on the Proteacee of Jussieu. Desc. Caulis semisepultus, divisus, ramis adscendentibus, folio brevioribus. Folia conferta, erecta, spithamea, vix pedalia,. 53—4 lineas lata, apice acuto sphacelato, uninervia, obsolet venosa, utrinque tuberculis pustuliformibus scabra, aliisque minutissimis conspersa, basi attenuatd petioliformi levi. Involucrum sessile, erectum, magnitudine pomi minoris ; Bracteis tomento ferrugineo demum subdeciduo. Calyx vix semuncialis ; laminis hirsutis ; aristis villis flexuosis cinereis ferrugineisve. ; Ozs. In Herbario D. Hibbert plantam vidi Foliis planis elongato-lanceolatis ; Involucris turbinatis ; Calycibus albo- lanatis aristarum lana longiore magisque implexa ; Stylo bi- uncial, vix arcuato: an distincta species ? 32. P. repens, caulibus nanis, foliis elongato-linearibus scabri- usculis margine revolutis, involucro turbinato: bracteis ob- tusis tomentosis: interioribus margine lanatis, calycibus bi- uncialibus ; unguibus hirsutis; aristis lamina brevioribus, stylo apice simplici. Lepidocarpodendron; foliis longissimis, angustissimis, fructum elegantissimé ex rubro flavo et albo variegatum instar coronse suceingentibus ;.radice repente. Boerh. Lugd. Bat. 2. p.190*. c. tab. Scolymocephalus s. Lepidocarpodendron foliis longissimis. Weinm. Phyt. 4. p. 290. t. 897. a. Protea caule unifloro calyce oblongo foliis linearibus longissi- mis. Roy. Lugd. Bat. 185. Leucadendron, foliis longissimis obtusé trigonis longitudine florem superantibus. Wachend. Ultra. 204. Leucadendron repens £. Linn, Sp. Pl. ed. i. p. 92. ed. i. p. 135. Protea Mr. Brown, on the Proteaceae of Jussieu. 93 Protea repens. Thunb. Diss. n. 38.* Prod. 26. Lam. Illust. 1. p- 236. n. 1230. Willd. Sp. Pl. 1. p. 523. Poiret. Encyc. Bo- tan. 5. p. 646. Has. In Africe Australis campis arenosis prope Prom. B. Spei. (v. s. in Herb. Banks.) Oss. Varietas? foliis vix punctatis, sesquipedalibus.. *33. P. lorea, caulibus nanis, foliis teretibus elongatis leevibus, involucro turbinato sub-pedunculato: bracteis acutiusculis sericeis, calycis unguibus extis glabris: aristis lamina bre- vioribus, stylo apice curvato. Has. In Africd Australi, prope Promont. B. Spei. D. Masson. (v. s. in Herb. Banks.) ’ Desc. Caulis brevissimus,semisepultus. Folia numerosa, pe- dalia, crassitie fili ligaterii. Involucrum pedunculo brevi squamis arcté imbricatis tecto: Bracteis exterioribus ovatis acutiusculis, interioribus oblongo-linearibus. Calyx Ungui- -bus Laminisque extis Aristis undique lana breyi densa alba erispata. Stylus glaber. 34. P. turbiniflora, caulibus nanis, foliis elongato-lanceolatis mar- ginatis subundulatis levibus, involucro subturbinato : brac- teis tomentosis obtusis, calycis aristis longitudine laminarum: lana apicis longiore crispa. Erodendrum turbiniflorum. Salisb. Parad. 108. Protea cwspitosa. And. Repos. 526. Has. In Africe Australis montibus ; in humidis solo fertiliori. D, Niven. (v. s. in. Herb. Hibbert.) Desc. Caules. czspitosi, abbreviati, divisi, erecti. Folia uni- nervia, venosa, juniora villosa, adulta glabra, nitida, minu- tissime Pace, acutissima, basi valde attenuata petioli- sae formi;, 94 Mr. Brown, on the Proteacee of Jussieu. formi, spithamea, vix pedalia, unciam circiter lata; extima ramorum nana, biuncialia, basi vix attenuata, membranacea, subscariosa. Involucrum sessile, vix biunciale: Bractets sub- incanis, ciliatis, interioribus apice lanatis. Calyx unguibus laminisque lanatis: Aristis curvatis, albo-lanatis, land ter- minali fulva&. Stylus glaber, apice levissimé curvato. *35. P. Scolopendrium, caulibus nanis, foliis elongato-lanceolatis marginatis levibus, involucro turbinato: bracteis lanceola- tis acuminatis apice tomentosis, aristis calycis lamina di- midio brevioribus. Has. In Africd Australi, Wintershoek. D. Joh. Roxburgh. (v. s. in Herb. Lambert.) Desc. Caulis foliis aliquoties brevior. Folia pedalia, sesqui- unciam vix duas uncias lata, costa subtis eminente, venis ramosis minutissimé punctata, basi valde attenuata. Invo- lucra subsessilia, solitaria v. bina, quandoque tres uncias longa: Bractets interioribus apice tomento persistente cine- reis. Calyx lanatus. Stylus glaber, infra medium dilatatus. Ovarii barba alba. tt Flores laterales. 36. P. cordata, floribus lateralibus, foliis cordatis subrotundis nervosis, bracteis involucri glabris. Protea cordata. Thunb. Diss. n.60.* tab. 5. bona. Prod. 28. Lam. Illust. Gen. 1. p. 233. n. 1207. Willd. Sp. Pl. 1. p. 534. Poiret. Encyc. Botan, 5. p. 639. And. Repos. 289. Protea cordifolia. Sims, Bot. Mag. 649. Has. In Africe Australis montibus, Hottentots Holland et prope Fluvium Zonder End. Thunb. loc. (v.s. in Herb. Banks.) 37. P. am- Mr. Brown, on the Proteacee of Jussieu. 95 37. P. amplevicaulis, floribus lateralibus, foliis cordatis ovatis amplexicaulibus divaricatis apice recurvis, bracteis inyolu- cri pubescentibus. Erodendrum amplexicaule. Salisb. Parad. 67. Protea repens. And. Repos. 453. Has. In Africa Australi. D. Masson. (v. s. in Herb. Banks.) 38. P. humilis, floribus lateralibus, foliis linearibus acutis, (biun- cialibus,) receptaculo conico: paleis acutis. Protea humiflora. And. Repos. 532. Has. In Africa Australi. D. Masson. (v.s. in Herb. Banks.) Desc. Caulis nanus. Rami glabri. Folia plana, fere 3 uncias longa. Involucra hemispherica, bracteis obtusis, interiori- bus apice pube adpressa ferrugined, *39. P. acerosa, floribus lateralibus, foliis subulatis, receptaculo convexiusculo: paleis obtusis. Has. In Africd Australi. D. Masson. (v. s. in Herb. Banks.) Desc. Caulis brevis. Rami erecti, glabri. Folia levia. In- volucra ramea, subaggregata, breviter pedunculata; Brac- teis obtusis, interioribus pube diutids persistenti subsericeis. Calyx muticus, apice barbato. Receptuculi palee connate. Squamule hypogyne subulate. Oxs. Varietas? Foliis longioribus (sesquiuncialibus) semitere- tibus in Herbario et Hort. D. Hibbert vidi, que secundum D. Niven. 3—4 pedes altain montosis solo fertiliori prope Zon- der End. lecta. Heec Protea virgata. And. Repos. 577. 6. LEUCOSPERMUM. Levcaprenprum. Salisb. Parad. Protez sect. 3. Linn. Mant. ConocarPopENpRa (spuria 196 et 198). Boerh. Lugd. Cuar. 96 Mr. Brown, on the Proteaceae of Jussieu. Cuan. Gen. Calye irregularis, labiatus, unguibus tribus (rard om- nibus) coherentibus, laminis staminiferis distinctis. Stylus filiformis, deciduus. Stigma incrassatum, glabrum (nunc ine- quilaterale). Nuzx ventricosa, sessilis, levis. Capitulum inde- finité multiflorum ; Involucro polyphyllo imbricato. Hanirtvs. Frutices sepe humiles, quandoque arborescentes, plerique tomentosi v. hirsuti. Folia integra v. apice calloso-dentata. Capitula terminalia; Floribus flavis, modo imbricatis bracteis di- stinguentibus persistentibus induratis ; modo fastigiatis recep- taculo planiusculo, paleis angustis, non mutatis, subdeciduis. + Capitulum amentaceum ; Bracteis propriis persistentibus subinduratis. 1. L. lineare, stylo calycem hirsutum superante, stigmate hinc gibboso, involucro tomentoso, follis linearibus integris ; cal- lo apicis subbarbato, ramis glabris. Protea linearis. Thunb. Diss. n. 35.* tab. 4. pedunculo insolité elongato stylisque apice nimis arcuatis. Thunb. Prod. 26. Lam. Illust. Gen. 1. p. 237. n. 1241. Willd. Sp. Pl. 1. p. 521. Poiret. Encyc. Botan. 5. p. 650. Has. In Africe Australis arenosis. Paarl, Drakenstein, Stel- lenboch. (v. s.in Herb. Banks. Lambert. Soc. Linn.) Oss. Folia sepits canaliculata marginibus inflexis, nunquam reflexis, callo apicis villis albis diu tecto; dum plana ob- soleté striata marginibus scabriusculis ; rarissimé 2—3-den- tata. *2, L. attenuatum, stylo calycem hirsutum superante, stigmate subzequilaterali, foliis cuneato-linearibus tridentatis aveniis basi attenuata, involucris ramisque tomentosis. Has. In Africee Australis arenosis elevatioribus inter saxa; Zwellendam. 4 Mr. Brown, on the Proteacee of Jussieu. 97 Zwellendam. D. Niven. (v.s.in Herb. Banks. Lambert. Hibbert.) f - Desc. Frutew erectus, tripedalis. Rami stricti, crassitie pen- ne anserine, incani. Folia glaberrima, levia, basi uninervi vix torta, crassa, rard 5-dentata, sesquiuncialia, biuncialia. Capitula solitaria v. gemina, breviter pedunculata, obovata, magnitudine pruni majoris. Bractee involucri ovate, acumi- natz, arctt imbricata ; pedunculi patule. Stylus calyce unam quartam longior. Stigma conico-ovatum. Oss. Hujus Varietas? insignis. Foliis latioribus, apice pro- fundé tridentatis, dentibus lateralibus szepissimé bi- interme-' dio tri-dentatis.” Ramulis preter tomentum incanum villis patulis brevibus. (v. s. in Herb. Hibbert.) 3. L. Tottum, stylo calycem hirsutum % superante, stigmate hinc gibboso, foliis lineari-oblongis sub-integris venosis basi. ob- _ tusa, bracteis involucri glabris ciliatis. Protea Totta. Linn. Mant. 191.* fide spec. in illius Herb. Thund. Diss. n. 54.* Prod. 27. Lam. Illust. Gen. 1. p. 235. n. 1224. Willd. Sp. Pl. 1. p. 532. Poiret. Encyc. Botan. 5. p, 644 Har. In Africe Australis montosis; Roode Zant Cascade. (v. s. in Herb. Linn., Banks., &c.) Oss. Frutex subdecumbens (secund. D. Niven.) Ramisepids hirsuti, quandoque glabri. Folia interdum 2—3-dentata, venis obsoletis. Calyces bracteis triplo longiores. Stigma indivisum. *4. LL, medium, stylo calycem hirsutum feré bis superante, stigmate hine gibboso, foliis lineari-oblongis integris passimque 2—3- dentatis: callis acutis ; basi obtusA, bracteis involucri tenu- issimé pubescentibus ciliatis, capitulis cernuis. VOL, X. to) Protea 98 Mr. Brown, on the Proteacee of Jussieu. Protea formosa. And. Repos. 17? que differt tamen, Foliis longioribus, Calycibus unilabiatis unguibus omnibus longitu- dinaliter coherentibus, Bracteis involucri sphacelatis, Stig- mate ovato-oblongo vix gibboso. : Has. In Africe Australis montibus. (v. s. in Herb. Soc. Linn.) Oss. Species inter L. Tottum et. ellipticum media, illo foliis, hoe floribus fere exacté conveniens. 5. L. ellipticum, stylo calycem hirsutum feré bis superante, stig- mate conico-ovato hinc gibboso, foliis oblongis 3—4-denta- tis; basi obtusis; biuncialibus: bracteis involucri tenuissimeé pubescentibus ciliatis, capitulis erectis. Protea elliptica. Thunb. Diss. n.15.* Prod. 26. Willd. Sp. Pl. 1. p: 512. Protea vestita. Lam. Illust. Gen. 1. p. 239. n. 1259 ? Protea conocarpa A. Poiret. Encyc. Botan. 5. p.057? Has. In Africe Australis montibus. (v..s.) Ozs. Calli apicis foliorum obtusiusculi. *6. L. nutans, stylo calycem supra sericeum bis superante, stig- mate obliquo turbinato! involucri bracteis tomentosis inca- nis, capitulis nutantibus, foliis ovatis oblongisve S—35-den- _ tatis ; -basi obtusis. a, Foliis subovatis cordatis vix 2 iisiaiidfalibps: GB. Foliis lineari-oblongis basi simplicibus, 2—3 uncias longis. Has. In Afric Australis montibus. Masson. (vy. s. «. in Herb. Banks., g. in Herb. Lambert.) Ons. Distincta stigmate obliquo, apice depresso, axi longitu- dinali elevata. Variat ramis tomentosis et hirsutis. 7. L. Con- Mr. Brown, on the Proteaceae of Jussieu, 99 7. L. Conocarpum, stylo calycem villosissimum superante, stig- mate subzequilaterali oblongo-conico, foliis ovalibus 3—9- dentatis, ramis bracteisque hirsutissimis. Scolymocephalus africanus latifolius lanuginosus foliis in sum- mitate crenatis. Herm. Cat. 20. Leucadendro similis Africana arbor argentea folio summo cre- naturis florida. Plukn. Phyt. t. 200. f. 2. folium, sed nux vix hujus generis. Leucadendron, africana arbor argentea summo folio crenato. Plukn. Alm. 212. Conophoros capitis Bonz Spei, folio in summo dentato. Raj. Hist. 3. App. 240. Petiv. Mus. 172. fide spec. in Herb. Petiv. Conocarpodendron ; folio crasso, nervoso, lanuginoso, supra crenato, ibique limbo rubro ; flore aureo ; cono facilé deci- duo. Boerh. Lugd. Bat. 2. p. 196. c. tab. bona. Scolymocephalus africanus folio crasso nervoso. Weinm. Phyt. 4. p. 292. t. 899. f. b. Protea foliis oblongo-ovatis apice quinquedentato-callosis. Roy. Lugd. Bat. 184. ; Leucadendron foliis ovatis obversis oblongis, margine calloso fimbriatis ad apicem crenatis. Wachend. Ultraj. 203. Leucadendron Conocarpodendron. Linn. Sp. Pl. ed. i. p. 95. ed. ii. p. 186. Syst. Nat. xii. t.2. p. 110. Berg. Act. Stockh. 1766. p. 321. Omiss. in Linn. Mant. et Syst. Veg. xiii. Protea conocarpa. Thunb. Diss. n.14.* desc. partim a L. gran- difloro desump*a. Thunb. Prod. 25. Willd. Sp. Pi. 1. p. 512. Lam. Illust. Gen. 1. p. 239. n. 1260. tab. 53. f. 3. mala, pree- cipué floribus separatis. Poiret. Encyc. Botan. 5. p. 656. Has. In Africe Australis campis et collibus sterilibus, prope Promont. B. Spei. (v. v. ad littora Simon’s Bay.) 02 8 L. gran- 100 Mr. Brown, on the Proteacce of Jussieu. 8 L. grandiflorum, stylo calycem villosissimum superante, stig~ mate wzquilaterali oblongo-cylindraceo, foliis oblongo-lan- ceolatis tridentatis mtegrisque, ramis hirsutissimis, bracteis involucri glabris ciliatis. Leucadendron grandiflorum.” Salish. Parad. 1106. Has. In Africe Australis montosis. (v. s. in Herb. Banks. sub nomine Protez villosiuscule. ) 9. L. puberum, stylo calycem hirsutum superante, stigmate zequi- laterali ovato, foliis lanceolatis ellipticisve integris uncia bre- vioribus pubescentibus, ramis hirsutis, bracteis involucri in- cano-villosis ellipticis longé acuminatis. Protea pubera. Linn. Mant. 192.* fide spec. in illius Herb. ex- clusis synonymis. Thunb. Diss. n. 56.* Prod, 27, Lam. Iilust. Gen. 1. p. 234. n. 1216. / Walid. Sp. Pl. 1. p. 533. excl. syn. Bergii. Poiret. Encyc. Botan. 5. p. 642. Has. In Africe Australis summis montibus; Hottentot’s Hol- land. (v.s. in Herb. Banks., Lambert.) Oss. Variat foliis angusto-lanceolatis. *10. L. buaifolium, stylo calycem hirsutum superante, stigmate equilaterali ovato, foliis ovalibus obtusis integris unguicu- laribus pubescentibus, ramis hirsutis, bracteis involucri or- biculato-ovatis brevitery acuminatis glabriusculis ciliatis. Has. In Africe Australis montibus. Masson. (v. s. in Herb. Banks.) ; Oss. Proximum priori et forte cum eo a Thunbergio con- fusum. *11. L. patulum, stylo calycem tomentoso-villosum superante, stigmate Mr. Brown, on the Proteacee of Jussieu. 101 stigmate eequilaterali ovato, foliis spathulato-lnearibus in- tegris: adultis glabris, ramis divaricatis tomentosis, capitulis — pedunculatis. Has. In Africé Australi. Masson. (v. s. in. Herb. Banks.) Desc. Frutex humilis, ramosissimus.. Folia conferta, uncia bre- viora, basi angustata, callo apicis acutiusculo, summa to- mentosa. Capitula magnitudine avellanz; pedunculo to- mentoso, bracteis lanceolatis ; Bractee involucrantes ovate, acuminate, tomentose, incane, Calyx tubulosus, bilabia- tus, tomentosus, villisque brevibus patulis supra frequentio- ribus. Stylus 9 lineas longus. Stigma breve. Oss. Valdé athinis L. pubero. *12. L. spathulatum, stylo calycem villoso-tomentosum super- ante, stigmate zequilaterali, foliis spathulatis basi lineari : adultis glabris uncialibus, ramis hirsutis patulis, capitulis pe- dunculatis, bracteis tomentosis acuminatis. Has. In Africd Australi: D. Niven. (v. s. in Herb. Hibbert.) Dausc. Frutex humilis, ramosissimus. Rami villis brevibus, pa- tulis tomentoque cinereo instructi. Folia elliptico-spathu- lata, basi attenuata, lineari, torta: callo apicis obtuso ; ob- solett venosa. Capitulum magnitudine juglandis minoris ; Bracteis involucrantibus ovatis, acuminatis. Calyces villis brevibus, patulis densé tecti, laminarum decumbentibus, brevissimis. Stylus uncialis. 13. L. tomentosum, stylo sublongitudine calycis, caule erecto, foliis linearibus cuneatisve tridentatis tomentosis, bracteis lanceolatis tubum calycis subequantibus. Protea tomentosa. . Thunb. Diss. n. 18.* Prod. 26, Linn. Suppl. 118. 102 Mr. Brown, on the Proteaceae of Jussieu. 118. Lam. Illust. Gen. 1. p. 239. n. 1257. Willd. Sp. Pl. 1. p- 514. Poiret. Encyc. Botan. 5. p. 656. e. foliis linearibus canaliculatis aveniis, ramis bracteisque to- mentosis, calycis laminis barbatis. #. foliis lineari-cuneatis planis subvenosis 3—5-dentatis, ramis hirsutis, bracteis calycisque laminis tomentosis. Protea candicans. And. Repos. 294. y- foliis linearibus planis ramis hirsutis, bracteis glabriusculis ciliatis. Has. In Africe Australis montibus, prope Promont. B. Spci. (v.s in Herb. Banks., Lambert., et Soc. Linn.) ; Oss. Plante pro varietatibus supra habite forte species di-. stincte. 14. L. Hypophyllum, stylo longitudine calycis, caule procum- bente, foliis linearibus tridentatis, bracteis orbiculato-ovatis tomentosis tubo calycis dimidio brevioribus. Thymelza capitata Rapunculoides Nerii crassioribus foliis sum- mo apice tridentatis zthiopica coniformi calyce squamato. Plukn. Mant. 181. t. 440. f. 3. Conophoros capensis folio angusto summo dentato. Petiv. Mus. 900. fide spec. in illius Herbar. Scolymocephalos foliis angustis in summitate tridentatis. Raj. Hist. 3. Dendr. p. 9. Conocarpodendron ; folio rigido, angusto, apice tridentato ru- bro; flore aureo. Boerh. Lugd. Bat. 2. p. 198.* c. tab. Scolymocephalus seu Conocarpodendron folio angusto. Weinm. Phyt. 4. p. 294. t. 902. f. a Protea foliis lanceolato-linearibus apice tridentato-callosis. Linn. Hort. Chiff. 29. Herb. Cliff. absque fructificatione. Protea Mr. Brown, on the Proteacee of Jussieu. 103 Protea foliis lanceolatis linearibus apice tridentato callosis ca- pitulis aphyllis. Roy. Lugd. Bat. 184. Wachend, Ultra). 202. Leucadendron Hypophyllocarpodendron. Linn. Sp. Pl. ed. 1. p. 93. ed. ii. p. 186. Berg. Act. Stockh. 1766. p.321.* Berg. Cap. 16.* Protea Hypophyllocarpodendron. Linn. Mant. 191.* desc. opt. Protea Hypophylla. Thunb. Diss. n.16.* Prod.26. Lam. Il- lust. Gen. 1. p. 259. n. 1256. Willd. Sp. Pl. 1. p. 518. Poiret. Encyc. Botan. 5. p. 655. Has. In Africz Australis sabulosis depressis prope Prom. B. Spei. (v.v. in collibus juxta Simon’s Bay.) Oss. Variat foliis glabris, pubescentibus et incano-tomentosis, $—5-dentatis passimque integris, planis canaliculatisve, ramis nudiusculis, villosis v. tomentosis; Capitulis subsessilibus pedunculatisque ; Bracteis laté ovatis, acutis orbiculatisve. tt Receptaculum planiusculum ; Bracteis propriis angustis deciduis. *15, L. molle, foliis ellipticis acutis 2—3-dentatis integrisve sub- sericeo-pubescentibus mollibus, bracteis exterioribus glabri- usculis, stigmate ovato. Has. In Africe Australis montibus. (v. s.) Oss. Proximum L. crinito, diversum figura foliorum et forté caule procumbenti. 16. L. crinitum, foliis obovato-oblongis obtusis 3—5-dentatis in- tegrisve ; basi angustatis; pubescentibus demum glabris sca- briusculis, bracteis omnibus villosis. Protea crinita. Thunb. Diss.n.13?* Prod. 25. Willd. Sp. Pl. 1. p. 511? Poiret. Encyc. Botan. 5. p. 657. Has. In Africa Australi. (v. s. in Herb. Soc. Linn.) 17. L. ole- 104 Mr. Brown, on the Proteacee of Jussieu. 17. L. oleefolium, foliis ovali-oblongis sublanceolatisve tridenta- tis et integris : adultis glabris, bracteis omnibus villosis, stig- mate oblongo. . Leucadendron olezfolium. Berg. Act. Stockh. 1766. p. 320.* Berg. Cap. 15.* Protea criniflora. “Linn. Suppl. 117.* Han. In Africé Australi. (v. s.in Herb. Banks.) Oxs. Duplex varietas, altera foliis ovali-oblongis obtusis ; brac- teis exterioribus glabriusculis apice barbatis: altera foliis lineari-oblongis acutiusculis bracteis omnibus villosis. Am- be A L. crinito diversze foliis basi haud angustata, 18. L. diffusum, foliis cuneato-linearibus integris 2—3-denta- tisve basi angustatis: adultis glabris, ramis procumbentibus, bracteis tomentosis lanceolatis acuminatis calyce dimidio brevioribus. Protea heterophylla. Thunb. Diss. n. we Prod. 26? Willd. Sp. Pl. 1. p. 515. Has. In Africd Australi. Gul. Rovburgh M. D. (v. s. in — Banks. et Soc. Linn.) Desc. Frutex prostratus ? Rami longi, glabri v. hirsuti, quan- doque adscendentes. Folia uncialia, plana v. marginibus leviter inflexis concaviuscula, obsoleté venosa, in ramis | prostratis secunda. Capituda solitaria, breviter pedunculata, turbinata, magnitudine avellanz ; Bractee involucri incane, calyce hirsuto dimidio breviores. Pistillum calyce sesqui- longius. Stigma clavatum stylo capillari parim crassius. Oxs. Cg saflinis L. patulo. 7. MIMETES. Mr. Brown, on the Proteaceae of Jussiew 105 7. MIMETES. Salish. Parad. Hyropuyttocarropenpron. Boerh. Lugd. Prortx Sp. 9—10. Linn. Mant. Cuan. Gen. Calyzr quadripartitus, equalis, laciniis distinctis. Sty- lus filiformis, deciduus. Stigma cylindraceum, gracile. Nux ventricosa, sessilis, levis. Receptaculum commune planum, paleis angustis, deciduis. Involucrum indefinité polyphyllum, imbricatum. Hasrtus. Frutices. Folia integra v. calloso-dentata. Capitula avil- laria, in quibusdam folio superiori cucullato amplexa ! quandoque terminalia. Involucra membranacea, rard coriacea, nunc dimi. diata! Pistilla calyce post expansionem flaccido longiora. Stig- ma s@pissimé acutum. + Capitula axillaria. 1, M. hirta, involucris equilateralibus coloratis acuminatis se- ' mi-exsertis 8—10-floris, stigmate subulato, laminis calycis plumosis, foliis acutis integerrimis. Scolymocephalus Africanus argenteus foliis Dorycnii Plateau. Herman. Cat. Mt. Conophoros capensis foliis pilosis apice nigricante. Petiv. Mus. 62. fid. spec. in illius Herb. Lepidocarpodendron ; foliis sericeis, brevibus, confertissimé natis; fructu gracili, longo. Boerh. Lugd. Bat. 2. p. 194. c. tab. Scolymocephalus africanus argenteus foliis Dorycnii. MVeinm. Phyt. 4. p. 292. t. 899. bona. Leucadendron hirtum. Amen. Acad. 6. p. 83.* Sp. Pi. ed. ii. p- 136. VOL. x. P Protea 106 Mr. Brown, on the Proteacce of Jussieus Protea hirta. Linn. Mant. p. 188.* (Herb. Linn.) Thunb. Diss. n. 55.* exclus. syn. Boerh. Lugd.2. p. 205. Thunb. Prod. 27. Lam. Illust. Gen. 1. p. 234. n. 1213., Willd. Sp. Pl. 1. p. 5382. Poiret. Encyc. Botan. 5. p. 641. _ Has. In Africe Australis campis collibusque, in locis humi- dis. (vy. v. in collibus humidis prope Simon’s Bay.) *2, M. capitulata, involucris equilateralibus coloratis acutis se- mi-exsertis pubescentibus 8—10-floris, stigmate apice co- nico-incrassato! laminis calycis plumosis, foliis acutis inte- gerrimis. Has. In Africa Australi. Gul. Roxburgh M. D. (v. s. in Herb. Banks.) ‘ Desc. Frutew erectus. Rami pubescentes. Folia elliptico- lanceolata, vix uncialia, pubescentia, haud sericea, ciliata, floralia pardim latiora; Involucra foliis pauld longiora ; Bracteis ellipticis, acutis, rubris tenuissimé pubescentibus, Calyces involucro vix longiores. Styli calycibus feré duplo longiores apice parim incrassato tetragono subfusiformi. Stigma stylo nodulo articuliformi connexum, cylindraceum, sulcatum, apice duplo crassiore conico-capitato. *3, M. pauciflora, involucris subeequilateralibus coloratis acutis villosiusculis subquadrifloris, calycibus pistilla aquantibus ! laminis nudiusculis, stigmate cylindraceo, foliis obtusis in- tegerrimis sericeis. Has. In Africd Australi. Gul. Roxburgh M. D. (vy. s. in Herb. Lambert.) nee Desc. Frutex erectus. Rami villosi, vestiti. Folia imbricata, frequentia, ovalia, plana, uncialia, venis alt? immersis ad- versus Mr. Brown, on the Proteacee of Jussieu. 107 versus lucem tantummodd obviis. Involucra cylindracea, foliis sesquilongiora. Bracteis membranaceis, rubris, exti- mis obtusis ter brevioribus. Calyx involucro feré unam quar- tam longior; Unguibus hirsutis ; Laminis glabriusculis, pube brevi adpressd. Stylus calycem vix superans, extra medium angulatus. Stigma cylindraceum, sub-emarginatum, crassitie styli, quo cum nodulo connexum. 4. M. cucullata, involucris mequilateralibus subdimidiatis acu- minatis glabriusculis, foliis lineari-oblongis tridentatis gla- bris: floralibus infra dilatatis marginibus recurvis, stigmate - subulato acutissimo. Scolymocephalus africana, foliis angustis brevioribus, tribus in summitate denticulis, capitulis foliosis interceptis. Herm. Afr. 20. Leucadendros africana s. Scolymocephalus angistiori folio api- cibus tridentatis. Plukn. Alm. 212. t. 304. f. 6, bona. Hypophyllocarpodendron foliis inferioribus apice trifido rubro ‘superioribus penitis rubris glabris. Boerh. riper Bat. 2 p. 206. c, tab. Séulpenocdhiles seu Fiyulopliptlacanpudetidron foliis tribus in summnitate. Weinm. Phyt. 4. p. 297. #. 905. Protea foliis lanceolatis obtusis foliis involventibus apice tri- dentato-callosis. Roy. Lugd. Bat. 184. Leucadendron foliis cuneiformibus apice tridentato-callosis summis ultra florem protensis. Wachend. Ultraj. 203. Leucadendron cucullatum. Linn. Sp. Pl. ed. i. p. 93. ed. il. p. 136. Berg. Act. Stockh. 1766. p.320.* Berg. Cap. 14.* Protea cucullata. Linn. Mant. 189.* Thunb. Diss. n. 17.* Prod. 26. Lam. Illust. Gen. 1. p. 239. n. 1258. Willd. Sp. Pl... p. 514. Poiret. Encyc. Botan. 5. p. 656.* PQ Has. 108 Mr. Brown, on the Proteacee of Jussieu. Has. In Africe Australis uliginosis prope Prom, B. Spei. (v.v. juxta Simon’s Bay et Gouatoilain. ) Oss. Frutex 2—3 pedes altus. Folia vix sesquiuncialia, sub- avenia; floralia supra glabriuscula. Stigma infra apicem non incrassatum. Varietas foliis uncié brevioribus subline- aribus. 5. M. Hartogii, involucris ineequilateralibus subdimidiatis : brac- teis acuminatis pubescentibus : interioribus tomentosis inca- nis, foliis limeari-oblongis tridentatis: adultis glabris mar- ginibus niveo-lanatis ; floralium apice angustato supra seri- ceo, stigmate extra medium fusiformi: acumine setaceo. Hypophyllocarpodendron ; foliis lanuginosis, in apice trifido rubro quasi florescens. Boerh, Lugd. Bat. 2. p. 205. c. tab. Scolymocephalus seu Hypophyllocarpodendron foliis lanugi- nosis. Weinm. Phyt.4. p. 297. t. 906. a. Protea cucullata 8. Lam. Iilust. Gen. 1. p. 239. n. 1258. Has. In Africe Australis collibus, prope Prom. B. Spei. (v. v. in montibus juxta False Bay.) Desc. Arbuscula orgyalis. Rami patentes, tomentosi. Folia frequentia, imbricata, plana, biuncialia et ultra, 8 lineas lata, subvenosa, utrinque tenuissimé pubescentia, pube de- mum decidua, land marginis persistenti ; floralia dimidio in- feriore dilatato, 6blongo, marginibus reflexis cucullato, ca- pitulam proximé inferius amplexante ; superiore breviore, lineari, supra sericeo, marginibus planis. Calya sesquiun- cialis, plumoso-barbatus. Stylus calycem superans, sulcato- angulatus. Stigma sulcato-quadrangulum sulcis strié pardm elevaté. Receptaculum paleis subulatis, lanatis. *6. M. Hibbertii, involucris inequilateralibus subdimidiatis : bracteis Mr. Brown, on the Proteacee of Jussieu. 109 bracteis obtusis; exterioribus glabris, foliis argenteis oblongo- ellipticis tridentatis integerrimisve. Has. In Africe Australis alpinis humidis, prope Barbiers Kraal. .D. Niven. (v.s.in Herb. Hibbert., Banks., Lam- bert.) Desc. Frutex 5—6 pedes altus. Rami tomentosi, cinerei. To- lia imbricata, sessilia, plana, obsolete venosa, dum duas uncias longa, vix 8 lineas lata. Involucra foliis breviora, tur- binato-ovata, 7—8-flora. Bracteis laté ovatis, exterioribus ciliatis, interioribus sericeis. Calya villosissimus. Stylus ca- lyce longior. Stigma filiforme, striatum, acutiusculum. *7. M. Massoni, involucris sequilateralibus calyce dimidio bre- vioribus : bracteis subrotundis obtusis coriaceis foliisque ar- genteis ovatis integris. Has. In Africe Australis montibus prope Franche Hock. Masson. (vy. s. in Herb. Banks.) Desc. Frutewv erectus. Rami sericei. Folia imbricata, frequen- tia, plana, holosericea, obsoleté venosa, biuncialia, sesqui- unciam lata, calloapicis nudiusculo. Involucra vix semun- cialia, globose ovata, circiter octo-flora ; Bracteis fructiferis induratis. Calyx villis longis, sub-adpressis incanus. Stylus calyce longior. Stigma filiforme, acutum, striatum, vix cras- sitie styli. Receptaculum villosum, angustum, epaleatum. tt Capitula terminalia. Mimetes spurie. 8. M. thymeleoides, caule erecto, foliis ovalibus obtusis pubes- centibus semuncia brevioribus, capitulis subaggregatis, sty- lis infra medium pubescentibus. Leucadendron thymeleoides. Berg. Act. Stockh. 1766. p. 324.* Berg. Cap. 19.* Has. 110 Mr. Brown, on the Proteacee of Jussieu. Has. In Africa Australi, prope Promont. B. Spei. (v. s. in Herb. Banks.) Desc. Frutex ramosissimus. Rami stricti, vestiti. Folia im- bricata, vix unguicularia, subavenia, inferiora glabra. Ca- pitula sessilia, globosa, magnitudine vix cerasi nigri. Brac- te@ involucri lanceolato-ellipticee. Palee undique densé la- nate. Calywx sericeo-lanatus. Stylus calyce longior. Stigma acutiusculum. 9. M. myrtifolia, caule erecto, foliis lineari-oblongis obliquis in- tegris v. 2—3-dentatis uncia brevioribus, stylo glabro, capi- tulis sub-solitariis. a, foliis tomentosis, passim 2—3-dentatis, bracteis acuminatis. @. foliis glabriusculis, summis capitulo parim longioribus, bracteis obtusiusculis. Protea myrtifolia. Thunb. Diss. n. 50*? Prod. 27. Willd. Sp. Pl. 1. p. 530. Potret. Encyc. Botan. 5. p. 641. Has. In Africéd Australi. (v. s. in Herb. Banks. et Soc. Linn.) Desc. «. Fruter parvus. Rami brunnei, adulti glabri, juniores ‘villosi. Folia avenia, tenuissimé pubescentia vy. glabra. Capi- tula turbinata, sessilia, solitaria v. pauca aggregata, piso vix duplO majora, multiflora. Bractee@ involucri pubescentes, ciliate; exteriores ovato-lanceolate, acumine brevi; interi- ores oblongo-ellipticz, obtusiusculz. Calyx tetraphyllus, plu- moso-villosus. Péstillum calyce longius. Stigma crassitie styli. Squamule hypogyne subulate, persistentes. Nuz el- liptica, vix compressa, tenuissimé pubescens, basi styli ter- minata: cortex membranaceus, tenuis, albus, separabilis apice rugoso, putamen crustaceum, nigro-fuscum. Nucleus integumento simplici, tenuissimo. Chalaza apicis lata, ve~ fis radiantibus. Receptaculum planum, villosum, epaleatum. 10. M. Mr. Brown, on the Proteacee of Jussieu 111 10. M. divaricata, caule procumbente, foliis ovalibus obtusis pu- bescentibus, stylo glabro. #. bracteis oblongo-linearibus obtusis semifoliaceis, laminis calycis sericeis. ; Scolymocephalos africanus argenteus, foliis brevioribus, myrti- formibus, capitulis rarioribus. Herm. Afr. 20. Leucadendron divaricatum. Berg. Act. Stockh. 1766. p.324.* Berg. Cap. p. 19.* Protea divaricata. Linn. Mant. 194.* Thunb. Diss. n. 57.* Prod. 27. Lam. Iilust. Gen. 1. p. 235. n. 1221. Poiret. En- cyc. Botan. 5. p. 643. Willd. Sp. Pl. 1. p. 533. f. bracteis lanceolatis acutiusculis subscariosis. Has. In Africee Australis campis et collibus, ubique prope Promont. B. Spei. (v. v. ad Jatera montium, juxta Simon’s Bay.) Oxs. Calyx tetraphyllus. Receptaculum epaleatum. 11. M. purpurea, caule procumbenti, ramis adscendentibus, foliis lineari-subulatis canaliculatis, laminis calycis glabris. Protea foliis linearibus simplicissimis ramis determinatis flori- bus terminatricibus. Roy. Lugd. Bat. 186. Leucadendron proteoides. Linn. Sp. Pl. ed. i. p.91.* (fid. spee. tune in Herb.) ed. ii. p. 184.* Berg. Act. Stockh. 1766. p- 826.* Berg. Cap. 24.” - Protea purpurea. Linn. Mant. 195.* Thunb. Diss. n. 26.* Prod. 26. Lam. Tllust. Gen. 1. p. 238. n. 1252. Willd. Sp. Pl. 1. p. 518. Poiret. Encyc. Botan. 5. p. 654. Has. In Africae Australis collibus, prope Promont. B. Spei; frequens. (v. v. ad latera montium, prope Simon’s Bay.) Oxs. I. Receptaculum epaleatum. Oxzs. II. Variat Caule erectiusculo; Foliis undique ¥ersis et secundis; i12 Mr, Brown, on the Proteacee of Jussieu. secundis ; Bracteis acumine subulato, longo, brevissimo, vel nullo. 8. SERRURIA. Salish. Parad. Serrarta. Burm. Afr. Adans. Fam. Gen. Cuar.. Calya quadrifidus, subeequalis, unguibus distinctis. Stigma verticale, glabrum. Squamule quatuor hypogyne. Nuv brevissimé pedicellata, ventricosa. Capitulum indefinite multiflorum ; pa/eis persistentibus, imbricatis. Hasirvs. Frutices. Folia filiformia, trifido-pinnatifida, raro indivisa. Capitula ¢erminalia v. e summis alis, simplicia, nune composita partialibus congestis v. pedunculo communi diviso corymbosa. In- volucrum imbricatum, membranaceum, floribus sepissime brevius, in paucis longius, quandoque nullum. Flores semper sessiles, pur- purei. Pistillum longitudine calycis. Stigma clavatum, rariusve cylindraceum. Nux ovalis, tenuiter pubescens, modo barbata, ali- quando glabriuscula. Ons. Secundum Cl. Salisburium, “Flores interdum pedicellati,” quod nunquam observare licuit. + Capitula simplicia ; Pedunculi indivisi v. nulli. *1. S. glaberrima, capitulis axillaribus pedunculatis, bracteis la- minisque calycis glabris, foliis indivisis passimque trifidis, caule procumbente. . Has. In Africee Australis umbrosis montium. Masson. Kleine Hoot. Hoeck.. Gul. Roaburgh M. D. (vy. s. in Herb. Soc. Linn. et Banks.) Desc. Frutex prostratus, glaber. Rami filiformes, subflexuosi. Folia alterna, remotiuscula, ramis partm graciliora, 2—3 un- cias longa. Capitula, erecta, sub-octoflora, pedunculo brac- teato parlm breviora. Bractee@ propriv subrotunde, mucro- nate, Mr. Brown, on the Proteacee of Jussieu. 113 nate, cucullate, glabre, scariose. Calyx strictus, unguibus villosiusculis. *2. S. cygnea, capitulis axillaribus terminalibusque pedunculatis, bracteis glabris subciliatis, calycibus curvatis sericeis, foliis bipinnatis, caule procumbente. «. Capitula floribus viginti pluribusve : bracteis involucranti- bus nullis. 6. Capitula floribus viginti paucioribus : bracteis involucranti- bus nonnullis, lanceolato-ovatis. Has. In Africa Australi prope Winterhoek et alibi. Gul. Row- burgh, M. D. (vy. s. in Herb. Soc. Linn., 8 in Herb. Banks.) Desc. Frutex procumbens, ramosus, glabriusculus. Folia ses- quiunciam longa, quandoque biuncialia, superiora interdum breviora. Pedunculi capitulo longiores, bracteis distantibus, sepils curvati. Capitula globosa, magnitudine cerasi; Brac- teis propriis laté ovatis, acuminatis. Calyx unguibus sigmoi- deo-curvatis ; Laminis nutantibus. Stylus pariter arcuatus. Stigma pendulum, *3. S. acrocarpa, capitulis axillaribus pedunculatis, bracteis to- mentosis, calycibus curvatis sericeis, nucibus basi pubes- centi styli mucronatis, foliis bipinnatifidis, caule erecto. Has. In Africd Australi, Brant-fly plain. Gul. Roxburgh, M.D. (v.s. in Herb. Soc. Linn.) Desc. Frutex bipedalis et ultra. Ramuli pubescentes. Folia biuncialia, adulta glabra. Pedunculi capitulo longiores, seep curvati, bracteis glabris distantibus, apice tenuissimé pubes- centes. Capitulum magnitudine cerasi: Bracteis propriis ova- to-subrotundis, breviter acuminatis, involucrantibus paucis VOL. XxX. : Q similibus. 14 Mr. Brown, on the Proteacee of Jussieu. similibus. Stylus basi incrassataé apice arcuato. Stigma pendulum. Nwz barbata pilis strictis patulis. #4, S. elevata, capitulis axillaribus pedunculo brevioribus, brac- teis cuneato-orbiculatis tomentosis, calycibus breviter bar- batis curvatis, nucibus submuticis, foliis bipinnatis uncid longioribus, caule erecto. Was. In Africe Australis arenosis. Masson. Picket Berg. Gul. Roxburgh, M. D. (v. s. in Herb. Banks., et Soc. Linn.) Desc. Frutex orgyalis. Rami tomentosi, cinerei. Folia fre- quentia, pilosiuscula, viridia, inferiora glabra, sesquiuncia- lia, callis obtusiusculis.. Peduneuli folia seepissime superan- tes, quandoque S-unciales, tomentosi, cinerei, bracteis al- ternis, lanceolatis, patentibus. Capitulum magnitudine ce- rasi, floribus viginti pluribus, semuncid brevioribus. Brac- tee omnes extts sericeo-tomentosze, brevissimé mucronate, intis glabre, intimee submutice. Nuz submutica, mucro- nulo vix manifesto, barbata. Ozs. Descriptio e planta Massoni: Roxburgiana paulo diversa, Calycibus quandoque sericeis; bracteis. mucrone longiore ; pe- dunculis brevioribus, paucioribus ; foliis recentioribus magis hirsutis: forte species distincta. *5, §. Aitoni, capitulis axillaribus subterminalibus pedunculo brevioribus, bracteis cuneato-subrotundis. mucronatis gla- briusculis, calycibus plumosis, nucibus mucronatis, foliis- tripartito-bipinnatis sericeis uncia brevioribus, caule erecto. Has. In Africd Australi. D. Masson. (v.s. in Herb. D. Ai- ton.) Desc. Rami stricti, pedales, tomentosi, vestiti. Folia erecta, frequentia, 8—10 lineas longa, subargentea tomento arcté ad presso, Mr. Brown, on the Proteaceae of Jussieu. 115 adpresso, profundé trifida, laciniis bipinnatifidis, intermedia pariim longiore magisque divisa, lacinulis intds sulco tenui, apiculis subrecurvis, callo obtusiusculo. Pedunculi e sum- mis alis et terminales, corymbosi, unciales et ultra, to- mento brevissiio cinerei, bracteis alternis e basi erecté lan- ceolata subulatis, recurvis. Capitula globosa, magnitudine feré juglandis, floribus viginti pluribus. Bractee exteriores acumine longiore, interiores Jatiores, omnes glabriuscule, subciliate. Calyx T—S8 lineas longus, unguibus laminisque plumoso-barbatis. Stigma clavatum, oblongum. Nuz villis strictis sericeis barbata, basi styli mucronata. Squamule hy- pogynz quatuor, subulate, persistentes. *O. S. simplicifolia, capitulis terminalibus pedunculatis, bracteis villosis, calycibus barbatis, foliis indivisis raritisve trifidis, caule erecto. Haz. In Africz Australis arenosis: Roode Zant Cascade. Gul. Roaburgh, M.D. (v.s. in Herb. Soc. Linn.) Desc. Fruticulus pedalis, sesquipedalis, simplex v. subramo- sus, glaber, apicem versus tenuissimeé pubescens. lia un- cialia sesquiuncialia, canaliculata, pleraque indivisa, aliqua passim trifida, juniora hirsuta ; radicalia elongata, crassiora, canali latiore. Pedunculi solitarii, capitulo longiores, inca- no-tomentosi ; bracteis glabriusculis, lanceolatis, distantibus. Capitulum magnitudine cerasi, floribus circiter viginti. Brac- tee subrotunde, breviter acuminate, tomentose, subin- can. Calyr dense plumosus, niveus. Stigma subcylin- draceum. *7. S. diffusa, capitulis terminalibus pedunculatis, bracteis lan- ceolato-ovatis acuminatis, calycibus barbatis, foliis trifidis Q2 Vv. pin- 116 Mr. Brown, on the Proteaceae of Jussieu. v. pinnatifidis subindé simplicibus uncialibus ramisque gla- bris, caule procumbente. Has. In Africee Australis arenosis saxosis; in elevatioribus prope Roode Zant. Gul. Rovburgh, M. D. prope Wilde River. D. Niven. (v.s. in Herb. Soc. Linn., et Hibbert.) Desc. Frutex diffusus, pedalis bipedalis. Folia vix sesquiun- cialia, dum pinnatifida laciniis quinque indivisis. Pedun- culi solitarii, tomentosi, capitulo vix longiores ; bractets an- gusté lanceolatis, concavis, patulis, glabris. Capitudum mag- nitudine cerasi, floribus circiter viginti. Bractec lanceolato- ovate, acuminate, villose, scariose; extimz angustiores, glabriuscule. Calyx unguibus laminisque plumosis. Stigma clavato-cylindraceum. 8. S. pinnata, capitulis terminalibus axillaribusque pedunculatis subaggregatis, bracteis lanceolatis acuminatis villosis dimi- dio calyce longioribus, calycis unguibus subsericeis: laminis apice barbatis, foliis pinnatifidis trifidisve uncid longioribus, caule procumbente piloso. Protea pinnata. And. Repos. 512? sed folia nimis longa. Has. In Africe Australis montibus aridis ; in ascensu Paarl. Berg. D. Niven. (v.s.in Herb. Hibbert.) Desc. Frutexv totus prostratus, basi divisus, ramis pedalibus, pubescentibus. Folia secunda, erecta, subsesquiuncialia, sepils pinnatifida, laciniis quinque, passim trifida, pilo- siuscula, callis acutis. Pedunculi e summis alis et terminales, capitula subequantes, adscendentes, tomentosi, bracteis al- ternis, ovato-lanceolatis, acuminatis, glabriusculis. Capi- tula globosa, magnitudine feré juglandis, multiflora. Caly- cis lamine infra sericee, apice penicillatim barbatee. Stigma erectiusculum, subclavatum, apice dilatato cavo. *9, S. are- Mr. Brown, on the Proteacee of Jussieu. 117 *9. S. arenaria, capitulis terminalibus pedunculo longioribus, bracteis lanceolato-ovatis acuminatis villosis, calycis laminis tribus plumoso-barbatis quarta subimberbi; unguibus nu- diusculis, foliis trifidis pinnatifidisve uncia brevioribus, caule pubescent. Has. In Africe Australis arenosis montium. 'Tygerhock Hill, Blue berg, &e. Gul. Roxburgh M.D. § D. Niven. (v.s. in Herb. Soc. Linn. et D. Hibbert.) Desc. Frutex erectus v. decumbens, pedalis, pardm ramosus. Folia frequentia, laciniis indivisis, sepe secunda. Pedun- culi solitarii, capitulo dimidio breviores. Ungues calycis gla- bri v. pilis raris patentibus. 10. S. cyanoides, capitulis terminalibus pedunculo longioribus, bracteis orbiculato-ovatis acuminatis villosis, calycis laminis tribus longitudinaliter plumoso-barbatis quarta nudiuscula, foliis patulis : superioribus subbipinnatifidis vix uncialibus ; inferioribus brevioribus trifidis, caule erectiusculo. Cyanus ethiopicus rigidis capillaceis tenuissimis foliis trifidis ex Prom. B. Spei. Plukn. Mant. 61. t. 345. f. 6. fid. spec. in ejus Herb. Protea foliis linearibus ramosis. Roy. Lugd. Bat. 186. Wachend. Ultraj. 202. Leucadendron cyanoides. Linn. Sp. Pl. ed. i. p. 93. ed. ii. p. 137. Berg. Act. Stockh. 1766. p. 326. Berg. Cap. 27.* Protea cyanoides. Linn. Mant. 188.* Herb. Linn. Protea cyanoides. Lam. Illust. Gen. 1. p. 239. n. 1263. Poi- ret. Encyc. Botan. 5. p. 658. forte diversa species. Has. In Africe Australis collibus, prope Promont. B. Spei. (v. v. ad latera montium juxta Simon’s Bay.) Desc. Frutex humilis. Ramuli glabriusculi vy. tenuissimé pu- ; bescentes. 118 Mr. Brown, on the Proteacee of Jussieu. bescentes. Folia vix uncialia, pilosiuscula, demim glabra. Pedunculi solitarii, tomentosi, capituli spits dimidio bre- viores, nunc subequantes, bracteis alternis. Capitulum mag- nitudine cerasi majoris, folia superiora superans, Bractee scarios2, villis adpressis, acumine subulato breviore. Stigma clavato-cylindraceum. *11. 8. furcellata, capitulis terminalibus pedunculatis, bracteis lanceolatis: exterioribus pedunculique glabris ; interioribus villosis, calycibus barbatis, foliis uncid longioribus trifidis : laciniis 2—3-fidisve fastigiatis ramisque glabris, caule erecto. Has. In Africd Australi. Gul. Roaburgh M.D. (v.s.) Desc. Rami virgati. Fola alterna, sesquiuncialia, ad medium trifida, laciniis modicé patentibus, vix sulcatis, callo brevi acuto, lateralibus bifidis, intermedia sepits trifida. Pe- dunculi capitula subzquantes, bracteis lineari-lanceolatis, imbricatis, glabris, vestiti. Capitulum magnitudine cerasi nigri. Stigma cylindraceo-clavatum. Oss. Valdé affinis sequenti. *192. S. scariosa, capitulis terminalibus pedunculatis, bracteis lan- ceolatis glabriusculis calyces sericeos quantibus apice pa- tulis, pedunculis squarrosis, foliis bipinnatis laciniisque di- varicatis ramisque glabris, caule erecto. Protea spherocephala. Poiret. Encyc. Botan. 5. p. 658.* se- cund. descript. synonyma autem omnia excludenda. Has. In AfricA Australi ; in depressis,rarits. Gul. Roxburgh M. D.. (v.s. in Herb. Soc. Linn.) Desc. Rami rubicundi, parim flexuosi. Folia sesquiunciam longa, pinnarum lacinulis paucis, subfastigiatis, callo acuto; superiora modict patentia. Pedunculi subumbellati, capi- tulo Mr. Brown, on the Proteaceae of Jussieu. 119 tulo paulo longiores, pilosiusculi, bracteis lanceolatis, gla- bris, divaricatis. Capitulum globost-ovatum, magnitudine cerasi minoris ; Bracteis omnibus scariosis, glabriusculis, ca- rinatis, apice acuto, patulo. Calyw villis arcté adpressis se- riceus. Stigma subcylindraceum. 13. S. pedunculata, capitulis terminalibus pedunculatis, bracteis laté ovatis tomentosis, calycibus curvatis plumoso-barbatis : laminé interiori villis adpressis sericed, foliis bi-tripinnatifidis cauleque erecto hirsutis. Protea pedunculata. Lam. Iilust. Gen. 1. p. 240. n. 1264. Protea spherocephala A. Poiret. Encyc. Botan. 5. p. 658. Protea glomerata. And. Repos. 264. bona quoad faciem sed stigma nimis inclinans. Has. In. Africee Australis montosis ; solo fertiliori; Roode Zant Cascade. Gul. Rorburgh, M. D. (v.s..in Herb. Banks., Lambert., Hibbert., et Soc. Linn.) Desc. Fruter quandoque orgyalis. Rami stricti, pubescentes. Folia frequentia, sesquiunciam longa, pube decumbenti v. patula, annotino-interrupta. Pedunculus terminalis, dum plures aliqui axillares, capitulo seepits longiores, rard nulli, ramulis floriferis tunc foliis nanis instructis. Capitulum mag- * nitudine feré juglandis. Calya densissimé barbatus, villis strictis, patulis. Stigma cylindraceo-clavatum. *14. S. scoparia, capitulis terminalibus pedunculatis, bracteis laté-ovatis villosis, calycibus barbatis, foliis triternatis pa- -tulis uncid brevioribus ramisque hirsutis, caule decum- bente.. Has. In Africz Australis depressis arenosis et saxosis ; inter 24 Rivers 120 Mr. Brown, on the Proteacee of Jussieu. 24 Rivers et Fontainage Flat. Gul. Roxburgh, M. D. (v. s. in Herb. Soc. Linn. et D. Hibbert.) Desc. Rami adscendentes, demim glabriusculi. Folia 8—10 lineas longa, subdivaricata, ad medium trifida, laciniis sub- bipinnatis, lateralibus intermediam zquantibus. Calycis ungues hirsuti; lamine densids barbate, interioris barba breviore. St¢gma clavatum. 15. S. hirsuta, capitulis terminalibus pedunculo longioribus, bracteis lineari-lanceolatis hirsutis, calycibus plumoso-bar- batis, foliis bipinnatis uncialibus, ramis_ hirsutis, caule erecto. Protea phylicoides. Thunb. Diss. n.9.* Prod. 25. Willd. Sp. Pl. 1. p. 510. excluso synonymo Bergii. Has. In Africe Australis collibus saxosis, prope Prom. B. Spei. (v. v. juxta Simon’s Bay.) Desc. Frutex 2—5 pedes altus. Rami umbellati, stricti, vil- lis patulis, persistentibus, hirsuti. Folia frequentia, quan- doque sesquiuncialia, modicé patentia, juniora hirsuta, adulta glabra, laciniis acutissimis. Pedunculi solitarii v. seepe uno plures, capitulo dimidio breviores, bracteis lanceo- lato-subulatis, divaricatis. Capitulum magnitudine feré ju- glandis, folia superiora superans. Calyv leviter arcuatus, barba lamine interioris breviore, Stigma clavato-cylindra- ceum. *16. S. stilbe, capitulis terminalibus subsessilibus ovatis, bracteis hirsutis ovatis acumine recurvo, calycibus barbatis, foliis 2—3-ternatis uncia brevioribus, ramis pubescentibus, caule erecto. «. folia Mr. Brown, on the Proteacee of Jussieu. 121 a. folia subbiternata, semuncid breviora, imbricata, adulta glabra; bractez pilosiuscule ; nuces glabriuscul. £. folia biternata, feré semuncialia, subimbricata ramique hir- suta; bractez nucesque barbate. y. folia subtriternata, semuncid. longiora, patula, ramulorum floriferorum nana ;. bracteze nucesque hirsute. Has. In Africe Australis montibus saxosis. Masson. et Gul. Rovburgh M, D. (vy. s. «. in Herb. Banks. 6. et y. in Herb. Soc. Linn.) Oxs. Plante huc ut varietates, proposite, forte species di- stincte. *17. S. Niveni, capitulis terminalibus sessilibus, bracteis lanceo- latis: extimis glabris; interioribus sericeis, calycibus bar- batis, foliis bipinnatifidis subuncialibus : summis capitulum superantibus ramisque glaberrimis, caule decumbente. Protea decumbens. And. Repos. 349. Has. In Africe Australis montibus saxosis. Swartberg. D. Niven. (v. s. in. Herb. Hibbert.) Desc. Fruticulus diffusus, spithameus, ramosissimus, Rami ra- mulique teretes, glaberrimi, rubicundi. Folia biternata et bi- pinnatifida, intds canaliculata, mucronibus laciniarum acu- tissimis, semipellucidis, innocuis; modict patentia; ramo- rum procumbentium secunda. Capitulasolitaria, subsessi- lia, globosa, magnitudine cerasi nigri. Bractee extime bre- viter acuminate, extis glaberrime, marginibus tenuissime ciliatis, dimidio capitulo parim longiores ; reliqua sericez, apicibus glabriusculis. . Calyx densé barbatus, lamina inte- riori villis adpressis sericea. Stigma cylindraceum, stylo vix crassius. ¥OL. x. R 18. S. vil- 122 Mr. Brown, on the Proteacee of Jussieu. 18. S. villosa, capitulis terminalibus sessilibus, bracteis lanceo- latis acuminatis tomentosis, calycis laminis barbatis: ungui- bus tomentosis, foliis subbiternatis: superioribus capitulum superantibus, ramis hirsutis, caule erecto. Protea villosa. Lam. Illust. Gen. 1. p. 240. n. 1265. Protea pbylicoides. Poiret. Encyc. Botan. 5. p.659.* exclusis synonymis Bergii et Thunbergit. Has. In AfricA Australi, prope Promont. B. Spei; in monti- bus prope Simon’s Bay. Gul. Roxburgh M.D. in si essis prope Constantiam legi. (v. v-) Desc. Frutez bipedalis et ultra. Rami umbellati, stricti, di- visi, ultimi hirsuti. Folia vix uncialia, trifida; laciniis latera- libus bifidis trifidisve ; intermedia trifida, quandoque pinnaté, mucronibus lacinularum acutissimis, subincurvis: modicé patentia, adulta glabra. Capitula solitaria, magnitudine cerasi. Calycis ungues tomento arcté adpresso ; Lamine pe- nicillatim barbate. Stigma cylindraceo-clavatum. *19. S. feniculacea, capitulis terminalibus subsessilibus, bracteis glabris ovatis acuminatis, calycibus sericeis, foliis -bipinna- tis sesquiuncialibus: superioribus capitulum superantibus ;. ramisque glabris, caule erecto. Has. In Africe Australis depressis, prope Constantiam, (ubi v. Vv.) Desc. Frutex bipedalis, ramis umbellatis, rubicundis. Folia modicé patentia, laciniis gracili-filiformibus, acutissimis. Capitula solitaria, magnitudine cerasi; pedunculo brevissimo, bracteis imbricatis tecto, v. nullo. Bractee breviter ci- liate. Calyx leviter arcuatus, unguibus laminisque argen- teo-sericeis villis arcté adpressis. Stigma oblongo-clavatum. Oss. Mr. Brown, on the Proteacea of Jussieu. 123 Oxs. Facie, foliis, bracteis, calycibusque affinitatem quandam cum S. glomeratd habet; sed capitulis semper solitariis di- . stincta. *20. S. ciliata, capitulis terminalibus pedunculo longioribus, bracteis subulatis glabris margine hirsutis dimidio capitult longioribus, calycibus sericeis, foliis subbipinnatis ramisque glabris, caule erecto. Han. In Africee Australis depressis arenosis prope Physsers- Hoek, Gul. Rowburgh M.D. (vy. s. in Herb. Soc. Linn.) Desc. Frutev ramosissimus. Rami rubicundi, ultimi tenuis- sim’ pubescentes. Folia vix uncialia, modicé patentia, bi- ternata v. subbipinnatifida ; superiora capitulum vix «quan- tia. Pedunculi solitarii v. sepé aggregati, bracteis subulatis . squarrosi. Capitula turbinato-obovata, ceraso nigro mino- ra. Bractee extis glabriuscule, punctis elevatis scabrius- cule, Calyx arcuatus. Stigma cylindraceo-clavatum. *21. S. congesta, capitulis terminalibus sessilibus, bracteis subu- latis margine hirsutissimis dimidio capituli longioribus, caly- cibus barbatis, foliis subbiternatis semuncialibus, ramis pi- losiusculis, caule erecto. Has. In Africee Australis arenosis, inter Roode Zant et Ur- bem Cap. Gul. Roxburgh M. D. (veos.in Herb. Soc. Linn.) Desc. Frutex ramosissimus. Pasi apical adulti glabri. Fo- lia erecta, quandoque pinnatifida, laciniis indivisis. Capztula turbinata, vix magnitudine cerasi nigri, seepils aggregata. Bractee extis punctis elevatis, crebris, junioribus piliferis. Calya dens? barbatus, villis patulis, parallelis. Stigma cy- lindraceo-clavatum. R2 *22, S. ni- ‘124 Mr. Brown, on the Proteacee of Jussieu. *22. S. nitida, capitulis terminalibus pedunculo squarroso duplo: longioribus, bracteis capitulo parim brevioribus : exteriori- bus subulatis glabris; interioribus villosissimis_ sericeis, calycis laminis plumoso-barbatis: interiori unguibusque nudiusculis, foliis uncid longioribus. Protea cyanoides. Thunb. Diss. n.3.*? Prod. 25? Willd. Sp. Pl.1. p. 507? Has. In Africe Australis montibus. Hottentots-Holland- Kloof. Gul. Roxburgh M.D. (v. s. in Herb. Soc. Linn.) Desc. Frutex glaberrimus, ramis rubicundis. Folia pinnatifida et subbipinnatifida, fere sesquiuncialia. Capitula solitaria,. globosa, magnitudine avellane. Calyx. strictus, unguibus. perangustis, pilosiusculis; lamina interiori. apice barba brevi rara, reliquis longitudinaliter barbatis, villis terminali- bus dimidio laminz longioribus. Stigma cylindraceum.. *23, §.squarrosa,capitulis terminalibus axillaribusque, pedunculis. ramuliformibus squarrosis, bracteis dimidium capituli su- perantibus: exterioribus linearibus glabris; interioribus li- neari-lanceolatis pilosis, calycis laminis penicillatim bar- batis: interiori unguibusque nudiusculis, foliis subbiunci- alibus. Has. In Africd Australi: Gul. Roxburgh M. D. (vy. s. in Herb. Lambert.) Desc. Frutex erectus, glaberrimus, ramosissimus, ramulis ru- bicundis. Folia bipinnatifida, patentia. Pedunculi capitulis parum longiores; bracteis numerosis, divaricatis, inferioribus teretiusculis, foliaceis, superioribus longioribus, linearibus, confertissimis. Bractee interioris capituli pilis sparsis, pa- tulis, hirsute. Stigma cylindraceum. 24. S. phy- -Mr. Brown, on the Proteacee of Jussiew. 125 24. S. phylicoides, capitulis terminalibus axillaribusque, pedun- culis ramuliformibus squarrosis, bracteis dimidium capituli superantibus: extimis lineari-subulatis; interioribus lan- ceolatis ; utrisque glabris, calycis laminis penicillato-bar- batis: interiori nudiuscula ; unguibus glabris, foliis sesqui- uncialibus. Leucadendron phylicoides. Berg. Act. Stockh. 1766. p. 328.* Berg. Cap. 29.* dese. opt. Protea spherocephala, Linn. Mant. 188.* (Herb. Linn.) exclus. syn. Bergii. Protea abrotanifolia. And. Repos. t. 507. Has. In Africd Australi. (v.s.in Herb. Linn. et Soc. Linn.) Desc. Frutex erectus, glaberrimus, ramulis rubicundis. Folia bipinnatifida, passimque pinnatifida, modiceé patentia, quan- doque biuncialia. Pedunculi (si-placeas ramuli floriferi) axil- lares et terminales, subcorymbosi, capitulis longiores, bracteis foliaceis, subulatis, indivisis, squarrosi. Capitula magnitu- dine avellane. Bractee extime punctis elevatis, interiores leves, marginibus nudis rariusve ciliatis. Calyw strictus, unguibus glaberrimis, laminis exterioribus niveo-barbatis, villis terminalibus longitudine antherarum ; interiori glabri- uscula.. Stigma cylindraceum. *25..S. emula, bracteis capitulo terminali subsessili pardm brevi- oribus: exterioribus lanceolatis tomentosis ciliatis; interi- oribus minoribus villosis, calycis laminis omnibus plumoso- barbatis, foliis bipinnatifidis.. Has. In Africee Australis montibus prope Franche Hoek. Gul. Roxburgh M. D. (v. s.in Herb.Soc. Linn. et D. Hibbert.) Desc. Frutew S—4 pedes altus. (Niven.) Rami ultimi tomento _ tenuissimo cinerascentes. olia sesquiuncialia, modicé pa- tentia, 126 Mr. Brown, on the Proteaceae of Jussieu. tentia, glabra, Jlaciniis acutissimis. Pedunculi capitulo breviores, quandoque brevissimi; bracteis subulatis, tomen- tosis, divaricatis, squarrosi. Capitula maguitudine avellane majoris. Bracteé membranacez. Calyx strictus, unguibus nudiusculis. Stigma cylindraceum. 26. S. florida, bracteis capitulo pedunculato longioribus: exte- rioribus glabris oblongo-lanceolatis acuminatis ; interioribus inclusis lineari-lanceolatis ciliatis, foliis pinnatifidis bipin- natifidisve. Protea florida. Thunb. Diss. n. 2.* tab. 1. bona. Lam. Illust. Gen. 1. p. 240. n. 1271. Willd. Sp. Pl. 1. p. 506. Poiret. Encyc. Botan. 5. p. 662. ; Has. In Afric Australis montibus prop Franche Hoek. Masson. (v.s.in Herb. Banks.) tt Capitula composita ; partralibus congestis. *27. S. decumbens, caule prostrato foliisque glabris trifidis: laciniis indivisis, capitulis partialibus subquadrifloris. Protea decumbens. Thunb. Diss. n. 1.* tab. 1. Prod. 25. Willd. Sp. Pl. 1. p. 506. Lam. Illust. Gen. 1. p. 289. n. 1261. Poiret. Encyc. Botan. 5. p. 657. Protea procumbens. Linn. Suppl. 116*. Has. In Africee Australis lateribus saxosis montium, prope Promont. B. Spei. (v. v. juxta Simon’s Bay.) Desc. Frutex prostratus, glaber, basi divisus. Rami elongati, rubicundi, parim flexuosi, spe annotino-articulati. ola alterna, erecta, secunda, biuncialia, infra medium trifida, laciniis subequalibus. Pedunculi terminales et seepe e sum- mis alis, adscendentes, graciles ; bracteis nonnullis, parvis, glabris. Capitulum commune subconicum, magnitudine fere juglandis, Mr. Brown, on the Proteaceae of Jussieu. 127 juglandis, e quatuor ad sex partialibus imbricatis, breviter pedunculatis, 3—4-floris, quandoque abortione simplex. Bractee capitulorum partialium orbiculato-ovate, acumine brevi, subsericeee, passimque glabriuscule. Calywr levissime arcuatus, subsericeus, villis arcté adpressis. Stigma cylin- draceum. 28. S. adscendens, caule procumbente foliisque glabris pinnatifidis bipinnatifidisque, pedunculis partialibus incano-tomentosis, calycibus curvatis. Protea ascendens. Lam. Illust. Gen. 1. p. 239. n. 1262. Porret. Encyc. Botan. 5. p. 658*? Has. In Africe Australis montibus. Kleine-Hoot-Hoek. Gul. Rovburgh M. D. (vy. s. in Herb. Soc. Linn.) Desc. Fruter glaber. Rami rubicundi, quandoque .adscen- dentes. Folia sepiis bipinnatifida, passim pinnatifida, ses- quiuncialia, biuncialia. Pedunculi communes terminales et interdum e summis alis, capituli dimidio breviores. Capztu- lum obtusé conicum, magnitudine feré juglandis, compositum partialibus quinque ad septem, imbricatis, breviter pe- dunculatis, 6—7-floris. Bractee ovato-lanceolate, acumine patulo, glabra, basi tomentosa subincana. Calyx villis ad- pressis, argenteis, sericeus. Stigma subcylindraceum. *29 S. flagellaris, caule procambente foliisque pilosis bipinnati- fidis, pedunculis partialibus subtomentosis, calycibus strictis. Has. In Africe Australis campis arenosis lateribusque mon- tium ; prope Simon’s Bay, (ubi v. v.) Desc. Frudex prostratus, basi divisus. Rami elongati, apice adscendentes, adulti glabriusculi.. Folia erecta, secunda, circiter biuncialia, laciniis patentibus, fastigiatis, hirsutis, pilis 128 Mr. Brown, on the Proteacee of Jussieu. pilis patulis, tardids deciduis. Pedunculi communes termi- nales ; bracteis alternis, subulatis, vix longitudine capituli ; quandoque recurvi. Capitulum magnitudine juglandis, e partialibus 5—8, racemoso-congestis, 8—10-floris. Pedunculi partiales capitulis suis breviores, tomento rariore cineras- centes. Bracteé ovate, acuminate, pube rard appressd consperse, ciliate. Calyx sericeus, villis adpressis imbricatis. Stigma subcylindraceum. 30. S. rubricaulis, caule erecto foliisque glabriusculis subbipin- natifidis uncialibus, capitulis partialibus paucifloris, bracteis ovatis acuminatis glabris, pedunculis partialibus pilosiusculis, stigmate cylindraceo. Protea spherocephala. Thunb. Diss. n.5*? exclus. syn. omn. Has. In Africa Australi. Gul. Rovburgh M.D. (v.-s.) Desc. Rami stricti, rubicundi, glabri, pilisve paucis patulis. Folia biternata et subbipinnatifida, erecta, vix sesquiuncialia. Pedunculus communis terminalis, capitulo brevior, glaber, bracteis alternis ; partiales capitulis suis dimidio breviores, pilosi, quandoque glabriusculi. Bractee ovate, acumine re- curvo, glabra, ciliate, scariose. Calya-sericeus, villis ad- pressis. Oxs. Valdeé affinis S. adscendenti. 51. S. glomerata, caule erecto foliisque glabris bipinnatifidis uncia longioribus, capitulis partialibus multifloris, bracteis exterioribus glabris ; interioribus subsericeis, pedunculo com- muni squarroso, stigmate clavato. Serraria foliis tenuissimé divisis capitulis tomentosis. Burm. Afr..p. 265. t..99. f..2. mala. Leucadendron Serraria. 6. Linn. Sp. Pl. ed.i. p. 94. Leucadendron Mr. Brown, on the Proteacee of Jussieu. 129 Leucadendron glomeratum. Linn. Sp. Pl. ed. ii. p. 137. (omissum in Syst. Nat. ed. xii.) Berg. Act. Stockh. 17606. p. 328. Protea glomerata. Linn. Mant. 187.* Herb. Linn. Protea patula. Thunb. Diss..n. 4.* ? Has. In Africz Australis collibus saxosis, prope Promont. B. Spei. (v. s. in Herb. Linn., Banks., Soc. Linn.) Desc. Frutex ramis rubicundis. Folia modicé patentia, quan- doque biuncialia, glaberrima. Pedunculi communes sepe ageregati, bracteis patulis, late-ovatis, acuminatis, glabris squarrosi, capitula subeequantes; partiales capitulis suis breviores ; utrique pubescentes. Capitula partialia magni- tudine pisi majoris, bracteis densissimé imbricatis, subro- tundis, acuminatis. Calyzx sericeus, villis adpressis. $2. S. decipiens, caule erecto ramulis pubescentibus, foliis bipin- natifidis uncialibus et ultra, capitulis partialibus paucifloris communique breviter pedunculatis, bracteis omnibus vil- losissimis, calycibus sericeis. «. Frutex 4—5-pedalis, foliis sesquiuncialibus biuncialibusque. 6. Frutex 1—2-pedalis, foliis uncialibus, bractearum acumine glabro. Has. In Africe Australis planitiis. elevatioribus arenosis. Gul. Rovburgh M. D. (v.s. in Herb. Soc. Linn.) Desc. Frutex ramosissimus, ramis tenuissime pubescentibus. Folia patentia, superiora capitula superantia. Capitula communia sepe aggregata; partialia 5—6-flora; Bractee ovate, villis longis, decumbentibus incanz, acumine subu- lato, nune glabro. Calyx curvatus, 33. S. compar, caule erecto ramis glabris, foliis bipinnatifidis VOL. X. s uncia 130 Mr. Brown, on the Proteacee of Jussieu. unciad Jongioribus, capitulis partialibus paucifloris com- munique breviter pedunculatis, bracteis tomentosis, calyci- bus barbatis. Has. In Africa Australi. (v. s.) Oss. Nimis aftinis S. decipienti. Differt praesertim ramis gla- bris, calycibus’ barbatis villis brevissimis patulis, bracteis exterioribus tenuissime tomentosis, acumine recurvo. 34, S. Roxvburgii, caule erecto, foliis triternatis fastigiatis se- muncia brevioribus, capitulo communi partialibusque sessili- bus paucifloris. Has. In Africé Australi, prope Pardberg in Swartland. Gul. Roxburgh M.D. (v.s. in Herb. Soc. Linn.) Desc. Frutew 3—4-pedalis, ramosissimus. “Rami umbel- lati, spithamei, pubescentes. olva adulta glabra, patula, flabelliformia, Jacinulis acutissimis. Capitulum terminale, siepe magnitudine juglandis minoris, quandoque vix cerasi. Bractee lanceolato-ovate, acuminate, villosissime, incane, acumine nudiusculo. Calya argenteo-sericeus, villis laxius adpressis. Stigma cylindraceo-clavatum. ttt Pedunculi divisi. Capitulis distinctis, corymbosis v. racemosis. 35. S. candicans, capitulis racemosis paucifloris, pedunculis par- tialibus calyce barbato brevioribus, foliis bipinnatifidis ra- mulisque incanis. Has. In AfricA Australi. (v. s.) Oss. Facies S. Burmanni B, eique quam maximé affinis. 36. S. Burmanni, capitulis corymbosis subdecemfloris, calycibus fastigiatis sericeis apiceve nudiusculis pedunculo_partiali- brevioribus, foliis bipinnatifidis setaceis vix biuncialibus. a, Ramis Mr. Brown, on the Proteacee of Jussieu. 131 #. Ramis foliisque pilosiusculis ; capitulis turbinatis, bracteis acumine glabriusculo; calycis laminis demim nudius- culis. Abrotanoides arboreum monamotapense floribus in ramulorum cymis. Plukn. Mant. \. t. 529. f. 1. fide specim. in illius Herb. Serraria foliis tenuissimé divisis floribus rubris apetalis. Burm. Afr. p. 264, t. 99. f. 1. mala, nisi quoad figuram capitu- lorum. ° Leucadendron Serraria «. Linn. Sp. Pl. ed. i. p. 93. ed. ii p. 137. Protea Serraria. Linn. Mant. 188.* Herb. Linn. Thunb. Diss. n'6.* Prod. 25: Willd. Sp. Pl. 1. p. = Lam. Tlust. Gen. 1. p- 240, n. 1268. Poiret. Encyc. Botan. 5. p. 660. . . Ramis foliisque subsericeis ;: capitulis basi stot bracteis totis calycibusque sericeis. Has. In Africee Australis depressis sterilibus, et ad latera montium. «. ubique. #. rarits; forte distincta species: (a. v. v. juxta Simon’s Bay. £.v.s. in Herb. Soc. Linn. et D. Hibbert.) 37. 8. triternata, corymbis compositis, capitulis globosis ; flori- bus viginti pluribus imbricatis, bracteis pedunculisque par- tialibus sericeis, foliis triternatis digitalibus widest gla- berrimis. Protea triternata. Thunb. Diss. n. 7*. Prod. 25. Willd. Sp. Pl. 1. p.. 509. Poiret. Eneyc. Botan. 5. p. 660. Protea argentiflora. And. Repos. 447. bona. Has. In AfricA Australi, prope fluvium ad Roode Zant. D. Niven. ° (v. s. in Herb. Banks., Hibbert., et Soc. Linn.) Desc. Frutex erectus, orgyalis. Rami rubicundi crassitie Seay penne 132 Mr. Brown, on the Proteacee of Jussieu. penne anserine. Folia patentia. Corymbus paniculatus, foliis spits longior, ramis glabris, ramulis tomentosis, incanis, subangulatis. Bractee ad divisuras glabriuscule, acute, patentes. Capitula magnitudine cerasi nigri. Bractee ovate, acuminate. Calyx argenteo-sericeus, villis laxits decum- bentibus. Stigma ovale. 58. S. elongata, corymbis simplicibus subcompositisve, pedunculu communi elongato: partialibus bracteisque glabris ; acumine subulato recurvo dimidium baseos ovatz superante, foliis 2—3-pinnatifidis digitalibus. Leucadendron elongatum. Berg. Act. Stockh. 1766. p. 327*. Berg. Cap. 27.* Protea glomerata. Thunb. Diss..n. 8*. exclus. synon. Linnzi et forte Burmanni. Thunb. Prod. 25. Willd. Sp. Pl... p. 509. sec. descrip. a ‘Thunb. mutuato. Protea thyrsoides. Lam. Illust. Gen. 1. p. 240. n. 1267. Poiret. Encyc. Botan. 5. p. 660*. Has. In Africe Australismontibus. Hottentots-Holland-Kloof. Kleine-hoot-Hoek. Gul. Roaburgh M. D. (v. s. in Herb. Banks. et Soc. Linn.) Desc. Frutex erectus, subramosus, sesquipedalis, glaber. Folia (Crithmz), ad apicem rami articulive annotini conferta, infra nulla. Pedunculus communis 3—10-uncialis, infra bracteis distantibus, apice corymbosus. Capitula globosa, 16—20-flora, superiora precociora. Bractee scariose, laté ovate. Calyx sericeus. Stigma clavato-oblongum. 39. S. crithmifolia, racemis simplicibus, pedunculo communi elongato partialibusque glabris, capitulis subtrigintifloris, bracteis glaberrimis latioribus quam longis: mucrone bre- vissimo obtuso erecto, foliis bi-tripinnatifidis digitalibus. Has. Mr. Brown, on the Proteacee of Jussieu. 133 Has. In Africd Australi. D. Niven. (v.s. in Herb. D. Hib- bert.) Desc. Frutex erectus, simplex? Folia3—4-uncialia,laciniis tere- tiusculis, callo apicis obtuso. Pedunculus terminalis, scapi- formis, seepe infra racemum 8—10 uncias equans, bracteis paucissimis.. Racemus scapo plerumque brevior, 8—10-florus. Pedunculi partiales, capitulo longiores, basi dilataté, cum processu scutelliformi racheos articulati. Capitula magni- tudine avellanz, globosa. Calya semuncialis. Nux undique pubescens, pedicello brevissimo, glabro, rugoso. 9. NIVENIA. Paranomus. Salish. Parad. Cuan. Gen. Calyx quadrifidus, equalis, totus deciduus. Stigma clavatum, verticale. Nua ventricosa, nitens, sessilis, basi integra. Involucrum simplici serie tetraphyllum, quadri- florum, fructiferam induratum ; Receptaculo plano epaleato. Hasirus. Fructices. Folia sparsa, inferiora bipinnatifida filiformia; superiora, in quibusdam, indivisa, plana. Involucra in spicam rariusve capitulum terminale digesta, sessilia, bracted unicd subtensa. Flores purpurascentes. This genus is published by Mr. Salisbury: his primary generic character does not indeed at all differ from that which he has given to Mimetes ; in his account of Inflorescence, however, it is evident he understood the genus nearly as I have here proposed it : I should therefore have adopted his name had it appeared to me tenable; but I am disposed to believe that he will, on reconsidering the subject, see the propriety of relinquishing it; for the irregularity or unusual structure, which (if I understand him) he says exists “ tot partibus diversis,” only takes place in the leaves of a small number 134 Mr. Brown, on the Proteaceae of Jussieu. number of species; on the other hand, the flowers of allare per- fectly regular, and that too in opposition to some of the most nearly related genera, while the great uniformity and regu- larity of inflorescence forms an essential part of its charac- ter. Ihave therefore named it in honour of Mr. James Niven, an intelligent observer and indefatigable collector, to whom botanists are indebted for the discovery of many new species, especially in the two extensive South-African families of Erica and Proteacez. + Folia superiora indivisa, latiora. 1. N. Sceptrum, foliis obovatis lanceolatisve planiusculis margine simplicibus, calyce sericeo villis adpressis. Protea Sceptrum Gustavianum. Sparm. in Act. Stockh. 1777. p. 55. t. 1. bona. Linn. Suppl. 116. (Herb. Linn.) Protea Sceptrum. Thunb. Diss. n.12.* Prod. 25. Willd. Sp. Pl. 1. p. 511. Poiret. Encyc. Botan. 5. p. 662. Protea alopecuroides. Lam. Illust. Gen. 1. p. 240. n. 1272. Has. In Africe Australis summis montibus Hottentots-Hol- land. (v. s. in Herb. Banks.) Oss. Involucri fructiferi foliola aucta, indurata, #2, N. marginata, foliis latioribus quam longis cucullatis mar- ginatis, calyce sericeo villis adpressis, involucri foliolis acutis apice glabriusculis. Has. In Africe Australis montibus. Gul. Roaburgh M. D. (v. s. in Herb. Soc. Linn.) Desc. Frutex. Rami umbellati, stricti, glabri, rubicundi. Folia subrotunda, partm latiora quam longa, diametro 8—10-lineari, glauca, margine cartilagineo, latiusculo, semi- pellucido, (infima nondum visa). Spica subsessilis, sesquiun- cialis. Mr. Brown, on the Proteacee of Jussieu 135 cialis. Bractee subulate, concave, glabriuscule. Stylus glaber. Stigma clava oblonga. 8. N. spathulata, foliis latioribus quam longis cucullatis margi- natis, involucri foliolis obtusis, calyce barbato, stylo glabro, stigmate clavato-oblongo. Protea spathulata. Thunb. Diss. n. 58*. ¢.5. Prod. 28. Lam. Tllust. Gen. 1. p. 235. n. 1218 Willd. Sp. Pl. 1. p. 533. Poiret. Encyc. Botan. 5. p. 642. Has. In Africe Australis montibus, Platte-Kloof. D. Masson. (v. s. in Herb. Banks.) Ons. Folia infima 2—3-pinnatifida, filiformia, canaliculata. *4, N. parvifolia, foliis latioribus quam longis cucullatis, calyci- bus barbatis, stylo lanato, stigmate conico-capitato. Protea Sceptrum. Lam. Illust. Gen. 1. p. 241. n. 1273? Protea Gustaviana. Poiret. Encyc. Botan. 5. p. 663? exclus. syn. Sparm. et Linnei. Protea spathulata. Thunb. Diss. tab. 5. quoad figuram. Has. In Africe Australis montibus. D. Masson. (v.s. in Ilerb. Banks., Soc. Linn., Hibbert.) Desc. Frutex ramosissimus. Rami umbellati, patentes ; ramuli tenuissimt pubescentes. olia inferiora bipinnatifida, fili- formia, canaliculata; reliqgua orbiculato-rhombea, frequentia, glaberrima, diametro vix unguiculati, margine cartilagineo, augusto, crenulato. Petiols adpressi, foliis breviores. Spice terminales, solitariz,v.aggregatz,sesquiunciales—biunciales, dum solitarie sessiles, dum aggregate sepe pedunculate. Involucrum foliolis subrotundis, fructiferis auctis, induratis. Stylus angulatus, dimidio inferiore longiore, lanato. Stigma magnum, apice styli duplo crassius, rugosiusculum. tt Folia 136 Mr. Brown, on the Proteacee of Jussieu. +t Folia omnia lipinnatifida. 5. N. spicata, pedunculis subumbellatis dimidio spice cylin- dracee longioribus, bracteis subtendentibus pedunculique ovatis, involucris inferioribus distinctis, stylis ad duas tertias villosissimis, foliis glabris, ramis tomentosis. Leucadendron spicatum. Berg. Act. Stockh. 1766. p. 327*. Berg. Cap. 25.* Protea spicata. Linn. Mant. 187.* (Herb. Linn.) Thunb. Diss. n. 1 Prod.-25 Hila SpeP ek Wp: 511. Has. In Africe Australis montibus. Hottentots-Holland- Kloof. (v.s. in Herb. Banks.) Desc. Frutev erectus, ramis tenuissime tomentosis, villis pre- terea nullis. Folia subtriternata, biuncialia, canaliculata, callis obtusis. Peduncult terminales, quandoque solitarii, seepiis S—5 umbellati, tomento villisque brevibus patulis incani; bracteis alternis, numerosis, adpressis; sesqui- unciales—biunciales. Spice sesquiunciales, usque 2+ un- cias equantes. Involucra superiora conferta, inferiora di- stincta; bracteis subtendentibus ovatis, acumine brevis- simo; foliolis ovatis, acutis, fructiferis auctis, induratis. Calyx basi villosus, ungues tomentosi, laminis breviter bar- batis. Stylus ips& basi et tertia parte superiore glabris. Stigma clavato-ovale. Nua ovata, cortice albo nitente te- nuissimo ; denudata fusca, basi parum incrassata, stylo diu terminata. 6. N. crithmifolia, pedunculis umbellatis spicas conico-cylindra- ceas subeequantibus, bracteis subtendentibus ovatis acumi- natis, involucris alternis : foliolis obtusis, stylis ad medium villosis, foliis divaricatis glabris. Protea Lagopus. And. Repos. 243. Has. Mr. Brown, on the Proteaceae of Jussieu. 137 Has. In Africe Australis montibus. D. Niven. (v. s. in Herb. Hibbert.) ; Oss. Nimis affinis P. spicato, et forté haud distincta species : differt tamen foliis divaricatis, lacinulis latioribus, sursum pauld dilatatis; bracteis pedunculi paucioribus pardmque angustioribus ; spicis pedunculo vix longioribus ; involucris magis distinctis, foliolis obtusioribus tomento arcté adpresso ; styli dimidio superiore glabro. 7. N. media, spicis cylindraceis pedunculo quater longioribus, bracteis subtendentibus capitulorum lanceolato-subulatis, involucris inferioribus subdistinctis: foliolis ovatis acutis apice imberbibus, stylo infra medium pubescenti, foliis gla- bris, ramis tomentosis. Protea spicata. And. Repos. 234 ? Has. In Afric Australis montibus, frequens. D. Niven. (v. s. in Herb. Hibbert.) Desc. Fruter 6—8 pedes altus (Niven). Rami umbellati, stricti, tomento tenuissimo cinerascentes. Folia erecta; sesquiuncialia ; inferiora biternata et subtriternata; supe- riora trifida, laciniis lateralibus subsimplicibus. Pedunculi terminales, solitarii, vix unciales, villosi, bracteis lanceolatis, spatsis, erectis, tomentosis. Spice 3—5 uncias longie, in- volucris distinctis, tamen approximatis, foliolis acutissimis, tomento arcté adpresso. Calyx tubo tomentoso, involucro feré ter longiore ; laminis villis brevibus, sericeis, subdecum- bentibus, barbatis. Stylus vix ultra unam tertiam a ai pubescens. Stigma gracile, clavatum. 8. N. Lagopus, spicis subsessilibus cylindraceis, capitulis imbri- catis: bracteis subtendentibus: lanceolato-subulatis: invo- VOL. X. T lucri 188 Mr. Brown, on the Proteacee of Jussieu. lucri subrotundis apice acuto barbato, stylo infra medium pubescente, foliis’ adultis glabris: junioribus ramulisque pilosis. Protea Lagopus. Thunb. Diss. n. 10.* Willd. Sp. Pl. 1. p. 510. Has. In Africe Australis montibus. Gul. Roxburgh M. D. (v. 8.) Desc. Frutex erectus. Rami umbellati. Folia vix sesquiunci- alia, modicé patentia, biternata. Spice solitarie, dense, 2—A unciales, pedunculo quandoque semunciali, sepé bre- vissimo v. nullo. Bracteé subtendentes apice barbate. Calyx unguibus tomentosis, laminis barbatis, villis longis, numerosis, patulis, Stylus vix ad medium pubescens. Stigma ovali-clavatum. *9, N. mollissima, spicis pedunculos vix zquantibus, foliis seri- ceis triternatis (uncialibus), calycis unguibus tomentosis : la- minis barbatis. Has. In Africe Australis montibus. D. Joh. Roxburgh. (v. s. in Herb. Banks., Lambert., Linn. Soc.) Desc, Frutev erectus, tomentosus, incanus. Rami ramulique tomento arctt adpresso. Folia mollissima, profunde trifida, Jacinulis fastigiatis. Pedunculi terminales, subsolitarii, foliis breviores. Spice subovatee, capitulis inferioribus distinctis, bracteis ovatis acutis, involucri similibus, utrisque tomen- tosis, imberbibus. Calycis ungues involucro feré ter Jongiores. Stylus infra medium pubescens. Stigma gracile. Nuwz ovata, cuticula alba nitente tenuissimé pubescente, basi incrassata styli diu coronata; involucri foliolis coriaceo-induratis, pa- rimque auctis, demim patulis cincta. *10. N. capitata, capitulo communi globoso subsessili, unguibus laminisque Mr..Brown, on the Proteacee of Jussieu. 159 laminisque calycis barbatis, foliis semuncialibus : ramulorum inferioribus glabris. Has. In Africe Australis montosis, near Brant-fly’s Hill. Gui. Roxburgh M. D. (v. s. in Herb. Banks., Lambert., Soc. Linn.) Desc. Frutev erectus, tripedalis et ultra. Rami umbellati, ultimi tomentosi. Jolia biternata, canaliculata, superiora ramulorum sericea. Capitula communia vix magnitudine cerasi nigri, pauciflora, quandoque aggregata breviterque pedunculata. Involucrum foliolis lanceolato-ovatis, acutis. Stylus medio pubescens, utroque fine glaber. Stigma ovali- clavatum. 10. SOROCEPHALUS. Spatalle sp. Salish. Parad. Cuar. Gun. Calya quadrifidus, equalis, totus deciduus. Stigma verticale, clavatum. Nuz ventricosa, brevissimé pedicellata v. basi emarginata. Involucrum subsimplici serie 3—6-phyl- lum, definit® pauciflorum y. uniflorum: fructiferum non mutatum. Receptaculum epaleatum. Hasirtus. Frutices. Ramis virgatis. Folia sparsa, filiformia v. plana, indivisa, infima rarits bipinnatifida. Ynvolucra sub- sessilia, unibracteata, in spicam capituliformem basi nunc. brac- teis imbricatis subtensam, congesta. J lores purpurascentes. Erym. cweos cumulus, et xe?er, caput ; ob capitula congesta. Oxs. Genus complectens phalanges duas facie et structura pa- rim diversas, quarum prima habitu et inflorescentid Spatalle proxima, diversa tamen stigmate verticali, calyceque semper regulari: secunda e speciebus inter se convenientibus capi- tulo communi involucrato, sed discrepantibus numero florum foliolorumque involucri partialis, nec non foliis in quibusdam filiformibus, in aliis planis, et in unica dimor- T 2 phis 140. Mr. Brown, on the Proteacee of Jussieu. phis instar Niveniz: fructus in hujus sectionis duabus spe- ciebus tantummodo observatus, in altera (foliis filiformibus) brevissimé pedicellatus, basi obsolete. emarginata, tenuissime pubescens ; in alter& (foliis planis) glaberrimus, sessilis, basi angustata, profundé emarginata. t Spica nudiuscula. Involucra 1—3-flora. Nux brevissimé pedicellata, basi integra. Folia filiformia, indivisa.. *j, S. setaceus, involucris uniftoris, foliis setaceis incuryis|(uncia- libus) ramulisque hirsutis. Has. In Africa Australi. Gul. Roxburgh M. D. (v. s. in Herb. Soc. Linn.) Desc. Frutex erectus. Rami virgati, stricti, umbellati. Folia frequentia, vix sesquiuncialia, mucrone setaceo, sphacelato : inferiora minus incurva. Capitulum terminale, sessile, ovatum,, magnitudine cerasi nigri. Calyx unguibus laxils tomentosis ; laminis barbatis. Stigma. conico-ovatum. *2, S, salsoloides, involucris unifloris, foliis triquetro-filiformibus incurvis (semuncialibus) glabris. Has. In AfricA Australi. Gul. Rorburgh M. D.. (v.s. in Herb. Soc. Linn.) Desc. Fruter erectus, ramosissimus. Rami glabri, ramuli tenuissimé pubescentes. Folia frequentia, semiteretia, supra sulcata, mucrone acuto subconcolori. Capitudum terminale, sessile, ovatum, vix magnitudine cerasi nigri, bracteolis paucis, brevissimis, lanceato-linearibus, subtensum. Calyx barba- tus, villis brevibus. Stigma erectum v. partum inclinans. *3. S. imberbis, involucris trifloris, laminis calycis acuminibusque bractearum glabris. Has. Mr. Brown, on the Proteacee of Jussieu. _ 141 Haz. In Africé Australi. D. Niven. (v. s. in Herb. Hib- bert.) Desc. Fruter erectus, ramosissimus. Ramul pubescentes. *4, Folia glabra, uncialia, modicé patentia, pardm incurva, supra sulcata, acut® mucronata. Cupitulum terminale, bre- viter pedunculatum, subglobosum, magnitudine cerasi nigri. Bractee lanceolate, ciliate, acumine subulato, glabro. Calycis ungues barbati. Stylus strictus. Stigma ovato-cla- vatum ; zequale. S. spatalloides, involucris trifloris subpedicellatis, calycis la- minis barbatis. Has. In Africd Australi; prope Franche-hoek. D. Niven. (v. s. in Herb. Soc. Linn., et D. Hibbert.) Desc. Frutexr erectus. Rami umbellati, tenuissime pubes- "5, centes. Folia modict patentia, partm incurva, vix uncialia, juniora pilosa. Capitula solitaria v. 2—3 aggregata, breviter pedunculata, ovata v. oblonga, magnitudine avellanz. Bractee lanceolate, acute, pubescentes, apice quandoque glabriusculo. Calycis lamina longits barbate.. Stylus apice sepiis incurvo, modd rectiusculo. Stigma styli hamatipardm inzequale; rectiusculi zquilaterale, ovatum. tt Spica subinvolucrata. Inyolucra 4—6-flora. Nux basi emarginatd. S. tenuifolia, foliis filiformibus (semuncid brevioribus), capi- tulis paucifloris, calycis laminis plumoso-barbatis : interiori nudiuscula. Has. In Africee Australis montosis; in humidis prope Breede River. D. Niven. (v.s. in Herb. Hibbert.) Desc. Fruter 3—A4 pedes altus (Niven), facie Spatalle prolifera. Rami glabri, rubicundi, vestiti; ramuli villosiusculi. Folia imbricata, 142 Mr. Brown, on the Proteacee of Jussieu. imbricata, scabriuscula, mucrone acuto; juniora hirsuta. Capitulum commune terminale, sessile, magnitudine pisi, e partialibus 2—4 compositum. Involucra partialia subim- bricata, foliolis lanceolatis, barbatis, apice glabriusculo. Calyx profundé quadrifidus, equalis. Stylus strictus. Stigma eequilaterale, erectum, ovatum. 6. S. lanatus, foliis triquetro-filiformibus (semuncid longioribus) supra sulcatis, capitulis multifloris, calycis laminis omnibus plumoso-barbatis. Protea lanata. Thunb. Diss. n. 30.* t. 3. Prod. 26. Willd. Sp. Pl. 1. p. 519. Poiret. Encyc. Botan. 5. p. 053. Has. In Africe Australis montosis. Swartland. (v. s. in Herb. Banks.) Desc. Frutex erectus. Rami subumbellati, stricti, vestiti, tenuissime pubescentes. Folia imbricata, 5—8 lineas longa. Capitulum terminale, solitarium, sessile, globosum, magnitu- dine avellanze majoris: partialia densissimé congesta, 5—8- flora: Involucris 5—7-phyllis, foliolis augusto-lanceolatis, barbatis. Calyx profunde 4-fidus, equalis. Stylus strictus. Stigma ovatum, equilaterale, stylo feré duplo crassius. Nu brevissimé pedicellata basique leviter emarginata, te- nuissime pubescens, cortice tenui, rugosiusculo, fusco. Obs. Variat foliis subtts triquetris teretibusque, scabriusculis et levibus. 7. S. imbricatus, foliis lanceolatis subtts scabris, unguibus calycis glanduloso-pilosis, stigmate clavato. . Protea imbricata. Thunb. Diss..n. 45. t. 5. Prod. 27. Linn. Suppl. 116*. Lam. Illust. Gen. 1. p. 235. n. 1222. Willd. Sp. Pl. 1. p- 527. Poiret. Encyc. Botan. 5. p. 643. And. Repos. 527. Has. Mr. Brown, on the Proteacee of Jussieu. 148 Has. In Afric Australis montibus, (vy. s. in Herb. var. et v. in Hort. D. Hibbert.) Desc. Fruter erectus. Rami elongati, stricti. Folia imbricata, subtds convexiuscula venoso-striata, supra concaviuscula levia, unguicularia, mucrone incurvo. Capitulwm terminale, sessile, subovatum, solitarium, v. e, 2—S ageregatis compo- situm. Involucrum commune polyphyllum, imbricatum, ca- pitulo brevius ; foliolis lanceolatis, membranaccis, coloratis, scabriusculis. Involucra partialia sepits quadriflora, tetra- phylla; foliolis lanceolatis, hirsutis. Ca/yx tubo gracili, la- minis barbatis. Ovarium barbatum. Stylus strictus. Stigma elliptico-clavatum, hine gibbosiusculum. Nuz glaberrima, nitens, fusca, oblonga, basi angustata concolori emarginata. *8, S. diversifolius, foliis spathulato-lanceolatis subtis laevibus: infimis bipinnatifidis, unguibus laminisque calycis barbatis, stigmate cylindraceo. Has. In Afric Australis montibus saxosis prope Goud Rivier. D. Niven. (vy. s. in Herb. Banks., Lambert., et Hibbert.) Desc. Frutev erectus, glaber, bipedalis usque orgyalis, indi- visus, v. bifidus, strictus, crassitie penne olorinz, supra pubescens. Folia infima trifido-bipinnatifida, canaliculata, biuncialia ; rediqgua imbricata, obtusiuscula, pardm concava, vix semuncialia. Capitulum terminale, solitarium, sessile, ovatum, obtusum, magnitudine pruni minoris. 11. SPATALLA. Salisb. Parad. Cuar. Gen. Calyx quadrifidus, lacinia interiore (in plerisque) majore, totus deciduus. Stigma obliquum, dilatatum. Nuz ventricosa, brevissimé pedicellata. Invol/ucrum simplici serie 2—4-phyllum, 144 Mr. Brown, on the Proteacee of Jussieu. 2—4-phyllum, uniflorum v. definite pauciflorum. Recepta- culum epaleatum. Hasitus. Frutices. Folia sparsa, filiforma, indivisa. Involucra terminalia, spicata v. racemosa, unibracteata, fructifera haud mutata. Flores purpurascentes. Anthera lacinie majoris calycis proportionatim major, et in quibusdam unica fertilis. + Involucra uniflora. Stigma concavum, cochleariforme. Calyx inequalis. *1. S. mollis, involucro diphyllo: foliolis integerrimis, foliis strictis ramulisque villosis. Has. In Africe Australis montibus. D. Joh. Roxburgh. (v. s. in Herb. Lambert.) Desc. Frutex erectus, ramosissimus. Rami rubicundi, ramuli graciles, erecti. Folia erecto-patentia, 7—8 lineas longa, callo acutissimo, villis modicé patentibus sericea. Spica sessilis, erecta, solitaria, oblongo-cylindracea, densa, race- mosa, vix uncialis. Bractee foliacex, pedicellis dupld longi- ores. Inwvolucrum foliolis ovatis, villosis, exteriore latiore. Calyx densé barbatus, lamina laciniz majoris villis margi- nalibus inflexis. Squamule hypogyne quatuor, lineares, per- sistentes. *2, S. pedunculata, involucro diphyllo: foliolo latiore tridentato, spicé imbricata, pedunculo foliis longiore triquetris incurvis basi attenuatis, bracteis sericeis involucro brevioribus. Has. In Africe Australis montibus. Kleine-Hoot-Hoek. Gul. Roxburgh M. D. (v. s. in Herb..Soc. Linn.) Desc. Fruteaw erectus, ramosissimus, foliis ramisque adultis glabris, junioribus sericeis. ola frequentia, fere. uncialia, basi attenuata, erecta, supra patentia, falcato-incurva, callo apicis Mr. Brown, on the Proteaceae of Jussieu. 145 apicis obtusiusculo. Pedunculi sesquiunciales, solitarii, se- ricei; bracteis alternis, subulatis. Spica cylindracea, pe- dunculo vix longior; pedicellis, involucris, calycibusque se- riceis. ; *3. S. nivea, involucro diphyllo : foliolo latiore tridentato, spica imbricata, pedunculo foliis breviore, rectiusculis acutissimis bracteis foliaceis villosiusculis involucra equantibus. Has. In Africee Australis montibus. D. Niven. (v. s. in Herb. D. Hibbert.) Desc. Fruter erectus, ramosissimus, ramis foliisque adultis glabris, novellis sericeis. Folia uncialia, leviter incurva, v. rectiuscula, basi pardim attenuata. Pedunculi solitarii, sub- sericei, bracteis alternis subulatis. Spica sesquiuncialis, pedunculo dupld longior. Involucri foliolum exterius pro- fundé tridentatum, dente intermedio angustiore. Calycis laminz villis brevibus, patulis, niveis barbate. *4, S. ramulosa, involucro diphyllo: foliolo latiore trifido, spicd subsessili imbricata, bracteis superioribus longitudine pedi- cellorum, foliis acuté mucronatis. Protea foliis setaceis, floribus racemosis. Hort. Cliff. 496? Leucadendron racemosum. Linn. Sp. Pl. ed.i. p. 91? ed. ii. p-194? Berg. Act. Stockh. 1766. p. 325.* Berg. Cap. p. 23.* Protea racemosa. Thunb. Diss. n. 21.*? Prod. 26? Has. In Africe Australis montibus. Roode Zant Kloof. (v. s. in Herb. Banks., Soc. Linn.) Desc. Fruter erectus, ramosissimus; ramis virgatis filiformi- bus, foliisque adultis glabris, novellis sericeis. Folia fre- quentia, modicé patentia, parimque incurva, basi attenuata, vix uncialia, supra canaliculata, subtus convexa, callo acuto VOL. X. U mucroni- 146 Mr. Brown, on the Proteacce of Jussieu. mucroniformi. Spica terminalis, breviter pedunculata, cy- lindracea, uncialis, sesquiuncialis, densa, subracemosa, flo- ribus omnibus imbricatis, ramulo uno alteroye sericeo brevi, sepissimé stipata. Bractee omnes pedicellos pariter tomen- tosos zquantes. Involucrum lacinia media labii majoris an- gustiore. Calya breviter denséque barbatus, villis margina- libus, lamine majoris arcté inflexis. St2gma cochleariforme, papilla centrali. *5. S. lara, involucro diphyllo: foliolo latiore trifido, racemo subpedunculato, laxiusculo, bracteis superioribus pedicello brevioribus. Has. In Africe Australis montibus. Kleine-Hoot-Hoek. Gul. Rowburgh M. D. (v.s.in Herb. Banks., Lambert., Soc. Linn.) Desc. Frutexv erectus, 4—6 pedalis, (Niven) ramosus. Rami eraciles, virgati, rubicundi, ramuli subsericei. Folia patenti- erecta, leviter incurva, v. rectiuscula, basi attenuata, callo apicis acutiusculo, v. obtusiusculo, uncialia, inferiora gla- bra, superiora sericea. Racemz breviter pedunculati, solitarii, erecti, sesquiunciales, ramulo brevi quandoque stipati. Bractee tomentose, pedicellis fructiferis breviores ; inferiores floriferorum subequantes. Involucra vix longitudine pedi- cellorum, sericea, fructifera labio majore tripartito, lacinid intermedia angustissima. Nua ovata, subsessilis, sericea, involucro persistenti duplo longior sty/o curvato dit coro- nata, basi barbata pilis strictis. *6, S. bracteata, involucro diphyllo: foliolo latiore profunde tri- fido, spicd pedunculaté imbricata, bracteis teretibus invo- lucra pedicellata superantibus, foliis incurvis (uncialibus) glabriusculis. Protea Mr. Brown, on the Proteaceae of Jussieu. 147 Protea racemosa. Linn. Mant. 187? (Herb. Linn.) Has. In Africee Australis montibus. Franche Hoek. (v. s. in Herb. Banks., Lambert., Soc. Linn.) Desc. Frutex erectus, 6—7 pedalis, (Niven) ramosissimus, ramulis ultimis sericeis. Folia e basi attenuata, adpressa, supra patentia, et falcato— v. sigmoideo-curvata, callo obtu- siusculo, adulta glabra, recentiora sericea, quandoque ses- quiuncialia. Pedunculi terminales, solitarii, spica sesqui- unciali breviores. Pedicelli imbricati, inferiores involucra zquantes, superiores iisdem pardm breviores. Involucra sericea, labio majore szepe tripartito. Calyx unguibus to- mento adpresso ; laminis barbatis villis modicé patentibus, marginalibus haud inflexis. *7. S. sericea, involucro diphyllo: foliolo Jatiore tripartito, spica sessili imbricata: bracteis involucra subsessilia a2quantibus, foliis semuncialibus ramulisque sericeis. Has. In Africae Australis montibus. Gul. Roxburgh M. D. (v. s. in Herb. Soc. Linn.) Desc. Frutew erectus, ramosissimus. Rami ramulique virgati, stricti, hi sericei, illi glabri. Fola frequentia, imbricata, patenti-erecta, rectiuscula v. leviter incurva, supra obsole- tissimé suleata. | Spice solitariz, vix unciales. Involucra labio majore laciniis subulatis, media angustiore. Calyx unguibus tomentosis, laminis barbatis. 8. 8. prolifera, involucro tetraphyllo : foliolis apice sphacelatis, spica conico-capitata: floribus subsessilibus. Protea prolifera. Thunb. Diss.n.27.* tab. 4. Prod. 26. Linn. Suppl. 118. Lam. Illust. Gen. 1. p. 238. n. 1233. Willd. Sp. Pl.1. p. 518. Poiret. Encyc. Botan. 5. p. 654, v2 Has. 148 Mr. Brown, on the Proteacee of Jussieu. Has. In Africe Australis montibus.* Hottentots-Holland : Roode Zant. (v. s. in Herb. Banks., Lambert., Soc. Linn.) Desc. Frutev erectus, sesquipedalis, bipedalis, ramosissimus. Rami ramulique umbellati, bi subsericei, illi_ rubicundi gla- briusculi. ola imbricata, conferta, vix unguicularia, ra- mulorum recentiorum sericea. Spica sessilis. Bractee fo- liacee. Jnvolucri foliola subulata, demtm glabriuscula. Calyx densissimé barbatus, villis brevibus sericeis ; lamina interiori duplO majori, villis marginalibus arcté inflexis. Stigma planiusculum, papilla centrali. Squamule hypogyne quatuor, lineari-subulate. *9, S. pyramidalis, involucro tetraphyllo: foliolis acuminatis pe- dicellos subeequantibus, spica erecta solitaria sessili oblongo- pyramidali foliis semuncialibus duplo longiore. Has. In Africe Australis montibus, prope Swellendam. Gul. Roxburgh M. D. (vy. s. in Herb. Lambert. et Soc. Linn.) Desc. Frutex erectus, ramosissimus, ramis ramulisque umbel- 10; latis, pubescentibus. Folia confertissima, modict patentia, stricta v. parim incurva, villosiuscula, callo acuto, mucroni- formi. Spica densa, subuncialis. Bractee foliacez, invo- lucra equantes. Involucra pubescentia, foliolis e latiore basi subulatis, apice patulis, exteriori pardm angustiore. Calyx lamin4 interiori parim majori, villis marginalibus simplici- bus. Stigma concavum, papilla centrali. Squamule hypo- gyne@ lineari-subulate. Receptaculum barbatum. S. polystachya, involucro tetraphyllo : foliolis apice patulis, spicis nutantibus aggregatis pedunculatis, foliis uncialibus curvatis. Has. Mr. Brown, on the Proteacee of Jussieu. 149 Has. In Africe Australis montibus. Gul. Roxburgh M. D. (v. s. in Herb. Lambert. et Soc. Linn.) ; Desc. Frutev erectus, ramosissimus. Rami ramulique um- bellati, rubicundi, ultimi pubescentes. Folia conferta, pa- tula, subsigmoideo-curvata, villosa, mucrone acutissimo, novella sericea. Spice 4—6, reficxze, sesquiunciales, brevi- ter pedunculate, ramulis umbellatis longioribus stipate. Bractee pedicellis ter longiores. Involucra foliolis subeequa- libus, concavis, lanceolato-subulatis, acuminatis. Caly« subeequalis. Stigma planiusculum, papilla centrali. Nu» brevissimé pedicellata, tenuissimé pubescens. “tt Inyolucra 3—4-flora, Stigma convexiusculum., Calyx subcequalis. 11. S. incurva, spicis racemosis subpedunculatis, bracteis invo- lucro tomentoso (sub-4-floro) brevioribus, foliis incurvis, calycibus inzequalibus. a. Spice sept aggregate. Bracte pedicellos subequantes. Folia feré uncialia, inferiora ramulorum glabra. Protea incurva. Thunb. Diss. n. 22*. tab. 8. bona. Willd. Sp. Pl. 1. p. 516. Poiret. Encyc. Botan. 5. p. 652. &. Spice solitariz. Bracteze pedicellos superantes. Folia semuncialia, feré omnia ramulorum sericea. Has. In Africe Australis arenosis humidis subumbrosis; Roode Zant Cascade. (v. s. «. in Herb. Banks., Lambert., Soc. Linn. B. in Herb, Hibbert.) Oss. I. Calyx inequalis. Stigma planiusculum, papilla cen- trali. Oss. II. 6. Forsan distincta species : Foliis confertissimis, pe- dicellis involucro feré dimidio brevioribus. *12. S. pro- 150 Mr. Brown, on the Proteacee of Jussieu. *12. S. propinqua, spicd subpedunculata, bracteis subulatis foliaceis involucra subsessilia tomentosa subbiflora zquanti- bus, foliis semuncialibus strictis ramulisque villosis, calyci- bus subzequalibus. Has. In Africa Australi. A. Auge. (vy. s. in Herb. Banks.) Oxs. Spica biuncialis. Pedicelli brevissimi. Nux pedicello manifesto, glabro, tenuissimé pubescens. 13. S. caudata, spica sessili, bracteis involucrisque ovato-lanceo- latis glabriusculis ciliatis, foliis glabris acutis. Protea caudata. Thunb. Diss. sec. ic. tab. 2. Has. In AfricA Australi; prope Palmetta River. Masson. (v. s. in Herb. Banks.) Desc. Frutex erectus, ramosissimus ; ramis umbellatis glabri- usculis. Folia vix semuncialia, supra canaliculata, acuta, stricta. Spice sepe aggregate, cylindracee, dense, unciales, quandoque biunciales. Involucra subsessilia, seepids triflora. Calyx subequalis, barbatus. Stigma convexum. Nua te- nuissimé pubescens. 14. 8. Thunbergii, spicd sessili, bracteis involucrisque ovato- lanceolatis villosis, foliis calyce longioribus acutis canalicu- latis ramisque pilosis. Protea caudata. Thunb. Diss. n. 23.* secund. descript. Has. In Africe Australis montosis. D. Niven. (v. s. in Herb. Hibbert.) Desc. Frutex erectus, ramosissimus. Folia vix semuncialia, conferta, imbricata, stricta v. pardm incurva. . Spica cylin- dracea, densa, uncialis, sesquiuncialis. Involucra brevissimé pedicellata, bracteis pardm longiora, villis persistentibus. Calyx Mr. Brown, on the Proteacee of Jussieu. 151 Calyx subequalis, laminis brevissime barbatis, subsericeis. Stigma convexum. Nua tenuissimé pubescens, pedicello brevissimo, crasso, glabro. *15. S. brevifolia, foliis calyce brevioribus obtusiusculis subseri- ceis triquetris, spicis densis, bracteis involucrisque pubes- centibus. Has. In Africe Australis montosis. D. Masson. (v.s.in Herb. Banks. et D. Aiton.} Desc. Frutewx erectus, ramis umbellatis, virgatis, pubescenti- bus. Folia subtriquetra, supra canaliculata, patenti-erecta, villosiuscula, subtrilinearia. Spica solitaria, sessilis, uncialis, sesquiuncialis, rachi pedicellis bracteisque pubescentibus. Bractee e basi membranaceé, lanceolaté, subulate. Involu- cra brevissime pedicellata, 2—3-flora. Calyx zequalis. Stigma convexum, papilla elevatiore. Squamule hypogyne quatuor subulatie. 12. ADENANTHOS. Labill. Nov. Holl. 1. p. 28. Cuar. Gen. Calyx quadrifidus, infra circumscissus. Squamule quatuor hypogyne, basi persistenti calycis adnate. Prstillum calyce longius. Stigma verticale. Nu ventricosa. Invo- lucrum uniflorum, imbricatum, 4—8-phyllum. Hasirtus. Frutices. Folia sparsa, in diversis varia. Flores azil- lares, solitarii, rubicundi ; raré terminales, subaggregati, lutes- centes. 1. A. obovata, foliis obovatis integerrimis glabris. Adenanthos obovata. Labillard. Nov. Holl. 1. p.29.* tab. 37. Haxs. In collibus saxosis ore australis Nove Hollandiz ; Lewins Land. (ubi v. v.) 2. A.cu- 152 Mr. Brown, on the Proteaceae of Jussieu. 2. A. cuneata, foliis cuneatis sericeis apice dentato-crenato. Adenanthos cuneata. Labillard. Nov. Holl. 1. p. 28.* tab. 36. Has. In Nove Hollandiz ore australi; Lewins Land: prope littora. (ubi v. v.) 3. A. sericea, foliis filiformibus biternatis sericeis, floribus axil- laribus solitariis, stylo glabro. Adenanthos sericea. Labillard. Nov. Holl. 1. p.29.* tab. 38. Has. In Nove Hollandie ord australi; Lewins Land: in arenosis prope littora. (ubi v. v.) 4. A. terminalis, foliis filiformibus trifidis: laciniis lateralibus bifidis intermedia indivisd, floribus terminalibus solitariis ternisve, stylo villoso. Has. In Nove Hollandiz ord australi. Flinders’ Land : in depressis prope littora. (ubi v. v.) 13. SIMSIA. Cuar. Grn. Calyx tetraphyllus, regularis, laminis reflexis. Stamina exserta. Anthere tandem libere, primd coherentes, lobis proximis vicinarum loculum constituentibus. Stigma dilatatum, concavum. Nuz obconica. Hasirus. Frutices humiles, glabri. Folia alterna, filiformia, dicho- toma, petioli basi dilatatd. Capitula globosa, parva, terminalia, racemosa, v. paniculata, involucro brevi v. nullo. Flosculi flavi, glabri, unibracteati. I have named this genus in honour of Dr. John Sims the respectable editor of the Botanical Magazine. *1. S. fenuzfolia, capitulis nudis, panicule ramis subunifloris bracteolatis. Has. Mr. Brown, on the Proteaceae of Jussieu. 155 Has. In Nove Hollandie ord australi: Lewins Land; ad Jatera saxosa collium. (ubi v. v.) *2. S. anethifolia, capitulis involucratis bracteolis imbricatis, panicule ramis multifloris: ramulis capitula subaquantibus. Has. In Nove Hollandiz ord australi ; Lewins Land ; in are- nosis prope littora. (ubi v. v.) 14. CONOSPERMUM. Smith, Linn. Trans. vol. 4. Exot. Bot. Gart. Carp. 3. p. 198. t. 215. Cuar. Gen. Calyx tubulosus, ringens, lacinid suprema basi for- nicata. Anthere tres, incluse, laterales dimidiate, superior biloba: primd cohzrentes, lobis proximis vicinarum locu- lum constituentibus. Stigma liberum. Nuz obconica, pap- posa. Hasirvs. Frutices. Folia sparsa, integerrima, plana, raridvsve Jiliformia. Spice avillares v. terminales, composite, sensim florentes, hinc corymbosa. Flores sdlitarii, sessiles, unibracteati, albi v. carulescentes ; Calyce deciduo ; Bracted cucullaté per- sistentt. Oss. Jussieu and Ventenat have referred this genus to the na- tural order Thymelez ; but that it is a genuine Proteacea, as Dr. Smith has considered it, is proved by the erect embryo, the terminal style, and the estivation of the Calyx; and is rendered evident. by its affinity to Simsia, which, with the more usual appearance of this order, agrees with peas pet - mum in the structure of its Anthere. t Calycis lacinie acul@, tubo vie longiores, Conosperma vera. 1. C. ellipticum, foliis ovali-oblongis obtusis mucronulatis ave- niis, pedunculis axillaribus. VoL. x. x Conospermum 7 154 Mr. Brown, on the Proteacee of Jussieu. Conospermum ellipticum. Smith in Rees. Cyclop. Has. In Nove Hollandiz ord orientali, prope Port Jackson ; in ericetis aridis. (ubi v. v.) 2. C. tavifolium, foliis lanceolato-linearibus acutis mucronatis te- nuissimé pubescentibus verticalibus, basi tortis, pedunculis axillaribus. Conospermum taxifolium. Simith in Rees. Cyclop. Has. In Nove Hollandiz ora orientali, prope Port Jackson ; in ericetis. (ubi v. v.) 3. C. ericifolium, foliis subulato-filiformibus imbricatis, spicis axillaribus pedunculo brevioribus. Conospermum ericifolium. Smith in Rees. Cyclop. Has. In Nove Hollandiz ord orientali, prope Port Jackson ; in ericetis. (ubi v. v.) 4. C. longifolium, foliis oblongis linearibusve planis venosis, pe- dunculisque elongatis scapiformibus, corymbis decompositis, calycis limbo extis pubescenti tubum vix equante. Conospermum longifolium. Smith Evot. Bot. 2. p.45. t. 82. Has. In Nove Hollandiz or4 orientali, prope Port Jackson ; in ericetis collibusque saxosis. (ubi v. v.) *5. C. tenuifolium, foliis lineari-filiformibus subcanaliculatis ave- niis, pedunculisque elongatis scapiformibus, corymbis sub- simplicibus, calycis limbo extis pubescenti tubo longiore. Has. In Nove Hollandiz or orientali, prope Port Jackson ; in collibus arenosis prope littora. (ubi v. v.) *6, C. caruleum, foliis oblongis lanceolatisve planis venosis, pedun- culisque Mr. Brown, on the Proteaceae of Jussieu. 155 culisque elongatis scapiformibus, corymbis compositis, caly- cis limbo glaberrimo tubo longiore. Has. In Nove Hollandiz, ord australi: Lewins Land. (ubi v. v.) tt Calycis lacinie caudate. Chilurus. *7. C. teretifolium, foliis teretibus pedunculisque elongatis, corym- bis compositis. Has. In Nove Hollandiz ord australi; Lewins Land: in col- libus saxosis. (ubi v. v.) *8. C. capitatum, foltis linearibus elongatis tortilibus, capitulis sessilibus e spiculis paucifloris congestis. Has. In. Nove Hollandiz ord australi; Lewins Land : in col- libus apricis graminosis. (ubi v. v.) +tt Incerte@ tribus. *9. C. distichum, foliis filiformibus subdistichis curvatis, spicis axillaribus indivisis. Has. In Nove Hollandiz ord australi; Lewins Land: in ericetis. (ubi vy. v. flor. delaps.) 15, SYNAPHEA. Cuar. Gen. Calyx tubulosus, ringens, lacinidé suprema latiore. Anthere tres, inclusz, laterales dimidiate, inferior biloba: primo coherentes, lobis proximis vicinarum loculum consti- tuentibus! Stigma filamento superiori sterili connatum ! Nua obovata. Hasrrvus. Frutices humiles. Folia sparsa, plana, pulcherrime re- ticulata, circumscriptione cuneiformia, lobata, inferiora ejusdem fruticis sepits indivisa: petiolt basi dilatatd semivaginanti. x 2 Spice 156 _ Mr. Brown, on the Proteacee of Jussieu: Spice avillares v. terminales, simplices v. ramose. Flores al- terni, solitarii, sessiles, unibracteati. Calyx flavus, ‘deciduus, quadripartibilis. Bractea cucullata, persistens. EryM. cvwedy, connectio, ob peculiarem coherentiam stigmatis v. apicis styli cum filamento sterili. *1. S. favosa, foliis oblongo-cuneiformibus indivisis trilobisque : lobis integris, petiolis spicisque glabris, stigmate bicorni. Has. In Nove Hollandiz ord australi ; Lewins Land : in col- libus saxosis. (ubi v. v.) 2 S. dilatata, foliis apice dilatatis trilobis: lobis inciso-dentatis, petiolis spicisque villosis, stigmate bicorni. Conospermum reticulatum. Smith in Rees. Cyclop. Has. In Nove Hollandiz ord australi; Lewins Land: in col- libus saxosis. (ubi v. v.) *3. S. petiolaris, foliis rameis petiolos subequantibus tripartitis : lobis divisis planis ; infimis trilobis integrisque, spicis elon- gatis ramosis, stigmate acuto. Polypodium spinulosum. Burm. Ind. p. 233. t. 67. f. 1. vel ad hanc v. ad plantam congenerem pertinere videtur. Has. In Nove Hollandiz ord australi; Lewins Land: in col- libus saxosis. (ubi v. v.) *4. S. polymorpha, foliis rameis brevissimé petiolatis tripartitis canaliculatis: lobis subdivisis ; infimis indivisis trilobisque, spicis simplicibus pedunculo longioribus, stigmate acuto. Has. In Nove Hollandiz ora australi; Lewins Land: in col- libus saxosis. (ubi v. v.) 16. FRANK- Mr. Brown, on the Proteaceae of Jussieu. 157 16. FRANKLANDIA. Cuan. Gen. Calyx hypocrateriformis, limbo quadripartito, plano, deciduo, tubo persistenti. Anthere incluse, calyce adnate! Squame hypogyne, in vaginam connate. Nu« fusiformis, pedicellata, apice dilatato papposo. Hasirus. Frutex glaber. Folia alterna, filiformia, dichotoma. Spice azillares, indivise, floribus alternis, unibracteatis, sor- didé flavis. Pollen sphericum. Cotyledones brevissime ! This genus is named in honour of Sir Thomas Frankland, ba- ronet, to whom English botany is much indebted, and whose valuable observations and excellent figures of submarine plants it is hoped he may be induced to communicate to the public. : * FrRANKLANDIA fucifolia. . Has. In Nove Hollandiz ord australi; Lewins Land: in eri- cetis humidis. (ubi v. v.) 17. SYMPHIONEMA. Cuar. Gen. Calyx regularis, tetraphyllus, basi cohzrens, medio staminifer. Filamenta apice coherentia! Anthere distincte. Glandule nulle hypogyne. Ovarium dispermum. Stigma subtruncatum. Nua monosperma, cylindracea. Hasirtus. Suffrutices v. Herbz glabre, pilisve raris glandulosis. Folia tripartita, lobis divisis ; inferiora opposita! Spicz ter- minales et e summis alis, simplices. Flores alterni, sessiles, unibracteati. Calyx flavus, deciduus. Bractex cucullate, per- sistentes. *1. S. palu- 158 Mr. Brown, on the Proteacee of Jussieu. #1, S. paludosum, laciniis foliorum subulatis semiteretibus, rachi- bus bracteisque glaberrimis. Has. In Nove Hollandiz ord orientali ; prope Port Jackson : in ericetis paludosis. (ubi v. v.) *2. S. montanum, laciniis foliorum planis linearibus uninervibus, rachibus bracteisque pubescentibus pilis glandulosis bre- vissimis. Has. In Nove Hollandie ora orientali; prope Port Jackson: in rupibus humidis. (ubi v. v.) 18. AGASTACHYS. Cuar. Gen. Calyx regularis, tetraphyllus, basi coherens, medio staminifer. Filamenta distincta. Glandule nulle hypogyne. Ovarium sessile, monospermum, trigonum. Stigma unilaterale Folia sparsa, integerrima, plana. Hasitus. Frutex glaberrimus. Spice numerose, terminales et e summis alis, simplices. Flores alterni, sessiles, unibracteati. Calyx flavescens, deciduus. Pistil- lum staminibus brevius. Bractez cucullata, persistentes. EryM. wyacreyys spicis abundans. Acastacuys odorata. Has. In Insule Diemen plagis australioribus; prope Ad- venture Bay: ubi primim a D. Nelson detecta, nuperits lecta a D. G. Caley. (v.s. in Herb. Banks.) 19. CENARRHENES. Labill. Nov. Holl. 1. p. 36. t. 50. Cuan. Grn. Calyx tetraphyllus, regularis, foliolis supra angus- Stamina basi calycis inserta. _Glandule tatis, deciduus. quatuor Mr. Brown, on the Proteacee of Jussieu 159 guatuor hypogyne, staminiformes. Ovarium sessile, mono- spermum. S¢tigma simplex. Drupa baccata. Hasirus. Arbor glabra. Folia alterna; plana, dentato-serrata, nitida. Spice avillares, simplices. Flores alterni, sessiles, uni- bracteati. Oss. Labillardiere considers this genus as most nearly related to Lauri. Jussieu, however, has (in Annales du Musewm, v. 5 p- 224.) stated sufficient.reasons for excluding it from that order, but has not attempted to determine its affinity. Ihave ventured to place it in Proteacee, from the structure of its fruit, stamina and calyx, and the only circumstance in which it differs from them, consists in its having(according to Labil- lardiere) four barren stamina; but even these occupy the place of the glands or scales usually found in the order, and the re- semblance they bear to stamina in this genus, may assist in explaining their nature in all: nor does their being in most cases secreting organstender this view of their origin improba- ble ; for the function of secretion, which, as it is far from uni- versal, must be considered as only of secondary importance in assisting impregnation, is more frequently accomplished by the modification of some of the usual parts of the flower than by the production of an additional organ. _ Cenarruenss nitida. Labill. Nov. Holl. 1. p. 36.* t. 50. Has. In Insule Diemen plagis australioribus. Labillardiere. (v. s. cum fructu sed floribus delapsis in Herb. D. Lambert.) 20. PERSOONIA. Smith in Linn. Trans. iv. Gert. Carp. 3. p- 218. t 220. Pentadactylon. Gert. 1. c. p. 219. t. 220. Linkia. Cav. Ic. 4. Cuar. Gen, Calyx tetraphyllus, regularis, foliolis medio stami- niferis, supra recurvis, deciduus. Stamina exserta. Glan- dule 160 Mr. Brown, on the Proteacee of Jussieu. dule quatuor hypogyne. Ovarium pedicellatum, 1-loculare; 1—2-spermum. Stigma obtusum. Drupa baccata; Nuce 1—2-loculari ! Hasirtus. Frutices v. Arbuscule, cortice in quibusdam scarioso- lamelloso. Folia sparsa, integerrima, sepiis plana. Pedunculi azillares, solitarii, ebracteati, v. racemosi, unibracteati. Flores flavi. Pedicellus ovarit in quibusdam articulatus ! Cotyledones sepius plures ! *i. P. teretifolia, foliis filiformibus exsulsis, pedunculis unifloris solitariis, antheris acuminatis, stylis ovario brevioribus. Has. In Nove Hollandie ord australi ; Lewins Land: in col- libus saxosis. (ubi v. v.) . *2, P. microcarpa, foliis filiformibus canaliculatis, pedunculis solitariis geminis ternisve, antheris muticis, stylis ovario ali- quoties longioribus, stigmate cernuo. Has. In Nove Hollandiz ord australi; Lewins Land : in eri- cetis paludosis. (ubi v. v.) *3. P. pinifolia, foliis filiformibus Jaxis, spicd foliata clongata pyramidali: foliis floralibus abbreviatis, ovario monospermo. Has. In Nove Hollandiz ord orientali; prope Port Jackson : in ericetis et ad ripas rivulorum. (ubi v. v.) 4. P. juniperina, foliis subulatis strictis pungentibus, pedunculis axillaribus sparsis spicisve foliatis abbreviatis, ovariis disper- mis glabris. Persoonia juniperina. Labill. Nov. Holl. 1. p. 33.* tab. 45. Has. In Insulé Diemen: et Nove Hollandie ora australi, prope Port Phillip: in ericetis aridis lateribusque collium. (ubi v.v.) *5, P. hir- Mr. Brown, on the Proteacee of Jussieu. 161 5. P. hirsuta, foliis linearibus hirsutis scabris margine recurvis, pedunculis axillaribus, ovariis monospermis sericeis. Persoonia hirsuta. Pers. Syn. 1. p. 118. Has. In Nove Hollandiz ora orientali; prope Port Jackson: in ericetis humidis. (ubi v. v.) *6. P. mollis, foliis longo-lanceolatis villosis subtts mollissimis, calycibus barbatis, ovariis dispermis glabris. Has. In Nove Hollandiz orA orientali; prope Port Jackson: ad ripas arenosas fluviorum. (ubi v. v.) 7. P. linearis, foliis angusto-linearibus elongatis glabris, pedun- culis erectis calycibusque pubescentibus, pedicello ovarii inarticulato, caule arborescenti: cortice levi. Persoonia linearis. And. Repos. 77. Vent. Malmais. 32. Sims. Bot. Mag. 760. Pers. Syn. 1. p. 118. Has. In Nove Hollandiz or orientali; prope Port Jackson : in campis et collibus. (ubi v. v.) *8. P. lucida, foliis lanceolato-linearibus elongatis glabris, pedun- culis erectis calycibusque pubescentibus, pedicello. ovarii inarticulato, caule arborescenti: cortice scarioso-lamelloso. Has. In Nove Hollandiz ora orientali; prope Port Jackson: in montosis ad ripas fluviorum. .D. Fer. Bauer. (v. s.) 9. P. virgata, foliis linearibus oblongo-linearibusve sparsis ver- ticalibus glaberrimis margine levibus, pedunculis erectis calycibusque glabris, caule arborescenti: cortice levi. Has. In Nove Hollandiz ora orientali; prope Sandy Cape: in arenosis prope littora. (ubi v. v.) VOL. X. Y *10. P. fleai- 162 Mr. Brown, on the Proteaceae of Jussieu. *10. P. flevifolia, foliis lanceolato-linearibus mucronatis confer- tis basi tortis utrinque levibus punctis crystallinis mican- tibus; marginibus scabris, calycibus glabris, caule fru- ticoso. Has. In Nove Hollandiz ord australi; Lewins Land: ad latera saxosa collium. (ubi v. v.) *11. P. scabra, foliis lineari-lanceolatis mucronatis utrinque sca- bris punctis crystallinis aliisque minutissimis opacis con- spersis, calycibus pubescentibus. Has. In Nove Hollandiz ora australi ; Lewins Land: in col- libus saxosis. (ubi v. v.) *12. P. spathulata, foliis lanceolato-spathulatis mucronatis con- caviusculis utrinque scaberrimis punctis crystallinis. Has. In Nove Hollandiz ora australi; Lewins Land : in col- libus saxosis. (ubi v. v.) *13. P. nutans, foliis linearibus levibus, pedunculis axillaribus recurvis calycibusque glabris. Has. In Nove Hollandiz ord orientali; prope Port Jackson : in sylvis solo arenoso, ad radices montium. (ubi v. v.) *14. P. falcata, foliis elongato-lanceolatis basi attenuatis sub- petiolatis falcatis aversis coriaceis, antheris acuminatis, caule arborescenti: cortice lamelloso. Has. In Nove Hollandie ord orientali; Endeavour River: Jos. Banks, bart.: septentrionali, Carpentaria ; prope littora. (ubi v. v. cum fruct. matur. flor. delaps.) 15. P. lanceolata, foliis lanceolatis ellipticisve mucronatis glabris levibus, Mr. Brown, on the Proteaceae of Jussieu. 163 levibus, pedunculis axillaribus unifloris, calycibus pube adpressd subsericeis, pedicello ovarii inarticulato. Persoonia lanceolata. And. Repos. 74. Pers. Syn. 1. p. 118. f. Persoonia latifolia. And. Repos. 280? Has. In Nove Hollandiz ora orientali ; prope Port Jackson: in campis ericetisque, prope littora. (ubi v. v.) 16. P. salicina, foliis lanceolato-oblongis inequilateralibus aversis, racemis lateralibus pedunculisve axillaribus unifloris, caly- cibus glabriusculis, caule arborescenti: cortice scarioso- lamelloso. Linkia levis. Cavan. Ic. 4. p. 61. ¢t. 389? an varietas P. lan- ceolate ? Persoonia salicina. Pers. Syn. 1. p. 118. Has. In Nove. Hollandiz ora orientali; prope Port Jackson : in campis collibus et sylvis. (ubi v. v.) 17. P. ferruginea, foliis ellipticis equilateralibus venosis adversis, pedunculis axillaribus multifloris calycibusque ferrugineo- tomentosis, caule erecto. Persoonia Jaurina. Pers. Syn. 1. p. 118. Persoonia ferruginea. Smith. Exot. Bot. 2. p. 47. t. 83. Has. In Nove Hollandiz ora orientali; prope Port Jackson: in campis. (ubi y. v.) *18. P. prostrata, foliis ovalibus obtusis margine pubescenti- bus, pedunculis axillaribus uni-v. paucifloris, caule procum- bente. Has. In Nove Hollandiz or4 orientali; prope Sandy Cape ; in arenosis prope littora. (ubi v.v. cum fruct, matur. flor. delaps.) ¥2 *19. P. ellip~ 164 Mr. Brown, on the Proteaceae of Jussieu. *19. P. elliptica, foliis ellipticis venosis, racemis lateralibus, calycibus glabris, pedicello ovarii articulato. Has. In Nove Hollandie ord australi; Lewins Land: ad latera saxosa collium. (ubi v. v.) *20. P. articulata, foliis elongato-lanceolatis equilateralibus gla- bris, racemis lateralibus pedunculisve unifloris, calycibus glabriusculis, ovarii pedicelli articulo inferiore glandulas hypogynas equante. Has. In Nove Hollandie or4 australi; Lewins Land : in col- libus saxosis. (ubi v. v.) 21. P. longifolia, foliis elongato-linearibus falcatis, racemis late- ralibus pedunculisve unifioris, calycibus pube adpressé tectis, ovarii pedicelli articulo inferiore glandulis hypogynis -lon- giore. Has. In Nove Hollandie ord australi; Lewins Land : in col- libus saxosis. (ubi v. v.) 22. P. graminea, foliis rameis linearibus longissimis margine re- curvis, racemis secundis multifloris, calycibus glabris, caule suffruticoso abbreviato. Has. In Nove Hollandiz ord australi; Lewins Land; ad ripas arenosas stagnorum. (ubi v. v.) 21. BRABEIUM. Linn. Gen. Pl. 1. n. 85. Mant. 168. ed. Schreb. n. 1580. Cuar. Gen. Calya tetraphyllus, regularis. Stamina basi calycis inserta. Vaginulahypogyna. Ovarium sessile. Stigma ver- ticale. Drupa exsucca, monosperma, putamine osseo. HaBitvs. Mr. Brown, on the Proteacee of Jussieu. 165 Hasrrvs. Arbor. Folia (Theophrasti,) verticillata, serrato-dentata. Spice azillares, floribus fasciculatis, ternis plurisbusve, bracted communi subtensis, plerisque masculis pistillo imperfecto. Braseium stellatifolium. Arbor hexaphylla zthiopica, foliis circa caulem ad intervalla senis. Pluk. Alm. 47. t. 265. f. 3. Amygdalus zthiopica fructu holosericeo. Breyn. cent. 1. t. 1. Brabejum. Hort. Cliff. 36. Roy. Lugd. Bat.400. Brabejum stellatifolium, Linn. Sp. Pl. ed. i. p. 121. ed. ii. p- 177... Mant. p. 332.* Brabyla. Mant. p. 137.* Brabeium stellulifolium. Linn. Syst. Veg. xiii. p. 764. Houtt. Nat. Hist. par. 2. t. 6. p. 424. tab. 37. ed. Germ. t. 4. p. 647. t. 37. f. 1. Lam. Encyc. Botan. 1. p. 459*? LIIllust. Gen. tab. 847. Willd. Sp. Pl. 4. p. 972. Brabeium stellatum. Thunb. Prod. 31. Hae. In Africé Australi, prope ERow. B, Spei. (v.s. in Herb. Banks. Lambert.) 22. GUEVINA. Molin. Chil. 198. Juss. Gen. 424. Quadria. Gen. Flor. Perwo. et Chil. 16. tab. 33. Gart. Carp. 3. p- 220. tab. 220. Cuan. Gen. Calyz tetraphyllus, irregularis, foliolis tribus revo- lutis, quarto erecto. Anthere apicibus concavis calycis im- merse. Glandule due hypogyne, antice. Ovarium di- spermum. Stigma obliquum. Drupa putamine osseo, mo- nospermo. Hasitus. Arbor. Folia alterna, pinnata. Racemi azillares, flori- bus geminis, pedicellatis, paribus unibracteatis. Calyx tomen- tosus, deciduus. Drupa part carnosa, nucleo amygdalino. Guevina 166 Mr. Brown, on the Proteaceae of Jussieu. Guevina Avellana. Molin. Chil. 198.* Nebu subrotundo fraxini folio. Feuill. 3. p. 46. t. 33. Quadria heterophylla. Flor. Peruv. et Chil. 1. p. 63. t. 99. fa b. Has. In sylvis et ad radices montium Chilensium. (v. s. in Herb. Banks. a Dombey.) 23. BELLENDENA. Cuar. Gen. Calyx tetraphyllus, regularis, patens. Stamina hy- pogyna. Glandule nulle hypogyne. Ovarium dispermum. Stigma simplex. Samara? aptera, 1—2-sperma. Hapirvus. Frutex glaberrimus. Folia sparsa, plana, apice trifida. Spica racemosa, terminalis ; floribus sparsis, rard geminatis. Calyx albus citd deciduus. Ovarium cum pedicello suo articula- tum. Samara colorata margine altero sulcato. This genus is named in honour of Jonn BeLtenpeEN KER, esq. whose botanical merits are established by an excellent Essay on Ensata, published in the Annals of Botany, and by his elaborate disquisitions on the Genera of that and other mo- nocotyledonous families, in the latter volumes of the Botani- cal Magazine. BELLENDENA montana. Has. In Insulé Diemen: in summis montibus. (ubi v. v.) 24. ANADENITA. Cuan. Gen. Calyx tetraphyllus, apicibus concavis staminiferis. Anthere immerse. Glandule nulle hypogyne. Ovarium dispermum. Stigma conicum. Folliculus unilocularis, abor- tione monospermus. Semen apterum. Havirus. Frutices. -(Grevilleis affines:) pube dum adsit medio affivd. Folia pinnatifida v. lobata, circumscriptione cuneiformia. Spice Mr. Brown, on the Proteacee of Jussieu. 167 Spice terminales, v. laterales, floribus geminatis, paribus uni- bracteutis, summis quandoque precocioribus | Erym. «@ priv. et ed glandula. *1, A. pulchella, foliis pinnatifidis pilosiusculis: lobis cuneiformi- bus apice trifidis v. inciso-pinnatifidis, folliculis viscidis. Haz. In Nove Hollandiz ord australi; Lewins Land: in collibus saxosis. (ubi v. v.) *2. A. trifida, foliis cuneiformibus triplinervibus aveniis trifidis (unguicularibus) subtis argenteis: lobis integerrimis laterali- busve 2—3-dentatis. Has. In Nove Hollandiz ord australi; Lewins Land: in syl- vis solo arenoso. (ubi v. v.) Oxs. Forte generis distincti, ob calycem irregularem, stigma paulld diversum, et folliculum ligneum bipartibilem. *3. A. ilicifolia, foliis cuneiformibus (uncialibus) venosis subtis argenteis basi attenuatis extra medium pinnatifido-incisis. Haz. In Nove Hollandiz ord australi; Flinders’ Land: in arenosis prope littora. (ubi v. v. floribus nexpansis absque fructu.) 25. GREVILLEA. Cuar.Gen, Calyz irregularis foliolis laciniisve secundis, apicibus cavis staminiferis. Anthere immerse. Glandula unica hy- pogyna, dimidiata. Ovarium dispermum. Stigma obliquum, depressum (raré subverticale, conicum). Folliculus unilocu- laris, dispermus, loculo centrali. Semina marginata v. apice brevissimé alata. Hasrrtvus. Frutices rard Arbores, pube dum adsit medio affixd. Folia alterna, indivisa v. pinnatifida. Spicze modo elongate race- mosc, modo abbreviate corymbose v. fasciculiformes, involucro nullo, 168 Mr. Brown, on the Proteacee of Jussieu. nullo, pedicellis geminatis, rar pluribus fasciculisve unibractea- tis. Calyces sepissimé rubicundi, nunc flavi; in quibusdam oblique inserti. Folliculi vel coriacei, ovati, stylo toto coronati ; seminibus ovalibus angustissimé marginatis et apice brevissimeé alatis: hgnei, vel subrotundi, pseudo-bivalves basi tantum styl mucronati; seminibus undique alatis. This extensive genus, of which a few of the least remarkable species have been already published as Embothriums by Dr. Smith, Cavanilles, and others, I have dedicated to the right honourable Cuartes Francis Grevitte, one of theVice- Presidents of the Royal Society; a gentleman eminently distinguished for his acquirements in natural history, and to whom the botanists of this country are indebted for the in- troduction and successful cultivation of many rare and in- teresting plants. Grevillea is probably the most extensive genus of Proteacee in New Holland, and admits of division into several very natural sections, most of which are readily distinguishable by more than one character, existing either in the parts of fructification or in habit ; notwithstanding which, I have not ventured to separate them into distinct genera, as I probably should have done, had I been acquainted with fewer species; but have given to each section a proper name, a practice that may perhaps be advantageously adopted in all large genera, where they are thus capable of natural subdivision. It must be unnecessary to add that proper names can in this manner be given only where the sections are perfectly natural, and not in those eases where genera have been subdivided from single characters, and those too of but little importance, as in Thunberg’s division of Protea, from the form and division of the leaves ; to which may be opposed the Mr. Brown, on the Proteaceae of Jussieu. 169 the masterly subdivision of the same genus previously given by Linneus in the Mantissa, whose sections, though ap- parently depending on single characters, are evidently formed from a contemplation of the whole structure, as far as it was then understood ; and it is remarkable that, with the exception of the first species, with whose real structure he was necessarily unacquainted, the rest are arranged, and even divided -into-sections, in most cases corresponding with the genera proposed in the present essay. + Folliculicoriacei, stylo toto stigmateque depresso coronati. Semina ovalia, angustissimée marginata, apiceque brevissimé alata. A. LYSSOSTYLIS. Folia omnit integerrima (in plerisque marginibus refractis v. replicatis pseudo-3-nervia) . Flores fasciculati v. in racemo abbreviato. Stylus glaber, Folliculus ecostatus. 1. G. punicea, foliis elliptico-oblongis basi subattenuatis mar- ginibus refractis, ramulis. floriferis racemoque abbreviato re- curvis, pistillis uncialibus, barba interiore calycis oblonga dimidium inferiorem unguium zquante. FEmbothrium sericeum 6. Smith. New Holl. 27. t.9. f. 5. B. Has. In Nove Hollandiz ord orientali; prope Port Jackson: in ericetis subhumidis. (ubi v. v.) *2. G. dubia, foliis ellipticis marginibus refractis, ramis ramulis- que tomentosis, floriferis racemoque abbreviato recurvis, pistillis uncia brevioribus. Has. In Nove Hollandie ord orientali ; prope Port Jackson: ‘in saxosis subhumidis prope littora. (ubi v. v.) Oss. Nimis affinis preecedenti. VoL, x. Zz 3. G, se- 170 Mr. Brown, on the Proteaceae of Jussieu. 3. G. sericea, foliis ellipticis oblongisve obtusis mucronatis mar- ginibus refractis, ramulis floriferis erectis, racemis abbreviatis recurvis, pistillis semuncialibus, barb interiori calycis di- midio inferiore unguium breviore. Embothrium sericeum. Smith. New Holl. 25. t. 9. f. 1, 2,3, 4. Willd. Sp. Pl. 1. p. 539. And. Repos. 100. Sims. in Bot. Mag. 862. iio dikien cytisoides. Cav. Ic. 4. p. 60. ¢. 386. f. 2. Has. In Nove Hollandiz ora orientali ; prope Port Jackson: in saxosis prope littora marina et ad rivulorum ee (ubi v. v.) 4. G. linearis, foliis lineari-lanceolatis acutis mucronatis margi- nibus refractis, racemis abbreviatis erectiusculis, stylis apice glaberrimis. Embothrium linearifolium. Cavan. Ic. 4. p. 59. t. 386. f. 1. Embothrium lineare. And. Repos. 272. [ Embothrium sericeam y. Smith. New Holl. 27. t. 9. f.6. Has. In Nove Hollandiz ord orientali ;_ prope Port dagkson : : in saxosis presertim prope littora. (ubi v. v.) *5. G. stricta, foliis hiteadae Rieedriiens acutis mucronatis mar- ginibus refractis costaque denticulato-scabris, stylis apice sericeis. Has. In Nove Hollandiz ora orientali ; prope Port Jackson: ad ripas saxosas fluviorum. (ubi v. v.) *6. G. riparia, foliis elongato-linearibus marginibus refractis cos- taque levibus, stylis apice glaberrimis, pistillis quadriline- aribus: pedicello ovarium superante, barba interiori, calycis densa. Has. Mr. Brown, on the Proteaceae of Jussieu. 171 Has. In Nove Hollandiz or4 orientali ; prope Port Jackson : ad ripas fluviorum. (ubi v. v.) *7. G. parviflora, foliis subulato-linearibus marginibus refractis costaque levibus, ramulis glabriusculis, calycibus ferrugineis barba interiori obsoletd, pistillis bilinearibus: pedicello ovarium vix zquante. Has. In Nove Hollandiz orA orientali; prope Port Jackson : in fruticetis a Jittore remotis. (ubi v. v.) *8. G. juniperina, foliis subulatis fasciculatis divaricatis margini- bus refractis, ramulis villosis teretiusculis, pistillis semunci- alibus pedunculo partiali quadrupld longioribus. Has- In Nove Hollandie ord orientali ; prope Port Jackson: in ericetis rarids.. D. G. Caley, §& A. Gordon. (v. 8.) *9. G. australis, foliis lanceolato-subulatis uncia brevioribus mar- - gine subrecuryis, supra pube decidua conspersis subtus se- riceis, ramis ramulisque tomentosis teretibus. Has. In Insul4 Diemen; plagis australioribus: ad fluviorum ripas. (v. v. absque flor. v. fruct.) *10. G. tenuifolia, foliis subulatis margine revolutis uncid brevi- oribus, fasciculis sessilibus, pistillis bilinearibus. Has. In Insula Diemen; prope Port Dalrymple: ad Shan saxosas fluviorum. (ubi v. v.) *11. G. pauciflora, foliis lineari-oblongis planiusculis obtusis mu- cronulatis supra levibus subtis subsericeis: inferioribus glabriusculis, fasciculis 2-4-floris erectis, calycibus nudtus- culis pistillum subzquantibus. ) bts ah z2 Has, 172 Mr. Brown, on the Proteacee of Jussieu. Has. In Nove Hollandiz orf australi; Flinders’ Land: in depressis apricis prope littora. (ubi v. v.) *12. G.aspera, foliis lineari-oblongis obtusis mucronulatis supra punctato-asperis subtis argenteis, racemis abbreviatis recur- vis, stylis brevissimis, stigmate cochleariformi. Has. In Nove Hollandie ord australi; Flinders’ Land : in ericetis aridis. (v. v. flor. delaps. fruct. matur.) *13. G. concinna, foliis linearibus marginerevolutis levibus erectis, racemis recurvis secundis multifloris, ovariis lanatis, stylis glaberrimis calyce subsericeo dupld longioribus. Oss. A reliquis sectionis facie differt. Has. In Nove Hollandiz ord australi; Lewins Land: in ste- rilibus prope littora marina. (ubi v. v.) + B. PTYCHOCARPA. Folia omnia integerrima, Flores fasciculati v. in racemo abbreviato, floribus superiori- bus precocioribus ! Stylus hirsutus v. tomentosus. Ovarium subsessile. Folli- culus costatus ! *14. G. arenaria, foliis oblongis obtusis mucronulatis, racemis recurvis paucifloris: pistillis tomentosis. Has. In Nove Hollandiz or4 orientali; prope Port Jackson: ad ripas arenosas fluviorum. (ubi v. v.) *15. G. montana, foliis lanceolatis acutis supra leviusculis subtis sericeis, floribus geminatis, pedunculis glabris calyces nudi- usculos subequantibus, pistillis hirsutis, tomento ramulorum arcté adpresso. Has. In Nove Hollandi ord oriqatalis 3 prope Port Jackson : in montosis. (v. s.) . *16. G. acu- Mr. Brown, on the Protéeacee of Jussieu. 173 *16. G. acwninata, foliis lancéolatis subacuminatis mucronatis suprd punctato-scabris subtts cinereo-tomentosis, racemis paucifloris porrectis recurvisve, pistillis hirsutis, calycibus demim glabriusculis, ramulis pubescentibus.. Has. In Nove Hollandiz ord orientali ; prope Port Jackson : in montosis. (v. s.) 4. G. cinerea, foliis ellipticis obovatisve mucronatis supra sca- briusculis subtis cinereo-tomentosis,' racemis paucifloris re- curvis, pistillis hirsttis, calycibus pedunculisque lanatis. Has. In Nove Hollandie orA orientali; prope. Port Jackson : in montosis ad ripas saxosas fluviorum. (ubi v. v.) _ *18. G. mucronulata, foliis obovatis obtusis: mucronulatis supra scabris nitentibus subtis parim sericeis, racemis abbreviatis, pistillis hirsutis, calycibus pilosiusculis pube adpressa. Has. In Nove Hollandiz ord orientali ; prope Port Jackson : in ericetis. (ubiv. v.) ge *19. G. Baueri, foliis oblongis obtusis mucronulatis utrinque glabris levibus, racemis abbreviatis, pistillis hirsutis, caly- cibus pedunculisque glaberrimis. Has. In Nove Hollandiz orA orientali ; prope Port Jackson : in depressis a littore remotis. (ubi v. v.) + C. ERIOSTYLIS. Folia omnia integerrima. Flores fasciculati, subumbellati. Pistillum lanatum,: pedi- cellatum. Folliculus ecostatus. *20. G. occidentalis, foliis lanceolatis supra punetatis scabris subtus sericeis, fasciculis axillaribus terminalibusque, caly- cibus 174 Mr. Brown, on the Proteaceae of Jussieu. cibus utrinque stylisque land patuld cinereis, stigmate mu- tico. Has. In Nove Hollandiz or& australi; Lewins Land: in sylvis solo sterili. (ubi v. v.) *21. G. sphacelata, foliis oblongis lanceolatisve supra punctis minutis scabriusculis subtis sericeis, fasciculis terminalibus, calycibus extus ferrugineo-tomentosis intus stylisque cinereo lanatis, stigmate mutico. Has. In Nove Hollandiz ord orientali; prope Port Jackson : in saxosis. (ubi v. v.) *22, G. phylicoides, foliis lineari-lanceolatis: supra punctato-sca- bris superioribus villosis; subtis pubescentibus cinereis, stigmatibus ovalibus appendice duplo longioribus. Has. In Nove Hollandiz ora orientali; prope Port Jackson: in montibus saxosis. (ubi v. v.) © 28. G. busifolia, foliis ellipticis supra punctatis scabris subtis tomento adpresso cinereis, stigmatibus orbiculatis. appen- dicem recurvum vix aquantibus. Embothrium buxifolium. Smith. New. Holl. 29. t.10. Willd. Sp. Pl. 1. p. 538. And. Repos. 218. Embothrium genianthum. Cav. Ic. 4. p. 60. t. 387. Hac. In Nove Hollandiz ord australi; prope Port Jackson: in ericetis saxosis. (ubi y. v.) + D. PLAGIOPODA. Folia integerrima v. divisa. Racemus thyrsiformis. Pedicellus ovarii accretus apice obliquo pedunculi, cui utrinque foliola duo calycis unum supra alterum inserta ! *24. G. Goodii, foliis integerrimis oblongis undulatis venosis utrinque Mr. Brown, on the Proteacee of Jussieu. 175 utrinque glabris, racemis elongatis pedunculatis, caulibus prostratis. Has. In Nove Hollandi ord septeutrionali; Carpentaria, et Arnhem’s Land: in depressis arenosis, prope littora. (ubi Val Va) *25. G. venusta, foliis pinnatifidis, v. trifidis passimque indivisis subtus sericeis, racemis erectis, calycibus glaberrimis, stylis hirsutissimis. Has. In Nove Hollandiz ord orientali; prope Cape Townsend: in umbrosis, ad radices montium. (ubi v. v.) . t E. CALOTHYRSUS. (Grevictia stricté sic dicta.) Racemus thyrsiformis. Folia pinnatifida (rard passim sani ei *26. G. pungens, foliis pinnatifidis supra glabris subtus ar genta 3 Jaciniis subulato-linearibus mucronatis pungentibus, racemis refractis, calycibus pistillisque glaberrimis. Has. In Nove Hollandie ord septentrionali ; Carpentaria : prope littora. (ubi v. v.) *27. G. Dryandri, foliis pinnatis subtis sericeis: foliolis elon- gato-linearibus, racemis pedunculatis porrectis longissimis, calycibus insertione subobliquis _pistillisque glaberrimis, caule patulo. Has. In Nove Hollandie ord septentrionali; Carpentaria, Arnhem’s Land: prope littora. (ubi v. v.) *28. G. aspleniifolia, foliis elongatis linearibus pinnatifido-incisis integerrimisque subtus tomentosis, racemis folio ter brevio- ribus, calycibus pubescentibus, stylis glabris. Has. 176 Mr. Brown, on the Proteaceae of Jussieu. Has. In Nove Hollandiz ord orientali; prope Port Jackson : rarius. (v. s. in Herb. Banks.) *29. G. Banksii, foliis pinnatifidis subtis sericeis : laciniis. elon- gato-lanceolatis, racemis erectis zequalibus, calycibus tomen- tosis, stylis glabris, ovariis sessilibus. Has. In Nove Hollandiz ord orientali; Keppel Bay, Pine Port, &c.: in collibus saxosis.. (ubi v. v.) *30. G. Chrysodendrum, foliis pinnatifidis bipinnatifidisque : laci- niis angusto-linearibus elongatis, racemis cylindraceis : flori- bus semiverticillatis, calycibus tomentosis basi persistenti ! ovariis subsessilibus, stylis glabris. Has. In Nove Hollandiz ord septentrionali ; Carpentaria : prope littora. (ubi v. v.) ++ CYCLOPTERA. Folliculi ignei, -subrotundi, basi styli mucronati. Semina undique alata. *31. G. heliosperma, .foliis pinnatis subbipinnatisque glabris : pinnis oblongo-linearibus v. oblongis : inferioribus petiolatis, racemis divisis erectis, calycibus pistillisque glaberrimis. Has. In Nove Hollandiz ord septentrionali; Carpentaria: prope littora, (ubi y. v.) ¥*32. G. refracta, foliis pinnatis passim indivisis: foliolis elongato- linearibus subtis argenteis, racemis refractis divisis, calycibus sericeis, pistillis glaberrimis. Has. In Nove Hollandie ord septentrionali ; ; Carpentaria : prope littora: (ubi v. v.) *33. G. ce- Mr. Brown; on the Proteacee of Jussieu. 177 #33. G. ceratophylla, foliis 2-3-fidis indivisisque’ subtis nervosis sericeis: laciniis elongato-linearibus, folliculis glaberrimis ovalibus. Has. In Nove Hollandiz ord septentrionali; Carpentaria : prope littora. (ubi v. v. sine flor.) *34.. G. mimosoides, foliis integerrimis ensiformibus planis nervo- sis ramisque glabris, folliculis obovatis viscidis. Has. In Nove Hollandie ord septentrionali ; Carpentaria : prope littora. (ubi v.-v. sine flor.) *35. G. polystachya, foliis lineari-ensiformibus integerrimis laxis ‘subtis nervosis sericeis, racemis terminalibus alternis, pistillis semuncid longioribus, eeerana obliquo concavo papilla - centrali. Has. In Nove Hollaiidie ora orientali, intra tropicum. (abi Vv. V.) *36. G. striata, foliis lineari-ensiformibus integerrimis strictis subtus multinervibus sericeis, racemis terminalibus alternis, pistillis semunciad mepDribias; stigmate verticali depresso- conico. Has. In Nove Hollandie ord septentrionali; Carpentaria : prope littora. (ubi v. v. sine fructu.) *37. G. lorea, foliis teretibus! pendulis longissimis, stigmate truncato-pyramidato. Has. In Nove Hollandie ora orientali, prope littora ; Shoal- water Bay. (ubi v. v. sine fructu.) *38. G. gibbosa, foliis elongato-lanceolatis integerrimis pubescen- Von! x.” Qa tulis 178 Mr. Brown, on the Proteacee of Jussieu. tulis uninervibus venosis, racemis clongatis, stigmate co- nico, folliculis gibboso-incrassatis. Has. In Nove Hollandiz ora orientali, intra tropicum ; prope Endeavour River. J. Banks, bart. (v. s.) 26. HAKEA. Schrad. Sert. Hanov. Cavan. Ic. 6. Labill. Nov. Holl. 1, p. 30. Pers. Syn. 117. Conchium. Smith. Linn. Trans. iv. p. 215. Vent. Malmais. 110. Gert. Carp. 3. p. 216. Cuar. Gen. Calyx tetraphyllus, irregularis, foliolis secundis. Stamina apicibus concavis calycis immersa. Glandula hypo- gyna unica, dimidiata, (rard biloba). Ovarium pedicellatum, dispermum. Stigma subobliquum,.e basi dilatata conico- mucronatum. Folticulus unilocularis, ligneus, loculo excen- trico, pseudobivalvis. Semina ala apicis nucleo longiore. Hasirus. Frutices rigidi, quandoque Arbores mediocres; pube dum adsit medio affiva. Folia sparsa, in variis varia, nunc in eodem frutice diversiformia. Fasciculi v. Racemuli, sepits aaillares, in plerisque involucrati, squamis imbricatis,, scariosis, caducis, rudimenta ramulorum quandoque simul includentibus, ideoque potis pro gemmd habendis, sed genus, unicd exceptd specie, a confinibus, optime distinguentibus, aliis notis in quibusdam va- cillantibus. Pedicelli colorati, in racemosis geminati, paribus unibracteatis. Flores parvi, albi v. ochroleuci. Pistillum gla- berrimum, stylo subdeciduo. Capsula parietibus incrassatis. Semina nigra, raré cinerea. + Folia omnia filiformia. A. Capsule juata apicem ecalcarata. 1. H. pugioniformis, foliis filiformibus indivisis glabris, calycibus sericeis hirsutisve, capsulis lanceolatis acuminatis rectis utringue infra medium transversim cristatis. a, Calyces Mr. Brown, on the Proteacee of Fussieu. 179 w. Calyces sericei. Banksia teretifolia. Salisb. Prod. 51. Hakea glabra. Schrad. Sert. Hanov. 27. t. 17. Hakea pugioniformis. Cavan. Anal. de Hist. Natur. 1. p. 213.* Ic. 6. p. 24.* tab. 533. Conchium pugioniforme. Smith. Linn. Trans. 9. p. 122.* Conchium longifolium. Smith. Linn. Trans. 9. p. 121.* Lambertia teretifolia. Gert. Carp. 3. p. 213. t. 217. 8. Calyces hirsuti. Ramuli ultimi tomentosi. Has. In Nove Hollandiz ord orientali; prope Port Jackson : in ericetis aridis, collibusque saxosis. @ forté distincta spe- cies. In InsulA Diemen. (ubi v. v-) *2. H. rugosa, foliis filiformibus indivisis glabris fructu pardm longioribus, capsulis obovatis curvatis refractis utrinque cristatis rugosis ; acumine subulato lwvi adscendenti, caule diffuso. Has. In Nove Hollandiz ord australi; Flinders’ Land: in campis sterilibus prope littora. (ubi v. v. absque flor.) *3. LL. epiglottis, foliis filiformibus indivisis glabris fructu duplé longioribus, capsulis curvatis refractis utrinque rugosis ecri- statis : mucrone adscendenti subulato carinato, seminum ala obovata, caule erecto. Hakea epiglottis. Labill. Nov. Holl. 1. p. 30. tab. 40. Conchium teretifolium. Gert. Carp. 3. p. 217. t. 219. Has. In InsulA Diemen; ad fluviorum rivulorumque ripas. (ubi v. v.) *4. H. nodosa, foliis filiformibus indivisis compressiusculis, cap- 2a2 sulis 180 Mr. Brown, on the Proteacee of Jussiet. sulis gibbosis obtusis nodosis seminumque ald obovatis, caly- cibus glabris, pedunculis pubescentibus. Has. In Nove Hollandie ora australi, prope Port Phillip ; ad latera montium. (ubi v. v.) Oss. Sequenti nimis affinis, an species distincta ? *5. H. fleailis, foliis filiformibus indivisis partim compressis, corr sulis ellipticis acutiusculis modicé convexis levibus. Has. In Nove Hollandiz ord australi, prope Port Phillip; ad latera montium. (ubi v. v.) *6. H. leucoptera, foliis teretibus indivisis fructu dupld longiori- bus, ramis erectis virgatis subflexuosis, capsulis ovatis infra gibbosis supra compressis, seminibus albo-cinereis ! Has. In Nove Hollandiz or&-australi; Flinders’ Land: ad margines sylvarum prope radices montium. (ubi v. v. sine flor.) *7. H. obliqua, foliis ieatabae indivisis, ramis tomentosis, glan- dula hypogyna. adnata apice obliquo pedunculi, calycibus sericeis, capsulis gibbosis subnodosis. Has. In Nove Hollandiz ord australi; Lewins Land: in ericetis aridis. (ubi v. v.)} *§. H. sulcata, foliis filiformibus indivisis undique sulcatis diva- ricatis. Has. In Nove Hollandiz ord australi; Lewins Land: in eri- cetis aridis. (ubi v. v. seu flor. caps. immat.) ——— t B. Capsule juxta apicem licalcarate. *9. H. hssosperma, foliis filiformibus indivisis undique exsulcis glabris Mr. Brown, on the Proteacee of Jussieu. 181 glabris fructu duplé longioribus, capsulis gibbosis intis ke- vibus: calcaribus brevissimis, seminis al4 obovata: nucleo levi basi immarginato. Has. In Insule Diemen montibus australioribus ; inter fluvia Derwent et Huon. (ubi v. v..sine flor.) 10. H. gibbosa, foliis filiformibus indivisis subtis basi obsole- tissimé sulcatis ramisque subpubescentibus, ramulis pedun- culisque hirsutis, calycibus glabriusculis, capsulis gibbosis intus lacunosis seminis ala semiellipticA, nucleo lacunoso basi marginato. Banksia gibbosa. Smith in White’s Voy. 224. t. 22. f. 2. Willd. Sp. Pl. 1. p. 536. Banksia pinifolia. Salish. Prod. 51. Hakea pubescens. Schrad. Sert. Hanov. 27. Hakea gibbosa. Cavan. Anal. de Hist. Nat. 1. p.214.* Ic. 6. p. 24.* t. 534. Conchium gibbosum. Smith in Linn. Pidkis 9. p. 119.* Conchium sphzroideum. Siith in Linn. Trans. 9. p. 120*? Conchium cornutum. Gert. Carp.3. p. 216. t. 219. - Has. In Nove Hollandiz ora orientali; prope Port Jackson: in ericetis. (ubi v. v.) Oxss. Calyces non penitus glabri, sed pilis paucis longiusculis decumbentibus, sepits deciduis, conspersi. 11. H. acicularis, folis filiformibus indivisis glabris subtis infra medium obsoleté sulcatis longitudine fructds, ramulis ultimis subsericeis, pedunculis hirsutis calyces glaberrimos sub- zquantibus, capsulis gibbosis subrugosis intis lacunosis. Banksia tenuifolia. Salish. Prod. 51. Hakea sericea. Schrad. Sert. Hanov. 27. Conchium 182 Mr. Brown, on thé Proteacee of Jussieu. Conchium aciculare. Vent. Malm. t.111. Smith in Linn. Trans. Q. p. 121. 8. Conchium compressum. Smith in Linn. Trans. 9. p. 121. Has. In Nove Hollandiz ora orientali; prope Port Jackson : in ericetis saxosis. (ubi v. v.) *12. H. vittata, foliis filiformibus indivisis exsulcis glabris fructu dupld longioribus, capsulis ovatis convexiusculis equilate- ralibus basi citils dehiscentibus intis lacunosis, seminis alA obovatd, ramulis tomentosis. Has. In Nove Hollandiz ord australi; Flinders’ Land: in campis sterilibus, prope littora. (ubi v. v. sine flor.) *13. H. cycloptera, foliis filiformibus indivisis fructu dupld lon- gioribus ramulisque glaberrimis, capsulis gibbosis intus la- cunosis, seminibus utrinque alatis; ald inferiore nucleum subeequante ! . Has. In Novaw Hollandiz ord australi; Flinders’ Land: in campis prope littora. (ubi v. v. sine flor.) *14. H. suaveolens, foliis filiformibus pinnatifidis passimque in- divisis supra sulcatis, floribus racemosis glabris : rachi to- mentosa, capsulis gibbosis. Has. In Nove Hollandiz ord australi ; Lewins Land : in sax- osis prope littora. (ubi v. v.) tt Folia pleraque filiformia, aliqua plana. *15. H. microcarpa, foliis integerrimis glabris: rameis teretibus ; infimis planis, calycibus pedunculisque glaberrimis, capsulis bicalcaratis umbellatis folio multoties brevioribus. Hak. In Insulaé Diemen ; ad ripas saxosas fluviorum. (ubi v. v.) 16. H. tri- Mr. Brown, on the Proteaceae of Jussieu. 183 16. H. trifurcata, foliis filiformibus 2-3-fidis indivisisve subtus sulcatis : passim planis ovalibus integerrimis, calycibus hir- sutis, capsulis compressis ecalcaratis. Conchium trifurcatum. Smith in Linn. Trans. 9. p. 122.* Has. In Nove Hollandiz ord australi; Lewins Land: in campis sterilibus. (ubi v. v.) 17. U1. varia, foliis superioribus filiformibus divisis stmplicibus- que: inferioribus planis pinnatifidis laciniis linearibus su- bulatisve, capsulis bicalcaratis. Has. In Nove Hollandiz ora australi; Lewins Land: in campis sterilibus. (ubi v. v. sine flor.) _ ttt Folia omnia plana. A. Folia aliqua v. omnia dentata v. incisa. ¥*18, H. attenuata, foliis cuneatis apice dentatis pinnatifidisve: passim lanceolatis integerrimis basi attenuatis, capsulis bicalcaratis.- Has. In Nove Hollandiz orA australi; Lewins Land : in col- libus saxosis. (ubi v. v. sine flor.) *19. H. linearis, foliis lanceolato-linearibus spinuloso-pauciden- tatis integerrimisque aveniis impunctatis, ramulis pedun- culoque communi glabris, fasciculis terminalibus axillari- busque, capsulis bicalcaratis compressiusculis. Has. In Nove Hollandiz ord australi; Lewins Land; in campis sterilibus. (ubi v. v.) *20. H. florida, foliis angusto-lanceolatis spinuloso-dentatis, mi- nutissimé punctatis marginibus scabriusculis, ramulis pedun- -culoque communi brevissimo pubescentibus, capsulis bical- caratis convexiusculis. Has, 184 Mr. Brown, on the Proteaceae of Jussieu. Has. In Nove Hollandie ord australi; Lewins Land: ad latera collium. (ubi v. v.) 21. H. ilcifolia, foliis circumseriptione ovalibus opacis sinuato- dentatis spinulosis subpetiolatis, ramis tomentosis, cap- sulis bicalcaratis ovatis gibbosis apice compressis intts scrobiculatis. Has. In Nove Hollandiz ord australi; Lewins Land: in col- libus sterilibus. (ubi v. v.) *22. H. nitida, foliis lanceolatis oblongisve basi attenuatis spinu- loso-paucidentatis integrisque nitidis subvenosis ramulisque glaberrimis, capsulis bicalcaratis gibbosiusculis intus levius- culis. Has. In Nove Hollandiz ord australi; Lewins Land: in col- libus saxosis. (ubi v. v. absque flor.) *23. H. amplewvicaulis, foliis sinuato-dentatis nitidis subvenosis : basi dilataté cordata amplexicauli, caule prostrato, ramis glabris, capsulis ecalcaratis. ; Has. In Nove Hollandiz ord australi; Lewins Land: in col- libus sterilibus. (ubi vy. v. sine flor.) #24, TH. prostrata, foliis angulato-dentatis apice dilatatis cunea- tis: basi cordaté amplexicauli, caule prostrato, ramis pu- bescentibus, capsulis ecalecaratis. Has. In Nove Hollandiz ord australi; Lewins Land: in collibus sterilibus. (ubi v. v.) 25. H. ceratophylla, foliis pmnatifidis bipinnatifidisve linearibus planis, calycibus ferrugineo-tomentosis, capsulis ecalcaratis. Conchium Mr. Brown, on the Proteacee of Jussieu. 183 Conchium ceratophyllum. Smith. Linn. Trans. 9. p. ¥24.* Has. In Nove Hollandiw ord australi; Lewins Land: in campis collibusque. (ubi v. v.) *26. Hy undulata, foliis obovatis trinervibus reticulato-venosis undulatis spinoso-dentatis, capsulis ecalcaratis tumidis, Has. In Nove Hollandie ord australi; Lewins Land: in col- libus saxosis. (ubi v. v. sine flor.) ttt B. Folia omnia integerrima. 27. H. oleifolia, foliis lanceolatis integerrimis uninervibus obsoleté venosis mucronulo spinoso: superioribus pubescentibus, ra- mulis tomentosis, capsulis terminalibus bicalcaratis gibbosis. Conchium oleifolium. Smith. Linn. Trans. 9. p. 124.* Has. In Nove Hollandie ord australi; Lewins Land: in campis et collibus (ubi v. v.) | 28. H. saligna, foliis elongato-lanceolatis integerrimis uninervi- bus acutis apiculo sphacelato; omnibus ramulisque glaber- rimis, capsulis axillaribus gibbosis: apice compresso utrin- que carinato. Embothrium salignum. And. Repos. t. 215. Conchium salignum. Smith. Linn. Trans. 9. p. 124.* Conchium salicifolium. Gert. Carp. 3. p. 217. t. 219. Has. In Nove Hollandie or4 australi; Lewins Land: in ericetis elevatioribus. (ubi v. v. sine flor.) *29. H. marginata, foliis lanceolatis integerrimis marginatis uni- nervibus (uncid brevioribus) mucrone spinoso: summis pu- bescentibus, capsulis ecalcaratis acuminatis nitidis sub- sessilibus. VOL. X. 2B Hap. 186 Mr. Brown, on the Proteacee of Jussieu. Has. In Nove Hollandie orf australi; Lewins Land: in ericetis clevatioribus. (ubi v. v. sine flor.) 30. H. ruscifolia, foliis ellipticis obovatisve petiolatis integerrimis spinoso-cuspidatis supra punctato-scabris subtus tomentosis, ramulis hirsutis, capsulis ecalcaratis punctatis scabriusculis. &. Hakea ruscifolia. Labill. Nov. Holl. 1. p. 30.* t. 39. Has. In Nove Hollandiz ord australi; Lewins Land: ad la- tera collium. (ubi y. v. sine flor.) *31. H. cinerea, foliis lineari-lanceolatis elongatis integerrimis trinervibus obsoleté venosis scabriusculis apiculo sphacelato, ramulis squamisque involucri tomentosis, capsulis lanceolatis acuminatis subcompressis ecalcaratis. Has. In Nove Hollandiz ord australi; Lewins Land: in are- nosis prope littora. (ubi v. v. sine flor.) 32. H. dactyloides, foliis integerrimis triplinervibus venosis obo- vato-oblongis v. lineari-lanceolatis aversis, ramulis angulatis, pedicellis pilosis, calycibus glabris, capsulis ecalcaratis : cor- tice verrucoso. ‘ #. Folia obovato-oblonga, passim lanceolata, venis anastomo- zantibus. Banksia dactyloides. Gert. Sem. 1. p. 221. t. 47. f. 2. Lam. Tilust. Gen. 1. p. 242. n. 1279. t. 54. f. 3. a Geert. mutuat. Banksia oleefolia. Salish. Prod. 54. Hakea dactyloides. Cavan. Anal. de Hist. Nat. 1. p. 215. Ic. 6. p. 25. t. 535. Conchium dactyloides. Vent. Malm. t.110. Smith. Linn. Trans. Q. p. 123. Le Conchium Mr. Brown, on the Proteacee of Jussieu. 187 Conchium nervosum. Gert. Carp. 3. p. 217. t. 219. 8B. Folia lineari-lanceolata, venis obsoletis. Has. In Nove Hollandiz ora orientali; prope Port Jackson: a. in saxosis prope littora. @. ad ripas fluviorum in regione montana. (ubi v. v.) 33, H. elliptica, foliis integerrimis quinquenervibus reticulato- venosis ellipticis ovalibusve muticis, pedicellis calycibusque glabris, capsulis ecalcaratis acutis gibbosis: cortice nitido. Conchium ellipticum. Smith. Linn. Trans. 9. p. 123. Has. In Nove Hollandiz ord australi; Lewins Land: in col- libus saxosis. (ubi v. v.) $4. H. clavata, foliis integerrimis lingulatis cartilagineo-carnosis mucronatis enervibus, floribus racemosis glabris, capsulis bicalcaratis. _ Hakea clavata. Labill. Nov. Holl.1. p 31.* t. 41. Has. In Nove Hollandiz ora australi; Lewins Land; in col- ‘libus saxosis prope littora. (ubi v. v.) *35. H. arborescens, foliis integerrimis lingulatis linearibusve ob- soleté nervosis muticis, involucris nullis! umbellis pedun- culatis, pedicellis calycibusque tomentosis, capsulis ecalca- ratis. Has. In Nove Hollandiz os septentrionali; Carpentaria: in apricis prope littora. (ubi v. v.) Oss. Species unica tropica et gemmis floralibus nudis. 27. LAMBERTIA. Smith. Linn. Trans. 4. p. 214. Cavan. Ic. 6. p. 31. Cuar. Gen. Calyx tubulosus, quadrifidus, laciniis spiraliter re- 2B2 volutis. 188 Mr. Brown, on the Proteaceae of Jussicu. volutis, Stamina laciniis inserta. Squamule hypogyne 4, distinctee v. in vaginulam connate. Ovariwm dispermum. Stigma subulatum. Folliculus unilocularis, coriaceo-ligneus. Semina marginata. Involucrum 1—7-florum, imbricatum, deciduum. Receptaculum planum, epaleatum. Hasirus. Frutices pulcherrimi, ramis verticillutis. Folia terna, sepits integerrima. Involucra terminalia, solitaria, colorata, in plerisque septemflora,raro uniflora. Folliculi subcuneati, apice hinc cuspidati, inde bicornes v. mutici, quandoque echinati. *1. L, uniflora, involucris unifloris, foliis obovatis mucronatis glabris reticulatis, folliculis hinc cuspidatis inde ecornibus. Has. In Nove Hollandiew ord australi; Lewins Land: prope littora saxosa sinuum. (ubi v. v.) *2. L. inermis, involucris septemfloris : foliolis interioribus cal ycis dimidio brevioribus, stylis glabris, folliculis hinc cuspidatis inde ecornibus, foliis oblanceolatis obovatisque muticis. Has. In Nove Hollandiz ord australi; Lewins Land: ad la- tera saxosa collium. (ubi v. v.) 3. L. formosa, involucris septemfloris ; foliolis interioribus caly- cem equantibus, stylis pilosis, folliculis hinc cuspidatis inde bicornibus, foliis lineari-lanceolatis cuspidato-mucronatis margine revolutis. Lambertia formosa. Smith. Linn. Trans. tab.20. And. Repos. 69. Cavan. Anal. de Hist. Nat. 1. p. 233.* Ic. 6. p. 31.* t. 547. Protea nectarina. Wendel. Sert. Hanov. fasc. 4. p. 5. t. 21. ~ Has. In Nove Hollandiz ord orientali; prope Port Jackson : in ericetis saxosis, (v. v.) 4. L? echi- Mr. Brown, on the Proteacee of Jussieu. 189 #4, I,? echinata, foliis linearibus glabris reticulatis apice dilatato- lobato | mucronate, folliculis bicornibus undique echinatis. Has. In Nove Hollandiz ord australi; Lewins Land : ad la- tera saxosa collium. (ubi v. v. absque flor.) 28. XYLOMELUM. — Smith. Linn. Trans. 4. p. 214. Cnar. Grn. Calye tetraphyllus, regularis, foliolis apice revolu- tis. Stamina inserta supra medium foliolorum, iisque recur- vatis exserta. Glandule quatuor hypogyne. Ovarium di- spermum. Stylus deciduus, Stigma verticale, clavatum, ob- tusum. Folliculus incrassato-ligneus, unilocularis, loculo ex- centrico. Semina apice alata. : Hazirus. Arbor. Folia opposita, adulta integerrima, plante juve- nilis dentata. Spice avillares, opposite, amentacee, florum pari- bus unibracteatis, infimis solim perfectis, reliquis ovario desti- tutis stigmateque minore abortientibus. Folliculus wnicus tantim maturescens, obpyriformis, tomentosus, crassissimus, intis suturd dehiscens, inde siccatione partibilis. XYLOMELUM pyriforme. Banksia pyriformis. Gert. Sem. 1. p. 220. t. 47. f.1. fructus. Lam. Lllust. Gen. 1. p. 242. n. 1278. t. 54. f. 4. a Gert. mutuat. White. Voy. 224. Hakea piriformis. Cavan. Anal. de Hist. Nat. 1. p.217.* Ic. 6. p. 25." t.536. ) Has. In Nove Hollandiz ord orientali; prope Port Jackson : in campis et collibus saxosis. (ubi v. v-) 29. ORITES. Cuar. Gen. Calyx tetraphyllus, regularis, foliolis apice recurvis. Stamina inserta supra medium foliolorum, iisque recurvatis exserta, 190 Mr. Brown, on the Proteacee of Jussieu. exserta. Glandule quatuor hypogyne. Ovarium sessile, di- spermum. Stylus strictus. Stigma obtusum, verticale. Folli- culus coriaceus, unilocularis, loculo subcentrali. Semina apice alata. Hasrrus. Frutices. Folia alterna, integerrima v. dentata. Spice avillares v. terminales, breves, florum paribus unibracteatis omni- bus hermaphroditis. EryM. Ogeiryg monticola. Hi Frutices enim in summis mon- tibus crescunt. *1, O. diversifolia, foliis planis lanceolatis dentatis integerrimisve subts tomentosiusculis, folliculis sutura truncata leviterve excisa. Has. In Insule Diemen summis montibus. (ubi v. v.) *2, O. revoluta, foliis ‘margine revolutis linearibus integerrimis subtus incano-tomentosis, folliculis sutura rotundata. Has. In Insule Diemen summis montibus. (ubi v. v. absque flor.) 30. RHOPALA. Schreb. Gen. Pl. 144. Roupala. Aubl. Guian. 1. p. 83. £. 32. Gert/Carp. 3: p.' 212: -¢. 217. Cuar. Gen. Calyx tetraphyllus, regularis, foliolis apice recurvis. Stamina supra medium foliorum inserta, lisque recurvatis ex- serta. Squamule hypogynz quatuor, distincte v. connate. Ovarium dispermum. Stylus persistens. Stigma verticale, clavatum. Follicudus unilocularis, ligneo-coriaceus. Semina utrinque alata, marginata, nucleo centrali. Hasrrus. Arbores. Folia alterna, rard verticillata, simplicia in- tegerrima v. dentata, rarits pinnata v. ternata, in eodem ramo. Spice Mr. Brown, on the Proteacee of Jussieu. 191 Spice avillares, guandoque terminales, racemosa, floribus ge minis paribus unibracteatis. 1. R. montana, foliis alternis integerrimis ovatis complicatis bre- viter acuminatis reticulato-venosis racemo axillari breviori- bus, pedunculis cum calycibus APRA ferrugineo-tomen- tosis. Roupala montana. Aublet. Guian. 1. p. 83. ¢t. 32. Lam. LIllust. Gen. 1. p. 245. t. 55. Poiret. Encyc. Botan. 6. p. 316.* Rupala montana. Vahl. Symb. 3. p. 20. Willd. Sp. Pl. 1. p. 536. Gart. Carp, 3. p..212. t. 217. Has. In Americe Aiquinoctialis rah ien Gallica.. Aublet. (v. s. in Herb. Aubl., nunc in Mus. Banks.) *2, R. media, foliis alternis integerrimis “Ovatis planis acuminatis petiolum decurrentibus immerse venulosis racemo axillari brevioribus, pedicellis calycibusque pubescentibus, ovariis tomentosis. Has. In Americe. oeinecrali Guiana Gallet. Tul. V. Rohr. (v. 8 s. in Herb. Banks.) 3. R. natida, foliis alternis integerrimis ellipticis breviter acumi- natis planis racemum axillarem subequantibus, pedicellis cum calycibus ovariisque glabris. Ropala nitida. Rudge, Guian. 1. p. 26. t. 39. Has. In Americe xquinoctialis Guiand Gallicd. Jos. Martin. (v. s.in Herb. Banks. et Lambert.) *A. R. moluccana. foliis alternis integerrimis ellipticis planis venu- losis subreticulatis spicd longioribus, pedicellis calycibusque glabris. Has. In Insulis Moluccanis. D. Christoph. Smith. (v.s. in Herb. Banks.) 5. R. co- 192 Mr. Brown, on the Proteacee of Jussieu. 5. R. cochinchinensis, foliis alternis ovato-ellipticis breviter acu- minatis planis extra medium subserratis racemum axillarem subzquantibus, pedicellis cum calycibus ovariisque glabris. Helicia cochinchinensis. Lour. Cochin. 83.* fide speciminis ab auctore, in Herb. Banks. Has. Insylvis Cochinchine. Loureiro. l.c. (v.s. absque fructu.) Desc. Rami glaberrimi, teretes. Folia petiolata, glaberrima, uninervia, 2-24 uncias longa; quandoque integerrima. Ra- cemi solitarii. Calyx ante expansionem clavatus, clava ovali tubi dimidio breviore et dupld crassiore. * Anthere foliolis calycis spiraliter revolutis exserta. Ovarium brevissimeé pe- dicellatum. Stylus filiformis, strictus. Stigma clavatum, striatum, oblongum, equilaterale. Squamule quatuor hy- pogyne, breves, ad medium connate, persistentes (a Lou- reiro post lapsum calycis vise et uti calyculus quadrifidus descriptz). *6, R. serrata, foliis alternis laté ellipticis partm acuminatis ser- ratis racemo axillari longioribus: basi subattenuatd inte- gerrima ; paginis discoloribus, pedicellis cum calycibus ova- rlisque tomentosis. Has. In Insulis Moluccanis. D. Christoph. Smith. (vy. s. in Herb. Banks. et Roxb.) *7, R. dentata, foliis alternis ovato-lanceolatis complicatis den- tatis utrinque attenuatis racemo axillari partim brevioribus : acumine lineari, calycibus ovariisque tomentosis. Has. In Americe equinoctialis Guianaé Gallica. D. Alex. Anderson. (vy. s.in Herb. Banks.) 8. R. peruviana, foliis alternis ovatis serratis lanuginosis subtus _ ferrugineis racemo axillari brevioribus. Embothrium Mr. Brown, on the Proteaceae of Jussiew 193 Embothrium monospernum. Flor. Perwv. et Chil. 1. p. 63.* t. 98. Has. In Peruvie montibus frigidis ; prope Panao, vicum ad Portachuelo declivia. lor. Peruv. 1. c. 9. R. diversifolia, foliis alternis simplicibus pinnatisque venosis- simis subtus pubescentibus racemo axillari brevioribus, folli- culis acinaciformibus tomentosis. Embothrium pinnatum. Fl. Perwv. et Chil. 1. p.65*. t. 99. Has. In Peruvid; in Muna ruderatis et versuris. Flor. -Perws. 1. c. 10. R. sessilifolia, foliis quaternis subsessilibus cuneato-oblongis subacuminatis integerrimis, racemis terminalibus verticillatis umbellatisve. Roupala sessilifolia. Rich. in Act. Soc. Hist. Nat. 1. p. 106. Poiret. Encyc. Botan. 6. p.316.* Willd. Sp. Pl. 1. p. 537. Ropala hameliefolia. Rudge Guian. 1. p. 22.* ¢. 31. Has. In Americ equinoctialis Guiana Gallicd. (v.s. in Herb. Banks. et Lamb.) $1. KNIGHTIA. Cuar. Gen. Calyx tetraphyllus, regularis, foliolis revolutis. Stamina calyci extra medium inserta. Glandule hypogyne quatuor. Ovarium tetraspermum, sessile. Stigma verticale subclavatum. Folliculus coriaceus, styligerus, unilocularis. Semina apice alata. Hasirus. Arbor eacelsa. Folia sparsa, serrata. Racemi aail- lares, floribus geminatis, paribus unibracteatis. Folliculi ob- longi, tomentosi. Genus proximum Rhopalz, distinctum, Seminibus quaternis, apice solum alatis. VOL. x. 2c This 194 Mr. Brown, on the Proteacee of Jussieu. This genus, which was discovered by Sir Joseph Banks, is with his approbation, named in honour of his friend ''homas An- drew Knight, esq. the author of many valuable essays on Vegetable Physiology, published in the Philosophical Trans- actions. For the figure here given [am alsoindebted to theliberality of the illustrious President of the Royal Society, who has enabled me to complete the account of this remarkable plant, by per- mitting me to copy Dr.Solander’s description, which Iwas the more desirous to give, as it exhibits a specimen of the accuracy with which subjects of natural history were investigated in that celebrated voyage ; of whose important results it is to be lamented so little is known to foreign naturalists, though in this country they have ever been open to the public, and in the most advantageous manner. Kwicattia eacelsa. Tab. id. Has. In Nova Zelandia; prope Telaga et Opuragi. Josephus Banks baronetus. (v. s. folliculis vacuis sed impressionibus seminum insignitis.) Desc. Arbor sylvestris, magna, sepe 80 pedalis. Caudev stric- tissimus. Ramu erecti, teretes,glabri. Ramuli ultimi parim compressi, villosiusculi. Coma pyramidalis. Folia numerosa, densé sparsa, erecta, petiolata, lanceolato-oblonga, (v. ob- longa,) acutiuscula, profundé serrata, serraturis remotis ob- tusis, plana, coriacea, rigida: superneé glabra, nitida, levia, subtus venosa venulisque numerosissimis subreticulata, villis copiosissimis brevissiinis densissimis. cinerascentia: 4-5 un- cias longa. Petioli foliis sexies breviores. Racemi sessiles, axil- lares, simplices, multiflori, ovato-oblongi, foliis duplo brevi- ores, Seepe in ramis nudiscollocati, ubi ante decessum foliorum axillares fuerunt, unde primo intuitu videntur quasi lateri- bus ramorum erumpentes. nae ruberrima. Pedicelli holo- sericel, SE Tanne DAR? ply Mr. Brown, on the Proteacee of Jussieu. 195 sericei, ruberrimi, crassiusculi, patentissimi, semunciales, bi- partiti, unde biflori. Calyx tetraphyllus, foliola ante expan- sionem arcté in tubum connata, linearia, acutiuscula, ses- quiuncialia, coriacea, extis villosa holosericea, ruberrima, usque ad basin revoluta, eequalia, in medio pauld angustiora. Glandule quatuor, receptaculo inter basin foliolorum inserte, e lata basi acute, virescentes, apice rubicundze, semilineam longe. Filamenta quatuor, unguibus petalorum adnata, supra medium per spatium lineare libera, filiformia, plana, erecta, rubicunda. Anthere lineares, longitudine foliolorum, superne parim incurve, flave, ipso apice casso lanceolato. Ovarium conicum, subangulatum, villosiusculum, rubrum. Stylus filiformis, crassiusculus, strictus, persistens, longitu- dine filamentorum, rubicundus. Stigma cylindraceo-angu- latum, incrassatum, apice attenuatum, longitudine anthera- -Trum,virescens. Folliculus oblongo-lanceolatus, stylo persistent coronatus, coriaceus, crassus, durus, unilocularis, sesquiun- cialis v. pauld longior, extis sericeus. Hactenus SouaANDER. Oss. Pollen triangulare, angulis per lentem pellucentioribus, flavum. Ovarium tetraspermum, ovulis apice alatis. 32. EMBOTHRIUM. Embothrii species. Forst. Gen. 15. t. 8. litt. g. et seq. Cuar. Gen. Caly@ irregularis, hinc longitudinaliter fissus, inde quadrifidus. Stamina apicibus concavis calycis immersa. Glandula hypogyna unica, semiannularis. Ovarium pedi- cellatum, polyspermum. Stylus persistens. Stigma verti- eale, clavatum. Jolliculus oblongus. Semina apice alata. Tasrrvs. Frutices. v. Arbuscule glabre. Ramuli squamis per- sistentibus gemmarum quandoque obsiti. Folia sparsa, integer- rima. Racemi terminales, corymbosi, paribus pedicellorum, 2c2 unibrac- 196 Mr.. Brown, en the Proteacee of Jussieu. unibracteatis : Involucro communi nullo. Flores coccinei, gla- berrimi. 1. E. coccineum, foliis ovali-oblongis obtusis mueronulatis : pa- ginis discoloribus, ramulis squamatis. Embothrium coccineum. Forst. Gen. p. 16. t. 8. litt. g.—m. Linn. Suppl. 128. Forst. Com. Soe. Reg. Goett. 9. p. 24. Lam. Encyc. Botan. 2. p. 351*. Tllust. Gen. 1. p. 244. mn. 1284. t. 55. f.2. Willd. Sp. Pl. 1. p. 537. Has. In America Australi ad littora freti Magellanici, et in Terra del Fuego. (v. s. in Herb. Banks.) Oss. Pollenellipticum, levissime arcuatum, extremitate utraque pellucentiore; fovilla majusculd globosa. 2. E. lanceolatum, foliis lanceolato-linearibus, ramis esquamatis.7- Embothrium lanceolatum. Flor. Peruv. et Chil. 1. p. 62. t. 96. Has. In Chili collibus et montibus altis, inter Conceptionis urbem et Arauciarcem. Flor. Peruv. 1. c. 83, OREOCALLIS. Embothrii species. Flor. Peruv. et Chil. Cuar. Gen. Calyx irregularis, hine longitudinaliter fissus, inde quadridentatus. Stamina apicibus concavis calycis immersa. Glandula nulla hypogyna. Ovarium pedicellatum, polysper- mum. Stigma obliquum, orbiculato-dilatatum, concavius- eulum. Folliculus cylindraceus. Semina apice alata. In- volucrum (racemi) nullum. Hasitus. Frutex speciosus. Folia sparsa, integra, paginis disco- loribus. Racemus thyrsoideus, terminalis, paribus pedicellorum unibracteatis, Flores coccinei, glaberrimi. — Erxym. Ogos mons, et xaAos formosus. OREOCALLIS Mr. Brown, on the Proteacee of Jussieu. 197 Orrocattis grandifiora.> Embothrium grandiflorum. Lam. Encyc. Botan. 2. p. 354.* Tllust. Gen. 1. p. 244. n. 1283. Willd. Sp. Pl. 1. p. 538. Embothrium emarginatum. Flor. Peruv. et Chil. p. 62. t. 95. Has. In Peruvia montibus; in collibus frigidis Provinciz Tarme. Flor. Perwv. l. c. 34. TELOPEA. Embothrii species. Smith. Salisb. Cuan. Gen. Calyz irregularis, hinc longitudinaliter fissus, inde quadrifidus.. Stamina apicibus concavis calycis immersa. Glandula hypogyna unica, subannularis. Ovarium poly- spermum, pedicellatum. Stylus persisteas. Stigma obliquum, clavatum, convexum. Folliculus unilocularis, cylindraceus. Semina apice alata, ala hinc immarginataé inde vasculosd nervo obliqué recurrenti. Involucrum (racemi v. corymbi) imbricatum, deciduum. Hasituvs. Frutices ramis determinatis. Folia sparsa, dentata v. integra. Racemi terminales, corymbosi, paribus pedicellorum unibracteatis. Flores coccinei. Erym. rnderog qui e longinquo cernitur, quod de his frutici- bus, floribus coccineis speciosis valet. In this genus, as well as in Lomatia, and perhaps in all those with an indefinite number of seeds, an extremely thin black- brown crust is interposed between the ripe seeds, exactly corresponding with them in size and form, and which is pro- bably the remains of a fluid matter that had se sche them in the unripe state. The most important characters distinguishing this genus from Lomatia, seem to be the single semiannular or nearly cir- cular gland, the cohering calyx, and the vascular wing of ; the 198 Mr. Brown, on the Proteacee of Jussieu the seed ; for the Involucrum, which at first seems to afford so excellent a distinction, considerably loses its importance in Telopea truncata, in which it almost always includes the ru- diments of branches, as in’ Hakea. In natural affinity Te- lopea approaches much more nearly to Oreocallis, which differs principally in having no gland at the base of the foot- stalk of its ovarium, and in the want of an Involucrum: the wing of the seed seems (from the figure in the Flora Peruviana) to be in like manner vascular. Embothrium itself, which is also very near akin to Telopea, is distinguishable by its verti- cal stigma, oval pollen, and naked sgt. 1. T. speciosissima, foliis cuneato-obtongis inciso-dentatis venosis cum ramulis involucrisque glaberrimis, Embothrium speciosissimum. Smith New Holl.19. t.7. Sims Bot. Mag. 1128. Embothrium speciosum. Salish. Parad. 111. . Embothrium spathulatum. Cav. Ic. 4. p. 60. ¢. 388. Gert. Carp.8. p. 214. t. 218. Has. In Nove Hollandiz ord orientali; prope Port Jackson: locis saxosis, praesertim subumbrosis. (ubi v. v.) 2. T. truncata, foliis lanceolato-oblongis integerrimis passimque paucidentatis subtds eee pubescentulis, involucris extus tomentosis. Embothkrium truncatum. Labill. Nov. Holl. 1. p. 32, t. 44. Oss. Ala seminis in hdc apice semper rotundata in precedenti sepils truncata observavimus. Has. In Insule Diemen montibus australioribus. (ubi v. v.) 35. LOMATIA. Mr. Brown, on the Proteacee of Jussieu. 199 85. LOMATIA. Embothrii species. Smith. Cavan. Cuar. Gen. Calyz irregularis, foliolis distinctis secundis. Stamina apicibus concavis calycis immersa. Glandule hypogyne tres, secunde. Ovarium pedicellatum, polyspermum. Stylus persistens. Stigma obliquum, dilatatum, subrotundum, plani- usculum. Foldiculus ovali-oblongus. Semina apice alata ; ala marginata disco evasculoso. Hasirtus. Frutices. Folia alterna, in plerisque divisa, v. dentata, rarius integerrima, quandoque in eodem frutice varia. Racemi terminales, interdum aaillares, elongati, laxi, nunc abbreviati, corymbosi, paribus pedicellorum unibracteatis. Flores ochroleuci. Involucrum nullum. Seminis. nucleus farind sulphured con- spersus. Erym. dee, margo, ob seminum alam marginatam. 1. L. stlaifolia, foliis bipinnatifidis glaberrimis : pinnulis cuneato- _ linearibus lanceolatisve incisis acutis mucronatis reticulato- venosis, racemis glaberrimis elongatis divisis simplicibusve. Embothrium silaifolium. Smith New Holl. 23. t. 8. Willd. Sp. Pl. 1. p. 537. Embothrium herbaceum. Cav. Ic. 4. p. 60. t. 388. Has. In Nove Hollandiz ord orientali; prope Port Jackson : in campis et ericetis. (ubi vy. v.) 2. L. ténctoria, foliis pinnatifidis bipinnatifidisve (rard indivisis) glabris : pinnulis linearibus distichis uninervibus subaveniis obtusiusculis mucronulatis, racemis elongatis glabris indivisis. Embothrium tinctorium. Labdill. Nov. Holl. 1. p. 31. tab, 42. et 43. Haz. InInsule Diemen campis et collibus. (ubi v. v.) 8. L. fer- 200 Mr.. Brown, on the Proteacee of Jussieu. 3. L. ferruginea, foliis bipinnatifidis tomentosis : pinnulis ovatis lanceolatisve, racemo terminali foliis breviore. Embothrium ferrugineum. Cavan. Ic. 4. p. 59.* t.385. Has. In Americe Australis “ San Carlos de Chiloc in solo aqua marina quandoque inundato.” Cavan. |. ¢ *4. L. polymorpha, foliis lineari-lanceolatis integerrimis v. denta- tis pinnatifidisve subttds cum ramulis pedicellisque tomen- tosis, racemis terminalibus corymbosis,. calycibus pilosius- culis, pistillis glaberrimis. a. cinerea. Folia lineari-lanceolata integerrima, marginibus recurvis, subtus cinereo-tementosa ; folliculi semunciales. 6. rufa. Folia lanceolata v. lineari-lanceolata, incisa v. pin- natifida, passim integerrima, subtus ferrugineo-tomentosa ; folliculi subunciales. Embothrii tinctorii var. Labill. Nov. Holl. 1. c. Has. In Insule Diemen montibus australioribus. (ubi v. v.) *5, ilicifolia, foliis oblongo-ovatis acutis spinuloso-dentatis reti- culatis petiolisque glaberrimis, racemis terminalibus elon- gatis. : Has. In Nove Hollandiz ord australi; prope Port Phillip: in campis sterilibus lateribusque montium. (ubiv. v. flor. delaps.) *6. L. longifolia, foliis lineari-lanceolatis elongatis glabris remote serratis, racemis axillaribus, pedunculis calycibusque pilo- siusculis, pistillis glaberrimis. Embothrium myricoides. Gert. Carp. 3. p. 215. t. 218. ? Has. In Nove Hollandiz ord orientali ; prope Port Jackson: ad ripas saxosas fluviorum et rivulorum. (ubi v. v.) ; 7. L. den- Mr. Brown, on the Proteacee of Jussiet. 201 7. L. dentata, foliis ovalibus serrato-dentatis petiolisque glaber- rimis, racemis lateralibus abbreviatis, calycibus pilosis, ovario tomentoso,} Embothrium dentatum, Flor. Perue. & Chil. 1. p. 62. t. 94 a. Has. In nemoribus et sylvis regui Chilensis. Flor. Peruv. L.c. 8. L. obliqua, foliis ovatis serratis glabris, racemis axillaribus, pe- dicellis calycibusque pilosis, stigmate deciduo. Embothrium obliquum. lor. Peruv. § Chil. 1. p. 63. t. 97. Embothrium hirsutum. Lam. Encyc. Botan, 2. p. 355. Illust. Gen. 1. p, 245. n. 1286. Has. In Conceptionis Chili et Puchacay provinciarum monti- bus. Flor. Peruv. 1. c. Ozs. Ala seminis hujus et precedentis examinanda. 36. STENOCARPUS. Emporueit species. Forst. Gen. Car. Grn. Calyx irregularis, foliolis distinctis, secundis. Sta- mina apicibus concavis foliorum immersa. Glandula hypo- gyna unica, semiannularis. Ovarium pedicellatum, poly- spermum. Stylus deciduus. Stigma obliquum, orbiculato- dilatatum, planiusculum. Folliculus linearis. Semina basi alata ! Hasrrvs. Frutices gluberrimi. Folia alterna, integerrima. Um- bellz aaillares, v. terminales, pedunculate. Flores ochroleuci. EryM. orevos angustus, et zeros fructus. 1. S. Forsteri, foliis oblongis obtusis enervibus. Embothrium umbellatum. Forst. Gen. 16. ¢. 8. f. a.—f. Forst. Aust. n. 60. Linn Suppl. 228. Lam. Encyc. Botan. 2. p. 352. Tilust. Gen. 1, p. 245, n. 1285. t.55. f.1. Willd. Sp. Pl. p. 538. VOL. X. 2D Has. 202 Mr. Brown, on the Proteacce of Jussieu. Has. In Nova Caledonid. J. R. et G. Forster, (x. s. sine fructu in Herb. Banks. et Lambert.) *2. S. salignus, foliis elongato-lanceolatis basi trinervibus. Haz. In Nove Hollandiz or4 orientali ; prope Port Jackson - ad ripas saxosas fluviorum et rivulorum. (ubi v. v.) 37. BANKSIA. Linn. fil. Suppl. Cirar. Gen. Calyx quadripartitus (raré quadrifidus). Stamina apicibus concavis laciniarumimmersa. Squamule hypogyn quatuor. Ovarium biloculare, loculis monospermis. olli- culus bilocularis, ligneus : Dissepimento libero, bifido. Amen- tum flosculorum paribus tribracteatis ! Hasitus. Frutices v. Arbores, vm ercelse. Rami umbellati. Folia sparsa, rard verticillata, integra, serrata, v. pinnatifido- incisa, mm eodem stirpe quandoque varia; in plantd guvenili v. mutilata sa@pe serrata, v. incisa, dum in adultd et illesd integer- rma. Amenta solitaria, terminalia v. e dichotemiis, raré la- teralia, bracteolis nonnullis, brevibus, angustis subtensa,, cylin- dracea, in quibusdam abbreviata. Bractex flosculorum per- sistentes, majores. solitaria ; minores geminata, collaterales, inte- riores. Amenti fructifert rachis utplurimum merassata, et cum folliculorum basibus conferruminata. Semina nigra, apice cuneato-alata, nucleo in lacund respondente dissepomenti. lgnei semimmerso. *1. B. pulchella, foliis acerosis integerrimis muticis (unguiculari- bus), calycis unguibus lanatis: laminis glabris, stigmate de- presso-capitato.. Has. Mr. Browx, on the Proteaceae of Jussieu. 203 Han. In Nove Hollandiz ord australi; Lewins Land; in ericetis aridis prope littora. (ubiv.v.) * *9, 3. spherocarpa, foliis acerosis integerrimis mucronulatis (unci- alibus), calycis unguibus laminisque hirsutis, stigmate subu- lato, strobilis globosis, folliculis ventricosis apice compressi- usculis. Has. In Nove Hollandiz ord australi; Lewins Land: in ericetis depressis. (ubi v. v.) *3, B. nutans, foliis acerosis integerrimis mucronulatis, amentis nu- tantibus, calycibus sericeis, folliculis apice dilatatis depressis. Has. In Nove Hollandiz oré australi ; Lewins Land: in eri- cetis aridis prope littora. (ubi v. v-) 4. B. ericifolia, foliis acerosis emarginato-bidentatis (unguicula- ribus): marginibus integerrimis, amentis elongatis, calycibus sericeis, stigmate capitato. Banksia ericefolia. Linn. Suppl. 127. Lam. Encyc. Botan. 1. p. 369. — Iilust. Gen. 1. p. 242. n. 1276. Willd. Sp. PEA. p.536. And. Repos. 156. Cavan. Anal. de Hist. Nat. 1. p.221.* Ic. 6. p. 27.* t. 538. Pers. Synop. 1. p. 117. Banksia. White's Voy. tab. ad p. 225. fig. 1. strobilus. Has. In Nove Hollandie ord orientali; prope Port Jackson : in ericetis saxosis. (ubi v. v-) 5. B. spinulosa, foliis (adultis) acerosis (1—3-uncialibus) apice tri- dentatis dente intermedio longiore : marginibus spinuloso- dentatis integerrimisve, calycibus basi intus. imberbibus, stigmate subulato. Banksia spinulosa. Smith New Holl. 1. p. 13.* t.4. Willd. 2p2 Sp. \ 204 Mr. Brown, on the Proteacee of Jussieu. Sp. Pl.1. p. 586. Cavan. Anal: de Hist. Nat. 1. p. 219.* Ic. 6. p. 20.**t. 537. Pers. Synop. 1. p. 17. Has. In Nove Hollandiz ora orientali; prope Port Jackson: in ericetis aridis. (ubi v. v.) Oss. Frutex est et sepits humilis, nec Arbor decempedalis, &c. ut habet Cavanilles. 1. c. *6. B, collina, foliis linearibus spinuloso-dentatis denticulo ter- minali breviore subtts venosis, bracteis amenti obtusis apice tomentosis, calycibus basi intds imberbibus, caule fruticoso. Has. Jn Nove Hollandiz ora orientali; in collibus apricis prope littora. Hunter’s River. (ubi v. v.) *7, B. occidentalis, foliis linearibus extra medium spinuloso-den- tatis subtis aveniis, bracteis amenti apice glabris, calycibus marcescentibus: unguibus basi ints barbatis, folliculis ven- tricosis tomentosis : apice compressiusculo nudo, caule fruti- coso, ramulis glabris. Has. In Nove Hollandie ord australi; Lewins Land: in ericetis. (ubi v. v.) *8. B. littoralis, foliis elongato-linearibus spinuloso-dentatis basi attenuatis subtus aveniis, calycibus deciduis, folliculis com- pressis bracteisque strobili apice tomentosis, caule arboreo, ramulis tomentosis. Has. In Nove Hollandie ord australi ; Lewins he ad lit- tora arenosa sinuum. (ubi v. v. flor. delaps.) 9. B. marginata, foliis linearibus truncatis mucronulatis integer- rimis v. dentatis : venulis subtus inconspicuis, ramis ultimis hirsutis, Mr. Brown, on the Proteaceae of Jussieu. 205 hirsutis, bracteis omnibus amenti apice glabris: majoribus acutis, caule fruticoso. «. Fratex erectus, orgyalis. Amentum foliis plerumque integris longius. Banksia marginata. Cavan. Anal. de Hist. Nat. 1. p. 227. Ic. 6. p. 29.* t. 544. B. Frutex erectus, orgyalis. Folia spinuloso-dentata, planius- cula, amento quandoque longiora. Banksia microstachya.. Cavan. Anal. de Hist. Nat. 1. p. 224. Ic. 6. p. 28.* t. 541. exclus. syn. Linnei. y. Frutex humilis, diffusus.. Folia spinuloso-dentata, planius- cula, cuneata, amento longiora. Has. In Nove Hollandiz ora orientali; prope Port Jackson : in ericetis. (ubi v. v.) *10. B. depressa, foliis elongato-cuneatis truncatis mucronulatis spinuloso-dentatis : subtds obsoleté costatis venulis incon- spicuis, bracteis omnibus amenti (folia vix equantis) tomen- tosis obtusis, caule prostrato, ramulis ultimis hirsutis. Has. In Insule Diemen plagis australioribus; in saxosis ad -.radices montium. (ubi v. v.) *11. B. patula, foliis cuneato-linearibus truncatis mucronulatis integris vy. paucidentatis (uncialibus) subtus reticulato-veno- sis, bracteis amenti apice tomentosis obtusis, calycis laminis carina glabra, caule diffuso, ramulis ultimis tomentosis. Has. In Nove Hollandie ord australi; Flinders’ Land: in- ter frutices, in sterilibus elevatioribus. (ubi v. v.). *12. B. australis, foliis linearibus truncatis mucronulatis margine: recurvis integris subtis. reticulato-venosis, ramulis ultimis. tomen- 206 Mr. Brown, on the Proteacee of Jussieu. tomentosis, bracteis amenti obtusis subequalibus apice tomentosis, calycis laminis carind obsoletissima sericea, caule arboreo. Has. In Insulé Diemen, ubique in campis et prope littora, necnon in ora australi Nove Hollandie prope Port Phillip. (ubi v. v.) > *13, B. insularis, foliis lineari- v. cuneato-oblongis subrotundatis cum mucronulo sparsis verticillatisve subtus reticulato- venosis, bracteis amenti obtusis extrorsim tomentosis, folli- culis compressis apice glabris. Has. In Insulis Freti Bass, et in Insulé Diemen, prope littora. (ubi v. v.) 14. B. integrifolia, foliis verticillatis oblongo-lanceolatis integris mucronulatis: subtus venulis reticulantibus conspicuis, folli- culis tomentosis, caule arboreo. ; a. Arbor parva v, mediocris. Folia oblanceolata, spits agate, basi attenuata. Bractee geminate obtuse, solitariis acutis dimidio minores. Banksia integrifolia. Linn. Suppl. 127. Lam. Encyc. Botan. 1. p- 369. Illust. Gen. 1. p. 242. n. 1275. Willd. Sp. Pl. 1. p. 535. Cavan. Anal. de Hist. Nat. 1. p. 229. Ic. 6. p. 30. tab. 546. Banksia spicata. Gert. Sem. 1. p. 221. t. 48. Banksia olewfolia. Cavan. Anal. de Hist. Nat. 1. p. 228. Ic. 6. p. 30. t. 545. Banksia glauca. Cavan. Anal. de Hist. Nat. 1. p. 230. Ic. 6. Dp. 3LF f @. Arbor magna. Folia lanceolato-oblonga, spits obtusius- cula, basi acuta. Bracteze geminate obtuse, solitariis acu- tiusculis haud dimidio minores. Has. Mr. Brown, on the Proteaceae of Jussieu. 207 Has. In Nove Hollandiz ord orientali ; prope Port Jackson: juxta littora marina. 6.In ora australi, prope Port Phillip. (v. vi) Oxs. Species polymorpha, cui nimis affines sunt B. insularis et compar. 15. B. compar, foliis sparsis lingulato-oblongis emarginatis nruticis dentatis integrisve : subtus reticulato-venosis niveis, ranulis bracteisque tomentosis, calycibus sericeis, caule arboreo. Has. In Nove Hollandiz ora orientali; prope Keppel Bay : juxta littora.. (ubi v. v. absque fructu.) Oss. Precedenti proxima ; an distincta species ? 16. B. verticillata, foliis verticitlatis lingulate-oblongis obtusis muticis: subtis aventis niveis, bracteis amenti tomentosis obtusis : involucrantibus hirsutis, caule arboreo. Has. In Nove Hollandiz ord australi; Lewins. Land: prope littora. (ubi v. v.) 17. B. coccinea, foliis alternis cuneato-obovatis oblongisve den- tatis truncatis costatis reticulato-venosis basi transversis, bracteis subulatis calycibusque lanatis, stigmate pyramidali. Has. In Nove Hollandiz or& australi; Lewins Land: in campis prope littora. (ubi v. v.). *18. B. paludosa, foliis subverticiHatis cuneato-oblongis subtrun- catis basi attenuatis extra medium dentato-serratis, margine subrecurvis : subtus costatis reticulato-venosis, petiolis ra- mulisque glabris, calycibus sericeis, caule fruticoso. Has. In Nove Hollandiz ord orientali; prope Port Jackson : in paludosis. (ubi v. v.) 19. B. ob- 208 Mr. Brown, on the Proteacee of Jussieu. 19. B. oblongifolia, foliis sparsis angusto-oblongis truncatis den- tato-serratis basi acutiusculis : subtis costatis reticulato-ve- nosis, petiolis ramulisque tomentosis, bracteis majoribus amenti acuminatis, calycibus sericeis, caule fruticoso. Banksia oblongifolia. Cavan. Anal. de Hist. Nat. 1. p. 99.5.* Ic..6. p. 28.* #. 542. | Banksia asplenifolia. Salisb. Prod. 51 ? Banksia salicifolia. Cavan. Anal. de Hist. Nat.1. p. 231. Ic. 6. p. 31.*? folia enim in hac specie quandoque integra. Has. In Nove Hollandiz ora orientali ; prope Port Jackson : in ericetis. (ubi v. v-) 20. B. latifolia, foliis obovato-oblongis spinuloso-serratis basi acutis : subtis costatis reticulatis cinereo-tomentosis, calycis unguibus sericeis : laminis glabris, caule fruticoso. Banksia robur. Cavan. Anal. de Hist. Nat. 1. p. 226.* Ic. 6. p- 29.* t. 543. Has. In Nove Hollandiz ord orientali; prope Port Jackson: in paludosis. (ubi v. v.) . Oss. Hujus speciei nomen Cavanillesii mutare coactus sum, quoniam nunquam arborescit sed frutex humilis est. 21. -B. marcescens, foliis cunciformibus planis sparsis truncatis extra medium dentato-serratis: basi acutiusculd, ramis to-— mentosis, calycibus persistentibus folliculisque glabris. Banksia premorsa. dnd. Repos. 258. Hav. In Nove Hollandiz ord australi; Lewins Land: prope littora. (ubi v. v.) . Oxs. Cim folia minimé premorsa falsum nomen mutare non hesitavi.. *29, B, at- Mr. Brown, on the Proteaceae of Jussieu. 209 *99. B. atéenuata, foliis elongato-linearibus truncatis basi attenu- atis extra medium serratis: subtds costatis reticulatis areolis tomentosis, bracteis apice hirsutis, cal ycibus glabris, folliculis tomentosis. Has. In Nove Hollandie ord australi; Lewins Land : prope littora. (ubi v. v.) #93, B. elatior, foliis elongato-linearibus subtruncatis serratis subtus reticulatis : adultis glabriusculis, bracteis imberbibus calycibusque tomentosis, stylo glaberrimo, stigmate ovali- clavato, caule arboreo. Han. In Nove Hollandiz or orientali; prope Sandy Cape: prope littora. (ubi v. v.) 24. B, serrata, foliis lato-linearibus elongatis truncatis serratis : subtis reticulatis glabriusculis: basi attenuata, stylo imo pulvereo-pubescenti, stigmate cylindraceo sulcato: basi oblique incrassata, caule arboreo. Banksia serrata. Linn. Suppl. 126.* Lam. Encyc. Botan. 1. p. 369. SIllust. Gen. 1. p. 242. t. 5A. f.1. White's Voy. 222. cum tab. 2 prioribus. Willd. Sp. Pl. 1. p. 535. And. Repos. 82. Banksia conchifera. Gert. Sem. 1. p. 221. t. 48. f. 1. Banksia serrata. Cavan. Anal. de Hist. Nat. 1. p. 222. Ic. 6. p- 27. t. 540. (forsan ad sequentem pertinet.) Banksia dentata. Wend. Hort. Herenh. tab. 8.? vel ad sequen tem pertinens. ; Has. In Nove Hollandie orA orientali; prope Port Jackson: in campis prope littora. (v. v-) *25. B. emula, foliis lato-linearibus elongatis truneatis profunde serratis: subtus reticulatis glabriusculis, calycibus sericeis, VOL. X. 25 stigmate 210 Mr. Brown, on the Proteaceae of Jussieu. stigmate capitato exsulco nitido apice (quadrangulo) styfi duplo crassiore, caule fruticoso. Banksia serratifolia. Salish. Prod. 51. ? Banksia serrata. White's Voy. 222. tab. tertia ? Has. In Nove Hollandiz ora orientali ; prope Port Jackson: in campis arenosis ericetisque. (ubi v. v.) Oss. B. serrata Cavan. et dentata Wend. supra ad B. serratam citate, forte ad hanc, valdé aftinem, pertinent. 26. B. dentata, foliis cuneato-oblongis truncatis sinuato-dentatis undulatis basi acutis: subtus costatis venulosis niveis, caly- cibus sericeis, folliculis tomentosis.. Banksia dentata. Linn. Suppl. 127. Willd. Sp. Pl. 1. p..536. Has. In Nove Hollandiz ord orientali, prope Endeavour River; et in septentrionali, Arnhems Land: prope littora. (ubi v. v.) *27. B. quercifolia, foliis oblongo-cuneatis subtruncatis glabris serrato-incisis : incisuris mucronatis, calycis laminis aristatis ! folliculis glabriusculis. Has. In Nove Hollandiz or& australi; Lewins Land: in campis prope littora. (ubi v. v.) *28. B. speciosa, foliis linearibus pinnatifidis : lobis triangulari- semiovatis mucronatis subtus niveis obsoleté nervosis, calycis laminis lanatis, stylo pubescenti, folliculis tomentosis. Has. In Nove Hollandiz ord australi; Lewins Land: in saxosis prope littora. (ubi v. v.) 29. B. grandis, foliis pinnatifidis: lobis triangulari-ovatis acutis planis subtis nervosis glabriusculis, calycis laminis follicu- lisque glabris. Banksia Mr. Brown, on the Proteacee of Jussieu. 211 Banksia grandis. Willd. Sp. Pl.1. p.535. Has. In Nove Hollandie ord australi; Lewins Land : in col- libus saxosis. (ubi v. v.) 30. B. repens, foliis pinnatifidis : Jobis sinuatis v. dentatis, caule prostrato. Banksia repens. Labill.Voy.1. p.412. t.23. Nov. Holl. 2. p.118. Haz. In Nove Hollandie ora australi; Lewins Land: in campis collibusque saxosis. (ubi v. v.) #31, B. ilicifolia, foliis cuneatis inciso-serratis subtis glabrius- culis, amentis brevissimis, calycis unguibus diu coherentibus stylum zquantibus : laminis citids dehiscentibus ! Has. In Nove Hollandie ord australi; Lewins Land: in ~ .campis collibusque prope littora. (ubi v. v.) Ons. Species tam singularjs ut fere proprii generis, transitum ad Dryandras facilem reddit, 38. DRYANDRA. Cuan. Gen. Calyx quadripartitus v. quadrifidus. Stamina apici- bus concavis laciniarum immersa. Squamule hypogyne quatuor. Ovarium biloculare, loculis monospermis. Folli- culus bilocularis, ligneus: Dissepimento libero, bifido. Recepta- culum commune planum, floribus indeterminatim confertis, paleis angustis, rard nullis. Involucrum commune imbricatum. Haxitus. Frutices plerumque humiles.. Rami dum adsint sparst vel umbellati. Folia sparsa, pinnatifida v. incisa, plante jucve- nilis conformia. Involucra solitaria, terminalia, rard late- ralia sessilia, foliis confertis interioribus quandoque nanis obval- lata, hemispherica, bracteis adpressis, in quibusdam apice appen- diculatis, 282 Oss. 212 Mr. Brown, on the Proteacee of Jussieu. Oss. Dryandra of Thunberg, first published in Flora Japonica, being not generically different from Aleurites, which was previously established by Forster, I have peculiar satisfaction in giving the name of my respected friend, Mr. Dryanper, to a genus so nearly related to Banksia, from which indeed it differs chiefly in Inflorescence, but in that respect so widely as to be at once distinguishable : there is also something in the habit, especially in the leaves of the greater number of spe-- cies, by which, independent of the parts of fructification, the genus is pretty certainly indicated ; and it is worthy. of no-. tice, that, while Banksia is generally spread over all the coasts of New Holland and of Van Diemen’s-Island,. Dry- andra has hitherto been observed only: on: that part of the south coast called Lewins Land, where, however, its species are nearly as numerous and abundant as those of. Banksia itself. *1. D. floribunda, foliis cuneiformibus inciso-serratis, involucri bracteis exterioribus- glabriusculis, calycis laminis glabris, stigmate subclavato obtuso. Has. In Nove Hollandiz ord australi; Lewins Land: in col- libus saxosis. (v. v.) Variat receptaculo epaleato.. *2, D. cuneata, foliis cuneiformibus sinuato-dentatis spinosis pe- tiolatis, involucri bracteis omnibus sericeis, calycis laminis: barbatis, stigmate subulato-filiformi acuto.. #. Folia vix sesquiunciam longa, dentibus. terminalibus sub- zequalibus. B. Folia biuncialia, apicis dilatati denticulo medio breviore sinubus latioribus. Forsan species distincta.. Habe. Mr. Brown, on the Proteacee of Jussieu. 218 . Han.:. In Nove Hollandize or4 australi; Lewins Land: in col- libus saxosis. (ubi v. v.) *3. D. armata, foliis pinnatifidis ; lobis triangularibus planis di- varicatis rectis spinoso-mucronatis: terminali proxiiis lon- giore; subtus reticulatis venulis nudis, ramis calycisque la- minis glabris, stylo basi pubescenti, stigmate subulato sul- cato. Ph. In Nove Hollandiz; ord australi; Lewins Land: collibus saxosis.. (ubi-v.-v.): *4.. D. falcata, foliis: pinnatifidis:: Jobis subulato-triangularibus - divaricatis faleato-recuryis spinoso-mucronatis: terminali proximis- breviore ; subtus reticulatis venulis nudis, ramis pubescentibus; laminis calycis styloque longitudinaliter gla- bris, stigmate clavato exsulco. Has. In Nove Hollandie ord australi ; Lewins Land: in collibus saxosis. (ubi v. v.) *5. D. formosa, foliis elongato-linearibus pinnatifidis: lobis sealeno-triangularibus muticis planis subtis niveis, involu- cris tomentosis : foliolis interioribus lineari-oblongis, recep- taculo paleaceo. Tab. ILI. eet In Nove Hollandiz ora australi;. Lewins Land: in ste- rilibus.prope littora. (ubi v. v.) 6. D. mucronulata, foliis elongato-linearibus pinnatifidis : lobis isoscelo-triangularibus mucronulatis planis subtus niveis, in- volucris tomentosis : foliolis interioribus lineartbus mucrona- tis, receptaculo paleaceo, caule.subsimplici. Has. 214 Mr. Brown, on the Proteacee of Jussieu. Has. In Nove Hollandiz ord australi; Lewins Land : in de- pressis saxosis. (ubi v. v.) *7,. D. plumosa, foliis elongato-linearibus pinnatifidis : lobis isos- celo-triangularibus mucronulatis margine subrecurvis subtis niveis, involucri foliolis interioribus plumoso-aristatis, recep- taculo epaleato. Has. In Nove Hollandiz ora australi; Lewins Land; in la- teribus saxosis collium. (ubi v. v.) *8. D. obtusa, foliis linearibus pinnatifidis caule decumbenti to- mentoso longioribus: lobis triangularibus obtusis subtus niveis margine incrassato-recurvis, involucri bracteis exte- rioribus ovatis, interioribus lineari-oblongis. Has. In Nove Hollandie ord australi; Lewins Land: in apricis prope littora. (ubi v. v.) 9. D. nivea, foliis linearibus pinnatifidis caulem glabrum sub- zquantibus: lobis scaleno-triangularibus acutis mucronu- latis subtis niveis margine recurvis, involucri-bracteis lineari- lanceolatis glabris ciliatis, calyee quadrifido, unguibus la- minisque hirsutis. «. Folia lobis adscendentibus, mucronatis, subtts venosis. Stigma stylo pardm crassius. Banksia nivea. Labill. Voy. 1. p. 413. t. 24. Nov. Holl. 2. p- 118. @. Folia lobis divaricatis, uninervibus, subaveniis. Stigma stylo vix crassius. Has. In Nove Hollandie ord australi; Lewins Land: in sax- osis prope littora. (ubi v. v.) . *10. D. lon- Mr. Brown, on the Proteacee of Jussieu, 215 *10. D. longifolia, foliis linearibus pinnatifidis longissimis acutis subtis cinereo-tomentosis : basi attenuata integerrimé ; lobis triangularibus adscendentibus decurrentibus margine re- curvis, involucri bracteis elongato-linearibus margine barba- tis extis glabris, calycis unguibus basi lanatis supra pube- scentibus : laminis pilosiusculis, caule tomentoso. Has. In Nove Hollandi ord. australi ; Lewins Land : in col- libus saxosis. (ubi-v. v.) *11. D. tenutfolia, foliis elongato-linearibus pinnatifidis subtrun- catis subtis niveis: basi attenuata integerrima petioliformi ; lobis triangularibus decurrentibus divaricatis margine recur- vis, involucri bracteis tomentosis: exterioribus ovato-lan- ceolatis, calycis unguibus basi lanatis supra cauleque glabris, Has. In Nove Hollandie ord australi; Lewins Land: in ericetis. (ubi vy. v.) *12. D. pteridifolia, foliis pinnatifidis caule tomentoso longiori- bus: lobis linearibus acutis mucronatis margine revolutis basi dilatatis, involucri bracteis tomentosis ovatis. Has. In Nove Hollandiz ora australi; Lewins Land: ad la- tera saxosa collium.. (ubi v. v.) *13. D.blechnifolia, foliis pinnatifidis caule tomentoso longioribus: lobis linearibus obtusis mucronulatis trinervibus margine re- curvis basi simplici. Has. In Nove Hollandiz ord australi; Lewins Land: prope King George’s Sound. D. Archibald Menzies. (v. s. absque fructificatione.) Oss. Ad hoc genus retuli, ob summam oy Seniehionts cum Dryan- dra picridifalid, cujus vix varietas. To . 216 Mr, Brown, on the Proteacee of Jussieu. To RENDER this essay as complete as I am able, I proceed to notice such plants, as either belong or have been referred to Pro- teacez, but from my imperfect acquaintance with which, or from the unsatisfactory accounts hitherto given of them, could not with certainty be referred to any of the genera described, or, if referable to any of them, I could not with confidence propose as distinct species; and shall conclude with the addition of a few synonyms to the species described, from Ray’s Historia Planta- rum, which had escaped me when the paper was first read to the Society. LrvcaDENDRON linifolium, foliis lineari-spathulatis aversis basi attenuatis ramisque glabris, capitulo masculo sessili foliis circumvallantibus longiore, calycis tubo barbato: laminis _stylisque imberbibus. Protea linifolia. Jacq. Hort. Schanb. 1. p. 11. ¢. 26. Oss. There can be no doubt of the genus of this plant, or of the individual figured by Jacquin beinga male. From the same figure, by which alone I am acquainted with it, it seems to be very nearly related to Leucadendron tortum, from which it differs in having the male heads sessile, and in the lamine of the calyx being quite smooth. LrvcapEenpron fusciflorum, foliis lineari-lanceolatis glabris junioribus rectis basi attenuatis, capitulo femineo foliis cir- cumvallantibus breviore, calycis laminis plumoso-barbatis : tubo pilosiusculo. Protea fusciflora. Jacg. Hort. Schanb. 1. p. 11. t. 27. , This Mr. Brown, on the Proteaceae of Jussiet, 217 This also is known to me only from Jacquin’s figure, from which it is unquestionably a Leucadendron, and a female plant ; it can hardly however be supposed the female of the preceding species ; and though I have here constructed a specific character for it, 1 think it is not improbably a variety of Leucadendron angustatum. LEUCADENDRON. Protea linearis. Houtt. Nat. Hist. par. 2. vol. 4. p. 116. ¢. 19. f. 2. ed. Germ. vol. 3. p. 84, t. 19. This is undoubtedly a Leucadendron, and probably a female plant; but from the figure alone its species cannot be de- termined. LEUCADENDRON. Protea stellaris. Sims Bot. Mag. 881. Seems to be a male plant, and apparently different from any thing I have seen. From the form of the leaves and the length of those surrounding the capitulum, I am inclined to consider it as the male of Jacquin’s Protea fusciflora already noticed. LEUCADENDRON. Conocarpodendron ; folio tenuissimo, angustissimo, saligno ; cono calyculato. Boerh. Lugd. Bat. 2. p. 203. c. tab. This is probably a male plant, notwithstanding the figure of a ripe cone is given at the bottom of the plate; the separate fruits of some of Boerhaave’s figures belonging decidedly to very different species. It may be the male of Leucadendron adscendens. LEUCADENDRON * Protea odorata. Thunb. Prod. Append. 187. VOL. X. 2 There 218 Mr. Brown, on the Proteaceae of Jussiew. There is no means of determining the genus of this plant, but it is rather more probably a Leucadendron than belonging to any other. LeucaDENDRON?? Conocarpodendron ; acaulon ; folio rigido, nervoso, oblongo,,. latiori ; cono fusco; semine oblongo, in medid quasi exca- vato. Boerh. Lugd. Bat. 2. p.201. c. tab. I know not what to make of this. If the strobilus and nuces. at the bottom of the plate really belong to it, it must be re- ferred to Leucadendron, and will stand near L. retusum or L. plumosum ; but there are some circumstances both in the figure and description which render this very doubtful. Thunberg refers it to his P. strobilina, but the descriptions by no means agree.. LEUCADENDRON ? Scolymocephalus Olez folio. Sherard. in Raj. Hist. 5. Dendr. Be 10. This, according to Boerhaave, is his Conocarpodendron, &c. 2. p. 197. c. tab. which I have considered as the female of Leucadendron squarrosum.. LEUCADENDRON ?? Protea glabra. Thunb. Diss. n. 52. From the very short and unsatisfactory description of Thun- berg, the genus of this plant cannot be determined, or even with much probability guessed at: _ Isopocon. Protea divaricata. And. Repos. 465. Can this be a variety of Isopogon anemonifolius ? The yellow flowers Mr. Bnown, on the Proteaceae of Jussict. 219 flowers satisfy me that it is not a species of Serruria, and prevent me at the same time from referring it to Isopogon anethifolius, whose leaves are not unlike, but whose flowers are of a very different colour. Prorea. Protea venosa. Lam. Illust. Gen. 1. p. 234 mn. 1212. Poiret. Encyc. Botan. 5. p. 640. Said by Poiret to resemble in most respects Protea longiflora ; it must therefere be a genuine Protea. Prorea. Scolymodendros Africanus ex Monte Tabulari. Pluk. Mant. 168, #442. f. 4. _ "This is manifestly a Protea, which it appears Plukenet had seen only in the possession of Woodward. The head, especially in the form of the bractez, bears a great resemblance to that of Protea cynaroides; but the leaves are so very different, that, unless we suppose they were drawn from memory and disproportionately reduced, it cannot be referred to this species. It is probably however one of the more common kinds, and I know not what else to suppose it may be, except Protea grandiflora. The figure itself has never, so far as I know, been noticed by any author. LreucosPERMUM. Scolymocephalus Africanus, foliis in summitate profundids _crenatis, intercreniis majoribus florum staminulis longis re- curvis. Raj. Hist. 3. Dendr. p. 10. This is probably a Leucospermum, and perhaps L. edlipticum. 2F2 MIMETEs ? 220 Mr. Brown, on the Proteaceae of Jussiew. Mrertes ? ; Protea dichotoma. Lam. Illust. Gen. 1. p. 235. n. 1219. Poiret. Encyc. Botan. 5. p. 643. Probably a spurious Mimetes. Srrrvria Bergii, capitulis simplicibus solitariis subpeduncu- latis, bracteis cuneiformibus truncatis cum acumine villosis : inferioribus glabris, calycibus curvatis sericeis, stigmate tur- binato-capitato, ramulis foliisque glabris. Leucadendron spherocephalum. Berg. cap. 26.* This I have no hesitation in referring to Serruria; and from the description of the accurate Bergius I am disposed to think it distinct from any I am acquainted with. It seems most nearly related to Serruria acrocarpa, differing chiefly in the smoothness of its branches, and in having terminal heads. SERRURIA- Protea spherocephala. Howtt. Nat. Hist. par..2. vol.A.. p. 99- t.19. f.1. ed. Germ. vol. 3. p. 72. t-19. Unquestionably a Serruria, and probably referable either to S. hirsuta or pedunculata. ; SERRURIA. Protea villosa. Thunb. Prod. Append. 186. A Serruria whose characters cannot be made out from the specific difference given by Thunberg. SERRURIA. Protea triternata. And. Repos. 337. This may be intended for S. congesta, but I cannot with con- fidence refer to it as such. SERRURIZ. Mr. Brown, on the Proteaceae of Jussieu. 228 SERRURIZ. Protea abrotanifolia minor. And. Repos. 536. Protea abrotanifolia hirta. And. Repos. 522. Protea abrotanifolia odorata. - And. Repos. 545. These are manifestly Serruriz, but I do not venture to refer them to any of the species I have described; nor are there sufficient materials from which they may be characterized as distinct species, Niventa. Protea concava. Lam. Illust. Gen. 1. p. 234. n.1217. Poiret. Encyc. Botan. 5. p. 642. A species of Nivenia, and perhaps one of those described. Niventa? Protea candicans. Thunb. Prod. Append. 186. Probably a Nivenia, and perhaps not different from N. hae lissima: it may however be a species of Serruria, in which case it is probably S. candicans. Protea prostrata. Thunb. Prod. 27. I know not to what genus this may belong; but from the species near which Thunberg has placed it, it may be supposed to be either a Protea or a Leucadendron : if the latter, it is pro- bably not very different from L. retusum. Hakea. Conchium drupaceum. Gert. Carp. 5. p. 217. t 219. I cannot refer this fruit to any of the species I have described. Emsoturium chaparro. Humb. Equin. Bot. Of this I know nothing but the name, which occurs in Hum- boldt’s Chart of Aiquinoctial Botany, and is placed there at the height of about 1600 feet. Emso- 299 Mr. Brown, on the Proteaceae of Jussieu. Emcorurtvm strobilinum. Labill. Nov. Holl. 2. p: 116. \t. 265. The seeds of this remarkable plant, which I am acquainted with only from Labillardiere’s figure and description, being unknown, and the internal structure of its ovarium not hav- ing been examined, its genus cannot be determined. Its re- gular and deeply divided calyx, the four glands at the base of the ovarium, and its vertical equilateral stigma, point out its near affinity to Knightia, from which it differs in the style being deciduous, and perhaps also in the number and form of its seeds. If these are but two in number, it would be still more nearly related to Orites; but some- thing in its whole appearance, and especially its un- ‘commonly large bractez, indicates its being a distinct genus. According to Labillardiere, it is a native both of oe Caledonia and the south-west coast of New Holland: but asI am ac- quainted with no plant of the order, which has so wide a range as this, and as it may be presumed the specimens from New Holland were very imperfect, otherwise so remarkable a plant would surely have found a place in the body of his work, I may be permitted to question the accuracy of the statement. I confess however that I know no plant of Lewin’s Land with which this could be confounded. Rovpatra pinnata. Lam. Illust. Gen. 1. p. 243. n. 1282. Porret, Encyc. Botan. 6. p. 317. Rudg. Pl. Guian. 25. t. 38. There can be little doubt of this plant constituting a distinct genus ; but its fruit being entirely unknown, it is better to place it among those which require a further examination. It was referred to Rhopala at a time when that genus was not at all understood. In its compound leaves, its irregular calyx, Mr. Brown, on the Proteaceae of Jussiew. 223 calyx, and even in some degree in the glands subtending the ovarium, it seems to approach more nearly to Gevuina ; and I am therefore inclined to think its fruit will be found to be a drupa, and not a folliculus as that of Rhopala. The whole plant however is so remarkable, that I here add a description taken from an excellent specimen, in Mr. Lambert’s Herba- rium, collected by the unfortunate Martin in Guiana, where it seems to have been first found by Richard. Frutex ? v. Arbor. Ramuli teretes, tomento minuto cineras- centes. Jolia alterna, abrupté pinnata, 3-4-juga. Foliola opposita, petiolata, late ovata, obtusa quandoque acutius- cula, integerrima, glaberrima, super nitida, subter fere opaca, venulis anastomozantibus partim emersis reticulata : dum 33 uncias longa 2 uncias lata. Petioli partiales semun- ciales, semiteretes, cum rachi teretiuscula articulati. Spica terminalis, pedunculata, erecta, folio brevior, pedunculo: longior, racemosa: Pedunculo rachique teretibus, pube brevissim4 cinereo-ferrugineis (in sicco). Pedicelli geminati, teretes, calyce breviores. Calya tetraphyllus. Folcola ante expansionem in tubum curvatum cylindraceum clausum utringue ampliatum coberentia, mox ad basin distincta, decidua, linearia, extis pube tenuissimd arcté appressa (in sicco) cinereo-ferrugined ; intus glabra : Ungutbus linearibus, basi dilatatis: Laminis ovatis, acutis, concavis. Stamina 4. Filamenta brevissima, basi laminarum imposita. Antherarum Jobi (connectivo) adnati, distincti, basi parim divergentes, longitudinaliter dehiscentes. Pollen flavum. Ovariwm brevé pedicellatum, parvum, uniloculare, dispermum, ovulis col- lateralibus: Pedicello basi cincto Squamé lata, glabra, adnata,, (in sicco) corrugatd, posticé subdeficiente, intersticid an- gustissima. Stylus cylindraceus, crassiusculus, glaber, lon- gitudine unguium calycis. Stigma obliquum, convexum, .stylo crassius, papilla centrali. Oxzs. 994 Mr. Brown, on the Proteacee of Jussieu. Ons. Singularis, Foliis vert compositis, petiolellis cum*rachi articulatis ; et Squama hypogyna pedicello ovarii adnata, nec ipso receptaculo connexa. Onitina acicularis. Append. Flor. Nov. Holl. ined. This is a perfectly smooth erect shrub ; with alternate Poe cal leaves, furrowed on the upper surface and terminated by a pungent mucro. I observed it only on the summit of the Table Mountain, at the southern extremity of Van Diemen’s Island. The perfect flowers I have not seen, but have exa- mined the ovarium so soon after foecundation, that I have no doubt of its containing originally only two ovula ; and as its base is surrounded by four glands, the calyx is probably regular. Hence its near affinity to Orites, with which it also agrees in inflorescence and apparently in stigma. The fruit is a smooth compressed coriaceous follicule, containing two seeds, which are winged at both ends ; on which account I have not absolutely referred it to Orites, but, until its flowers are discovered, have given it a temporary name, er a its affinity to that genus. Banxsta musculiformis. Gert. Sem. 1. p. 221. Lam. LIIllust. Gen. 1. p. 242. n. 1280. Fructus musculiformis. Rumph. Amb. 2. p. 184. t. 60. Gertner has taken up this plant entirely from Rumpf’s figure, and referred it to Banksia on account of its fruit contain- ing according to that author two winged seeds. But from Rumpf’s description, it appears that the whole plant is lactescent ; hence it probably does not belong to this family, but rather to Apocinie, as Burmannus has already con- jectured. Cyztinpria. Lour. Cochin. ed. Willd. 1. p. 86. Both Mr. Brown, on the Proteaceae of Jussieu. 225 Both Willdenow and Ventenat have considered ‘this genus- as belonging to Proteacez, with whose structure indeed the de- scription of Loureiro in most respects well agrees.. Mr. Konig, however, (Ann. of Bot. 1. p. 392.)-assures us, on the authority of original specimens, that it is scarcely different from Olea, though Loureiro: has: characterized it as having four bilocular: anthere, included in the concave apices of tke segments of the corolla; two circumstances altogether incompatible with Oleine, and which render it- not impro- bable that the specimen. sent-to. Sir Joseph Banks by the author was very different from that which he described. Leucospermum Conocarpum. Scolymocephalus Africanus, latifolius, Januginosus, foliis in summitate crenatis, coma sericea.’ Raj. Hist. 3. Dend. p. 9. Mimetes Hartogii. Scolymocephalos Africanus lanuginosus humilis, foliis in summo tridentatis, flore dilute purpureo, carinulé albulé Oldenlandii. Raj. Hist. 3. Dend. p.10. fide characteris et descriptionis. Mimeres cucullatus. (Raj. Hist. 3. Dend. p.10. n. 10.) Mimetes hirtus. Scolymocephalos Africanus, foliis brevioribus acuminatis, flori- bus rubentibus, summis surculis foliis intermistis. Raj. Hist. 3. Dend. p. 10. VOL. X- 26 Besides. 226 Mr. Brown, on the Proteaceae of Jussieu. Besides the Proteacez described or noticed in this paper, I am acquainted with several very beautiful species, chiefly of Gre- villea and Persoonia, discoyered in New Holland by Mr. George Caley, a most assiduous and accurate botanist, who, under the patronage of Sir Josepu Banks, has for upwards of eight years been engaged in examining the plants of New South Wales, and whose numerous discoveries will, it is hoped, be soon given to the public, either by himself, or in such.a manner as to obtain for him that reputation among botanists to which he is well entitled. TABULARUM EXPLICATHIO. Fic. Tas. I]. Kwnicutia ExcELsa. 1. Flos expansus, parim auctus. 2. Idem longitudinaliter apertus, magnitudine natural. 8. Ejusdem basis cum glandulis hypogynis. 4. Pistillum auctum, ovario longitudinaliter secto ovulis quatuor:. 5. Ovulorum insertiones et relativas positiones ostendens. 6. Ovulum pauld magis auctum.. 7. Pollen plurindm auctum.. Tas. UII. Dryanpra rormosa.. 1. Ramus magnitudine naturali. | . Flos magnitudine naturali. Idem auctus. Receptaculum commune magnitudine naturali et auctum:s . Idem verticaliter sectum. . Palez receptaculi. Folliculus. Dissepimentum cum seminibus. . Semina. . Dissepimentum. . Pollen ad Jentem auctum. 09 [e) Cm vet bet = CES V. On (s'22%i.0) V. Ona remarkable Variety of Pedicularis Sylvatica. In a Letter to Alevander MacLeay, Esq. F. R.S. and Sec.L.S. By James Edward Smith, M.D. F.R.S. P.L.S. Read February 7, 1809. Dear Sir, T wave lately been favoured by the Marquis of Stafford with a specimen of a remarkable variety of the Pedicularis sylvatica, gathered by his lordship last summer on his estate in Sutherland.. It consists of a solitary flower of that plant, which, instead of its, proper ringent form, with two long and twoshort stamens, has a salver-shaped regular corolla, with six stamens, four of which. are longer than the others. There is also what appears to be the style partly changed toa petal, and yet bearing a membranous expansion like one side of an anther. I conceive therefore that this is really an attempt at a seventh stamen, though become partly a petal. There is however no other sign of a style.« The Marquis sought in vain for another specimen; but it is re- markable that Mr. Hooker and Mr. Borrer found one resembling. it in the same neighbourhood this very season. This specimen is very interesting to me, as being another in- stance of the same kind of variety as I have noticed in Galeopsis. Tetrahit at Matlock. See Fl. Lapponica, ed. 2. 201. I have also had in my own garden. some regular salver-shaped flowers of Chelone. 228 Dr. Smitn on a remarkable Variety of Pedicularis Sylvatica. Chelone barbata on the very same branch with the proper ringent ones. Such accidents are frequent in various species of Antirrhi- num and Bignonia. They should be kept in mind by all students of systematical arrangement, as a warning not to expect that our artificial rules can keep pace with the intricacies of nature. IT remain, &c. J. E. Smita. Norwich, February 4, 1809. {, 229.) VI. A Botanical Description: and Natural Histor, 'y of the Malabar Cardamom. By Mr. David White, Surgeon on the Bombay Establishment. Communicated by the Dihvotors of the Hon. East India Company. With additional Remarks my William George Maton, M.D., V.P.L.S., §c. Read November 15 and December 6, 1808. Tur plant producing Cardamoms is a singular, if not unique, instance of one of ‘the most valuable articles of. modern luxury being almost entirely indebted to the care of nature for its growth and perfection. Lofty hills, whose summits are ever clothed with clouds, a moist atmosphere, or copious rains for three-fourths of the year, and an exposure admitting but a limited proportionof the sun-beams, are the circumstances which, the natives tell us, and experience proves, are most favourable to its growth, and are the sole re- quisites for an abundant crop. Simple as the progress is which conducts it through various stages to maturity and a marketable state, the subject claims attention, and derives. importance from the general estimation and extended use of the spice, as a grateful and salubrious accessary of diet: its use as such is so universal, that it is now in a manner regarded as a necessary of life by most of the inhabitants of Asia; and its general adoption by the ci- vilized nations of the other quarters of the world is prevented only by its limited importation. The possession of its trade has been vol. x. 2H always 230 Mr. Wutrr’s Description and Natural History always an object of much competition ; and the best sources of it being now in possession of the English, accumulate fresh conside- rations for becoming better acquainted with its history. When it is further premised, that the information here given is founded on documents ever judged most likely to attain the ob- ject of all useful investigation, namely, the testimony of intelli- gent natives on the spot, and actual inspection during a tem- porary residence undertaken for the purpose, the writer deems no further apology necessary for bringing forward the fruits of his observation. i. BOTANICAL DESCRIPTION. Monanpria. Monocynta. Amomum CarDAMOMUM. Calyx double, each spathous and tubular. Outer and inferior arising from the proper pedicle, embracing the inner calyx to near its summit, split before, keeled and pointed behind, withering. Inner and superior funnel-form, lax, continuous with and rising from the top of the germen, ascending with and reaching above the middle of the tube of the corolla. Border 2- or 3-cleft, unequally finely scored, permanent. Corolla monopetalous, funnel-form. Tube ascending, cylindrical below, compressed a little upward, marked with three su- perficial furrows, evanescent as they descend from the di- visions of the inner border. Border double, unequal. Inferior and outer reflected to the interior, membranous, 8-parted. Divisions oblong-linear, obtuse, with margins a little intlected, and ends turned up slippes-wise ; the middle or of the Malabar Cardamom. 231 or anterior one larger ; a double linear band running along the centre of each. Interior and upper border fleshy, four-parted, unequal. The posterior division large, ascending from a con- tracted base, expanding rhomboidally ; margin a little wavy, and obscurely three-lobed, centrally grooved half way up. The second, or what may be called the staminal division, half the length of the former, erect from the opposite side of the rim of the tube, linear nearly to half its height, then abruptly expanding in breadth and thickness to nearly double, lopped and tooth-like at the top, sloping inwardly into a shovel-like vaginal hollow, to receive the stigma and upper part of the style; a slight score bisecting it externally, and ending in an obsolete notch above. Third and fourth divisions ex- actly opposite to each other, and between the two former a pair of short, horizontal, horn-like processes slightly twisted, straitening the mouth of the tube and dividing it unequally. Stamen with no filament, two pair of parallel antherous lines lying on the inner thickened part of the second division, contiguous below, but with their conical points free, and projecting into the mouth of the tube, diverging upwards to receive the expanded stigma and upper part of the style, their surface, and the space they inclose, heaped with glo- bules of farina soon bursting into the finest pollen. Pistillum shorter than the corolla, and of the length of the stamen. Germen a lopped oval, smooth. Two conical segments erect from one side of its top contiguous to each other, half sheathing the style. Style conical at its origin, then thread-like, lastly enlarging at 2u2 the 232 Mr. Wuire’s Description and Natural History- the rim of the tube; passing which, it is received into the staminal sheath of the upper border. Stigma obtusely triangular, a little excavated on the side of the tube, with the upper rounded edge prominent from the sheath. Pericarpium a fleshy, fibrous, smooth capsule, contracting when dry into a surface corrugated lengthwise, obtusely trigonal, oblique a little; angles marked with a superficial score ; sides inwardly bisected by a ridge ; three-celled, with three valves. Seeds many, nidulating by means of a fine muci- laginous, splendid, silky membrane, and: attached to the receptacle, or rachis, by an eight-toothed oblong faseia in each of its angles; the silky membrane of the seeds forming filamentous pedicles for this purpose. Seeds from 18 to 27, obtusely wedge-shaped, a furrow on the plain side, convex on the other; surface scabrous, hard, horny. Flowers on lax panicled peduncles, issuing horizontally from the tuberous ringed part of the stem, near the root; generally two from each flat side. Common. peduncle serpentine, jointed, or rather rimmed, tapering. Partial peduncles lateral from the rings at acute angles, and diminishing in- tervals; every partial peduncle supporting from two to four pedicled flowers, one or two of which abortive. Length of the peduncle varies from three and four inches to one and a half and two feet. Bractee oblong, acute, and spathous, accompanying and en- veloping the pedicles at their origin, withering. Colour. Lower division of the corolla green; upper spreading. petal of the inner border with a pink ramification, pale white on the outside and the rest of the border. Stems. of the Malabar Cardamom. 233 Stems. Base tuberous, clubbed, ring’d rim-wise for two or three inches; the lower part giving out viviparous shoots, the upper part panicles. Stems erect from the base, and slightly elliptical, tapering as the continuous sheaths send off the leaves ; when bearing, from six to twelve feet high, and from eight and twelve to thirty in number, quite smooth to the touch, finely scored to the eye, with varying shades of glossy green, pale at the base, which distinguishes this. species from a congener frequent on the same site, but with a red or fuscous base. Leaves very long, in the same plane, alternate, at distances a little unequal, supported on long sheaths embracing closely half the stem, elliptico-linear-spear-pointed, from nine inches -to two feet and a half long, from one to five inches broad, upper side waved with narrow ridges and broad furrows acutely with the middle rib, smooth, dark-green, edges very entire, below pale sea-green,. and glossy with asilky soft- ness, middle rib channelled above, keeled below. Petioles short, grooved with a small obtuse: squamous. prDcess em- bracing the stem above the sheath. Roots fibrous, thinly ramose, and with here and there a fibre much longer and larger than the rest. running obliquely into the soil. There is no individual of the Amomunr tribe that displays so. much natural beauty as the Cardamomum. The glistening polish of its stems, the sea-green glossy surface of its leaves waving with the least impulse, and the general symmetry of the whole, easily distinguish it from its rival neighbours in the woods. It outshines them also in the elegance of its flowers: the vivid pink, surrounded. by the pale white of the spreading division of 234 Mr. Wuttr’s Description and Natural History of the upper border of the corolla, presents a most delicate con- trast. ’ The shortness of its roots may relate to some hidden properties of its organic ceconomy ; or these may be compensated by the greater proportion of the leaves, absorbing more copiously from the air, and thus contributing to the formation of that elaborate essence which we so much admire in the perfect spice. It may be expected that we should give some account of the name and the history of its commerce. In Botany, the history and origin of names,are so far useful, as they are immediately or remotely connected with the elucida- tion of the subject in question, the indication of its virtues, or the nation who first introduced its use, and the channels, if an article of trade, through which it first flowed to civilized countries. In Malabar, the native soil of its best species, it is simply named Ela, or Ela-tari and Ela-channa; the former addition signi- fying a young plant, the latter a full-grown one. The word channa includes also some congeners, one of which, Poidn- channa, is so like the real Cardamom in appearance and foliage, as with difficulty to be distinguished by these marks only. The ripe pod is styled exclusively Ela-tari, ari in Malabar signifying any small grain: e.g. ari rice, mout-art natcheny or raggee. Indiscriminately they also say Ela-kai, the last word being of general application to all kinds of perfect roots and seeds. In Sanskrit, the most common appellative is Ela. The synonyms are no fewer than 10, viz. Elum* Walakum, Mailayum, Songani, Hari Walakum, Waleyiegum, Moukana, Kouna, Kounara, Agni-jivala, * My authority tells me that Elwm is the casus rectus or nominative here, and that it becomes varied into Ela in the oblique inflections, or when annexed to other words which govern it. Thesame grammatical variation is also observed in the Malabar language, Moudriwadine. of the Malabar Cardamom. 235 Moudriwadine. These are taken from idioms of the Amarsinha; but there is reason for supposing that all of them, except the first, are merely epithets, either allusive to its qualities and _vir- tues, or suggested by that wild and extravagant fancy which characterizes the genius of Indian fabulists and poets. As Ela signifies leaf in both languages, I have no doubt but the assem- blage of leaves, forming the most obvious and striking ap- pearance of the plant, suggested to the first rude observers the natural and appropriate term. In the other parts of India, they give it names, all more or less similar to the indigenous. The Hindu is Hil-Il, or Ilachi; the Kanarese, Ela-Ki. These termi- nations are no doubt deduced from the Kai above mentioned, as the first syllable is from that of Ela. Of the name Kagdaneuzow given to it by the Greeks, and Car- damomum by the Romans, neither I, nor those whom I consulted, can find any traces in the dialects of Hindostan. Iam therefore inclined to conclude that the spice itself was not introduced among them, till at a late period of their history, and by some very circuitous or irregular channels, which left them to their own ingenuity to adapt a significant epithet: for this they had recourse to analogy. In their owa language the Greeks had the word Kagdenov to signify cresses, a production that ap- proached to the nature of aspice, as near as to. form the founda- tion of a comparison. When they added to this a word of su- perlative emphasis—apowor, (literally signifying perfect or fault- less,) they may have conceived that they attained a tolerably clear idea of their new-imported luxury.—Kakele, both in Arabic and Persian, is, without doubt, connected with the indigenous Ela, or perhaps a compound of it. In the medical practice of Europe, the use of Cardamoms is too limited to enable us to form a sufficient estimate of their stimulant 236 Mr. Wurrn’s Description and Natural History stimulant power. ‘They are seldom given alone; and their com- bination with other stimulants must render their effects uncer- tain. It is not unlikely that the high degree of acrimony ascribed to them by the natives may be comparative only to their own bland constitutions, the more susceptible of stimulus from their simple diet, and moderate and uniform habits of living. It would be an object of considerable curiosity, if not some instruction, to trace the gradual introduction of Cardamoms into Europe, and their general adoption as a luxury, or use as a me- dicine. We have reason to think that they were little, if at all, known before the time of Augustus ; and the silence of the Bible relative to them, proves that both the spice and its virtues were alike unknown to the Jews, and probably their neighbouring nations. ‘This singular fate of a valuable luxury, and the cir- cumstances connected with it, deserve further investigation. I need scarcely refer to the description of Rumphius, as it is so very imperfect in detail respecting both the botanical and the natural history of the plant; but he disarms criticism and all attempt at censure, by his usual candour in confessing that it was taken from an exotic, which did not produce a per- fect fructification, and of which the species is evidently dif ferent from that of Malabar, and is most likely the Grana_ Paradisi. He talks of the roots being tuberous and having the flavour of the spice, whereas the subject of the present sketch is without these marks, the taste of the radical fibres being nearly insipid, and though the leaves, on being chewed, leave behind them on the throat and palate an acrimonious sensa- tioa, no aroma analogous to that of the spice is discernible. The accuracy of his information may also be suspected, when he states that Cardamom is a name common all over Upper Hin- dostan. He may have been misled by Armenian merchants, who had of the Malabar Cardamom. 237 had horrowed the appellation from the Greeks in the early period of its commerce; in which, most probably, they either directly or indirectly largely participated, YI. THE CARDAMOM FARMS. | The spots chosen for these, called in the Malabar language iEla-Kandy, literally signifying Cardamom plots, are either level or gently sloping surfaces, on the highest range of the Ghadtsy after passing the first declivity from their base. The extent of climate hitherto known in Malabar to produce them lies betwixt 11° and 12° 30’ N. Lat. or thereabouts. Steep places and the very summits of the hills would, the na~ tives acknowledge, be also productive,—but with such an accu- mulation of labour, and in a quantity so stinted, as not to repay the additional pains: but here we must take ito account their blind attachment to beaten tracks of cultivating, and their ob- stinate aversion to all attempts at improvement. The months of February and March are, on account of the prevailing dry weather, selected as the most proper for com- mencing their labours; the first part of which consists in cutting down the large and small trees promiscuously, leaving, of the former, standing at nearly equal distances, certain tail and stately individuals, adapted to that degree of perpendicular shade which experience teaches them to be most favourable for the future crops. They affirm, and with some reason, that no little exactness is required in hitting this prolific medium ; for, as too much sun burns up; so does excessive shade alike disappoint the hopes of harvest. ‘The grass and weeds are then cleared away, and the ground disencumbered from the roots of the brushwood ; VOL. xX. 21 the 288 Mr. Wurre’s Description and Natural History the large trees lie where they fall ; the shrubs, roots, and-grass are piled up in different small heaps, and their spontaneous and gradual decomposition fertilizes the space they cover*. They mention it as an infallible sign of future fertility, if the large trees, on falling, cause a trembling of the adjacent soil or mountain, as their phrase is; though it is not very probable that they ever reject a spot once chosen and begun upon, from the absence of this equivocal and perhaps imaginary symptom. Yet, if it really does take place, a rationale may be applied to explain it; for, as the soil of those woods is a very fine mould, soft and rare in proportion to its volume, so, where thin, and superficially intercepted by rocky or gravelly strata, it is not likely that it will be much affected by the gravity of the fall. On the contrary, if of great depth, the shock will be readily felt, and the com- motion communicated through the spongy mass, connected as it is by a close intertexture of roots and fibres, and thus exciting in the sanguine and simple fancy of those children of nature an assimilation to an earthquake. The size of the Ela-Kandy is various ; sometimes from choice, at others, determined by the nature and extent of the surface or slope. ‘The largest I saw among fifty did not exceed 60 yards in one diametez, and 40 in the other. Their form varies likewise, very commonly oblong or oval, sometimes a contour irregularly rounded. ‘The variety in these respects is chiefly owing to the convenience of the standard or permanent trees for shade. Those with lofty strait stems, extensive heads, and that are in an adolescent state, and known to be long-lived, are preferred for this purpose, and left standing at 15 or 20 yards from each * Mr. Pennant has therefore been Jed into an error in saying that ashes procured by burning on the spot are used as manure—Vide Pennant’s India, vol. i. : ieee otner. of the Malabar Cardamom 239 other. Much more diminutive plots are also cultivated by a race of Hill People called Kourchara and Cadera, who are not exactly slaves, but locally attached, and acknowledging certain obliga- tions of a feudal and perhaps reciprocal kind to the Nairs in the neighbourhood. ‘They are, of course, permitted to reap the pro- duce of their separate industry, without the participation of these superiors. « After the operations now described, no further labour is be- stowed for four years. At the revolution of the fourth rainy sea- son, and towards its close, they look for a crop, and their hopes are rarely disappointed: this first effort of nature is generally scanty; for instance, oaly one-half of what is reaped the follow- ing year, and only one-fourth of what is yielded after the sixth rains, at which period the plant has reached its acme of prolific vigour. Now and then, however, this routine is interrupted, and its progress protracted, by causes of which they are not very solicitous to investigate the nature: they remark, however, ex- cessive and uninterrupted rains to be one source of failure. In the dry season succeeding to the first crop, they grub up the undergrowth of shrubs, and clear away the weeds and grass, laying them up, as before, in heaps to rot ; for in no case do they set fire to these, the consequence of which practice would be the — certain failure of the crops. ‘This agrees with the most approved ideas of agriculture even in Europe, where the most substantial and copious manures are produced from the mouldering piles of weeds, and vegetable offals of every description, This process of cleaning being yearly repeated, the same spot will continue productive for 50 years and upwards. My in- formers would not specify any term or number ;, they said that it exceeded their habits of computation, and the memory of any one generation, Another opinion similarly founded is, that the 212 exhausted 240 Mr. Wurrr’s Description and Natural History exhausted Ela-Kandy will require an equal period of years be- fore it recovers by rest its ancient vigour. Both limits are so far explicable on natural principles, and. appear to. be regulated by the exhausting and accumulating excitabilities inherent in the soil, and. operated upon by a continuance of the same crop. The suceessive decay and fall of the large standard trees, de- stroying one of the most essential conditions of the prosperity of the plantation, is another and evident cireumstance determining the period: of its duration. The reproduction of the same trees, to a size capable of shel+ tering the young plants, will give the least measure for the qui- escent state of the ground, and this cannot be less than twenty or thirty years, considering their average growth. The barren state of one Ela-Kandy is iramediately replaced by the establishment of another on a fresh side, and with similar properties to, the former; in the choice of which they can never be at a loss, from the great extent of mountain and wood ina state of nature; and, the same operations repeated, the customary routine of crops will follow. As the Cardamom plants spring up from scattered seeds dor+ mant on the spot, or washed thither by rains from the adjacent parts, we do not find any regularity in their disposition, nor 1s the industry of the natives ever exerted to correct this. Accord- ingly we see them variously grouped ; in- some places crowded. and extremely luxuriant, in others thin and stunted; some roots sending forth from twenty to thirty stems, two-thirds or three- fourths of which bear; others from eight to twelve, and-down to. four or five. Hence it is difficult to-caleulate the rate of produce in any one plant.. Each stem sends. forth from its thickened base from two to four strings or fructiferous panicles; from these issue alternately. short clusters bearing fram two to three ripe pods. The: of the Malabar Cardamom. 241 The length of the common string or stalk varies from four inches to eighteen, and is sometimes two feet; but these last ex- tremes are not fertile in proportion. In good years, from four to six plants will yield of dried pods one dungally, a measure of ca- pacity equal to four pints Winchester. Fhe number of plants in an Ela-Kandy they never think of reckoning. It struck me, on traversing them repeatedly, that the largest plots might contain from twelve to fifteen hundred.. The abundance of crop, from every inquiry I could make, is best ensured by a moderate routine of weather, with respect to dry and wet: the extremes of each are injurious: they dread most, however, deluging rains, particularly for the young planta- tions, and during the flowering season, which commences on the first fall of the rains in April and May, and continues for two months. ‘The flower being very delicate, and the recumbent and repent posture of the fruit-panicles, exposes them particularly to the bad effects of drenehing moisture. Repeated torrents, de- scending from above, commit their devastation by baring the roots, and sweeping. away the finest portion of the mould, which furnishes a nutriment so essential to the vigour of the plants. What tends to confirm this statement is, that the natives remark a very general contrast betwixt the Cardamom and Pepper crops. The seasons favourable to the great produce of the latter are: found to be adverse to the former, and vice -versd. Now it is well known, that, m the early part of the season, the rains cannot be too copious for the Pepper vine. In August and September, the pods increase and acquire: the greatest size. In the first half of October, they begin to ripen; then the gathering of the earlier part commences; the reaping proceeds through all that month. and November. A longer than usual continuance of the rainy sea- son may protract the final gathering till the middle of December. ‘ About. 242 Myr. Wutrn’s Description and Natural History About a fortnight earlier than here stated, the Cardamoms on the western or sea-side of the Ghatits are gathered ; and to this they give the name of the Kanni crop, or that of the month an- swering to the period from the middle of September till the 15th of October: the other above the Ghats they style the Wretcha- gau, from the month answering in like manner to our November — December. The prior maturity of the former is ascribed, and not without reason, to the milder temperature of the ocean cherishing the western exposure, while this gives them the full effect of the sun’s beams till he sets. It is also found that, during the rainy monsoon, the intervals of fair weather are more frequent than above the Ghadts; all which circumstances create an equability of climate favourable to the earlier production of the spice. ‘The process of reaping keeps pace with the simplicity of the previous management. A dry day being chosen, the fruit-stalks are plucked from the roots, carried to their houses, and laid out to dry on * mats placed upon a thrashing-floor: a series of four or five dry days is sufficient to complete the desiccation. The pods being ex- tricated, by stripping with the fingers, are separated into three or four sorts, denominated from their respective qualities: 1. Talli- Kai, the head fruit; 2. Nadu-Kai, the middle; and 3. Poulo- Kai, the abortive fruit. The last being thrown away, the two former are mixed together ; the purpose of the separation being to ascertain the relative proportions, and to render the whole uniform and marketable. They are then laid up in mat- bags made of the Pandanus sylvestris of Rumphius, a plant growing every where around their houses and fields. These bags are of two sizes, one holding 32 pounds avoirdupois, ora Com- pany’s maund in Malabar, oxti the other 16 pounds. The bundles thus prepared by the cultivator are juinedaately carried of the Malabar Cardamom. 243 _earried down to shops, or little storehouses, erected by Mopla merchants, or agents, in different places along the whole range of hills, and at a little distance from the farms. Here they are sub- jected to another and final operation by the venders to the whole- sale merchants on the coast. This consists in holding them over a gentle and slow fire in flat baskets, while the assistants con- tinue rubbing them betwixt their hands for a certain time; which has the effect of detaching what remains of the permanent calyx and foot-stalks, or other adhering membranes, and gives the pod that appearance and marketable quality delineated in Tas. V. figs. 14 and 15. This operation is termed in Malabar Terimbous, a word expressive of its nature. ‘The Cardamoms are now weighed for the purpose of ascertaining the respective quotas of rent payable by the different farmers. The result of this is expect- ed to correspond with a previous estimation of the quantity of the crops, taken on the ground before they arrive at maturity ; on the approach of which, an official deputation, consisting of public officers and some of the head men of the country well acquainted with the subject, repairs to the Ela-Kandys, attended by the proprietors, and there makes the calculation from the combined eonsideration of the extent of ground, age of the plantation, and general appearance of the fruit-stalks then in full bearing. Four or five of the visitors, whose interests are supposed to be neutral, and equally unbiassed betwixt Government and the Ryot, successively and seriously deliver their opinions; from the average of which the official attendants strike a mean, and mutual satisfaction is generally the consequence. his previous step is designed to serve as a comparative check to the measuring after the final drying of the pods, when they are expected to bear the proportion of one-fifth to the quantity of the green as before Cheap 2:4 estimated. 244, Mr. Wutrte’s Description and Natural History estimated. This proportion is judged to be most favourable to the proprietors, as actual experiments prove it at least to be as 25 to 100; but Government is thus moderate, to encourage the honesty of the farmers, and to remove all inducement to its clandestine exportation. The duties, or customs, are paid only on exportation from the province by sea or land: they amount to twelve per cent., and the average price is rated at 1200 rupees per candy of 640 pounds avoirdupois. The total produce of Wynatd may amount, one year with another, to something above fifty candies, perhaps fifty-six ; and this grows on an extent of more than 100 miles, reckoning the sinuosities and angles of the hills.) The kingdom or country of the Coorja Rajah produces less by ten or fifteen candies. The whole site of the growth of this spice on the continent of Hin- dostan extends from the Soubramany Ghadt, nearly due east from Mangalore, to Mannaar Ghadt in the same direction from Calicut. If nature be propitious to the progress of this valuable pro- duction from youth to maturity, she has been no less kind in providing for this last stage, in refusing to the generality of the inmates of the forest any appetite for the fruit. The natives mention only a few of the smaller animals whose depredations are felt, viz. two kinds of squirrels, a large and small species, and the field rats; but as they did not dwell much on the damage thence accruing, it is to be presumed that it cannot amount to much. ‘The evils attendant on the reaping to the Kourch-ara, Pani- ara, &c., who perform the labour, are much more serious. ‘The sting of the green whip-snake, abounding in those situations, is instantly fatal, no antidote having yet been found to arrest its poison. Fevers of the Malabar Cardamom. B45 Fevers and fluxes commit ravages much more extensive.—The season of reaping coincides with that when the insalubrity of the air happens to be at its highest pitch: the great heats of October, succeeding to the equinoctial rains, operating upon a drenched soil, and exhaling vapours from a profusion of Juxu- riant undergrowth, must accumulate a mass of miasmata which becomes more intensely noxious by stagnation, a circumstance of itself well known to have a tendency to corrupt or alter the healthy proportions of the respirable fluid, and thus lay a sure foundation for the diseases mentioned. A more directly painful calamity is never escaped,—that is, numerous bites of leeches (a small species of Hirudo geometra) whose numbers are infinite, and attacks incessant. Their size varies from two to six lines. Their minuteness and gentle mode of suction seldom engage at- tention or excite precaution ; but, true to the ancient definition, * non missura cutem, nisi plena cruoris,’ they only fall off when glutted with blood, the copious flow of which at length indicates the authors. ‘Che simple consequence of these would be otherwise little felt, were it not for the abundance of a small shrubby plant, whose leaves are so acrid, or rather caustic, as to inflame by simple contact the sound skin for more than a day, as I ex- perienced in myself; and if they touch a wound made by the leeches, the inflammation is sure to increase; and most fre- quently extended ulcerations, phagedenic in their progress and fatal in their termination, succeed, the symptomatic fever excited running so high as to carry off the patient, who con- ceives himself happy if he escape with only a contraction of the member or muscles thus affected. The name of the plant in question is Mouricha, denoting in Malabar its cutting or acri- monious quality. It is from eight to twelve feet high, with large leaves acutely oval and subserrated ; trunk from two to three VOL, X. 2x inches 246 Mr, Wurre’s Description and Natural History inches in diameter. The absence of flowers prevented its genus being ascertained. Though the natives of both Wyndad and Coorga affirm that the situations at present, and from time immemorial, producing Cardamoms, are the only places where they will thrive; yet, as they assign no reason for this, nor mention any experiments having been made to prove the fact, we have every right to doubt their testimony, and refer their opinion to those habits of indolence and local prejudice, which characterize the peasantry in most countries, and which beget in them a stupid aversion from all schemes of innovation and improvement. This sceptical suggestion receives great strength, if not confirmation, from a series of facts which have come under my own observation. The following is their history : In October 1802, when the rebellion broke out afresh in Wyndad, I accompanied the first force sent to quell it. We for- tified different points at the top of the Ghadts, some in the neighbourhood of Cardamom ground, others where no farms had ever been established or thought of. Of this last deserip- tion was a post at the top of Cottiour Ghadt. Besides clearing away the grounds adjacent, a great many broad alleys, leading from the redoubt in various directions through thick and lofty trees, down and around the hills to Darallour, (another stockade two miles further inland,) were cut and cleared from grass and underwood by the pioneers. All these places I had the good for- tune to revisit the first ten days of this month (October 1806), and was much gratified and interested by finding great abun- dance of the Cardamom plant growing luxuriantly, and bearing in a proportion equal to what I immediately afterwards observed at the Peria Ghatit. No further labour had been bestowed on them after our departure; and the similarity of shade and ex- posure, ‘% ‘ * waa aa ee oes went AMES of the Malabar Cardamom. 247 posure, from the largest trees being left standing here and there, had produced the same effects as elsewhere. In the very middle of the stockade, and on the site of the barracks, I had the curiosity to reckon the assemblage of stems on two plants, one of which sent forth twenty-six and the other thirty-two, both fertile in the usual proportion. I found likewise that high sum- mits and steep declivities were alike favourable to the prosperity of the plants; for the stockade itself was built on the declivity of a high range, and the alleys mentioned led in various wind- ings down the steepest slopes. All this ought to convince us, that experiments judiciously in- stituted, and properly prosecuted, are alone wanting to extend the Cardamom farms over a much larger space ; and that more- over, by the knowledge acquired in the course of this expe- rience, we should most probably attain to some essential im- provement in the modes of cultivation at present adopted. REFERENCES TO THE FIGURES. ; ‘ Tas. IV. A Cardamom plant about three months old, one-fourth of the natural size. a, b. T'wo viviparous scions springing from its base. c. The involuted leaf before evolution. Tas. V. Fig. 1. exhibits a full grown Cardamom plant, its stems cut off a little above the third of its height, which was 12 feet: base __ of stems immediately above the rings from: 23 to 3} inches in girth. Its roots depending in their natural habit, pro- . 2x2 portion, 248 Mr. Wutte’s Description and Natural History portion, and colour. a,a,q, the tuberous ringed part im- mediately above ground, with the curved shoots 6, b, 6, b, germinating, the common peduncle with its pedicles and partial frugiferous pedicels. . 2. The partial panicle with its germs and flower viewed in front. a,a, the double calyx. 6,6, the spathous bracts. c¢,c,c, the three divisions of the outer and lower border of the corolla, the middle largest, and their extremities turned up slipperwise. d, the second or staminiferous division: at the base of this the hornlets seem to project from the mouth of the tube horizontally. e, the expanded rhomboidal division of the upper border, with its pinky ramification. . 3. The back view of the corolla. 6b, the germen. c,c, the projecting pair of hornlets, i. e. 3d and 4th divisions of the: upper border. . 4. The tube only of the corolla, with the inner calyx, hornlets and stamen bearing division of the upper border. a,b, show the two pair of antherous lines im situ, and the sheath above for the stigma c, this last being turned to one side. . 5. The same without the calyx. The second division and hornlets a little magnified. ‘The anthers a, a, raised up and deflected, to show the sheath more fully. . 6. The second division a, of the upper border magnified, showing the upper part of the style stigma and anthers in situ, lying on its inner surface, and the style ascending through the orifice b of the tube, straitened by the bulging basis of the hornlets. . .7. 8. The naked pistilla, one with the germinal appendices. a alittle separated, the other with the same in situ. . 9. A half-grown germen, with the persisting inner calyx, and its 3-dentate border b, and germinal appendices a. Fig. amend eked C~ Linn Trans Vol. X. Tab. §. p.248. of the Malabar Cardamom. 249 Fig. 10. The naked pistillum a little magnified, showing the conical base of the style a, thickening again at d, and the expanded stigma. Fig. 11. Longitudinal and transverse sections of the full-grown pericarpium, as it is taken from the plant, and before drying. Fig..12. Two seeds a little nagar a the convex side, } the flat grooved one.. Fig. 13. 'The bare capsule, one rem removed to show the trian- gular rachis or seed-receptacle, with one of the eight-toothed belts.or fasciz lining one of its angles—viewed in front. Fig. 14. 15..The Cardamom pod, as it comes to market from the drying processes.. Additional Remarks by William, George Maton, M.D. V.P.L.S.. Sc. fc. If the author of: the- foregoing valuable communication had been conversant with Mr. Roscoe’s arrangement of the Scitaminee (in the 8th voliime of’ The Linnean Transactions), it is most ‘pro- bable that he weuld not have referred the plant producing the Malabar Cardamom to the genus Amomum, notwithstanding it has hitherto been :piaced under that’ appellation by» most’ other: botanical writers.” The filament, or antheriferous petal of Amomum:(according to’ Mr. Roscoe) extends beyond the anthera, and terminates ‘in three lobes ; whereas, in the-plant so fully~described and minutely: figured by Mr: White, the anthera is of equal length with the filament, and appears to’ be somewhat emarginated, the notch’ ee the obtusely triangular stigma. Neither can this plant be: considered. 250 Dr. Maton’s additional Remarks considered as an dAlpinia, or an Hellenia, without great violence to its natural characters, for the inflorescence issues horizontally from the tuberous, annulated part of the stem, near the root ; but in the genera just mentioned it is terminal, from the extre- mities of the leafy shoots,—a difference (as Mr. Roscoe also remarks, in a letter with which he has favoured me on this sub- ject) too great to be made a mere specific distinction; and I cannot help suspecting that the fruit, likewise, will be found to be different, though my opportunities of investigation have not been sufficient to warrant my being confident on this point. From Philydrum there is a sufficient distinction in the absence of the woolly appendage at the base of the tube, and from Hedychium in the anthera not being placed marginally on the filament. According to Mr. Roscoe, all the Renealmie (except R. exaltata perhaps) are reducible to the genus Alpinia, their in- florescence being terminal ; and the description of R, ewaltata, as given in the Supplementum Plantarum, cuts off that plant from a generic alliance with the Cardamom, the fruit of the former being a cylindrical bacca, containing seeds perfectly smooth, Hence it seems necessary to place the Cardamom under a new genus, to which I propose to affix the name of E.erraria, from Elettari, the original Malabar appellation, as given in the Hortus Malabaricus. 1 cannot.help considering it as premature to attempt to draw its botanical characters in a regular manner, until opportunities are afforded of comparing this plant, in the different stages of fructification, with its congeners, particu- larly Amomum and Alpinia, of which perfect specimens in a living state ought to be carefully vestigated, before any discri- minations, can be satisfactorily established. In the mean. time, it may be of some importance to collate the figures and descrip~ tions on the Malabar Cardamom. 251 tions given by various authors, and to extricate from the unac- countable confusion, in which the botanical history of the Mala- bar Cardamom has been involved, such synonyms as ought to accompany it in its future station in the Species Plantarum. What the Cardamom of the ancients was, it is now scarcély possible, I think, to determine, so imperfect are the notices of ' it which they have left behind them. There is good reason to suppose however, that the article bearing that name in their Materia Medica, was not the common Cardamom of our shops. Both Clusius and john Bauhin appear to have been convinced of this, and to neither of these early authors, nor indeed to Caspar Bauhin, are we to ascribe any of the inaccuracies that have found their way into later descriptions of this celebrated aromatic; but the plant producing it was not satisfactorily made known, until the publication of the Hortus Malabaricus, in which the delineation of it is so striking that we cannot but wonder at all perplexity, as to its prominent characters, not having been then precluded. Yet Burmann, though he had probably séen a specimen of the true Cardamom in Hermann’s herbarium, and though he expressly asserts that the Ensal of the last-mentioned author agrees with Van Rheede’s figures of the Elettari, arid with Clusius’s description and figure of “Cardamomum minus culgare,” (lib. 1-:Aromat. c. 24.) makes a reference to Bontius’s Java (p- 126) for the same species. Bontius, it is true, places by the side of his plant the capsule of the Malabar Cardamom, but, the plant itself is represented with a simple, compact spike, and seems to be no other than Amomum compactum, (of Solander’s MSS.) or the Cardamom of Java*. In justice to Burmann, * Specimens and.a sketch of this species (the latter made on the spot, when Sir Joseph Banks was in the island of Jaya,) I haye had opportunities of examining in the Banksian Jibrary. however, 952: Dr. Maton’s additional Remarks however, I ought to mention, that Commelin was guilty of the same error before him, referring to Bontius’s Cardamomum minus as being the saine as Van Rheede’s, in his Horti Malabarici Cata- logus, p. 18. From the mistake made by Burmann appear to have originated the erroneous description and discordant references given, on the subject of the Cardamom, in the works of Linnzus, and which have partly descended to some of his editors. If, in writing his Flora Zeylanica, Linneus had found a specimen of the Ensal in Hermann’s herbarium, or if he had consulted the figures of Van Rheede, the errors, which commenced with that Flora, could not, I think, have existed. That there was not a specimen of the Ensal in the herbarium of Hermann, I have ac- tually ascertained, having examined that collection on purpose ; and that Linneus had not an opportunity of verifying Bur- mann’s references, by consulting the Hortus Malabaricus at the same time with the other works quoted by that author, is ren- dered highly probable, on account of his not having been pos- sessed of the work, for which he was obliged to send to the Academy of Sciences at Stockholm (as I am informed by Mr. Dryander) whenever the use of it was indispensable to him. Neither had he any specimen of the true Cardamom in his own ‘herbarium, that which he seems to have considered .as such having a compact spike, though it is labelled as being “‘ from Su- rat,” whence he could not have received it until some time after the publication of his Flora Zeylanica, and Materia Medica; for he had no correspondent (I imagine) in that part of India, prior to his pupil Toren’s voyage, in 1750. Toren mentions having been at Surat; but it is wonderful enough that he does not enter upon any description of so remarkable a plant as the Cardamom, which he probably would have done, had he seen it growing; and on the Malabar Cardamom. 258 and, as we find that he sailed immediately afterwards to Java, it is not an unreasonable conjecture, that he may have sent home Bontius’s plant from that island, and that the specimen, through some hurry either of the collector himself, or of his master, when it arrived in Sweden, may have been wrongly noted as being from India. Be this as it may, it is clear that Linneus bas confounded the Javanese Cardamom with that of Malabar, having quoted both Bontius and Van Rheede as sy- nonyms, and not only tab. 4 and 5 (vol. 11.) of the latter, but also tab. 6, which confirms the supposition of his having copied Burmann’s reference upon trust.at that time, for Burmann had been guilty of the same error. We find Linneus adding to all this inaccuracy, by quoting also Barrclier, 1396, tab. 571, which plate is obviously copied from the figure entitled “* Amomo legi- timo degli antichi,” and prefixed to Marogna’s commentary on the subject, accompanying Pona’s “ Monte Baldo descritto.” The pharmaceutical synonym (subjoined to the others) of “ Car- ‘damomum minus” precludes all doubt of his intending to point out the plant which produces the common Cardamom of our shops. The Flora Zeylanica, however, is known to have been written in haste, and its author discovered some of the mistakes into which he had been led, before he published his Species Plantarum, because be there discards many of his former re- ferences, but amongst these, unfortunately, tab. 4 and 5 of the Hortus Malabaricus, retaining only tab. 6. This last-mentioned error is unaccountable, for the very same plate is referred to by him for Amomum Granum Paradisi (with which it will probably be found to agree very well) ; and it is curious to observe that ‘this gross inaccuracy exists also in his editor Reichard. To com- plete the confusion of our illustrious author in regard to the Cardamom, in his second edition of the Species Plantarum he voL. xX. 21. not 254 Dr. Maton’s additional Remarks not only retains the erroneous reference to Van Rheede’s tab. 6, but adduces also, as a synonym, “ Cardamomum minus, Rumph. Amb. 5. p. 152. t. 65. f. 1,” than which nothing can worse cor- respond with the Cardamom of Malabar. Moreover, he changes his description, (which, in the first instance, was at least ambi- guous,) and stamps the species with the character of “ scapo simplicissimo, brevissimo,”. which is contradicted by his very re- ference to Van Rheede! Some of this confusion has been re- moved by the laborious Willdenow, who, very properly, separates the references to Linnzus’s Flora Zeylanica, Van Rheede’s tab. 4 and 35, and Hermann’s Museum Zeylanicum 66, from the charac- ters in the 2d edition of the Species Plantarum and from the Cardamomum minus of Rumphius, placing the former set of synonyms under Sonnerat’s name of Amomum repens, and the latter under the original name of A.Cardamomum. But, as I have before remarked, the Malabar Cardamom cannot now, consistently with the new arrangement of Mr. Roscoe, be con- sidered as belonging to that genus; and (with all due respect for the high authority of the Berlin editor) I cannot consider it proper to attach the original trivial name of Cardamomum to the plant not producing the article bearing this appellation in the shops, and which plant will probably prove to be no other than the Amomum compactum of Solander. These observations apply also to the A. Cardamomum of Mr. Roscoe. The following is the result of my endeavours to ascertain the true synonyms of ELETTARIA Carpamomoum. Cardamomum minus. Clusii de Aromat. lib. 1. c. 24. p. 187. Matthiol. sur Diosc. {Pinet) p.6. Bodai Annot. in Theophrastum, p- 1014. fig. Cardamomum on the Malabar Cardamom, 255 Cardamomum cum siliquis sive thecis brevibus. J. Bauhini Hist. Plant. tom. 2. lib. 15. p. 205. Cardamomum simpliciter in officinis dictum. Cardamomum verum, Angl C. Bauhini Pinaz, p. 414. Elettari. Van Rheede Hort. Malab. vol. 11. p. 9. t. 4. 5. Cardamomum Ensal dictum. Burmanni Thes. Zeyl. p. 54. Cardamomum minus officinarum. Dale Pharm. p.276. Geof- froy Mat. Med. p. 368. Linn. Mat. Med. p. 2. * Amomum repens. Sonnerat Voy, tom. 2. p. 240. pl. 136. Ros- coe, in Act. Soc. Linn. 8. p. 353. Ang]. Lesser Carpamom. * In Schreber’s edition of this work, the characters of the Malabar Cardamom are (erroneously) taken from the 2d edition of the Species Plantarum, with references.to the discordant figures of Van Rheede and Rumphius. 2a Ss VIL. Some ( 256») VII. Some Account of the Herbarium of Professor Pallas. By Aylmer Bourke Lambert, Esq., F.R.S. and A.S., V.P.L.S. Read December 20, 1808, and March 21, 1809. Tuer Herbarium of the celebrated Professor Pallas has lately come into my hands. It was brought to this country from Russia by the well known travellers Dr. Clarke and Mr. Cripps, who pur- chased it of him while on a visit at his house in the Crimea, and afterwards, in May 1808, sold it by auction in London. It contains some thousands of specimens in very fine preserva- tion, especially those which belong to the Russian empire, col- lected in his various journeys undertaken to investigate and publish the Natural History of that extensive country. The plants are the best prepared of any I have ever seen, except a collection a few years ago from Cayenne, taken from the French, who excel so much in their manner of preparing their collections of Natural History in the countries they explore; and who have of late years brought home so many valuable ones from New-Hol- land, and from countries within the tropics. It also contains many hundreds of specimens given to Pallas by various celebrated botanists. George Forster, who accom- panied his father with Captain Cook in his second voyage round the world, and who afterwards was engaged by the Empress Catherine to join in a similar expedition, which never took effect, sent Mr. LampBert’s Account of the Herbarium of Professor Pallas. 257 sent to Pallas fine specimens of all the plants gathered during his voyage with Cook. I find several species here not in his own Herbarium, which I purchased some years ago from his father- in-law Professor Heyne. All the plants collected in Billing’s expedition, by Dr. Merke, the naturalist employed in that voyage, and others, appear to be here; but I have not been able to find among them a celebrated plant mentioned by Sauer in his account of that expedition, and called there Zemlenoi Laudon, or frankincense of the earth, (see page 28,) unless it be Cachrys odontalgica. Sir Joseph Banks sent Pallas a fine collection of specimens, which were collected by him and Dr. Solander in their celebrated voyage with Captain Cook. ‘There are also a great number of species from Professor Thunberg, and Grecian plants from the late much lamented Dr. Sibthorp. Among these is the true Hellebore of the ancients, found by him on mount Olympus, the Helleborus officinalis of Dr. Smith’s Pro- dromus Flore Grece. 1 find also many plants of the Flora Au- striaca from Jacquin, and several of Forskahl’s, communicated by Vahl. Cavanilles appears to have sent to Pallas many plants from Spain. Here is also a curious collection from Persia, made chiefly in the neighbourhood of Gilan by Gmelin; and in it I ob- serve the Ferula assafetidu, but without fructification. ‘There are many specimens of Russian plants from Gmelin, Georgi, and others, all named and numbered according to their works, and having synonyms of the older authors prefixed: also from Steller, with names and numbers from his unpublished Flora Ochotensis and other MS. works mentioned by Pallas in the preface to his Flora Rossica. Pallas’s plants of his own collecting are very rich in dupli- cates; of some there are as many as fifteen or twenty, in every state he could find them both in flower and fruit; and whenever he 258 Mr. LamBert’s Account of he discovered the same species altered by soil or situation, heseems never to have neglected preserving it. Every specimen is named in his own hand-writing, and the habitats noted, sometimes with ob- servations: as for instance, with respect to his Phlomis Herba-venti, of which Willdenow makes a new species Ph. pungens, he observes that a decoction of this plant is used by the Russians as one of the best means of hardening steel. In this Herbarium I find the greatest part of the plants figured in the Flora Sibirica of Gmelin ; several very good specimens of that fine plant Campanula punc- tata; and those figured in Amman’s Stirp. Rarior. with Cypripe- dium guttatum, which our President informed me he had never been able to find in any other collection. ‘The plants of Flora Ros- sica, and those of Pallas’s Travels; all his Astragali and Salsole, and all the plants collected in his last tour in the Crimea are here, besides a great number of new species not noticed in any of the above-mentioned works, and which no doubt he intended to have published in the continuation of that splendid work the Flora Rossica, of which plates have been already engraved sufficient, as I understand from Dr. Clarke, to make another volume; and which, I hope, wil! soon make its appearance, as it only waits for some bookseller to undertake it: some of these plates are already cited by Professor Georgi in his Beschretbung des Russischen Reichs. 1 find Pallas, in the MS. to some of his specimens, has changed their names from those published in some of the volumes of the Petersburgh ‘Transactions, and in his own Travels, but for what reason I know not. He calls Phlomis alpina, Leonurus altaicus; and Solidago palmata, in the French edition of his ‘ravels, by Lamarck, in a note vol..vi. page 399, appears again in the same volume page 166, under the name of Senecio palmatus, and in his Herbarium by that of Senecio davu- gicus; so, that it requires some time and pains to make out his species, we oe et , pun To. ; this: 7. . 7 Sigh ; td POOR 1 LG STR.) Q EECA wey aie ede Pet, aA Oe PTA! ay Ww Oe LER ytd o ‘i besa Penis #229. Dae th athe BY Reet athe: apes paPa Tie dels |b pectiatha, saiby ip rail: atl iy. beste Sees at ate © Ba. Pa analy vs Ay oO Raine team asel.: ida ratio 7 py aiien ne on hath: a mya Mi Ne ie toa bay ninldicid bas i Wiad inatrbhetk Lieu Sedat | Nine ca N i eRe Nias . ; a? ‘ SE apateh: vae aaa iy 4 vie? Sin Seat sae i | PP Hirt waned Bad oe el Dee avantes «ak ibe dena dn} emnenedeabs’ sy aabie han de 103 enig ts ie siete Sapheth harap BY bs a5ucA r. areas itvdiiad % Linn. Trans. Vol. X, Tab. 6. p. Sx 19) i) : f DY See 0 JoUlevens i it ' = ‘ j re ; ey 4 d ( Py gt . fe ae tela sofalifola e ‘a ; SN fi : - EEF a é c ie the Herbarium of Professor Pallas. 259 species. Of Moluccella grandiflora of the Species Plantarum by Willdenow, which is M. diacanthophylla of Pallas in Nov. Act. Petrop. vol. x. page 380, table 11, the very specimens from which the figures seem to have been made, are named in his MS. Moluccella quadrangularis, species nova e deserto Buscarico. A plant which he describes in the Appendix to his Travels as Planta Salsa, &c., and supposes it to be a Cacalia, I have not been able to discover as yet, unless he has placed it in another genus, which is most likely, or that somebody is more fortunate than myself in the possession of it. Lamarck observes in the preface to Pallas’s Travels, that he mentions the same plants repeatedly, even the most common ones,—which certainly is sometimes the case ; because, perhaps, he thought that they would be better understood by the generality of his readers, and did not like to give details of new species there, which he intended to publish in a work devoted to that purpose. As I am preparing to give a catalogue of all the species found in his Herbarium, with the ob- servations I there find in MS., I shall now only submit to the Society an account of some of the most remarkable species that I have already noticed ; and express a hope that in future every botanist sent on similar expeditions may execute his charge with as much assiduity as Pallas has done, and bring us home as ex- tensive collections. PENTSTEMON rrvtescens. Tas. VI. Fig. 1. PENTSTEMON caule frutescente ramoso. Digitalis Dasyantha. Pall. MSS. Habitat in Camtschatka et Unalashka. Pall, MSS. ». Nod reine ds Pa LOBELIA 260 Mr. LampBert’s Account of LOBELIA sgssrurFottra. ” TasivTy Fig:2. Lozsetta caule herbaceo folioso glabro simplicissimo, foliis ob- longo-lanceolatis serrulatis sessilibus utrinque nudis, pedun- culis axillaribus folio brevioribus. Lobelia camtschatica. Pall. MSS. Habitat in Camtschatka. Pallas. y. _ This singular species has so much the habit of some species of Euphorbia, that without fructification it might easily be mistaken for one of that genus. The stems are above a foot in height, without any sort of pubescence, round, shining, and striated ; naked towards the base, and marked with a few scars from the fall of the leaves, which are of a dull green, with their edges finely serrated, conspicuously veined on their lower side, but nearly veinless above, and appear to be affixed in a spiral direction. PHELIPAA:. Tourn. Cor. p. 47. t. 479. Desfont. in An. Mus. Hist. Nat. 10. p. 298. t.21. Juss. in An. Mus. Hist. Nat. 12. p. 445. PHELIPEA FOLIATA. Tas. VII. Puretieza caulibus parce foliatis simplicibus unifloris, corolla lacinils subovatis. Orobanche Phelypza. Marsch. v. Bieberst. Terek und Kur, in Ken. An. Bot. 2. p. 447. synonymo Tournefortii excluso. O. coccinea. Willd. Sp. Pl: 3. p. 354, sine oe uetoeti Lathrea Phelypea. Pall. MSS. Habitat in monte Caucaso et Taurid. Pall. MSS. y. This Vee , cides ahi genres the Herbarium of Professor Pallas. 261 ‘This new addition to the Geaus Phelipca of Tournefort, again re-established by Desfontaines from his MSS. and the original drawing of Aubriet in the Museum of Natural History at Paris, and confirmed by the authority of Jussieu, throws considerable light upon the character of that curious genus ; and is the more interesting, that no specimens of the Rhelipea Tourneforti now remain in his Herbarium, or are known to exist in any other collection. The specimens of Phelipea foliata in the Pallasian collection rise from a short scaly root a little fibrous below, to from ten to eighteen inches in height ; the stems striated and a little flexuose, leafy towards the base, but naked a considerable way below the flower. The specimens from Caucasus, when magnified, appear a little villose; those from 'Tauria are shining, and without any sort of pubescence. ‘The calyx is bilabiate, with the upper lip three-cleft, the divisions approaching each other and a little incurved ; the under lip is deeply two-parted, with the divisions more obtuse and longer than in the upper lip. The tube of the corolla is curved, the limb bilabiate with the upper lip two- parted, the divisions nearly oval, and the lower lip three-parted and considerably longer. The filaments are broad, compressed and approaching in pairs, two of them considerably sherter, and are inserted in the tube of the corolla. The anthers are large, with two cells, and of a shape nearly resembling a heart inverted with a double point. ‘The style-is round and incurved ; the stigma very large, and nearly hemispherical. The capsule is oval, with the seeds affixed to four fleshy branched receptacles adhering Jongitudinally to its sides, and ramifying throughout the whole of its interior, but without appearing to unite with one another. The seeds are very small, nearly oval, shining, and exceedingly numerous, covering every lobe and sinus of the receptacles. ¥OL. x. 2M This 262 Mr. Lamepert’s Account of This curious structure of the fruit confirms the close affinity before suspected by Jussieu to exist between Phelipaa and the Aiginetia of Linneus* and Roxburgh+, the capsule of which is described by the latter as having a nwmber of convoluted lamine throughout, between which are lodged innumerable most minute seeds, and may possibly be nearly of the same construction as in Phelipea, although the entire sheathing calyx and regular co- rolla in A’ginetia are abundantly sufficient to distinguish the two genera. In addition to the foregoing account of Pallas’s Herbarium, I now beg leave to mention that I have since discovered in it fine specimens in fructification from that celebrated Palm growing in the garden at Berlin, which Linneus calls Phenix dactylifera, the Date Palm, in his Dissertation on the Sexes of Plants. See Dr. Smith’s translation of that work, page 51. Our President also mentions it in his Introduction to Botany, page 321, saying in a note, “What species of Palm was the subject of this experi- ment does not clearly appear. In the original communication to Dr. Watson printed in the Preface to Lee’s Introduction to Botany, it is called Palma major foliis flabelliformibus. Ait. Hort. Kew. vol. 3. 473. Yet Linnzus, in his dissertation on the subject, expressly calls it Phania dactylifera, the Date Palm, and says he had in his garden many vigorous plants raised from a portion of the seeds above mentioned. The great success of the experiment, and the ‘ fan-shaped’ leaves, make me rather take it for the Rhapis, a plant not well known to Linneus.” Now it appears * Sp. Pl. ed. 1. p. 632. + Plants of the Coast of Coromandel, i. p, 63, tab. 91. from ESE i ies sce 5m IE 2 TL VR Seay uns the Herbarium of Professor Pallas. 263 from Pallas’s specimens sent to him from Berlin (above men- tioned) to be the Chamerops humilis Linn., and that variety which is said to:grow twenty feet high. | Willdenow, in his Preface to the Hortus Berolinensis, also considers it to be that plant. ‘Two labels accompany the specimens, with the following inscriptions on them : “Chamerops* arborea feminea, Palma nostra in H. R. Bero- linensi culta, per foecundationem artificialem ab Ill. Gleditsch instituta, maxime celebrata. « Soboles exinde ortz ad 3 pedum altitudinem fere accedentes in eodem viridario aluntur sub matris umbra.” ‘A sketch from one of the specimens is annexed, Tab. VIII. Whether the two supposed varieties may not be distinct species, we must leave to those botanists who nae an opportunity of ob- sigs them where — grow. oy Ow further examination of this Herbarium, I have found some more new plants, and others. but very little known, which I beg leave to lay before.the Society. The greater part of the plants foupd by Sievers in his journey to discover the true Rhubarb, and by him communicated to Pallas, are in this collection. One of the most remarkable is the Robinia jubata, first published in the Nova Acta Academie Scientiarum Imperialis Petropolitane ; also’ more perfect specimens of the same sent by the Governor of Irkutsk at Pallas’s request, and from which the superb figure in Pallas’s Species Astragalorum, tab. 85, was taken : these are nearly three feet in length, and in excellent preservation. Rheum nutans, sibiricum and caspicum also of the Flora Rossica, vol. 2, quoted * « Chamerops No. 4. Chameer. arborea feminea, L. p, 1657.” 2m 2 by 264 Mr. Lampert’s Account of by Professor Georgi in his Beschreibung des Russichen Reichs, but yet unpublished ; a new species of Rumex, R. graminifolius of Professor Rudolph, whose specimens of it I have also received through the kindness of my friend Dr. E. D. Clarke, of Cam- bridgé ; the beautiful and rare Lilium camtschatcense of Linnzus; a remarkable new species of Vaccinium which we had _ before heard of, and been Jong anxious to see. The following note affixed to the plant by Professor Rudolph, from whose Herbarium I received it, (there beimg no specimen of it in the Pallasian col- Jection,) contains all that we yet know concerning it: “ Vacci- nium prestans. Hocce Vaccinium a nemine hucusque est visum. Crescit in remotissimo deserto, et in unico loco et paucissimis incolis Kamtschatkz tantummodo noto. Baccz perquam grate sapide sunt. Specimina cum floribus nequisquam, quamvis 100 rubelonum pretium oblatum fuit, ausus est colligere.” The fol- lowing specific character will, I trust, distinguish it from its con- geners. VACCINIUM presrans. Vaccinium caule humile adscendens, foliis magnis obovalibus serrulatis ciliatis venosis, fructu subgloboso amplissimo. » . A sketch from the specimen is annexed, Tab. IX. For the Rumex I here propose the following specific character. RUMEX eramiInirotivs. Rumex foliis gramineis levibus integerrimis: vel lacinulis dua- bus oppositis appendiculatis. Tas. X. R. graminifolius. Georgi Besch. Russ. Reichs. p. 921, sine nota. Habitat in Kamtschatkaé ad mare glaciale. Rudolph. In insulis Curilis. Pallas. ». The Linn Drans Vol. X. Tab.8.p.264. Nogectiaicon Srasstans MRA tt i Fa, Seal } saativls po en ii cold y i fea th ebiak ee fee - Ph ™ ve ‘Passi Pay i ‘ vir Ls Wy all Sit fet cigs Bagh ayy ih ae abil bes oe | oad i se fieite ia at 4 © ve ‘ ¢ : 4 ‘ef — aig . 7 , Mite . ’ > > y rs rd ; | ~ Linn Trans Vol. X Tab lO p.264 . a Re ; 4 { he a i ae mh 9 ite. a ® Fl 1% i: 7 ‘ & , x ¢ ne Hy “—y Liaw". wh G9 ATT TELAT SUL WUT the Herbarium of Professor Pallas. 265 The specimens of Lilium camtschatcense, of which a figure is annexed, Tab. XI., vary in length from six to eighteen inches, with the upper leaves alternate, and the lower in whorls, generally by fives; but sometimes by threes, or in opposite pairs towards the top. The roots are very remarkable, being composed of little tubers or grains, imbricated round a central pillar, like the grains of Maize, only much smaller, with a few branched fibres at the base. ‘The flowers are terminal, and vary in my. speci- mens from one to three on each stem. It has already been sup- posed to be a species of Fritillaria, and the specimens seem to confirm the conjecture, as the short stamens, large recurved stigmas, and very short style, accord much better with that genus. What may be the situation or form of the nectaries I have not been able to discover: VIII. Some ( 266 ) VIII. Some Remarks on the Synonyms and native Country of Hypericum calycinum. By J. E. Smith, M.D., F.R.S., and PULLS. Read March 21, 1809. Towanps the end of last August I received from Mr. Hincks, Secretary to the Cork Institation, a specimen of Hypericum caly- cinum, gathered, by Mr. Drummond, Curator of the botanic garden near that city, about three miles from Cork in the road to Bandon, where these gentlemen assure me the plant in ques- tion grows wild in great abundance. This communication led me to investigate the reputed places of growth of this species, as well as of the Hypericum Ascyron, with which Linnzus and some other botanists have confounded it. This confusion was first publicly corrected in the Hortus Kewensis, v. 3. 103, where the synonyms of the calycinum are rightly given. Two years af- terwards Mr. Curtis published this plant in his Magazine, v. 5. t. 146, judiciously adopting the corrections in the Hortus Kew- ensis, but relapsing into an old error in quoting Bauhin’s Ascy- rum magno flore. 'The occurrence of this quotation chiefly excited in my mind a desire to investigate the whole subject; for I must honestly confess that, as Bauhin’s plant was gathered by Burser on the Pyrenean mountains, J should have been glad to have found it the same with our Irish one, as confirming the wildness of the latter. My first object therefore was to determine the plant of Dr. Surtu’s Remarks on Hypericum calycinum. 267 of Bauhin, described in his Prodromus, p. 130, from Burser’s specimen, and therefore to be ascertained by the herbarium of the latter at Upsal. On turning to Linneus’s own copy of Bau- hin, I found a mark indicating that he had made this inquiry, and the result is recorded in an unpublished manuscript note in the first edition of his Species Plantarum to the following effect : « The true Linnean Hypericum Ascyron is the same with that of Burser. Its stem is perfectly straight and altogether herbaceous. If therefore the plant of Wheeler be shrubby and inclining, it is certainly another species.” In consequence of this discovery of Linnzus, the synonym of Wheeler is not given under H. Ascyron in the second edition of Sp. Pl., though. that of Morison is still retained, Linnzus not having perceived that Morison figures Wheeler's plant, while the latter part of his description only belongs to it, the former being transcribed from Bauhin’s Prodromus. Such faults are common in writers who work on the plan of Morison, and he errs also in men- tioning Mount Olympus as the place where Sir George Wheeler gathered his plant. But though Linneus rejected Wheeler's synonym for his H. Ascyron, he has not either referred it to any other old species, nor described it afresh as a new one, at least in the Sp. Plantarum. In his Mantissa indeed, p. 106, he has de- scribed the species in question by the new name of Hypericum calycinum, but without any synonym ; and he had now so totally forgotten his former note, and the reference to Wheeler's Journey, that he gives North America, with a doubt, as the native coun- try of his calycinum. This was a mere guess, devoid of all founda- tion. The specimens of this species in his herbarium appear to be garden ones ; so does the original authentic one of his H. Ascyron, though to the latter he has pinned a plant raised by Gronovius from Pennsylvanian seed, which is H. pyramidatum of Hort. Kew. . recently 268 Dr. Smirn’s Remarks on the Synonyms and recently figured by Ventenat in his splendid Jardin de la Malmai- son, t. 118; as well as two wild Siberian specimens of the plant figured by Gmelin, 0. 4. ¢. 69. This last figure is quoted in the second Manlissa, p. 455, for H. Ascyron, which Gmelin thought it to be, perhaps rightly; but the calyx is much larger than usual, and very unequal, so as to raise a doubt in my mind. The main point, however, respecting our present inquiry is esta- blished, that the true H. Ascyron, which is the Ascyron magno flore, Bauh. Pin. 280, Prod. 130, is a native of the Pyrenees ; perhaps also of moist meadows in Siberia. My next object was to ascertain what Tournefort understood by the above phrase of Bauhin, adopted in his IJnstitutiones Rei Herbarie, 256, under which he quotes Morison, who, as I have said, confounds two species together. ‘This question is decided by Tournefort’s ¢. 131, f. 2, evidently drawn from H. Ascyron and not from H. calycinum, which last it appears Tournefort never knew, otherwise he could not have passed it over. The next botanist after Sir George Wheeler who gathered H. calycinum wild was the late Professor John Sibthorp, who found it in the woods about the village of Belgrad near Constantinople, no doubt the same place where Wheeler first discovered it. The situation is not unlike that near Cork where Mr. Drummond found our specimen, sheltered, and of no considerable elevation, with a southern exposure towards the sea. Dr. Sibthorp has left a figure of this plant for the Flora Greca, which is one of Mr. Ferdinand Bauer’s most exquisite drawings ; but he mistook it for H. Ascyron, and has therefore quoted Tournefort’s synonym above mentioned. No other plant in this writers Institutiones or Corollarium, as far as I can dis- cover, can possibly be referred to H. calycinum. Ventenat de- termined his Ascyrum erectum, salicis folio, magno flore, Inst. 256, by Jussieu’s herbarium, to be H. pyramidatum. It native Country of Hypericum calycinum. 269 It seems therefore that H. calycinum, though so commonly cul- tivated in the English gardens and shrubberies, to which Sir George Wheeler introduced it in 1676, has not been found wild in any other part of the world than at Belgrad near Constanti- nople, and between Cork and Bandon in Ireland ; two situations, though remote from each other, and differing about ten degrees in-Jatitude, not unlike with respect to their exposure. We know moreover, by daily experience, that the plant under considera- tion is able to bear a much colder climate than either. In con- sequence of the above discovery, the Hypericum calycinum will make the first plate in the 29th volume of English Botany. Norwich, March 15, 1809. VOL. Xs 2N IX. Notes ( 270 ) 1X. Notes relating to Botany, collected from the Manuscripts of the late Peter Collinson, Esq., I'.R.S., and communicated by Aylmer Bourke Lambert, Esq., F.R.S. and A.S., V.P.L.S. Read April 18, 1809. Brine lately on a visit to John Cator, Esq., of Beckenham- Place, and looking one day over his library, amongst a collec- tion of books left him by his uncle, who married the daughter of the celebrated Peter Collinson, I discovered several which had formerly belonged to that eminent naturalist. One of them was his own copy of Miller’s Gardener’s and Botanist’s Dictionary, the last edition published by the author, with the following note at the bottom of the title page: “The gift of my old friend the author to P. Collinson, F.R.S.” This book contains a great deal of his manuscript notes relating to the plants cultivated in those days, both in his own gardens and in those of the most celebrated of his contemporaries ; with a complete catalogue of the plants he had cultivated in his garden at Mill-Hill, and a list of all those which he had himself introduced into this country from Russia, Siberia, America, and other parts of the world; also some original letters from Dillenius, Miller, Bartram, and others; and a short account of his own life, which appears not to have been known to his biographers. Mr. Cator having obli- -gingly Notes relating to Botany. 971 gingly permitted me to take a copy of the whole, I now submit to the Linnean Society those parts which I think most worthy A.B. L. of their notice. I WAS born in the house against Church-Alley, Clement’s Lane, Lombard-Street, from whence my parents removed into Grace- church-Street, where I have now lived many years. [July 18th, 1764.] Gardening and gardeners have wonderfully increased in. my memory. Being sent at two years old to be brought up with my relations at Peckham, im Surry ; from them I received the first liking to gardens and plants. Their garden was remarkable for fine cut greens, the fashion of those times, and for curious. flowers. I often went with them to visit the few nursery-gardens: round London to buy fruits, flowers, and clipt yews in the shapes of birds, dogs, men, ships, &c. For these Mr. Parkinson. in Lambeth was very much noted, and he had besides a few myrtles, oleanders, and other evergreens. This was about the year 1712. At that time Mr. Wrench, behind the Earl of Peter-- borough’s at Parson’s Green near Chelsea, famous for tulip-trees,. began the collecting of evergreens, arbutuses, phillyreas, &c. ;. and from him came the gold and silver hedgehog-holly, being. accidental varieties from the hedgehog variety ‘of the common. holly. He gave rewards to encourage people to look out for ac- cidental varieties from the common holly; and the saw-leaved. holly was observed by these means, and a variegated holly goes. by his name to this day. He and Parkinson died about the year 1724. Contemporary with them were Mr.. Derby and Mr. Fairchild; they had their gardens on each side the narrow alley. leading to Mt. George Whitmore’s, at the further end of Hoxton.. 2n2 As. 972 Notes relating to Botany, collected from As their gardens were small, they were the only people for exotics, and had many stoves and green-houses for all sorts of aloes and succulent plants; with oranges, lemons, and other rare plants. At the other end of the town were two famous nursery- men, Furber and Gray, having large tracts of ground in that way, and vast stocks; for the taste “ae gardening increased annu- ally. Doctor Compton, bishop of London, was a great lover of rare plants, as well such as came from the West Indies as from North America, and had the greatest collection then in England, After his death the see was filled by Bishop Robinson, a man destitute of any such taste, who allowed his gardener to sell what he pleased, and often spoiled what he could not otherwise dispose of. Many fine trees, come.to great maturity, were cut down to make room for produce for the table. The abovementioned gardeners Furber and Gray availed themselves of making purchases from this noble collection, and augmented their nurseries with many fine plants not otherwise to be procured. Brompton Park was another surprising nursery of all the va~- rieties of evergreens, fruits, &c., with a number of others all round the town; for, as the taste increased, nursery-gardens flourished. Mr. Hunt at Putney, and Mr. Gray, are now living, aged - about 70. But more modern cultivators are the celebrated James Gordon at Mile-End, whom for many years, from my extensive correspondence, I have assisted with plants and seeds, and who, with a sagacity peculiar to himself, has raised a vast variety of plants from all parts of the world; and the ingenious Mr. Lee of Hammersmith, who, had he the like assistance, would be little behind him. Mr. Miller of the Physic Garden, Chelsea, has made his great abilities well known by his works, as well as his skill in every part of gardening, and his success in raising seeds pro- cured the Manuscripts of the late Peter Collinson. 273 cured by a large correspondence. Ie has raised the reputation of the Chelsea garden so much, that it excels all the gardens in Europe for its amazing variety of plants of all orders and classes, and from all climates, as | beheld with much delight this 19th of July, 1764. October 3d, 1759, after nine years absence from Goodwood after the death of my intimate friend the late’ Duke of Rich- mond, I accompanied the present Duchess there, and to my agreeable surprise found the hardy exotic trees much grown. There were two fine great magnolias about twenty feet high in the American grove that flowered annually. (My tree flowered this year, 1760, that I raised from seed about twenty years before.) Some of the larches measured near the ground seventeen inches round, the rest fourteen inches and a half. I saw a larch of the old Duke’s planting cut down, that in twenty-five years was above fifty feet high, and cut into planks above a foot in diameter, and above twenty feet long; but there were some larches of the same date seventy feet high. They grow wonderfully in chalky soil. October 30th, 1762, the young Lord Petre came of age. The late Lord Petre, his father, died July 2d, 1742: he was my intimate friend, the ornament and delight of the age he lived in. He went from his house at Ingatestone in Essex, to his seat at Thorndon-Hall in the same county, to extend a large row of elms at the end of the park behind the house.. He removed, in the spring of the year 1734, being the 22d of his age, twenty- four full-grown elms about sixty feet high and two feet diame- ter: all grew finely, and now are not known from the old trees they were planted to match. In the year 1738 he planted the great avenue of elms up the park from the house to the espla- nade: ' 274 Notes relating to Botany, collected from nade: the trees were large, perhaps fifteen or twenty years old. On each side the esplanade, at the head or tup of the park, he raised two mounts, and planted all with evergreens in Apyil and May 1740. In the centre of each mount was a large cedar of Lebanon of twenty years growth, supported by four larches of eleven years growth. On the same area on the mount were planted four smaller cedars of Lebanon aged twenty years each, supported by four larches aged six years; on the sides Virginian red cedars of three years growth, mixed with other evergreens, which now (anno 1760) make an amazingly fine appearance. In the years 1741 and 1742, from this very nursery he planted out forty thousand ffees of all kinds, to embellish the woods at the head of the park on each side of the avenue to the lodge, and round the esplanade. It would occupy a large work to give a particular account of his building and planting. His stoyes ex- ceed in dimensions al] others in Europe. He dying, his vast collection of rare exotic plants and his extensive nursery were soon dispersed. I paid to John Clarke for a thousand cedars of Lebanon, June the 8th, 1761, seventy-nine pounds six shillings, in behalf of the Duke of Richmond. ‘These thousand cedars were planted at five years old, in my sixty-seventh year, in March and April, anno 1761. In September 1761 I was at Goodwood, and saw these cedars in a thriving state. This day, October 20th, 1762, I paid Mr. Clarke for another large parcel of cedars for the Duke of Richmond. It is very re- markable that Mr. Clarke, a butcher at Barnes, conceived an opinion that he could raise cedars of Lebanon from cones from the great tree at Hendon-Place. He succeeded perfectly, and annually - the Manuscripts of the late Peter Collinson. 2h5 apnually raised them in such quantities, that he supplied the vurserymen, as well as abundance of noblemen and gentlemen, with cedars of Lebanon; and he succeeded not only in cedars, but he had a great knack in raising the small magnolia, Warner’s Cape jessamine, and all other exotic seeds. Ile built a large stove for pine-apples, &c. Any person who has curiosity enough may go to Goodwood in Sussex, and see the date and progress of those cedars, which were at planting five years old. ‘The Duke’s father was a great planter ; but the young Duke much exceeds him, for he intends to clothe all the lofty naked hills above him with evergreen - woods: great portions are already planted, and he annually raises infinite numbers in his nurseries from seeds of pines, firs, cedars, and larches. . In the Duke of Argyle’s wood stands the largest New-England or Weymouth pine. This, and his largest cedars of Lebanon now standing, were all raised by him from seed in the year 1725 at his seat at Whitton near Hounslow. This spring, 1762, all the Duke of Argyle’s rare trees and shrubs were removed to the Princess of Wales’s garden at Kew, which now excels all others, under the direction of Lord Bute. Mr. Vernon, Turkey merchant at Aleppo, transplanted the weeping-willow from the river Euphrates, brought it with him to England, and planted it at his seat at T'wickenham-Park, where I saw it growing anno 1748: this is the original of all the weep- ing-willows in our gardens*. October ® This is the fifst authentic account we have had of its ‘introduction ;. the story of its being raised from a live twig of a fruit-basket, received from Spain by Pope, being only 276 Noles relating to Botany, collected from October.the 18th, 1765, I went to see Mr. Rogers’s vineyard, all of Burgundy grapes, and seemingly all perfectly ripe. 1 did not see a green half-ripe grape in all this great quantity. He does not expect to make less than fourteen hogsheads of wine. The bunches and fruit are remarkably large, and the vines very strong. He was formerly famous for ranunculuses. October 18th, 1765, I visited Mrs. Gaskry, at Parson’s Green near Fulham. This long, hot, dry summer has had a remark- ably good effect on all wall-fruits. Apricots, peaches, and nec- tarines ripened much earlier than usual, and have been excel- lent’; but the most remarkable was the plenty of pomegranates, near two dozen on each tree, of a remarkable size and fine ruddy complexion, of the size of middling oranges. One that was split showed the redness and ripépess within. John Buxton, Esq., of Shadwell near Thetford in Norfolk, from the acorns of 1762, sowed or planted on forty-two acres of land 120 bushels, containing as near as can be computed 1,432,320 acorns ; which is nearly 34,103 acorns on each acre. For this Mr. Buxton had a present of a gold medal from the Society of Arts, &c. Years or ages hence it may be worth a journey to go and observe the progress of vegetation in the dimensions and only on newspaper authority so late as August 1801.—See Miller’s Dictionary by Martyn. A.B.L. Sir Thomas Vernon of London, Knight, and some time member for that city, died - in 1705, leaving two sons. Henry the eldest died unmarried at Aleppo in Syria, aged 31; his monument is in St. Stephen’s church, Colemait-Street. Thomas Vernon, the second son, resided at Twickenham-Park, Middlesex. The above communicated to me by Sir William A’Court, Bart, nephew to Mr. A.B.L. heights Vernon. the Manuscripts of the late Peter Collinson. 277 heights of this famous plantation, whose beginning is so certainly known. By a letter (November 28th, 1762,) from Thomas Knowlton, gardener to the Duke of Devonshire at his seat of Londesburgh near York, and director of His Grace’s new kitchen-garden, stoves, &c., at Chatsworth, I am informed that the Duke of Devonshire is now sowing seventy quarters of acorns, that is, 560 bushels; an immense quantity: but this year there was the greatest crop of acorns ever remembered. Besides this vast sowing, some hundred thousands of young seedling oaks are planting out this winter: between forty and fifty men are employed about this work. In the year 1761, as many oaks were transplanted from the nursery, of two, three, and four years old. . 1761. Our last winter, if it may be called so, exceeded for mildness 1759. The autumnal flowers were not gone before spring began in December with aconites, snowdrops, polyan- thuses, &e., and continued without any alloy of intervening sharp frosts, all January, except two or three frosty nights and mornings: @ more delightful season could not be enjoyed in southern latitudes. In Januafy and February my garden was covered with flowers. This summer, 1762, I was visiting Mr. Wood, of Littleton, Middlesex. He showed me a curiosity which surprised me. On a little slender twig of a peach-tree about four inches long, that projected from the wall, grew a peach, and close to it, on the other side of the twig, a nectarine. This Mr. Miller also assured me he had himself known, although not men- VOL. X. 20 tioned 278 Notes relating to Botany, collected from tioned here (in his Dictionary); and another friend* assured me that he had a tree which produced the like in his garden at Salis- bury: but this I saw myself, and it induces me to think that the peach is the mother of the nectarines ; the latter being a modern fruit, as there is no Greek or Latin name for it. Copied from my nephew Thomas Collinson’s Journal of his Travels, 1754.—* In the reign of Queen Elizabeth, anno the first orange- and lemon-trees were introduced into England by two curious gentlemen, one of them Sir Nicholas Carew, at Bedington, near Croydon, in Surrey.” (The title is lately extinct, anno 1763.) These orange-trees were planted in the natural ground; but against every winter an artificial covering was raised for their protection. I have seen them some years ago in great perfection. But this apparatus going to decay, without due consideration a green-house of brick-work was built all round them, and left on the top uncovered in the summer. I visited them a year or two after, in their new habitation, and to my great concern found some dying, and all declining; for, although there were windows on the south side, they did not thrive in their confinement; but being kept damp with the rains, and wanting a free, airy, full sun all the growing months of summer, they languished, and at last all died. A better fate has hitherto attended the other fine par- cel of orange-trees, &c., brought over at the same time by Sir * T well knew the gentleman here alluded to, Dr. Hancock of Salisbury, who as- sured me of this fact ; and a drawing showing both the fruits on the same branch is now in the possession of H. P. Wyndham, Esq., of Salisbury. Dr. Hancock told me that he had the tree taken up to send to the Earl of Harburgh, but it was killed by removing. ——A. B.L.. - Robert the Manuscripts of the late Peter Collinson. 279 Robert Mansell, at Margam; late Lord Mansell’s, now Mr. Tal- bot’s, called Kingsey-castle, in the road from Cowbridge to Swansey, in South Wales. My nephew counted eighty trees of citrons, limes, burgamots, Seville and China orange-trees, planted in great cases all ranged in a row before the green-house. This is the finest sight of its kind in England. He had the curiosity to measure some of them. A China orange measured in the extent of its branches fourteen feet. A Seville orange was fourteen feet high, the case included, and the stem twenty-one inches round. A China orange twenty-two inches and a half in girth. July 11th, 1777. I visited the orangery at Margam in the year 1766, in company with Mr. Lewis Thomas, of Eglews Nynngt in that neighbourhood, a very sensible and attentive man, who told me that the orange-trees, &c. in that garden were intended as a present from the King of Spain to the King of Denmark ; and that the vessel in which they were shipped being taken in the Channel, the trees were made a present of to Sir R. Mansell. December 10th, 1765. A few days ago died my friend Mr. Bennet, who was very curious and industrious in procuring seeds and plants from abroad. He had a garden behind the Shadwell water-works near the spot where he lived, and built several very handsome stoves at a great expense, filling them with fine exotics of all kinds; but the erecting a fire-engine to raise the water so hurt his plants by the smoke, that he removed to a large garden of two or three acres, in the fields at the back of Whitechapel Jaystalls. Here he built a large house for pines and other rare exotics, which he left well stocked. In this garden he raised water melons to a great size and perfection; I have told above 202 forty 280 Notes relating to Botany, collected from § y forty lying ripe on the ground. They were raised in frames, and transplanted out under bell-glasses. A basket of these melons was sent to the King. Mr. Bennet had besides a great collection of hardy-ground plants. His garden and all his plants were sold by auction April 14th, 1766. The seeds of the rhubarb with broad curled leaves were first raised by me. ‘They were sent by Dr. Amman, professor of botany at Petersburg, whose father-in-law was Russian go- vernor of the province near which the rhubarb grows. ‘The seed of that with long narrow curled leaves was sent by the Jesuits in China to my friend Dr. Tanches, at Petersburg, by the Rus- sian caravan, and he sent it to me. Lord Rochefort, our ambassador in Spain, in a letter dated Madrid, November 1765, says, that in the parts where he had been there are very few forest-trees worth notice ; but the ilexes about the Escurial are fine. One sort produces acorns of a mon- strous size, which they eat in Spain at their best tables, and they are as sweet as chesnuts. May 17th, 1761. I was invited by Mr. Sharp, at South Lodge, on Enfield Chace, to dine, and see the Virginia dog- wood (Cornus florida). The calyx of the flowers is as large as those figured by Catesby, and (what is remarkable) this is the only tree that bears these Howers amongst many hundreds that I have seen: it began to bear them in May 1759. Anno 1747. Raised a new species of what appears to be a tbree-thorned Acacia, from seeds from Persia, that came with Azad or Persian hornbeam, given me by Mr. Baker: it thrives well the Manuscripts of the late Peter Collinson. 281 well in my garden. I gave seed to Mr. Gordon, and he also raised it. The eastern hornbeam (Miller’s Dictionary, edition Sth,) was raised from seed given to me, which came from Persia by the name of Azad. I gave it to Mr. Gordon, gardener, at Mile- End, who was so fortunate as to have it come up anno 1747, and from him my garden and other gardens have been supplied. There is a large tree in my field at Hendon, Middlesex. Mr. Miller is greatly mistaken in saying the Arundo No. 2, or Donaz, dies down every year. In my garden the stalks have continued for some years making annually young green shoots from every joint, and bear a handsome tassel of flowers. The first time I ever saw it in flower was September 15th, 1762. This very long hot dry season has made many exotics flower. Donax seu Arundo flowered this year also (1762) at Mr. Gordon’s at Mile-Iind. October the 22d, 1746, I received the first double Spanish broom that was in England, sent me by my friend Mr. Brewer at Nuremberg: it cost there a golden ducat; and, being planted in a pot nicely wickered all over, came from thence down the river Elbe to Hamburgh, from whence it was brought by the first ship to London. I inarched it on the single-flowered broom, and gave it to Gray and Gordon, gardeners, and from them all have been supplied. Anno 1756. Some roots of Siberian martagon, sent me by Mr. Demidoff, proprietor of the Siberian iron mines, flowered for the first time, May 24th, 1756. The flower is but little re- flexed, and is, I think, the nearest to black of any flower that I know. In 282 Notes relating to Botany. In the year 1727, my intimate friend Sir Charles Wager, first lord of the admiralty, brought plants from Gibraltar-Hill, of the Linaria procumbens Hispanica flore flavescente pulchré striato, la- bits nigro-purpureis, which I have yet in my garden, anno 1761; and at the same time he brought the broad-leaved Teucrium, and a species of periwinkle, neither of which were in our gardens before ; and some roots of what is called Hyacinths of Peru. In the year 1756, the famous tulip-tree in Lord Peterborough’s garden at Parson’s Green, near Fulham, died. It was about seventy feet high, the tallest tree in the ground, and perhaps a hundred years old, being the first tree of the kind that was raised in England. It had for many years the visitation of the curious to see its flowers, and admire its beauty, for it was as straight as an arrow, and died of age by a gentle decay. But it was remarkable, that the same year that this died, a tulip-tree which I had given to Sir Charles Wager flowered for the first time in his garden, which was opposite Lord Peterborough’s. This tulip-tree I raised from seed, and it was thirty years old when it flowered. April 8th, 1749. I removed from my house at Peckham, Surry, and was for two years in transplanting my garden to my house at Mill-Hill, called Ridgeway-House, in the parish of Hendon, Middlesex. Anno 1751. I raised the China or paper mulberry from seed given me by Dr. Mortimer. xX. 4 De Linn Trans Vol. X.Tab.12.p. 283. é ) " V L i i See Inne Rudge. det? (283) X. A Description of several Species of Plants from New Holland. By Edward Rudge, Esq. F.R.S. and L.S. Read April 18, 1809, and January 16, 1810. CENTROLEPIS CUSPIDIGERA. Monandria Monogynia. Tan, SEL. Fie. 1, Cenrroteris foliis parum pubescentibus: spathis longissime cuspidatis, valde hispidis: paleis emarginatis. Devauxia Billardieri. Brown Prod. v. 1. 252. Planta tres ad quatuor pollices longa. Radiz fibrosa. Scapi plures, erecti, teretes, basi foliis vaginati. Spathe bivalves, ovate, longissime cuspidatz, basi concave, pilis albidis rigidis hispida, decem- ad duodecim-flora. Calyx nullus. Corolla nulla; Palee unilaterales, tot quot flores, ovato-oblonge, emarginatz. Stamen. Filamentum filiforme, paled longius, basi pistilli inser- tum. Anthera cordata, versatilis. Pistillum. Germen superum, ovatum; Stylus tripartitus ; Stigma acuta, glandulosa. Capsula trilocularis ; loculis a basi inequaliter distantibus, mo- nospermis. Semina 284 Mr. Runee’s Description of Semina ovata. Habitat prope Port Jackson in Nova Hollandia. Taz. XII. Fig. 1. Planta magnitudine naturali. a. Spathe cum floribus magnitudine aucte. b. Exdem sejuncte floribus orbate. c. Folium. d. Flos integer eadem proportione ampliatus. e. Capsula. jf. Anthera dorso et fronte visa. g. Semen. CENTROLEPIS EMULA. Tas. XII. Fig. 2. C. foliis usque ad apicem villosis, peracutis: spathis acuminatis : paleis obtusis. Devauxia Patersonii. Brown Prod. v. 1. 252. Planta biuncialis. Radix fibrosa. Scapi plures, teretes, purpurei. Folia scapo breviora, villis albidis usque ad apicem tecta. Spathe bivalves, ovat, apice obtuse, concave, villose, mul- tiflore. Calyzr nullus. Corolla nulla. Palee unilaterales, ovate, concave, integre. Stamen. Filamentum basi pistilli insertum, palez longitudine. Anthera oblonga. Germen oblongo-ovatum. Semina ovata, circiter novem in singulis spiculis. Habitat prope Port Jackson in Novd Hollandia. TAB. PIE Cor Cea Ea ce ti us iy & & Linn Trans Vol X Tiab 3. p.265, Ft SAY) Wwil A d (jp | 3 Yime 7 Ble pled: : pe i Z Slemnelen wet loreal! several Species of Plants from New Holland. 285 Tas. XII. Fig. 2. Planta magnitudine naturali. a. Spathe cum floribus magnitudine auctz. b. Flos integer eadem proportione ampliatus. c. Capsula. d. Anthera. e. Semen. f-. Folium. The name of this genus would be much more appropriate by deriving it from its prickly spathes, the Greek word zevrgay meaning a prickle as well as a centre: for the glumes are uni- lateral in several species, and probably not truly central (as Monsieur Billardiere describes them) in any: I use the term spathes in conformity to his description of Centrolepis fascicu- laris. PIMELEA CURVIFLORA. Tas. XIII. Fig. 1. P. foliis ovalibus, capitulo in omnibus fere axillis brevissime pedunculato: corolla extus .valde barbaté tubo curvato: an- theris cordatis. Pimelea curviflora. Brown Prod. v. 1. 362. Fruticulus gracilis, ramosissimus, diffusus. Rami teretes, divaricati, villis densissime imbricatis. Folia ovalia, subsessilia, integerrima, supra glabra, subtus pilosa, tres vel quatuor lineas longa. Flores capitulo in omnibus fere axillis brevissime pedunculato terminales. Capitulum sex- ad octo-florum. Calyx nullus. Corolla. Tubus inferne curvatus, extus villosus, albidus, intus . glaber: Limbus quadripartitus: Lacinie oblongo-ovate, obtuse. VOL. xX. oP Stamina. 286 Mr. Ruvee’s Description of Stamina. Filamenta duo filiformia, fauce corolle inserta, laciniis corolle multo breviora ; Anthere cordate. Pistillum. Germen oblongum, glabrum; Stylus filiformis, curva- tus, tubo corolle brevior; Stigma capitatum. Habitat in Nova Cambria. Tas. XIII. Fig. 1. Planta magnitudine naturali. a. Corolla magaitudine multum aucta. b. Corolla aperta. c. Anthere dorso et fronte vise. d. Pistillum. PIMELEA GLAUCA. Tas. XIII. Fig. 2. P. foliis ovali-lanceolatis, levibus: coroll4 extus villos4 tubo cylindraceo; filamentis brevissimis, stylo longissimo : stigmate minutissime barbato. Pimelea glauca. Brown Prod. 360. Frutex ramosus. Rami teretes, glabri. . Folia decussata, subsessilia, patentissima, ovali-lanceolata, inte- gerrima, levia, glauca, semiunguicularia. Flores in capitulis involucratis bracteis quatuor ovatis. Capitulum terminale, multiflorum. Calyx nutlus. Corolla monopetala, tubulosa; Tubus extus villosus, albus, intus glaber; Limbus profunde quadripartitus; Lacinie ovato-lan- ceolate. Stamina. Filamenta duo, brevia, fauce tubi inserta. Anthere oblong. Pistillum. } ati ret Hyena Blaha trun ni be rk!: y ee ial taane, (irhalle indwrataan Nn Wate es aston 1 EE CORRE by rink Iageiiucine patra gt ee i age Fue alohyaee's MTT fe: Ae Aaah rs : yop i va ae om hy a sia ie vasa ti Sat Linn Trans Vol.X.TarbLA.p 287. / Uf: , Lf? vA mh Yondlei flamalise Dima Nee a RR. del? several Species of Plants from New Holland. 287 Pistillum. Germen clavatum, glabrum ; Stylus filiformis, apice inflexus, tubo corolla multo longior; Stigma parvum, obtusum, minutissime barbatum. Habitat in Nova HollandiA. Tas. XIII. Fig. 2. Ramus magnitudine naturali. - Corolla magnitudine multum aucta. . Corolla aperta. . Pistillum. . Anthera. Qaaewa PIMELEA FILAMENTOSA. Tas. XIV. Fig. 1. P. foliis lanceolatis mucronatis, capitulis grandibus, bracteis ovato-cuneatis ; corolla extus villosa; filamentis longissimis ; antheris sublinearibus. Folia opposita, sessilia, glabra, mucronata. Flores in capitulis grandibus involucratis foliolis quatuor ovatis, utrinque glabris ; receptaculo longo piloso. Calyx nullus. Corolla monopetala, tubulosa, extus pilosa, pilis infra longio- ribus et rigidioribus; Lacinig exquales, ovato-oblonge, ob- tusze. Stamina. Filamenta longissima, fauce tubi inserta. Anthere sub- lineares. Pistillum. Germen ovatum, glabrum ; Stylus filiformis, exsertus ; Stigma hemispheericum, pilosum. Habitat in Noyvé Hollandia. 2Pe2 Tas. 288 Mr. Rupvexr’s Description of Tas. XIV. Fig. 1. Ramus magnitudime naturali. a. Corolla magnitudine aucta. 6. Corolla aperta. c. Pistillum. d. Stamen. PIMELEA SPICATA. * Flores spicati. Tas. XIV. Fig. 2. P. foliis ovalibus, levibus, longe nunc per paria distantibus: coroll4 apice extus tantum pubescentula, laciniis obovatis: antheris minutis subsessilibus. Pimelea spicata. Brown Prod. v. 1. 362. Folia opposita, longo intervallo nunc per paria distantia, levia, brevissime petiolata: nervis paucis. Flores in spicd pergente florescentia elongata, terminali, foliis duobus involucrata. Calyx nullus. | Corolla monopetala, tubulosa, utrinque glabra. Limbus qua- drifidus ; Lacinie obovate, apice extus tantum pubescentule, Stamina. Filamenta duo brevissima, fauce tubi inserta. Anthere subovate. Pistillum. Germen ovatum ; Stylus filiformis fere altitudine limbi: Stigma capitatum, barbatum. Habitat prope Port Jackson in Nova Hollandia. Tab. XIV. Fig. 2. Planta magnitudine naturali. a. Corolla magnitudine aucta. 6. Corolla. oth Piday dshadcith sre Als pal Wes Shs: Be ae kahit. abun t= wieD Linn. Trans Vol. X. Tab 15. p. 289. Sirf Bi wl. Z R.da! several Species of Plants from New Holland. 289 b. Corolla aperta. c. Pistillum. d. Anthera. XYRIS ELONGATA. Tas. XV. Fig. 1. X. scapo ancipiti longissimo, capitulo oblongo, bracteis inferio- ribus acute carinatis. Radix fibrosa. Folia inferne equitantia, scapo duplo breviora, angusta, subu- lata, preeter stipulas reliquas gemmaceas vagineformes. Scapi plures, bipedales ancipites margine crassiusculo flavo, tenuissime striati, torti, foliis duobus vaginati. Spica oblonga, imbricata, uncialis, bracteis ovatis, concavis, margine membranaceis, flores plures claudentibus: ad singu- los bractee due acute carinate. Corolla tripetala, lutea, petalorum laminz late obcuneate. Stamina. Filamenta tria, brevissima, basi corolle inserta. Anthere sulcatz, basi apiceque profunde emarginate. Stylum non vidi. Habitat prope Port Jackson in Nova Hollandia. Tas. XV. Fig. 1. Planta magnitudine naturali. a. Corolla magnitudine aucta. 6. Anthera. ScrrPvUs GRACILIS. Tas. XV. Fig. 2. S. culmo nudo, tereti, capitulo glomerato mucronato. Isolepis nodosa; Brown Prod. v. 1. 221. . Culmus 290 Mr. Rupex’s Description of Culmus nudus, levis, teres, subtilissime striatus, apice in acutum mucronem terminans. Capitulum parvum, juxta apicem culmum unilaterale glomera- tum, spicis paucis ovatis, acutis, fuscis, sessilibus. Spice late ovate, imbricate, dense conglomerate; Squamis ovato-lanceolatis, acutis, concavis, carinatis, fere omnibus fertilibus. Stamina. Filamenta tria, membranacea. Anthere oblonge, albze. Pistillum. Germen obovatum, glabrum. Stylus unicus. Stigmata tria minutissime barbata. Semina non vidi. Scirpo nodoso affinis. Habitat in Novaé Hollandia. Tas. XV. Fig. 2. Planta magnitudine naturali. a. Spica magnitudine aucta. ' b. Flosculus. PERSOONIA PINIFOLIA. Tetrandria Monogynia. Tas. XVI Fig. 1. P. foliis perangustis linearibus, ad flores repente abbreviatis : spicd longa terminali. P. pinifolia. Brown in Trans. Linn. Soc. v. 10. p. 160. et Prod. o. 1. 372. Caulis teres, pilosus. Folia densa, perangusta, recurva, linearia, acuta, canaliculata, tenella pubescentia, adulta sepe omnia glabra: ad flores in _ bracteas repente abbreviata. Flores in spicis dense imbricatis, pedunculis brevibus. Calyx Linn. Trans Vol X.Tabl6 p.290 a Lj fo : eS We fo . : ; C Aerzountie fone (ie 2 LE hurwula Z é e t.del! ecw! vo a ee ee e we Faye? a Pr %, Fong 4 wien ‘Pia On8 several Species of Plants from New Holland. 291 Calyx nullus. Corolla. Petala quatuor paulo infra medium staminifera, superne recurva, extus pubescentia. Stamina. Filamenta omnium brevissima. Anthere longissime, lineares, demum recurve, biloculares, quadrivalves, facie dehiscentes. Pistillum. Germen oblongum: Stylus glaber, persistens: Stigma obtusum. Habitat prope Port Jackson in Nova Hollandia. Tas. XVI. Fig. 1. Planta magnitudine naturali. a. Flos integer cum bractea magnitudine auctus. b. Petalum. c. Anthera dorso et fronte visa. d. Pistillum.. PERSOONIA HIRSUTA. Tas. XVI. Fig. 2. P. foliis recurvulis, linearibus, convexis, sulco subtus, hirsutis ; floribus axillaribus, dense hirsutis. P. hirsuta. Pers. Syn. 1. p. 118. et Brown in Linn. Trans. v. 10. p- 161. et Prod. »v. 1. 372. Caulis teres, densissime hirsutus. Folia linearia, sessilia, subtus sulcata, undique pilosa. Flores solitarii, axillares; pedunculis brevibus, densissime hir- sutis. Calyx nullus. Corolla. Petala quatuor, paulo infra medium staminifera, spa- tulato-lanceolata, extus pilis densissimis obducta, intus glabra, superne recurva. Staminum a 8% stage Le eis oni ipretie tation 44, teh {ey cclanbatet eh. ' ss litaie age + aia, exit 5 : ; Eee ities: : 4 Rs 1a my ie we af ed ae ay one at rey BAv Mi Ree several Species of Plants from New Holland. 298 Pistillum. Germen subglobosum, pappo pilo denso coronatum. Stylus filiformis, contortus ? versus laciniam corollz sterilem. Stigma clavatum. Habitat, prope Port Jackson in Nova Hollandia. Tas. XVII. Fig. 1. Planta magnitudine naturali. a. Flos integer cum Bracted iyagaitugime auctus. b. Corolla aperta. c, Anthere. d. Pistillum. ' ZreERIA PILOSA. ae ) Tas. XVII. Fig. 2. | Z. foliorum laminis tres ad quatuor lineas longis, lanceolatis, subtus pilosis: floribus solitariis, axillaribus. Frutev ramosus, ramis oppositis densissime hirsutis. Folia opposita, ternata: Petioli pilosi: Lamine uninervize, supra glabre, punctate, subtus pilose. Flores solitarii, axillares, pedunculati. Pedunculi breves, teretes, pilosi. Calyx profunde quadrifidus, laciniis acutiusculis. Corolla. Petala quatuor, ovata, obtusa, utrinque glabra. Stamina. Filamenta quatuor, lata, singula glandula insidentia, glabra. Anthere cordate, biloculares. Pistillum. Germen quadrilobum. a brevis. Stigma quadri- lobum. Cocci quatuor, ovati, hirsuti, monospermi. Habitat in Nova Cambria. Legit J. White. VOL. x. 2G | _ Awe 204 Mr. Rovce’s Description of Tas. XVII. Fig. 2. Planta magnitudine naturali. a. Flos integer magnitudine auctus. b. Idem petalis abruptis. c. Anthera dorso et fronte visa. d. Pistillum cum calyce. e. Cocci tunica interior pergaminea. Jf. Semen. CrYPTANDRA ERICIFOLIA. Pentandria Monogynia. Tas. XVIII. Fig. 1. C. caule sericeo: foliis duas ad tres lineas longis, frearttoe acutis: corollis extus sericeis. C. ericifolia. Smith in Rees Cyclop. Frutex pergracilis: ramis paucis longis, superne sericeis. Folia alterna, inter se remotiuscula, duas ad tres lineas longa, linearia, lateribus usque ad medium arcte reduplicatis, acuta, glabra. Flores in capitulis terminalibus. Bractea ad basin singulorum florum, cuneata, extus sericea. Calyx quinquefidus: laciniis structura bractearum. Corolla tubulosa, limbo quinquefido, densissime sericea, intus glabra. 7 Stamina. Filamenta quinque, inter segmenta tubi squamis_ cu- cullatis inserta. Anthere bilobe. Pistillum. Germen oblongum, pilosum. Stylus simplex. Stigma obtusum. Habitat prope Port Jackson in Nova Hollandia. Tas. Fig.J. a i\h Ny Wi ry, aaa ( \y eV) WZ Ss ; We SN = se5 WY Wa YG lS 7 V Wy WZ Linn. Trans Vat. X Tab b.p.294. é c d I i? ie Cryplandea QHAVA. several Species of Plants from New Holland. 295 Tan. XVII. Fig. 1. Planta magnitudine naturali. . Flos integer magnitudine ampliatus. . Idem apertus. . Anthera dorso et fronte visa cum cucullo, . Pistillum. e. Calyx cum Bractea. SO" S8 CrYPTANDRA AMARA. Tas. XVIII, Fig. 2. C. caule incano : foliis unas ad duas lineas longis, spatulatis, ob- tusis: corolla extus incana. C.amara. Smith in Rees Cyclop. Frutex humilis: ramis numerosis, densis dum teneris incanis. | Folia alterna, densa, unas ad duas lineas longa, spatulata, late- ribus etiam magis quam in precedente. reduplicatis, et supra medium plane confluentibus, margine scabriuscula. Flores in capitulis terminalibus. Bractee inferiores structur4 fere foliorum sensim magia calycine, Calyx quinquefidus : laciniis late ovatis. Corolla late infundibuliformis; laciniis cuneatis, obtusissimis ; extus incana. Stamina. Filamenta quinque, ut in precedente. inserta, squamis parum cucullatis. Anthere profunde bilobe. Pistillum. Germen late obconicum. Stylus simplex. Stigma apice styli vix latius. Habitat prope Port Jackson in Nova Hollandia. Tas. XVIII. Fig. 2. Planta magnitudine naturali. a. Flos integer magnitudine auctus. 2Q2 b. Corolla 296 Mr. Rupce’s Description of b. Corolla aperta. c. Anthera dorso et fronte visa cum cucullo. d. Pistillum. STYPHELIA REFLEXA. Pentandria Monogynia. Tas. XIX. Fig. 1. S. corollz limbo reflexo, hirsutissimo, racemis terminalibus ; foliis oblongis lateribus revolutis. Frutex erectus, ramosus. Folia oblonga, lateribus revolutis, obtuse acuminata subsessilia. Flores terminales in capitulum congesti, breviter pedicellati. Bractee due, calyce breviores, ovate. Calyx squamulis imbricatis, pubescentibus inferioribus parum carinatis. ‘Corolla breviter tubulosa, calyce Jongior, extus levis, laciniis quinque longissimis recurvis, pilis longis niveis intus den- sissime hirsutis. Stamina. Filamenta quinque fauce tubi inserta. Anthere longe recurve, superne acute, inferne latiores, sulcate. Pistillum. Germenturbinatum. Stylus brevis. Stigma capitatum. Habitat in Nova Hollandia. Tas. XIX. Fig. 1. Planta magnitudine naturali. a. Flos integer magnitudine auctus. b. Corolla aperta. c. Antherz dorso et fronte vise. d. Pistillum. Lasr Ay frelea WA Ive ) | 2 | a so ee cacsannnie Mais. } J . ¥ Os it ween nits ah san pag ts Pith he “> Reladip tics : g Subtle kyu ty Sackvedee t aaseenie ii ate a a bios vay) iki ies aidaas aed Saas \, Wire a ig phos atisteot SA Toes) Eaten several Species of Plants from New Holland. 2907 LAsIorvETALUM PARVIFLORUM. Pentandria Monogynia. Tas. XIX. Fig. 2. L. foliis lineari-lanceolatis, vix acuminulatis: floribus parvis: antherarum rachi lata. Frutex gracilis, more affinium totus tomento ferrugineo stellato vestitus. Bractee valde tomentose. Folia alterna tres ad quatuor pollices longa, duas ad quatuor lineas lata, supra etiam dum tenera tomentosa, lineari-lance- olata basi ima nunquam retusa. Flores in cymis brevibus nutantibus. Corolla longe minor quam in congeneribus, ceterum parum discz pars; laciniis ovato-acuminatis, incurvis. Stamina. Filamenta brevissima, receptaculo inserta, adpressa ger- mini. Anthere apice truncatulz, rachi latiore quam in ceteris. Pistillum. Germen subglobosum, trilobum, superum. Stylus bre- vissimus. Stigma simplex. Habitat in Nova Hollandia. Tas. XIX. Fig. 2. Planta magnitudine naturali. a. Pars racemi magnitudine aucta. b. Bractea. c. Calyx. d. Flos integer fronte visus. e. Idem dorso visus. Ff. Flos apertus. g- Stamina petalis abruptis. h. Anthera dorso et fronte visa. 4. Pistillum. PiTTo- 298 Mr. Ruvcx’s Description of PirrosPoruM FULVUM. Pentandria Monogynia. Tap. XX. P. caule tenero valde tomentoso: foliorum laminis late lanceo- latis: calycis foliolis patentibus: petalis flavis: stigmate vix bilobo. Folia tres ad quatuor pollices longa, 13 lata: Petioli brevissimi, rare tomentosi: laminz late lanceolate, integerrime, obtuse, per nervos tomentose, ceterum fere leves. Flores in paniculis densissimis fasciculati, fragrantes. Pedunculus terminalis, gracilis, viscidulo-pubescens. Bractee structuré calycis, sed angustiores. Calyx patens: foliolis lanceolato-cuneatis, ante petala caden- tibus. Corolla. Petala septem ad octo lineas longa, flava, apice revoluta, arcte coherentia’ precipue versus apicem postquam ceci- derunt. Stamina. Filamenta flava, compressiuscula. Germen pallide viride, pube mox fuscescente. Pericarpium basi tantum biloculare, dein uniloculare. Genus Bursarie et Billardiere in serie naturali propinquum. Habitat prope Port Jackson in Nova Hollandia. Tas. XX. Planta magnitudine naturali. a. Flos integer magnitudine parum auctus. b. Calyx. c. Corolla aperta. d. Anthere dorso et fronte vise. e. Pistillum. Mars- Linn. Trans.Vol. X. Tab 20 p.296. q agit Tien we ipyicinie ‘hae ‘ atin teins (es. rinses > oT peg 7 : Neue ‘ bien? {aie ; ok ha Satin hai rape cae ois MiP ha, Bit Hrabtihod spain ria pe ae ee ie: avers Zinn. Trans Vol X Tab, 21. p. 299. "A ne, DZ) i 5%, YF e j ae . ip x j f Qn bn i a Oe é c ~ : ‘i / . Trach y mene MMUAI i) ’ (a muaevelens c several Species of Plants from New Holland, 299 MansDENIA SUAVEOLENS. Pentandria Digynia. Tas. XXI. Fig. 1. M. foliis ovalibus glabris; floribus axillaribus; corolle Jaciniis basi intus minute barbatis. Marsdenia suaveolens. R. Brown in Trans. Soc. Wern. Edinb. Folia opposita, petiolata, utrinque glabra, avenia. . Flores in paniculis axillaribus, sex- ad octo-floris. Calyx monophyllus, persistens, quinquepartitus, laciniis ovatis margine ciliatis. Corolla monopetala, tubo brevi; lacinie quinque longe, obtuse, basi intus minute barbatz. Stamina. Filamenta quinque lata, infra Nectarium conicum quinquedentatum inserta. Anihere bilobe minutissime, mem- brand terminate. Pistillum. Germen obconicum, bilobum. Styli duo, breves. Stig- mata duo, obtusa. Habitat prope Port Jackson in Nova Hollandia. Obs. I had figured and described this plant some time since, but delayed presenting it to the Society, in order not to interfere with the arrangement of the whole Genus, as described by Mr. Brown, and just published in the Transactions of the Wernerian Society at Edinburgh; and I have therefore preserved the spe- cific name by which it is laid down in the Banksian Herbarium. Tas. XXI. Fig. 1. Ramus magnitudine naturali. a, Flos integer magnitudine auctus. b. Corolla. c. Eadem aperta. d. Stamina corolla abrupta. - e. Stamen unicum fronte, latere et dorso visum. Ff. Nec- 300 , Mr. RuvcGx’s Description of Jf. Nectarium cum granis pollinis adherentibus. g. Calyx et Germen. h. Pistillum cum stylis duobus. TRACHYMENE. Pentandria Digynia. Cuar. Essen. Petala quinque ovato-lanceolata, integra. Fructus subglobosus tuberculis scaber, bipartibilis. Involucrum po- lyphyllum. Unmbella simplex. TRACHYMENE INCISA. Tas. XXI. Fig. 2. 'T. foliis radicalibus incisis, umbellis paucis. Caulis erectus, teres, gracilis. Folia radicalia, ternata, multipartita, incisa, longe petiolata. Umbella simplex, terminalis, radiis pluribus, brevibus. Calyx nullus. Corolla. Petala quinque ovata cum acumine inflexo. Stamina. Filamenta quinque petalis longiora; Antheris bilocula- ribus, reniformibus. Pistillum. Germen inferum, cyathiforme. Styli ivareat Stig- mata simplicia. Fructus rugosus bipartibilis in semina duo semiovata, gibba. Habitat prope Port Jackson in Nova Hollandia. Nomen a rgayvs asper, et “vq membrana. Obs. ‘This Genus appears to be the same as Azorella of La Bil- lardiere; but that name having been previously given to another by Cavanilles, and which is taken up in Lamarck’s Encyclop. Bot., I am under the necessity of giving this another name. 7 TaB- s\ ah Eooa ey CL mga Sion 4 lt Pha, dagen Swarr et Pine E Hen pai abaya Ate a De be Oi HGH Bb 4 A ew a - the ae 4 iit ‘hin “be ak oe halts Ree "fe Linn. Trans. Vol. X. Tab. 22.p. 301, p) het cut bls = TALL c Wy y) inl oovtae fulove iA A.det? several Species of Plants from New Holland. 301 Tan. XXI. Fig. 2. Planta magnitudine naturali. a. Flos integer magnitudine auctus. b. Idem petalis diruptis. c. Anthera fronte et dorso visa. d. Pistillum. e. Fructus. XANTHOSIA. Pentandria Digynia. Cuar. Essnn. Calyx diphyllus. Petala quinque, ovata, stami- nibus opposita. Fructus ovatus, bipartibilis, glandulis duabus coronatus, striatus. XANTHOSIA PILOSA. Tas. XXII. Fig. 1. X. foliis lanceolatis, sinuatis, floribus axillaribus. Frutex ramosus. Caulis erectus, gracilis, pilosus. Folia alterna, petiolata, sublanceolata, sinuata, subtus pilosa. Flores plures axillares. Bractee due, subulatz, pilis longis densissime vestite. Calyx diphyllus corolla longior. Corolla. Petala quinque ovata, acuta. Stamina. Filamenta petalorum longitudine. Anthere reniformes, biloculares. Nectaria duo. Pistillum. Germen ovatum, striatum, bipartibile, glandulis duabus coronatum. Styli duo pilosi. Stigma simplex. Habitat prope Port Jackson in Nova Hollandia. VOL. x. QR Nomen 302 Mr. RupvcGe’s Description of Nomen a Zav$og flavus. This plant when immersed in warm water communicates to it a deep yellow colour. Taz. XXII. Fig. 1. Ramulus magnitudine naturali. . Flos integer magnitudine auctus. Calyx. . Bractea. . Corolla latere et fronte visa. . Eadem petalis diruptis. . Anthera latere, dorso et fronte visa. . Nectaria. . Pistillum. See QAaaan PORANTHERA. Pentandria Trigynia. Cuar. Essen. Flores corymbosi. Petala quinque, ovata, in- tegra. Involucrum octophyllum. Calyx nullus. Pericarpia tria polysperma. PoRANTHERA ERICIFOLIA. Tas. XXII. Fig. 2. P. foliis subulatis, multifariam imbricatis; corymbis termina- libus. Frutex ramosus, ramis teretibus, patentibus. Radix fibrosa. Folia numerosa, lineari-subulata, dense imbricata, tres ad quatuor lineas longa, vix quintam linee partem lata. Corymbus compositus, terminalis. Calyx nullus. Corolla. several Species of Plants from New Holland. 303 Corolla. Petala quingue ovato-oblonga, integerrima. Stamina. Filamenta quinque, petalis duplo longiora. Anthere quadriloculares. Pericarpia tria polysperma. Habitat prope Port Jackson in Nova Hollandia. Nomen a zogos porus et avbyeq anthera. Tas. XXII. Fig. 2. Planta magnitudine naturali. a. Flos integer magnitudine auctus. b. Idem petalis abruptis. c. Antherz latere, fronte et dorso vis. d. Pericarpia. The Synonyms to several of the species above described have been added from Mr. Brown’s Prodromus, which has been published some time since this paper was read to the Lin- nean Society. 2n2 XI. Some ( 304 ) XI. Some Remarks on the Physiology of the Egg, communicated ina Letter from John Ayrton Paris, M.B. io William George Maton, M.D. V.P.L.S, $e. §¢ Read April Ath, 1809. Dear Sir, Tue extensive range which the Ovipari form in the scale of ani- mated existence renders the physiology of the egg a subject of extraordinary interest and importance to the disciple of Lin- neus : I am therefore induced to hope that the communication of any new facts relative to its organization and development will be received by you as an acceptable tribute to the canse of natural history. The ova, or germs of oviparous animals admit of an evident division into two orders. I. The Perrecr, and II. the Imrrr- rect. The former are deposited by the Aves, Serpentes, and by most Oviparous Quadrupeds, and are completely formed im utero; whilst the latter, produced by some of the Testacea, Am- phibia, and by most Pisces, acquire additions after their ex- clusion. The observations contained in this memoir relate more particularly to the class dves, the history of whose ova compre- hends whatever is interesting or important in the germs of in- ferior animals. The egg, when completed and deposited, con- sists of the following parts :— 1. Vitellus or yolk, with its capsule and cicatricula; 2. The two Albumina On the Physiology of the Ege. 505 Albumina, with their proper membranes ; 5. The Chalaze; 4. The Folliculus aéris; 5. 'The Common Membranes; 6. The Exterior Involucrum, or Shell. The necessity of any description of these parts is superseded by the minute and valuable details which are to be found in the works of Fapricivus AB AQUAPENDENTE, Harvey, Marereuy, and of many modern and enlightened physiologists; I shall confine myself, therefore, to what I consider exclusively original. The principal use of the albuminous portion of the egg is doubtless to afford materials for the growth, and nourishment for the support, of the ovular embryon: such however does not appear to be the only purpose for which it is designed. No where does Nature display more anxiety for the preservation of her offspring, or more wisdom to obtain her objects, than in her provisions to ensure an equable temperature to the fwtus in ovo; a condition which is so essential to the evolution of the animal,. that the smallest deviation overthrows the nice balance between the different actions that are to mature it, and produces fatal effects. The albumen then I consider as a great defence against such an evil. The chalaza, by retaining the cicatricula at the source of heat, obviates the mischief that would accrue from constant change of position; but the albumen, being a most feeble conductor of caloric, retards the escape of heat, prevents any sudden transition of temperature, and thus averts the fatal chills which the occasional migrations of the parent might induce. As an illustration of the use and importance of such a structure, I may observe, that those fish which retain their vi- tality a considerable time after their removal from the water, as eels and tench, have the power of secreting a slimy and viscid fluid, with which they envelop their bodies. Is it not extremely probable that this matter, by acting like the albumen of the egg, and. 306 Dr. Paris’s Remarks on and preventing evaporation from the surface of the animal, and the consequent change of temperature, may be the principal cause of this tenacity of life ? It must however be remarked, that deviations of temperature are injurious and fatal in proportion only to the degree of vital energy which the ovular embryon possesses: hence germs of inferior vitality not only suffer the vicissitudes of heat and cold with impunity, but are developed by a less defined tem- perature. We therefore perceive, as we descend the scale of oviparous beings, that those peculiar provisions which the eggs of perfect animals possess, for the regulation of their tempera- ture, cease to be essential, and therefore disappear. The part of the egg to which I next beg to direct your atten- tion is the folliculus aéris, or air-bag, placed at its obtuse extre- mity ; the nature of this follicle excited in me considerable in- terest, as I found that it had not been so fully investigated as its importance seemed to demand. The external shell, and the internal_membrane by which it is lined, constitute the parietes of the cavity, whose extent in the recent egg scarcely exceeds in size the eye of a small bird: by incubation, however, it is extended to a considerable magnitude. That its most essential use is to oxygenate the blood of the chick, in my opinion there can be no doubt: but to establish com- pletely the truth of such a theory, it is necessary to discover the nature of the air by which it is inflated, and which has hitherto remained unexamined. We are informed by Buffon, that it is a product of the fermentation which the different parts of the egg undergo. If the Count’s conjecture be established, it must be non-respirable, and therefore cannot discharge the office which such a theory would assign to it. ‘To determine this matter, and to discover also whether the process of incubation produces any eh change the Physiology of the Egg. 507 change in its chemical constitution, I instituted the following experiments ; viz. ExpPERIMENT 1, Twenty-one hen’s eggs newly laid, when punctured at their obtuse extremity, yielded only 1 cubical inch of gas, which, when received in a jar, and subjected to the eudiometric test of Dr. Priestley, I found to be pure atmospherical air. ExeerRiIMENT 2. Two eggs, after 20 days’ incubation, were opened under the ‘surface of water, from which 1 cubical inch of gas was collected: this I also discovered to be atmospherical air, contaminated how- ever with a small portion. of carbonic acid, which I suspect to be derived from the venous blood of the chick, and which seems to establish another most beautiful analogy between. this mode of oxygenation, and respiration after birth. From these results the following corollaries may be drawn: viz. 1. The folliculus aéris before incubation contains atmosphe- rical air. 2. No other chemical change takes place in the constitution of. the air, than a small inquination with carbonic acid. . 5. It gains by incubation an increase of volume, which takes: place nearly in the ratio of 10 to 1. I must here remark, that its extent does not increase equally in equal successive portions of time, but observes a rate of pro-. gression, which is accelerated as the latter stages of incubation advance: it seems, however, to arrive at its maximum of dilatation a few days previous to the exclusion of the animal. In the eggs of inferior animals, the embryon does not appear: to be oxygenated by any distinct apparatus, but, like the animal which 308 Dr Panrts’s Remarks on which it is hereafter to become, receives air through the medium of spiracula, dispersed over the exterior tnvolucrum. The de- scription of the folliculus aéris just delivered is taken from that in the egg of our common hen. ‘The same apparatus exists in the eggs of all birds, and contains a similar air: its capacity, however, does not seem to vary either with the size of the egg, or of the bird to which it belongs; but I think Ihave discovered a beautiful law by which its extent is modified. Thave uniformly found, as far as my contracted inquiries have led me, that the folliculus aéris is of greater magnitude in the eggs of those birds which place their nests on the ground, and whose young are hatched fledged, and capable of exerting their muscles as soon as they burst from their shell, than in the eggs of those whose nests are generally built on trees, and whose progeny are born blind and forlorn. Thus the folliculi in the eggs of fowls, partridges, and moor-hens are of considerable extent, whilst those in the eggs of crows, sparrows, and doves are extremely contracted. ‘The chick, therefore, of fowls and partridges has a more perfect plumage, and a greater aptitude to locomotion, than the callow nestlings of doves and sparrows. Such an instance of the agency of oxygenation in the promotion and increase of muscular power is not solitary in physiology; for the history of ruminating animals will furnish us with a parallel example. “Their cotyledons,” observes the author of Zoonomia, “seem to be designed for the purpose of expanding a greater surface for the termination of the placental vessels, in order to receive oxygenation from the uterine ones: thus the progeny of this class of animals are more completely formed before their nativity than that of the carnivorous classes. Calves therefore and lambs can walk about in a few minutes after their birth; while kittens and puppies remain many days without opening their the Phy ysiology of the Keg. 509 ‘their eyes.” If any further testimony be necessary to show that the augmentation of muscular energy is the result of a nice combination of oxygen with the animal organs, many interesting facts might be adduced in confirmation of its truth. We gene- rally find the strength of an animal proportionate to the extent ‘of its chest: hence an attention to the “animosum pectus” has been attended with the improvement of our breed of cattle; and it is in consequence of a great extent of pneumatic receptacle that birds are enabled to bear the prodigious muscular exertion of flight. Is it not probable, too, that the repeated suspirations of the fatigued are instinctive exertions to procure a greater proportion of oxygen, by which their muscular energy may be revived? J must not quit the subject of this follicle, without no- ticing a very curious fact well known to every one employed in the concerns of a farm-yard,—that, if the obtuse extremity of an egg be perforated with the point of the smallest needle, (a stratagem which malice not unfrequently. suggests,) its generating process is arrested, and it perishes like the subventaneous egg. Hence Sir Busick Harwood was led to suspect that the elastic fluid contained in the air-bag was oxygen, and I was induced to examine its nature. .Can this curious problem *be solved, by supposing that the constant ingress of fresh air is too highly ex- citing? A parallel example may be adduced from the vegetable kingdom in support of such an opinion. The young and tender plant, before it puts forth its roots, is often destroyed by having too free a communication with the atmosphere, by which its powers are exhausted: it is to obviate such an effect, that the horticulturist, taught only by experience, covers it with a glass, by which he limits the extent of its atmosphere, and conse- quently decreases its respiration, transpiration, and the inordinate actions which would prove fatal to it. VOL. Xx. 2s I shall 310 Dr. Paxrts’s Remarks on I shall close this paper with a few observations on the forma- tion of the exterior involucrum, or shell, by which this microcosm is defended from external violence. We here detect a single operation, at once answering two of the wisest and most import- ant purposes of the animal: it at once averts destruction from the individual, and contributes essentially to the preservation of its species ; for, whilst it removes the calcareous matter, which, if allowed to accumulate, must render the bird incapable of flight, and defeat the best purposes of its existence, it furnishes the germ of the future animal with a strong and convenient defence. The eggs of birds are, however, sometimes destitute of this pro- vision, which I think may arise from the secretion of calcareous matter not keeping pace with the exuberant production of the fluids of the egg. Hence we perceive this imperfection oftener occurring in strong birds, and in the months of harvest, when their food is more luxuriant and abundant. The experiments of Vauquelin, which prove that the quantity of calcareous matter voided by birds exceeds that taken in, suggested to Fordyce, that birds must require calcareous matter during their laying, and that, if the animal be deprived of it, the shell is never formed. Such a theory, however, is not only derogatory to the wisdom of nature, but illegally deduced from the experiments themselves. Are we to expect, from our imperfect notions of elementary bodies, to explain the origin of every substance found in the animal ceconomy, or the series of changes which it under- goes? Nature has her own laboratory, and is capable, without any foreign aid, of preparing the ingredients necessary for her pro- ductions. That a deficiency of calcareous matter in the system is the cause of the absence of the shell, no one will deny; but that this depends on some internal state, and not on the privation of lime, may be shown by the following curious circumstance. A hen, the Physiology of the Egg. 311 A hen, which I kept for some experiments, had its leg broken in two parts. ‘The fracture was carefully bandaged ; three days sub- sequent to which, several eggs destitute of shells were found on the premises. ‘The hen had deposited no perfect eggs, nor were there any other birds from which these yolks could have proceeded : I therefore conjectured that all the calcareous matter designed for the formation of the shell had been employed in the regene- ration of the bone. We find a similar law existing in the human species. The reunion of a bone fractured during a woman’s pregnancy is often delayed until her delivery; and it is well known, that, if the horns of a deer be broken at the rutting season, it is incapable of procreating its species.—I remain, dear Sir, with great esteem, Yours faithfully, Joun Ayrton Parts. Westminster, November 30, 1808, 2823 XII. Some ( 312) XII. Some Observations on the Parts of Fructification in Mosses ; with Characters and Descriptions of Two New Genera of that Order. By Mr. Robert Brown, Lib. Linn. Soc.. Read June 20th, 1809. Tur account which the celebrated Hedwig has given of the sexes of Mosses, seems to be founded on so ample an induction, and is now so generally received, that it must be necessary to notice- the arguments which mere theoretical Botanists have from time to time produced against it. There is, however, one author,. Mons. Palisot Beauvois, who has not only objected to the ac-- count ef Hedwig, but has proposed a theory of his. own, and who consequently appealing to actual observations, and appear- ing to have particularly studied, specifically at least, this tribe of plants, merits some attention. The earliest account of Mons.. Beauvois’ theory is to be found in the observations added to the order Musci in the Genera Plantarum of Jussieu; and it was. soon after more fully given by the author himself, in a Memoir on the Sexual Organs of Mosses, published in the third volume of the American Philosophical Transactions: since that time he has in his different works occasionally treated of the same subject, and has lately repeated the substance of his original essay, in the introduction to his “ Prodrome de Cinquieme et Siai- eme Familles de Athiogamie,” published at Paris in 1805, a translation of which is given by my friend Mr. Konig, in the second volume of the Annals of Botany. To this work, as it must” be On the Parts of Fructification in Mosses. 318 be in the hand of every scientific botanist, I refer for a full account of M. Beauvois’ hypothesis, and confine myself to ob- serving, that what is generally called the capsule of Mosses is by him. considered as the containing organ of both sexes; that the granules which Hedwig supposes to be seeds, he regards as pollen; the real seeds according to him being imbedded in the substance of that body which occupies. the centre of the cap- sule, and to which botanists have given the name of columnula or columella. 'The supposed seeds of this author, however, having entirely escaped the two most acute and experienced ob- servers in this department of. botany, Schmidel and Hedwig, in all the species of which they have given dissections, it might fairly be concluded that they are not. of universal existence, and this alone would be sufficient perhaps. to overturn the hypo- thesis.. But it would be more satisfactory, if, while the accuracy ef these excellent observers was confirmed in other instances,. the cause of that appearance, which I apprehend. has misled M. Beauvois,.could at the same time be pointed out. The species more particularly described and figured by him in the American. Transactions, is Hypnum velutinum; which therefore, had it been in a proper state, I should have preferred as the sub- ject of my examination; but as he asserts that his observations were repeated, and with similar results, on all the species of Mosses found in the neighbourhoed of Paris and Lisle, I have chosen Lunaria hygrometrica, perhaps the most general plant in existence; which therefore must have been examined by him, and is within the reach of every one. As, according to M. Beauvois, the action of the pollen on the seeds does not take place till the separation of the operculum, he probably did not conceive it necessary to observe the capsule until it had acquired its full size, and was in fact nearly ripe, or, S14 Mr. Brown’s Observations on the or, as he terms it, in blossom. At this period he examined under the microscope a transverse section of the capsule, in which, as appears both from his description and figure, he found a dense stratum of granular matter, which he considered to be pollen, situated immediately within the inner membrane; while in the substance occupying the centre, which he describes as reticulated, he observed scattered granules, in size and appear- ance - like those of the pollen already mentioned: these he regards as the genuine seeds, and the containing organ he calls the capsule. It is remarkable that he no where expressly states the manner in which this capsule bursts: but it may be inferred, from the use he assigns to the peristomium, that he supposes it to eject its contents by the upper extremity: for, if the bursting were la- teral, the seeds would at once come into contact with the pollen: but though impregnation would in this way more certainly be accomplished, the motions of the ciliz could no longer be con- sidered as in any degree assisting it. Desirous to examine an object as nearly similar as possible to that on which the hypothesis appears to be founded, I in the first place made a transverse section of the full grown but green capsule of Funaria hygrometrica; and, I confess, was both sur- prised and disappointed to find it, under the microscope, exactly resembling M. Beauvois’ figure [18]. But little reflection, how- ever, was necessary to show that these scattered granules might either have been forced into the pulpy central substance, by the pressure necessarily applied to the stratum of pollen in making the section, or, what is more probable, been carried over its surface by the cutting instrument, which had previously passed through this stratum. Accordingly, by repeated immersion in water, and more readily still by the careful application of a small hair pencil, Parts of Fructification in Mosses: 315 pencil, the greater part of the granules was removed. A trans- verse section at an earlier stage of the capsule, before the falling of the calyptra, exhibited, as I expected, fewer granules on the substance of the columella, and which were removeable in like manner. Lastly, by a longitudinal section, in which, if well per- formed, the scalpel could not be supposed to carry any part of the pollen over the surface of the columella, I obtained a distinct view of this part, perfectly free from these supposed seeds, and evidently consisting of large cells filled with an uniform pulpy substance; a continuation of which occupied the cavity of the operculum. é From these observations, even added to those of Schmidel and Hedwig, though they seem conclusive against the hypothesis of M. Beauvois, I by no means pretend to reason strictly re- specting the whole order: on the contrary, from the conversa- tions I have had with my ingenious and accurate friend Mr. Francis Bauer, as well as from some observations of my own, I am disposed to believe that considerable diversities may exist in the placentation of Mosses: that in some cases the seeds may be formed in a much greater portion of the columnula than in others: and it is even not improbable that in certain cases its. whole substance may be converted into seeds; or, to speak more accurately, that it may produce seeds even to the centre, and that the cells in which they were probably formed may be re-ab- sorbed. This I am inclined to think is the case in Phascum al- ternifolium of Dickson, in the ripe capsule of which there is hardly the vestige of acolumnula; and I have observed the same structure in two new species of Anodontium of Bridel; which, if it equally exists in the only species of this genus hitherto de- scribed, would perhaps considerably strengthen its character. In these cases the inner membrane is also evanescent; and such a struce 316 Mr. Brown’s Observations on the a structure, it may be remarked, equally militates against M. Beau- vois’ theory, whether we suppose the columella to have existed at an earlier stage, in the usual form, or not. As to this organ being tubular, and discharging its contents by the top, it is neither consistent with what has been already ob- served, nor with the appearance of its remains in the ripe cap- sule: but admitting for a moment its tubular nature, there are certain Mosses in which no discharge could possibly take place in the way described; the column being elongated even to the apex of the operculum, to which it often continues to adhere, as in Buxbaumia, and in the first of the two new genera which I now proceed to describe. DAWSONIA. Peristomium penicillatum, ciliis numerosissimis capillaribus rectis zqualibus e capsule parietibus columellaque (!) ortis. Capsula hinc plana, indé convexa. Calyptra exterior e villis implexis, énterior apice scabra. Muscus hinc arcté affinis Polytricho, quo cum foliis, floribus mas- culis, et calyptrd penitus convenit ; inde, aliquo modo. Bux~ baumiz accedens, presertim figurd capsule, et “structurd colu- melle. Peristomio autem ab omnibus diversissimus. Dawsonia POLYTRICHOIDES. Tas. XXIII. Fig. 1. Parria. Nove Hollandiz ora orientalis, extra tropicum. Srario. Ripe subumbrose rivulorum, ad radices ABET te, in vicinitate Portis Jackson. Desc. Caspites laxi, amorphi. Radicule tenuissime, tomenti instar Parts of Fructification in Mosses. 317 instar caudicem ‘descendentem brevem investientes. Caulis simplicissimus, erectus, strictus, 2—S-uncialis, basi reliquiis foliorum squamatus, supra dense foliatus. Folia, e basi dila- tata semiamplexicauli membranaced fusca, lineari-subulata, Opaca, viridia, marginibus longitudinaliter dorsoque apicis denticulatis, spinulis sursum crebrioribus majoribusque, con- caviuscula, patula, siccatione appressa, canaliculata, superiora vix semuncialia, inferiora sensim breviora. Masculi Flores terminales, discoidei. Folia perigonialia cuneato- orbiculata, mucronata, integerrima, semimembranacea, exte- riora sensim majora. Fla succulenta numerosa, articulata, basi attenuata. Anthere flosculi singuli 6—8, cylindracee, bre- vissimé pedicellatz. Femineus Flos in distincto individuo. Seta terminalis, solitaria, erecta, levis, nitens, rufo-fusca, caule ter brevior, foliis termi- nalibus dupld longior. Vaginula cylindracea, stricta, glabra, tegmine pilorum calyptre exterioris instar instructa. Calyptra duplex: exterior constans pilis intertextis dimidio infe- riore tenui flexuoso pallido ramuloso edentulo, superiore fer- rugineo stricto denticulato: interior membranacea straminea, capsule mature subulata, supra lopgitudinaliter fissa, apice solim denticulata. Capsula nutans, angulum feré rectum cum seta efformans, ovata, per lentem reticulata, areolis subrotundis, sordidé fusca, levis, nonnitens, supra plana marginibus acutis, subtds modice con- vexa ore coarctato, marginato. Apophysis nulla. Operculum conico-cylindraceum, capsula brevius, apice lateris superioris in mucronein levissimé incurvum producto, basi in- crassata, cum calyptris sepissimé deciduum. Peristomium penicillum densum album referens, longitudine cir- citer dimidii capsule, formatum Ciliis indeterminatim nu- VOL. x. 2. merosissimis $18 Mr. Brown’s Observations on the merosissimis (200 et ultra) capillaribus inarticulatis equalibus rectis albis opacis, pluribus e capsule parietibus ortum du- centibus, centralibus (circiter 50) columellam terminantibus ! Membrana interior capsule mature exterior! approximata, vas- culisque numerosis connexa. Columella longitudine capsule mature, in qua latiuscula, cor- rugata, colli brevis margine incrassata, intra cilias desinens in processum filiformem solidum indivisum apicem operculi at- tingentem eique arctils adherentew. Semina minutissima, levia, in cumulo viridia, need hyalina. Oss. L. Ihave named this remarkable genus in honour of my esteemed friend Dawson Turner, Esq., a gentleman emi- nently distinguished in every part of Cryptogamic botany, and from whom, after he has finished the incomparable work on Fuci, in which he is now engaged, we may expect a general history of Mosses. Obs. 1]. The strict relationship between Dawsonia and Polytri- chum in most respects, and the striking dissimilarity of their peristomiums, may tend, perhaps, in some degree to lessen our confidence in the characters derived from that part; for there seems in this case but little analogy between the two struc- tures. ‘The better to understand that of Polytrichum, I was induced along with Mr. Turner to examine it in the unripe capsule: in this state the cavity of the operculum was found completely filled with a cellular pulp, similar to that composing the columella, of which it appeared evidently to be a continuation: to the surface of this pulp the teeth of the pe- ristomium were closely pressed, but did not adhere: by degrees the pulp dries up, and in the ripe capsule leaves only the membrane or tympanum of an inorganic appearance, and firmly Parts of Fructification in Mosses. $19 firmly cohering with the teeth by the inner side of their apices. It does not therefore properly belong to the operculum, though in some cases it may adhere to it, as does the analogous process of the columella in Dawsonia and in several other Mosses. The affinity of Dawsonia to Burbaumia is certainly less strict than to Polytrichum, and rests chiefly on the,similarity of the figure of the capsule, and in the central process of the colu- mella, which is still more evident in Burbaumia, where it forms part of the Linnean generic character, though unaccountably overlooked by Schmidel in his masterly dissertation ; but, if I mistake not, actually represented by him [in fig. 14, b, /.c.], and confounded with the peristomium, which in this case, I suppose, had adhered to the operculum, as | have repeatedly found it to do, and thus escaped his notice. Hedwig consi- ders the plaited membrane which constitutes the peristomium of Buabaumia, as derived from the inner membrane of the capsule, and quotes the figure just mentioned of Schmidel in proof of this origin. In both species, however, | find it arising from the exterior membrane, though considerably within its margin, which in Buabaumia aphylla is said by Hedwig to be divided into teeth,—an appearance I could not observe in the few ripe capsules I have dissected. In other respects, the two species seem essentially to agree, and therefore ought not to be separated, as Ehrhart and some late writers have done. The generic character comprehending both, I would propose to alter in the following manner. BUXBAU MIA. Capsula obliqua, hinc convexior, v. gibba. Peristomium intra marginem, quandoque dentatum, membrane exterioris ortum, tubulosum, plicatum, apice apertum. 272 LEPTO- $20 Mr. Brown’s Observations on the LEPTOSTOMU M. Capsula oblonga, exsulca; Operculo hemispherico, mutico. Peristomium simplex, membranaceum, annulare, planum, indi- visum, e membrana interiori ortum.. Musci densé cespitosi. Caules erecti, annotino-ramosi. Folia un- dique modicé patentia, latiuscula, nervo valido, marginibus integris, revolutis, pilo (quandoque ramoso?) terminata. Seta terminalis. Capsula erecta, v. inclinans, basi in apophysin obconicam attenuata, ore coarctato. Calyptra glabra, levis, caduca. 1. L. inclinans, foliis ovato-oblongis obtusis; pilo simplici, cap-. sulis inelinatis obovato-oblongis. Tap. XXIII. Fig. 2. Parria. Insula Van-Diemen.. Sratio. Rupes ct saxa ad latus orientale prope summitatem Montis Tabularis Lat. Aust. 43°, elevatione supra mare 3000 ad 3500 ped. Desc. Muscus late virens 2—3S-uncialis. Caules parm divisi, infra tomento denso ferrugineo vestiti, supra confertim fo- liati. Folia concaviuscula per lentem minutissimeé punctato- areolata, pilo tortili ipso folio quater breviore. Seta fusca, levis. Vaginula infra stipata adductoribus pluribus filis- que succulentis eapillaribus articulatis. 2. L. erectum, foliis oblongo-parabolicis obtusis; pilo simplici,, capsulis erectis oblongis. Patria. Nove Hollandiz ora orientalis, extra tropicum. Sratio. Rupes prope fluviorum ripas, in regione montana ; ad fluvios Hawkesbury et Grose. Desc. Muscus 2—5-uncialis. Caules simplices et subramosi, infra. | | ; Parts of Fructification in Mosses. 321 infra tomento ferrugineo vestiti, supra dense foliati. Folia ‘siccatione parim curvata et simul adpressa. Seta elongata, fusca, levis, Capsula equilatera. Operculum delapsum fuit. 3. L. gracile, foliis ovato-oblongis acutiusculis; pilo simplici folii dimidium equante, capsulis oblongis zquilateris. inclinatis. Parria. Nova Zelandia. Sratrro. Umbrosa humida (?) ad Dusky Bay. Dom. Arch. Menzies. Desc. Caules subramosi. Folia siccatione adpressa, areolato- punctata. Seta elongata, levis. Vaginula cylindracea, filis succosis adductoribusque numerosis cincta. 4. L. Menziesii, foliis oblongo-lanceolatis acutis; pilo. simplici folio quater breviore, capsulis oblongis inclinatis. arcuato- Tecurvis.. Patria. Americe Australis Staten-Land, ubi anno 1787 de- texit Dom. Arch. Menzies, cujus amicitiz banc et preeceden- tem speciem debeo.. STATIO. ----- Desc. Muscus leté virens, sesquiuncialis. Caules subsim- plices, basi ferrugineo-tomentosi, supra confertim foliati. Folia erecto-patentia, siccatione adpressa, minutissimé areolata, v. punctata.. Seta caulem szpils superans, erecta, fusca, levis. Capsula subfalcata ad angulum. acutum ra- riusve feré rectum inelinans. % Ons. The plants which I have referred to this genus are all natives of the southern hemisphere, and in their habit, in which there is something peculiar, strictly agree with each ather, and. with Bryum macrocarpum of Hedwig. In three of 322 Mr. Brown’s Observations on the of the four species here described, I have had the oppor- tunity of removing the operculum without having been able in any case to observe an external peristomium, which, from the appearance of these plants, might be expected to exist, and which Hedwig has figured in his Brywm macrocarpum. Of this plant I have only seen specimens that had lost the operculum: the mouth of the capsule, however, seemed to be very perfect, and was furnished with a membrane, exactly as in the species here described, but I could not: perceive any remains of external teeth. In opposition to such authority, however, I do not venture to add it to this genus, to which in every other respect it seems to belong. The character of Leptostomum, derived from the undivided annular process of the inner membrane of the capsule, may to many appear too minute, and perhaps unimportant ; and had it been observed in one species alone, I should not have ventured on that account to distinguish it as‘a genus: but finding it in four species, accompanied too with a habit widely different from that of Gymnostomum, to which these plants must otherwise be referred, I have not hesitated to employ it. As, however, Hedwig has actually figured and described an external peristomium in his Brywm macro- carpum, whose striking resemblance to Leptostomum has _been already noticed, there may be still some reason to doubt the sufficiency of the generic character, and it may seem somewhat improbable that Mosses of such a habit should be really destitute of an outer peristomium. But, without questioning the accuracy of Hedwig in this instance, 1 may be permitted to observe, that the outer peristomium which he has figured in Bryum macrocarpum is extremely unlike that of any other geaus where the fringe is double: and Fig. Parts of Fructification in Mosses. 823 and it may perhaps in some degree tend to strengthen the character of Leptostomum, to advert to what appears to be really the case in certain species of Pterogonium, in one of which* Mr. Hooker has already described the fringe as derived solely from the inner membrane; and I have collected, on the mountains of Van Diemen’s Island, a moss with a peristomium decidedly of like origin; a cir- cumstance that appeared to me so remarkable, that I had actually described it as a distinct genus, before I was aware of the similar structure of the Nepal plant described by Mr. Hooker; or of the probability, from Hedwig’s own figures, that some at least of his Pterogonia were ‘of the same structure; a point that I have not at present the means of determining, but which I beg leave to recommend to the attention of those botanists who are provided with perfect specimens of the published Pterogonia. EXPLICATIO TABULA XXIII. 1. Dawsonia polytrichoides. a. Mascula planta magnitu- dine naturali. 6. Discus masc. auctus. c. Ejusdem flos unicus. d. Idemabsque folio perigoniali, magisque auctus. e. Anthera et filum succulentum maximé aucta. f. Feminez plante magn. nat. g. Vaginula cum foliis perichetialibus auctis. A. Capsula cum calyptra exteriori. 7. Pili calyptre exterioris magis aucti. j. Capsula cum operculo et calyptra interiori. k. /. Capsula deoperculata cum peristomio. m. Cap- sulz sectio ejusdem figuram insertionemque ciliarum os- tendens. o. Calyptra interior. p. Operculum cum colu- * Pterogonium declinatum. Trans. Linn, Soc. ix. p. 309. mellz 324 On the Parts of Fructification in Mosses. melle processu filiformi. g. Columella ciliis suis terminata. r. Semina. s. Cilia peristomii aucte. Fig. 2. Leptostomum inclinans magnitudine naturali. «. Ejus- dem capsula aucta cum membrana annulari. 8. Operculum. y- Idem a basi visum cum annulo coherenti. ee XIII. Descrip- ; ( 3825 ) XIII. Description of Seven new Species of Testacea. By William George Maton, M.D. F.R.S. § A.S. and V.P.L.S. Read Nov. 7, 1809. Tus shells which I am about to describe were referred to me by the Right Hon. Sir Joseph Banks, Bart., K.B., who received them from the estuary of the Rio de la Plata, and who, with his usual liberality, obligingly presented me with specimens, and permitted me to lay a description and figures of them before the Linnean Society. It is singular that so many new species should have been found collected together in one spot, and still more so, that no one species before described should have formed part of the as- semblage. I am induced to think that they were brought down together by some of the tributary streams of the Rio de la Plata, from interior parts of the South American continent not hitherto explored by conchologists; the name of one of these streams proves that it abounds with natural productions of this tribe, for itis called Rio di Conchas. Many of the bivalves were found enveloped in the gelatinous matrix (if it may be so denominated) in which they were first deposited, and to which probably all testa- ceous creatures remain attached (unless removed by mechanical violence) until the calcareous covering which is to form their pro- tection has acquired the requisite degree of firmness. In the present instance, this matriz, in its dry state, forms a tough, but VOL. X. 2u thin, 326 Dr. Maton’s Description of thin, semitransparent substance, not unlike bladder in texture, and soluble in nitrous acid. The young shells are attached to it by their epidermis, which, in fact, seems to be merely a mem- branous expansion of the same substance, and to take its origin from it for the purpose of confining the animal during the for- mation of the shell. In some species, the attachment of the membrane is so loose, that it is*thrown off very soon after the animal is set at liberty; but in others it remains firmly adhering to the calcareous matter during life. Most fluviatile shells retain this covering more or less entire, and it is the case with all the species hereunder described, in all their stages of growth. ‘The membrane by which the calcareous matter of the shell is se- creted, or deposited, is of a very different nature, and has a more immediate connexion with the contained animal. 1. Mya LABIATA. WA BX OL abate tea. Mya testa subovali, valvis occlusissimis, alterius margine 1 abii instar) prominente. Habitat in America australi, fluviatilis. Testa firma, transversim striata, epidermide viridi, leviore, de- cidua, intus margaritaceo-polita, anterius subrostrata. Cardinis dens alterius valvz solidus, subcochleariformis, antrorsum por- rectus, fovewe triangulari valve opposite insertus. Margo hujus (® regione cardinis) quasi truncatus, illius rotundatus, subtenuis. Umbones parum prominentes. I have not mentioned the size of Mya labiata in the above de- scription, not thinking myself warranted so to do, unless I had seen a great number of specimens. ‘Those from which the cha- racters were taken are all of the same size, and about 1 inch in length, Seven new Species of Testacea. 327 length, and rather more than 4 an inch in width. It is one of the most remarkable bivalves with which I am acquainted, part of the margin of one of the valves projecting over the correspond- ing part of the other, so as, exactly, to resemble a lip. It is for- tunate when so striking a character presents itself, for the species cannot, in such circumstances, be mistaken. 2. Mya VARIABILIS. Tas. XXIV. Fig. 4, 5, 6,7. Mya testa subrhombea, gibbosa, umbonibus longitudinaliter corrugatis, cardinis dentibus duobus, apice divergentibus, foveis linearibus invicem insertis. Habitat in America australi, fluviatilis. Testa transversim striata, rugis sensim evanescentibus, epider- mide viridescente-fusca, intus margaritacea, cerulescens, 1 poll. longa (ztate provecta), vix 1 poll. lata. Margo antcrius suban- gulatus, apud cardinem rectus. Testa junior minus gibba, subrhomboidea, fragilis, subdia- phana, colore intus purpurascente, rugis multd prominentiori- bus et fere ad marginem usque divergentibus. This species varies extremely in its structure and contour, ac- cording to its several stages of growth; and, if I had scen only the youngest and the oldest shells, without having had oppor- tunities of comparing those of intermediate ages with each, I should most probably have given them separate places in the genus. ‘There can be no doubt that many other testacea (espe- cially in the genera of Mya and Mytilus), at present considered as distinct species, will, from the occurrence of similar opportuni- ties, be found to owe their difference of form solely to difference of age. ‘The most striking character in the younger specimens 2u2 of 328 Dr. Maton’s Description of of Mya variabilis is the radiating ruge, or plaits, which proceed from the apew of the wnbones, and cover nearly the whole of the shell. This circumstance, added to some others, induced me, at first, to look upon this shell as a variety of Mya corrugata, of Miiller (Hist. Verm. terr. et fluv. 2. p. 214. n. 398), but, on con- sulting the figures of that species given in the Beschaft des Gesell. Naturf. Freunde zu Berlin, (tom. 4. p. 35. tab. 3. f. 7. 8), and by Schroter (Flussconch. n. 182. tab. 9. f. 3), Tat length decided to the contrary, its habit being totally different, though, from the ambiguity of the description given in Gmelin, I might have made a very gross mistake, had I been unable to consult the au- thors just mentioned. In fig. 6 of the plate annexed to this paper, it will be seen that the ruge@, though so strong over the whole of the younger shell (fig. 5), are very indistinct as they pass towards the margin, and in fig. 4, the oldest of the three specimens, they are almost obsolete, except on the decorticated umbo: it will be remarked also, that the outline of the shell be- comes totally different at its full growth, gradually verging from a subrhomboidal, or somewhat obliquely oval, to a subrhombic or almost orbicular form. As these differences are so marked, no person, I conceive, who duly considers the facts which I have mentioned, will be liable to separate Mya variabilis into several species. 3. TELLINA LIMOSA. Tas. XXIV. Fig. 8, 9, 10. TELLINA testa equivalvi, ovata, transversim striata, intus pur- purea, umbonibus acutiusculis prominentibus. Habitat in America australi, fluviatilis. Testa vix fragilis, glabra, epidermide viridi, margine integro, { pollicis longa, = pollicis lata. Fig. 10. Seven new Species of Testacea. 329 Fig. 10. Testa junior, colore extus et intus pallidior, tenuior, subdiaphana. I have no particular remarks to make on this species, except that it has a good deal of the habit of a Mactra. Having no striking character, as to either its figure or colour, it is very liable to be confounded with some other species, though I have endeavoured to describe it with precision; and, had the describers of those shells which are most nearly allied to it been less ambi- guous in their definitions, I should not fear that there would be any mistake in referring to its name. 4. MyTILus MEMBRANACEUS. Tas. XXIV. Fig. 11, 12. Myritvs testa subrhombea, fragillima, margine anteriore an- gulata. Habitat in America australi, fluviatilis. Testa subdiaphana, 1 poll. longa et lata, subventricosa, feré membranacea, intus submargaritacea, glaberrima, transversim delicatissimé striata, colore extus viridescente, figura feré Mye variabilis senioris. Margo ad cardinem rectissimus. Cardo eden- tulus. Umbones acuti. I have given the trivial name of membranaceus to this Mytilus, on account of its extremely thin and tender texture, which forms its most obvious character. The contour approaches so nearly to that of Mya variabilis in its perfect state, as to render it de- sirable that they should both be placed in the same genus, did not the hinges so materially differ: in fact, many of the Mye and Mytili belong to one natural family, and there is often much difficulty in determining under which name a particular species . ought 330 Dr. Maron’s Description of ought to be placed, for Linnzus has not made the absence of teeth an indispensable character for a Mytilus, and some of that genus gape like the Mye at one extremity. 5. VouvtTa FLUVIATILIS. Tas. XXIV. Fig. 13. Vo.uta testa subovali, pellucida, levi, columella biplicata, apertura integra. Habitat in America australi, fluviatilis. Testa vix } poll. longa, ultra } poll. lata, tenera, flavescente-vi- ridis, eal brunneis transversim lineato-notata. Anfractus ro- tundati. Spira prominula. 6. VoLUTA FLUMINEA. Tab. XXIV. Fig. 14, 15. Voturta testa obovata, cornea, longitudinaliter delicatissime striata, apertura integra, columella biplicata, apice acuto, bre- vissimo. Habitat in America australi, fluviatilis. Testa magnitudine precedentis, at ventricosior, anfractibus magis depressis, apice verd tenuior, colore pallidior, obsoleté li- Renee! lineis distantioribus. These Volul@ are so nearly allied to each other, that I hesitated at first to consider them as distinct species; yet the characters given above, it is presumed, will sufficiently authorize their se- paration. The shape of V. fluviatilis is almost a perfect oval, but that of V. fluminea is obliquely ovated. ‘This variation might be attributed to difference of age, were not the specimens all of equal 4 ‘ { Seven new Species of Testacea. $31 equal size; and it ought, moreover, to be remarked, that the Jatter of these species is most beautifully striated, an appearance not distinguishable in the other, though perhaps obliterated chiefly by the deeper colour and larger size of the spots, which show themselves very strongly quite through to the interior of the shell; the uppermost line of spots, however, on the gibbous part of V. fluminea, is pretty deeply marked. ‘There are but few fluviatile shells in this genus, and the two here described are not likely to be confounded with any of them. 7 Hewix Prater. Tas. XXIV. Fig. 16, 17. Hexrx testa perforata, subglobosa, levi, alba, lineis transversis. geminis, apertura interru pto-ovali, labio acutiusculo. Habitat in America australi, fluviatilis. Testa diametro # pollicis, solidula, epidermide lutescente, li- neis purpurascente-brunneis nunc geminis, nunc solitariis et la~ tioribus transversim cincta, labio lacteo in columellam apud umbilicum replicato. Anfractus 4—5, parum rotundati. Spira acuminata. This is a very elegant species; but, as the number of Helices contained in Gmelin’s edition of the Systema Nature is so large, I ought not to pronounce it new with too much confidence. No description given by that author, however, can I consider as applying to the shell which I have here named; nor is the latter very liable to be confounded with others before known, because such of the fluviatile tribe as are elegantly banded are compara- tively few. I have taken its trivial name from the Rio de la Plata. Before 332 Seven new Species of Testacea. Before I conclude this paper, I ought to express my obligation to Mr. James D. Sowerby for the very accurate and excellent drawings with which he has kindly enabled me to illustrate the preceding descriptions, and without which my endeavours to render myself clearly understood might have been very far from being successful. XIV. An Linn. Trans Vol X. Tab 24 Pp. 332 AYES... eh oe , ’ od % Be vO tA 4 Pe ae eae: walewy ours Sikh Rat sabes Ce 1 Aire ie x “2? ; call aes co : ( 333 ) XIV. An Account of several Plants, recently discovered in Scotland by Mr. George Don, A.L.S., not mentioned in the Flora Bri- tannica nor English Botany. By James Edward Smith, M.D. PWS. b.L:5- Read Nov. 21, and Dec. 5, 1809. Norwirustraypine the numerous additions to the British Flora, owing to the labour and acuteness of various observers, especially of Mr. Dickson, within the last 20 years, new discoveries, of the most interesting nature, are continually rewarding the zeal of new votaries to botany. I need only advert to the Buxbaumia aphylla, the abundance of new Lichens, Fuci and Conferve, and the numerous Salices, which are amongst our more recent acqui- sitions, in proof of my assertion. The richest harvest we have for a long time had, was commu- nicated to me in the course of last summer by Mr. George Don of Forfar, whose scientific merits and eminent zeal are sufficiently known to the Linnean Society. I have chosen a part of these treasures for the materials of my earliest tribute to the Society, at its first meeting for this season, after the long vacation. The plants shall be enumerated in systematic order, with such re- marks as I may think useful or amusing to British botanists, ac- companied by characters and descriptions of such species as, from their novelty or obscurity, may require that sort of illus- tration. VOL. x. 2x 1, Aira 334 Dr. Smirn’s Account of several Plants, 1. Arra levigata*, foliis planis ; vaginis levissimis, panicula coarctata, petalis aris- tatis basi villosis, rachi glabra brevissima. Found on the high mountains of Clova in Angusshire, as well as at the sea-side near Dundee. In the former situation it is viviparous; in the latter not so. ‘This grass appears to have been overlooked as a viviparous alpine variety of Aira cespitosa. At least, so Linnzeus, who received it from Lapland by means of some one of his travelling pupils, considered it; and probably it is the supposed variety, mentioned on the authority of the Rev. Hugh Davies, in the Flora Britannica. Mr. Don, however, justly remarks, that it differs from the cespitosa in never being above a foot, or foot and half, high, even when cultivated in a rich moist soil; as well as in the great smoothness of the herbage when drawn through the hand. For, though the edges of the leaves are rough, their sheaths and backs are remarkably smooth. My acute correspondent thought he had ascertained a further difference, in the absence of the woolliness at the base of the flowers. This, however, I find not exactly the case; but the remark has led to the detection of a curious specific character in those parts. This consists in the extreme shortness, and perfect smoothness or nakedness, of the little partial stalk which elevates one floret, while the very base of each floret is bearded. In A. cespitosa thep artial stalk itself is hairy all over, and of a much greater length than in our devigata. Mr. Don informs me that the latter flowers a month earlier than ceéspitosa. 'The root is fibrous and perennial. The examination of this grass in its viviparous state, teaches us one mode in which that phenomenon takes place, and which * Engl, Bot, t, 2102. is recently discovered in Scotland by Mr. George Don. 335 is perhaps the only mode with respect to grasses. This is by an absolute transmutation, more or less complete, of the glumes of the corolla into leaves. That such is the case, is evident, not only from the change being mostly incomplete, part of the glume retaining its natural state, but also from the awn terminating the newly-formed leaf. Indeed it often seems as if the lower part only of the awn itself had become leaf, the glume which bears it remaining unchanged. The gay petals of a tulip often become in part or entirely leaves. Why may not this happen to a grass ? It seems that the organs of impregnation are starved and obli- terated in such viviparous florets of this Aira, and not as some have supposed concerning other alpine viviparous grasses, that those parts are themselves transformed into a gemma, or leaf-bud ; still less is the leafy appearance caused by the seeds vegetating in their husks, as Lightfoot thought of Poa alpina, and perhaps Festuca vivipara. \t is possible indeed that the stamens, and even pistil, of all such grasses may be capable of change into leaves, as well as the corolla, though I have not found it so in this Aira. 2, AVENA alpina*, panicula erecta subsimplici, calycibus subquinquefloris, recep- taculis apice barbatis, foliis serrulatis nudis ; Vvaginis scabris. Discovered in 1807, on rocks upon the summits of the highest mountains of Clova, Angusshire. It is perennial, flowering in June. This is a very fine species of Avena, and, as faras I can discover, perfectly new. I was inclined to refer it to pubescens, with which it most agrees in general aspect, but is larger in every part, and *Avena planiculmis. Engl. Bot. t. 2141, and as I presume of Schrader’s FI. Germ. v. 1. 381. ¢. 6. f. 2; but Mr. G. Don thinks otherwise, and denies the flatness of the stem in his plant. 2x12 Mr. 336 Dr. Smirn’s Account of several Plants, Mr. Don has indicated the following differences, which I find to hold good. ‘The roots form a compact tuft, and are not at all inclined to creep. The leaves are never clothed with soft hairs, nor are their edges even, as in pubescens, but they are finely ser- rated, so that the two species are distinguishable, even in the dark, by the touch. In this last particular the leaves agree with pratensis, but differ from that in their rough and greatly elongated sheaths. The flowers differ from both those species, not only in their much greater size, but in their partial stalk, or rachis, the hairiness of which I observe to be crowded up into a very dense tuft, towards the base of each floret, not dispersed over the whole rachis. This species bears the same relationship to Avena pubescens, that my A. caryophyllea, Fl. Grac. t. 89, does to pratensis, being larger, with a greater number of florets in each calyx. I wish however that the caryophyllea might prove as permanently di- stinct; upon which subject I shall take this opportunity of making some observations. That was one of the few Greek grasses, drawn by Mr. Ferdinand Bauer, of which I could find no specimens in Dr. Sibthorp’s herbarium. I was therefore obliged to take their specific characters from the drawings; and I did so with confidence, having had such frequent expe- rience of the fidelity of this excellent artist. The rachis of this Avena being delineated quite smooth, and that part having been resorted to by Linneus in this genus for his specific differences, I seized upon it, in conjunction with the greater number of florets, to establish a specific character. But I have lately discovered specimens of this grass, along with most, if not all, of the others of the Flora Greca that were in the same predicament, quite out of their places, confounded amongst a heap of rubbish, which I had supposed not to belong to the Greek herbarium at all. ‘Thus then —< i aT, ON ee ee ee ry recently discovered in Scotland by Mr. George Don. _— 337 then I am enabled to have recourse to Nature herself; and I find the rachis is actually hairy, exactly in the peculiar manner of that of A. pratensis, the greater number of florets, being about double, constituting the only distinctive character of the caryo- phyllea; for its leaves are rough-edged, and scarcely less involute than those of pratensis. Such an occasional inaccuracy, in a science where such mul- tiplied observations are necessary, can by no means detract from the reputation of Mr. Bauer, or any other artist. His original discoveries, and frequent improvements upon other observers, place him far out of the reach of any depreciation. The same may justly be said of the indefatigable Dr. Sibthorp, under whose inspection the drawing was made, Truth however renders my notice of the mistake indispensable, 8. AruNDO neglecia*, calycibus unifloris corollam ezquantibus, paniculd erecta diffusa, floribus sparsis erectis aristatis, stipula brevissima. A. neglecta. Ehrhart Calamaria n, 118. Discovered in June 1807, in a marsh called the White Mire, one mile from Forfar. Mr. Don never noticed it any where else, nor have I ever before seen any other specimens than the Upsal one in Ehrhart’s Calamarie; another sent by Dr. Swartz from Sweden, named “ d. stricta of Timm,” but not to be found in the Flora Megalopolitana ; and a third in the Linnean herbarium, laid into Agrostis, without a name, but with a Swedish inscription, signifying that “it was found by Solander on the Lapland alps, in Westbothland and at Ljumkil, and is very different from * Arundo stricta, Engl, Bot, t. 2160. Schrad. Germ, v, 1,215, t. 4. fi 5. Agrostis 338 Dr-Smitn’s Account of several Plants, Agrostis arundinacea in its flowers, not to mention the smallness of its leaves.” , In fact, this plant is next akin to Agrostis arundinacea, and like that is surely an Arundo, according to Linneus’s original deter- mination in the Flora Lapponica. They both belong indeed to the genus which some have separated from Arundo, by the bad name of Calamagrostis, distinguished by having only 1 floret in each calyx, as do likewise Arundo Calamagrostis and Agrostis Calamagrostis of Linneus. It seems to me that they may all very naturally be referred to Arundo. Arundo neglecta is by far the smallest British species of its ge- nus, being scarcely 2 feet high. It has something of the habit of A. Calamagrostis, but differs from that, as well as from all the species just mentioned, in having the glumes of the calyx simply acute, without any elongated point. ‘lhe corolla moreover is as long as the calyx; its glumes abrupt and jagged, the larger bear- ing a short dorsal awn, scarcely projecting beyond the calyx, and not, like that of Agrostis arundinacea, twice as long. ‘The root is creeping. Stem simple, with 2 joints, smooth, as are also the sheaths. ‘The leaves are narrow, acute, rough on the upper surface and edge. Stipula very short, abrupt and entire. Panicle of a purplish or bronze-coloured brown. It must be confessed that the first grass, described in the pre- sent paper, comes very near these just referred to Arundo, in the generic character founded on the hairs at the base of the corolla. But the hairs of Azra levigata form a tuft at the base of the outer glume only, and, from the analogy of Aira cespitosa, should seem rather to belong to thé rachis than to the glume itself, how- ever closely approximated to the latter. ‘They do not, as in Arundo, grow out of, and entirely encompass, both glumes of the corolla. 4. Cum- recently discovered in Scotland by Mr. George Don. 339 4. CH@ROPHYLLUM aureum*, caule tumidiusculo anguloso subpiloso, foliolis pinnatifidis acutis incisis, seminibus coloratis costatis. Ch. aureum. Linn. Sp. Pl. ed. 2.370; nec Mant. 356. Jacq. Austr. v. 1. 40. t. 64. Cerefolium n. 749. Hall. Hist. v. 1. 328. Myrrhis perennis alba minor, foliis hirsutis, semine aureo. Rupp. Jen. ed. Hall. 282. t. 5. Found between Arbroath and Montrose, in the borders of fields; also at Corstorphine near Edinburgh; flowering in June. This species would scarcely be recognised by the specific name, which alludes to a very slight yellowness, or rather tawniness, in the ripe seeds. Linnzeus originally confounded it with Chero- phyllum hirsutum, from which it differs, even generically accord- ing to Haller, in not having furrowed but ribbed seeds. This difference escapes my powers of observation. More certain ones are to be found in the short soft deflexed pubescence, rarely en- tirely wanting, on the stem of our plant, with a few coarse hairs occasionally superadded, like those of hirsutum, but more de- flexed: in the narrow, pinnatifid, sharp and elongated leaflets: and in the less dilated edges of the common footstalks, whose very base however, in the lower leaves, is remarkably annular and abrupt. The flowers are cream-coloured, with a reddish tinge occasionally. There are often one or two leaves of a general in- volucrum: the partial one consists of several ovate, pointed, fringed whitish leaflets. Seeds longish, with 3 elevated obtuse palish ribs to each. Styles permanent, divaricated. The description under this name in the Mantissa altera was * Engl, Bol. t, 2103. 5 made 340 Dr. Smiru’s Account of several Planis, made from an imperfect specimen of Cherophyllum temulentum, accidentally mistaken for the awreum, from which it widely differs. 5. Saxrrraca pedatifida, foliis radicalibus reniformibus pedatifido-septemlobis ; caulinis palmatis linearibusque, caule subnudo ramoso, petalis lineari- obovatis. S. pedatifida. Ehrhart Exsicc. n. 15. S. quinquefida. Donn Cant. ed. 5. 107. Found (by Mr. George Don) on the mountains of Clova, An- gusshire. The same was sent to the Cambridge garden, some years since, from the Highlands, by the late Mr. J. Mackay. It comes nearest to S. geranioides, with which the Swiss botanists seem to have confounded it, but differs in the pedate form of the radical leaves, which are divided almost to the base, their lobes narrower and blunter than in that species. The petals too are much narrower, and the calyx-teeth less elongated after flowering. The true S. petraa, Jacq. Ic. Rar. t. 81, a plant known to very few botanists, has leaves divided in a somewhat similar manner, but the stem is much more leafy, and the petals emar- ginate, as in Pona’s and Jacquin’s figures. 6. SaxiFrraca elongella, foliis aristatis trifidis quinquefidisve: basi elongatis ; superioribus linearibus indivisis, pedunculis longissimis nudis. S. elongella. Donn Cant. ed. 5. 107; ex nomine. Gathered on a rock by a river called Lintrathen, a mile and half north of Airly castle, Angusshire. The late Mr. J. Mackay sent it formerly to Cambridge; at Jeast if I am right in the sy- nonym, recently discovered in Scotland by Mr. George Don. S41 nonym, which cannot at this season be determined. Mr. George Don has favoured me with wild as well as cultivated specimens. The stems creep to some extent, throwing out numerous short leafy branches. Some of the leaves are linear and undivided ; others, from a long narrow base, divide suddenly into 3 equal oblong lobes, the 2 outermost of which have sometimes a short lateral lobe; all are more or less fringed with soft hairs, and tipped with a small bristle. Neither the lobed nor the undivided leaves seem exclusively appropriated to any. particular part of the plant, but those on the upper part of the flowering branches are always undivided. Such branches are erect, bearing seldom more than one large white flower, on a remarkable naked stalk, usually two inches long, erect and slightly glandular. In one lux- uriant cultivated specimen there are five flowers on one branch. The germen is inferior. Calyx-teeth ovate. Petals obovate, en- tire, with three slender ribs separating a little above the base. 7. Saxrrraca platypetala, foliis aristatis trifidis quinquefidisve, stolonibus procumbentibus, caule subfolioso, petalis obovato-orbiculatis. Found on the mountains of Clova in Angusshire. We have the same gathered by Mr. D. Turner upon Snowdon. It has the habit of S. hypnoides; but the leaves are almost universally divided into three, sometimes five, lobes, a few on the upper part of the flowering stem only being undivided. The petals moreover are very different, being twice as broad, and almost orbicular, with three ribs, of which the central one is often deeply divided, while the others sometimes throw off numerous lateral branches towards the edge of the petal. VOL. X. Qy 8. LycHNISs ie) He bee) Dr. Smiru’s Account of several Plants, 8. Lycunts alpina, glabra, petalis bifidis, floribus corym bosis, foliis lineari-lanceolatis. L. alpina. Linn. Sp. Pl. 626. Fl. Dan. t. 65. Willd. Sp. Pl. uv. 2. 809. Silene lapponica alpina, facie viscarie. Linn. Fl. Lapp. n. 185. On rocks near the summit of Clova in Angusshire, but very rare; first observed by Mr. Deon in 1795. This is a very pretty species, found in Switzerland, as well as on the Lapland mountains, so that we cannot wonder at its being a native of Scotland also, though never noticed before. It re- sembles Lychnis Viscaria, but is smaller and not viscid. Some strange confusion has crept into the descriptions of this plant. Linneeus in his Flora Lapponica makes it a Silene, saying the styles are three. In the Species Plantarum it is properly referred to Lychnis, without mention of any anomaly in the number of the styles, which therefore must be understood to be five; but in the Systema Vegetabilium they are said to be four, and the petals are there described as destitute of a crown. Now in the original manuscript of Linnzus’s Lapland Tour, where he first describes the plant in question, the styles are asserted to be five, and the petals to have a crown, formed of two teeth upon each petal, their border moreover being cloven half way down. Haller, in Act. Helvet. v. 6.13. n. 46, says the petals are “ plaited at their origin, with tumours but without auricles,” and that “the styles are five.” These two last accounts, taken from nature, may safely be relied on, and they agree with what I am able to discover in dried spe- cimens, where I find the petals as distinctly crowned as in any Lychnis or Silene whatever. Willdenow is reprehensible for copying the erroneous specific character from the Systema Vege- tabilium as if it were taken not from Linneus but from Oeder in recently discovered in Scotland by Mr. George Don. 348 in the Flora Danica, who says nothing at all like it. It is re- markable however that Haller, in the first edition of his Flora; describes only three styles. Could this be copied from Linneus, whose original error seems to have arisen from the obscurity of a figure in his own manuscript? It is, after all, possible that the styles may vary in number from three to five. 9. Porentitta tridentata, foliis ternatis cuneiformibus: supra glabris: subtus pilosis: apice trifidis. P. tridentata. Ait. H. Kew. v. 2. 216. t. 9. Willd. Sp. Pl.v. 2.1110. Discovered last summer on a mountain called Werron, and on some others to the westward, all in Angusshire. This, in Mr. Don’s opinion, equals any of its genus, if it does not surpass them all, in point of beauty. It is not honoured with much di- stinction in our gardens, though sometimes seen there. The flowers are white. The plant in Fl. Danica, t. 799, P. retusa Retz. Prodr. 123, cited by Willdenow, has hairy leaves and yellow flowers, and must certainly be a different species. 10. Ranuncuuus alpestris, foliis glaberrimis: radicalibus subcordatis obtusis tripartitis lobatis ; caulino lanceolato integerrimo, caule subunifloro. R. alpestris. Linn. Sp. Pl. 778. Jacq. Austr. t. 110. By the sides of little rills, and in other moist places, about two or three rocks on the mountain of Clova, Angusshire, very rare, and but seldom flowering. Mr. Don suggests that “its herbage, bearing a great resemblance to several of its kindred, may easily have been overlooked, but when in blossom it is truly a splendid plant.” The petals are inversely heartshaped, ofa brilliant white. 2x2 Calyx 844 Dr. Smiru’s Account of several Plants, Calyx smooth, bordered with white. The stem-leaf is often ternate. The radical ones, as Linneus remarks, greatly resemble those of R. aguatilis that float on the surface, and in watery places may be mistaken for them. 11. Cocuteartia groenlandica, foliis reniformibus carnosis integerrimis, siliculis globosis. C. groenlandica. Linn. Sp. Pl. 904. C. minima, erecta et repens, insulz Aalholmiane. JVillius in Bariholin. Act. Hafnie, v. 5. 143. f. 144. Found on the mountains of Clova, Angusshire, and Loch-ne- gare, in August 1807. Mr. Don’s specimen agrees with the au- thentic one in the Linnean herbarium, and with Bartholin’s two figures, especially with that which is branched. The radical leaves are extremely fleshy, convex beneath, about the size of a split pea, entire, and grow on long stalks. One or two of the stem- leaves are nearly sessile, more slang! and approach towards the shape of C. anglica, having occasionally a tooth at each side of their elongated base. The pouch is globose, with a short style, as in C. officinalis, of which this may possibly be a variety, but it is not the same with the groenlandica of Withering. It is remark- able that the plant published by Bartholin is said to flower on the sea-shore in April, and to disappear entirely by the month of July; whereas Mr. Don gathered his in full bloom in August. May the alpine situation of the latter cause such a difference ? The flowers are large, tinged with purple. 12. Creris pulchra, foliis pubescentibus dentatis; caulinis subsagittatis, caule as culato corymboso, calycibus pyramidatis glabris. C, pulchra. Linn. Sp. Pl. 1134. Hieracium recently discovered in Scotland by Mr. George Don. S45 Hieracium pulchrum. Bauh. Hist. v. 2. 1025. H. montanum alterum leptomacrocaulon. Colwnn. Ecphr. 248, t, 240. Lapsana chondrilloides. Linn. Sp. Pl. ed. 1. 812. Found in 1796 amongst crumbling rocks on the hill of Turin, to the east of Forfar. The plant is not at present known in our gardens, though said to have been cultivated at Chelsea in Rand’s time; see Hort. Kew. Mr Don rightly determined it to be a Crepis, and the Linnan specimen decides its species. 'The flowers are small and inconspicuous, of a pale yellow. Each calyx-leaf acquires a strong prominent smooth rib as the seed ripens. This plant appears in two places in the Ist edition of Spec. Plant. but in the 2d the Lapsana is made a variety 8, which is still incorrect, for it is precisely one and the same in every respect. My worthy friend Dr. Afzelius once told me an amusing anecdote to account for the specific name of this Crepis. The Queen of Sweden, Louisa Ulrica, celebrated as the great pa- troness of Linnzus, used frequently, in her visits to the Upsal garden, to jest with him for his valuing many mean or ill-looking plants, in which she could see nothing to admire. Coming to this little Crepis, which is far from ornamental, in one of her walks with the Professor, the Queen exclaimed, “This I suppose you call a pretty plant!” Linnzus replied, “The plant has as yet not been called any thing; but Your Majesty has given it a name which shall certainly be adopted.” He therefore called it Crepis pulchra. The old synonym of Bauhin, Hieracium pulchrum, may seem to invalidate this story, but will not be found to do so in reality; as, though it might afford the precise name, the idea might nevertheless be suggested to Linnaeus by the Queen. 13. Err- $46 Dr. Smiru’s Account of several Plants, &c. 13. Er1tGEron uniflorum, caulibus subunifloris, calyce villoso, radio erecto subtubuloso. E. uniflorum, Linn, Sp. Pl. 1211. Fl. Lapp. ed. 2. 250. 6.9. f. 3. Grows on Ben Lawers, and on rocks by the side of the river Almond, near Lindoch, seven miles from Perth. Mr. Don remarks that the chief distinction between this and the alpinwm, Engl. Bot. t. 464, is, that in wniflorum the florets of the radius are more slender, and seem to be tubular, always upright, and never be- coming patent as in alpinum. They are also of a deeper colour, and the disk is constantly of a dark purple approaching to black, instead of a light yellow. To this we may add, that the calyx is always much more villose, forming, as Linnaeus says, a hispid globe before it opens. The radius seems to be often white, and hence he compares it to a daisy. Its erect position remains when dry, and a liberty appears to have been taken by the draughtsman of the Flora Lapponica, who certainly saw only a dried specimen, of making it spread almost horizontally. There can in future be no difficulty in distinguishing these two species. Each of them is liable to bear several flowers on a stem when cultivated. Both grow in Switzerland as well as in Scot- land; but we have seen only the uniflorum from Lapland, though it appears by Fl. Danica, t. 292, that the alpinum is found on the mountains of Norway and Iceland: and indeed Linnzus in his Lapland Tour describes his plant with a yellow disk, and sketches the radius in a rather spreading posture ; so that, though he pre- served the uniflorwm only, he might possibly gather both, and at that time confound them. Norwich, Noy. 6—30, 1809. XV. Descriptions ( 347 ) XV. Descriptions of Seven new Species of Apion. By the Reo. William Kirby, F.L.S. Read December 5, 1809. I bee leave to offer to the Linnean Society a description of some species of Apion which I have met with since my paper* upon that genus was printed, together with a few additional remarks upon some of those already described. 62. APION GENIST®. A. nigrum albido-villosum, elytris villoso-cinereis: vittd rectd -albida, pedibus rufis: plantis atris. Long. Corp. 14 lin. Habitat in Angliz Genistd tinctorid. Dom. Seales. Mus. Dom. Marsham, Milne, Scales, Spence, Geo. Sowerby, nostr. DESCR. CORPUS nigrum, pilis decumbentibus albidis incanum. » Capur rarids pilosum. Rostrum mediocre, filiforme, de- orsum spectans, subarcuatum, nitidum, pone antennas incrassatum. Antenne apud basin rostro subtus insertee, mediocres nigre: articulo primo rufo. Oculi magni, prominuli. Truncus subglobosus, anticé angustior, excavato-punc- * Trans. Linn, Soc. yol. ix. p. 1. tatus : S48 Mr. Kirsy’s Descriptions of tatus: punctis distinctis, ante scutellum lineola ex- aratus. .Pedes rufi: coxis femorum trochanteribus tar- sisque nigris. Coleoptra oblonga, striata, ex flavescente cinerea, qui color ex pilis decumbentibus exoritur: vittd intermedia recta laté villoso-albida, qua tamen ad apicem haud attingit, in utroque elytro notanda ; margo itidem lateralis paululiim albescit. Obs.—Puneta et lineola thoracica nisi pilis abrasis via facile conspi= cienda. This species very much resembles A. melanopum (Linn. Trans. ix. 19. 2), which it shoulda follow; but the rostrum is thicker, the first joint only of the antennz is rufous, the trunk is proportionally wider, the thighs are entirely rufous, the very extremity of the base only excepted, the hip-joints are black, and the elytra, instead of a narrow oblique streak, have a broad straight stripe of white, which runs nearly to the end. 63. APION LEHVICOLLE. A. atrum glabrum, fronte sulcataé, femoribus testaceis, trunco lzeviusculo, coleoptris globoso-ovatis gibbis. Long. Corp. 12 lin. Habitat in Anglia. In Cantio a nobis bis lectum estate hujus (1809) anni. Mus. nostr. * DESCR. CORPUS atrun, nitidum, glabrum. Capur vix punctatum, inter oculos sulcatum: sulculis circiter tribus. Rostrum feré mediocre, crassiusculum, in medio paululim incrassatum, obsoletits ruguloso- punctatum. Antenne mediocres, paulo pone medium rostro insidentes. Truncus : Seven new Species of Apion. 349 Troncus cylindricus, capite vix latior, levissime punc- tulatus, ante scutellum fossulA satis impress notatus. Femora omnia cum trochanteribus, item Cove anteriores duz, flavo-testacea. Tibie antic rufx basi dilutiores, posteriores quatuor nigro-picez basi annulo flavo-testa- ceo. Tarsi nigri. Coleoptra subglobosa sive ex glo- boso ovata, gibba, striata: striis subpunctatis. This species should be placed after A. flavifemoratum (Linn. Trans. ix. 42. 23.) to which it is very nearly related: it is however quite distinct, and may always be known by the very slight puncta- tion of its trunk,and the deep fossula just above the scutellum. The rostrum also is thicker than even that of the male of the species just referred to, and the little furrows too between the eyes afford a good character. I think it was taken, but am not quite certain, in the parish of Wittersham in the Isle of Owney in Kent, a spot which abounds with insects, particularly Hymenoptera. 64. APION VELOX. A. atrum, rostro breviori crassiusculo, coleoptris obovatis sulcatis : sulcorum interstitiis angustissimis. Long. Corp. $—1 lin. Habitat in Anglia. In Salice capred a Dom. Sheppard szpiis lectum currens velociter. Mus. Dom. Sheppard, Geo. Sowerby, : Wilkin, nostr. DESCR. CORPUS atrum, -pilositate parva albicanti paululdm obscuratum. Carur inter oculos confluenter rugulosum. Rostrum bre- vius, crassum, leve. Antenne sublongiores, pone me- VOL. X. 22 dium 350 Mr. Kinsy’s Descriptions of dium rostro insidentes: clavA albido-villos&. Oculi ad- modum magni, subprominuli. Trunevs teretiusculus, medio pauld latior, confluenter punctatus, lineola obsoletiori ante scutellum impressus. Coleoptra ex globoso obovata, sulcata: sulcis interstitiis ipsis latioribus, concinné et impressé punctatis. This species may be placed after A. ebeninum (Linn. Trans. ix. 55. 34.) to which it is allied. It differs from it not only in size, being very much smaller, but the rostrum also is shorter and thicker, the trunk is of a different shape, rough with confluent points, and exhibiting a very faint trace of an impressed line or point at the scutellum. From A. brevirostre, (Linn. Trans. ix. 68. 51.) which it also somewhat resembles, it is sufficiently and indeed strikingly distinguished by the unusual width of the furrows of the elytra, and their very narrow ridge-like interstices. Mr. Sheppard informs me that it runs uncommonly fast for an insect of this genus. Mr. George Sowerby has also taken it, who gave me my specimens. 65. APION PUBESCENS. A. atrum piloso-incanum, thorace brevi posticé lineol4 impresso, rostro mediocri. Long. Corp. 1 lin. circiter. Habitat in Anglia. Ex Mus. Dom. Hall. DESCR. CORPUS nigrum, nitidiusculum, totum pilis albican- tibus incanum. Capur thorace pauld brevius, inter oculos leviusculum. Rostrum filiforme, mediocre, satis arcuatum. Antenne postice, mediocres. Oculi magni, prominuli. Truncus Seven new Species of Apion. $51 Truncus brevis, teretiusculus, posticé latior, punctulatus, ante scutellum lineol4 exaratus. Coleoptra ovata, striata: striis subpunctatis ; interstitiis planiusculis. Obs. Maris rostrum brevius, crassius, leviter arcuatum. This species should follow A. atomarium, (Linn. Trans. ix. 59. 40.) which it very much resembles: the head however is longer, the rostrum in both sexes shorter, the trunk is more conspicuously punctulate with a very visible dorsal channel, the interstices also of the furrows of the elytra are wider and flatter, and the furrows themselves less conspicuously punctate. 66. APION SIMILE. A. atrum, coleoptris obovatis zneo-nigris subsericeo-nitidis, rostro femineo longiori. Long. Corp. 1—13 lin. Habitat in Anglid. Apud Hunstanton in Norfolcid in maritimis a nobis semel lectum. Mus. Dom. Marsham, W. J. Hooker, nostr. DESCR. CORPUS atrum ex pube quadam parvé obscurum. Carut. Rostrum longius, filiforme, leviter arcuatum, apice nitidum, in medio subincrassatum. Antenne mediocres, pone medium rostro insidentes, Oculi magni, sub- immersi. Truncvus subcylindricus, confluenter punctatus, lineolé ante scutellum exaratus. Coleoptra obovata, nigra, zneo, sed levissimé, tincta, subsericeo-nitida, striata: striis subpunctatis ; interstitiis planiusculis. Obs. Maris rostrum brevius et quam femine crassius, Elytrorum . nitor sericeus ex rugulositate quédam, sed levissimd, exoritur. 222 A. simile 352 Mr. Kirby’s Descriptions of A. simile is nearly related to and should follow the preceding species, but it is less hairy; the rostrum is longer, its coleoptra are more obovate, have an neous tint,and reflect, although faintly, a sericeous lustre. It is also not unlike A. seniculus, (Linn. Trans. ix. 61. 43.) but it is less hairy, and proportionally wider. 67. APION ANGUSTATUM. A. atrum subangustum piloso-subincanum, coleoptris oblongis sulcatis, scutello canaliculato. Apion angustatum. Mus. Dom. Gyllenhal. Apion Meliloti var. 8. Kirby in Linn. Trans. ix. 64. 46. Long. Corp. 13 lin. Habitat in Suecid. Mus. Dom. Gyllenhal. nostr. DESCR. CORPUS atrum, angustum satis, ex pilositate obscu- rum et leviter incanum. Capvur longum admodum, punctatum, inter oculos rugu- losum. Rostrum longius, subfiliforme, arcuatum, levis- — simé punctulatum, ante antennas nitidum. Antenne me- diocres, pone medium rostro insidentes. Oculi prominuli. Truncus ex globoso teretiusculus, confluenter puncta- tus, ante scutellum lineold satis impressa exaratus. Scu- - tellum, quod singulare, canaliculatum. Coleoptra ob- longa, sulcata: sulcis interstitiorum feré latitudine, im- pressé punctatis. In my description of A. Meiiloti, I intimated a suspicion that var. ® might prove a distinct species; but as I had then seen only two specimens of the former insect, I did not venture to separate them. Having since taken several, none of which varied ; from Seven new Species of Apion. 3353 from « in the slightest degree, I was induced to compare @ with it again. ‘The result of this comparison,was the conviction that they ought to be given as distinct species ; for, exclusive of the difference of size which is considerable for such minute insects, the body of A.angustatum is more hairy and obscure ; the head be- tween the eyes has no concavity, and is differently sculptured ; the trunk and coleoptra, which last are proportionally shorter, are of a shape rather different, the former inclining a little more toa globose form, and the latter being more oblong; the minute scu- tellum is distinguished by a longitudinal channel, and the fur- rows of the elytra are wider in proportion, 68. APION SCUTELLARE. A. atrum subangustum piloso-subincanum, coleoptris obovatis sulcatis, scutello elongato. Long. Corp. 14 lin. Habitat in Anglia semel lectum. Mus. nostr. DESCR. CORPUS admodim angustum, atrum, ex pilositate parva subincanum et obscurum. Capur thorace paulo brevius, inter oculos striatulum. Rostrum longius, filiforme, arcuatum, ante antennas sub- attenuatum apice ipso iterum paululum dilatato. An- tenne breviores, pone medium rostro insidentes, nitidi- uscule. Oculi immersi. Trowncus teretiusculus, antict paulo angustior, conflu- enter punctatus, ante scutellum fossuld exaratus. Scu- tellum quam obtinet plerumque in hoc genere longius. Coleoptra ex oblongo obovata, sulcata: sulcis intersti- tiorum feré latitudine, punctatis. I had 354 Mr. Kinsy’s Descriptions of I had put by this insect also, as a variety of A. Meliloti, but upon further inspection, I am convinced it is distinct: it is inter- mediate between it and 4. angustatum, which should stand first in the series. From A. Meliloti, which it most resembles, it may be distinguished by having a rather longer rostrum, a more hairy body, eyes less prominent, elytra black with wider furrows, a longer scutellum, and no concavity between the eyes. From A. angustatum, with which it agrees in its plane front, hairy body, and sulcate elytra, it differs in those other characters which di- stinguish A, Meliloti from that species. ADDITIONAL OBSERVATIONS. My learned and very ingenious friend, and coadjutor in an in- tended Introduction to Entomology, William Spence, Esq. F.L.S. whose eye nothing escapes, in a letter lately received, directed my attention to the trochanters (for by this name, in the work above alluded to, we have agreed to distinguish what | formerly called the second or femoral joint of the apophysis) in Apion as differently circumstanced from those of other Coleopterous genera; and upon examination I find that they are so fixed to the base - of the thighs as to intercept them from coming at all in contact with the coxe (or my first joint of the apophysis); which circum- stance, although it invariably takes place in Hymenopterous in- sects, is observable in no Coleoptera that I have had an oppor- tunity to examine, not even in the cognate tribes of Curculionidae, or insects that have their antenne seated onarostrum. The general law in this order is for the exterior and longer angle of the base of the thigh at least, to touch the cova, if it does not in- osculate i i Seven new Species of Apion. 355 osculate with it; and, to permit this, the trochanter is set on very obliquely, and so that this angle goes beyond it: whereas in Apion the apex of the trochanter forms nearly a transverse or very slightly oblique line with the base of the thigh, and intercepts it inits whole width. This peculiarity strongly substantiates its claim to be considered as a distinct genus. When I constructed the Character Naturalis of Apion, I was not aware that the term Epigastrium had been employed by Linné upon one occasion, and probably in the very sense in which I used it. See Syst. Nat. ed. 12. 647. 4. under Cantharis rufa. I shall now add a few remarks upon some of the species for- merly described. Apion Malve (Linn. Trans. ix. 20, 3.) Obs. 1. Core omnes nigra, sed trochanteres testacei sunt, quod etiam obtinet in A. ver~ nali (21. 4.) Obs. 2. Maris rostrum pauld brevius et crassius est, et fere totum albido pilosum. Apion Cracce (29. 12.) Var. 8 Antennis totis nigris. Dom. Spence. Apion Vicie (31. 14.) Cove nigre. Femora antica trochanteribus rufis. Dom. Spence. Apion Malvarum (33. 16.) Core nigre. Femora omnia trochan- teribus rufis, sed posticis obscure. Apion rufirostre (35. 17.) Core omnes cum femorum: trochan- teribus flavee. Dom. Spence. Mr. Leach informs me that he has occasionally taken this species in coitu with A. Malvarum. Apion nigritarse (36. 18.) Femina. Core 4 anteriores cum trochan- teribus omnibus flave. Mas. Core 2 anteriores cum tro- chanteribus omnibus rufe. ; Apion 356 Mr. Kirsy’s Descriptions of Apion flavipes (37. 19.) Core 2 anteriores nunc nigre nunc flav, reliquis nigris, femorum trochanteribus flavis. Dom. Spence. Apion pallipes (38. 20.) Cove omnes, item trochanteres, flavee. Apion assimile et flavifemoratum (42. 22, 23.) Cove due anteriores, cum trochanteribus omnibus, rufee. Dom. Spence. Apion Sorbi (46. 25.) In quibusdam speciminibus Capué inter oculos bistriatum. Dom. Spence. Apion punctifrons (50. 28.) Femina rostro longiori tenuiori. I took several specimens of this Apion in the sandpits under Chariton-Wood near Woolwich in the autumn of the present year, 1809. Apion marchicum (54. 83.) Var. ® Elytris viridescente-ceruleis : stria suturali in medio vix reliquis profundiori. Obs. Mas rostro breviori sed vix crassiori. Apion Astragali (55. 35.) Var. 8 taken by Mr. Atkinson of Leeds in Yorkshire, in June and July 1809, on the only plant of Astragalus glyciphyllus he ever met with in that county. Apion Spencii (57. 37.) Ex pluribus speciminibus inter se collatis Nomen Specificum sic emendandum. A, atrum piloso-obscurum, fronte striat4, thorace canaliculato utrinque foveato, coleoptris atro-czruleis viridescentibusve. K. Obs. Femina rostro longiori tenuiori. Dom. Spence. Apion unicolor (58. 39.) Nomen specificum sic emendandum, cum specimina plura puncta gemina elevata rostri exhibeant, A. atrum subpilosum, coleoptris oblongis, rostro puncto gemino elevato. K. . Obs. Femina rostro longiori tenuiori, Dom. Spence. Apion Seniculus (61. 43.) Oculi majores quam in A, tenui. _\ Apion Meliloti (64. 46.) Caput inter oculos potius striatum. Mas rostro pauld breviori sed vix quam femine crassiori. I took several Seven new Species of Apion. S5T several this autumn (1809) in the sand-pits under Charlton- Wood, near Woolwich. Apion violaceum (65. 47.) Var. 8. Elytris viridescentibus. Var. y. Fronte vix canaliculata, capite thoraceque, sed levissimé, zneo tinctis, elytris viridescente-ceruleo nitidulis. An idem ? Ex Mus. Dom. Hall. Apion Onopordi (71. 54.) Habitat etiam in Rumice et Carduis. Dom. Spence.. A me nunquam nisi in Onopordo lectum. K. Apion Radiolus et oxurum (73. 56, 57.) From a further examination _of Mr. Marsham’s specimen of 4. Radiolus | am convinced that A. ovurum is merely a variety of it, differing in nothing but the black colour of its elytra, and the hairs which are scattered over it. In old specimens the hairs are often rubbed off. I therefore would expunge J. oxzurum. VOL. Xx. SA XVI. Account ( 358 ) XVI. Account of Ormosia, a new Genus of Decandrous Plants belonging to the Natural Order of Leguminose. By Mr. George Jackson, F.L.S. Read February 6, 1810. Amoncsv a fine collection of Guiana plants in the herbarium of A. B. Lambert, Esq. there are several specimens of a plant with velvety branches, rigid pinnate leaves, and papilionaceous flowers; the calyx bilabiate with the limb reflected, its upper lip supporting the vexillum, being two-lobed, and the lower lip three-parted : the stamens ten, separate, dilated towards the base, and alternately longer: the style incurved and ciliate, bearing two truncated unequal stigmas, the uppermost of which is largest, and incurved towards the other. The germen is ovate and pu- bescent, containing five seeds; the fruit a short oblique woody pod, opening with two valves, and containing in general only one perfect seed, but is also occasionally found with two: these are large, nearly oval, of a fine scarlet colour with a large black spot on one side. From these singular characters, noticed some time ago by Mr. Lambert, I was induced to examine some surround- ing genera of the order, to endeavour to discover its congeners, affinities, and proper place in the series; and a plant with similar scarlet and black seeds being enumerated in the Flora Guazanen- sis of Aublet, as a species of Robinia, but without any further description, a reference to the Pseudo-acacia ingens, fructu coccineo, nigra f : ' Mr. Jacxson’s Account of Ormosia. 359 nigra macula notato, of Plumier’s Catalogue, and unpublished MSS. tom. 7, tab. 145 excepted ; my first care was to endeavour to find out whether it might not be the same. That it was not the plant of Plumier I was well aware, a copy of his drawing of that, with many others of his unpublished drawings, being in the Sherardian collection at Oxford, and from which I had taken copies my- self for Mr. Lambert. I was, however, still uncertain about the plant of Aublet, very erroneous and even heterogeneous syno- nymy being often adapted by the botanists of that age with very little scruple. Fortunately, however, his herbarium was at hand, being now in the possession of the Right Honourable Sir Joseph Banks; and on being favoured by Mr. Dryander with a sight of Aublet’s original specimen, I found that Mr. Lambert’s plant was the identical Robinia coccinea. Characters exactly similar I have since discovered in another nondescript plant from Guiana, communicated to Mr. Lambert by Mr. Anderson of St. Vincents ; and also in the Sophora monosperma of Professor Swartz’s Prodro- mus and Flora Indie Occidentalis, of which the Pseudo-acacia ingens fructu coccineo, §c. of Plumier’s drawings, above mentioned, is a very good representation ; a plant essentially differing both from the original Sophora of Linnzus and the Virgilia and Po- dalyria of Lamarck, to the latter of which it has lately been re- ferred by Mons. Poiret, as well as the Edwardsia of Mr. Salis- bury, a very curious species of which, from South America, communicated by the late Professor Cavanilles, is also in Mr. Lambert’s collection. From these three species, therefore, agree- ing in habits and characters, and natives of nearly the same lati- tude, I have constituted a new genus, the characters of which, accompanied with sketches from the dried plants, I have now the honour to lay before the Society. The name Ormosia, by which I have distinguished it, is formed from the Greek Oguos, monile, a S48 necklace ; $60 Mr. Jacxson’s Account of Ormosia. lace; their beautiful seeds, and particularly those of O. dasycarpa, commonly called in the West Indies the bead-tree, being worn as necklaces by the ladies. The natural place of the genus appears to be in the vicinity of Virgilia and Podalyria ; but the affinities are far from strong, and leave abundant room for intermediates on all sides; and from the unexplored tropical parts of America, many conter- minal plants of the order are probably yet to be expected. ORMOSIA. Decandria Monogynia, Linn. Leguminosae, Juss. Character Genericus. Calyx bilabiatus, labio superiore bilobo, inferiore tripartito. Corolla papilionacea. Vexillum subro- tundum, emarginatum, alis vix longius. Carina longitudine alarum, dipetala. Filamenta libera, basin versus dilatata. Sty- lus incurvus. Stigmata duo, unum supra alterum. Germen subovatum, 5-6-spermum. Legumen lignosum, compressum, bivalve, 1—3-spermum. Habitus. Arbores. Rami ferrugineo-villosi. Folia stipulata, impari-pinnata. Stipulz a petiolis distincte. Foliola ner- vosa, integerrima, 4—6-juga. Flores terminales, paniculati, cerulei vel purpurascentes. Legumina lata, lignosa. Semina pauca, colorata, magna. 1. OrnMosIA coccinea. Tas. XXV. O. foliis impari-pinnatis, foliolis crassis subovatis, marginibus re- volutis, utrinque nudis, 4—6-jugis ; leguminibus glabris, nitidis. Robinia il e ; ‘ es “ Rips) OS {7 PIACEP ITD II 2. T NK AN AA EAA ay fl TM il Mf Y t SSS —S— \ 7 | & Bs : G NA Mr. Jacxson’s Account of Ormosia. 861 Robinia coccinea. Aub. Flor. Guian. 2. p. 773, sine synonymo Plumieri. Habitat in Guiana. Arbor. Rami flexuosi & casu foliorum cicatricibus notati. Stipule anguste, sericez, a4 petiolis distincte. Folia magna sept pedalia. Foliola rigida, nervosa et venulosa; supra niti- dissima, subtis subfusca. Nervi subtds exstantes, supra de- pressi. Venule numerose, inter nervos oblique, iisque pari ra- tione subtis elate, flexuose. Petioli universales villosi, supra leviter sulcati ; partiales crassi, interdum feré glabri. Paniculze bracteate, pedales vel etiam ultra. Bracteze subulatz. Pedunculi, pedicelli et calyces villosi, Calyx basi turbinatus, limbo reflexus. Labium superius inferiore longius, bilobum. Petala omnia un- guiculata. Vexillum utrinque emarginatum. Ale obovato-fal- cate. Carina dipetala, petalis subfalcatis. Filamenta calyci in- serta, quinque breviora. Anthere subovatz, utrinque emarginate, biloculares. Stylus incurvus, ciliatus. Stigmata truncata, in- zqualia; superius majus, versus inferius incurvum. Germen striatum, villosum, 5-spermum. Legumen breve, durissimum et nitidissimum, brevissimé rostratum, basin versus obliqué attenu- atum, 1- vel rarids 2- spermum. Semina subovata, nitida, coccinea cum macula nigra. Integumentum seminis duplex, exterius cori- aceum, interius membranaceum, albidum. Albumen nullum. Embryo semini conformis. Cotyledones plano-convexe. Radi- cula centrifuga, exserta, subhemispherica. Plumula nulla. Expricatio TaBuLz. Fig. 1. Ramuli floriferi pars. 2. Flos sejunctus. 3. Vexillum. 362 Mr. Jacxson’s Account of Ormosia. 8. Vexillum. 4. Ale. 5. Carina. 6. Calyx, Stamina et Pistillum. 7. Calyx vi expansus cum Staminibus. 8. Pistillum. 8. b. Germinis sectio. 9. Fructus monospermus. 10. Idem intus visus, valva superiori amota. 11. Fructus dispermus vi expansus. 12. Embryo. 2. Ormosra dasycarpa. Tas. XXVI. O. foliis impari-pinnatis, foliolis 4-5-jugis, utrinque nudis, le- guminibus ferrugineo-tomentosis. Pseudo-acacia ingens, fructu coccineo, nigra macula notato. Plum. Cat. p. 19, et MSS. cum Icone. Glycine arboreum, foliis oblongis, seminibus majoribus. Browne Jam. p. 298. Sophora monosperma. Swartz Prod. et Flor. Ind. Occ. 2. p. 722. Willd. Sp. Pl. 2. p. 501. Podalyria monosperma. Poiret in Encyc. Method. 5. p. 440. Habitat in India Occidentali. ExpericatTio TaBuLe. Fig. 1. Rami fructiferi pars. 2. Calyx cum Pistillo. 3. Idem, pistillo exempto. 4. Germinis sectio. 5. Legumen lEAAAA Ss EE=ZB = = = = == SF SSS = aS = — ——F i— —— FF ——_ —S a LA G77 — ————S —— — — jj, | N = ——— — =— Af: SS = te, SS —————— SS Sa S__ EEA SS = = = SS Mr, Jackson’s Account of Ormosia. 363 5. Legumen trispermum vi expansum. 6. Semen. 7 Embryo. 8. Ormosta coarctata Tas. XXVII. O. foliis impari-pinnatis, foliolis inzequalibus 4-5-jugis, supra nudis, subtus ferrugineo-hirsutis. Habitat in Guiand. Anderson, Arbor. Rami é vestigiis petiolorum cicatricosi, subteretes. Stipule a petiolis distincte, subulate, sericez. Folia O. dasy- carpe minora. Foliola ovato-lanceol.ita, nervosa, supra fusco- viridia, subtus ferrugineo-hirsuta, duo infima multo minora, ma- gisque ovata. Nervi supra depressi, subtus elati ac venulis pari ratione extantibus intertexti. Petioli tomentosi, teretes, partiales brevissimi. Paniculz coarctate, breves. Bractex pubescentes, ad divisuras panicule lato-subulate, ad pedicellos triangulo- ovate, concave. Pedicelli bracteis breviores, teretes, villosi. Calyx extis villosus, intds coloratus, glaber, labium superius in- feriore longius. Filamenta alterné breviora. Anthere utrinque emarginatz, biloculares. Germen hirsutum, 5-spermum. - Fruc- tum maturum non vidi. Semina facie O. dasycarpe sed minora. D. Thompson. Expiicatio TABULz, Fig. 1. Ramuli floriferi pars. 2. Flos sejunctus. 3. Vexillum. 4, Ale. 864 Mr. Jacxson’s Account of Ormosia. 4. Ale. 5. Carina. 6. Pars inferior Calycis cum Staminibus et Pistillo. 7. Calyx vi expansus cum Staminibus. 8. Pistillum. / 9. Germen longitudinaliter sectum. XVII. An A) : A Vymona’ coartala. EM ( 3635 ) XVII. An Account of anew Genus of New Holland Plants named Brunonia. By James Edward Smith, M.D. F.R.S. P.L.S. Read February 6, 1810. For the knowledge of the genus of plants of which I now propose to offer an account to the Linnean Society, I am obliged to Mr. Robert Brown, Librarian to the Society, who discovered it in the course of his botanical researches in New Holland. A very inter- esting part of his rich harvest in that country occupies a large por- tion of the present volume of our Transactions. With such a proof of his genius and abilities before us, any testimony of mine to the same purpose would be altogether superfluous; but Lam anxious to seize an opportunity, which, at my earnest solicitation, Mn Brown has afforded me, of gratifying my own personal friend- ship, while I do public justice to his merits, in dedicating this new and very distinct genus to his honour. In order to accom- plish this, as there is already a Brownea, in memory of the natu- ral historian of Jamaica, I am obliged to adopt a contrivance, unexceptionable in itself, and authorized by precedent, of pre- serving as much resemblance to his name as possible, while I avoid all ambiguity with the Brownea previously established, in calling my genus Brunonia. Of this, consisting of two species, I shall now proceed to offer a systematic description, subjoining some remarks on its botanical affinity, which is enveloped in no small degree of obscurity, VOL. X. SB BRU NO- 366 Dr. Smitu’s Account of Brunonia. BRUNONIA. Crass. ET Orv. Pentandria Monogynia. Sect. 1. Flores monopetali, inferi, monospermi. Nat.Orp. Aggregate Linn. Dipsacee Juss. ? Essent. Cuar. Corolla infundibuliformis, quinquefida, irregu- laris. Antheré connate. Stigma indusio bivalvi. Semen unicum, calyce interiori, demum plumoso, tectum. Nat. Cuar. Calyx.—Perianthium commune multiflorum, poly- phyllum : foliolis flore brevioribus, subeequalibus, paten- tibus, persistentibus; interioribus minoribus, solitariis, sub singulo flore. Perianthium proprium duplex, utrumque inferum: exterius tetraphyllum, brevius, foliolis membranaceis, subzqua- libus, erectis, concavis, obtusis : interius turbinatum, parim longius, quinquedentatum, per- sistens, dentibus plumosis. Corowa universalis equalis. Propria monopetala, infundibuliformis, calyce longior ; limbo quinquepartito, patente, laciniis subeequalibus, dua- bus superioribus profundids divisis ; tubo quinquepartibili. Sramina. Filamenta quinque, receptaculo inserta, capillaria, debilia. Anthere lineares, in cylindrum connate, longitu- dine tubi.. Pistrttum. Germen superum, subrotundum. Stylus clavatus, staminibus duplo feré longior. Stigma incrassatum, torulo- sum, obtusum, valvulis duabus equalibus, verticalibus, or- biculatis, concavis, membranaceis, conniventibus, inclusum. Pericareium nullum, nisi perianthium interius, cum corolle basi membranaceda, persistens, auctum atque induratum, dentibus Dr. Smitu’s Account of Brunonia. 867 dentibus quinque plumosis, elongatis, patentibus, pappum mentientibus, coronatum. SemeEN solitarium, tectum, ovatum, exalbuminosum, Embryo, ex inventoris auctoritate, erectus. 1. Brunonta australis. TAR: NON EEE, B. foliis pilosis: pilis patentibus, laciniis calycinis undique plu- mosis. Jn campis arenosis maritimis Australasia. Abundant in Van Diemen’s Land, and observed also on the op- posite shore of New Holland at Port Phillip, flowering in January 1804. Mr. Brown. Herba acaulis, undique pilosa, annua? Radix simplex, fusiformis, gracilis. Folia radicalia, numerosa, bi- vel tri-uncialia, erectiuscula, spa- tulata, obtusiuscula, integerrima, uninervia, pardm venosa, pal- lidé viridia; basi attenuata; undique pilosa; pilis patentibus, rigidulis, apice confertis, mucronulum simulantibus. Scapus solitarius, pedalis vel altior, simplicissimus, nudus, teres, pilis superné minus patentibus ; intds spongiosus. Capitulum terminale, solitarium, magnitudine Scabiose suc- cise, undique sericeo-pilosum. . Flores cerulei, feré Jasionis montane. &. Brunonta sericea. Tas. XXIX. B. foliis sericeis: pilis adpressis, laciniis calycinis apice denu- datis coloratis. 3B2 In 868 Dr. Smitn’s Account of Brunonia. In arenosis maritimis Nove Hollandiz. At Pine Port, just within the tropic, on the east coast of New Holland, flowering in August 1802, Mr. Brown. Forma omnind precedentis, at folia numerosiora, angustiora, undique sericea, pilis arett adpressis. Capitudwn priori simil- limum, sed apices calycis interioris denudati, subexserti, colorati, obtusiusculli. The genus under-consideration is, as Mr. Brown remarks, ex- ceedingly interesting, on account of its apparent relationship to. several very different natural orders, and the great difficulty of referring it to any one in particular. Its discoverer is inclined to place it between the Campanulacee and Corymbifere of Jussicu, though it overturns the artificial characters of both orders, having a superior germen. But it accords with the latter in the very important circumstance of the upright embryo, and precisely in the number, form, texture, and connexion of its stamina and an- there, which are altogether those of a true syngenesious flower. Its stigma on the other hand bearsan exact resemblance to some of the Campanulacee, as Goodenia, Scavola, Velleia, &c, and is unlike every thing else in nature. For this reason, and for the sake of its germen superum, which is the case with some of these, as Velleia, Mr. Brown was disposed to place it at the end of this order, bordering upon Syngenesia. On considering the above remarks, assisted by dried specimens, Ihave presumed to suggest that Brunonia may perhaps belong to Dipsacee, and Mr. Brown in reply informs me that this idea had not entirely escaped him, I was, led to it by the general aspect of the plants, and by a suspicion of Jussieu *, that the * See Adanson and Gertner on this subject. exterior Dr. Smitu’s Account of Brunonia, 569 exterior perianthium in Dipsacee may perhaps most properly be deemed inferior, only embracing the seed closely, being enlarged and hardened in the fruit; witness Scabiosa. Now this is pre- cisely the case with what I have above described as the inner pe- rianthium of Brunonia, the outer one, of four leaves, not being analogous to any thing in Scabiosa, except the solitary scales or leaves in many species accompanying each flower. Can it be possible, therefore, that what I have taken for the inner is really the only perianthium in Brunonia, and exactly analogous to the outer one in Scabiosa ? They both alike, in an indurated state, envelop and crown the ripe seed. If habit were to be much insisted on, nothing can be stronger in my favour; for, besides the inflorescence, when I lay the dried specimens of the two Brunonie by the side of Seabiosa cretica and graminifolia, nothing can be more striking than the exact agree- ment of the foliage of B. australis with the fermer, both in shape and colour; while the same circumstances, including the silky pubescence, no less agree in B. sericea and S. graminifolia. I am, however, aware how treacherous these analogies are in the pro- ductions, whether vegetable or animal, of New Holland, but their technical characters are no less so. If it would lead us widely astray to make the wonderful Ornithorinchus a bird, on account of its beak, it would be equally dangerous, were any botanist to refer Brunonia to the Campanulacee, for the sake of its stigma alone. “ Upon the whole,” as Mr. Brown very can- didly remarks, “ instead of our being able to determine the order to which this genus belongs, Brunonia seems to afford no smalk proof of the limits of these groups being purely artificial; for does it not break down the barrier between Syngenesi@ and Cam- panulacee, Dipsacee and Globularie?” ‘To this I most heartily subscribe ; but if it leads to the overthrow of artificial definitions, too 370 ‘Dr. Smitn’s Account of Brunonia. too confidently perhaps asserted for natural, may it not on the other hand guide us to some natural combinations, in helping us, for instance, to understand Corymbium? ‘hese anomalous pro- ductions, while they perplex the system-builder, enlighten the true observer. Who knows but the difference between an up- right and a reversed embryo, which, according to our present knowledge, I allow to be almost insuperable, and by which rule Brunonia must be referred to the Corymbifere, and not to the Dipsaceea, may prove, like every other known character, liable too ccasional exception ? J. 7. SMiTaH. EXPLANATION OF THE PLATES. Tas. XAVUII. Brenonia australis. Fig. 1. Planta magnitudine naturali. 2. Flos completus magn: auctus. 3. Calyx exterior cum bracted respondente capituli. 4. Corolla cum dimidio calycis interioris. 5. Pistillum et Sta- mina, quorum tubus antherarum apertus. 6. Stigma dimidio indusii abscisso. Apex styli cum indusio stigmatis. Tas. XXIX. Brunonta sericea. Tig. 1. Planta magnitudine naturali. 2. Capituli lobus magn. auctus. 3. Flgs completus. 4. Calyx exterior cum bractea re- spondente capituli. 5. Stamina et Pistillum, cujus Stigma lon- gitudine indusii. 6. Stamen unicum. 7. Pistillum, cujus stigma semiexsertum. 8 Apex Styli cum indusio stigmate adhuc in- cluso. 9. Stigma denudatum. 10. Calyx interior fructifer. 11. Tubus ejusdem apertus, ostendens semen filamentis infra cohxrentibus cinctum. 12. Semen filamentis persistentibus cinctum. 13. Apex incrassatus operculiformis tunice exterioris seminis. 14. Semen tunica exteriore orbatum. 15. Embryo. XVIII. A De- it wate ae ap et ai, GH PPP LEP LOPPL © . [7 PILDOCPPRP SS LE 4 9g eer Te nem waz ae w ater FOP DL LA0 on” Linn. Te | ey <—_ A 'Y YEZ- Kas | 4 IWi- | TIEEND Se ( 871 ) XVIII. ‘ P +449 tiga hy eA" P x ge iz aay. 4 4 ‘ ; 1h, G ae . he ‘ ae PON hae Ge ; < Bie he my prt PARE BS % Linn Trans Vil X Tab, 32-p.4on. Fig. 2. an Insect of the Genus Buprestis. 401 ‘same insect; but in this 1 cannot agree with him, as neither de- scription nor figure accords with B. splendens. ‘ The annexed figures, ‘I'an. XX XII. fig. 1. and 2. repredhi our insect in its perfect state. Fig. 3.is a reduced drawing of the piece of wood, with the excavation from which the insect issued : the dark spotted parts are exact representations of the wood, as it appeared when first in our possession: the lighter shades mark the appearance after a thin shaving had been taken off by a plane: proceeding further with the same instrument, the opening extended to the dotted lines ; and the outer lines show the full breadth of the excavation, as made by the insect, when it was planed down to half its depth. The total length of the channel could not be ascertained, as it is evident the whole width of the plank was not sent. Fig 4. represents a section of the entrance of the full size. It is a subject of curious inquiry to know in what state the insect remained for such a term of years in this wood, whether as a larva, a pupa, or as a perfectly formed animal, or what length of time in each state. Some insects remain a consider- able time in the larva state, as the Wire-Worm, which is said to be five years before its change into papa. Others again remain two or three years as pupa, and many coleopterous insects will live a considerable time in their last or perfect state. ‘The pre- sent discovery, however, establishes one fact, which has hitherto appeared doubtful, viz. where the larva of Buprestis inhabit, and on what substance they feed. The celebrated Baron De Geer, and after him Olivier, suspected that they lived in dry wood, because the first had discovered a dead specimen of Bu- prestis rustica in a beam of a house, and the latter B. Mariana upon the trunks of worm-eaten pine-trees, and in the timber- yard 402 Mr. Marsiuam’s Account of yard @f the arsenal at Toulon. Many years since a row of the Lombardy poplar was planted on the border of a foot path leading to the Dog and Duck in St. George’s Fields, and soon afterwards two of the B. 9-maculata of Ent. Brit. were taken from the trunks of those trees ; but I have not heard that any more of the same species have been taken in Great Britain. The destructive property of these insects to timber is now evident: and.the length of time that this animal lay concealed strengthens an opinion which I have, from several causes, long entertained, that, by the dispensation of Providence, nothing once created shall be entirely Jost; but, that although a series of unfavourable seasons may succeed each other, so as to de- ‘stroy the greatest part of many animals, yet a remnant shall remain to propagate and continue the species. In confirmation of this remark I shall mention one instance, which occurred to my friend William Jones, Esq. of Chelsea, and which I do not recollect to have seen published. This gentleman in one of his entomological excursions took a female of the Phalena Bombyx mendica, which laida number of eggs that produced thirty-six cater- pillars: all of these fed, spun their cases, and went into the pupa state in a regular manner: but at the proper season only twelve came out in their perfect state; and as this was no uncommon circumstance he concluded that the rest were dead. ‘To his great astonishment however, the next season twelve more made their appearance, and the following year the remainder burst into life, equally perfect with the foregoing. How is this extraordinary fact to be accounted for, except by the abovementioned supposi- tion? They all fed alike, spun up about the same time, were equally exposed to the same atmosphere of heat and cold, and yet the result was so widely different. The question I am aware an Insect of the Genus Buprestis. 403 aware is more easily proposed than answered ; yet it is not im- possible but that future observations may lead to an explanation of this mystery. I cannot conclude this letter without mentioning another cu- rious circumstance related to me by Sir Joseph Banks. The Sirex Gigas was seen in the nursery of a gentleman, to the no small discomfiture of both nurse and children in consequence of its size and wasp-like appearance ; and a few days afterwards several insects of that species came out of the floor of the same room. I once had one sent to me, which was reported to have eaten its way through a leaden pipe; and the Sirex Juvenca, a large blue one, | found in my own bedchamber, in a house that had been newly built. That numbers of exotic insects are imported into this country in timber, and different packages of goods, there is no doubt; and therefore it becomes the duty of the British Entomologist to be cautious how he arranges them, and not to consider every insect to be British that is found alive in this country. I am, &c. Tuomas Marsuam. Xl. Bs- ( 404 ) XXII. Extracts from the Mtnurr-Boox of the LinNEAN Society of Lonpon. Dec.6, Tur Treasurer communicated a letter from the Rev. 1808. William Bingley, F.L.S., giving an account of his having taken Forficula gigantea of Fabricius on the West Beach near Christchurch, on the 7th of July last. Mr. Bingley states, that as he was walking on the Beach just at the close of the evening, he saw two or three large insects running along the sand, about or rather below high- water mark, and from their size and manner he took them to be young Mole Crickets. Surprised at seeing such insects in that situation, he examined them as well as the light would permit, and, by their immense forceps and size, found them to be a species of Forficula hitherto un- described as British. He took home some specimens, and ascertained them to be the Forficula gigantea of Fabricius. From subsequent observations he concludes that these in- sects seldom or never quit their hiding-places in the day- time. A friend of Mr. Bingley’s sought for them afterwards in the same place, and found a great number concealed under large stones about the sands. Mr. Bingley some- times put three or four together into his box; and the con- sequence was, that one of them was frequently devoured by the rest. In their habits these insects greatly resem- ble the common Earwig; but when approached they turn al Evtracts from the Minute-Book of the Linnean Society. 405 up their abdomen in the manner of the large Staphylini, bending the extremity quite over the head, which they defend by means of their enormous forceps. The largest he could procure was nearly fifteen lines in length, exclu- sive of the antennx, which measured somewhat more than half an inch. Nov.7, Mr. Sowerby, F.L.S. communicated the following ac- 1809. count of a remarkable stone, known by the name of the Blowing-Stone, on the road from Farringdon to Uffington, in Berkshire. The Blowing-Stone is placed near the front of a little public-house, to which it gives its name. It is an un- wrought Sand-stone, about three fect high, three feet wide, and nearly eighteen inches in thickness, having na- tural perforations. One of these perforations begins at the upper end on one side, and passes to the other side a little lower down. It is eighteen inches in length, about an inch in diameter at the upper end, and nearly two inches at the lower; thus forming a tube like a horn, and when filled with wind sounds like one, and may be heard at a considerable distance. Any one used to blowing a horn can sound it. Mr. Sowerby has not been able to determine whether these perforations were caused by roots of trees or by an animal; but he concludes that they have been formed in the same manner as those observed in some of the Sand-stone found on Marlborough Downs. Mr. Sowerby also communicated the following account of a pit about two miles from Farringdon, oo gle called the Farringdon Gravel Pit. “ This pit is of a nature not yet described, being a rock VOL. x. ac com- 406 Extracts from the Minute-Book of the Linnean Society. composed of petrified animal remains, which agree in structure much better with the Alcyoniums than with any thing else I can recollect. The rock exposes some hundreds of yards of strata and surface; and, being chiefly composed of heaps on heaps of these substances, is truly curious. It is cemented together by brown and reddish oxide of iron, which often covers the animal remains in a peculiar manner with a fine crust of spicule, giving a velvety lustre to them when the light catches on their shining sides. Besides these Zoophytes there are remarkable Belemnites, mostly worn; and a stratum about an inch thick, that presents little else than spines of Echini. There are also some Nautili, and small peb- bles of every description, to be found in this rock.” Mar.6, Read the following Observations on some Plants of the 1811. Flora Japonica, by A. B. Lambert, Esq. ViPS. Mr. Lambert having lately received a collection of spe- cimens of plants from Japan, and another from Egypt, he has been enabled to determine two species of plants belong- ing to the genus Mimosa of Linn. which have hitherto re- mained doubtful among botanists. One is the Mimosa Leb- beck of Linn. found by Hasselquist, who describes it in the Act. Ups. 1750. p. 9. It. 473. “ foliis pinnatis” instead of foliis bipinnatis; which has caused the mistakes of subse- quent writers on that genus. Jacquin was the first who made this plant a new species under the name of Mimosa speciosa. ‘lhis name has been taken up in the first edition of the Horfus Kewensis, and Willdenow in his Species Plant. has called it Acacia speciosa; but from Mr. Lam- bert’s specimens it is evident that Acacia speciosa and Acacia Lebbeck Willd. are the same plant. The other is the Extracts from the Minute-Book of the Linnean Society. 407 the plant which is described by Thunberg in ‘his Flora Japon. under the name of Mimosa arborea, first shown to be an error by the late Mr. Dryander in, Kempf. Icon. Select. published by Sir Joseph Banks. ‘lhunberg after- wards, in his paper on Japan plants in the second volume of the Trans. Linn. Soc., named it Mimosa speciosa. Will- denow in his edition of Species Plant. calls it Acacia Nemu ; he appears to have made his description from Kampfer’s figure, and places it in the genus next to his Acacia Juli- brissen. ‘The Japan specimens in Mr. Lambert’s possession prove that the Mimosa Julibrissen of the Hort. Kew., the Acacia Julibrissen of Willdenow Sp. Plant., and the Acacia Nemu of the same author, are all the same plant. The figure in Gmelin’s Travels, vol. iii. p. 372, pl. 40, which he calls there Mimosa arberea, seems not to have been quoted by any of the editors of the Species Plantarum, except Richard, who has taken it up as Mz- mosa Lebbeck with a doubt. Having found very fine spe- cimens of Gmelin’s plant in Pallas’s Herbarium, sent to him by Gmelin, and from which his figure was drawn, Mr. Lambert has been enabled to determine it to be Mi- mosa Julibrissen of Linn. Hort. Kew. ed. 1, and Acacia Ju- hibrissen of Linn. Species Plantarum by Willdenow. Hypoxis spicata of Thunberg’s Flor. Japonica, which is Aletris farinosa of the same author in the second volume of the Trans. Linn. Soc., is a new species, and ‘T'hunberg’s spe- cific character sufficiently distinguishes it from the Lin- nean plant, to which at first sight it seems nearly allied. Mr. Lambert therefore calls it Aletris Japonica. — 3G2 CAT A- ( 408») CATALOGUE OF THE LIBRARY OF THE LINNEAN SOCIETY, Continued from Page 328 of Vol. IX. of the Sociely’s Transactions. ee - : N. B. Books, which are Continuations of Works, included in any of the former Parts of the Catalogue, have the original Numbers here affixed to them; and the otlier Books are numbered in regular Progression. EE 670. Bacar (Casp.) Prodromus Theatri Botanici. Basil. 1672, 4to. 671 672 673 . Bernardi (A. B.) Sicularum Plantarum Centuria prima. Panormi, 1806, 8vo. . Bournon (Le Comte de) Traité de Mineralogie, premiere partie: 3 tom. Lon- dres, 1808, 4to. - Brown (R.) On the Natural Order of Plants called Asclepiadee. Edin. 1810, 8vo. 674. ————-. Prodromus Flore Nove Hollandiz, vol. 1. London, 1810, 8vo. 675 . Clark’s (Bracy) Dissertation on the Foot of the Horse, part 1st. London, 1809, 4to. 676. Crosfield’s (G.) Calendar of Flora at Warrington, in 1809. Warrington, 1810, 677. 8vo. : Delacroix (D.) Connubia Florum, ed. R. Clayton, Baroneto. Bath, 1791, syo. 678. Delaroche (F.) Eryngiorum Historia. Paris. 1808, fol. 679. —— 680. Observations sur des Poissons recueillis dans un Voyage aux Isles Baleares et Pythiuses. Paris, 4to. — Observations sur Ja Vessie Aerienne des Poissons. Paris, 4to. 538. Dillwyn’s (L. W.) Synopsis of British Confervee, fasc. 14—16. London, 681 1808—9, 4to. . Fallen (Carl, Fredric) Preside, Diss. de Beta Pabulari, Lunde, 1792, 4to. &82. Harris’s (W.) Catalogue of the Library of the Royal Institution. London, 1809, Svyo. 548. Haworth ee i 548. 685. 554. 650. 685. 686. 687. 688. 561. 689. 690. 691. 692. 693. 694. 695. 696. 697. 511. 698. 699 Py 700. 377. 568. 386. 701. 702. 703. 704. Catalogue of the Library of the Linnean Society. 409 Haworth (A. H.) Lepidoptera Britannica, pars 2da._ Lond. 1809, 8vo. Klein (Jac. Theod.) An Tithymaloides frutescens foliis Nerii. Gedani, 1730, 4to. Konig (C.) and J. Sims's Annals of Botany, No. 6. London, 1806, 8vo. Latreille (A. P.) Genera Crustaceorum et Insectorum, tom, 4tus, Paris, 1809, Lontes (J.) The Utility of Agricultural Knowledge to the Sons of the Landed Proprietors of England. London, 1609, 8vo. Marsden’s (W.) History of Sumatra, 3d ed. London, 1811, 4to, with Atlas fol- Martin’s (W.) Outlines of a System of Extraneous Fossils. Macclesfield, 1809, 8vo. Monro (A.) On the Structure and Physiology of Fishes. Edin, 1785, fol. Montagu’s (G.) Supplement to Testacca Britannica. London, 1808, 4to. Neale (A.) Letters from Spain and Portugal. London, 1809, 4to. Paulet (Joann. Jacob.) Tabula Plantaram Fungosarum. Paris. 1791, 4to. Pennant’s (T.) Tours in Wales, 3 vols. London, 1810, 8vo. Pona (J.) Plantz que in Baldo Monte reperiuntur. Basil. 1608, 4to. Raffencau-Delisle (Alire) Dissertation sur les Effets d’un Poison de Java, appelé Upas tieuté. Paris, 1809, 4to. Reeve’s (H.) Essay on the Torpidity of Animals. London, 1809, Svo. Retzii (A. J.) Dissertationes Academice. Lundz, 1808, 4to. De Plantis Cibariis Romanorum. —— Om Kal. Sabatti (L. et C.) Hortus Romanus, tom. 1—7. Romzx, 1772—84, fol. Shaw’s (G.) General Zoology, vol. 7th, parts 1 and 2. London, 1809, 8vo. Zoological Lectures, 2 vols. London, 1809, 8vo. Smith’s (J. E.) Introduction to Physiological and Systematic Botany, 2d edition. London, 1809, 8vo. Tour to Hafod. London, 1810, fol. and Sowerby’s English Botany, vol. 27—31. London, 180s— ——— 10, 8vo. Sowerby’s (J.) British: Mineralogy, No. 50-—65. London, 1808—11, Svo. : English Fungi, No. 28, 29. London, 1809, fol. New Elucidation of Colours. London, 1809, 4to. Spence’s (W.) Agriculture the Source of Wealth of Great Britain. London, 1808, 8vo. Britain Independent of Commerce, 6th edition. London, 1808, 8vo. Radical Cure of the Present Distresses of the West-India Planters. London, 1808, 8¥o. ——— 704s. Lin= 410 704. 705. 706. 707. 708. 709. 710. Til. 712. 713. 714. 715. 528. 438. 665. 527. 439. 716. 71f. Catalogue of the Library of the Linnean Society. Linnzi Philosophia Botanica, ed. quarta, cura C, Sprengel. Hale ad Salam, 1809, 8vo. Thompson’s (J. V.) Catalogue of Plants growing in the Vicinity of Berwick-upon- . Tweed. London, 1807, 8vo. ; Thunberg (C. P.) Dissertationes Academicz Upsaliz. 4to. - Betula. 1807. ——_————-- Dracena. 1808. - Museum Naturalium Academie Upsaliensis Append. 14. 1807. : $ - Reformandz Pharmacopcez Suecice Specimen 7tum, 1807. - Flora Capensis, vol. 1, pars prima. Upsaliz, 1807, 8vo. Ventenat (E. P.) Decas Generum Novorum aut parum cognitorum. Paris. 1808, Svo. Wade’s (W.) Oaks, from the French of Michaux. Dublin, 1809, 8vo. - Sketch of Lectures on Artificial or Sown Grasses. Dublin, 1808, 8vo.. on Meadow and Pasture Grasses. Dublin, 1808, 8vo. Annales du Museum National d’Histoire Naturelle, par les Professeurs de cet Etablissement, 15 tom. Paris, 1802—10, 4to. Asiatick Researches, vol. 9. Calcutta, 1807, 4to. Philosophical Transactions for 1808—10. London, 4to. Transactions of the Horticultural Society of London, vol. 1, part 2d. London, 1808, 4to. Transactions of the Royal Society of Edinburgh, vol. 6, part 2d. Edin. 1809, 4to. Transactions of the Society for the Encouragement of Arts, Manufactures, and ~ Commerce, vol. 25—27. London, 1807—9, 8vo. Some Account of the late Peter Collinson. London, 1770, 4to. Observations on the Brumal Retreat of the Swallow, by Philochelidon. London, 1808, 8yo. LIST a aoe eee ( 411 ) LIST OF DONORS TO THE LIBRARY OF THE LINNEAN SOCIETY. With References to the Numbers affixed in the foregoing Catalogue to the Books presented by them respectively. THE Royal Society of London, 438. The Royal Society of Edinburgh, 527. The Asiatick Society, 528. The Society for the Encouragement of Arts, Manufactures, and Commerce, 439: The Horticultural Society of London, 665. The Managers of the Royal Institution, 682. The Right Honourable Sir Joseph Banks, Bart. K.B. H.M.L.S. 683. 690. Anton. Bivona Bernardi, 671. Le Comte de Bournon, F.M.L.S. 672. Mr. Robert Brown, Libr. L.S. 673. 674. 711. Alexander P, Buchan, M.D. F.L.S. 677. Rey. John Burrell, M.A. F.L.S. 688. Mr. Bracy Clark, F.L.S. 675. Mr. George Crosfield, 676. F. Delaroche, M.D. 678. 679. 680. Lewis Weston Dillwyn, Esq. F.L.S. 538. The late Jonas Dryander, Esq. V.P.L.S. 681. 706. 707. '708. 709. 710. Thomas Forster, Esq. F.L:S, 717. Adrian 412 Donors to the Libfary of the Linnean Society. Adrian Hardy Haworth, Esq. F.L.S. 548. Sir Thomas Maynard-Hesilrige, Bart. F.L.S. 697. Aylmer Bourke Lambert, Esq. V.P.L.S. 670. 692. William Lewis, Esq. F.L.S. 716. Mr. John Loudon, F.L.S. 685. Alexander MacLeay, Esq. Sec. L.S. 650. William Marsden, Esq. F.R.S. 686. The late Mr. William Martin, F.L.S. 687. George Montagu, Esq. F.L.S. 561. Adam Neale, M.D. F.L.S. 689. David Pennant, Esq. F.L.S. 691. Henry Reeve, M.D. F.L.S. 694. Andreas Johannes Retzius, F.M.L.S. 695. 696. George Shaw, M.D. F.L.S. 511. 698. John Sims, M.D. F.L.S. 554. James Edward Smith, M.D. P.L.S. 693. 699. '700. Mr. James Sowerby, F.L.S. 377. 386. 568. 701. William Spence, Esq. F.L.S. 702. 703. 704. Kurt Sprengel, M.D. 684. John Vaughan Thompson, Esq. F.L.S. 705. Walter Wade, M.D. A.L.S. 712. 713. 714. DONA- (418-.) DONATIONS TO THE MUSEUM OF THE LINNEAN SOCIETY, Exclusive of many Presents of single Specimens of Animals, Plants, and Minerals. DonatTIons. Donors. SKINs of the Mountain Ram, and of another Animal, from the interior Part of ©anada Ph brea. Gen. Thos. Davies, F.L.S. Specimens of Meleagris Satyra, Phasianus igni- ) __ , tus, and two other Indian Birds......... }rieut.-Col Thos. Hardwick, F.L.S. Several Specimens of Bird Skins collected in New South Wales by Mr. W. Westall .. Specimens of 34 Birds from Berbice ....-...- Alexander MacLeay, Esq. Sec. L.S. _J The Rt. Hon. Sir Joseph Banks Bart. fa. B. Lambert, Esq. V.P.L.S. An extensive Cabinet of Insects.......+.- . K.B. A Cabinet of European Lepidopterous Insects. John Symmons, Esq. F.L.S. A Collection of English Shells.........+.4 . Rey. Hugh Davies, F.L.S. A Collection of Shells, chiefly from the Red Sea Viscount Valentia, F.L.S. A Collection of dried Plants, named on the Authority of the Linnean Herbarium : Mr. James Dickson, F.L.S. Hortus siccus Britannicus, Fasc. 1—19...ee++ A Collection of Specimens of Mints........+ Mr. W. Sole, A.L.S. A Collection of dried Marine Plants, in two Yoh Stackhouse, Esq. F.L.S. IBGGES ie Aciisicitinb se dedt estes cease ce vee Specimens of Conferve, figured in the Synopsis a W. Dillwyn, Esq. F.LS. of British Conferve.....ccesseeereees 5 c VOL. X. 3H Specimens 414 Donations to the Museum of the Linnean Society. Donations. Donors. Specimens of dried Plants.......+-+eee++ee++ Mr. John Fairbairn, F.L.S. Specimens of Plants collected in the County of Mayo by Dr. Patrick Browne . A.B, Lambert, Esq. V.P.L.S, Specimens of Plants from Barbadoes......... A Collection of dried Plants from Portugal.... W. Withering, Esq. F.L.S. A large Collection of dried Plants from India and the Cape of Good Hope...........- A Collection of Specimens of Plants from Ja- fw. Roxburgh, M.D. F.LS. qe Wright, M.D. A.LS. An arranged Collection of Lichens, with Re- ference to the Methodus Lichenum, and to the unpublished Lichenographia Universa- lis of the Donor......-.0+2+e0 seeceee A Portrait of the late Dr. Solander........... R.A. Salisbury, Esq. F.L.S. A Portrait of the late Henry Seymer, Esq....... A.B. Lambert, Esq. V.P.L.S. Erick Acharius, M.D. F.M.L.S. N.B. The Museum bequeathed by the late Dr. Pulteney, as noticed in the Sixth Volume of the Society’s Transactions, p. 390, consists of an extensive Collection of Shells, an Herbarium. Britannicum, a Collection of exotic Plants, and a Collection of Minerals. Directions Directions for placing the Plates of the Tenth Volume. Tas. 1. Brodizea congesta - 2. Knightia excelsa - - 3. Dryandra formosa - 4 4. Cardamom Plant - a 5, —— - - - = 6. Pentstemon frutescens & Lobelia sessilifolia 7. Phelipzea foliata = - 8. Chamzrops humilis - = 9. Vaccinium przestans i 10. Rumex graminifolius 11. Lilium camtschatcense - 12, Centrolepis cuspidigera & C. zemula 13. Pimelea curviflora & P. glauca 14, Pimelea filamentosa & P. spicata 15. Xyris elongata & Scirpus gracilis 16. Persoonia pinifolia & P. hirsuta 17. Conospermum ericifolium & Zieria pilosa 18. Cryptandra ericifolia & C. amara 19. Styphelia reflexa & Lasiopetalum parviflorum 20. Pittosporum fulvum - 21. Marsdenia suaveolens & Trachymene incisa 24%, Xanthosia pilosa & Poranthera ericifolia 23. Dawsonia polytrichoides - 24. Shells - - . 25. Ormosia coccinea - = 26. Ormosia dasycarpa - 27. Ormosia coarctata = 28. Brunonia australis } 29. Brunonia sericea 30. Menziesia cerulea & M. Bryantha 31. Andrea - = 2 = 32. Buprestis splendens - - EEE to face page 3 ” - 194 2 - 213 “ - 247 - - 248 ~ - 259 = - 260 - - 263 - - 264 = - 265 = - 283 ‘ - 285 - - 287 = - 289 ~ - 290 ~ - 292 - - 294 = - 296 - - 298 L - 299 - - 301 - - 324 - - 332 - - 360 - - 362 - - 363 - _= 370 . - 379 - - 398 - - 401 The Binder is requested to observe, that asa general Title-page and a Table . of Contents for the whole volume are now given, the Title-pages to the sepa- rate Parts, and the Table of Contents for Part I., are to be cancelled. ERRATA. | Page 18, U. 12, fer pollenjferous read polliniferous. 22, L 7 from the bottom, for Josephia read Dryandra. 29, L 22, for Avastachya read Agastachys. 30, 1. 3, for Gevuina read Guevina. 31, 1. 21, for Josephia read Dryandra. 34, L 18, for Ahena read Akena. A8, I. 13, for apice read apici; for latere read lateri. 48, 1, 4 from the bottom, for Rhaphi read Raphe. 52, 7. 9, after floribus add (; ) and erase it after separata. 57, l. 1, for disc, read desc. 88, 1. 12, erase hyphen between dimidio and brevioribus. 105, Mimetes,—the specific names of this genus when adjectives to terminate in us- 112, 2. 24, after Hoot erase (.) 137, L. 3, for spicato vead spicata. 145, 2. 6, insert (,) after aculissimus, and erase it after breviore. 152, J. 3, for ore read ora. 169, 1. 12, for Lyssosry.is read Lissosty is. 198, 2 26, erase Observavimus- , 200, 2.17, after 5 insert L. 223, J, 2, for Gevuina read Guevina. 224, 1, 28, for Apocinice read Apocinee, 226, . & from the bottom, erase et auctum. 512, L. 7. for necessary read unnecessary. 316,04 19, after modo erase the (. ) Tab, Il, fig. 8, erase the lines which alternate with the scales, pee ee ee wer TaaET eis Printed by Richurd Taylor and Co., Shoe-Lane, London, =