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HOI^TUS nORTOllNSI

ith Joad'i/

Banbury' s

(ooTrvpliments

La Mortola,
Ventimiglia,
Italy.
1912.

SIR

THOMAS HANBURY,

K.C.V.O.,

F.L.S.

HORTUS MORTOLENSIS
ENUMERATIO PL ANTARUM IN HORTO MORTOLENSI CULTA RUM

ALPHABETICAL

CATALOGUE OF PLANTS
GROWING
IN

THE GARDEN OF

THE

LATE

SIR

THOMAS HANBUBY,

K.C.V.O.,
ST.

F.L.S.
LAZARUS

KNIGHT COMMANDER OF THE ORDERS OF ST. MAURICE AND AND OF THE CROSS OF THE CROWN OF ITALY

LA MORTOLA
VENTIMIGLIA, ITALY

COMPILED BY

ALWIN BERGER
Curator of the Garden

IToultroit

WEST,

NEWMAN

&

CO.,

HATTON GAEDEN

1912

m
IMS-

13

LONDON
rniNTED BY WEST, NEWMAN AND
HATTON GAllDEN,
E.G.

CO,

CONTENTS.
PAGE

PEEFACE
LIST

V
.
.

OF BOOKS EEFEKEED TO

xvi

CATALOGUE

SUPPLEMENT
NOTES
SYSTEMATIC
SYNOPSIS

338
354

OF

THE GENEEA

439

PREFACE.
1897, a

As the last catalogue of the garden was published iu new edition becomes necessary, on account of the

changes which a large garden undergoes during so many years. Naturally, such a catalogue can never be considered as complete as is the catalogue of a library. It is almost antiquated by the time it is published, as new plants are constantly being introduced and others disappear. I think it therefore necessary to point out that no one must expect to find in the garden at the present moment every plant mentioned in this catalogue, nor in the catalogue the name of every plant to be found in the garden. The large collection recently made by Mr. Wilson in China and the plants collected in 1909-10 for the garden by Dr. J. Brunnthaler in South Africa are for the greater part yet undetermined and therefore only partly included. Nevertheless, the present catalogue will be of help to students who visit the garden, and will give correspondents an idea of what is cultivated or has been tried. The nomenclature adopted is that of the Index Kewensis, Engler and Prantl's Natilrliche PJianzenfamilien, the Colonial Floras edited from Kew, and the more important recent monographs, without adhering rigidly to any one of them. The references do not always give the original description and are not strictly chronological, but indicate where reliable descriptions and figures can be looked up in
the library of the garden. The first two catalogues of the plants grown at La Mortola one being an alphabetical, the other a systematic, enumeration of about 3600 species then in cultivation were compiled by the Curator, the late Gustav Cronemeyer, and published in 1889. They were distributed to all Botanical Gardens and to many other correspondents, with permission to draw upon the collection for all scientific purposes. Previous to this, in 1883, a list of seeds containing the names of 557 species was printed and circulated, and since that time has been issued annually. Seeds and plants are

Cj-

CSI

vi

HOETUS MORTOLENSIS
distributed
to

now

almost every botanical establishment

and to many private gardens, in increasing numbers. Many Colonial, Agricultural, and Forestry Departments send requests for them, and many a new botanical garden is indebted to La Mortola. In 1900, 6378 packets of seeds were sent out; in 1901, 7837; in in 1908 they numbered 13,085. 1902, 9331
in the world,
;

second alphabetical catalogue was compiled in the spring of 1897 by the then Curator, Mr. Curt Dinter, now Government Botanist in German South West Africa this contains about the same number of species as that of 1889. Since then no efforts have been spared to develop La Mortola into an important subtropical botanical garden. A small Botanical Museum, a Herbarium of cultivated and indigenous plants, and a Library containing the most necessary botanical works, chiefly on systematic and geographical botany, have been gradually formed. All three Museum, Herbarium, and Library receive constant additions and are now placed in a special building. Besides the annual distribution of seeds, fresh and dried material has been liberally sent to many laboratories, and students have been freely admitted to the garden. The introduction of new plants has been continued, and all the available land has been more intensively cultivated
;

and planted.

Among

the chief contributors of seeds and plants

are indebted to

many Botanic Gardens

we

chiefly to

Kew,

Cambridge, Glasnevin, Edinburgh, Oxford, Dahlem-Berlin, Bonn, Darmstadt, Dresden, Freiburg i. Br., Giessen, Gottingen, Hamburg, Karlsruhe, Marburg, Munich, Strassburg, Prague, Schonbrunn, Vienna, Bale, Zurich, Amsterdam, St. Petersburg, Tifiis, Paris, Antibes (Villa Thuret), Lyons, Marseilles, Montpellier, Genoa, Rome, Naples, Palermo, Parma, St. Louis, Washington, Buitenzorg, Hong Kong, Buenos Aires, &c., also to the establishment of Haage & Schmidt at Erfurt, Vilmorin-Andrieux of Paris, and others. For plants from South Africa we are indebted chiefly to the late Prof. MacOwan, who was one of the oldest and most generous correspondents of Daniel and Thomas Hanbury to Mr. Arderne and the late Mr. Harry Bolus of Cape Town, Dr. Brunnthaler of Vienna, Prof. Burtt-Davy of Pretoria, Mr. Hislop of Pietermaritzburg, to Mr. Hutchins, formerly of Cape Town, to the late Max Leichtlin of Baden-Baden, to Dr. R. Marloth of Cape Town, Mr. Medley Wood of Durban, and to Dr. S. Schonland of Grahamstown. For
;

PEEFACE

vii

plants from South- Western Africa we are indebted to Mr. Curt Dinter, Government Botanist in Okahandja. From Delagoa Bay seeds have been sent by the Bishop
of

Lebombo

from German East Africa by Dr. Brunn-

thaler of Vienna, Prof. Dr. A. Engler of Dahlem, and by For plants and seeds from Prof. Dr. Stuhhiiann of Amani. British East Africa we are indebted to Mr. Dawe and Mr.

Brown

of the Botanic Garden in Entebbe, and to Mr. Hutchins of Nairobi, Chief Conservator of Forests in British East Africa; for plants from Eritrea and Ahijssinia to Prof. J. Baldrati of Asmara, to Prof. Penzig of Genoa, Prof. Georg Schweinfm'th of Berlin, and to Cav. C. Sprenger for plants from Egypt and of Naples (now of Corfu); Southern Arabia to Prof. Georg Schweinfurth. Plants from the Canary Islands we owe to the kindness of the late Mr. Morris of Ivybridge, to Lord Walsingham and to Dr. Perez of Orotava. Western and Southern Mediterranean plants were contributed by Miss Willmott, Mr. C. Bicknell of Bordighera and M. Henri Correvon of Geneva. Those of the Eastern Mediterranean were procured through Mr. Hartmann, chiefly from the Island of Cyprus and Syria; for Istrian and Dalmatian plants we are indebted

De Marchesetti of Trieste. Plants and seeds have also been kindly sent from from the Mauritius by Bishop Gregory and Dr. Konig Island of Sohotra by Prof. Balfour of Edinburgh and Prof, von Wettstein of Vienna. For Indian plants we owe our thanks to the late Sir Dietrich Brandis and the late Sir George King, also to the Directors of the Botanic Gardens at Calcutta, Lai Bagh, and Peradenya for Chinese plants to the Director of the Botanic Garden in Hong Kong, to M. Puteaux in Versailles, Cav. Sprenger, Prof. Sargent, Mr. Wilson, and others. For Californian plants we are indebted to Mrs.Brandegee, Prof. C. F. Baker of Claremont, and Dr. F. Franceschi of for Mexican plants to Prof. N. L. Britton Santa Barbara of New York, Prof. Conzatti of Oaxaca, Mr. C. A. Purpus of Flagstaff, Dr. J. N. Eose of Washington, Dr. H. Boss of Munich, Prof. Wm. Trelease of St. Louis, to the late Dr. Weber of Paris, and others for plants from Costa Bica to Mr. Charles Werkle of San Jose for West Indian plants to Prof. C. F. Baker of Cuba (now of Claremont, Cal.), to Mr. Fawcett late of Jamaica, and to Messrs. Knight of London for Chilian plants to Mr. Ed. Framm of Hamburg and to
to Prof.
; ; ; ; ; ;

viii

HOKTUS MOETOLENSIS

Dr. J. Sohrens, Director of the Botanic Gardens in Santiago; from South Brazil to Mr. Reukart of Villefranche, and to Prof, von Wettstein of Vienna; for Uruguay plants to Prof. Arechavaleta of Montevideo for Argentine plants to the late Dr. Weber of Paris. For Australian plants we are indebted to the late Baron von Miiller, to the late Mr. van den Bossche, to Messrs. Veitch & Sons of London, and to the Directors of the Botanic Gardens of Melbourne, Port Darv^in and Sydney, and others. For Neio Zealand plants to Captain DorrienSmith of Tresco Abbey, Scilly, and to Dr. A. R. Wallace. Besides these, v^e owe numerous plants to the kindness of many whose names it is impossible to enumerate here, but of which some are given in the notes at the end of the
for plants
;

catalogue.

The garden is practically never without flowers. The end of September may be considered as the dullest time, but as soon as the autumnal rains set in, the flowering begins and continues on an ever-increasing scale until the middle of April or beginning of May. Then almost every plant is in flower the most marked features being the graceful branches of the single yellow Banksian rose,
;

Fortune's yellow rose, the sweet-scented Pittosporum, the wonderful crimson Cantua huxifolia, and the blue spikes of the Canarian EcJiium. Early in January the spring flowers begin to bloom Anemones, Antholyza, Narcissus, Iris, Sparaxis, Freesias, &c., but before the end of May these have all withered, and the bare soil is a strange sight to those who are accustomed to the green lawns of northern gardens. In May many succulents begin to flower, the Opuntias

and Mesembrianthemums especially showing a great variety of colour. Giant Agaves throw up their tall flower stalks, and are in full bloom a few weeks later. Erythrinas, Brachychitons, Metrosideros, and many other interesting exotic trees and shrubs, and some of the Bignoniaceae, open their gorgeous blossoms only during the warmest part of the summer. The Gardeners' Chronicle has repeatedly published lists of plants in flower in the garden in midwinter and in

midsummer. The soil at La Mortola


of

is

nummulitic limestone
'=

of the

formed by the decomposition Lower Eocene period.* It

F. Giordano & N. Pellati, Carta Geologica delle Alpi Occidentali, R. Ufficio Geologico, Roma, 1908.

PEEFACE
is

ix

heavy and clayey, in summer becoming hard and cracking into deep fissures. Its calcareous composition prevents the cultivation of calcifuge plants. In one part of the garden
only a small travertine deposit forms a sandy soil. This, though somewhat calcareous, suits fairly well a number of fine-rooted plants and has lately been planted with Proteaceae, Melaleucas, &c. On the French side of the Riviera, from Antibes to beyond Cannes, quite a different soil prevails, the result of porphyritic and granite rocks, permitting the cultivation of a great many plants which succeed but imperfectly at La Mortola. The climate of La Mortola is the typical one of the northern Mediterranean the summers are dry, and rain falls chiefly from autumn to spring. It is more copious in the three autumn months October (sometimes even towards the end of September), November, and December, than from January to March. Thun(?erstorms, though not frequent, may occur at any season they are most usual in May or June. But, generally speaking, the rainfall is irregular, and three months may pass with little or no rain, and this may happen not only during the summer but also in winter. The drought is often such that even large fleshy Opuntias No garden could exist become shrivelled and withered. under these conditions without an artificial water supply, and this is here provided by large tanks. The average annual * rainfall for ten years (19001909) has been about 851*00 mm. (over 33J inches); the minimum was, in 1908, only 488" 70 mm., the maximum, in reckon about 50 to 58 rainy days 1907, 1199-20 mm. per annum as the average. The beneficial effect of the rainfall is further diminMoreover, the ished by the steep incline of the land. great number of cloudless days on which brilliant sunshine is accompanied by hot and dry winds are a noticeable
:

We

feature of this climate.

The temperature on the Eiviera is not extremely high. The hottest days only show 31C. ( = 88F.) in the shade nevertheless, the summer is very trying owing to the
;

moist atmosphere, the continuous bright hot weather, and the warm nights, which only cool down towards morning in
*

The monthly average

for this period

shows the following figures


;

January, 27'40
;

February, 75-10 mm. March, 92-80 mm. April, 56-60 mm. May, 36-30 mm. June, 68-10 mm. July, 24-40 mm. October, 167-90 mm. August, 35-40 mm. September, 55*50 mm.

mm.

November, 117-10

mm.

December, 94-40

mm.
b

X
places

HORTUS MORTOLENSIS

where the north wind brings the fresher air from the During the greater part of the year, howmountains. ever, the temperature is variable, especially during winter, when the difference between sunshine and shade is very remarkable, and a cool night generally succeeds even a warm winter day. This sudden change is very prejudicial to many A marked fall in temperature has almost tender plants. invariably been observed at the beginning of January, and when cold winds prevail even frost may come. The lowest point of the thermometer, which I have seen, was 4 C. But besides the danger ( -= 24-8 F.) on January 6th, 1901. arising from cold winds, we are never quite safe from frost in winter, although it is rather an exception than the rule. A thunderstorm which brings masses of snow or hail on to our nearest mountains, and is followed by a clear night, may bring down the temperature to or below freezing point. These frosts may occur at any time from November to March, but happily they only last a few hours, and generally pass without doing much damage. It is often surprising what an amount of ungenial weather plants can stand. Snowfalls * occur but rarely, and are of short duration, nor does the snow remain longer than twenty-four hours. In a garden soil, water, temperature and sunlight are the factors which determine the character of the vegetation, and Nature severely punishes any neglect of them. No one understood this better than Sir Thomas Hanbury, with his keen observation and long experience. " Never go against Nature," was his constant thought in laying out and planting his garden. A short history of the garden may be of interest. It is chiefly drawn from the notes on " Sowing and Planting at La Mortola," which were carefully kept by the late Sir Thomas Hanbury, and his brother Daniel, the eminent botanist and pharmacologist. These old pages bear witness to the enthusiasm with which the brothers entered upon their self-imposed task, and to their zeal in pursuing it. It had been the dream of Thomas Hanbury from his early youth to make a garden in a southern climate, and to share its pleasures and botanical interests with his favourite brother. While staying on the Riviera, in the spring of 1867, after many years of strenuous work in the East, he decided
"On December 12th, 1878, the country down even to the seashore was covered with snow the temperature showed two or three degrees of frost." (See T. H. in Gardeners' Chronicle, February 11th, 1879.)
. . .

PREFACE
to carry out his plan.

xi

He was

first

inclined to

buy Cap

Martin, near Mentone, but gave up the idea as soon as he became acquainted with the little cape of La Mortola. As he first approached it by sea, he was struck by the marvellous beauty of this spot. A house, once the mansion of a noble Genoese family, and at that time, though almost a ruin, known as the Palazzo Orengo, stood on a high commanding position. Above it was the little village, and beyond all rose the mountains. To the east of the Palazzo were vineyards and olive terraces to the west a ravine whose declivities were here and there scantily clothed by Aleppo pines while on the rocky point, washed by the sea-waves, grew the myrtle, to which La Punta delta Murtola probably owed its name.* The purchase was concluded on May 2nd, 1867 (which may be considered to be the date of the foundation of the garden), and the work of restoring the house and adapting it to modern requirements was at once put in hand. Additions were gradually made to the property, and it now extends over an area of 45 hectares ( 112 acres), a great part of which, however, consists of a picturesque wooded
; ;

ravine.

In July, 1867, Thomas Hanbury returned to La Mortola, accompanied by his brother, who at once appreciated the charms and possibilities of the place. Almost his first thought was to use means to increase the natural vegetation on the wild parts of the property, then almost denuded by the unchecked depredations of the neighbouring peasants, who had freely cut the trees and brushwood, and pastured their goats on the scanty herbage. Many indigenous shrubs, such as JRliamnus Alaternus, Quercus Ilex, Ivy, &c., now so abundant, were then scarce or non-existent. He sowed seeds of them in the valley, or among the rocks, and from these is derived the present abundant evergreen undergrowth. He also introduced various kinds of Cistus which grew in the neighbourhood, but not on the property. The first three dozen rose-plants of different varieties were at this period brought from his father's garden at Clapham. In the autumn of 1867 Thomas Hanbury was again busy at work. Among the plants mentioned in his notes of September and October are Passion flowers. Geraniums, Peonies, Cedars of Lebanon, Koses, &c. Several interesting gardens and horticultural establishments already existed on
'=

Myrtle =^mirto or mortella in Italian.

(Murta

= local dialect.)

xii

HORTUS MORTOLENSIS
the
Eiviera, especially the botanical

the French side of

garden of M. Thuret on Cap d'Antibes,* the nursery-gardens of Charles Hiiber & Cie., Hyeres, and that of Nabonnand, at Golfe Juan. In all these a wealth of exotic plants was grown, and the first supplies for La Mortola were drawn from them, as is shown by the lists of purchases made at that time. Some 80 varieties of Acacia, 20 plants of Callistemon, many Bignonia, Arbutus, Buxus, Chamserops, many kinds of Cistus, some 40 Eucalyptus, Cupressus, Ficus, Genista, Juniperus, Magnolia, Melaleuca, Yucca, Wigandia, &c., were then bought and planted. Letters, treating chiefly of the garden, were constantly exchanged between the brothers, and in May, 1868, Daniel Hanbury paid his second visit to La Mortola. On his way he received from the Director of the Jardin des Plantes, in Paris, several new plants, among them two specimens of an Australian palm {Livistona australis) and one of the large Chilian palm {Jubcea apectahiUs) which are still in the garden. At Montpellier he was the guest of Prof. Planchon, who gave him, among other plants, the little Erigeron mucronaUis (generally known as Vittadenia triloba), which is now half,

many places in the other plants, which have now become quite wild in the garden, were introduced at that time, e. g. Ferula communis, F. glauca, the various Vincas, Antliolyza cBthiopica, &c. whilst the interesting indigenous Euphorbia dendroides, then rare on the property, was propagated by seeds sown abundantly on rocky places.
wild, not only in this garden, but also in
district.

Many

We

can, in fact, hardly overrate

to Daniel

Hanbury

in those first years.

what the garden owed Through his pro-

ficiency in botany, and his numerous botanical acquaintances at home and abroad, he was able to obtain rare and valuable

plants from all parts. One of his chief endeavours was to procure those of economic and, especially, pharmaceutical

Styrax officinalis, Catha edulis, Illicium, Casimiroa edulis, Argania Sideroxylon, Pilocarpus pennatifolius, EupJiorbia resinifera, &c. A number of interesting forms of Citrus, among them the Bergamot, were also procured in 1868 from M. Sahuts'
e.g.

importance,

Iris

florentina,

* After the death of M. Thuret, his sister-in-law bequeathed the garden, with the means for its upkeep, to the French Government. M. Charles Naudin acted for long years as Director, and his successor, M. le Prof. Dr. George Poirault, continues the fine traditions of this botanical establishment, to which La Mortola owes so many interesting and valuable plants.

DANIEL HANBURY,

F.L.S.

PREFACE
nursery garden at Montpellier, and on

xiii

November 5th, 1868, Thomas Hanbury mentions many plants in flower, among them the striking Mexican Dahlia imperialis, " very fine
and making a great show now." The collection of Australian, South African, and American plants must have been a notable one already in the very first years, though no catalogue of that period exists, except These formed an object of special interest of succulents. from the very beginning, and Daniel Hanbury from time to time enumerates with evident pride the species in cultivation. Even in June, 1868, he noted 40 different species, and in the

autumn

Many of the same year the collection was doubled. plants had been sent from Kew, from Paris, and from the the late Mr. Wilson fine collection of his old friend
Saunders,
of

Reigate a well-known entomologist and Most botanist, and the editor of the Befugiivm Botanicum. of the large Agaves and Opuntias, which are now such a striking feature of the garden, date from that time. Until December, 1868, the brothers Hanbury were their own gardeners, having only the unskilled assistance of some of the Mortola peasants, but they were then fortunate in securing a young and excellent head-gardener, Mr. Ludwig Winter,* who remained at La Mortola for about six years. During this period the main parts of the garden assumed their present form. In 1874 Daniel Hanbury and his friend. Prof. Fliickiger (of Strassburg University), finished their important book, Pharmacographia, which had closely occupied them for Thomas Hanbury was looking forward to several years. his brother's more frequent presence at La Mortola, but Daniel died, his hopes were doomed to disappointment after a few weeks' illness, at Clapham Common, on March 24th, 1875. During the last twenty-eight years of his life Sir Thomas spent the greater part of the year at La Mortola, and was never happier than when there, surrounded by his family and by friends who shared his love of Nature. He knew almost every individual plant in his garden, and the most precious to him were those which reminded him of his He would gladly have given more time to beloved brother.

Now

Cavaliere and owner of the large horticultural establishment

at Bordighera.

notice is to be found in " Science f A short biography and obituary Papers, chiefly Pharmacological and Botanical, by Dan. Hanbury." Edited by Joseph Ince. London, 1876.

xiv

HOKTUS MOETOLENSIS

his favourite pursuit, but was never unmindful of the many claims made on his sympathy and help from all around.

His efforts on behalf of the poor and suffering, and for furthering knowledge, &c., were largely appreciated and with the same keen interest with which he developed his garden he founded the Botanical Institute of the University
;

of

Genoa.

This building, equipped with

all

modern

re-

quisites, large collections, and a very rich inaugurated as the " Istituto Hanbury " on

herbarium, was

September

6th,

1892, during the festivities in commemoration of Christopher Columbus, and in the presence of the Italian authorities, and of many botanists, who were then attending their Congress in the city. As the Kiviera became more and more a health and pleasure resort, the Mortola gardens were thrown open to the public on special days (Monday and Friday afternoons). At first permission to enter was given by letter, but more recently it was decided to admit all who presented themselves at the gate, on payment of a small entrance fee. The money thus collected is given to local charities, foremost among these being the Ventimiglia Hospital. The number of visitors constantly increased, and many of them remember with appreciation how courteously the owner himself acted as guide.* Many Eoyal personages have listened with pleasure to Sir Thomas's descriptions of the various plants of interest. Foremost among these was Her late Majesty, Queen
Victoria, in commemoration of whose visit a marble slab was placed on the north side of the house, above the entrance to the room where she rested and sketched the view from a west window.

The

late

Dr. Maxwell Masters, Editor of the Gardeners' Chronicle,

1874, published, in that journal, a full account of his visit, illustrated by two woodcuts. {Gard. Chron., 1874, ii. 35-G9.) The first list of " Plants in Flower in Jauuary " had appeared in the same paper a few months previously. In 1876, Prof. A. Fliickiger published a short but very interesting account of the garden, of which an English translation, illustrated by engravings, was printed for private circulation in 1885. Early in the eighties Prof. Penzig, of Modena (now of Genoa), published several pamphlets on the jjarden, and, at about the same period, the late Dr. Hugh Macmillan devoted a chapter to La Murtola in his book The Riviera. The late Rev. C. Casey described many of the plants here in his Biviera Nature Notes, which he dedicated to Sir Thornas Hanbury. A long and fascinating chapter is devoted to La Mortola in Prof. Strasburger's Streifziige an der jR-i^iera, which appeared in 1895, and of which an English translation {Eamhles on the Biviera), made by O. and B. Casey, was published in 1906 by Mr. Fisher Unwin.

who was Thomas Hanbury 's guest in May,

PREFACE
of

XV

A special token of regard and appreciation, in the form an illuminated address, and their portraits, contained in a very handsome volmne, had been prepared for Sir Thomas Hanbmy, in honour of his seventy-fifth birthday (June 21st, 1907), by a large number of distinguished botanists from all parts of the v^orld, and some v^ell-known garden-lovers. Unfortunately, he never received it, as he was called hence on the 9th of the preceding March. He died at La Mortola, and, according to his wish, his ashes were interred in his garden, amidst the old cypress trees. During his later years Sir Thomas often said that to distribute seeds and plants, and to encourage others in their love of Nature, was his mission in life. That he carried out his mission faithfully, his garden is the best
proof.
It may be interesting to give the letter which was written to Sir Thomas by the late Sir Joseph Hooker in 1893, when dedicating to him the 119th volume of the Botanical Magazine
:

"

My

dear Hanbury,

"It is no less a duty than a pleasure to offer to you the dedication of a Volume of the Botanical Magazine, as a tribute to the value of your services to Scientific Horticulture, in creating a garden of Exotic plants at Mentone, which, in point of richness and interest, has no rival amongst the principal collections of living plants in the world; and in munificently founding the Istituto Botanico Hanbury in the Botanical Gardens of the University of Genoa, the early years of which are already so full of promise for the future
' '

of Scientific

Botany

in

Europe."

La

Mortola, May, 1911,

A. Berger,

Curator.

LIST

OF

ABBREVIATIONS OF BOOKS EEFEREED TO.

An.

Ic.

PL Med.

= Icones Plantarum Medicinalium. Abbildungen von Arzneygewachsen. Nurnberg, 1779-1790.


6 vols.

Anonym, book.
Ardoino, Flore Analytique
clu

Ard. Fl. Alp. Mar.


Baill.

= Honore

De-

Mon.

partement des Alpes Maritinies. Mentone, 1867. H. Baillon, Histoire des Plantes. Monographic des Eenonculacees, &c. Paris, 1868-1873. 5 vols.

B. M.

d-

Curtis, Botanical Magazine.

London, 1787-1911.

137

vols.
J.

Bak. Al.

Yiicc.

G.

Baker,

Synopsis of Aloineae and


148-241.)

Yuccoideae. (Extracted from the Linnean Society's

Journal

Botany,

vol. xviii. pp.

Bah. Am. Bak. Brom.


Bak.
Ir.

= Ibid., Handbook of the Amaryllideae.


--=

Ibid.,

Handbook

of the Bromeliaceae.

London, 1883. London,

1889.

Barla, Orch.

Handbook of the Iridese. London, 1892. Barla, Les Orchidees de Nice. Nice, 1868. Benth. Fl. Hongk. = George Bentham, Flora Hongkongensis. London, 1861. Benth. Fl. Hartweg. = Ibid., Plantas Hartwegianas Imprimis Mexicanis etc. Enumerat Novasque Describit Georgius
Ibid.,

Berger, Al.

= Alwin
in

Bentham. Londini, 1839. Berger, Liliaceee-Asphodeloidese-Aloineae,


Engler's Eegni
Vegetabilis

Conspectus

(iv.

38. 3. 2).

Leipzig, 1908.
Stuttgart, 1907.

Berger Eiiph.

Ibid.,

Sukkulente Euphorbien.

Berger, Mesembr.

Ibid.,

Mesembrianthemen und Portulacaceen.


Stapelieen

Stuttgart, 1908.

Berger, Stap.

d Kl. =
1910.

Ibid.,

und

Kleinien.

Stuttgart,

LIST
Bickn. Fl. Borcl.

OF ABBEEVIx\TIONS
Rem.

xvii

S.

Clarence Bicknell, Flora


Bordigheva, 1896.

of

Bordighera and San Eemo.


Bickn. PI. Biv.
Boiss. Ic.

Ibid.,

Riviera.

Euph.

Flowering Plants and Ferns of the London, 1885. Edmond Boissier, Icones Euphorbiarmn.
Flora Orien talis sive Enunieratio Plantarura

Geneve, 1886.
Boiss. Fl. Or.

Ibid.,

in Oriente a Grsecia et
etc.
i.

^gypto ad

Indiae fines,
vols.
;

Genevae et Basileae, 1867-1884, 5


Periodical.

and

Suppl. 1888.

Bonpl.

Bonplandia.

Bossche, Ic. Bel.

L.

Hannover, 1853-1862. 10 vols. van den Bossche, Icones Selectee Horti


;

Thenensis
de E.
Bot. Gaz.

avec

les

Descriptions et Annotations
Bruxelles, 1899-1906.
Periodical.

De Wildemann.

The Botanical Gazette.

Chicago.

Brand. For. Fl. Brand. Ind. Tr.


Bull. N.

= =

Dietrich Brandis, Forest Flora of North-west


London, 1874.
Indian Trees.
of the
Ibid.,

India.

London, 1907.
Garden. Geneve.

York B. G.

Bull. Herb. Boiss.

= Bulletin = Bulletin

New York Botanic

de I'Herbier Boissier.

Periodical.
Christ, Spicil.

1893-1908.

DC.

(Reprint H. Christ, Spicilegium Canariense. from Engler's Bot. Jahrb. ix.) 1887. Aug. Pyrame et Alphons De Candolle, Prodromus Systematis Naturalis Regni VegetabiHs. Parisiis, 1824-73. 17 parts in 20 volumes.
PI. Gr.

DC. PI. Gr. ^ DC. Bev. Cact.

Aug. Pyrame

De Candolle, Revue de la

Famille

des Cactees.
Dill. Hort. Elth.

Paris, 1829.

H. Dillenius, Horti Elthamensis Plantarum Rariorum Icones et Nomina, etc. Lugduni Batavorum, 1774. Dinter, S. W. Afr. = K. Dinter, Deutsch Siidwest Afrika. Flora, Forst-und landwirtsch. Fragmente. Leipzig, 1909. Pr. Acj. = J. R. Drummond and D. Prain, Notes on Drum, (Separate print Agave and Furcraea in India. from The Agricultural Ledger, 1906, no. 7.) Emj. Cact. Bound. = George Engelmann, Cactaceae of the Boundary. United States and Mexican Boundary
J.
it;

Survey.
Engl, B. Jahrb.

Washington, 1858.
Periodical.

Engler's Botanische Jahrbiicher.

Leipzig.

xviii

HORTUS MORTOLENSIS
George Bentham =
and Ferdinand Mueller, Flora
Australiensis, a Description of the Plants of the

Fl. Austr.

Fl. Brit. Inch

Fl. Cap.

Austrahan Territory. London, 1863-1878. 7 vols. J. D. Hooker, The Flora of British India. London, 1875-1897. 7 vols. Harvey and Sondee, Flora Capensis continued by Sir William T. Thiselton-Dyer. London. Vols,
;

i.,

ii., iii.,

iv., vi., vii.

Fl. d'lt.

Adriano Fiori
d'ltalia.

Giulio Paoletti, Flora Analitica


della
Italicae

Italiana.

Flora P. A. Saccardo, Cronologia ossia Flora Iconographia Florae

Italiana illustrata.
N.B.

Padova, 1895-1909.

7 vols.

Of

this Flora I only cite the

numbers, as they are

the same for each species in the text-book and in the

Iconographia.

Fl. Of. Fl. d.

= Boiss. Fl. Or. S. = Ch. Lemaire, M.


1845-1880.

Scheidweiler, M. L. van Houtte,


23 vols.

etc.

Flore des Serres et des Jardins de I'Europe. Gand,


Fl. Jap.

Sieb.

& Zucc,

Fl. Jap.
;

Fl. Trop. Afr.

tinued

Daniel Oliver, Flora of Tropical Africa conby Sir William T. Thiselton-Dyer.


Vols,
i.,

London.
Fl.
it

ii.,

iii., iv.,

v., vii., viii.

Syl.

Flora and Sylva, edited by

W. Eobinson.
3 vols.

London,

1903-1905.
Fl.

Periodical.

W.

Lid.

A. H. R. Grisebach, Flora of the British

West

London, 1864. Ac. Baron Ferdinand von Mueller, IconoF. Mull. Austr. graphy of Australian Species of Acacia and Cognate Genera. Melbourne, 1887-88. Decades
Indian Islands.
i.-xiii.

F. Mull. Sel. Extrtr.

PL =

Ibid., Select extra-tropical Plants readily

eligible for Industrial Culture or Naturalization.

Detroit, Michigan, 1884.

Forsk. Fl. xF(j .-Arab.

Vetbvs Forskal, Flora ^gyptiaco-Arabica


Plantarum,
etc.

sive Descriptiones

Post mortem

auctoris edidit Carsten Niebuhr.


Forster,

Hauniae, 1775.

Hdb. Kakt. Carl Friedr. Forster, Handbuch der Cacteenkunde. 2. Aufl. von Th. Rtimpler. Leipzig, 1886.

Freem. Bamb. Gard.

A. B.

Garden.

Freeman-Mitford, The Bamboo London, 1896.

LIST
Frut. Vilm.

OF ABBKEVIATIONS

xix

M.

Gall.

Citr.

=
=

L. de Vilmorin & D. Bois, Fruticetum Vilmorinianum. Catalogue d'arbustes, etc. Paris, 1904. Georges Gallesio, Traits du Citrus. Paris,

1811.
Garcl. Ghron.
Graij,

Man.

Bot. N. U. S.

The Gardeners' Chronicle. London. Periodical. = Asa Gray, Manual of the Botany of

the Northern United States.

New

York, 1866.

4th ed.
Gren.
d-

School and College edition.

Goclr. Fl. Fr.

M. Grenier
E.

et

M. Godron, Flore de
3 vols.

France.
Guilfoyle,

Paris, 1848-1855.

Guilfoyle, Australian Plants suitable for Gardens, Parks, &c. Melbourne, 1911. Hal. Consp. Fl. Grcec. = E. de HalAcsy, Conspectus Florae Graecse. Lipsise, 1901 -1908. 3 vols, and Suppl. Harv. Thes. =^ William H. Harvey, Thesaurus Capensis or. Illustrations of the South African Flora. Dublin,
Austr.
;

PL = W.

1859-1863.

2 vols.

Hdbk.
Henk.

Fl. N.

Zeald.

J.

D. Hooker, Handbook of the

New

Zealand Flora.

Hochst.

London, 1867. Henkel und Hochstetter, Synopsis der


Stuttgart, 1865.
=--

Nadelholzer, etc.

Henk., Behn.

Hook.

Hook.

Hook.

Hort.

Eehnelt und DiTTMANN, Das Buch der Nymphaeaceen oder Seerosengewachse. Darmstadt, 1907. Journ. Bot. Sir William Jackson Hooker, Hooker's Journal of Botany and Kew Garden Miscellany. London, 1849-1857. Periodical. 9 vols. Ic. PL Sir Joseph Dalton Hooker, Hooker's Icones Plantarum {Stapelm Barklyana, by N. E. Brown, London, 1890. vol. X. t. 1901-1925). Syn. Fil. Sir William Jackson Hooker and John Gilbert Baker, Synopsis Filicum or, A Synopsis of London, 1868. all known Ferns. Philippe L. de Vilmorin, Hortus Vilmorinianus, Vilm.

d Dittvi., Nymph.
L.

Fr. Henkel, F.

Catalogue des Plantes Ligneuses et Herbacees,


Verri6res-le-Buisson.
III.

etc.

1906.

Him. PL

=
J.

Ind. Kew.

Cathcart and J. D. Hooker, Illustrations of Himalayan Plants. London, 1855. D. Hooker and B. Daydon Jackson, Index KewPhanerogamarum Nomina et ensis, Plantarum

Synonyma Omnium Generum


7 vols,

et

Specierum,

etc.

and 3 suppl.

vols.

1893-1908.

XX

HOETUS MORTOLENSIS

JacobiG. A. von Jacobi, Versuchzueiner systematischen Ordnung Hamburg, 1864, etc. tier Agaveen. Joseph. Jacquin, Plantarum Rariorum Nicol. Jacq. H. Sch.

Horti Caesarei Schoenbrunnensis Icones et Descriptiones.


Je2)s.

Viennae, 1797-1804.

4 vols.
of California.

Silva Calif.

Willis Linn Jepson, The Silva

Berkeley, 1910.
Joiirn.

Linn. Soc.

= The Journal of the Linnean Society Botany.


Periodical.

London.
Jowrn. Bot.

The Journal of Botany, British and Foreign. Edited by James Beitten. London. Periodical.
--^

Jourii.

B. H. Soc.

Journal of the Royal Horticultural Society.

Kaenipfer,

W. Wilks. London. Periodical. .lt.=ENGELBERT Kaempfer, Amoenitatum exoticaruna,


Edited by Rev.
etc.

Lemgovise, 1712.

Kew

Bull.

= Royal

Gardens, Kew.

Bulletin

of Miscellaneous

Information.

King, Mat. Fl. Mai.

London. Periodical. George King, Materials for a Flora


Peninsula.
Calcutta,

of

the Malayan
4 vols.

1889-1905.

King d Pantl. Orch. Him.


2 vols.

= G. King and Pantling, The Orchids of the Sikkim Himalaya. London, 1898. = Karl Schumann, Gesamtbeschreibung der Kakteen (Monographia Cactacearum). Neudamm,
1899.

K. Schum. Mon.

K. Schum. Moil. Naclitr.

= Ibid., Gesamtbeschreibung der KakNachtrage, (Monographia Cactacearum). teen 1898-1902. Neudamm, 1903. (Supplement to
the Monographia.)

Kunth, En.

Carol. Sigism. Kunth, Enumeratio Plantarum cognitarum, etc. Stutgardiae 5 parts in 6 vols. et Tubingae, 1833-1850.

omnium hucusque
Kuntze, Mon.

= Otto

Kuntze, Monographic der Gattung Clematis.


Ibid., Revisio

(Berlin, 1885.)

Kuntze, Bev. Gen.


Labill. Ic. PI. Syr.

Generum Plantarum.

3 vols.

1891-1898.

Jac. Julian.
Syrias

La Billardiere,
etc.

Icones Plan-

tarum
1791.

Rariorum,

Lutetiae Parisiorum,

L. Sp. PI.

Carol. Linnaei, Species Plantarum.


1762-3.

Ed.

2.

Holmiae.

LIST
Ledeb. Fl. Ross.

OF ABBREVIATIONS

xxi

Carol. Frideric. a Ledebour, Flora Rossica, Enumeratio Plantarum in totius Imperii Rossici Provinciis Europaeis, Asiaticis et Americanis hucusque observatarum. Stuttgartiae, 1842sive

1853.

4 parts in 6 vols.

Lem.

PI.

Gr.

= Charles Lemaire, Les Plan tes Grasses, autres que


les Cactees.

3rd ed.

Paris, 1889.

L'Her. Ger.

C. L.

L'Heritier de Brutelle, Geraniologia, seu Erodii, Pelargonii, Geranii, Monsoniae et Grieli


historia iconibus illustrata.
Parisiis,

1787-88.

Lodd. B. C.

= Conrad

Loddiges
20
in

Cabinet, &c.

and Sons, The Botanical Plates by George Cooke. London,


vols.

1818-1833.
Loicr. Fl. Cocli.

Joannis de Loureiro, Flora Cochinchinensis,

etc.

Denuo

Germania

edita

cum

notis Caroli

Ludovici Willdenow.
Loice,

Berlin, 1793.

Man.

Fl.

Mad.
of

Richard Thomas Lowe, A Manual Flora

Madeira and the adjacent Islands, etc. London, 2 parts in one vol. Has remained in1868.
Beccari, Malesia, Raccolta
intorno
alle

complete.

Malesia

= Odoardo

di

Osservazioni

Botaniche
Firenze,

Piante
etc.

dell'Arcipelago
Vol.
iii.

Indo-Malese e Papuano,

fasc. v.

Roma,

1890.

Malpighia

Malpighia, Rassegna Mensuale di Botanica redatta Messina, da A. BoRzi, 0. Penzig, R. Pirotta. Genova. Periodical. Marl. Kapl. = Rud. Marloth, Das Kapland, insonderheit das Reich der Kapflora, das Waldgebiet und die
Karroo, pflanzengeographisch dargestellt.
1908. Jena,

Mass. Stap. Nov.

Francis Masson, Stapeliae Novae, or a Collec-

tion of several

new

Species of that

Genus

dis-

covered in the interior parts of Africa.


1796.

London,
Citronier.

Mich. Trait. Citr.


Miers, Contr.
Bot.

M. Etienne Michel, Traite du

Paris, 1816.

John Miers, Contributions


etc.

Iconographic and Descriptive,


1871. 3 vols.

to Botany, London, 1851-

Miers,

III.

Sth.

Am.

PI.

Ibid.,

Illustrations of South

American

Plants.

London, 1849-1857.

xxii

HORTUS MORTOLENSIS
=
Philip Miller, The Gardeners' Dictionary, 8th ed. London, 1768.
etc.,

Mill. Diet.

Moggr. Ft. Ment.

J.

Traherne Moggridge, Contributions


etc.

to

the Flora of Mentone, and to a Winter Flora of

the Riviera,
Monatsschrift
f.

K.

Monatsschrift
Periodical.

London, 1871. fiir Kakteenkunde.

Neu-

damm.
Moris, Fl. Sard.

Hyacinth. Moris, Flora Sardoa seu HisPlantarum in Sardinia et adjac. Insulis Taurini, 1837-1859. Sponte Nascentium, etc.
Jos.
toria

4 vols.

Nick. Diet.

= George

Nicholson, The Illustrated Dictionary of

Gardening, a Practical and Scientific Encyclopaedia of Horticulture for Gardeners

and Botanists.
to

London, 1888.
Nick. Diet.
Suppl.

Ihid.,

The Century Supplement


London, 1901.

the

Dictionary of Gardening.

Supple-

N.

Pff.

= Engler

ment to the above. und Prantl, Die


Leipzig, 1889-1910.

Natiirlichen Pflanzenfamilien

nebst ihren

Gattungen und wichtigeren Arten.


4 parts.

Pfeiff.

En.
Otto

Pf.

&

Lud.Pfeifper, EnunieratioDiagnosticaCactacearum hucusque cognitarum. Berolini, 1837. L. Pfeipfer und Fr. Otto, Pfeiff. & Otto, Abb. Abbildung und Beschreibung bliihender Cacteen.

Figures des Cactees en


Leipzig.
PI. Gr.

fleur, etc.

Cassel

und

P. J.

Redoute et A. P. De Candolle, Plantarum Succulentarum Historia, ou Histoire Naturelle des


Plantes Grasses.
Paris, 1799.
3 vols.
ed.

Red.

Thar.

P. J.

Redoute

et C. A.

Thory, Les Roses. 3rd


Paris,

Paris, 1835.

Bed. Lil.
Bef. Bot.

P. J. Redoutj^,

Les

Liliacees.

1802-1816.

8 vols.

= W. Wilson
Plants, etc.

Saunders, Refugium Botanicum

or,

Figures and Descriptions of little-known or

new

The descriptions by H. G. ReichenG. Baker.

BACH and
Bept. Miss. B. G.

J.

Missouri Botanical Garden


Mo., 1890-1910.

London, 1869-1872. Annual Report.


;

St. Louis,

Bev. Hart. Belg.

= Revue
Gand.

de I'Horticulture Beige et Etrang^re.

Periodical.

LIST
Bisso

OF ABBKEVIATIONS
cles

xxiii

A.

Eisso, Histoire Naturelle


1818.

Grangers.

Paris,

Bondot, Vert de Chine


Boss,
Ic. PI.

= =

M. Natalis Kondot, Notice du Vert de


Paris, 1858.

Cliine, etc.

H. Pan. Hermann Eoss, Icones et Descriptiones Plantarum Novarum vel Rariorum Horti Botanici
Panormitani.

Panormi, 1896.

B.

V. C.

= A. Engler, Das Pflanzenreich, Regni Vegetabilis Conspectus.

Leipzig, since 1899.

large series of

monographs in progress of publication. Sahn, Cact. H. Dyck. J. de Salm-Dyck, Cacteae in Horto Dyckensi cultae anno 1849, etc. Bonnse, 1850. Sahn, Hort. Dyck. = Ibid., Hortus Dyckensis oder Verzeichniss der in dem Bot. Gart. zu Dyck wachsenden

Pflanzen.

Diisseldorf, 1834.

Satow, Bamh. Jap.

Sir

Bamboos
Sanv. Fl. Medit. Ex.

in Japan.

Ernest Satow, The Cultivation of (From the Asiatic Society,


Sauvaigo,
Flora Mediterranea

Tokio, 1899.)

= Emile

Exotica.
les

Enumeration des Plantes Cultivees dans Jardins de la Provence et de la Ligurie. Nice,


2 parts (incomplete) in 1 vol.

1899.

Schneider, Hdb. Laubh.

Camillo Karl Schneider,


der Laubholzkunde.

Illustriertes

Handbuch
2 vols.

Jena, 1906-1911.

Seemann, The Botany of the Voyage H.M.S. 'Herald,' etc. London, 1852-1857. Sieb. d- Zucc. Fl. Jap. Siebold et Zuccarini, Flora Japonica. Lugduni Batavorum, 1835. Smith, Exot. Bot. = James Edward Smith, Exotic Botany consisting of coloured figures and scientific descriptions, etc. London, 1804-1805. 2 vols.
Seem. Herald.
of

= Berthold

St.

Ilil.

Plantes us. des Bras.

= Auguste

De

Saint-Hilaire,
Paris, 1827.
;

Plantes Usuelles des Brasiliens.


Siveet, Fl. Austr.

= Robert

Sweet, Flora Australasica


1 vol.

or a

Selection of

Handsome and Curious


:

Plants, etc.

London, 1827-1828.
Siveet, Cist.

Ibid.,

Cistineae

the Natural Order of Cistus or

Rock Rose,
Siveet, Ger.

illustrated, etc.
:

London, 1825-1830.
5 vols.

=
=

Ibid.,

Geraniaceae

the Natural Order of Gerania,

illustrated, etc.

The

Ciard.

The Garden,

London, 1820-1830. London. Periodical.

xxiv

HORTUS MORTOLENSIS
mitanus, sive Plantae Novae vel Criticae,
etc.

Tod. H. B. Pan. -^ Augustin. Todaeo, Hortus Botanicus Panor-

Padi

normi, 1876-1890.
Tod. Nnov. Gen.
it

2 vols, (incomplete).

Spec.

Ibid.,

Nuovi Generi e Nuove Specie


Orto Botanico
di

Piante
Torr. Fl. N. York

colt,

nel R.

Palermo.

Palermo, 1858-60.

John Toreey, A Flora


etc.

of the State of

New

York,
Tr. Linn. Soc.

Albany, 1843.

2 vols.

= The Transactions of the Linnean Society.


Periodical.

London.

Veitch,

Man.

Conif.

Coniferee, etc.

Vent. J.

Malm.
Dalm.

James Veitch & Sons, A Manual of London, 1881. E. P. Ventenat, Jardin de la Malmaison.
2 vols.

Paris, 1804.
Vis. Fl.

Robertus de

Visiani, Flora Dalmatica, sive


... in

Enumeratio Stirpium Vascularium


lectas, etc.

Dalmatia

Lipsiae,

1842-1952.
6 vols.

3 parts in 1 vol.

Wight,

Ic.

= Robert Wight, Icones Plantarum Indiae Orientalis.


Madras, 1840-1853.

Wight,

III.

Ibid., Illustrations of

Indian Botany,

etc.

Madras,

1840-1850.

2 vols.

W.

d-

Lge.

Fl.

Hisj).

M. Willkomm
Hispanicae.

and

J.

dromus
1880.
Willd.
Sj}. PI.

Florae
3 vols.

Stuttgartiae,

Lange, Pro1870-

C. L.

Willdenow,

Caroli a Linne Species Plan-

tarum.
Th.
Wolf,

Berolini, 1797-1810.

5 parts in 10 vols.

Mon. Potent. Theodor Wolf, Monographie der Gattung Potentilla. Stuttgart, 1908. T. Medley Wood and Maurice Evans, Natal Wood, Nat. PL Plants, Descriptions and Figures. Durban, 1899-

1900.

= @ = = 2^
Ij

Annual

plant.

Biennial plant.
Perennial plant.

=
= = =

''

Shrub or tree. Climbing plant.


Indigenous plant.
See notes at the end of the Catalogue.

HORTUS MORTOLENSIS.
ABELIA

B. Br.

N.

Pff. iv. 4. 166,

sub Linncea.

Caprifoliaceae.

Linnseeae.

March-May. chinensis B. Br. DC. iv. 339. China. t? floribunda Decne.B. M. t. 4316 Fl. d. S. t. 5. Mexico. Tp March-June, DC. iv. 339 Fl. Brit. Incl. iii. 9; Wight, triflora i^. -Br. Northern India. III. t. 122; Brand. Ind. Trees, 361. 17
;
.

t.

March-May.
uniflora B.
Japan.

Br. DC.
Tj
.

iv.

339

B.

M.

4694

Fl. d. S.

t.

824.

May.

Aberia Hochst.
I

Doryalis.
Pff.
ii.

ABIES
Silba.

Juss.N.

1.

81,

Nachtr. 24.

Pinacese-Abie421;

tineae.

Henk.
April,

Mill Fl. d'lt. n. 90. il. pectinata DC. xvi. 2. & Hochst. 174. Central and South Europe.
xvi.
2.

T?

balsamea MillDC.
Gard. Chron. 1895,
i.

423

Henk. & Hochst. 176

431. North America. >> bracteata Hook. & Am. DC. xvi. 2. 419 Henk. & Hochst. 167; B. M. t. 4640; Fl d. S. t. 899. California. I? cilicica Ant. & Kotschy.DC. xvi. 2. 422; Veitch, Man.
425,
;

Tp March-April. 419 Veitch, Man. Conif. 102 Gard. Chron. 1896, ii. 275. CaHfornia. ? Nordmanniana Spach. Henk. & Hochst. 173 Veitch, Man.

Conif. 110.

Asia

Minor.

..

nobilis

LindlDC.

xvi. 2.

Conif. 102, with figure

Pinsapo

DC. xvi. 2. 423; Henk. A Hochst. 165; April. 1437-8. South Spain. ip religiosa LindlDC. xvi. 2. 420; Henk. d- Hochst. 170; B. M. t. 6753. Mexico. ^
Boiss.
t.

B.

M.

t.

6992. Caucasus. Tp

Fl

d. S.

HORTUS MORTOLENSIS

ABOBRA

N. 34. CucurbitaceaB-AbobrinEe. Extra- tropical South America. tenuifolia Natid. N.Pff. July-October.
Naud.
.

Pff. iv. 5.

I.e.

14.

ABUTILON

Gartn.N.

Pff.

iii.

6.

37. Malvacete-Malveae-

Abutilinae.

Darwinii Hook. fil. in B. M. t. 5917. Brazil. ^. Spring and summer. Dugesii S. Wats, in Proc. Amer. Acad. xxi. (1886) 447.
Mexico.

^.

Spring.

globiferum G. Don.
and summer.

Nich. Diet. 4. Mauritius ^


i.

Spring Wight,
tro-

indicum Sweet.~DC.
Ic.
t.

Tropics. Spring-summer. 184. Abyssinia, longicuspe Hochst. Fl. Trap. Afr. pical Africa. Summer.
12.
17
.

471

Fl. Brit. Ind.

i.

226

i.

^)

megapotamicum

St.

Hil.B. M.

t.

5717

Fl. d. S.

t.

1599.

Brazil.
^2
.

V^

striatum Dicks.

Nich. Diet. 4
t.

All the year.

Baill.

Mon.
t.

iv.

fig.

144.

All the year.

venosum Lem.B. M.
All the year.

4468

Fl. d. S.

5. Mexico. Tp

vexillarinm E. Morr.
:[

megapotaynicdim.
iii.

ACACIA Willd.N.
-Acacieae.

Pff.

3.

108. Leguminosaj-Mimosoideae
ii.
;

acinacea Lindl.
t. 7.

Fl. Austr. 353 F. Midi. Austr. Ac. Australia. March-April. alata R. Br.Fl. Austr. ^2Q.A. platyptera Lindl 5. M. 3933. W. Australia. Winter-spring. arabica Willd.DC. 293 Baill. 461 Fl. Brit. Ind. 28. N. Africa, Arabia, India. ^ Mon.
i.

Tp

ii.

t.

l?

ii.

ii.

ii.

fig.

armata B. Br.Fl. Austr. ii. 347 B. M. t. 1653 Lodd. B. C. t. 49. N. S. Wales, Victoria, S. Australia, W. Aus;

tralia.
,,

Tj

February- April.
I.

var.

angustifolia Benth. Fl. Austr.


C.
t.

e.

A. imdidata

WiWdi. Lodd. B.

753. T?

February-April.
;

Baileyana F. Mull. Ic. Austr. Ac. ii. t. 115 Gard. Chron. Winter. 1894, i. 37. Queensland, N. S. Wales. T? brachybotrya Benth. Fl. Austr. ii. 373 B. M. t. 4384. l? N. S. Wales, Victoria, S. Australia. March-May. calamifolia Siveet. DC. ii. 451 Fl. Austr. ii. 339 Lodd.
. ;

B. C.

t.

909

Bossche, Ic. Sel.

t.

S.Australia.

7. N.

S.

Wales, Victoria,

T7

February-April.

HORTUS MORTOLENSIS

ACACIA
Cavenia Hook. & Am.
Chili. Tp.

F.
Fl.

Milll. Sel. Extra-trop. PI. 2.

May-June.

congesta Benth.
March-April.

Fl.
Garcl.

Austr.

ii.

346.

W.
375

Australia.

cultriformis A. Cunn.
t.

Aiistr.
i.

ii.

Hook.
S.

Ic.

PI.

170;

The
var.

1902,

255. N.
J?

Wales. T?.

April-June.

albicans Hort. Winter. Fl. Austr. 351. W. Australia. April. cuneata Benth. 407. Queensland, N. Cunninghami Hook. Fl. Austr. Wales. 364. W. Australia. cyanophylla Lindl. Fl. Austr. April-May. Austr. 388 F. cyclopis A. Cunn. Fl. Austr. May-July. 173. W. Australia. 415 Lodd. B. dealbata Link. DC. 458 Fl. Austr. 1928. N. FebruaryWales, Victoria, Tasmania. ^
,,

ii.

i?

ii.

S.

ip

ii.

T^

ii.

Milll. Ic.

ii.

t.

I?

ii.

ii.

C.

t.

S.

April.

Br. DC. ii. 449; Fl. Austr. ii. 351; B. M. April. 3244. W. Austraha. Tp Queensdecurrens Willd. DC. ii. 470; Fl. Austr. ii. 414.
decipiens B.
t.

1745,

De Neufvillei Hort. Winter. Gartenwelt, Garden February-March. Ac. Dietrichiana F.


origin.
Tp
.

land, N. S. Wales, Victoria, Tasmania, S. Australia.

Tp

xiv. (1910), 112.

Milll.

Ic. Aiistr.

i.

t.

53.

Australia.
t.

Tp

April.

diffusa

Lindl DC. ii.


t.

450

Fl. Austr.

ii.

332
S.

B. M.
S.

2417

Lodd. B. C.

631.Victoria, Tasmania, N.

dodonseifolia Willd.

Fl. Austr.
Austr.

ii.

359.

Wales. Tp

AustraHa.

Tp

March-June.

Drummondii LindlFl.
Australia.

ii.

419; B.

M.
ii.

t.

5191. W.

Tp

February.
ii.

eburnea Willd. DC.

461
ii.

Fl

Brit. Ind.

293. India.
Tp

Tp

June- August.

excelsa Benth. extensa Lindl.

Fl Fl

A^^str.

390.
ii.

Austr.

349. A. pentaedra
.

Queensland.
;

Eegel,

March-April. Grtflra. t. 24. W. AustraHa.- Tp falcata Willd. DC. ii. 451 Fl Austr. ii. 361 Lodd.
;

B. C.

1115. Queensland, N. S. Wales. Tp Farnesiana Willd.DC. ii. 461 Fl. Austr. ii. 419 Tp May-November. Tropics. Ic. t. 300.
t.
;

Wight,

b2

HORTUS MORTOLENSIS
(continued).
ii.

ACACIA

glaucescens Willd.DC. ii. 454; Fl. Austr. Queensland, N. S. Wales. t, 3174. Tp


.

406; B. M.

Gnidium Benth. Fl. Austr. ii. 359. Queensland. \ Hanburyana Hort. Winter. Gartemvelt, xiv. (1910),

April.

111.

December-February. Garden origin. Tp Fl. Austr. ii. 389; F. Mull. Austr. harpophylla F MiilL
.

Ac.

i.

t.

59.

Queensland. ^

July.

hispidula Willd.DC. ii. 450; Fl. Austr. ii. 355; Lodd. B. C. t. 823. N. S. Wales. T? homalophylla A. Cunn. Fl. Austr. ii. 383 F. Milll. Ic. Austr. Ac. i. t. 57. N. S. Wales, Victoria, South Australia.
;

T?.

horrida Willd.
Cap.
ii.

DC.

ii.

281;

3arl. Kapl.

460; Jacq. H. Sch. t. 393; Fl. 56. South Africa. T?. JulyAiistr. Ac.

August.
juncifolia Benth.Fl. Austr. ii. 339 F. Milll. Ic. N. Australia, Queensland, N. S. Wales. i. t. 18.
;

h
t.
.

juniperina Willd.Fl. Austr.


Queensland, N.
June.
leiicocephcda
S.

331 Lodd. B. C. Wales, Victoria, Tasmania. ^


ii.
;

398.
April-

Link

= Leuccena
.

glmica.
;

linifolia Willd.Fl. Austr.


land, N. S.

371 B. M. t. 2168. QueensWales. i? April. Vent. J. longifolia Willd.DC. ii. 454 Fl. Austr. ii. 397-8 Malm. t. 62 B. M. t. 1827, 2166 Lodd. B. C. t. 678. MarchN. S. Wales, Victoria, Tasmania, S. Australia. ^
ii.
; ; ; ;

April.

lunata Sieb.DC.
t.

ii.

452

Fl. Austr.
S.

ii.

373

Lodd. B. C.
l?
.

Queensland, N. Wales, Victoria. April. 362 F. macradenia Benth. Fl. Austr. 47. Queensland. Ac. April-May.
1235.
ii.
;

March-

Milll. Ic. Austr.

i.t.

l?

Maidenii F.
(1893), 222,

Mull Mad. Mem.


t.
;

Linn. Soc. N.

S.

Wales

29. N. S. Wales. l? melanoxylon B. Br.DC. ii. 452 Fl. Austr. ii. 388 B. M. t. 1659; Lodd. B. C. t. 630. N. S. Wales, Victoria, S.
;

Australia, Tasmania.

microbotrya Benth. Fl. Austr. November-December.

Tp

March-June.
ii.

363.

W. Australia.

Tp

montana
t.

Benth.
S.

Fl. Austr.

ii.

357

F. Milll.

Aiistr. Ac.

i.

30. N.

Wales, Victoria,

S.

Australia. Tp

HOETUS MOETOLENSIS
ACACIA
neriifolia A. Cunn.

Wales,

S. Australia.

Fl. Austr. 363. Queensland, N. April-May.


ii.

S.

Tp

notabilis F. Miill.Fl. Atistr.

ii.

365. N.

S.

Wales, Victoria.

obliqua A. Cunn.Fl.
Wales, Victoria,

Atistr.

ii.

353; B. M.
l?
.

S. Australia.

i.

Oswald! F. MullAustr.
N.
S.

Ac.

t.

t. 4041. N. S. March-May. 10 Fl. Atistr. ii. 384.


;

Fl. Austr. 383 F. Austr. Ac. Queensland, N. Wales. Chron. 374 podalyrisefolia A. Cunn. Fl. Austr. -Queensland. December-March. 1894, 3502. 371 B. M. prominens A. Cwm.Fl. Austr. April, N. Wales, Australia.
pendula A. Cunn.
t.
ii.
;

Wales, Victoria,

S. Australia.

T^

Milll.

i.

58.

S.

^T?

ii.

Garcl.

i.

39.

T?

ii.

t.

S.

S.

T?

pulchella B. Br.DC. ii. 455 t. 212. W. Australia. T?

Fl. Austr.

ii.

416; Lodcl. B. C.
S. Australia.

pycnantha Benth. Fl. Austr. Ij March- April.

ii.

365.

i.

Victoria,
;

retinodes Schlecht.Fl. Austr.


t.
.

ii.

362

F. Milll. Austr. Ac.


S. Australia.

49.

A. semperflorefis Hort.

Victoria,
B. M.

Tp

All the year.


Atistr.
ii.

Riceana Hensl.Fl.
mania.

335;

t.

5835. Tas-

T?

April.
ii.

rigens A. Cunn.Fl. Austr.


S. Australia.-

337. N.
ii.

S.

Wales, Victoria,
i?

Tp

rostellifera

Benth. Fl. Austr.


Milll.

368.

rupicola F.

Fl. Austr.
ii.

ii.

333.

bsaligna Wendl.DC.
^?-

W. Australia. Victoria, Australia.


S.
ii.

450; Fl. Austr.

364. W.

Australia.

se^nperjlorens Hort.

retinodes.
;

sentis F. Milll. Fl. Austr. ii. 360 F. Milll. Austr. Ac. i. Australia, Queensland, N. S. Wales, Victoria, t. 39. N.
S. Australia.

Siebertiana Hort. Winter. Gartenwelt, xiv. (1910), 112. February-March. Garden origin. Tp sphserocephala Cham, d Schlecht.B. M. t. 7663. Mexico.
.


l?

^ stenophylla A. Cunn.Fl. Austr.


Ac.
i.

ii.

385

F. Milll. Austr.

t.

55. N.

Australia,

Queensland,
April.

N.

S.

Wales,

Victoria, S. x\ustralia.

17

HOKTUS MORTOLENSIS
{contimted).

ACACIA

subcaerulea Lindl.

December-March. ^^ uncinella Benth. Fl. Austr. ii. 341. W. Australia. verniciflua A. Cunn.Fl. Austr. ii. 358; B. M. t. 3266, 3279.

Lodd. B. C.
t.

t.

W. Australia. 1460 as A. graveolens. E. Australia.


Austr.
ii.

Fl.

369.

Tj

ij

verticillata

Willd.DC.
.

ii.

453; Fl. Austr.

ii.

334; B. M.
S.

110

tralia.
,,

Lodd. B. C. t. 535. Tp April-May.


var.

Victoria,
ii.

Tasmania,

Aus-

pendula.
ii.

t?

April-May.

vestita

Ker.DG.

452

Fl. Austr.

375. N.

S.

Wales.

i^
c

Whanii

F. Milll.Fl. Austr.

ii.

386. Victoria. i?

ACffiNA

Vahl.

N.

Pff.

iii.

3. 46.

Rosaceae-Rosoideae-Sanguis-

orbeae.

inermis Hook. fit. Hdb.

myriophylla Lindl.
ovalifolia Bz.

Nich. Diet. May-July. 592. Chili. 433. Australia, New Zealand, ovina.4. Gtmn. Fl. Austr. America. pinnatifida Rz. d Pav.DC. May-July. 592. Chili. 434. Aussanguisorbse Vahl. DC. 592; Fl. Austr.
7.

U.

Fl. N. Zealand, 57.

May-July.

Chili.

New Zealand. May-July.


2(
.

Pav.DC.
21.

ii.

i^

ii.

S.

ii.

2|

ii.

ii.

traha, July.

N. Zealand,

Tristan

d'Acunha,

&c.

14..

May-

sarmentosa Carm.

DC.

ii.

592. Tristan d'Acunha.


Pff.
iii.

2|

l?

ACANTHOPANAX
t.

Decne.

d Planch. N.
I.

8.

49. Ara-

liaceae-Schefflereae.

aculeatum Seem.N.
977.
ip
.

China. November-February. ricinifolium Seem. Nich. Diet. Suppl. Japan. ACANTHUS L. N. 318. Acanthaceffi-Acan5.
1?

Pff.

c.DC.

iv.

252

Lodd. B. C.

Pff\

iv.

36.

thoidese.

arboreus Forsh.
V.

106;

Fl. ^g.-ar. 115; DC. xi. 272; Fl. Trop. Afr. Gard. Chron. 1902, i. 221-2, fig. 70. Arabia,

Abyssinia, trop. E. Africa. Tp April-June. Caroli-Alexandri Hatissk. Consp. Hal. Fl. Grcec.

ii.

460.

Greece.

11.

June,
xi.

longifolius

Hort.DC.

270

Fl. d'lt. n.

3223. Dalmatia.

May.

HOETUS MOKTOLENSIS

ACANTHUS
mollis
If.
.

L.DC. xi. 270 Fl


;

d'lt. n.

3222. Dalmatia, Italy.


April-June.

April-June.
var.

,,

candelabrum
T.

ITo/-^. xi.

U.
272;

montanus
Afr.

Anders. DC.

Gard. Chron. V. 107; T? Eastern tropical Africa.

B.M. t. 5516; Fl. Trop. 1909, i. 201. Western and


1.

spinosus L.DG.

xi.

271

B. M.

1808

Fl. d'lt. n.

3221.

Mediterranean region, Asia Minor.


I

U.

April-June.

ACER

L.N. Pff. cappadocicum


n.

iii.

5.

Gled. var.

269. Aceraceae. sinicum Behd.

Cliina {Wilson, China {Wilson,


i^

1009). T?. catalpifolium Behd.

China {Wilson,

n. 1359).

caudatum
n.

Wall. var.

multiserratum Behd.

1061). 1?. Pax, Acerac. {B. V. C), 36; Schneider, Davidii Franch. Hdb. Lauhh. ii. 216. China {Wilson, n. 341, 649, 1005, 1005a, 1008a). 1?. Isevigatum Wall.Fl. Brit. Ind. i.693; Pax, Acerac. {B.V.C.), 32. Himalaya, China {Wilson, n. 979). T?

laxiflorum Pax, Acerac. {B. V. C), 1069,1154, 1234, 1309). i?.

36.

China

{Wilson, n.

Negundo L.Pax,

Acerac. {B. V. C), 42; Fl. d'lt. n.

2452.
;

N. America, Mexico.
Acerac.
31.

Ip

April.
;

oblongum Wall DC.


I.

i.

c.

India,

593

Fl. Brit. Ind.

i.

693

Pax,

China {Wilson,

n.

257).

Tp
.

i?

April-May.

pictum Thunh.YQX. parviflorum O.K. Schneider, Hdh. Lauhh.

Japan, Manchuria, Ghind. {Wilson, Wilsoni Behd. Schneider, Hdh. Lauhh.


ii.

225.

n. 642).

ii.

204.

China

(TFiZsow, n.

233). I?.

Achania Sw.

= Malvaviscus.
Pff. iv. 5.

ACHILLEA L.N.
Anthemidinse.

272. Compositse-AnthemideaeFl. d'lt. n.

Ageratum L.DC.

vi.

27
vi.

3598. S. Europe.

June.

biserrata M.
ligustica

B.DC.
vi.

AllDC.

26
21.

23. Asia Minor. 24;. June. Fl.d'It. n. 3603. Europe, Orient.


if.

14.

May-June.
vi.

sericea Vis. DC.

Dalmatia.

May-June.

HORTUS MORTOLENSIS
CompositEe-Cichoriese-Leontodontinae.

ACHYROPHORUS Scop.N. Pff. iv. 5. 362, sub Hypochm-is.


pinnatifidus DC.
Corsica.
vii.

93

Fl.

cl'It.

n.

3830 o.S.

Italy,

1^.

Summer.
Pff.
iv.

ACNISTUS

Schott.N.

3&.

14. Solan aceae-Solanese-

Lyciinse.

Lycium cestroides DC. xiii. 1. 500. cestroides Miers. i? May-June. Uruguay. Schlecht.

ACOKANTHERA

G.

Don.N.

Pff'.

iv.

2.

126. Apocynaceae-

Plumieroideae-Arduineae.

spectabilis Hook. fil.B. M. t. 6359 Fl. Cap. vi. 1. 501 Wood, Natal PL t. 74. Toxicophlaa spectabilis Sond.
;

S. Africa.

ij

May-June.
Pff.
iii.

ACRADENIA

Kippist.N.

4.

136. Rutaceae-Rutoideaei.

Boronieae.

Franklinise Kippist.

Fl. Austr.
Pff.
iii.

328.

Tasmania.

i?

ACTINIDIA

Lindl.N.

6.

125. Dilleniaceae-Acti-

nidioideae.

Kolomikta Maxim.
Ind.
I.

A. callosa Lindl. FL Brit. 286. East Asia, Japan.


Pff.
I.

N.

c.

17

ACTINOMERIS

Nutt.N.

Pff. iv. 5.

238. Compositae- Heli-

antheae-Verbesininas.

helianthoides Nutt.

squarrosa Nutt.

DC. 575. Georgia. U. DC. 575. Eastern United States. U.


v.
v.

ACTING STEMM A
China.
I

Griff'. N.

Pff'.

iv.

5.

13. Cucurbitaceas-

Fevilleae-Gomphogyninae.

paniculatum Maxim.

Forb.

d;

Hemsl. En.

PL

Chin. 320.

V,

ACTING STROBUS
Cupressineae.

Miq.

N.
xvi.

Pff.

ii.

1.

93. PinaceaeAustr.
.

pyramidalis Miq.

DC.

2.

444;

FL

vi.

239;

FL

d. S. V.

p. 5016. fig.

S.W.
6a.

Australia. T?

March-

April.

lADENIA

Forsk.N.

Pff.

iii.

83,

Nachtr.

255. PassiU.

floraceae-Passifloreae

Pechuelii Harms

I.e.
c.

repanda

Engl. L

German S.W. Africa. German S.W. Africa.

2^5.

Summer.

HOETUS MOETOLENSIS

ADENOCARPUS

DC.N.

Pff.

iii.

3.

326. Leguminose-PapiSoc. Bot. Ft. xx. (1873),

lionatae-Genisteae-Spartiinae.

anagyrifolius Coss. Bal. 246. Ip Morocco.

Bull.

foliolosus DC. ii. 158 B. M. t. 426. Canaries. i? frankenioides Choisy. DC. ii. 158. Canaries. i?
;

ADIANTUM

L.N.

Pff.

i.

4.

282. Polypodiaceae-Pteridege;

Adiantinae.

*Capillus-Veneris L.Hook Syn. Fil. 123 Fl. cVIt. n. 46. Africa, Europe, Asia, America, &c. 2^1. cuneatum Lgsdf. & Fisch. Hook. Syn. Fit. 124. Tropical

America. 2^. Parleyense Moore. Hook. Syn. Garden origin. if..

Fit.

124

Fl. d. S.

1.

1933-4.

^CHMEA
liese.

Bz.

(&

Pav.N.

Pff.

ii.

4.

47. Bromeliace^-Brome54.

brasiliensis Begel.
Brazil.

Bak.

Brom.

Central

and South

2^.

June.

bromelisefolia Bak. Brom. 67. Trinidad. V,. cserulescens Bak. Brom. 50. Tropical America. i^. distichantha Lem. Bak. Brom. 54 B. M. t. 5447. Para-

Weilbachii Brazil.
Brazil.

guay. 2|. May. Lindeni K. Koch. Bak. Brom. 61; B. M.

t.

6565. South
t.

2^.

June.

E. Morr.

Bak.

Brom. 53; B. M.

6435.

if..

JEgle sepiaria DC.

Citrus trifoUata.

ionium Webb &

Berth.

=
Pff'.

Sempervivum.
ii.

|.ffi3RIDES Lour.N.

6.

217. Orchidaceae-Monandrset.

Sarcanthinse-^ridese.

japonicum Bchbch.f.
October.

B. M.

5798.

Japan.

if.

July-

^schynanthus Jack.

Trichospor^im.
Pff:
iii.

iETHIONEMA
Buxbaumii
Spreng.
t

B. Br.N.
Fisch.

2.

165. Crucifer^-Sinapeai.

Cochleariinae.

Boiss.

Fl. Or.

353.

A. cappadocicum

Asia Minor.

If..

Spring.

lensis

Only a few indigenous plants are enumerated here, as a Florida Mortowas published in 1905.

10

HOETUS MORTOLENSIS
(contimied).
d;

^THIONEMA
graecum
Greece.

Boiss.

Sprim.

Hal.

Consp. Fl. Grcsc.

i.

110.

if..

Spring.

Boiss. Fl. Or. i. 346 grandiflorum Boiss. d Hohen. Laubh. i. 357. Persia. 2^. Spring. Schneider, Hdb. pulchellum Boiss. <& Huet. Boiss. Fl. Or. i. 346. Asia

Minor.
saxatile

i^

Spring.
i.

DC.

209.Bickn.

PI. Biv.

t.

Fl. d'lL n. 1495.

S.

Europe.

Spring.
5.

lAGAFANTUUS L' Her.N.Pff.ii


Agapanthineae.

53. Liliacege-Allioideae;

umbellatus L'Her.Fl. Cap.


t.
,,

vi.

402

B. M.

t.

500

Pied. Lil.

4.

S.Africa.
fl.

if.

June-July.

albo.
Pff.

AGASYLLIS

Hoffm.N.

oideae-Peucedaneas-Angelicinae.

caucasica Spreng.

DC.

iv.

Umbellifer-Api200. Caucasus.
iii.

8.

221.

if.

AGATH^A

Cass.N.

Pff. iv. 5. 167,

sub Felicia. GoimgositiGA. amelloides DC.


iii.

Astereae-Asterinae.

coelestis Cass.

Aster
year.

Nich. Diet.

fig. 6.

v.

225.

capensis Less. Fl.

folius

Thunb. Ind. Keiv.


var.

Cape.

Cap.

83.
Tp
.

Aster
Almost

rotundiall

the

monstrosa Hort.
iv.

hispida DC.

224.

Aster elongatus Thunb. Fl. Cap.

iii.

89.

Cape.
AGATHIS
Hdb.

21

February-May.
Pff.
ii.

Salisb.

australis Steud.
Fl. N.

N. N.
ii.

1.
I.

66.

Pff.

c.

Pinaceae-AraucarieaB. Danwiara australis Lambert,


.
;

Zealand^ 256. New Zealand. ?


Pff.
5.

JAGAVE L.N.
v..

117.

Amaryllidaceae-Agavoideae.
B.

albicans Jacobi.Bak. Am. 191


June,

M.

t.

7207. Mexico.
;

Kunth, En. 819 Bak. Am. 180 Fl. Central America. July. angustifolia Haio. Kunth, En. 837 Bept. Miss. B. G. (1908), 284. 30-35. ^. Jacquiniana Hook. B. M. 5097. ^. ixtlioides Hook. B. M. 5893. ^. excelsa
americana L.
n. 761.
v.
;

d'lt.

if.

v.

Trel.

t.

t.

t.

Bak. Am. 182.^. vivipara Wight, Ic. t. 2024. i. Wightii Prain. Honduras'? June-July. if ^7

HOETUS MOETOLENSIS

11

AGAVE
applanata Lem.Bah. Am. 173
t.
;

35.

Mexico.

Be])t.

Miss. B. G. 1896,

1(..
;

asperrima Jacohi.Bak. Am. 173


t.

Kwith, En. 834; Bak. Am. 174, ex Mexico. June-July. attenuata Salm. Kunth, En. 838 B. M. 5333 Bak. Am. 193 Garcl Chron. 1909, 106, with plate. Mexico. compacta JacohiYll. aurea Brandegee, PI. Baja 207. Lower California.
atrovirens Kario.
parte.
v.

53.

Mexico.

Bept. Miss. B. G. 1896,

i^.

il.

v.
i.

t.

'?

,,

var.

i?

Calif.

If.

May-June.

Bakeri Eoss

Kanoinskii.

barbadensis Trel. Spec. ined. Barbadoes. 1(.. Beguini Hort. Garden origin. 1(.. Bergeri Trel. Spec. ined. Mexico ? 1(. July- August. Bouchei Jacohi.Bak. Am. 191 B. M. t. 7558 Garcl. Chron. 1897, i. 167. Mexico. Tp May- June. bracteosa S. Wats. Bak. Am. 192. Northern Mexico. if. Cantala Boxh.Kunth, En. v. 837. A. viviiMva Bak. Am.

194, ex parte.

Mexico.

n..

July.

Hook.B. M. t. 4939; Bak. Am. 187. Mexico. 2^. chiapensis Jacobi 225.Bak. Am. 183. Mexico. 24;. chloracantha Salm. Bak. Am. 192. Mexico. if. MayCelsii

July.

Bak. Am. 179. Mexico. cochlearis Jacobi, Nachtr. ii. 151. Mexico. crenata Jacobi 229. Mexico. if.

coGcinea Boezl.

dasylirioides Jacobi. Bak. Am. Guatemala, Mexico. dealbata Jacobi 152. Mexico.
if.
;

if.

if.

185;

B. M.

t.

5716.

if.
;

decipiens Bak.-Keio Bull. 1892, 184 Bept. Miss. B. G. 1896, 93, t. 57-59. Florida. 24 i? densiflora Hook.B. M. t. 5006 Bak. Am. 183. Mexico. June -July. If. deserti Eng.Bak. Am. 172 Bept. Miss. B. G. 1896, t. 33;

4.

S. California.

14..
;

Ellemeetiana C. Koch. Bak. Am. 193 Bef. Bot. t. 163 B. M. t. 7027. Mexico. 4. May-June. elongata Jacobi 108. Bak. Am. 181. Central America.

Ij

June-July.

12

HOETUS MOETOLENSIS
{continued).
in

AGAVE

Engelmannii Trel. Mexico? 2|.

BepU Miss. B. G.

1891, 167,

t.

55-56.

excelsa Hort. Mort.

angtistifolia.
i.

expansa
filifera

Jacobi, Nachtr.

ferox C. Koch.
Mexico.

151. Mexico? 4. Bak. Am. 176. Mexico. 4.


;

June-July.
i.

Salm.Bak. Am. 166

Gard. Chron. 1897,

167.

t.

If..

var.

filamentosa Salm.
164;
Bossche,
Ic.

Bak.
Sel.
t.

Am. 166 Bef. Bot. 144. Mexico. 2^.


;

June-July.

July. Friderici Berger. Mexico? Mexico. Koch. Jacobi Funkiana Bak. Am. 186. geminiflora Gaivl. Kunth, 831 Mexico. Ghiesbreghtii C. Koch. Bak. Am. 171. Mexico.
Franceschiana Trel. Spec. ined. Mexico ? Franzosini Nissen. B. M. t. 8317. Mexico. i^
21.
.

C.

38.

2(.

E71. v.

n..

2^.

July.

Gilbeyi Hort. Gard. Chron. 1873, 1305, fig. 101 Bak. Am. 171. Mexico. i^:.
;

fig.

270;

1877,

glomeruliflora Berger. A. heteracantha var. glomerulijiora Engelm. Notes, 325. Western Texas. !(..

Goeppertiana /aco6i. Bak. Am. 188. grandidentata Jacobi 207. Mexico?

Mexico.
2|.

!(..

June,

3. Mexico. 2^. 7527.Mexico. F? June. Haynaldi Tod. H. B. Pan. 88. t. 24; Bak. Am. 170. November-March. Mexico ? 21 Henriquesii Bak. Am. 170. Mexico. 14.. June-July. heteracantha Zucc. Kunth, En. v. 856 Bak. Am. 168.

Hanburyi Bak.

in Keiv Bull. (1892)


;

Haseloffii Jacobi 244

B. M.

t.

Mexico.

i^.. horizontalis Jacobi. Bak. Am. 188. Mexico. Lem. Bak. Am. 171, ex parte. Mexico. if. horrida

ingens
,,

var.

Berger. A. Milleri Hort. Mexico. Mexico. picta Sahn in Bonplandia,


?

1!^

2|.

vii.

88.

2^

July.

Kunth, En. Karwinskii Zucc. Bep. Miss. B. G. 1907, 252,

v.
t.

837

Bak. Am. 181


Corderoyi
t.

29-31.^.
2.

De

Smet.

A. Bakeri Boss,

Ic.

&

Descr. Pan.

Mexico.

Kerchovei Lem.

Bak. Am.

169.

Mexico.

2f

HOETUS MOETOLENSIS

13

AGAVE
Knightiana Drwmnond
fiora Auct.
in B.
i^.

Kochii Jacobi 46 and 211. Mexico. 1(.. June. latissima Jacobi 49. A. macroculmis Tod. H. B. Pan. t. 37. A. coccinea Hort. Mexico. 2^.
if. v.
;

Legrelliana Jacobi 253. Cuba. lophantha Schiede. Kunth, En. 838 Bah. Am. 167. Mexico, &c. %. July. caerulescens Salm. Bah. Am. 167. Mexico. July. Kew Bull. 1910, 344-349. A. mexicana Hort. lurida Mexico.^ July. macroacantha Zucc. Kunth, En. 834 Bah. Am. 177
ii.

Mexico.

M. sub

t.

8271.

A.

cjemini-

51.

,,

var.

2|.

Ait.

2^.

v.

B. M.

t.

5940; Bept. Miss. B. G. 1907, 247.


11.

t.

18-28.
i^.

Mexico.

var. planifolia Berger.


;

Mexico.
;

maculata Begel.Bah. Am. 196 B. M. t. 5122 Be2)t. Miss. B. G. 1896, t. 28. Texas, Northern Mexico. 4. June,
massiliensis Hort. Garden origin. mexicana Hort. = lurida.

micracantha Salm. Bah. Am. 191; Bef. Bot. 327. Mexico. July. miradorensis Jacobi. Bah. Am. 182. Mexico. %. 145. Mexico. mitraeformis Jacobi, Nachtr. Morrisii Bah. Am. 184. Jamaica. mortolensis Berger. Garden multiflora Tod. H. B. Pan. 35. Mexico. neglecta Small. oblongata Jacobi, Nachtr. 155 Bah. Am. 189. Mexico. U Ousselghemiana Jacobi, Nachtr. 156. Mexico. Palmeri Engelm.Bah. Am. 178 Bept. Miss. B. G. 1896, 48-52. Arizona. parrasana Berger Notizblatt Berlin. Bot. Gart. 1906, 250. Mexico. Parryi Engehn.Bah. Am. 175 Miss. B. G. 1896, 83. 42-43. Arizona, New Mexico. paucifolia Tod. H. B. Pan. Mexico. June. picta Salm = ingens. polyacantha Haiv. Bah. Am. 183, ex parte. Mexico. June. portoricensis Sp. Porto Eico.
if.,

t.

1;

i.

24.

2^.

origin.

!(..

ii.

47.

t.

2;.

21.

i.

i.

2|.

t.

S.

11.

in

If..

Be2)t.

t.

if..

i.

77.

t.

19.

if.

if.

Trel.

ined.

if.

14

HORTUS MORTOLENSIS
(continued).

AGAVE

Pringlei Hort. Mort. (not En(jelm.\).


June-July.

pumila De
rigicla

Smet.

Reginae Hort.
Auct.

Bah. Am. Mexico?


elongata.

Garden 172. Mexico.

origin.

2;.

if.

if.

Mexico. July. Rovelliana Tod. Ind. Sem. Hort. Bot. Pan. Mexico? 835 Bak. Am. 194 rubescens Salm. Kunth, En.
rigidissima Jacobi, Nachtr. ii. 150. Roezliana Bak. Am. 169. Mexico.
if.

if.

1;.

v.

BejJt.

Miss. B. G. 1907, 254.

rupicola Begel.

Salmiana
August.

Bak. Am. 190. Mexico. June-July. Otto. Bak. Am. 174. Mexico. Juneif.

t.

31-34. Mexico. if

if.

t. 6292; Bak. Am. 189.^. ccespifp H. B. Pan. i. 32. t. 8. Mexico, Guatemala. tosa Tod. Salm in Bonplandia, vii. 89. A. Wislizeni Engelm. scabra Bak. Am. 175. Northern Mexico. if:. schidigera Lem.Bak. Am. 166 B. M. t. 5641.Mexico.

Sartorii C. Koch.B. M.

If

June.

Shawii Engelm. Bak. Am. 172; Bept. Miss. B. G. 1896, 44-47. California. Prain, Notes on Ag. Furcr. Ind. sisalana Perrine. Drum, July. 89; Bak. Am. 181. Yucatan. sobolifera Salm. Bak. Am. 194. W. Indies.
Mexico.
If.
t.

Schlechtendalii Jacobi 54. Mexico. 1(.. Schottii Engelm. Bak. Am. 166; B. M. t. 7567 Bept. Miss. B. G. 1896, t. 29. Southern Arizona. if Scolymus Kano. Kimth, En. v. 824; Bak. Am. 176.
;

2|.

d-

>>

if

spectabilis Tod. H. B. Pan.

ii.

t.

25;

Bak. Am. 174.

Mexico.
striata
184.
,,

If.

spiralis Brandegee.

California. ^
En.
v.

Zucc Kunth,
Mexico.

832; B. M.
184.

t.

4950; Bak. Am.


832.

v..

July.

var.

recurva Bak. Am.

Kunth, En.

v.

Mexico.
striata

If

June-July.
vii.

Salm

in Bonplandia,
.

94.^. Hystrix Hort.

Mexico.

Tp

June-July.

tequilana Web. in Bull. Mtis. Par. 1902, 218. Mexico. 2;. Terraccianoi Pax. Keiu Bull. 1894, App. 28. Mexico? 2f

uncinata Jacobi

104.

Mexico.

1|.

HORTUS MORTOLENSIS

15

AGAVE
univittata Ha-w.Kunth, En. v. 835 Bah. Am. 167 t. 6655 Bef. Bot. t. 215. Mexico. 2|:.
; ; ;

B.

M.

utahensis Engelm.Bah. Am. 177;

Be2}t. Miss.

B. G. 1896,

Utah, Arizona. variegata Jacobi. Bak. Am. 196 Mexico. June.


t.

32.

1(..

Bef. Bot.

t.

326.

Northern
t.

2|.

VerschafFeltii

Lem.Bak. Am. 177;

Victorise-Reginae T. Moore.
June.
var.

Bak. Am. 169. Mexico. laxior Berger. Mexico. Villarum Hort.Nich. Diet. Garden
,,

Mexico.

Ref.

Bot.

306.
1(..

!(..

-ii.

Sup2}l. 28.

origin.

i^.

virginica
t.

L.Kunth, En.

1157; Ee23t. United States. 2^. vivipara Bak. = Cantata. Weberi Gels. Bull. Mus. Par. 1901, 230. Mexico. if Wercklei Web.Monatsschrft. f. K. 1907, 72 and 122. Costa Rica. if Tp

Bak. Am. 197; B. M. Miss. B. G. 1896, t. 26-27. Southern


v.

833;

Willdingii Tod. H. B. Pan.

ii. t.

32; Bak.

Am. 187. Mexico?,

Cuba? 2|.
Wislizeni Engelm. xalapensis Boezl.

Jacobi

scabra.

72 and Nachtr.
B.

i.

155.

Uxylonacantha Salm.Bak. Am. 168


Mexico.
,,
;

Mexico.
5660.

M.

t.

11

July.
var.

mediopicta -Hbri. if. Vanderdonckii Bak. in Gard. Chron. 1877, i. 527. If:. yuccsefolia Salm. Kunth, En. v. 830; Bah. Am. 195; B. M. t. 5213 Bed. Lil. t. 328-9. Mexico. if June-July. zapupe Trel. in Trans. Ac. Sci. St. Louis, xviii. (1909) 32.
,,

var.

Mexico.

If.

AGERATUM
If
.

L.N.

Pjf. iv. 5.

137. Composit-Eupatoriee2524;

Piquerinae.

mexicanum Sims

in B.

M.

t.

DC.

v. 108.

Mexico.

All the year.


Pjf.
iii.

AGONIS DC.N.
flexuosa Schau.
iii.

7.

94. Myrtaceae-Leptospermoidese-

Leptosperminae.
99.

DC. 226, sub Leptospermiim. FLAustr. W. Australia. July.


iii.
Tj
.

16

HORTUS MORTOLENSIS
Desf.

AILANTHUS

N.

Pff.

iii.

4.

223.

Simarubacese2532
;

Simaruboideae-Ailanthinae.

glandulosa Desf.DC. ii. 89 China. Hclb. Laubh. ii. 130.

Fl.
I?
.

cl'It.

n.

Schneider,

June-July.

AJUGA

orientalis

L.N. Pff. iv. 3a. 209. LabiataB-Ajugoicleae-Ajugese. L.DG. xii. 596; Fl. d'lt. n. 3065. Mediter-

ranean region.

2^.
xii.

March-April.

reptans

L.DG.

595

Fl. d'lt. n.

3064. Europe,

Asia.

2^.

March-April.

JAKEBIA

Decne.N.

Pff.
d
.

iii.

2.

60. Lardii^abalacese.
t.

lobata Decne.Sieb.
China, Japan.

Zucc. Fl. Jap.

78; B.

M.

t.

7485.

Tp

March-May.
;

quinata Decne.Sieb. & Zucc. Fl. Jap. t. 77 B. M. t. 4864 Fl. d. S. t. 1000. China, Japan. I? . March-May.

ALANGIUM Lam.B.
begoniifolium
goniifolia Roxb.

V. G. iv.

DG. Africa to Japan.


ip

Baill.

Wangerin, B. V.G.,
iv.

220

b.

20. Alangiacese.
I.e.
ii.

Marlea
743.

be-

267

Fl. Brit. Ind.

ALBERTA
magna
B. M.

E.

Mey.N.

Pff. iv. 4.

89. Rubiacec^-Coffeoidegei.

Guettardinae-Alberteae.

E. Mey.
t.

Harv. Thes. Gap.


Ciard. Ghron. 1897,
Pff.
iii.

t.

45

Fl. Gap.

iii.

16
.

7454

ii.

416. Natal. h

ALBIZZIA Dur.N.
soidese-Ingeae.

3.

106.

Leguminosffi-Mimo361
;

fastigiata E.
t.

Mey.Fl. Trop.
ii.

27.

Tropical Africa, Natal.


Boiv.DG.
ii.

Afr.
T?

ii.

Wood, Natal
ii.

PI.

Julibrissin
Brit. Ind.

469; Fl. Trop. Afr.


Tj

356; Fl.

300; Fl.

d'lt. n.

1857. Tropical and subJune.

tropical Asia

and

Africa.

lophantha Benth.Fl.
Australia.

Austr.

ii.

421. 5. M.
26.

t.

2108. S. W.
Tp

\^

All the year.

moluccana Miq.
stipulata Boiv.

Fl.
ii.

Fl. Ind. Bat.


Brit.

i.

Molucca Islands.
300.X>C.
ii.
.

Ind.

ii.
Ij

469.

Tropical and subtropical Asia.

July- September.

ALBUCA L.N. Pff.


Red. Lil.
Bed. Lil.
t.

5.65.~Liliaceae-Lihoide8e-Scillea3.
iv.

major L.Eunth, En.


69.

374
374
t.

Fl. Gap. vi. 454


24.

B. M. B.

t.

804 720

S. Africa.
iv.

June.
;

minor L.Kunth, En.


t.

Fl. Gap. vi. 454

M.

t.

21

Bef. Bot.

239. S. Africa. 2^.

June.

HORTUS MORTOLENSIS

17

ALBUCA

(continued).
Ca;p. vi.

tenuifolia Bak. in Bef. Bot. t. 335; Fl. S. Africa. March-April. n..

461.

ALLIUM

L.N. Pff. ii. 5. 55. Liliacege-AllioideEe- Allies. Chamgemoly L.Kwith, En. iv. 442 B. M. t. 1203
;
;

Bed.

Lil.

t.

325

Bichn. PI. Biv.

t.

77

Fl. d'lt. n.

707. Medi-

terranean region.

hymenorrhizum
Persia.

2^

polyphyllum

Kunth, En. March- April. Kar. Kir. Kunth, En.


Ledeh.
<&
.
;

i^.

March-April.

iv.

429.

Turkestan,

iv.

685.

Turkestan,
March-Apr.

N.China. 1^ March-April. Schuberti Zucc.B. M. t. 5787-8. Orient. senescens L. Kunth, En. iv. 421 B. M.

t.

2^

1150.

Siberia.

Europe,

2^.

strictum Schrad.
Europe, Orient.

Lodd. B. iv. 440 subhirsutum April-May. Fl. d'lt. n. 708. S. Europe. 4.


;

Kunth, En. March. L. Kunth, En.


14..

March- April.

iv.

419

Fl. d'lt. n. 704.

C.

t.

943

ALOE

L. N. Pff. ii. 5. 44. Lihaceae-Asphodeloidese-Aloineae. abyssinica Lam. Berger, Aloinece (in B. V. C. iv. 38. 3^) 237. fig. 87. DC. PI. Gr. t. 27.-5. M. t. 6620. TorZ. H. B. Pan.

February- April. Abyssinia, Eritrea. t. 29. !(.. Berger, Al. {B. V. C), 197. abyssinica x striata. Garden origin. if.. March-April.

sethiopica Berger, Al. (B.


Hort. Mort. B.

V.

Andrea
origin
.

Hort.
if.
.

M. Del

t.

7667.

arborescens Cape.
Tp
.

Berger,

Abyssinia.
Al. (B.
V.

C), 243.

A. Schiveinfurthii

Dec-March. 317. Garden C),


1(..

April.

Mill. var. Milleri Berger, Al. {B. V. C), 288.

November-December.
var.

frutescens Link.

Berger,

Al. (B. V. C),

293. S. Africa. I?.


var.

February-March,

Natal.
var.

natalensis Berger, Al. (B. V. C), 290. Tp December-February,

pachythyrsa
ip
.

Berger, Al. (B. V. C),

292.
288.

S. Africa.

var.
S.

December-March, C), Ucrise Berger, Al. (B. h January-February, Africa.


V.
.

var. viridifolia Berger, Al. (B. V. C),


S. Africa.

290.

February-March.

18

HOKTUS MOETOLENSIS
{contimied).

ALOE

aristata

Haw.

Berger, Al. {B.


=
striatula.

V.

C), 176. S. Africa.

2;.

May-June.
aurantiaca Bak.

Bainesii Dyer.Berger,

Al. {R. V. C),

319

B.

M.

t.

6818.

Natal bamangwatensis
I?

Schoenland.

Berger,
V.

Al. {B. V. C), 208.

Tropical South Africa.

1^.

Summer.
C), 177. Garden origin.

Baumii Engl, k Gilg = zehrina. Beguini Hort. Berger, Al {B.

,,

2^-

var. jyerfectior Hort.

= perfectior.
V.

Bortiana
origin.

Terr. fil.-Berger,
if..

Al. {B.

C),

197. Garden

April-May.
Al. {B. V. C),

Boylei Bah. Berger,


July.

170. S. E. Africa. 2;.


;

brevifolia

Mill Berger, A
14..

I.

{B. V. C), 185

DC.

PI. Gr.

t.

81.

S.Africa.
,,

var.

var.

Berger, {B. May-June. {B. postgenita Bak. Berger, May-June.


Al.
S. Africa.
2|.

June- July. depressa Bak.

V. C), 186.

Al.

V.

C), 185.

S. Afi'ica.

14..

var.

Serra Berger, Al. May-June. 14


.

{B. V. C), 186.

Buchanani Bak.
Land.
csesia

Berger,

Al.

{B.

V.

C),

167. Nyassa
S. Africa.
l?.

2|.

February.
Al. {B. V.

Sahn.Berger,

C), 299. S. Africa.

Spring-summer. Cameronii Hemsl.


263.

in B.

Tropical

M.
.

t.

Africa.

^
i^..

7915
April.

Berger, Al. (B. V. C),

camptjlosiphon Berger

lateritia.

capitata
t.

Bak. Berger,

36.

Madagascar.
Haw.Berger,

Al. {B. V. C), 254:. Tod.

H. B. Pan.

May.

ciliaris
Tj

Al. {B. V. C),

255. S. E. Africa.

?.

January-March,

ciliaris

commutata
{B. V.

x variegata. Garden origin. 14.. Tod. H. B. Pan. i. 75. t. 18 C), 214. S. Africa. 4. May.
{B. V. C), 167
;

Berger, Al.

Cooperi Bak.Berger, Al. S. Africa. May. 14.. Corderoyi Berger, Al. {B.
April.

B.

M.

t.

6377.
ip
.

V.

C), 324.

Garden origin.

HOETUS MOETOLENSIS

19

ALOE

Berger, {B.V.C.), 183. Garden U March-April. Davyana Schoenland. Berger, (B. C), 211. Transcy ajiea, Hort.
.

Al.

origin.

Al.

V.

vaal.

%.

March.

Dawei

Berger, Al. {B. V. C),

251. Uganda.
Al.

T?

De

Laetii Hort. Berger,

{B.

V.

origin.

C),

324. Garden
Africa.

2^

ip

June.
Al. {B. V. C),

dichotoma

L.

fil Berger,

317. S. W.
t.

f?-

distans Haiv.Berger, Al. {B. Tj Cape. June-July.

V.

C), 274; B. M.

1362.

Dorothese Berger, Tp March.

Al. {B. V. C), 263.

Tropical

E. Africa.

echinata Willd.
elegans Tod.

Immilis.
V. C.),168. S.E.Africa. 24

Ecklonis Salm.Berger, Al.{B.

abyssinica.
.

Engleri Berger, Al. {B. V. C), 252. Tropical E. Africa. T? May. eru Berger, Al. {B. V. C), 249. Eritrea, Nubia. Tj T? Abyssinia ? May. var. Gornnta Berger, Al, I. c. 250. ,,

t.

ferox

MillBerger, Al

{B. V. C), 310; B.

M.
.

1975.

Natal. Tp. March. var. xanthostachys Berger, Al, I c. March. 17 Georgetti Hort. Garden origin. 2| h gigantea Hort. DelBerger, Al {B. V. C), 317. Garden April, origin. if. ^ glauca Mill Berger, Al {B. V. C), 188. S. Africa. !?.
,,

February.

grandidentata Salm. Berger, Al.{B. V. C), 215. S. Africa. May. -!(.. Greatheadii Schoenlaml Berger, Al. [B. V. C), 212. S. Africa. !(.. A. pallidifiora Berger, B. M. t. 8122.

March-April.

Greenii Bak. Berger, Al {B.


S. Africa.

if.

V. C), 210; B. M. September-October.


et

t.

6520.

hsemanthifolia Marloth

Berger,

Al

(B. V.

C), 173.

Cape. 2|. Hanburyana Naudin


hereroensis
Africa.

= striata. Engl Berger, Al

{B.

V.

C), 204. S.
C), 217
B.

W.
t.

If..

heteracantha Bak Berger, Al {B. 6863 .Garden origin .If. May.

V.

M.

c2

20

HORTUS MORTOLENSIS
(continued).
Al. (B. V. C),
.

ALOE

Hildebrandtii Bak.Berger,

267

B. M.

t.

6981. Tropical E. Africa. h humilis Mill.Berger, Al. (B. V. C), 180

,,

S. Africa.

DC.

PI. Gr.

t.

39.

2^.

April-May.

var.

echinata Willd.
April.

Berger,

AL,
I.e.

I.e.

182.

2^.

var.

incurva Haw. Berger, Al., 828. S. Africa. 4. April.

182; B. M.
192.

t.

imbricata Hort.
origin.
14..

Berger,

Al.

[B.

V.

C),

Garden

insignis N. E.
origin.

Br. Berger,

Al.

{R.

V.

C), 183. Garden

if..

laetecoccinea Berger, Al. {B. V. C), 184. February- March. 11 T?


.

Garden

origin.

Lanzm Tod. =

Lapaixii Badl.

Berger, May. lateritia Engl. Berger,


4.
May.
laxiflora N. E.
^7

vera.

Al. {B. V. C), 178.

Garden

origin.

Al. (B.

V.

C), 199.

A. eampylo-

siphon Berger, B.M.


latifolia

t.

8134.
Al.

Hatv.Berger,

German E.Africa. July. (B. V. C), 204. S. Africa. 2^.


1(.
.

Br.Berger,

Al. {B. F. C),

255. S. Africa.

longiflora Bak.Berger, Al. {B. V. C), 299. S. Africa.


Tj
.

November-January.
Berger, Al. (B. V. C), 315; Bossche, le. Sel.
?
.

luteobrunnea
t.

40.

Garden origin h
B. Pan.
.

April.
i.

macrocarpa Tod. H. 209. Eritrea. if


Marlothii Berger,
mitis Berger, Al. (B.

36.

t.

Berger, Al. (B.V.C),

May.
C),226.

Al. (B. V. C),


V.

Somali Land?
.

mitriformis Mill.Berger, Al. t. 99 B. M. t. 1270. S. Africa. i? June. var. spinulosa Bak. Berger, Al.,
;

312. S. Africa. v. if. Summer. (B. V. C), 276 DC. PI. Gr.
I.

e.

277.

S. Africa.

Tp

mortolensis Berger, May- June. 1|:


.

Al. (B. V. C), 191.

Garden

origin.

myriacantha
S. Africa.

Boe^n.
2^.

&

Sehult.

Berger,

Al. {B. V. C), 166.

nobilis Haiu.-Berger, Al. (B. V. C), 278. S. Africa. Tp. June.

HOETUS MOETOLENSIS

21

ALOE
'pallidiflora

Berger

Greatheaclii.

Peacockii Berger

ahyssinica.

Peglerae Sciwenland.
vaal.

Berger, Al.

{B.

V.

C), 174.

Transt.

If.

pendens Forsk.Berger, AL

[B. V. C), 272

B.

M.

7837.

S.

Arabia.

T?

February-March.
i.

percrassa Tod. H. B. Pan.


perfectior Berger, Al. (B.

81.

t.

21

220. Eritrea, Abyssinia.


V.

Berger, Al. {B. V. C).

i|i.

May-June.

C), 177.

Garden

origin.

24:.

December.
Perryi Bak.-Berger,
Socotra.
plicatilis
Al. (B.
V.

C), 246; B. M.

t.

6596.

MillBerger,
t.

Al. {B. V. C), 332; B.


t.

DC.

PI. Gr.

75;

Jacq. H. Sch.

M. t. 457; 423. S. Africa. l?.

April-June.

pluridens Haw. Berger, February-March. pratensis Bak.Berger,


S.Africa.
7^.

Al. {B. V. C), 294.

S. Africa.

1?

Al. {B. V. C), 187

B. M.

t.

6705.

April-May.
origin.

Garden C), 213. Garden pseudopicta Berger, Al. (B. May. pungens Berger, Al. (B. C), 253. German E. Africa. April-June. C), 284. Africa. purpurascens Hatv. Berger, Al. {B.
prorumpens
21
.

Berger, Al. {B. V. C), 177.

April.

V.

origin.

71

V.

1/:

Tj

V.

S.

!(.

^2

April-June.

Quehlii Badl. 4. May.

14.

Rebutii
.

Berger, Al. (B. Hort. Berger, Al. {B.


S.

V.

C), 178.

V.

C),

Garden 191. Garden


V.

origin.

origin.

April. Al.

rubrolutea Schinz. Berger,


t.

{B.
.

C), 221

B. M.

8263. Tropical

W. Africa. Tj

rubroviolacea Schweinfurth. Berger, Al. {B. V. C), 296 March-April. B. M. t. 7882. S. Arabia. 1?
.

November.

rubroviolacea x supralaevis Berger, h March-April. Garden origin.

Al. {B. V. C), 298.

runcinata Berger,
June.

Al. {B. V. C), 205.

S.Africa.

if

May-

S2

HORTUS MORTOLENSIS
{continued).

ALOE

Salmdyckiana
S. Africa.

Schult.
.

fil.

Berger,

Al. {B.

V.

C), 301.
S. Africa.

T?

March-April.

var.

fulgens Berger, Al, T? March-April.


.

I.

c.

302.

saponaria Haiv.Berger, AL {B. V. C), 201 B. M. t. 1416. S.Africa. May-June. i;. Schimperi Tod. H. B. Pan. i. 70. 1. 16 Berger, Al. {B. V. C), 196. April. Garden origin. 21
;

Schiveinfurthii Hort. Mort.

smaragdina
origin.
14..

somaliensis Somali Land.

Berger, (B. May- June. C. Wright. Berger, Al.


Hort.
Al.
14..

cethiopica.
V.

C),
{B.

190.

Garden

V.

C), 236.

March-April.
V.

speciosa Bak.Berger, Al. {B. speciosa Hort. Berger, Al. {B. April-May. 11

Garden C), 183. Garden spinosissima Hort. Berger, Al. {B. 4. MarchC), 214. Garden origin? spuria Berger, Al. {B.

V. C), 281. origin.


.

C), 299. S. Africa. i?

V.

origin.

April.
V.

2|..

June.

stans Berger, Al. {B.

V.

C), 279. S. Africa.

Steudneri

Schtoeinfurth.

Berger,
May.

Tp

May.
C), 287.

Al.

{B.

V.

Berger, striata Naudin.^ S.Africa. striatula Haiv. Berger,


Hmv.

Eritrea, Abyssinia.

2^.

Al. {B. V. C),


14.

195. .1. Hanhuryana

April-May.

Al. {B. V. C), 258.

S. Africa.

Tp

May-June. succotrina Lam.Berger, Al. {B. V. C), 282; DC. PI. Gr. November. t. 85; B.M. t. 472. Cape. 1?. var. saxigena Berger, Al. [B. V. C), 283. ,, Fp November. Cape.
supralsevis Haiv. Berger, Al. {B. h March-April.
.

V.

C), 308.
309.

S. Africa.

var.

erythrocarpa Berger,

I.

c.

ip

Marchn

April.

tenuioY Haw. Berger, Al. {B. V. C), 257. S. Africa. T? . Thraskii Bak. Berger, Al. {B. V. C), 315. S. E. Africa.
tricolor

Bak.

variegata

= commutata. L. Berger, Al.


t.

(B.

V.

C), 188; B. M.

t.

513;

DC. PL

Gr.

21. S. Africa. 2^.

HORTUS MORTOLENSIS

23

ALOE
Varvari A. Borzi.
origin.

variegata x striata.

Garden Berger, Al.


{B.
V.

origin.

14..

{B.

V.

C), 305.

Garden
n.

I^

vera

h.Berger, AL
Tp
.

C), 228; Fl.

d'lt.

726.

Canaries, Cape Verde Isles, southern Mediterranean region.

December-June. var.Lanzae Berger, Al. {B.

V.

C), 230. If. B. Pan.

t.

39.

2^

Tp

June.
Al.

virens Haiv.Berger,
S. Africa.

{B. V. C), 179; B.

M.

t.

1355.

Vr.

Early summer.

Winteri Berger, Al. {B. V. C), 305. Garden origin. l?. December-February. zebrina Bak. Berger, Al. {B. V. C), 207. B. M. t. 7948. Tropical S. Africa. 4. August-April.

ALONSOA

Bz.

d Pav.N.

Pff. iv. 36.

53. Scrophulariacese.

Antirrhinoidese-Hemimerideae.
acutifolia Bz. <Pav.
x.

caulialata Bz.
incisifolia Bz.

Pav.

DC. 250. Peru. U October-June. DC. 250. Caracas, Mexico. U.


x. x.

October-June.

d Pav. DC.

250

B. M.

t.

417. Chili
October-June.

October-June.

linearis Bz.

&

Pav.

DC.
ii.

x.

250.

Peru.

1^

Aloysia Ort. & Pall.

Lippia.
6. 23.

ALPINIA L. N.
346. N.
Wright,
S.

Pff.

caerulea Benth.

Zingiberaceae-Zingibereae. Fl. Austr. 265; Schum. (B. C.


vi.

V.

iv. 46),

Wales. 24.
t.

V. C), 338.-5. M. t. 1900; 2028. India, China. ij:. nutans Boxh.Schuvi. {B. V. C), 3395. M. t. 1903 Fl. d. S. t. 2339; Fl. Brit. hid. vi. 256. Tropical Asia. 2^.
Ic.
;

calcarata Bosc. Schum. {B.

July-August.

ALSOPHILA

B. Br.N.

australis B. Br.

Hook.

Pff.

i.

4.

132. Cyatheaceee-Cyathese.

Syn. Fil. 40.

^
ALSTRCEMERIA L.N.
Pff.
ii.

Tasmania, Australia.

5.

119. Amaryllidace-Hy;

poxidoidese-Alstroemeriaceae

aurantiaca D. Don. Bak. Am. 141 B. M. t. 3350. ChiH. -U. May. Ligtu L.Bak. Am. 139; B. M. t. 125. Chili. 2^. May.

24

HORTUS MORTOLENSIS
(contmued).
;

ALSTRCEMERIA

pelegrina L.Bak. Am. 140


Peru, Chili. 2|.

B. M.

t.

139

Bed. Lil.

46.

May. pulchella L.Bak. Am. 136 May. 11


.

B. M.

t.

3033. N. Brazil.

ALTH^A L.N.
Orient.
ficifolia

Pff.

iii.

6.
i.

cannabina L.DC.

40. Malvaceae-Malveae-Malvinae. 436; Fl. d'lt. n. 2537. Europe,


t.

2|.

June-August.
i.

Cav.DC.

437; B. M.

7237. S. Europe,

Orient.

June-August.

narbonensis Pourr.
June-August.
officinalis

DC.
i.

i.

436. S. France,
Fl.
d'lt.

Spain.

1(..

L.DG.
!(..

436;

n.

2538. Europe,
S.

June- August. 2540. E. pallida Waldst. & Kit. DC. 437; Fl. Europe. June- August. 2539. 3198 Fl. rosea Cav.DC. 437 B. M. Orient. 4. June-July. Or. 827, suhAlcea. sulphurea Boiss. & Hohen. Boiss. Orient.
Orient.
i.

d'lt. n.

71

i.

t.

d'lt. n.

Fl.

i.

1^.

ALYSSUM
alpestre

DC.N.
L.DC.

Pff.

iii.

2.

194. Cruciferffi-Hesperidesed'lt. n.

Alyssinae.
i.

161; Fl.

1442. S. Europe. if. 1439. N.


Grcec.
i.

April-June.

argenteum Vitm.DC.

DC. 159 Hal. Consp. Fl. April-June. April-June. gemonense L. DC. 160. Europe. 1438. sub leucadeum Aprilcreticum L.
Crete.
i.
;

i.

160; Fl.

d'lt. n.

Italy.

!(..

April-June.

89.

if..

i.

if.

Giiss.

Fl. d'lt.

n.

Italy.

if

June.

montanum L.DC.
16; Fl.

i.

162

B. M.

t.

419

Bickn. PI. Biv.


if.

t.

d'lt. u. 1443.

Europe, Orient.
t.

April-June,

saxatile
If
.

L.DC.
L.

i.

160; B. M.

159; Fl.

d'lt. n.

1438.

April-May.

spinosum
S.

DC.

i.

164; Gard. Chron. 1903,


V^.

ii.

42.

Spain,

France, Algeria.

April-May.
iv.

ALYXIA

E. Br.

N.

Pff.

2.

151. Apocynacese-Plumie;

roideae-Plumiereae.

buxifolia B.

Br. DC.

viii.

348

FL

Austr.

iv.

307. N.

S.

Wales, Victoria.

HOETUS MOETOLENSIS

25

AMARANTUS L.N. Pff.


toidege-Amarantinae.

iii.

la. 102.

Amarantaceae-Amaraniv.

caudatus L.DC.

xiii. 2. 255 and other tropical countries.

Fl. Brit. Ind.

719. India

0.
;

Summer.

AMARYLLIS
lideae.

L.N.

Pff.

ii.

5.

106. AmaryllidaceEe-AmarylBah. Am. 95


;

Belladonna L.Kunth, En.


733.

^S.

Africa.

14..

v. 601 September.
ii.

B. M.

t.

AMBROSINIA L.N.
Bassii

Pff.
n.

3.

L.Fl.

cVIt.

537;

N.Africa.

151. Arace^-Aroideee-Arese. B. M. t. 6360. S. Italy, 318. Leguminose-Papito

2|.

March.
Pff.
iii.

AMICIA

H. B. K.N.

3.

lionatse-Hedysareae-^schynomeninae.

Zygomeris DC.
T7
.

ii. 315 B. M. November-April.


;

t.

4008. BoHvia

Mexico.

AMORPHA

L.N.

Pff.

iii.

3.

264. Leguminosffi-Papilionatseii.

Galegese-Psoraliinae.

fruticosa L.DC. 256; Florida. May-June.


.

croceo-lanata Wats. Schneider, Hdb. Laubh. Ip America. May-June.


ii.

73.

N.

Fl.

d'lt.

n.

2089. Carolina,
.

Tj

nana Nutt.B. M.

t.

2112. N. America. i?
Pff.
iii.

AMPELOPSIS
Vitis
1?

Schneider, Hdb. Laubh. 320; 634. China, Corea, Japan. Thmib.; DC. amurensis Planch. China, Manchuria. (Wilson 121, 157.)!? Delavayana Gagnep. China. [Wilson 124, 130, 149.) megalophylla Diels d Gilg. Schneider, Hdb. Laubh.
heterophylla
het.

Michx.N.
Sieb.

5.

449.Vitacese-Vitoidese.
ii.

&

Zilcc.

i.

,,

var.

n.

,,

var.

n.

T?

ii.

322. China. (MZsow n. 143.) l? . Veitchi Hort.^ Parthenocissus tricuspidata.

AMSONIA

Walt.N.

Pff.

iv.

2.

143. Apocynacee-Plumie-

roideae-Plumiereae-Alstoniinse.

DC. viii. 385. N. America. 4. ciliata Walt. Tabernsemontana Walt. DC. viii. 385; B. M.
Bossche, Ic. Sel.
t.

t.

1873;

69.

N. America.

14..

June-July.

Aviygdalus Tourn.

= Primus.

26

HOETUS MOETOLENSIS
L.N.
in B.
Pff.
iii.

ANACAMPSEROS

16.
;

arachnoides Sims

M.

t.

1368

57. PortulacaceEe. DC. iii. 355 Fl. Cap.


;

ii.

June-August. filamentosa Sims in B. M. 356; Fl. Cap. 1367; DC. 384; Berger, 3Iesembr. 305. S.Africa. June-July. depauperata Berger, Mesembr. 306. hispidula Berger, Mesembr. 305. Cape. quinaria E. Mey. Fl. Cap. 383 Berger, Mesembr. 300.
384; Berger, Mesembr. 305.

S. Africa.

2^.

t.

iii.

ii.

if..

,,

var.

!(..

if..

ii.

S. Africa.
,,

14..

var.

Schmidtii
74..
iii.

Berger,

Mesembr.

300.

rufescens DC. 356; 303. Africa.


Africa.
S.

S.

W.

Fl. Cap.

ii.

384; Berger, Mesembr.


Fl. Cap.

74.

June-July.

Telephiastrum DC.

iii.

355

DC.

PI. Gr.

t.

ii.

June-August. tomentosa Berger, Mesembr. 307. German S.W. Africa. 2; ustulata E. Mey.Fl. Cap. ii. 383 Berger, Mesembr. 301.
S. Africa.
!(..

383; Berger, Mesembr. 302.

S. Africa.

2^.

ANAGYRIS
foetida

L.N.

Pff.

iii.

3.

201. Leguminosse-Papilionataet.

Podalyrieae.

Mediterranean region. December-March. ANANAS Adans. N. Bromeliaceae-Bromelieae. macrodonta E. Morr. Bah. Brom. Brazil
Tp
.

L.DC.

ii.

99

Lodd. B. C.

740

Fl. d'lt. n. 1862.

Pff.

ii.

4. 45.

24.

2(.

ANCHUSA
Spring.
italica

L.N.

Pff.

iv.

3tt.

114. BorraginacecB-Borra-

ginoideoe-Anchuseae.

capensis Thunb.DC.

x.

45

B.

M.

t.

1822. S. Africa. 0.
;

Betz.DC.
t.

x.

47

Biv.

40; Fl.

d'lt. n.

2809.

Lodd. B. C. t. 1383 Bickn. PI. Mediterranean region. .

Spring.

ANDROMEDA
Carolina.

L.N.

Pff'.

iv.

1.

42. Ericaceffi-Arbutoidese;

AndromedeaB.

floribunda Pursh.DC.

vii.

598

B. M.

t.

1566. Georgia,

ANDROPOGON
pogonee.
n. 110.

L.N.

Pff.

ii.

2.

26. Graminese-Andro;

Ischsemum L.Kunth, En.

^Europe, Asia, Africa.

i.

499

Moggr.

t.

73

Fl. d'lt.

14..

May-July.

HOETUS MOETOLENSIS

27

ANDROPOGON
iii.

provincialis Lam.
466.

Kunth, En. 499 Gren. d Godr. Fl. Fr. Sorghum Brot.Kimth, En. 501; Fl. Brit. Lid. 183; Fl. Cap. 347. Tropics. ^O. Summer. 505. squarrosus L. Kunth, En. Aprili.
;

(continued).

S.

France.

2|.

i.

vii.

vii.

i.

^Tropics.

i;.

September.

ANEMONE
S.

L.

N.

Pjf.

iii.
i.

2. 61.

Eanunculacese-Anemoneae.
M.
t.

coronaria L.DC.
Em-ope, Orient.

18; B.
1(..

841; Fl.

d'lt. n.

1564.

decapetala Arduini. DC. i. 19. N. Europe, Asia, America. May. !(.. fulgens /. Gay.DC. i. 18; Moggr. t. 1; Fl. d'lt. n. 1563. S.Europe. January- April. 2|.

February-April.

,,

var.

pavonina DC.
14.

i.

18

Moggr.
10

t.

1.

S.

Europe.
1

January- April.
i.

Hepatica L.DC.
Fl. d'lt. n. 1565.

22

B. M.

t.

Bickn. PI. Biv.


!(..

t.

Europe, N. Asia.
t.

March-April.
t.

japonica

October-November. montana Hoppe. Gren. & Godr. Fl. Fr. i. 11. Europe, Caucasus. April-May. 14.. patens L. DC. i. 16. Europe, N. America. if. April-May. pratensis L.DC. i. 17; Fl. d'lt. n. 1554 y. Central Europe. April-May. !(..
If..

Sieb.

&

Zucc. Fl. Jap.

5; B.

M.

4341.

Japan.

i.

Pulsatilla

L.DC.
if..

17;

Fl. d'lt.

n.

1554. Europe, N.
i.

America.

March-April.
i.

rivularis Bitch.DC.

21
18;

Fl. Brit. Lid.

Wight,

Ic.

t.

936. India. 21:. stellata Lam.DC.


Europe.
if.

i.

B.

M.

t.

123; Moggr.

t.

Januaryvirginiana L. DC. 21 America.


i.

2. S.

April.
;

Baillon,

Mon. Ban.
i.

i.

81-2.

N.
t.

If.

vitifolia

Buck.DC. 3376. Himalaya.


Cav.N.

i.

21

Fl. Brit. Lid.

8;

B.

M.

21:

ANGOPHORA
cordifolia

Pff.

iii.

7.

89. Myrtacese-Leptosperiii.

moidege-Eucalyptinae.

Cav.DC.

iii.

222

Fl. Austr.
S.

183
184.

B.

M.

t.

1960; Lodd. B. C.

lanceolata Cav.
land, N. S.

DC.

t.

106. N.
iii.

Wales. T?
iii.

222; Fl. Austr.

Queens-

Wales. I?.

28

HORTUS MORTOLENSIS
Labill.N.
176
Pff.
ii.

ANIGOZANTHUS

5.

124. Amaryllidacese;

Hypoxidoideae-Conostylideae.

flavidus Bed. Lil.

t.

Fl. Austr. vi. 443

B.

M.

t.

1151.

W. Australia.
jANISACANTHUS
coGcineus
Ic. Sel.

if..

Nees.N.

Pff. iv. 3b.

328. Acanthaceaexi.

Acanthoideae-Graptophyllese.
0. Ktze.
33.

t.

Wrightii

A. virgularis Nees. DC. 445; Bossche, November-December. America. 328. N. America. A. Gray. Syn. Fl. Am.

S.

I?

ii.

Tp

September-October.

lANONA L.N.
1900,
ii.

Pff.

iii.

2.

37. Anonacese-Xylopiese.
i.

Cherimolia MillDC.
460.

85

B. M.
(?

t.
.

2011

Gard. Chron.

Tropical America.
Pff.
iii.

June.

ANOPTERUS

Labill.N.

2a.

81. Saxifragaceaeii.

Escallonioideae.

glandulosa Labill.DC. 4377. Tasmania. f?

iv.

6; Fl. Austr.

439; B. M.

t.

ANTHEMIS
Orient.

L.N.

Pff. iv. 5.

271. Compositse-Anthemideae;

DC. 11 Fl. 3586. Europe, May-June. Caucasus, Biebersteiniana C. Koch. Nich. Diet. Gard. May-June. Orient. 292. Syria. Spring. Blancheana J5ows. Fl. Or. 3581 Cupaniana Todaro. Fl.
austriaca Jacq.
if..

Antliemidinae.

vi.

d'lt. n.

83.

If.

iii.

2|:

d'lt.

n.

(S.

Sicily.

if.

Spring.

nobilis
If.
.

L.DC.
June.

vi.

Fl. d'lt. n.

3577. W. &
Fr.
ii.

S.

Europe.
284.

santolinoides
Algeria.

if.

Manby.Bidl. May-June.

Soc.

(1855)

lANTHOCERCIS

LabillN.
;

Pff.

iv.

36.

36. Solanacese;

Salpiglossoideae.

viscosa B. Br.DC. x. 191 Fl. Austr. iv. 475 B. M. t. 2691; Gard. Chron. 1895, i. 391. W. Australia. i? May-June.

JANTHOLYZA
Gladioleae.

L.N.

Pff.

ii.

5.

156. Iridaceae-Ixioideaevi.

aethiopica L.Bak. h-id. 230; Fl. Cap. 561. February-April. S. Africa. If.

167; B. M.

t.

HORTUS MORTOLENSIS

29

ANTHOXANTHUM
larideae.

L.N.

Pff.

ii.

2.

43. Gramiuese-Pha2|.

amarum
June.

Brot.

Kunth,
iii.

En.

i.

38.

Portugal.

May-

ANTHYLLIS L.N. Pff.


Loteae.

3.

254. Leguminos^-Papilionatse169;

Barba-Jovis L.DC.
Biv.
t.

ii.

16;

Fl. d'lt.

n.

B. M. t. 1927; Bickn. PL 2034. S. Europe. Tj. April-

May.
cytisoides L.

DC.

ii.

169.

Spain,

S.

France.

i?

April-

May.

Hermannise L.DC.
2035.

ii.

169;

B. M.
d'lt. n.

t.

2576; Fl.
T?
.

d'lt. n.

Mediterranean region, Orient.


ii.

montana L.DC.
April-May.

170; Fl.

May-June. 2033. Europe. 2^.

ANTIRRHINUM

L.N.

Pff'.

iv.

Sb.

59. Scrophulariacese-

Antirrhinoideae-Antirrhineae.

Asarina L.DC. x. 292 W. <& L. Fl. Hisp. ii. 586. Spain, S. France. %. Spring. glutinosum Boiss. d; Beut.W. <& L. Fl. Hisp. ii. 584; B. M. t. 7285; The Garden, 1904, ii. 424. Spain. 2]!. May;

October.

hispanicum Chav.DC.
Spain
44.
.

x.

291;

W. d L.
2929
n.

Fl. Hisp.

ii.

584.
t.

74.

May-October.
x.

-latifolium DC.

291

Fl. d'lt. n.

Bickn. PI. Biv.

W. Europe. 14.. majus L.DC. x. 291;


S.

April-September.
Fl.
all

d'lt.

2930. S. Europe,

N.America.

!{-.

Nearly

maurandioides A. Gray. Proc. Am. Acad. vi. (1868) 376. Texas. 2|:. siculum Ucria.DC. x. 291; Fl. d'lt. n. 2931. Mediterranean region.
!(..

the year.

June-October.
2. 51.

APERA Adans.N.

arundinacea Hook.

Gramineae-Agrostideae. Hdb. Fl. N. Zeal. 326 Journ. B. Hort. Soc. 1897, ccxv. New Zealand.
Pff.
ii.

fil.

!(..

APHYLLANTHES L.N
deloideae- Aphyllantheae

Pff.

ii.

5.

47. Liliace^e-Aspho;

monspeliensis
Fl. Ment.
Africa.
t.

L. Kunth,
89;
April.

En. 647

Fl. d'lt. n.

B. M. t. 1132 Moggr. 715. S. France, Spain, N.


;

if.

30

HOETUS MOKTOLENSIS
Willd.N.
Pff.
ii.

APICRA

5.

46. Liliaceae-Asphodeloideae(B. V. C), {B.


V.

Aloineae.

buUulata Willd.Berger, Al. congesta Bak.Berger, Al. Summer.


Cape.

11.

116. Cape. 2|.

C), 118.

Cape.
t.

2|.

deltoidea Bah.Berger, Al. {B.

V.

C), 118; B. M.
V.

6071.

Summer. var. intermedia Cape. U.

Berger, Al. {B.

C), 120.

var.
If-

turgida Berger,
.

Al. {B. V. C), 118.

Cape.
t.

Summer. M.
1352.
1.

foliolosa Willd.Berger, Al. {B. V. C), 120; B.

Cape.

U.
Al. {B. F. C), 117; B.

pentagona Willd.Berger, Summer. Cape. 11.


Skinneri Berger,
B.
ilf. t.

M.

1338.

Al. {B. V. C),

spiralis Bak.Berger, Al. {B. V. C), 117

1455. Cape. 2|.

116. Cape. 2|. DC. PI. Summer.


;

Gr.

t.

56;

APIOS

Moench.

N.

Pff.

iii.

3.

365.

Leguminosae-Papilionatae;
;

Phaseolese-Erythrininae.

tuberosa Moench.DC.
2186.

ii.

N. America. U
Pff.
iii.

390 B. M. t. 1198 June-July.

Fl. d'lt. n.

APIUM

L.N.

8.

184. Umbelliferge-Apioiclese-Ammi101;

nese-Carinae.

graveolens L.DC.

iv.

Fl

d'lt.

n.

2276. Europe,

Asia, Africa, S. America.

.
179. Apocynaceae-Echitoideaeviii.

APOCYNUM

L.N.

Pff. iv. 2.

Echitidese.

androssemifolium L.
N. America.
44.

DC.
viii.

439;

B.

M.

t.

280.

if.

June-July.

cannabinum L.DC.
t.

439;
June.

Bept. Miss. B. G. 1898,

N. America.

2^.

APONOGETON

Thunb.N.

Dinteri Engl, d Krause. B. V. C. iv. 13, 14. German S.W. Africa. i;. May-June. distachyum Thunh.Fl. Cap. vii. 43; B. V. C. iv. 13, 21; Nearly all the year. B. M. t. 1293. S. Africa. 2^.

Pff.

ii.

1.

222. Aponogetonacese.

AQUILEGIA L.N.
borese.

Pff.

iii.

2.

59. Eanunculaceae-Hellei^.

ccBrulea James.

B. M.

t.

5477.

N. America.

May.

HORTUS MORTOLENSIS
AQUILEGIA
May.
{continued).
<&

31

flabellata Sieh.

Zucc.

Nich. Diet. Suppl.

78.

Japan.

2|

formosa DC.

May. i. 50; Fl. cl. S. t. 795. Siberia. 2^. glandulosa Fisch. DC. i. 50. Siberia. 2^. May. Skinneri Hook.B. M. t. 3919. Mexico. i^. June. vulgaris L.~DC. i. 50; Fl. d'lt. n. 1626. Europe. 2^:.

May- June.

ARABIS L.N.
Turritinae.

Pff.

iii.

2.

193.

Cruciferae-Hesperideaet.

albida Stev.DC. i. 142 ranean region, Orient.


bellidifolia
H.
.

Lodd. B. C.
i^.

1459. Mediter-

i.

April.

Jacq.DC.

147; Fl. d'lt. n.

1337. Europe.

April.
Pff.
iii.

JARALIA L.N.
Abeli Hort.

{Lemoine, 1906). angustifolia Hort. {Lemoine, 1906). Baueri Hort. {Lemoine, 1906).
^>
v^

8.

56. Araliaceae-Aralieae.
(?
.

Cunninghamii Hort. {Lemoine, 1906). elegantissima Hort. Veitch. h knightisefolia Hort. {Lemoine, 1906). h. leodiensis Hort. {Lemoine, 1906). h. mexicana Hort.
.

Chabrieri Hort.Bev. Hort. Belg. 1887, 20. i? chinensis L. DC. iv. 259; Nich. Diet. i. 104; Hdh. Lmcbh. ii. 431. China. -ip

Schneider,

^ij.

^>

palmata Hort. = Oreopaiiax palmatus. papyrifera Hook. = Tetrapanax impyrifer.


quinquefolia Hort.
Sieboldi Hort.
trifoliata Hort.

Pseiidopanax crassifolins.

Schefferi Hort. i?

= Fatsia japonica. = Pseudopanax crassifolius.

tARAUCARIA

Juss.

N.

Pff.

ii.

1.

67.

Pinaceae-Abietineaevi.

Araucariinae.

Bidwilli Hook.DC.
t.

xvi. 2.

371

Fl. Austr.

243

Fl. d. S.

2221-2. Queensland. T? brasiliensis A. Rich.DC. xvi.


Brazil.

2.

370; Fl.

d. S.

t.

2202.

ij

Cunninghamii Sweet.DC. xvi.


Queensland, N.
S.

2.

371; Fl. Austr.

yi.

243.

Wales.

(?

32

HORTUS MOETOLENSIS
(continued).

ARAUCARIA
excelsa B.

Br.DC.

xvi. 2.

372

Fl. d. S.

t.

2304-5. Nort.

folk Island.

Tp

imbricata Pav.DC.
Chili.
I?.

xvi.

2.

370

Fl. d. S.

1577-80.

ARAUJIA
DC.

Brot.N.

Pff.

iv.

2.

228. Asclepiadaceae-Cynanangustifolia Hook.

choideae-GlossonematinsB.

megapotamica
viii.

G. Don.

A.
iv.

& Arn.
Summer.

534. S. Brazil T? . sericifera Brot. DC. viii. 533.

S. Brazil.

i? .

ARBUTUS

L.

N.

Pff.

1.

48. Ericacese-ArbutoideaeB.M.
t.

ArbuteaB.

Andrachne L.DC.vii.

582;

2024. Crete, Greece.

Tp

January-March.
Veill.

canariensis
n.

Unedo L.~DC.
S.

DC 582; 2654. Europe.


vii.
V^

vii.581; B.M.t. 1577.

Canaries.
123;
Pff.
ii.

Tp

Lodd. B. C.
.

t.

Fl. d'lt.

November-March.

jARCHONTOPHCENIX
Cunninghamii Wendl.
Chron. 1902,
i.

We^idl.

Dr.

N.

3.

75.
Gard.

Palmae-Ceroxylinae-Arecinae-AreceEe.
d-

Dr.

Fl.

Austr.

vii.

141

19. {Seaforthia elegans

R. Br.).

Queensland,

N.

S.

Wales. 1?.
Adans.N.
vi.

ARCTOSTAPHYLOS
tomentosa Lndl.

Pff.

iv.

1.

48. Ericaceseij

Arbutoidese-Arbuteae.

DC.
Pff'.

585.
5.

California, Mexico.
:

ARCTOTIS L.N.
Arctotidese.

iv.

308. Compositae-TubiflorseB.

aspera L.
S. Africa.

var.
if..

arborescens DC. vi. 488 Spring and summer.

M.

t.

6528.

Leichtlini N. E.
carpha.

Br. Gard.

S. Africa.

lyrata Harv.

Summer. revoluta Jacq.DC. vi. 488; B. M. t. 6835. S. Africa. 2; Spring and summer. Fl. Cap. iii. 465, sub Haplocarpha. scaposa Harv.
11.

Fl. Cap.

Chron. (1883)

i.

78,

sub Haplo-

2|.
iii.

June-September. 465, sub Haplocarpha.

S. Africa.

S. Africa.

1(.

stoechadifolia

Berg. DC.
1^.

vi.

488;

Fl.

Cap.

iii.

455.

S.W.

Africa.

Spring and summer.

HOETUS MOKTOLENSIS
ARDISIA
Siv.N.
Pff.
iv.
1.

33

93. Myrsinaceae-Myrsinoideaet.

Ardisiege.

crispa A.

DCA.
=
Ip

crenata
236.

1950; B. V. C.
latifolia Sieber

iv.

Sims.DC. viii. 134; B. M. 144. China. T?


viii.

Oncostemon.
135; B. V. C.
iv.

odontophylla Wall.DC.
India, Java.

236.

150.

Arduina L.

Areca Baueri Hook. sapida Sol. ,,

= Carissa L. = Kentia Baueri. = sapida.


,,

ARENARIA
capillaris

L.

noideaB-Alsinege.

N. Poir. DC.

Pff.

iii.

lb. 84.

Caryophyllaceae-Alsi1(.. 1(..

graminifolia Arduini.

DC.
i.

i.

403.

N. Asia, N. America. 401. Dalmatia.


i.

Italy,

May-June.
serpyllifolia

L.DC.

411

Fl. d'lt. n.

1115.Europe,

temperate Asia.

if..

May-June.
Pff. iv.
1.

tARGANIA

Boem.

<&

Schult.N.

145. Sapotacese-

Palaquieae-Sideroxy linae

Sideroxylon Boem. <& Schult. DC. viii. ij June, November-December.

187.

S.W. Morocco.

ARGEMONE

Town.

N.

Pff.

iii.

2.

141.

Papaveraceae-Papa;

veroidese-Papavereaj.

Fedde, Gardr. Chron. 1907, ii. 113 grandiflora Sweet. Papav. {B. V. C.) 280. Mexico. 2|:. May-October. mexicana L.DC. i. 120 B. M. t. 243 Fedde, Papav.
; ;

{B. V. C.)

273. Mexico. 0.
Pff.
iv.

May-September.

ARGYREIA

Lour.N.

3a.

20. Convolvulacege-Con-

volvuloidese-Argyreiinse.

megapotamica
Argentina.

Griseb. in

Goett. Abh. xxiv. 1879, 263.

f?

speciosa Siueet. DC. ix. 328; Fl. Brit. Ind. iv. 185; Wight, Ic. t. 851 B. M. t. 2446. India, Java, China. l? .
;

ARGYROLOBIUM
Andre V7sianum
t.

Eckl.

d Zeyh.N.

Pff.

iii.

3.

232.Legu-

minoste-Papilionatse-Genisteae-SpartiinaB.
Steud.

Fl.

Cap.

ii.

75

Bossche, Ic. Sel.

177. Cape. I?. -argenteum Walp.DC. ii. 156; Ard. Fl. Alp. M. 94; Bickn. Western Mediterranean region. 1(. I? PI. Biv. t. 14.

April-May.

34

HORTUS MORTOLENSIS
Scheichu.

ARIOCARPUS

N.

Pff.

iii.

6a. 195.

Cactaceae-

Cereoideae-Mamillarieae.

fissuratus K. Schum. Mon. Cact. 600; Be2)t. Miss. B. G.

Summer. 1898, t. 32. Mexico. 4. Kotschubeyanus K. Schum. Mon. Cact. 606 B. G. 1898, t. 33. Mexico. 24:. Summer.
prismaticus Scheidw.
t.

Bept. Miss.

K.
Pff.

Schum. Mon. Cact. 605


October.
ii.

B. M.

7279.Mexico. 2^:.

ARISiEMA Mart.N.
Arese.

3.

150.

Araceae-AroideaeRumphia,
i.

ringens Schott.
Japan.
14..

Kunth,
April.

En.

iii.

17

t.

98.

ARISARUM
='=vulgare

L.N. Pff. ii. 3. 149. Arace^-Aroideas-Arege. proboscideum Savi. Kunth, En. iii. 15 B. M. t. 6634 April. i^Z. cZ'Z^. n. 536. Italy. 2(.

Fl. cVIt. n. 535.


April.

Targ.-Tozz. Kunth, En. iii. 15; B. M. t. 6023; OctoberMediterranean region. i^.

ARISTEA

Soland.

Aristeae.

corymbosa
t.

N. Benth. Bak.
Pff.
t.

ii.

5.

152.

Iridaceae-Iridoideae;

Irid.

895

Bed. Lil.
Irid.

453

145 Fl. Cap. vi. 55 B. M. Lodd. B. C. t. 254. Cape Colony.


;

nEckloni Bah.
54.

144

Wood, Nat.

PI.

t.

68

Fl. Cap. vi.

Kaffraria, Natal. U.
Pff.
iii.

[ARISTOLOCHIA L.N.
Aristolochieae.

1.

272. Aristolochiaceaet.

Goett. Abh. 471 brasiliensis Mart. DC. xv. Summer.


argentina Griseb. Summer. 2^
.

altissima Desf.DC. xv. 1. 489; B. M. n. 955. Eastern Mediterranean region.

6586; Fl.

d'lt.

If .

Summer.

xix. 1874, 156.

Argentina.

1.

B. M.

t.

4120. Brazil.

2|.

elegans Mast.B. M. t. 6909. Brazil. i? . Summer. fimbriata Cham.DC. xv. 1. 454; B.M. t. 3756. Brazil. May-June. If. grandiflora Swartz.DC. xv. 1. 472; B. M. t. 4368-9. Tropical America. July-November. If . Moggr. t. 87 Bickn. PL pallida Willd.DC. xv. 1. 487
.

Biv.

t.

52.

Europe, Asia Minor.

if.

Spring.

HOETUS MORTOLENSIS

35

ARISTOLOCHIA
t.

{continued).
xv. 1.
n.

rotunda L.DC.
52
;

487
957.

Fl.

d'lt.

Mediterranean
1.

Moggr.

t.

64

Bickn. PI. Biv.


region.

2^

Spring.

sempervirens L.DC.
T? .

xv.

489

B. M.

t.

1116. Crete.

April-December.
L'Her.

ARISTOTELIA
Aristotelieae.

N.

Pff.

iii.

6.

8. Elseocarpaceae-

fruticosa Hook. fil.Hdb. Fl. N. Zeald. 33. New Zealand.

f?ii.

Macqui L'Her.DC.

56

Miers, Gontr.

ii.

t.

80. Chili.
t.

racemosa Hook. fil.Hdb.

Fl.

New Zealand.
Chrysantheminae.

N. Zeald. 33

B. M.

7378.

Tp

ARTEMISIA L.N.
ranean region.
Madeira.

Pff.

v.

281. Compositge-Anthemidese121
;

arborescens L.DC.

vi.

Fl. d'lt. n.

3552. Mediter-

I^

June-July.
vi.

argentea L'Her.DC.

120; Loioe, Man. Fl. Mad.

451.

ip

June-July.
;

camphorata Vill.DC. vi. 121

Fl. d'lt. n.

3551. S. Europe.
2^.
i?

June- July.

gnaphalodes Nutt.

DC.
vi.
vi.

vi.

115.

N. America.

DC. 103. Europe, Caucasus, June-July. 114. Mexico. mexicana Willd. DC. 103. Europe, Caucasus, nutans Willd. DC. 94. Caucasus, salsoloides Willd. DC. 119. N. America, Kamtschatka. Stelleriana Bess. DC. %. June- July. 203. Western North America. tridentata Nutt. Bef. June-July.
maritima L.
2|
.

hololeuca Bieh.DC.

112. S.W. Europe. 1|:

Siberia.

vi.

li

Tj

vi.

Siberia.

vi.

Siberia.

ip

vi.

Bot.

t.

Tp

variabilis

Ten.DC.
21
.

vi.

94

Fl. d'lt. n.

3565 /?. S.

Italy,

Spain

May- July
B. Br.N. Pff.
ii.

ARTHROPODIUM

5.

35. Liliaceae-Aspho;

deloidese-Asphodeleee-Anthericinae.

cirrhatum B. Br.Hdh. Fl. N. Zeald. 285 New Zealand. %. June-July.

B. M.

t.

2350.

D 2

36

HOETUS MORTOLENSIS
L.N. Pff. ii. 3. 147. Araeeae-Aroidete-Arese. hygrophilum Boiss. Fl. Or. v. 37. Syria. If. April-May. palsestinum Boiss. Fl. Or. v. 37 B. M. t. 5509 Gard. Chron. 1893, 101. Syria, Palaestina. 2^. April-May. pictum L.Gr. d Goclr. Fl. Fr. iii. 331 Fl. d'lt. n. 528.

ARUM

i.

Corsica.

2|.

October.

ARUNDINARIA
busege.

Michx.N.

Pff.

ii.

2.

91. GraminesB-Bam;

falcata Nees.Fl. Brit. Ind.

vii.

381
vii.

Nich. Diet.
B. M.

i.

118.

Himalaya. Falconeri Benth.Fl.


T^

Brit. Bid.

383

t.

7947.
tp

India.

Hindsii

Satotv,

Bamb. Jap. 49, with plate.

Japan, China.
;

Bamb. Gard. 167. Himalaya. ^ B. mitis, japonica Sieb. Freem. Bamb. Gard. B. Metahe. Japan. 381. Himalaya. khasiana Munro. Fl. Brit. Bid. Biv. Bamb. Jap. 82, with plate Simoni A. d
.

var. graminea Freem. Mitf. Bamb. Gard. 110. Japan. ^j Hookeriana Munro. Fl. Brit. Ind. vii. 382 Freem. Mitf.

t.

2.

Tp

vi.

'^

G.

Satoio,

B. M.

t.

7146. China, Japan. T?


Pff.
ii.

ARUNDO
,,

L.N.

2.

68. Gramineffi-Festucea3.
;

Donax L.Kunth,
N. Africa.

1(

Tp

En. i. 189 Fl. d'lt. n. 210. S. Europe, September-October.

var. foliis variegatis.


Pff.
iv.

ASCLEPIAS L.N.
curassavica L.
Islands.

2.

238. Asclepiadacese-Cynan;

choideae-Asclepiadeae.

DC.

viii.

566

Lodd. B.

C.

t.

349.

Antilles
t.

I?

Summer.
;

Douglasii HookNich. Diet. Gard. 119 N. America. 2|. July-September.

Fl. d. S.

426.

Hallii A. Gr.Gard. Chron. 1900,

ii.

183. N. America. 2f.

DC. July567. N. America. U. 564. Mexico. Julylanuginosa Kunth. DC. September. Ktinth. DC. 570. Mexico, N. America. Imif 565. N. America. phytolaccoides Pursh. DC.
incarnata L.
September.
viii. viii.

July-September.

if.

oYia.

viii.

2f.

viii.

1(..

July-September.

HOETUS MOETOLENSIS
ASCLEPIAS
(continued).
viii.

37

purpurascens L.DC.

564

N. America. syriaca L. DC.


September.

Torr. Fl. N. York,

ii.

t.

14.

!(..

viii.

564.

N.

America.

t.

if.

July-

DC. 567; Locld. B. G. 1297. N. July-September. verticillata L.DC. 569; Lodd. B. C. 1067. N. America. June-October. ASIMINA Adans. N. Anonaceae-Uvarieae. triloba Dun. DC. 87 Nich. Diet. 159 Schneider, 347. Pennsylvania. Hdb. Laubh.
tuberosa L.
America.
viii.
If..

viii.

t.

If.

Pff.

iii.

2. 31.

i.

i.

fig.
.

i.

I?

ASPARAGUS

L.N.

Pff.

ii.

5.

77. Liliaceae-Asparagoideaev.

Asparageae.
^^acutifolius

L.Kunth, En.

65

Fl. d'lt. n.

terranean region.

\^

736. Medi-

ip

July-October.
v.

aphyllus L.Kunth, En.


ranean region.
S. Africa.
T?

66

Fl. d'lt. n.

Jacq. H. Sch. 266 Cap. 263. Caspian Sea. July. caspius Kunth, En. comorensis Hort. Gard. Chron. 1898, 179. Comoro Islands. h 263. Cooperi Bak. Fl. Cap. JuneJuly. 259; Kunth, En. crispus Lam. Fl. Cap. cumhens Jacq. H. Sch. February. N. June. davuricus Fisch. Ktmth, En. 75 Fl. Cap. laricinus Burch. Kunth, En. 267 Gard.
capensis L.
t.
;

737. Meditervi.

Fl.

v. 64.

if.

i.

fig.

72.

If.

vi.

S.

Africa.

ip .

vi.

iv. 77.

ji.

de-

t.

51.^

S. Africa.

2f..

v. 64.
;

Asia.

2f

v.

vi.

122. S. Africa. T? madagascariensis Bak. in Journ. Linn. Soc. xvi. 206; B. M. t. 8046. Madagascar. T? Kunth, En. v. 63. Eussia, Caucasus, maritimus Pall.
Chron. 1898,
i.

Persia.

2^.

medeoloides
B.

Thunh.

Fl.

Cap.

vi.

272.
;

asparagoides Willd.

Kunth, En.
.

v.

M.

t.

5584. S. Africa. If
En.
v.

105 Bed. Lil. March-April.


d'lt. n. 735.

Myrsiphyllum t. 442
;

officinalis L.

Kunth, Caucasus, Siberia.

var. angustifolius BaA;.

Fl. Cap.Yi.2T2.

60; Fl.

Europe,

if ,

If.

May-June.

38

HOETUS MOKTOLENSIS
{continued).
S.
t.

ASPARAGUS

plumosus Bak.Fl Cap. vi. 260; Fl. d. Chron. 1898, i. 146. S. Africa. Tp .
retrofractus L.
S. Africa.

2413-4; Gard.
266.

K^mth,

June.
Fl. Cap.
vi.

En.
v.

v.

88;
S.

Europe, N. spinosus Hort. Wildpr. Canaries. Fl. Cap. 271 Gard. Chron. 1905, Sprengeri 10 B. M. June-July. 8052. Natal. 265. Cape. suaveolens Burch. Fl. Cap. 68. Asia Minor. verticillatus L. Kunth, En.
scaber Brign.
En.
62.

Tp

Ktmth,

Africa.

U;

T? .

Becjel.
t.

vi.

i.

2(

l?

vi.

i?

v.

71.

June.

virgatus Bak.Fl. Cap.

vi.

259; Bef. Bot.

214. S.

Africa.

ASPERULA
Galieae.

L.N.

Pff.

iv.

5.

148.Rubiaceae-Coffeoideae14..

ciliaris i?c/t6.

galioides

Bieh.

May-June. DC. 582. Persia. DC. 585. Europe, Caucasus.


iv.
iv.

V,.

May-June.
nitida Sihth.

& Sm.DC.

iv.

taurina L.DC. iv. 582; Fl. Orient. May-June. !{..

584. Sicily, Greece. 24. d'lt. n. 3294. Central Europe,

ASPHODELINE
n.

Bchb.N.

Pff.

ii.

5.

31. Liliacese-Asphode;

loideae-Asphodelese.

liburnica Bchb.Kunth, En.

iv.

562

B.

M.

t.

2626
773

Fl. d'lt.

719. S. Europe. 2^.

May.
iv.

lutea
n.

Bchh.Kunth, En.

561

B. M.

t.

Fl. d'lt.

718. S. Europe. 2^.

May.
5.

ASPHODELUS

L.N.

Pff.

ii.

31. Liliacee-Asphodeloidet.

Asphodelese.

acaulis Desf. Fl. Atl. i. 302, 5. 1/. t. 7004. Algeria. i;.


fistulosus
t.

89;
April.
;

Kunth, En.

iv.

560;

178;

d'lt. n.

L.Kunth, En. iv. 557 B. M. t. 984 Bed. Lil. Lodd. B. C. t. 1124; Bickn. PI. Biv. t. 79; Fl. 717. S. Europe, N. Africa, Arabia. 2;. March;

May.

ramosus
n.

L.

Kunth,
14-.

En.

iv.

555; Bed. Lil.


J.

t.

51; Fl. d'li

716.

A. albus Willd.

A. cerasifer

Gay.

Mediter-

ranean region.

March-May.

HOUTUS MORTOLENSIS
ASPIDISTRA
Gawl.

39

^v".

Pff.

ii.

5. 82.

Liliaceae-Asparagoideae-

Kunth, En. 313, sub Plectogyne variegata Japan. Spring and summer. 311; B. M. 2499; Lodcl B. C. lurida GatvLKunth, En. 1468. Eastern Himalaya, China. U.
elatior Blume.
v.

Convallarieae-Aspidistringe.

Link.

If..

v.

t.

t.

Aspidium Sw.

Polystichum.
i.

ASPLENIUM

L.N. Pff. 4. 233. Polypodiacege-Asplenieae. *Adiantum-nigrum L.Hook. Syn. Fil. 293 Fl. d'lt. n. 24.
;

Africa, Europe

bulbiferum

Forst.

Australia, India, Mexico.

dimorphum

Hook. Syn. Kunze. Hook. Syn.


If.
<&

N. Asia, N. America.
Fil.

2|.

218.

N.

Zealand,

Fil. 223.

Norfolk Island.

ASTELIA

Banks

Sol.N.

Pff.

ii.

5.

75. Liliaceae-Dracfe284. New Zea-

noidese-Dracaenee.

Banksii A. land. 2^.

Giinn.

Hdh.

Fl. N.

Zeald.

ASTER

161. Compositas-Astereas-Asterinae. DC. 231. Europe, Asia. 233. N. America. Augustcordifolius L. DC. September. 232. Virginia, Carolina. 4. grandiflorus L. DC. 246. N. America. Isevis L. DC. 3517. N. Novi-Belgii Nees.DC. 238; Fl. America. August-September. 3519; B. M. Tradescanti L.DC. 241; Fl. 7825. N. America. August-September.

L.

N.

Pff. iv. 5.
v.

Amellus L.

li.

v.

2|.

v.

v.

If..

v.

d'lt.

n.

if.

v.

d'lt.

n.

t.

!(..

ASTRAGALUS

L.N.

Pff.

iii.

3.

285. Leguminosae-Papilio-

natae-Galegeas-AstragalinaB.
aristatus L'H6r. := sempervirens.

aureus Willd.DC. ii. 296. Orient. Tj caucasicus Pall. DC. ii. 296. Caucasus.
creticus Lam.

DC.

Syria. MayMay-June. 371. Syria. drusorum Boiss. Fl. Or. DC. 291 PI. Syr. 9 emarginatus Lahill. 246. Syria. Boiss. Or. 294. Caucasus. June-July. galegiformis L. DC.
deinacanthus
June.
Boiss.
Or.
ii.

Fl.
Ic.

ii.

297.

Greece. ^
374.

T^

T^

ii.

i?

19,

t.

ii.

Fl.

ii.

if.

ii.

14..

40

HORTUS MORTOLENSIS
{continued).

ASTRAGALUS
longifolius

Lam.

Armenia.
Persia.

if.

DC.
ii.

ii.

297;

Boiss. Fl.

Or.

ii.

375.

ip

mollis Bieh.DG.

301

Boiss. Fl. Or.

ii.

260. Caucasus,

narbonensis Gouan.

DC.

ii.

294.

S.

France, Spain.

2^.

ii. 295 Boiss. Fl. Or. ii. 408 B. M. 7622. Asia Minor. 2^. May-July, saxatilis Freyn & Bornm. in Oester. Bot. Zeitschr. 1891, 495. Asia Minor. i;. sempervirens Lam. Fl. cl'It. n. 2083. A. aristatus L'H6r. DC. ii. 298. S. Europe. i;. May-June. Tragacantha L.DC. ii. 298 Fl. d'lt. n. 2082. Western
; ;

May-July. ponticus Pall. DC.


t.

Mediterranean region.
viciaefolius

Ip

DC.

ii.

282

Boiss. Fl. Or.

ii.

252.

Asia Minor.
Astrapcea Lindl.

Caucasus,

!(:.

= Domheya.
Correa.N.
Pff.
iii.

ATALANTIA
oidese.

4.

192.Rutaceae-Auranti51.

buxifolia Oliver.

Beiith.

Fl.

Hongk.

mosa.

S.

China, For-

ip

July.

ATHAMANTA
macedonica

Koch.N.
Spreng.
if.

Pff.

iii.

8.

206. Umbelliferae-ApiFl. d'lt. n. 2393.

oideas-Ammiineae-Seselinse.

DC.

iv.

155

Matthioli Wulf.DC. July. Europe. 155 Fl. sicula L.DC. US.E. Europe.
S.
if..

Italy,

iv.

155;
d'lt. n.

Fl.

d'lt.

n.

2395/3.
S.

iv.

2394. Italy,

Europe.

ATRACTYLIS L.N.
Carolininae.

Pff.

iv.

5.

317. Composit^e-CynareaeFl. d'lt. n.

cancellata L.DC. ranean region. 0.

vi.

550;

3687. Mediter-

May-June.
Pff.
iii.

ATRAPHAXIS L.N.
lanceolata DC.
Central Asia.
xiv.
l?
.

la.

23. Polygonaceae-Polygot.

noideae-Atraphaxideae.

78

Bossche, Ic. Sel.

188.

spinosa L.
fig.

166.

DC. Orient.

S.

Russia,

Spring.

xiv.
V>

75
.

Schneider, Hdb. Lauhh.

i.

255,

May-August.

HOETUS MOETOLENSIS ATRIPLEX L.~N.


canescens James.
June.
Pff.
iii.

41

la.

64. Chenopodiacese-CycloN. America.

lobeae-Atripliceae

Ind.
xiii. 2.
Tp
.

Kew.
100

Western

T?

Fl. d'lt. n. 1002. S. Europe, July-November. portulacoides L.Fl. d'lt. n. 1000; DC. xiii. 2. 112. Europe, Syria, N. Africa. 4 Tp July-September.
;

Halimus L.DC.
N. and
S. Africa.

ATROPA

L.N.

Pff. iv. 3b.

Belladonna L.DC.
Orient, India.

xiii. 1.

4.
i.

16. Solanaceae-Solanege-Lyciin. 464 Fl. d'lt. n. 2880. Europe,


;

May-June.
Pff.
iii.

AUBRIETIA

Adans.N.
158
.

2.

190. Cruciferffi-Hespei.

rideae-Capsellinae.

Nich. Diet. 145. Nich. Diet. 145. Campbelli Hort. Eyrei Hort. Nich. Diet. 145. Leichtlini Hort. Nich. Diet. Suppl. 112. erubescens Griseb. Boiss. Fl. Or. 252. Greece. March-May. gracilis Sprun. Boiss. Fl. Or. 250; Hal. Consp. Fl. Greece. 4. March-May. olympica Boiss. Fl. Or. 251. Bithynia. April,,

deltoidea DC. Asia Minor.


var.
var.

Boiss. Fl. Or.

252. Italy, Greece,


i.

11

April.

Bougainvillei Hort.

i.

,,

var.

i.

var.

i.

if.

i.

Grcec.

i.

84.

i.

14..

May.

AUCUBA

Thunb.N. Pff. iii. 8. 268. Cornaceffi-Cornoidese. japonica Thunb.DC. iv. 274 B. M. t. 1197 Wangerin, Comae. (B. V. C.) 38. T? Japan, Corea, Formosa.
;

March-April.
Audibertia Benth.

= Bamona.
Pff.
iii.

Azalea L.

= Bhododendron.
Bz.

AZARA

& Pav.N.
<&

6 a.

41. Flacourtiacese-FlaFl. d. S. t. 2445 December-February.


; ;

courtieae.

Gilliesii Hook.

Arn.B. M.

t.

Gard. Chron. 1906,

microphylla Hook. Nich. Diet. t. 71. Chili. Tp. March.

i.

77.

Chili.

5178
Tp
i.
.

151

Bossehe, Ic. Sel.

AZOLLA

Lam.N.

Pff.

caroliniana Willd.

Fi.

i.

4.

400. Salviniaceae.
d'lt. n. 53.

America.

2f

42

HORTUS MORTOLENSIS
Ker.

BABIANA

N.

Pff.

ii.

5.

155.

IridacesB-Ixioideaevi.

Gladiolege.

disticha Ker.Bak. Irid. 184; Fl. Cap. March-April, t. 626. S. Africa. If.
plicata Ker.Bak. Irid. 183
Jacq.
;

112; B. M.

FL

Cap.
if..

vi.

112; B.

M.

t.

576;

H. Sch.

t.

14.

S. Africa.

March-April,
vi.

striata

Ker.Bak

Irid.

184

Fl. Cap.
t.

583, 621, 637, 1053; March-April.

Bed. Lil.

113; B.M. t. 410, 90. S. Africa. 2^.

BACCHARIS L.N.
Baccharidinae.

Pff.

iv.

5.

170. Compositae-Astereae-

cordifolia

DC.

v.

422.

S.

America.
i?
.

Tp

Pingraea DC. v. 420. ChiH. rosmarinifolia Hook, d Am.

March-May. DC. v. 419.

Chili.

i?

March-May. sagittalis DC.y. 425. Chili. i? scoparia Pers.DC. v. 424 Fl. West
;

Ind.

366. W.

Indies.

T?

trinervis Pers.

DC.
Pff.
iii.

v.

411.

Brazil.
v.

Tj .
.

xalapensis H. B. K.DC. May.

411. Mexico. i?

March-

B.^CKEA

L.

N.
M.
.

7. 98.

Myrtacege-Leptospermoideae;

Leptospermeae-Baeckeinae.

virgata Andr.DC.
t.

iii.

229

Fl. Austr.

iii.

81

Lodd. B. C.

341; B.

t.

2127.Victoria, N.

Australia,

New

Cale-

donia.

September.
Pff.
iv.

BALLOTA

L.N.

3 a.

259. Labiatas-Stachyoideae-

Lamiinae.

acetabulosa Benth.

rupestris matia.
tBAMBUSA

DC. xii. 517. Greece. pseudodictamnus Benth. DC. xii. 517 Fl. Summer. Crete. 2| h

ii

ij

Summer.
3144.

d'lt. n.

Vis.
V,
.

Fl. Dalm. Summer.

ii.

216; Fl.

d'lt. n.

3143. Dal-

Schreb.

Fortune! Van Houtte

N. Fl.
Pff.

ii.

2. 94.

d. S.

t.

Gramineae-Bambuseae. 1535. Japan. ^


.

graminea Hort. = Arundinaria Hindsii var. graminea. nana Boxh. Nich. Diet. i. 156 Satoiu, Bamb. Jap. 74, with

Japan, China. ^ palmata Hort. Nich. Diet.


plate.
.

Suppl.
i.

121;

Freem. Bamb.
l?
.

Gard.

t.

5; Gard. Chron. 1894,

169.

China, Japan.

HOETUS MOETOLENSIS
B AMBUS A

43

Freeni. Bamh. Gard. 112. Japan. quadrangularis Fenzi. Nich. Diet. Suppl. 121 Bamh. Gard. China, Japan. verticillata Hort. Gall. ^ viridis Hort. Gall.
pygmsea Miq.
;

{continued).

Tp

Freem.

89.

Ip

t^

JBANKSIA

L.fil.N.
-

Pff.

iii. 1.

151. Proteacese-Grevilloideffiv.

Banksieae.
ericifolia

L.DC.

xiv.

453; Fl. Austr.

547; B.

M.

t.

738.

Wales. Tp. grandis Willd.DC.


N.
S.
tralia.
Tp
.

xiv.

464
456
S.

Fl. Austr. v.

552. W. Aus;

integrifolia L.DC. 2770. Queensland, N. June. marcescens B. Br. DC.


xiv.
t.

Fl. Austr. v. 554

B. M.
.

t.

Wales, Victoria.

Tp

April-

xiv.
fp
.

461

Fl. Austr. v. 560.

B. M.

2803. W. Australia.
Vent.

April-June.
201.

BAPTISIA

N.

Pff.

iii.

3.

Leguminosse-Papiliot.

natge-Podalyrieae

australis B.

Br.DC.

ii.

100

B.

M.

509. N. America.

BARLERIA
deae

L.

N.

Pff. iv.

36. 313.

Acanthacese-Acanthoi1615. India, Burma.

Barlerieae.

cristata
Tp
.

L.DC.

xi.

229.-5. M.

t.

September-October.

Barlia Pari.

Orchis.
Pff.
iii.

BAROSMA
'?

Eutaceae-Kutoideas398. Wendl. Fl. foetidissima Bartl. April391. S.Africa. lanceolata Sond. Fl. Cap.
Willd.N.
4.

148.

Diosmeae-Diosminae.
<&

Caj).

i.

S. Africa.

i.

ip

May.

BAUHINIA L.N.
candicans Benth.
Wales.

Pff.

iii.

3.

147. Leguminosae-Caesalpinii.

oideae-Bauhinieae
in Mast. Fl. Bras. xv.

Carronii F. Midi.

Fl. Austr.

ii.

295.

201. Brazil. Queensland, N.

ip

S.

Tp

grandiflora Juss.DC.

ii.

Hookeri F. Milll.Fl.
Wales.
ip
.

Austr.

513. Peru. ip 296. N. ii.

August.
Australia, N. S.

44

HORTUS MORTOLENSIS
(continued).

BAUHINIA
China.

purpurea L.

DC.
.

ii.

515; Fl. Brit.

Incl.

ii.

284

India,
279.

Summer. Vahlii W. & Am.DC.


I?
.

ii.

515; Fl. Brit. Ind.


7814.

ii.

Himalaya.

^
=

yunnanensis Franch.
Beaucarnea Lem.

B. M.
Pff.

t.

China.

i? .

Nolina.
iii.

BEAUPORTIA

R. Br.N.

7.

98. Myrtaceae-Leptoiii.

spermoideae-Leptospermeae-Calothamninie.

decussata B. Br. DC.


t.

iii.

211

Fl. Austr.

166

B.

M.

1733. W. Australia. I?

BEGONIA

acerifolia H. B.

135. Begoniaceae. 1. 306. Quito. 2^ xv. 1. 294; B. M. acuminata Dryand.DC.

L.N.

Pff.

iii.

6a.

K.DC.

xv.

Spring,
t.

4025.
Africa.

Jamaica.

!(..

Dregei %.

0.

d D.DC.

xv. 1.

384

B. M.

t.

3720. S.

Spring.
t.

fuchsioides Hooh.B. M. Tp October-May.


.

4281 309

DC.
;

xv. 1.

291. Mexico.

gracilis H. B.
!(..

K.DC.
(&

xv.

1.

B. M.

t.

2966. Mexico.
B. M.
t.

Summer. heracleifolia Cham.


Gard. Chron. 1899,

ScM.DC.
249.

xv.

1.

335
14..
;

3444

ii.

Mexico.
1. 1.

Winter-spring.
B.

maculata Baddi. DC. xv. Brazil. NovemberTp


.

hydrocotylifolia Otto.DC. xv. October-May. Mexico. 1^.

344

M.

t.

3968.

318.

B. argyrostigma Fisch.

April.
;

manicata Cels.DC.
Mexico.

1|.

metallica

L.

The Gard. 1900, ii. 387. xv. 1. 341 October-May. Sm. Fl. Mag. 1876, t. 197.Mexico. T?
xvi.
1.

March-November.

Rex Piitz.DC.
All the year.

350; B. M.
xv.
1.
1.

t.

6101. India. 2|.


origin.
1{..

ricinifolia A. Dietr.

DC.
xv.

400.
;

Garden
t.

scabrida DC. fil.DC.


24
.

367

B. M.

7347.Venezuela.
.

Summer.
Begel.

Scharffii Hook. fil.B.

Schmidtiana Summer.

Nich.

M.

t.

7028. S. Brazil. u
Diet.
i.

176.

Brazil.
B. M.
t.

Summer.
14.

semperflorens L. & Otto.DC. xv. Lodd. B. C. t. 1439. Brazil. 2;.

1.

392

2920

All the year.

HOKTUS MORTOLENSIS

45

BEGONIA

{continued).

socotrana Hook.f. weltoniensis Hort.

B. M. 6555. Nich.Dict.i. 111. Garden


t.

^Socotra.

il.

origin.

1(:.

BELAMCANDA
t.

Adans.N.

Pff.

ii.

5.

150. Iridacee-Iri;

doidese-Sisyrinchieae-Libertinae.

chinensis Lernan.
171
;

Bed.
t.

Lil.

t.

Fl. d. S.

1632.

121 Bah. Irid. 117 B. M. Pardanthus chinensis Ker.


;

Cochin China, China, Japan.


Bellevalia Lapeyr.

2|.

July-August.

Hyacinthus.
Pff.
iv.

BELLIUM
Corsica.

L.N.

5.

160.

Compositee-Astere^n.

Asterinse.

bellidioides

L.DC.
2|.

v.

303; Fl.

d'lt.

3512. Sardinia,
v.
;

May-July. crassifolium Moris, Fl. Sard, t 79 DC. 303 Fl. 3513. Sardinia. May-June. Rosaceffi-EosoideseBENCOMIA Webb.N. Sanguisorbeae. caudata Webb. Lowe, Man. Fl. Mad. 240. Poterium cauda;

d'lt.

n.

21

Pff.

iii.

3.

46.

tum
ij

AitDC.
.

ii. 594 March-April.

B. M.

t.

2341. Canaries, Madeira,

BENINCASA

Savi.N.

Pff. iv. 5.

25. Cucurbitacese-Cucurbiii.

teae-Cucumerinae.

cerifera Savi.DC. Asia and Africa.

iii.

303

Fl. Brit. Ind.

617.

0.
=
iii.

Tropical

Summer.
Cornus capitata Wall.
2.

Benthamia fragifera Lindl.

BERBERIS L.N.
Chili. Tp
309.
.

Pff.

actinacantha Mart. angulosa Wall.

Schneider,
t.
; .

77. Berberidaceaj.
Hdb. Laubh.
i.

300.

March-April.

B. M.
Tp

Himalaya.
=:
i.

7071 Schneider, Hdb. Laubh. March-April.

i.

Aquifolium Pursh.
aristata-DO.
i.

Mahonia aquifolium.
t.

106; B. M.

2549; Schneider, Hdb. Laubh.


hid.
April.

313. Nepal. T?. March-April. asiatica Boxb. DC. i. 107 Fl. Brit.

i.

i.

Hdb. Laubh.
Bealei Fort.

299.

India.
Bealei.
;

110

Schneider,

Tj

cretica L.

DC. Crete, Cyprus.

Mahonia
i.

106
Tj
.

Schneider, Hdb. Laubh.

i.

308.

March-April.

46

HORTUS MORTOLENSIS
{continued).

BERBEHrlS

Darwinii Hook. B. M. t. 4590 Schneider, Hdb. Laubh. i. 300. Chili. Tj. March, March-April. glauca DC. i. 106. Argentina. ^ Hartioeg. 158. America. S. Marchglobosa Benth. PI. ^
;

April.

Guimpeli Koch & Bouche.

Schneider,
.

Hdb. Laubh.

i.

312,

N. America.

f?

Forst.DC. i. 107; B. M. t 4308; Schneider, April. Hdb. Laubh. i. 301. S. Chili. J? Lycium Boyle.Fl. Brit. Ind. i. 110; B. M. t. 7075; l? Spring. Himalaya. Schneider, Hdb. Laubh. i. 306. Neuberti Hort. Schneider, Hdb. Laubh. i. 316. Garden
ilicifolia

origin.

1?

Spring.
;

sinensis Desf.DC. i. 106 B. M. t. 6573 Schneider, Hdb. March-April, Laubh. i. 312. China. \^
;

stenophylla Hance
T^
.

in Joiorn. Bot. xx. 1882, 257.

China.
i.

March-April.
i.

Thunbergi DC.
Japan.^

106;

Schneider,

Hdb. Laubh.
110; B. M.

310.

Tj

umbellata Wall.Fl.
F? Himalaya. virescens Hook.

Brit. Lid.

i.

t.

2549.

Spring.
fil.

&
i.

Thorns.

B.

M.

t.

7116
T^
.

Schneider,

Sikkim, Himalaya. Spring. Schneider, Fl. 1641 105 vulgaris L. DC. 315. Europe, N. Asia. Spring. Hdb. Laubh. Lid. 110 4656 Fl. 107 B. M. Wallichiana DC. Spring. 304. Himalaya. Schneider, Hdb. Laiibh. 405. Rhamnacese-Zizypheae. BERCHEMIA Neck. N. & Zucc. Nich. Diet. Suppl. 143 Schneider, racemosa 262.Japan, Formosa. Hdb. Laubh. 2 Saxifragaceae-SaxiBERGENIA Moench. N. ragoideae-Saxifragege DC. cordifolia B. Br. Saxifraga Saxifraga DC. crassifolia Engler. N. January-April. 196. Altai Mountains. 37; B. M.
Hdb. Laubh.
i.

305.

d'lt.

n.

i.

Tp

i.

t.

Brit.

i.

i.

T?

Pff.

iii.

5.

Sieb.

ii.

>> .

Pff.

iii.

a. 51.

cordif.
c.

iv.

38.

Siberia.

if

Pff.

I.

crassif.

iv.

t.

i;.

BERKHEYA

Ehrh.N.

Pff. iv. 5.

311. Compositae-Arctotideae
;

-Gorterinae.

grandiflora Willd.DC. t. 1844. S. Africa. 1?

vi.
.

506

Fl. Cap.

iii.

506

B. M.

May-June.

HORTUS MORTOLENSIS

47

BERKHEYA

(continued).
;

membranifolia DC. vi. 518 Fl. Cai^. iii. 492, sub Stohaa. S. Africa. May-June. 2^. purpurea DC. vi. 518; Fl. Cap. iii. 494, sub Stobcea.

S.Africa.

If..

June.
in Bossche, Ic. Sel.
iii.

Radula De Wild,
Harv. Fl. Cap.

t.

52.

Stobaa Badula
June.

491.

S. Africa.

14..

IBESCHORNERIA
-Agavoideae.

Kunth.N.

Pff.

ii.

5.

119. Amaryllidaceffi

argyrophylla Hort. Mexico ? 2^. April-May. Decosteriana Bak. Am. 162; B. M. t. 6768. Mexico. 2|:.
April-May.

pubescens Berger
Mexico
?

in Gard. Chron. 1906,

ii.

350.

fig.

138.

If.

June.

superba Hort. Mort. May.


Mexico.

Bak. Am. 162. Mexico


?

1^

April-

tubiflora K^mt}l, En.

v.

844

B. M.

t.

4642

Bak. Am. 161.

If.

April-May.
in B.

yuccoides Hook,

4
L.

M.

t.

5203

Bak. Am. 162. Mexico.

April-May.
Pff.
iii.

BETA

N.

la.

56.

Chenopodiacese-Cyclolobeae;

Betese.

trigyna Waldst. <& Kit.DC. xiii. 2. 55 Hungary, Caucasus, Asia Minor. 2^.

Fl. d'lt. n. 1005.

vulgaris

Moq.~DC.

xiii. 2.
.

55

Fl. d'lt. n.

May-June. 1004. S. Europe,

Asia, Africa.
var.

if

May-September.
I.

Cicla Moq.DC.

c.

var.

maritima Moq.

DC.

Fl. d'lt. n. 1004 p.


I.

c.

Fl. d'lt. n. 1004

S.

BIARUM

Schott.N. Pff. ii. 3. 149. Aracese-Aroideae- Areas. tenuifolium Schott.Kunth, En. iii. 22 B. M. t. 2282 Fl. Spring. Southern Mediterranean region. if; d'lt. n.533.
;
;

IBIGNONIA L.N.
capreolata L.

Pff. iv. 3b.

226. Bignoniaceae-Bignonieae.

buccinatoria Mairet

Phadranthus buccinatorius. Doxantha capreolata.


1?

Lindleyi DC. ix. 147. purpurea Lodd. B.C.


speciosa

Argentina. 5800. Uruguay. Rodigasiana Hort. {Lemoine, 1095).


.
t.
f?

l?

Hook.

sqicalus Veil.

Clytostoma callistegioides. Pithectonium squahis.

48

HORTUS MOETOLENSIS
{continued).

BIGNONIA

Tweediana Liiull. May- June.


unguis L.DG.
America.

DC.

ix.

146.

S. Brazil,

Argentina
1705.

ix.

146;

LocU. B. C.

t.

Tropical

^
=

May-June.

venusta Ker.

Pyrostegia venusta.
Pff.
ii.

IBILLBERGIA Thunb.N.
melieae.

4.

46. Bromeliaceae-Bro81
;

decora
Peru.

Poej)!}.

& Endl.Bak. Brom.


76.
S.

B.

M.
2|.

t.

6937.

Bah. Brom. Brazil. Leopoldi x Morelli. Garden %. Liboniana De Jonghe. Bak. Brom. 74 Fl.
iridifolia Lindl.
origin.
;

If.

d. S.

t.

1048

June-July. 5090. Brazil. 2| Lietzei E. Morr.Bak. Brom. 76. S. Brazil. if. nutans Wendl.Bak. Brom. 75 B. M. t. 6423. Brazil.
t.
.

B. M.

l(.

April.
;

pallescens Bak. Brom. 75 B. M. t. 6342. Brazil. if. pyramidalis Lindl. Bak. Brom. 71 B. M. t. 1732. S.
;

Brazil.

i^.

speciosa Thunb.

Bak. Brom. 73

Lodd. B. C.
B. M.

t.

76.

Brazil.

Uthyrsoidea Mart.Bak. Brom. 71


;

t.

4756. S.
14..
;

Brazil.

Uvitta.tB,
t.

Brong Bak. Brom. 78. zebrina LindlBak. Brom. 80

S. Brazil.

B.

M.

t.

2686

Lodd. B. C.

1912. Brazil If.

BLECHNUM

L.N.

Pff.

i.

4.

245. Polypodiacess-AsplenieseFil. 184.

Blechninae.

brasiliense Desv.

occidentale L.

Hook. Syn. Hook. Syn.


Pff.
ii.

Fil. 185.

Brazil, Peru. Tropical America.

T^

BLETILLA

Rchb. fil.N.

123. Orchidaceffi-Monandrset.

Thuniinee.

hyacinthina Bchb. fil.B. M.

China, Japan.
L.DC.

1492

Lodd. B. C.

t.

1698.

24.

April-May.
iii.

IBOCCONIA L.N.
frutescens
(R. V. C),

Pff.

2.

140.

Papaveracee-Papat.

veroideee-Chelidonieae.
i.

121

Lodd. B. C.

83

Fedde, Papav.

218. Tp

April-May.

HOETUS MOKTOLBNSIS

49

BCEHMERIA
merieae.

Jacq.

N.

Pff.

iii.

1.

111.

Urticaceaj-BcBhIncl. v.

macrophylla Don.DC.
Subtropical Himalaya.

xvi. 1.
.

nivea Hook. & Am.


fig.

DC.

209; Fl. Brit.

577.
iii.
.

xvi.

1.

206
i.

Baill.

Mon.

Urt.

541

Schneider, Hdb. Laubh.


xvi. 1.

246.
;

Tropical Asia. ^

platyphylla Don.DC.
India.

210
207

Fl. Brit. Ind. v.

578. 577.

fp

rugulosa Wedd.DC.
Tropical Asia.

xvi.

1.

Fl. Brit. Ind. v.

\^

BONTIA

L.N.

Pff. iv. 36.


xi.

359. Myoporacese.
716
;

daphnoides L.DC.

Fl.

West Ind. 503.W. Indies.

BORONIA
tralia.

Sfii.N. Pff.

iii.

4.

135. Rutacese-Eutoidese-Boro316
;

nieEe-Boroniinae.

elatior Bartl.Fl. Austr.

i.

B.

M.

t.

6285. W. Aust.

ij

March-April.
Austr.
i.

megastigma Nees.Fl.
Australia.

315; B. M.

6046. W.
t.

^>

March-April.
i.

pinnata Sm.DC.
N.
S.

721; Fl. Austr. I 318;

B.M.
i.

1763.

Wales. Tj

March- April.
i.

polygalsefolia
t.

Sm.DC.
.

722; Fl. Austr.

320; B. M.

277. Australia. T?

March-April.
iv.

BORRICHIA

Adans.N.
v.

Pff.

5.

234. Compositai-HeHVirginia,

anthese-Verbesininae

frutescens DC.

489.

Florida,

Mexico.

Tp

May-June.

BO SI A

L.

N.

Pff.

iii.

la. 101.

Amarantaceae-Amarantoideae323
;

Amarantese.

Amherstiana Hook. DC.


Tp

xiii. 2.

Fl. Brit. Ind. iv. 716.

Himalaya. May-June. Canaries. Yerva-Mora L. DC.


.

xiii.

2.

87.

Tp

May-

June.
Boticerosia
t

W. &

Arn.

Caralluma.

BOUGAINVILLE A

Comm.N.Pff.
xiii. 2.

iii.

16.

27. Nyctaginaceae
i.

-Mirabileae-Bougainvilleae.

glabra Choisy.DC.
ii.

437

Gard. Chron. 1898,

168,

353. Brazil. I? . April-October. and 1903, Nich. Diet. Sup]jl. 157. var. Sanderiana Hort.

April-October.

50

HORTUS MORTOLENSIS
(continued).
xiii. 2.

BOUGAINVILLE A

spectabilis Willd.DC.

437

B.

M.

t.

4810. Brazil.
Suppl. 158.

fp

April-July
var. lateritia Hort.
Tp .

Nich. Diet.
228
;

April- July.

BOUSSINGAULTIA H. B. K.N. Pff.iii. la.


baselloides H. B. K.DC. August. ador. 2^.
xiii. 2.

B.

127. Basellaceae. M. t. 3620. Ecu-

BOUVARDIA

Salisb.N.

Pff.

iv.

4.

47. Rubiaceae-Cinchoi.

noideae-Cinchoneae.

Humboldtii Hort.

Nich.
iv.

Diet.

207.

Mexico.

Autumn-winter. triphylla Salisb.DC. Spring and summer.

365

B. M.

t.

1854. Mexico. T?

BOWIE A

Harv.

N.

Pff.

ii.

5.

38.

Liliacese-Asphodeloideae;

Asphodeleae-Eriosperminae.
volubilis Harv.Fl. Cap.
vi.

367

B. M.

t.

1^.
BOWKERIA

5619. S.

Africa.

April- June.

Harv.

N.

Pff.

iv.

3b.

64. Scrophulariaceae220
t.
;

Antirrhinoideae-Cheloneae.

Gerrardiana Harv.Fl. Cap.


B. triphylla Hort.
1904,
ii.

iv.

2.

B.
;

M.

t.

8021.

Bossche, Ic. Sel.


>>
.

74

Gard. Chron.

416.

Natal.

June-November.
Pff.
iii.

jBRACHYCHITON
Sterculieae.

Endl.N.

6.

96. SterculiaceseS.

acerifolius F. Mull.Fl. Aitstr.


July.

i.

229. N.
B.

Wales. i?.
;

Bidwilli Hook.Fl. Austr. Tp Queensland. t. 1465.


var.
l?

i.

228

M.

t.

5133

Fl. d. S.

June-August. June- August. planior. Wales. 228. N. luridus F. Milll.Fl. 229. Queensland, N. populneus B. Br. Fl. June-July. Wales, Victoria. W. Australia. occidentalis Benth. June-July, 230. Queensland. rupestris K. Sch. Fl. Austr.
. .

AiLstr.

i.

S.

T?

A^istr.

i.

S.

T?

,,

var.

I.

c.

Tp

i.

Tp

BRACHYSEMA
W.

B. Br.N.

Pff.

iii.

3.

204. LeguminosaeB.

Papilionatae-Podalyrieae.

lanceolatum Meissn.Fl. Austr.


Australia.

ii.

10;

M.

t.

4652.

March-April.

HORTUS MORTOLENSIS

51

BRAHEA

Mart.N.

Tp calcarea Liehm. Mexico. edulis Hort. Erythea edulis. nitida Hort. Nich. Diet. Suppl. 159. Boezli Hort. Erythea armata.

Pff.

ii.

3.

86. Palmffi-Coryphinse-Sabalege.

Mexico.

Tp

BRASSICA

L.

N.

Pff.

iii.

2.

177. Cruciferge-Sinapeset.

Brassicinae.

Botteri Vis. Fl. Dalm. April-May.

iii.

135.

52.

insularis Morris, Fl. Sard.

i.

168.

t.

11.

Dalmatia. Sardinia.
14.

i(.

I?

December-June.

BRAVOA

LI.

&

Lex.

N.

Pff.

ii.

5.

117. Amaryllidacese160
;

Agavoideae.

geminiflora LI.
Mexico.
21.

& Lex.Bak. Am.

B. M.

t.

4741.

BRODI.^A
AlliesB.

Smith.N.
A.

Pff.

ii.

5.

57. Liliaceae-Allioidese5857.

coccinea
April.

Gray.

B.
1(.
.

M.
i.

t.

California.

74.

Nich. Diet. 213 G(^d. Chron. 1896, 6123. volubilis Baker. B. M. U. MoraceseBROUSSONETIA Vent. N. Moroideae-Broussonetieae. 224 Fl. papyrifera Vent. DC. 914; Brandis, 189. China, Formosa, Japan. Ind. Tr. 613. Maycongesta Sm.
213.
;

ii.

California.

April.

t.

California.

April.

Pff.

iii.

1.

76.

xviii.

d'lt. n.

fig.

Ip

June.

BROWALLIA
soideae.

L.N.
x.

Pff.

iv.

6.

37. Solanaceae-SalpiglosIndies,

elata

L.DC.

197;

B.

Tropical America.

speciosa Hook. March.

B. M.

0.
t.

M. t. 34. 1136. W. March-May.

4339.

Colombia.

if.

October-

BRUNPELSIA
soideae.

Siv.N.

Pff. iv. 36.

37. Solanaceae-Salpiglost.

calycina Benth.DC. x. 199 B. M.


;

4583,4790.i^rawciscm
April-June.

eximia Scheidw.

S. Brazil.

ip

E 2

62

HORTUS MORTOLENSIS
Heister.N.
Pff.
ii.

BRUNSVIGIA

5.

106. Amaryllidaceae-

AmaryllidoideaB-Amaryllideae.

Josephinae Gaivl. Bak. Am. 97; Fl. Cap. vi. 205; Bed. Lil. 370-372; Gard. Chron. 1905, i. 187. S. Africa. 24. t. September.

BRYONIA

L.N.

Pff.

iv.

5.

25. Cucurbitaceae-Cucurbiteae-

CucumerinEe.

albaL.i)C.iii.307;F^.fZTi.n.3390. Europe. 2|. May-July.


dioica Jacq.DC.
iii.

307

Fl. d'lt. n.

3392. Central and

South Europe.

2;.

May- July.
Pff. iv. 5.

BRYONOPSIS

Arn.N.

28. Cucurbitacese-Cucurii.

biteae-Cucumeringe.

laciniosa Naud.
622;

Fl.
t.

Trop. Afr.

556.

Fl. Brit. Ind.

ii.

Wight,

Ic.

Australia.

0.

500. Trop. Summer.

Africa,

Trop. Asia, Trop.

BRYOPHYLLUM
ber-January.

Salisb.N. Pff. iii. 2 a. 34. CrassulacesB. calycinum Salisb.B. M. 1. 1409 DC. iii. 396.Tropics. 2; crenatum Bak. B. ilf. t. 7856. Madagascar. if. Decem;

IBUDDLEIA
May.

N. americana L. DC.
L.
t.

Pff. iv. 2. 46.


x.

438.

Loganiacese-BuddleioideEe. Jamaica, Mexico. ^ March.


; ;

asiatica Loiir.DC.

B. M. x. 446 Fl. Brit. Ind. iv. 82 6323; Gard. Chron. 1906, i. 106. India, Malaya. Tj. December-January.

auriculata Benth.
Ic. Sel.
t.

DC.

x.

445; Fl. Cap.

iv. 1.

1047; Bossche,

20.

S. Africa.

T?

October-February.

brasiliensis

Jacq.DC.

x.

442;

B.M.
t.

t.

2713. Brazil. T?
iv.

September-October. Colvilei Hook, fil.III. Him. PI.


B.

18; Fl. Brit. Ind.

81;

7449. Himalaya. V. globosa Hope.DC. x. 440 B. M.


M.
t.
;

t.

174. Peru, Chili. 1?


t.

April-June.

Lindleyana Fortune.DC.
Tp
.

x.

446

Fl. d. S.

9. China.

May-July.

B. M. t. 2824. madagascariensis Lam. DC. x. 447 Madagascar, Mauritius. Tp . March- April. nivea Duthie in Gard. Chron. 1905, ii. 275, fig. 102. China.
;

Tp

July.

salvifolia

Sch.

t.

Lam. DC. x. 444; 28. S. Africa. T?


.

Fl. Cap.

iv. 1.

1046; Jacq. H.

HOETUS MOETOLBNSIS

53

BUDDLEIA
China.

(continued).
ii.

variabilis Hemsl.Gard. Ghron. 1898,

139; B.

M.

t.

7609.

Tp

Spring-autumn.

BUETTNERIA
always.

L.N.

Pff.

iii.

6.

83. Sterculiacese-Biitt-

nerieae-Biittnerinae.

urticifolia K. Schum.

N.
ii.

Pff.

I.e.

Brazil.

Tp

Nearly

BULBINE L.N.
oaulescens L.
April.

Pff.

5.

33. Liliacese-Asphodeloideae-

Asphodeleae-Antherinae.

Fl. Cap.
;

vi.

360.

S. Africa.

v.

T?

October-

longiscapa Willd.Kunth, En. iv. 564; Fl. Cap. vi. 362. Bed. Lil. t. 423 B. M. 1. 1339. S. Africa. 2^ March-June.
.

BUMELIA

Sio.

N.

Pff.

iv.

1.

145.

Sapotaceae-Palaquieaeii.

lanuginosa Pers.

DC. 573. N. America. lycioid.es Pers. DC. 573. N. America. tenax Willd. DC.
Buphthalminae.

Sideroxylinae.

viii.

190 189

Schneider, Hdh. Lauhli.

T?

viii.
i?
.

Schneider, Hdh. Lauhh.

ii.

May.

viii.

189.

N. America.
;

i?

BUPHTHALMUM
salicifolium

L.N.
v.

Pff. iv. 5.

209. CompositEe-Inulese3658. S. Europe.


3656.

L.DC.

483

Fl. d'lt. n.

11. July. speciosum Schreb.

Caucasus, Asia Minor.

DC. 485 Fl. 4. June-July.


v.
;

d'lt. n.

Europe,

BUPLEURUM
(E. V. C),

L.N.

Pff.

iii.

8.

180. Umbelliferge-ApioideEen.

Ammiineae-Carinae.

dianthifolium Guss.Fl.

d'lt.

2247;

Wolff,
.

Umbell.

May-June. fruticosum L.DC. iv. 133 Fl. d'lt. n. 2249; Wolff, Umbell Tp (R. V. C), 168. May-July. Mediterranean region.
;

158. Sicily, Balearic Islands. Tj

BURCHELLIA

B. Br.N.

Pff. iv. 4.

74.Eubiaceae-Cincho-

noideae-Gardeniinae.

capensis B. Br.DC. iv. 367; Fl. Cap. iii. 3; 5. iW. t. 2339; Lodd. B. C. t. 664. S. Africa. 1? February-May.
.

BURSARIA
spore ae.

Cav.N.

Pff.

iii.

2a.

112.Pittosporaceai-Pittoi.

spinosa Cav.DC.

x^.ustralia,

i. 347; Fl. Aiistr. ^> Tasmania. June.

115; B. M.

t.

1767.

54

HOETUS MORTOLENSIS
Pff.
iii.

DC. 2628. Balearic 18; Fl. Islands, Sardinia. March-April. sempervirens L. DC. 2627. 19; Fl. Europe. ^ March-April. BYSTROPOGON L'mr. N. 3a. 314. LabiatseStachyoideae-Thyminae. 185. Canaries. origanifolius L'Her. DC. Aprilbalearica Lam.
xvi. 1.
.

IBUXUS L.N.

5.

133. Buxace-Buxee.
d'lt. n.

Tj

xvi.

1.

d'lt.

n.

S.

Pff.

iv.

xii.

Tj

May.

CACCINIA

Savi.N.

Pff. iv. 3a. 99.

Borraginaceae-Borragi14..

noideae-Cynoglosseae.

strigosa Boiss.

Fl. Or.
Pff.
iii.
ii.

iv.

CADIA

Forsk.

N.

3.

Persia. 187. Leguminosae-PapiUonatae278.


April.
;

Sophoreae.

varia L'Her.DC.
Abyssinia.

486

Fl. Trop. Afr.

ii.

255.Arabia,

March-May.
Pff.
iii.

C^SALPINIA L.N.
Gilliesii

3.

173. Leguminos^-Caesalpini.

oideae-Eucsesalpinieae.

Wall.B. M.
ii.

mexicana DC.

var. burmanica. Journ. Bot. 1884, July-August. China, Burma. 255 Fl. Hoiigh. 481 Fl. Brit. Ind. Nuga Ait. DC. 97. E. Asia, Tropical Australia. 256. 37; Fl. Brit. Lid. sepiaria Boxh. Wight, Tropical and Bianccea scandens Tod. H. B. Pan. April. subtropical Asia. 481. ChiH. April-June. tinctoria Dovib. DC.

481.

^Mexico.
T^

t.

4006. Chili. l?
Tp

June-July.
xxii.

April.

Minax Hance
365.

ii.

ii.

V>

Ic.

t.

ii.

t.

1.

T? .

ii.

i?

vernalis

Champ.Fl. Hongk.

94

B.

M.

t.

8132. Hongkong.

^.

CAJOPHORA Presl. N.Pff.


Loaseae.

iii.

6a. 118.

Loasaceae-LoasoideaBfig.

lateritia Klotzsch.

N.
t.

Pff.

I.

c.

119,

43.

Hook, in B. M. autumn.

3632. Argentina.

Loasa
.

lateritia

Summer-

CALANDRINIA
June.

H. B. K.N.

Pff.

grandiflora Lindl.B. M.

t.

iii. 1 b. 56. Portulacaceae. March3369. Chih. if


.

HOETUS MOETOLENSIS.

55

CALCEOLARIA

L.~N.

Pff.

iv.

b.

55. Scrophulariaceee;

Antirrhinoideae-Calceolarese.

Bu.rhidgea.na. Hort.Nich. Diet.

C.Pavoniixfuchsiafolia. Gardenorigin.
t.
;

i.

239 Krdnzlin {B. V.G.), 122.


14.

Tp

Spring.

scabiosifolia Sims in B. M.
{B. V. C), 23.

Chili.

0.

2405 DC. x. 204 Krdnzlin Spring and summer.


:

CALENDULA
Spain.

L.N.

Pff. iv. 5.

304. Compositae-Tubifloreffi-

Calendulae.

algarbiensis Boiss.

0.

Willk.
vi.

&

Lge.

PL
iii.

His}),

ii.

127.

Spring.

fulgida
.

Baf.DG.
Spring.

454; Fl.

cVIt.

298. Sicily, &c.

officinalis
region.

L.DC.
.

vi.

451

B. M.

t.

3204. Mediterranean
d-

Spring.
vi.

suflfruticosa
126.

Portugal,
=

VahlDC.

453

Willk.
.

Lge. Fl. Hisp.

ii.

N. Africa.

if.

Tp

Spring.

Calla cBthiopiea L.

Bichardia africana.
Pff.
iii.

CALLIANDRA

Benth.N.

3.

107.

Leguminosse549. Brazil.
172
;

Mimosoideae-Ingeae.

brevipes Benth.B. M. t. 4500 Fl. ij June-August. portorioensis Benth. Bossche, Ic. 8129. W. Indies. 1? Summer.
; .

d. S.

t.

Sel.

t.

B. M.

t.

Tweedii Benth. B. M. t. 4188. I7i^a pulcherrwia Hort. FL d. S. t. 25.Brazil. 1? Summer.


.

CALLICARPA L.N.
coidege-Callicarpeae.

Pff.

iv.

3 a.

165.

VerbenacejE-Vitit.

cana L.DC. purpurea


Juss.

xi.

643

Fl. Austr. v.

56.-5. M.

2107.

Queensland, N. Australia, Timor, Java.

DC.

^
t.
.

xi.

645

Fl. d. S.

1359

Schneider,

Tp May-June. Hdb. Laubh. ii. 591. China, Japan. tomentosa Willd.DC. xi. 647 B. M. t. 2107. China.
;

1?

June-July.
Pff.
iii.

CALLICOMA Andr.N.
serratifolia

2a.
7
;

102. Cunoniacese.
ii.

Andr.DC.
t.

iv.

Fl. Austr.

440

B. M.

t.

1811

Lodd. B. C.

1167. Austraha. Tp
Pff.
iii.

ICALLISTEMON
brachyandrus
Victoria.

B. Br.N.
Lindl.
.

7.

94. Myrtacese-Lepto122.

spermoideae-Leptospermeae-Leptosperminse.

Fl.

Austr.

iii.

N.

S.

Wales,

\^

June- August.

56

HOEfllS

MOETOLENSIS.
Austr.
120.

CALLISTEMON
coccineus F.
June-July.

{continued).
Milll.

Fl.
;

iii.

S. Australia.

i?

lanceolatus DC.
B. G.
t.

iii.

223 Fl. Austr.

iii.

120 B. M.

t.

260 Lodd.
;

523, as Metrosideros semper/lorens.

N.

S.

Wales, Victoria.

Queensland,
S.

Tj

June-July.
iii.

linearis

DC.

iii.

223; Fl. Austr.

122. N.
119.

Wales. t?.
Tp

June-July.

phoeniceus Lindl. June- July.

Fl.
iii.

Austr.

iii.

W. Australia.
121. N.
;

rigidus B. Br.DC. Ij June-July.

223

Fl. Austr.

iii.

S.

Wales.

salignus DC.
S.

iii.

223

Fl. Austr.

iii.

120

B. M.

t.

1821.

E. Australia, Tasmania.

^
1.

June-July,

speciosus DC. iii. 224; Fl. Austr. iii. 119; B. M. t. 1761; June-July. Lodd. B. C. t. 285. W. Australia. T?
.

JCALLITRIS

Vent.N.Pff.

ii.

193. Pinacese-Cupressoidese238.

Fl. Austr. cupressoides Schrad. DC. quadrivalvis Vent. DC.


australis B. Br.
April.

Actinostrobinae.

vi.

xvi. 2. 443.

xvi. 2.

Tasmania. Africa. 452. Atlas Mountains.


i?

S.

T?

T?

CALOCEPHALUS

R. Br.N.

Pff.

iv.

5.

194. Compositae-

Inuleae-Angianthinae.

Brownii F. Mull. Fl. Cass. DC. vi. 152.


11
^>
.

Austr.
S.

iii.

574.

and W.

Leucophyta Broivnii Australia, Tasmania.

June-September.

CALOCHORTUS
Tulipeae.

Pursh.N.

Pff.

ii.

5.

63. Liliacese-Lilioidese245.

venustus Dougl.
April-May.

Nich.

Diet.

i.

California.
4.

!(..

tCALODENDRON

Thunh.N.

Pff.

iii.

147. Eutaceae-

Eutoideae-Diosmeae-Calodendrinse.

capense Thunh.DC. i. 712; Fl. Cap. i. 371; Gard. Chron. June-July. 1905, i. 292. 304. S. Africa. ^
.

CALONYCTION

Clioisy.N. Pff.

iv.

3 a.

26. ConvolvulaceseH. Sch. t. 36 June- August.

Con vol vuloidese-Con volvuleae speciosum Choisy. DC. ix. 345 B, M. t. 752. Tropical America.

Jacq.
!(:.

HOETUS MOETOLENSIS

57

CALOTHAMNUS
quadrifidus B.
t.

Lahill.N.

Pff.

iii.

7.

97. Myrtace*iii.

Leptospermoideae-Leptospermeae-Calothamninse.

Br.DC.
t.

iii.

211

Fl. Austr.

1506; Locld. B. C.

737.

W.
iii.

Australia.

179
l?
.

B.

M.

June-

August.

CALPURNIA
sinia.

E. Mey.

N.
Afr.

Pff.

3.

197. Leguminosset.

Papilionatae-Sophoreae.

aurea Bak.Fl. Trop.


lasiogyne E. Mey.

ii.

252; B. M.

2617.

AbysPI.
t.

Fl. Natal, Abyssinia. ^


Pff.
iii.

Cap.
.

ii.

267

Wood, Nat.

4.

jCALTHA L.~N.
269.

2.

56. Eanunculacejfi-Helleboreffi.
i.

polypetala Hochst.Boiss. Fl. Or.

-Asia Minor,

59

The Gard. 1906,

i.

Persia.
Pff.

if..

Spring.

CALYCANTHUS
fertilis v.

L.N.

Isevigatus Willd.

DC.
Jp
.

iii.

2.
;

94. Calycanthacese.
Nich. Diet. 248.
i.

iii.

Butneria

ferax Schneider, Hdb. Laubh.

344.

Atlantic
occ.
T?

North America.

OGcidentalis Hook,
June-July.

d Am.

B.

M.

t.
i.

4:808.Butneria
345.

Greene, Schneider, Hdb. Laubh.

California.

CALYCOTOME
"spinosa
n. 1905.

Link.N.

Pff.

iii.

3.

236. Leguminosffit.
ip
.

Papilionatse-Genisteae-Spartiinae.
Li7ik.

DC.
Pff.
i.

ii.

152

Bickn.

PL Biv.

11

Fl. d'lt.

Western Mediterranean region.


iii.

April-May.

CAMELLIA L.N.
t.

6.

183, sub T/zea.- TheaccEe-Theese.


t.

japonica L.DC.
82.

529;

B.M.
Tp
.

42; Sieb.

&

Zucc. Fl. Jap.

China, Japan. Sasanqua Thunb. DC.


B. M.
t.

December-May.
;

i.

529
.

Sieb.

&

Zucc. Fl. Jap.

t.

83

5152. China. T?

CAMPANULA
alliarisefolia

L.N.

Pff.

iv.

5.

49. Campanulacese-Cam;

panuloidese-Campanuleae.

Willd.DC.
i^.

vii.

464

B. M.

t.

912. Caucasus,

Asia Minor.
fragilis

Spring.

coUina Bieb.DC. vii. 470; B. M. t. 927. Caucasus. 4. Cyrill.DC. vii. 476; B. M. t. 6504; Fl. d'lt. n. 3445. S. Italy. 4. June-September.

Grossekii Heuffel.DC. vii. 464. Hungary. Hostii Baumg. DC. vii. 470. Europe. if..

if.

Spring.

58

HORTUS MORTOLENSIS
(continued).
vii.

CAMPANULA

isophylla Moretti.DG.
Bickn. PI. Riv.
t.

476

Moggr.
n.

36;

Fl. d'lt.

B. M. t. 5745 t. 80 3444. Liguria. !(..


;

July-October. istriaca Peer in Journ. Bot. xxviii. 1890, 271.

Istria.

l^.

April-May.
lactiflora
14.
.

M.B.DC.yn.

ill; B. M.

t.

1973. Caucasus.
t.

Spring.

macrorrhiza Gay.
n.

3451

DC. Liguria.
vii.

vii.

2|.
;

475 Moggr. Nearly always.


;

29

Fl. d'lt.

Medium L.DG.
.
April-May.

460

Fl. d'lt. n.

3420. S. Europe.
1257. Asia Minor,
Fl. Or.
iii.

peregrina
Syria.

L.DG.
14..

vii.

478; B. M.
Noe.

t.

Spring.
Boiss.

phyctidocalyx
menia.

&

Boiss.

936.

Ar-

21

April-July.

Portenschlagiana Boem. & Schult. DC. vii. 476 The Gard. Spring. 1903, i. 110. Dalmatia. 1^. punctata Lam.DG. vii. 465 B. M. 1. 1723 Gard. Ghron.
; ;
;

1907,

ii.

96.

Eastern

Siberia.
;

l^.

June.

pyramidalis L.DC. vii. 477 Fl. d'lt. n. 3442. Adriatic Italy and Austria. Spring. 2^. sarmatica Ker.DG. vii. 464; Lodd. B. G. t. 581; B. M.

2019. Caucasus. *Tracheliuni L. DG. N. Asia, N.


t.

if..

Spring.

vii.

469

Fl. d'lt. n.

3455. Europe,
ii.

Africa.

if.

Spring and autumn,


t.

Vidalii H. G. Wats.B. M.
.

4748

Gard. Ghron. 1903,


472.

April-July. 330-331. Azores. 2|: 1? Waldsteiniana Boem. d Schult. DG. vii.

Croatia.

If.

Spring.

CAMPHOROSMA

L.N.

Pff.

iii.

la. 68.

Chenopodiaceaed'lt.

Cyclolobeae-Camphorosmeae.

monspeliacum L.DG.
Mediterranean region.

xiii.

2.
.

125; Fl.

n.

1028.

if

July-October.

CAMPSIS

grandiflora K. Sch.
grdfi.
t.

Bignoniacese-Tecomeae. 623. Hdb. Laubh. Te223. Bignonia Thunb. coma Del. DG. B. M. June-July. 1398. China, Japan. 623. Tecoma radicans Seem. Schneider, Hdb. Laiibh.
Lo2ir.

JV.

Pff. iv. Sb. 230.

Schneider,
ix.

ii.

grdfl.

T?

ii.

rad. Juss.

DC.

ix.

223.

Florida, Texas, &c.

Bignonia rad. L. B. M.
July-October.

t.

485.

17 .

HOETUS MOKTOLBNSIS

59

CAMPTOSEMA Hook, d Am.N.


rubicundum Hook.
cinoides Hort.
(&

Pff.

iii.

3.

369. Leguminosse

Am. B. M. 4608. Dioclea glyArgentina, Brazil. Spring. 55. Campanulacese-CampanuJCANARINA L. loideae-Campanuleae. Campanula Lam. DC. 444. Canaries. 422 B. M.
t.

-Papilionatae-Phaseoleae-DiocleinaB.

S.

Tp

iV.

Pff. iv. 5.

vii.

t.

2^.

January- April.
Pff.
iii.

CANAVALIA DC.N.
ensiformis DC.
obtusifolia DC.
ii.

3.

369. Leguminosae-Papilioii.

natge-Phaseoleae-Diocleinae.

404

Tropics. 0.
ii.

Fl. Trop. Afr.

190

B. M.

t.

4027.

September.

404

Fl. Trop. Afr.

ii.

190. Tropics.

^.
Candollea cuneiformis Labill.

Hibbertia cuneiformis.

CANNA L.N.

Pff.

ii.

6.

indica L.Fl. West Ind. 603


Fl. d'lt. n. 798.

W. Indies. 4. June-September. iridiflora Bz. & Pav. B. M. 1968. Peru. Springt.


24:
.

32. Cannacege. B. M. t. 454


;

Bed. Lil.

t.

201

autumn. lutea Mill.Lodd. B.


America.

G.

t.

646

B. M.

t.

2085. Tropical

l^.

Summer.
Pff. iv. 3a. 45.
ix.
;

ICANTUA
Pers.

Juss.

N.
Ij

buxifolia

Peru.

Lam. DC.
.

Polemoniaceee-Cantueae. 321 B. M. t. 4582. C. dependens April-May.


iii.

jCAPPARIS L.N.

Pff.

2.

229.

Capparidacese-Cappari291
;

doidese-Capparideae.

spinosa L.DC. i. 245 Mediterranean region


tember.
,,

B.

M.

t.
;

Fl. d'lt. n.

Orient

India.

1307.

June-SepFl. d'lt.
.

var.
n.

rupestris Sibth.

ISO! f3.

& Sm. DC. 245 Mediterranean region.


i.

Ip

June-

September.

CAPSICUM L.N.
Solaninae.

Pff.

iv.

36.

20. Solanacese-SolaneFl. d'lt. n.

annuum L.DC.
America.

xiii.

1.

412

2875. Tropical

0.

Summer.

60

HOETUS MORTOLENSIS
Lam.

CARAGANA

A^.

Pff.

iii.

3.

283.

Leguminosae-Papilioii.

natae-Galegeae-Astragalinse.

microphylla DC.
Siberia. T?
.

ii.

268

Schneider, Hdb. Laubh.

97.

ICARALLUMA
lieae.

L.N.

Pff. iv. 2.

277. Asclepiadaceae-Stapefig.

commutata
.

Berger, Stap.

&

Kl. 105,

23.

S.

Arabia

% September-October. crenulata WallDC. viii. 648


fig.

Gard. Chron. 1904,


2;.
;

i.

19,

Berger, Stap.

dependens N. E.
Kl. 120.

Br.

S. Africa.

Fl. Cap. 878 Berger, August-November.


iv.

&

Kl. 89.

India.
1.

August.
Stap.

&

2^.

europsea N. E. Br.~Berger, Stap. d' Kl. 92.DC. viii. 649 B. M. t. 5087 Fl. d'lt. n. 2744. Southern Mediterranean
;

region.
,,

21

Summer-autumn.

var. afl&nis Berger, Stap.


Sel.
t.

Kl. 97.

Bossche, Ic.

,,

var.

167. Morocco ? Simonis Berger, Stap. &

Kl. 95.

Tunis,

Tripoli.

Lugardi N. E. Br.Fl. Trop. Afr. iv. 1. 487 Berger, Stap. d- Kl. 113, fig. 26. Tropical W. Africa. 2^. AugustNovember.
;

lutea N. E. Br.Fl. Cap.

iv. 1.

885; Berger, Stap.

Kl. 84.

S. Africa.

11.
;

Marlothii N. E. Br.Fl. Cap. iv. 886 Berger, Stap. d Kl. 122. S. Africa. 21:. Munbyana N. E. Br. Gard. Chron. 1904, i. 84, fig. 39 Berger, Stap. d Kl. 99. Algiers. September-November. 14. Nebrownii Dinter d Berger. B. M. t. 8267 Berger, Stap. d Kl. 85, with figure. German S.W. Africa. 71 August;

October. Sprengeri N. E. Br. Fl. Trop. Afr. 484; Berger, Stap. d Kl. 102, Eritrea, Abyssinia. Summer.
; .

iv. 1.

fig.

22.

24.

autumn.

CARDIOSPERMUM
Paullineae.
Ic.
t.

L.N.
i.

Pff.

iii.

5.

306. Sapindacei.

Halicacabum L.DC.
508
;

601

Fl. Brit. Lid.

670

Wight,

M. t. 1049. Most tropical and subtropical countries. 0. Summer. hirsutum Willd.DC. i. 602; Bossche, Ic. Sel. t. 61. W. Africa. ^ . Summer-autumn.
B.

HOETUS MOETOLBNSIS

61

CARDUNCELLUS
caeruleus Less.
June-July.

J^iss.N.
615.

Pff.

iv.

5.

332. Compositse-

Cynareae-Centaureinae.

DC.
Pff.

vi.

Spain,

Algiers, Corsica.

2|..

CAREX
n.

L.

N.

ii.

2.

122.

Cyperaceffi-Caricoideiii.

Cariceae.

extensa Good.
506.
July.

Gren. d Europe, Asia


=
Boott.
2^.
d'

Goclr. Fl. Fr.

426; Fl.
1(..

d'lt.

Minor, N. Africa.

June-

japonica Hort.

Morrowii
Japan.

Kilchenth. Cyper. Caric. {R.


Godr. Fl. Fr.
if..
iii.

Morrowii.

V.

C), 626.

muricata L.Gren.

Europe, Asia, America. nana Boott. Kilchenth. Cyper.


Japan.
t

394

Fl. d'lt. n. 460.

May-June.
Caric.

{B. V. C), 103.

i^.

CARIC A L.N.
tj
.

Pff.

iii.

6 a.

98. Caricacea.
in B.

candamarcensis Hook.
June-July.

fil.

M.

t.

6198.

Ecuador.
T7
.

hastata Hort.
July.

Trop. America.
I.

Tp

June-July.

quercifolia St. Hil.N. Pff.

c.

S.

America.

June-

CARISSA

L.

N.

Pff.

iv.

2.

216, as Arduina.

Apocynaceseiv. 1.

Plumieroidese-Arduineae.

Arduina Lam.DC.
Cap.
iv. 1.

viii.

334

Fl

Trop. Afr.

91

Fl.

498; Lodd. B. C.

t.

387, as

Arduina bispinosa L.

S.

and British Central

Africa.

Tp

edulis Vahl var. tomentosa Stapf, Fl. Trop. Afr. iv. 1. 90 From Transvaal to Damaraland and Fl. Cap. iv. 1. 497.
Eritrea.

T?

June-July.
fil. viii.
;

grandiflora DC.

300

B. M.

t.

6307

335 Fl. Cap. Wood, Natal PI. i.


;

iv. 1.

497

Bef. Bot.
Africa.

14,

t.

14. S.

^
CARLINA
L.

N.

Pff.

iv.

5.

316. Compositae-Cynarese;

Carlininae.

acanthifolia
sicula

AllDC.

vi.

545

Fl

d'lt. n.

3689. Mediter-

ranean region.

.
vi.

Summer.
546;

Ten.DC. Summer.

Fl

d'lt n.

3693. Sicily. 2^.

62

HORTUS MORTOLENSIS
R.

CARMICHiELIA
australis B.

Br.N.

Pff.

iii.

3.

278. LeguminosaeLodd. B. C.
V>
.

Papilionatae-Galegeae-Robiniinse.

Br.Hdb.
t.

Fl. N. Zeald. 50;

1.

1061

Bossche, Ic. Sel.

Enysii

land.

T. Kirk.
Tp

Nich. Diet.

13.

New

Zealand.

May-June.

Gard. Supjpl. 195.

New Zea-

flagelliformis Col.Hdb. Fl. N. Zeald.


Ip
.

50. New Zealand.


.

May-June.
Fl. N. Zeald.

odorata Col.Hdb.

50. New Zealand. ^


2rt.

CARPENTERIA
California.

Torr.

N.
t.

Pff.

iii.

69. Saxifragaceseii.

Hy drangeoidese-Philadelpheae
californica Torr.B. M.

6911

Gard. Chron. 1908,

112.

June.
Pff.
iii.

CARPODETUS

Forst.N.

2a.

87. Saxifragacesetp

Escallonioideae.

serratus Forst.

Hdb. Fl. N. Zeald.


Pff. iv. 5.

59.

New Zealand.
;

CARTHAMUS

L.N.

332. Compositae-CynareaeFl. d'lt. n.

Centaureinae.

lanatus L.DC. vi. 610 B. M. t. 2142 0. Summer. S. Europe, Orient. leuGOcaulos Sibth. & Sm.DG. vi. 610 Greece. ii. 168. 0. Summer.
;

3752.

Hal. Consp. Fl. Gr.

CARYOPTERIS

Bunge.N.

Pff.

iv.

3 a.

178.Verbenaceaet.

Caryopteridoideae.

Mastacanthus Schaii.DC.
Tj
.

xi.

625

B. M.

6799. China.

September-October.
LI.
(&

JCASIMIROA
edulis LI.
ii.

Lex.

N.
Her.
April.

Pff.

iii.

4.

178.

Rutaceae-

Toddalioideae-Toddalieae.

&

Lex.

Seem.
.

t.

5152

Gard. Chron. 1893,

393. Mexico. \^
L.

CASSIA

N.

Pff.

iii.

3.

157.

Leguminosae-Csesalpinioidese;

CassieaB.

artemisioides Gaud. DC. ii. 495 Tp March-April, Australia.

Fl.

Austr.

ii.

288.

australis Sims in B. E.Australia.

M.
ii.

t.

2676;

Fl. Austr.

ii.

285.

Tp

bicapsularis L.
sub
t.

DC.

October-spring.

494

183.

Tropical America.

Wildem. in Bossche, Ic. Sel. Tj September-October.


.

HOETUS MORTOLENSIS
CASSIA
{continued).

63

coquimbensis November.
America.
laevigata

Vog.

B. M.

t.

7002.

Chili.

t.

i?

September-

corymbosa Lam.DC.

T?

ii. 491; B. M. June-September.

633.Tropical
.

Willd.DC.

ii.

491. Tropical America. \^


;

July-

September.
OGcidentalis

tomentosa L.DC. 496 Fl. Brit. Ind. America. September-January.


.

L.DC. ii. 497 Fl. Brit. Ind. ii. 262. Tropics. September-October. pilifera Vogel. N. Pff. I. c. 159. Uruguay to Central America. September-January. ^

f?

ii.

ii.

263. Tropical

Tp

CASSINIA
New

B. Br.N.

Pff.

iv.

5.

188. CompositEe-Inulese;

Gnaphalinae.

leptophylla B.
Zealand.

longifolia B. Br. DC. Wales, Victoria.


Tp
.

Br.DC.

vi.

155 156

Hdb.

Fl. N. Zeald.

145.
S.

vi.

Fl. Austr.

iii.

586. N.

l?

Theodorei F. M.Fl. Austr.

iii.

588. N.
Pff'.

S.

Wales. f?
3.

tCASTANOSPERMUM
australe A. Cunyi.

A.

Cunn.N.
ii.

iii.

195. Leguii.

minosae-Papilionatae-Sophoreae.

Fl. Austr.
S.

275; Gard. Chron. 1905,


.

244. Queensland, N.

Wales. Tj
1.

ICASUARINA L.N.

Pff.

iii.

18. Casuarinaceee.
xvi. 2.
.

Cunninghamiana Miq.DC.

Queensland, N.

335

Fl. Austr.

vi.

198.

S.

Wales.

^
2.

equisetifolia Forst.DC. xvi.

November-December. 338 Fl. Austr. vi. 197.


;

India to Australia.

Ip

glauca Sieber.DC. xvi. 2. 334; Fl. Austr. vi. 196. Eastern Tp Australia. November-December. stricta Ait. DC. xvi. 2. 336 Fl. Aicstr. vi. 195. C. quadri.

Eastern Australia, Tasmania. February. suberosa Otto dDietr.DC. 197. 337; Fl. Austr. Eastern Australia. ^ November-December. torulosa Ait.DC. 200. Eastern 341 Fl. Austr. Australia.
valvis Labill.
Tp
.

xvi. 2.

vi.

xvi. 2.

vi.

ip

CATALPA

Juss.N.

Fargesii Bureau.

Schneider,
Tp.

Pff. iv. 3 b.

234.Bignoniaceae-Tecomeae.
Hdb. Laubh.
ii.

627.

China

[Wilson, n. 636).

64

HOKTUS MOETOLENSIS
{continued).
;

CATALPA
I7
.

ix. 226 B. M. t. 6611.Japan. May-June. sutchuensis Dode. Schneider, Hdb. Laubh. ii. 627. China {Wilso7i, n. 640). Tp.

Kaempferi Thunh.DC.

tCATHA

Forsk.

N.
T7
.

Pjf.

iii.

5.

208.

Celastraceae-CelastroideaeTrop. Afr.
i.

EucelastresB.

edulis Forsk. DC.


Abyssinia.

ii.

6;

Fl.

365. Arabia,

December- January.
Pff.
ii.

JCATTLEYA

Lindl.N.
t.

6.

146. Orchidaceae-MonJune.

andrse-Laeliinae-Cattleyese.

citrina Lindl.B. M.

3742. Mexico. 4.
iii.

CEANOTHUS
africanus L.
T?

L.N.

= Noltea africana.
ii.

Pff.

5.

412. Ehamnaceae-Ehamneae.
B. M.
t.

americanus L.DC.
.

31

1479. N. America.
ii.

April-June.

azureus Desf. N.America.

DC. ^.

ii.

31

Schieider, Hdb. Laubh.

295.

June-July.
Pff'. iii.

CEDRELA
Dugesii

B. Br.N.
S.

4.

267. Meliaceae-CedreloideaeAcad,
xviii.

Cedreleae.

Wats.
Tp

Proc.
i.

Am.
Fl.

1883,

190.

Mexico.

odorata L.DC.
S.

264

West Lid. 131. W. Indies,

America.

sinensis Juss.

Toona Koxb.

= Toona sinensis. = Toona ciliata.


Moench.

T7

CEDRONELLA

N.
xii.
T^
.

Pff.

iv.

3 a.

235. Labiatae-

DC. 406, as Moench. Canaries, Madeira. Pinaceae-Abietinae. CEDRUS Loud. N. 408 Veitch, Man. Con. 134. atlantica Manetti. DC. Atlas Mountains. April. 408 Veitch, Man. Con. 134 Deodara Loud. DC. Brandis, For. Fl. Lid. 516. Himalayan Mountains.
canariensis Willd.
C. triphijlla
Pff.
ii.

Stachyoideae-Nepeteae.

74.

xvi. 2.
.

Ip

xvi. 2.

T?

April.

Libani BarrelDC.

xvi. 2.

407

Veitch,

Man. Con. 137.

Asia Minor, Lebanon.

Tp

April.

HOETUS MORTOLENSIS

65

CELASTRUS

N. 205. Celastraeege-Cela363. Abyssinia. arbutifolius Hochst. Fl. Trop. Afr.


L.
Pff.
iii.

5.

stroideae-Eucelastreae.

i.

\^

articulatus

Thunh.DC.

ii.

7; B.

M.

t.

Gy^nnosporia huxifolia. huxifolms L. mollis Decne. in Bev. Hort. Ser. 2. iv. (1845-46) 425.

7599. Japan. tj

orbiculatus Lam. = articulatus. punctatus Thunh. DC. 6 Schneider, 184. Japan, China. April-May.
land unknown.
Tp
ii.
:

Native
ii.

Hdb. Lauhh.

i? .

serratus Hochst.

= Gymnosporia serrata.
i.

stylosus Wall.Fl. Brit. Ind.

618

N.

Himalaya.

Pff.

I.

c.

205.

April.
iii.

CELOSIA

L.

N.

Pff.

la. 99.

Amarantaceae-Amarantoidese;

Celosieae.

cristata

L.DC.

xiii. 2.

242

Fl. d'lt. n.

1056. Trop.
?
.

Asia,

0. Autumn. pyramidalis Hort. Nich. Diet. 289. India Autumn. CELSIA L. N. Sb. Scrophulariacese-PseudoAfrica, America.
Pff.
iv.

52.

solaneae-Verbasceae.

Arcturus Miirr.DC. Minor. . May.

x.

245

B. M.

t.

1962. Greta, Asia

CELTIS L.N.
1?
.

Pff.

iii.

1.

Audibertiana Spach.
April,

DC.

63. Ulmacese-Celtidoideffi.
xvii.

175.

Origin
912;

unknown.
Schneider,

australis
April,

L.DC.
i.

xvii.

169;

Fl. d'lt. n.

Hdb. La2ibh.

231.

Mediterranean
xvii.
Tp
;

region. Orient.

Tp

sinensis Persoon.
Gillies.

DC. 172 Schneider, Hdb. Laiibh. 229. China, Japan. DC. 190. America. Tala
xvii.
Tp

i.

CENTAUREA

L.N.

Pff. iv. 5.

326. Compositse-Cynaresevi.

Centaureinse.

alba L. var. deusta Ten.DC. S. Europe. May. 2^.

569; Fl.

d'lt. n.

37188.

argentea L. DC. vi. babylonica L.DC.


stina, Central Asia.

582.
vi.

Istria, Crete.
;

2^.
iii.

canariensis Brouss.
July.

DC.

567 Boiss. Fl. Or. May-July. If..


vi.

681. Pal.
l^
ip
.

577.

Teneriife.

June-

66

HORTUS MORTOLENSIS

CENTAUREA

DC. 580; May-July. region. Clementei Boiss. W. & L.


Cineraria L.
vi.

{continued).

Fl. d'lt. n. 3730.

2^.

Fl. Hisp.

ii.

Mediterranean 150. Spain.


i;.

June.

collina

L.DG.

vi.

588

Fl. d'lt. n.

3737. Mediterranean
vi.

region, Orient.

2^.

June-July.
n.

conifera L.Fl. d'lt. Mediterranean region.


v^

3717.DC.
601
;

606 (Leuzea).

2^.

June- July.
Fl. d'lt. n.

crassifolia Bertol.DC.
11
.

vi.

3743. Malta.

DG. 3726. Europe, 578; 0. 664. Canaries. cynaroides Link. DG. 598. N. Africa. ferox Desf.DG. 1847, 429. Algeria. Fontanesii Spach. Duch. Bev. Bot. U62. Asia Minor, 568; B. M. glastifolia L.DG. May-June, Caucasus, 577. Spain, France. intybacea Lam. DG.
Cyanus
L.
vi.

May-August.

Fl.

d'lt.

n.

Caucasus.

vi.

2^.

vi.

2^.

ii.

vi.

t.

Siberia.

2|..

vi.

S.

1(..

montana L.DG.
Central and

var.
S.

vi.

578; B.
14..
Z.

Europe.
582.

M. t. 77; May.
579.
if..

Fl. d'lt. n.

3727.
May.

albida DC.
vi.

c.

pannosa DG.
June-July.

Parlatoris Heldr.

Fl.

Greece.
d'lt.

n.

Orient. 3731
^.

1(..

Italy, Greece.

2^.

puUata
.

L.

DG.

vi.

577.

Mediterranean region.
;

if.

ragusina L.DG. vi. 589 B. M. t. 494. Dalmatia, Creta. May-July. If repens L. DG. vi. 663, sub Acroptilon. S. Russia, Asia May-July. Minor, Afghanistan. if. DG. yi. 602.Turkey. 2^. May-June. rutifolia Sibth. salmantica L.DG. vi. 563; Fl. d'lt. n. 3715. Europe, May-July. N.Africa. 2^. salonitana Vis. Fl. Dalm. ii. 35. Dalmatia. if.. June.

Scabiosa L.DG.

vi.

580; Fl.

d'lt. n.

3734. Europe. 2^.

May-July.
sempervirens L.DG.
Fl. d'lt. n. 3725. Western May-June. sphserocephala L.DG. vi. 599 B. M. t. 2551 Fl. d'lt. May-July. n. 3749. S. Europe. 2;. sterilis Stev.Boiss. Fl. Or. iii. 622. Tauria. 2|
vi.

577

Mediterranean region.

i^.

HOETUS MOETOLENSIS

67

CENTRANTHUS
0.

DC.N.

Pff. iv. 4.

Calcitrapa Dufr.DC.

iv.

632; Fl.

d'lt. n.

181.Valerianaceae. 3340. S. Europe.

*ruber DC. iv. 632 ranean region.

FL

d'lt. n.

3337. S. Europe, Mediter-

21.

April-October.
Pff. iv. 4.
iv.

CEPHALARIA
Europe.

Schrad.N. leucantha Schrad.DG.

648

Fl. d'lt. n.

118. Dipsaceae. 3366. S. W.

2^.

June-July.
iii.

CEPHALOCEREUS

Pfeiff'.N. Pff. Cereoideae-Echinocactese.

6a.

181. Cactacese.

chrysomallus K. Schum. Mon. K. Schum. Mon. senilis Pfeiff.

200.

201.

Mexico. ^ Mexico.
ii.

T?

CEPHALOTAXUS
drupacea
Pilger,
Sieh.

Sieb.

& Zucc.N.

Pff.

1.

109. Taxaceae-

Taxoidese-Cephalotaxeee

&

Zucc. Fl. Jap.


V.
.

ii.

t.

130
19;

Tax. {B.

C), 100,

fig.

B.

DC. xvi. 2. 504 M. t. 8285.

Japan, China. ^
CERASTIUM L.N. Pff.
-Alsinese.

iii.

lb.

80. Caryophyllaceffi-Alsinoideae
t.

Biebersteinii DC.
i.

i.

418

B. M.

2782

The Garden, 1901,

Asia Minor. May. tomentosum L.DC. 418 Fl. May-July.


470.
2|.
i.
;

d'lt. n. 1146.

S.

France,

Italy.

2;.

Cerasus Tourn.

Prunus.
Pff.
iii.

ICERATONIA L.N.
nioideae-Cassieee.

3.

154. Leguminosse-Caesalpin.

Siliqua
Orient.

L.DC.

ip

ii. 486; Fl. d'lt. September-October.

1859. S. Europe,

CERATOSTIGMA Bunge.N.
-Plumbaginege.

Pff. iv. 1.

122. Plumbaginaceae
Nich. Diet. Sujypl.
t.

plumbaginoides Bunge.

N.

Pff.

I.e.;

2U.Plnmbago

Larpentce Lindl. Fl.

d. S.

307

B.
.

M.

t.

4487, as Valoradia plumbaginoides.

CERATOZAMIA
Zamieae.

Brongn.N.

Pff.

ii.

N. China. Cycadaceae14.

April.

1.

23.

Kuesteriana

Begel.

mexicana Brongn.

DC. DC.

xvi. 2. 546.

xvi. 2. 546.

Mexico. Mexico.

T^

Tp

2f

68

HORTUS MORTOLENSIS
Pff. iv. 2. 158.

ICERBERA L. N.
lactaria

Apocynaceae-Plumieroidess;

Plumiereae-Cerberinae.

Ham.DC.

viii.

353

B. M.

t.

1845. India

f?

JCERCIS

LeguminosaB-CaesalpinioideaeChina. ^ chinensis Bung Schneider, Hdb. Laubh. 1860. 518 B. M. 1138 Siliquastrum L.DC. Europe, Orient. ^ April-May. 6a. 176. Cactaceae-CereoideseICEREUS Mill.N. Echinocactese. acidus K. Schtim. Mon. Nachtr. En. America. alacriportanus Hort. alopecuroides Web. America June-August, 467. Mexico. ambiguus Bonpl. DC. 8277. amecaensis Heese.K. ScJmvi. Mon. 154 B. M. Mexico. andalgalensis Web. K. Schum. Mon. 168. Argentina. America. areolatus Muhlenpf. K. Schum. Mon. 100. ^ Juneazureus Parm. K. Schum. Mon. 118. Brazil. July. Baumannii Lem. K. Schum. Mon. 133. Uruguay, ParaSummer. guay. Mexico. bavosus Web. K. Schum. Mon. Mexico. baxaniensis Kanv. K. Schum. Mon. September-November. Beneckei Ehrb. K. Schum. Mon. 103. Mexico. February-October. Costa Rica. BioUeyi Web. K. Schum. Mon. Nachtr. ^ K. Schum. Mon. 147. Cuba. ^. Boeckmannii July. Bonplandii Parm. K. Schum. Mon. 135. Paraguay. breviflorus K. Schum. Mon. 58, Nachtr. Bridgesii Salm. K. Schum. Mon. 107. Bolivia. ^. June-July. En. Tropical America. csesius K. Schum. Mon. Argentina. candicans September. gladiata K. Schum. Mon. catamarcensis Berger. K. ScMim. Mon. 243. Argentina.
L.
Pff.
iii.

N.

3.

146.

Bauhinieae.

e.

ii.

5.

ii.

1.

Fl. d'lt. n.

Pff.

iii.

22.

Chili.
S.
.

i^

Pfeiff.

87.

Tp

S.

?.

i?

iii.

T?

t.

Tp

Tp

S.

Tp

84.

ip

98.

ip

Tp

60.

Otto.

Tp

23.

Chili.

Tp

Otto.

Pfeiff.

89.

Tp

Gill.

69.

Tp

,,

var.

70.

Tp

HORTUS MORTOLENSIS

69

CEREUS

{continued).

Cavendishii Monv.K. Schum. Mon. 135, Nachtr. 40.


S. America. ^ Bolivia. K. Schum. Mon. 179. Celsianus Berger. October-November. var. Bruennowii K. Schum. I.e. 180. K. Schum. I. c. 180. var. lanuginosior Salm. var. Williamsii K. Schum. I.e. 180. chalybseus Otto. K. Schum. Mon. 120. Argentina. ^ chilensis Colla. K. Schum. Mon. 61. Chili. ^
.

i?

Forster, Hclb. Kakt. 711. Mexico. clavatus Goccineus Sahn. K. Schum. Mon. Nachtr. Goerulescens Salm. K. Schum. Mon. 121. Argentina. coluhrinus Otto = Baumannii. cometes Scheidiu. K. Schum. Mon. 190. Mexico. K. Schum. Mon. Argentina. Coryne Curtisii Otto.K. Schum. Mon. 189. W. Indies. cyaneus Hort. America. Uruguay. Damazioi K. Schum. Mon. Nachtr. Dauticitzii Fr. A. Haage = lanatus. Mexico. Dumortieri Sahn. K. Schum. Mon. eburneus Salm. K. Schum. Mon. 108. Mexico. ^ Emoryi Engelm. K. Schum. Mon. 123. California.
. .

,,

Otto.

ed.

ii.

Tp

53.

Tp

^?

i?

Otto.

63.

i?

T?

S.

Tp

38.

T?

92.

i?

17

eriophorus Lk. d- Otto.Pfeiff. En. 94, Ahhild. t. 22. W. Indies. ^ K. Schum. Mon. 95. Eruca Bra?idegee. K. Schum. Mon. 125. S. California. Tj euchlorus Web. K. Schum. Mon. 84. S. Brazil, Paraguay.

euphorbioides Ha^o.
schrft. f.

K. Schum. Mon. 93

Berger in Monatsi?
.

Brazil. exerens Link. K. Schum. Mon. 184, K. Schum. Mon. 161. Trinidad. b extensus Salm. flagelliformis Mill.K. Schiim. Mon. 142. Mexico. June, K. Schum. Mon. Nachtr. Mexico. flagriformis ^. En. 82. W. Indies. ^ flavispinus Salm. K. Schum. Mon. 111. Argentina. Forbesii America. formosus Salm, Cact. Hort. Dyck. 58. 213.
fig. 39.
v^
.

K. 1907, 87, with fig. Brazil.

October.

i?

Zilcc.

46.

Pfeiff.

Otto.

f?

S.

^. fulgidus Hook. fil. in B. M. Garden origin. ^


.

t.

5856

K. ScMim. Mon. 146.

70

HORTUS MORTOLBNSIS
{continued).

CEREUS

Funkii K. Schwn. Mon. 61. Chili. t? geometrizans Mart. K. Schum. Mon.

104.

Mexico. ^.

June-July.

pugionifer Le;j. K. Schum. Mon. 105. f? June-July, Mexico. giganteus Engelm.K. ScMim. Mon. 76 B. M. t. 7222. i? N. Mexico, Arizona. Dyck. 335. S. America. glauGUS Salm, Hort. ^ Gonzalezii Web. K. Schum. Nachtr. 59. Costa Rica. ^ June-July, grandiflorus Mill.K. Schum. Mon. 144 B. M. t. 3381.

var.

W.

Indies.
,,

l?

June-July.

var. var. var.

barbadensis Hort.

,,

Maximilianus Hort.
;

Schmidtii Hort. Greggii Engelm. K. Schum. Mon. 96 ii. 93. Texas. Tj. July.

Gard. Chron. 1903,

Grusonianus Weingart
Tropical America.
fornia.
T?
.

July, gummosus Engelm. K. Schum. Mon. 124. Lower Cali hamatus Scheidio. K. Schum. 155 Bossche, 103. rostratus Lem. Mexico. July, hamatus x grandiflorus. Garden Hankeanus Weh. K. Schum. Mon. 88. Argentina.
\^
.
;

in Monatsschrft. f. K. 1905, 54.

Ic. Sel.

t.

C.

i?

origin,

ip

T?

July- August.

Hassleri K. Schum. Mon. Nachtr. 57. Paraguay. (? Hermentianus Monv. K. Schum. Mon. 187. Native land

not known. Hildmannianus K. Schum. Mon. 110. Brazil. Hoppenstedtii Berger. K. Schum. Mon. 177. Mexico. K. Schum. Mon. 113. America. horridus HouUetii Berger. K. Schum. Mon. 182. Mexico. ^ K. Schum. Mon. 156. Venezuela. ^ inermis Jamacaru DC. K. Schum. Mon. 112. America. ^. Summer. Jusberti Beb. K. Schum. Mon. 137. Argentina, Paraguay. June-July. K. Schum. Mon. Nachtr. Honduras. Kunthianus Isetevirens Otto.Pfeiff. En. America. ^ Summer.
1?
.

i?

l?

Otto.

S.

i?

Otto.

S.

ip

Otto.

48.

T?.

99.

S.

HOETUS MOKTOLENSIS

71

CEREUS
laevigatus Sahn, Cact. Hort. Dyck. 204.

lamprochlorus Lem. K. ScMcm. Mon. 60. Argentina. ^ lanatus H. B. K.K. Schum. Mon. 194, Nachtr. 66 Fl d. S. t. 2163. Peru. Tp. Lemairei Hook, in B. M. t. 4814 K. Schum. Mon. 160. W.
. ;
;

S.

America.

Indies

Tp lepidotus Sahn. K. Schum. Mon. 109. Cuba. 47. Mexico. leptophis DC. K. Schum. Mon. Nachtr. K. Schum. Mon. 113; B. M. t. 5775. lividus Pff.
.

America.
Tp

Tp


Tp

S.

Tp longispinus Sahn. K. Schum. 62. Chili. MacDonaldise Hook, in B. M. t. 4707; K. Schum. Mon. 149.

K. Schum. Mon. 115. Brazil. September. mamillatus Engehn. K. Schum. Mon. 165, Nachtr. California. marginatus DC. K. ScMim. Mon. 90. Mexico. K. ScMtm. Mon. 143. Mexico. Martianus June-July. JulyMartinii Lah. K. Schum. Mon. 141. Argentina.
macrogonus Sahn.
Tp
.

S.

America.

Tp

July.

61.

S.

Tp

Tp

Ziicc.

Tp

Tp

August.

mixtecensis
Mexico.

/.
Tp
.

A. Purp. in Monatsschrft. f. K. 1909, 52.

monacanthus Lem.

Tp K. Schum. Mon. 142. S. America. Moritzianus Otto. K. Schum. Mon. 191. Venezuela. Tp Tp multangularis Haio. K. Schum. Mon. 66. S. America. Napoleonis Grah.K. Schum. Mon. 159 B. M. t. 3458.
.
;

W. Indies. b Tp nitidus Salvi, Cact. Hort. Dyck. 212. Venezuela. K. Schum. Mon. 146. Mexico. nycticalus Link.
.

Tp

Tp

June-July.
,,

var.

armatus
.

Hort.

K. Schum. Mon. 147.


;

obtusus Haw.Pfeiff. En. 105


America.

K. Schum. Mon. 117. S.


Tp

K. Schum. Mon. 159. Mexico. K. Schum, Mon. 284California. pacificus Coult. paraguayensis K. Schum. Mon. Nachtr. 34. Paraguay. b Argentina, Bolivia. pasacana Weh. K. Schum. Mon.
ocamponis Salm.
Tp

Tp

77.

72

HOETUS MOETOLENSIS
{continued).
Efig.

CEREUS
1?.

Mexico. Zoe, 192. California. pensilis Kath. Brandegee pentaedrophorus Lab. K. Schum. Mon. 174. 468. Central America. pentagonus L. DC. Summer. peruvianus MiZ/. K. Schum. Mon. 113. S.America. ^. Summer. longispinus Hort. 115. DC. K. Schum. monstruosa phatnospermus X. Schum. Mon. Nachtr.^1. Paraguay. K. Schum. Mon. America platygonus K. Schum. Mon. 174. Mexico. polylophus DC. pomanensis Weh. K. Schum. Mon. 136. Argentina. ^ Sonora. Pringlei Wats. K. Schum. Mon. Forst. Hdh. Kakt. 717. Mexico. pruinosus ^ pterogonns Lem. K. ScMim. Mon. 152. New Granada. Mexico. ^ quaretaroensis Web. K. Schwn. Mon. K. Schimi. Mon. ^ re-pMiduB Haiv. Paraguay. rhodoleucanthus K. Schum. Mon. Nachtr. ^. K. Schum. Mon. 166. Mexico. rigidispinus Royenii Haio. K. Schum. Mon. 181. W. Indies. scandens Salm, Cact. Hort. Dyck. 219. Guayana. Schottii Engehn. K. Schum. Mon. 173. Mexico. Schrankii Zucc. K. Schum. Mon. Nachtr.
pecten-aboriginum
75.

K. Schum. Mon.
v.

in

Tp

Brazil.

T?

iii.

'^

,,

var.
var.

T^

P.

I.

c.

i? l?

Otto.

99.

S.

l?

i?

71.

l?

Otto.

ed.

ii.

T^

82.

94.

Antilles.

44.

Milhlen;pf.

Tp

i?

Tp

California.
52.

i?

1?

July.

sciurus Kath. Brandegee in Zoe, v. 192. California. ^ serpentinus DC.K. Schum. Mon. 129 B. M. t. 3566.
.

Mexico.

T?

Tp Summer. setaceus Salm. K. Schurn. Mon. 162. Brazil. Argentina. K. Schum. Mon. 67. Spachianus Lem. ^.
.

Summer,

t.

June-July.
2306. Central Paraguay, Spegazzinii Web. K. Schum. Mon. Nachtr. Summer. Argentina. spinulosus DC. K. Schum. Mon. 148. Mexico.

speciosus K. Schum. Mon. 153; B. M.


America.
Tp

42.

fp

fp

stellatus Pfeiff.K. Schum. Mon.

79. Mexico.

Tp

October,
.

stenogonus K, Schum. Mon. Nachtr. 31.

Paraguay. ^

HOETUS MOETOLENSIS

73

CEREUS
strictus

K. Schum. Mon. 68. Argentina. ^ Swartzii Griseb. Fl. West. Ind. 301. Jamaica. Bolivia. ^. tephracanthus Lah. K. Schum. Mon. Summer. 81. boliviana Web. K. Schum. Bolivia. ^ K. 1904, 55. Mexico. testudo Kariv. Monatsschrft. Forst. Hdb. Kakt. 399, 715. thalassinus America ^ Argentina. ^ thelegonus Web. K. Schum. Mon. tortuosus Forb. K. Schum. Mon. 139. Argentina.
strigosus Salm.
.

DC.K. Schim. Hon. 188. West Indies. T?


Tj

80.

var.

I.

c.

f.

T?

Otto.
.

ed.

ii.

S.

78.

Tp

Summer.
triangularis Haio.

K.

Schum. Mon. 157.


158.

Mexico. ^.
.

Summer. trigonus Haw.

var.
56.

K. Schum. Mon.
T^
.

costaricensis Web.

K.

Antilles. ^

Schum. Mon. Nachtr.


K.
?

Costa Eica. Urbanianus Giirke & Weing. 136. Tropical America.


I?

Summer.
in Monatsschrft. f.

1906,

Summer.
t.

variabilis Pfeiff. En. 105, Abbild.

15.

S.

America

CERINTHE

L.

N.

Pff. iv.

3 a. 127.

Borraginaceae-Borragi;

noideae-Lithospermege.

major L.DC.

x.

S;

B. M.
Bichiell,

t.

333

Fl. d'lt. n.

2777.
t.

Europe, Orient.

0.
2
;

April-May.

minor L.DC.
Fl. d'lt. n.

x.

PL
270.

Riv.

t.

39

B.

M.

6890

2775. Europe, Orient. 0.


Pff.
iv.

April-May.

CEROPEGIA L.N.
dichotoma
fig.

2.

Asclepiadace^-CynanBerger, Stap.

choidese-Tylophoreae-Ceropegintfi.

73.

DC. Canaries.
Haiu.

viii.
.

645
ix.

Kl. 363,

T?

Summer.
1861, 59
Tj
.

fusca

G. Bolle in

Bonplandia

Berger, Stap.

&

Kl. 365.

Canaries.
; ;

B. M. t. 8066 Summer.
;

Sandersoni Decne.B. M. t. 5792 Fl. Cap. iv. 1. 815 Summer. Berger, Stap.d Kl. 372. Natal. 2^ . stapeliiformis Haiv.B. M. t. 3657 FL Cap. iv. 1. 812 Summer. Berger, Stap. & KL 360. S. Africa. 1/: . Woodii Schlechter.Gard. Ghron. 1897, ii. fig. 104 B. M. FL Cap. iv. 1. 823 Berger, Stap. <& KL 370. t. 7704
;
;

Natal.

V,.

Nearly always.

74
t

HOETUS MOETOLENSIS
L.

OESTRUM

N.
I?
.

Pff.

iv.

Sb.

29. Solanacese-CestreaeFl. d. S.
t.

Cestrinae.

aurantiacum
Guatemala.
S.

Lindl.

DC. xiii. 1. 603; November-March.


xiii.

79.

corymbosum Schlecht.DC.
Brazil. Tp. elegans Schlecht.DG.
xiii. 1.

1.

621

B. M.

t.

4201.

November- January. fasciculatum Miers.DC. xiii.


ip
.

600;
1.

B.M.
599
;

t.

5659. Mexico.
t.

B. M.

4183 and
xiii.

Mexico. ^ November-January. 1729 DC. 330 B. M. fastigiatum Jacq. H. Sch. -December. 606. W. Indies. ^ October 619. Mexico. Gal.^DC. lanatum Mart, DC. 659. Brazil. ^. Octoberluridum Don.
5659.
.

t.

t.

1.

d;

xiii. 1.

T?

xiii.

1.

January.

mortolense Hort. Mort.

Garden
i.

origin.

Tp

October-

Nich. nocturnum L. DC.


Newelli
Veitch.

Garden origin? 631. America. 1770 Fl. 616 B. M. Parqui L'Herit.DC. April-June, SeptemberArgentina. ^ 2865. January. 663. Brazil. April-June. Poeppigii Sendt. DC. 646. Brazil. MarchPseudo-quina Mart. DC.
Diet.

January.

301.

i?

October-April.

xiii. 1.
xiii.

S.
;

T?

1.

t.

d'lt.

n.

Chili,

xiii. 1.

i?

xiii. 1.

T?

April.

roseum H.
ber-May.

B.

K.DC.

xiii. 1.

602. Mexico. Tp

Decem-

Smithii Hort. Lem.

Garden
H. Sch.

origin.
t.

T?

suberosum
S.

Jacq.

452;

DC.

xiii.

1.

612.

America.

Warscewiczii Klotzsch in Otto (& xix. 1851, 362. S. America. i?


.

Dietr.

Allg.

Gartenztg.

CHJEROPHYLLUM
Villarsii Koch.

L.N.

Pff.

iii.

8.

150. Umbelliferaei.

Apioidege-Scandicineae-Scandicinse.

Gren. & Godr. Fl. Fr.


I.

744. Europe.
38.
iii.

!(..

CHAMiEALOE
vi.

Berger, Aloin. {B. V. C.

iv.

2)

120.

Liliacese-Asphodeloideae-Aloineae.

africana Berger,
309.

c. fig.

41.

Aloe Boiviei Schult. Fl. Cap.

Boiuiea africana

Haw. S.

Africa.

H..

July-

September.

HOETUS MOETOLENSIS

76
100.

CHAMiBCYPARIS
filifera

Spach.

N.

Pff.

ii.

1.

Pinaceae-

Cupressineae-Cupressinae.

Hort.Nich. Diet. 303;

Veitch,

Man. Con. 243.


Tp

Japan.

Ip

pisifera Sieb.

&

Zucc.

DC.

xvi. 2. 465.

Japan.
.

JCHAMiEDORE A Willd.N. Pff.


Arecineae-Iriartese.

ii.

3.

62. Palmae-Ceroxylinae?

corallina Hort.

desmoncoides H. Wendl. Nich. Diet. 305. Mexico. i? . Octoberelegans Mart.B. M. t. 4845. Mexico. i?
.

Central America ^
WendlB. M.
t.

November.
Ernesti- August! H.
4831,

4837. Mexico.

^
Ghamcepeuce DC.

= Cirsium.

tCHAM-ffilROPS L.
Sabaleae.

N.

Pff.

ii.

3.

31. Palmje-Coryphinge-

excelsa

Thunb. Traehycarpus exeelsa. humilis L.Kunth, En. iii. 249 B. M. t. 2152 Fl d'lt. 518. Mediterranean region. ^. May. var. arborescens Pers. Fl. d'lt. n. 518. i? Tp var. elegans Hort. Nieh. Diet. Stcppl. 223.
;
;

n.

,,

,,

,,

var.

,,

var.

macrocarpa Hort. Nieh. Diet. Suppl. 223. tomentosa Hort. Sauvaigo, Fl. Medit. Ex.
.

'?

ii.

37. ip.

ICHEIRANTHUS
Cheiri

L.N.
i.

Pff.

iii.

2.

194. Cruciferse-Hespe1319. Europe.


;

rideae-Erysiminae.

L.DG.

135; Fl.

d'lt.

n.

2(.

Spring.

kewensis Hort. Gard. Ghron. 1904, i. 123 Keiv Bull. 1910, 322. Garden origin. 2^ Spring. mutabilis L'Herit.DG. i. 136 Loive, Fl. Mad. i. 22 B. M. t. 195. Madeira. Winter to spring. 24..

CHENOPODIUM
multifidum L.
S.

L.N.

Pff.

iii.

la.

60. ChenopodiaceaMoq. DC.


xiii.
i.

Cyclolobeae-ChenopodieaB.

Boubieva
!(..

multifida

80.

America.

nitrariaceum F. Muell.Fl. Austr. May.

v.

158.

Australia.

Jp

76

HORTUS MORTOLENSIS
BurchelLN.
Pff. iv.
2.

CHILIANTHUS

46. Loganiacese-

Buddleioideae.

arboreus Benth. DC. x. 435. H. Sch. t. 29. S. Africa. i?


.

Buddleia salicifoUa Jacq.


July.
36.

CHILOPSIS
linearis

D.

Don.N.
ix.

Pff.

iv.

234. Bignoniacese-

Tecomeae.

DC.

227. Mexico. i?
Lindl.N.
t.

CHIMONANTHUS
prgecox Link.
China.
prcBCOx L. B.

Schneider, Hdb. Laubh.


M.
466.

Pff.

iii.

2.

94. Calycanthacese.
i.

346.

Calycanthus

Ch. fragrans Lindl.

DC.

iii.

2.

December-February.

CHIONODOXA
Scillese.

Boiss.N.
v.

Pff.

ii.

5.

68. Liliacete-LilioideaBt.

Lucilise Boiss. Fl. Or.

311

B. M.

6433. Asia Minor.

14..

Spring.

CHLIDANTHUS

Herb.N.

Pff'.

ii.

5.

108. Amaryllidaceae-

Amaryllidoideae-Crininse.

Ehrenbergii Kunth. Bak. Am. 28. Mexico. 2^. fragrans Kunth.Bak. Am. 28; B. M. t. 640.Peru. 2|:.

CHLORANTHUS
inconspicuus

DC. China, Japan.


Siv.
if.

S^o.N.

Pff.

iii.

1.

12. Chloranthaceae.
Bossche, Ic. Sel.
t.

xvi. 1.

474

110-

CHLORIS L.N.
1899,

Pff.

ii.

distichophylla Lag.

truncata B. Br.
t.

Fl.

Kunth, En.
Austr.
vii.

59. Graminege-Chlorideee.
i.

262.
;

S.

America.

11

612

Bept. Miss. Bot. G.

41. Australia. 0.
Hook.fil.N.
t.

CHLOROCODON

Pff'. iv. 2.

215. Asclepiadaceseiv. 1.

Periplocoideae-Periplocese

Whiteii Hook. fil.B. M. Natal. T? .

5898

Fl. Cap.

542.

CHLOROPHYTUM
;

Ker.N.

Pff.

ii.

5.

34. Liliace^-Aspho-

deloidese-Anthericinae.

elatum B. Br.Kunth, En. iv. 604 Fl. Cap. vi. 399. Bed. May-August. Lil. 1. 191 Bef. Bot. t. 216. S. Africa. 4
; .

CHOISYA

H. B. K.N.

Pff'.

iii.

4.

127. Rutacese-Eutoidesei.

Choisyinse.

ternata H. B.

K.DC.
.

i.

724

Oard. Chron. 1907,

53, 382,

387. Mexico. T7

May.

HOETUS MORTOLENSIS

77

CHORIZEMA
cordatum

Labill.~N.
Lindl.

Pff.

iii.

3.

205. Leguminosse-Papi28.

lionatae-Podalyrieae.

Fl.
.

Austr.

ii.

W.

Australia.

ip

January-May. ilicifolium Lahill.Fl Austr. ii. 28; W. Australia. Tj January-May.

varium

Benth. Fl.

B. M.

t.

1032.
Tp

Aiistr.

ii.

28.

W.
5.

Australia.

January-May.
t

CHRYSANTHEMUM

L.N.

Pff. iv.

277. Compositse-

Anthemideae-Chrysantheminae.
achilleaefolium M. B. DC. vi. 58. Caucasus. if.. anethifolmm Brouss.Willd. En. PI. H. Berol. 904.
Canaries.

Winter-spring.

argenteum Willd. Spec. PL iii. 2146. M. B. DC. vi. 55 Ledeb. Fl. Boss. ii.
;

Pyrethrmn sericeum
551.

Caucasus.

2|.

Spring.

Broussonetii Balb.DC. vi. 66; B. M. t. 5067. Canaries. Tp Winter and spring. carinatum Scliousb.DC. vi. 65 B. M. t. 5095. N.W. Africa. 0. cinerarisefolium Vis. Fl. Dalm. ii. 88 B. M. t. 6781.DC.
.
;

vi.

55,

sub Pyrethmm.
vi.

Dalmatia.
;

14..

Spring.

*flosculosuni L. Sp. PI. 890


gatus

Fl. d'lt. n.

3599.Plagim
2|
.

vir-

DC.

135.

P. Allionii L'H6r.

grande Hook. fil. in B. M. t. L'H6r. DC. vi. 135. Algeria. 2|. grandiflorum Willd. DC. vi. 66.

Liguria. June. 7886. Plagius grandiflorus


May.
Winter

Canaries. h.

and spring.

indicum L.DC.
churia.

vi.

62
K.

Fl. d'lt. n.

3545. China, Man-

If.

October-November.
<&

macrophyllum W.
If
.

DC.

vi.

May.
in B.

nipponicum Hook. fil.


ber-November. *pallens J. Gay. DC.
If
.

M.

t.

Europe, Caucasus. 7660.Japan. Octo58.


ip
.

vi.

47; Fl. d'lt. n.

35418. S. Europe.

June-July.
vi.

pinnatifidum L. fil DC.


Madeira.

viscosum
May.

Webbii

DC. Masfer. Index


Desf.

66

Loive, Fl.

Mad. 410.
if.

fp

Winter-spring.
vi.

Mediterranean region. Keiuensis. Canaries. Winter


64.
Tp
.

and spring.

78

HORTUS MORTOLENSIS
L.N.
Pff.
iv. 5.

CHRYSOCOMA
Conyzinae.
T?

169. Composit^-Astereaet.

Coma-aurea L.DC.
.

v.

353

B. M.

1972. S. Africa.

April-October.

CHRYSOPHYLLUM
imperiale Benth.

L.N.

Pff. iv. 1.

147. Sapotacese-Palat.

quieae-Chrysophyllinae.

Theophrasta imperialis Hort. Brazil. ^


;

Hook.fil.B. M.

6823

N.
.

Pff. I.e. 149.

CINERARIA

Less.N.

Pff. iv. 5. 298,

under Senecio.Comorigin.

positae-Senecioneae-Senecioninae.

hybrida Hort.Nich.

Diet. 327.
Pff.

Garden
iii.

Spring.

jCINNAMOMUM L. N.
soideae-CinnamomeaB.

2.

113. Laurace-Per-

DC. xv. 1. 24. Laurus Cam2658. Japan, China. Tp May-June. LoureiriiA^ees. DC. XV. 1.16. China, Japan. Tp May-June.
Nees

Camphora

& Eberm.

5.

phora L. B. M.

t.

ICIRSIUM

L.

N.

Pff.

iv.

322.

Composit^-Cynarese Caucasus. .
3791. S. E. Europe,

Carduinae.

arachnoideum M. B. DC. canum M. B.DC. vi. 644


;

vi.

639.

Fl. d'lt. n.

Eastern Mediterranean region, Caucasus. , June, diacantha Labill. Chamcepeicce diacantha DC. 659. Syria. . May- June. eriophorum Scop.DC. 638 3785. Europe, Asia Minor. . May- June. ferox DC. 637. Eastern Europe, Asia Minor. . Fl. gnaphalodes 3775. Chamcepeuce gnaphalodes DC. 658. Calabria. May-June. monspessulanum All DC. 644 3792. France, June.
Casabonse Hoff'm. Fl. d'lt. n. 3777. Chmncspeuce CasahoncB DC. vi. 658. Elba. 0. June. cynaroides Spreng. Chamcepeuce cynaroides DC. vi. 659.
vi. vi.
;

Caucasus.

i^.

June.

Fl. d'lt. n.

vi.

Sp)reng.
vi.

d'lt. n.

I?

vi.

Fl. d'lt. n.

S.

Italy.

v..

CISSUS L.N.

Pff. iii. 5. 450. Vitaceee-Vitoideffi. Baudiniana Brouss. N. Pff. c. 453. C. antarctica Vent. DC. i. 629; B. M. t. 2488. F^7^s antarctica Benth. Fl.

I.

Austr.

i.

447.

Cramerianus
land. 2(.

Queensland, N. Wales. ^ Schinz. Dinter, D. W. Afr.


S.

S.

94.

Herero-

July.

HOETUS MORTOLENSIS
CISSUS
{continued).

79

Hererolancl. S. W. Afr. 95. if:. gongylodes Planch. N. Pff. I. c. 452, fig. 221. Vitis pterophora Bak. B. M. t. 6803. Brazil. Tp .

Dinteri Gilg.

Dinter, D.

ICISTUS Tourn.N.
acutifolius

Sweet
Cist.

= corbariensis.
i.

Pff.

iii.

6.

303. Cistaceae.
t.

albidus

L.DC.

264; S^veet, Cist.


C.
iv.

31; Fl. d'lt. n. 1291

Grosser,

{B. V.

193),

13. S. Europe. T?.


{B. V.

Grosser, ^ May-June. 265; Sweet, corbariensis Pourr. DC.


S.

April-May. albidus x crispus Del.


France, Spain.
.

Cist.

C),

13.

i.

Cist.

t.

8.

C.popu22.

lifoliiis

salvifoli%is

Grosser,

Cist.

{B.

V.

C),

S.

France.

^
.

May-June.
I 264; Sweet,
Cist.
t.

crispus

L.DC.

22; Fl. d'lt. n. 1290;

Grosser (B. V. C.) 13.

ij region. May-June. Cupanianus Sweet, t. 70 = C. populifolius L. cyprius Lam. DC. i. 266 Sioeet, Cist. t. 39. C. ladaniferus x ^i May-June. Garden origin. laurifolius (B. V. C), 25.

Southern and western Mediterranean


;

florentinus Lam.

salvifolius {B. V.

59. monspeliensis x C), 30. W. Mediterranean region.


.

Sioeet,

Cist.

t.

C.

Tp

formosus Curt.

Halimium lasianthum. hirsutus Lam.DC. 265 Siveet, Cist.


i.
;
.

t.

19; {B. V. C), 19.

Spain, Portugal. ^ May-June. 23. W. Mediter266 B. ladaniferus L.DC. May-June. ranean region. 266; Sweet, albiflorus Dunal. DC.
i.
;

V.

C.

S.

fp

,,

var.

i.

Cist.

t.

84

B.

V. C.

24. i?

266; Sweet, maculatus Dtmal. DC. May-June. Cist. t. 1; B.V. C. 24. i? laurifolius iy. DC. i. 266 Siueet, Cist. t. 52 B. V. C. 24. S. W.

var.
i.
. ; ;

May-June.

ip May. Mediterranean region, S. France, Asia Minor. Cist. t. 27 Fl. d'lt. monspeliensis L. DC. i. 265 Sioeet, B. V. C. 17. Mediterranean region, from Greece n. 1286

to Teneriffe and Madeira.

parviflorus Lam. DC. i. 264; Siveet, Cist. t. 14; Fl. d'lt. B. V. C. 17. S. Italy, Tunis, Asia Minor, Cyprus, n. 1288
;

T?

May-June.

T? May-June. platysepalus Sweet, Cist. t. 47. B. V. C. 30. Garden origin.

Crete, &c.

C. hirsutus
ip
.

x monspeliensis May-June.

80

HORTUS MORTOLENSIS
(continued).

CISTUS

populifolius

L. Sweet,
Tj
.

Cist.

t.

23; R. V. C.

21. W. Medi17.
Tp
.

terranean region.

purpureus ferus X villosus R.


salvifolius

Lam. DC.
L.DC.
i.

May-June.
i.

264; Sioeet, Cist.


Siueet, Cist.

t.

C. ladani-

V. C. 28.

Garden origin.
;

May-June.
Fl. d'lt. n.

265

t.

54
Tj
.

1287 R.
;

V. C. 20.

Mediterranean region.
;

May-June,

symphytifolius Lam. var. vaginatus Gross. (R. V. C), 12. Jacq. Sioeet, Cist. t. 9 C. vaginatus Dryand. DC. i. 265 May-June. H. Sch. t. 282. Canary Islands. ^
;

tauricus VxeQ\.

undulatus Dun.
vaginattis

villosus L. DC.
,,

= villostis. = villosus. Dry Q,ndi = symphytifolius


i.

Lam.
V.
15.
i?

var.

Mediterranean region. C), May-June, Lois. Corsica, Sardinia,


264; R. V. C.
14.

corsicus Gross. (R.

C. corsiciis

Sicily.
i.

var. creticus Boiss. Fl. Or.

437

R.

V. C.
t.

C. creticus L.

DC.

i.

264; Siveet, Cist.

16. 112.

Eastern Mediterranean region,


Tp

S. Italy, Sicily.

var.
t.
Tp

May-June. eriocephalus Gross.


.

[R. V. C), 15; Sweet, Cist,

35.
.

C. incanus

Rchb.

Mediterranean region.
.

May-June.

var.

var.

tauricus Gross. [R. V. C), 14. C. tauricus Presl. May-June. Eastern Mediterranean region. ^^

undulatus

Gross. (R. V. C), 16.

C.
Tj
.

undulatus

Dunal,Z)C.i.264.

Garden
S.

origin.

May-June.

CITHAREXYLUM

L.N.

Pff. iv. da.

159.Verbenacese-Verv^
.

DC. 610. America. May-July. boggaeum Tod. Tropical America. 613. Peru, Mexico. reticulatum Kunth. DC.
barbinerve Cham.
xi.
^>
.

benoidese-Citharexylese.

xi.

i?

CITRIOBATUS
Wales.

A.

Cunn.N.

multiflorus A. Cunn.

Fl. Austr.
Pff.
iv.

Pff.

iii.
i.

2a.

113. Pittosporaceae.

121.

Queensland, N.

S.

CITRULLUS
498.
&c.

Neck.N.

5.

27. Cucurbitace^-Cucurii.

biteae-Cucumerinse.

Colocynthis Schrad.

Fl.

Brit. Ind.

620;
302.

Wight,

Ic.

t.

Cucttmis Colocynthis L.

DC.

iii.

0.

Africa,

India,

Summer.

HOETUS MORTOLENSIS CITRULLUS


Ser.

81

{continued).

vulgaris Schrad.

Fl. Brit. Ind.

ii.

621.
India,

Cuciimis Citrullus

DC.

iii.

301.

S.

Africa,

&c. .

(Water

melon.)
I

Summer.
iii.

CITRUS L.N. Pff.


Brit. Ind.
,,

4.

195. Rutaceae-Aurantioideae-Citrinffi.
Pff. I.e. 198; Fl. d'lt. n.
.

Aurantium L.Encjl. N.
i.

2531; Fl.

515.

var.

Tropical Asia. ^ amara L. C. Bigaradia


DC.
i.

Dub.

C. vulgaris

Eisso.

539.
Tp
.

Pomeranze.)

(Bitter orange, Bigarade,

April-May.
t. t.

subvar. Bizzarria Bisso,


subvar. salicifolia Bisso,

52.
48.

subvar. sinensis Bisso,


,,

t.

49.

var.

Bergamia Wight
t.

ct
t.

Am.

Engl.
53.

"Chinotto."
I.e.

198;

Bisso,

53

B.
.

M.

7194. (Bergamot, Bergat.

motte.)

T?

March-June,
Engl.
C.
I.e.

subvar. vulgaris Eisso,


,,

var.

sinensis Gall. Citr. 149;

198.

C,

Aurantium Eisso, DC.


didce

i.

539.

Aurantium
Arancio,

Auct.

Apfelsine.)

(Orange, Portogallo, ^ April-May.


. :

subvar. hortenses

"Arancio
"

celeste

della
t.

China."
4.

C. Atcr. sinense Eisso,

Arancio cornuto.''
culatum Eisso,
t.

C. Aur. corni-

12.

"Arancio doppio." "Arancio a frutto grosso." "Arancio grosso di Malta.''


melittense Eisso, 13.

C. Aur.

"Arancio di Jaffa." "Arancio Inshii." "Arancio in arancio." "Arancio a foglia larga."


latifolium Eisso, p. 39.

C.

Aur.

"Arancio "Arancio "Arancio " Arancio "Arancio "Arancio "Arancio

di Malta schizzato." mela rosa."

sanguineo di Tangeri."

San Michele
Satsuma."

di Teneriflfa."

Turco dolcissimo."
Vaniglia."

82

HORTUS MORTOLENSIS
{continued).
i.

CITRUS

australis Planch.
lia.
1?
.

Fl. 196. Austra371 Engl. April-May. Inch decumana L.DG. 539; 516; Engl. 198. India, Malaya, Polynesia Islands. (Shaddock, SciaApril-June. docco.) subvar. hortenses Pompelmos decuPampelmons."
Ajistr.
i.
;

australasica F. MullFl. Austr. April-May. Australia. ^

371

Etigl.

I.

c.

196.

I.

c.

i.

Fl. Brit.

i.

I.e.

^)

"

C.

manus
"
"

Risso,

t.

61.

Pampelmous

dolce."

Santa Sabina Orange." "Amoy Pommeloe." C. 2^ompelmos

chadock Risso,
"

t.

65, 66.

Amoy

Pommeloe

from

Consul

Forest."
" Sciadocco
''

C. a frutto piccolo." pompelmos Chadec minor Risso, p. 131. Sciadocco, grape fruit." C. jjo7?i-

pehnos racemosus Risso,

p. 131.

Hystrix DC.
Brit. Ind.

i. i.

539

Michel, Trait. Gitr. 42,


I.e.

t.

18, fig. 1

Fl.
^>

515; Engl.

200.

India,
I.e.

Sumatra.

May. japonica Thunh. DG.

i.

540; Engl.

199; B. M.

t.

6128.

China, Japan. ^.
Gitr.

(Kumquat.)
:

April-May.

subvar. hortensis

"Kin Kan."
medica L.Gall.
Asia.
,,

87.Fl.

Brit. Ind.

i.

514. Tropical
539.

Tp

Spring, autumn.

var.

Cedra

Gall.

Gitr. 96;

DG.

i.

(Cedrato,

Ital.)

subvar. hortenses

"Cedro degli Ebrei." "Cedro digitato." "Cedro: Buddha fingers."


"Cedrato di Firenze." xima Risso, 197, t. 99,
"Florentina, Firenze."
202.
t.

G. medica ma100.

cedrato di Piccolo G. medica florentina Risso,

102.

" Grossissima di

Lima."

HOETUS MOETOLENSIS
CITRUS
(continued).

83

"Limone

di " Meraviglia,

Gerusalemme."

mamellato." "moltiforme."

"Cedro "Cedro

var.

di Calabria."

del Paradise."
105.
i.

Limon
i.

Gall. Citr.
;

C.

Limonum

Eisso;

DC.

539

Fl

Brit. Incl.

516.

subvar. acris.

(Lemon, Limone, Citrone.)


:

formas cultas

" cardinalis."

"Limone

di Catalogna."

"Perettone a frutto grosso." "Limone di Canea senza semi."

Limone del Portogallo." "Limone a foglie gialle." "Limone verrucoso."


"

subvar.

Limetta

Eisso,

t.

69.

"Limone dolce."
p. 140.
T?
.

subvar. "

Lumia
t.

dulcis " Eisso,

subvar. " Perettone a frutto piccolo."

myrtifolia Bafin.
nobilis

Bisso,

50. China.

April.

540; N. Pff. iii. 4. 196. Cochin China, ij China. (Mandarin.) April-May. form. cult. " Dai-dai."

Lour.DC. i.

form. cult, sanguinea. form. cult, "viridis."


trifoliata

L.N.

Pff.
i.

I.

Gard. Chron. 1900,

c. 196. ^gle sepiaria DC. 269. Japan. \^ April.


.

i.

538

CLEMATIS L.N.
Mongolia.

Pff.

iii.

2.

sethusiaefolia Turcz.Kuntze,

62. Eanunculacege-Clematidese. Mon. 129 B. M. t. 6542.


;

2^.

Armandi Franch.
halearica Eich.

Meyeniana.
6

cirrhosa.
i.
;

brachiata Thunb.DC.
Gard. Chrofi. 1901,
ii.

Kuntze, Mon. 125; B. M.

t.

96

867. S. Africa. Tp . campaniflora Brot.DG. i. 9 Lodd. B. C. t. 927


;

Kunize,
1086;

Mon. 137. Portugal, Spain. cirrhosa L.DG. i. 9; B. M.


Fl. d'lt. n.

ip

April.
1.

t.

1070; Lodd. B. C.

1543. S.

Italy to Syria. Tp.

December;

January.
,,

var.

balearica Bich.
t.

DC.

i.

959.

Western Mediterranean region.


g2

9 Kuntze, Mon. 144 B. M.


;

ip .

84

HORTUS MORTOLENSIS
{continued).

CLEMATIS

Kuntze, Mon. 133; B. M. t. 6594. coccinea A. Gray. T? . June- July. Texas. crispa L.DG. i. 9 Kuntze, Mon. 136 B. M. t. 1892. N.E.America. I? . May-June. *Plammula L.DG. i. 2 Kuntze, Mon. 115 Fl. cl'It. n. 1545. S.Europe. !(:. June-July, B. M. t. 834 Schneider, Hdb. florida Tlmnb.DG. i. 8 I? . April-May. Laubh. i. 286. Japan. Boxb.~DG. i. 3; Fl. Brit. Ind. i. 4; Kimtze, Mon. Gouriana

100; King, M. Fl. Mai.

graveolens Lindl.
B. M.
t.

Fl.

\.

4. Indo-Malayan

region.

T? .

Brit. Ind.\.^\

Kuntze, Mon. 124;

heracleifolia

July. ligusticifolia N^Ut. Kuntze, Mon. 103. N. America. ^


Meyeniana Walp.Benth.
G.

Fl. d. S. t. 548. Himalaya. 2| . DC. i. 3. China. t? . indivisa Willd.Hdb. Fl. N. Zeald. 2 mmtze, Mon. 107 B. M. t. 4398. New Zealand. T? . integrifolia L.DG. i. 8 Kuntze, Mon. 176 B. M. t. 65 N. Asia, Central Europe. i;. MayFl. d'lt. n. 1541.

4495

Fl.

Hongkong 6

B. M.

t.

7897.

Armandi Franch. Gard. Ghron. 1905, ii. 30, with plate. Tj May. montana Buck. DG. i. 9; Fl. Brit. Lid. i. 2; Kuntze, Mon. 141; Gard. Ghron. 1905, ii. 368. 379. Himalaya. ^ .

China.
April.

var.

fl.

roseis.
i.

orientalis

L.DG.

3; Fl. Brit. Ltd.

i.

5; Kicntze,

Mon. 123.

DG. 3 Kuntze, Mon. 115 Hort. Japan. Gray. Kuntze, Mon. 135. Western N. Pitcheri Torr. America. ^ 1544. recta L.DG. 2 Kuntze, Mon. Ill Fl. June-July, Europe. songorica Bunge. Kuntze, Mon. 112. Kuntze, Mon. 102. N. America. virginiana L. DG. 1546. Kuntze, Mon. 99 Fl. *Vitalba L.DG. 3 April-May. Europe, N. Africa, Caucasus, &c.
paniculata Thunb.
Vilmor.
fig. 1.
ct
i.
; ;

Northern Asia, Himalaya, Caucasus.


%.

Tp .

June-July.

\q

i.

d'lt. n.

S.

2^.

Siberia.

14.^.

i.

4;

??

i.

d'lt. n.

Tp .

Viticella
d'lt. n.

L.DG.

i. 9 B. M. t. 565 Kimtze, Mon. 136 1542. S. Europe, Orient. T^ . April-May.


; ;

Fl.

HOETUS MOETOLENSIS

85

CLERODENDRON
Ip
.

L.N.
xi.

Pff.

iv.

3 a.

174.Verbenaceae4880. N. China.

Viticoideae-Clerodendrese.

foetidum Bunge.DG.
June-July.

672

B.

M.

t.

fragrans WiUd.DC. xi. 666; B. M. t. 1834. Japan. l? Nearly always. inerme B. Br. DC. xi. 660; Fl. Brit. Incl. iv. 589. India,
Java.

Ip

Siphonanthus Ait.DC.
Brit. Incl. iv. 595.

xi.

670

Wight,
T^
.

III.

t.

173

Fl.

India, Malaya.
xi.
i.

trichotomum Thunb.DC.
Japan.

668; B. M.

t.

6561. China,

Ip

CLETHRA L.N.
Madeira.

Pff. iv.
vii.

2. Clethracese.
;

arborea Ait.DC.

589

B. M.

t.

1057; Vent. H. M.

t.

40.

Tj

CLIANTHUS
Dampieri

Baulks

S Sol.N.

Pff'. iii. 3.

279. Leguminosae;

Papilionatas-Galeg'eaB-Coluteineae.

B. M. t. 5051. A. Cunn. FL Austr. ii. 214 June-Sept. N. Australia, N. S. Wales, S. Australia. T^ puniceus Banks ct Sol.Hdb. Fl. N. Zeald. 52 B. M. t. March- April. 3584. New Zealand. T?
. ;

CLIPPORTIA L.N.
Sanguisorbeae.

Pff.

iii.

3.

46. Eosaceae-Rosoideseiii.

obcordata L. fil.DC.

ii.

596; Fl. Cap.

297. S.

Africa.

Tp

April-June.
Trel. in Bej^t. Miss. Bot.

ICLISTOYUCCA
arborescens
States.

Gard. 1902, 41.

Liliacese-Dracsenoideae-Yucceae.
Trel.
I.

c.

t.

6.

7,
t.

&c.

Y. arborescens Trel. in

Bept. Miss. Bot. 1892, 163.

& 49. S. Western United

Tp

CLITORIA L.N.
Ternatea
1542.

Pff.

iii.

3.

357. Leguminosae-Papilionataeii.

Phaseoleae-Gly cininae

L.DC.

ii.

233; Fl. Trop. Afr.

177; B. M.

t.

Tropics. . Summer. 104. Amaryllidaceae-AmarylOLIVIA Lindl. N lidoideae-Haemanthinse. miniata Bgl. Bak. Am. 62 Fl. Cap.vi. 229. Imantophyllum Autumn-spring. B.M. 4783. Natal. Aitoni Hook. 228. ImantophylUim nobilis Lindl. Bak. Am. 62 Spring. 2856. ^Cape. miniatum Hook, in B. M.
Pff.
ii.

5.

in

t.

v..

Fl. Cap.y'i.

t.

2|..

86

HORTUS MORTOLENSIS
Pff.
iii.

CLUYTIA L.N.

5.

Richardiana Mull.

Arcj.

DC. xv.
Pff.
iv.

83. Euphorbiaceae-Cluytiinse.
2.

1044.

Abyssinia.

i?

October-December.

CLYTO STOMA
Bignonieae.

Bur.N.

36.

216. Bignoniaceae-

calystegioides Bur. N. in B. M. t. 3888 DC.


;

Pff.
ix.

I.

c.

Bignonia speciosa Hook,


to Argentina.

147. S. Brazil

CNEORUM L.N.

Pff. iii. 4. 94. Cneoraceae. pulverulentum Vent. DC. ii. 84. Canaries. \^ *tricoccum L.DC. ii. 84 Ardoino, Ft. Alp. Mar. 85 February-March. S. Europe. ^ cVIt. n. 2533.

Fl.

COB^A

Cav.

N.

Pff. iv. 3a. 44.

Polemoniaceae-CobaeeaB.
;

macrostoma Pav.DC. ix. 322 B. V. C. iv. 250. t. 3780 (C macrostemma) Guatemala, San
.

26

B. M.

Salvador,

ij Summer-autumn. Costa Rica. 0. scandens Cav.DC. ix. 322 B. V. C. iv. 250. 24


;

B. M.

t.

851.

Mexico, Costa Rica, Brazil.


Wight & Arn.N.

Tp .

All the year.

tCOCCINIA

Pff. iv. 5.

35. Cucurbitaceae105
j.
;

Cucurbiteae-AbobrinaB.

indica Wight
ii.

Am. Wight,
Incl.

III.

ii.

t.
14.

Fl. Trop. Afr.

Summer. Tropical Asia and Africa. 621. India, Africa. palmata Cogn. Fl. Brit. 2|. Summer, W. Afr. 130. German W. sessilifolia Cogn. Dinter, D. Summer. Africa.
550.
ii.

S.

S.

S.

!(..

COCCULUS DC.N.
carolinus DC. N. America.
laurifolius
[B. V. C.
i.

Pff.

iii.

2.

84. Menispermacege-Cociv. 94),

culeae-Meni sperminae

98
1?
i.

Diels, Menisp. {B. V. C.

231.

DC.

100

Fl. Brit. Incl.

i.

101
.

Diels, Menisp.

iv. 94),

239. Himalaya. T?
;

May-August.
I.

trilobus DC. i. 98 C. Thunbergii DC.

Diels, Menisp. {B. V. C.


i.

c),

232.

98.

tCOCOS

L.

N.

Pff'.

ii.

3. 81.

Japan, N. China. Palmee-Ceroxylinae-CocoineaeIp


!)

Attaleeae.

australis Hort. {non Martins

eriospatha or leiospatha.

Bhimenavia Hort.
Bonneti Hort.

capitata or leiospatha or eriospatha.

leiospatha.

HOETUS MOETOLENSIS

87

COCOS

{continued).
!)

campestris Hort. {non Martins

capitata Mart.
var.

Beccari in Malpighia, Diet. Suppl. 249. Minas Geraes.


Tp
,,

= capitata or eriospatha.
ii.
.

(1888) 90

Nich.

leiospatha
ii.
T^

Barh.-Bodr.
;

Beccari
ii.

Summer.
in

Mal-

pighia,

1888, 91
.

Nich. Diet. Suppl.

250.

Summer. Beccari in Malpighia, 1888, 91 Summer. Nich. Diet. Suppl. 250. Eio Grande do Sul. ^ 1888, 92; Nich. Diet. Jatay Mart. Beccari in Malpighia,
S. Brazil.

eriospatha

Drude.

ii.

Suppl. 250; Gard. Ghron. 1901,

Romanzoffiana Cham.
Malpighia,
,,

ii.

Kunth, En. Beccari in 286 86. Spring-summer. Brazil. 1888, in B. M. var. plumosa Hort. (An Hook.
iii.
.
;

ii.

370. Argentina. l?
i^

S.

t.

5180?) Brazil.
Pff.
ii.

fil.

l?

Spring-summer.

CCELOGYNE

Lindl.

N.

6.

126.

Orcliidaceaet.

Monandrae-Coelogyninae.
cristata Lindl.Fl. Brit. Ind.
v.

829

Fl. d. S.

1807

King & Pantl. Orchid. Him.


+

iii.

184.

Himalaya

U.

COFPEA
arabica

L.N.

Pff. iv. 4.

104. Eubiaceae-Coffeoideas-PsyB. M.
t.

chotriinae.

L.DC.
Pff.
ii.

iv.

499

1303. Abyssinia,

i?

COIX L.N.
n.

2.

Lacryma L. Kunth,
105. Tropics.

21. Gramineae-Maydeae. En. 20 B. M. t. 4279


i.
;

Fl. d'lt.

0.
ii.

COLCHICUM
Colchicese.

L.N.

Pff.

5.

29. Liliaceae-Melanthioideae-

Bivonse Guss.
October.

Fl.

d'lt.

n. 621.

Italy.

14..

September-

Tenorei Parl.Fl.
October.

d'lt. n.

620/;?.- Italy. 2(.

September-

COLEONEMA
album
t.

Bartl.

tt

Wendl.N.

Pff.

iii.

4.

152. EutaceaeBossche, Ic. Sel.

Eutoideae -Diosmeae.
Bartl. & Wendl.Fl. Cap. April. 127. S. Africa. T?
.

i.

378

COLEUS

Loiir.N.

Pff.

iv.

3 a.

359. Labiatae-OcimoideaeB.

Plectranthinae.

Blumei Benth.DC.
Summer.

xii.

75;

M.

t.

4754. Java. 2^.

88

HORTUS MORTOLENSIS
{continued).

COLEUS
U
.

igniarius Schioeinfth.
Spring.

Penzigii
Spring.

Fl. Trop. Afr. Schweinfth. Fl. Trop. Afr.


v.
1(.
.

v. 435.

v.

Abyssinia. 428. Eritrea. U.


;

thyrsoideus Bak.Fl. Trap. Afr.


Tropical Africa.
Spring.

440

B. M.

t.

7672.

JCOLLETIA
cruciata
t.

Gill, d-

Juss.N.Pff. iii. 5. 423. RhamnaceaB-CoUetiese. Hook. Miers, Contrih. Bot. i. t. 34 B. M.

5033. Ciiili. T?.

October-November.
ii.

horrida Willd.

= spinosa.
28;

spinosa

Lam. DC.

B.

M.

t.

3644. Chili. l?

February- May.

COLOCASIA

Schott.N.
ScJiott.

Pff.

ii.

3.

139. Aracese-Colocasiiii.

oidese-Colocasieae.

antiquorum
Fl. d'lt. n.

Kunth,

En.

37

B. M.

t.

7364

527.Tropical Asia. If

COLQUHOUNIA
vestita
laya.

WalLN.
xii.

Pff. iv. 3a.

267. Labiatse-Stachy-

oidese-LamiinaB.

WallDC.
ij
.

457

Fl. Brit. Ind. iv.

674. Hima-

November-December.
Pff.
iii.

COLUTEA

L.N.

3.

281. Leguminosae-Papilionatee;

Galegea3-Coluteinae.

arborescens L.DC.
Bicknell,

ii.

270
S.

B. M.
Or.

t.

81
Tj

Fl. d'lt. n.
.

2093

PL

Biv.

cilicica
Laiibh.

Boiss.
ii.

Bed. Fl.
t.

18.

Europe.
ii.

195;

90.

C.

longialata Koehne.

Asia Minor.

Schneider, Hdb.
Tj
.

April-May.

COMMELINA
lineaB.

L. N.

Pff:

ii.

4.

63. Commelinace-Comme44; Red. Lil.


t.

tuberosa
t.

L. Kunth,

En.
1(..

iv.

Mexico. Spring. undulata B. Br. Kunth, En. 58 Australia. Spring.


1695.
iv.

108; B. M.
C.

Lodd. B.

t.

1553.

2f.

CONIOGRAMME

Fee.N.

Pff.

i.

4.

261. Polypodiacese-

Pterideae-Gymnogramminae. fraxinea Fee. Hook. Syn. Fil. 381. nica Bl. Tropical Asia and Africa.

Gymnogramme
2^.

java-

HOETUS MORTOLBNSIS

89

CONIOSELINUM
Pischeri W.
I

Fisch.N.
iv.

Pff.

iii.

8.

217. Umbellifer.

Apioideae-Peucedaneae-Angelicinae.

& G.DC.
L.N.

164. Europe. 2|
iv.

May.

CONVOLVULUS
^althaeoides
S.

Pff.

Sa.

33. Convolvulacese;

Convolvuloidege-Convolvulese.

L.DC. ix. 409 B. M. t. 359 Fl. Europe, N. Africa. 2|: . May-July.


;

cVIt. n.

2840.
Asia,

='=arvensis

L.DC.

ix.

N. America.

406

Fl. cVIt. n.

2842. Europe,
n.

2|.
ix. 402 June- July.
;

-cantabricus
Orient.

L.DC.
ix.

Fl.

cl'It.

2833. S. Europe,
cl'It.

If.

Cneorum L.DC.

401

B.

M.

t.

459

Fl.

n.

2832.

floridus L. DC.
S.Europe.

21.

May- June.
ix.

404.

mauritanicus Boiss. Spring-autumn


sabatius Viv.Moggr.

Canaries. May-June. B. M. 5243. N. Africa. U.


i?
.

t.

t.

61; Bickn. PI. Biv.

t.

^=sepium

Teneriffe. Spring. 2843. Europe, Asia, Summer. Soldanella L.DC. 427 Fl. 2844. Europe. tenuissimus Sihth. & Sm. Hal. Prodr. Fl. 309. Eastern Mediterranean region. May- July.
ix.

Liguria. scoparius L. DC.


n. 2835.

38; Fl.

cl'It.

i^.

May.
ip
.

404.
;

433 Fl. d'lt. N. Africa, N. America, Australia.


ix. ix.
;

L.DC.

n.

2^.
n.

cl'It.

if

Grcsc.

ii.

If .

CONYZA

Less.N.

Pff.

iv.

5.

169. Compositse-Asteregeiii.

Conyzinse.
ivsefolia

Less.DC.

v.

388; Fl. Cap.


ii.

113. S. Africa. i?

COOPERIA
Spring.

Herb.N.

Pff.

5.

107. Amaryllidacese-Zephy27.

ranthinae.

Drummondii

Herb.

Bak.

Am.
;

Texas,
t.

Mexico.

if.

pedunculata Herb. Bak. Am. 27


If
.

5. iW.

3727. Texas.

Spring.
!)

Copcrnicia cerifera Hort. (non Martius

Livistona clecipiens.

COPROSMA

Forst.N.

Pff. iv. 4,

132.Eubiacese-CoffeoideEe-

Psychotriinae-Anthospermege.

acerosa A.Cunn. Hdb.Fl. N.Zeald. 118; Schneider, Hdb. f? Laubh. ii. 631. New Zealand. Hdb. Fl. N. Zeald. 112. Norfolk Island, Baueri Endl.

New Zealand.
Tp

April-June.

90

HOETUS MOKTOLENSIS
(continued).

COPROSMA
Zealand.

Cunninghamii Hook.

fil.Hclb. Fl. N. Zeald.

113. New

April-June,

lucida Forst.~Hdb. Fl. N. Zeald. 112. New Zealand. Tj

CORDIA

L.

N.

Pff. iv. 3a. 81.

Prancisci Tenore.

^.
CORDYLINE
australis

Borraginacese-Cordioideae. Cat. Orto Bot. Nap. 1845, 83. America.


ix.

serratifolia H. B. K.

DC. Comm. N.

495.
ii.

Mexico.
;

Tp

June.

Pff.

5.

73. Liliaceae-DracaeB. M.
t.

noideae-Dracaeuese.

Hook.Hdb.

Fl. N. Zeald. 281

5636.

New

Zealand.

Tj

June-July.

Banksii Hook. fil.Hdb. Fl. N. Zeald. 282. New Zealand. T? May. Baueri Hook. fil. in Gard. Citron. 1860, 792. Draccena C. obtecta Bak. australis Hook, in B. M. t. 2835.

Goepp. cannsefolia B. Br.


C. nutans

Nick. Diet.

stricta Endl.

Fl. Austr. 22 B. M. 2575. C. congesta 23. Queensland, N. Kunth, En. Wales. Junevii.
;

i.

Norfolk Island. June-July. Kunth, En. 35 Fl. Austr. 372. Queensland. June-July.
?
T?
.

v.

vii.

21

T?

t.

v.

S.

T?

July.

terminalis Kunth, En.


ii.

375.

^Tropical Asia, Australia.


Pff.
iv.

v.

25

Fl. Austr.
Tp

vii.

21

Nich. Diet.

June-July.

COREOPSIS L.~N.
Coreopsidinae.

242. Compositae-HeliantheseNich. Diet.


ii.

auriculata L.

DC.

v.

571

376.

N. America.
1290.

24

May- June.
t.

coronata Hook. B. M.

3460; DC.

vii.

289. Texas. 2^.


t.

May- June.
grandiflora Nutt.DC. v. 572; May-June. N. America. 2^.

Lodd. B. C.
t.

lanceolata L.DC. May-June. l(.


.

v.

570

B. M.

2451. N. America.

CORIARIA L.N.
April.

Pff.

japonica A. Gray.
-myrtifolia
Fl. d'lt.

B.
i.

iii.

5.

129. Coriariaceffi. M. t. 7509. Japan.

i?

March-

L.DC.
n.

2629.

Western

739;

Ardoim,

Fl.

Alp. Mar. 88;

Mediterranean region.

Tp

March-April.

HOETUS MOETOLENSIS
CORIS L.N.
311
;

91

Pff. iv. 1.

'''monspeliensis L.
B.
.

DC.
;

166. Primulaceffi-Coridese.
viii.

59

Ardoino, Fl. Alp. Mar.


n.

M.
1(.
.

t.

region

2131 Fl. April- June


8.
iv.

d'lt.

2706. Mediterranean

CORNUS

capitata
gerin,

L.N. Pff. iii. WaU.~DC.


;

265. Cornacege-Cornoidege.
273
;

Fl. Brit. Ind.

ii.

745

Wan-

Benthamia fragifera Lindl. Wight, III. t. 122 B. M. t. 4641. Himalaya. Tj Ardoino, Fl. Alp. Mar. 162 *sanguinea L.DC. iv. 272 Fl. d'lt. n. 2420. Europe, W. Asia. T? May-June.
Corn. {B. V. C), 89.
. ; .

COROKIA

A.

Cunn.N.

Pff.

iii.

8.

buddleioides A. Cunn.
Zealand.

Hdh.

264. Cornaceae-CornoideaB.
Fl.

N. Zeald. 106.

New

Tj

Cotoneaster Baoul. Hdb. Fl. N. Zeald. 106 Sel. t. 73. New Zealand. T?

Bossche, Ic.

tCORONILLA L.N.

Pff.

iii.

3.

311. Leguminos^-Papilio-

natse-Hedysareae-Coronillinae.

coronata L.DC. ii. 310 Fl. d'lt. n. 2102. S. Europe. U May. glauca L.DC. ii. 309; B. M. t. 13. S. France, Italy, Tp Sicily. February-May. juncea L.DC. ii. 309; Lodd. B. C. t. 235; Fl. d'lt. n. 2104. Western Mediterranean region. April1^
;

June.

-minima L.DC.
B. M.
June.
t.

ii.

309;

Ardoino, Fl. Alp. Mar.

119;

2179; Fl.

d'lt. n.

2103. S. Europe. if
Fl. Alp.

May-

"scorpioides Koch.
n.

Ardoino, Mediterranean 2099.


L.DC.
185
;

Mar. 119;
Persia.

region,

Fl. d'lt.
.

May-

July.

valentina
B. M.
t.

ii.

309;

Ardoino, Fl. Alp. Mar. 118;


Italy, Sicily.
Tp

Fl. d'lt. n.

2105. Spain,

February-May.

CORREA
t.

Sm.N.

Pff.

iii.

4.

144. Eutaceae-Eutoideae-Boroi. 354 Vent. J. Malm. Tasmania. November^


;

nieae-Correinae.

alba Andr.DC.
13.

i.

719

Fl. Austr.

Victoria,
M.

S. Australia,

May.
cardinalis F.

speciosa.
origin.

coccinea Hort.

Garden

T?

92

HORTUS MORTOLENSIS
(continued).

CORREA

Lawrenciana Hook.

Fl. Austr.
normalis).

i.

355.

Victoria, Tasmania.
Fl. Atostr. i. 719 S. Wales, Victoria,
;

I?

September-May.
(var.
t.
T^
.

speciosa Ait. 355 B. M. Tasmania.


;

DC.

i.

1746, 1901,

4912. N. November-May.

CORTADERIA
Festucese.

Stapf.Garcl. Chron. 1897,

ii.

396. Gramineaeargenteum

argentea Stapf.
Nees.

Garcl.

Chron.

I.

c.

Gynerium
i.

Brazil, Argentina. U. CORYNOCARPUS Forst. N.


carpaceae.

September-October.
Nachtr.

Pff.

215. Coryno-

laevigata Forst.Hook.
t.

fil.

Hclb. Fl. N. Zealcl. 46; B.


i?
.

M.

4379. New Zealand.

April.

Corypha Gehanga Hort. {non Blume)

Livistona oliviformis.

COSMOS

Cav.

A''.

Pff.

iv.

5.

245.

Compositge-Heliantheae-

Coreopsidinae.

bipinnatus Cav. DC. v. 606; B. M. t. 1535. Mexico. September-November. diversifolius var. atrosanguineus Hook. B. M. t. 5227. June. Dahlia Zimapani Hort. Mexico. 2^. sulphureus Cav. DC.y. 606. Mexico. 0. SeptemberNovember.
.

COTINUS
Fl.

Tourn.N. Pff. -Coggyria Scoi). Engl.

cl'It.

n.

164. Anacardiacese-Rhoideae. Bhus Cotinus L. DC. 67 2457. Europe, Mediterranean region.

iii.
I.

5.

c.

ii.

S.

Ip

May- June.

COTONEASTER
angustifolia
affinis
t.

moidese-Pomarieae.

Rosaceae-Po N. Franchet. Pyracantha angustifolia Schneider,


Medic
Pff'.
iii.

3.

21.

May. Hdb. Lauhh. i. 761 B. M. t. 8345. Yunnan. l? LwfZZ.- DC. ii. 632; Fl. Brit. Ind. ii. 385; Lodd.B.C.
;
.

bacillaris Wall.

June, Himalaya. Fl. Brit. Ind. 384. Himalaya. 570. Thibet, Francheti Bois. Schneider, Hdb. Laubh. Yunnan.
919.
l?
.

ii.

T?

i.

Tj

horizontalis Decne. in Fl.

Schneider, Hdb. d. S. xx. 168 May. 745. China. 1? microphylla Wall. Bef. Bot. t. 49; Schneider, Hdb. Laubh. May. i. 760. Himalaya. V.
;

Laubh.

i.

HOETUS MOETOLENSIS

93

COTONEASTER
pannosa
nan.

(continued).

Franchet.
.

Schneider,
.

Hdh. Laubh.

i.

754.

Yun;

i^

May-June.

rotundifolia Wall.
t.

Schneider,
t.
Tp

8010. Himalaya. Tp Simonsii Bah. Bef. Bot.


746.

Hdh. Laubh. i. 759 B. M. May. 55; Schneider, Hdb. Laubh. i.


t.

Himalaya.

thymifolia Bak. Bef. Bot.


June.
I

50.

Himalaya.

l?

May32.

COTYLEDON

DC.Eucotyledon

in

N.

Pff.

iii.

2 a.

Crassulaceae.

Barbeyi Schweinfth.

Gard.

Chron. 1893,

i.

624.

Abyssinia.

Tp

June-July.

coruscans Haw. DC. iii. 396; Fl. Cap. ii. 371; B. M. May-June. t. 2601. S. Africa. 2^. cristata Haio.DC. iii. 399; Fl. Cap. ii. 376. S. Africa. 4. decussata Sims in B. M. t. 2518; Fl. Cap. ii. 372.
S. Africa.

Tj

Eckloniana Harv.

Fl.

Cap.
iii.

ii.

374.

S. Africa.
ii.

fascicularis Ait. DC.


gracilis

397

Fl. Cap.

U. 374. S.
2^.

Africa.

Harv.Fl. Cap. ii. May. hemisphserica L.DC.


S. Africa.

373.

S. Africa.

Februaryii.

iii.

398;

Fl.

Cap.

376.
x.

il.

macrantha
1900,

Berger in Monatssch-ift fur KaJcteenhmde,


.

106. S. Africa. ij

December-May.
Fl. Cap.
ii.

orbiculata
S. Africa.

L.DC. iii.

396

371

B.

M.
;

t.

321.

June-July.
;

reticulata
Ic. Sel. t.

teretifolia

Thunh.DC. iii. 398 Fl. Cap. ii. 376 Bossche, 123. Cape. i? May-June. Thunh.DC. iii. 397 Fl. Cap. ii. 373. S. Africa.
2|:
. ;

V^

June-July.
iii.

undulata Haiu.DC.
.

396

B.

M.

t.

7931. S. Africa.
ii.

June.

ventricosa Burm.

DC.
Pff.
iii.

iii.

397

Fl. Cap.

375.

S. Africa.

i;3.

COWANIA Don.N.
mexicana Don.
N.America.
Tp

38. Rosacea -Rosoidese-Poteni.

tilleae-Dryadinse.

Schneider, Hdh. Laubh. June-July.


.

527.

Western

94

HORTUS MORTOLENSIS
181. Ci-uciferae-Sinapeae-Brassicinae. DC. 226. Caucasus, Himalaya. % juncea Bieh. 1423 European seamaritima L. DC. 225 Fl. May. shores. pinnatifida B. Br. DC. 225. Caucasus, E. Europe.
iii.

CRAMBE L. N. Pff.
If..

2.

i.

i.

d'lt. n.

i.

S.

1(.

CRASSULA L.~N.
2|
V^
.

Pff.

abyssinica A. Rich.
April-July,

Fl.
iii.

iii.

2a.

35. Crassulaceae.
ii.

Trop. Afr.

388.

Abyssinia.
;

acutifolia
t.

Lam. DC.
1^.

384

Fl. Cap.

ii.

340

DC.
;

PI. Gr.

2.

Cape.

arborescens Willd.DC. iii. 383 Fl. Cap. ii. 337 384. S. Africa. ? Bolusii Hook. fil.B. M. t. 6194. S. Africa. 2^
; .

B.

M.

t.

Novem-

ber-January.

canescens DC.
canescens

iii.

391

Fl.
if..
;

Cap.

ii.

364.

Globulea

Haw.

iii. Fl. Cap. ii. 358. Cape. l^ columnaris L.fil. cordata Ait.DC. iii. 386 Fl. Cap. ii. 347 DC. PI. Gr. Jacq. H. Sch. t. 431. S. Africa. 2^. t. 121 Fl. Cap. ii. 348. S. Africa. corymbulosa Link. 14.. May-June. cultrata L.DC. iii. 391 Fl. Cap. ii. 363 B. M. t. 1940. S.Africa. May-June. 14.. de\toidea.L.fil.DC. iii. 386 Fl. Cap. ii. 350. S. Africa. i;
;
;

Africa. DC. 385


S.

June-July.

divaricata E. d- Z. Fl. Cap. ii. 339. S. Africa. 11. ericoides Haiu. DC. iii. 385 Fl. Cap. ii. 350. S. Africa.

November- January. DC. PL Gr. falcata Willd.DC. iii. 393 Fl. Cap. ii. 338 t. 103 B. M. t. 2035. S. Africa. 2|:. June-July.
T7
.
; ;
;

hemisphserica Thunb.DC.
Marloth, Kapland, 227.

iii.

387;
14.

Fl.

Cap.

ii.

367;
Nich.

impressa N. E. Br.
Diet.

Keiv

S. Africa.

Bull. Add. Ser.

iv.

109

Suppl.

264.

C. Schmidtii Regel.

S.

Africa.

24.

September-May. lactea Ait.DC. iii. 383;


B. M.
t.

Fl. Cap.
14.

ii.

1771.

S. Africa.

DC. iii. 385; Fl. Cap. lycopodioides Lam. S. Africa. ^. May. var. pseudolycopodioides Schinz. ,, S.W. Africa 4.

1?

337 DC. PI. Gr. t. December- January.


;

37;

ii.

351.

German

var. viridis.

if..

May.

HORTUS MORTOLENSIS

95

CRASSULA
t.

{continued).

marginalis

May. multicava Lem. May.


21.

Ait. DC. iii. 385; Fl. Gap. ii. 354; Jacq. H. Sch. 471. S. Africa. 24 monticola N. E. Br. Keio Bull. Add. Ser. iv. 109. S. Africa.

III.

Hort.

ix.

30;

Lem.
i.

PI. Gr. 41.

S. Africa.

2|.

pallida Bak.Gard. Chron. 1874,


June-July.
perfoliata

766. S. Africa. 2^.

L.DC.

iii.

393; Fl. Cap.

ii.

338. S. Africa. 2^.


.

June-July.

perforata L.fil.DC. iii. 385 Fl. Cap. ii. 338. S. Africa. u perfossa Lam.DC. iii. 385 Fl. Cap. ii. 338 DC. PI. Gr. t. 25 Jacq. H. Sch. t. 432. S. Africa. 24. portulacea Lam. DC. iii. 383 Fl. Cap. ii. 337 DC. PI. March-April, Gr. t. 79. S. Africa. I?
;
; ; ;

pyramidalis L.fil.DC. 7665. Cape. 2^:.

iii.

388; Fl. Cap.

ii.

358; B. M.

t.

quadrifida Bak. Ref. Bot. 298

multicava.
ii.

recurva N. E. Br.
Vr-

in

Gard. Chron. 1890,


Fl. Cap.

684. S.

Africa.

rosularis Haiv.-DC. 389; S.Africa. June.


iii.

ii.

350; B. M.

t.

5393.

if..

rotundifolia

Haw.DC.

iii.

384; Fl. Cap.

ii.

365. S.

Africa.

UGr.
t.

July, sarcocaulis E. dZ. Fl. Cap. ii. 341. S. Africa. if T? spathulata Thunb.DC. iii. 386 Fl. Cap. ii. 348 DC. PI.
. ;
;

49.

S.Africa.
.

!(..
;

Summer.
;

tetragona L.DC. iii. 384 Fl. Cap. ii. 339 DC. PL Gr. t. April-May. 19. S. Africa. T? trachysantha Harv. Fl. Cap. ii. 362 Bossche, Ic. Sel. April-May. t. 151. S. Africa. 24 >> turrita Thunb.DC. iii. 388; Fl. Cap. ii. 348; Jacq. H. Sch.

t.

52.

S. Africa.

24.

CRAT-EGUS

L.,

sub Mespihis in N.
ii. 629 April-May.

Pff.

iii,

3. 26.

Rosaceseorigin.

Pomoidese-Pomarieae.

Azarolus L.DC.
Italy.

Fl. d'lt. n.

Gard. Chron. 1897, 119. Garden 384. Himacrenulata Boxh. DC. 626 Fl. Brit. Ind. April. laya.
Carrierei Hort. T? March.

1841. S. France,

Tp

i.

ii.

ii.

Tp

96

HORTUS MORTOLENSIS
{continued).
d-

CRAT-ffiGUS

maloides Sarg. Trees


T?
.

Shrubs,
ii.

9.

N. W. America.
Europe.

11..

-Oxyacantha L.DC.
April.

628
626.

Fl. d'lt. n.

1842. Europe.

Pyracantha Pers.
trilohata Labill.

DC.

ii.

S.

f?

April-May.

Pirns trilohata.

CRINODENDRON Mol.N.

Pff. iii. 6. 5. Elaeocarpaceae. Pataqua Mol. N. Pff. c. Tricusindaria dependens Rz. & Pav. DC. 520; B. M. t. 8115. Chili.

I.

i.

f?

CRINUM L.N. Pff.

ii.

5.

108. Amaryllidaceae-Amaryllidoideaeii.

Amaryllideae-Crinese.

asiaticum L.Kunth, En.

547 Bak. Am. 75 B. M.


; ;

1.

1073.

China, India.
capense Herb.

if.,

longifolium.

crassifolium Herb.

variabile.
;
;

flaccidum Herb.Fl. Austr. vi. 454 Bak. Am. 88 B. M. t. 2133. N. S. Wales, S. Australia. 2^. giganteum Andr. Kunth, En. ii. 569 Bak. Am. 91 Fl.

Trop. Afr.

vii.

404

B.

M.

t.

latifolium L.Kunth, En.


t.

v.

5205. Sierra Leone. 2|:. 573 Bak. Am. 87 Wight,


; ;
;

Ic.

2019-20. India. If longifolium Thunb.Bak. Am. 93. B. M.


t.

Bed. Lil. t. 661 June. Kunth, En. v. 612. S. Africa. if. Moorei Book. fil.Bak. Am. 93 B. M. t. 6113. S. Africa.
347.

If

July.

pedunculatum B. Br. Bak. Am.


E. Australia.
2f

11; Bed. Lil.

t.

408.

Powelli Hort. Bak. Am. 95. Garden origin. pratense Herb. Bak. Am. 82. India.
if.

if

June-July.

Herb.Bak. Am. 92 Fl. Cap. vi. 199.Jacq. H. 429. Cape. if:. yucGseflorum Salisb.Bak. Am. 89 B. M. t. 2121 Lodd. B. C. t. 668. Sierra Leone. l^.
variabile
Sch.
t.
;

CRITHMUM Tourn.N. Pff.


Ammineae-Seselinge.

iii.

8.

201. Umbelliferae-Apioideaen. 2412.


If.

'=maritimum L. DC. iv. 164 Fl. d'lt. and Mediterranean shores. Canaries.
;

t.

European

July-October.
Tritonia.-lri-

CROCOSMA

Planch. N.

Pff.

ii.

5.

155, sub

dacese-Ixioideae-Gladiolese.

aurea Planch.Bak.

h-id.

189

B. M.

4335. S. E.

Africa.

If.

HOETUS MORTOLENSIS

97

CROCUS

Pff. ii. 5. 142. Inclace-Crocoidee. Gay.Bak. Irid. 92; B. M. t. 6187. Greece. 2|. sativus L.Bak. Irid. 86 Bed. Lil. t. 173 Fl. d'lt. n. 768.

L.~N.
/.

Boryi

Orient.

1(.

January-March.
Irid. 94; B.

speciosus M. B.Bak.
Orient.

M.

t.

3861. S.E. Europe,


t.

2|.

suaveolens Bertol.Bak.

Tommasinianus

Herb.

Bak.
1.

Irid.

82 B. M.
;

Irid. 83.

Dalmatia,

3864. Italy. U
Servia.

nversicolor Ker. in B. M.
Bickn. PI. Biv.
t.

1110; Bak. Irid. 81; Moggr.

t.

65

Fl. d'lt. n. 765.

above La Mortola. %. January-April. Weldeni Hoppe.Bak. Irid. 79 B. M. t. 6211. Dalmatia.


;

Liguria, mountains

40;

nzonatus
Cilicia.

/.

Gay.
if.

Bak. Irid. 87

Gard. Chron. 1898,

i.

85.

CROSSOSOMA
tacese.

Nutt.

N.

Pff.

Nachtr. 186.

Crossosoma; .

californicum Nutt.N. Pff. I. c. Gard. Chron. 1903, ii. 130 B. M. t. 7949. Western New Mexico. Tp May-June.
;

CROTALARIA L.N. Pff.


Genistese-Crotalariinse

iii.

226. Legurainosae-Papilionatae;

capensis Jacq.
PI.
t.

DC.
t.

ii.

130

Fl. Cap.

ii.
.

92

B. M.

7950. S. Africa. Tp
iii.

46 Wood, Natal Nearly always.


;

CROWE A
N.
S.

Sm.

N.

Pff.

140.

Eutaceae-Butoidese-Eriostei.

moninae.

saligna Andr.DC.

\.

720

Fl. Austr.

329; B. M.

t.

989.

Wales. 1?.

Spring.
Pff.
ii.

ICRYPTOMERIA
Taxodiinae.

Don.N.
xvi.

1.

89. Pinaceae-AbietinasSieh. Fl. Jap.


i.

japonica Don.

Japan, China.
J

DC.
Tp

2.

438;

124.

CRYPTO STEGIA
grandiflora B.
Ic. t.

B. Br.N.

Pff. iv. 2.

218. Asclepiadaceaeiv.

Periplocoideae-Periploceae.

Br.DC.

viii.

492; Fl. Brit. Ind.


Tp
.

6; Wight,

832.

India, Tropical Africa.


Pff.
iii.

CRYPTOTiENIA. DC.N.
deae-Ammineae.

8.

189. Umbelliferae-Apioi2^.

canadensis DC.

iv.

119.

N. America.

98

HORTUS MORTOLENSIS
L.N.
Pff.
iv.

CUCUMIS

5.

27. Cucurbitacege-CucurbiteseSummer. 3397.Tropical Asia and


xi.

Dudaim L. DC. Melo L.DC. iii.

Cucumerinae.

iii.

301.

Persia. .
d'lt. n.

300; Fl.

Africa. 0. Summer. myriocarpus Ncmdin in Ann. Sc. Nat. S6r. iv. 22. S.Africa. . Summer. prophetarum L.DC. iii. 301; Fl. Brit. Incl. From tropical Africa to India. . Summer.

1859,

ii.

619.

Sacleuxii Hort.
.

Keio Bull. 1891, Add.


iii.

ii.

40.

Zanzibar.
;

Summer.

sativus
3396.

L.DC.

Tropics. 0.

300

Fl. Brit. hid.

ii.

620

Fl. d'lt. n.

Summer.

CUCURBITA L.N.
Cucurbitinae.
ficifolia

Pff. iv. 5.

33. Cucurbitacese-Cucurbitese-

argy rosperma ITor^. Bouche.N.

0. Summer. 39. 34; Hort. Vilm. C. melanosperma A, Br. America? 0. Summer. maxima Duch.DC. 316 Fl. Brit. Lid. 622 Fl. 3399. Tropics. 0. Summer.
Pff.
I.e.
fig.
iii.
;

ii.

d'lt.

n.

moschata Duch.DC. iii. 317


t.

Fl. Brit. Ind.

ii.

622 Wight,
; .

III.

105, Ic.

t.

507
iii.
.

Fl. d'lt. n.

3398.Tropics.
ii.

Summer.
3400.

Pepo L.DC.

317; Fl. Brit. Ltd.

Tropics.
.

622 Fl.
;

d'lt. n.

perennis A Gray.

Nich. Diet. 408. Mexico


?

Summer.

2|:

Summer.

CUDRANIA

Tr&c.N.

Pff.

iii.

1.

82. Moraceae-Artocarpoidese;

Euartocarpeae.

javanensis Tr&c. Fl. Austr. vi. 179 Fl. N. S. Wales, Queensland, Java, India.

Brit. Lid. v. 538.


Tp

CUPHEAP. Br.N. Pff.


cyanea DC.
eminens
PI.
iii.

iii.

7.

9. LytbraceEe-Lythrese-LythrinEe.
iv.

85; Koehne, Lythrac. {B. V. C.


i.

C. strigulosa El. d. S.

39.

with

figure.

Mexico.

216),

172.

V>

lanceolata Ait.

& Lind. = micropetala. DC. iii. 85 Koehne, Lythrac. {B. V. C), 132. Mexico. 0. Summer. micropetala H. B. K. DC. iii. 84 Koehne, Lythrac. {B. V. C), 161. C. jorullensis Lindl. B. M. t. 5332. C. eminens PI. & Lind. Fl. d. S. t. 994. Mexico. if: Autumn to spring. platycentra Lem. Fl. d. S. 1. 180; Koehne, Lythrac. {B. V. C),

167.

Mexico.
Lem.

1(..

All the year.


^

strigulosa

cyanea.

HOETUS MORTOLENSIS
ICUPRESSUS L.N.
Cupressinae.
145.
Pff.
ii.

99

1.

99. Pinacese-CupressineseNachtr.
1.

arizonica E. L. Greene.
Sel.
t.

N. California.
.

Pff.
.

25

Bossche, Ic.

V)

Spring.

Benthami Endl. = lusitanica. funebris EndlDC. xvi. 2. 471


China.

Henkel

Hochst.

236.

V^

Spring.

Goveniana Gordon.
California.
Islands.

DC.
Wats,

xvi. 2.

472

Henkel
I.

&

Hochst. 240.

Tp

Spring.

guadalupensis

S.

N.

Pff.

c.

25.

Guadaloupe
t.

Lawsoniana Andr.
DC.
.

xvi. 2.

Veitch, Man. Conif. 231; B. M. 5581. 464, sub Chamcecyparis. N. W. America,


n. 3.

Spring. ^ lusitanica Mill. Diet.

Lam.
,,

Mexico.
var.

DC.

xvi.

2.

470, as C. glauca

Tp

Spring.

macrocarpa
239.

Hartiu.

California. Spring. sempervirens L. DC. 468 Henkel d Hochst. 230 Eastern Mediterranean region. Fl. Spring. horizontalis Pari. DC. 468, &c. Spring.
Tj
.

Benthami Henry. Mexico. ^. Spring. DC. xvi. 2. 473 Henkel & Hochst.

xvi. 2.

d'lt.

n.

93.

T7

var.

xvi. 2.

T?

torulosa

Don.DC.
645
Tj

xvi. 2.

469

Henkel

&

Hochst. 233

Fl.

Brit. Ind. v.

Fl.

Or.

v.

705. India,

Persia, Syria,

Asia Minor.

Spring.
Pff.
iii.

CUSSONIA

Thunh.N.

8.

53. Araliace^-Schefflerese.
ii.

spicata Thunh.DC. iv. 255; Fl. Cap. Tp Kapland, 264. S. Africa.

568; Marloth,

CYATHULA Lour.N. Pff.


globulifera

iii.

la.

107. Amarantaceae-Amaran-

toideae-Amaranteae-Achyranthinae.

21^2.
donia.

Moq.DC.
Spring.
Pff.
ii.

xiii.

2.

329. S.

Africa, Madagascar.

JCYCAS L.N.

1.

21. Cycadacege-Cycadeffi.

neo-caledonica Linden.

Nich.
2.

Diet. 416.

New

Cale-

??

Normanbyana

F.

M.Nich.

Diet. 416.

Australia.
t.

Tp

revoluta TMinb.DC.x\i.

526; B. M.

2963-

4.Japan.

Summer.

h2

100

HOETUS MOETOLENSIS
L.N.
Boiss.
1(..

CYCLAMEN
246.
Algier.

Primulaceae-CyclamineaB.
d Beut.Pax
I.

Pff.

iv.

1.

115;

Pax
c.

in

B.

V. C. iv. 237.

africanum

254
254.

B. M.

t.

5758.
2^

September-October.

cyprium U?tger d Kotschy. Pax europseum L.DO. viii. 56; Pax

I.

c.

Cyprus.
cV It.
I.

I.e.

250; Fl.

n.269S.
Fl. d'lt.

Europe.
n. 2691.

1(.

February-April.
viii.

neapolitanum Ten.DC.

57

Pax

c.

254

Central
44.

and eastern Mediterranean

region.

2|.

September-October.

persicum B. M. t.
I.e.

Mill. Diet. ed. 8, n. 3

DC.
57,

iii.

57

Pax

I.e.

248;

Greece, Asia Minor. February-April. vernum Lob. repandum Sibth. d Sm. DC. sub Pax 251. Central and eastern Mediterranean region.
2|.
viii.

C.

24

March.

CYCLANTHERA
Cyclanthaceae.

Schrad.N.

Pff. iv. 5.

38. CucurbitaceaeGranada.

explodens Naiid. N. Pff. Summer. pedata Sehrad. N. Pff. I.e.

I.

e.

38.

New

0.

CYDONIA
oblonga
;

Mill. N.

39.
3.

Mexico. 0.

Summer.

Pff.

iii.

22. Eosace^-PomoideseC. vulgaris Pers.


.

Pomariete.
Mill. Diet.
ed.
8,

n. 1.

DC.

ii.

April-May. 638 Fl. d'lt. n. 1849. S. Europe. l? sinensis Thouin.DC. ii. 638; B. M. t. 7988. China. Tj

March- April.

CYMBIDIUM
Oreh.

Siv.N.

Pff.

ii.

6.

184. Orchidacese-Monandraevi.

Oymbidiinae.

aloifolium Sioartz.

Him.

iii. t.

Fl. Ind. 252. Himalaya.


Brit.
Pff. iv. 2.
viii.

10
!(..

King & Pantl.

CYNANCHUM
roseum B.

L.N.

251. Asclepiadacese-Cynan-

choideas-Asclepiadese

Br.

DC.

532.

Siberia.

if.

Spring.

CYNARAL.
n.

-?^.

Pff.iy. 5.

Cardunculus D.DC.
3804 a.
var.

Mediterranean region.

323. Compositae-Cynareae-Carduineae. vi. 620; B. M. t. 2862; Fl. d'lt.


l^..

June-July.
d'lt.

Scolymus L.Fl.

n.

3804^.

horrida Ait. DC. vi. humilis L. DC. vi.

Cultivated variety.

620. Madeira. 620. Europe.


S.

![..

2(. if.

June-July.
June-July.

HOETUS MOETOLBNSIS

101

CYNOGLOSSUM
Cynoglosseae.

L.N.
;

Pff.

iv.

3 a.

102.Borraginaceae;

pictum SolDC. x. 147 B. M. t. 2134 Bichi. PL Biv.t. 41 Fl. d'lt. n. 2820. S. Europe, N. Africa. 0- April-May.

jCYNOMORIUM
coccineum
L.

Micheli.N.

Pff.

iii.

250. Balanophoracesed'lt. n. 951.

Cynomoroidese.

DC.

xvii.

123
2|.

FL

nean regions, Canaries.

Mediterra-

April-May.
5.

CYPELLA Herb.N.
Moraeeae-Maricinae.

Pff'.

ii.

147.-Iridaceae-Iridoidee-

Herbert! Herb.Bak. Uruguay. 2(.

Irid.

63

B. M.

t.

2599. S.

Brazil,

CYPERUS L.N.
Cyperinae.

Pff.

ii.

2.

107. Cyperaceae-ScirpioideaeEn.
ii.

Madagascar. K^mth, En. Arabia, Abysflabelliformis 181. natalensis Hochst. FL Cap. 402. Egypt, L. Kunth, En. 64; FL Papyrus Sudan, May- June. Argentina. reflexus ValiL Kunth, En.
alternifolius

L.

Kunth,

33.

1(..

June-July.

Bottb.-

ii.

32.

sinia.

If.

vii.

S. Africa.

if.

ii.

d'lt. n.

Sicily.

if.

ii,

42.

Chili,

if.

jCYPHOMANDRA

Sendt.N.

Pff.

iv.

3&.

35. Solanace^-

Solaneae-Mandragorinas.

Gard. Chron. 1900, ii. betacea Sendt. DC. xiii. 1. 393 436 B. M. t. 7682. Central and S. America. l? Springautumn. fragrans Sendt.DC. xiii. 1. 391; B. M. t. 3684. Argen;

tina.

Tp

June-July.

Cypripedmm

L.

Paphiopedihim.
Pff.
iii.

CYRILLA L.N.
racemiflora
Cyrtanthera Nees

5.

182. Cyrillaceae.
c.
;

L. N.

Pff. L

Gard. Chron. 1901,


Indies and N. Brazil.

ii.

199.
Tj

Carolina, Florida to the

W.

Jacobinia.

CYRTANTHUS
S.

Ait.N.

Pff.

ii.

5.

109. Amaryllidaceae;

Amaryllidoideae-Crininae.

Mackenii Hook. fiLFL Cap.


Africa. 1^.
vi.

vi.

225

Bef. Bot.

t.

355.
Africa.

obliquus Ait.FL Cap.

219

B. M.

t.

1133. S.

If.

102

HORTUS MORTOLENSIS
=
Polystichum.

Cyrtomium

Presl.

CYSTOPTERIS
Woodsieae.

Bernh.

N.

Pff.

i.

4.

163.

PolypodiaceaeFl. d'lt. n.
ll.

*fragilis Bernh.

Hook. Syn. Fil. 103 Europe, Asia, America, New Zealand.


Pff.
iii.

20.

CYTISUS L.N.
Cytisinae.

3.

239. Leguminosse-PapilionataB

Fl. 1875; Schneider, Hdb. Lauhh. Lipari Islands. April, albus Link. DC. 153 Schneider, Hdb. Lauhh. Portugal. 58 Schneider, 1877 Moggr. Ardoini Fourn.Fl. Maritime Alps. Hdb. Laubh. 156; Schneider, Hdb. Laubh. austriacus L. DC. Europe and ^ April-May. 155. Austria, Taurus, Siberia. biflorus L'Her. DC.
seolicus Guss.
ii.

d'lt. n.

46.

Tj

ii.

ii.

43.

>)

d'lt. n.

t.

ii.

45.

T?

ii.

ii.

55.

S.

Siberia.
ii.

T?

Lodd. B. G. t. 497 Fl. d'lt. April-May. Nich. Diet. i. 430 Schneider, Hdb. filipes Webb & Berth. T? March-April, Laubh. ii. 43. Teneriffe.
;
;

capitatus Scop. DC. ii" 156 n. 1879 8. South Italy. Tp

fragrans

Lam.

C. mibigemis Link.

DC.

ii.

153.

Teneriffe.

'?

Heuff'elii

Wierzb. = austriacus. Hillebrandtii Briquet. Bossche,

Ic. Sel.

t.

178.

Canaries.
n.

Tp

April.
;

hirsutus L.DC. ii. 156 Bickn. PI. Eiv. t. 13 Fl. d'lt. April-May. 1879 B. M. t. 6819. S. Europe. l?
;
;

Laburnum L. = Laburnum vulgare. monspessulanus L. Fl. d'lt. n. 1881. Genista candicans L. DC. ii. 145. Mediterranean region, Azores, Canaries.

Tp

April.

pahnensis Hort.

ponticus Willd. DC. ii. 157. Asia Minor. ij prsecox Bean. Gard. Chron. 1897, i. 301 Schneider, Hdb. Laubh. ii. 44. {= G. pungens x albus). Garden origin.
. ;


i?

= filipes.

I?

April.

prolifer

L.DC.

ii.

155

Lodd. B. C.

t.

761

B.

M.
.

t.

1908.

Teneriffe.
;

April,
d'lt. n.

prostratus Scop.Fl.

1879
;

^. Tirol. T?
t.

purpureus Scop.DC. ii. 155 Lodd. B. C. 1176 Fl. d'lt. n. 1878. S. Europe. T?
.

892

B.

May. M.

t.

April- June.

HOKTUS MOETOLENSIS
CYTISUS
.

103

(continued).

scoparius Link. DC. f? April-May.

var.

ii.

154

FL

d'lt. n.

1873.

Europe.
M.

Andreanus

Hort.
.

Nich. Diet.

Stippl. 295.

Normandy.
-sessilifolius

ii.

March-April.
;

L.DC.
T^
.

ii.

153

Fl. d'lt. n. 1872; B.

t.

225.

April-May. DC. 154 Fl. 1876. Mediterranean region. February-June. JDAHLIA Gav. N. 239. Composita-HeliantheaeCoreopsidinae. coGcinea Cav. DC. 762. Mexico. 794; B. M.
Europe. triflorus L'Her.
S.

d'lt.

n.

T^

Pff. iv. 5.

v.

t.

i;.

Summer.
imperialis BoezlB. M.
t.

5813; Gard. Chron. 1903,


433. 604.

ii.

178.

Mexico

Juarezii Hort.

Summer. SpringMaximiliana Hort. B. M. t. 7655. Mexico. ^? summer. Merkii Lehm. B. M. t. 3878, as D. glabrata. Nich. Diet. ii. 433. fig. 605. Summer. Mexico. If.. Nich. Diet. ii. 433. fig. 606. variabilis Desf.DC. v. 494 Mexico. Summer. !(..

Nich. Diet.
iii.

v..

November.
ii.

fig.

Mexico.
.

2^.

DAIS L. N.

Pff.

6a.

242.Thymelaeaceae-Thymelaeoideae529
iii.
;

Daphneae-Passerininse.
cotinifolia L.

DC.

xiv.

B. M.

t.

147. Natal- 1?

DALBERGIA L.fil.N.
Sissoo Boxh.DC.
Trees, 24.
ii.

Pff.

3.

333. Leguminosse-Papilioii.

natae-Dalbergieae-Pterocarpinae.

India, Afghanistan. May-June. 137. EubiaceaeDAMNACANTHUS Gaertn. N. Cofi'eoidese-Psychotriinas-Morindese. 158. HimaBid. 473 Fl. indicus Gaertn. DC. Japan. LiHaceae-Asparagoideae-Aspa"DANM Medic. N. racemosa Moench. Kunth, En. 277. Buscus racemosics L. Greece, Asia Minor, Persia, ^ July.
17
.

416; Fl. Brit. Bid.

231

Brand. Bid.

Pff'.

iv.

4.

iv.

Brit.

iii.

laya,

Tj

Pff.

ii.

5. 78.

rageae.

v.

104

HORTUS MORTOLENSIS
-Daphneae-DaphninaB. L. DC. xiv. 538 Lodd. B. C. 1. 150 Moggr. Fl. Ment. t. 86 Fl. d'lt. n. 933. Mediterranean region. Tp June-September. Laureola L.DG. xiv. 539 B. M. t. 206 Fl. d'lt. n. 937. Tp Europe.

DAPHNE L.N.Pff.m. 6a. 237. Thymelaeacese-Thymelseoideae


-Gnidium

odora Thunb.DC.
Hort.

xiv.
.

537;

B. M.

t.

15Q7.D. indica

Japan.

Tj

October-February.
iii.

DAPHNIPHYLLUM Blume.N. Pff.


macropodium
ii.

5.

36.Euphorbiacese-

Platylobeae-PhyllanthoideEe-Daphniphylleae.

Miq.

DC.
ij

xvi. 1. 5

Schneider, Hdb. Laubh.

136.

Japan.

tDASYLIRION Zucc.N. Pff.


-Nolineae.

ii.

5.

72. LiliaceaB-DracasnoideaB
Yucc. 239
;

Mexico. July. glaucophyllum Hook, in B. M. 5041 Bak. & Yucc. 239. Mexico. July. 5099 Yucc. 240; B. M. Hookeri Lem. Bak. Al. Mexico. July. lucidum Bose Contr. N. York Herb. 90. Mexico. ^ July, Wats. Bak. Al. Yucc. 241 B. M. quadrangulatum 7749. Mexico. Summer. serratifolium Karw. Bak. Al. d Yucc. 240. Mexico. Summer. Wats. Bak. d Yucc. 239. Arizona, New Wheeleri Mexico.
I?
.

acrotrichum Zucc.Bak.

Al.

<&

B. M.
Al.

t.

5030.

t.

T?

d:

t.

Tj

in

x.

S.

d-

t.

Tj

T^

S.

Al.

T?

DATURA L.N.
arborea L.
Chili.

DC.
.

Pff. iv. 3b.


xiii.
i.

27. Solanacese-Datureae.

544; Gard. Chron. 1901,

Tj

All the year.


in B.

chlorantha Hook,
All the year.

M.
;

t.

5128.

Gai'den
1440
;

Peru, origin?
i.

8,

Tp

Peru. All Stramonium L. DC. 540 Fl. fZ'7i.n.2857. Europe, Asia, Africa, America. 0. Summer. 545. Mexico. All suaveolens H. B. K. DC.
1.

Metel L.DC. xiii. 1. 543 B. M. Tropics. O. Summer. sanguinea Bz. d Pav. DC. viii.

t.

Fl. d'lt. n. 2856.

545.

i?

the year.

xiii. 1.

xiii. 1.

i?

the year.

HOETUS MOETOLENSIS

105

D AUCUS L.N. Pff.


Carota L.DC.

iii.

8.

iv.

211; Fl.

248. Umbelliferae-Apioideae-Dauceae. d'lt. n. 2355. Europe, Asia.

00.

DAVALLIA Sm.N.
canariensis Sm.
t.

Hook.

Pff.

i.

4.

212. Polypodiacese-Davallieae.
Syn. Fil. 97
;

& Bak.

Lodcl. B. G.

142.

Canaries, Portugal, Morocco, &c.


=
Microlepia platyphylla.

2^.

platyphylla Don.

DEBREGEASIA
Boehmerieae.

Gaudich.

N.

Pff.

iii.

1.

113.

Urticaceas-

velutina Gaud. Fl. Brit. Ind. v. 590 Gard. Chron. 1906, Tj May-June. India, Ceylon. i. 232, with plate.
;

Decabelone Decne.

Tavaresia.
fil.

DECAISNEA
B.M.

Hook.

Thorns.N.
Sioppl.

Pff.

iii.

2.

69. Lardit.

zabalaceae.

Fargesii Franch.
t.

Nich. Diet. N.
Pff.

305

Hort. Vilm.

7848.China. Tj.
B. Br.
iii.

DEERINGIA
Celosieae.
Ic.
lia.

la.

97. Amarantaceaet.

celosioides B.
t.

Br.DC.

xiii. 2.

236; B. M.

2717

Wight,

728; Fl. Brit. Ind. iv. 714.


Tj .

Tropical Asia and Austra59. Eanunculace^-Hellet.

May-June.

DELPHINIUM
boreae.

L.N.
i.

Pff.

iii.

2.

Ajacis

L.DG.

51

Moggr. Fl. Ment.

52

Fl. d'lt.

n. 1628.

Western Mediterranean region. 0.


L.DG.
i.

Spring and

autumn. Staphisagria nean region.

56

Fl. d'lt. n.

1630. Mediterra-

0.

May-June.
Pff.
ii.

JDENDROBIUM

Siv.-N.

6.

173. Orchidacee-Mo748
;

nandrae-Dendrobiinse.

densiflorum WallFl.

Brit. Lid. v.

B.

M.

t.

3418.
;

Himalaya. U nobile Lindl.Fl. Brit. Lid.


Pantl. Orch.

v.

740

B. M.

t.

5003
!(..

King

<&

Him.

t.
f.

71.

thyrsiflorum Eeichb.

= densiflorum.
7369

China, Himalaya.
Pff. iv.

DERMATOBOTRYS
lariaceae.

Bolus. N.
t.

Sb.

107. Scrophui.

Saundersiae Bolus. B. M. 131. Natal. T?. April.

Gard. Ghron. 1902,

106

HOETUS MOKTOLENSIS
Willcl N. Pff. iii. 3. 117. LeguminosseMimosoideae-Eumimoseae. brachylobus Benth. in Hook. Journ. Bot. 1848, 358. March-June. N. America. (?

DESMANTHUS

DESMODIUM
cuspidatum
100.

Desv.N.
ct

Pff.

iii.

3.

327. Leguminosaj-Papilio-

Torr. Gray. Gray, Man. Bot. North. U.S. Northern United States. Dillenii Darlmgt.Gray, Man. Bot. North. U.S. 100. Northern United States. 167. Himalaya. oxyphyllum DC. 336 Fl. Brit. hid. April-May. 165. Nepal. 336 Fl. Brit. Ind. podocarpum DC. September-October.
i? ip

natae-Hedysarese-Desmodiinae.

ii.

ii.

Tp

ii.

ii.

Ij

Scalpe DC.
tilisefolium

ii.

334; Fl. Brit. Ind.

ii.

165; Wight, Ic.

t.

985.

Asia, Tropical Africa.

1?

Don.Fl.

Brit. Ind.

ii.

168

B. M.

t.

2867.

Himalaya.
June.

l?

viridiflorum

DC.

ii.

329.

N.
2a. 72.

America.

T?

May-

DEUTZIA

Thunb.

N.

Pff.

iii.

Saxifragaceae-Hydran.

geoidege-Philadelpheae.

discolor Hemsl. in Journ. Linn. Soc. xxiii. 275; Schneider, Hdb. Lanbh. i. 381. China {Wilson, n. 470). ip Fl. d. S. t. 611. gracilis Sieb. ct Zucc. Fl. Jap. i. t. 8
;

Japan.

Tp

longifolia Franch.

Schneider,
;
.

Hdb. Laubh.
Tp

i.

380.

China
;

{Wilson, n. 1321, 1322, 1340).

scabra Thunb. DC. iv. 17 Sieb. Fl. Jap. i. t. 7 B. M. April. t. 3888. Japan. i? Schneideriana Behd. var. laxiflora Behd. China {Wilson, n. 767a). I?.

DIANELLA

Lam.

N.

Pff'. ii. 5.

39.

Liliaceae-Asphodeloideae-

Asphodeleae-Dianellinae.

Hdb. Fl. N. Zeald. 283. New May-June. Fl. AiLstr. vii. 15. revoluta B. Br. Kunth, En. v. 48 II,.. Queensland, N. S. Wales, Victoria, S. and W. Australia.

intermedia Endl.Hooh.

Zealand, Norfolk Island.

U.

fil.

May- June.
tasmanica Hook.
fil.

Fl.

Austr.

vii.

14

B. M.

t.

5551.

Victoria, Tasmania.

H-.

May-June.

HOETUS MOETOLENSIS
JDIANTHUS L.N.
noidege-Dianthese.
Pff.
iii.

107

16.

76. Caryophyllacese-Sile1885,
842.

ambiguus Pane.

Journ.

Bot.

Servia.

l^.

May-June. arboreus L.DG. i. 357; Lodd. B. C. t. 459. Greece. T? August-September. atrorubens All. DC. i. 357, sub D. Carthusianorum; B. M.
.

t.

1775.

S.

Europe.
i.

14..

June.
Fl. d'lt.
n.

Balbisii Ser.DC.

356;

1224E. Italy. i;.

May- June. csesia Sm.DC.

i. 362; Fl. d'lt. n. 1234. Europe. 2^. May-June. calocephalus Boiss. Fl. Or. i. 515. Asia Minor. 2;. June. Caryophyllus L.DC. i. 359 B. M. t. 39 Fl. d'lt. n. 1233.

ciliatus Gitss.Fl. d'lt. n.

Mediterranean region. October-June. May. 12SS. Italy. 211 Greece. cruentus Griseb. Halacsy, Consp. Fl. May.
if.. !(..

Grcec.

i.

li,.

gallicus Pers.DC.

i.

363

Gren.

<&

Godr. Fl. Fr.

i.

242.

Western France.
glaucophylhis

If..

Hornem =

Balbisii.

glutinosus Boiss. & Heldr. 206. Greece. 24:.

Halacsy,

Consp. Fl. Grac. Consp. Fl. Grac.

i.

haematocalyx
204.

Boiss.

ct

Heldr.

Halacsy,

i.

pallens Sibth.
i.

& Sm. DC. 361; Halacsy, Consp. Fl. Grac. May-June. 215. Greece, Asia Minor, Persia. 1204. Hun362 B. M. petrseus Waldst. & Kit.DC. May. gary.
Greece.

2^.

i.

V,.

i.

t.

If.

pungens L.DC.
Willk.

i.

360;

Gren.
iii.

&

Godr. Fl. Fr.


S.

i.

234;

&

Lange, Fl. Hisp.

682. Spain,

France. 2;.

Requienii Godr. in Gren. & Godr. Fl. Fr. i. 234. May. If. rupicola Biv.DC. i. 357 Fl. d'lt. n. 1226. S. Lampedusa. If.. May-June.

S.

Europe.

Italy, Sicily,

serrulatus Desf.Fl. Atlant.


.

i.

346;

DC.

i.

363. N. Africa.
.

May. If May. squarrosus Bieb.DC. i. 364. Asia Minor. if tener Balb.DC. i. 362; Fl. d'lt. n. 1231a, &.Italy. 2f. tymphresteus Boiss. & Spr. Halacsy, Consp. Fl. Grcec. i. May-June. 209. Greece. 2^. virgineus L.DC. i. 361 B. M. t. 1740. Europe, Asia. May. 2f

108

HOETUS MOETOLENSIS
Link d
Otto.

DIASCIA

N.
in B.

Pff. iv. 36. 54.

Scrophulariaceaeiv. 2.

Antirrhinoidese-Hemimerideae,

Barberse Hook. S. Africa. 0.

fil.

M.

t.

5933

Fl. Cap.

156.

Spring.

DICENTRA
oidese.

Bernh.

N.

Pff.

iii.

2.

143.

Papaveraceae-FumariDiclytra sped.

spectabilis Lem. in Fl.


126.

cl.

S.

t.

257.

DC.

i.

Ciiina, Japan.

If.

Spring.

DICHONDRA

Forst.N.

Pff. iv. Sa.

13. Convolvulaceae-Con-

volvuloideae-Dichondrese.

repens Forst.DC. ix. 451; Hook. fil. Hclh. Fl. N. Zeald. Tropical and subtropical regions of both hemi199.

spheres.

If.
3.

DICHROSTACHYS DC.N.
nutans Benth.Fl.
Nat. PI.
t.

Pff.

iii.

118. Leguminosse;

Mimosoideae-Adenantherae.
Trop. Afr.
iii.

333

DC.

ii.
T^

446

Wood,

Tropical Africa and Asia. 119. Poly podiaceaeJDICKSONIA L'Her. N. Dicksonieae. 1989. 50; Fl. antarctica Lahill. Hook. Syn. E. Austraha, New Zealand, New Caledonia. 133. Eutaceae-Eutoide^DICTAMNUS L. N.
243.
Pff.
i.

4.

Fil.

cl.

S.
Tj

t.

Pff'.

iii.

4.

Euteae-Dictamninae.

albus L.Fl.

d'lt. n.

From Central and DIERVILLA L. N.


florida Sieb.

2529.L>. Fraxinella Pers. DC. i. 712. June. S. Europe to N.E. Asia. If.

Pff. iv. 4. 169.


i.

CaprifoHaceae-Lonicereae.
;

Zucc. Fl. Jap.

75

Journ. Linn. Soc.


;

xxiii.

S68.Weigelia rosea Lindl. B. M. t. 4396 Fl. d. S. t. 211. Tj April-May. China, Manchuria. japonica DC. iv. 330. Japan, China {Wilson, n. 762). Jp


x.

DIGITALIS L.N.

Pff. iv. 36.

88. Scrophulariaceae-Ehinan;

thoideae-Digitaleae.

ambigua Murr.DC.
If
.

450

Fl. d'lt. n.

2980. Europe.
d'lt.

June.

ferruginea L.DC. x. 450; B. M. t. 1828; Fl. Europe, Asia Minor. June. 2^.

n.2977.

lanata Ehrh.DC.
gary.

x.

450;

B. M.

t.

1159. Greece, Hun-

If.

June.

HOETUS MOETOLENSIS
DIGITALIS
lutea
n.

109

(contmued).
x.

L.DG.

452

Bichi.

PI.

Biv.

t.

44

Fl. cVIt.

2981. S. Europe. 2|:. June. mariana Boiss. DC. x. 451. Spain. purpurea L.DC. x. 451; Fl. d'lt.

if..

June.

n.

2979. Europe.
71 5.

14.

June.

viridiflora Lindl.

Z>C.
;

x.

452.

Greece.
Pff.
iv.
;

June.

IDIMORPHOTHECA

Moench.N.

306. Compo-

sitae-Tubifloreae-Calencluleae.

aurantiaca DC. vi. 72 Fl. Cai). iii. 421 Gard. Chron. 1905, February-April. ii. 127, & 1908, i. 364. Cape. 0. Ecklonis DC. vi. 71 Fl. Cap. iii. 419 B. M. t. 7535.
;
;

S. Africa.

^>

April-May.
vi.

pluvialis

Moench.DC.

70; Fl. Cap.

iii.

418. S.

Africa.

O.

Dioclea glycinoides Hort.

Camptosema ruhimmdum.
ii.

IDIOON LindlN.
.

Pff.

1.

edule Lindl.DC. Summer. 17

xvi.

2.

22. Cycadaceffi-Zamieae. 537; B. M. t. 6184. Mexico.

DIOSCOREA

133. Dioscoreaceae-Dioscoreae. 134 Fl. d. S. t. 971. Japan, China, Philippine Islands. 4. bulbifera L.Kimth, En. v. 435; {Wight, Ic. t. 878?).
Pff.
ii.

L.N.

5.

Batatas Decne.N.

Pff'.

I.

c.

Nich. Diet. 323 Bossche, Transcaucasian regions. 388. Japan. japonica TImnb. Kunth, En. quinqueloba Thunb. Kunth, 350. Japan. sativa L. Kunth, En. 295. India, 340 Fl. Lid. Australia, &c.
Australia, India.
21

caucasica Lipsky.
t.

Siippl.
21.

Ic. Sel.

70.

April.

v.

2^,

E71. v.

1(:.

v.

Brit.

vi.

24:.

Diosma alba Thunb.

Coleonema alMcm.

DIOSPYROS

Dalech.N. Pff. iv. 1. 161. Ebenacea?. Kaki L. fil.DC. viii. 229 Gard. Chron. 1907, ii. 22-23 B. M. t. 8127. Japan. T? May. Lotus L.DC. viii. 228 Fl. Brit. Lid. iii. 555 Fl. d'lt.
; . ;
;

Temperate Asia. ^ May. montana Boxb. DC. Fl. Brit. Lid. 230 555 1225. Tropical Asia. Wight, virginiana L. DC. 228; Schneider, Hdh. Laubh. 576. N. America. May-June.
n. 2659.
.

viii.

iii.

Ic.

t.

l?

viii.
fj
.

ii.

110

HOETUS MORTOLENSIS
Desf.N.
Cass.
Pff.
iv.

DIOTIS

5.

273. Compositae-AnthemideaeDC.
vi.

Anthemidinse.

maritima
cVIt. n.

D. candiclissima Desf. 3606. Western Mediterranean


Pff. iv. 3b. 71,

34

Fl.

regions, England.

nDIPLACUS

Nutt.N.

sub ilfwmZMs. Scrophu-

lariaceae-Antirrhinoideae-Gratioleae.

glutinosus Nutt.DC. x. 368; Jacq. H. Sch. Nearly always. N. California. ^

t.

364.
Spring

longiflorus Nutt.

DC.

x.

368.

California.
ii.

T?

and summer.

DIPLARRHENA

Labill.

N.

Pff.

5.

149. Iridaceae-IriS.

doideae-Sisyrinchieae-Libertinse.

Morsea Labill Fl.

Austr.

vi.

400
2^.

Bak. Irid. 114. N.

Wales, Victoria, Tasmania.

c.

DIPLOGLOTTIS
Cupanieae.

Hook. fil.N.

Pff.

iii.

5.

347. Sapindaceaefil.

australis Badlk.

N.
V.

Pff.

I.

D. Gunninghamii Hook.
.

B.M.t. 4470; Fl. Austr.

i.

454. Queensland. Tj
N.
Pff.,

IDIPLOPAPPUS DC.
filifolius

275

sub Aster,

iv. 5.

167.

Compositae-Astereae-Asterinae.

DC.

V.

276;

Fl.

Cap.
275;

iii.

85. S. Africa. T?.


Cai).
iii.

September-December. fruticulosus Less. DC. t. 2718. S. Africa. l?

v.
.

Fl.

85; B. M.

April-May.

DIPSACUS L.N. Pff. fuUonum L.DG.


Caucasus.
sylvestris
Orient.

iv. 4. iv.

188. Dipsaceae.
Fl. d'lt.
n.

645; 645;

3357. Europe,
3358. Europe,

0.

June,
iv.

MillDC.
June.

Fl

d'lt. n.

0.
Hook.

DISGARIA

N.

Pff.

iii.

serratifolia Benth.

& Hook.

5.

423.

'N. Pff.
iii.

Rhamnaceae-Colletieae. April.
I.

c.

Chili.

Tp

DISCOCACTUS

Pfeiff.N.

Pff.

6a.

190. Cactace-Cere-

oideae-Echinocacteae.

alteolens K. Schuvi. Mon. Nachtr. 82.

Brazil,
fig.

Paraguay.

UHartmannii K. Schum. Mon. guay. 2^.


Disemma
Labill.

Nachtr. 83.

12-13.

Para-

Passiflora.

HORTUS MORTOLENSIS
DODON-ffiA L.N.
Australia.
Pff.
iii.

111

5.

attenuata A. Cunn.Fl. Austr.

DC. 617; Fl. 477. Queensland, N. Wales, Victoria. October, 479. Australia. lobulata F. M. Fl. Austr. 486. Queensland, N. tenuifolia Lindl. Fl. Austr. Wales. October. Fl. Cap. 242. Thunbergiana Eckl. & May. 474. triquetra Andr. DC. 617; Benth. Fl.
cuneata Budge.
S.
i.

356. Sapindacese-Dodonseese. i. 477; B. M. t. 2860.


Atistr.
i.

Ip

October.

Tp

i.

f?

i.

S.

Tp

Zeijh.

i.

S. Africa.

T?

i.

Atistr.

i.

S.

Africa. T?

viscosa

L.DC.

i.

616

Fl. Cap.

i.

242
.

Fl. Austr.

i.

475.

S. Africa, Australia, S.

America.
3.

May-June.

DOLICHOS L.N.

Pff.

iii.

383. Leguminosae-PapilionatseFl. Trop. Afr.


ii.

Phaseoleae-Phaseolinse.

Lablab L.B. M. t. 896 vulgaris Savi, DC. ii. 401.


;

Tropics. 0.
M.
t.

210.Lablab Summer.
.

lignosus

L.DC.
Cav.N.

ii.

397

B.

380. India. T?

April-

May.

DOMBEYA

Pff.

iii.

6.

Mastersii Hook.
Abyssinia.

fil.
.

in B.

M.

t.

78. Sterculiacese-Dombeyese. 228. 5639 Fl. Trop. Afr.


;

i.

mollis Hook, in B. M. t. 4578. Hab.? T? Wallichii Benth. & Hcok. N. Pff. I. c. Astrapaa Wallichii Lindl. B. M. t. 2503. Madagascar. ip March-April.

DOREMA

Don.N.

Pff.

iii.

8.

233.Umbelliferae-Apioideae-

Peucedaneae-Ferulinae.

Aucheri

Boiss. Fl. Or.

ii.

1009.

Persia.
iii.

if;.

jDORYALIS

Arn.d-Mey.N.Pff.

6a.

44. Macourtiaceae-

Euflacourtiese.

caffra Warb.
Fl. Cap.

Tp

Aberia caffra Hook. fil. et Harv. Pff. I. c. App. 584 Gard. Chron. 1905, ii. 737. Natal. Spring and winter.
ii.
;

N.

DORYANTHES
Agavoidee.
land.
14..

Correa.N.

Pff.

ii.

5.

119. AmaryllidaceaeSitppl.

Guilfoylei F. M. Bailey. Nick. Diet.

329. Queens;

Palmeri W. Hill.Fl. Austr.


t.

vi.

452

Bak. Am. 163

B.

M.

6665.

Queensland.

24.

May.

112

HORTUS MORTOLENSIS
Pjf.
iii.

DORYCNIUM L.lY.
natae-Loteas.

3.

257. Leguminosae-Papilioi.

gracile Jonl.
June.

Gren.

Godr. Fl. Fr.

427.

Europe. 4.

*hirsutum

B. M. t. 336 var. incanum DC. ii. 208 2039. Mediterranean region. 1(.. May-June. latifolium WiUd.DC. ii. 208. S. Europe, Asia Minor. if
Ser.
;

Fl. d'lt. n.

DC. 209; Gren. Godr. Fl. Fr. Europe. June. Restionacese-Haplantherae. DOVEA Kimth. N. Cape. %. tectorum Mast. N. 3&. 216. BignoniaceaeDOXANTHA Miers. N. Bignonieae. capreolata Miers. Schneider, Hdb. Laubh. 621. Bignonia
''suflfruticosum Vill.
i.

May- June.
426.
S.

ii.

d-

l?

Pjf.

ii.

4. 8.

Pjf. I.e.
Pjf.

iv.

ii.

capreolata L.

DRABA L. N.
t.

363.

864 Jacq. H. Sch. April-June. Southern Atlantic N. America. 17 .


ix.

DC.

146

B. M.

t.

Pjf.

iii.

2.

190.

Cruciferge-Hesperideaen.

Capsellinae.

aizoides L.DC. March-April.

i.

166; Fl.

d'lt.

1460. Europe. if

IDRAC-ENA
Draco

Vandelli.

noideae-Dracaeneae.

cinnabari Balf.
L.

Kunth, En.

fil.

N. N.
v.

Pff.

ii.

5.

73. Liliace^-Dracaeip

Pff.

I.

c.

B. M.

Socotra. 4571. Canary Islands.


t.

-^

DRACOPHYLLUM
Epacrideae.
land.

Labill.N.

Pff. iv.

1.

74. Epacridaceae182. New Zea-

Urvilleanum A. Bich.Hdb.

Fl. N. Zeald.

Tp

DRACUNCULUS
Areae.

Schott.N.

Pff.

ii.

3.

148. Aracese-Aroideae-

canariensis Kunth, En. iii. 30. Teneriffe. 14.. May. vulgaris Schott. Kmith, En. 29 Fl. d'lt. n. 531. Portugal, Italy, Dalmatia, Orient. May. if.

DRYANDRA
Australia.

B. Br.N.

Pff.

iii.

1.

154.Proteacese-Grevil;

loideae-Banksieae.

mucronulata B. Br.DC.

xiv.

470

Fl. Austr. v.

573.

Tp

July-August.

HOETUS MOETOLBNSIS

113

DUNALIA
^

H. B. K.N.

Pff. iv.

U. 14. Solanaceffi-Solanejfi-

Lyciinse.

cyanea Bouv.
.

DC. xiii. 1. Autumn and spring.

484.

S.

and Central America.

DURANTA

L.N.

Pff. iv. 3a.

159.Verbenaceae-VerbenoideseGener.
it

Citharexyleae.

brachypoda
America.

Tod.
ifj

Nuov.
xi.

Spec.

24.

Tropical

EUisia Jacq.DC.

615
615.

B. M.

1.

1759.Tropical America.
?
P?

T?

October.

inermis L.

DC.

xi.

integrifolia Tod. Nuov. Gener.

xi. 616. S. America. T? Plumieri Jacq.DC. xi. 615 Lodd. B. C. t. 280. Cuba, Tp Jamaica. May-September. stenostachya Tod. Hort. Pan. i. 9. t. 3. Tropical America ? May-October. ^ turbinata Tod. Nuov. Gener. & Spec. 28. Tropical America.
;

^. Mutisii L. fil.DC.

Tropical America & Spec. Tropical America.


27.

DUVALIA Haw.N.

Pff.

iv.

2.

277. AsclepiadacetB-Cynan;

choideae-Tylophoreae-Stapeliinae.

angustiloba N. E. Br.Fl. Cap. iv. 1. 1034 Berger, Stap. 351. fig. 72. S. Africa. 4. September-October.

caespitosa Haio.DC.
Berger, Stap. 345.
S.

viii.

662

Mass. Stap. 20.

t.

29

Africa. August-October. Corderoyi N. E. Br.Fl. Cap. 1027 B. M. 6082 Berger, Stap. 342. hirtella Sweet. B. M. 1397 Fl. Cap. 1031 Berger, Stap. 347. October.
14..

iv.

1.

t.

S. Africa.
1.

2^.

iv. 1.

S. Africa.

2^.

Pillansii N. E. Br.Fl. Cap.


fig.

iv. 1.

1026

Berger, Stap. 341.

70. Cape. 2|:. October. radiata Hatv.DC. viii. 663 B. M. 1032. S. Africa. 2^. October.
;

t.

619

Fl. Cap. iv.

1.

reclinata Haiv. Fl. Cap. Cape. !(.. October.

iv.

1.

1030

Berger, Stap. 346.

DUVERNOIA
DYCKIA

E.

Mey.N.

Pff.

iv.

3&.

339. Acanthaceee.

Acanthoideae-Imbricatae-Odontonemeae.

adhatodoidesS.lfe?/.Z)C.xi. 323. S.Africa. T?


Schult.

October.

f.N.

Pff.

ii.

4.
;

brevifolia Bak. Brom. 130

54. Bromeliacese-PuyeEe. Bef. Bot. t. 236. S. Brazil. 2^

114

HORTUS MORTOLENSIS
{continued).
frigiddi Hook. fil.B.
f.

DYCKIA

Bak. Brom. 131; B. M. 3449. Monte Video, Argentina. August. regalis Linden =frigida. sulphurea Koch. Bak. Brom. 131. Uruguay.
rariflora Schult.
t. if..

M. t. 6294 Bak. Brom. 134. Brazil 2^


;

C.

if.

EBENUS
cretica
i.

L.N.

Pff.

iii.

3.

315. Leguminosse-Papilionat;

Hedysarese-Euhedysarinse.

L.DC.
A.

ii.

350

460. Crete. T?.

B. M. t. 1092 May-June.
;

Halacsy, Fl. Grcec.

ECBALLIUM
1.

Bich.N.

Pff. iv. 5.

26. Cucurbitacese-Cucur-

biteae-CucumerinaB.

='^Elaterium A.

1914

Fl. d'lt. n.
21.

Bich.DC. iii. 311; Ardoino, 173; B. M. 3389. Mediterranean region, N. Africa,


May-September.
Bz.
lO

Azores.

ECCREMOCARPUS
scaber Bz.
t.

Pav.N.
238
;

Pff. iv. 3b.

244.Bigno1411
;

niaceae-Eccremocarpeae.

dPav.DC.

ix.

Lodd. B. C.

t.

B.M.

6408. Chili. ^

Summer.
;

lECHEVERIA

DC.

iii.

Crassulaceae.

1^
.

401
d. S.

N.

Pff.

iii.

2a. 34,

sub Cotyledon.

agavoides Lem. Fl. May-June. 1(.

t.

2003

Bef. Bot.

t.

67. Mexico.
6.

australis Rose, Bull. N. York Bot. Gard.

iii.

Mexico.
62, n. 18.

May-June. bracteolata Link


.

ct

Otto.

Bef.

Bot.

i.

sub

t.

Mexico.

If..

Pachyphytum bracteosum. t. 70. California. Summer, 2^ campanulata Kunze. Mexico. i^. Summer. Mexico ?. if Summer. clavifolia Berger, Gartfl. 1904, 205. coccinea DC. iii. 401 Bef. Bot. i. n. 2 B. M. t. 2572 Lodd. Summer-autumn. B. C. t. 832. Mexico. if. cuspidata Bose, Bull. N. York Bot. Gard. iii. 9 Monatsschft. K. 1907, p. 184, with figure. Mexico. Summer. 1|:. f.
bracteosa Lindl.

& Paxt.

californica Uort.Bef. Bot.

Desmetiana E. Morr.
Summer.
edulis Breiver.

Gartfl.

1904, 205. Mexico.


2^.
if
.

2^

farinosa Lindl.

fulgens
winter.

Nich. Diet. Suppl. 263. California. Bef. Bot. California. Summer, AutumnLem. Bef. Bot. Mexico.
t.

71.

t.

64.

2^.

HORTUS MORTOLENSIS

-115

ECHEVERIA

{continued).

Spring and summer. Punkii Hort. Garden origin ? il Mexico. i;. gibbiflora DC. iii. 401; Bef. Bot. n. 23. December- April. Gartenwelt xii. 41. var. carunculata Hort. if..
.

var.

crispata Bak. in Bef. Bot. sub t. 65. 2^. var. metallica Lem. III. Hort. x. Suppl. 81 Bef.
;

Bot.

t.

glauca Hort. autumn. globosa Hort.

Bef.

65.-4.
Bot.
t.

61.

Mexico.
ii.

2^.

Spring-

Mexico

?
III.

!(..

Spring and summer.


Misc. 26, 44, PI. Gr. 44.

Hookeri Salm.Lem.

adimca Bak. in Bef. Bot. t. 60. Mexico. 21 Springautumn. imbricata Hort. Garden origin. U. Nearly always. Mexico. Spring. linguifolia Lew. !(.. Bef. Bot. t. 58. Summer. linguifolia x pulverulenta. Garden origin. 1(. Autumn. Mexico. lurida, Lindl. 21 Bef. Bot. t. 59. maculata Bose, Bull. N. York Bot. Garcl. iii. 7. Mexico.
C.
.

Hort.

2^

Spring.

magnifica Hort. Garden origin. media Hort. Garden origin. 24.

\^

Spring-autumn. Spring-summer.
.

metallica Hort.

gibbiflora.

mucronata

Hort. (non

Schlecht.).

Garden

origin?

24..

Spring-autumn.

mutabilis Hort.

nodulosa

Otto

Garden origin. Bef. Bot. 56. Mexico.


24..

t.

!(..

SummerSummer-

autumn. nuda Bak. in Bef. Bot.


autum.n.

t.

57.

Mexico.
.

24..

opalina

jffori. Garden origin. 24.. Spring-summer. pachyphytoides Hort. Garden origin. T^ Nearly always. Pachyi^hy turn E. Morr. = Pachyphytum bracteosum Klotzsch.

Peacockii Bak. in Gard. Chron. 1874, ii. 258. N. America. 24 Garden origin. !(:. Spring-summer. Garden origin ? 2(: Pfersdorffii Hort. platyphylla Bose, Bull. N. York Bot. Gard. iii. 7. Mexico.
perbella Hort.

24.

Spring.
iii.

Mexico. 1904, 206. Mexico. pulchella Berger, California. pulverulenta Nutt. Bef. Bot.
Pringlei Bose, Bull. N. York Bot. Gard.
6.

2^.

Spring-autumn.

in Gartfl.

24.

t.

66.

24.

2i

116

HOETUS MORTOLENSIS
(continued).

EOHEVERIA
pumila

pulvinata Bose.B. M.
Schlecht.

Bef. Bot.
t.

t.

7918. Mexico.
t.

62.

Mexico. 4.
.

il

March-April.

Purpusii K. Sch.B. M.
autumn.

7713. California. 21

pusilla Berger in Gartfl. 1904, 206.

retusa Lindl.

Bef. Bot. Bef. Bot. roseata Lindl. Bef. Bot. scaphiphylla Hort.
quitensis Lindl.

n. 5.

n. 22.

n. 3.

Gartfl.

Mexico. 4 Summer New Granada. December. Mexico. Mexico. 1904, 205. Garden
l^.

v..

2^.

origin.

2;.

Summer.
Scheideckeri Hort. Spring-summer.

Gartfl.

1904,

205.

Mexico ?
n..

2^.

secunda -Lm^Z.
autumn.
stellata Hort.

Bef. Bot. n. 14.

Mexico.
t.

Spring-

Garden

origin.

2;.

stolonifera Otto.Bak. Bef. Bot.

63.

Spring-autumn.

turgida Bose, Bull. N.

J?

York Bot. Gard.


origin.

Mexico. Mexico.
2;.
iii.

21.

21.

Spring.

Uhinkii Hort.
.

uniflora Berger.
Spring.

Garden Spring. Pachyphylum uniftorum Rose. Mexico.


if
.

ECHIDNOPSIS

Hook. fil.N.

Pff. iv. 2.

274. Asclepiadacese;

CynanchoideaB-Tylophoreae-Stapeliinae.

cereiformis Hook. fil. in B. M. 475; Berger, Stap. 22. fig. Nearly always.
,,

t.

Eritrea, Abyssinia. var. brunnea Berger. Fl. Trop.Afr. Berger, Stap. 23. obscura Berger. Fl. Trop. Afr. Berger, Stap. 23. u. Virchowii K. Schum. Fl. Trop. Afr. 476 Berger, Stap. E. Africa.
3.
1/:.

5930

Fl. Trop. Afr. iv.

i.

I.e.;

2(.

,,

var.

I.

c.

iv.

i.

25.

2;.

ECHINACEA

Moench.N.
v.

Pff. iv. 5.

233. Compositse-Helian5281. N. America. 2;.


!(.
.

theae-Verbesininae.

angustifolia DC.

554; B. M.

t.

May-June.

purpurea Moench.DC. v. 554. N. America.

May-June.

lECHINOCACTUS

Lk.

& Otto.N.
erinaceus.

Pff.

iii.

6a.

185. Cacta-

ceae-Cereoideae-Echinocacteae.

acutatus Lk. & Otto

HOETUS MOETOLENSIS

117

ECHINOC ACTUS

{continued).

acutissimus Otto <& Dietr. K. Schum. 424. Chili. 2^. If. albatus Dietr. K. Schum. 365. Mexico. anfractuosus Mart. K. Schum. 366. Mexico. if.. 11 arrigens Lk. <& Otto. K. ScUtm. 372. Mexico. Beguinii Weh. K. Schum. 442. Mexico. i;. Summer. Summer. bicolor Gal. K. Schum. 302. Mexico. if. castaneoides Cels. K. Schum. 427. Chili. if. centeterius Lehm.K. Schum. 417 B. M. t. 3974. Chili.

K. Schum. 423. K. Schum. Nachtr. 88. cinereus Phil. concinnus Monv. K. Schum. 385; B. M. 4115. Uruguay.
chilensis Hilchn.
Chili.
If.
fig.

14..

Summer.

15.

Chili.

T?

t.

Summer. coptonogonus Lein.


May. corniger DC.

-If.

K.

Schum. 362.

Mexico.
14..

if

crispatus DC.

K. ScMcm. 352. Mexico. ScMtm. 371. Mexico.


A'.
t.

Cumingii Hopff.K. Schum. 411; B. M.

Summer. Summer. 6097. Bolivia.


21-

Ucurvispinus Colla. K. Schum. 418. Chili. if. cylindraceus Encj. Cact. Bound, t. 30; K. Schum. 357.

Summer. S. California. if. denudatus Lk. S Otto.K. Schum. 413. fig. 72. S. Brazil. Summer. 21. May. echidna DC.K. Schum. 332. Mexico. if Ehrenbergii Pfeijf. K. Schum. 436. Mexico. if. Mexico. K. Schum. 330. if electr acanthus Lem. Summer.

K.

Emoryi Eng.
,,

Cact.

Bound,

t.

28

fornia, Mexico.

If.
I.e.
t.

var.

rectispina Eng.
Cact. aliq. nov.

Lower California.
Schum. 346.
9;

Cali-

2^.

erinaceus Lem.
S. Brazil.

K. Schum.

298.

if.

exsculptns Otto. K. Schum. 425. Chili. if. Fiedlerianus K. Schum. Nachtr. 121. ChiH. 14.. floricomus Arech.Monatsschrift f. K. 1907, 161. Uru-

guay.

If.

June.

Poersteri Stieber.

Mexico. 14. K. Schum. 378. Proehlichianus K. Schum. Nachtr. 124. ChiH. if. K. Schum. 406. fig. 71. Argentina. 2f. gibbosus DC.

Summer.

118

HOETUS MOETOLENSIS
{continued).

ECHINOCACTUS

Grahlianus Ferd. Haage. K. Schum. Nachtr. 106. ParaSummer. guay. !(.. Grusonii Hildvi. K. Schum. 313. Mexico. if. Summer. Hartmannii K. Schum. = Discocactus Hartmannii. Haselbergii Bumpier, Handb. ii. 563 K. Schum. 382 B. M. t. 7009. Kio Grande do Sul. i;.

K. Schum. 376. Mexico. heterochromus Web. K. Schum. 302. Mexico. hexsedrophorus Lem. K. Schum. 437; B. M. 4311. Summer. Mexico. 51. Mexico. horizonthalonius Le7n. K. Schum. 304.
hastatus
Hojjff.
2^.
if. If.
fig.
.

U Summer. hyptiacanthus Levi. K. Schum. 403. fig. 70. Uruguay. Summer. If ingens Zucc.K. Schum. 314. fig. 54; B. M. t. 4559.

Mexico. 21. intertextus Erig. Cact. Bound,


Texas, Mexico.
1|.

t.

34

A".

Schum. 445.
if

Summer. lamellosus Dietr. K. Schum. 373. Mexico. May. lajicifer Dietr. K. Schum. 371. Mexico. Leninghausii K. Schum. 382. Eio Grande do Schum. 435 Otto Abb. leucacanthus Zucc. 14. Mexico. 4632. longihamatus Gall.K. Schum. 341; B. Summer. Mexico. lophothele Salm. K. Schum. 432. Mexico. MacDowellii Beb. K. Schum. 441. Mexico. macrodisGUS Mart. K. Schum. 348. Mexico. mammulosus Lem. K. Schuin. 388. Uruguay, Argentina. May. 'M.dithssonii Beige. K. Schum. 351. Mexico. and Nachtr. microspermus Web. K. Schum. 397.
.

if.

Sul.

if.

A'.

it

Pfeiff.

t.

If..

31.

t.

If.

If.

1|.

if:.

If.

1|.

fig.

98,

fig.

22;
,,

B.M.

t.

var.

7840. Argentina. 2^. macrancistrus K. Schum. Nachtr.


23.
If.
if.
.

109.

Argentina. Spring. minusGulus Web. K. Schum. 395. Argentina. Schtim. 410. Paraguay. Monvillei Levi. multicostatus Hildm. K. Schum. 376. Mexico. Summer. multiflorus Hook, in B. M. 4187 A^ Schum. 404. Argen Summer.
fig.
A'.

if.

fig.

64.

If

t.

tina.

If.

HOETUS MOETOLENSIS

119

ECHINOCACTUS
myriostigma Salm.K. Schum. 320 Mexico. Summer. 2^. napinus B. A. Phil. K. Schum. 328.
;

B. M.
Chili.

t.

4177.

nigricans -Deeir. K. ScMim. 423. Chili. 21. obvallatus DC. Bev. Gact. t. 9 K. Schum. 370. Mexico.

if..

ornatusDC K. Schum. 322. fig. 66. Mexico. i^.. Summer. Ottonis Lh. Otto.K. Schiim. 391; B. M. t. 3107. Para-

21

Summer.

Summer. paraguayensis -ffori. 1^. var. tenuispinus K. Schum. I. c. 24. peninsulas Eng. K. Schum. 355. Lower California.-^ 2|. Autumn. pentacanthus Lem. K. Schum. 369. Mexico. Uperuvianus K. Schum. Nachtr. 113. Peru. 14.. Pfeiflferi Zucc. K. Schum. 329. Mexico. 4. Summer. Pfersdorffii Hort.K. Schum. 332. Mexico. 2; pilosus Gal. K. Schum. 307. fig. 52. Mexico. if. pumilus Lem. K. Schum. 393. Uruguay? If. Quehlianus Ferd. Haage. K. Schum. Nachtr. 120. fig. 28.
guay
,,
.

14.

var.

,,

xecMTCVViB Lk.(& Otto.

K.Schum.Ml. Mexico. Summer. robustus Lh. & Otto. K. Schum. 326. Mexico. K. Schum. 416. Argentina. Saglionis Scheerii Salm. K. Schum. 335 E7ig. Cact. Bound, Texas, Mexico. Schickendantzii Weh. K. Schum. 415. Argentina. Schilinzkyanus Ferd. Haage. K. Schum. 394, and Nachtr. 21. Paraguay. 107, 65. ParaSchumannianus Nicolai. K. Schum. 383.
if. if.

Argentina.

if.

Gels.

if.

t.

17.

if

if.

fig.

if.

fig.

guay. if. SGopa Lh. & Otto.K. Schum. 381; B. M.

t.

5445. S.

Brazil.

Spring-summer. If. Sellowii Lh. d Otto.K. Schum. 296. S. Brazil. 2^. senilis B. A. Phil.K. Schum. 389. Chih.- if setispinus Eng. Cact. Bound, t. 20 K. Schum. 338. Texas,
;

Spring-autumn. Soehrensii K. Schum. Nachtr. 115. fig. 25. Chili. if. submammulosus Lem.K. Schum. 386. Paraguay ? if
Mexico.
If.

tabularis
Tellii

Cels.

i?o?'^.

K. Schum. 389. Summer. Mexico.


fig.

66.

-Uruguay.

if

if.

120

HOETUS MORTOLENSIS

ECHINOCACTUS
tenuiflorus Lh.
Ho2}ff.

K. Schum. 452. Mexico. May. K. Schum. 344 Eng. Cact. Bound, texensis Texas, E. Mexico. K. Schum. 449. Mexico. turbiniformis uncinatus Gal. K. Schiim. 343. Mexico. Texas. Wrightii unguispinus Eng. K. Schum. 442. Mexico. villosus Lem. K. Schum. 426. viridescens Nutt. K. Schum. 356 Eng. Cact. Bound, California. 4296. 55 B. M. Williamsii Lem.K. Schum. 318. Mexico. May-June. Wippermannii Miihlenpf. K. Schum. 363. Mexico. Western United Wislizeni Eng. K. Schum. 357. Mexico,
if..
;

{continued).

t.

33.

2^.

Pfeiff.

fig.

77.

21

2|-.

,,

var.

Eiuj. I.e.

2^.

2(..

Chili.
;

2^.

t.

29.

24

fig.

t.

2^.

2^.

S.

States.

14..

lECHINOCEREUS
aeifer Lein.

Eng.

N.

Pff.

iii.

6a.

184. Cactaceae.

K, Schum. 286. Mexico. Summer. Summer. Berlandieri Lam. K. Schum. 256. Texas. K. Schum. 257. Mexico. May. Blankii Palm. Brandegeei Coult. K. Schum. 290. California. chloracanthus Bilmpler. K. Schum. 266. Texas, New Mexico. Summer, cinerascens Lem. K. Schum. 262. Mexico. cirrhifer Lah. K. Schum. 263. Mexico. conglomeratus Fdrst. K. Schum. 278. Mexico. dasyacanthus Eiig. K. Schum. 268. -Texas. De Lsetii Gilrhe in Monatsschrift K. 1909, 131. Mexico.
71
ij,.

Cereoideas-Echinocactese.

2^.

2f

14..

2|

v..

if.

14.

f.

^^2. May. diversispinus Hort. Pan. (Palermo, 1901). !{.. dubius Eiimpler. K. Schum. 276; Eng. Cact. Bound.

t.70.

Texas, Mexico.

Ehrenbergiii?/M;i2j/er.

Engelmannii Lem.

June. K. Schum. 262. Mexico. K. Schum. 275 Eng. Cact. Bound, 57. California, Arizona. enneacanthus Eng. K. Schum. 264 Eng. Cact. Bound, 2-4 and 49. Texas, Mexico. Summer. K. Schum. 274 Eng. Cact. Bound, Fendleri
2;.
;

14

June.

t.

2f

t.

48,

t.

V,.

Bilmijler.
t.

t.

51-53
&c.

B. M.

6533. Utah, Arizona, New Mexico, Sonora,


K. Schum. 261.

%.
jPors^.

gly cimorphus

Mexico.

14,

HOETUS MOETOLENSIS

121

ECHINOCEREUS

{continued).

Knippelianus Liehn. Summer.


Mexico.

K. Schum. 251.
287.
fig.

fig.

47.

Mexico.
t.

2^.

Leeanus Lem.K. Schum.

49;

B. M.

4417.

!(..

leonensis Maths. K. Schum. 263. Mexico. leptacanthus K. Schum. 260. Mexico. 21.

14..

Summer.

June. Schum. 273. California. maritimus Merkeri K. Schum. 217. Mexico. mojavensis Bumpier. K. Schum. 279. Western United States. 4. papillosus A. Linhe. K. Schum. 258. Texas. Gaci. Bound. paucispinus Bilmpler. K. Schum. 280
-ST.

v,.

-if..

S.

l^..

Encj.

t.

56; B. M.

t.

pectinatus Eng.K. Schum. 270; B. M.


&c.

6774. Texas, New Mexico. 2|. t. 6669. Mexico,


;

24.
t.

phoeniceus Lem.K. Schum. 282 B. M.


cispinus.

6774, as C. pau-

New Mexico.
var.

2|..

inermis K. Schum.
Cact.

I.e.

283.

Mesa Grande.
Schum. 285.
2^.
t.

Upolyacanthus Eng.
Bound,
11.
t.

54. 55; K.

^Texas, Arizona, Mexico.


Leyn. K.

Poselgerianus A. Linhe.

K. Schum. 257. Mexico.


Schum. 259
;

procumbens
59
;

Eng. Cact. Bound,


June.

B. M.

t.

7215. Mexico. 2f.

pulchellus K. Schum. 252.

Roemeri Lem.

A'.

Schtcm. 284.

Mexico. U. June. Texas, New Mexico, Utah,


;

21:.

Roetteri Bilmpler.K. Schum. 272 Eng. Cact. Bound, 3-5. 2^. Texas, Arizona, Chiliuahua.

t.

41,

Salm-Dyckianus Scheer.K. Schum, 255.Mexico. 4.


June.

Scheerii Lem.K. Schum. 253. Mexico. 2|:. June, subinermis Salm.K. Schum. 250. Mexico. 2|:. June, tuberosus Bumpier. K. Schum. 249. Texas. 21 viridiflorus Eng.K. Schum. 267 Eng. Cact. Bound, t. 36

B.

M.

t.

7688. Mexico, Texas. 2|:.


Torr.

ECHINOCYSTIS
Sicyoideae.

& Gr.N.

Fff. iv. 5.

35. Cucurbitacese;

lobata Torr. d Gray.Graij, Man. Bot. North. Un. St. 139 N. America. . JulyGard. Chron. 1897, ii. 271.

October.

122

HOETUS MOETOLENSIS
iii.

ECHINOPHORA L.N. Pff.


-Echinophoreee.

8.

146. Umbelliferae-Apioideae
Fl. Hisp.
If.. iii.

313. Compositae-CynareaeECHINOPS L.N. Echinopsidinse. June-July. DC vi.524. Hungary. bannaticus 430. Syria. 4. July. Gaillardoti Boiss. Fl. Or. 523. June-July. humilis Bieb. DC.
Pff.
iv.

spinosa L.DC. iv. 236; W. d L. Mediterranean region. n. 2418.


5.

14

Fl. d'lt.

i?oc/ieZ.

14.

iii.

vi.

Siberia, Altai.
;

if.

B. M. t. 932 -Ritro L.DG. vi. 524 S.Europe. !(-. July-September,


;

Fl. d'lt. n.

3683.

ECHINOPSIS

N. 6a. 184. Cactacese-CereoideaeEchinocactese. Bridgesii Salm. K. Schwn. 237. Bolivia.


Zucc.
Pff. hi.
if
i?
.

campylacantha B. Mey.K. Schum. 241


Argentina.

B.

M.

t.

4567.
Spring.

!(..

cinnabarina Lab. K. Schum. 227. Bolivia. Eyriesii Zucc.K. Schum. 230; B. M. t. 3411.
&c.

Summer.

11^.

Spring-summer. June-July. K. Schum. 235. Bolivia. if.. K. Schum. 235. = E. oxygona x Lagemannii Dieir. Garden origin. 14.. May-June. Eyriesii. leucantha Walp. K. Schum. 240. E. salpingophora Lem.
If..

Argentina,

Huottii Lab.

Argentina.
U-

if

Meyeri Hort.=^E.

Eyriesii x leucantha.

Garden
t.

origin.

K. Schum. 232; B. M. multiplex Zucc. Spring-summer. Brazil. if..

3789.

S.

K. Schum. 233. Brazil. June. 4124. Pentlandii Salm. K. Schum. 229; B. M. June. Peru. Maximiliana Heyd. K. Schum. var. tricolor Hort. Paraguay. rhodotricha K. Schum. Nachtr. Salmiana Web. K. Schum. 231. Bolivia. Schickendantzii Web. K. Schum. 237. Argentina.
oxygona
Zticc.
S.
if..

,,

var. cristata Hort.

if.

t.

2(.

var.

I.e.

24.

v,.

79. fig. 10.

if..

If

June-July.
;

tubiflora Zucc.K. Schum. 234


1|:
.

B. M.

t.

3627. S. Brazil.

June-August.

HOETUS MOETOLENSIS
ECHINOFSIS
(continued).

123

valida Monv.

K. Schum. 238. Paraguay.


= tuhiflora.
x. 18.

if..

Ziiccarinii Pfeiff.

jECHIUM

N.Pff.iy.3a. 128. Borraginaceae-Borraginoideae Canary Islands. ^ Marchaculeatum Poir. DC.


L.
-Echieee.
.

April.

bifrons DC.

x. 17.

Canary Islands.
x.

Tp

April-May.
.

candicans L.DC.
April-May.

17;

B. M.

t.

6868. Madeira. t?

fastuosum Ait.DC. x. 16; B. M. sub t. 6868; Gard. Chron. April-May. 1903, i. 328. Canary Islands. l? giganteum L. DC. x. 18 Vent. Malm. t. 71. Canary
.

Islands.

l?

March.

DC. x. 17. lineatum Jacq. fil. March- April. molle Poir. DC. x. 17. Tenerilfe.

roseum

Canary Islands. simplex DC. .


Hort.
Tp

Canary Islands. February-March.


Tp

Tp

March-April.
April.
ii.

x.

16.

Tenerifl'e.
t.

Wildpretii Pearson. B. M. 5.Teneriffe. 0. May.

7847; Gard. Chron. 1905,

EDGEWORTHIA Meissn.N. Pff.

iii.

6a.

238.ThymelaeaceseInd.
.

Thymelaeoideae-Daphneae-Daphninae.

DC. xiv. 543 Fl. Brit. Gardner! Meissn. ip B. M. t. 7180. Himalaya, China, Japan.
;

v.

195

Spring.

Edivardsia Salisb.

= Sophora.
Pff. iv. 3a. 87.
ix.

EHRETIA

L.

N.
iv.
.

acuminata B. Br. DC.


Brit. Ind.

141
July.

Japan.

Borraginacese-Ehretioideae. Fl. Austr. 503 387 Fl. 170. India, Australia, Wight,
;

iv.

Ic.

t.

l?

macrophylla WallDC.
Himalaya. serrata Eoxb.

ix.

503; Fl. Brit. Ind.

iv.

141.

T^

June.

= acuminata.

EICHHORNIA
Summer.

Kunth.N.

E. speciosa Kunth, En. crassipes Solms. deria azurea Hook, in B, M. t. 2932.

Pff'.

ii.

4.

73. Pontederiaceae.
iv.

131.

S.

America.

Ponte

2^.

ELiE AGNUS L.N. Pff. iii. 6a. 249. Elseagnace*. angustifolia L.DC. xiv. 609; Fl. d'lt. n. 930. Temperate
Asia.

Tp

May-June.

edulis Sieb.

= multiflora.

124

HORTUS MORTOLENSIS
{continued).

EL^ AGNUS
.

glabra Thunb. DC. xiv. 614 Nich. Diet. 505. Japan. T? November-January. Wight, Ic. latifolia L.DG. xiv. 610 Fl. Brit. Ind. v. 202 t. 1856; Brand. For. Fl. t. 46. Tropical Asia. T?
; ;
;

latifolia

Hort.

= limhellata.
xiv.

November-January. 7341. Japan. 614; B. M. multiflora Thunb.DC. 612. Japan, China. Aprilparvifolia Boyle. DC. May. 614 Nich. Diet. 506. Japan. pungens Thunb. DC. November-January. reflexa Behd. Schneider, Hdb. Laubh. 413. Japan. November-January. 201; 614; Fl. Brit. Ind. umbellata Thunb. DC. Boyle, Afghanistan, India, China, Japan.
17
.

macrophylla Thunb.DC.

614;

B.M.

t.

7638. Japan.

xiv.

t.

T^

xiv.

Tp

xiv.

Tp

,,

var.

ii.

Tp .

xiv.

v.

III. t.

81.

Jp

EL-ffilOCARPUS L.N.
carpeas.

Pff.

iii.

6.

5. Elseocarpacese-Elaeot.

cyaneus Ait.Fl.
Ic. Sel.
t.

Austr.

i.

281; B. M.
ii.

1737;

Bossehe,

93

Gard. Chron. 1904,


Pff.

280. Australia. i?
5.

tEL-ffilODENDRON Jacq.N.
capense E. Z.Fl. Cap.
(?
.

iii.

215, sub Cassine.

Celastraceae-Cassinioidese-Eucassinieae.
i.

468

B. M.

t.

3835. Cape.

February.
C.

ELiEOSELINUM
Asclepium.

Koch.N.

Pff'. iii.

8.

244. UmbeUiferEeS.

Apioideae-Laserpitieae-Elaeoselinae.
Bertol.

Fl.

d'lt. n.
ii.

2373.

Europe.

14..

ELETTARIA
bereae.

Maton.N.
White

Pff.

6.

27. Zingiberacese-ZingiBrit. Ind.


vi.

Cardamomum
Malabar. 2^.

&

Maton.

Fl.
1.

251.

EMBOTHRIUM

Forst.N.

Pff.

iii.

148. Proteace^-GrevilM.
ii.

loidese-Embothrieae.

coccineum Forst.DC. xiv. 443

B.

t.

4856. Chili. Tp

ENCEPHALARTOS
Zamieae.

Lehm.N.

Pff.

1.

22. Cycadacet.

Altensteinii Lehm.DC. xvi. 2. 532 Chron. 1906, ii. 206. S. Africa. T?

B. M.

7162

Gard.

Summer.

HOETUS MOETOLENSIS

125

ENCEPHALARTOS
horrida Jacq.

{continued).

cycadifolius Lehm.

DC.

xvi. 2. 531.
2.
^

S. Africa.^
t.

Tp

horridus Lehm.~DC.

xvi.

S. Africa.

Lehmanni Lehm.
Summer. villosus Lem.
Ic.

DC.

532
2.

B. M.
531.

5S71.Zamia
Africa.

xvi.

S.

Tp

Sel.

t.

160.

DC. 533 Africa.


xvi. 2.
S.
Tj
.

B. M. t. 6654 Summer.

Bossche,

ENCHYLiENA
Australia.

B. Br.N.

Pff.

iii.

la.

71. Chenopodiacee;

Cyclolobeae-Camphorosmese.

tomentosa B. Br.DC.

ip

xiii. 2. 128 Fl. Austr. September-October.

v.

181.

ENTELEA

B. Br.N.

Pff.

iii.

6.

21. Tiliace^-Tiliese.
;

arborescens B. Br.Hook. fil. Hdb. Fl. N. Zeald. 32 t. 2480. New Zealand. Tp June-July.
.

B.

M.

EPHEDRA

L.N.

Pff.

ii.

2.

117. Gnetacese.
;

distachya L. 354. Europe


2.

altissima Desf.DC. xvi. 2. 356 B. M. Mountains. February-May. . ^


Fl. d'lt. n. 101.
S.

t.

7670. Atlas

E. vulgaris Kich.

to Central Asia.
xvi. 2.

DC.

xvi.

Tp

October.

fragilis

Desf.DC.

355
.

Fl. d'lt. n.

ranean region, Arabia.

103. Mediter-

Tp

October.
6.

EPIDENDRUM
Cattleyeae.

L.N.

Pff.

ii.

144. Orchidacese-Lseliinee-

falcatum Lindl.B. M. t. 3778. Mexico. i^. prismatocarpum Beichb.f. B. M. t. 5336. Central America.

nradicans Pav.

Nich. Diet.
Pff.
iii.

i.

513.

Mexico.

24.

EPILOBIUM L.N
Zealand.
14..

7.

208. Onagracese-Epilobieffi.

haloragifolium A. Cwin.Hdb. Fl. N. Zeald. 80. New


pedicellare Presl.

Lidex Keicensis,
Pff.
iii.
i.

ii.

853.

Chili.

24,

EPIMEDIUM
April.

L.N.

pinnatum Fisch.DC.

75. Berberidacese. 110; B. M. t. 4456.Persia. if


2.

EPIPHYLLANTHUS
Spring.

Berger, Bep. Miss. Bot. Gard. 1905,

84.
if.

Cactaceae-Cereoidese-Echinocactese.

obtusangulus Berger,

I.

c.

K.

Schum. 127.

Brazil.

126

HORTUS MORTOLENSIS
Pff.
iii.

EPIPHYLLUM Hcm.N.
oidese-EchinocacteaB.

6a.

183. Cactaceae-Ceret.

Altensteinii

Pfeiff.

En. 28, Abbild.

28.

Brazil.
M.
t.

T?

February, Hort. Brazil. ^ truncatum Haiu.K. Schum. 221 December-February.


. .

December. Gaertneri Hook. fil.K. Schum. 223; T? March. Brazil. Bridgesii Le??^. K. Schum. Nachtr. 74.
B.

B.

7201.

E. Bueckerianum
t.

M.

2562.Brazil.

Tp

EPIPREMNUM
pinnatum
vi.

Schott.N.

Pff.

ii.

3.

120. Aracese-Monste-

roideae-Monsterese.

mirahiU Schott
549.

= pinnatum.

Engl.

B.

V.

C. iv. 23 b.

60;

Fl.

Brit.

Ind.

Malayan

Islands.
Pff.

^
2.
;

ERANTHIS
borese.

Salisb.N.

iii.

57. Ranunculacese-Helle-

hyemalis Salisb.DC. i. 46 B.M.t.d; Fl. d'lt. n. 1615. Central and S. Europe. 2^. January-February.

ERCILLA

A. Jicss.N. Pff.

iii.

lb.

11. Phytolaccaceae-Phyto-

lacceae.

volubilis A. Juss.DC.

xiii. 2.

238; Walter, Phytol. {B. V. C),

34.Peru. 2|..

EREMOSTACHYS
June-July.

Bunge.N.

Pff.

iv.

3a.

246. Labiatae-

Stachyoidese-Lamiinae.

laciniata Bunge.DC.

xii. 54.7;

S.ilf.

t.

7048. Orient. 2^.

ERIANTHUS
pogoneae.

Michx.N.

Pff.

ii.

2.

24. Grajpaineae-AndroFl. d'lt.


n.

Ravenna Beauv.Kunth,
Mediterranean region
.

En.
.

i.

479;

117.

if.

Autumn

lERICA

L.

N.

Pff. iv. 1. 58.


vii.

arborea L.DC.
n. 2643.

690

S.

Europe,

Ericaceae -Ericoidese-Ericeae. 59 Fl. Moggr. Fl. Ment. Caucasus, Abyssinia. Canaries,


;

t.

d'lt.
1?
.

March-April.
australis
S.

April-June, 684; Fl. Cap. Boxb.DC. cornuta blanda. ^ E. cristaflora


T^
.

L.DC. vii. 666 Europe, N. Africa.


v.

Lodd. B. C.

1.

1472

B.M.
1.

t.

8045.

vii.

iv.

301,

as

S. Africa.

HOETUS MOETOLENSIS
ERICA
(eontiiiued).

127

mediterranea

L. DC.

wii.

ranean region.

614; B.

M.

t.

471.

Mediter-

Tj

January-April.

multiflora L.DC. vii. 667; Lodd. B. C. t. 1572; Moggr. Fl. Ment. t. 59 Fl. d'lt. n. 2645. S. France, Italy. ?

October-November.
polytrichifolia
Salisb.

DC.
;

vii.

689.

Portugal.

February.

scoparia L.DC. April-May. ^


.

vii.

692
vii.
I?
.

Fl. d'lt. n.

2642. S. Europe.
n.

stricta

Andr.DC.

666;

Fl.

d'lt.

Corsica, Sardinia.

2646. Spain,

May- August.
iv.

lERIGERON
Asterinae.
n.

L.

N.

Pff.

5.

164. Composita-Asteresev.

Karwinskyanus DC.
3529.

Vittadinia
DC.
v.

var,

mucronatus DC.
triloba

285; Fl.
2^,

d'lt.

Hort.

the year.

speciosus May.
Villarsii
11
.

284.

N.W.
;

Mexico. America.
i^.
1.

All

April-

BallDC.

v.

291

Lodd. B. C.

1390. Europe.

April-May.

ERIOBOTRYA
Pomarieae.
n. 1848.

Lindl.N.Pff.
ii.

iii.

3.

25. Kosacee-Pomoideed'lt.

japonica Lindl.DC.

Japan, China. ^
L.N.
vi.

631; Wight, Jet. 226; Fl.


.

November-December.

ERIOCEPHALUS
africanus L.

Pff. iv. 5.

270. Compositse-AntheM.
t.

mideae-x^nthemidinae.

DC.

145;

B.

833.

Cape.

f?

November-March.

ERIOGONUM

Michx.N.

Pff.

iii.

la.

14. Polygonacesei.

Eumicoideae-Eriogoneae.

arborescens Green in Bull. Western N. America. 2^ Tp

Calif.
.

Acad.

1.

1884, 11.

June-July.

ERODIUM

L'Her.

hymenodes
Algeria.

N. Pff. L'Her. Ger.


Spring.

iii.

4. 9.

Geraniacese-Geraniege.
i.

t.

4;

DC.

647; B. M.
312.

t.

1174.

24.

Manescavi Buh.

1(.

Gren.
649
;

&

Godr. Fl. Fr.


6.

1.

Pyrenees.

14.

June.
i.

Reichardi DC.
.

L'H6r. Ger.

t.

Balearic Islands.

April-September.

128

HORTUS MORTOLENSIS
L.N.
Pff.
iii.

ERYNGIUM
June,

8.

139. Umbelliferae-Saniculoideae
iii.

-Saniculeae.

agavifolium Griseh.

N.

Pff.

8.

142.

Argentina.

2^.

amethystinum L.DC.

iv.

88

Fl. d'lt. n.

2233. Europe.

If-.

June-July.
;

aquifolium Cav.DC. iv. 21 W. ct L. Fl Hisp. iii. 10. Spain. %. June- July, -campestre L.DC. iv. 88; Fl.d'It.n. 2232. Europe. 2^.

June-July. Fl. d'lt. n. 2230. Eastern creticTim Lam. DC. iv. 89 June-July. Mediterranean region. if.
;

dichotomum Desf.DC.
ranean region.
11.
If..

iv.

90

Fl. d'lt. n.

2235. Mediter23.

eburneum

Decne. Bull. Soc. Dot. Fr. 1873, June-July. 90 Nich. Diet. 729. Orient. giganteum Bieh.DC. June-July 95 The Garden, pandanifolium Cham. & Schlecht. DC. June-July. 37. Brazil. 1902, Sanguisorba Cham. & Schlecht. DC. June-July. 94 Bossche, 166. Serra Cham, d Schlecht. DC. June-July.
Brazil.
iv.
;

June-July.

fig.

11

iv.

i.

2f.

iv.

97.

Brazil.

2f

iv.

Ic. Sel.

1.

Brazil.

If.

Spinalba Vill.DC.
June-July.

iv.

88

Fl. d'lt. n.

2238. Europe. 4.

ERYSIMUM L. N.
Erysiminge.

Pff.

iii.

2.

193. Cruciferee-HesperideaeFl. Hisp.


iii.

ochroleucum DC.

i.

199

W. d L.

808. Spain.

If..

Spring.

Perofskianum F. & M.B. M. t. 3757. Caucasus. 0. rupestre DC. i. 197. Asia Minor. 2f thyrsoideum Boiss. Fl. Or. 190. Asia Minor. if.

i.

ERYTHEA
armata

S.

Wats.N.

Pff.

ii.

3.

35. Palmae-Coryphinse-

Wats. Nich. Diet. 352. Brahea Boezli California. Brandegeei Purpus in California. 1903, edulis S. Wats. Nich. Diet. 530. Guadalupe Island.
S.
Siipi^l.

Sabaleae.

Linden.

Tp

Gartfl.

11.

i?

i.

HOETUS MOETOLBNSIS

129

+ERYTHRINA L.N.
caflfra

Pff.

iii.

3.

363. Leguminosse-Papilioii.

natse-Phaseoleae-Erythrininae.

Tkunb.DC.
Tp
.

ii.

S.Africa.
crista-galli

412; Fl. Cap.

236; B. M.

t.

2431.

July-October.
Sesse.
ii.

coralloides Mog.

d-

DC.
;

ii.

413.

Mexico. ^
877. W.
ii.

L.DC.

413; B. M.

t.

2161. Brazil. Tp
Indies, S.

Summer. herbacea L.DG.

ii. B. M. 411 United States. June-July. ^ indica Lam.DC. ii. 412 Fl. Br.

t.

Incl.

188

Wiglit, Ic.
.

India, Tropical Asia, Java, Polynesia. ^ insignis Tod. Hort. Pan. Native April, 184. E. Tropical tomentosa B. Br. Fl. Trop. Afr. Africa, Nubia to Natal. ^ viarum Tod. Nuov. Gen. & Spec. Native land not known.
t.

58.

t.

2.

of

'?

l?

ii.

62.

Tp

ESCALLONIA
lonioidese.

L.fil.N.

Pff.

iii.

2a.

84. Saxifragaceae-Escalt.

floribunda H. B. K.DG. iv. 4; B. M. Tp Granada. August-September.

6404. New

illinita Presl.

Ntch. Diet.
<&

i.

533.

t.

Chili.
;

Tp

Gard. Chron. 1897, langleyensis Nich. Diet. Suppl. 354 ii. 15, & 1898, ii. 11. Garden origin. Tp

macrantha Hook.
.

Am.

B. M.

T? October-May. Tp pterocladon Hook, in B. M. t. rubra Pers.DG. iv. 3 B. M. t. 2890 Sehneider, Hdh. Tp Lauhh. i. 398. Chili. November-March. Tp visGOsa Forh. Bossehe, Ic. Sel. t. 16. Chih. July.
; ;

Chilo6 Island. 4827. Patagonia.


4473.

2.

ESCHSCHOLTZIA
californica

Cham.N.
ii.

Pff.

iii.

139. Papaveraceset.

Papaveroideae-Eschscholtzieae.

Cham. DC.
V. C.) 154.

344;

B. M.

Papav. {R.

California. .
Pff.
iii.

2887; Fedde, March-April.

lEUCALYPTUS

L'Her.N.

7.

89

Myrtacese-Lepto-

spermoidese-Leptospermese-Eucalyptinae.

amygdalina Labill.Fl. Austr. iii. 202 B. M. t. 3260 Fl. d'lt. n. 2192. N. S. Wales, Victoria, Tasmania. Tp
; ;

June-July.

botryoides

S??i.

Fl.

Austr.
.

iii.

229.

Wales, Victoria.

Queensland,
E

N.

S.

130

HOETUS MOETOLENSIS
(continued).
iii.

EUCALYPTUS

calophylla B. Br.Fl. Austr.


Chron. 1896,
ii.

225

B.

M.

t.

4036

Gard.
Tp

Fl. Austr. 257. Queensland. 217. Australia. 220; Fl. Austr. cneorifolia DC. Fl. Austr. 201. Australia. coriacea A. Cunn. 234. W. Australia. cornuta Lahill. Fl. Austr. May-June. 221. N. Australia, Queensland, crebra F. M. Fl. Austr. June-July. N. Wales. 251. W. Australia. diversicolor F. M. Fl. Austr.
citriodora Hook.
iii. iii.

661. W. Australia. l?
iii.

T^

iii.

Tp

iii.

Tp

iii.

S.

Tp

iii.

Tp

June- July.
ficifolia F.

M.Fl.

Austr.

iii.

256;

B.

M.

t.

7697. W. 2190.

Australia.

Tp

Globulus Lahill.Fl.
Victoria, Tasmania.

Austr.
ip
.

iii.

225

Fl. cVIt. n.

October-May.

gomphocephala DC. iii. 220. Australia. Tp Gunnii Hook.f. i^Z.^ws^r. iii.246. Victoria, Tasmania. ^ Lehmanni Preiss.Fl. Austr. iii. 233 B. M. t. 6140, as E. cornuta. W. Australia. Tp October, May. leuGOxylon F. M.Fl. Austr. iii. 209. N. S. Wales, Victoria,

Fl. Austr. 235. W. Australia, 210. N. Wales, melliodora A. Cunn. Fl. Austr. July-August. Victoria. 235 Bossche, occidentalis Endl. Fl. Austr. 184. W. Australia. September. 213. Australia. polyanthemos Schau. Fl. Austr.
macrandra
F.

S. Australia.

Ip

October-December.
iii.
iii.

M.

ip

S.

ip

iii.

Ic. Sel.

t.

Tp

iii.

ip

robusta Sm.Fl. Austr.


Wales.

iii.

228
iii.

Fl. d'lt. n.

2191. N.

S.

Tp

January.

viminalis Lahill. Fl. Austr. Tp S. Australia, Tasmania.

239.

N.
iii.

S.

Wales, Victoria,

JEUCLEA L.N.

Pff. iv. 1.

Pseudebenus E. Mey.

Fl. Trop. Afr.


Pff.
ii.

158. Ebenaceae.
512.

S.

W.

Africa.

Tp

July.

EUCOMIS

L'H6r.N.

5.

67. LiliacejE-Lilioideae302 Fl. Cap.


;

Scilleae.

punctata L'mr.Kunth, En. t. 913. S. Africa. 4.

iv.

vi.

475

B.

M.

regia Ait.Kunth, En. iv. 302 t. 238. S. Africa. 2|.

Fl. Cap. vi. 477

Ref. Bot.

HORTUS MORTOLBNSIS

131

JEUCOMMIA

Oliver. N.

Pff.

Nachtr.

i.

159.Trochoden;

draceae-Euptelodiese.

ulmoides Oliver. N. Pjf. I. c. Keio Hdh. Lauhh. i. 424. China. Tp


;

Bull. 1904, 4

Schneider,

EUCRYPHIA
JEUGENIA
australis

pinnatifolia

Cav.N. Pff. iii. 6. 131. Eucryphiacese. Gay.B. M. t. 7067 Gard. Chron. 1901,
;

ii.

351. Chili. Tp.

Michx.N.

Pff.

iii.

7.

78. Myrtacese-Myrtoidese.

Myrtege-Eugeniinae.

apiculata DC. iii. 276. Chili. T? Wendl. = myrtifolia. dysenterica DC. iii. 268. Brazil.

Tp

edulis Berg.N.

Pff.
iii.

iii.

7.

82. S. America. l?
Fl. Brit. Lid.
>>
ii.

Jambos L.DC.
1696, 3356.

286

India to Australia. littoralis Planch.Bull. Soc. Bot. Fr. 1865, 178. New Caledonia. Mato Griseb. Goett. Ahh. 1879, 125. Argentine. ^
xii.
Tp
.

474

B. M.

t.

xxiv.

t. 2230. Australia. June-September. Ugni Hook, d- Arn.B. M. t. 4626. Chili. i? uniflora L. Ind. Keio. E. Michelii Lam. DC. iii. 262; B. M. t. 473.Brazil. Tp
Tp
.

Lam. uniflora. myrtifolia Sims.DC. iii. 287; B. M.


Michelii

lEULOPHIA B. Br.N. Pff.


Cyrtopodiinge.

ii.

6.

157. Orchidacese-Monandrse56.

Colese Bolfe.

Fl.Trop. Afr.

vii.

Somaliland, Eritrea.
if:
. .

i^

EUPATORIUM L.-N.Pff.iy. 5. 138. Compositge-Bupatorie^-

DC.y. 175. N. America. DC. 175. N. America. aromaticum L.


ageratoidesL.^/.
v.

Ageratinse.

if

May-June. May-June.

Purpusii Brandegee. Erythea,


micranthum

grandiflorum Andre, Bev. Hort. 1882, Tp America ? November-March.

384,

Central Mexico.
.

ij

DC. v. 154 November-March.


Less.

Bef. Bot.

t.

155.

vii. 3.

riparium Bgl.Gartfl.
March.

xv. 1866, 324.

violaceum Hort. DC. v. 170, Tp Guadalupe ? November-March. Weinmannianum Egl. ynicranthum.

Mexico. March, 525. Mexico. sub E. guadalwpense


Tp

t.

if

k2

132
t

HORTUS MORTOLENSIS
L.N.
Pff.
iii.

EUPHORBIA
Abyssinia.

4.

103. Euphorbiaceae-Croto;

noidete-Euphorbieae.

abyssinica Baeuschel.

DC.

June, aggregata Berger, Euph. 92. S. Africa. i^ T? alcicornis Bah. Journ. Linn. Soc. xxii. 1887, 517 Berger, V) E^iph. 41. Madagascar.
. ;

Boiss. altissima Boiss. DC. 116 Asia Minor, Greece. February-May. Ammak ScMoeinftli. Berger, Eujjh.
xv. 2.
if.
;

xv. 2. 84

Berger, Eupli. 67.

Tp

Ic.

Eiiph.

t.

66.

74.

S. Arabia.

amygdaloides
S.Europe.

L. DC.
11
.

xv.

2.

170;

Fl. cVIt. n.

2617.
107.

DC. S.Africa. 96 aphylla Brouss. DC. Islands. June. atropurpurea Brouss. DC. B. M. 3321. Teneriffe. DC. balsamifera Canary Islands. June. A Beaumieriana Hook. Morocco. June.
anacantha
Ait. xv.
if.

February-May.
2.

86

Berger, E^iph.

April,

xv. 2.

Berger, Eiqih. 23.

Canary

T^

xv. 2. 108
Tp
.

Berger, Eiiph. 15

t.

April.

Ait.

xv.

2.

107;

Berger, Eupli.

14.

>>

fil.

Coss.

Berger,

t.

Euph.

85.

1?

biglandulosa Desf. DC.


S. Italy,

xv. 2. 175;

Fl. d'lt. n.
if.

Greece, Crete, Asia Minor.

Bivonae Stend.DC.
Bojeri Hook. DC. 32. Madagascar.

xv. 2. 130; Fl. d'lt. n.

2608. March- April. 2580 Western


;

Mediterranean region.

if.
;

April.

xv. 2. 79

5.

M.
all
;

3527

Ser^/er,

Euph.

bubalina

DC. Berger, Eujph. 121. 90 June-August. canariensis L. DC. 83 Berger, Euph. Canary Islands. May-June. candelabrum Trem. DC. 84 Berger, Euph. Abyssinia. DC. caput-medusae 86 Berger, Euph. 110 Lodd.
Boiss.
Tp

Tp

Nearly
2.

the year.

xv.

S. Africa.

xv. 2.

64.

Tp

xv. 2.

73.

Tp

i^.

xv. 2.

1315. S. Africa. 2^ Ip March. ceratocarpa Ten. DC. xv. 2. 122; i^/. d'lt.
B. C.
t.
.

2579. May-July. Boiss. Euph. cereiformis L. DC. xv. 88 48 Berger, Euph. Africa. March-April. Berger, Euph. 123. cervicornis Boiss. Z>C. xv. 90 Africa.
n. S. Italy, Sicily.
if.
2.
;

Ic.

t.

96.

S.

Tp

2.

S.

Tp

HOETUS MORTOLENSIS

133

EUPHORBIA

[continued).

-Characias L.
var.

terranean region.

DC.

xv. 2.
2^.

172; Fl.

d'lt. n.

2618.Medi-

February- April.
Fl. d'lt. n.
14.
.

veneta Fiori & Paol.

DC. xv. '2.89; Berger,Eiiph.l20. S.Africa. ^ Cooperi N. E. Br. Berger, Euph. 83. Natal. T? coralloides L.DC. xv. 2. 117 Fl. d'lt. n. 2588. Italy. May-June. 11 DC. xv. 2. 109 Fl. d'lt. n. 2604 Berger, -dendroides L. ip Eiiph. 17. Mediterranean region. November-May.
cl^ya. Jacq.

fenii Hpe.

Adriatic

coast.

2618 /S.E. WulFebruary- April.

Dinteri Berger, Eujph. 83.

Dregeana E.
S. Africa.

Meij.
.

Echinus Hook.
ij
.

June. enopla Boiss. DC. June.


\2

fil. (

German S.W. Africa. DC. 95 Berger, Euph. Cosson. Berger, Euph. 85. Morocco.
1?

xv. 2.

26.

xv. 2.

89

Berger,

Euph.

93.

S. Africa.

Tp var. dentata Berger, Euph. 95. S. Africa. ,, l^ erosa Willd. Berger, Euph. 90. S. Africa. June. Tp May. Erythrseae Berger, Euph. 73. Eritrea. Pournieri Hort. Nich. Diet. Suppl. 357 Berger, Euph. 127. Madagascar. ip April, Franckiana Berger, Euph. 78. S. Africa. \^ Berger, Euph. 87. DC. xv. 2. 85 fruticosa Forsk.


. ;

S.

Arabia.

i?

fulgens Kario.DC. Winter.

xv. 2.

68

B. M.

t.

3673. Mexico. 1?

Gerardiana

Jacq.

DC.
14..

xv. 2. 166.

Mediterranean region.
Euph. 104
;

2|.

globosa Sims.DC.
2624.

xv. 2. 87

Berger,

B. M.

t.

S. Africa.
c&

grseca Boiss.
Asia Minor.

grandicornis

DC. 144 and 1267. Greece, Tropical Africa Goebel. Berger, Eiiph.
Sprun.
!(..

June-October.
xv. 2.

52.

I^

Spring.

grandidens Haio.
S. Africa.

DC.
xv. 2.

xv. 2. 82

Berger,

Euph.

47.

Tp

June-July.

heptagona L.DC.

^
W.

88

Berger,

Euph.

93.

S. Africa.

May.

Hermentiana Lem.
Africa.

DC.

xv. 2.

82; Berger, Euph. 50.

f?

134

HOETUS MORTOLENSIS
Intisy Drake.
lactea Haiv.
?

EUPHORBIA

Berger, Eiqjh. Madagascar. DC. 82 Berger, Eiiph. Laro Drake. Berger, Eu])h. Madagascar.
24.
xv. 2.
;

{continued).

ij

49.

S. Africa.

23.

i?

Lathyris

L.~DG.

xv. 2.

99

Fl. d'lt. n.

2577. Italy. .
S.

May-July.
Ledienii Berger, Euph. 80 May.
;

B. M.

t.

8275.
;

Africa. Tp

mammillaris L.
S. Africa.

DC.

xv.

2.

88

Berger, Eiiph. 90.

i?

var.

spinosior Berger, Euph. 90.

S. Africa.

Berger, Euph. 115. German S.W. Africa. ^ July-August. mauritanica L. DC. xv. Africa. 94; Berger, Euph.
Marlothii Pax.
.

^'

2.

26.

S.

^?-

meloformis Ait. DC. xv. 2. 87 Berger, Euph. 101 DC. PI. Gr. t. 139. S. Africa. 1? April-May. Morinii Berger, Euph. 98. S. Africa. Tp ^) multiceps Berger, Euph. 109. S. Africa. Myrsinites L.~DC. xv. 2. 173 Fl. d'lt. n. 2609. S. Europe.
;

2^-

neriifolia
t.

L.~DC.

xv. 2.

79

Berger, Euph. 34;

DC.
ip

PI. Gr.

India. ^. Summer. neutra Berger, Euph. Native land unknown. DC. xv. 165 Fl. 2610a. nicseensis Mediterranean region. May-June.
46. 71.
All.
2.
;

d'lt.

n.

If..

Nivulia Haio.DC. xv. t. 1862. India. Tj


.

2.

79

Berger,

Euph. 35 Euph.
86.

TF^(//l^ Ic.

ofScinarum L.
Ip
.

DC. Spring- Summer. ornithopus Jacg. DC. Spring- Summer.


14..

xv. 2.

84

Berger,

xv. 2. 87

N. Africa. Berger, Euph. 106. Cape.


<ZTi. n.

^^Taralias

L. DC.

xv. 2. 167;

i^Z.

2607. Medi76. fig. 18.

terranean region.
S. Arabia.

'^..

May-July.

parciramulosa Schweinfth.

Berger,
86
;

Euph.
Berger,

parvimamma Boiss. DC. S. Africa. 4 ^ June.


.

Tp

xv. 2.

Euph.

113.

pendula Hort.

Phillipsise N. E. Br.

Sarcostemma viminalis. Berger, Euph. 87.

Somaliland.

\^

HOETUS MOETOLBNSIS

135

EUPHORBIA
piscatoria Ait.

DC. 2.84; Berger, Euph. Eritrea, Abyssinia. 88 Berger, Euph. polygona Hatu. DC. DC. xv 92, as E.pugniformis; Berger, procumbens
polyacantha
Boiss.
xv. 62.
Tj
.

DC. xv.

2.

108; Berger, Euph. 15.

Madeira.

ij

April- June.

xv. 2.

99.

S. Africa.

T?-

Blill.

2.

Euph. 118 B. M. t. 8082. S. Africa. T? pseudocactus Berger, Euph. 78. S. Africa ? ^ pteroneura Berger, Euph. 29. S. Africa ? Mexico
;

pulcherrima Grab. S. M.
Regis- Jubae

Willd.
t.

DC.
.

xv. 2. 71.
.

Poinsettia piulcherrmia

3493. Mexico. b

Winter.
Berger,

Webb. DC.

xv. 2. 109;

Euph.

16.

T^ April-June. Canary Islands. Reinhardtii Volkens. Berger, Euph.

S.

66.

Tropical E. Africa.
Tp

^?-

resinifera Berg.

Schimperi

Presl.
.

Berger, Euph. Morocco. DC. Eritrea, 96; Berger, Euph.


61.

xv. 2.

25.

Arabia. T? semiperfoliata Viv. DC. xv. 2. 170; i^/. (^T^. n. 2617/3. Sardinia, Corsica. February- June. 1(1. T^ Natal ? similis Berger, Euph. 69. splendens Bojer.DC. xv. 2. 79 Berger, Euph. 31 B.M. t.

2902.

-Madagascar.
var.

i?

Nearly always.

parviflora Hort. Tj Madagascar.

Berger,
Africa.

Euph.

31.

Stapfii Berger, Euph. 59.

Tropical E.
xv.
2.

Tp

stellaespina
S.

Haio.DC.
.

89;
95.

Berger,

Euph.

99.

Africa. Tj

May.
Berger,

submammillaris
-May.

Euph.

S. Africa.

i?

March
?
Tp

tenuirama

Schioeinfth.

Berger, Euph.
;

49.

tetragona ilaw.
Tirucalli

DC.

xv. 2. 84

Berger, Euph. 58.

Arabia Africa.
S.

L. DC.

xv. 2.
.

96

Berger,

Euph. 22. Tropical


Server, ^w^^/i.

Africa and Asia.

triangularis
S. Africa

^ Desf. DC.
T?
.

xv.

2.

179

57.
^>

trigona

Haw.-DC.

xv. 2. 82; Berger,


t.

Euph.
2.

45.
;

India.

uncinata DC. PI. Gr. 38. Cape. i?

151

DC.

xv.

81

Berger, Euph,

136

HOETUS MOETOLENSIS
{contimied).
;

EUPHORBIA

viperina Berger, Euph. 114


June-July.

B. M.

t.

7971. S. Africa. i?
Euph. 80. S.
Africa.

virosa Willd.DC. xv.

May-June. xylophylloides Brongn.


Tp
.

2.

83

Berger,

DC.xv.
Pff.
iii.

2.

176; Berger, Euph. 24.

Madagascar. EUPOMATIA B. Br. N.


T^
.

2.

39. Anonaceae-Eupomat.

tieae.

Bennettii F. M.Fl. Austr.


tralia.

i.

54; B. M.

4848. Aus-

Tj

EUROTIA

Chenopodiaceae-Cyclo120. Mediterranean ceratoides C. A. Mey. DC. region, Orient, N. Asia, N. W. America. %.


Adans.
Pff.
iii.

N.

la. 66.

lobeae-Atriplicese.

xiii.

2.

[EURYOPS

Cass.N.

Pff. iv. 5.

302. Compositae-Senecioneasiii.

Otlionninae.

spathaceus DC.

vi.

446

Fl. Cap.

Hi.

S.

Africa.

Tp

November-April.

virgineus Less DC. vi. 445 Fl. Cap. iii. 411 8291. S. Africa. ^. February-March.
;

B. M.

t.

EVONYMUS L.N.

echinatus Wall. Fl. Br. Ind. i. 611; Boyle, III. t. 31; l? November-December. Himalaya. B. M. t. 2767. I?. Himalaya. fimbriatus Wall. Fl. Br. Ind. i. 611. November-December. DC. ii. 4; Fl. d'lt. n. 2442. Japan, japonicus Thunb. Tp May. China. lucidus Don. = pendulus Wall. pendulus Wall. Fl. Br. Ind. i. 612. Himalaya. Tp

Pff.

iii.

5.

199. Celastraceae-Celastroideae.

EXOCHORDA Lindl. N.
Quillaieae.

Pff.

Albert! Bgl.
Asia.

Schneider,
Pav.N.

318. Eosaceae-Spiraeoideae493. Central Hdb. Laubh.


,

iii.

i.

T?

FABIANA
June.

Bz.

ct

Pff. iv. 36.

32. Solanaceae-Cestreae590

Nicotianinae.

imbricata Bz. d Pav.


Fabricia Gaertn.

DC.

xiii. 1.

Peru. ^

April-

Leptospermum.

HOETUS MOETOLBNSIS
IPALKIA
L.fil.N.
Pff. iv. 3a.

137

14. Convolvulacese-ConvolvuB.

loideae-Dichondrese.

repens L. fil.DC.
t.

ix.

99.

S.Africa. U.

451

M.

t.

2228

Bossche, Ic. Sel

June.
iii.

PALLUGIA Endl.N. Pff.


tillese-Dryadinae.

3.

38. Eosace-Eosoidea3-Poteni.

paradoxa EjicU. Schneider, Hdb. Laubh. 6660. Mexico. Tp.


Farfugkmi grande Lindl.

526

B.

M.

t.

= Ligularia
iii.

KcBmpferi Sieb. & Zucc.

FARSETIA

Turr.N.

Pff.

2.

200. CruciferiB-Hesperoideffi158.

Malcolmiinae.

clypeata B. Br. April-May.

DC.

i.

Orient,
8.

S.

Europe.

0.

FATSIA

Dec7ie.

& Planch.N.

Pff.

iii.

33. Araliacese-Schef-

flereae.

japonica Decne. & Planch. Nich. Diet. iii. 3. Aralia japonica Thunb. DC. iv. 258. Aralia Sieholdii Hort. Japan. l? October-December.

FEDIA

Moench.N. Pff. iv. 4. 178.Yalerianacese. Cornucopise Gaertn.DC. iv. 630; Fl. d'lt. S. Europe, N. Africa. 0.

n.

3356.

Feijoa Berg.

Orthostemon.

FELICIA

Cass.

A^.

Pff.

iv.

5.

167.

Asterinas.

abyssinica Sch. Bip.


Arabia.

Fl.

Trop.

November-May. echinata Nees. DC. v. 222. S. Africa. 24. petiolata Hort.Gard. Chron. 1907, ii. 81. fig. 34

4.

iii.

80,

sub Aster.

&

S. Africa.

Compositge-Astere306. Abyssinia, Afr.


iii.
;

Fl. Cap.

if..

FENDLERA Engelm. d Gray.N. Pff.


Hydrangeoideae-Philadelpheae.

iii.

2a.

71. SaxifragaceseGard. Chron.

rupicola Engelm.
1904,
J
ii.

Gray.

B.
.

M.

t.

7924;

410. Texas. Tj

April.

FERDINAND A
eminens Lag.

Lag.N.

Pff. iv. 5.

238 & Nachtr.


fj.

i.

326.

Compositae-Heliantheae-Verbesininae.

DC.

v.

553.

Mexico.

March-June.

138

HOETUS MORTOLENSIS
L.

PERRARIA

N.

Pff.

ii.

5.

148.

Iridaceae-Iridoideae-Tigrit.

diete-Tigridinae.

undulata L.Bak.
S.Africa. 4.

Irid. 73

B. M.

144

Bed. Lil

t.

28.

March-April.
Pff.
iii.

JPERULA L.N.

8.

228.

Umbelliferse-ApioideaeFl.
d'lt.

Peucedaneae-Ferulinae.

communis L.DC.
Ferulago L.

iv.

172;

n.

2325. Medi-

terranean region, Abyssinia.

Mediterranean region, Caucasus. 172. April. Europe. glaucal/. DC. candelabrum Heldr. Sart. Hal. Fl. Gr. 642. Greece. U. 173. Asia Minor. orientalis L. DC.
iv.

DC.
var.

If.

April-June.

171.

U,,

iv.

S.

if..

d-

i.

iv.

if.

Hook.f. in B. M. t. 6196. Turkestan. 2f. thyrsiflora Sibth. d Sm.DC. iv. 171. Crete. if tingitana L.~DC. iv. 173 Nich. Diet. fig. 10 B. M.
; ;

Sumbul

t.

7267.

Morocco.
L.N.

If

FESTUCA

Pff.

ii.

2. 74.

Graminese-Festucaceae.
d'lt. n. 321.
i.

altissima Boiss.W. d L. Fl. Hisp. i. 96.i^Z. S. Europe, Asia Minor. June, if.

arundinacea
Europe.

Vill.

Kunth, En.

404; Fl.

d'lt. n.

dl3y.

if.

elegans Boiss. W. & L. Fl. Hisp. i. 95. Spain. If. gigantea Vill.Kimth, En. i. 407 Fl. d'lt. n. 312. Europe,
;

April-June.

N. Asia, Africa.

2f..

May- June.
Nich. Diet. Siippl. 369
;

ovina L.
n.

var.

glauca ifor^.
d-

Fl. d'lt.

310/^. S. Europe. 2|.


S.

April-May.
i.

spectabilis Jan.Gr.

G. Fl. Fr.
!(..

579

Fl. d'lt. n. 319.

Europe, Persia.

JFICUS L. N. Pff. iii. 1. 89.


India.

May- June. Moraceae-Artocarpoideas-Ficoidese.


v.

bengalensis L.Fl. Brit. Ind.

499

Wight,

Ic.

t.

1989.

T?

Benjamina L.Fl.

92; Fl. 917. Mediterranean region. Summer. 3305. India. comosa Loioe in B. M. 165. Queensland. Cunninghamii Miq. Fl. Bot. Jahrb. 1888, German S.-W. damarensis
Malay Peninsula. Carica L.N. Pff.
Tp

Brit. Ind. v. 508;

Wight,
d'lt.

Ic.

t.

658.

iii.

1.

n.

Tp

t.

^>

A^istr. vi.
x.

T?

Eiujl.

5.

Africa.

1?

HOETUS MORTOLENSIS
FICUS
{continued).

139

diversifolia Blume.
India,

Fl. Brit. Ind.


v.
T^

v.

529.
;

Malaya.
Ic.
t.

Tp

elastica Boxh.Fl. Brit. Ind.

508

Wight,

663.

Sauvaigo, Fl. Medit. Exot. 172. Abys 165. N. Australia, QueensHenneana Miq. Fl. Austr. land. 505. India. Hookeri Miq. Fl. Brit. Ind. imperialis Hort. = Boxburghii. Fl. W. Ind. 151. Jamaica, Cuba. ^ laevigata 170. macrophylla Desf. Fl. ^ Porteana Bgl. Nich. Diet. Suppl. 369. Mexico.
glumosa
sinia.

Malayan Archipelago.
Delile.
17
.

vi.

v^

v.

ip

VaJil.

Atistr. vi.

Australia.^

i?

radicans Roxb.
religiosa

= rostrata.
V

L.Fl.

Brit. Ind. v. 513;

Wight,

Ic.

t.

1967.

repens Hort.

520. F. Ind. rostrata Lmn. Fl. Wight, 671. India, Malaya. 534. Roxburghii Wall. Fl. Brit. Ind.
India, Ceylon.

= stipulata.
t.

Brit.

v.

radicans Roxb.

Ic.

I?

v.

F. macrophylla

Roxb. Wight,
tralia.

Ic.

t.

673. India. T?
vi.

rubiginosa Desf.Fl. Austr.

168

B. M.

t.

2939. AusT?

f?

scabrifolia Bich.
171.
,,

Index Keiuensis. Australia.


t.

stipulata Thunb.B. M.
var.

6657

Saiivaigo, Fl. Medit. Exot.

F. repens Hort., F.pumila L.

minima

-H'o7'f.

China, Japan.

ij

t^

PIRMIANA
culieae.

Marsigli.N.

Pff.

iii.

6.

95. Sterculiaceae-SterSterculia platanifolia

platanifolia B. Br.
L.
fil.

DC.
.

i.

483.

Japan.

Tp

May.
Pff.
iii.

FLEMINGIA
Ind.

Boxb.N.

3.

375. Leguminosae-PapiIc.
t.

lionatse-Phaseoleae-Cajaninae.

congesta Boxb.DC.
ii.

ii.

351

Wight,
.

390

Fl. Brit.

228.

Tropical Asia. ^
Pff.
iii.

PLUGGEA

Willd.N.

5.

18. Euphorbiaceae-PhyllanInd.
v.

thoideae-Phyllantheae.

microcarpa Bl.Fl.
Australia, Africa.

Brit.

328.

India,

China,

f?

140

HOETUS MOETOLENSIS
Labill.N.
Pff. iv.
2.

FONTANESIA
Fraxineae.

5. Oleaceae-Oleoideaed'lt. n.

phillyrseoides Labill.DC.
Syria, Asia Minor, Sicily.

viii.
.

281; Fl.

2730.

PORSYTHIA
ringeae.

Vahl.N.
Vahl.

Pff. iv. 2.

7. Oleaceae-Oleoidese-Syt.

suspensa
Tp
.

DC. 281; B. M. 4995. Japan, China. March-April. March. 4587. China. viridissima Lindl. B. M.
viii.
t.
T?

Fourcroya Spreng.

= Furcrcea.
Pff.
iii.

FRAGARIA L.N.
989;

3.

33. Kosaceae-Eosoideae-PotenFl. Brit. Ind.


ii.

tillese-Potentillinae.

indica Andr.DG.
t.

ii.

571

343

Wight,

Ic.

Fl. d'lt. n.

1799. Afghanistan,

India, Malaya,

Corea, Japan, Formosa, &c.

2^.

May-October.

Franciscea Pohl.

= Brunfelsia.

FRANCOA

Cav.

N.

Pff.

appendiculata Cav.
nqjestris Poepp.

B. M.
t.
iii.

iii.

2a. 68.
t.

3178.

= sonchifolia.
Pff.
6.

Saxifragacese-Francoideae. June-July.
Chili.
14.
.

sonchifolia Cav.B. M.

3309. ChiH. 2^.

June-July.

FRANKENIA L.N.
hispida DC.
region.
14..
i.

286. Frankeniacege.
n.

349;

Fl.

d'lt.

1239 /5. Mediterranean

April-June.

IFRAXINUS L.N. Pff. iv. 2. 5. Oleaceae-OleoideEe-Fraxinese.


Ornus L.DC.
April-May.
viii.

274

Fl. d'lt. n.

2731. S. Europe. T?
iii.

xanthoxyloides Wall.DC.

viii.

275; Fl. Brit. Lid.

606.

India. ^
PREESIA
sonieae.

Klatt.N.

Pff.

ii.

5.

157. Iridacese-Ixioideffi-Wat;

refracta Klatt.Bak. Irid. 167

Fl. Cap. vi.

98. S.

Africa.

14.

Mar ch- April


var.
var. var.

,,

alba Bak.
colorata

I.e.

,,

Hoi't.

Garden
24.
I.

origin.

t.

1^.

,,

odorata Bak.
Torr.

c.

Lodd. B. C.
6.

1820.

14.

PREMONTIA
montieae.

N.

Pff.

iii.

75. StercuHace-Fre-

californica Torr.B. M. Frenela Mirb.

t.

5591. CaHfornia. i?

Callitris.

HOETUS MOETOLBNSIS
FREYLINIA
DC.
Pangelli.N.
Sjrin.

141

Pff. iv.

Sb.

64. Scrophulariace^F. cestroides Colla,

Antirrhinoideae-Cheloneae.

oppositifolia
X.

Fl. Cap. iv. 2. 214.

333.

S. Africa.

Tj

November-April.
5.

PRITILLARIA
Tulipeae.

L.

N.

Pff.

ii.

62. Liliacege-LilioideiBxiv. 1874, 270.

libanotica Bak. in Journ. Limi. Soc.


non.

Leba2|:.

2^.

April.

oranensis
April.

Pomel.

Bevue
iii.

Hort.

1881,

80.

Algeria.

tPUCHSIA L.N.
.

Pff.

7.

219. Onagracege-FuchsieEe.
;

arborescens Sims.~DC. iii. 37 B. M. t. 2620. Mexico. Tj November-March. conica Lindl. Nich. Diet. ii. 33. Chili. November\^
June.

corallina

Hort. Nich. Diet.

ii.

31.

Garden
;

origin.

T^

corymbiflora Bz. & Pav.DC. iii. 39 B. M. t. 4000. Peru. Tp May-June. fulgens Mog & Sesse.DC. iii. 39 B. M. t. 3801. Mexico.

October-June.

globosa
*

LindlB. M.

t.

3364. Garden
M.
t.

origin

Tp

All

the year.
integrifolia Chambess.B.

macrostemma
the year.

Bz.

&

Pav.

DC.
iii.

3948. Brazil. ip
iii.

37.

Chili.

Tp

All

microphylla H. B. K.
ii.

DC. 36 Schneider, Hdb. Laubh. Mexico. Autumn. procumbens B. Cunn.Hdb. Fl. N. Zeald. 76; B. M. 6139. New Zealand. Spring-summer. form F. globosa). Garden Riccartoni Hort.
;

419.

Tp

t.

2^

Tp

(a

of

origin.

Tp

serratifolia Bz.

d Pav.DC.

iii.

39; B.

M.

t.

4174. Peru.
.

-^

splendens Zucc. B. M. t. 4082. Mexico. triphylla x corymbiflora. Garden origin. autumn,

Tp

June-July.
,

Tp

Spring and

FUMANA Spach.N.
193),

Pff.

iii.

306. Cistacese.
.

arabica Spach. var. incanescens Haiiskn.

B.
B. M.

V. C. (iv.

125. Cyprus. Tp

*l8evipes Spach.
region,

B.

April-May.
(iv.
t.

V.

C.

193),

128

t.

1782

Fl. d'lt. n. 1270; Stveet, Cist.

24. Western Mediterranean

Tp

May-June,

142

HOETUS MORTOLBNSIS
{continued).

FUMANA

*procumbens
d'lt. n.

May-July, "thymifolia Halacsy var. glutinosa Gross. B. V. C. (iv. 193), 130; Fl. d'lt. n. 1269. Mediterranean region. T?. May-July.
.

Gren. d Godr.B. V. 1267. Central Europe. V>

G.

(iv.

193),

125;

Fl.

JFURCRiEA
voideae.

Amaryllidaceas-Agaaltissima Tod. Cat. Pal. Bot. Gard. Tropical America. 7170. Bedinghausii Koch. Bah. Am. 203; B. M. Mexico. April. cubensis Haw. Bak. Am. 199. Tropical America. Delsedevanti Hort. Tropical America. Demouliniana Jacohi, 297. Mexico. October. elegans Tod. Bak. Am. 201. Mexico.
Vent. N.
Pff.
ii.

5.

119.

21

C.

t.

1?

14..

1^.

2^.

v,.

2250 DC. PI. Gr. 2025. Tropical America. 4. t. 126; Wight, Ic. t. longseva Kanv. d- Zucc Bak. Am. 203 B. M. t. 5519.

gigantea Vent.Bak. Am. 199

B.

M.

t.

Mexico.

17

April-May.
; ;

pubescens Tod. Bak. Am. 201 B. M. t. 7250 Mexico. if: Selloa C. Koch.B. M. t. 6148. Mexico, Guatemala. 2(. undulata Jacohi.Bak. Am. 201 B. M. t. 6160. Mexico.
;

n-

GAILLARDIA Foug.N.Pff. iv. 5.263. Compositae-HelenieaeHeleninae.

aristata Picrsh.DC.
!(.
.

v.

652

B. M.

t.

2940

N. America.

Autumn.
;

pulchella Foug.DC. v. 652 B. M. N. America. if. Autumn.

t.

1602, as G. hicolor.

,,

var.

Lorenziana Hort.

origin.

Nich. Diet. Garden


39.
;

if.

var.

picta Hort.Nich. Diet. 39

B. M.

t.

3368,

as G. hicolor

Drummondii Hook.
Pff. iv. 5.

!(..

*GALACTITES

Moench.N.

324

Nachtr.

i.

329.
;

Compositae-Cynareae-Carduinee.

tomentosa Moench.DC.
d'lt. n.

vi.

616; Ard. Fl. A. M. 194

Fl.

GALEGA
If

Mediterranean region. 0. May-June. 268. Leguminosae-PapilionataeL. N.


3802.
Pff.
iii.

3.

Galegeae-Tephrosiinae.

orientalis
.

Lem. DC.

ii.

248; B. M.

t.

2192. Caucasus.

August-September.

HOETUS MORTOLENSIS

143

GALIUM

Tourn.

N.

Pff. iv. 4.

149. Rubiaceffi-CoffeoicleseFl. d'lt. n.

Psychotriinse-Galiese.

*cinereum AIL DC.

May- July. *maritimum L. DC.


!(..

iv.

595

3270 S. Europe.
8264.

Orient.

24.

iv. 602; Fl. July-August.

d'lt. n.

Europe,

GALPHIMIA
glauca Cav.

Gav.

N.
i.

Pff.

iii.

4. 69.

Malpighiacea^-Plani.

toreae-Galphimiese-Galphimiinae.

DC.

582.

Mexico. ^
iii.

October.

GARDENIA Ellis.N.

Pff. iv. 4.

76. Rubiacese-Cinchonoideae
5; B.

-Gardeniinae-Gardenieae.

globosa Hochst.Fl. Cap.


5.
I?
.

M.
iv.

t.

4791; Harv. Thes.

Natal. Fl. Coch. 182; DC. grandiflora 380. Cochin China. ^ jasminoides Ellis. G. florida L. DC. 379; B. M. 2627, 3349. China, Japan. May-October.
Lo2ir.
iv.
t.
^)
.

Thunbergia L. fit. DC. iv. 382 Fl. Cap. 1004. S. Africa. Tp. May-June.
;

iii.

B. M.

t.

IGARRYA
;

Dougl.N. Pff. iii. 8. 256. Garryace. Lindl.DC. xvi. 1. 487 Gard. Chron. 1904, i. 42Tp 43 Schneider, Hdh. Laubh. ii. 459. Mexico. April. Padyena Hook. DC. xvi. 1. 488 Schneider, Hdh. Lauhh.
elliptica
;

October-December. xvi. 1. 487 Nich. Diet. Tp March-April. Mexico. Tp Thuretii Hort. Thuret. Garden origin.
ii.

460.

Jamaica.

T?

macrophylla Benth.

DC.

v.

ii.

54.

GARULEUM
visGOSum
tifidum.

Cass.N.
Cass.

Pff. iv. 5.

306. CompositfB-Tubuliflorse
iii.

-Calenduleae.

S. Africa.

DC.

309; Fl. Cap.

92, as G.

pinna-

2^.

May-July.
ii.

IGASTERIA

Duval. N.

Pff.

5.

46. Liliacese-Asphodeloidese
300
;

-AloineaB.

acinacifolia Hato.
38. 3^)

Fl. Cap.
t.

vi.

Berger, Al. [B. V. C.

iv.

155

B. M.

angulata Haiu. Fl. Cap. vi. 291 Berger, Al. 134. S. June- July. 2^. var. truncata Willd. Berger, Al. 134. S. Summer, 14..

2369. S. Africa. 2^.


;

June.

Africa.

Africa.

144

HOETUS MORTOLENSIS

GASTERIA

Fl. Cap. 291; Berger, Al. 133. May-June. apicroides Bah. Fl. Cap. 302; Berger, Al. 158. Africa. May. brevifolia Haio. Fl. Cap. 290; Berger, Al. 132. Africa. Spring-summer. candicans Haio. Fl. Cap. 300; Berger, Al. 157. Africa. June. carinata Haw. Fl. Cap. Africa. 296; Berger, Al. 149. Summer. falcata Berger, Al. 150. var. latifolia Berger, Al. 150. U. cheilophylla Bak. Fl. Cap. 293; Berger, Al. 145. Africa? Garden origin? November-June. colubrina N. E. Br. Fl. Cap. 294 Berger, Al. 142. Africa. conspurcata Haw. Fl. Cap. 291; Berger, Al. 134.
angustifolia Haio.
S. Africca.
2|:.

{continued).

vi.

vi.

S.

2^.

vi.

S.

11.

vi.

S.

i^..

vi.

S.

2|.

var.

i^.

vi.

S.

ii.

vi.

S.

!(..

vi.

S. Africa.

if..

nexcavata Haw. Fl. Cap. nfasciata Haw. Fl. Cap. May-June. glabra Haiv. Fl. Cap. Summer.
14..
!(..

Croucheri Bak. Fl. Cap. vi. 301 Berger, Al. 157 B. M. t. 5812. S. Africa. 2^. decipiens Haw. Fl. Cap. vi. 297 Berger, Al. 147 S. Africa.
; ;
;

vi.

292; Berger, Al.

146.

S. Africa.

vi.

289; Berger, Al. 139.

S. Africa.

vi.

299; Berger, Al. 151. S. Africa.


origin.

Holtzei Berger,

Al. 131

Isetepuncta Haw. S. Africa. 2^.

Fl.

Garden
Cap.

24.

Spring.

vi.

298;
origin.
24.

Berger, Al. 151.

Lauchei

Berger, Al. 131.


Al. 136.

lingua Berger,

maculata Haiu.

May-July. Spring. margaritifera Berger, Al. 131. Garden origin. 14. metallica Berger, Al. 152. Garden origin. 14.. Spring. nigricans Hatv. Fl. Cap. vi. 289; Berger, Al. 137. ^^S. Africa.
11.

Garden Africa.
S.

1(..

Feb.-March.

Fl. Cap. vi. 295; Berger, Al. 144.

S. Africa.

nitida

Summer. If.. Haw\ Fl. Cap. Summer. !(..

vi.

299

Berger, Al. 152.

S. Africa.

HOETUS MOETOLBNSIS

145

G A STE RI A

{contimted)
vi.

obtusa Haiu.Fl. Cap. Summer. 11

298

Berger, Al.

153. S.

Africa.

obtusifolia
S. Africa.

Haio.
14..

Fl.
!(..

Gap.

vi.

290; Berger, Al. 135.

planifolia Bak.Fl. Cap.


t.

vi.

162.

292; Berger, Al. 141; Bef. Bot.

S. Africa.

pulchra Haiv. H. Sell. t. 19 -summer.

Fl.
;

June-July,
vi.
t.

Cap.

299

Berger, Al. 145


.

Jacq.

DC.

PI. Gr.

91. S. Africa. 2^
origin.
;

Spring

rufescens Berger,
S. Africa.
14.

Al. 138.

subverrucosa Haiv.

Spring. Garden Fl. Cap. 288 Berger, Al. 132.


if.
vi.

sulcata Haio.Fl. Cap.

vi.

291

Berger, Al. 135.

S. Africa.

i;.

Spring.
vi.

trigona Haio.Fl. Cap.

298; Berger, Al. 153. S. Africa.


vi.

nverrucosa Haio.Fl. Cap.


t.

287

Berger, Al. 129

B.

M.

837. S. Africa. 2^.


Gaertn.N.

Spring.

jGAZANIA

Pff. iv. 5.

309. Composit^-Arctotidese
S.

-Gorterinae.

Bergeriana Dinter.
July.

German

W.

Africa.

2;.

JuneAfrica.

bracteata N. E. Br. in Gard. Chron. 1894,

i.

620. S.

11.

April.
vi.

longiscapa DC.
April.

513; Fl. Cap.


vi.

iii.

474.

S. Africa.

if.

Pavonia B. Br.DC.
2f.

513

Fl. Cap.

iii.

476. S.

Africa.

April-May.
iii.

rigens Moench.DC. vi. 510; Fl. Cap. April-May. S. Africa. if..

473; B. M.

t.

90.

GEIJERA

Schott.N.

Pff.

iii.

4.

119.

Eutaceae-EutoideaeTp

Zanthoxyleae-Evodiinse.

parviflora Lindl.

Fl. Austr.
A.

i.

364.

E. Australia.
ii.

GEITONOPLESIUM
Luzuriagoideae.

Cunn.N.

Pff.

5.

86. Liliaceaevii.

cymosum
B.

A. Cunn.

Kunth, En.
t.

v.

112

Fl. Austr.

19

M.

t.

3131
Tp

Bed. Lil.

393. E.

Australia, Norfolk

Island.

May.
L

146

HORTUS MORTOLENSIS
Jiiss.N. Pff.
iv. 2.

GELSEMIUM

28. Loganiacese-LoganiB. M.
t.

oideae-GelsemieaB.

sempervirens Ait. DC. ix. 24 States. ^ . May-June.

7851. S. United

GENISTA L.N.
aethnensis DC.
n.

Pff.

iii.

3.

233. Leguminosffi-Papilionatseiv. t.

Genistese-Spartiinge.
ii.

150
t.

3fons, Fl. Sard.

28

1901;

B.

M.

2674. Sicily, Sardinia. ^.


ii.

Fl d'lt. May-

June.

canariensis L.

DC.
148
;

145; Lodd. B. C.

1.

1201.

Canaries.
Fl
d'lt. n.

Tp

MarcJi-April.

candicans L.

=
ii.

Cytistis monspessulanus.

Corsica DC.
1895.

Moris, Fl. Sard.


Tp
.

iv. t.

31

Corsica, Sardinia. February-May. 150. Asia Minor, depressa Bieb. DC. ephedroides DC. 147 Fl. 1900. Corsica, Sar April-June. 147. N. Africa. ^ February-March. ferox Poir. DC. 436. Willh. & Lge. Fl. Hisp. florida L.DC. 151 Spain, Portugal. ^ May-June. 12 Fl. Bicknell, PL Biv. 149 germanica L. DC. 1892. Europe. April-June. 148; Bicknell, PI. Biv. 12; Fl. hispanica L.DC. 1890. Liguria, France, Spain. linifolia L.DC. 146 B. M. 442.Mediterranean region. ^ April-May. 123. Madeira. maderensis Lotve, Man. Fl. Mad.
ii.
ip

ii.

d'lt. n.

dinia, Sicily.

Tp

ii.

ii.

iii.

ii.

t.

d'lt. n.

Tp

ii.

t.

d'lt.

n.

S.

Tp

ii.

t.

i.

Tp

March.

monosperma Lam.DC.
1902.

ii.

150

B. M.

t.

683
fp
.

Fl. d'lt. n.

Sicily, Portugal, Spain,

N. Africa.

December-

April.

radiata Scop.DC.

ii.

146

Fl. d'lt. n.

1897. S. Europe.

scoparius

May-June. Lam. = Cytisus scoparius. Scorpius DC. ii. 148; Fl. d'lt. n. 1894. S. Europe, N.
^
.

Africa.

Canaries. Willk. Lge. Fl. Hisp. 419. Morocco, Portugal, Spain. Schneider, tinctoria L.DC. Fl. 1886 151 Hdb. Laubh. Europe, N. Asia. April-May. 148. Algeria. June. tricuspidata Desf. DC.
Spachiana Wehb. B. M. t. 4195. sphserocarpa Lam. DC. ii. 150;
iii.
ii.
;

April.


33.

Tp

tt

Tp

d'lt.

n.

ii.

Tp

ii.

^>

HORTUS MORTOLENSIS

147

GENISTA

(continued).
ii.

virgata DC.

149

Loive,
Tp
.

2265. Madeira.

Man. Fl. Mad. March-May.


4. 8.

i.

126

B. M.

GERANIUM
;

L.

N.

Pff.

iii.

Geraniacese-Geranieae.
;

anemonifolium L'mr.DC. i. 640 Loive, Man. Fl. Mad. 84 B. M. t. 206 Sweet, Ger. t. 244 Bossche, Ic. Sel. 1. 119. . Spring. Madeira, Canaries. atlanticum Boiss.B. M. t. 6452. Algeria. 24. April. cinereum Cav.DC. i. 640; Fl. d'lt. n. 2483. Pyrenees,
;

Dalmatia, Asia Minor.

14..

June.
i.

Endressi

/.

Gay.Gren.
t.

<&

Godr. Fl. Fr.

301. Pyrenees.
i.

24.

June.
12; Fl. Brit. Ind.

neTpBleicise Siveet, Ger.

430. India,

China.

14..

IGERBEEA Gronov.N. Pff. iv. 5. 345. Compositae-MutisieaeMutisinae.

abyssinica Schultz Bip.

Fl. Trop. Afr.

iii.

445. Abyssinia.
.

UJamesonii Bolus. B. M. t. 7078.Transvaal 2|:


out the year.

Through-

GESNOUINI A Gaud.N. Pff.


arborea
Gaiid. DC.
Pff.
iii.

iii.

xvi.

i.

116. Urticaceae-Parietarieae. April. Canaries. 235. 50. ^


1.

GEUM

L.N.

3.

36.Rosaceae-Rosoideae-Potentilleae-

Dryadinae.

hispidum Fries. DC. ii. 554. Spain. 14.. June. japonicum Thunh. DC. ii. 554. Japan. if.. June. moUe Vis. & Panc.Fl. d'lt. n. 1764. Mediterranean region.

11

June.
ii.

pyrenaicum MillDC.
Europe.
24.

552

Fl. d'lt. n.

1795. S. W.

reptans L.DC. ii. 553 Fl. d'lt. n. 1767. S. Europe. 2;. silvaticum Potirr. Willk. & Lge. Fl. Hisp. iii. 238 Fl. d'lt. June. n. 1765 /?.- Portugal, Spain, Pyrenees. 2|:

ii.

GINKGO

L.N.

Pff.

1.

GIRALDIA Baroni. Compositae-Cynareae-CarHninae.


Stapfii Baroni. Nuov. Giorn. Bat.
It.

biloba L.DC. xvi. >> Northern China.

2.

19. Ginkgoaceae. 507; Veitch, Man.

Conif.

313.

1897, 431,

t.

12.

China.

2^.

May- June.

l2

148

HORTUS MORTOLENSIS
L.

GLADIOLUS
Gladioleae.

N.

Pff.

ii.

5.

156.

Iridacese-Ixioidese;

blandus Ait.Bak. Iricl. 217 625. S. Africa. 2;.


Colvillei
Szveet.

Fl. CaiJ. vi. 154

B.

M.

t.

May-June. gandavensis Hort.


June.
illyricus Koch.
region, Caucasus.

Bak. Bak.
2^.
;

Iricl.

228.

Garden

origin.

14..

Irid.

228.

Garden

origin.

24.

Bak.
=

Irid.

200.

Eastern
S.

Mediterranean
E. Africa.

May.
Fl. Cap. vi. 155.
2;

Macowanii Bak. Irid. 219


natalensis Reinw.

psittacinus.
ii.

primulimis Bak.Gard. Chron. 1890,


191,
f.

122,
2^.
vi.

& 1904,
158

ii.

Rhodesia, near Victoria 200 Fl. Cap. psittacinus Hook. Bak.


74.
Falls.

Irid.

Lodd.

Mediterranean region. tennis Bak. 208 Fl. Cap.


795.
Irid.
; ; ;

1756. S. Africa. 2^. -segetum Ker.Bak. Irid. 200


t.

B.

2|.
vi.

M. t. 719 May.
vi.

Fl. d'lt. n.

145.

Cape.
139
;

2^

May.
t.

tristis L.Bak. Irid. 203 Fl. Cap. 35 B. M. t. 1098. S. Africa. 2;.

Bed. Lil.

GLAUCIUM
223;

Mss.

N.
n.

Pff.

iii.

2.

141.

Papaveracese-PapaverApril-

oideee-Papavereae.

corniculatum

C^trt.

DC.
i.

i.

122; Fedde,Papav. {B. V. C),

Fl. d'lt.

1531. France, England. 0.

May. flavum Crantz.DC.


Papav. {B.
v.

C), 232.

122; Fl. d'lt. n. 1530; Fedde, Mediterranean coast. if..

May-autumn.
var. fulvum Fedde, c. squamigerum Kar. & Kir. NicJi.

I.

Diet. Suppl. 394

Fedde,

Papav. {B.

V.

C), 229. Central Asia. 0.


Pff.
iii.

May.

IGLEDITSCHIA L.N.
macracantha
ii.

3.

168. Leguminosge-Csesal;

pinioideae-Eucsesalpinieae.

Desf.
Tp

DC.
.

ii.

479

Schneider, Hdb. Laubh.

China. triacanthos L.DC. Carolina.


10.
>>

May-June,
ii.

479; Fl.

d'lt. n.

1858.Virginia,

GLOBULARIA L.N.
*Alypum L.DC.
d'lt. n.

Pff. iv. 3 b.
xii.

273. Globulariaceee.
;

613

Ard. Fl. Alp. Mar. 314


T7
.

Fl.

3232.

Mediterranean region.

October-March.

HOKTUS MOETOLENSIS

149

GLOBULARIA
nudicaulis
14.
.

{continued).
;

cordifolia L.DC. xii. 612 S. Europe. d'lt. n. 3231.

Bicknell, PI. Riv.


2^.

t.

48

Fl.

L.DC.

xii.

613

Fl.

May-August. d'lt. n. 3230. Europe.

April- August.

Lam. = Lytanthus salicinus Wettst. trichosantha Fisch. <& Mey. DC. xii. 611.
salicina

Greece.
;

2^.

April-August.

vulgaris
June.

L.DC.
t.

xii.

611

Lodd. B.

C.

t.

1888

Bicknell,

PI. Biv.

48; Fl.

d'lt. n.

3229. Europe. 2^.

March-

Willkommii Nym.Willk. dLcje. Fl. Hisp. ii. 383. S.Europe.

!(..

April.
3.

GLYCYRRHIZA L.N.
echinata L.DC.
glabra
ii.

Pff.

iii.

307. Leguminosae-Papilio;

natae-Galegeae-Astragalinae.

248

Fl. d'lt. n. 2086

B.

M.

t.

2154.

Orient, E. Europe,

S. Italy.

if..

June.
;

L.DC.

ii.

247

Fl. d'lt. n. 2085

S.

Europe, Asia,

N.Africa.

24.

June-July.
Pff. iv. 5.

GNAPHALIUM
Gnaphalinae.

L.N.

187. Compositge-Inuleas;

japonicum Thunh.DC.
Japan.
!(..

vi.

237

Nich. Diet. Suppl

397.

June- July.

lanatum Eorst.

japonicum.

sandwicensium Gaud.

DC.
6a.

vi.

236.

Sandwich Islands.

tGNIDIA L.N.

Pff.

iii.

226. Thymelaeacese-Thymelae;

oidese-Gnidiese.

carinata Thunh.DC. Tj April-May.


.

xiv.

588

B.

M.

t.

1463. S. Africa

denudata Lindl. DC. xiv. 585. G. tomentosa Hook. B. M. May. t. 2761. S. Africa. ^
.

Goldfassia Nees

Strobilanthes.
iv. 2.

GOMPHO CARPUS B. Br.N. Pff.


fruticosus B. Br.DC. Tp July-August. physocarpus E. Mey.
.

235. AsclepiadaceaeM.
t.

Cynanchoidese-Asclepiadege-Asclepiadinae.
viii.

557

B.

1628. Arabia.
Nat.

DC.
.

viii.

558;

Wood d Ev.

PI.

t.

217. S. Africa. ?

July-August.

150

HOETUS MORTOLENSIS
Michx.

GONOLOBUS

N.
I.

Pff.

iv.

2.

301.

AsclepiadaceaB-

Cynanchoideae-Gonolobese.

obliquus B. Br.N. Pff. %. Summer.

c.

302. B. M. 1. 1273. N. America.

GONOSPERMUM
fruticosum
Less.

Less.~N.

Pff.

iv.

5.

271. Compositae17
.

Anthemideae-Anthemidinae.

DC.

vi.

84.

Canaries.

April-May.
ii.

revolutum
Canaries.

Sch.
.

Bip.Webb & Berth. Phyt.


April-May.
Pff. iv. 5.
iv.

Can.

292,

t.

88.

IGOODENIA

ovata Sm.

Fl. Australia. ^
Salisb.

Svi.N.

75. Goodeniaceae.
;

Austr.
.

59

Bossche,

Ic.

Sel.

t.

124.

April-May.
iii.

GOODIA

N. Pff.
t.

3.

218.

Leguminosae-Papilionataeii.

Genisteae-Bossiaeinae.
lotifolia Salisb.DC.
ii.

117

FL Austr.
.

177

B.

M.

t.

958;

Lodd. B. C.

696. Australia. Tj
Pff.
i.

April-July.

IGOSSYPIUM L.N.
Summer-autumn.

iii.

6.

herbaceum L.DC.

456; Fl.

51. Malvace^-Hibiscese. d'lt. n. 2563. India. 0.

jGOURLIEA

Gill. N.

Pff.

iii.

3.

196.

Leguminosse-Papilio218. Chili. T?
3
b.
.

natae-Sophoreae.

chilensis Clos.G. Gaij, Fl. Chil.

ii.

JGRABOWSKIA
April-May.

Schlecht.N.

Pff.

iv.

13. Solanaceas19.

Solaneee-Lyciinae.

boerhaavisefolia

W. Am.

DC.
N.
Pff.

xiii.

i.

Peru.

J?

GRAPHEPHORUM
Festuceae.

Desv.

ii.

2.

74.

Gramineae-

festucaceum A. Gray. North America. 21

Proc. Am. Ac.


ii.

v.

1862, 191.

Europe,

November-December.
4. 45.

GREIGIA

Begel.

N.

sphacelata Begel.

Bromeliaceae-Bromelieae. Bak. Brom.


Pff.

12.
1.

Chili.

i?

JGREVILLEA

B. Br.N.

Pff.

iii.

143. Proteaceae-Grevil-

loideae-Grevilleae.

acanthifolia A. Cjtnn.DC. xiv. 377; Fl. Austr. v. 438; B. M. t. 2807; Lodd. B. C. 1. 1153. N. S. Wales. t? June.
.

alpina Lindl.DC.

xiv.
.

360

Fl. Austr. v. 441

B. M.

t.

5007. Australia. \^

May.

HORTUS MORTOLENSIS

151

GBEVILLEA
t.

{continued).
;

aspleniifoliairm(//i^.DC. xiv. 376

Fl
;

Austr. v. 435

B. M.

7070. N. S. Wales. T? Banksii B. Br.Fl. Austr.


Chron. 1894,
ii.

December -June. B. M. t. 5870 v. 434


ij
;

Gard.

glabrata Meissn.

DC.

15.

Queensland.
xiv.

Nearly always.

391

Fl. Austr. v. 486.

Australia.

I?

April-June.
;

Hilliana F. M.Fl. Austr. v. 463 B. M. t. 7524. QueensJune-July. land, N. S. Wales. ^ DC. xiv. 363 Fl. Austr. v. 469. Ausjuniperina B. Br.

tralia.

longifolia R. Br.

aspleniifolia.
xiv.
.

Preissii Meissn.DC.
5837.

371

Fl. Austr. v. 431

B M.
;

t.

Australia.

l?

Autumn-spring.
xiv.
S.

robusta A. Cimn.DC.
t.

3184.

Queensland, N.

rosmarinifolia A. Cunn. DC. B. M. t. 5971. Australia. T?

Thelemanniana
Australia.

Hiceg. DC.
v.
.

381 Fl. Austr. v. 459 Tp Wales. June.


;

B.

M.

xiv.
.

363

Fl. Austr. v. 445;

xiv.

372

Fl. Austr. v. 431.

17

vestita Meissn.

W.

Australia.

Fl. Austr. 488 ^ April-May.


Pff.
i.

Autumn-spring.
;

Bossche,

Ic. Sel.

t.

34.

JGREWIA L.N.
asiatica
S. Africa.

iii.

L.DG.

511

caffra Meissn.Fl.

27. Tiliacea-Grewiese. i. 386. India. Tj Cap. i. 225 Wood & Ev. Nat. PI. t. 42.
6.
;

Fl. Brit. Ind.


;

April-August.
;

flava

DC.

i.

509

Fl. Cap.
i.

i.

225. S. Africa. i?
;

OGcidentalis

L.DC.
'Tp .

S. Africa.

511 Fl. Cap. April- August.


Pff.
iii.

i.

225

B.

M.

t.

423.

GREYIA

Hook.

S Harv.N.

5.

382. MelianthaceaBii.

Greyieae.

Sutherlandii Hook. & Harv.Fl. Cap. March-April. t. 6040. S. Africa. ^


.

309;

B. M.

GRINDELIA W.N.
Solidagininae.

Pff.

iv.

5.

squarrosa Dun.
N.

W.

America.

DC.

v.

315

Compositae-Astereae B. M. 1706 as Donia


148.
t.

sq.

2|.

Summer.

GRISELINIA
littoralis
nac. {B.

Forst.N. Pff. iii. 8. 269. Cornaceae. Baoul.Hdh. Fl. N. Zeald. 105; Wangeri^i, V. C), 96. New Zealand. Tp

Cor-

152

HORTUS MORTOLENSIS
Gay.N.
Pff.
iii.

GUICHENOTIA
petaleae.

6. 91.

Sterculiacese-Lasioi.

ledifolia /.
tralia.

Gay. DC.
.

i.

489

Fl. Austr.

258. W. Aus-

Tj

April.

Gymnogramme javanica

Bl.

Coniogramme fraxinea.
Pff.
iii.

GYMNOSPORIA

W. & Arn.N.
i.

5.

207. Celastracese2070, as Celastrus.

Celastroidese-Eucelastreae.

buxifolia Szysz.Fl. Cap.

459

montana

Ind. Keio. Canaries. Fl. Austr. 400 Fl. Brit. Ind. 621 382. India, Africa, Australia. Wight, l.c.Fl. Trop. Afr. serrata Hochst. N. 362, as Abyssinia.
cassinoides Masf.
Benth.
t.
T^
.

B. M.

t.

S. Africa.

T^

May-June.
i.

i.

Ic.

T?

Pff.

i.

Celastriis.

l?

Gymnotlirix Beauv.

Pennisetum.

Gynerimn argenteum Nees

=
Pff.

Cortaderia argentea.
iii.

GYPSOPHILA L.N.
noideae-Diantheae.

16.

75. Caryophyllaceae-Silei.

cerastioides D. Don.Fl. Brit. Ind.


2^

Himalaya. 353. Europe. May- June. paniculata L. DC. DC. 354. Egypt, Orient. MayRokejeka June. 353. Caucasus. May-June. Steveni Fisch. DC.
i.

217

B.

M.

t.

6699.

ii

Delile.

i.

i^.

i.

71.

H-ffilMANTHUS L.N.
albiflos Jacq.
vi.

Pff.

ii.

5.

104. Amaryllidacee-Ama;

ryllidoideae-Amaryllideae-HEemanthinae.

H. Sch.
t.

t.

31
;

235

B. M.

1239

Bed. Lil.

Bak. Hdb. Am. 68 Fl. Cap. Lodd. B. C. t. t. 398


;

602. S. Africa. 2^:. Garden origin. 1(.. albiflos X virens. coccineus L. Bak. Am. 71; Fl. Cap. vi. 240; B. M. 1. 1075; Bed. Lil. t. 139 Lodd. B. C. t. 240. S. Africa. 1(. Sep-

tember-October.

Katherinse Bak. Am. 64

Natal, Transvaal.

Fl. Cap. vi. 231

B. M.

t.

6778.

2^.
; ;

multiflorus Martijn.Bak. Am. 63 Fl. Trop. Afr. vii. 388 B. M. t. 961 and 1995 Bed. Lil. t. 204 Lodd. B. C. t. 912. IZ". Kalbreyeri Bak. Tropical Africa. U.
; ;

HOETUS MOETOLENSIS
J

153

HAKE A

Schrad.

N.

Pff.

iii. 1.

145.

Proteacege-Grevilloideae;

Grevillese.

acicularis B. Br.

DC. xiv. 400 Wales, Victoria, Tasmania. Tp


xiv.

Fl. Austr. v.
April.

514. N.

S.

Baxter! B. Br.DC.
tralia.
Tp
.

409

June-July. carinata F. M. DC. 418 Fl. Austr. 524. Aus 501. ceratophylla B. Br. DC. 410; Fl. Austr. W. Australia. April-May. cucuUata B. Br. DC. 408 Fl. Austr. 521 B. M. W. Australia. January4528, as H.
xiv.
;

FL

Austr.

v.

501. W. AusS.

v.

tralia.

Tp

April.

xiv.

v.

Jp

xiv.

v.

t.

Victories.

I?

April.

dactyloides Cav.DC. xiv. 415 Fl. Aiistr. v. 524 B. M. t. 3760. N. S. Wales. T? May-June. elliptica B. Br. DC. xiv. 412 Fl. Austr. v. 523. W. Aus; ; . ;

tralia.

Tp

eucalyptoides Meissn.

= laurina.
xiv.

florida B. Br.
tralia.^
Tp
.

DC.
April.

405

Fl. Austr. v.

527. W. AusS.

gibbosa Cav.DC.

xiv.

401

Fl. Atcstr. v.

bglabella B.
tralia.

513. N.

Wales.

Br. DC.
.

xiv.

407

Fl. Austr. v.

509. W. Aus502. W. Aus;

Tp

April- May.

lasiantha B.
tralia.

Br.DC.

xiv.

411

Fl. Austr. v.

laurina B. Br.
Fl.

DC.
518;

xiv.

411 and 413, as H. eucalyptoides


t.

Austr.

V.

B. M.

7127. W. Australia.
;

Tp

November-February. leucoptera B. Br. DC.

xiv.

396

B'l.

Austr.

v.

515.
Tp

land, N. S. Wales, Victoria, S. Australia.

Queens-

nodosa B. Br.DC.

t.

xiv.

397

Fl. Austr. v.

514. Victoria.

Tp

October.
xiv.

obliqua B. Br.DC.

395; Fl. Austr.


.

v.

500; Lodd. B. C.

1682. W. Australia. ip oleifolia B. Br.DC. xiv. 416


tralia.

Fl. Austr. v.

527. W. Aus-

Tp

April.

propinqua A. Cunn. DC. xiv. 397; N. S. Wales. Tp. pugioniformis Cav.DC. xiv. 398; Fl.
B.
C.
t.

Fl. Aiistr. v. 513.

Austr.

v.

506; Lodd.

353.

N.

S.

Wales, Victoria, Tasmania.

Tp

December.

154

HORTUS MORTOLENSIS
(continued).

HAKE A
W.

pycnoneura
rostrata F.

Meissn.

DC.
xiv.

xiv.

414; Fl. Austr.

y.

525.

Australia.

Tp

M.DC.

396

Fl. Austr. v.

508.Victoria,
;

S. Australia.

DC. xiv. 416 Fl. Austr. v. 512 saligna Knight d Salisb. f? Smith, Fl. Austr. t. 27. Queensland, N. S. Wales.
;

April.

suaveolens B. Br.
Ic. Sel. t. 1.

DC.
xiv.

xiv.

403
T?

Fl. Austr. v. 531


.

Bossche,

W. Australia.
;

January.
v.

ulicina B.

Br.DC.

415 Fl. Austr.

524. N.
Austr.

S.

Wales,

Victoria, Tasmania, S. Australia.

undulata B. Br.

DC.
I^
.

xiv.

407;

Fl.

v.

520.

W.

Australia.

varia B.

Br.DC.

xiv.

405

Fl. Austr. v.

527. W.

Australia.

17

November.

VictoricB

Drumm. =cwc2*Z/ato.
Willk.B.
V. C. iv. 193.

HALIMIUM

33. Cistaceee.
;

alyssoides Gross. B. V. C. iv. 193. 37 Western Mediterranean region. T7

Siveet, Cist.

t.

96.

halimifolium Willk.B. V. C. iv. 193. 39; Sweet, Cist. t. 4; V) June, Fl. d'lt. n. 1284. Western Mediterranean region, lasianthum Gross.B. V. C. iv. 193. 38; Siveet, Cist. t. 50. Western Mediterranean region. ^

occidentale Gross.

B.
\^
.

V. C. iv. 193. 35.

California.

i?

ocymoides

Willk.

d Lge.B.

V. C. iv. 193. 36;

B.M.

t.

627.
t.

Portugal, Spain.

umbellatum

Mediterranean region.
Pff. iv. Sb.

Spach.

B.

V. C. iv. 193.
17
.

42

Siveet, Cist.

5.

tHALLERIA L.N.
abyssinica Jaub.

63. Scrophulariacese-Antirrhilucida.
2.
1?

noideae-Cheloneae.

lucida L.
1744.

From

DC.

& Spach.
x.
;

301 Fl. Trop. Afr. iv. Abyssinia to the Cape.

295
.

B. M.

t.

Nearly the

whole year, chiefly in spring.

HALORRHAGIS Forst.N.
Halorrhageae.

Pff.

iii.

7.

232. HalorrhagidaceaeFl.

Hdb. Fl. N. Zeald. 65; alata Forst. Cercodia erecta Murr. Australia,

Austr.

ii.

479.

N.

Zealand, Juan

Fernandez.

1;.

HOETUS MOETOLENSIS

155

HAMELIA
2533.

Jacq.N. Pff. iv. 4. 86.Kubiacese-CinchonoideaeGarden iinae-Gardenieae patens Jacq.DG. iv. 441 Smith, Ex. Bot. t. 24 B. M. t.
; ;

From Mexico, W. Indies


= Arctotis.

to Paraguay.

i?

Haplocarpha Less.

HAPLOPAPPUS Cass.N. Pff. iv. 5. 150. Compositge-Astereae


-Solidagininae.

croceus

A. Gray in Proc.

Acad. Sc. Phil. 1863. 65.

N. America.
ericoides DC.

^
v.

346

Gard. Chron. 1896,

ii.

301. California.

Tp

May-June.

IHARDENBERGIA
Tp .

Benth.N.

Leguminosae-Papilionatae-Phaseolese-GIycininae. 246. W. Australia. Comptoniana Benth. Fl. Austr.


ii.

Pff.

iii.

3.

361, sub Kennedya.

April.

monophylla Benth. Fl.


Vent. J.
tralia.

Austr.

ii.

247
t.

B.

Malm.
fj

106 Lodd. B. G. February- April.


t.
;

758,

M. t. 263, 2169 1940. E. Aus;

tHAWORTHIA DuvalN.
loidese-Aloineae.
38, 3. 2.),

Pff.

ii.

5.

46. Liliacese-Asphodeiv.

altilinea Haio.Fl. Cap. vi.-347; Berger, Al. {B. V. C.

104. Cape. 2^.

angustifolia Haiv.
Cape.

Fl.

Summer.
vi.

Cap.

347

Berger, Al. 109.

!(.

Summer.
vi.

atrovirens Haw.Fl. Cap.


t.

350

Berger, Al. 110

B.

M.
t.

1361. Cape. 1/:.

Summer.
vi.

attenuata Haio.Fl. Cap.


1345, as Aloe radida.

,,

340; Berger, Al. 93


If.

B. M.

var. var.

Cape. argyrostigma Rort. Berger, Al. clariperla Bak. Berger, Al.


Summer.
94. 94.
if.
fig.

if.

Bolusii Bah. var. aranea Berger, Al. 114. Summer. Cape. If.

39a-e.

Chalwinii Marloth & Berger. Berger, Al. 85. Cape. if. Summer. coarctata B.a%o. Fl. Cap. vi. 338 Berger, Al. 84. Cape. Summer. If cuspidata Haiv. Fl. Cap. vi. 346 Berger, Al. 107. Cape. Summer. If. cymbiformis Haio. Fl. Cap. vi. 347 Berger, Al. 101 B. M. t. 802. Cape. If. Summer.

156

HOETUS MORTOLBNSIS
{continued).

HAWORTHIA

denticula Ilmo.

Summer. fasciata Hem. Fl. Cap. l(. Summer.


2^
.

Fl.

Cap.

vi.

351

Bercjer, Al. 106.

Cape.

vi.

340; Berger, Al. 90.

Cape.
Cape.
2(.

var. csespitosa Berger, Al. 92.

glabrata Bak.
If.
.

Fl.

if..

Cap.

vi.

342

Berger, Al. 93.

glauca Bah. Fl. Cap. Summer. hybrida Haio. Fl. Cap.

,,

Summer. var. concolor Sahn.


vi.

Berger, Al.

93.

if..

339; Berger, Al. 83.


vi.

Fl. Cap. Summer. laetevirens Haiv. Fl. Cap. Summer. Berger, Al. margaritifera Hatu. Fl. Cap. 341 Summer. Cape. erecta Ba^. Berger, Al. granata Bak. Berger, Al. semimargaritifera Bah. Berger, Al. 111. Cape. 352 Berger, pallida Haiv. Fl. Cap.
icosiphylla Bah.
If..

Summer.

vi.

vi.

Cape. Cape. 338; Berger, Cape. 344; Berger, Al. 351; Berger, Al. 105. Cape.
Al. Ql.

93.

If.

vi.

87.

2f..

,,

var.

88.

i^.

,,

var.

88.

14..

var.

88.

2^

vi.

Al.

If

Summer,
var.

pellucens Haw.
14.
.

delicatula Berger, Al. 114.


Cap.

Summer.

planifolia Haio.

Fl.

vi.

347

Cape. Berger, Al. 102. Cape.


;

If.

Summer.

Cape. 346 Berger, Al. 103 B. M. reticulata Haio. Fl. Cap. 1314. Cape. Summer. retusa Haio.Fl. Cap. 345; Berger, Al. 100; DC. PI. 455. Cape. Gr. 45 B. M. Summer. rigida Haio.Fl. Cap. 339 Berger, 81; DC. PI. Gr. Cape. Summer. rugosa Bah. Fl. Cap. 343 Berger, Al. Cape. Summer. semiglabrata Haio. Fl. Cap. 341; Berger, Cape. Summer.
;

radula Haiu. Fl. Cap. vi. 342 Berger, Al. 94 ScA. t. 422. Cape. Summer. if. Reinwardtii Haiv. Fl. Cap. vi. 337 Berger, Al. Summer. 1/:
;

Jacq.

H.

83.

vi.

t.

if.

vi.

t.

t.

if..

vi.

Al.

t.

62.

ll.

vi.

92.

if.

vi.

Al. 89.

If.

HOETUS MOETOLENSIS

157

HAWORTHIA

Fl. Cap. 342; Berger, Al. Cape. subfasciata Bak. Fl. Gap. 340; Berger, Al. Cape. Summer. 343 Berger, Al. subulata Bak. Fl. Cap. Cape. Summer. tesselata Haio. Fl. Cap. 348; Berger, Al. Cape.
subattenuata Bak. Summer. If..
2^.
vi.

89.

vi.

90.

vi.

92.

2|

vi.

97.

Summer. tortuosa Haw.Fl. Cap.


11
.

vi.

336

Berger,

Al.ld

B.

M.

t.

1337, sub A. rigida.


,,

turgida
If
.

Cape. %. Summer. var. major Salm. Berger, Summer. 80. tortella Bak. Berger, Al. Hatv. Fl. Cap. 346 Berger, Al. 101. Cape.
Al.
if.

var.

80.

if.

vi.

Summer.
vi.

viscosa Haw.Fl. Cap.


814.
,,

336

Berger, Al. 78

B.

M.

t.

Cape.
var.

,,

var.

Summer. if. concinna Bak. Berger, Al. 78. 4. pseudotortuosa Bak. Berger, Al. 78.
.

if.

HEBECLINIUM DG.N.
ianthinum Hook.
May.

Pff. iv. 5.

140, sub Eupatorium.

Compositae-Eupatorieae-Ageratinse.

B.

M.

t.

4574.

Mexico.
Ind.

T?

April-

macrophyllum DC.
T?
.

v.

136; Fl.

W.

356. W. Indies.

May-July.
L.

HEBENSTREITIA

N. Pff.
xii.

iv.

6.

81. ScrophulariaceEv. Nat. PI.


t.

Antirrhinoideae-Selagineae.

comosa Hochst.DC.
ilf. t.

Wood

ct

67

B.

7895. S. Africa. If. Summer. dentata L.DC. xii. 4 B. M. t. 483. S. Africa. .


;

HEBERDENIA

Banks.B.
viii.

V.

C. iv. 236.

158. Myrsinaceseii.

Myrsinoideae-Myrsineae.

excelsa Banks. B. V. C. I. c.

DC. 106 Loioe, Man. Fl. Mad. Canaries, Madeira, Azores. ^


; .

31

IHECHTIA
Puyeae.

Klotzsch

d;

Zucc.N.
;

Pff.

ii.

4.

32.Bromeliaceffi-

argentea Bak. Brom. 139 B. M. t. 7460. Mexico. 2f. glomerata Zucc.Bak. Brom. 138 B. M. t. 5842. Mexico.
;

nrosea E. Morren.

Bak. Brom. 140. Mexico.

if.

158

HORTUS MORTOLBNSIS
L.N.
Pff.
iii.

tHEDERA

8.

41. Araliacea-Schefflereffi.

canariensis Willd. Schneider, Hdh. Lauhh. ii. 422. DC. iv. 261. H. algeriensis Hort. Algeria, Portugal, Madeira,
Canaries.

Tp .

colchica Koch.
chrysocarpa

Schneider, Hdb. Laubh. 422. H. H. H. Baegneriana Hort. TransDC.


ii.
I.

October.

var.

c.

caucasia, N. Persia.

l^

October.
;

Helix L.DC. iv. 261 Fl. d'lt. n. 2224 Schneider, Hdb. Laubh. ii, 422. Europe. ^) . August-October. var. chrysocarpa Ten. Fl. d'lt. I. c. p. S. Europe

(Italy to Turkey).
if?

August-October.

HEDYCARYA

Forst.N.

Pff.

iii.

2.

99. Monimiacese-Moni;

mioideae -Hedycarieae.

arborea Forst.Hdb. Fl. N. Zeald. 240 20. New Zealand. T?

B. V. C.

iv.

101.

HEDYCHIUM Koen.N. Pff.


carneum Carey. Fl.
India.

ii.

6.

Brit. Ind. vi.

19. Zingiberaceae-Hedychiese. 232 B. M. t. 2637.


;

August-September. Gardnerianum Wall.Fl. Brit. Ind. vi. 230 E. Himalayas. August-September. !(..
24.

B. M.

t.

6913.

HEDYSARUM
2112y.

L.N.

Pff.

iii.

3.

313. Leguminosae-Papilio;

natae-Hedysarese-Euhedysarinae.

capitatum Desf.DC.

ii.

341

B. M.

t.

1251

Fl. d'lt. n.

Southern Mediterranean region. 0.


ii.

April-May.

coronarium L.DC.
May-June.

341; Fl.

d'lt. n.

2113. Italy. 2|:.

elongatuni Fisch. r= sibiricum.

sibiricum Poir.DC. ii. 343 Ledeb. Fl. Boss. i. 707; Lodd. B. C. t. 1401 B. M. t. 2213. Siberia. 2;. tauricum PallDC. ii. 342 Ledeb. Fl. Boss. i. 702 B. M.
; ; ; ;

t.

996.

Caucasus.
iii.

if..

Hedyscepe Canterburyana Wendl. & Drude

= Ketitia.
C. iv.

HEIMIA Link. N.Pff.


salicifolia Lk.
to

Lythraceae-Nesaeeae-NesaBinae. 216. 241. 89 B. V. April-August. Central Southern America. 304. Cistaceae HELIANTHEMUM Tourn.N. (see also Fumana, Halimium, and Ttiberaria). 193. 78. Western MediC. glaucum Boiss. B. terranean region. May-June.
7. 12.

d Otto.DC.

iii.

^>

Pff.

iii.

6.

V.

iv.

l^

HOKTUS MOETOLENSIS

159

HELIANTHEMUM

(continued).
iv.

oelandicum Sw.B. V. C. Tp regions. May-June.

193. 119

Sweet,

85. Arctic
104
;

salicifolium Mill.Fl.
Sweet, 71.

S.

d'lt. n. 1280 Tp Europe, Orient.

B.

V. C. iv. 193.

May-June.
t.

vulgare Gaertn.B. V. C. iv. 193. 84; Siveet, Cist. Fl. d'lt. n. 1277a. Europe. T? April-September.
fl.

34;

pi. Tp.

HELIANTHUS L.N. Pff. iv. 5. 235. CompositEe-HelianthejBVerbesininae.

multiflorus L.
October.

DC.
1(..

v.

590.

N. America.
;

1(.

September-

tuberosus L.DC.
N. America.

v.

590 B. M. t. 7545 September-October.


;

Fl. d'lt. n. 3668.

HELICHRYSUM

Gaertn.N.

Pff.

iv.

5.

190. Composit^-

Inuleae-Gnaphalinae.

angustifolium DC. vi. 183 Fl. d'lt. n. 3630. S. Europe. June-September. If.. Baxter! A. Cunn. DC. vi. 193 Fl. Austr. iii. 617. Victoria,
;

S. Australia.

14..

bracteatum Willd.DC. tralia. 0. rupestre DC. vi. 182 Fl.

vi.

188

Fl. Austr.

iii.

620. Aus-

d'lt. n.

3627a. Southern Italy.


n.

May-June. *StoeGhas DC. vi. 182; Fl. d'lt. June- August. region. 11.
If
.

3628. Mediterranean

HELICODICEROS
dese-Areae.

Schott.N.
c.

Pff.

ii.

3.

148 x\racee-Aroi-

muscivorus Engl.

I.

Dractmculus
iii.

Dr.

crinit%is

Schott, Ktmth, En.

m. Fl. d'lt. n. 532, 30 Corsica, Sardinia.

!(..

May.
5.

HELIOPSIS Pers.N. Pff. iv.


Zinninse.
Isevis

226. Compositae-Heliantheaet.

Pers.DC.

v.

550; B. M.

3372. N. America. 2^.


3a. 92.

HELIOTROPIUM

L.

N.

Pff.

iv.

Borraginacese-

Heliotropoideae.

*europ8eum L.DC. ix. 534 Fl. d'lt. June-October. S. Europe. 0.


;

n.

2830. Central and

160

HOETUS MOETOLBNSIS
{contimiecl)
ix.

HELIOTROPIUM
All the year.

peruvianum L.DC.

538; B. M.

t.

141. Peru. Tp

IHELLEBORUS
boreae.

L.N.

Pff.

iii.

2.

57. Kanunculaceae-Hellei.

caucasicus A. Br.

Boiss.
March.
Fl.

Fl. Or.

62

Nick. Diet. 132.

Caucasus.
colchicus
*foetidus
S.

1(.

BglBoiss.
i.
;

Or.
If.

i.

62;

Nich. Diet.

132.
1618.
April,
d'lt. n.

Caucasus, Central Asia.

B.

January-March.
;

L.DC.

Europe.

guttatus il. Br.


lividus
1619.

Boiss. Fl. Or.


i.

2^.

47 Nich. Diet. 132 January-April.


i.

Fl. d'lt. n.

63.
t.

Caucasus.
if.

14.

Balearic Islands, Corsica, Sardinia.


i.

L.DC.

47;

M.

72 and 7903; Fl.

January-

March.
niger

M. December-March olympicus Lindl. Boiss.

%
fig.

L.DC.
.

46

B.

t.

Fl. d'lt. n.

1617. Europe.

215.

Greece.
Dietr.

Fl.

Or.

i.

63

Nich. Diet. 133,

if.

February.
iii.

HELWINGIA
japonica
ii.

Willd.N.

434.

680; Schneider, Hdh. Lauhh. H. rusciflora Willd. Sieh. Fl. Ja;p. t. 86. Japan,
xvi. 2.

DC.

Pff.

8.

263. Cornaceae.

China.

^
L.N.
Pff.
ii.

HEMEROCALLIS

5.

40. Lihacese-Asphode-

loideae-Hemerocallideae.

aurantiaca Hort. May-June.

Nich.
iv.

Diet.

Suppl. 420.

Japan.

if.

588 B. M. t. 19 Bed. Lil. t. 15 Europe, Temperate Asia. (excl. /3). if. fulva L.Kunth, En. iv. 588 B. M. t. 64 Bed. Lil. t. 16.
flava L.Kunth, En.
; ;

China.
En.
iv.

If.
2.

minor

Mill. Diet. ed. 8. n.

H. graminea Andr. Kunth,

588; B.

M.

t.

873. Northern Asia. if

Heptapleurum Gaertn.

Schefflera.
Pff.
iii.

JHERMANNIA L. N.
niese.

6.

80. Sterculiacese-Hermani.

alnifolia
;

L.DC.

i.

495

Fl. Cap.
.

189

Jacq.

H. Sch.

t.

B. M. t. 299. Cape. I? 291 Fl. Cap. angularis Jacq. H. Sch. t. 126


;

All the year.


i.

197.

Cape.

Tp

All the year.

HOETUS MORTOLBNSIS

161

HERMANNIA
t.

(continued).
i.

candicans Ait. DC.


117.
,,

493

Fl. Cap.

i.

186

Jacq. H. Sch.

S. Africa.

var.
t.

66.

December-March. discolor Harv. Fl. Cap. Bossche, December-March.


l?
I.

c.

Ic. Sel.

denudata L.DC. 495 t. 122. S. Africa. Tj.


i.

Fl. Cap.

i.

194

Jacq.

H. Sch.

April-July.
Pff.
ii.

HERMODACTYLUS
Iridoideae-Iridinae.

Adans.N.

5.

145.

Iridacege&
;

tuberosus
S. Bern.

Salisb.

Bak.
t.

Irid. 47;

Bicknell, Fl. Bord.


t.

270

B. M.
n.

531

1083; Fl. d'lt. March-April.

792.

48 Fl. d. S. t. Mediterranean region. 4.

Bed. Lil.

IHESPEROALOE

caenoideae-Yucceae.

funifera Trel. Bak. Keio Bull. 1898, 226 H. Engelmanni 12. 511. Northern Mexico. 2^.
;

Liliaceffi-DraBept. Miss. Bot. Gard. 1902, 36. H. Davyi


Engelm. N.
Pff.
ii.

5. 71.

Baill. Hort. PI.

parviflora Coult.Bept. Miss. Bot. Gard. 1902, 30. H. yuccafolia

Bngelm. B. M.

t.

7723. Texas. 2^

IHESPEROYUCCA Engelm.Trel. Bept. Miss. Bot. Gard. 1902,


38
;

N.

Pff.

ii.

5. 71,

sub Yiicca.

LiliaceaB-DracsenoideseB. M.
t.

Yucceae.

Whipple! Bak. Keio Summer. 11

Bull. 1892, 8

7662. California.

HETERODENDRON
Nepheliese.

Desf.N.
ii.

Pff.

iii.

5.

333. Sapindacesei.

oleifolium Desf.DC.

^.

92

Fl. Austr.

469. Australia.

:HETER0M0RPHA
542

Cham. & Schlecht.


d-

N.
iv.

Pff.

iii.

8.

179.
ii.

Umbelliferae-Apioideae-Ammineae-Carinae.

arborescens Cham,
;

Schlecht.

DC.
1?
.

134

Fl. Cap.

Fl. Trop. Afr.

iii.

10

Wolff] Umhell. {B. V. C),

33.

From

Abyssinia to

S. Africa.

April-August.
4.

HETEROPTERIS
glabra Hook.

Juss.

N.

Pff.

iii.

62. MalpighiaceseIp

Pyramidotorae-Banisterieae-Banisteriinae.

& Am.

1^. Pff.

I.

c Brazil.

162

HORTUS MORTOLENSIS
Zucc.

HETEROTOMA
Lobelioideae.

N.
vii.
.

Pff. iv. 5. 68.

Campanulaceae;

lobelioides
7849.

Mexico. April-June. HEUCHERA L. N. 62. Saxifragacese-Saxifragoideae-Saxifraginae. hispida Pursh. A. Gray, Man, Bot. N. U. 144. Virginia,
i^

Zucc.DC.

350

Fl. cVIt. n. 1454

B.

M.

t.

Pff.

iii.

2a.

S.

Illinois.

If.

May.

micrantha Dougl.
America.

DC.
B. M.

iv.

667.

Pacific
2a. 62.

States

of

N.

2^.

May.

pilosissima Fisch.

May. sanguinea Engehn.

4.
24.

& Mey.N.
t.

Pff.

iii.

N. California.

6929.

New Mexico, Arizona.

April-May.
B.

HEURNIA

Br. N.

Pff. iv. 2. 280.

Asclepiadaceae-Cynan;

choideas-Tylophoreae-Ceropegiinse (Stapelieae).

appendiculata Berger, Stap. 174. S. Africa? !(.. October, Fl. Trop. Afr. iv. 1. 496 aspera N. E. Br. Berger, Stap. 139 B. M. t. 7000.Trop. E. Africa. 2^. July-October. aspera x Penzigii Berger, Stap. 139. Garden origin. 2^.

July-October.

brevirostris N. E. Br.
147; S. M.
t.

Fl.

Cap.

iv. 1.

915

Berger, Stap.

6379. Cape. 2^. September-November. cldivigera. Haiv. DC. viii. 651 Fl. Cap. iv. 1. 907 Berger, Stap. 163 B. M. 1. 1661, as H. campanulata. S. Africa. 11 Oct. concinna N. E. Br. Fl. Trop. Afr. iv. 1. 497; Berger, Stap. Summer. 144; B. M. t. 7905. Eritrea, Somaliland. 2^. Hystrix N. E. Br.Fl. Cap. iv. 1. 911 Berger, Stap. 172 B. M. t. 5751. Natal. If July-October.

oculata Hook. fil. Fl. Trop. Afr. iv. 1. 496 Berger, Stap. 144 B. M. t. 6658 Qard. Chron. 1904, ii. 132. German S.W.Africa. August-October. If. Berger, Stap. Penzigii N. E. Br. Fl. Trop. Afr. iv. 1. 496 140. Abyssinia, Eritrea. August-October. !(.. Berger, Stap. 168. Pillansii N. E. Br.Fl. Cap. iv. 1. 909 S. Africa. August-October. if. primulina N. E. Br.Fl. Cap. iv. 1. 912 Hook. Ic. 1. 1906 Berger, Stap. 148. October-November. S. Africa. If. somalica N. E. Br. Fl. Trop. Afr. iv. 1. 947 Berger, Stap. 146. fig. 35. October-November. Somaliland. 2^. Fl. Cap. iv. 1.914; Berger, Stap. 166. Thureti Cels. S.Africa. September-October. 2^.
; ; ;

HORTUS MORTOLENSIS
HEURNIOPSIS
N. E. Br.N.
Pff. iv. 2.

163

277. Asclepiadacese;

Cynanchoideae-Tylophoreae-Ceropegiinee (Stapelieae).

decipiens N. E. Br.Fl. Trap. Afr. iv. 1. 499 Fl. Cap. iv. 1. 922 Berger, Stap. 135. German S. W. Africa, S. Africa. August-October. !(..

Hexacentris Nees

Thunhergia.
iii.

HIBBERTIA Andr.N. Pff.


-Hibbertiese.

6.

115. Dilleniacee-DiIlenoide
I.

cuneiformis

Gilg.

N.
i.

Pff.
;

c.
t.

Candollea

cuneiformis

Labill. Fl. Austr.

42

B. M.

2711. W. Australia. Tj
Dillenia speciosa B.
2^.

May-June.
volubilis Anclr.
t.

Fl. Austr.
S.

i.

37.

M.

449.

Queensland, N.
Pff.
iii.

Wales.

May-June.

HIBISCUS L.N.
399
;

6.
i.

48. Malvacese-Hibiscese.
;

Abelmoschus L.DC.
Desc. Fl.

452
t.

Fl. Ind.

i.

342

Wight,

Ic.

t.

M. Ant.

v.
.

361. India,
341; Wight,

cultivated in

most

tropical countries.

angulosus Mast.Fl. Ind.


Ceylon.

i.

Ic.

t.

951. India,

ip

June.

argentinus
T?
.

0. Kuntze, Bev.

Gen.m.

2. 19.

Argentina. California.
.

April.

californicus Kellogg.

Nich.
450
;

Diet. Suppl. 425.

21.

August.

esGulentus
iv. t.

L.DC.

i.

Fl. Ind.
all

i.

India, cultivated in tropical countries. July-September. 451. Georgia, Florida. grandiflorus Michx. DC. Fl. Jap. Hamabo Sieb. 176. 93. Japan.
269.
i.

343 Desc. Fl. M. Ant.


;

if.
Tp

d;

Ziicc.

i.

t.

heterophyllus
Austr.
i.

Vent. Hort.

Malm.

t.

212. Queensland, N.
;

S.

DC. Wales. ^
103
; ;

i.

450

Fl.

May-Sep-

tember.
i. 448 Fl. Ind. i. 341 Fl. Austr. i. 210 The Garden, 1898, i. t. 126 Gard. Chron. China, Japan. 1897, ii. 249. 0. Summer. militaris Cav.DC. i. 451 B. M. t. 2385. N. America.

Manihot L.DC.
B. M.
t.

7752;

If

Summer.
i.

mutabilis L.DC. May-October.

452

Fl. Ind.

i.

344. China.
i.

Tp

pedunculatus Cav.DC. t. 836. S. Africa. ^


.

i.

446; Fl. Cap.

173; Lodd. B. C.

164

HORTUS MORTOLENSIS
(continued).

Fl. Brit. Ind. 341. Tropical Himalaya, Khasia Mountains. 0. Summer. Rosa-sinensis L.DC. 344; B. M. 448; Fl. Brit. Ind. 158. Tropical Asia. May-October, Godr. Fl. Fr. i.296; Fl. roseus Thore.DC. 450; Gren. 2561. August. France, Spain. 2559. L.DC. 448 Nich. Diet. 143 Fl. syriacus Armenia. June-September. Wight, Ind. 343 tiliaceus L.DC. 454 Fl. Tropics both hemispheres. Summer. roseus. Cuba. venustus Blume [see B. M. 7183] January. 243. CompositaeHIDALGOA Llav. Lex.N.
pungens Boxb.
i.

HIBISCUS

i.

i.

t.

I?

i.

it

d'lt. n.

Italy,
i.

if..
;

d'lt. n.

T?

i.

Brit.

i.

Ic.

t.

7.

of

l?

t.

var.

Tp

Pff. iv. 5.

Helianthese-Coreopsidinse.

Wercklei Hook.

Costa Rica.
Crepidinae.

fil.

B. M.

t.

7684; Gard. CJiron. 1900,

ii.

83.

2^.

Summer-autumn.
375. Compositse-Cichoriese3963. S. Europe.

HIERACIUM L.N.

Pff. iv. 5.

Spring. aurantiacum L. DC. Spring.


If.. If..

amplexicaule L.DC.

vii.

230; Fl. d'lt. n.

vii.

204; Fl. d'lt. n. 3948.

Europe.

lanatum W.DC.
Spring.

vii.

216; Fl.

d'lt. n.

3985. Europe. 2^.


n.

Schmidtii Tmisch.DC.

vii.

230; Fl. d'lt.

4035. Europe.

If..

Spring.

HIPPEASTRUM
May.

Herb.N.

Pff.

ii.

5.

113. Amaryllidaceset.

Amaryllidoideae-Narcisseae-Pancratiinse.

aulicum Herb.Bak. Am. 46


;

B.

M.
t.

3311.Brazil. 2^.
t.

Reginse Herb.Bak. Am. 48 B. M. Mexico, Brazil. May. 1(..

453; Bed. Lil.

9.

HIPPOMARATHRUM Link.N. Pff.


-Apioideae-Smyrnieae.

iii.

8.

173. Umbelliferffi

siculum Hfmcjg.

d-

Lk.

DC.
If.. iii.

iv.

237

Fl. d'lt. n.

2409.

Spain, Italy, Greece.

HLADNIKIA Koch.N. Pff.


Smyrniese.

8.

171. Umbelliferae-Apioidese2396. S. Europe. 2^.

Golaka Bchb.fil.Fl.

d'lt. n.

HOETUS MOETOLENSIS

165

HOHERIA
1901,

A.

Cunn.N.
A. Cunn.

Pff.

iii.

6.

44.Malvacea-Malvese31
;

Sidinae.

populnea
ii.

Hdb. Fl. N. Zeald.


T?
.

Gard. Chron.

374. New Zealand.

July.

= Lceselia. jHOLLBCELLIA Wall.N.


Hoitzia Juss.
latifolia Wall.
i.

295.

China.

Stauntonia March-April.
l?

Fl. Brit. Ind.

Pff.

iii.
i.

2.

69. Lardizabalace*.

108; Schneider, Hdb. Lauhh.

latifolia Wall.

Himalaya,
Wight,

Central

HOLOPTELE AP/fWic/t. ^. Pff.


integrifolia Planch. DC.
Fl. Brit. Ind. v. 481.

iii.

1.

62. Ulmacea5-Ulmoidee.
Ic. t. 1968 Eoxb. Brand. integrifolia
; .

Ulmus
Pff.

xvii.

164

Forest Fl.

431. India, Ceylon. T^


Juss.N.
iii.

HOMALANTHUS

5.

95.

Euphorbiacese;

Platylobege-Crotonoideae-Hippomanese.

populneus Pax, N. Pff. iii. 5. 95. fig. 60; Bossche, Ic. Sel.t. 169. Homalanthus populifolius Grab. B. M. t. 2780 Fl. Carumbium populneum Muell. Arg. DC. Brit. Ind. v. 469.
XV. 2. 1144.

H. Leschenaultianus Juss.
i?
.

Pacific Islands.

HOMEBIA

Vent. N.
N.

Malaya, Australia,

Autumn.
ii.

Pff'.

5.

149.

Iridaceae-Iridoideaevi.

Tigridieae-Cipurinse.

coUina Vent. Bah. Irid. 74 FL Cap. Bed. Lil. t. 250, &c. S. Africa. 4.
;

28

B.

M.

1.

1033

Spring.

IHOODIA

Siueet.

Pff.

iv.

2.

274.

Asolepiadaceaa-Cynan;

choideae-Tylophorese-Ceropegiinae (Stapelieae)

Currori Decne. DC. viii. 665 Berger, Stap. 40 8136. German S. W. Africa. 2^.
;

B. M.

t.

HOUTTUYNIA

Thunb.N.

Pff.

iii.

1.

cordata Thunb.DC.
China, Japan.

xvi. 1.

238; B. M.

3. Saururacese. t. 2731. Himalaya,

2^.

June-July.
iii.
;

tHOVENIA Thunb.N. Pff.

5.

412. Ehamnacese-Ehamneae.
;

dulcis Thunb.DC. ii. 40 Sieb. Fl. Jap. t. 73 B. M. l? March-April. 2360. Japan, China, Himalaya.

t.

JHOWEA

Becc.

N.

Pff.

ii.

3.

67.

Palmse-Ceroxylinge;

Arecineae-Arecese.

Lord Howe's Island. Becc. Nich. Diet. Gard. Kentia F. Fl. Austr. Forsteriana 138. Lord Howe's Island.
vii.

Belmoreana Becc.Nich.
Kentia B. Fl. Austr.
vii.

Diet. Suppl. 430

B. M.

t.

7018.
17
.

137.

T7

166

HOKTUS MOETOLENSIS
Tylophoreae-MarsdeniinaB.

JHOYA B.Br.N. Pff. iv. 2. 289. Asclepiadaceae-Cynanchoideaecarnosa B. Br. DC. viii. 636 788. S. China to Queensland.
;

Fl. Austr. iv. 346

B.

M.

t.

Tj

July-September.

HUNNEMANNIA
141.

Siveet.N. Pff.

iii.

2.

139. PapaveraceaeV.

Eschscholtziese.

fumariaefolia Sweet.B. M.

Mexico.
Boxb.N.

2|

t. 3061 Fedde, Papav. {B. Nearly the whole year.


;

C),

HUNTERIA
Wight,

Pff.

iv.

2.

150. Apocynaceae-Plumi;

eroidese-Plumiereae-Eauwolfiinae.

corymbosa Boxb.
Ic.
t.

viii. 350 Fl. Brit. Ind. 428 and 1294. India, Ceylon. 4.

DC.

iii.

637

HYACINTHUS
Scilleae.

L.N.

Pff.

ii.

5.

68.

Liliaceae-Lilioidesed'lt.

dubius Guss.Kunth, En.


Italy, Greece.

iv.

308; Fl.
iv.

n.

672. S.

lineatus

U. March-April. 309. Asia Steud. Kunth, En.


L.Kimth, En.
1.

Minor.

if.

March-April.
orientalis
iv.

303

B. M.

t.

937

Fl. d'lt. n.

Dalmatia, Greece, Asia Minor. March-April. Decemalbulus Jord. Nich. Diet. 160. ber-March. (Roman hyacinth.) 334 Fl. romanus L. Kunth, En. 308 Bed.
669; Sau7id.Bef.Bot.
21.

176.

var.

if..

iv.

Lil. vi.

d'lt.

n.

671

B.

M.

t.

939. Mediterranean region.


iv.

if

March-April.
-trifoliatus

Ten.Kunth, En.

308;

Fl. d'lt. n.

673.

Apulia, Liguria.

If.

April.
iii.

HYDRANGEA
393.

L.N.

Pff.

2a.

75. Saxifragacese-Hydran;

anomala D. Don.

DC. 15 Schneider, Hdb. Laubh. Himalaya, China {Wilson, 491). 438. H. 15; B. M. Hortensia Sieb. DC. 391. China, Japan. K. Koch, Schneider, Hdb. Laubh.
iv.

geoideae-Hydrangeeae.

i.

n.

\^

iv.

t.

o]puloides

i.

tj April-September. longipes Franch. Nouv. Arch. Mus. Paris, ser. 2. viii. 227. China {Wilson, n. 580). Tj paniculata Sieb. Fl. Jap. t. 61; DC. iv. 666; Schneider, Tp Hdb. Laubh. i. 390 Japan.
.

HOETUS MOETOLENSIS

167

HYDRANGEA
384.

{continued).

quercifolia Bartr.

DC.

iv.

14
.

Schneider, Hdh. Lauhh.

i,

Georgia, Florida. ^ April-May. 772). Sargentiana Eehd. China {Wilson, strigosa i?eM. China {Wilson, 765, 773). var. macrophylla Behd. China {Wilson,
n.
Tj

n.

Tj

n.

571,

757).-!?.

xanthoneura

Diels

&

Gilg in Engl. Bot. Jahrb. xxix. 373.


T?
.

China

{Wilson, n. 1183a, 1327, 1354).

HYMENANTHERA
Einoreeae.

E. Br.N.

Pff.

iii.

6.

330. Violaceae;

crassifolia Hook.

fil.

Hdb.

Fl.

N. Zeald. 18
Tp
.

Schneider,

Hdh. Laubh.

ii.

357.

New Zealand.
Pff.
ii.

April.

HYMENOCALLIS
Ic. Sel.
t.

Salisb.N.

5.

110. Amaryllidaceae;

Amaryllidoideae-Narcisseae-Eucharidinae.

calathina Nich. Diet. Gard.


190
;

ii.

165

Bak. Am. 128

Bossche,

B.

M.

t.

2685, as Ismene calathina Herb.

Peru, Bolivia.

14..

caribaea Herb. Bak. Am. 125


t.

558

Bed. Lil.

t.

B. M. t. 826 414. W. Indies. 2|:.


;

Lodd. B, C.

IHYMENOSPORUM
ceae-Pittosporese.
.

F.

M.N.

Pff.

iii.

2 a.

112. Pittospora-

flavum F. M.Fl. Austr. i. 114 B. M. N. S. Wales. Tp June.


;

t.

4799. Queensland,

HYPERICUM L.N. Pff.


Hypericese.

iii.

6.

208. Guttiferge-Hypericoidea-

^ March-June. Fl. Or. 808 282. Greece, Asia Minor. 1249. calycinum L.DC. 546 B. M. 146 Fl. Eastern Mediterranean region, Asia Minor, Caucasus.
golia,

segyptiacum L.DC. i. 549; B. M. t. 6481. Egypt. i? December- May. Androssemum L. DC. i. 543 Fl. d'lt. n. 1250. Europe, Tj Caucasus. June- September. Ascyron L.DC. i. 545 N. Pff. I. c. 211. Siberia, Mon-

Japan, N. America.
Boiss.

atomarium

i.

Fl. Grcec. Cons;p.

i.

Tp

i.

t.

d'lt. n.

11

June.
i.

canariense L.DC.
211.

Canaries.

l?

544 Lodd. B. March-June.


;

C.

t.

953

N.

Pff.

I.

c.

168

HORTUS MORTOLENSIS
cernuum
chinense
China.

HYPERICUM

Choisy; DC.

Fl. Brit. Ind. 253. H. ohlongifolium 545. Western Himalaya. June. 334. India, Japan, L. DC. 545 B. M.
Roxb.
i.

{contimced).

i.

i?

i.

t.

Tj

May.
; ;

*Coris L.DC. i. 553 B. M. t. 6563 Fl. d'lt. n. 1265. June- August. Europe, Orient. 2^. elatum Ait. DC. i. 544. N. America. T? floribundum Ait.DC. i. 544 N. Pff. I. c. 211. Canaries. V) March-June. fragile Heldr. <& Sart.Boiss. Fl. Or. i. 794; Fl. Grac. Greece. May-June. Consp. i. 283. !(.. hircinum L. DC. i. 544 Fl. d'lt. n. 1251. Mediterranean

Hookerianum Wight & Am. Fl.


Himalaya.
T?
.

region.

1^

Brit.

Ind.

i.

254.

DC. 544 Schneider, Hdb. Laubh. 338. Caucasus. ^ May. Moserianum E. Andre. The Garden, 1898, 490. Garden May. olympicum L. DC. 544 Fl. Or. 790 FL Grcec. Consp.
inodorum W.
i.
;

ii.

ii.

origin.

ip

i.

i.

i.

275

Smith, Ex. Bot.


Boiss.

ii.

t.

96. Greece. T?
Or.
i.

polyphyllum
Cilicia.

Bal.Fl.
i.
;

791

N.

April-May. prolificum L.DC. 547 Jacq. H. Sch.


1^.
1?-

Pff. I.e. 212.

t.

299. N. America.
i.

pyramidatum Ait. DC.

i.

545

Torr. Fl. N. York,

t.

12.

N. America.
HYPOCALYMNA
robustum Endl.

2^.

Endl.N.

Pff'. iii. 7.

98. Myrtaceae-Leptot?
.

spermoideae-Leptospermeae-Baeckeinas.

Fl. Austr.
ii.

iii.

92.

W. Australia.

HYPOXIS L.N.
November.

Pff.

5.

121. AmarylHdaceae-Hypoxidoi184
;

deae-Hypoxideae.
yillosa. L.fil.Fl. Cap. vi.

B.

M.

t.

711. S. Africa. 2^

HYSSOPUS L.N.
Hyssopinae.
ofiacinalis L.
i-egion, Orient.

Pff. iv. 3 a.

306. Labiatae-Stachyoideaed'lt. n.

DC.

xii.
T?
.

251 Fl.
;

3199.

Mediterranean

May-June.

HOETUS MOETOLENSIS
IBERIS L.N. Pff.
gibraltarica
iii.

169

2.

L.DC.
i.

Lcmbh.
saxatilis
Spring.

i.

356.

Spain, Morocco.
180; Fl.
i.

164. Cruciferse-Sinapese-CochleariinEe. i. 181 B. M. t. 124 Schneider, Hdb.


; ;

!(..

L.~DC.

d'lt. n.

December-March. 1507. S. Europe. 2^.

semperflorens L.DC.
11
.

181; Fl.

d'lt. n.

1506. Italy.

October- April.
i.

sempervirens L.DC.
rexiana
All.

180

Mediterranean region.
i.

Fl. d'lt. n. 1508./. Gari^


.

Spring.
;

Tenoreana DC.

179

Lodd. B. C.
Spring.
6a.
Pff.

t.

1721

Fl. d'lt. n.

1509&.S. Italy. If.

JIDESIA Maxim.N. Pff. iii. polycarpa Maxim. N.


Chron. 1906,
I
i.

45. Placourtieae-Idesieae.
I.e.;

B. M.
Tp

t.

6794;

13.

China, Japan.

Gard.

ILEX L.N.
W.

Pff. iii. 5. 186. AquifoHacege. Aquifolium L.DC. ii. 13; Fl. d'lt.

n.

2434. Europe,
ii.

Asia.
,,

^
var.

balearica Loes.

164.

Betschleriana Goepp.

Cassine

Ait.

corallina

= Olmediella Betschleriana. DC. N. America. Franch. Schneider, Hdb. Laubh. 165. China
ii.

Schneider, Hdb. Laubh. Balearic Islands, Spain.


S.
Ip

April and November.

14.

T?

ii.

1269). Tp. cornuta Lindl. B. M. t. 5059 Schneider, Hdb. Laubh. 164. Northern China. T? March.

Dahoon Walt. DC.


fragilis

{Wilson, n.

6.

ii.

ii.

14.

Hook. var. Kingii Loes. Chmd,{Wilson, n. 892a). Pranchetiana Loes. China {Wilson, n. 148). Tp

N. America.
i.

Tp

insignis Hook. Fl. Brit. hid.

599. Sikkim Himalaya.


.

Tp

ip

March-May. latifolia Thunb.DC.


March-April.

ii.

16;

B. M.

t.

5597.Japan. i?
ii.

Schneider, Hdb. Laubh. 168. China Hil.DC. paraguayensis 15; N. 188. Brazil, Uruguay, Paraguay. "Mat6." 117. China Pernyi Franch. Journ. Linn. Soc.
macrocarpa
Oliv.

{Wilson, n. 151).

Tp

St.

ii.

Pff.

I.e.

S.

Tp

xxiii.

{Wilson, n. 119).

purpurea Hassk.
serrata Thunb. Tarajo Goepp.

Java, China {Wilson, DC. Japan.' Linnaa, 749.


ii.

Tp.

n. 689).
.

ip

16.

Tp

xxvi.

?^

Tp

170

HOETUS MOETOLENSIS
Pff.

ILLICIUM L.N.
floridanum

Ellis.

DC.

iii.

2.

18. Magnoliaceae-IUicieaB.
i.

77

Lodd. B. C.

t.

209.

Tj N. America. religiosum Sieb. & Zucc.Fl. Jap. i. B. M. t. 3965 Bossche, Japan. ^ I. anisatum L. ex parte. Ic. Sel. t. 126. August. Hook. fil.B. M. t. 7005. S. China. ^ verum
.
; ;

Ima{n)tophylhivi Hook.

Clivia.
iii.

IIMPATIENS L.N.
auricoma
Poiss.

B.

Pff.

5.
t.

M.
t.

389. Balsaminaceae. 7381. Comoro Islands.

U-

Spring-autumn. Hawkeri Bull.B. M.

8247. Eastern New Guinea. 2;

Spring-autumn Holstii Engl.B. M. t. 8029. Spring-autumn. Oliveri Hook. fil. B. M. t. 7960

Tropical
;

E. Africa.

U
178.

Gard. Chron. 1903,

ii.

Tropical E.

Africa.

2^.
t.

Nearly always.

Sultani Hook. autumn.

fil.

B.

M.

6643. Zanzibar. 2;.

Spring-

IMPEBATA

Cyr. N. Pff. ii. 2. 23. Gramineas-Andropogoneae. "cylindrica Beauv. Ktmth, En. i. 477 Fl. d'lt. n. 119. June-July. S. Europe, N. Africa, &c. l!,.

INCARVILLEA
Tecomese.

Juss.

N.

Pff. iv.

36. 232.

Bignoniacese44
;

Delavayi Bur. & Franch.B. M.


grandiflora Bur.
Gard. 1899,
ii.

it

Franch.

Nich.

t.

7462.China. if
Diet. Suppl.

The

22. China. 2f. Olgae Bgl.B. M. t. 6593. China. 2f. May-August. sinensis Lam. DC. ix. 237. China. May- August. if. Mayvariabilis Bat. B. M. t. 7651. China. if.

August.

INDIGOPERA L.N. Pff.

iii.

3.

259. Leguminosae-Papilionatse

-Galegeae-Indigoferinae.

argentea L. DC. ii. 224. N. Africa, W. Asia. Tp decora Lindl. B. M. t. 5063. Schneider, Hdb. Lauhh.


Tp
.

ii.

65.

Dosua Ham. DC.


macrostachya

China.
Tp
.

ii.

Vent.

225. Nepal. April- August. DC. 226 Vilm. Frut. 53. China.
T^
.

ii.

April-August.

Inga Hort. {non Willd.) =: Calliandra.

HORTUS MORTOLENSIS

171

INULA

crithmoides L.DC.y. 470


Tp

Compositae-Inuleae-Inulinae. 3646. Canaries, Fl. Autumn-spring. Mediterranean region. N. 463 Fl. 3634 Helenium L.DC. 202. From Central Europe to Persia. June. 6411. Fl. Brit. Ind. 294 B. M. Hookeri C. B. Sikkim Himalaya.
L.
Pjf. iv. 5. 201.
;

N.

d'lt. n.

v.

d'lt. n.

Pff.

I.

c.

14..
;

Clarice.

iii.

t.

2^.
;

montana L.DC.
21
.

v.

468

Fl. d'lt. n.

3642. S. Europe.
292.

May-June.
v.

Royleana DC.

464

Fl. Brit. Lid.

iii.

Himalaya.
ii.

nthapsoides Spreng.
Caucasus.

DC.

v.

464

Ledeb. Fl. Boss.

502.

2^.

June.
Pff. iv. Sb.

JIOCHROMA Benth.N.
Lyciinse.

14. Solanaceae-Solaneae1261.

coccineum

Scheidiu. Fl. d. S.

xii. t.

S.

America.

T?

February-November. grandiflorum Benth. DC. xiii. 1. 491. I. Warsceioiczii Rgl. FebruaryFl. d. S. xi. t. 1163. Peru, Colombia. I? November. lanceolatum Miers. Chanestes lanceolata Miers, DC. xiii. 1. May-Feb489 B. M. t. 4338. Ecuador, Colombia. Tj

ruary.

tubulosum Benth.DC.
Ecuador.

xiii.

1.

490; Fl.

d.

S.

i.

t.

56.

Tp

May-February.
Pff.
iii.

lONOPSIDIUM
acaule Bchb.

Bchb.N.
i.

2.

164. Cruciferoe-Sinapeae
;

-Cochleariinge.

DC. Portugal. 0.

174, sub Cochlearia

Fl. d. S.

t.

389.

March.

IIPOMCEA L.N.

Pff. iv. da.

29. Convolvulaceae-Convolvuiv.

loideae-Convolvuleae.

Batatas Lam.Fl.
ix.

Brit. Lid.

202

Fl. d'lt. n. 2847

DC.
2^.

Tropical America. Bona-nox L. = Calonyction speciosicm Choisy. German S.W. damarana A. Bendle in Journ. Bot. 1896, Africa. July- September. 3685. 202 B. M. digitata L.DC. 389 Fl. Brit. Lid. Tropical Asia, Australia, America. Learii Paxt. = Pharbitis Learii Choisy. DC. ix.358. Mexico. Summer. muruGoides
338, as Batatas edtdis Choisy.
36.
Tj

ix.

iv.

t.

S.

2^.

ii. f^ Sc/i.

172

HORTUS MORTOLENSIS
(contimied).
ix.

IPOMCEA

pandurata Mey.DG.
Carolina, Florida, &c.

381

B.

M.

t.

1939. Virginia,
ix.

lf.

July.
;

rubrocaerulea Hook. B. M. t. 3297 October-November.

DC.

375. Mexico.
2^.

tuberosa L.

DC.
Pff.

ix.

362.
la.
t.

IBESINE
|IRIS L.

L.

N.

iii.

Tropical America. 117. Amarantaceae-Gomphreneae.


5499. S. America. i;.
14.
.

Herbstii Hook.B. M.
N. Pff. ii. 5. 145. acoriformis Bor. Bah.

IridacesB-Iridioidese. Em^ope.
Irid. 11.
;
;

April-May.

acuta Willd.

= sibirica L.

alata Poir.Bak. Irid. 45 Bed. Lil. t. 211 B. M. t. 6352. Western Mediterranean region. 21. November- April.

albopurpurea Bak.
April.

B. M.
;

t.

7511.

Japan.
2361, as
I.

2^:.

March-

amoena DC. = /. hybrida Retz. aphylla L.Bak. Irid. 33 B. M. E. Europe. UIf.

t.

furcata M. B.

atropurpurea Bak.Gard. Chron. 1893, 384 B. M. 7379. Palestine. Greece. U Marchattica Boiss. & Heldr. Bak. April. Western Himalaya. aMYes. Lindl. Bak. Tod. = pallida Lam. australis Balkans. balkana Janka. Bak. nudicaulis. 5806, as 33 B. M. biflora L. Bak.
i.
;

t.

Irid. 26.

Irid. 15.

2^.

Irid. 31.
;

11.

Irid.

t.

I.

Portugal, Morocco.

11

March -April.

biglumis Vahl.

ensata Thunb.

Biliotti Post. Bak. Bloudowii Ledeb.

Ft. Boss.
=

Irid.

37. Asia Minor.


iv.

if.

102; Bak. Irid. 29.

Altai.

nbrachycusins Eisch.
^'I^. n.

Bak. Irid. 27 Bed. Lil. March-April. 780. Europe. Lombardy, Ciengialti Ambrosi. Bak.
Chamseiris
Bertol.
S.
;

setosa Pall.

t.

363

Fl

24.

Irid. 34.

S. Tyrol.

If

April.
var.

,,

veneta Pamp.

in

Nuov. Giorn. Bot.


if.

Ital. 1909,

93.

Corygei Lange.

Province Bak.

of Treviso.

Irid. 36.

cuprea Pursh. = fulva. Delavayi Micheli.B. M.

t.

Garden origin? 7661. Yunnan.


;

if.

1^.

diciiotom9.L.filBak. Irid. 17 B, M. t. 6428. N. China. 21

HORTUS MORTOLENSIS
IRIS
{continued).
Iricl.

173

ensata Thunb.Bak.
as
I. loncjispatha.

Temperate Asia. March-April, erratica Tod. = falcifolia Bunge. Bak. Central Asia. 4. = aphylla L. Fieberi Pischeriana Willmott (1905). flavescens DC. in Bed. Lil. 375 Bak. Bosnia, Balkans, Armenia, Caucasus. 1163 flexuosa Murraij.B. M. Bed. Lil. 420 Bak. sibirica as flexuosa. Europe, Asia. florentina L.Bak. 38 Fl. 775; B. M. 671 Bed. Lil. Central and Europe. May. 18 Fl. foetidissima L.Bak. 783 Bed. 351. Western Mediterranean region, Afghanistan.
24.

Fl. cV It. n. 787

B.

M.

t.

2528,

lutescens.

Irid. 30.

Seidl.

Ifor^.

if.

t.

Irid. 35.

If..
;

t.

t.

Irid. 9,

I.

\a.i\

2f

Irid.

d'lt. n.

t.

t.

23.

S.

if.

Irid.

d'lt. n.

Lil.

t.

if.

May-June.
,,

var. foliis variegatis.


t.

fulva Ker-Gaivl.Bak. Irid. 14; B. M. United States. if.

1496. Southern

furcata M. B.

aphylla L.
; ;

germanica L.Bak. Irid. 37 B. M. t. 670 Bed. Lil. t. 309 Fl. d'lt. n. 777. Central and S. Europe. If April-May. graminea L.Bak. Irid. 8 Fl. d'lt. n. 786 B. M. t. 681.
. ; ;

April-May. Bak. 98. Orient, E. Europe. haematophylla Fisch. Bak. 9 Europe, N. Asia.
Europe.
iv.

if.

Gueldenstaedtiana Lepech.

Irid.

14

Ledeb. Fl. Boss.


1843.

If.

Irid.

Lodd. B. C.

t.

if.

halopJiila Pall.

Gueldenstadtiana.
19 Gard. Chron. 1904,
;

Haynei Bak. Irid.


U-

i.

264. Palestine.
t.

hexagona Walt. Bak.


Florida.

Irid. 13

B.

M.
;

6787. Texas
;

to

if.

Histrio Beichb. fil.Bak. Irid. 42 B. M. t. 6033 Gard. Chron. 1897, i. 105.Palestine. if Hookeri Penny. Bak. Irid. 10. I. tripetala Hook, in B. M.

2886. Canada. 24:. hungarica W. & K, = aphylla L. hybrida Betz. Bak. Irid. 36. /. amcena DC. Bed. I/7.t.336. Garden origin ? if iberica Hoffm.Bak. Irid. 19; B. M. t. 5847; Fl. d. S. 1963.
t.

Caucasus, Persia.

14..

174

HORTUS MORTOLENSIS
(continued).

IRIS

italica Parl.Fl. d'lt. n. 780 a,

japonica Thunb.
t.

373.

Bak.

b. Italy. 1(..
I.
t.

April,

Irid. 24.

chinensis Curt. B.
152.

I.

fimbriata Vent. Red. Lil.

Japan,

M.

N. China. %. April-June. juncea Desf.Bak. Irid. 41 B. M.


;

t.

5890
if:.

Fl. d'lt. n. 789.

Sicily,

Tunis, Algeria, Morocco.

April.

Kcsmpferi Sieb.

Icsvigata Fisch.
;

Korolkowi Begel.Bak. Irid. 21 443. Turkestan. 2^. 1901,


i.

& Mey. B. M. t. 7025


;

The Gard.
6132
Fl.

laevigata Fisch.
t.

& Mey.Bak.

Irid. 13

B.

M.

t.

4. E. Siberia, Japan. i;. d. S. Herb.Bak. Irid. 10; B. M. t. 5298. California. longipetala


2073.

Lortetii

Barb.Bak.

Irid.

18

B.

M.

t.

7251. Lebanon.

InridB. Ait. Bak. Irid. 34; B.

M.
;

t.

986. S. E. Europe. 2;.


t.

lutescens

Lam.Bak.

Irid. 33

B. M.

2861

Fl. d'lt. n.

779. iVsia Minor, Crete, S. France. if.. March-April. Marise Barb. Gar tenfl. 1893, 488. fig. 106. Egypt. 4.
maritima Mill. = sibirica L. mauritanica Ker. = juncea Desf Milesii Forst.Bak. Irid. 23; B. M.
laya.

t.

6889. N.W. HimaMountains.

1^.

missouriensis Nutt.
21
.

Bak.

Irid. 9.

Rocky

April.

Monnieri DC.
Rhodes.
!(..

in Bed. Lil.

t.

236; Bak. Irid. 15

Crete,

monspur

Hort.

May-June. Garden origin.

71,

ochroleuca L.

orientalis Mill.

olbiensis Henon.Bak. Irid. 28

B.

M. M.

t.

6110. N.
61
;

Italy,

S.France.
orientalis

4.

March- April.
Irid. 16
;

MillBak.

B.

t.

Bed. Lil.

t.

350. Asia Minor, Syria. 2^. May. pallida Lam.Bak. Irid. 38 B. M. t. 685 Bed. Lil. t. 366 March-April. Fl. d'lt. n. 776.Europe, W. Asia. 2|:.
;
;

var. foliis variegatis.

paradoxa Stev.Bak. Irid. 20; B. M. t. 7081. Persia. 2^. March- April. 2;. plicata Lam. Bak. Irid. 39. Garden origin. prismatica Pursh. Bak. Irid. 8; B. M. 1. 1504. N. America. March- April.

2|.

HOETUS MOETOLENSIS
IRIS pumila L.Bah.
d'lt. n. 781.

175

Irid.

S.

26 B. M.t.9; Bed. Lil. t. 261 14.. Europe, Caucasus, Siberia.


;

Fl

var. caerulea

Spach.Bak.

Irid. 26;

B.

M.

t.

1261.

Reichenbachiana Heuff.Bak. Irid. 32. Servia. 2;. ruthenica Dryand.Bak. Irid. 4 B. M. t. 1123, 1393. E.
;

Europe, N. Asia.

U.

March-April.
B. M.
t.

Sari Schott.Bak.
Palestine.

Irid. 18;

6960. Asia Minor,

2^.

sambucina L.Bak.

Irid.

36 B. M.
;

1.

187. Central Europe

to Caucasus, Armenia. 2^. setosa Pall.Bak. Irid. 11 B. M. t. 2326. N. E. Asia and N.W.America. U. March-April. sibirica L.Bak. Irid. 9 Bed. Lil. t. 420 Fl. d'lt. n. 784. Europe, N. Asia, Japan. 2;. March-April.
;

var.
var.

alba Hort.

trigonocarpa Bak. Irid. 9. Japan. sindjarensis Boiss. & Hausskn.Bak. Irid. 47 7145. Mesopotamia. if Sisyrinchium L.Bak. Irid. 43 Bed. Lil. t. 29

if..
;

B. M.
B. M.

t.

t.

March-May. Orient. if. Bak. Irid. sogdiana Bunge.


!(..

Lepech. Orient. songarica Schrenk. Bak.


sordida Eetz.

1407, e,09Q.Hort. Bot. Pan.

t.

34. Mediterranean
14, as I.

region,

Gueldenstcedtiana

Irid. 5.

Central Asia.
t.

2^.

spuria L.
Irid. 14
;

spuria L.Bak.
Algeria, Central
var.

B.

M.

58; Fl.

d'lt. n.

785.

and

S.

Europe, Orient.

dsenensis Kotschy.

Bak.

2;

Irid. 15.

S. Persia.

var.

subbarbata Joo.Bak.
Irid. 36
;

Irid.

15. Transsylvania.
Orient,

Usqualens L.Bak. ^
B. M.
6
t.

787. Europe,
t.

Statellae Tod. Hort. Bot. Pan.


33, as Ir. hitescens

t.

B. M.

6894

Bak. Irid.
2^.

Lam.

var. Statellm.

Sicily.

stylosa Desf.

unguicularis Poir.
Irid. 17
;

susiana L.Bak.
8
.

B.
.

Asia Minor, Persia . 39; Swertii Lam. Bak. origin


2^

M. t. 91 Fl. March- April


Bed. Lil.
t.

d. S.

t.

1067-

Irid.

306. Garden

if

176

HOKTUS MORTOLENSIS
(continued).
Irid.

IRIS

tectorum Maxim. Bak.


Chron. 1904,
i.

23

B. M.

t.

6118
2^.
t.

Gard.

tenuifolia Pall.

Bak.
355.

China, Japan.

24.

Irid.

4. Central

Asia.
;

tingitana Boiss. Morocco. If

&

Betit.Bak. Irid. 40

B.

M.

6775.

trojana Kerner. Bak. Irid. 13. Asia Minor. if.. unguicularis Poir. Bak. Irid. 3. Iris stylosa Desf. Fl.

March-April.

Atl.

i.

40. t.5; B.
var.

M.

t.

5773. Algeria. if

,,

alba Hort.

U.
; ;

March-April.

variegata L.Bak.
Fl. d'lt. n.

B. M. t. 16 Bed. Lil. Irid. 34 778. S. B. Europe. if verna L.Lodd. B. C. 1. 1855 Bak. Irid. 16 B. M.
;
;

t.

292

t.

8159.

United versicolor L.Bak. N. America.


States.

if.

Irid. 12

B. M.

t.

21

Bed. Lil.

t.

339.

if.

virescens DC. in Bed.

Lil.

t.

295

Bak.
B.

Irid. 32.

Europe.
Bed. Lil.

xiphioides Ehrh.Bak. Irid. 40


t.

M.

t.

687

212. S. France, Spain. The

"English Iris" of the


t.

gardens.

If.

April-May.
Irid. 39
;

Xiphium L.Bak.

B.

M.

656

Bed. Lil.

t.

337.
of

Western
=

Mediterranean region.

The "Spanish Iris"

the gardens.

if".

April-May.

Isoloma Benth.

Kohleria.

ISOMERIS

Nutt.N. Pff. iii. 2. 223. Capparidaceae-Cleomideae. arborea Nutt.B. M. t. 3842. California. Tj All the year.
.

ISOPLEXIS

Lindl.N.

Pff. iv. 36. 89,

under Digitalis

L.

Scrophulariaceae-Rhinanthoideae-Digitalese.

canariensis Lindl.DG. Tp March-June.

x.

449;

B.

M.

t.

48. Canaries.

ISOPOGON
W.

B. Br.N. Pff.

iii.

1.

133.Proteaceae-Persooni278;
Fl.

oidese-Proteese.

formosus B. Br.
Australia.
Pff.

DC.
.

xiv.

Austr.

v.

349.

Tp

May-June.

IXIA

L.

N.

ii.

5.

154.

Iridacese-Ixioideae-Ixieae.
; ; ; ;

B. M. Fl. Cap. vi. 83 linearis Thunb.Bak. Irid. 165 April-May. t. 570. S. Africa. If;. maculata L.Bak. Irid. 163 Fl. Cap. vi. 81 B. M. t. 539;
Jacq. H. Sch.
t.

21; S. Africa. 2;.

April-May.

HORTUS MORTOLENSIS
IXIA
(continued).

177

paniculata Delaroche.
B.

Bak.
;

Irid.

166

Fl.

Cap.

vi.

85

M. t. 256; Bed. Lil. t. 34. S. Africa. l^. May. patens Ait. Bak. Irid. 163 Fl. Cap. vi. 80 B. M. t. 522 Bed. Lil. t. 30 and 140. S. Africa. 2^. May.
;

IXIOLIRION
tataricum May.

Amaryllideae-Ixiolirinae.

N. Herb. Bak.
Fisch.

Pff.

ii.

5.

110.

AmaryllidaceaeSoongaria.

Am.

132.

Altai,

if.

IJACARANDA
Tecomeae.

Juss. N.

Pff.

iv.

35.

233.

Bignoniaceae.

ovalifolia B. Br. in B.
ix.

229

2327. J", mimoscefolia Don. DC. JulyGard. Chron. 1904, ii. 224. Brazil. i?
M.
t.

August.

JACOBINIA

Moric.N.

Pff. iv.

3&.

351. Acanthaceae-Acan;

thoideas-Imbricatae-Justicieae.

magnifica LindauN.
thera magnifica Nees.
var.

minor Nees.DC.

Justicia

Brazil. August-September, 3383, as 329 B. M. carnea Hook. Organ Mountains. ^


Tp
.

Pff.

I.

c.

351

DC.

xi.

328, as Cyrtan-

xi.

t.

August-September.

Mohintli Hemsl.N.
graphis.

Mexico.

Pff.
f?
.

I.

c.

351

DC.

xi.

361, sub Serico-

July-August.
ii.

pauciflora Benth. & Hook. fil. Gen. PI. fioribunda C. Koch, Nich. Diet. Brazil.

115.
f?
.

Lihonia

DecemberGard.

April.

penrhosiensis Hort. fp Garden origin.

Libonia
.

p. Hort. Nich. Diet.

December-April.
iii.

JJANUSIA

Jziss.N. Pff.

4.

65. Malpighiaceae-Pyramidoiii.

torae-Banisterieae -Banisteriinae.

prolixa Arech. Ann. Mus. Montev.

186.

Uruguay. ^
t.

JJASMINUM L. N.
Jasmineae.

Pff.

iv.

2.

15. Oleaceas-JasminoideaeB. M.

azoricum L.

DC.

viii.

311;

1889. Azores,
iii.

Madeira. T? . May. floridum Bunge.DC. viii. 313 B. M. t. 6719. China. Tp


fruticans
t.

Nich. Diet. Gard.

207

L.DC.

37

Fl. d'lt. n.

viii. 313 B. M. t. 461 Bicknell, 2724.Mediterranean region. f?


; ;

PI.
.

Biv.

April-

June.

178

HORTUS MORTOLENSIS
(continued).

JASMINUM

gracillimum Hook. fil. Summer. grandiflorum L.~DC.


Fl. Brit. Ind.
fp

B.
viii.
;

M.

t.

6559.

N.

Borneo.

f?

313

Brand.
t.

For. Fl.

313

iii.

603

Wight,
viii.
Tp
.

Ic.

1257. Himcalaya.
Fl. Brit. Ind.
iii.

June-November.
312
;

heterophyllum Boxb.~DG.
Bef. Bot.
t.

156.

humile L.
Wight,

DC.
t.

Nepal.
;
;

601

June- August.

viii.

Sims, B. M.
Ic.

t.

313 Fl. Brit. Ind. iii. 602. J. revolutum 1731 Lodd. B. C. t. 966 DC. viii. 312
;

Himalaya, Ceylon. April-June. 61. nitidum Skan, Keiu Bull. 1898, 225 The Garden, 1903, Admiralty Islands. 762. China. midiflorum Lindl.B. M. 4649 Fl. January. 285. Canaries, 312 B. M. odoratissimum L. DC. Madeira. ^ October-May.
1258.
Ip
.

1.

Tp

t.

d. S.

t.

Tp

viii.

t.

viii. 313 Fl. Brit. Ind. iii. 603 B. M. t. 2723. Kashmir, Afghanistan, Persia. 1? . June-November. primulinum Hemsley, Keio Bull. 1895, 109 B. M. t. 7981 December-April. Gard. Chron. 1903, 1. 197. China. Tp humile. revolutum Sims Sambac Ait.DC. viii. 301 Wight, Ic. t. 704 Lodd. B. C. B. M. t. 1785; Fl. Brit. Ind. iii. 591.India, t. 1922; Spring-autumn. Burma, Ceylon. Tp simplicifolium Forst.Fl. Austr. iv. 296 B. M. t. 890.

officinale

L.DC.

31; Fl. d'lt. n.

Australia, Pacific Islands.

Spring.
xxvi. 1890, 80.

sinense Hemsley, Journ. Linn. Soc.

China.

suavissimum Lindl. N. S. Wales. T?.


Wallichia^ium Lindl.

Fl.
iii.

Austr.

iv.

227.

Queensland,

= humile.
5. 74.

JATROPHA L. N.
Jatrophinse.

Pff.

Euphorbiaceae-JatrophesBxv. 2. 1081;

spathulata
iv.

Milll.
fig.

Arg.DC.
Pff.
iii.

Pax

in B. V. C.

147. 81.

31. Mexico Tj
8.

JOHRENIA DC.N.

226. Umbeliiferje-ApioideaDBoiss. Fl. Or.


ii.

Peucedaneae-Ferulinse.

fungosa Boiss.N. . Asia Minor.

Pff.

I.e.

1011. Syria,

HOETUS MOETOLENSIS

179

jJUB^A
1895,

H. B.

K.~N.

Pff.

ii.

3.

82. Palm^-Ceroxylinseiii.

Cocoinege-Attaleeas.

spectabilis H. B. K.
2.

Kunth,
1.

En.

293

Gard. Cliron.

516. Chili. Tj.


Pff.
xvi.
iii.

JUGLANS
regia

L.N. L.DC.

2.

135; Fl.

24. Juglandace^. cVIt. n. 866. Orient. Tj


101, Nachtr.

March.

tJUNIPERUS L.N.

Pff.

ii.

1.

i.

25.Pinaceae-

Cupressineae-Juniperinse.

bermudiana L.DC. xvi. 2. 490. Bermuda Islands, &c. Cedrus Webb. DC. xvi. 2. 478. Canaries. f?
.

Tp

chinensis

L.DC.

xvi. 2.

487

Sieb. Fl. Jap.

t.

126,

127.

China, Japan.

Tp

476 Labill. Ic. PI. Syr. 18. March. excelsa M. B.DC. xvi. 2. 484 Brandts, For. Fl. 538, t. 68. From Asia Minor to N.W. Himalaya, &c. Tp Marchxvi. 2.
.
;

drupacea Labill.DC.
Syria, Asia Minor.

Tp

DC. 492 (name only macrocarpa Sibth. DC. 476. Southern Mediterranean region. *Oxycedrus L.DC. 95. Mediterra477 Fl. nean region. December-April. 490. New Mexico. pachyphlaea Ton: DC. -phoenicea L.DC. 486; 3%<7r. 65; Fl. Mediterranean region. ^ March-April. procera Hochst. DC. 485. Abyssinia. recurva Ham. DC. 481 Brandis, For. Fl. 536. Northern India. rigida Sieb. & Zucc.DC. Fl. Jay. 480 125. Japan. March-April. Sabina L.DC. 483 Fl. 98. Central and Europe. tburifera L.DC. 22. Spain, 487; Fl. Hisp. Portugal. virginiana L.DC. 488; Fl. 90. N. America. Marchfragrans Knight.
xvi. 2,
!)

April.

ip

xvi. 2.

Ip

xvi. 2.

d'lt. n.

Tp

xvi. 2.
2.

Tp

xvi.

t.

d'lt.

n. 97.

xvi. 2.

Tp

xvi. 2.
.

Tp

xvi. 2.

Sie&.

t.

Tp

xvi. 2.

d'lt. n.

S.

Tp

April.
xvi.

2.

i.

Tp

xvi. 2.

d'lt. n.

Tp

April.

JURINEA

Cass.N.

Pff.

iv.

5.

321. Compositse-Cynarea!(..

Carduinae.

alata Cass.

DC.

vi.

675.

polyclonos DC.

vi.

675.

Caucasus. Eussia, Central

Asia.

if.

N 2

180

HORTUS MORTOLENSIS
Pff. iv. 36.

JUSTICIA L.N.

346. Acanthaceae-Acanthoideaec.
;

Imbricatae-Justicieae.

Adhatoda L.N.
Vasica Nees,

Pff.
xi.

I.

349

B.

M.

t.

Q&l.Aclhatoda

DC.

Malaya.

Tp

hyssopifolia L.

DC.
Tp .

387 June-July.
xi.

Fl. Brit. Ind. iv.

540. India,

392.

KADSURA
t.

N. japonica Dun. DC. Japan.


Juss.
17.

Pff.
i.

iii.

2. 18.
;

Canaries. June-July. Magnoliacese-Schizandreae.


T?
.
;

83

Kaempfer, Am. 477

Sieb. Fl. Jap.

May.

{KALANCHOE
U.
Baumii

Adans.N. Pff. iii. 2a. 34. Crassulaceae. segyptiaca DC. PI. Gr. t. 64 DC. iii. 395. Tropical Africa.
;

Engl,

Gilg.

Bull.

Herb. Boiss.

1907,

895.

Tropical Africa.

2^.

April-May.
teretifolia A. Defl.

Bentii C. H. Wright

Fl. Trop. Afr. ii. 396. Tropical brachycalyx A. Bich. Africa. U. carnea N. E. Br.Gard. Chron. xxv. 1886, 1. 298.Tropical
Africa.

If..

Cassiopeia Hort. Tropical Africa. 2^. April-May. coccinea Welio. Fl. Trop. Afr. ii. 395. Tropical Africa. crenata Haiv.DC. PI. Gr. t. 176 Fl. Cap. ii. 379

If

Fl.

Trop. Afr.

ii.

394.

Tropical

Africa.

2|.

Dyeri N. E. Br.Gard. Chron. 1904, i. B. M. t. 7987. Tropical E. Africa. 2f.


Elizse Berger in Monatsschrft.
insignis
f.

354, 1906,

i.

304

N. E. Br.

t.

8036. Tropical

K. 1903, 69.
E.

Cotyledon Africa.
2f.
t.

June.

flammea Stapf.Ketv

Bull. 1897, 266

B. M.
393; B.

7595.

!(.. May-June. Somaliland. glaucescens Britten. Fl. Trop. Afr.

ii.

Bull. Herb.

27. Tropical Africa. 2f. grandiflora W. dA.Fl. Brit. Ind. ii. 415
Boiss. 1908,

M.

t.

5460.

India.

14..

kewensis Dyer. Bull. Herb. Boiss. 1908, 38 X teretifolia. Garden hybrid. If. vehUina Welw. Kirkii N. E. Br.

= K.

flammea

marmorata Bah. Bull.


B. M.
t.

7333.

Eritrea,

Herb. Boiss. 1896, 198, 1908, 28;


Abyssinia,

Somaliland.

2f.

January-June.

rosea

C. B. CI.

Journ. Linn. Soc. xxv.

21.

t.

8.

India.

2^.

HOETUS MOETOLENSIS

181

KALANCHOE

{continued).

Bull. Herb. Boiss. rotundifolia Haio. Fl. Cap. ii. 379 April-May. 1907, 895. S. Africa. 2^:.
;

,,

var.

dentata Berger.
A. Bich.

Schimperiana

Fl. Trop. Afr.


if..

ii.

391; Bull. Herb.

Boiss. 1896, 198, 1908,

April-May. 2^. somaliensis Hook. fil.


C.

38. Eritrea,
t.

Abyssinia, Gallaland.

B. M.
t.

7831.

Somaliland.
885. Z.

if.

teretifolia Deflers.Bull. Herb. Boiss. 1907,

Be^itii
>
i

H. Wright

in S.iH.

thyrsiflora

Harv.Fl

Cap.

7765. S. Arabia. i;. ii. 380; B. M. t. 7178;


;

Biill.

^
'

894. S. Africa. If:. ApriAay. velutina Welw.Fl. Trop. Afr. ii. 396 Bull. Herb. Boiss. 1908, 36. 7t. Kirkii N. E. Br. in B. M. t. 7871.Tropical
iler6. ozss. 1907,

Welwitschii
if.

Africa.
Africa.

2^.

Britten.

Fl.
ii.

Trop. Afr.

ii.

394.

Tropical

KARATAS

Plum.

N.

Pff.

4. 44.

Bromeliacese-Bromeliese.
t.

Carolinse Ant. Bah. Brovi.9; B. M.

5502. S. Brazil.

cruenta Bak. Brom. 10; B. M.


rutilans Bak. Brom.
spectabilis
Brazil.
9.

t.

2892. Brazil 2|.

S. Brazil.

2|.
t.

Ant. Bak. Brom. 11


if:.

B. M.

6024. Central

KEDROSTIS Medic N.
thrieaB-Anguriinee.

Pff.

iv.

5.

17. Cucurbitacese-Meloiii.

aMcana

Cogn.

DC.

Monogr. Phan.

463.

S.

Africa.

KENNEDYA
Marry atta

Vent.N.

Pff.

iii.

3.

361. Leguminosse-Papilio-

natae-Phaseoleae-Glycininse.
Lindl. =^ prostrata R. Br.
ii.

nigricans Lw^Z.-i^Z. Austr.

249;
250;

B. M. B. M.

t.

3652.
t.

W.

Australia.

prostrata B. Br.
Australia.

rubicunda
Wales.

Fl. Austr. April-June. Vent. Fl. Austr.


i? .

Tp .

April-June,
ii.

270.
N.
S.

ii.

249.

Queensland,

Tp ,

April-June.
Pff.
ii.

IKENTIA

Bl.N.

3.

73. Palm^-Ceroxylin^-Arecinese5735. Norfolk Island. i?

Areceae.

Baueri Endl.B. M.
Belmoreana F.
Miill.

t.

Hotvea Behnoreana.

182

HOETUS MOETOLENSIS
{continued).

KENTIA

Canterburyana F. MuU.Fl.
Island.

Austr.

vii.

138. Lord Howe's

Tj

Forsteriana F.

Miill.

=
.

sapida Mart.Hdb.

Fl.

Hoioea Forsteriana. N. Zeald. 288 B. M.


;

t.

5139.

New

Zealand.

Tp

KERRIA DC.N.
japonica DC.

Pff.
ii.

iii.
;

3.

28. Kosacese-Eosoidese-Kerrieae.
;

541 B. M. t. 1296 March-May. 98. Japan. ^


.

Sieb.

Zucc.

FL

Jap.

JKETELEERIA Carr.N. Pff. Nachtr. 23. Pinaceae-Abietineae.


Fortune! Carr.

DC.

xvi. 2. 431, as

Pinus.

S.E. China.
.

^^

N. KIGGELARIA L. N. Pangieae. 225 africana L. DC. June. Africa. ^


sethiopica Decne.
i.

JKIGELIA DC.N. Pff. iv.

36.

249. Bignoniaceffi-Crescentiese.

Pff. I.e. Pff.

iii.

Tropical E. Africa. ^ 6a. 25. ElacourtiaceasIc.

Bossche,

Set.

iii.

t.

92.

S.

KITAIBELIA W.N.
vitifolia

Pff.
i.

iii.

6.

W.DC.

436; B. M.

35. Malvaceae-Malopeae. t. 821. S. Europe. 4.


under Se?^eco. Compositaeiii.

JKLEINIA L.N.

Pff. iv. 5. 301,

Senecioneae-Senecioninse.

acaulis DC. vi. 339 Fl. Cap. 392. S. Africa. 4. April.


;

319

Berger, Stap.

Kl.

var.

Ecklonis DC.
Berger, Stap.

I.e.

2^.
;

April,

amanensis
iv.

Kl. 384

Notizhl. Berl. Bot. Gart.


2^.

181,

fig.

Tropical E. Africa.
;

July.
;

Anteuphorbium DC. vi. 338 B. M. t. 6099 Berger, November. d Kl. 400. S. Africa?, Morocco. T?
articulata Ha^o.
Ic.

Stap.

DC.

vi.

339;

Fl. Cap.

iii.

319; Bossche,

Sel.

t.

108; Berger, Stap.


Berger,

d
Kl.

Kl.

395. S. Africa. 2;.

November-January.
cylindrica
Stap.

d
;

389.

S.

Africa.

Tp

November.
ficoides

Haiu.DC. vi. 337 Fl. Cap. iii. 316 Berger, Stap. November. 388. S. Africa. l? fulgens Hook. fil.B. M. t. 5590 Berger, Stap. d Kl. 383.
;

Kl.

21:

Natal.

l!r

December.
1(.

Galpini Hook. fil.B. M.

Transvaal.

t. 7239 Berger, Stap. October-January.


;

Kl. 386.

HOKTUS MOETOLENSIS
KLEINIA
{continued).
;

183

Fl Grantii Hook.fil.-B. M. t. 6791 Berger, Stap. & Kl. 381; November-January. Trop. Afr. iii. 407. Trop. E. Africa. n Hanburyana Berger, Stap. & Kl. ^^.Senecio H. Dinter
.

in Gard. Ghron. 1898,

i.

354. S. Africa? 4. November-

December.

DC. = tomentosa. Mandraliscse Tineo.Berger, Stap. & Kl. 387. S. Africa? November. 2|: Kl. 401 DC. neriifolia Hem.DC. vi. 338 Berger, Stap. & October-December. PI. Gr. t. 12. Canaries. T? nyikensis Baker in Keiv Bull. 1897, 271. British Central
Haioorthii

Africa.

If.

Tp

December.
;

odora DC. vi. 339 Berger, Stap. & Kl. 400. S. Arabia. ij November. pendula DC. vi. 339 B. M. t. 7659 Berger, Stap. & Kl.
.

396,

fig.

78.

S.

Arabia,

Abyssinia,

Somaliland.

2^

September-October.
pteroneura

DC. = Anteuphorbiuni. Berger, radicans Haio.DC. vi. 337; Fl. Cap. iii. 317; July-September. & Kl. 393. S. Africa. StaiJ. repens Haiv.DC. vi. 337 Fl. Cap. iii. 317 DC. PI. Gr. t. 42 November-March. Berger, Stap. d; Kl. 387. S. Africa. semperviva DC. vi. 339 Berger, Stap. d; Kl. 381. S. Arabia.
1(:
.

2|:

If..

November.
Haioorthii
July.

tomentosa Haio. Berger, Stap. & Kl. 390. Z. DC. vi. 338; Fl. Cap. iii. 318. S. Africa. 2;.

KNIGHTIA B. Br.N. Pff.


Embothrieae.

iii.

1.

150. Proteacese-Grevilloideae;

excelsa B. Br.Hdh. Fl. N. Zeald. 241 fig. 102. New Zealand. ^


.

N.

Pff.

I.

c.

150,

JKNIPHOFIA

Moench.N.
iv.

Pff.

ii.

5.

42. Liliacese-Asphode284
vi.
;

loideae-Aloinese-Kniphofiinae.

Burchellii Kunth, En.


{B. V. C.
iv.

552

Fl. Cap. vi.

Berger, Al.

38. 3^),

63. S. Africa. 4t.

Summer.
284; Berger,

caulescens Bak.B. M.
.

5946; Fl. Cap.

Summer. Al. 65. S. Africa. Tp 67. Garden hybrid. % Chloris Hort. Berger, Al.
foliosa Hochst.Fl.
Trop. Afr.
vii.

Summer.
.

Gorallina flori.5ersrer,iL 67. Garden hybrid. 2;

August.

453

Berger, Al. 55

B.

M.

t.

6742. Abyssinia. 2|.

184

HOETUS MOETOLENSIS
{continued).

KNIPHOFIA

Berger, Al. 329. kewensis Hoi-t. Summer. Macowanii Bah.Fl. Cap. vi. 280 August. t. 6167. S. Africa. 2|:. natalensis Bah.Fl. Cap. vi. 281;

Garden
;

hybrid.

B.

2|.

Berger, Al. 54

M.

Berger, ^Z.

50. Natal.

!(:.

September.

Nelsonii Mast.Fl. Cap. vi. 280; Sergfer, ^L 53. Orange Eiver Colony. %. September-October. Northise Bah.Fl. Cap. vi. 284 B. M. t. 7412 Berger, Al. 65. S. Africa. 2|.
; ;

pauciflora Bah.Fl. Cap.


41.

vi.

41

B.

M.

t.

7269; Berger, Al.

Phoebus Hort. Summer. primulina Bah.

Garden hybrid. Berger, Fl. Cap. 538; Berger, Al. 60; The 496. Natal. December. Garden, 1898,
Al. 69.
24.
vi.
i.

Natal.

!(..

May-June.

2^.

Rooperi Lem.Fl. Cap. 62. S. Africa. 2|:. rufa Bah.B. M. t. 7706


October.

vi.

283

B. M.

t.

6116

Berger, Al.

Berger, Al.

56. Natal 2^. Mayvi.

sarmentosa Kunth, En. iv. 552 Al. 62; B. M. t. 744; Bed. Lil.
;

Fl. Cap.
t.

282

Berger,

161.Transvaal. 2;. Tuckii Bah.Fl. Cap. vi. 278 Berger, Al. 56; B. M. t. 7644; The Garden, 1900, ii. 232. S. Africa. 2|. May. Uvaria Hooh.B. M. t. 4816 Fl. Cap. vi. 283 Berger, Al.
;
;

61.

S. Africa.

i^.

var.

maxima

June-September. Bah.B. M. t. 6553

Fl. Cap.

vi.

283;

Berger, Al. 61.

K. grandis, grandiflora Hort.

var. nobilis

Orange Eiver Colony. 2^ Bah.Fl. Cap.


S.Africa.

August.
283; Berger, Al. 62.
62.

vi.

24:.

var.

prsecox Bah.

K. Saundersii

KOCHIA

Both. N. Pff. -Camphorosmeae.


Australia.

iii.

la. 70.

Bef. Bot. 169; Berger, Al. Hort. Orange Eiver Colony. U. Chenopodiaceae-Cyclolobeae
1.

August.

brevifolia B.

Br.DC.
T?
.

xiii.

2.

131

Fl. Austr. v.

185.

KCELREUTERIA
Koelreuterieae.

Scojj.-N.

Pff.

iii.

5.

352. Sapindaceseii.

paniculata Laxm.

DC. i. 616; Schneider, Hdh. Laubh. July. 255. N. China. T?


.

HOETUS MOETOLENSIS

185

KOHLERIA

Beg.N.

Pff. iv. 36.

177. Gesneriaceae-Gesnerihirsuta

oideae-Kohlerieae.

hirsuta Beg. N. Pff. Colombia, Venezuela.

I.

c.

Isoloma
Spring.
142.

H. B. K.

if.
5.

KUHNIA L.N.
Adenosty lines.
rosmarinifolia

Pff. iv.

Compositse-Eupatoriese126.

Vent.

DC.
Pff.

v.

Arizona

to

Mexico.

KUNDMANNIA
sicula DC.
iv.

Scop.N.

iii.

8.

209. Umbelliferse-Apito Crete

oidese-Ammineae-Seselinae.
143; Fl. cVIt. n.
l^..

2316. From Algeria

and Samos.

May- June.

KUNZEA

Bchb.N. Pff. iii. 7. 94. Myrtaceae-Leptospermoideae -Leptospermeae-Leptosperminge.

ericifolia

Bchb.DC.

iii.

225;

Fl.

Austr.

iii.

Australia.

113. W.
I.

peduncularis F. MilU.Fl.
fig.

Aiistr.

iii.

115

N.

44.

Victoria, N.
Schneider,
ii.
I.

S.

Wales.

Pff.

c.

95,

\^

ILABURNOCYTISUS
Adami
Chron. 1904,

Schneider, Hdh. Lauhh.

ii.

40. Legu-

minosae-Papilionatae-Genisteae-Spartiinae.
c.

Cytisus
figs.
iii.

218-219.

^
LABURNUM
gare Gris.
Fl. d'lt. n.

Adami Poiteau, Gard. 86 and 88. Garden origin.

Gris.N.

Pff.

3.

236. Leguminosse-Papilioii.

natae-Genisteae-Spartiinge.

anagyroides Medic.

Schneider, Hdh. Lauhh.


M.
t.
.

40.

L. vulii.

Cytisus Labitrmtm L. B.

176;

DC.

153;

1869. Europe. Tp
Jacq.N.
Pff.
ii.

April-May.

LACHENALIA
Scilleae.

5.

69. Liliaceae-Lilioideae;

orchioides Ait. Kunth, En. iv. 284 Fl. Cap. vi. 426 B. M. t. 854 and 1269; Bef. Bot. t. 171. S. Africa. 2^. December-January. pendula Ait.K^inth, En. iv. 291 Fl. Cap. vi. 423 B. M. t. 590. Cape. December-January, 14.. Fl. Cap. vi. 429 pustulata Jacq. Kunth, En. iv. 287 B. M. t. 817. Cape. 2|. February- April. tricolor Thunh. Kunth, En. iv. 290 Fl. Gap. vi. 424 B. M. t. 82; Bed. Lil. t. 2; Lodd. B. C. t. 767. Cape. 2^. December-January.
;
;

186

HORTUS MORTOLENSIS
L.

LACTUCA

N.

Pff.

iv.

5.

371. Compositse-Cichorieae;

Crepidinse.

perennis L.DC. vii. 133 B. M. t. 2130 S. and Central Europe. May. if.
;

Fl. d'lt. n. 3877.

138. Origin sativa L. DC. Laitue romaine.) 0. var. capitata L. DC.


vii.

uncertain.

(Cos

lettuce,

vii.

138.

(Cabbage

lettuce,
ii.

Laitue pomm6e.)

Origin unknown. 0.
i.

|L.ffiLIA Lindl.N. Pff.


Lseliinae-Cattleyeae.

6.

147. Orchidacese-Monandrse;

anceps Lindl.B. M.
Mexico.
-71.

Gard. Ckron. 1894, t. 3804 December-January, autumnalis Lindl. B. M. t. 3817. Mexico. if. cinnabarina Batem. B. M. t. 4302. Brazil. if.

172.


iii.

March.

LAGENARIA

Ser.N.

Pff. iv. 5.

29. Cucurbitaceas-Cucurbiteae
Summer,

-Cucumerinse.

vulgaris Sen
var. var. var. var. var. var. var.

DC.

299.
Ser.

Tropics. 0.

clavata clava-Herculis Hort.

Cougourda
depressa

Ser.

Ser.

Gourda

Ser.

pelegrina Hort.

var.
var.

pyrotheca Hort. Sipho Hort.


turbinata
Ser.
iii.

JLAGERSTRCEMIA L.N. Pff.


-Lagerstrcemiinae.

7.

13. Lythraceae-Nesaeese
;

indica
259.

L.DC. iii.

93

B. M.

t.

Japan, China, Cochin

speciosa Pers.

DC.

405 Koehne, Lythr. {B. China to N. Australia.


to Queensland.

V.
Tp

C),
.

iii.

93; Koehne, Lythr. {B. V. C), 261.

India, Indo-China,

Sunda Islands
iii.

JLAGETTA
lintearia

Juss.N.

Pff.

6a.

234. ThymelEeacese-Thyme;

laeoideaB-Daphnege-Lagettinae.

Lam.Fl.

Brit.

West Bid. 279

B.

M.

t.

4502.

Jamaica.

T?

JLAGUNARIA

G.

Don.N.

Pff.

iii.

6.
;

47. Malvacese-Hibisceffi.
;

Patersonii G. Don.DC. i. 454 B. M. t. 769 Fl. Austr. i. 218. Tp Queensland, Norfolk and Howe's Islands. June -August.

HOETUS MOETOLBNSIS

187

LANTANA

L.

N.

Pff. iv. 3a. 150.

Verbenacege -Verbenoideae
t.

-Lantaneae.

Camara L.DC.
Spring-autumn.

xi.

598; B. M.

96. S. America. t?
599. W. Indies. Tp
,

crocea Jacq. H. Sch. t. 473 Spring and summer.


lilacina Desf.

DC.

xi.

DC. xi. 604. Brazil. Tp Spring-autumn nivea Vent. var. mutabilis Hook. DC. xi. 596; B. M. t Spring and summer. 3110. S. Brazil. Tp purpurea Hornem. DC. xi. 597. Tropical America. Tp October-November. salvisefolia Jacq. H. Sch. iii. t. 285 DC. xi. 605. S. Africa I? Summer-autumn. Sellowiana Link d; Otto.DC. xi. 604 B. M. t. 2981. Tp Summer-spring. S. Brazil. DC. xi. 600. S. America. Tp tiliaefolia Cham. DC. xi. 606; B. M. t. 1449. trifolia L. W. Indies, Tp S. America. Summer-autumn.


. ,

ILAPAGERIA
agoideae.

Bz.

<&

Pav.N.

Pff.

ii.

5.

87. Liliacese-LuzuriB.

rosea Bz.
t.

d' Pav.Kunth, En. 2059. S. Chili. Tp.

v.

284

M.

t.

4447

Fl. d. S.

LAPEYROUSIA
corymbosa
90.

Pourr.N.

Pff.

ii.

5.

157. Iridacea-IxioideEe
;

-Watsoniese.
Ker. in B.
2|
.

M.
;

t.

595

Cape. Spring. cruenta Bak. Lid. 173 Fl. Cap. Africa.


S.
l^.

Bak. L-id. 169


vi.

Fl. Cap. vi.

90

Locld. B. C.

t.

1857.

JLARDIZABALA Bz. d Pav.N. P/.iii.2.70. Lardizabalace^.


biternata Bz. Pav.DC. ^ . November-February.
i.

95

B.

M.

t.

4501. Chili.

LASERPITIUM L.N.
hispidum
Bieb.

Pff.

iii.

8.

246. Umbeinfer^-Apioidese
i^.

-Laserpitieae-Thapsiinae.

DC.
=

iv.

206.

Caucasus.
=

Lasiandra macrantha Lind. & Seem. Cogn.

Tibouchina semidecandra

Latania horhonica Hort.

Livistona chinensis Mart.

tLATHRJEA L.N.
clandestina

Pff. iv. Sb.


xi.
i.

L.DC.

Gard, Chron. 1904,

131. Orobanchacese. B. M. t. 7106 Fl. d'lt. n. 3060 293. S.W. Europe. 2^. April.
49
;

188

HOKTUS MOETOLENSIS
h.N.
Pff.
iii.

LATHYRUS
Vicieae.

3.

352. Legurainosae-PapilionataeFl.
cl'It.

='=Aphaca
Orient.

L.DC.

ii.

372

n.

2121.

S.

Europe,

May-June.
370 Bicknell, Fl. Biv.
;

-latifolius

m.

L.DG. ii.
June-July,

t.

23. S. Europe.

niger Bernh.DC. ii. 378 B. M. t. 2261 Fl. d'lt. n. 2145. May-June. Europe. 1(. -Ochrus DC. ii. 375; Fl. cl'It. n. 2123. S. Europe. 0. April-May. odoratus L.DC. ii. 374 B. M. t. 60 Fl. cl'It. n. 2128. April-May. S. Italy. 0.
; ;
.

,,

var.

nanus

iJori.

0.
cl'It.

November-December.

ILAURENTIA
lioideaB.

Neck.N.
vii.

Pff. iv. 5.

69. Campanulaceae-Lobe3467. Southern Mediter-

tenella A. DC.

410; Fl.
!(..

n.

ranean region.

Nearly always in flower.


iii.

JLAURUS

L.

N.

Pff'.

2.

124.

Lauraceae-Lauroideae233.

Laureae.

C amphora

L.

= Cinnamomum
Webb.
l?
.

canariensis
Madeira.
inclica

DC.

Camphora.
1.

xv.

Canary

Islands,

March- April.

glandulosa Hort.

= Cinnamomum
Persea indica.
i?

Camphora.

Thunb.

maderensis Hort.
nobilis

L.DC.

terranean

Madeira. March-April. 233 Fl. 932. Orient, MediMarch- April. region.


.

xv. 1.

cl'It.

n.

Tp

var. latifolia Ness.

DC.

xv. 1.

233. ^

sericea Willd.

Persea sericea.
Pff.
iv.

LAVANDULA
oideae.

L.N.

3a.

228. Labiatae-Lavandul;

abrotanoides Lam. DC. xii. 146 Bef. Bot. 1. 159. Canary Nearly all the year. Islands. ^ dentata L.DC. xii. 145 B. M. t. 401 Fl. d'lt. n. 3094.

S.

Europe, N. Africa.

lanata Boiss.

DC.

Tp

Spring.
;

xii.

146

Bef. Bot.

t.

301.

Spain.
xii.

Tp

-latifolia Vill.Fl. d'lt. n.

S096.L. Spica DC.

145.

July- August. Mediterranean region. if. multifida L. DC. xii. 147; Fl. d'lt. n. 3097. Western Tp January-March. Mediterranean region.
.

HORTUS MORTOLENSIS

189

LAVANDULA
Spica L.
StcBchas
region.

Fl.

(continued).
d'lt. n.

wraDC.xii.145.

Mediterranean region. ^
xii.

3095 Schneider, Hdb. Lauhh. ii. 600. L. July- August.


;

L.DC.
Tp
,

144

Fl. d'lt. n.

3093. Mediterranean

February-May.

vera

DC.

L. Spica L.
iii.

LAVATERA L.N. Pff.

39. Malvacese-Malveae-Malvinse. acerifolia Cav.DC. i. 438 B. M. t. 7865. Teneriffe. Tp arborea L.DC. i. 439 Fl. d'lt. n. 2541. Mediterranean
6.
;

April-June. region, Canaries. Tp assurgentiflora Kellogg, Proc. Cal. Ac. 1859. California. Tp April-May. *maritiina Gouan.DC. i. 439 Fl. d'lt. n. 2547. Mediter.

ranean region.
^'^Olbia

Tp

October-May.
;

L.DC.
.

i.

438

Fl. d'lt. n.

2543. S. France,
2543
(3;

Liguria.

Tp

April-June.

var.

hispida Desf.Fl.
.

d'lt. n.

B.M.

t.

2541.

Algeria ^ April-June. 2546. Mediterranean ^punctata All DC. 439 Fl. May-September. region. 0.
i.
;

d'lt. n.

LECHEA L.N.
minor
L.

Grosser,
i.

Pff.

iii.

6.

306. Cistaceae.
{B. V. C), 135.

Cist.

L. thymifolia

Michx. DC.

285. Atlantic N. America. T?


H.Pan. 1896,
3.
i.

ILEICHTLINIA
-Agavoideae.

Boss,Ic. PI.

7. Amaryllidacese
2^.

protuberans Boss,

I.e. 8. t.

Mexico.
;

JLEONOTIS Pers.N. Pff. iv.


Lamiinae.

3a.

246. Labiatae-StachyoideseFl. Trop. Afr. v.

dubia E. Mey.DC.

xii.

536
T?
.

Africa, Tropical Africa.

493. S.
;

December.
;

Leonurus B. Br. DC.


t.

xii.

536 Fl. Trop. Afr.


i.

v.

492

B.

M.

478

Africa.

Gard. Chron. 1908,


Tp
.

139. S.

Africa, Tropical

September-December.
Pff.

LEONTICE L.N.
March-April.

Leontopetalum L.

DC.
iii.

iii.

2.

76. Berberidaceae.
i.

109.

Orient,

Greece.

i(..

LEPIDIUM L.N.
diinae.

Pff.

2.

160. CruciferaB-Sinapeae-Lepi;

suffruticosum
Spain.

L.DC.
April.

i.

207

W. d L.

Fl. Hisp.

iii.

786.-

2^.

190

HORTUS MORTOLENSIS
Wall.N.
Pff. iv. 4.

LEPTO DERMIS

126. Rubiaceae-Coffeoiiii.

deae-Psychotriinae-Paederieae.

lanceolata Wall DC. Temperate Himalaya.

iv.
.

462; Fl. Brit. Ind.

198.

September-December.
Pff.
iii.

ILEPTOSPERMUM

Forst.N.

7.

93. Myrtaceae-

Leptospermoideas-Leptospermeae-LeptosperminaB.

baccatum Schau. = scoimrium Forst. Isevigatum F. Mali. Fl. Austr. iii. 103.

Fahricia lavigata
.

Gaertn. B. M.

t.

1304. Australia. T?
iii.

April-May.
iii.

lanigerum Sm.DC.
Australia, Tasmania.

227; Fl. Austr.


iii.

106. S. E.
105
Tp
. ;

f?

scoparium Forst.DC.
t.

3419.

Australia
DC.
v.

227

Fl. Austr.

iii.

and

New

Zealand.

B.

M.

May-

June.

JLEPTOSYNE

531

N.

Pff. iv. 5. 243, as

Coreopsis.

Gard. Chron. 1900, 319. California. maritima A. Gray. B. M. 6241, as Coreopsis maritima. Spring-summer. California. 333. California. 1897, Stillmannii.4. Gray. Gard. Spring-summer. 148. Orchidaceae-MonandraBN. LEPTOTES
gigantea Kellogg.
ip
.

Compositae-Heliantheae-Coreopsidinae.
Spring.

ii.

t.

11

C/iro7t.

ii.

LwifiZ.

Pff.

ii.

6.

Laeliinae-Cattley eae

bicolor Lindl.B. M.

t.

3734. Brazil. 2|:.


Pff.
iii.

June.

ILEUCADENDRON

Herm.N.
xiv.

1.

138. Proteaceaei.

Persoonioideae-Proteeae.

argenteum B. Br.DC.
Marloth, Kapland.
t.

213

Gard. Chron. 1906,


T^

254

iv.

Cape.
xiv.

DC. April. Cape. plumosum B. Br. DC.


Levisanus Berg.
Tp
.

Globularia B. Br.DC.

226. Cape.
;

T^
ii.

xiv.

216

Bossche, Ic. Sel.

t.

54.

xiv. 213.
3.

Cape.
ii.

Tp

LEUC-ENA

Benth.N.

Pff.

iii.

115. Leguminosae-Mimo-

soidese-Eumimoseae.

glauca Benth. Summer.

Fl.

Trop.

Afr.

337. Tropics.

Tp

Leucanthemum DC.

Chrysanthemum.

HOETUS MORTOLENSIS

191
iii.

tLEUCHTENBERGIA
Principis Fisch.
t.

Fisch.

& Hook.N.

Pff.

6a.

192.
B.

Cactaceae-CereoideaB-Echinocactese.

d Hook.K. Schum. Mon.


1(.
.

Cact.

470

M.

4393.

Mexico.
L.N.

July-August.
5.

LEUCOJUM

Pff.

ii.

105. Amaryllidacese-AmarylB. M.
t.

lidoidese-Amaryllidese-Galanthinee.

sestivum L.Bak. Am. 19


Fl. d'lt. n. 745.

Central

and

S.

1210 Bed. Lit. t. 135 Europe, Orient. if..


; ;

May.

hyemale DC.Bak. Am. 20


MeJit.
t.

B. M.

t.

6711

Moggr. Fl.

21

Bickn. Fl. Biv.

t.

70

Fl. d'lt. n.

747. From

Mentone to Nice. %. April. vernum L.Bak. Am. 19 B. M.


;

Central Europe.

2^.

Fl. t. 46 February-March.
;

d'lt. n.

746.

Leucophyta Brownii Cass.

Calocephahis Broionii F. Miill.

Leuzea DC.

Centaurea.

LEWISIA

Pursh.N.

rediviva Pursh.

B. M.

Pff.

iii.

lb.

59. Portulacace.

t.

5395.
Pff.

California.
4.

2^.

LEYCESTERIA
Lonicereae.

Wall.N.
iv.

iv.

169. Caprifoliacese-

formosa
ij
.

WallDC.
iii.

338;
t.

Brandis, For. Fl. 256; Fl.

Brit. Ind.

16

B.

M.

3099.Temperate Himalaya.

July- August.

LIBANOTIS

Crtz.N.

Pff.

iii.

8.

203, as Seseli

L. UmbelliJune.

ferae-Apioidea3-Amminea3-Seselinae.

buchtormensis DC.

iv. iv.

149.

Siberia.

4.
n.

montana AllDC.
Temperate Asia.

149; Fl.
June.
ii.

d'lt.

2303. Europe,

l^.

LIBERTIA

Spreng.N.

Pff.

5.

149. Iridacese-IridoideaeM.
t.

Sisyrinchieae-Libertinae.

formosa Grah.Bak.
June.

Irid. 116; B.

3294. Chili. 2;.


14..

grandiflora

Siveet.

tricolor Lem.

Bak. Nich. Diet.


Pff.

Irid. 116.
S^tpj^l.
ii.

488.

New Zealand. New Zealand.


i.

if..

LIBOCEDRUS
decurrens
of Don).

Don.N.

1.

95, Nachtr.

25. Pinacea-

Cupressineae-Thu j opsidinae
Torr.

DC.

xvi. 2. 456.

Thuja gigantea Carr. (not


Ip
.

N. California, Oregon.
=
Jacobinia,

April.

Libonia C. Koch.

192

HOETUS MORTOLENSIS
Senecioninae.

LIGULARIA Cass. N. Pff. iv. 5. 301. Compositae-SenecioneaeKaempferi


Senecio
;

Sieb.

&

Zucc.
t.

Fl

Jap.

i.

77,

t.

35.Z>C.

vi.

363, as

B. M.
if.

5302, as Farfugium grande Lindl.

Japan.

December.

LIGUSTRUM
Oleineae.

L.

N.
f.
;

Pff.

iv.

2.

13.

Oleaceae-OleoideaeFor. Fl. 310


viii.
;

compactum
Brit. Ind. Olea.

Hook.
iii.

& Thorns. Brand.


Fl. d. S.
t.
.

Fl.

616

11870.DC.
Tj
.

287, as

Temperate Himalaya. ^ June. 7519. Japan. Carr. B. M. Nich. Diet. 264. Japan. June. Ibota Sieb. 2728. Japan. 293 Fl. japonicum Thunb.DC. May-July.
coriaceum
t.
Tj
.

viii.

d'lt. n.

ij

lucidum Ait. DC.

viii.

293
viii.
.

B.

M.
;

t.

nepalense WallDC. Temperate Himalaya.


ovalifolium Hassk.

294

Fl. Brit. Ind.

2565. China. T? iii. 617.


i?

^ July. Nich. Diet. 264. Japan. June-July. Quihoui Carr. Nich. Diet. 264. China.
T?
.

Regelianum Koehne in Mitt. Deutsch. May. 70.Japan. Tj Loitr. DC. viii. 294. China. sinense Stauntoni DC. viii. 294. China. ^

Dendrol. Ges. 1904,

Tp

*vulgare

L.DC.

viii.

293;

Fl.

d'lt.

n.

2726.Europe,

May-June. Walkeri Decne.Fl. Brit. Ind.


Caucasus.
.

iii.

614

Gard. Chron. 1898,

ii.

282. Ceylon.

Tj

LILIUM L.N.

Pff. ii. 5. 60. Liliaceae-Lihoideai-Tulipeae. auratum Lindl B. M. t. 5338 Gard. Chron. 1909, ii. 274.
;

%. candidum L.Kunth, En. iv. 266 Fl d'lt. n. 635 B. M. June. t. 278; Bed. Lil t. 199. S. Europe, Orient. 4. croceum Chaix. Kunth, En. iv. 265 Lodd. B. C. t. 784.
; ;

Japan.

S.

Europe.

U.

Henryi Bak.B. M.
longiflorum Thunb.
June.

Kunth,

t.

7177. China. 2;. En. iv. 266.


iv.

Japan.
893
;

!(..

Martagon L.Kunth, En.


n.

257

B.

M.
;

t.

Fl

d'lt.

637. Europe. if.. May. speciosum Thunb. Kunth, En. iv. 259 12-13 B. M. t. 3785.Japan. If
;

Sieb. Fl. Jap.

i.

t.

HOETUS MORTOLENSIS

193

LIMNANTHEMUM
nymphoides
2773.

S. G.

Gmel.N.

Pff. iv. 2.

107. Gentiad'lt. n.

naceaB-Menyanthoideae.

Europe, Asia.
Dur.

Hoffmgg.

&

Link.

U.

DC. ix. 138; Fl. April-August.


Pff. iv. 1.

ILIMONIASTRUM
naceae-Staticese.

Moench.N.
xii.

125. Plumbagii?
.

DC. 689. Algeria. July. 689. Southern Meditermonopetalum Boiss. DC. ranean region. ^ July. LINARIA Juss. N. Scrophulariacese-AntirrhiGuyonianum
xii.
.

Pff. iv. 3b. 59.

noidese-Antirrhineae.

capraria Moris. DC.


Island.
21.

x.

286
v.

Fl. d'lt. n,

2923. Capraria

*Cymbalaria MillDC.
Mediterranean region.

Fl. d'lt. n. 2900. Europe, March-October. B. M. t. 6424 Fl d'lt. n. dalmatica Mill DC. x. 275 2919. Eastern Mediterranean region. June-July. !(.. B. M. t. 2183 Fl d'lt. n. genistifolia MillDC. x. 275 2920. Europe, N. Asia. June-September. 4. Spring maroccana Hook, fil B.M. t. 5983. Morocco.

266
.

2^

-summer.
pilosa

DCDC. DC

x.

267;

Fl

d'lt. n.

2903. Sardinia,
S.

Sicily.

U.
striata

March-May. DC. x. 278. W. and

Europe. i^:.

May-

August.

LINDENBERGIA Lehm.N. Pff. iv. 3&. 73. ScrophulariaceaeAntirrhinoideae-Gratioleae.

grandiflora
218.

Benth.DC
t.

x.

376

Fl
2^.

Brit. Ind. iv. 261

Bossche, Ic. Sel


ii.

165; B.

M.

t.

7738; Gard. Chron. 1902,

Subtropical Himalaya.
Pff.
iii.
i.

LINUM
n.

L.N.
2518
;

4.

30. Linaceae-Eulineae.
;

flavum

L.DC
B.

426

Hal

Co7isp.

Fl

Gr.

i.

258

Fl

d'lt.

312. Greece, Orient. 2;. Spring. grandiflorum Desf.DC i. 427 B. M. t. 4956. Algeria. O March-May. maritimum L. DC. i. 424 Hal Consp. Fl. Gr. i. 254 BickneU, Fl Biv. t. 9 Fl d'lt. n. 2513. Mediterranean
t.
;
.

M.

region. Spring-summer. 7^. Muelleri Moris, Fl Sard. iv. t. 23; Fl


dinia.
14..

d'lt. n.

2414. Saro

194

HORTUS MORTOLENSIS
(continued).
i.

LINUM

narbonense L.DG.
n. 2510.

426

Moggr. Fl. Ment.

t.

55

Fl.

cl'It.

S.Europe. 2^. *tenuifolium L.DC. i. 427; Bicknell, Fl. Biv. 1. 10; Fl. d'lt. JuneCentral and S. Europe, Asia Minor. n. 2512. i^.

May- June.

July.

trigynum Roxb.

Reinioardtia trigyna Planch.

JLIPPIA

L.

N.

Pff. iv. Sa. 151.

Verbenacese-Verbenoideae;

DC. 583 Jacq. H. Sch. 361. October-November. 585. America. canescens Kunth. DC. 573. America. July chamsedrifolia Steud. DC. -November. 574. Aloysia citriodora Ort. citriodora Kunth. DC. October-March. Uruguay, Argentina, 574. N. and America. ^ lycioides Steud. DC. Spring. 584. Mexico, Peru, reptans Kunth. DC. Magnoliaceae N. ILIRIODENDRON L.
asperifolia Bich.
S.
xi.
Tj
.

Lantaneae.

t.

America,

S. Africa.

xi.

S.

Tj

xi.

S.

Tj

xi.

Chili.
xi.

Tp

S.

xi.

Brazil.-

2|.

Pff.

iii.

2.

17.

Magnolieae.

tulipifera

L.DC. i. 82 B. M. t. 275 2081-2. Atlantic N. America. i?


;

Fl. d. S.

t.

2025,

LIRIOPE

157. OrchidaceaJLISSOCHILUS B. Br. N. Monandrae-Cyrtopodiinas. Trop. Afr. Eritrea, German Erythrseae Bolfe. S.W. July- August. 330. Sapindaceae-Nepheliese. ILITCHI Sonn. N. Sonn. DC. 611, as Euphoria Litchi Desf. China. sinensis bPff.
ii.

Lour. N. Pff. ii. 5. 85. Liliaceae-Ophiopogonoidese. graminifolia Bake?: Nich. Diet. 285. Ophiopogon spicatus Hook. B. M. t. 5348. China, Japan. V^. April-June.

6.

Fl.

vii.

91.

Africa.

2^.

Pff.

iii.
i.

5.

LITHOSPERMUM L. N.

Pff.

iv.

3a.

122. Borraginace^;

Borraginoidese-LithospermeaB.

fruticosum L.DC. x. 80 Gr. & Godr. Fl. Fr. ii. 517 W. d- L. Fl. Hisp. ii. 499. Spain, S. France. ^ March-April.
; .

LITHR.^A

Miers.

N.

Arceirinha March.

= molleoides. caustica Hook. & Arn. = venenosa.

Pff.

iii.

5.

164.

Anacardiaceae-Rhoideae.

HORTUS MORTOLENSIS

195

LITHR^A

{continued).

Gilliesu Griseb.

molleoides.
latifolius.
iii.

Molle C. Gay.
Bolivia.

= Schinus
Pff.

molleoides Engl.N.

Pff.

5.

164. S.

Brazil, Argentina,

I?

venenosa Miers.N.
japonica
Sieh.

iii.

5.

165. Chili. Tp
Spreng.
1.

LITSEA Lam.N. P/.iii.2. 119. Lauraceae-Persoideae-Litseege.


Jitss.

N.
.

Pff.
i.

I.e.

Tetranthera japonica
t.

Ziiec. Fl. Jap.


Tp

66.

Japan.
JLIVISTONA
Sabaleae.

87 and 100

DC.

xv.

181.

May-June.
Pff.
ii.

B. Br.N.

3.

35. Palmffi-Coryphinse242
S.
;

australis Mart.
B. M.
t.

Kunth, En.

iii.

6274. Queensland, N.

Fl. Austr. vii. 146 Wales, Victoria. T?

Summer.
chinensis B. Br.
Hort.

China, Japan.

Kimth, En.
Tp

iii.

241.

Latania Corypha

horhonica

decipiens Becc. in Webbia Hort. N. S. Wales. T?


olivaeformis Mart.
Hort.

iii.
.

1910, 301.

Copernicia cerifera

Nich.

Diet. 283.

Gebanga

Java. ^
Bz.
<&

LLAGUNOA
nitida Bz.
Spring.

& Pav.N.

Pff.

iii.

5.

354. SapindaceseS.

Cossignieee.

Pav.

DC.

i.

626.

Western

America.

f?

Loasa

lateritia

Hook.

= Cajophora lateritia.

LOBELIA
2^
.

L. N.

Pff. iv. 5. 66.


vii.

Campanulaceae-LobelioideaB.
;

cardinalis

L.DC.

382

B. M.

t.

320. N. America.
544
;

September-November. Erinus L.DC. vii. 370 Fl. Cap.


;

iii.

B.

M.

t.

901.

S. Africa.

l^.

Winter-spring.

laxiflora H. B.
var.

383. Mexico. i;. B. M. t. 3600. Siphoc. eampylos bicolor Hort. Mexico. Novem2^.
vii.

K.DC.

angustifolia DC.

I.

ber-May.

LOCHNERA
B. M.
t.

Beiehb.N.
Pff.

Pff. iv. 2.

145. Apocynacese-Plumiviii.

eroidese-Plumiereae-Alstoniinae.

rosea Beichb.

248.

N. Vinca rosea L. DC. 382 W. Indies and other tropical countries. 0.


I.

e.

October-April.
2

196

HORTUS MORTOLENSIS
L.

LCESELIA

N.

Pff.

iv.

3a.

53. Polemoniacese-PoleTp
.

moniese.

coccinea G. Don. whole year.

DC.

ix.

318.

Mexico.
5.

Nearly the

LOMANDRA
R. Br.
S.

Labill.N.

Pff.

ii.

50. Liliaceee-Asphode97, as Xerotes

loidese-Lomandreae.

longifolia Lahill.

Fl. Austr. Queensland, N. Australia. Summer.


l^.

vii.

longifolia

S.

Wales, Victoria, Tasmania,

jLOMATIA

B. Br.N.

Pff.

iii. 1.

149. Proteacese-Grevilloidese449
;

Embothrieae.

ferruginea B. Chili. Tj.


longifolia B.
t.

Br.DC.

xiv.

B. M.

t.

8112. Southern
;

Br.DC.
S.

7698. N. 1272. N.

447 Fl. Austr. v. 537 Wales, Victoria. i? June-July.


xiv.
;
.

B.

M.

silaifolia
t.

B.Br.DC.
S.

448; Fl. Atcstr.Y. 537; B. M. Wales, Victoria. Tp


xiv.

JLOMATOPHYLLUM
macrum
iv.

Willd.N.
iv.

Pff.

ii.

5.

47. LihaceseAl.
V.

Kunth, En. 549; Berger, {B. C. 327. Mauritius, Bourbon. Spring-summer. 326. Schinz. Berger, Lorn. purpureum Th. Dur.
Salm.
38. 3^),
Tp
.

Asphodeloideae-Aloinege.

Al.

horhonicum Willd. Kunth, En.

iv.

549

B. M.

t.

1585.

Bourbon, Mauritius.

Tp

LONICERA

CaprifoHaceae-Lonicereae. Behder, Bept. Miss. B. G. 1903, 139. chrysantha North-eastern Asia. ^ 142. Tibet, China {Wilson, deflexicalyx Batal. Behder, 856). Fl. Behder, 194 331 etrusca Santi. DC. 3318. Mediterranean region (from Madeira to KurMay-June. 382 Behder, glabra Loive, Fl. Madeira, 196. JuneL. gigantea Carr. Madeira.
L.
Pff. iv. 4. 166.

N.

Turcz.

I.e.

n.

T?.

iv.

I.

c.

d'lt.

n.

distan).
,,

Tp

var.

i.

I.

c.

Tp .

July.

fuchsioid.es Hemsl. in Journ. Linn. Soc.

xxiii.

362,

t.

Behder,

I.

c.

148.

China.

Tj .

June.

gigantea Carr.

=
75.

L. etrusca var. glabra.

gymnochlamydea
Behder,
I.

Hemsl. in Journ. Linn. Soc.


n. 266).

xxiii.

362

c.

China {Wilson,

Tp

HOETUS MOETOLENSIS

197

LONICERA

{continued).
;

Henryi Hemsl. in Journ. Linn. Soc. xxiii. 363 Behder, c. 148.Tibet, China {Wilson, n. 254). T? B. M. Hildebrandiana Coll. & Hemsl. Behder, c. 163 t. 7677. Burma, China. Tj . iberica M. B.DC. iv. 337 Behder, I. c. 79. Western
I.

I.

Asia.

Tp

April-May.
n.
iv. 331 B. M. t. 640; Behder, I.e. 185; May3316. Mediterranean region. Tj .
;

='lmplexa Ait.DC.
Fl.

d'B.

June.

japonica Thunh.
T^

Japan, China, Nepal. 141. China {Wilson, Kcehneana Behder, 131. Turkestan. Korolkovii Stapf. Behder, 141. Maackii Max. podocarpa Branch. Behder,
I.e.

Behder,
I.

159.

July-October.

c.

n. 93).

Tp

I.e.

Tj

var.

I.

c.

China {Wilson,
n. 3319.

n.

412 and 457). Tp


iv.

Periclymenum L.DC.

331; Behder,
T? .

I.

c.

197

Fl. d'lt.

Europe, N. Africa. sempervirens L.DC. 332 167. N.America.


iv.
Tj

B.

M.

t.

781
c.

Behder,
155.

I.

c.

April,

similis

Hemsl. var. Delavayi


I?.
I.

Behder,
B. M.

I.

China

{Wilson, n. 589).

Standishii Carr.Behder, Tp January.


.

c.

81

t.

5709. China.

var. longifolia Behder, I.e. 82.

China {Wilson,
N. America.

SuUivantii Gray.

ii.

^?-

tragophylla
151
;

Behder, Hemsl. Behder,


t.

n.

82). Tp.

I.

c.

182.

Central
;

I.

c.

193

Gard. Ghron. 1904,


n.

B.M.

8064. China {Wilson,

trichosantha Bur. & Branch. Tp China {Wilson, n. 8566).

Behder,

346.) T?
I.e.

142.

Tibet,

Webbiana Wall DC.

iv.

136;

Behder,

I.e.

108. S.E.

Europe, Afghanistan, India, China {Wilson,

n. 861).

Tp

LOPEZIA

Cavanilles.

N.

Pff.

iii.

7.

221.

Lopezieae.

Central DC. iii. 62. coronata Andr. Summer. miniata DC. iii. 62. Guatemala, Mexico.
April.

OnagraceaeAmerica. .
'?
.

2|

October-

Lophospermum Don

Maurandia.

198

HOKTUS MOETOLENSIS
iii.

JLOROPETALUM B. Br.N. Pff.


chinense
t.

2a.

128. Hamamelidaceae
428
;

-Hamamelidoideae-Hamamelideae.
Oliv.

Fl.

Brit. Ind.

ii.

Bossche, Ic. Sel.


chin.

58

iv.

Gard. Chron. 1894, i. 343. Tp 269. Himalaya, S. China.


;

Hamamelis

DC.

LOTUS L. N. Pff.
floridus Masf.

iii.

Ind. Keio 119 Loioe, Man. Fl. Mad. Canaries, Madeira. April-June. 472. 210; B. M. 79; Nich. Diet. Jacobseus L.DC. March-July. Jacobus). Cape Verde Islands (Island macranthus Loioe, Man. Fl. Mad. 179, sub Pedrosia.
iii.
;

Bertholetii Masf. Ind. Kew iv. 1291. L. peliorrliynchus Hook. fil. B. M. t. 6733. Teneriffe. 2^:. March-June.
i.

3.

257.

Leguminosae-Papilionatae-LoteaB.

177, sub Pedrosia.

2^.

ii.

t.

fig.

St.

T?

i.

Madeira.

11
fil.

peliorrhynchus Hook.

Bertholetii.
1.

LUCUMA
LUFPA
L.

Jnss.

N.
Pff.

Pff.

iv.

142.

Sapotaceae-PalaquieaeBrazil.
Tp
.

Sideroxylinae.

neriifolia Hook, d Am.DC. viii. 166.

June-July.

N.
ii.

iv.

5.

25.

Cucurbitaceae-CucurbiteaB;

Cucumerinae.

acutangula Boxb.DC.
Brit. Ind.

iii.

302

Fl. Trop. Afr.

ii.

530

Fl.

615.

Malaya. 0.
;

Summer.
Ic.
t.

segyptiaca Mill. DC. iii. 303 Fl. Brit. Ind. ii. Afr. ii. 500
;

Wight,

499

Fl. Trop.

614Tropics. 0. Summer.

cylindrica

M. Eoem.
Pff.

cecjyptiaca.
6.

LUHEA

Willd.N.

iii.

divaricata Mart.

&

Zucc.

N.
2.

22. Tiliaceas-Tiliese.
Pff. I.e.

Argentina,

S. Brazil.

-^ LUNARIA L.N.
damininae.

Pff.

iii.

185. Cruciferae-Sinapeae-CarL. biennis Moench,

annua

L. Fl. S.Europe. 0.

d'lt. n.

1457.

DC.

i.

156

Spring.

LUZULA DC.N.
n. 607.

Pff. ii. 5. 7. Juncaceae. maxima DC. = sylvatica. sylvatica Gaud.Gren. d Godr. Fl. Fr.

iii.

353

Fl. d'lt.

Europe. U.
Lindl.N.Pff.
ii.

Spring.
6.

ILYCASTE

162. Orchidaceae-MonandraeJuly.

Lycastinae.

Deppei Lindl.B. M.t. 3395. S. Mexico. 2|.

HOETUS MOETOLENSIS

199

LYCHNIS L.N.
Lychnideae.
April-July.

Pff.

iii.

lb.

73. Caryophyllacese-Silenoide^385; B. M.
t.

chalcedonica L.DC.

i.

257.Japan. 2^.

coronaria Desr.DC. i. 387 B. M. S.Europe. 4. April-July.


;

t.

24; Fl. cVIt. n. 1149.

If

Flos-Jovis Desr.DC.
.

i.

385

Fl. cVIt. n.

1150. Europe.

April-July.
3&.
1.

LYCIUM
iv.

L.N. Pff. iv. afrum L.DC. xiii.


2.

13. Solanacese-Solaneffi-Lyciinse.
521; Fl.
cVIt.

n.

2866; Fl Cap.

111.

regions.

S.

Africa,

subspontaneous in Mediterranean
iv.

Tp

May-June.

australe F. M.Fl. Austr.

t.

467. N. S.Wales,

S. Australia.

Tp

May-June.

cestroides Schlecht.

=
.

Acnistus cestroides.
xiii. 1.

chilense Bert.DC.

514

Miers,

III.

Sth.

Am.

PI.

ii.

May-June. 72. Chili. Tp chinense Mill.-DC. xiii. 1. 510

Fl. d'lt. n.

2868. China.
2867. MediT?

T7

May-June.
xiii.

europseum L.DC.

1.

523
T^
.

Fl. d'lt. n.

terranean region, Canaries.

microphyllum Duham. DC. xiii. ruthenicum Murr.DC. xiii. 1.


Southern Eussia to Persia.

May-June.
1.

526.

India?
N.
Pff.

514;

I.e.

13.

tetrandrum Thunh.
PI.
ii.

DC.

>>

xiii.

t.

66

Fl. Cap. iv. 2.

Miers, 111. Sth. Am. 1, 516 114. L. horridum Thunb.


;

S. Africa.

^'

Treioianum Eoem. & Schult.

chinense.

LYCOPERSICUM
as Solanum.

Tourn.DC.

xiii.

1.

23; N. Pff.

iv. 36.

24,

Solanaceae-Solaneae-Solaninae. Solanum Lycopersicum esculentum Mill. DC.


xiii. 1.

26.

L. Fl. d'lt. n.

2875. Tropical America. (Tomato.) 0.

Summer.

LYCORIS

Herb.N.

Pff.

ii.

5.

113. Amaryllidaceas-Amarylli!(..

doidese-Narcisseae-Pancratiinae.

radiata Herb.

Bak. Am. 40. China, Japan.


Pff.
ii.

LYGEUM L.~~N.

2.

Spartum L.Kimth, En.


Mediterranean region.

42. Gramineae-Oryzese. i. 19 Fl. d'lt. n. 106. Western


;

^2^.

Spring.

200

HORTUS MOETOLENSIS
Benth.N.
Pff.
iii.

JLYSILOMA

3.

107. Leguminosse-Mimoc.

soideae-Ingeae.

latisiliqua Bentli.
Islands.

N.
Pff.

Pff.

107.

Florida,

Bahama

^^

LYSIMACHIA L.N.
barystachys
289.

iv.

1.

112.

Primulacese-Lysima-

Buncje. DC. Eastern Asia. 4. nummularia L. DC.

chiese-Lysimachiinse.

viii.

61; Knuth, Primul. {B. V. C),

Summer.
61
;

viii.

Knuth, Primul. {B.

V. C),

258

Fl. cVIt. n.

2697. Central Europe. 2^.


Pff. iv. Pff.
I.

Spring.

LYTANTHUS
DC.
xii.

Wettst.N.

U. 272. Globulariacege.
c.

saliciaus Wettst. in N.
614.

Globularia salicina Lam.


;

^)

September-November.
iii.

LYTHRUM L.N. Pff.


='=flexuosum Lag.
n.

Koehne,
t.

7.

8. LythraceEe-Lythrese-Lythrinse.
Lythrac. {B. V. C), 68
Fl. d'lt.
.

2201

B. M.

6499. Mediterranean region. 2;

May-

October.

salicaria L.
d'lt. n.

Grafferi Tenore flexuosum Lag. Koehne, Lythrac. {B.

2199.

Europe.
Fl.
Pff.

14..

V. C), 78 DC. June-August.


;

iii.

82

Fl.

JMACADAMIA

F. Milll.N.

Pff.

iii.

1.

147. ProteaceseT?

Grevilloideae-Grevilleae.

australis Hort. (Hy6res, 1903).


ternifolia F. Milll.

Austr.

Australia. 406. Australia. ^.


v.
6.

June.

MACKAYA
bella

Harv. N.
t.

iv.

336. Acanthacete-Acan.

thoideae-Imbricatae-OdontonemeaB.

Harv.B. M.
Nutt.N.
Niitt.

5797. Natal. t?
Pff.
iii.

June-July.

MACLURA
693.

1.

74. Moraceae-MoroideaeChron. 1894,


ii.

Broussonetiege.

aurantiaca

DC. 227; Gard. Louisiana, Arkansas. June.


xvii.
T^
.

IMACROZAMIA Miq.N. Pff.


spiralis Miq.

DC. spiralis Salisb. N.


1952.

ii.

1.
;

xvi. 2.
S.

535

Fl. Austr. vi. 251.


.

22. Cycadace^-Zamiese. Zamia

Wales.
2.
;

MAGNOLIA L.N.
grandiflora

Pff.

iii.
i.

L.DC.

80

16. Magnoliaceae-Magnolieae. Lodd. B. C. t. 814 B. M. t.


;

M.

foetida Sarg., Schneider,


of

Southern Atlantic States

Hdh. Laubh. i. 334. Tp May-July. N. America.

HOETUS MOETOLBNSIS

201

MAGNOLIA
August.

(continued).

inodoraP DC. i. 81. S. China. Tj pumila Andr.DG. i. 81 B. M. t. 977. China.


;

(?

June-

IMAGYDARIS

Koch.~N.

Pff.

iii.

8.

174. Umbelliferse-Apioi7i.

deae-Smyrnieae.

panacina DC. iv. 241. tomentosa Koch. DC.

Spain, N. Africa.
iv.

June.

241.

M.

iKtstinacea Fiori, Fl.


14..

d'lt. n.

2408.

Sardinia,
iii.

Sicily,
2. 77,

N. Africa.

June.

MAHONIA Nutt.N. Pff.


aquifolium
lOQ;
April.
Niitt.

Schneider, Hdh.
t.
;

sub

5er&em. Berberidace^.

Lodd. B. C.

Lauhh. i. 318. {DC. i. 1718.) N. America. l?. March-

Bealei Carr. Fl.

{DC.
Spring.

i.

d. S. t. 166 Schneider, Hdh. Lauhh. i. 323. 109; B. M. t. 4852.) Himalaya, China. 1?.

tenuifolia Loud.
Ic. Sel.
t.

11.)

Schneider, Hdh. Lauhh. 321. {Bossche, Mexico. November-January.


i.

Tj

MAJORANA

Moench.N.

Pff. iv.

3 a.

307. Labiatse-Stachy-

oidese-Thyminse.

hortensis Moench.
;

N.

DC.xii. 196 Fl. d'lt. n.

Origanum Majorana L. Pff. I. c. 3206. N. Africa, Orient. 2^ June.


.

MALCOLMIA

B. Br.N.

Pff.

iii.

2.

200. Cruciferse-Hespen.

rideae-Malcolmiinae.

maritima B. Br. DC.


terranean region.

i.

0.
Pff.

187; Fl. d'lt. Early spring.


iii.

1313. Medi-

MALLOTUS
Formosa.

Lour.N.

5.

53. Euphorbiacese-Croto-

noideae-Mercurialinae.

japonicus Mull. Arg.

DC.
Pff.

xv. 2. 966.

Japan,

N. China,

Tp

July.

MALVASTRUM A.
Malvinae.

Gr.N.

iii.

6.

41. Malvace^-Malvesei.

capense Gray & Harv.


Malva.

Fl.
.

Cap.

S. Africa.

160; DC.

i.

434, sub

Tp

May-June.
iii.

MALVAVISCUS
mollis Lam.

DC. Mexico. ^
.

Dill.N.
i.

Pff.

6.

46. Malvacese-Urenese.
jnollis Ait.

445.

Achania

B.

M.

t.

2374.

All the year.

202

HOETUS MORTOLENSIS
Haio.N.
Pff.
iii.

tMAMILLARIA

6a.

192. Cactaceae-Cereoi-

deae-Mamillarieae.

K. Schum. 576. Mexico. '? angularis Lk. & Otto. Spring-summer. bicolor Lehvi. K. Schum. 568 Pfeiff. Abb. i. t. 3. Mexico. Spring-summer. bocasana Pos. K. Schum. 530. Mexico. !(.. Spring. Candida Scheidio. K. Schum. 524. Mexico. %. caput-medusse Otto. K. Schum. 589. Mexico. if: Spring and summer. carnea Zucc. K. Schum. 592. Mexico. 2|. Celsiana Lem. K. Schujii. 565. Mexico. %. Spring and

summer.
centricirrha Lem.

K. Schum. 579. Mexico.

!(:.

Spring-

summer.

var.

var.
var.

Bockii K. Schum. 582. Krameri K. Schum. 582.

n..

May-June. May-June. 2|.

macracantha

iT.

/Sc/iwm. 582.

if.

MaySpring-

June.

var.

magnimamma K. Schum. 582. summer. var. recurva K. Schum. 582. 1^.

1|

May-June.

chrysacmitha Otto

rhodantha.
;

clava Pfeiff. K. Schum. 501

B.

M.

t.

4358. Mexico. l^.

Summer.

conimamma

A. Lke.

cornifera DC.

K.

K. Schum. 489. Mexico. %. Schum. 491, 81. Mexico.


fig.
t.

i^.

Summer. dasyacantha Engelm. Cact. Bound, 482. Texas, New Mexico. i;.
decipiens
Scheidiu.

17-22
fig.

K. Schum.

K. Schum. 527. Mexico. n. California. dioica Kath. Brand. K. Schum. 544. discolor Haio. K. Schum. 556. Mexico. Spring dolichocentra Lem. K, Schum. 557. Mexico.
88.
S.
1^. i^.
if
.

and summer.

K. Schum. N. 135. Mexico. Summer, Donati durangensis Bge. K. Schum. 478. Mexico. Eichlamii Quehl. Monatsschrft, K. 1908, 65. Guatemala. nSummer. elegans P. DC. K. Schum. 564. Mexico.
Berge.
2|.
2^. f.
i;.

,,

var.

Galeottii K. Schum. 559.

%.

HORTUS MORTOLENSIS

203

MAMILLARIA
elephantidens Lem.K. Schuni. 486 Pfeiff. Abb. ii. t. 20. Summer. Mexico. 2^. SpringK. Schum. 518. Mexico. elongata DC. U. summer. Emskoetteriana Quehl. Monatsschrft. f. K. 1910, 139.
;

Mexico. n.. erecta Lem. K. Schum. 503. fig. 82. Mexico. U. formosa Scheidio. K. Schum. 590. Mexico. 14.. glochidiata Mart. K. Schum. 531. Mexico. U. var. crinita K. Schum. I. c. 532.

K. Schum. 541. Texas. Grusonii Bunge. K. Schum. 583. Mexico. Haageana Pfeiff. K. Schum. 567. Central Mexico. Spring. Islands Santa Halei Brand. K. Schum. 510. Margarita and Santa Magdalena. Heeseana MacDoiv. K. Schum. 579. Mexico. Heyderi Miihlenpf. K. Schum. 571. Texas, New Mexico. 4. Karwinskiana Mart. K. Schum. 594. Mexico. lasiacantha Engelm. K. Schum. 521. Texas. denudata Engelm. K. Schum. 522. M. Bimgei Hort. Texas, Mexico. %. Pos. K. Schum. 524. Mexico. leona Lesaunieri Beb. K. Schum. 553. Mexico. longimamma DC K. Schum. 507. Mexico. 15; K. Schum. macromeris Engelm. Gact. Bound, 483 Nich. Diet. Suppl. 514. Mexico, New Mexico. macrothele Mart. K. Schum. 502. Mexico.
Grahami Engelm.
ll14..
24:.

gracilis Pfeiff.K. Schum. 551.

fig.

90. Mexico. 2;.

fig.

84.

of

24.

i^.

24.

2|.

var.

11

14..

14..

t.

14,

2;.

14.

mazatlanensis K. Schum. in Monatsschrft. f. K. 1905, 154. Summer. Mexico. 14 meiacantha Engelm. K. Schum. 584. Texas, New Mexico. Summer. 14. melanocentra Pos. K. Schum. 574:. Mexico. 14.

micromeris Engelm. K. Schum. 523. Texas, Mexico. Mexico. Greggii Engelm. K. Schum. missouriensis Sweet. K. Schum. 497. N. America. Mundtii K. Schum.Monatsschrft. K. 1903, 141. Mexico. Summer.
2|.

var,

I.

c.

24.

f.

24.

204

HOKTUS MORTOLENSIS
{continited).

MAMILLARIA

mutabilis Scheicho. and summer.


Odieriana Lem.

K. Schum. 594. Mexico. K. Schum. 570. Mexico.


centricirrha.
14.
.

14..

Spring

rhodantha.

Parkinsonii Ehrbg. and summer.


pentacantha
Pfeiff.

14.

Spring

perbella Hildm.

K. Schum. 567. Mexico.


Cact. Bound.
1(..

Spring and

summer. phellosperma Encjelm.

6.

t.

E. Schim. 540.

K. Schum. 535. Mexico. Springautumn. polyedra Mart. K. Schum. 592. Mexico. K. Schum. 559. Mexico. polythele K. Schum. 580, sub M. centricirrha. Mexico. pulchra Haio.
plumosa Web.
14. 14.
ilfa7*f.

California, Arizona, &c.

74.

npusilla

DG.K. Schum. 526. Spring-autumn.

fig.

87. Mexico, Texas. 4.

var. impexicoma Salm. K. Schum. 495. Mexico. Uradiosa Engelm. K. Schum. 479. Texas, New Mexico, &c. Spring. arizonica Engelm. K. Schum. 481. recurvata Engelm. K. Schimi. 493. Mexico. K. Schum. 549. Mexico. rhodantha Lk. & Spring and summer. Roseana Brand. K. Schum. 512. Lower California. Rungei Hort. = lasiacantha denudata. rutila Zucc. K. Schum. 556, sub M.coronaria. Mexico. Scheerii Milhlenpf. K. Schum. 484. Mexico. K. Schum. 534.Mexico. Schelhasii Schiedeana Ehrbg. K. Schum. 536. Mexico. Schum. 587. Mexico. sempervivi DC. senilis Lodd. K. Schum. 511. Mexico. setispina Engelm. K. Schum. 513. Lower California. sphacelata Mart K. Schum. 547. Mexico. spinosissima lyew. K. Schum. 537. Mexico.
14
.

pyrrhocephala Scheidw. K. Schum. 597. Spring and summer. ScMmi. 494. Mexico. A'. radians DC. summer.
,,

Mexico. Spring14.

2^.

,,

var.

24.

2^.

Otto.

24

14.

var.

2^

fig.

80.

14.

Pfeijf.

2^.

24.

A'.

14.

74.

14.

14.

2^.

HOETUS MOKTOLENSIS

205

MAMILLARIA
strobiliformis Scheer.

A'.

Schum. 477.

New Mexico, Texas.


30.

nU-

subechinata Salm elongata. Thornberi Orcutt.Monatsschrft.

f.

K. 1907,

Arizona.

K. Schum. 586. Mexico. Schum. 554. Mexico. K. Schum. 585. Mexico. uncinata Zucc. vetula Mart. Schum. 529. Mexico. Summer. Wildii Dietr. K. ScMmi. 533. Mexico. Spring and
Trohartii Hildm. umbrina Ehrbg.
A'.

if.

A'.

if.

if.

if.

if.

summer.

MANDEVILLA

Lindl.

N.

Pff.

iv.

2.

170.

Apocynacese Argentina.

Echitoideae-Echitideae.

suaveolens Lindl. DC. June- August. 17 .

viii.

452; B. M.

t.

3797.

MANDRAGORA Juss.N.
-Mandrogorinae.

Pff. iv. 36.

27. Solanaceae-SolaneaB
2882.

autumnalis Spreng.
region.

Fl.
xiii. 1.

d'lt.

n.

Mediterranean
2881. Medi-

if.

vernalis Bert. DC.


terranean region.

466

FL

d'lt. n.

if.

MANETTIA Mut.N.
bicolor Hort.

Pff. iv. 4.

49.Kubiaceae-Cinchonoideae-

Cinchoninae-Cinchoneae.

= inflata.
ii.

inflata Sp-ague in Gard. Chron. 1904,


t.

385.

fig.

169
if.

B.

M.

7776, as

ilf .

bicolor.

Uruguay,
iii.

Paraguay.

From

autumn

to spring.

JMANIHOT

Adans.N.
Milll.

Pff.

5.

79.Euphorbiacege-Platyxv.
2.

lobe^-Crotonoideae-Manihoteae.

carthaginensis
America.

Arg.

DC.

1073.

Tropical

Tp

July.

MARGYRICARPUS
alatus
Gill.

Bz.

dPav.N.

Pff.

iii.

3.

45. Eosacese-

Eosoideae-Sanguisorbeae.

Schneider,

Hdb. Laubh.
ii.

i.

535.

Chili.

T^

April -May.

setosus

Bz.

& Pav.DC.
i.

591

Nich. Diet.

fig.

513

Schneider, Hdb. Lmibh.

535.

Chili.

Tp

April-May.

206

HOETUS MORTOLENSIS
Ker.N.
Pff.
ii.

MARICA
cinae.
11.

5.

147. Iridaceae-Iridoidese-Mari;

humilis Lodd. B.
June. longifolia Link.

C.

t.

1801

Bak. Irid. 63. S. Brazil.

Bak.

Irid. 62.

Brazil.
;

11.

MARRUBIUM
MARSDENIA

candidissimum L.
B.

DC. Dalmatia, Bosnia.


if.

L.N.

Pff. iv. 3a.


xii.

230. Labiatse-Stachyoidese
Fl. d'lt. n. 8100.

451

Italy,

June-July.
Pff.
iv.

Br. N.
viii.

2.

291. Asclepiadacese1?
.

Cynanchoideae-Tylophoreae-Marsdeniinse.

erecta B. Br.

DC.

616.

Syria, Turkey.

Summer.

MARTYNIA L.N.
annua L.N.
lutea Lindl.

Pff. iv. db.

269. MartyniaceaB.

Pff. l.c.M. diandra Glox. DC. ix. 253. Mexico and other tropical countries. 0. Summer.

Proboscidea lutea Stapf.

proboscidea Glox.

= Proboscidea Jussieui Steud.


Pff.
ii.

MASSONIA
Scilleae.

Thunb.N.
-BaA;.

5.

70. Liliaceae-Lilioideae-

versicolor

Fl. Cap. vi. 413.


iii.

S. Africa.

2^.

MATTHIOLA B. Br.N. Pff.


-Hesperidinae.

2.

202. Cruciferae-Hesperideae

incana B. Br. DC.


region, S. Europe.

i.

132
2f
.

rupestris DC.
Spring.

i.

135;

Fl. d'lt. n. 1308. Mediterranean Winter and spring. Fl. d'lt. n. 1308^8.- S. Italy. if.
;

sinuata B. Br.DC. i. 133; Fl. region. 0. Spring.

d'lt. n.

1309. Mediterranean

MAURANDIA
Mexico.

Ort.

N.

Pff.

iv.

36. 61.

Scrophulariaceaet.

Antirrhinoideae-Antirrhineae.

Barclaiana Lindl.DC.

x.

297

Lodd. B. C.
3&. 61.

1381.

If.

All the year.

erubescens A. Gray. N. Pff. erubescens Zucc. DC. x. 297


Mexico.
1|.

iv.
;

LopJiospermtim

B.

M.

t.

3037 and 3038.

All the year.

MAUROCENIA
Cap.
Tp
.

L.

N.

Pff.

iii.

5.

215. Celastraceae-Cassini215.

oideae-Eucassiuieae.

frangularia Mill.
i.

N.

Pff.

iii.

5.

465.

Cassine Maurocenia L.

M. capensis Sond. Fl. DC. ii. 11. Cape.

March.

HOETUS MORTOLBNSIS

207

MAXILLARIA

Bz.

& Pav.N.

Pff.

ii.

6.

187. Orchidaceae-

Monandrse-Maxillariinae.
Nich. Diet. Suppl. 527. lepidota Lindl. October-December.

Colombia.

U.

MAYTENUS

Feuill.N.
Pff.

Pff.

iii.

5.

205. Celastracese-CelaDC.
ii.

stroideae-Eucelastreae.

Boaria Molin.N.

I.

c.M.

chilensis

9. Chili.

April-May.

Medeola asparagoides L.

Asparagtts medeoloides.
iii.

JMEDICAGO L.N.
natse-Trifolieae.

Pff.

3.

245. Leguminosae-Papiliot.

arborea L.DC.
t.

ii.

173; Moris, Fl. Sard.

35

Lodd. B.

1379;

Fl. d'lt. n.

1928. Canary

Islands, N. Africa,

S.

Europe, Asia Minor.


ii.

t?

April-May.

*sativa L.DC. April-May.

173;

Fl. d'lt. n.

1930. Europe. 2^.

IMELALEUCA

L.N.

Pff.

iii.

7.

95. Myrtaceae-Leptosperiii.

moidese-Leptospermese-Leptosperminee.

acuminata F. Miill. W. Australia. Tp

Fl.
iii.

Austr.

132.

Victoria,
iii.

S.

and
S.

armillaris
cuticularis
Australia.

Sm.DC.

213;

Fl. Austr.
l?
.

146. N.
iii.

Wales, Victoria,

S. Australia.
iii.

April-May.
Austr.

Lab.DC.

214;

Fl.

148.W.
;

Tp

March-May.
iii.

decussata B. Br.DC.
t.

214

Fl. Austr.
S.

iii.

133

B.

M.
.

2268; Lodd. B. C.

t.

1208.Victoria,
;

Australia. i?

May-June. densa B. Br.DC.

iii.

215

Fl. Austr.

iii.

156. W.
Austr.

Australia.

ip

June.

diosmifolia Andr.

DC.
.

iii.

212;
34

Fl.

iii.

130.

W.
iii.

Australia.

S.

T?

May-June.
i.

ericifolia Sm. Exot. Bot.

t.

DC.

iii.

213

Fl. Aiistr.
April.

159. N.
F.

filifolia

Mull. Fl.

Wales, Victoria, Tasmania.


Ausir.
iii.

T?

151. W. Australia. Tp
iii.

May.
fulgens B.
B. C.
t.

Br.DC.

iii.

214

Fl. Austr.
iii.
;

131

Lodd.
Lodd.

378; Bossche,

hypericifolia Sm. DC. iii. 214 Fl. Austr. iii. 131 June-July. B. C. t. 199. W. Australia. T?
.

Ic. Sel.

97. W. Australia. Tj
;

incana B. Br.
Australia.

DC.
.

iii.

215;

Fl.

Austr.

iii.

157. W.

May.

208

HOETUS MORTOLENSIS
(continued).

MELALEUCA
linariifolia
140.

Sm. Exot. Bot.


S.

t.

56;

DC.

iii.
.

214

Fl. Austr.

iii.

Queensland, N.

nesophila F. Mull.
July,

Fl. Austr.
Bot.
t.

Wales.

June-July.

iii.

150.

W. Australia.

i?

nodosa Sm. Exot.


158
;

Vent. Jard.

Malm.

t.

35; DC. iii. 213; Fl. Austr. iii. 112. Queensland, N. S. Wales.
145.

^^ Preissiana Schau.
Australia.

Fl. Austr.
June-July.

iii.

Victoria,
iii.

S.

and

W.

pulchella B.
B. C.
t.

Br.DC. iii. 214 200. W. Australia. b


;

Fl. Austr.
.

141

Lodd.
Wales,
T?

pustulata Hooh.
sparsiflora Turcz.

fil.

Fl.

June-July.
iii.
.

Austr.

160.

Victoria, S. Australia, Tasmania.

Fl. Austr.
iii.

^
148.

N.
iii.

S.

iii.
;

W. Australia.
iii.

styphelioides
Wales.

Sm.DC.
J^ly-

212

Fl. Austr.

144. N.

S.

thymifolia Sin. Exot. Bot. t. 36 DC. B. M. t. 1868 Lodd. B. C. 134


; ;

214

Fl. Austr.
S.

iii.

t.

439. N.
M.
t.

Wales,

Victoria.

Wilsonii F. Milll.Fl. Austr.


toria, S. Australia.

iii.

134

B.

6131.Vic-

June.
Pff.
iii.

IMELANOSELINUM
N.
Pff.
t.
iii.

Hoffm.N.
iv.

8.

247. Umbelli;

ferse-Apioideae-Laserpitieae-Thapsiineae.

decipiens Hoffm.DC.
8.

208

245.

fig.

76.

Loioe, Man. Fl. Mad. 362 Thapsia decipiens Hook. fil.


;

B. M.

5670. Madeira.
Ker.

l?

MELASPH.^RULA
-Gladioleee.

N.
t.

Pff.

ii.

5.

155.

Iridaceae-Ixioideae
;

graminea Ker. in B. M. 115. S. Africa. 2^.

615

Bak. Irid. 189

Fl. Cap. vi.

April.
Pff.
iii.

IMELHANIA

Forsk.

N.

6.

76.

Sterculiaceae-

Dombeyeae.

Erythroxylon B. Br.DC.

i.499

B.

M.

1.

1000. St. Helena.

^.

MELIA
t.

L.N.
160
;

Pff.

iii.

4.

Azedarach L.DC.
n. 2534.

286. Meliaceae-Melioideae-Melieae. i. 621; B. M. t. 1066; Wight, Ic.


;

Brandts, F. Fl. 68

Fl. Brit. Ind.

i.

544

Fl. d'lt.

Persia, India, China, &c. ^


= M.
Azedarach L.

May-June.

sempervirens Sw.

HOETUS MOKTOLENSIS

209

IMELIANTHUS
Meliantheae.
S.

L.

N.
Cap.

Pff.

iii.

5.

381. Melianthaceget.

comosus Vahl.Fl.
Africa.
Tp
.

i.

367

B.

M.

301, as

M. minor.

March-May.

intermedius Berger in Gard. Chron. 1911, ii. 41. Garden origin. March-May. 17 major L.DC. i. 708; Fl. Cap. i. 367. S. Africa. T?.

May- Jane.
pectinatus Harv.Fl. Cap. l Add. 21; B. M.
S. Africa.
t.

6557.

Tj

November-March.
fil.

Trimenianus Hook.

= pectinatus.
70. GramineEe-Festuceae.
i.

MELICA L.N.
altissima L. April-May.

Kunth, En.

Pff.

ii.

2.

377.

S.

Europe, N. Asia.
d'lt. n.

if..

*Bauhinii All.Kunth, En.


terranean region.
ciliata L.

Kunth,
U.

2^

i. 376 Fl. April-May.

286. Medi-

N.Africa.

En. i. 375; Fl. April-May.


Pff.
iii.

d'lt. n.

285.

Europe,

MELICOCCA

L.N.

5.

323. Sapindaceas-Melicoccese.

bijuga Juss.DC. i. 615; Fl. West Ind. 127.Trinidad, Tp Central and S. America.

MELICOPE
Zealand.

Forst.N.

Pff.

iii.

4.

122. Eutaceae-EutoideseFl. N. Zeald.

Zanthoxyleae-Evodiinae

ternata Forst.DC.

i.

723

Hdb.

40. New

Tp

MELICYTUS

Forst.N. Pff. iii. 6. 330.Violaceae-Einoreege. ramiflorus Forst. Hdb. Fl. N. Zeald. 17. New Zealand,

Norfolk Island.
Lk.
Lk.

Tp

JMELOCACTUS
communis
B.

d Otto.N.

Pff.

iii.

6a.

190. CactaceaeWest Bid. 300;

Cereoideae-Echinocacteae.

& Otto.K Schum. 463


f.

Fl.

M.
.

t.

3090. W. Indies. 24.

Maxoni
24

Base.

Monatsschrft.
5.

Summer.

K. 1909, 81.

Guatemala.

Summer.

MELOTHRIA
iii.

L.N. Pff. iv.

15. Cucurbitaceae-Melothrieaei.

Melothriinae.

punctata Cogn.
305.

Bossche, Pilogyne suavis


Comoro

Ic. Sel.

17.

Schrad.

Bryonia punctataDC. Africa, Madagascar,

Mauritius,

Islands, Java, Celebes.

2^.

Summer.
p

210

HOETUS MORTOLENSIS
Toiirn.N.
102
Pff.
iii.

MENISPERMUM
Laubh.
i.

2.

83. Menispermacese1910
;

Cocculese-Menisperminae.

canadense L.DC.
325.

i.

B.

M.

t.

Schneider, Hdb.

Atlantic N. America.
Pff.
iii.

2^.

Summer.

MENTZELIA

L.N.

6a.

109. Loasacete-Mentzeli-

oideae-Mentzelieae.

Conzatti Greenm.

Mexico.
Pff.
iii.

Tp

tMERYTA

Forst.N.

8.

macrophylla Seem,
Islands.

in Bonplandia, x.

34. Araliaceae-Schefflereae. Samoa 1862, 294.

Tp

June.
x.
ii.

Sinclairii Seem, in Bonpla^idia,

1862, 295
344. 370

Zeald. 104; Gard. Chron. 1898,

Hdb. Fl. N. and 1903, ii. 422,


;

with figure.

New Zealand.

Tj

JMESEMBRIANTHEMUM

L.N.

Pff.

iii.

16.

45. Aizoacese

-Ficoidese-Mesembrianthemese.

Australia, agninum Haio. Fl. Cap. Cape. May. angulatum Thunb. DC. Mesembr. Cape. 0.
Mesembr. 205.
If.

abyssinicum Bgl. Berger,Mesembr. 76. Abyssinia, Eritrea. U. May. acinaciforme L. DC. iii. 428 Fl. Cap. ii. 412 Berger, Mesembr. 202. fig. 40 B. M. t. 5539. Cape. U May. aequilaterale Haw. DC. iii. 429; Fl. Austr. iii. 324; Berger,

Chili.

If..
;

April.

ii.

398

Berger, Mesembr. 269.

iii.

448

Fl. Cap.

ii.

454

Berger,

36.

Summer.
ii.

aureum L.DC.
barbatum
bicorne
Cape.
L.

iii.

437; Fl. Cap.


fig.
iii.

418; B. M.
if
Tp
.

t.

262;

Berger, Mesembr. 165.

30.

Mesembr.

DC. Fl. Cap. 440 Cape. June-July. Sonder. Fl. Cap. 432; Berger,
;

Cape.

May.
446
;

ii.

Berger,

80.

if

i?

ii.

Mesembr.
394;
418;

63.

If
iii.

bifidum Haio.DC.
Mesembr. 258.

blandum
,,

Cape. Haio. DC.


fig.

if.

420; Fl. Cap. April-May.


436;
Fl.
Tp

ii.

Berger,

iii.

Cap.
.

ii.

Berger,

Mesembr. 162.
var.

29.Cape. if

May.
.

curviflorum Berger, Mesembr. 163. DC. iii. 436 Fl. Cap. ii. 418. Cape. 2| T? May. Bolusii Hook. fil. in B. M. t. 6664 Berger, Mesevibr. 275. figs. 60 and 61. S. Africa. September-October. if.
;

HOETUS MORTOLENSIS

211

MESEMBRIANTHEMUM
Bosscheanum

(continued).

Fl. Cap. ii. 409 brevicaule Haiv. DC. iii. 426 Berger, Mesembr. 216. Cape. if. Brownii Hook. fil. in B. M. t. 6985 Berger, Mesembr. 148. April-May. Cape. 1(. Tj
;

Berger, Mesembr. 269.

Cape.

U. October.
;

bulbosum

Hato.

Mesembr. 81.

DC. Cape.

iii.

440

Fl.

Cap.

ii.

447

Berger,

%
iii.

calamiforme L.DC.

424; Fl. Cap.


2f
.

ii.

405; B. M.

t.

7775

candens Haio.
90.

DC. 442 Fl. Cap. 445 Berger, Mesembr. Cape. %. May-June. Fl. Cap. caninum Haio. DC. 419 Berger, 398 Mesembr. 249. Cape. May- June. canum Haw. DC. 419; Fl. Cap. 396; Berger, Mesembr. 279. Cape. %. September-October. Fl. Cap. carinans Haio. DC. 423 Berger, 400 Mesembr. 2i5. Cape. U. May. caulescens Mill. DC. 53 Fl. Cap. 432, PI. Gr. 421; Berger, Mesembr. 188. Cape. May-June. ^
iii.
;

Berger, Mesembr. 225,

Cape.
iii.
;

May.

ii.

ii.

2f

iii.

ii.

iii.

ii.

iii.

t.

ii.

is.

coccineum Haxo.DC.
436
;

iii.

438, PI. Gr.


;

t.
;

83

Fl. Cap.

ii.

Lodcl. B. C.

t.

1033
.

B.

M.
;

t.

59

Berger, Mesembr.

150. fig. 26. Cape. T? May. Gongestum Salm. Fl. Cap. ii. 416

Berger, Mesembr. 183.

^ Cooperi Hook.
v,
.

Cape.

May.
fil.

in B.

M.

t.

6312

Berger, Mesembr. 76.

Cape. If.

May.
iii.

cordifolium L.DC. Berger, Mesembr. 53.

449, PI. Gr.


3-4.

1.

102

Fl. Cap.
.

ii.

456

Cape. corniculatum L.DC. 426, PI. Gr. 408; Berger, Mesembr. lyj. Cape crassifolium L.DC. 427, PI. Gr. 411; Berger, Mesembr. 10Q. Cape.
fig. 8,
iii.

if

Nearly always.
;

t.

108 175

Fl. Cap.

ii.

If.

Spring.
;

iii.

t.

Fl. Cap.

ii.

if.
;

May.

crassulinum DC. iii. 445 Fl. Cap. ii. 451 Berger, Mesembr. May. 72. fig. 11. i. Cape. If crystallinum L.DC. iii. 448, PI. Gr. t. 128 Fl. Cap. ii.
;

453

Berger, Mesembr. 35.

Madeira, Canaries. 0. Summer. deltoides Mill. DC. iii. 433, PI. Gr. t. 53 Fl. Cap. ii. 421 Cape. May-June. Berger, Mesembr. 190. ^ DC. iii. 433 var. muricatum Berger, Mesembr. 90. ,,
;

Cape,

Mediterranean region,

Fl. Cap.

ii.

421. Cape. 1?
p 2

212

HORTUS MORTOLENSIS
(continued).
;

MESEMBRIANTHEMUM
densum Haiv.B. M.
Berger, Mesembr. 85.
t.

1220
iii.

DC.
i.

iii.

diversifolium Haw. DC. Mesembr. 135. Cape.

fig. 14.

Cape.
; .

425
l(.

ii. 447 December, Fl. Cap. ii. 407 Berger, December-January and

441

Fl. Cap.

Tp

later.

dolabriforme L.DC. iii. 423; Fl. Cap. ii. 400; Berger, Mesembr. 213. fig. 43 B. M. t. 32. Cape. l? Summer. echinatum Ait. DC. iii. 441, PI. Gr. t. 24; Fl. CajhiiAAS; Berger, Mesembr. 77. fig. 12. Nearly always. Cape. l^ Tp Ecklonis Salm. Fl. Cap. ii. 441 Berger, Mesembr. 103. fig. 16. Cape. Summer, December-January. 2^ tp edule L. DC. iii. 428 Fl. Cap. ii. 412 Berger, Mesembr.
; .

204. Cape. 2^.

April-May.
t.
T?

elegans Jacq. Hort. Sch. iv. 18. Berger, Mesembr. 148. Cape.

436

Fl. Cap.

ii.

440

falcatum L. DC. iii. 433 Fl. Cap. ii. 420 Berger, Mesembr. 188. Cape. 2^ Tp May. falciforme Haio.DC. iii. 433 Fl. Cap. ii. 420 Berger, Mesembr. 187. Cape. % T? May-June. fastigiatum Haio.DC. iii. 446, PI. Gr. t. 35 Fl. Cap. ii.
; ; . ; ;

June,

Cape. ^ 397 felinum Haw. DC. 419, PI. Gr. 158; Fl. Cap. Berger, Mesembr. 267. Cape. %. October. 433 Berger, 445 Fl. Cap. flexuosum Haiv. DC. Mesembr. 122. Cape. 446 Berger, floribundum Haio. DC. 441 Fl. Cap. Mesembr. 91. Cape. May-June. 411 Berger, geminiflorum Haio. DC. 427 Fl. Cap.
433
;

Berger, Mesembr. 120.


iii.

t.

ii.

iii.

ii.

i?

iii.
T^

ii.

if.

iii.

ii.

Mesembr. 212. Cape. 2|: Tj May. geniculiflorum L.DC. iii. 445, PI. Gr. t. 17; Fl. Cap. ii. May451 Berger, Mesembr. 63. fig. 8. i. Cape. ^
. ;

June.

glaucum L.DC.
439
;

iii.

437, PI. Gr.


;

t.

146

Jacq.

H. Sch. t
T?
.

Fl. Cap.

ii.

417

Berger, Mesembr. 164.

Cape.

Fl. Cap. 439 Berger, Mesembr. 145. 435 Berger, granulicaule Haio. DC. 446 Fl. Cap. Mesembr. Cape. 428; Berger, Haworthii Don.DC. 439; Fl. Cap. Mesembr. 155. Cape. Spring.
glomeratum
Cape. L.
ii.
;

May.

Tp

June,

iii.

ii.

59.

Tp

iii.

ii.

\^

HOETUS MOETOLENSIS

213

ME SEMBRI ANTHEMUM
heteropetalum Hmv.DC.
Mesembr. 195.
414
iii.
.

429

Fl. Cap.

ii.

413; Berger,
Fl. Cap.

Cape.

Tp

June.
;

inclaudens Haiv.DC.
;

iii.

430 440 446

B.

M.

t.
Tp
.

1663

ii.

Berger, Mesemhr. 196.


iii.

Cape.
;

May-June.
ii.

intonsum Haiv.DC.
6057
;

Fl. Cap.

446
.

B. M.

t.

Berger, Mesembr. 83.


iii.

fig.
;

14. Cape. Tp
Fl.

Spring.
;

junceum Haio.DC.
Mesembr.
58.

Cap.

ii.

434

Berger,

Cape. ^
iii.
ii.

lacerum Haio.DC.

429, PI. Gr.

t.

89; Fl. Cap.


.

ii.

413;

Berger, Mesembr. 193. Fl. Cap. Iseve Thunh.

fig.

38. Cape. 1?
;

May-June.

136

Berger, Mesemhr. 136.

Cape.

4.

Spring.
Eckl.

Lehmannii

420 Berger, Mesembr. 187. lunatum Willd. Fl. Cap. Spring. Cape. U 397 Berger, 419 Fl. Cap. lupinum Haiu. DC. September-October. Mesembr. 268. Cape. 420 Berger, Fl. Gap. 433 maximum Haio.DC. 185. Cape. ^ January. Mesembr. 441 Berger, Mesembr. 101. megarhizum Don. Fl. Cap. Spring and summer. Cape. Berger, 392 417 Fl. Cap. minimum Haio.DC. October-January. Mesembr. 286. Cape. 1376; 392; B. M. 417; Fl. Cap. minutum Hatu.DC. Cape. Berger, Mesemhr. 285. 430 Berger, Mesembr. 130. molle Ait.Fl. Cap. Cape. ^ December-February. 253 Berger, Mesemhr. 253. multiceps Salm. Fl. Cap. Spring. Cape. 426 Berger, 431 Fl. Cap. multiflorum Haiu.DC. May-June. Mesembr. 110. Cape. 395 Berger, Mesemhr. multipunctatum Salm. March-April. 257. Cape. 398 Berger, Mesemhr. 272. musGulinum Haio. Fl. Cap. Cape. Summer. Gr. 60 Jacq. H. Sch. 431, mutabile Haio. DC. 414 Berger, Mesembr. 195. Cape. 440 Fl. Cap.
linguiforme L. summer.
Tp
.

Mesembr. 129.

fig.

Berger, ii. 430 Spring and summer. SpringCape. Berger, Mesembr. 239. 1[

&

22.

Zeyh. Fl. Cape. U.

Cap.

ii.

iii.

ii.

1(..

iii.

ii.

ii.

Tp

iii.

ii.

14..

iii.

ii.

t.

fig.

65.
;

i.

2^

ii.

fig.

23.

14

ii.

H..

iii.

ii.

^1?.

Soncler,
v..

ii.

fig.

55. iv.

ii.

H..

iii.

PI.

t.

t.

ii.

1?

June.

214

HOETUS MORTOLENSIS
nobile Haio. DC. iii. 419 Mesembr. 264. Cape. !(..
iii.

MESEMBRIANTHEMUM

noctiflorum L.DC. 444, PL Gr. 431; 10; Fl. Cap. Berger, Mesembr. 123. Cape. Summer. nodiflorum L.DC. 447, PL Gr. 452; 88; FL Cap. Berger, Mesembr. Canaries, Madeira, Mediterranean region. 0. May-June. Berger, obconellum Haiu. DC. 417 FL Cap. 391 Mesembr. 288. October-November. Cape. 417 FL Cap. 392 Berger, obcordellum Haw.DC. Mesembr. 287. Cape. February. Spring and ochraceum Berger, Mesembr. 234. Cape. summer. 367. opticum MarL Berichte Deutsche Bot. Ges. German S.W. 422 perfoliatum MiU. FL Cap. Berger, Mesembr. 104. Cape. ^ June-July, 142, pinnatifidum L. fiLB. M. 67 DC. PL Gr. 448; FL Cap. 455; Berger, Mesembr. Cape. 0.
t.
ii. Vi
.

{continued).
;

Fl.

CaiJ.

ii.

398

Benjcr,

iii.

t.

ii.

41.

S. Africa,

iii.

ii.

fig.

65.

iii.

1(..

iii.

ii.

2|.

V..

xxvii.

Africa,

21

ii.

fig.

17.

i.

t.

t.

iii.

ii.

33.

Summer.

pomeridianum L.DC.
458
;

iii.

450

B. M.

t.

540

FL

Cap.

ii.

Berger, Mesembr. 29.

Cape. 0.
;

Summer.

pseudotruncatellum Berger, Mesembr.


Africa.

289.

DC. 424 FL Cap. Mesembr. 230. 48. Cape. 434 FL Cap. pulchellum Haw. DC. Mesembr. 167. Cape. Spring. FL Cap. pygmseum Haw. DC. 434 Mesembr. 116. Cape. Fl. Cap. 447 pyropaeum Haiu. DC.
pubescens Haiv.
iii.

German S.W.
ii.

if.

Spring.

405 424 425 452

Berger,

fig.

2|.

iii.

ii.

Berger,

if

T?

iii.

ii.

Berger,

fig.

18.

iii.

2^.

iii.

ii.

Berger,

Mesembr. 38
.

B. M.

t.

2144, as

M.

tricolor

Willd. Cape.
ii.

DC. Cape. ramulosum Haio. DC. Mesembr. 258. Cape.


Mesembr. 257.

Summer. quadrifidum Haio.

iii. 1|1. iii.

420
421

FL

Cap.

394
394

Berger,

Autumn.
;

Fl. Cap.

ii.

Berger,

l^.

February.
fig.

Rehneltianum
May-June.

Berger, Mesembr. 245.

52.

Cape.
;

V,.

relaxatum

Willd.

Mesembr. 45.

DC. Cape.

iii.

449

FL

Cap.

ii.

457

Berger,

If.

July-October.

HOETUS MOETOLENSIS

215

MESEMBRIANTHEMUM
rhomboideum
247.
fig.

Salm.

Fl.

Cap.

ii.

400

Berger, Mesemhr.

53. Cape. 2;. May-July. Fl. Cap. rigidicaule Haio. DC. iii. 427

ii.

410
425
Tp

Berger,

Mesemhr. 210.

rigidum Haio.
Mesemhr. 112.
,,

DC.
fig.

fig.

42.

iii.
i.

18.

June, tenellum Berger, Mesemhr. 112. Fl. Cap. 420; Berger, Mesemhr. 185. May-June. Fl. Cap. 395 Berger, 421 rostratum L. DC. Mesemhr. 255. Cape. Fl. Cap. 413 Berger, 428 rubricaule Haxv. DC. Mesemhr. 200. Cape. April-May. 423 Fl. Cap. 399 Berger, scapigerum Haiv. DC. Mesemhr. 252. Cape. Spring. SchoUii Salm.DC. 410; Berger, 427; Fl. Cap. Mesemhr. 210. Cape. 435 Berger, Mesemhr. Cape. simile Sonder, Fl. Cap.
var.
.

Cape. ^ 432 Fl. Cape.


.

Spring.

Cap.
.

ii.

Berger,

Tp

June.

roseum

Willd.

ii.

Tp

iii.

ii.

fig.

55.

i.-iii.
iii.

l^..

April.

ii.

V>

iii.

ii.

ijl.

iii.

ii.

T?

April,

ii.

62.

-^
spectabile Haio.DC.
Fl. Cap.
ii.

iii.

436; B. M.

t.

396, PI. Gr.


fig.

1.

153

419

Berger, Mesemhr. 161.

28.

i.

Cape.
;

Spring.

spinosum

L.

Cape. May-June. splendens Fl. Cap. Berger, 445 432 Mesemhr. 119. Cape. Spring. stellatum Mill DC. Gr. 447 440, 29; Fl. Cap. Berger, Mesemhr. Cape. December. stelligerum Haio.DC. 440; B. M. 70; Fl. Cap. 447; Berger, Mesemhr. Cape. Spring. 443 Fl. Cap. subincanum Haw. DC. 441 Berger, Mesemhr. 102. Cape. ^ Summer. Haw. := rigidum tenellum. tigrinum Haio. DC. 419 Fl. Cap. Berger, 397 Mesemhr. 266. October. Cape. tuberosum L.DC. Gr. 443, 440; 78; Fl. Cap. Berger, Mesemhr. 100. Cape. ^ Spring. Fl. Cap. 426 Berger, tumidulum Haw. DC. 431 Mesemhr. Cape. May. Fl. Cap. Berger, umbellatum L.DG. 427 431 Mesemhr. 114. Cape. ^. May.
Mesemhr. 162.
fig.

DC. L. DC.
fig.

iii.
i.

440

Fl.
Tp

Cap.
.

ii.

430

Berger,

24.

iii.

ii.

19. ii.-iv.
iii.

t?

Fl.

t.

ii.

84.

if.

iii.

t.

ii.

82.

fig.

14. iv.-v.
;

T?

iii.

ii.

fig.

16.

i.-ii.

tejiellum

var.

iii.

ii.

fig.

57.

1(..

iii.

PI.

t.

ii.

fig.

16. iii.-iv.
;

iii.
T?

ii.

114:.

iii.

ii.

216

HORTUS MORTOLENSIS
umbelliflorum Jacq.
Mesembr. 121.
Mesembr. 105.
J5g.

MESEMBRIANTHEMUM
19.

DC. 446 Fl. Cap. 433 Cape. ^ May-June.


iii.
;

(continued).

ii.

Berger,

i.

uncinatum Mill DC.

iii.

431

Fl. Gap.

ii.

423

Berger,

June. Cape. Berger, 425 432 Fl. Cap. vaginatum Haw. DC. June. Mesembr. 110. Cape. ^ 409 Berger, Mesembr. 138. validum Haw. Fl. Cap. Cape. 438, PI. Gr. 36 Fl. Cap. verruculatum L.DC. Cape. ^ May-June, 428 Berger, Mesembr. 126. June, vespertinum Berger, Mesembr. 253. Cape. vittatum N. E. Br. Berger, Mesembr. 260. Cape.
14..

iii.

ii.

fig.

18.

ii.

ii.

fig.

24.

iii.

71

iii.

t.

ii.

fig.

21.

!(..

If.

April.

Wettsteinii
October.

Berger, Mesembr. 285.

fig.

65.

iii.

Cape.

U.

Zeyheri Salm.
Cape.

Fl.

Gap.

ii.

429

Berger, Mesembr. 157.

Tj

April.
iii.

MESPILUS L. N.Pff.
Orient.

3. 26.

Rosaceae-Pomoideae-Pomariae.
;

germanica L.DC.

ii.

633

Fl. d'lt. n.

1843. S. Europe,

Tj

April.

jMETROSIDEROS
hypericifolia A. Zealand, \ .

Banks. N.
Cunn.

Pff.

iii.

7.

87. Myrtaceae71.

Leptospermoideae-Leptospermeae-Metrosiderinae.

New New Zealand. lucida Menzies. Hdh. Fl. N. Zeald. New Zealand. tomentosa A. Cunn. Hdb. Fl. N. Zeald.
Fl.

Hdb.

N. Zeald.

71.

T^

72.

Tp

June-July.

MEZONEURUM
Malaya.

Desf. N.

Pff.

iii.

3.

176. Leguminosaeii.

cucuUatum Wight & Am. Fl.

Caesalpinioideas-Eucaesalpinieae.
Brit. Ind.

258.

India,

f?

MICHAUXIA L'Her.N.
Tchihatcheffii Fisch.
B. M.
t.

Pff. iv. 5.

52. CampanulaceaB-Cam457.

panuloideae-Campanuleae-Campanulinae.

campanuloides L'Her.

DC.
2.

vii.

Orient.

14..
i.

May.
182

d Heldr.Gard.
.

Chron. 1897,

7742. Asia Minor. if

May.

MICHELIA L.N.

fuscata Blume. Journ. Linn. Soc. xxiii. 24. -Magnolia fuscata May-June. Andr. DC. i. 81 B, M. t, 1008. China. V.
; .

Pff.

iii.

17. Magnoliaceae-Magnolieae.

HOETUS MOETOLENSIS

217

MICROLEPIA
Davalliese.

Presl
/.
2^.

platyphylla
Ceylon.

N. Sm. Hook.
Pff.

Pff.

i.

4.

215.

PolypodiaceseIndia,

& Bah.

Syn. Fil. 99.

Micromeria Benth.

= Satureia.
ii.

IMILTONIA

Lindl.~N.

6.

199.

Orchidacese-Mon-

andrae-Oncidiinse-Odontoglosseae.

Regnelli Bchb.fil.B. M.

t.

5436. S. Brazil. 4.

MIMOSA

Leguminosae-Mimosoideaeacanthocarpa Benth. N. Mexico. Summer. 426. Brazil. pudica L. DC. Summer. 385. Brazil. ramulosa Benth. Hook. Journ. Bot. Summer. Bot. Bom. Spegazzinii Pirotta. Ann. 1887, 132 Nich. Diet. 535. Argentina. Summer.
L. N. Eumimosese.
Pff.
iii.

3.

115.

Pff.

I.

c.

17

ii.

T?

iv.

Ij

1st.

iii.

S20ppl.

Tp

MIMULUS

L.N.

Pff. iv. 36.

71. Scrophulariaceae-Antirrhi-

noideae-Gratioleae.

hybridus Hort.

MINA

Llav.

N. Lex. N.

Pff.

I.

c.

72.

Pff. iv.

Garden Spring. 3a. Convolvulaceae-Conorigin.


.

25.

volvuloideae-Convolvulese-Convolvulinae.

lobata Llav.

0.

& Lex.DC.

ix.

337

B. M.

t.

7689. Mexico.

Autumn.
Pff.
iii.

MIRABILIS L.N.
Boerhaviinae.

16.

24. Nyctaginacege-Mirabileffi;

dichotoma L.
t.

139.

DC. 428 Central America.


xiii. 2.
if..

Descoiirt. Fl.

Med. Ant.

ii.

Jalapa L.DC.

xiii. 2.

427
2.

B. M.

t.

371. Central America.


t.

!(..

Summer-Autumn.

longiflora

Mexico.

L.DC.
2^.

xiii.

428

Smith, Exot. Bot.

23.

MirasoUa Schultz Bip.

= Tithonia.
Pff.
ii.

MISCANTHUS
pogoneas.

Anderss.N.
t.

2.

23. Graminese-Andro-

sinensis Anderss.

B. M. 7304. Eulalia japonica Trin. China, Japan. Summer. var. gracillima Hort, Nich. Diet. Suppl. 535.
If.
,,

Garden

origin.

-if.

Summer.

218

HOETUS MOETOLENSIS
Tourn.

MITELLA

N.

Pff.

iii.

2a. 63.

Saxifragacese-Saxifra-

goideae-Saxifrageae.

pentandra Hook.B. M.

t.

2933. N. W. America. 2^.

MITRARIA Cav.N. Pff. iv. 3b.


deae-Coronanthereae.

162. Gesneriacese-Cyrtandroi;

coccinea Gav.DG.
Chili.

vii.

537

B. M.

t.

4462

Fl. d. S.

t.

385.

f?

Spring.

MOLUCELLA
Lamiinae.
Isevis

L.N.
xii.

Pff. iv. 3a.

258. Labiatae-Stachyoideae;

L.DG.

513
xii.

Nich. Diet. 376

B. M.

t.

1852.

Asia Minor, Orient.

0.
513;

Summer.
Fl.
cl'It.

spinosa L.DG.

n.

Mediterranean region, Syria, Palestine.

3146. Southern Summer.


.

MOMORDICA
Lid.
ii.

L.N.

Pff.

iv.

5.

23. Cucurbitaceae-Cucurii.

biteae-Cucumerinae.

Balsamina L.DG.
617
;

iii.

311

Fl. Trop. Afr.


iii. 1.

537

Fl. Brit.

Desc. Fl. Med. Ant.

164.Tropical
t.

Africa

and Asia. 0. Summer. Charantia L.DG. iii. 311


504
;

B. M.
t.

2455

Wight,

Ic.

t.

Fl. Brit. Lid.

ii.

616

Fl. d. S.

594.Tropical

Africa

and Asia. 0. Summer. cochinchinensis Spreng. Fl. Brit. Lid. ii. 618. M. mixta Eoxb. B. M. t. 5145. Tropical E. Asia. 0. Summer. Huberi Tod. = involucrata. involucrata E. Mey.Fl. Gap. ii. 491 B. M. t. 6932 Bef. Bot. t. 223. Natal. 0. Summer.

Schinzii Gogn.
.

Lid.

Ketv. Siippl.

i.

281.

S.

W.

Africa.

Summer.
Pff.
iii.

MONANTHES Haio.-N.
agriostaphys
Spring.
Ghrist,

2 a.

32. Crassulaceae.

Spicil.

Gan. 162.
Spring.

Canaries.
!(..

l^.

agriostaphys x muralis. 2^. atlantica Ball. B. M. t. 5988.

fil.

Morocco.
;

Spring.

brachycaulon Webb, Phyt.

i.

202

Christ, Spicil. Gan. 116.

Teneriffe.

14..

Spring.
atlantica.

muralis Hook.
115.

polyphylla Haiv.

Webb,

Phyt.
if.

i.

203

Ghrist, Spicil. Can.

Madeira, Teneriffe.

Spring.

HOETUS MOETOLBNSIS

219

MONARDA
fistulosa

L.N.

Pff. iv. 3 a.

289.

Labiata-Stachyoide*t.

Monardeae.

L.DG.
if..

xii.

361

B. M.

Texas.

145. From Canada

to

Spring-summer.
Pff.
ii.

tMONSTERA

Adans.N.

3.

120. Aracese-MonsteV.

roidese-Monstereae.

deliciosa Liehm.

Engl. Arac. {B.


& Lex.N.

C), 23

6.

111.

Phib-

dendron perkisum Kunth & Bouche.

^Mexico,

Guatemala.

Tp .

Summer.
Llav.
Pff. iv. 5.

JMONTANOA

232. Compositsefigure.

Heliantheae-Verbesininae.

B. M. 8143. Mexico. ^ October564. tomentosa Llav. d Lex, DC. cordifolia DC. 565.) Mexico. ^ December. 122. Costa Eica. Wercklei Berger in Gard. Chron. 1911, December-January. 146. IridaceaB-IridoideaB-Iridinge. MOR.^A L. N.
mollissima Brongn.
April.
t.
.

bipinnatifida C. Koch. Nich. Diet. Gard. 380, with T? Mexico. December.

v.

(var.

I.

c.

ii.

T7

Pff.

ii.

5.

angusta Ker
13.

in B.
If..

M.

t.

1276
60

Bah. Irid. 50

Fl. Cap. vi.

Cape.

iridioides

L.Bak.
t.

Irid.

Fl. Cap. vi. 25

B.

M.

t.

Jacg. H. Sch.

196.

S. Africa.
;

693

21.

June.
;

Pavonia Ker in B. M. t. 1247 Bak. hid. 59 Fl. Gap. vi. 23 Jacq. H. Sch. t. 10. Cape. If Robinsoniana F. Milll. Fl. Austr. vi. 409; Bak. Irid. 60; B. M. t. 7212. Lord Howe's Island. 24. July.
;

MORICANDIA DC.N.
-Moricandiinae.

Pff.

iii.

2.

204. Cruciferse-Hesperide^
; ;

*arvensis DC.
Fl. Biv.
t.

i.

221

B.

Fl. d'lt. n.

M. t. 3007 Moggr. t. 27 Bicknell, 1417. S. Europe, N. Africa. .


iii.

Nearly the whole year.

Ramburii Webb.W. d

L. Fl. Hisp.

869

B. M.

t.

4947.

Spain. 0.
/.

Spring.
Pff.
iii.

MORISIA

Gay.N.
J.

2.

181.

Cruciferse-SinapeaeB. M.
t.

Brassicinae.

hypogeea

Gay.Fl.
11
.

d'lt. n.

1426

7598. Corsica,

Sardinia.

March-April.

220

HOETUS MORTOLENSIS
Lindl.N.
Pff. iv. 2.

MORRENIA

249. Asclepiadaceae-CynanI.

choideae-Asclepiadese-Cynanchinae.

brachystephana Griseb. 4 '? Summer.

N.

Pff.

c.

S. Brazil,

Argentina.

odorata Lindl. N. Pff. I. c. % Tj Summer, autumn.


.

fig.

72.

S. Brazil,

Argentina.

MUEHLENBECKIA Meissn.N. Pff.


-Coccoloboideae-Coccolobese.

iii.

la.

32. Polygonaceae

DC. xiv. 147. complexa Meissn. DC. xiv. 147


chilensis Meissn.

Peru,
;

Chili.

Tp .

Hdh.

Fl. N. Zeald.

236.

New

Zealand.

June-October.

Tj F. Mull. Fl. Atistr. v. 276. Australia. June-November. platyclada Meissn. N. Pff. I. c. fig. 16. Coccoloba ijlatycl. F. Miill. B. M. t. 5382. Solomon Islands. Tj JuneNovember.
.

Cunninghamii

MUEHLENBERGIA
Agrostideae.

Schreb.N.

Pff.

ii.

2.

47. Graminese2|.

alpestris Trin.

Kunth, En.
Pff.
iii.
;

i.201.
4.

S.America.
;

Spring.

MURALTIA
Ic. Sel.

Neck.N. mixta DC. i. 336


t.

Fl. Cap.
.

i.

342. Polygalacese-Polygaleae. 104 B. M. t. 1714; Bossche,

Cape. ^ MURRAYA L. N.
3.

Spring.
4.

Pff.

iii.

187.Rutacese-Aurantioideaei.

Aurantieae-Limoniinae.

exotica

L.DC.
i.

i.

537

Fl. Austr.

369

Wight,

Ic.
i?
.

t.

Fl. Brit. Ind.

502.
ii.

India, Ceylon, Australia.


7. Musace^-Muses.
7182
;

96

May.

IMUSA L.N.
pelago.

Pff.

6.
t.

Basjoo Sieb.B. M.
M21S. {B. V. C),
14..

Keio Bull. 1894, 248; K. Schum.

22. ilf. japonica Hort.

Liu-Kiu
;

Archi-

Cavendishii Lamb.
{B.
V.

Keio Bull. 1894, 244


Gard.
Chron. 1902,
t.
;

K. Schum.

Mm.

C),
14..

17;

i.

225. Southern

China.

Ensete

J.

F. Gmel.B. M.
ii.

5223-4

Ketu Bull. 1894, 240;


V.

Gard. Chron. 1894,

Abyssinia.
paradisiaca L.
Tropics.

14..

K. Schum. Mus. {B. 697 Spring-autumn.


K. Schum. Mus. {B.
V.

C), 15.
692;

var.

sapientum
;

0. Ktze. Bev. Gen.

ii.

Keiv Bull. 1894, 250

C),

20.

2^.

HORTUS MORTOLENSIS

221

MUSSCHIA

Dumort.N.
vii.

Pff. iv. 5.

60. Campanulacee-CamMan.
;

panuloideas-Campanuleae-Platycodinae.

aurea L. fil.DC.
Madeira.

495;

Loioe,

Fl.

Mad. 574.
;

2^.

WoUastoni
t.

Loiue, Man. Fl. Mad. 576 1376. Madeira. 2f.

B. M.

t.

5606 Fl.

d. S.

MYOPORUM

Banks & Sol.N.


B. Br.

acuminatum

Fl.

Pff. iv. 3b.

359. Myoporacese.
3.

Austr.

v.

Australia.
;

Tp

December-January.
crystallinum Hort.

tuherculaUim.
xi.

parvifolium B. Br.DC.
t.

710
;

Fl. Austr. v. 6
t.

1693

Lodd. B. C.
.

t.

837

Bossche, Ic. Sel.

B. M. 89. Aus-

Tp tralia. May-June. serratum B. Br. DC. xi. 709

Fl. Austr. v. 4.

Australia.
v.

Tj

April-June.
xi.

tuberculatum B. Br.DC.
Australia.

710;

Fl.

Austr.

5.

Tj

April-June.
iv.

MYOSOTIS L.N.
Spring.

Pff.

3a.

119. Borraginaceas-Borra-

ginoideae-Lithospermeae.
dissitiflora Bak. in Gard. Chron. 1868, 599.
21
.

Switzerland.
14..

sylvatica Hoffm.

DC.
iii.

x.

107.

Europe.

S. Africa.

Spring.

MYRICA

L.N.

sethiopica L.
cerifera L.

DC.

DC.

Pff.

1.

27. Myricacese.
148. N. America.
Pff.
iii.

xvi. 2. 153.

xvi. 2.

^ ^
14..

MYRIOPHYLLUM
-*

brasiliense Camhess.

A. K. Schindler (B. M. proserpinacoides America.


Gill.

L.N.

7.

234. Halorrhagidaceae.
V. C), 88.
fig.

25.

S.

Myroxylon racemosum 0. Kuntze

Xylosma racemosum.

MYRSINE

L.N.

Pff.

iv.

1.

92. Myrsinaceae-Myrsinoideae-

Myrsineae.

africana L.DC. viii. 93; Mez, Myrs. {B. V. C), 340; Azores, Africa, Arabia, Socotra, Jacq. H. Sch. t. 124.
S.Asia.

Urvillei A.

May-August. DC. = Bapanea Urvillei.


Tp
.

Myrsiphyllum asparagoides Willd. ^^ Asparagus medeoloides.

222

HOETUS MORTOLENSIS
L.N. Pff. iii.
<&

MYRTUS
New

7.

66. Myrtaceae-Myrteoideae-MyrteaB
Fl. N. Zeald. 74
;

-Myrtinae.

buUata Banks

SolHdb.
T^
.

B. M.

t.

4809.

Zealand.

-communis L.DC.

var.

iii.

239;
.

Fl

d'lt. n.

2193. Mediter-

ranean region, Orient.

July.

boetica Mill DC. iii. 239. Tp DC. iii. 239. Tp var. tarentina Mill Ugni Mol.DC. iii. 239; B. M. t. 4626. Chili. Tp

NANDINA
1900,

Thunb.N. Pff. iii. 2. 75. Berberidaceae. domestica Thunh.DC. i. 109 B. M. 1. 1109 The Garden,
; ;

ii.

13.

China, Japan. ^
Pff.
ii.

February.

tNARCISSUS L.N.
biflorus Curt. B. M.
11.

5.

111. Amaryllidaceae-Amarylt.

lidoidese-Narcisseae-Narcissinae.
t. If..

197

Bed. Lil

405

Bak. Hdb. Am.

S.

Europe.
3.

March-April.

Bulbocodium

L. var.

monophylla Dur.

B.

M.

t.

5831

January-February. Algeria. Bak. Am. 2^. Mill. Bak. Am. 5 B.M. t. 121 Bed. Lil incomparabilis S.W. Europe. i;. February-March. t. 220. Bed. Lil t. 159. B. M. t. 15 Jonquilla L.Bak. Am. 10
;
;

Western Mediterranean region.


odorus L.Bak. Am. 6
;

%.
t.

February-March.
;

Red. Lil.

157

B. M.

t.

934.

S.W. Europe. 11. February-March. posticus L. Bak. Am. 11; Bed. Lil 1. 160. April-May. region. !(:.

Mediterranean

Pseudo-Narcissus L.Bak. Am. 3; Fl. d'lt. n. 758. Mediterranean region. %. March-April. Mediterranean *Tazetta L. Bak. Am.l; Mogcjr. t. 23. region. 4. December-March. Bak. Am. 9; Moggr. var. (velsubspec.) aureus Lois.

var. (vel subspec.)

var. (vel

t. 22.-2^. Bak. Am. 8 Bertolonii lord. Moggr. t. 90. 24. Bak. Am. 8. subspec.) canariensis Hort.

Canaries, S. France.
var. (vel subspec.) italicus Bak.

if.
t.

Am. 8; Linn. B. M.

var. (vel subspec.)

var. (vel subspec.)

1188. 2(. pachybolbus Durieu. Bak. Am. 8; B. M. t. 6825. Algeria. 2f. papyraceus Ker. Bak. Am. 8; B.M.

t.

947.

If.

November-April.

HORTUS MORTOLENSIS
NARCISSUS
{continued).

223

triandrus L.

Bak. Am. Spain, Portugal.


5.

24.

March.

NASTURTIUM
officinale B.

B. Br.~N.

Pff.

iii.

2.

184. Cruciferae-Sinapeae

-Cardamininae.

Br. DC.

i.

137

Fl. d'lt. n.

1361. Europe,

N.Asia.

NEJA

D.

Spring. (Watercress.) 325. Compositse-Astereae-Solidagiinae. Don. DC.


2;.
v.

gracilis D.

Don.DC.

v.

325

Lodd. B. C.

1.

1814. Mexico.

2^.

Spring.

NELUMBO
DC.
i.

Adans.

N.
N.

Pff.

iii.

2.

5.

Nymphseacese-Nelumspeciosiim Willd.
t.

bonoideae.

nucifera Gaertn.
113
;

Pff.
t.

I.

c.
;

Nelumhimn
Wight,
III.

B. M.

903

Bot.
24.

9. Tropical
Summer.

and subtropical Asia and N. Australia.

NEMESIA

Vent.

N.

Pff. iv.

3b.

57.

Scrophulariaceas-Antirt.

rhinoideae-Antirrhineae.

strumosa Beiith.-DG.
.

x.

260

B. M.

7272. S. Africa.

Spring and summer.

NEPETA
cyanea

L.N.
Stev.

Pff.

iv.

3a.

235.

Labiatse-Stachyoidese14..

macrantha

DC. 383. Caucasus. DC. 387. Altai Mountains. 385 B. M. Mussini Henkel. DC. as M. Caucasus. Spring and summer.
xii.

Nepeteae.

Fisch.

xii.

!(..

xii.

t.

23,

longiflora.

2^.

Nepetella L.DC.

xii.

383

Fl. d'lt. n.

3114. S. Europe.
2^.

nracemosa Lam.

DC.
xii.

xii.
;

385.

Orient.
i.

tuberosa L.DC.

375 Fl.
iii.

d'lt. n.

3109. S. Europe. 2^

JNEPHELIUM L.N. Pff.


leiocarpum F. Mull.
tp
.

Fl. Austr. Wales. June- July. tomentosum F. Mull. Fl. Austr. Wales. b

5.

331. Sapindaceee-Neplielieae.
467.

i.

Queensland, N. 466. Queensland, N. Mexico,

S.

S.

NEPHRODIUM
diese.

Bich.N.

Pff.

i.

4.

167. Polypodiace-AspiFil. 293.

Hook. & Bak. Syn. patens Desv. Hook. & Bak. Syn.
molle Desv.

Peru,

New

Zealand.

14..

Fil. 293.

Central America,

Japan, Polynesia.

14.

224

HORTUS MORTOLENSIS
Schott.

NEPHROLEPIS
Davalliese.

N.

Pff.

i.

4.

205.

Polypodiacese;

Hooh. d- Bah. cordifolia Presl.N. Pff. i. 4. 206. fig. Ill 300. Tropical America, India to Japan, Australia, Syn. Fil.

New

Zealand, tropical Africa.

4.

NERINE

Herh.

N.

Pff.

ii.

5.

106.

Amaryllidaceae-Amarylliii.

doideae-AmaryllideaB-Amaryllidinae.

Bowdeni W. Wats.Gard.
Sylva, 1905, p. 120

Chron. 1904,
t.

365

Flora

&

8117. Cape. 2|:. October, Bah. Am. 99 Fl. sarniensis Herb. Kunth, En. v. 617 Cap. vi. 209 B. M. t. 294 Bed. Lil. t. 33 Jacq. H. Sch. t. 66. Cape. 24. Bah. Am. 102 undulata Herb. Kunth, En. v. 621 B. M. t. 369 Bed. Lil. t. 115. Cape. Fl. Cap. vi. 212

B. M.

Uvenusta Herb, in B. M. 210. Cape. 2;.


t.

1090

Bah. Am. 100

Fl. Cap. vi.

INERIUM L.N.
Echitidese.

Pff. iv.

2.

180. Apocynaceae-Echitoideaen.

Oleander L.DC.\\n. 420; Fid' It. Tp Summer. region.

2733. Mediterranean

NERTERA
2167.

Banhs & Sol.N.


<&

Pff.

iv.

4.

131. Rubiacese;

Coffeoideae-Psychotriinse-Anthospermeae.

depressa Banhs

Sol.Hdb.
S.

Fl. N. Zeald. 120


If..

Fl. d. S.

t.

New Zealand,
A. Gr.

America.

Nescea

Comm, = Heimia.

NEVIUSIA

N.

Pff.

iii.

3.

28.

Rosaceae-RosoideaeGard. Chron. 1904,


i.

Kerrieae.

alabamenis A. Gr.B. M. 229. Alabama. Tp

t.

6806

NICANDRA

Adans.

N.

Pff.

iv.

b.

11.

Solanaceaet.

Nicandreae.

physaloides

Gaertn.DC.

xiii.

Fl. d'lt. n. 2879.

Peru. .
Pff. iv. 2.
Pff.
I.

B. M. 1. 434; Summer-autumn.

2458;

JNICODEMIA
oideae.

Ten.N.

49. Loganiaceae-Buddlei17

diversifolia Ten.

N.

c,

Madagascar.

HOETUS MORTOLENSIS
INICOTIANA L.N.
Nicotianinae.
Pff.
iv.

225

U. 32. Solanacese-Cestreffixiii.

alata Link

d;

Spring, autumn.

Bigelovii S.
fornia.

DC. Wats. Nich.


Otto.

1.

567.

S.

Brazil.

0. Cali-

Diet.

Gard. Siippl. 553.

0.

Spring, autumn.

Brazil, Argentina. 566. longiflora Cav. DC.


n. 2862.
l?
.

Andre tomentosa. glauca B. Grah.DC. xiii. 1. 562


colossea E.
xiii. 1.
t.

B. M.

t.

2837

Fl. d'lt.

All the year.


Chili, Argentina.

0.

noctiflora Hook, in B. M.

0. Spring, autumn. paniculata L. DC. xiii.

2785
561.

DC.

xiii.

1.

566. Chili.

1.
;

Peru. 0.

rustica

L.DC.

xiii. 1.

563

Fl. d'lt. n.

Summer. 2863. Central and

S. America. 0. Spring, summer. Sanderae Hort. Gard. Chron. 1903, ii. 256. Garden origin. 0. Spring, autumn. suaveolens Lehm. DC. xiii. 1, 565 Vent. J. Malm. t. 10 B. M. t. 673. Australia. 0. Spring, summer.

sylvestris Speg.
1899,
ii.

&

Comes. B.
xiii.

M.

t.

7652

Gard. Chron.

357;

Nich. Diet. Suppl.

553. Argentina. 0.
n. 2864.

Summer, autumn.

Tabacum L.DC.
America.

557; Fl.

d'lt.

-Tropical

Summer. tomentosa Bz. & Pav.B. M. t. 7252 Nich. Diet. Gard. Suppl. 553. Lehmannia tomentosa Spreng. DC. xiii. 1. 572. Tp Peru. Summer. wigandioides C. Koch d- Fint. Nich. Diet. Gard. 451.
;

0.
.

fig.

692.

Colombia.
Bz.

f?

Spring.
36.

NIEREMBERGIA

d Pav.N. Pff. iv.


t.

34. Solanacese585. Argentina.

Cestrese-Nicotianinffi.

gracilis Hook, in B.

%.

M.

3108

DC.

xiii. 1.

March-June.
Miehx.

JNOLINA

N.

Pff.

ii.

5.

71. Liliacese-DracsenoideEe-

Nolineae.

Beldingi Brandegee
S.

Zoe, 1890, 305. Lower California. ^Wats. Bak. Al. & Yucc. 235. Texas, Mexico. erumpens June.
in
i.

^f'

If..

longifolia
ii.

Hemsl.Bak.

Al.

Yucc. 235
Tj
.

67.

South-central Mexico.

Gard. Chron. 1894,


Q

June.

226

HORTUS MORTOLENSIS
(continued).

NOLINA

Lem. (see Supplement). Lem. (see Supplement). recurvata hein.^ Beaucarnea recurvata Lem. (see Supplement). var. stricta Ltem. ^=^ Beaucarnea stricta Lem. (see
(Edipus Rose

Purpusii Rose

= Beaucarnea gracilis = Beaucarnea stricta

,,

Supplement).

NOLTIA

Beichb. N. Pff. iii. 5. 415. Rhamnaeeae-Rhamneae. africana Beichb. N. Pff. iii. 5. 415. Ceanothus africanus L. DC. ii. 32. S. Africa. !?.

Nopalea Salm

Oinmtia.

NOTELiEA
Oleinese.

Vent.

N.
Berth.

Pff.

iv.

2.

10.

Oleacese-OleoideaeOlea excelsa Ait.


April.
T?
.

excelsa Webb

&

N.

Canaries, Madeira. AraliaceseNOTHOPANAX Miq. N. Panax arboreum Forst. Hdb. arboreum Seem. N.
DC.
viii.

Pff. iv. 2. 10.

288.

Pff.

iii.

8.

47.

Schefflereee.

Pff.

I.

c.

730. New Zealand. T? longissimum Hooh. fil. Hdb. Fl. N. Zeald.


Fl. N. Zeald. 102.

102, as

Panax.

New Zealand.
oideae-Allieae.

f?

NOTHOSCORDUM
America.

Kunth.N.
iv.

Pff'.

ii.

5.

57. Liliace-Alli1129. Subtropical

fragrans Kunth, En.

461

B. M.

t.

1|.

April.

Notonia DC.

Kleinia.

NUTTALLIA
noideae.

Ton: & Gr.N.

Pff.

iii.

3.

51. Rosacese-Pru;

cerasiformis Torr. & Gr. Gard. Chron. 1896, i. 489 Bossche, Ic. Sel. t. 78 Schneider, Hdb. Laubh. i. 650. N. W. America,
;

T?

April.
/.

NYMPHJEA

E. Smith.N.

Pff.

iii.

2.

7. Nymphseaceaeii.

Nymphaeoideae.

Robinsoniana Hort.
Henk. Behn.
d-

Gard.

Chron. 1896,
100.

558.

fig.

98
i^.

Dittm.

Nymph.

Garden
2(.

origin.

Summer. tuberosa A. Paine. B. M. t. 6536 Nymph. 81. Eastern N. America.

Henlc. Behn.

<

Dittm.

Summer.

HOETUS MOETOLBNSIS

227

OCHNA

L.N.

Pff.

iii.

6.

139. Ochnacese-ExalbuminosiB.

Ourateese.

atropurpurea DC. i. 736 Fl.Cap. i. 448. S. Africa. Tp


;

June.

JOCIMUM

L. N. Moschosminse.

Pff.

iv.

3a.

369. Labiatse-OcimoicleaeFl.d'It. n.

Basilicum

L. DC.

xii.

32;

3216. Tropical

Asia and Africa.

0.
xii.

Summer.
34
;

viride Willd.DG.

Fl. Trop. Afr. v.

337. Tropical

W.

Africa.

1(.

l?

lOCOTEA

Aubl.

N.

Pff.

iii.

2.

116.

Lauraceae-Persoideae118; Baillon, Mon. Laur.

Cinnamomeae.
ii.

foetens Benth. d-Hook.f.


fig.

250.

DC. xv. Canaries.


T?

1.

ODONTOGLOSSUM
crispum
Lindl.

H. B. K.N.

Pff.

ii.

6.

197. Orchi-

daceae-Monandras-Oncidiinse-Odontoglosseae.

Nich. Diet. Gard. 470.


Neck. N.

fig.

715.

Colombia.
2;

URossii Lindl.

Nich. Diet. Gard. 475.


N.
Pff'.
I.

fig.

717.

Mexico.

tODONTOSPERMUM
maritimum
Moench, DC.
v.

Pff. iv. 5.

209. Compositge-

Inuleae-Buphthalminse.
Schultz Bip.

c.

Asteriscus maritimus
ii.

486;

W. & L.
2^.
v.
>>
.

Fl. Hisp.

47. Meditert.

ranean region, Canaries.

sericeum

B^iphthalmum. Canaries.
Schultz
Pff'.
iii.

April-June.

Bip.DC.

486; B. M. April-May.

1836, as

CENANTHE L. N.

8.

204. Umbelliferse-Apioidese21
.

Ammineae-Seselinae.

peucedanifolia PollDC. iv. 137. Europe.

April-May.

CENOTHERA
rinse.

L.

DC.
iii.

iii.

45.

Gnagraceae-Onagrese-CEnothed'lt. n.

biennis L.DC. e May.


.

46.i^Z.
50;

2216. N. America.

fruticosa
Spring.

L.DC.

iii.

B. M.

t.

332. Virginia. 2^.


1.

macrocarpa Pursh.DC.

iii.

47

B. M.

1592.

N. America.
Spring.

14..

Spring.

odorata Jacq. DC. iii. 48. Patagonia. B. M. t. 347 rosea Ait.DC. iii. 51 Spring-summer. Mexico. 14..
; ;

if..

Fl. d'lt. n.

2215.

Q 2

228

HORTUS MORTOLENSIS
Adans.N.
526
;

OPTIA

Pff. iv. 3b.

Jasminum
xi.

Wettst.

N.

360. Myoporaceae.
I.

Pff.

c.

Sjrielmannia africana DC.


.

B. M.

t.

1899. S. Africa. T?

OLE A L.N.
cuspidata
europsea

Pff: iv. 2.

chrysophylla Lain.

DC.
t.

12. Oleacese-Oleoideae-Oleinese.
viii.

285

Tropical Africa, Arabia, Mascarene Islands.


WallDC.
L.DC.
viii.

Fl. Trop. Afr. iv.


1?
.

1.

18.

viii.

285;

Fl. Brit. Ind.


.

iii.

611;

Brandts, For. Fl. 307.

38. Himalaya. T? 284; Fl. d'lt. n. 2725. Orient,


Ip
.

Mediterranean region.
excelsa Ait.

May.
287; Fl.

Notelcea excelsa.
viii.
t.

laurifolia

Lam. DC.

Cap.
t.

undulata Jacq. H. Sch.

Tp June. undulata Jacq. latirifoUa. verrucosa Link. DC. viii. 285 Fl. Cap. iv. 1. 486 loth, Kapld. 109. 111. S. Africa. Tp May.
.

B.

M.

iv. 1. 487.-0. 3089. S. Africa.

Mar-

OLEARIA

Moench.N.

Pff. iv.

5.

166. Compositae-Astereaeiii.

Asterinae.

argophylla F. Milll.Fl. Austr.


Australia.
l?
.

avicennisefolia Hook. Hdb. Fl. N. Zeald. 127. New Zealand. Forsteri Hook. Hdb. Fl. N. Zeald. 127 Gard. Chron. 381. New Zealand. 1897, October-January. Haastii Hook. Hdb. Fl. N. Zeald. 126 The Gard. 1899, 206. New Zealand. May-June.
ff,l.
fp

470

B. M.

t.

1563.

fil.

ii.

Tp

fil.

ii.

T^

ilicifolia

macrodonta Bak.B. M.

Hook. fil. Hdb. Fl. N. Zeald. 126. New Zealand. l? t. 7065 The Gard. 1902, ii. 96.
;

New

Zealand.

Tp

f? pimeleoides Benth. Fl. Aiistr. iii. 479. Australia. Solandri Hook. fil. Hdb. Fl. N. Zeald. 128. New Zealand. l?

stellulata

DC.Fl. Austr. iii. 473 B. M. t. 4638 Chron. 1901, ii. 260. Australia. Tp April.
; .

Gard.

OLINIA Thunb.N.

Pff.

capensis Klotzsch.

N.

iii.

6a.

216. Oliniaceae.
I.

Pff.

c.

S. Africa.

Tp

OLMEDIELLA

Baill. Notizbl. Berl. Bot. Gart.

iv.

178.

Flacourtiaceae-Flacourtieae-EuflacourtieaB.

Betschleriana Loes. Notizbl. Berl. Bot. Gart. Ilex Betschleriana Goepp. Mexico. Jp

iv.

175-181.

HOETUS MORTOLENSIS

229

OMPHALODES

Borraginaceaelinifolia Moench. DC.x. 161. Spain, Portugal. 0. Spring. 2825. 83 Fl. 162 Moggr. verna Moench. DC. March-April. Europe.
Moench.
Pff. iv. 3a. 101.

N.

Borraginoideae-Cynoglosseae.

x.

t.

cl'It.

n.

l^.

tONCIDIUM
America.

Sio.N.

Pff.

ii.

6.

199. Orchidaceae-MonandraeLocld. B.
C.
t.

Oncidiinae-Odontoglossese.

bifolium Sims, B. M.

t.

1491

1845. S.
Fl. d. S.
t.

!(..

July.
; ;

crispum Locld. B. G. t. 1854 B. M. t. 3499 2147-8. Brazil. 2|. July. flexuosum Sivis, B. M. t. 2203; Lodd. B. C.

t.

424. S.

October. Forbesii Hook. B. M. Brazil.


Brazil.
2^.
if.

t.

3705

Nich. Diet. Suppl.


Diet. 487.

564.

longipes Lindl.
June.

& Paxt.Nich.

S. Brazil.

if.

Pohlianum Wettst. S. Brazil. if. pulvinatum Lindl. Nieh. Diet. 489. Brazil. if December.
.

ONCOBA Forsk. N.
spinosa Forsk.
ii.

Fl.

Pff.

iii.

6a. 17.

Trop. Afr.
I.

t.

142;

N.

Arabia.

Pff.

c.

19.

fig.

Flacourtiacese-Oncobeae. 115; Harv. Thes. Cap. Tropical Africa,


i.

5.

S.

Tj

ONCOSTEMON
folia

Juss.N.

Pff. iv. 1.

95. Myrsinaceae-Myrsin200. Ardisia-lati-

oideae-Hymenandrese. latifolium Mez, Myrs. {B.

V. C. iv. 236),
1?
.

DC.

viii.

108.

Mauritius.
Pff.
iii.
ii.

Spring-summer.

ONOBRYCHIS
-caput-galli

Gaertn.N.

3.

314. Leguminosae2117. S. Europe.


iii.

Papilionatae-Hedysareae-Euhedysarinae.

May-June. !(.. eriophora Desv. DC. ii. 345; Portugal. May-June. If

Lam. DC.

346; Fl.

d'lt. n.

Fl. Hisp.

266. Spain,

if

saxatilis
region.

May-June. 344 viciaefolia Seop.DC. May-June. N. Asia.


.

AllDC.

ii.

345; Fl.

d'lt. n.

2115. Mediterranean 2114. Europe,

ii.

Fl. d'lt. n.

If.

ONONIS

L.N.

Pff.

iii.

3.

241. Leguminosae-PapilionataeL. Fl. Hisp.


iii.

Trifolieae.

aragonensis Asso.

W.

it-

415.

Spain. ^

230

HOETUS MOETOLENSIS
{continued).

ONONIS

Mediterranean region. Spring. 1925 Lodd. B. fruticosa L.DC. 161 Fl. 1569. Spain, Spring. France.
n. 1921.
If..
ii.
;

biflora

Desf.DC.

ii.

160

Moris, Fl. Sard.

t.

33

Fl. d'lt.

d'lt. n.

C.

t.

S.

17

='=minutissima

L.DC.
1(.

ii.
.

164

Fl. d'lt. n.

1915. Mediter;

ranean region.
rotundifolia

V>

L.DC.
t.

ii.

Spring-autumn. 161 Fl. d'lt. n. 1926


;

B. M.

t.

335;

Lodd. B.

C.

1496. Europe. T?
Pff. iv. 5.

Spring.

ONOPORDON
Carduinae.
Orient.

L.N.

324. CompositaB-CynareasFl. d'lt. n.

Acanthium L.DC.

vi.

618

3805. Europe,

0.

Summer.
vi.

illyricum
region.

L.DC.

618

Fl. d'lt. n.

3808. Mediterranean
d'lt. n.

Fl. 3807. Eastern Mediterranean region, Orient. . Summer. 3806. Europe, tauricum Willd.DC. 618 Fl. Mediterranean region. . Summer,
vi.
;

Summer. Sibthorpianiun Boiss. d- Heldr.

d'lt. n.

S.

OPHIOPOGON
oidese.

Ker.N.

Pff.

ii.

5.

85. Liliacese-Ophiopogon-

japonicus Ker in B. M. t. 1063. Convallaria japouica Thunb. Red. Lil. t. 80. Flilggea jap. Eich. Kunth, En. v. 302. Japan, China. 4. April-May.

spicatus Ker.

= Liriope graminifolia.
Beauv.N.
i.

OPLISMENUS
Burmannii
KuntkfEn.

Pff'. ii. 2.

36. GramineEe-Paniceae.
fol.

Beauv. var. albidus Nich. Diet. Suppl. 569;

InSia.
OPOPANAX

14.

139. 0. imbeciUis Summer.


Pff.
iii.

var. Fl. d. S.

t.

1715.

Koch.N.

8.

234. Umbelliferse-ApioideaB

-Peucedaneae-Ferulinae.

Chironium Koch.

DC.
Pff.

iv.

170.

Mediterranean region. K.
T?
.

2|

tOPUNTIA

Mill.N.

iii.

6a.

199. Cactacese-OpuntioidegeSchum. Man. 670.

Opuntieae.

acanthocarpa Engehn.

d;

Big.

Sonora, California, Arizona.

June.
;

albicans Salm.Pfeiff. En. 155 Salm, Cact. H. Dych. 237 K. Schum. Mon. 742. T^ Mexico. June, alcahes Web. K. Schum. Mon. 674 Berger in Efigl. B. Jahrb.
;

xxxvi. 448.

Lower California.

2;.

HOETUS MOETOLENSIS

231

OPUNTIA

{continued).

Amyclaa Ten.
andicola

= Ficus-indica.
En. 145
;

Argentina. aoracantha Lem. K. Schum. Mon. 691. Argentina.


UPfeiff.

K. Schum. Mon. 693.

2|.

aquosa Web. ^=' Peireskiopsis aquosa,


arborescens Engelm.

arbuscula
Sonora.

Engelm.
1^

K.

= imhricata.
Schum. Mon. 679.

aurantiaca
June-July.

Gill.

K.

Schum. Mon.

Arizona to 744. Argentina.


T?

basilaris Engelm.

Big.K. Schum. Mon.

western United States.

,,

101.

South,

17

var.
var.

cordata Hort.

ramosa

Parish.

K. Schum.
Tp
i.

I.e.

Beckeriana K. Schum. Mon. 722.^-Mexico?


July.

T;

1?

May?
i?

Gard. Chron. 1904, Mexico Nearly always. bernardina Engelm. K. Schum. Mon. 674. Southern Bigelovii Engelm. K. Schum. Mon. Qll. California, Arizona, Sonora. Brandegeei K. Schum. = Peireskiopsis Brandegeei. 474 K. Schum. Mon. 655 B. M. brasiliensis Hmo. DC. 3293. America. June-July. camanchica Engelm. & Big. K. Schum. Mon. 731. Texas, Arizona. June. caracasana Salm, Cact. H. Dyck. 238 Berger Engl. B. xxxvi. Venezuela. June. x cardiosperma K. Schum. Mon. Nachtr. 164. Paraguay.
Bergeriana Weh.
34.
fornia.
Tj
.

Cali-

l?

iii.
\^

t.

S.

Tj

in

Jah7'b.

4:51.

Tp

-^.
Cardona Web.

streptacantha.

chlorotica E?igehn.
California, Sonora.

Big.
.

K. Schum. Mon.

721.

choUa Weh.

K.

Arizona,
California.

Schum. Mon. 676.

Lower

chrysacantha Hort.
clavarioides Lk.
tt

Mexico

? Tj May-June. Otto.K. Schum. Mon. 687.


.

fig.

104.

Chih. T?.
clavata Engelm. Nevada. h

K.

Schum. Mon. 665.

New

Mexico,

232

HORTUS MORTOLENSIS
(continued).

OPUNTIA

cochinelifera Mill. Diet. ed. 8. n. 6; DC. iii. 473; Pf. d Otto. 24. Nopalea coccinellifera Salm, Gact. H. Dyck. 63 t. v> June-July, Southern Mexico? K. Schwn. Mon. 750.

corrugata Salm.K. Schum. Mon. 696. Argentina. Jj June, crinifera Pfeiff. En. 157 K. Schum. Mon. 709. Mexico.
. ;

i?

June-July.

curassavica
Indies.

Mill DC.
.

iii.

472

K. Schum. Mon. 712. W.

ip

June,
;

cylindrica DC. iii. 471 B. M. 682. Chili. T?. July-August.


,,

t.

3301

K. Schum. Mon.

var. cristata.

cymochila Engelm. d Big. K. Schum. Mon. 716. Texas. ^ Darwinii Hensl. K. Schum. Mon. 695. Patagonia. f? Davisii Engehn. d Big.K. Schum. Mon. 673 B. M. t. 6652.

i?

Texas, New Mexico, Arizona, California. ^ decumana Hmv. K. Schum. Mon. 719. America. ^.
.

June-July.

decumbens Salm,

Hort. Dyck. 361

K. Schum. Mon. 707.

May-July. dejecta Salm, Hort. Dyck. 361 K. Schum. Mon. 751. Cuba. Tp June-July. diademata Lem. K. Schum. Mon. 692. Argentina. Tp K. Schtim. Mon. 12i.Dill. Dillenii Haio.DC. iii. 472 H. Elth. fig. 382. W. Indies. I? June-July.
Southern Mexico, Guatemala.
T?
. ;

diplacantha Hort. Pan. 1901. Mexico? Tp K. Schum. Mon. 696, sub 0. corrugata. eburnea Lem.

Ip

ip

Argentina.

elata Lk.
June.

Otto.

K.

June,

Schum. Mon. 748.

S.

America.

Mexico. June-July. Engelmannii Salm. K. Schum. Mon. 724. Chihuahua, Texas, New Mexico. June, Bolivia exaltata Berger. DC. K. Schum. Mon. 719 Ficus-indica 473 Fl. 1066 Mexico, naturalized the Mediterranean region. May-July. Amycleea Ten. K. Schum. fructu albo.
xxxvi. 454.
Tp
.

elongata Salm, Cact. H. Dyck. 242

Berger in Engl. B. Jahrb.

Ip

Chili,

ip

Gitss.

iii.

cVIt. n.

/3.
.

in

ip

,,

var.

I.

c.

ip

var.

Tp

floccosa Salm, Cact. H. Dyck. 248; K. Schum. Mon. 684.

Peru.

Tp

HORTUS MORTOLENSIS

233

OPUNTIA
foliosa Salm, Cact. H. Dijch. 70;

DC.

iii.

471. Native land

June. unknown. 17 fragilis Haiv. DC. iii. 472;


.

K. 75

Schum. Mon. 738. N.


K. Schum. Mon. 676.

America. fulgida Engelm. Cact. Bound,


Tp

t.

Sonora, California.

Tuna Haw. DC. iii. 4.12. 7 Dill. H.Elth. 380. Cuba. T?. July. glaucescens Salm, H. Dyck. 362 K. Schum. Mon. 742.
gilva Berger.?0.
fig.
;

glomerata Haiu.
June.

K. Schum. Mon. 696. Argentina. Gosseliniana Web. K. Schum. Mon. Nachtr. 154. Sonora, Lower California.
Tj
l?

Mexico.

Tp

June.

Grahamii Engelm.

Cact. Bound,

t.

72

K. Schum. Mon. 663.

New Mexico.
gymnocarpa Web.

K.

T?

Schum. Mon. 719.

S.

America.
?

hsematocarpa Berger in Etigl. B. Jahrb.

xxxvi. 456.

Hanburyana Web. Gard.


Tj
.

Tp

June.

Chron. 1904,

i.

34.

Mexico Mexico?
i?

June-July.

hyptiacantha Web.
June-July.

K.

Schum. Mon. 739.

hystricina Engelm. ct Big. K. Schum. 1? fornia, Nevada, Arizona, New Mexico. imbricata DC. iii. 471 K. Schum. Mon. 668

Mexico. Mon. 736. Cali;

B. M.

t.

8290..

Mexico, Texas, Arizona, June. Engl. B. Jahrb. xxxvi. 463. insequilateralis Berger June-July. Mexico 139 K. Schum. Mon. 718. 473, PI. Gr. inermis DC. June. W. Indies. intermedia Salm = vulgaris. Brand. K. Schum. Mon. 662. Lower invicta T. ^
&c.
Tj
.

in

Tp

iii.

t.

T?

S.
.

Cali-

fornia.

Karwinskiana Sahn, Cact. H. Dyck. 239 K. Schum. Mon. 752. Mexico. Tj Kleiniae DC. Bev. 118; K. ScMm. Mon. 678. Mexico, Texas.
;

Tj

June-July.

lanigera

Salm

== crinifera.

Ledienii Hort.

Bergeriana.

234

HOETUS MOETOLENSIS
{continued).

OPUNTIA

Lemaireana

Cons.

Weh.

in Bois. Diet. 894.

S.

America.

ij

June.
in Bull.

leptarthra Web.
Mexico.

Mus. Hist. Nat. Par. 1904, 393.

T?

leptocaulis DC. Bev. 118; K. Schum. Mon. 678. New Tp June. Mexico, Texas, Arizona to Southern Mexico.
,,

var.

longispina Engelm.

Berger in
June.

Engl. B.

Jahrb. xxxvi. 450.


,,

Tp

Tp Berger, I. c. var. vaginata Engelm. June, leucotricha DC. Bev. 119 K. Schum. Mon. 711. Mexico.
.

Tp

June-July.

macrorhiza Engelm.

K. Schum. Mon. 717. N. America.


;

megacantha Salm,
,,

maculacantha Forst. == sulphurea. Hort. Dyck. 363 Berger h Jahrb. xxxvi. 452. Mexico. June-July.

in Engl.

B.

i? lasiacantha Pfeiff. Berger, I. c. l? Mexico. Ta.icroddi.sys Lehm.K. Schum. Mon. 70Q. June. ip var. rufida K. Schum. I. c. non Engelm. Miquelii Monv. K. Schum. Mon. 685 Berger in Monatsschrft.

var.

,,

Chili.
missouriensis

I?

July.

Colorado, 472, PL Gr. 138; K. Schum. monacantha Haiv. DC. April-December. Mon. 745. America. 143. Fl. Dalm. 0. vulgaris Auct. DC. 474; nana K. Schum. Mon. 714. Eastern United States, naturalized in Southern Europe. May-June. Nashii Britton, Bull. N. York B. G. 1905, 446. Bahama Islands. h 473; K. Schum. Mon. 121. nigricans Haiv. DC. June. Mexico. En. 144 K. Schum. Mon. 696. Argenovata paraguayensis K. Schum. Nachtr. 160. Paraguay.
.

= polyacantha Haw. Engelm. K. Schum. Mon. 731. mojavensis h California. June.


DC.
iii. t.

S.

l?

Vis.

iii.

iii.

Tp

iii.

iii.

Tp

Pfeiff.
Tp
.

Chili,

tina.

i?

June-July,

parva

Berger.

i? Pentlandii Salm. K. Schum. Mon. 698. Bolivia. K. Schum. Mon. 713. Florida. pes-corvi Leconte.

Tropical America.

Tp

June-July.

^?

June.

HOETUS MOETOLENSIS

235

OPUNTIA

K. Schum. Mon. 730. New Mexico, Arizona, Chihuahua. pilifera Web.K. Schum. Mon. 709. Mexico. pititache Web. = Peireskiopsis pititache. platyacantha Sahn. K. Schum. Mon. 693. Argentina. 7046. polyacantha Hmv. B. M. missouriensis DC. K. Schum. Mon. 1^%. N.America. June,
phaeacantha Engelm.
fp
.

Tp

Tp

t.

0.

in. 4:12;

ij

polyantha Haiv.DC. iii. 472 K. Schum. Mon. 724 B. M. t. 2691. W. Indies '? Tp June-July. Porteri Web. = Peireskiopsis Porteri. prolifera Engelm. K. Schum. Mon. 675 Berger in Engl. B.
; ;

Jahrh. xxxvi. 449. Arizona, California.


; ;

Tp

June.

puberula Pfdff- En. 156


1?
.

K. Schum. Mon. 709.

July.

quipa Weh.

K. Schum. Nachtr.
-Ecuador.

Mexico. 162. Brazil.


Tp
;

quitensis Web.-^K. ScMim. Mon. 747


Jahrh. xxxvi. 452.

Berger in Engl. B.

Rafinesquei Engelm. K. Schum. Mon. 715 Fl. d. S. 2328 B. M. t. 7041. N. America. i? June. K. Schum. Mon. 680. Arizona, ramosissima Engelm.
;

Ip

June.
fc.

California, Sonora.

Ip

'

rhodantha K. Schum. Mon. 735. Colorado. I? June. ip robusta Wendl. K. Schum. Mon. 741. Mexico. June. rosea DC. iii. 471, Bev. t. 15. Mexico. June. ^ rotundifolia K. Schum. = Peireskiopsis rotundifolia. rubescens Salm. DC. iii. 474 K. Schum. Mon. 743.

82. Bept. Miss. B. G. 1909, rufida Engelm. Mexico. ^ June-July. Ruthei Hort. Mexico. rutila Nutt.K. Schum. Mon. 7S7. United States. Otto 6 Salmiana Parm. K. Schum. Mon. 688
;

Brazil.

Tp

Griffiths in

81.

i?

i?

Pfeiff. tt

t.

B. M.

t.

4542. Brazil. Tp

June-July.

Scheerii Weh.K. Schum. Mon. 710, Nachtr. 156. Mexico.

Argentina. Schumannii Weh. Gard. Chron. 1904,1.34. Mexico? June. serpentina Engelm. K. Schum. Mon. 670. California.
Schickendantzii Web.
Tp
.


ip

Tp

May- June.

K.

Schum. Mon. 688.

June.

Tp

spathulata Web.

Peireskiopsis spath^ilata.

236

HORTUS MORTOLENSIS
Spegazzinii Web.

OPUNTIA

K. Schum. Mon. B. Jahrb. xxxvi. 449. Argentina.


MillDC.
.

(continued).

689
V>
.

Berijer in Emjl.

June-July.

spinosissima
Jamaica.

iii.

472; K. Schum. Mon. 705.

1?

l? K. Schum. Mon. 741. Mexico. i? K. Schum. Mon. Nachtr. 163. Par9;guay. stenarthra Engelm. Cact. Bound. 46. t. 66. Mexico. stenopetala

spinulifera Salm.

June,

streptacantha Lem.
June.
stricta

K.

Schum. Mon.

739. Mexico.

1?

Jp

Haw.

0. inermis.

Berger in Engl. B. tesajo Engelm. K. Schtim. Mon. 679 June. Jahrb. xxxvi. 450. Lower California.
.

subulata Engelm. in Gard. Chron. 1883, i. 632 K. Schum. Mon. 680; Gard. Chron. 1903, ii. 91. Chili, Bolivia. i? Summer and autumn. i? Argentina. K. Schu7n. Mon. 745. sulphurea Gill.
June,

'7

texana
I7
.

Griffiths in Be2)t. Miss. B. G. 1909, 92.

t.

9. Texas.

June.

tomentosa Salm.
Mexico.

DC.

iii.

473

K, Schum. Mon. 708.

I?

July.
iii.

triacantha DC.

473. (not of

ScMimannl)
;

W.

Indies.

-^
tunicata Lk.
iD

Otto.

B. Jahrb. xxxv. 448.

Turpini Lem.
Argentina.

Berger
.

K. Schum. Mon. 667 Mexico. July.


ip
.

Berger in

Engh

in 'Engl.

B. Jahrb. xxxvi. 450.

Tj June-July, T? Web. K. Schum. Mon. 710. California. ursina ij June-July. Web. Mexico. velutina K. Schum. Mon. 683. Bolivia. Verschaflfeltii Cels.

1?

July.

vestita Salm.
July.

K.
=

Schum. Mon. 684.

Bolivia.

l?

June-

vulgar is Auct.

nana.
Big.

SouthEngl. B. Jahrb. xxxvi. 455. Tropical Winteriana Berger America June. xanthostemma K. Schum. Mon. 735. Colorado. b June-July. zacuapanensis Berger. Mexico. ^
Whipple! Engelm. &
Schum. Mon. 669.
western United States.
in
Ij

K.
Tp

'?

HORTUS MORTOLENSIS ORCHIS L.N.


Pff.
ii.

237

6.

88. Orchidacese-Monandrffi-OphrycVIt. n.
Orcli.
t.

dinae-Serapiadeae.

longibracteata Biv.

Fl.

816
25.

Moggridge,
S.

t.

17.

Barlia longihr. Pari. Barla,

Europe, N. Africa.

24.

February-March.
d'lt. n. 824 Bicknell, t. 63. Western South and Central Europe. May. 2^
;

purpurea Huds.
Asia,

Fl.

Oreodaphne californica Nees

Umhellularia californica.
Pff.
iii.

lOREOPANAX

Decne.

& Planch. N.

8.

39. Araliace^-

Schefflereae.

capitatus Decne. Planch. N. Pff. I.e. 40; DC. iv. 262, as Tp Hedera. Tropical America. October-November.

Mexico. DecemMarch. Epremesnilianus Hort. Mort. Mexico palmatus Berger. DC. 264, as Hedera cheirophylla.
dactylifolius Nich. Diet. Gard. 522.
Tp
.

ber-March.

fp

iv.

S.

America.

V)

October-January.
?
v
.

stellatus Hort.

Mexico

July.
.

Thibautii Hook. fil. B. M. t. 6340. Mexico. ^ March. xalapensis Decne. tt Planch. N. Pff. I.e. 40; DC. iv. 264, as V> Hedera. Mexico. March.

ORIGANUM
June.

L.N.

Pff. iv. 3a.

308. Labiatse-StachyoideseM.
t.

Thyminae.

Dictamnus L.DC.
virens Hffm. d Lk.

xii.

191; B.
193.

298. Crete. 2^

Tp

U-

DC.

xii.

Spain, Canaries, Azores.


67. Liliacese-Lilioidese;

ORNITHOGALUM L.N.
Scilleae.
;

Pff.

ii.

5.

arabicum L.Kimth, En. iv. 353 B. M. t. 728. 3179 Bed. Lil. t. 63 Fl. d'lt. n. 653. S. Europe, N. Africa. 2| May. caudatum Ait. Kunth, En. iv. 357 Fl. Cap. vi. 515; B. M. t. 805; Bef. Bot. t. 262. S. Africa. 2|:. Eckloni Schlecht.Fl. Cap. vi. 513; Bef. Bot. t. 177.
;

S. Africa.

if.

graminifolium Thunb.
511 Bed. Lil.
;

Kunth,
t.

En.

iv.

358; Fl. Cap.


.

vi.

t.

312 B. M.
;

972. S. Africa. 2|
;

October

-November.

lacteum
1134
;

Jacq.

Kunth, En.
t.

Bed. Lil.

418

Fl. Cap. vi. 505 B. M. t. iv. 354 Lodd. B. C. 1. 1159. S. Africa. 2f


;

238

HOETUS MORTOLENSIS
(continued).

ORNITHOGALUM
longebracteatum
514
;

Jacq.

Kunth,
En.
iv.

En.
360

iv.

357

FL

Cajh

vi.

Bed. Lil.
Cyr.
2|:.

montanum
S. Italy.

Kunth,
xi.

t.

120. S. Africa. i;.


;

Fl. d'lt. n. 650.

OROBANCHE L.N.
.

Pff. iv.

-Hederae Duby.DC. May-July. 21

28; Fl. d'lt. n.

U. 129. Orobanchacese. 3055. Europe.


xi.

-ramosa L.N.
sub Kopsia.

Europe, Asia, Africa. 0.


=
Bohdea.
Pff'. iii. 7.

Pff. I.e.

ISO.DC.

8.FI.

d'lt. n.

3025,

May- June.

Orontium japonicum Thunb.

lORTHOSTEMON Berg.N.
Sellowianus Berg.

63. Myrtace^-MyrtoiM.
t.

deae-Myrtese-Orthostemoninae.

Feijoa

Brazil.

Selloiviana Berg. B.

7620.

l^

July.
Pff.
iv.
2.

OSMANTHUS
Oleinese.

Lonr.N.

9.

Oleacese-Oleoidefig.

Aquifolium Sieh.Stapf
Japan. Japan.

in Keio Bull. 1911, 177.

a.

Ip

July.
in Keiv Bidl.

Portunei Carr.Stapf

1911, 177.

fig.

b.

Tj

July.
;

fragrans Lour.DC. viii. 291 B. M. t. 1786, sub Olea. Japan, China. ^

t.
.

1552 Lodd. B. C. October-December.


;

,,

var,

rubra Hort. Frut. Vilmor.


iii.

184.

T?

October.

OSTEOMELES Lindl.N. Pff.


Pomarieae.

3.

22.Rosacee-Pomoidee7354;
Schneider,
.

anthyllidifolia

Lindl.B. M.

t.

Hdb.

Laubh.

i.

762.

Pacific Islands, China. ^


vi.
.

JOSTEOSPERMUM L.N. Pff. iv. 5. 306. Composit^-Calendulese.

moniliferum L.DC. PI. t. 55. Cape. ^

460; Fl. Cap.

iii.

436; Wood, Nat.

February-May.
Pff'.

OSTROWSKIA

Begel. N.
t.

iv.

5.

52. Campanulaceae14..

Campanuloideae-Campanulinse.

magnifica Begel.B. M.

7472.

Central Asia.

OSTRYA

=:=carpinifolia

Scop.N. Pff. iii. 1. 43. Betulacese-Corylese. Scop. DC. xvi. 2. 125; Fl. d'lt. n. 897. Medi-

terranean region.

Tp

April.

HOKTUS MOETOLENSIS

239

tOTHONNA
Cap.
iii.

L.N.

Pff. iv. 5.

303. Compositae-Senecioneae444; Jacq. H. Sch.


It
.

Othonninae.

Athanasiae L. fil.DC.

vi.

t.

242; Fl.

410, as Euryops.

Cape. 4
iii.

February- April.
t,

crassifolia Harv. Fl. Cap.

336

Ref. Bot.

253.

Cape.
t.

If.

Spring, summer.
;

triplinervia DC. vi. 478 Fl. Cap. h October-April. Cape.

iii.

337

Bef. Bot.

225.

OTHONNOPIS

Jaub.

d Spach.Benth.
iv.

d:

Hook.f. Gen. PI.

ii.

4.61.Hertia Neck. N. Pff.


cioneae-Senecioninae.

5.

289. Compositte-Senefig.

cheirifolia Benth.

&

Hook.

f.

787. DC.

vi.

476, sub

Othonna.

Nich. Diet. Gard. 533. A\gevi&, Tunis.

if.

Autumn-spring.

OWENIA

F. Miill.~N. Pff.

iii.

4.

301. Meliacese-Melioideaei.

Trichilieae.

cerasifera F. Mull.

Fl.
4.

Aiistr.

386.

Queensland.
Cape, Cape.
i.

i?

tOXALIS L.N.

i. 697; Fl. Cap.i.'^lQ. asinina Jacq. var. leporina Sond. Fl. Cap. i. 319. ,, Bowieana Lodd. = purpurata.

DC

Pff.

iii.

19. Oxalidaceae.
If if
.

Spring. Spring.

cernua Thunb.DC.
t.

i.

696

Fl. Cap.

348

Lodd. B. C.

1154.

Cape.
=
i.

if.

November-May.
i.

Deppei Lodd.
hirta
Cape.

tetraphylla.
;

L.DC.

If.

693 Fl. Cap. April-May.

343

Lodd. B. C.

t.

213.

H. Sch. t. 356; DC. i. 696; Fl. Cap. i. t. 1782. Cape. if October. DC. i. 695.-0. Deppei Lodd. B. C. tetraphylla Cav. t. 1500. Mexico. If. May. variabilis Lindl. var, alba Sond. Fl. Cap. i. 331 B. M. t. 1683. Cape. If. var. rubra Sond. I.e. Cape. i^.

purpurata

Jacq.

S4:9.Lodd. B. C.

,,

JOXERA

Labill.N.

Pff. iv. 3a.

174.Verbenaceae-Viticoideae-

Clerodendreae.

pulchella Labill.B. M.

t.

6938. New Caledonia. I?


iii.

OXYBAPHUS

L'Herit.N.

Pff.

lb. 24,

under Mirabilis.
April- June,
if.

Nyetaginaceae-Mirabileae-Boerhaviinae.

glabrifolius Vahl.DC. xiii.2.431. Mexico. if

nyctagineus

Stveet.

DC.

xiii. 2.

434.

N. America.

240

HORTUS MORTOLENSIS
(cojitimied).
xiii. 2.

OXYBAPHUS

viscosus L' Her. DC.

430

B.
2.

M.

t.

434. Peru. i;

OXYPETALUM
t.

B. Br.N.

Pff.

iv.

259. Asclepicadaceae;

Cynanchoideae-Asclepiadeae-OxypetalinaB.

coeruleum Deem. DC.


347.

viii.

Argentina.
=

!(..

585 B. M. t. 3630 Spring-summer.


;

Fl. d. S.

IPACHYPHYTUM
unijiorum Rose

Klotzsch.N.

bracteosum Klotzsch.

B. M.
S.
iv.

Pff.

iii.

2a.

t.

4951.

Mexico.

34. Crassulaceae. 2l Summer.


.

Echeveria imiflora.

Pachyrhizus Thunbergianus

&

Z.
4.

Pueraria hirsuta.

PiEDERIA L.N.

Pff.

125. Rubiaceae-Colfeoideae471
;

PsychotriinaB-Psederieae.

tomentosa Blume.

DC.
i.

iv.

Fl. Brit. Ind.

iii.

197.

Japan, China, Himalaya, Malay Islands.

tP.^ONIA
If
.

L.

N.

Pff'. iii. 2.

55.
;

Ranunculaceae-Paeoniese.

B. M. t. 1756. 2888. Siberia. May. arborea Donn. Schneider, Hdh. Laubh. i. 271. P. Moutan v> April. Sims, B. M. t. 1154. China, Japan.
albiflora

PallDC.

66

corallina Betz.

DC.

i.

65.

Europe.

71.

April.

7788.China. 2;. Mlokosewitschi Lomah. in Act. Hort. Tiff,,


t.

lutea Franch.B. M.
casus.

ii.

282.

Caut.

Vr.

Moutan
S.

Ait.

arborea.
i.

peregrina

Mill DC.

66

B. M.

t.

1050

Moggr.

3.

Europe.

PALIURUS

Juss.

4. N.

March- April.

Spina-Christi Mill. DC. ii. 22 B. M. ij May-June.


;

Fl.
t.

Pff.

iii.

5.

401.

Rhamnaceae-Zizypheae.

P. acideatiis Lam. 1893. S. Europe, Temperate Asia.


d'lt. n.

2422.

Panax aculeatum Dryand.


,,
,,

= Acanthopanax. arboreum Forst, = Nothopanax. longissimum Hook. fil. = Nothopanax.


L.
Pff'.
ii.

PANCRATIUM

N. canariense Ker. Kwith, En.

5.

112. Amaryllidaceae-Ama-

ryllidoideae-Narcisseae-Pancratiinse.

Canary Islands. v. 659. November. Bed. Lil t. 153 Fl illyricum L.Kunth, En. 660 Western Mediterranean region. 1(.. May. n. 760.
; ;

14..

d'lt.

HOKTUS MOETOLENSIS

241

PANCRATIUM
maritimum
Lil.
t.

(continued).

L.

Kunth, En.
t.

v.

658

Fl. d'lt. n. 759

Bed.

8; Bichnell, July-October.

68.

Mediterranean
36.

shores.

v..

IPANDOREA
australis

Tecomeae.

N. Spach. N.
Spach.
;

rff. iv.

230.

Bignoniaceaeaustralis E. Br.

Pff.

I.

c.

Tecoma

DC.

ix.

225

Fl. Austr. iv. 537.


t.

Jard.

Malm.

43;

B. M.

t.

Bignonia pandorea Vent. 865.E. Australia. l?


I.

April- June.

jasminoides K. Schum. N. Pff. Lindl. DC. ix. 225 Fl. Austr.


;

c.

Tecoma jasminoides
;

iv.

Queensland, N.

S.

Wales.

i.

Tp .

B. M. t. 4004. 537 Spring-summer.

Bicasoliana H. Baill.

Podranea Bicasoliana.

PANICUM L.N.
S.t.

Kunth, En. 94 Fl. Ind. 55 Fl. 1743-4. India, China, Malaya. Summer-autumn. 141. Papaveraceae-PapaveroideaePAP AVER L. N.
plicatum Lam.
;

Pff.

ii.

2.

35. Gramineae-PaniceEe.
Brit.
24.

vii.

d.

Pff.

iii.

2.

Papavereae.

atlanticum Coss.Fedde, Papav. {B. V. C), 363 B. M. t. 7107. Morocco. U. April-May. bracteatum Lindl.DC. i. 119; B. M. t. 658; Fedde, Papav. April-May. {B. V. C), 365. Caucasus. 2;.
;

orientale

L.DC.

i.

119

B.

M.

(B. V. C),

364. Armenia. 2;.


Pfitz.N.
Pff.

Fedde, Papav. t. 57 April-May.


;

tPAPHIOPEDILUM

ii.

6.

84. Orchidaceae-

Diandrae-Cypripedilinae.

Lodd. B. C. t. 1321 insigne Pfitz.Fl. Brit. Ind. vi. 172 Winter. 2^. B. M. t. 3412, as Cypripedium. Nepal. venustum Pfitz.Fl. Brit. Ind. vi. 173 Lodd. B. C. t. 585 Winter. 21 B. M. t. 2129, as Cypripedium India. villosum Pfitz.Fl. Brit. Ind. vi. 171 Fl. d. S. t. 1475, as Winter. Cypripedium. India. 14..
;

PAPPEA Eckl.
lieae.

it

Zeyh.N.

Pff'. iii. 5.

334. Sapindaceae-Nephei.

capensis Eckl. & Zeyh.


Papyrus antiquoriLm Willd.
PardantMis chinensis Ker

Fl. Cap.

241.

Cape.

Tp

Cyperus Papyrus L.

Belamcanda.
B

242

HOETUS MOKTOLENSIS
Pff.
iii.

PARKINSONIA L.N.
aculeata
America.

3.

171. Leguminosifi-Csesal1.

pinioideae-Eucsesalpinieae.

L.~DC. ii. 486;

Desc. Fl. Med. Ant.

12.Tropical

Tp

July-August.
Pff.
iii.

PARROTIA
persica

C. A.

Mey.N.

2a.

126. Hamamelidaceaet.
.

Hamamelidoidese-Parrotieae.
C. A.

Mey.DC.
i.

Chron. 1893,

B. M. iv. 268 Northern Persia. l? 335.


;

Gard. 5744 March-April.


;

PARTHENOCISSUS Planch. N. Pff.

iii.

5.

448, sub Quinaria.


318.

Vitacese-Vitoideae.

Henryana
China

Diels

Gilg.

Schneider, Hdb. Laubh.


.

ii.

{Wilsooi, n.

440). ^
313.

himalayana Planch,
Hdb. Laubh. 1109).- Tj.
ii.

var. rubrifolia Gagnej).

Schneider,
n. 205,

Himalaya,
i.

China {Wilson,

Thomsoni

Laivs.

Fl. Brit. Lid.

657, as Vitis.

Himalaya,
Veitchii

China {Wilson, n. 235). T? . tricuspidata Planch.B. M. t. 8287.

Ampelo^sis
Hort.
data Lynch.

Parth. Veitchii Graebn.

tricuspidata Sieb.

& Zucc.
Vitis

Amp.

Vitis inconstans Miq.

Veitchii, V. tricuspiT?

V. japonica Hort. &c.

Japan, China.

May.

PASSERINA
jBliformis
S.

melgeoideae-Daphnese-Passerininse.
xiv.

N. L. DC.
L.

Pff.

iii.

6a. 241.

562

Thymelgeaceae-Thy Marloth, Kapland,


74.

Africa. Tp.

May.
Pff.
iii.

:JPASSIPLORA L.N.
florese.

6a.

86. Passifloraceae-Passit.

Actinia Hooh. B. M. t. 4009 1902, ii. 15. S. Brazil. T?

Fl. d. S.
.

10

Gard. Chron.

April-June.

adenopoda Moq. DC. iii. 330. Mexico. i? . July-August, Lodd. B. C. t. 246 B. M. t. 66 alata Ait.DC. iii. 328 Gard. Chron. 1894, i. 19, and 1897, ii. 449-51. Peru. T? . alba Lh. d Otto.Nich. Diet. Gard. 29.Brazil. Tj .
; ; ;

March-June. Banksii Benth. Fl. Austr. iii. 312. Disemma coccinea DC. B. M. t. 4140. Queensland. Tj . April- June. iii. 333 caerulea L.DC. iii. 330 B. M. t. 28. Brazil, Peru. Tp .
;

All the year.

cseruleo-racemosa Lodd. B. C. t. 573. Garden origin. Tj . All the year.

P. arc-en-ciel.

HOETUS MORTOLENSIS
PASSIFLORA
capsularis
{continued).

243

L.DC.

iii.

325
329;
l? .

B. M.

t.

7751.Brazil l?

All the year.

edulis Sims.DC.
1898,
i.

iii.

B.M.t.l9S9] Gard.
May-June.

Chron.

101. Brazil

exoniensis Hort.

Tacsonia exoniensis.
;

Diet. Gard. ii. 31 B. M. t. 7052. Spring-autumn. Herbertiana Lindl.Fl. Austr. iii. 311 Lodd. B. G. t. 1364. Disemma Herbertiana DC. iii. 332. Queensland, N. S.

Hahnii Mast.Nich.
Mexico.

Tp .

Wales.

Tj

Summer.
iii.

ignea Hort.

Tacsonia manicata.

incarnata L.DC.

329 B. M.
;

t.

3697. Tropical America.

f?-

insignis Hook, fil = Tacsonia insignis. lunata Juss.B. M. t. 2354; DC. iii. 331. Mexico. Tj Summer.

manicata Pers.
militaris Hort.

= =

Tacsonia manicata. Tacsonia militaris.

mollissima H. B. K.
84, as P. princeps.

Tacsonia mollissima.
iii.

racemosa Brot.DC.
suberosa L.DC.
Smith, Ex. Bot.
iii.

329

B. M.
Tp .

t.

2001; Lodd. B. C.

t.

t.

Brazil. All the year. 325 Nich. Diet. 32 Fl. W. hid. 290 Summer. W. Indies.
; ;

28.

T?

Van-Volxemi Hook.

fil.

Tacsonia Van-Volxemi.
Pff. iv. 36.

PAULOWNIA
China.

Sieb.

d Ziicc.K

66. Scrophulariii.

aceae-Antirrhinoideae-Cheloneae.

Fargesi Franch.

\^

tomentosa

Baill.

Schneider, Fl.
t.

Hdb. Laubh.
2941.
;

618.

Central
&
ii.

d'lt. n.
x.

P.

im;perialis Sieb.

Zucc. Fl. Jap.

10

DC.

300

The Gard. 1901,

130.

Japan.
PAVONIA
hastata Cav.

Tp

April-May.

Cav.N. Pff. iii. 6. 46. Malvaceee-Urene*. June-December. DC. i. 443. Brazil. Tp prsemorsa Cav. DC. i. 444 B. M. t. 436 Fl. Cap. i. 170. T? March-November. S. Africa. Schimperiana Hochst. Fl. Trop. Afr. i. 192. Abyssinia, Tj Summer. &c. spinifex Cav. DC. i. 442; Fl. W. hid. 82. W. Indies,

Tropical America.

i?

August-October.

var. ovalifolia

DC.

i.

443.

ip

August-October. R 2

244

HORTUS MORTOLENSIS
Pff.
iii.

JPEIRESKIA Plum.N.
kioicleae.

6a.

203. Cactaceae-Peires-

Mill DC. iii. 474 K. Schnm. Mon. 758; B. M. t. October-November. 7147. Tropical America. T? K. Schum. Mon. 764. Paraguay. ^ amapola Web.
aculeata
;
.

June-October.

argentina Web.K. Schum. Mon. 764. Argentina. Tj


bleo Hort.

grancUfolia.

brasiliensis Pfeiff.K. Schum. Mon.

760. Tropical America.


.

discolor Web.

foetens Weingart.

Tropical America. ^ Tropical America. ^

. ;

Godseffiana Hort. Sand.Gard. Chron. 1908,

i.

257.

fig.

114.

Tropical America. ^ Monatsschrft. grandifolia Haio.DC. iii. 475 June, 131. Tropical America. ^

f.

K. 1904,

undulata Lem. Monatsschrft


America.

f.

K. 1904, 187. Tropical

PEIRESKIOPSIS
iii.

Britt.

d Bose
I.

in Smiths. Misc. Coll. vol. 50,

Cactacese-Opuntioideae. 331. Opuntia aquosa Britt. & Bose, Schum. Mon. Nachtr. 149. Mexico. ^
n.

1775.

c.

aqu.

Web.

K.

autumnalis Eichlam
Guatemala.
Tp

in

Monatsschrft.

331. Op. Brand. K. Schum. & Bose, Brandegeei Mon. 653. Lower 331. Op. Chapistle Web. & Bose, chapistle Mexico. & Bose, 332 Web.^. Schum. Op. pititache Mon. 654. Mexico. 332. Op. Porteri K. Brandegee, Porteri d Bose, K. Schum. Mon. 654. Mexico.
Britt.
I.e.

f.

K. 1909, 22.

California.
I.

Tp

Britt.

c.

t.

44.

Tp

Britt.

I.

c.
.

pitit.

T?

Britt.

I.

c.

Tj

rotundifolia Britt.

&
.

Bose,

I.

c.

333.

Peireskia

rot.

DC.

iii.

475. Mexico. ^
spathulata

Britt.

<&

Bose,

I.

c.

33.

Op. spath.

Web.

Mexico.

'?

^PELARGONIUM
Geraniese.

L'Her. N.

Pff.

iii.

4.

10. Geraniaceaei.

abrotanifolium Jacq. H. Sch.


i.

282

Siueet, Ger.

t.

DC. t. 136 351. S. Africa. ^


;

661

Fl. Cap.

June,

HOETUS MOETOLENSIS

245

PELARGONIUM

{continued).
i.

alchemilloides Willd.DC. October-March. 1(.

660

FL

Cajy.

i.

295. Cape.

anceps Jacq.DC.
October-March.

i.

660;

Fl.

Cap.

i.

289. Cape. 2(.


i.

capitatum Ait. DC.


Spring.

i.

674;
655 671

Fl.

Cap.

303. Cape. >?


;

carnosum Ait. DC.


98. Cape. T?. cordatum Ait.DC.
22; B.

i.

Fl. Cap.

i.

278
302

Siveet, Ger.

t.

May.
i.
;

Fl. Cap.
.

i.

L'Her. Ger.
Ger.

t.

April-June. M. t. 165. Cape. Tp crispum Ait.DC. i. 677 Fl. Cap. i. 304 L'Her. April-May. 32 Sweet, Ger. t. 383. Cape. ^
;
; .

t.

crithmifolium Sm.DC.
Ger.
t.
;

Stoeet, Fl. Cap. i. 278 i. 655 354 Gard. Chron. 1899, i. 19 Jacq. H. Sch. t. 137, T? March-June. Cape. as P. paniculatum. dasycaulon Sims in B. M. t. 2029 DC. i. 653 Fl. Cap. i.
;

279.

Cape.
;

if.

June.
;
;

denticulatum

H. Sch. t. 135 DC. i. 659 Fl. Cap. i. 307 Siveet, Ger. t. 109. Cape. ^ echinatum Cicrtis in B. M. t. 309 DC. i. 665 Fl. Cap. i. 299 Jacq. H. Sch. t. 138, as P. ha^natum. Siueet, Ger. t. 54 May. S. Africa. Tp Endlicherianum Fenzl.B. M. t. 4946 Nich. Diet. Gard.
Jacq.
. ; ; ;

iii.

61.

fig.

63

Fl. d. S.

t.

2031

Gard. Chron. 1901,

ii.

149. Asia Minor. 2^.


ficifolium Hoffmgg.S. Africa.

^
;

gibbosum Willd.DC.
t.

i.

662

Fl. Cap.

i.

276

Siveet, Ger.

61.

Cape.

Tp

October.
; ; ;

glutinosum Ait. DC. i. 679 FL Cap. i. 306 B. M. 1. 143 March- April. L'Her. Ger. t. 20. Cape. ip grandiflorum Willd.DC. i. 667 Fl. Cap. i. 294 Siveet, Ger. t. 29. Cape. i? graveolens Ait. DC. i. 678 Fl. Cap. i. 306 L'Her. Ger.
.

t.

17.

Cape.

T?

March-June.
i.

inquinans Ait.DC.
fig.

659; Fl. Cap.

i.

299; Dill. H. Elth.

151;

Nich. Diet.

Gard.

iii.

62.

fig.

64. Cape. i?
i.

October-May. malvsefolium Jacq.DC.


tp
.

i.

654

Fl. Cap.

296. Cape.

April-May.
Trop. Afr.
i.

multibracteatum Hochst.Fl.

293. Abyssinia.

V.

April-May.

246

HOETUS MOETOLENSIS
(contimied).
Ait.

PELARGONIUM
t.

odoratissimum
2^9
;

DC.
1.
i.

i.

659; Fl. Cap.


Fl. Cap.

i.

300; Siveet, Ger.


.

Bossche, Ic. Sel.

146. S. Africa. v
;

All the year,

peltatum Ait. DC.


Siveet, Ger.
t.

666

i.

293

B.

M.
t.

t.

20

95.

S. Africa.

pulverulentum
S. Africa.

Colv.

Fl. Cap.
;

Tp
i.

May- June.
;

272

Siveet, Ger.

218.

March-May, October. quercifolium Ait. DC. i. 678 Fl. Cap. i. 306 L'Her. Ger. March. t. 14. Cape. I? Tp var. pinnatifidum L'Her. Ger. t. 15. quinatum Sims in B. M. t. 547 DC. i. 659 Fl. Cap. i. 285; Siveet, Ger. t. 79. S. Africa. Tj quinquevulnerum Willd.DC. i. 664 Sioeet, Ger. t. 161 April-June. Fl. Cap. i. 275. S. Africa. 1? Radula Ait. DC. i. 679 Fl. Cap. i. 307 UHer. Ger. 1. 16.
If.
;

Cape.
300
;

[p

Spring.
in B.
t.
;
;

M. t. 493 DC. i. 666 Fl. Cap. 48. S. Africa. I? saniculsefolium Willd.DC. i. 668; Fl. Cap. i. 294. Cape.
reniforme Curtis
Sioeet, Ger.

i.

bstenopetalum Ehrh.

= zonale.
; ;

tetragonum L'Her. Ger. t. 22 DC. i. 658, PI. Gr. t. 96 B. M. t. 136; Sweet, Ger. t. 99; Fl. Cap. i. 286. S. Africa.

ip

Spring-summer.
; ;

i. 671 Fl. Cap. i. 305 B. M. t. April-June. 168. S. Africa. i? tricolor Curtis in B. ilf t. 240 DC. i. 657 Fl. Cap. i. 293 Sweet, Ger. t. 43. 69. S. Africa. T? B. M. t. 1641. Fl. Cap. i. 274 triste Ait.DC. i. 662

tomentosum Jacq.DC.
518
;

Siveet, Ger.

t.

Cape.
19.

If.

June.
i.

vitifolium Ait. DC.

674

Fl. Cap.

i.

303

L'Her. Ger.

t.

S. Africa.

l?

April-June.
i.

zonale Willd.DC.
fig.

659
T?
.

Fl. Cap.
all

i.

298

Nich. Did. 63.

Almost the year. 299, stenopetalum Harv. Fl. Cap. Spring-summer. 195. Cactaceae6 PELECYPHORA Ehrenb. N.
67.

S. Africa.

var.

i.

S.

Africa.

Tp

Pff.

iii.

a.

Cereoideae-Mamillarieae.

aselliformis Ehrenb.~K. Schum. Mon. 602; B. M.

t.

6061.

Mexico.

!(..

pectinata K. Schum. Mon, Cact. 603.

Mexico.

If.

HOKTUS MOETOLENSIS

247

PELTOPHORUM
Tropical

Walp.

N.
.

Pff.

iii.

3.

176. LeguminosaeTrop. Afr.


ii.

Caesalpinioidese-Eucaesalpinieae.

africanum Sond.Fl. Cap.


S. Africa.

ii.

270

Fl

260.

PENNISETUM
.

Pers.N. Pff. ii. 2. 38. Gramineae-Paniceae. longistylum Hochst. Nich. Diet. iii. 69. fig. 74. Abyssinia. If Spring-summer.

PENTAPTERYGIUM

Klotzsch.N.
Brit. Incl.
t.

Pff. iv. 1.

55. Ericaceaes.

Vaccinioideae-Thibaudieae.
Fl. serpens Klotzsch. Hook. fil. III. Him. PI.

15 b.

Vaccinium Himalaya. ^
iii.

449.

PENTSTEMON

Mitch. (Pentastemon). A^. Pff.

iv.

Sb.

65.

Scrophulariaceae-AntirrhinoideaB-Cheloneae.

barbatus Both.DC. x. 329 Nich. Diet. Gard. 72. fig. 71. Mexico. May-June. If. campanulatus Willd.DC. x. 326 B. M. t. 1878. 3884 Lodd. B. C. t. 420. Mexico. If. May-June. Mexico. 2^. Cobsea Nutt.DC. x. 326; B. M. t. 3465. May-June. glaber Pursh.DC. x. 324 B. M. t. 1672. 4319. Western North America. 2^. May-June. Hartwegii Benth. DC. x. 323 P. gentianoides Lindl. B. M. May-February. Fl. d. S. t. 730. Mexico. 4. t. 3661 laevigatus Ait.B. M. t. 1425.DC. i. 327, as P. puhescens N.America. %. May-June. Sol. Murrayanus Hook. B. M. t. 3472; DC. x. 322. Texas. 2^. May- June. ovatus Dougl.DC. x. 328 B. M. t. 2903. N. America. May-June. If
;

perfoliatus A. Brongn.

Torreyi Benth.
June.

DC.

DC.
x.
Pff'.

x.

326.

324.

N.
5.

Mexico. America.

if.

if.

May-

JPENTZIA Thunb.~N.
July-November.

iv.

283. Compositae-Antheiii.

mideae-Chrysantheminae. virgata Less. DC. vi. 137


ip
.

Fl. Cap.

173. S. Africa.

PEPEROMIA Bz.
argyreia Hort.

& Pav.N.

Pff'. iii. 1.

10. Piperaceae.
iii.

Sandersii.

eburnea Linden.

Nich.

Diet.

Gard.

74.

Colombia.

2;.

248

HORTUS MORTOLENSIS
(continued).

PEPEROMIA

resedseflora Linden

& Andre. B. M.
1.

t.

6619. Colombia.
t.

USandersii
S.

C.

America.

DCDC. xvi.
If.

400; B. M.

5634.Tropical

JPERIPLOCA L.N.
graeca

Pff.

iv. 2.

216. Asclepiadaceae-PeriploLodd. B. G. 1. 1389; t. 2289 Tj . Mediterranean region.


;

coideae-Periploceae.

L.DC.

viii.

498

B. M.

Fl. d'lt. n. 2736.

Eastern
viii.

June.
laevigata Ait. DC.

498; Fl.

d'lt. n.
T? .

2739. Canaries,

Spain, N. Africa, Sicily, Syria.

June.

JPERSEA

L. N. Pff. iii. 2. 114. Lauraceas-PersoideaB-Cinnamomeae. gratissima Gaertn.DC. xv. 1. 52 B. M. t. 4580.Tropical Tj February-March. America. indica Spreng. DC. xv. 1. 52. Laurus indica Thunb.
;

Phcehe indica Pax, N. Pff. Tp May. Canaries.

I.

c.

115.

Azores,
Tj
.

Madeira,

sericea Kunth.

DC.

xv.

1.

46.

Peru.
;

May-July.

PERSOONIA S7n.N. Pff.


-Persoonieae.

iii.

1.

131. Proteaceae-Persoonioideae
B. M. under
t?
.

Toru

A.

Cunn.DC.
Guss.N.

xiv.

331

t.

3513

Hdb.

Fl. N. Zeald.

241. New Zealand,


Pff.
iii.

PETAGNIA

8.

144. Umbelliferas-Sanicu;

loideae-Lagoeciese.

saniculifolia

Guss.DC.

iv.

83

Fl. d'lt. n.

2228. Sicily.

UPETASITES
L.

N.

Pff. iv. 5. 290.

Compositae-Senecioneae;

Senecioninae.

fragrans Presl.Fl. d'lt. n. 3472 The Gard. 1902, ii. 58. Nardosmia fragrans Reichb. DC. v. 205. Mediterranean January-February. region If.
.

PETROPHILA
Australia.

B. Br.N.

Pff.

iii.

1.

134. Proteaceae-PerFl. Austr. v.

soonioideae-Proteeae.

divarioata B.

Br.DC.
Tj
.

xiv.

272

326. W.

October.

Petrophyes

Webb = Monanthes Haw.

HOKTUS MOKTOLENSIS

249

PETROSELINUM

Hffm.N.

Pff.

iii.

8.

186. Umbelliferas2273. S. Europe,

Apioideae-Ammineae-Carinse.

sativum Hffm.DC. iv. 102 . May-June. N. Africa.


;

Fl. d'lt. n.

PETUNIA

Mss. N.

Pff.

iv.

Sb.

34.

Solanacese-Cestreaet.

Nicotianinge.

nyctaginiflora Juss.DC. xiii. 1. 573; B. M. Autumn-spring. Argentina.


;

2552.

violacea Lindl.DC. xiii. 1. 573 B. M. t. 3556. Argentina. 0. (Various hybrid forms.) Autumn-spring.

PEUCEDANUM L.N. Pff. iii.8.234. Umbelliferae-ApioideaeFerulinae.

Galbanum
Galbanum
Bert.

Benth.
L. B.

& Hook.
M.

f.

Fl.

Cap.

ii.

560, as

Buhon
vert.

verticillare Spreng.

Fl.
11
.

t.

2489. Cape. 2^.


d'lt.

n. 2348.

Tommasinia

S.Europe.
Molina. N.

June-July.
iii.

IPEUMUS
17.

Pff.

2.

99. Monimiaceae-Monimi;

oideae-Hedycariese

Boldus Molina.DC.

xvi. 2.

P.

674

Perk. Monim. {B. V. C),


t.

fragrans

Pers.

B.

M.

7024.

Chili.

Tp

March.

PPEIPPERA

Salm.

N.

Pff.

iii.

6 a. 196.

Cactaceae-Cereoideae;

Khipsalideae.

ianthothele Web.K. Schum. Mon. 610 Argentina. as Pf. cereiformis Salm.

Pfeiff'.

Abb.

ii. t.

9,

2^.

Phaca

bcetica

L.

= Astragalus

lusitanicus

Lam.

(see

Supple-

ment).

PHACELIA Mss.N.
lieae.

Pff. iv. 3a.

63. Hydrophyllaceae-Phace299; B. M.
t.

tanacetifolia Benth.DC.
fornia.

ix.

3703. Cali-

0.

Summer.
Pff. iv. Bb.

tPH.ffilDRANTHUS Miers.N.
Bignonieae.

219. Bignoniaceaebuccinatoria

buccinatorius Miers.

N.
t.

Pff.

I.

c.

Bignonia

DC.
T? .

ix.

195

B. M.
all

7516.5. Kerere Hort. Mexico.

Nearly

the year.

250

HORTUS MORTOLENSIS
D.

PH-ffilNOCOMA
prolifera D.
t.

Don.N. Pff.
vi.
ii.

iv. 5.

188. CompositEe-Inuleae
Fl. Cap.
iii.

-Gnaphalinae.

Don. DC.

266
t.

287
.

B. M.

2365; Bossche,

Ic. Sel.

42. S. Africa. i?

PHAGNALON
region.
1(.

Cass.N.
v.

Pff. iv. 5.

187. Compositae-Inulesen.

Gnaphalinse.

rupestre DC.
.

396; Fl. April-May.

d'lt.

3632. Mediterranean

JPHARBITIS

Choisy.N.

Pff. iv. 3a.

31. Convolvulaceae-Con-

volvuloidege-Convolvuleae-Convolvulinae.

hispida Choisy.DC. ix. 341 B. M. t. 113. 1005. 1682. Central and S. America. 0. Summer-autumn. Learii Lindl.B. M. t. 3928; DC. ix. 343 Bossche, Ic. Sel. Tp . Spring and Central and S. America. iv. t. 164. summer.
;

Nil

ChoisTj.

DC.ix.did. Tropics.
Pff'.
iii.

Summer-autumn.

JPHASEOLUS L.N.
Caracalla L. DC. coccineus L. Fl.
392.

3.

379. Leguminosse-Papilio.

natae-Phaseoleae-Phaseolinae.

ii.

390.

America. ^
2188.

d'lt. n.

P. multiflorus

W. DC.

ii,

Mexico, N. and

S.

America.

Summer.

(Run-

ners or climbing beans.)

vulgaris L.DC. ii. 392 0j. (Dwarf bean.)

Fl. d'lt. n.

2187. S. America.

PHILADELPHUS L.N.

Pff.

iii.

2ft.

69. Saxifragacese-Hy-

drangeoidese-Pliiladelpheae.

brachybotrys iiToe/wie var. purpurascens Zoe/i7ie. 5^c/i7mder, Hdh. Lauhh. i. 373. China {Wilson, n. 1346). Tp incanus Koehne. Schneider, Hdh. Lauhh. i. 370. China (MZso7i, n. 574. 583). T?.

mexicanus
ii.

Schlchtd.

218; Schneider, Hdh. Lauhh.


365.

microphyllus A.
Laithh.
i.

N. Gray. N.

Pff'.

I.

c.

71

Gard. Chron. 1903


71
Schneider, Hdh.
1(..
Tp
.

i.

362. Mexico. i;. May.


I.

Colorado, New Mexico. 581). Wilsonii Koehne. China (Wilson,


n.
viii.

Pff.

c.

May.
June.

JPHILLYREA L.N. Pff. iv. 2. 9. Oleaceas-Oleoideae-OleineiB.


-angustifolia L.DC. I? April-May.

292

Fl. d'lt. n.

2726. S. Europe.

HOETUS MOETOLENSIS

251

PHILLYREA
latifolia

{continued).
viii.

L.DC.
viii.
.

292; Fl.
.

d'lt.

n.

2726

var.

Europe, Morocco.

y. S.

April-

May.
2726 var./3. S. Europe,
var. y a.

*media L.DC.
N. Africa.

var.

292; Fl.

d'lt. n.

Tj

April-May.
Fl. d'lt. n.
.

spinosa Willd. T?

2726 April-May.
Bal.

Ph.

ilicifolia

Vilmoriniana

Boiss.

<

B. M.
.

t.

6800.

shore of the Black Sea.

South-eastern

Tj

April- May.

Philodendron pertusum Kunth & Bouche

Monstera.

PHLOMIS

L.

N.

Pff.

iv.

3a.

248.

Labiatse-Stachyoide^Boiss. Fl. Or.


iv.

DC. cashmeriana Boyle. DC.


armeniaca
Willd.

Lamiinae.

xii.

538

783.

Asia Minor, Armenia.

2^.
xii.

542

"Western Himalaya, Afghanistan.

chrysophylla
Greece.

Boiss. Fl. Or. iv.


xii.

788. Syria.
T^
.

Fl. Brit. Ind. iv. 692.

ferruginea Ten.DC.

540

Fl. d'lt. n.

i? May. 2123. S. Italy,


.

ij

June-July.
xii.
.

fruticosa

L.DC.

Greece, Italy.

l?

540 B. M. April-May.
;

t.

1843

Fl. d'lt. n. 3124.

lanata Willd.DC.
Crete.

xii.

DC. 539 Jacq. Hort. Sch. 359 W. 448. Spain, Portugal. May. viscosa Poir. DC. 540 Boiss. Fl. Or. 788. Syria, Asia Minor. April-May.
purpurea L.
xii.
;

539;

Fl. d'lt. n.

3125. Calabria,
t.

ip

October.

<&

L. Fl. Hisp.

ii.

ij

xii.

iv.

T^

PHLOX

L.N.
;

Pff. iv. da.

46. Polemoniaceae-Polemoniese.
;

divaricata L.DC. ix. 305 B. M. t. 163 Lodd. B. C. 1418 The Gard. 1901, ii. 251. P. canadensis Sweet. Atlantic N. America. 4. April.
;

t.

Drummondii Hook.B. M.

0.

t.

3441

DC.

ix.

305. Texas.
2^.

Spring.

paniculata L.

DC.
ii.

ix.

303.

Atlantic N. America.
origin.

JPHCENIX L.N. Pff.

3.

28. PalmEe-Coryphinge-Phcenicese.
!).

acaulis Hort. (non Boxh.

canariensis Hort. Beccari, Malesia iii. 369 Gard. Chron. Nich. Diet. Suppl. 596. P. Mhce Webb. 1894, i. 405
; ;

Garden

Tj

Canaries.

Tj

Spring.

252

HORTUS MORTOLENSIS
(continued).

PHCENIX
;

dactylifera L. 355 Fl. cVIt.

Knnth,
n.

En.

iii.

517. N.

Africa,
i?

255 Beccari, Malesia iii. Spring. Arabia. i?


;
. .

hybrida Hort.

macrocarpa
origin.

Spring. Garden 364. Garden Hort. Beccari, Malesia


origin.
iii.

V>

Spring.

pumila
;

Hort.

reclinata Jacq. Kunth, En. iii. 256 Beccari, Malesia iii. 349 Fl. Cap. vii. 29. Tropical and S.E. Africa. T? Spring.
;

Origin unknown.
origin.
V)

l?

Spring.

Spring. Garden 425 Beccari, Malesia rupicola T. Anders. Fl. Brit. Ind. 395. Sikkim, Himalaya. 255 Beccari, Malesia sylvestris Boxb. Kunth, En. 425. India, Burma. Spring. 364; Fl. Brit. Ind. 41. Liliaceae -Asphodeloideae FHORMIUM Forst. N.
Rivieri Hort.
iii.
.

vi.

Tp

iii.

iii.

vi.

T?

Pff.

ii.

5.

-Hemerocallideae.

tenax Forst.Hdb.

Fl.

N. Zeald. 286

Bed. Lil.

t.

448-9.

N. Zealand.
var.

2^.

June.
.

atropurpureum Hort.Nich. Diet. 106. 2;


Lindl.N.
Pff.
iii.

June.

PHOTINIA

3.

25. Rosaceae-Pomoidee-

Pomarieae.

DC. ii. 631 Schneider, Hdb. Laubh. i. April-May. 708. California. 1? serrulata LwcZZ. DC. ii.631; Fl.d'It.n.lMl. Cratcegus glaMarch-May. bra Thunb. B. M. t. 2105 Japan, China. T?
arbutifolia Lindl.
; .

PHYGELIUS

E. Meij.N.

Pff. iv. 36.

63. ScrophulariaceseM.
t.

Antirrhinoideae-CheloneaB.

capensis E. Mey.DC. T7 April-November.


.

x.

300

B.

4881. S. Africa.

PHYLICA

L.

N.

Pff.

iii.
ii.

5.

416.
;

Rhamnacese-Rhamneae.
M.
t.

ericoides

L.DC.

34

B.

224

Fl
ii.

Cap.

i.

499.
Africa.

S. Africa.

T?

October-May.
ii.

paniculata Willd.DC.

36

Fl. Cap.

482. S.
t.

^?li.

rosmarinifolia Thunb. DC. Cap. ii. 483. S. Africa. i?

35

Lodd. B. C.

849

Fl.

PHYLLIS L.N.
Nobla
L.

Pff. iv. 4.

129. Rubiaceae-Coffeoideae-PsyIc. Sel.


t.

chotriinae-Anthospermae.

Madeira.

DC.
1?
.

iv.

Bossche, 579 June-July.


;

94.

Canaries,

HOETUS MOETOLENSIS

253

IPHYLLOCACTUS

Link.

N.

Pff.

iii.

6a.

182. Cactaceae;

Cereoideae-Echinocacteae.

Ackermannii Salm.K. Schum. Mon. 215


May-June. anguliger Lem.K. Schum. Mon. 208;
T?
.

B.

M.
t.

t.

3598.

Mexico.

B.

M.

5100.

S. Mexico. June. ^ biformis Lab.K. Schum. Mon. 218; B. M. t. 6156. Honduras. ^ Tp caulorrhizus Lem. K. Schum. Mon. 208. Honduras ? crenatus Levi. K. ScMim. Mon. 207. Honduras. ^ June, K. Schum. Mon. 206. grandis Lem.Fl. d. S. iii. 255 June-October. Honduras. ^ Hookeri Salm.K. Schum. Mon. 211 Pfeiff. d: Otto, Abb. i.
. .


t.
.

Brazil, Guiana. Junelatifrons Zucc. K. Schum. Mon. 213. Mexico. July. Costa lepidocarpus Web. K. ScMim. Mon. Nachtr. Kica. Abb. phyllanthoides Link. K. Schum. Mon. 216
t.

5; B.

M.

2692, as Cereus phyllanthus.

\^

68.

Tp

Pfeiff.

ii.

17.5. M. t. 2092. S. Mexico. Tp May. Phyllanthus Link.K. Schum. Mon. 205; Pfeiff. Abb. 1. 10. DC. PI. Gr. t. 145. S. Brazil. Tp
t.
. .

i.

K. Schum. Mon. Nachtr. Costa Rica. 41. Cuba. strictus Lem. K. Schum. Mon. 209.
Pittieri Web.
fp
.

72.

June.

fig.

ip

JPHYLLOCLADUS
cladoidese.

Bich.N.

Pff.

ii.

1.

108. Taxaceae-Phyllo498; Hdb. Fl. N. Zeald.

trichomanoides D. Don. DC.


259
;

xvi. 2.

Pilger, Taxac. {E. V. C. iv.

5.),

97. N. Zealand. Tp
ii.

PHYLLOSTACHYS
-Bambuseae.

Sieb.

& Zucc.N.

Pff.

2.

93. Gramine^

aurea A. & G. Biviere. Nich. Diet. Suppl. 598; Freem. Bamb. Gard. 114. China. ip Castillonis Hort. Freem. Bamb. Gard. 152 Satow, Cult. Bamb. Jap. 87, with plate. Japan. Tp flexuosa A. <& C. Biviere. Freem. Bamb. Gard. 131.

Henonis Hort. Satow, Cult. Bamb. Jap. China.


China.
Tp

40,

with plate.

Tp

254

HORTUS MORTOLENSIS
Kumasaca Munro. Freem.
(continued).

PHYLLOSTACHYS

Banib. Gard. 162

Satoiv, Cult.

Bamh. Jap. 70, with plate. Japan. ^ Satoio, Cult. Marliacea Hort. Freem. Bamh. Gard. 158 Bamh. Jap. 85, with plate. China, Japan. Tj mitis A. & C. BivUre. Freem. Bamh. Gard. 117 Satoiv, V* China, Japan. Cult. Bamh. Jap. 35, with plate. nigra Munro. Freem. Bamh. Gard. 142 Satoio, Cult. Bamh. Tj China, Japan. Jap. 52, with plate B. M. t. 7994. Satoio, Quilioi A. d C. Biviere. Freem. Bamh. Gard. 124 China, Japan. Cult. Bamh. Jap. 22, with plate. \^

PHYSALIS L.N. Pff. iv. Sh. 19. Solanaceae-Solaneae-Solaninae.


Prancheti Mast,
Suppl. 599.
in Gard. Chron. 1894,
ii.

441

Nich. Diet.

Japan. 0. Summer. 440. America. peruviana L. DC.


xiii. 1.

S.

Summer.

Physianthus Mart. & Zucc.

Araujia.
Pff.
iii.

PHYSOCARPUS Maxim.N.
oideae-Spiraeese.

3.

14. RosacesB-Spiraei.

opulifolia Maxim.
op. L.

Schneider, Hdh. Laubh.


Neillia
opiilif.

442.

Spircea

DC.

ii.

542.
.

Benth. & Hook.

April-May. to Florida. \^ P. Schneider, Hdh. Lauhh. i. 444. pauciflorus Heller. Torreyi Hook. fil. B. M. t. 7758. South-western United T? April-May. States.

Canada

PHYSOCHL.fflNA
orientalis
G.

G.

Don.N.
xiii.

Pff. iv. 36.

17. SolanaceaeB. M.
t.

Solaneae-Hyoscyaminee.

Don.DC.
!(..

1.

555;

2414.

Caucasus.

PHYTOLACCA L.N.
lacceae.

Pff.

iii.

lb.

10. Phytolaccacese-Phytoii.

*decandra L.DC. xiii. 2. 32; B. M. t. 931; Fl.d' It N. America. U. July-October.

1058.

Peru to Argentina. June. [B. Nachtr. 23. Pinaceae-Abietineae. JPICEA Link. N. 416. Abies excelsa Poir. Fl. excelsa Link. DC. Europe. ^
V.

dioica

L.DC.

xiii. 2.

30; Fl. d'lt. n. 1059; Walter, Phytol.


Tp
.

C), 46.

Pff.

ii.

1. 77,

xvi. 2.
.

d'lt.

n. 91.

Morinda Link.DC.

xvi.

2.

416;

Fl. Brit.
.

Gard. Chron. 1904, i. 325. Himalaya. Tj Smithiana Boiss. = Morinda.

Ind. v. 653; March-April.

HORTUS MORTOLENSIS
PILEA Lincll. N.
Pff.
iii.

255

microphylla Liehm.
Tropical America.

DC.
14..

1.

108. Urticaceae-Procridese.
Nich. Diet. 125. xvi. 1. 106 Spring and summer.
;

muscosa Hort.

microphylla.
iii.

+PILOCARPUS Vahl.N Pff.

4.

157. Rutacese-Rutoidesev>
.

-Cuspar ieae-Pilocarpinse B. M. pennatifolius Lem. December.

racemosus
Pilocereiis

Vahl.

DC.

i.

Brazil. 728. W. Indies.


t.

7235.

May-

f?

= Cereus. Pilogyne suavis Schrad. = Melothria punctata Cogn.


Lem.

PIMELEA

Banks d Sol.N.

Pff.

iii.

6a.

242.Thymelseacese-

Thymelseoideae-Pimeleeae.
decussata R. Br.

= ferruginea.

ferruginea Labill. Fl. Austr. vi. 10. P. decussata R. Br. DC. xiv. 502; Lodd. B. C. t. 1283. W. Australia. T? Nearly always. spectabilis Lindl. DC. xiv. 504 Fl. Austr. vi. 9 B.M. t. 3950. W. Australia. T?.

Pincenectitia tuherculata Hort.

Beaucarnea recurvata Lem.

(see

Supplement).

JPINGUICULA

Tourn.N.

Pff. iv. 3b.

118. Lentibulariacese;

Utricularieae.

grandiflora Lam. Ardoino, Fl. Alp. Mar. 307 April- July. n. 3224 y h. Sea Alps. if:

Fl. d'lt.

tPINUS L.N,
.

Pff.

ii.

1.

70; Nachtr.

bruttia Ten.DC. March. 1?

xvi. 2.

384

Fl. d'lt. n.

21. Pinacese-Abietine^. 856. Calabria.

canariensis C. Sm. DC. xvi. March-April. Coulteri D. Don.DC. xvi.

2.

393.

Canary Islands.
;

Tj

2.

392

Jeps. Silva Calif. 84.

California. edulis Engelm. DC. excelsa Wall. DC.


t.

24.

Tp

xvi. 2. 398.

xvi. 2. 404.

New Mexico. Himalaya.


Tp
;

Tp

*halepensis Mill.DC. xvi. 2. 383 Tp March. ranean region.

Fl. d'lt. n.

85. Mediter-

insignis Dougl.
Jeflfreyi

radiata.
xvi. 2.

Murr.DC.

393

B. M.

t.

8257. California.

256

HORTUS MORTOLENSIS
{continued).

PINUS

Lambertiana Dotujl. DC. xvi. 70. t. 15. N. California. T?


.

2.

406

Jeps. Silva Calif.

Laricio Foir.DC.
Asia Minor.
Tj
.

xvi. 2.

longifolia Boxb.DC. Himalaya. maritima Lam. = Pinaster Massoniana Lamb. DC.


f?
.

386

Fl
;

d'lt. n.

86. S. Europe,
652.

xvi. 2.

390

Fl. Brit. hid. v.

Sol.
xvi. 2.

389

Sieb.

Zucc. Fl. Jap.

114. China. ^. Montezumae Lamb. DC. xvi. 2. 398; Gard. Chron. 1899, i. 147. Mexico. Tp Tp patula Schiede & Deppe.DC. xvi. 2. 397. Mexico. *Pinaster SolDC. xvi. 2. 382 Fl. d'lt. n. 84. S.W. Europe,
t.

113.

Algeria.

Tp

April-May.
xiv. 2.

Pinea L.DC.
radiata D. Don.
*silvestris

381

i^Z. d'/i.

region, Canaries, Madeira.

Jeps.
2.
.

Tp

n. 83. Mediterranean April-May,


t.
.

Silva Calif. 100.

30.

P. insignis

Dougl. DC. xvi.

395. California. T?
xvi.
2.

April.

L.DC.

385

N.W.

Asia.

M.

d'lt. n.

87. Europe,

Tp

April.
xvi. 2.

Thunbergii Pari DC.

388. Japan. Tp

PIPER L.N.
Betle

Pff.

iii.

1. 1.

L.DC. xvi.

6. Piperacese. 359 B. M. t. 3132. India, Malaya. Tp


;

JPIRUS Tourn. N. Pff. iii. 3. 22. Rosaceae-Pomoideae-Pomarieae. Fl d'lt. n. 1850. Europe. 633 communis L.DC.
ii.
;

April.
d'lt. n.

domestica Sm.Fl
Sorbus Gaertn.
region.

Sorbus
635;

1856.DC.

ii.

domestica L.
d'lt.

Mediterranean

637, as Pyrus

Tp

April.
ii.

Malus L.DC.
April,

Fl

n.

1851. Europe. T?
i.

sinensis Lindl
China.

Schneider,
ii.
.

Hdb. Laubh.

663.

Northern

Tp

spectabilis Ait. DC.


t.

635; B.
April.

M.

t.

267; Lodd. B. C.
660.

1729. China. Jp

syriaca Boiss.

Fl
ii.

Or.

ii.

655

Schneider, Hdb. Laubh.


Tp

i.

Cyprus, Syria, Armenia. trilobata DC. 636; Labill Dec. Sorbus trilobata Boiss. Fl. Or.
Roem. Schneider, Hdb. Laubh.
i.

iv. 15. t. 10,


ii.

as Cratcegus.

657.

Eriolobus tril
Tp
.

726.

Lebanon.

May.

HORTUS MORTOLBNSIS
PISONIA L.N.
hirtella H. B.
Pff.
iii.

257

Ih.

29. Nyetaginaceae-Pisonieae.
445; Bossche,
Ic. Sel.
i.

Mexico. ^ October-December. Brunoniana Endl.Fl. Austr. N. Zeald. 280 Hdb. 229. Australia, New Zealand, Norfolk Island. 157. Anacardiacese-Rhoideae. PISTACIA L.N. 158. Canaries, atlantica Desf. DC. N. 64 N. Cyprus. ^ *Lentiscus L.DG. 2456. 1967 65 B. M. Mediterranean region. April-May. mutica Fisch. & Mey.Boiss. Fl. Or. 158. N. 7 Turkey, Asia Minor Afghanistan. *Terebinthus L.DC. 64 2455. MediterFl. ranean region. April-May.
.

KDC.

xiii. 2.

t.

15.

v.

Fl.

\^

Pff.

iii.

5.

ii.

Pff.

I.

c.

Africa,

ii.

t.

Fl. d'lt. n.

17

ii.

Pff.

I.

c.

to

Tp

ii.

d'lt. n.

>p

vera L.DC.

ii.

64

Boiss. Fl. Or.

ii.

Fl. d'lt. n.
Tp

2454.

Persia, Syria, Mediterranean region.

PISTORINIA DC. N.
Crassulaceae.

Pff.

iii.

2a.

33,

under Cotyledon.
Africa.

hispanica DC. iii. 399, PI. Gr. 0. Spring, summer.

t.

122. Spain, N.

PISUM L. N. Pff.

iii.

3.
ii.

354.

Leguminosae-Papilionatae-Vicieae.
Pff. I.e.

arvense L.DC.
ranean region.

368; N.

355. Orient, MediterOrient.

0.
ii.

All the year.


I.e.

sativum L.DC. 0. All the

368; N. Pff:

355. S. Europe,

year.
Pff.
ii.

PITCAIRNIA L'Her.N.
niege.

4.

50. Bromeliaceffi-Pitcairt.

Altensteinii Leon, in Fl.


B. M.
t.

d.

S.

162

Bak. Brom. Ill

4241, as P. undulatifolia Hook.

Venezuela.
t.
t.

2^..

angustifolia
t.

Sol Bak.

Brom. 91

B. M.

1547; Bed. Lil.

76. W. Indies. 2|.


;

bromelisefolia L'Her.Bak. Brom. 94


Lil.
t.

B. M.

834

Bed.

75. W. Indies. 2;.

cserulea Benth.

& Hook. f.

Bak. Brom. 121.


.
;

Puya Whytei
;

Hook. fil. B. M. t. 5732. ChiH. u T? echinata Hook, in B. M. t. 4709 Bak. Brom. 108
t.

Fl. d. S.

844.

Colombia.

if..

Peru, Mexico. ^ Begel. Bak. Brom. 113. Mexico. imbricata


as

ferruginea Bz.

& Pav.Bak. Brom.

119

B. M.
.

t.

5234,

Puya

grandiflora Hook.

if.

258

HORTUS MORTOLENSIS
{continued).
C.

PITCAIRNIA

Moritziana

Koch & Bouche.

Bak. Brom. 98. Venezuela.


;

UB. M. t. 4775, pulverulenta Bz. d- Pav.Bak. Brom. 106 Peru, Bolivia. as P. longifolia Hook. 2|. spathacea Griseb. Bak. Brom. 102 B. M. t. 7966. Argen-

tina.

If..

June.

JPITHECOCTENIUM
-Bignoniege.
biiccinatorium

Mart.N. Pff. iv. 3b. 218. BignoniaceaB

Argentina. 194. Mexico. ^ muricatum Mog. DC. 194. Brazil. ^ Summer. squalus DC.
Descr. PI. Bepubl. Arg. 42.
ix.
t. 7.

DC. = PJiacdranthus bitccinatorhis. cynanchoides DC. ix. 195. P. clematideum Hieron.


T? .

Ic.

&

Summer,

ix.

PITHECOLOBIUM
N. America.

Mart.N.

Pff.

iii.

3.

104. Leguminosaei.

Mimosoideae-Ingese.

brevifoliiun Benth. in A. Gray, PI. Wright,

67.

Western
N.

>>

polycephalum

Benth.

N.

^
pruinosum
Wales.
Benth.
.

Pff.

I.

c.

106.

Tropical America.
S.

Fl.

Austr.

ii.

423.

Queensland,

Tp

May-June.

+PITTOSPORUM
-Pittosporeae.

Banks. N.

Pff.

iii.

2a.

110. Pittosporaceae

arbutifolium Hort.

Victoria, Tasmania. N. 111. Norfolk Island. February-April. Hdb. Fl. N. Zeald. 725. New Zealand. Buchanani Hook.
bicolor Hook.
Fl. Austr.
i.

viridiflonim.
113.
i?
.

March- April. braateolatum Endl.


Tp
.

Pff'.

I.e.

fil.

Colensoi Hook. fil. Hdb. Fl. N. Zeald. 19 Gard. Chron. April. 1899, ii. 370 B. M. t. 8305. New Zealand. T? coriaceum Dryand. DC. i. 346 Lodd. B. C. t. 569. Tp Madeira. May. crassifolium SolHdb. Fl. N. Zeald. 20 B. M. t. 5978 Gard. Chron. 1901, ii. 431. New Zealand. i? April. eriocarpum Boyle. Fl. Brit. Ind. i. 199 Brand. For. Fl. 19 B. M. t. 7473. Western Himalaya. I? May. erioloma G. Moore & F. Muell. in Fragm. vii. 139. Lord Howe's Island. Tp April.
; ;

HOETUS MORTOLENSIS

259

PITTOSPORUM

{continued).

Hdb.Fl.N.Zeald. 21. New Zealand. May. floribundum Wight d- Am. Fl. Brit. Ind. i. 199 Brand. For. Fl. 19. Himalaya. I? May. heterophyllum Franch. Ind. Keiu.i. Suppl. China. Tj
eugenioid.es A. Cimn.

Tp

April-May.

Mayi Hort.Gard.
Zealand
?

Chron. 1899,

ii.

371, with figure. New

Tp

April.

patulum Hook. fil. Hdb.

b-

Fl. N. Zeald. 19.

New
;

Zealand.

phillyrseoides DC.
t.

i.

Austraha. April-May. procerum Naudin. Australia ^ April-May. Ralphii T. Kirk, Trans. N. Z. 1871, 161. New Zealand. revolutum Ait. DC. 346 Fl. Ill Lodd. B. 506. Queensland, N. April. Wales, Victoria. 110. Queensland, rhombifolium A. Cunn. Fl. Austr. N. Wales. ^. July. tenuifolium Gaertn. Hdb.Fl. N. Zeald. New Zealand. April.
1859.
Tp
.

347

Fl. Austr.

i.

112

Lodd. B. C.

Inst.

iii.

^>

i.

Aiistr.

i.

C.

t.

S.

Tp

i.

S.

19.

Tp

Tobira^li^.-Z)C.
April-May.

i.

346; B. M.

1.

1396. Japan, China. Tp


'

umbellatum Banks & SolHdb.


Zealand.

Fl.

N. Zeald. 21. New


i.

Tp
i.

viridiflorum Sims 443.


Wales, Victoria.
S. Africa.

undulatum Vent. DC.


fp
.

346;

Fl. Austr.

111. N.
;

S.

April.

in B.
l?
.

M.

t.

1684

DC.

i.

346

Fl. Cap.

i.

April.
Pff.
iii.

PLAGIANTHUS
-Sidinae.

Forst.N.

6.

42. Malvaceee-Malvege

pulchellus A. Gray. Fl. Austr. i. 189. Sida pulchella Bonpl. DC. i. 468 Veyit. Jard. Malm. t. 2. N. S. Wales, Tj Victoria, Tasmania. Spring.
;

Plagius L'Her.

Chrysanthemum.
Pff. iv. 3&.

PLANTAGO
ii.

L.N.

acanthophylla Decne.DC.
357.

Spain.

369. Plantaginaceee. xiii. 1. 730; W. & L.


;

Fl. Hisp.

14..

Serraria L.DC. xiii. Mediterranean region.

1.

731
24.

Fl. d'lt. n.

3247. Western
s 2

260

HOETUS MORTOLENSIS
Desv. N.
Pff.
i.

IPLATYCERIUM

4.

336. Poly podiaceae-

Acrostichese-Platyceriinae.

alcicorne Desv. Hook. Syn. Fil. 425. Mascarene Islands and Seychelles.

Temperate Australia,
If.
5.

PLATYCODON

A.

DC.N.

Pff.

iv.

59. Campanulaceaet.

CampanuloideaB-Campanuleae-Platycodinae.

DC. grandiflorum A. Japan. May-June. 21

DC

xii.

422; B. M.

252. China,

Plectogyne Link.

Aspidistra.

PLECTRANTHUS

L'Her.N.

Pff. iv.

3a.

352.

Labiatae-

DC. Arabia, Abyssinia. fruticosus L'Her. DC. June. parviflorus Willd. DC. Ucylindraceus Hochst.
!{..

Ocimoideae-Plectranthinae.
xii.

60

Fl. Troj). Afr. v. 414.

xii.

62.

S. Africa.

xii.

67

Fl. Austr. v. 78.

^. OctoberAustralia.

PLEUROSPERMUM Hoffm.N.
-Apioideae-Smyrnieae.

Pff.

iii.

8.

171. Umbelliferae
2397. North-

austriacum Hoffm.DC.
Golaka Reichb.

iv.

244
1(.
.

Fl. d'lt. n.

ern Asia, Central Europe.

April-May.
fil.

= Hladnikia Golaka Reichb.


Pff. iv.
4.

PLOCAMA

Ait.

N.

133.

Rubiace^-CoffeoidesePff.
I.

Psychotriinae-Anthospermeae.

pendula Ait.DC.
Canary Islands.

iv.
Tj
.

577

N.

c.

131.

fig.

427.

PLUMBAGO L. N.
bagineae.
t.

Pff. iv.

1.

122. Plumbaginace-Plum;

capensis Thunh.DC.
295.

xii.
.

693

B.

M.

t.

2110; Lodd. B. C.
Fl. d'lt. n. 2708.

S. Africa.

Tp

europaea

L.DC.

xii.

May-January. 691 B. M. t. 2139


;

S.

Europe, Caucasus.

Larpentce, Lindl.

pulchella Boiss.

DC.

September-October. Ceratostigvia plumbaginoides Bunge.


1(..

xii.

692.

Mexico.
;

T?

May-June.

PLUMIERA L.N.
alba

Pff'. iv. 2.

136. Apocynaceae-Plumieroideae

-Plumiereae-Alstoniinae.
viii. 392 Fl. W. Lid. 411 Desc. Fl. Med. Ant. 178. W. Indies. Tp. rubra L.DC. viii. 390 Fl. W. Lid. 411 B. M. t. 279; Desc.
;

L.DC.

iii. t.

Fl.

Med. Ant.

iv. t.

297.

Central America.

\^

June-Sept.

HORTUS MORTOLENSIS

261

PODANTHUS
Mitiqui
Chili.

Lag.N.

Pff. iv. 5.

224. Composita-Helianthese

-Petrobinae.
Lincll.
Tp
.

N.

Pff.

I.

c.

DC.
ii.

v.

501, sub Euxenia.

June.

tPODOCARPUS

L'Her.N.

Pff.

1.

104, Nachtr.

20. Taxa-

ceae-Podocarpeae.

elongatus L' Her.DC. xvi. 2. 511; iv. 5.), 89. S. Africa. ^..
falcatus B.
iv. 5.),

Pilger, Taxac. {B. V. C.

Br.DC. xvi. 2. 511; Pilger, Taxac. {B. V. 89. S. Africa. I?. neriifolius D. Don.DC. xvi. 2. 514; B. M. t. 4655; Fl. d.
t.

C.

S.

768; Fl. Brit. Bid.

v.

649; Pilger, Taxac. {B. V. C), 80.


1?

South-eastern Asia, Malayan Archipelago. 449. BignoniaceaetPODRANEA Sp-agtie. Fl. Cap. Tecomeae. 450. Tecoma BicaBicasoliana Sprague. Fl. Cap. soliana Hort. Pondo Land. July-October.
iv.

2.

iv. 2.
.

Ij

Poinciana

Gilliesii

Hook.

CcBsalpinia Gilliesii.

Poinsettia Grab.

Euphorbia.
Pff.
iii.

tPOLYGALA
Lower

L.N.

4.

apopetala Brayid.
California.

PI.

Baja
.

Cal. 130.

330. Polygalaceae-Polygalese. t. 3 B. M. t. 8065.


;

ip

June-July.

myrtifolia L.DC. March-October.


oppositifolia

i.

322;
321;

Fl.

Cap.

i.

83. Cape. i?
82. Cape. Tj 85. Cape. T?

L.DC.

i.

Fl. Cap.

i.

March-October. virgata Thunb. DC.

i.

322; Fl. Cap.

i.

May-June.

POLYGONUM
t.

N. 25. Polygonaceae-Polycapitatum Ham. DC. 129; Fl. Brit. Bid. 44; Bef. Bot. Himalaya. October-April. equisetiforme Sibth. d Sm.DC. Fl. 85 976. Mediterranean region. August. 136. Japan, China. multiflorum Thunb. DC.
L.
Pff.
iii.

la.

gonoideae-Polygoneae.
11.

xiv.

v.

24.

xiv.

d'lt. n.

Tp

xiv.

!]:.

September-October.

POLYMNIA

L.N.

Pff. iv. 5.

217. Compositse-HeliantheEeif.

Melampodinae.
silphioides DC. v. Uvedalia L.DC.
516.
v.

Brazil.
-N.

June-July.

515.

America.

if

Juue-July

262

HOETUS MOETOLENSIS
L.N.
Pff.
i.

POLYPODIUM
''^vulgare

4.

306. Polypodiaceae-Polypo;

dieae-Polypodiinae.

L.Hook. Syn.

Fil.

334
2|.
i.

Fl. cVIt. n. 4.

Asia, Africa, N. America.

I.

Europe,

POLYSTICHUM

Both.

N.
Pff.

Pff.

4.

189.

PolypodiacesB-

Aspidieae-Aspidiinae.

aculeatum Both.N.

c.

191

Hook. Syn. Fil. 252.

Throughout the world. falcatum Diels.N. Pff.

2|.
c.

I.

194

Hook. Syn. Fil. 257.

E. Africa, India, China, Japan, &c.

if..

POMADERRIS

Labill. N. Pff. iii. 5. 419. EhamnaceseEhamnege. apetala Labill.DC. ii. 33; Fl. Austr. i. 419. N. S. Wales, Victoria, Tasmania, S. Australia. April-May. ^ lanigera Sims in B. M. t. 1823; DC. ii. 33; Fl. Austr. i. 416.

N. S. Wales. T?. racemosa Hook. Fl.

Aiistr.

i.

421.

Australia.

Victoria, Tasmania,
t.

S.

Tj

May.
Pff.
I.

PONTEDERIA L.N.
cordata L.N.
ii.

ii.

4.

73. Pontederiacese.
Lil.

t.

58.

America.
Pff.
iii.

Pff.

c.Bed.
If.
1.

72

Torr. Fl. N. York,

Summer.

POPULUS L.N.
*nigra

35. Salicace^.
;

L.DC.
Bz.

xvi. 2.

327

Fl.

cl'It.

n.

886. Europe. Tp

April.

IPORLIERIA

Pav.N.

Pff.

iii.

4.

83. Zygophyllaceae-

Zygophylloidese-Zygophyllese.

hygrometra Bz. & Pav.DC.


November.

i.

707. Peru, Chili. Tj.

PORTULACA L.N.
309.

Pff.

iii.

lb.
t.

59. Portulacacese.
;

grandiflora Hook. B. M.

2885

Bercjer,

Mesembr.

&

Port.

Brazil. .
;

April-June.
Pff'. iii.

IPORTULACARIA
386

Jacq.N.
t.

lb.

59. Portulacaceae.
iii.

afra Jacq.DC. PI. Gr.


Berger, Mesembr.

132, Prodr.
Port.
iii.

360

Fl. Cap.

ii.

&

308. S. Africa. T?
34.

POTENTILLA

N. Eosaceae-EosoideaePotentilleae-Potentillinae. Spring, 581. N. America. arguta Pursh. DC. 580. Caucasus, N. Asia. U. Spring. bifurca L. DC.
L.
Pff.
3.
ii.

14..

ii.

HORTUS MORTOLENSIS

263

POTENTILLA

{continued).
d:

delphinensis Gren.

Godr. Fl. Fr.

i.

11

Spring.

gracilis

Dougl. ex Hook, in B. M.
11.

t.

France. 2984. Western N.


530.
S.
(3.

America.

Spring.
ii.

micrantha Bam. DC.

585

Fl. d'lt. n. 1768

W.

Asia, Tunis, Algeria.

ipeYBiCB. Boiss.d' Haussk.

i^L Or.
;

Europe,
Spring.
Asia.

if..

Spring.
ii.

710.

Persia.
ii.

if.

rupestris

L.DG. ii. 583


Spring.
ii.

Fl. d'lt. n.

1793. Europe, N.
705

1^.

speciosa Willd.DG.
Fl. Gr.
i.

586

Fl. Or.

Hal. Consp.
if
.

South-east Europe, Orient. 581. tanacetifolia Willd. DC.


512.
ii.

Spring.
Spring.

Siberia.

if.

IPOTEKIUM L.N.
guisorbeae.

Pff.

iii.

3.

45. Rosaceffi-Rosoidete-SanFl. d'lt. n.

spinosum L.

DC.
N.

ii.

594;

1809. Eastern
.

Mediterranean region,

S. Italy, Sicily.

ij

May-July.

+POUTERIA

Alibi.

Pff. iv. 1. 141.

Sapotaceae-PalaquieaeTp
.

Sideroxylinffi.

salicifolia Edlk. in N.

Pff'.

I.

c.

142. S. Brazil

July.
T^
.

suavis Hemsl.

in Keiu Bull. 1906, 365.


iii.

Uruguay.

POZOA Lag.N. Pff.


coriacea Lag.

8.

129. Umbelliferse-Hydrocotyloideae
82.
iii.

-Mulinege- Azorellinae

DC.

iv.

Chili.

if.

PRANGOS

Lindl.N.

Pff.

8.

174. Umbellifer^-Apioideai;

Smyrnieae.

ferulacea Lindl.DC. iv. 239 Mediterranean region, Persia.

Fl. d'lt. n.
If.

2411. Eastern

PRASIUM L.N.
region,
I

Pff. iv. 3a.


xii.

majus L.DC.

556

Canary Islands.
L.

221, Labiatse-Prasioidege. Fl. d'lt. n. 3087. Mediterranean


T^
.

May-June.
105.

PRIMULA

N.

Pff. iv.

1.

Primulacese-Primuleffi;

Primulinae.

acaulis Hill. Pax, Primul. {E. V. C. iv. 237), 54 Fl. d'lt. Mediterranean region, S. and Central Europe. n. 2662.

t.

14..

March-April.
viii.
;

AUionii Lois. DC.


63
;

38

Pax,

I.

c.

144
;

Bickn.

t.

49

Fl. d'lt. n. 2672

Moggr. Fl. Ment. The Gard. 1902, i.


;

326. Sea Alps. 24:.

February-March.

264

HOETUS MOETOLENSIS
(continued).
;
;

PRIMULA

floribunda Wall.~DC. viii. 35 B. M. t. 6712 Pax, I. c 35. Western Himalaya, Afghanistan. 1|: February-May Forbesii Franch.Pax, I. c. 34 B. M. t. 7246 Gard. Chron 1904, i. 20. China. 2^. February-May. kewensis JSort. Joiirn. B. Hort. Soc. 1900, Ixv. fig. 52 a The Gard. 1903, ii. 10, with plate. Garden origin. if. February-May.

marginata
Bicknell,

Curt, in B.
t.
.

M.
I.

t.

191

DC.
;

viii.

38

Moggr.

1.

11

49

Pax,

c.

133

Fl. d'lt. n.

2670. Sea

Alps.

11

March- April.

obconica Hance. Pax, I. c. 22 Nich. Diet. Sup2d. 620 B. M. t. 6582 as P. pomdiformis Hook. fil. China. 2^.
;

October-April.

Palinuri Petagna.DC. viii. 37 B. M. t. 3414 Fl. d'lt. n. 2667 Pax, I. c. 132. S. Italy. 4. March-April. simensis Hochst. Pax, I. c. 37 B. M. t. 6042, as P. verticillata var. simensis Hook. fil. Abyssinia. % December
;

-May.
sinensis Lindl.

DC.
2564,

viii.

35;

Pax,

I.e.

21;

Lodd. B. G.
.

916 B. M. ber-May.
t.
;

t.

7559. Central China. %

Decem-

verticillata Hort.

simensis.

Pritchardia filifera Linden

=
Pff.

Washingtonia.
Pff. iv. 36.
c.

PROBOSCIDEA
B. M.
1.

Schmid.N.

Jussieui Steud.

N.

I.

Martynia proboscidea
.

269.Martyniaceae.
Glox.

Summer. 1056 DC. ix. 253. Texas, Arizona. lutea Stapf. N. Pff. I. c. Martynia lutea Lindl. DC. ix. 253.

S. Brazil,

Paraguay, Uruguay.
Pff.
iii.

0.

Summer.

PROSOPIS L.N.
Adenanthereae.
juliflora

3.

118. Leguminosae-Mimosoideae-

Tropical America. ^ 446; Brand. For. Fl. Ind. 288. Persia, Afghanistan, India. 448. Argentina. ^ torquata DC.
DC.
ii.

447.

spicigera
ii.

L.DC.
ii.

ii.

169; Fl. Brit.


Tp
.

IPROTEA L.N.
Proteeae.

Pff.

iii.

1.

136. Proteaceae-Persoonioideae-

DC. xiv. 237. Thunb.DC. xiv. 239 mellifera


abyssinica Willd.

Abyssinia,
;

S. Africa.

B. M.

t.

346. S.

Africa.

HOETUS MORTOLENSIS
PROUSTIA
pyrifolia
1898,
ii.

265

Lag.N.

Pff. iv.

5.

343. Compositse-Mutisie^B. M.
t.

Mutisinse.

Lag.DC.

vii.

27

5489

Gard. Chron.

143. Chili. T?.


Pff.
iii.

IPRUNUS L.N.

3.

51. Rosacege-Prunoideffi.
Pff.
I.

Amygdalus Stokes. N.
Asia.

c.

53

Fl. d'lt. n.

1738.

Amygdalus comviunis L. DC.

ii.

530.

L.

Central and Eastern


Cerasus avium

avium

N.

Tp

-February.
Pff.
ii.
I.

c.

54

Fl. d'lt. n. 1747.


.

Moench. DC.

CapoUin
T?
.

Zucc.

May. caroliniana
Florida. Tp

Ait.
.

DC.
Pff.
I.

March. 535. Europe. Tp DC. ii. 541, as Cerasiis Capuli.


ii.

540,

as

Mexico. Cerasus. Carolina to


1748. Asia Minor?
Tp
.

March-May.
c.

Cerasus L.N.

Tp

54

Fl. d'lt. n.

Tp

March.

divaricata Ledeh.

DC.
ii.

ii.

534.
;

Caucasus.

March.

domestica L.DC.
.

533

Fl. d'lt. n.

1743. S. Europe.
i.

622. Bailey. Schneider, Hdb. Laubh. March. Walp. Nich. Diet. 295. 403a, as Cerasus. California. & Zucc. Fl. Jap. 172. japonica Thunh. 90; 612 DC. Schneider, Hdb. Laubh. 539, as Cerasus. P. chinensis Hort. China, Japan. March. albo pleno Keio Hand-list. 223. roseo pleno Keiv Hand-list. 223. Amyg2176. dalus pumila Sims in B. M. 1751. Caucasus, 540 Fl. Laurocerasus L. DC. Western Asia. parvifolia Keio Hand-list of Trees & Shrubs, 233. 2nd Hartogia capensis Hort. 1752, DC. 540, as Cerasus. lusitanica L. Fl. Portugal. May. Fl. W. Lid. 231 540 occidentalis Sw.DC. Nich. Diet. 296, as Cerasus. W. Indies.

March.

hortulana L. H.
N. America.
ilicifolia

Tp

fig.

Tp

Sieh.

i.

t.

i.

ii.
.

Tp

,,

var. var.

fl.

fp

,,

fl.

t.

Tp

ii.

d'lt. n.

Tp

April.

,,

var.

ed.

Tp

d'lt. n.

ii.

Tp

ii.

Tp

pendula Desf.Nich. Diet. Suppl. 623 The Gard. 1899, ii. 300 B. M. t. 8034.Japan. ip Persica Sieb. <& Zucc.N. Pff. iii. 3. 53; Fl. d'lt. n. 1739. ip Persica vulgaris Mill. DC. ii. 531. Orient. March.
; ;
.

266

HORTUS MORTOLENSIS
(continued).

PRUNUS
194;

Temperate Himalaya. ^. December-January. serotina WHld. DC. 540, as Cerasus. N. America. ^ 611. Nich. serrulata Lindl. Schneider, Hdb. Laubh. Diet. 297. 405, as Cerasus. China, Japan. stellipila Koehne. China (Wilson, March. 8061. China. triloba Lindl.B. M. 652. Syria. ursina Kotschy. Fl. Or.
DC.
ii.

Puddum

Roxh.Fl.

Brit.

Ind.

ii.

314;

Brand. For. Fl.

537, as Cerasus.

ii.

i.

fig.

T^

n. 177).

T^

t.

Tp

ii.

T?

spec. P from Pamir Plateau, Chitral Valley (Sir Dietr. Brandis,

1904). T?.

PSEUDOPANAX
Schefflereae.

C. Koch.

N.
Pff.

Pff.

iii.

8.

46.

Araliaceee-

Aralia Hort. New Zealand. July. heteromorphus Hort. Nich. Diet. 104, as Aralia. New Zealand Hdb. Fl. N. Zeald. 102, as Panax. New Lessonii Zealand. 168. CompositaB-Astereae-ConyPSIADIA Jacq. N.
as

crassifolius C.

Koch.N.

I.

c.

Hdb.

Fl. N. Zeald. 101,

Panax
.

crassif.

trifoliata

Ij

T^

See^n.
Tp

Pff. iv. 5.

zinae.

glutinosa Jacq. Hort. Sch. t. 152; DC. v. 319; Bak. Fl. February-May. Maur. cC- Seych. 171. Mauritius ? Tp

IPSIDIUM L.N. Pff.


-Myrtinae.

iii.

7.

67. Myrtaceae-Myrtoidese-Myrteae

Cattleianum Sab. DC. iii. 236; B. M. t. 2501; Nich. Diet. May-June. 239. fig. 304. S. Brazil. I? Guajava Baddi.N. Pff. c. 69 Brand. For. Fl. 232 Fl. Fl. W. Ind. 241. DC. iii. 233 & 234, as Brit. Ind. ii. 468 P. ])yriferum L. & P. pomiferum L. Tropical America. ^ May-June.
.

I.

PSORALEA L. N.
*bituminosa L.
Sel.
t.

Pff.

iii.

3.

263.

Leguminosae-PapilionataeBicknell,
t.

Galegeae-Psoraliinae.

DC.

ii.

219

18

Bossche, Ic.

82

Fl. d'lt. n.

2087. Mediterranean region. 2^.


;

M^y-September. bracteata Berg. DC. ii. 218 Lodd. B. C. Sch. ii. t. 224
;

Fl. Cap.

ii.

153

Jacq. Hort.
.

t.

1559. S. Africa. ^

HOETUS MOETOLENSIS

267

PSORALEA

{contimiecl).

dentata DC. ii. 221. May-October.

Western

Mediterranean region.
187.

2^

drupacea Bunge.

Boiss. Fl. Or.


;

ii.

Persia, Turkestan.

Uglandulosa L.
.

DC. ii. 220 Schneider, Hdb. Laubh. ii. 68. Chili. T? May-July. macrostachya DC. ii. 220. California. i? May-June. physodes Hook. Fl. Bor. Am. i. 136. Western N. America.

uFl. Cap. pinnata L.DC. ii. 216 1903, i. 301. S. Africa. I?


; .

ii.

144

Gard. Chron.

PTERIDIUM

Gled.N.

Pff.

i.

4.

296. Polypodiacese-Pteridese

-Pteridinae.

*aquilinuin Kuhn.N. Pff. I. c.Hook. d Bak. Syn. Fil. 162, and Fl. d'lt. n. 43, as Pteris. Cosmopolitan. 4.

PTERIS

L.

N.

Pff'.

i.

4.

290.

Polypodiaceae-PterideaB-Pteri293
;

dinae.

arguta Ait.N.
cretica
n.

Pff.

I.

c.

Hook. Syn.

Fil.

160.
Fl. d'lt.

Portugal, Canaries, &c.

14..

L.N.
;

Tropics and subtropics. 5194. albo-lineata Hook. B. M. 153 N. 292 Fl. longifolia L.Hook. Syn. Cosmopolitan. 292. 155 N. serrulata L. fil Hook. Syn. China, Japan. 4. 293. tremula B. Br. Hook. Syn. 161 N. E. Australia, New Zealand, Nachtr. 259. CacPTEROCACTUS K. ScMm. N. taceae-Opuntioidese. 107. Argentina. Kuntzei K. Schum. Mon. 753.
45
Bicknell,
t.

Pff.

I.

c.

292

Hook. Syn. Fil. 154

82.

1^.

var.

t.

if.

Fil.

Pff'.

I.

c.

d'lt. n. 44.

if.

Fil.

Pff:

I.

c.

Fil.

Pff.

I.

c.

&c.

if.

Pff.

i.

fig.

Tp

PTEROCARYA Ktmth.N.
fraxinifolia

Spach.
93.
fig.

Laubh.
Persia.

i.

DC. Schneider, Hdb. 139 50-51. Caucasus, Armenia, Western


xvi.
2.
;

Pff.

iii.

1.

24.Juglandacese.

Tp

March.

PTEROCEPHALUS

Vaill.N. Pff. iv. 4. 189. Dipsacacese. Cyprus. multiflorus Poech. En. PI. Ins. Cypr. 16. if.. May-October.

268

HOETUS MOETOLENSIS
Tul.N.
Pff.
Pff.
iii.

PTEROGYNE
nitens

3.

130. Leguminosae-CaesalpiT?
.

nioideae-Cynometreae.

TulN.
L.

I.

cBrazil.
iv.

IPTERONIA

N.Pff.
;

5.

152. Compositge-Astereaeiii.

SolidagininaB.

incana DC.
Africa.

v.
.

f?

Fl. CaiJ. 358 April-May.


Pff.
iii.

100

B. M.

t.

8380. S.

PUERARIA DC.N.

3.

370. Leguminosas-Papilionatae

-Phaseoleae-Diocleinae.

hirsuta Schneider, Hdb. Laubh. ii. 114. Dolichos hirsutus Thunb. DC. ii. 397. Pachyrhizus Thunbergianus S. & Z. China. ^ . September-October.

PULMONARIA

L.N.

Pff. iv. 3a.

117. Borraginaceae-Borran.

ginoideae-Anchuseae.

saccharata i^f^Z^.I>C. x. 92; Fl. d'lt. and S. Europe. 2^. March- April.

2799 /3. Central

JPUNICA L.N.

Pff.

iii.

7.
iii.

Granatum L.DC.
var.

25.Punicaceae. 3 B. M. t. 1832
;

Fl. d'lt. n. 2194.

Himalaya, Orient.
nana
Pers. N.

Tj

L.

DC.
4.

May-September.
I.e.;

B.

M.

t.

634. T?.

May-September.

PUTORIA

Pff. iv.

133. Rubiaceae-CoffeoideseFl. d'lt. n.

Psychotriinae-Anthospermeae.

calabrica L. fil.DC. Mediterranean region.

iv.

577

3255. Eastern

2^.

April-September.

JPUYA

Molina.

N.
=

Pff.

ii.

4. 53.

Bromeliaceae-Puyeae.
;

ccendea Lindl.

Pitcairnia ccerulea.

chilensis Molina.Bak. Brom. 126 t. 869-870. Chili. T?.

B. M.

t.

4715

Fl. d. S.

Pyrethrum Hall.

Chrysanthenmtn L.

PYROSTEGIA
Bignonieae.

Presl.

N.

Pff.

iv.

36.

223.

Bignoniaceget.

venusta Miers. Bignonia venusta Ker. B. M. ix. 158. Brazil. T? . March-May.

2050

DC.

QUAMOCLIT

Totem.

N.

Pff.

iv.

da.

27. ConvolvulaceseM.
t.

Convolvuloideae-Convolvuleae-Convolvulinae.

coccinea Moench.DC. ix. 335 America. 0. Summer.

B.

221. Tropical

HOETUS MORTOLENSIS

269

QUAMOCLIT

{co7itimied).
ix.

vulgaris Ghoisy.DC.

336;

B.

M.

t.

244.

Tropical

America and Asia.

0.
iii.

Summer.

QUERCUS L.N.
Tp
.

52 Fl. coccifera L. DC. April-May. region. 82 glabra Thunh.DG. Japan. April.


xvi. 2.
;

Pff.

1.

55. Fagaceae.
d'lt. n. 902.

Mediterranean
t.

xvi. 2.

Sieh.

Zucc. Fl. Jap.

89.

Tj

-Ilex

L.DC.

xvi. 2.

38

Fl. d'lt. n.

904. Mediterranean

region, Syria, Afghanistan,

Western Himalaya.
Fl. Brit. Ind. v.

Tp

April

-May. incana Eoxb.DC.


perate Himalaya.

xvi. 2.
Tp

Libani Oliv. DC. xvi. *pubescens Willd.N.


Europe.
Africa.

Tp

51

603. TemTp

2. 49.

Syria, Asia Minor.


c.

Pff.

I.

57

Fl. d'lt. n.

899i. S.

April-May.

Suber L.DC.

Tp

40 Fl. April-May.
xvi. 2.
;

d'lt. n.

903. S. Europe, N.

IQUILLAJA

Molina.

N.

Pff.

iii.

3. 16.

Eosaceae-SpirgeoideaeB.

Quillajeae.

Saponaria Molina.DC.
Tp
.

ii.

547

M.

t.

7568. Chili.

April-May.
Pff.
iii.

QUISQUALIS L.N.
indica

7.

125. Combretaceae.
t.

India, Malaya.
I

L.DC.

iii.

23

B. M.

2033

Fl. Brit. Lid.

ii.

459.

Tp ,

July-September.
Pff. iv. 3a.

RAMON A
bertia.

Greene.Audibertia Benth.A^.
Pff.
I.

287.

N. California. polystachya Greene. N. California. RANDIA Houst. N.


grandiflora Briquet.
If..

Labiatae-StachyoideEe-Salvieae.

Pff.

DC. 359, sub AudiNearly the whole year. DC. 360, sub Audic.

xii.

I.

c.

xii.

bertia.

2^

June-September.

Pff. iv. 4. 75.

Eubiacese-Cinchonoideae-

Gardeniinae-Gardenieae.

spec. P

California.

f?

RANUNCULUS L.N.
moneae.

Pff.

iii.

2.

64. Eanunculacese-Anei.

anemonefolius DC.
April-May.
canariensis Hort.

i.

37; Fl. Or.

50.

Asia

Minor,

if..

cor tiiscefalius.

270

HOETUS MORTOLENSIS
(continued).

RANUNCULUS

caucasicus Bieb. May.


Madeira, Azores.

DC.

i.

36.

Caucasus.
;

if.

April-

cortusaefolius Willd.DC.

U.
d'lt. n.

i. 29 B. M. April-May. i.

t.

4625. Canaries,
1596. S.
April.
Italy,

millefoliatus

VcM.DC.

27

Fl. d'lt. n.

Tunis, Eastern Mediterranean region.

if..

serbicus Vis.Fl.

1600/3. S.E. Europe. 2^:. April


1606.

-May.

velutinus Ten. Fl. April-May. y.

d'lt. n.

S.

Europe, Asia Minor.

RAPANEA
Hdb.

Aubl.Myrsine L. N.

Pff. iv. 1.

92. Myrsinaceae-

Myrsinoideae-Myrsineee.

Urvillei Mez, Myrs. {B. V. C), ^ll.Myrsine Urv. A. DC.


Fl. N. Zeald.

184. New Zealand. i?


Pff.
iii.

JRAPHIOLEPliS Lindl.N.
-Pomarieae.

3.

25.Rosacese-Pomoidese
1726. Southern China.
t.

indica Lindl.DC.

ii.

,,

630

B. M.

1.

Tp

March- April.
var.

pheostemon
Sieb.

Lindl. Bot. Beg.

468.

Tp

March
Tj

-April.

japonica May.

&

Zucc. Fl. Jap. 162.

t.

85.

Japan.

ovata Hort.

= japonica.
Pff.
iii.

REAUMURIA L. N.

6.

292. TamaricaceEe-Tamari456
;

coideae-ReaumurieaB.

hypericoides Willd.DC.
Orient, Central Asia.

iii,

Boiss. Fl. Or.

i.

761.

Tp

tREEVESIA Lindl.N. Pff.


thyrsoidea Lindl.

B. M.

iii.

6.

92. StercuHacese-Helictereffi.

t.

4199.

China. ^

May-June.

REGELIA

Schau. N. Pff. iii. 7. 98. Myrtaceae-Leptospermoideae-Leptospermeae-Calothamninae.

ciliata Schau.

Fl. Austr.

iii.

170.

W. Australia.

I?

REHMANNIA
angulata

Libosch.N.

Pff. iv. db.

88. Scrophulariaceae;

Rhinanthoideae-Digitaleae.
Heinsl. in Jo2trn. Linn. Soc. xxvi. 1890, 193
i.

Gard.
8177.

Chron. 1903,

China.

2;.

290 The Gard. 1903, April-May.


;

i.

317

B. M.

t.

HORTUS MORTOLENSIS

271

REINWARDTIA Dumort.N. Pff.


tetragyna
1894,
ii.

iii.

Planch.

Fl.
t.

4.32. Linaceae-Eulineae.
i.

Brit. Ind.

412;

Gard. Chron.

721

B. M.

7136. India. T?
i.

trigyna Planch.Fl. Brit. Ind. Linum trigynum Roxb. India.

412
V)
.

B. M. t. 1100, as November till spring.


;

RESEDA L.N.
Spring.

Pff.

iii.

2.

crystallina Wehh

Berth.

240. Resedacese. DC. xvi. 2, 572.

Canaries. 0.

odorata L.DC. xvi. November-May.


Bestio tectorum L.
fil.

2.

565

B. M.

t.

29. Cyrenaica. 0.

Dovea tectorum.
Pff.
ii.

RESTREPIA

H. B. K.N.

6.

139. Orchidacese-Monan-

drae-Pleurothallidinae.

antennifera H. B. K.B. M.

t.

6288.

Venezuela, Colombia,
161. GesneriBossche,

71

April.

RHABDOTHAMNUS
Solandri A. Cunn.
Ic. Sel. V.
t.

A.

Cunn.N.
Fl.

Pff. iv. 36.

acese-Cyrtandroidese-Coronantherese-Coronantherinse.

Hdb.
t.

N. Zeald. 221;

174

B. M.

8019. New Zealand. 2^.


iii.

RHAGODIA
nutans B.

B. Br.
Br.

N.

Pff'.

la. 59.

Chenopodiaceae-

Cyclolobeae-Chenopodieae.

DC.

xiii. 2.

53

Fl. Atcsir. v. 156.

Queens-

land, N. S.

Wales. 1?.

RHAMNUS L.N. Pff.

iii. 5. 409. RhamnacejB-RhamneEe. *Alaternus L.DC. ii. 23 Fl. d'lt. n. 2425. Mediterranean region. February-March. 1^ californicus Eschsch. Nich. Diet. 286 Schneider, Hdb. I? Lauhh. ii. 266. California, Mexico. May.
;

chinensis Hort.

chlorophorus Decne.

chlorophorus Decne.
China.

Bondot,
ii.

Vert de Chine, 142.

t.

2.

Tp

crenulatus Ait.DC.

grandifolius Fisch.dMey.
latifolius
Sel.
t.

25; N. Pff. I.e. 410. Teneriffe. T? Ledeb. Fl. Boss. 504. Caucasus.

Azores, Canaries. ^ Hort. = Pallasii Fisch. & Mey. Ledeb. Fl. Boss. 503 Schneider, Hdb. Laubh. 277. Caucasus. April-May. spathulaefolius Fisch. & Mey. Ledeb. Fl. Boss. 502 Schieider, Hdb. Laubh. 279. Cauca.sus.
106.
.

L'mr.DC.

ii.

26

B. M.

t.

2663

Bossche,

Ic.

oleifolius

latifolius.

i.

ii.

Tp

i.

ii.

Tp

272

HORTUS MORTOLENSIS
Weiidl.

RHAPIDOPHYLLUM

d Drude.N.
Pff.
I.

Pff.

ii.

3.

33.
249,

Palinae-Coryphinae-Sabaleae.

Hystrix Wendl. d Drude.N.


Tp
.

c.Kunth, En.
S.

iii.

as CJiamarops Hystrix Fraser.

Florida to
ii.

Carolina.

Spring.
Pff.
ii.

RHAPIS L.N.
t.

flabelliformis Ait.

Kunth, En.

3.

33. Palmae-Coryphinae-Sabaleae.
251
;

Jacq.
.

H. Sch.

iii.

316

B.

M.

t.

1371. Japan, China. Tp

Spring.

RHAZYA Decne. N. Pff. iv. 2. 143. Apocynaceae-Plumieroidese


-Plumiereae-Alstoniinae.

orientalis A.

DC.

viii.

386; Fl. Or.


Pff'. iii.

iv.

47. Asia Minor. 2;.

tRHIPSALIS

Cactaceee-Cereoideae -Rhipsalideae. alata K. Schum. Mon. 635, Nachtr. 144. Central America. anceps Web. K. Schum. Mon. 649. Brazil. hrachiata Hook. = Saglionis. capilliformis Web. K. Schum. Mon. 629. Brazil. 3080; Cassytha Gaertn.K. Schu7n. Mon. 621; B. M. 865. Tropical America and Africa. Lodd. B. C. cavernosa G. A. Lindb. K. Schum. Mon. 648. Brazil. conferta Salm. K. Schum. Mon. 625. Brazil. K. Schum. Nachtr. 145. Brazil. crispata dissimilis K. Schum. Mon. 646. Brazil.
Gaertn.
6a. 197.
T?
.

N.

Tp

ip

t.

t.

Tp

Tp

Tp

Pfeiff-

Tp

Tp

fasciculata Haiv.DC.
America.

iii.

476

B.

M.

t.

3079.Tropical
Tp

Tp

gibberula Web.

K. Schum. Mon. 643. Brazil.


i.

gracilis N. E. Br. in Gard. Chron. 1903,

18.

B.^penduliflora

K. Schum. Mon. 628. Brazil. Tp grandiflora Hato.K. ScMim. Mon. 624

B.

M.

t.

2740.
6089.

HouUetiana Brazil,
Brazil.
31.

Tp

Lem.K. Schum. Mon. 639

B.

M.

t.

lumbricoides Lem.

K. Schum. Mon. 632 B. M. 5136, as Brazil, Uruguay. sarmentacea Otto & Dietr.
;

Tp

t.

S.

Tp

mesembrianthemoides Hatv.K. Schum. Mon. 630 B. M. t. 3078. Brazil. Tp. myosurus K. Schum. Mon. 648 B. M. t. 3755. Brazil. Tp pachyptera Pfeiff.K. Schum. Mon. 636. J5. M. t. 2820.
; ;

Brazil.

Tp

paradoxa Salm.

K. Schum. Mon. 646. Brazil.

Tp

HORTUS MORTOLENSIS
RHIPSALIS
{continued).

273

penduliflora N. E. Br. in Gard. Chron. 1877, i. 716 (not of K. Schum. !). Brazil? f? pentaptera Pfeiff.K. Schum. Hon. 631 Pfeiff. & Otto. Abb. & Beschr. i. t. 17. S. Brazil, Uruguay, Argentina.
;

Tp January- March. puniceo-discus G. A. Lindb.


.

K. Schum. Mon. 647. Brazil.


635.

bramulosa Pfeiff.K. Schum. Mon.

January-March. 4039. Uruguay. B. M. K. Schum. Mon. 631, as B. micrantha, Nachtr. sulcata Web. January-March. 140. Tropical America ^ = alata. Sioartziana tetragona Web. K. Schum. Mon. 628. Brazil. trigona Pfeiff.K. Schum. Mon. 632. Brazil. tucumanensis Web. K. Schum. Mon. 645. Argentina. ^ virgata Web. K. Schum. Mon. 620. Brazil. Warmingiana K. Schum. Mon. 641. Brazil. K. 1906, 64. Costa Wercklei Berger, Monatsschrift Rica. Liliaceae-AsparagoideaeRHODEA Both. N.
,

\^ Regnellii G. A. Lindb. K. Schum. Mon. 639. Brazil. rhombea Pfciff. K. Schum. Mon. 638. Brazil. t^ Saglionis Le7n. K. Schicm. Mon. 627. B. brachiata Hook.

Costa Rica.

^?

t.

I?

Pfeiff.

I?

Tp

Tp

f?

f.

T?

Pff.

ii.

5.

82.

Con vallarieae- Aspidistrinae japonica Both & Kunth.Kimth, En.


as Orontium jap.

v.

321

B. M.

t.

898,

Japan.
x.

2^.

RHODOCHITON

Zucc.N.

Pff. iv. 36.

61. Scrophulariaceaet.

Antirrhinoideae-Antirrhinese.

volubile Zucc.DC.

298

B. M.

3367. Mexico. T?

JRHODODENDRON
indicum
506.
Sioeet.

L.~N.
vii.

Pff. iv. 1.

35.Ericaceae-Rhodoii.

dendroideae-Rhododendreae.

Azalea indica L.
var.

China. amoenum Paxt. B. M.


Tp

DC.

726

Schneider, Hdb. Laubh.


.

April-May.
t.

4728.

China.

Tp

April-May.

RHODOSPH-ffiIRA Engl.N.
Rhoideae.

Pff.

iii.

5.

162. AnacardiaceaBi.

rhodanthema Engl.N.
Bhus
rhod.

Queensland, N.

Pff.

I.

c.Fl. Austr.
Wales.

489, as

S.

274

HORTUS MORTOLENSIS
Phil. N.
Pff.
ii.

RHODOSTACHYS
Bromelieae.

4.

45. Bromeliacese;

pitcairnisefolia Benth.Bak. Brom. 28

B. M.

t.

8087.

Chili. 2^.

RHODOTYPUS

Sieb.

& Zucc.N.

Pff.

iii.

3.

28. Rosaceset.

Rosoideae-Kerrieae.

kerrioides Sieb. & Zucc. Fl. Jap. 99; B. M. v> April-May.

5805.Japan.

RHUS L.N.

167. Anacardiacese-Rhoideae. DC. 73 Schneider, Hdb. Laubh. 148. aromatica N. America. 2459. Mediterranean 67 Fl. Coriaria L.DC. region. = Cotimis Coggyria Scop, Cotinus 519. Cape. pallens Sonder, Fl. Cap. excisa Thunb. March.
Pff.
iii.

5.

Ait.

ii.

ii.

Tp

ii.

d'lt. n.

Tj

Li.

var.

i.

Tp

glauca Thimb.DC.
insignis Hook.
fil.

ii.

69; Fl. Cap.


ii.

i.

516. Cape. t?

Fl. Brit. Ind.

integrifolia Benth.
April.

<&

Sikkim Himalaya. DecemberHook. California.


11.
Tp
.

B. viminalis Fl. Cap. i. 514. lancea L. fil. DC. ii. 70 Jj Cape. Jacq. H. Sch. iii. t. 344 (non Vahl !). December. Jacq. H. Sch. t. lucida L.DC. ii. 69 Fl. Cap. i. 517 Tp 347. Cape. February-March. oxyacantha Schousb.DC. ii. 71 Fl. d'lt. n. 2460. West;

October. 150. radicans L. DC. 69 Schneider, Hdb. Latibh. America. N. rhodanthema F. M. = Bhodosyhcera rhodanthema Engl. Fl. Brit. Ind. 67 10 Brand. semialata Murr. DC.
ern Mediterranean region, Sicily, Syria.
ii.
;

T?

ii.

Tj .

ii.

ii.

For. Fl. 119, Ind. Trees 197; Wight,

Ic.

t.

Zucc. N. 170 Japan. tomentosa L. DC. 72 Fl. Cap. 508 111. Africa. April-June.
sylvestris Sieb.
<

Himalaya.

561. Temperate
;

Tp

Pff.

I.

c.

Schneider, Hdb.

Laubh.
iii. t.

ii.

151.

Tp

ii.

i.

Bossche, Ic. Sel.

S.

Tp

trifoliata Hort.

Mort.
ii.

excisa var. pallens.


t.

venenata DC.

68

Dill. Hort. Elth.

292. N. America.

HORTUS MORTOLENSIS

275

RHUS

{contimied).
ii.

vernicifera DC.

68

The Garden, 1898,

ii.

507. Japan.

Jp

May.

viminalis Jacq.

lancea.

RHYNCHOSIA

Lour.

N.
ii.

Pjf.

iii.

3.

373.

LeguminosFl.
Tj .

Papilionatae-Phaseolese-Cajaninae.

phaseoloides DC.

385

B.
S.

M.

t.

2284

W.
oides.

W.

Ind. 190.

Indies, Central

and

America.

April-Sep-

tember.

Ehynchospermum jasmmoides

Lindl.

Trachelospermum jasmin-

RIBES

L.

N.

Pjf.

iii.

aureum
416.

Pursh.

DC.

2a. 88.

Saxifragacese-Ribesioideae.
483
;

iii.
l?

Schneider, Hdb. Lauhh.

i.

longeracemosum Franch. Schneider, Hdb. Lauhh. China {Wilson, n. 898). Tp


,,

N. America.'
var.

i.

400.

Schneider, Davidii Jancz. China {Wilson, n. 280). T?

I.

c.

luridTim Hook. fil. <& Thorns. Fl. Brit. Ind. T? laya, China {Wilson, n. 100).
.

ii.

410.

Hima-

nigrum L.DC.
N. Asia.
saxatile

iii.

481

Fl. d'lt. n.

1691. N. Europe,
.

Tp.
iii.

Pall DC.

479. Siberia. Tj
Pff.
ii.

March.

RICHARDIA

Kunth.N.
iii.

3.

136, sub Zantedeschia.

Araceas-Philodendroideae-Zantedeschiese.

africana Kunth, En.

58

Fl. Cap.

vii.

38.

Calla cethioFl. d.

pica L. B. M. t. S. Africa. albomaculata Hook. B. M. t. 5140 S. t. 1343. S.Africa. If. EUiottiana W. Wats.Fl. Trop. 7577.Transvaal ? if
832.

if.

October- June.
vii.

Fl. Cap.

37

Afr.

viii.

167; B. M.

t.

RICINUS L.N.
2625.
,,

Pff.

iii.

5.

70. Euphorbiaceae-Ricininae.
1017
;

communis L.DC.

xv. 2.
Tj
.

B. M.

t.

2209

Fl. d'lt. n.

Tropics.
var.
.

Summer. inermis Jacq. DC. Ij Summer.

xv. 2. 1018.

Java,.

var.

zanzibarensis Hort.

640.

Nich. Diet. Suppl. E. Tropical Africa. Summer.


Tj
.

T 2

276

HORTUS MORTOLENSIS
Pff.
iii.

ROBINIA L.N.
Robiniinae.

3.

274. Leguminosae-Papilionatae261
;

Pseud-acacia L.DC.
United States.

ii.

Fl. d'lt. n.

2092. Eastern

April.

ROCHEA DC.N.

Pff. iii. 2a. 38. Crassulaceae. DC. PI. Gr. t 1, Prodr. iii. 394 FL Cap. coccinea B.M. t. 495. Cape. 2^.
;

ii.

368;

Bogiera

latifolia

Decne.

Bondeletia amcena.
iii.

ROMNEYA

Harv.N.

Pff.

2.

139. Papaveraceae-Papaveri.

oideae-Eschscholtzieae.

Coulteri Harv.Gard. Chron. 1899, i. 208, 1900, Fedde, Papav. {B. V. C), 132. California. 2^ i?
July.

131;

May-

RONDELETIA
t.

Plum.N.

Pff. iv. 4.

33. Rubiacese-Cinchonversicolor J. in

Ind. Sm. 729. B. May-June. 4579. Central America. ^ B. M. Rosaceas-Rosoideee-Rosese. ROSA L. N. Bemo. Burnat. Bicknell, Fl. Bord. & April-May. Liguria. ^ 1837. 6724 Fl. 611 B. M. alpina L.DC. April-May. Central Europe. ^
amcena Hemsl.
Keiv. iv.
.

oidese-Rondeletieae.

Pff.

iii.

3. 46.

^'Allionii

S.

94.

ii.

t.

d'lt. n.

BanksisB B. Br.
1902,

var.
fl.

fl.
i.

439.

Gard. Chron. luteo.B. M. t. 7171 April. fig. 171-172. China. Tj .


;

pi. luteo.

Lodd. Bot. Cat.


i.

t.

1960
ii.

Bed.
Bed.

&
var.
<&

Tlfior.
fl.

Les Boses,

t.

9.
t.

pi.

albo. JB. M.
i.

Ledeb. Fl. Boss. 82 Christ, Boscb Turkestan. June. 602; B. M. 7096. Persia, berberifolia PallDC. Turkestan. 577. blanda Ait.DC. 606 Schneider, Hdb. Lauhh. B. alpina Red. & Thor. N. America. May. Bourbonia Boessig. Ketv Hand-list of Trees and
Beggeriana Schrenk.
Orient. 11.
ii.
;

Thor. Les Boses,

t.

10.

1954

Tp .
;

April,

DC.

601

T? .

April.

Tp

ii.

t.

\^

ii.

i.

Icevis

i.

t.

41.

Tp

Shriibs,
iii.

273.
t.

B. canina burboniana Red. & Thor. Les Boses,

131;
Tp
.

DC. ii. 613. {B. indica x November-May,

gallica).

Garden

origin.

HORTUS MORTOLENSIS

277

ROSA

{continued).

China. June-July. californica Cham, d Schlecht. Schneider, Hdb. Lauhh. 574. California. *canina L. dumalis Bechst. Fl. 1818y. Europe. April-May. Carolina L. DC. 605 Schneider, Hdb. Lauhh. 568. Carolina, Virginia.
Tp

bracteata Wendl.DC. ii. 602; B. M. t. 1377; Bed. & Thor. Les Boses, iii, t. 153 Schneider, Hdb. Lauhh. i. 586.
;

i.

Tp

var.
Tp
.

d'lt.

n.

S.

ii.

i.

Tj

damascena

Mill. Diet. n. 15

DC. ii. 620 Schneider, Hdb. Laubh. i. 549. Hybrid {^xohohly B.gallica x caTp nina or B. gallica x moschata) May- June.
; ;

,,

var.

Fendleri

Dieck. Schneider, Hdb. Bulgaria, Orient. MayJune. Crep. Schneider, Hdb. Laiibh. 577. California.
var.

conditorum
i.

Dieck.

Tp

tringitipetala
550.

Laubh.

l?

i.

Tp

May.
ii.

ferox M. B.Boiss. Fl. Or. i. 560. Asia Minor. i?


foliolosa

687

Schneider, Hdb. Lauhh.

Friit. Vilm. 91. Garden origin. Tp X rugosa. May. Schneider, Fortuniana Lindl. d Paxt. Nich. Diet. 320 Hdb. Lauhh. i. 547. {B. Banksia x IcBvigata.) " Epinip . March-May. (fl- pi-) euse de la Chine." China. Fl. d'lt. n. 1817 Sch7ieider, Hdb. gallica L.DC. ii. 603 Laubh. i. 547. Central and S. Europe, Asia Minor, May-June. Armenia. ^

,,

var. centifolia

Crep.
ii.

B.

centif.

L.

DC.

Bed.
Tp
.

(&

Thor.

t.

61-72.

Eastern

ii. 619; Caucasus ?

May-June.
Ser.
:

,,

var.

muscosa
69
Tp

B. muse.
ii.


Tp

t.

Bed.

&

Thor.

t.

Ait. DC. ii. 619 B. M, 73-76. Origin unknown.


;

gigantea Crep.
Chron. 1903,
.

Journ.
i.

May-June.
Linn. Sac.
;

xxviii. 1891,

t.

Gard,

188 & 211

B. M.

t.

7972. Burma, Yunnan.

May- June.
;

hispida Sims in B. M. t. 1570. B. Eglanteria luteola Red. & Thor. iii. t. 124 DC. ii. 607. Siberia ? April-May. indiea L.DC. ii. 600 Gard. Chron. 1902, i. 438. i?. chi^ Tp China.nensis Jacq. Schneider, Hdb. Laubh, i. 546.
;

278

HOETUS MOETOLENSIS
(continued).
var.
ii.

ROSA

indica

fragrans Red. & Thor. Les Roses,


600.
("

iii. 1.

173

DC.
.

R. indica odoratissima Lindl.

China. ^
origin.

October-May.
,,

Tea Koses.")
iii.

var.
I?

major Red. &


.

Thor.
(fl.

1.

May-June.
pi.)

pi.)

var.

minima

Curt, in B.

M.

1.

Garden 1762. ^ May-June


181.
.
;

(fl.

var.

semperflorens Ser.DC.
t.

Smith, Ex. Bot.

91.

ii. 601 B. M. t. 284 Tp R. hejigalensis Pers.

October-June.
var.

semperflorens

simplex Hort.
Schiieider,
.

Dieck. ^
i.

Hdb. Laubh. 546 Garden ^ November-June. sinica Murr. B. M. laevigata Michx. DC. 600. 2847. China. "Anemone." Keio Hand-list of Trees and April Shrubs, 285. Garden

var. viridiflora Hort.


origin.
ii.

October-June.

i?.

t.

Tj .

April.

var.

origin.

Tp .

May.
Leschenaultiana Hort. Mort. [non Eed.
;

!)

moschata.

lucida Ehrh.DC. ii. 602 Red. & Thor. i. t. 35; The Garden, 1899, i. 428. N. America. i? May. ^> var. alba Frut. Vilm. 91. May. lutea Mill. Diet. n. 4 Fl. d'lt. n. 1839.E. Eglanteria L. DC. ii. 607 Red. & Thor. iii. t. 122. Orient. var. fl. pi. T/ie Garden, 1898, i. 22. V. April-May.
.

,,

("

Persian Yellov?.")

var.

bicolor Sims in B. M.

t.

1077.
.

R. punicea Mill.

Diet. n. 12.

Lyelli Lindl.

Schneider, Hdb. Laubh. i. 544. China, India? May. microphylla Roxb.DG. ii. 602; B. M. t. 3490 and 6548; Schneider, Hdb. Laubh. i. 588. China. May-June. ^

DC.

ii.

607. T?

April-May.

Tj.

(Double

fl.

form only.)
ii.

moschata Herrm.DC.
H. Sch.
iii. t.

598; Red.
ii.

Thor.

i.

t.

18; Jacq.
1813.

Himalaya. ^ May. multiflora Thunb.DC. 589; B. M. & Zucc. Japan, China.


.
ii.

280;

FL

Brit. Ind.

365; Fl.

d'lt. n.

t.

Sieb.

V) .

7119.R. poly antha May.


i.

hybr.

"Aglaia," The Garden, 1903, May.

73. Tp.

HOETUS MOETOLENSIS

279

ROSA
multiflora hybr. "

Crimson Rambler,"
The Garden, 1905,
ii.

Nich. Diet. Sitppl.

647

415. Japan. Tj
ii.

May- June,
hybr. " Leuchtstern," The Garden, 1901,

27.

Tj

May-June.

var. var.

May. nana Hort. ^ Thunbergiana Bed. & Thor.


.

i. t.

4. 2.

Tj

May.
Noisettiana Bed. & Thor. i. t. 5 Schneider, Hdb. Laubh. i. 543. { = B. moschata x indica). Garden origin. Tp May. nutkana Presl. Schneider, Hdb. Laubh. i. 576. N. America. Tp April-May. oxyodon Boiss. Fl. Or. ii. 674. Caucasus. Tp May-June. Schneider, Hdb. Laubh. i. Phoenicia Boiss. Fl. Or. ii. 688 542. Syria, Asia Minor. Tp . May. *rubiginosa L.DG. ii. 615 Fl. d'lt. n. 1829. Central and T? May. S. Europe. Thunb.DC. ii. 607 Sieb. d' Zucc. Fl. Jap. t. 28 rugosa May. The Garden, 1899, t. 434. Japan. ^ May. fl. pleno. b. *sempervirens L. DC. ii. 597 Bicknell, Fl. Biv. t. 25 Fl. d'lt. n. 1814. Mediterranean region. ^ . May-June, May. sempervirens x moschata (?) fl. pi. ^ sericea Lindl.Fl. Brit. Bid. ii. 367; B. M. t. 5200. Himalaya. ^ Schneider, Hdb. Lanbh. i. sicula Tratt. Fl. d'lt. n. 1831 557-560. i2. Seraphini Hook. fil. B. M. t. 7761. S. i? Europe, N. Africa. May.
;


=
.

sinica Lindl.

Icsvigata.
;

Soulieana Crep.Friit. Vilm. 85 B. M. t. 8158. Western fp China. May. spinosissima L. Schneider, Hdb. Laubh. i. 583. B. pim-

pinellifolia L.

DC.

N. Asia.

608 April-May.
ii.

Fl. d'lt. n. 1838.

Europe,

Watsoniana

Crep. in Bev. Hort. Belg. 1888, 183; Schneider,


i.

Hdb. Laubh.
Schneider,

541.

Japan.

Tp .

April-June.
ii.

Wichuraiana Crep.Gard.

Chron. 1897,

Hdb. Laubh. i. 540. B. Lucice Franch. & Kochebr. B. M. t. 7421. Japan, China. ^ May-June. xanthina Lindl Nich. Diet. Suppl. 645 B. M. t. 7666.
;

99.

fig.

28;

China.

April-May.

280
1

HORTUS MORTOLENSIS
Pff. iv. 3a.

ROSMARINUS L.N.
Rosmarineae.

216. Labiatae-AjugoideaB3086. MediterFl. d'lt.

*officmalis

L.DC.
Tp
.

xii.

360

Fl. d'lt. n.

ranean region.
var.
I.

October-May. humilis Ten. (= ^ October-May.


c.
.

v. nijpestris Pasq.).

ROUPALA

Aubl.N.

Pff.

iii.

1.

147.Proteaceae-Grevilloideas
;

-Grevilleae.

Pohlii Meissn.DC.
Geraes).

xiv.

432

B. M.

t.

6095. Brazil (Minas

^
;

JROYENA
lucida

L.N. Pff. iv. 1. 158. Ebenacese. L.DC. viii. 211 N. Pff. c. 157.
l.

fig.

Ic. Sel.

t.

48.

S. Africa.

pubescens

Willd.

DC.
4.

84
Tj

Bossche,

v>

April-June.

viii.

213.

S. Africa.

August-

September.

RUBIA L.N.
-peregrina
Orient.

Pff.

iv.

153. Rubiacese-Coffeoideae-Psycho589
589
;

triinae-Galieae.

L.DC.
2^.

iv.

Fl. d'lt. n.

3256. S. Europe,

April-June,
iv.
;

tinctorum L.DC.
to India.
14..

Fl. d'lt. n.

3257. S. Europe

RUBUS L.N.
Rubinae.

Pff.

iii.

3.

28. Rosaceae-Rosoideae-PotentilleaeIxxxii. 53.

amabilis Focke in Engl. Bot. Jahrb. xxxvi. Beibl. China {Wilson, n. 830). T?
australis Forst.DC.
Zealand.
ii.

536

Hdb. Fl. N. Zeald. 54. New


ii.
;

Tj

biflorus Buch.-Ham.

Laubh.

i.

513.

Fl. Brit. hid. 338 Himalaya to Central China


Ic.
.

Schneider, Hdb.

{Wilson, n. 832).
1952.

chroosepalus Focke in Hook. China {WilsoJi, n. 79). Tp

PI. xx. 1891,

t.

Clemens

{Wilsoji, n. 871).

corchorifolius L.fil. DC. ii. 567 Journ. Linn. Soc. 230. ip Japan, China {Wilson, n. 15).
;

China.

Tj

xxiii.

Schneider, Hdb. Lmibh. 514. Korea, delioiosus Torr. B. M. 6062 Schneider, Hdb. Latibh. 504. Rocky Mountains. ^. May. ellipticus Smith. DC. 563; Fl. Brit. Lid. 336; Wight, 230. Himalaya. April-June.
coreanus Miq.
China
i.

{Wilso7i, n. 152).

Tp

t.

i.

ii.

ii.

Ic.

t.

T?

HOETUS MORTOLENSIS

281

RUBUS

{continued).

flosculosus Focke in Hook.

Ic. PL xx. 1891, sub t. 1952. China {Wilson, n. 145). ^ Henryi Hemsl. d Kuntze in Journ. Linn. Soc. xxiii. 231. Tp Central China {Wilson, n. 48). ichangensis Hemsl. Kuntze in Journ. Linn. Soc. xxiii. 231. Central China {Wilson, n. 663, n. 1052). T? inopertus Focke in Engl. Bot. Jahrb. xxix. 1900, 400 China {Wilson, n. 97, n. Schneider, Hdb. Lauhh. i. 514. 946). Tj. Schneider, irenseus Focke in Engl. Bot. Jahrb. xxix. 394 Hdb. Laubh. i. 504. China {Wilson, n. 141). Tj Kuntzeanus Hemsl. in Journ. Linn. Soc. xxiii. 232. Central China {Wilson, n. 92). T?

Lambertianus Ser. DC. ii. 567 233. China {Wilson, n. 482). l?


;

Joiirn.

Linn. Soc.

xxiii.

B. M. Ic. PI. xx. 1891, t. 1951 May-June. 7426. China {Wilson, n. 279). Tp Schneider, leucodermis Dougl. Nich. Diet. Suppl. 649 Hdb. Laubh. i. 511. Oregon, California. Tp macilentus Jacqiiem. Fl. Brit. Ind. ii. 336. Himalaya, China {Wilson, n. 850). Tp mesogseus Focke in Engl. Bot. Jahrb. xxix. 399. China {Wilson, n. 52a, n. 71). T?

lasiostylus Focke in Hook.


t.

moluGcanus L.DC.
Ic.
t.

ii.

566
Tp
.

Fl. Brit. Ind.

ii.

Himalaya. Parkeri Hance in Journ. Bot. 1882, 260 235. China {Wilson,
225.
xxiii.

330

Wight,

Journ. Linn. Soc.


1952.

n. 44).

Tp

pileatus Focke in Hook.


{Wilson, n. 838).
f?.

Ic. PI. xx.

1891, sub

t.

Playfairianus Hemsl. in Journ. Linn. Soc.


{Wilson, n.
rossefolius
t.

xxiii.

4).

China 235. China

Tp

Smith. DC. ii. 556 Fl. Brit. Ind. ii. 341; B. M. 1733 and 6970. India, China, Java. J? April-May. thibetanus Franch. N. Arch. Mus. Paris. Ser. ii. vol. viii.
;

1885-6, 221.Tibet, China {Wilson, n. 804). l? Thunbergii Sieb. & Zucc. Journ. Linn. Soc. xxiii.

238.

Japan, China {Wilson, n.

2).

trianthus {Wilson,

n. 78).

tricolor {Wilsoii, n. 828).

truUisatus {Wilson,
vioarius {Wilson,
n.

n. 57).

China. China. China. ^ 948). China. ^


T? Tp
.

Tp

April,
.

282

HOETUS MORTOLENSIS
Pff. iv. 36.

RUELLIA L.N.

308. Acanthaceae-Acanthoideae-

ContortsB-Ruellieae.

formosa Andr.~B. M. t. 1400; DC. xi. 215. Brazil. 2|. tuberosa L. N. Pff. I. c. 309. Cryphiacanthus harhadensis Nees DC. xi. 197. Texas to S. America, W. Indies. 2|.

IRULINGIA

B. Br.N.

Pff.

iii.

6.

83. Sterculiaceae-Buttnerieae
t.

-Biittnerinae.

corylifolia

Grah. in B. M.
Australia.
Pff.

3182;

Fl. Austr.

i.

239.

Western

T?

May-June.
17.

BUMEX

L.

N.

iii.

la.

Polygonaceae-KumicoideseMiss. Bot. G. 1892, 80.


t.

Rumiceae.

hymenosepalus Torr.Bept.
B. M.
t.
;

18

7433. Western N. America. 2|:. Lunaria L. DC. xiv. 73 Fl. d'lt. n. 994.
spontaneous in Southern
Italy.

June.

Canaries, sub-

(j

April-June.

RUPRECHTIA

C. A.

Mey.N.
Kew.

Pff.

iii.

la.

35. Polygonace^T^
.

Coccoloboideae-Triplarideae.

excelsa Griseb.

l7id.

Argentina.
v. 274';

October.

RUSCUS L. N.
geae.

Liliaceae-Asparagoideae-Aspara740. Western Fl. aculeatus L. Kimth, En. Europe, Mediterranean region.


Pff.
ii.

5. 78.

d'lt. n.

2^.

April.

androgynus L.

= Seviele androgyna.
v.
if..

Hypoglossum L.Kunth, En.


S.Europe.
d'lt.

275

Fl. d'lt. n. 741/?.

December- April. Hypophyllum L.Kunth, En. v. 275; B. M.


Fl.
n.

t.

2049;

741.

Mediterranean
Pff. iv. 36. 63.

region,

Madeira.

2^.

December-April.
racejiiosus L.

= Dana racemosa.
Pff.
I.

RUSSELIA
coccinea

Jacq.

rhinoideae-Cheloneae.
c.
;

N. Wettst. N.

Scrophulariaceae-AntirBossche, 109.
Ic.

Sel.

t.

B. sarmentosa Jacq. DC.

x.

332.
.

B. multiflora Sims B. M.

t. 1528. Central Mexico. ^ juncea Zucc. DC. x. 332. Mexico.

September-June.

RUTA
21

L.

N.

Pff.

iii.

4.

129.

Rutinae.

'''chalepensis L.
.

Fl.

d'lt. n.

RutaceaB-Rutoideas-Ruteae2524. Mediterranean region.

April-June.

HORTUS MORTOLENSIS

283

RUT A

(continued).

='=chalepensis var. bracteosa

DC.
t.

B. macrophylla

Sol. B.

M.

Fl. cl'It. n. 2524. i. 710 2018 DC. i. 710. Mediter;


;

ranean region. !(.. graveolens L.DC.


Orient.

April-June.
i.

710

Fl. d'lt. n.

2527. S. Europe,
i.

i;.

April-June.

var.

crithmifolia Moric.DC.

710

Fl. d'lt.

n. 2527c.

2^.

April-June,
i.

var.

divaricata Ten.DC. 25275.-2^. April-June.


i.

710

Fl. d'lt. n.

montana Mill DC.

710

Fl. d'lt. n.

2526. Mediter-

ranean region, Orient.

%.
3. 37.

April-August.

ISABAL

Palmse-Coryphinae-Sabaleae. Kunth, En. 246 B. M. 1435. Adansonii July-August. Florida, N. Carolina. ^. W. Indies. ^ Blackburnianum Glazehr. Index July- August. 245; Fl. W. Ind. umbraculiferum Mart. Kunth, En.
Admis.
Pff.
ii.

N.

Guerns.

iii.

t.

Keio.

iii.

514. W. Indies. ^
j

SACCHARUM L.N. Pff.


officinarum
India, Tropics.

ii.

2.

L.Kunth,

En.

23. Gramineae-Andropogoneae. i. 474; Fl. W. Ind. 561.

if.

SAGITTARIA L.N.

Pff. ii. 1. 231. Alismaceae. montevidensis Cham. & Schlecht. Kunth, En. iii. 157 B. M. t. 6755. S. Brazil, Uruguay. 4 June-November.

SAINTPAULIA

Wendl.N.

Pff.

iv.

3b.

185. GesneriaceseU- Winter.

Cyrtandroidese-Ramondieae.

ionantha Wendl.

B. M.
iii.

t.

7408.

Usambara.
; .

JSALIX L.N.

Pff.

1.

36. Salicace.
xvi. 2.

babylonica L.DC.
Fl. d'lt. n. 867.

212

Brandis, For. Fl.

t.

59

Persia, Western Asia. ^ March-April. SALVIA L. N. 270. Labiatae-Stachyoideae Fl. 1340. Mexico. albo-cserulea February-May. DC. 255. Jacq. H, Sch. amarissima 317 Mexico. ^ February-May. 301. ^Mexico. Octoberangustifolia Cav. DC,
Pff.
iv.

3a.

Salvieae.

Oaleotti.

d. S.

t.

Tp

Ort.

xii.

t.

xii.

if.

December.

284

HORTUS MORTOLENSIS
(contimied).

SALVIA

argentea
3171.

L.DC.
xii.

xii.

284

Jacq. H. Sch.

t.

Mediterranean region. 0.
273
;

Fl. d'lt. n.

aurea L.DC. -May. azurea Lam.

B. M.

1.

May. 182. S. Africa. i?


t.

April

U. 288.-6'. dichroa Hook. bicolor Desf.DC. B. M. 6004. Morocco, Algeria. 5274. Mexico, cacalisefolia Benth.DC. 348; B. M. Peru. January-May. 3167. Canaries, canariensis L. DC. 275 Fl. subspontaneous in May-June. candelabrxim Boiss.DC. 5017. Spain. 263 B. M. May-June. chamsedryoides Cav.DC. 314 B. M. 808. Mexico. October-May.
Atlantic United States.
xii.
fil.

DC.

xii.

302;

B. M.

1728.; Southern
in

t.

2|.

xii.

t.

!(..

xii.

d'lt. n.

Sicily.

Tp

xii.

t.

S.

xii.

t.

Tp

coccinea L.DC. xii. 348 B. M. Cuba. October-May. 2^.


;

t.

2864. Georgia,
Tj
.

Florida,

confertiflora Pohl.

DC.

xii.

323.

Brazil.
.

October-

May.

May. Desf.DC. xii. 264. S. Europe ? 2^ May-June. cretica L.DC. xii. 263. Crete ? Tp cyanea Benth. DC. xii. 336. Mexico, Costa Rica. ^.
crassifolia
.

October-May. cypria Ung. & Kotschy.

Boiss.
xii.

Fl. Or. iv.

596. Crete.

Tp

May- June.
dichroa Hook.
fil.

bicolor.

discolor H. B.

K.DC.

338

B.

M.

t.

6772. Peru. Tp

November-June.

dumetorum Andrz. DC. xii. 290. Central Asia. elegans Vahl.DC. 343 B. M. t. 6448 Bef. Bot.
; ;

if.

t.

228.

December-May. farinacea Benth. DC. xii. 302. Texas. Gardneriana Hort.{Haage & Schmidt,
Mexico.
1?
.

U.
t.

April-June.
?

gesnerseflora Lindl.

Tj December-May. Goudotii Benth.DC. xii. 339 Bef. Bot. t. 229. Colombia. Tp December-June. Grahami Benth.DC. xii. 335; Lodd. B. C. t. 1798.
.

Paxt. Fl.

1905).

d. S.

2131. Colombia.
2|.

V) Mexico. September-July. grandiflora Ettl. DC. xii. 264. Orient.


.

f?

May-June.

HORTUS MORTOLENSIS
SALVIA
Heerii Begel. May.

285

Bef. 0.

Bot.

t.

205.

Peru.
d'lt. n.

Tp

November-

Horminum L. DC.
ranean region.

xii.

278; Fl.

3168. Mediter-

June- July. ianthina Otto (& Dietr.DC. xii. 699 Fl. d. S. t. 884. Tp Mexico. November-March. interrupta Schousb.DG. xii. 266; B. M. t. 5860. N.
;

I? April-May. involucrata Cav.DC, xii. 333


.

Africa.
Tp
.

B. M.

t.

2872. Mexico.
2^.

December-May. judaica Boiss. Fl. Or. iv. -May. leonuroides Glox.DC.


1?
.

635.

Palestine, Syria.
327
;

April

xii.

B. M.

t.

376. Mexico.
;

October-May.
xii.

leucantha Cav.DC.
2293.
21
.

321

B. M.

t.

4318

Fl. d. S.

t.

Mexico. October- January. 344. Mexico. longistyla Benth. DC.


xii.

T^

October-

December.

mentiens Pohl.DG. xii. 330 Tp November-May.


.

Bef. Bot.

t.

206. Brazil.
.

mexicana L.DC.
November-May.
microstegta Boiss.
officinalis

xii.

337;

B. M.

t.

1728. Mexico. Tj

&

Pall.
xii.

verbascifoUa.
;

Fl. d'lt. n. 3165. S. Europe. May-June. paniculata L.DC. xii. 275 B. M. t. 6790. S. Africa. September-May. ^ patens Cav.DC. xii. 348 B. M. t. 3808 Fl. d. S. t. 503.

L.DC.

264

1?

Mexico.
January.

14..
t.

porphyrata Hook. B. M. -May. pulchella DC. xii. 334.

4939. Mexico. 2|:.


America.
i?
.

September
October-

Central Regeliana Trautv. Caucasus.


= mentiens.
.

2^.

April-May.
B.

Begia Hort.
Minor.

scabiossefolia

Lam.DC.

xii.

270

M.

t.

5209. Asia
.

2|:

scabra Thunb. DC. xii. 351. S. Africa. Tp OctoberMay. *Sclarea L.DC. xii. 281; Fl. d'lt. n. 3169; B. M. t. 2320. S. Europe. 24 June-August.

April-May.

286

HORTUS MORTOLENSIS
{continued).

SALVIA

semiatrata Zucc.

DC.
xii.

xii.

316. Mexico.
Tp
.

v>

October-June.

332. Mexico. December-Febry. Sessei5e^/t. DC. 1089. Sellow.DC. 330; Lodd. B. C. splendens April-November. Brazil. U 5991. Atlas Mountains. taraxacifolia Coss. Bal. B. M. May.
xii.
t.
.

d-

t.

2^.

triloba L. fil.DG.

xii.

ranean region.

2^.

Fl. 265 April-May.


;

d'lt. n.

3166. Mediter-

verbascifolia M. B. var. cana Boiss. Fl. Or. iv. 619. S. Armenia, Syria. microstegia Boiss. & Bal. %. May. virgata Ait.DC. xii. 290 Fl. d'lt. n. 3174. S.E. Europe,

Orient.

i^.

July- August.

SAMBUCUS
caerulea

australis Cham,

L.N. Pff. iv. 4. 161. Caprifoliaceae-Sambucese. d Schlecht. DC. iv. 323. S. America. Tp

Bafin.

Nich.

Diet.

Supijl.

653.

Western N.

America.

tp

July- August.
ii.

JSAMUELA Trelease. N. Pff. Nachtr.


oidese-Yucceae.

48.

Liliaceae-Dracaent.

North-eastern Mexico. ^ Bept. Miss. Bot. Gard. 1902, 117. Faxoniana Texas. ^
81.
.

Carnerosana

Trel. Bept. Miss. Bot.

Gard. 1902, 118.

76-

Trel.
.

t.

73-75.

SANSEVIERIA
gonoideae.

Thunb.N.
t.

Pff.

ii.

5.

84. Liliaceae-OphiopoTrop. Afr.


vii.

cylindrica Boj.B. M.
Tropical Africa.

5093

Fl.

335.

spec. P

German S.W. Africa.


Pff. iv. 5.

2^.

i^.

SANTOLINA L.N.
-Anthemidinae.

271. Compositse-Anthemidese
vi.

Chamsecyparissus L.
var.
n.

DC.
14..

35

Fl. d'lt. n. 3604.

Mediterranean region.

June.
{Viv.)

pinnata
3604y.
vi. 36.

DC.
1(.

vi.

35

Fl. d'lt.

Italy. June. Europe. rosmarinifolia Mill. DC. Spain, France. viridis Willd. DC.
S.
vi. 35.

1(..

June,
June.

S.

21.

SAPINDUS L.N.
manatensis
N. America.

Pff.

iii.

Shuttleio.

Index
i.

5.

315. Sapindaceae-Sapindeae.
Sem. Hort. Pan. 1910, 74.

marginatus

Willd.

DC.

607. Georgia.

HOETUS MOETOLBNSIS
SAFINDUS
{continued).
i.

287

Mukorossi Gaertn.DC.

609 N.

Fl. Brit. Ind.

i.

683.
164.

^ Saponaria L.DC. Tropieal America.


India to Japan.
P.

i.

607

Pff.

I.

c.

316.

fig.

Tp

SAPIUM

Br.N.

Pff.

iii.

5.

97. EuphorbiaceaB-Crotonoidese
1210
;

-Hippomaneae.

sebiferum Roxb.DC.
China, Japan.

xv. 2.

N. Pff.

I.

c. fig.

63.

Tp

SAPONARIA L.N.
oideee-Dianthese.

Pff.

iii.

lb.

78. Caryophyllaceae-SilenS. imdtiflora Eegel.

calabrica Guss. Fl. d'lt. n. 1208^. Southern Italy. 0. Spring.


\

SARCOC AULON DC.N. Pff.


Burmanni

iii.

4.
;

April- June. b Patersoni Eckl. & Zeyh.DC.


.

Sivset.DC.

i.

638

Fl. Cap.

9. Geraniaceae-Geraniese. i. 256. S. Africa.


638
;

i.

Fl.

Cap.

i.

256.^

S. Africa.

Tp

SARCOCOCCA Lindl. N.
pruniformis Lindl.
t.

Fl.

Pff.

iii.

Brit. Ind. v.

90

DC.

xvi.
.

1.

11, as S.

Ceylon.

Buxaceas-Buxeae. Bossche, saligna Muell.-Arg. India,


5.

132.

266

Ic. Sel.

December.
B. Br.N.
viii.

SARCOSTEMMA
Fl. Cap.
iv. 1.

Pff. iv. 2.

156. Asclepiadaceseiv. 1.

Cynanchoideae-Asclepiadeae-Cynanchinae.

viminale B. Br.DC.
755
;

538

Fl. Trop. Afr.

384

Berger, Stap.

Klein,

fig.

74. Tropical

and Southern

Africa.

October.

SATUREIA L.N.
Melissinae.

Pff. iv.

Za.

296. Labiatae-StachyoideseFl. d'lt. n. 3184


2|.
;

grseca

L.N.

Pff.

I.

c.

298

DC.
.

xii.

214 213

(Micromeriagr.)

Juliana L.N.

Pff.

{Micromeria Jul.)

Mediterranean region. 3183 298 Fl. Mediterranean region.


I.

Tp

May-June.
xii.

c.

d'lt. n.

DC.
.

if.

June,

lanata Link.N.

Canaries.
microphylla
{Micromeria).

Pff.
Tp
.

I.

c.

299

DC.
n.

xii.

215 (Micromeria).

1(.

Guss.

Fl.
209

May-June.
d'lt.

3186
.

DC.

xii.

219

Sicily,
xii.

Malta.
;

2|

montana L.DC.

Fl. d'lt.

May-June. n. 3181. S. Europe,


Koch.

Mediterranean region.

June-October,
S. alternipilosa C.
.

spicigera Boiss. Fl. Or. iv. 566. Asia Minor, Caucasus. if. ^

May- July.

288

HORTUS MORTOLENSIS
ii.

SAUROMATUM Schott.N. Pff.


Areae.

3.

148. Arace^-AroideaB;

guttatum Schott.FL Brit. Ind. vi. 508 -PZ. fZ. S. t. 1334. India. i;. April.

B.

M.

t.

4465

SAUSSUREA DC.N.
Carduinae.

Pff. iv. 5.

320. Compositse-Cynareaeiii.

albescens Hook. fil. <& Th.Fl. Brit. Ind. Himalaya. 2^. 540, under Ajplotaxis.

374

DC.

vi.

ii.

tSAXEGOTHiEA

Lindl. N.

Pff.

1.

103.

Taxaceae-

Podocarpoideae.

conspicua Lindl.
iv. 5.),

DC.
Pff.

xvi. 2.

497; Pilger, Taxacece {R. V. C.

42. Chili. Tp.


iii.

SAXIPRAGA L.N.
sarmentosa L.

2a.

52. Saxifragacese-Saxifra-

goideae-Saxifrageae.

DC.

iv.

43.

China, Japan.
;

May-June.

SCABIOSA L.N.
africana

Pff. iv. 4.
;

L.DC. iv. 657 caucasica M. B.DC. iv.


Caucasus.

189. Dipsacacese. Fl. Cap. iii. 44. S. Africa. 2;. 654 The Garden, 1900, ii. 464.
;

crenata Cyr.
region.

DC.

14..

April-June.
iv.

656

Fl. d'lt. n. 3385.

Mediterranean

!(..

cretica
Tp
.

L.DC.
May-July.

iv.

654
Atl.
i.

Fl. d'lt. n.

3381. Crete, Sicily.

daucoides Desf. Fl.


graminifolia

23.

t.

28 DC. iv. 657. Algeria. 2^


;

L.DC.

iv.

654; Fl. d'lt. n. 3382. S. Europe.

2;.

May-August.
;

limonifolia Vahl.DC.

*maritima L.DC.

iv. 661 Fl. d'lt. n. 3380. Sicily. 2^ 657 Bichiell, PI. Biv. t. 26 Fl. d'lt. n. 3379;S. Mediterranean region. % August-September. stellata L.DC. iv. 655 Fl. d'lt. n. 3383. Mediterranean iv.
;
;

region.

0.

Spring-summer.
iii.

SCHEPPLERA Forst.N. Pff.


digitata

8.

Forst.Hdb.

Fl. N. Zeald.

35. AraUaceai-Schefflereae, 103. New Zealand.


ii.

bracemosa
Wight,
(Bedd.) Fl. Brit. Ind.
729, as Heptapleurum;
Ic. t.

1015. India. T?

Stelzneriana Hart.

Heptapleurum

stelznerianum Hort.
in B.
April.

^'

t.

venulosa Harms

var.

erythrostachys Hook.

7402, as Heptapleurum.

Tropical Asia.

fil.
.

M.

I?

HORTUS MORTOLENSIS
tSCHINUS L.N.
;

289

Pff. iii. 5. 162. Anacardiacea-Rhoideae. DC. ii. dependens Orteg.N. Pff. c. 164, 163. fig. 104 74 B. M. t. 7406. S. America. l? May. latifolius Engl.N. Pff. I. c. IM.LithrcBa Molle C. Gay.
I.
;
.

Chili, Argentine.

^
;

Molle L.DC. ii. 74 June-December.

B. M.

t.

3339. Mexico
1881,
ii.

to Chili.

montanus
T?
.

Engl. Bot. Jahrb.

terebinthifolius Racldi.

DC.

i.

422. Chili. i?

74.

Brazil, Paraguay.
Sb.

September-October.

SCHIZANTHUS
pinnatus
Chih.
Biciz

Buiz d Pav.N.
<&

Pff'. iv.

36. Solanaceae
t.

-Salpiglossideae.

Pav.DC.
Sieh.

x.

202; B.

M.

2404.

2521.

O.

Spring.

SCHIZOPHRAGMA
integrifolia

d Zucc.N.

Pff.

iii.

2a.

76. Saxi-

fragacese-Hydrangeoidese-HydrangeeaB.
Oliv. in HooJc. Ic. PI. xx.
i.

t.

Hdb. Laubh.

394. China
Pff.
iii.

{Wilso7i, n.

Schneider, 1934 1251). 1?


;

tSCHOTIA

Jacq.N.

3.

138. Leguminosae-Csesalpiniii.

oideae-Amherstieae.

brachypetala Sond.

Fl. Cap.
;

274; Harv. Thes. Cap.

i. t.

32. Natal- ^. July. latifolia Jacq.DC. ii. 508


f?
.

Fl. Cap.

ii.

274. S. Africa.

May.
Mart,

ISCHUBERTIA

d Zucc. N. d
Zucc.

Pff. iv. 2.

228.

Asclepia-

daceae-Cynanchoideae-Asclepiadeae.

grandiflora Mart,

DC.
Pff.

viii.

534.

Brazil.

^.

SCIADOPITYS
Taxodieae.

Sieb.

& Zucc.N.

ii.

1.

84. Pinacesexvi. 2.

verticillata Sieb.

d
ii.

Zucc. Fl. Jap. 101

DC.

435

B. M.

t.

8050.Japan. l?
Pff.

ISCILLA L.N.
d'lt. n. 660.

autumnalis L.
casus.
!(..

Kunth,

5.

66. Liliacea5-Lilioidea5-Scille.
En.
iv.

315

Red.

Lil.

t.

317

Fl.

Western Europe, Mediterranean region, CauOctober.


hispanica.

campanulata

Ait.

haemorrhoidalis Webb

Berth. Phyt. Can.

iii.

336.

t.

230.

Canaries. 4

October.

290

HOKTUS MORTOLENSIS
{continued).
Mill. Diet. ed. 8. n. 8
Ait.
;

SCILLA

hispanica

Fl. cVIt. n.
t.

667. S. cam;

immdata
iv.

B. M.

t.

127

Red. Lil.
2^.

435

Kunth, En.
iv.

326.

Spain, Portugal.
t.

April,

hyacinthoides L.B. M.
Bichiell, PI. Biv.

t.

1140;

Kunth, En.

316;

75;
2^.
;

Fl. d'lt. n.

664. S. Europe,
304
;

Madeira, Canaries.
italica
t.

May-June.
Bed. Lil.
;

L.B. M.
;

t.

663
iv.

t.
t.

Lodd. B. C.

1483

Kunth, En.

323

Moggr.

Liguria, Dauphin^, &c. March- April. = Urginea maritima Bak. messeniaca Boiss. Hal. Consp. Fl. 8035. Greece. U. February- April.
%..

37

Fl. d'lt. n. 662,

maritima L.
t.

GrcBc.

iii.

237

B.

M.

non-scripta Hoffmgg. Lk.Fl. d'lt. n. 668 B. M. 1. 1461 Red. Lil. t. 224. ;S. nutans Smith Kunth, En. iv. 327. Western Europe. 2^ April, Red. Lil. t. 190 Kunth, En. iv. 315 obtusifolia Poir. Fl. d'lt. n. 661 /3. Sicily, Sardinia. 2^. peruviana L. Kunth, En. iv. 318 Fl. d'lt. n. 663 Red. Lil. t. 167 B. M. t. 749. Spain, Portugal, N. Africa. 2^.
;

April-May.
,,

var.

elongata

{Pari.)

Fl.
318
;

d'lt. n.

PI. Biv.

sibirica Andr.

Kunth,
;

t.

74. Italy. 2|:.


En.
iv.
1.

663 a Bichiell, April-May.


;

Lodd. B.

C.

t.

151

B. M.
2^.

t.

1025. 2408

Fl. d. S.

1677. Russia, Asia Minor.

February-March.

SCIRPUS L.N. Pff.


Fl.

ii. 2. 111. Cyperacese-Scirpoideae-Scirpinae. Rottb.Kunth, En. ii. 201 Fl. Austr. vii. 330 prolifer
;

Cap.

vii.

226.

Zealand.

St.

Helena,

S.

Africa, Australia,

New

2^.

May-June.

SCOLOPENDRIUM
Asplenieae.

Sm.N.

Pff.

i.

4.

230. Polypodiaceae1(.

vulgare Sm.

Fl.

d'lt. n. 35.

S.

Europe, Asia, America.

SCORZONERA
N. Africa.

L.N.

Pff. iv. 5.

365. Compositae-Cichorie*
;

-Leontodontinge.

deliciosa Guss.DC.

If..

vii. 118 April-May.

Fl. d'lt. n.

3866. Sicily,

hispanica L.DC.
Caucasus, Siberia.

vii.
1(..

120
124

Fl. d'lt. n.

3861. S. Europe,
3860. S. Europe.

June-July.
;

vUlosa Scop.DC.

vii.

Fl. d'lt. n.

2^

April-June.

HOETUS MOETOLENSIS

291

SCROPHULARIA L.N.

Pff.

iv.

Sb.

65. Scrophulariaceae-

Antirrhinoidese-Cheloneae.

sambucifolia L.^DC. x. 306; Desf. Fl. Atl. t. 143. Western Mediterranean region. i;. April-May. Boiss. Fl. Or. iv. 412 scabiossefolia Benth.DC. x. 311 14. Himalaya, Afghanistan. Fl. Brit. Ind. iv. 256.

April-May.
trifoliata
Sardinia.

L.DC.

x.

306;

Fl.

d'lt.

n.

2938. Corsica,

2^

April-May.
Pff. iv. 3a.

SCUTELLARIA L.N.
oidese.

225. Labiatse-Scutellariiv.

albida

L.DC.
If..

xii.

420; Fl. Or.


xii.

682. S. E. Europe, 687. Italy, Greece,


t.

Orient.

May- July.
419
xii.
;

Columnse All DC.


N. Africa.
cordifolia
.

Fl. Or. iv.

4. Benth.DC.

415

B. M.

4290. Mexico.
3089. S. Europe,

Spring-autumn. If. peregrina L.DC. xii. 420


Orient, N. Africa.
!(..

Fl. d'lt. n.

April-May.
CunniJighamii.

Seaforthia elegans R. Br. Archontophc&nix

SECALE L.N.
montanum
Orient.

Pff.

ii.

2.

P.

Guss.Fl. d'lt. May-June. if.


.

80. Gramineae-Hordese. n. 380^. Mediterranean

region.

ISECHIUM

Br.N.
iii.

Pff. iv. 5.
;

edule Sio.DC.

313

Fl.

37. Cucurbitaceae-Sicyoideae. W. Ind. 286.Tropical America.

2|.

October-November.
Juss.

SECURINEGA

N.

Pff.

iii.

5.

18.

Euphorbiaceae
.

Platy lobese-Phyllanthoideae
Schneider, Hdb. ramiflora Mull. Arg.DC. xv. 2. 449 Asia. 134. Laubh. ii. Temperate Eastern ^
;

ISEDUM

L.N.

Pff.

iii. iii.

2a.

Aizoon L.DC.
May-June.

402,

29. Crassulaceae. PI. Gr. t. 101. N. Asia. 2^.


Fl. d'lt. n.

-album L.DC.
N.Africa.
var.

iii.

406

1718. Europe,
;

Asia,

if.

May.

Hal. Consp. Fl. (DC.) DC. iii. 407 583. Greece. 1;. May. alsinefolium All.Fl. d'lt. n. 1723. Maritime Alps. 1|:. May.

athoum
i.

Grac.

u 2

292

HOETUS MORTOLENSIS
{continued).
iii.

SEDUM

Anacampseros L.DC.
Fl. d'lt. n.
;

403, PI. Gr.

t.

33

B.

M.

1.

118;

1710. Alps, Pyrenees. i; asiaticum DC. iii. 401 Fl. Brit. Ind. ii. U May.
.

419.

Himalaya.
Brit.

var.

Wallichianum Hook.
ii.

f.

d Th.Fl.
t.

Bid.

4:19. !(..
iii.

May.
Gr.

-dasyphyllum L.DC.
n.

406, PI.

93;

Fl.

d'lt.
14..

1720.

Western

and Central Europe, N.


Sesse.

May.

dendroideum Mog. d
February- April. ebracteatum Mog.

DC.
iii.

iii.

409. Mexico. ^.
Africa.
;

& Sesse.DC.

409

Bef. Bot.

t.

221.

Mexico.
Himalaya,

11.

euphorbioides

January-February. Led. Fl. Ross. Schlecht.

ii.

177.

Siberia.

Ewersi Ledeh.Fl.

Boss.
14..

ii.

182

Fl. Brit. Lid.

ii.

421.

Altai, &c.

Fabaria Koch. Fl. d'lt. n. 1709. Europe. if. heptapetalum Pair. Fl. d'lt. n. 1731. S. cceriileum Vahl. B. M. t. 2224 DC. iii. 404. Corsica, Sardinia, Sicily, Malta, Tunis. 0. May-June. hispanicum L.DC. iii. 406 Fl. d'lt. n. 1732. S. Europe, Orient. 0. May-June. hybridum L.DC. iii. 402; Ledeh. Fl. Boss. ii. 183.

Siberia. 183. 402 Ledeh. Fl. Boss. involucratum M. B.DC. Caucasus. 182. Kamkamtschaticum Fisch. Ledeh. Fl. Boss. tschatka. Hal. Consp. 784 laconicum Boiss. & Heldr. Fl. Or. 587. Greece, Asia Minor. Fl.
if.
iii.
;

ii.

if

ii.

If.

ii.

Grcec.

i.

if.

laxiflorum DC.
N. Asia.
24.

iii.

409. Teneriffe. i?
iii.

maximum Sut.DC.

402

Fl. d'lt. n.

1707. Europe,

Middendorfianum Max.

n*nic3eense
iii.

multiceps Coss. May-June.


All.

408, PI.

Nich. Diet. 404. Manchuria. & Dur. Nich. Diet. 405. Algeria. 1713. altissivium DC. 116. Mediterranean region. Gr. May
if.

Fl. d'lt. n.
t.

S.

Poir.
if.

-June.

HOETUS MOETOLENSIS

293

SEDUM
nudum
Ait. DC. iii. 409, Mad. 324. Madeira. Tp
PI. Gr.
t.

155

Loive,

Man.
\^

Fl.

obtusatum A. Gray. Nich. oxypetalum H. B. K.DC.


populifolium L.DC.
Siberia.
iii.

Diet. 405.
iii.
;

California.
.

409. Mexico. T?
Ledeb. Fl. Boss.

403

ii.

180.

ii

retusum Hemsl.
rubens L.~DC.
-

Nich. Diet. 406. Mexico.


iii.

T?

405

Fl. d'lt. n. 1733

Mediterranean region, Canaries, 0.


-rupestre L.Fl.
Asia Minor.
,,

Bef. Bot.

t.

242.

May-June.
t.

d'lt. n.

1714,

anopetalum DC. iii. 408. ^2^. May- June, (L.) DC. c. PI. Gr. t. 116.-2^. May- June. sarmentosum Bunge. Nich. Diet. 406. China. if. Selskianum Begel <& Maack. Nich. Diet. 406. Manchuria.
"var.
var.

DC. PI

Gr.

115. Europe,

2|.

reflexum

I.

sexangulare L.DC.
1717.

iii.

407, PI. Gr.

t.

118

Fl. d'lt. n.

N. Africa, Europe, N. Asia. 4.


t.

May-June.

Sieboldii Hook, in B. M.

U.
spectabile
June.
Bar.

5358

Nich. Diet.

406.Japan.
14..

Nich.

Diet.

406.

Japan.

May-

May-june. Stahlii Sohns.B. M. t. 7908. Mexico. 4. Nieh. stoloniferum S. T. Gviel. Ledeb. Fl. Boss. ii. 184 Diet. 406.-6'. spurium M. B. B. M. t. 2370; DC. iii. 402. May. Caucasus. if.

Telephium L.DC.
Walliehianum Hook.

iii.

402, PI. Gr.

t.

92

Fl. d'lt. n. 1708.

Europe, N. Asia.
SELAGO
-Selagineae.

= asiaticum.

2f.

June- July.

L.N.Pff.W.Sb. 82. Scrophulariaceas-Antirrhinoidese

Mey.DC. xii. 11. S. Africa. Tj corymbosa L. DC. xii. 10. S. Africa. if.
distans E.

ISEMELE
B. M.
April.

Kunth. N.
t.

Pff.

ii.

5.

Asparageae.

androgyna Kunth, En.


1898
Si

3029.

Madeira,

v.

Lihacese-Asparagoideae277. Buscus androgynus L.


78.

Canary Islands.

I?

294

HORTUS MORTOLENSIS
affine Lamotte.

JSEMPERVIVUM

Fl. App. 115. Alps. Uannuum C. Sm. Christ, Spicil. {Engl. Bot. Jahrb. S. dichotomum DC. 413. Canaries. 0.
d'lt.
iii.

L.N.

Pff.

iii.

2a.

31. Crassulaces.
ix.)

160.

MayM.
t.

June.

arachnoideum L.DC.
68; Fl.
d'lt. n.

iii.

413, PI. Gr.

t.

106, B.

1701.

Alps, Pyrenees.
411, PI. Gr.
t.
;

if.

June-July.

arboreum L.DC.
Mad. 337

iii.

125; Loive, Man. Fl.


Fl. d'lt. n.

Journ. Bot. 1899, 202

1699.

Madeira, Canaries.
var.
Tp

Tp

January-March.
Hort.

atropurpureum
.

Nidi.

Diet. 416.

assimile Schott.

atlanticum
June-July.

Nich. Diet. 417. Transsylvania. 4. 6055. Atlas Mountains. Ball. B. M.


t.
iii.

January-March.

14..

aureum

C.

Sm.DC.

412

B.

M.

t.

4087

Christ, Spicil.

Canaries. May-June. balsamiferum Christ, 161. Island (Canaries). January-April.


113. 161.
2|.

Spicil.

of

Lanzerota

V>

Bentejui
-April.

Christ, Spicil. 109.

160. Gran Canaria. Tp

March

Berthelotianum

{Bolle) Christ, Spicil. 112. 161.

U.

Teneriffe.

April-May.
d'lt. n.

Braunii Funck.Fl.

1702

Nich. Diet.

417. Tyrol.

DC. 412 Christ, 110. 161. April. calcareum Jord. Ard. Fl. Alp. Mar. 144. Liguria. June-July. canariense L. DC. 412, PI. Gr. Christ, 141 111. 161. Teneriffe, Gomera. May-June. Castello-Paivse Christ, 111. 161; Bolle in Bonplandia, 1859, 240; B. M. 5593, as Paivce. Gomera.
csespitosum C. Sm. Gran Canaria.
iii.
;

n-

Spicil.

17

2(.

iii.

t.

Spicil.

!{..

Spicil.

t.

S.

T?

May-June.

chlorochrysum Hort. chrysanthum Hoehst.

Canaries. Fl. Trop. Afr.


ij
.

May-June,
ii.

400.

Abyssinia.
161.

Tp

March-April.
iii.

ciliatum Willd.DC.
Can'aries.

411

Christ, Spicil. 111.

May-June.
;

cuneatum
1859,

Christ, Spicil. 111. 161

Bolle in Bonplandia,

239. Teneriffe. Tp.


d'lt.

debile Schott. Fl.

May-June. App. 114. Western Europe. 2^.

HORTUS MORTOLENSIS

295

SEMPERVIVUM

{continued).

decorum Christ, Spicil. 113. 161; 240. Gomera. May. dichotomum DC. = anmmm.
f?
.

Bolle in Bonplandia, 1859.

dodrantale Willd. DC. iii. 412. Canaries. U. Doramcs Webb = Mauriqueorum. fimbriatum Schn. <& Lehm. Nich. Diet. 417. S. Europe.

U-

flagelliforme Fisch. DC. iii. 413. Siberia. if. Funckii F. Braun.~Fl. d'lt. n. 1702. Alps. 1(. glutinosum Ait. DC. iii. 411 Jacq. H. Sch. t. 464 B. M. t. 1693 Loive, Man. Fl. Mad. 335. Madeira. l? June. Haworthii Salm, Hort. Dyck. 253 Christ, Spicil. 110. 161. >> TenerijEfe. May-June. Fl. d'lt. n. 1700 hirtum L.DC. iii. 413, PI. Gr. t. 107 B. M. t. 1457, as S. soboliferwn. Central Europe. 2f
. ;
; ; .

holochrysum
April- June.

Christ,

Spicil.

110.

161.

Teneriffe.
April,

f?

Canaries. Servia. 110. 161. Teneriffe. ^ June. Lindleyi Christ, Canaries. May-June. lineolare Ha^v. Rev. marginatum Hort. Canaries. ^ 110. 161; Bolle mBonplandia, Mauriqueorum Christ, June-July. 1859, 241. Gran Canaria. ^ Paivce = Castello-Paivce. 112. 161. Palma. June. palmense Christ, patens Griseb. d Schenk. Nich. Diet. Suppl. 666. Eastern Europe. Moggridgei piliferum Jord. Ardoino, Fl. Alp. Mar. 145. B. M. 6610. Alps. Hook. Pittonii Schott. Nich. Diet. 418. 234. Canaries. poGuliforme Berger. Bossche, June-July. 114. 161. Hierro Island polypharmicum Christ, (Canaries). pyrenaicum Lamotte. Pyrenees. Nich. Diet. Reginse-Amaliae Heldr. & Sart. (non Boiss. 418. Greece. June-July. Schottii Schn. & Lehm. Nich. Diet. 418.
hybridum
Haio. Rev. 64.
l?
.

kopaonikense Pane.

2|.

Spicil.

65.

i?

.,

Spicil.

Spicil.

ip

if.

S.

fil.

t.

If

Styria.
t.

if.

Ic. Set.

ip

Spicil.

if.

if

if.

'Tyrol.
;

if.

Smithii Sims
110.

in B.

M.

t.

1980

DC.

iii.

412

Christ, Spicil.

161. Teneriffe. I?.

June-July.

296

HOETUS MOKTOLENSIS
{continued).
T? May-June. Canaries. tabulseforme Haw. DC. iii. 412; Lodd. B. C. t. 1328; Lowe, Man. Fl. Mad. 334 Journ. Bot. 1899, 203. Teneriffe (N. W. coast). May-June. 2; .

SEMPERVIVUM
Btriol^ivoca.

Bergerin Gartemoelt.

Europe, Caucasus, Northern Persia. June-July. 296; tortuosum Ait. DC. 411, PI. Gr. 156 B. M. Christ, May-June, 109. 161. Teneriffe. triste Hart. Nich. Diet. 419. Europe. June, 111. 161 urbicum Christ, M. 7893. Canaries. May-June. velutinum N. E. Br. in Gard. Chron. 1901, 318. Canaries. May-June. Bonplandia, 1859, Bolle viscatum Benjer. Monium 241. Canaries. May. Berger. Bonplandia, 1859, 238. Cape Verde Webbii Islands. June.
2^.
iii.

tectorum L.DC.

iii.

413, PI. Gr.

t.

104; Fl.

d'lt. n. 1706.

t.

t.

Spicil.

fj

2^.

Spicil.

JB.

t.

ip

ii.

1[

ip

vise.

in

fp

{Belle)
Tp

Wulfeni Hpe.Fl.

d'lt. n.

Youngianum
June.

Christ, Spicil. 111.

1705. Austrian Alps. 24. May161. Canaries. ip


.

Zelebori Schott.

Servia.
Pff.
iv.

2^.

JSENECIO

L. N.

5.

296.

Compositae-Senecioneseiii.

Senecioninae.

angulatus L. fit. DC.

vi.

404

Fl. Cap.

404. S.
iii.
1(..

Africa,

Tp

October-April.
vi.

australis Willd.DC.

374

Fl. Austr.

668. N.

S.

Wales, Victoria, Tasmania,

S. Australia.
Tp

Barba-Johannis DC. vi. 430. Mexico. -Cineraria DC. vi. 355 Fl. d'lt. n. 3490
;

Bichiell, PL Riv. Cineraria maritima L. Mediterranean region. June-July. clivorum Maxim. Gard. Chron. 1902, 217 (with Plate)
.

April.

t.

29.

!(..

ii.

7902. China, Japan. 2^. cruentus DC. vi. 410 Vent. J. Malm.
t.

B. M.

cruenta Mass.
,,

-Teneriffe.

t.

99, as Cineraria

fl.

albo.

DC.

2^.

April.

I.

c. {ysbY. lacteics).

14..

April.

deltoideus Less. DC.

vi.

404

Fl. Cap.

iii.

403. S.

Africa.

ip

October-February.

elseagnifolius Hook.

Zealand.

fil.

Hdb.

Fl.

N. Zeald. 162.

New

Tp

HORTUS MORTOLENSIS

297

SENECIO

(continued).
vi.

gibbosus DC.

355 Fl cVIt. n. 3490y. -Sicily.- 1; Ghiesbreghtti Horfc. grandifolius Less.-Nich. Diet. 420.-S. -March. Mexico. ^. January Club, 1900, I70.-Mexico. Greggii Bydb. in Bull. Torr. Bot.
;

May.

DC. vi. 355.t. 19 haliensis Forsk Fl. Mg.-Avab. 149. December-March. Arabia. ^ B. M. t. 53.-Teneritfe.-2|. Mayvi. 409 Heritieri DC.
; . ;

junceus Haw.
S.

Fl. Cap.

m. 407

Berger, Stap.

&

Kl.

404.-

Suppl. 667.- Uruguay.leucostachys Bah.-mch. Diet. h June. ^ J Cap. iii. 400.-S. Africa.longifolius L.-DC. vi. 400 Fl.
.

Africa.

T?

October.

October-April.
vi.

macroglossus DC.
2188;

404

FL Cap
ii.

iii.

Gard. Chron. 1893,


vi.

755.

-r., 7 o 403 Fl. d. S^ S. Africa.- T?.


i.
.
;

December-May. macrophyllus M. B.-DC.

352

^
;

-.nno Gard. 1902,

1.

qo^^ 325.-

Caucasus. 4. June- July. mikanioides Oito.-FZ. Ca^..


October-April.

iii.

402

448; Bept. Miss. Bot. Gard. 1897.

t.

Lowe, Man. Fl Mad. 32.-S. Africa.- 1? ^


a m 397.-S. Africa.

-r,,

7,^

niveus L.6s.-DC.vi.390;
oxyri JoUus DC.
June.
vi.

Fl. Cap.

111.

405

Fl. Cap.

iii.

376.-S. Africa.-!^.
,

Petasitis

Cin.rarm.-S. DC. vi. 431 5. M. t. 1536, sub April. America. T?. February4803.-Mexico.-i? .May. prsecox DC. vi. 431 B. M. t. Chron. 1911, ii. 82.-Mexico.in Gard.
;
;

^-

Prainianus Berger February-April. h 5959.-Uruguay.-l^ pulcher Hook. B. M. t.


.

June.
.

scaposus DC.

vi.

403

Fl. Cap.

iii.

406

Berger, Stap.

d;

Kl.

403 S.

Africa. 2;.

June-July.
iii.

subscandens

Hoo/ts^.-i^^. rro^.. Afr.

421.-Abyssmia.

21-

SEQUOIA
1896,

Endl.-N. Pff. ii. 1- 85.-Pinaceae-Taxodieae Gard. Chron. giganW Torr.-DC. xvi. 2. 437 B. M. t. 4777
;
;

ii.

725, 1897,

ii.

379, 1900,

i.

101. -Calif ornia.-i?

298

HOETUS MOETOLENSIS
{continued).

SEQUOIA

sempervirens Endl.
March-April.

DC.
=

xvi.

2.

436.

California.

Tj

Sericographis Mohintli Ness

Jacohinia.

SERJANIA

Schum.N. Pff. iii. 5. 302. Sapindaceae-Paullinieae. exarata Badlk.N. Pff. I. c. 303. fig. 155.Brazil. Tp . scatens Badlk. Ind. Keiv. iii. 887. Mexico. \^ .

SESELI L. N. Pff.
-Seselinae.

iii.

8.

201. Umbelliferse-Apioideae-Ammineas
iv.

gummiferum Sm.DC.
961.

145; B. M.
144.

t.

2259; Fl. Or.

ii.

Asia Minor.

i^.

Hippomarathrum Jacq. tomentosum Vis. DC.


matia.

DC.
iv.

June.
iv.

Europe.

2^.

144;

Fl. d'lt. n.

2296. Dal-

2|.

SICYOSPERMA
Sicyoideae.

A.

Gray.N.

Pff. iv. 5.

38. CucurbitaceaB21. Texas, New

gracile A.

Mexico

Gray.N. Pff. Summer.


.

iv.

5.

38.

fig.

SIDA L.N.

Pff'. iii. 6.

aurantiaca

mollis May-October.

Orteg. DC.

St. Hil.

Ind. Keiv. Brazil.


i.

42. Malvaceae-Malveae-Sidinae.
ip

470;

B.

M.

t.

2759.

Peru.

i?

SIDERITIS L.N.
Marrubieae.

Pff. iv. 3a. 231.

candicans
August.

Ait.

DC.
xii. xii.

xii.

Massoniana
spinosa Lam.

Benth. in

DC.
442
Ip
.

xii.

Labiatae-Stachyoideas437. Teneriffe. July457. Madeira.


i?
.

'?

sicula Ucria.DC.

DC.

439; Fl.
;

d'lt. n.
lO

3102. Sicily. 2^.


ii.

Willk.

Lge. Fl. Hist.

445.

Spain, N. Africa.
SIDEROXYLON
L.N.
viii.

Pff'. iv. 1.

143. Sapotaceas-Palaquieae
1.

-Sideroxylinae.

inerme L.DC.

182

Fl. Cap. iv.

438. S.

Africa.

SILENE

L.

N.

Pff.

iii.

Ih.

70.

Caryophyllaceae-SilenoideaBd'lt. n.

Lychnideae.

fruticosa L.DC. Asia Minor. if.

i.

381

Fl

1196. Sicily, Greece,

April- June.

HOETUS MOETOLENSIS
SILENE
{continued).

299

ntalica L.DC. i. 381; Fl. cVIt. n. 1199. Caucasus, Mediterranean region. May- June. 2^. longiflora Ehrh.DC. i. 382; Fl. Or. i. 639. Hungary,

Asia Minor.

if..
i.

Otites
S.

Sm.DC.

369;

Fl.

d'lt.

n.

1204. Central and

Europe, N. Asia.
i.

U.
381
;

June-July.
Fl. d'lt. n.

paradoxa L.DC.
Europe.

1200. Mediterranean
;

If.

June.
;

pendula L.B. M. Roemeri


Friv.

t. 114 DC. i. 375 Fl. d'lt. n. 1189. Mediterranean Europe, Asia Minor. 0. March-May.

Fl. Or.
i.

i.

609. Greece.
d'lt. n.

if.

Saxifraga L.DC.
Asia Minor.
if.

377; Fl.

Schafta

May-June. Gmel.Ledeb. Fl. Boss. 323; Caucasus. Spring and summer.


S. G.
i.

1167. S. Europe,
Fl. Or.
i.

655.

if

spinescens Sibth.Fl.

Or.

i.

632; Hal. Consp. Fl. Gr.


1159.

i.

183.

Greece.
Africa.
,,

14..

"vulgaris Garcke.

Fl.

d'lt.

n.

Europe,
1159
8.

Asia,

N.

If

May-June.

var.

maritima With.
.

Fl.

d'lt. n.

Italy.

2|

May-June.
Pff. iv.
5.

SILPHIUM L.N.
Melampodinae.

218. Compositae-Heliantheaev.

terebinthinaceum Jacq.
July.

DC.

512.

N.

America.

if.

SILYBUM

Gaertn.

N.

Pff. iv. 5. 323.

Corapositae-Cynareae912.

Carduinae.

eburneum

Cos.

d Dur.

Lid.

Keiv.

iii.

N. Africa. 0.
d'lt.

June-July.

Marianum

Gaertn.

DC.

vi.

616;

Fl.

n.

3803.

Canaries, Mediterranean region. Orient.

June- July.

SIPHOCAMPYLUS
-Lobelioideae.
bicolor D.

Pohl.N.

Pff. iv. 5.

65. Campanulaceae

Don.

Lobelia laxiflora.
vii.

macrostemon DG.fil.DC.

403. Peru. 2^.


169. Cruciferse-Sinapeae.

SISYMBRIUM L.N.
Sisymbriinae.

Pff.

iii.

2.

millefolium Ait. DC. lldi.-TeneviEe. if

April-May.

300

HORTUS MORTOLENSIS
Pff.
ii.

SISYRINCHIUM L.N.
Sisyrinchieae.

5.

150. Iridaceffi-IridoideaeBak. Irid. 124.


t.

angustifolium Mill. Diet. naum Curt. B. M. t. 464

n.
;

S'.

grami-

Red. Lil.

282. N. America.
;

{Herb 1911.)
;

striatum Sm.Bak. Irid. 133 Bed. Lil. t. 66 Lodd. B. G. t. 1870 B. M. t. 701 Jacq. H. Sch. t. 11. Chili, Argentine. May-June. If.
;
;

SKIMMIA

Thunh.N.

Pff.

iii.

4.

181. Rutace^-Toddalioideaei.

Toddalieae.

Laureola Hook. fil. Fl. Brit. Ind. Limonia ? Temperate Himalaya.

499
.

DC.

i.

536, as

T?

April.

SMILAX L.N.
='=aspera

Pff. ii. 5. 88. Liliacese-SmilacoideEe. L.Kunth, En. v. 214 Fl. d' It. n. 742. Mediter;

September-November. australis B. Br. Fl. Austr.


ranean region.
T^ .

vii. 7.
;

xlustralia.

i?

excelsa L.Kunth, En. v. 212 Boiss. Fl. Or. Minor, Caucasus. ^ . Kunth, En. v. 228. officinalis H. B. K.

v.

342.

Asia

Colombia.
Tp

sandwicensis Kunth, En.

v.

253.
v.

Hawaian Islands.
203
;

Sarsaparilla L.Kunth, En. tp America.

B. M.

t.

1846. N.

JSOLANDRA

Sw.N.

Pff. iv. 3b.


xiii.

27. Solanacese-Daturete.
535;

grandiflora Sw.DC. Ij Tropical America.

1.

N. N.

macrantha Dun.
flora Hort. B.

DC.
t.

Pff'.

I.

c Mexico,

xiii. 1.

533

Pff'.
.

I.

c.

S. grandi-

M.

1874. Cuba. I?
iv.

March-June.

JSOLANUM

L.

N.

Pff'.

36.

Solaninae.

acanthocarpum

^
T?
.

Poit.

Ind.
xiii. 1.

May.

acTileiger Moric.

DC.

atropurpureum Schrank.
May-July.
ip

Bef.

Solanacese-Solanese929. Cochin China. Keiu. 301. Brazil.


21.
iii.
l?
.

Bot.

t.

207. S.

Brazil.

DC. 115. Madagascar, Mauritius, Bourbon. May-July. 447. aviculare Forst. DC. 69; Fl. Austr. niatum B. M. 349. Australia, New Zealand.
auriculatum
Ait.
.

xiii. 1.

xiii.

iv.

S. laciI?.

Ait.

t.

April-October.

HOETUS MOETOLENSIS

301

SOLANUM

{continued).

betacewm Cav.

= Cyphomandra betacea. Dill. Hort. Elth. 364. t. bonariense L.DC. xiii. 1. 348 July-October. 272. fig. 351. Argentine. Tp Capsicastrum Link. -DC. xiii. 1. 151 Fl. d. S. t. 1242.
; . ;

Brazil.

Tj

All the year.


xiii. 1.

Cervantesii Lag. DC.


year.

103. Mexico. t?
;

All the

ciliatum

Lam. DC.

xiii. 1.

241

Fl. d. S.

t.

1988. Brazil.
.

July-November. T^ 0crinitum Lam. var. costaricense Berger. Go&t& Kica. ^


Nearly always.

crispum Buiz

Pav.DC. xiii. 1. 91 B. M. t. 3795 ii. 414. ChiU. T? . All DC. xiii. 1. 316. Brazil. ^ Dim. cyananthum
d;

Gard. Chron. 1901,

the year.

diphyllum L.
August.

DC.

xiii.

1.

144.

Mexico.

T?

July-

162. Peru. Tp. October, fastigiatum Willd.DC. xiii. 1. 348. Brazil. Tj

Dombeyi Dun.DC.
ferox

xiii. 1.

L.DC.

xiii. 1.

255

Fl. Brit. hid. iv. 233


.

Wight,

Ic. t. 1399. Tropical Asia. ^ giganteum Jacq.DC. xiii. 1. 258 B. M. t. 1921 Fl. Cap. iv. 2. 94
; ;

March.
Fl. Brit. Ind. iv. 233
; ;

Wight,

Ic.

t.

893.
April-

Tropical Africa and Asia.

V^

July- August.
.

glaucum Dun. DC.


July.

xiii.

1.

100. America. T?
.

May. glutinosum Dun. DC. xiii. 1. 342. Mexico. ^ Dun. DC. xiii. 1. 54. S. America. 4. Aprilgracile
October.

jasminoides Paxt. DC. October-May.


laciniatum Ait.

x\i\.

1.

82. S. America. i?

aviculare.
xiii. 1.

lanceolatum Cav. DC.


V)
.

343; B. M.

t.

2173. Mexico.

April-November.
Trop.
Afr.
iv.

lycioides
2.

L.DC. xiii. 1. 161. Peru. Tp macrocarpon L.DC. xiii. 1. 353; Fl.


214.

Tropical Africa,

marginatum L.DC.
iv. 2.

Mascarene Islands. U. B. M. t. 1928; Fl. Trop. xiii. 1. 370


;
.

235. Abyssinia, Eritrea, &c. T? April-October. Afr. Wight, III. t. 166 Melongena L.Fl. Brit. Ind. iv. 235 Summer. d'lt. n. 2872. India. 0. Fl.
; ;

302

HORTUS MORTOLENSIS
{continued).

SOLANUM
;

Pseudocapsicum

Rantonnetii Carr. L'Hortic. Franc. 1859, 197. Argentina. ^ October. 37. Brazil. 257; Bef. Bot. robustum Wendl.DC. July-October. 329. United States, Mexico. rostratum Dtm. DC. 0. Summer. Lodd. B. C. Seaforthianum Andr. DC. 67
.

June- July. Lowe, Man. Fl. Mad. ii. 79 BejJt. Miss. B. G. 1897, t. 43. China, Bourbon, Nearly always. S. Africa, Madeira, Azores, Brazil. 17 pyracanthum Jacq. H. Sch. iv. 36. t. 470 DC. xiii. 1. 304 Tp JulyMadagascar. Smith, Ex. Bot. ii. t. 64.

Pocote Hort. Lemoine.


L.

America. DC. 152;


S.
xiii. 1.

l^.

October.

xiii. 1.

t.

f?

xiii. 1.

xiii.

1.

t.

1982. Barbados. Tj . June-November. B. M. tt. 2568. sisymbrifolium Lam.DC. xiii. 1. 326 0. Summer. 2888. 3954. Tropical America. sodomaeum L.DC. xiii. 1. 366; Fl. d'lt. n. 2873. MediSummer. terranean region. l(. texamim Dun. DC. xiii. 1. 359 Fl. d. S. t. 1398. Texas. 0. Summer. tomentosum L.DC. xiii. 1. 299 Fl. Cap. iv. 2. 100. Tp June-November. S. Africa. torviim Swar^^.DC. xiii. 1. 260; Fl. Brit. Ind. iv. 234 Wight, Ic. t. 345. ;S. ferruFl. Trop. Afr. iv. 2. 231 Marchgineum Jacq. H. Sch. t. 334. Tropics. ^.
971
;

B. M.

t.

October.

triquetrum Cav.
October.

DC.

xiii.

1.

153.

Mexico.
d'lt.

>>

JuneS.

tuberosum
America.
the year.

L.
2^.

Warszewiczii

DC. 2870. 31; Fl. (Potato.) May. All Hort. Nich. Diet. 455. Tropics.
xiii.

1.

n.

Tp

Wendlandii Hook. fil.


ii.

in B.

M.

t.
ii.

6914
388.

Gard. Chron. 1893,

339; The Garden, 1900,

Costa

Rica. l?

Summer-autumn.

SOLENANTHUS

Led.N.

Pff. iv. 3a.

103. Borraginacese-

Borraginoideae-Cynoglosseae.

cerinthoides Boiss. Fl. Or. iv. 271, under Trachelanthus. Persia. March-April. 2^.

HOKTUS MORTOLENSIS

303

SOLLYA

Lindl.N.

Pff.

iii.

2a.

113. Pittosporacese-Billardii.

ereae.

heterophylla
Lodd. B. G.
345.

Lindl.Fl. Austr.
t.

126

B. M.

t.

3523

1975.

Western Australia. ^
Pff.
iv.

Billardiera fusiformis Labill.


.

DC.

i.

April-October.

JSONCHUS L. N.
Crepidinae.

5.

371. Compositse-Cichorieae-

arboreus DC. vii. 189. gummifer Link.DC.


Jacquini DC.
March-April.
vii.

Teneriffe.

^
M.
t.

vii.

188; B.

t.

5219.Teneriffe.

188;

B. M.

6642.

Teneriffe.
v>

I?

leptocephalus Cass. pinnatus Ait. DC.


Canaries, Madeira.

DC.
vii.
l?
.

vii.
;

189.

Teneriffe.
Man.
Fl.

188

Loive,

Mad. 551.

SOPHORA

L.N.

Pff.

iii.

3.

195. Leguminosae-Papilionatae69
;

Sophoreae.

alopecuroides L.DC.
Brit. Lid.
ii.

ii.

Led. Fl. Boss.

i.

716

Fl.

250.

Caucasus, Central Asia.


ii.

2^.

flavescens Ait.DC.

96

Led. Fl. Boss.

i.

japonica L.

Tp ii. 96. March-April, Mexico. tetraptera Ait.Hdb. Fl. N. Zeald. 52 B. M. 1. 167. 3735. Ediuardsia grandiflora Salisb. DC. ii. 97. New Zealand.
. ;

DC. 95 1861. Japan, China. secundiflora Lag. DC.


ii.

b-

716. Siberia.
;

Jacq. H. Sch.
Tj
.

t.

353

Fl. d'lt. n.

t.

I?

April.
xxiii.

viciifolia Hance, Journ. Linn. Sac.

1887, 203

B.

M.

7883. China. Tp

April.
Pff.
ii.

tSOPHRONITIS

Lindl.N.

6.

148. Orchidacea-Mon-

andrae-Laeliinae.
t. 3677. Brazil. 2^. March. grandiflora Lindl.B. M. t. 3709 Gard. Chron. 1895, 492. 1897, i. 266.Brazil. i;. January-February. violacea Lindl.B. M. t. 6880. Brazil. if. March.
;

cernua Lindl.B. M.

i.

SORBARIA

A.

Br.N.

Pff.

iii.

3.

16. Eosaceae-SpiraBoideae-

Spiraeeae.

arborea C. K. Schneider, Hdb. Lauhh. i. 490. n. 499). 1?. sorbifolia A. Br. Schneider, Hdb. Laubh.

China (Wilson,
i.

488.

S^pircea

sorbif. L.

Northern Asia. ^

304

HOETUS MORTOLENSIS
=
Pirus domestica Sm.
Pff.
ii.

Sorbus domestica L.

tSPARAXIS Ker.N.
oletu.

5.

155. Iridacese-Ixioideae-Gladi197; Fl. Cap.


;

grandiflora Ker.Bak.
541. 779
;

Irid.

vi.

Bed. Lil.
14..

t.

109. 139. 362

Jacq.

116; B.M.t. H. Sch. t. 17.

S.Africa.
381. 1482
;

April.
;

tricolor Ker.Bak. Irid. 197

Fl. Cap.

vi.

117

B. M.

t.

Bed. Lil.

t.

129. S. Africa. 2^.


Pff.
iii.

April.

tSPARMANNIA L.fil.N.
africana L.fil.DC.
Vent. J.
i.

6.

22. Tiliaceae-Tilieae.
i.
.

503

Fl. Cap.

Malm. t. 78. S. Africa. palmata E. Mey.Fl. Cap. i. 224

^
;

224 B. M. t. 726; Winter and spring,


;

Bossche, Ic. Sel.

t.

141.

S. Africa.

T7

October-November.

SPARTIUM L.N.
11
fp
.

Pff'. iii. 3.

232. Leguminosae-Papilionatae
;

-Genistese-Spartiinae.

"junceum L.DC.
t.
;

ii.

145

B.

M.

t.

85

Bicknell,

PL

Biv.

Fl. d'lt. n. 1903.

Mediterranean

region, Canaries.

May-June.

Spartocytistis

Webb =

Cytisus.
Pff. iv. 3a.

SPHACELE

Benth.N.

290. Labiatse-Stachyoideae

-Horminese.

subhastata Benth.

DC.

xii.

255.

Chili.

Tp

April-May.

JSPH.ffiIRALCEA
-Abutilinae.

St.

Hil.N.

Pff.

iii.

6.

38. Malvacese-Malveae

FebruaryCentral America. speciosa Berger. ^ November. Timbellata St. Hil. N. Pff. I. c. Malva umb. Cav. Lodd. December- April. B. C. t. 222 DC. i. 435 Mexico. Tj
.

JSPH^ROSICYOS
sphsericus Cogn.
Fl. Cap.
ii.

Hook. fil.N. Pff. -Cucurbiteae-Cucumerinse.

iv. 5.

26. Cucurbitaceae
ii.

S. Meyeri Hook.

fil.

490, as huffa.

Fl. Trop. Afr.

532;

S. Africa,

Mascarene Islands.

0.

Summer.
L.

SPINACIA
oleracea
.

2V. Pff. iii. la.

64.

Chenopodiaceae-CyclolobeaB
Fl. d'lt. n.

-Atriplicese.

L.DC.

xiii. 2.

118

1003. Orient.

(Spinach.)

HORTUS MORTOLENSIS
SPINIPEX L.N.
34.
Pff.
ii.

305

2.

38.Graminese-Panicese.
vii.

hirsutus LaUll.Fl. Austr.

Australia,

New
3.

Zealand,

503; N. Pff. I.e. 39. New Caledonia.

fig.
if.

Summer.

SPIR^A L.N. Pff.


China.
,,

iii.

14. Rosaceae-Spiraeoideae-Spiraeeae.

cantoniensis Lour. Fl. Coch. i. 394. S. lanceolata Poir. DC. ii. 542.-5. Beevesiana Lindl. Fl. d. S. t. 1097.

ip

April.
fl.

var.

pi.

April.
;

Pilipendula L.DC. ii. 546 Fl. cl'It. n. 1758. Europe. June- July. 1^ opiilifolia L. = Physocarpus opulifoUa Maxim.
.

prunifolia Sieb.

&

Zucc. Fl.

Jap.

t.

70.

China,
;

Japan.

var. flore

1900,

i.

pleno. i^Z. 142.


f?

d.

S.

t.

12

The Garden,

sorbifoUa L.

Sorbaria sorbifolia.

Thunbergii
Laubh.
i.

Sieb.

&

Zucc. Fl. Jap.


.

t.

451.

Japan. ^
=

69

Schneider, Hdb.

April.

Spondias Solandri Benth.


ment).

Pleiocjynium Solandri (see Supple-

SPOROBOLUS
tideae.

Broion.N.
i.

Pff.

ii.

2.

49. Gramineae-Agros21

asper Kimth, En.

210.

N. America.
Pff.
ii.

SPREKELIA

Heister.

Amaryllidoideae-Narcisseae-Pancratiinae.

formosissima

N. Herb. Kunth,
t.

5.

113.

Amaryllidaceaet.

En.
;

v.

507.

mosissima L. B. M.

47

Bed. Lil.

Amaryllis for5. Mexico,

2^.

May.
L.

STACHYS
affinis

N.
=

Pff.

iv.

3a.

260.

Labiat^-StachyoideseFl. Grcec.
ii.

Lamiinae.

Fl. Or. 721 Hal. Consp. 519. Greece. 474 W. d Lge. circinata L'Her. DC. 442. Spain, N. Africa. May-June.
cassia Boiss.
iv.
;

Bunge

Sieboldii Miq.

11

xii.

Fl. Hisp.

ii.

if.

coccinea Jacq. H. Sch. t. 666. Mexico. 2^.

iii.

18.

t.

284;

DC.

xii.

467; B.

M.

306

HORTUS MORTOLENSIS
{continued).

STACHYS

germanica L.
Asia, N.

DC.
71

xii.
.

464; Fl.

d'lt.

n.

3148.

Europe,

Africa.

June.

italica Mill.

DC.

xii.

ranean region.

4.

464; Fl. May-July.


;

d'lt. n.

3149. Mediter-

lanata Jacq.DC. xii. 463 Boiss. Fl. Or. iv. 718. Orient. May-June. If maritima L.DC. xii. 483; Fl. d'lt. n. 3162. Mediter-

June. ranean region. 71. Sieboldii 31iq.N. Pff. I. c. 26'1.Nich. Dict.Sui^ijl. 685, as Eastern Asia. S. tuberifera Naudin. 2^.

Stadmannia

australis A.

G\mn. = Diplo(jlottis australis Edlk.


Pff.
iv.

STiEHELINA L.N.
Carduinse.
=:^dubia

5.

320. Compositae-Cynareae-

L.DC.

vi.

544

Fl. d'lt. n.

3700. Mediterranean

region.

74..

June.

STANHOPE A Frost. N.
drse-Gongorinee.

Pff.

ii.

6.

166. Orchidacese-Monan2^.

oculata

Liyidl.

B. M.

t.

5300.

Mexico.

June.

iSTAPELIA L.N.

Pff. iv. 2.

278. Asclepiadacese-CynanchoiCap.
iv. 1.

deae-Tylophorese-Ceropegiinse (Stapelieae.)
" albicans " Sprenger.
<&

Fl.

1007

Berger, Stap.

Garden angulata Tod. Hart. Bot. Pan. i. 54. t. 13. fig. 3; Cap. iv. 1. 990 Berger, Stap. ct Kl. 198. S. Africa Garden origin? 2|. August-November.
Kl. 224.

origin.

4.

August-November.

Fl.

atrata Tod.

S. variegata.

bella Berger, Stap.


Chron. 1902,
i.

&
if
.

Kl. 229

Fl. Cap.
ii.

iv. 1.

979

Gard.

fig.

40-41, 1908,

fig.

66. S.

Africa

Garden

origin

August-November.
d;

" cantabrigiensis " Berger, Stap.

" chlorotica " Bilst.Fl. Cap. Kl. 224. Garden " ciliolulata Tod.Fl. Cap. Kl. 219. Garden
origin.

August-November. " Charybdis " RUst.Fl. Cap. Kl. 221. Garden origin. if.
If.

Kl. 293.

Garden origin.
;

iv. 1.

1008
1009

Berger, Stap.

&
&

August-November.
iv.
1.
;

Berger, Stap.

if.

August-November.
iv.

"

1.

999; Berger, Stap.

origin.

if.

August-November.

HORTUS MORTOLENSIS
STAPELIA
"
{continued).
;

307

Circe " Biist.Fl. Cap. iv. 1. 983 Berger, Stap. & Kl 222. Garden origin. %. August-November. "cupularis" N. E. Br.Fl. Cap. iv. 1. 990; Berger, Stap. (& Kl. 218. Garden origin. i;. August-November. deflexa Jacq. DC. viii. 652 Fl. Cap. iv. 1. 955 Berger, Stap. d- Kl. 279 B. M. t. 1890; Lodd. B. C. t. 135. S. Africa. August-November. i;

,,

var.

atropurpurea Hort. Berger, Stap. August-November. S.Africa. 2|.

tt

Kl. 280.

discolor Tod. Hort. Bot. Pan.


1.

i.

49.

t.

12.

fig.

Fl. Cap. iv.


.

982

Berger, Stap.

&

Kl.

195. S. Africa? 21
:

August

-November. " divergens " N. E. Br.Fl. Cap. iv. 1. 1906 Berger, Stap. & Kl. 217. Garden origin. if:. August-November. Engleriana ScJilechter. Fl. Cap. iv. 1. 979; Berger, Stap.d

Kl. 282.

fig.

58. S. Africa. 2^.

August-October.
t.

Caralluma europcea N. E. Br. Br.Fl. Cap. iv. 1. 948 B. M. gigantea N. E.


europcea Guss.
;

Berger, Stap.

Kl. 247.

fig.

51. S. Africa. 2^.


iv.
1.

7068 August-

October.

glabricaulis N. E. Br.Fl. Cap.


t.

953

1917

Berger, Stap.

Kl.

274 S.

Africa. 2^

Hook. Ic. PI. August.

November.
grandiflora Mass. Stap. Nov. 13. t. 11 DC. viii. 652 Fl. Cap. iv. 1. 945 Berger, Stap. d Kl. 258 B. M. t. 585.
; ; ;
;

S. Africa.

!(..

September-December.
Berger
Kl.

"Hanburyana" Berger, Stap. d


December.
hirsuta

Biist.

Fl.

Cap.

iv.

1.

200. Garden origin. 2^.


653
C.
;

1007; August-

L.DC.

viii.

Fl. Cap.

dKl.2Q3; Lodd. B.

t.

94. S.

936 Berger, Stap. Africa. 2|. Augustiv.


;

November. AugustS. Africa. 2|:. var. patula N. E. Br. I. ,, November. " lunata " Dam.Fl. Cap. iv. 1. 1004 Berger, Stap. d Kl. 215. Garden origin. Tj,. August-October. DC. viii. 658 Fl. Cap. iv. 1. 985 maculosa /. Donn. B. M. t. 1833. S. Africa. 2^ Berger, Stap. d Kl. 191

x\ugust-November.
"

maculosoides " N. E. Br.Fl. Cap. Stap. d Kl. 295. Garden origin. 2;.

iv.

1.

984

Berger,

July-October.

X 2

308

HOETUS MOKTOLENSIS
{continued).

STAPELIA

"magna"

Berger, Staii.

&

Kl. 295.

Garden
1011
;

origin.

2|

August-November.
" mirabilis "

Dam.

Fl.

Cap.

iv.

1.

Berger, Stap.

<&

Kl. 221.

Garden
;

origin.

2^.
t.

August-November.
38
;

mixta Mass.
iv. 1.
If:
.

Stap. Nov. 23.

DC.

viii.

658

Fl. Cap.

1000 Berger, Stap. August-November.

&

Kl. 202.

fig.

45. S. Africa.
;

"

Garden 661 mutabilis Jacq. DC. Africa Stap. & Kl. 191.
(

Muley Hassan"
Kl. 196.

Bilst.Fl. Cap.
origin.
viii.

iv. 1.

ii.
;

1010 Berger, Stap. August-November.


1.

Fl. Cap.
.

981

Berger,

S.

2|

August-November.
;
;

pulchella Mass. Stap. Nov. 22. t. 36 DC. viii. 655 Fl. Cap. SumBerger, Stap. d Kl. 304. S. Africa. 2^ iv. 1. 989
;

mer-autumn. pulvinata Mass. Stap. Nov.


Cap.
iv.
1.

13.

t.

13

DC.
;

viii.

654
t.

Fl.

935
t.

Berger, Stap.

&

Kl. 262

B.

M.

1240

Lodd. B. C.

206. S. Africa. 4.
<&

Autumn.
Fl. Cap.

"putida"

iv. 1. 1012. Garden origin. 1^. Autumn. revoluta Mass. Stap. Nov. 12. t. 10 DC. viii. 657 Fl. Cap. Berger, Stap. Kl. 226. fig. 48. S. Africa. iv. 1. 980 August-November. If var. glaucescens Berger, Stap. d- Kl. 228. if. August-November.

Berger, Stap.

Kl. 213;

rufa Mass. Stap. Nov. Berger, Stap. 1. 965 August-November.


;

16.
d:

t.

20

DC.

viii.

653

Fl. Gap. iv

Kl. 298.

fig.

63. S.

Africa. if

Schinzii Berger d Schlechter. Berger, Stap. d Kl. 253. fig. 53 German S.W. Africa. 4. scutellata Tod. Hort. Bot. Pan. i. 52. t. 13. fig. 2 Fl. Cap Berger, Stap. d Kl. 199. Garden origin. 2; iv. 1. 1007 August-November. " Scylla " Sprenger. Berger, Stap. d Fl. Cap. iv. 1. 1005 Garden origin. if. August-November. Kl. 225. " Sisyphus " Dam. Berger, Stap. d Kl. Fl. Cap. iv. 1. 1013 217. Garden origin. if. August-November. tsomoensis N. E. Br.Fl. Cap. iv. 1. 954 Hook. Ic. PI. t. August1918 Berger, Stap. d Kl. 276. S. Africa. If

November.

"Uspenskyi"
Kl. 221.

Bust.

Fl.

Cap.

iv. 1.

1014; Berger, Stap.

Garden

origin.

2f

August-November.

HOETUS MOETOLENSIS
STAPELIA
variegata

309

August-November, var. atrata {Tod.) N. E. Br.Fl. Cap. iv. 1. 1006 Berger, Stap. d- Kl. 216 Hort. Bot. Pan. t. 13. fig. 1. Garden origin. 2|. August-November, var. atropurpurea (Salm) N. E. Br, Fl. Cap. iv.
Stap.
S. Africa.
if.
.

L.DC. viii. Kl. 205.

659

Fl. Cap. iv.

1.

992

Berger,

1.

1005; Berger, Stap.

&

Kl.

216. S. Africa. 2|:.


iv. 1.

August-November. var. bufonia (/. Bonn) N.E. Br.Fl. Cap.


Berger, Stap.
S. Africa.

998;

var.

August-November, if.. clypeata (/. Donn) N. E. Br. Fl. Cap. iv. 1. 1000 Berger, Stap. d Kl. 209 B. M. t. 1676. August-November, S. Africa. 2^.

Kl. 209

Lodd. B.

C.

t.

332.

811.

var.

conspurcata

{Willd.) N. E. Br.

Fl.
Fl.
S.

Cap.

iv. 1.

1003;
var.

Berger, Stap.

Kl.

212. S. Africa. 2^.


Cap.
Africa.
iv.

August-November,

marmorata
Berger,

{Jacq.)

N. E. Br.

1.

1004;
var.

Stap.

Kl. 214.

If.

Berger, Stap. d Kl. 207 S. x\ugust-November. var. picta (/. Donn) N. E. Br.Fl. Cap. iv. 1. 1004 Berger, Stap. d Kl. 213 B. M. t. 1169. S. Africa.
Africa.

August-November, normalis Jacq.

if..

2^

August-November.
N. E. Br.
;

var. planiflora (Jacq.)

Fl. Cap.
Gr.

iv. 1.
t.

998

Berger, Stap.
Africa.

Kl. 207

DC. PL
18

149. S.
Fl.

if.

August-November.
11.
t.
;

verrucosa Mass. Stap. Nov.


Cap.
iv. 1.

DC.
;

viii.

655
t.

987
t.

Berger, Stap.

Kl. 305

B. M.

786

Lodd. B. C.

127. S. Africa. if:.

July-October.
1.
.

var. roriflua (Jacq.)

Berger, Stap.

Kl.

N. E. Br.Fl. Cap. iv. 306. S. Africa. l^

988

July

-October.

STAPHYLEA
clese.

L.N.

Pff.

iii.

5.

260. Staphyleaceae-Staphyleoi-

holocarpa Hemsl. in Keiv Bull. 1895, 15. 111)--^ Fl. d'lt. n. 2446 pinnata L.DC. ii. 3

China {Wilson,
;

n.

Schneider, Hdb.

Laubh.

ii.

191.

Central and

S.

Europe, Orient.

I?

310

HORTUS MORTOLENSIS

JSTATICE L.N. Pff. iv. 1. 124. Plumbaginaceae-Staticeae. arborea Willd. = fruticans. arborescens Brouss. = fruticans.
australis Spreng.

DC.
New

xii.

642;

Fl.

Austr.

iv.

267.

Japan,
July.

China,

Caledonia,

Australia.

21

MayDC.
xii.

brassicsefolia Webb, Phyt. Can.


637.

iii.

181.
.

t.

195

Gomera Island (Canaries). ^ April-May. DC. 656; Fl. ='=cordata 2716a. imbescens DC. Moggr. Fl. Ment. 33. Liguria, Maritime Alps. October.
G^iss.
xii.
cl'It.

n.

S.

t.

71.

fruticans
t.

Webb.DC. xii. 636. S. arborea Willd. B. M. 3776. Teneriflfe. i? May-September. Gmelini Willd. DC. xii. 645. Eastern Europe, Asia. 2^.

V.

June-August.

imbricata Webb. DC.


Teneriffe.
1(.
.

xii.

638;

Fl
;

d.

S.

t.

320-321.

April.

macrophylla Brouss.DC.
riffe.

xii. 637 B. M. t. 4125. TeneMarch-June. macroptera Webb. DC. xii. 637. Ferro Island. i? occidentalis Llotjd. DC. xii. 648 W. & Lge. Fl. Hisp. ii. 378. W. Europe, Morocco. if.. May- August. olesefolia ScoihFl. d'lt. n. 2714. W. Europe, N. Africa.

V)

2714 Corsica, Sardinia. May-July, pectinata Ait. DC. 639. Canaries. Perezii Stapf.Gard. Chron. 1910, 64 Kew Bull. 1911, 113. Canaries. March-July. puberula Webb. DC. 3701. Lanzerota 638 B. M. Island. March-October. rosea Hort. (non Smith = Limoniastrum monopetalum. 642. China. sinensis Gir. DC. May-July. sinuata L.DC. 635 B. M. 71. Mediterranean region. May-August. 663. Caucasus. suffruticosa L. DC. tatarica L. DC. 632, as Goniolimon Boiss. S.E. Europe, Asia. May-August.

var.

U.

May-June.
densiflora
Gitss.

Fl.
xii.

d'lt.

n.

g.

/S.

oxylepis Boiss.
2^.

DC.

647.

S. Italy,

xii.

i?

ii.

!(..

xii.

t.

Tp

!)

xii.

if.

xii.

t.

24.

xii.

l?

xii.

tat.

2^.

Stauntonia

latifolia

Wall.

HollboeUia latifolia Wall.

HOETUS MOETOLENSIS

311

STENOCARPUS
N. Australia.

R. Br.

N.

Pff.

iii.

1.

151.

Proteaceae Queens;

Grevilloideae-Embothrieae.

^ salignus B. Br. DC.


.

Cunninghamii B. Br. DC.


xiv.
.

xiv.

451

Fl. Austr. v. 540.

451

Fl. Austr. v. 539.

Wales. J? sinuatus Endl.DC. xiv. 451 Fl. Austr. v. 539 B. M. 4263 Fl. d. S. t. 7. 8. Queensland, N. S. Wales. l?
land, N. S.
; ; .

t.

JSTENOLOBIUM
-Tecomeae.

D. Don.N.

Pff. iv. 36.

240. Bignoniaceae

alatum Sprague in Fl. Cap. iv. 2. 448. Tecoma alata DC. ix. 225. T. Smitkii Hort. Gard. Chron. 1893, ii. 649. 1894, ii. 64. Peru, Bolivia. Tj sambucifolium Seein. N. Pff. c Tecoma sambucif. H. B. K. DC. ix. 224. Peru. Tp October, stans D. Don. N. Pff'. Tecoma stans Juss. DC. ix. c. 224 B. M. t. 3191. Tropical America. T? May-October.
.

I.

I.

STENOTAPHRUM
Paniceas.

Trin.

N.
vii.

Pff'.

ii.

2.

38.

Gramineae-

glabrum

Trin.

Fl.
138
;

Cap.

438.
I.

S.

americamim Schrank,

Kunth, En.

i.

N.

Pff.

c. fig.

33. Tropics. 2^.


Pff.
iii.

STEPHANANDRA
incisa Zahel.
Sieb.

Sieh.

& Zucc.N.

3.

14. Rosaceae
S. Jiexuosa

-Spirseoideae-Spiraeeae.

& Zucc.

Schneider, Hdh. Laubh. Japan, Korea.


l?

i.

448.

STEPHANOTIS

Diip.-Thou.N.

Pff. iv. 2.

287. Asclepiadaceae
t.

-Cynanchoideae-Tylophoreae-Marsdeniinae.

floribunda A. Brongn.DC. viii. 620; B. M. ip . Madagascar. Diet. fig. 531.

4058; Nich.

i.

STERCULIA L.N.
foetida

Pff.

iii.
;

6.

96. Sterculiaceae-Sterculieae.
i.

L.DC.

483
S.

Fl. Austr.

226

Wight,

Ic.

t.

181.

364. India to N.

Wales. i? Br achtj chiton.)


107. Amaryllin.

(For others see Supplement and under

STERNBERGIA

Waldst.

(&

Kit.N.
;

Pff'. ii. 5.

daceae-Amaryllidoideae-Amaryllideae-Zephyranthinge.
Fl. d'lt. B. M. t. 290 lutea Ker. Kunth, En. v. 701 750. Mediterranean region. !(;. Sept^ember-October.
;

312

HOKTUS MOKTOLENSIS
A.

ISTIGMATOPHYLLON

Juss.N.

Pff.

iii.

4.

63. Mal-

pighiaceae-Pyramidotorae-Banisterieae.
Tj . June-Oct. ciliatum^. Jnss. Nich. Diet. 503. Brazil. littorale A. Juss.B. M. t. 6623. S. Brazil. Tp .

STIPA

L.

N.

Pff.

ii.

2. 46.

Gramineae-Agrostideae.
i.

Aristella

L.Kunth, En.

ranean region, Asia Minor.

567. Fl. Austr. W. Australia. May- June, Fl. 183 elegantissima Lahill. Kunth, En. May-June. 565. Australia. Ind. Keiv. Habitat May-June. formicarum Fl. 161. 180 gigantea Lag. Kunth, En. April-May. Spain, N. Africa. Fl. 179 162. Western *juncea L.Kunth, En. May-June. Mediterranean region. 180 W. d Lge. Fl. Hisp. Sch. Kunth, En. Lagascae B. 59. Spain, Algeria. June-July, 164. Cent, and pennata L. Kunth, En. 179; Fl.
;

"Calamagrostis Wahlenb. July-i\.ugust. South Europe. If.. Fl. capillata L. Kunth, En. i. 180 South and Central Europe to N. Asia. compressa B. Br. Kunth, En. i. 183

159. MediterMay-June. if.. Central and Fl. d'lt. n. 158.


180
;

Fl. d'lt. n.

d'lt. n.

160. From
vii.

if:.

May- June.

if..

i.

A^istr. vii.

if..

Delile.

2|

i.

d'lt.

n.

S.

Italy,

if.

i.

d'lt. n.

if..

i.

i.

if.

i.

d'lt. n.

S.

Europe, N. Africa, West, and North. Asia. Stobcea Thunb. = Berkheya Ehrh.

if.

May-June.

STRANViESIA
-Pomarieae.

Lindl.N.

Pff.

iii.

3.

26. Eosaceae-Pomoideae
;

glaucescens Lindl. Fl. Brit. Bid. ii. 382 Schneider, Hdb. Tj June-July. Laubh. i. 713. Himalaya.

STRATIOTES
aloides L.

L. N.

Pff.

ii.

1.

255.

Hydrocharitaceaeif..

Stratiotoideae.

Fl. d'B.

n. 564.

Europe.
6.
;

:tSTRELITZIA Ait.N.
I2
.

Pff.
t.

Augusta Thunb. B. M.
June-July.

7. Musaceae-Museae. 4167-8 Fl. d. S. 1. 1. 2. S. Africa.


ii.

jimcea Link.

= parvifolia.

parvifolia Dry and.

Nich. Diet. 514.

S. Africa.

if..

Reginge Ait.B. M. t. 119; Bed. Lil. t. 77. 78; Lodd. B. G. t. 1535 The Garden, 1901, ii. 412. S. Africa. 2; April-June. var. ovata Ait. ,, if. Reginse x parvifolia Garden origin? if.
; .

HOETUS MOETOLENSIS

313

STREPTOCARPUS

Lindl.N.

Pff. iv. Bb.

151. Gesneriacea;

Cyrtandroideae-Streptocarpeae.

Wendlandii Sprenger.Fl.
Gard. Chron. 1894,
i.

Gcq). iv. 2.
ii.

590. 1897,

441 B. M. t. 7447 275. Zululand. 4.


;

November.

STREPTOSOLEN
Salpiglossidese.

Miers. N.

Pff.

iv.

36.

37. Solanacese-

Jamesoni Miers. N. Pff'. I. c. Browallia Jamesoni Benth. DC. X. 197 B. M. t. 4605. Ecuador, Colombia. I? All
;

the year.

STROBILANTHES
glomeratus

Bl.N.

Pff.

iv.

36.

304. Acanthaceis-

Acanthoidese-Contortae-Strobilantheae.

Dyerianus Hook. fil.B. M.


T. Anders.

Fl.
xi.

t.

7574. Burma. Tp
Goldfussia

Brit. Ind. iv. 448.

glomerata Nees,

DC.

173;

B. M.

t.

3881. Assam,
Goldftissia
.

Burma.

T7

isophyllus T. Anders.
isophylla Nees,

Fl.
176

Brit. Ind. iv. 462.


;

DC.

xi.

B. M.

t.

4363. Assam. l?

STYPANDRA

B.

Br.N. Pff. ii. 5. 38. Liliace^-Asphodeloidese

-Asphodelese-Dianellinae.

csespitosa B. Br.

Fl. Austr.
viii.

vii.

54.

Australia.

2(.

June.

ISTYRAX L.N.
Officinale
d'lt. n.
^)
.

Pff. iv. 1.

177. Styracacege.
260;

L.DC.

Moggr. Fl. Ment.

t.

60; Fl.

2660.

Orient, Greece, Dalmatia,


Pff.
iii.

Italy, S. France.

May-June.
Forsk.

SU^DA

N.

la. 80.

Chenopodiacege-Spirolobeae
;

-Suaedeae.

fruticosa Forsk. Fl. Mg.-Arah. 70


n. 1040.

DC.

xiii. 2.
^>

156; Fl. d'lt.

Northern temperate region.


B. Br.N.
Pff.
iii.

ISUTHERLANDIA

3.

280. Leguminosaeii.

Papilionatae-Galegeae-Coluteinae.
Fl. Cap. frutescens B. Br. DC. ii. 283 March-June. 181. S. Africa. T?
;
.

212

B.

M.

t.

SWAINSONA

Salisb.

N.

Pff.

iii.

3.

281.

LeguminosaeQueensland,

Papilionatae-Galegeae-Coluteinae.
atrococcinea Hort.

=
.

coronillcBfalia.

campylantha F.
S. Australia.

Muell.

Fl.

Austr.

ii.

219.

Tp

April-June.

314

HOETUS MOKTOLENSIS
{contimied).
ii.

SWAINSONA

coronillsefolia Salisb.FL Austr.

217
S.

B. M.

t.

792. 1725

Lodd. B. G.

1.

1642. Queensland, N.

Wales,

S. Australia.

Tp

April- June.

galegifolia R. Br.

coronillczfolia.

Greyana Lindl.Fl.
Wales, Victoria,
Osbornii T.

Austr.

ii.

216
Tp
.

B.

M.

t.

4416. N.

S.

S. Australia.

April- June.

Moore

coronillcBfolia.

SYMPHYTUM L.N.
asperrimum Sims
14.
.

Pff. iv. Sa.

112. Borraginaceee-Borragi929;

noideaB-Anchusese.
in B.

M.
x.

t.

DC.

x. 38.

Caucasus.
S. Central

April-June.
38; Fl. d'lt. n. 2817

-bulbosum Schimp.DC.
and
S.

Europe.

!(..

April- June.
Pff.
iii.

SYNADENIUM

Boiss.N.
in B.

5.

112. EuphorbiaceaeBerger, E7q)h.

Crotonoidese-Euphorbieae.

Grantii Hook.

fil.

M.
.

t.

5633

127.

Tropical E. Africa.

SYRINGA

L. N. Pff. iv. 2. 7. Oleaceas-Oleoideae-Syringeae. c. Schneider, Hdh. Laubh. ii. amurensis Bup". N. Pff. May. 784. Manchuria, N. Korea. I? vulgaris L.DC. viii. 282 B. M. t. 183 Fl. d'lt. n. 2729.

I.

E. Europe, Orient.

Tj

April.
iii.

jTACSONIA

Juss.N.

Pff.

6a. 91,

sub Passiflora.

Passi-

floraceae-Passifioreee

exoniensis Hort. Nich. Diet. Sitppl. 696. (Hybrid between T. Van-Volxemii and T. mixta mollissima). Garden origin. Spring-autumn. 1? .

ignea Hort.

manicata.
t.

insignis Mast.B. M.

6069;

Fl. d. S.

t.

2083-4.

S.

Summer-autumn. manicata Juss.DC. iii. 334 B. M.


America.
.
;

t.

6129. Peru. l?

Nearly always.
militaris Hort.
T. insignis

Nich.

Diet. Siippl. 696.

and

T. manicata).
ii.

(Hybrid between Journ. B. Hort. Soc. 1900,


.
; ;

209
5.

Gard. Chron. 1900,

mollissima H. B. K.DC.
t.

iii.

383. Garden origin. T? 334 B. M. t. 4187 Fl.


t.

d. S.

Colombia.

^>

Van-Volxemii Hook.B. Decem ber- June

M.

5571. Colombia. i?

HOETUS MOETOLENSIS

315

TAGETES

L.

N.

Pff.

iv.

5.

265.

Compositse-Helenieffii.

TagetininaB.

lacera Brandegee.
Nich. Diet.

Suppl. 696.

Gard. Chron. 1898, Pacific North

355.

fig.

America.

0.

135

Autumn.

JTALAUMA
pumila

Juss.N. Pff. iii. 2. 16. Magnoliacese-Magnoliege. Hodgsoni Hook. fil. Thorns. Fl. Brit.Ind.i.iO; Hook. fil. III. Him. PI. t. 6 B. M. t. 7392. Himalaya. i?
;

Bl.

Magnolia immila.
Pff.
iii.

TAMARIX

L.N.

6.

293. Tamaricaceae-Tamaricoidese
;

-Tamariceae.

africana Poir.DC. iii. 95; Vis. Fl. Dalm. iii. 152 Fl.d'It. n. 1241. Dalmatia, Western Mediterranean region, N. f? Africa. April-May.

gallica

iii. 96 Vis. Fl. Dalm. iii. 151 Fl. d'lt. n. Dalmatia, Western Mediterranean region, Canaries, l? Tropical Africa. May-June.
; ;

L.DC.

1240

hispida Willd. DC. iii. 95 Ledeh. Fl. Boss. Schneider, Hdh. Lauhh. ii. 341. Caspian region.
;

ii.

135

Tp

TAMUS L. N.
edulis Lo^ve.

Pff.

ii.

5.

A^. Pff.

TARCHONANTHUS
iii.118;

Dioscoreaceae-Dioscoreae. Canaries, Madeira. L.N. 174. Compositse136.


c.
I.

2^ .

Pff.

iv.

5.

Inulese-Tarchonanthinae.

camphoratus L.DC.

v.

431

Lodd. B. C.
ij

t.
.

^. P/.Z.c. fig. 90. Cape Colony.

382 Fl. Cap. June-August.


;

ITAVARESIA
&

TFbZw. (Decabelone Decne. N.


in Fl. Trop. Afr. iv.
;

Asclepiadaceae-Cynanchoideae-TylophoreaB
1.

Pff: iv. 2. 275.)

(Stapelieae)

Barklyi N. E. Br.
Kl. 46.
fig.

494

Berger, Stap.
(?

10

B.

M.

t.

6203. S.

Africa.

grandiflora Berger, Stap.

d Kl. 45. German S.W. Africa. 2^


ii.

TAXODIUM
DC.

Bich.N.

Pff.

1.

90. Pinaceffi-Taxodiese.

giganteum Hort.

mexicanum

Carr. N. Pff. I. c. 91. T. mncronatum Ten. 441. Mexico. f? sempervirens Lamb. = Sequoia sempervirens.
xvi. 2.

1.

Sequoia gigantea.

TAXUS

L. N.
fig.

baccata L.
110.
Persia.

DC.
;

Pff.

ii.

112. Taxaceae-Taxoidese-Taxese.
500; Pilger, TaxacecB {B. V. C.

xvi. 2.

23
ip

Fl. d'lt. n. 100.

Europe,

iv. 5),

Algiers, Caucasus,

316

HOETUS MORTOLENSIS
Juss.

TECOMA

= Pandorea australis. = Tecomaria capensis. grandiflora Lois. = Caynpsis grandiflora. jasminoides Lindl. = Pandorea jasrninoides. radicans L. = Campsis radicans. Bicasoliana Tanf. = Podranea Ricasoliana.
australis R. Br.

capensis Lindl.

Smithii Hort. =^ Stenolobium alatum.


stans
Li.

= Stenolobium stans.
Spach.

TECOMARIA
TecomeaB.

N.

Pff.

iv.

36.

229.

Bignoniaceae-

capensis Spach.

Fl. Cap.
l?

iv. 2.
t.

DC.

ix.

223

Lodd. B. C.
j.

Cape, Transvaal. TELOPEA B. Br. N.


Embothrieae.

Tecoma capensis Lindl. Wood, Nat. PI. t. 272. September-March.


448.

1672

Pff.

iii.

1.

149.

Proteacese-Grevilloideae;

speciosissima B. Br. DC. xiv. 446 B. M. t. 1128. N. S. Wales. Tp

Fl. Austr.

v.

534

JTEMPLETONIA

B. Br.N.

Pff.

iii.

3.

217. Leguminosse169
;

Papilionatae-Genisteae-Bossiaeinge.

retusa B. Br.DC. 2334; Lodd. B. C.

ii.

118; Fl. Austr.

ii.

B. M.
t.

t.

2088.

t.
.

526. 644; Vent. J.

W.

Australia.

Tp

Malm. November-March.
Pff'.
iii.

53. S. and

TERNSTRCEMIA
Cleyera

L.

f.N.

6.

187. Nachtr.

i.

246.
80.

Theaceae-Ternstroemieae.

japonica Thunb.
with
+

Sieb.
V>

Zucc. Fl. Jap.


i.

i.

148.

t.

japonica Thunb. DC.

524.

Kaempfer, Am. 11^.

fig.

Japan.

TESTUDINARIA
Dioscoreae.

Salisb.N.

Pff.

ii.

5.

135. Dioscoreaceae;

Elephantipes Burch. Kunth, En. B. M. t. 1347. S. Africa. T? .


Tetranthera. japonica Spreng.

iv.

441

Fl. Cap. vi. 252

= Litsea japonica Juss.


iii.

TETRAGONIA

L.

N.

Pff.

16.

44.

Aizoaceae-Ficoideaeiii.

Mesembrianthemeae.

expansa Murr.-DC. N. Zeald. 84 B. M.


;

iii.

452

Fl. Austr.
d'lt. n.

New

2362 Fl. Zealand, Japan, S. America.


t.
;

Q.

325 Hdb. Fl. 1061. Australia, Summer.


;

HOETUS MOETOLENSIS

317

ITETRAPANAX
flerese.

C.

Koch.N.

Pff.

iii.

8.

33. Araliacese-SchefAralia papyri/era


;

papyrifer C. Koch. Hook. Journ. Bot.


d. S.
t.

N.
iv.

Pff.

I.

c.
t.

34.

489. 1201.

Journ.

Lin.

M. t. 4897 Fl. Fatsia papyrifera Benth. & Hook. fil. Tp China, Formosa. Soc. xxiii. 341.
1852, 50.

1-2

B.

December.

TEUCRIUM
Ajugeae.

L.

N.

Pff.

iv.

3ft.

210. LabiatiB-Ajngoidese3070. S. E. Europe.


Fl.
d'lt.

Arduini L.DC.

xii.

May- July. campanulatum L. DC.


2^.

582

Fl. cVIt. n.

xii.

578;

n.

S. Italy,

Western Mediterranean region.


xii.

U^

3077.

May-

July.

-Chamaedrys L.DC.

587

Fl. d'lt. n.

3082. Central

and S. Europe. 14.. May-June. DC. xii. 576; Hal. Consp. Fl. Gr. ii. creticum L. Fl. d'lt. n. 3076. Mediterranean region. 470 ^ December. cubense L.DC. xii. 578; Fl. W. Lid. 492. Bahamas,

Tropical America, Galapagos,

New

Caledonia.

August.

flavum

L. DC.

xii.

588; Fl.

d'lt. n.

3081.

!(.

JulyEurope,
3075.
.

S.

N.Africa.

l?

May-June.
575; Bef. Bot.
t.

fruticans
^

L.DC. xii.

204; Fl.

d'lt. n.
>>

Western Mediterranean region. Southern Italy.

All

the year.

heterophyllum L'Her.
Tp
.

DC.
xii.

xii.

575.

Madeira,
t.

Canaries.

April-May.
581
;

hircanicum Lam. DC.


Or.
iv.

B. M.
2^.

2013

Boiss. Fl.

Caucasus, Persia. July-August. 585 W. Lge. Fl. Hisp. 470. lusitanicum Lam. DC. June. Spain, Portugal, Balearic Islands. 3080. Southern 589; Fl. Marum L.DC. June. Spain. 3085. Mediter593 Fl. ^montaiium L.DC. June-September. ranean Europe, Asia Minor. 1279 Boiss. Fl. Or. 577 B. M. orientale L.DC. July- August. 808. Asia Minor, Syria. 3084. Mediterranean 591 Fl. *Polium L.DC. July-August. region, Orient.
811.
xii.
;

d-

ii.

if.

Tp

xii.

d'lt.

n.

Italy,

Tp

xii.

d'lt. n.

If..

xii.

t.

iv.

2^.

xii.

d'lt. n.

If..

318

HORTUS MORTOLENSIS
Pff.
ii.

THALIA L.N.
August.

6.

dealbata Fraser.B. M.

43. Marantaceae-Maranteae. t. 1690. S. Carolina. 2|.

July-

THALICTRUM
monese.
Sicily.

L.

N.

Pff.

iii.

2.

66. Ranunculaceae-AneFl.d'It. n. 1548.

calabricum Spreng.

DC.
i.

i.

13

Calabria,
iii.

1^.

April-June.

glaucum Desf.DC.

15

W.

d-

Lge. Fl. Hisp.

958.

South-western Europe.

4.

minus L.DC.

i.

May-June. petaloideum L.DC.


2^.

13; Fl. cVIt.

May-June. n. 1550 ^.Europe,


t.

Siberia.

i.

12; Lodcl. B. C.

891

Ledeb. Fl.

Siberia. May- June. 958. Lge. Hisp. 15 W. tuberosum L.DC. April-June. S.W.Europe. 247. Umbelliferae-ApioidegeTHAPSIA L. N.
Boss.
i.

6.

if..

i.

ct

Fl.

iii.

2^.

Pff.

iii.

8.

Laserpitieae-Thapsiinse.
decipiens Hook.
f.

Melanoselinum decipiens.
iv.

garganica L.DC.
ranean region.

202; Fl.

d'lt.

n.

2371.

Mediter-

1^.

May- June.
iii.

THASPIUM
aureum

Nutt.N.
Ntitt.

Pff:

8.

214. Umbelliferae-ApioideaB-

Ammineae-Seselinae.

Graij,

Man.

Bot. N. U. S. 155.

America.

Atlantic N.

if.

June.
iii.

tTHEA L.N.
sinensis L.
(L.)

N.

Pff.

6.

182. Theace^-Theeffi.
I.

Pff.

c.

fig.

92.

T. ckinensis var. BoJiea

Sims

in B.

var. viridis (L.)

M. t. 998; Lodd. B. C. t. 226. T. chin. DC. i. 530 Lodd. B. C. t. 227, 1828.


;

Camellia theifera Griff.

Assam,

China.

Jj

October-

December.
Theophrasta imperialis Hort.

Chrysophyllum imperiale.

THEVETIA L.N.
neriifolia
2309.

Pff. iv. 2.

159. Apocynacese-Plumieroide^
344
;

-Plumiereae-Cerberinae.

Juss.DC.

viii.

Fl.

W.

West Indies, Mexico, Peru, Brazil.


Buiz

Ltd. 407
T^
.

B. M. t. Summer.

THIBAUDIA

& Pav.N.

Pff. iv. 1.

56. Ericacege-Vaccini-

oideae-Thibaudiese.

floribunda H. B.

K.DC.

vii.

561. Colombia. T?

HORTUS MORTOLENSIS

319

THLADIANTHA

Bunge.N.

Pff.

iv.

5.

13. Cucurbitaceset.

Fevilleae-Thladianthinae.

dubia Bunge.Fl. Brit. Ltd. China. Summer. 1(.^.

ii.

631

B. M.

5469. India,

THOMASIA
petalese.

/.

Gay.N.

Pff.

iii.

6.

91. Stereuliaces-Lasioi.

solanacea
Sel.
t.

J. Gay. DC. 489; 6. W. Australia. v^


i.

Fl. Austr.

251; Bossche,

Ic.

THUJA

L.N.

Pff'. ii. 1.

97

Nachtr.

25. Pinacese-Cupressinege

-Thujopsidinae.

gigantea Hort.

orientalis L.

DC.
d
<&

Libocedrus decurrens.
xvi. 2.

461

Fl. d'lt. n. 92.

China, Japan.
Nachtr.
i.

I?.

March.
Sieb.

THUJOPSIS
dolobrata
2.

Ziicc.N.

Pff.

ii.

1.

95

25.
xvi.

Pinacese-Cupressineae-Thujopsidinae.
Sieb.

Zucc. Fl. Jap.

ii.

34.

t.

119. 120

DC.

460. Japan. T?.


L.
f.

THUNBERGIA

N.
t.

Pff.

iv.

3b.

291.

Acanthaceffi-

ThunbefgioideaB.

alata Boj.B. M.

2591

DC.

xi.

Tropical Africa, Natal. .


coccinea Wall.B. M.
Hexacentris cocc. Nees,
t.

58

Fl. Trop. Afr. v. 16.

Summer-autumn.
Fl. Brit. hid. iv.
61.

5124;
xi.

DC.

India.
;

Ip

393. Novem;

ber-February.

fragrans Boxb.Fl. Brit. Ind. iv. 390 DC. xi. 57 Lodd. B. C. t. 1913. India, Malaya, Philippines, N. Australia.

^grandiflora Boxb. Wight, Ic. t. 872 xi. 54 Fl. Brit. Ind. iv. 392. India,
;

B.

M.

t.

2366
.

DC.

Burma. I?
.

natalensis Hook, in B. M. tember.

t.

5082. Natal. 4

May-Sep-

THYMBRA
Orient.

L. N.

Pff.

iv.

3a.

304.

Labiatae-Stachyoideffi-

Melissinae.

spicata L.

DC.
Tp
.

xii.

240

Boiss. Fl. Or.

iv.

561.

April-July. THYMUS L. N.
Pff.
iv.

Greece,

3a.

311.

Labiatae-Stachyoidese;

Thyminae.

capitatus Hffmgg. & Link.DC. xii. 204 May. Mediterranean region. >p

Fl. d'lt. n. 3200.

320

HOETUS MOKTOLENSIS
{continued).
BliLtn.
.

THYMUS

cimicinus
Eussia.

LecUb.
xii.

Fl.

Ross.

iii.

348.

Southern

May.
199
;

^vulgaris
I7
.

L.DC.
xii.

Fl. d'lt. n.

3202. S. Europe.
ii.

February-May.
202; W.
d-

Zygis L.-DC. May. 1?

Lge.Fl.Hisp.

402. Spain.

TIARELLA
11.

L.

N.

Pff.

iii.

2a. 61.

Saxifragaceae-Saxifragoideae
1589 The Garden, 1900, April-May. if.
t.
;

-Saxifrageae.

cordifolia
ii.

50 B. M. America. Atlantic N.
;

L.DC. iv.

TIBOUCHINA

Aubl.N.

Pff.

iii.

7.

147. Melastomataceae-

Melastomatoideae-Tibouchineae.

Pleroma macranc. 148. semidecandra Cogn. N. Pff. thum Hook. B. M. t. 5721. Lasiandra macrantha Lind. &
I.

Tp

Seem.

S. Brazil.

September-December.
ii.

TIGRIDIA
Pavonia
Lil.
t.

Ker.

Tigridieae.

N. Ker. Bak.
;

Pff.

5.

147.

Iridacese-Iridoideas

55. Bromeliaceae-TillandITILLANDSIA L. N. corallina K. Koch. Bak. Brom. 220. Brazil. dianthoidea Bossi. Bak. Brom. 198 Malpighia T. recurvifolia Hook. B. M. 5216. Brazil, Uruguay,
B. M.
t.

Ferraria Pav. L. f. Bed. Irid. 67. Lodd. B. C. t. 1424. Ferraria Tigridia Ker. 532. Mexico to Guatemala. %. June.
Pff.
ii.

4.

sieae.

i;.

viii. t. 8.

t.

S.

Argentina. 2;. May- June. Duratii Vis. Bak. Brom. 166


fasciculata Sioartz.

Nich. Diet.

fig.

37. Uru-

guay, Argentina, Brazil, Peru, &c.

Bak.

2|..

Brom. 183. Central America,


Indies.

W.

Indies.

Ii-

pruinosa Stv.Bak. Brom. 168. Central America, W.

2^:.

punctulata

Cham. &

Schl.

Bak.
;

Brom. 172.

Central
;

Mexico. 14.. scalaris Bak. Brom. 221.

S. Brazil.

U.
t.

Bef. Bot. setacea Stv.Bak. Brom. 175 Brazil. 2|. 3275. Mexico to S.

288

B. M.

t.

HOKTUS MOKTOLENSIS
TILL AND SI A
(continued).
;

321

stricta Sol.Bak. Brom. 198

B. M. t. 1529. S. America. May-June. usneoides L.Bak. Brom. 159 B. M. t. 6309. Florida, Mexico to Chili and S. Brazil. 2|; May. vestita ScJilecht. d Cham. Central Bak. Brom. 170.

21

Mexico.

2^.

xiphioides Ker.
Argentina.

Bak. Brom. 164


May- June.
Pff.
iii.

B.

M.

t.

5562. Uruguay,

14..

TIPUANA

Benth.N.

3.

338. Leguminosffi-Papilionatae
c.

-Dalbergieae.

speciosa Benth.

N.

Pff.

I.

Bolivia. ^

June.

TITHONIA Desf.N.
Verbesininse.

Pff. iv. 5.

235. Compositge-Heliantheaediver sifolia

diversifolia

A.
Tp
.

Gray.
June.

Mirasolia

Hemsl.

Mexico.

jTODEA

Willd.N. Pff. i. 4. 377. Osmundaceae. Fl. Austr. vii. 699 barbara Moore.Hook. Syn. Fil. 427 Hdb. Fl. N. Zeald. 384. New Zealand, Australia, S. Africa.
;

bTommasinia Bertol.
t

Peucedanum.
Pff.
iii.

TO ON A
Ind.

Endl.N.

4.

269. Meliaceae-CedreloideasToona Eoxb.


Fl. Brit.
t.

Cedreleae.

ciliata Boem.
i.

N.

Pff'.

I.

c.
t.

Cedrela
161
;

568

Wight,

Ic.

Brandts, For. Fl. 72.


ij
.

14

Bid. Trees 145.

sinensis

India, Burma. May. Schneider, Hdb. Boem. N.


Pff.
I.

c.

Lauhh.

ii.

132. China. Tj.

TORENIA L.N.

Pff'.

iv.

36.

79. Scrophulariaceae-Antirrhi;

noidese-GratioleaB

B. M. Fl. Brit. Bid. iv. 278 flava Ham.DC. x. 414 0. 6700. India, Siam, China, Sumatra. Fournieri Linden. B. M. t. 6747. Cochin China. 0.
;

t.

JTORREYA Am. N.
californica Torrey.

DC.

Pff'. ii. 1.

111. Taxaceae-TaxoideaB.
506; Pilger, Taxac. (B. V. C.
fil.

xvi. 2.

r. California.
iv.
5.),

109.

Myristica Hook.

B. M.

t.

4780.
Y

I?

322

HOBTUS MOETOLENSIS
(continued).
Sieb.
64.
ip

TORRE YA
nucifera
Jap.
ii.

& Zucc.DC.
129
;

xvi. 2.

505

Sieb.

d-

Zucc. Fl.

t.

Pilger, Taxac. (B. V. C.

iv. 5.),

105.

Japan.

TOURNEFORTIA
Messerschmidia
Teneriffe.

L.

Heliotropioideae.

N. Sweet.

Pff.

iv.

3a.

91.

BorraginaceaeDC.
ix.

T. fruticosa Ker.

528.

April-May.
ix.

scabrida H. B.
Toxicophlcea Harv.

K.DC.

518. S. America.

Tp

=
L.

Acohanthera.

TRACHELIUM

N.

Pff.

iv.

5.

53.

Campanulaceaen.

Campanuloideae-Campanuleae.

cserulenm L.DC. vii. 491; Western Mediterranean region.

Fl.

cVIt.

3465. Italy,

if.

May- June.
173. Apocyna-

TRACHELOSPERMUM

Lem.N.

Pff. iv. 2.

ceae-Echitoideae-Echitidese.

jasminoides Lein. Fl. d. S. t. 615. Bhynchospermum jasm. June. Lindl. B. M. t. 4737. China, Japan. T? .

TRACHYCARPUS
phinae- Sabalese.

Wendl.N.

Pff.

ii.

3.

32. Palmae-Cory;

excelsa Wendl.Fl. Brit. hid.


Journ. Limi. Soc. xxxvi. 168.

Fl. d. S. t. 2368 vi. 436 Chamcerops excelsa Thunb.


;

Kunth, En.
ip

iii.

260. Cham. Fortunei Hook. B. M.


i.

t.

5221.

T. Fortunei WendlGard. Chron. 1897, 405. China, Japan. April-May. Martiana Hort. = Takil. Himalaya. Takil Beccari in Webbia, May. Wagneriana Hort. Winter. China
.

52.

Tp

I?

TRACHYSTEMON
Boiss. Fl. Or.

Don.N.

Pff. iv. Sa.

114. BorraginacesePsilostemon
or.

Borraginoideae-Anchuseae.

orientale D. Doji.
iv.

N.

Pff.

I.

c.

fig.

45.

L.

177. Asia Minor. 1|:.


Pff.
ii.

March.

TRADESCANTIA L.N.

4.

68. Commelinaceae.
;

Crassula Link d Otto.B. M. t. 2935 Brazil. June -December. 2(

Lodd. B. C.

t.

1560.

navicularis September.

Ortgies.

Nich.

Diet. 65.

Peru.

if..

May-

HOKTUS MORTOLENSIS
TREVESIA
;

323

Vis.N. Pff. iii. 8. 32. Araliacese-Schefflerese. palmata Vis.Fl. Brit. Ind. ii. 732 B. M. t. 7008. Gilihertia palm. DC. iv. 256. Gastonia palmata Roxb.

Eastern Himalaya.

^
Pff.

April-May.
4.

jTRICHILIA L.N.
Trichilieae.

iii.

305. Meliacege-MelioideaeA^.

havanensis Jacq.DC.
Mexico.

i.

622

Pff.

I.

c.

306.W.

Indies,

Tp

March-April.
L.

TRICHOSANTHES
Anguina L.DC.
722
305.
;

N.
314
;

Pff.

iv.

5.

31.

Cucurbitaceseii.

Cucurbiteae-Trichosanthinae.
iii.

Fl. Brit. Ind.

610

B. M.

t.
t.

Nich. Diet.

fig.

98. T.

coluhrina Jacq. Fl. d. S.

India, China, Malaya. 0. Summer. coluhrina Jacq. = Anguina. 609. Japan, cucumerina L. DC. 315 Fl. Brit. Ind. Formosa, India, Malaya, N. Australia. 0. Summer. Kirilowii Max. Nich. Diet. Gard. 85 Journ. Linn. Soc.
iii.
;

ii.

313. N. W. Asia. 1^. palmata Boxh.Fl. Brit. Ind. ii. 606 Wight, III. t. 104-5 B. M. t. 6873. Japan, China, India, Malaya, N. Australia.
xxiii.
; ;

0.

TRICHOSPORUM

Don.N.

Pff. iv. 36.

152. Gesneriaceae-

Cyrtandroideae-Trichosporese.

parasiticum 0. Ktze.N. Pff. I. c. Mschynanthus grandiB. M. t. flora Don. DC. ix. 261.i^Z. Brit. Ind. iv. 338 3843. India. November-January. 2^.
;

Tricuspidaria dependens Ruiz & Vd,v .^=^Crinodendron Patagua Mol.

TRIFOLIUM L.N.
-Trifoliese.

Pff.

iii.

3.

249. Leguminos^-Papilionatge
193;
Fl. d'lt.
n.

pannonicum L. DC.
Europe.

ii.

1996. S.E.

if.

May-June.

TRIPTERIS

Less.N.
Less.

tomentosa

DC.

Pff. iv. 5.
vi.

306. Composit^-Calendulese.
;

457

Fl. Cap.

iii.

430.

UTRISETUM
538.
Pers.

S. Africa.

N.

Pff.

ii.

2. 54.

Gramineae-Avenese.
i.

rigidum B.

<&

Seh.Kunth, En.
if.

297;

Boiss. Fl. Or. v.

Caucasus, Orient.

Y 2

324

HOETUS MORTOLENSIS
B. Br.N.
Pff.
iii.

tTRISTANIA

7.

88. Myrtacese-Leptosperiii. 263; Bossche, July-August.

moideae-LeptospermeaB-Metrosiderinae.

conferta B.
Ic. Sel.
t.

Br.DC.

iii.

210; Fl. Austr.


Tp
.

38.

densiflora

Eastern Australia. Carr. Nich. Diet. Suppl.


'

716.

Australia.
;

neriifolia B.

Br. DC. iii. 210 Fl. Austr. iii. 262 Lodd. 157. N. S. Wales. Tj STiaveolens Sin. DC. iii. 210 Fl. Austr. iii. 262. Eastern
;

B. C.

t.

Australia.

i?

JTRITHRINAX
Sabaleae.

Mart.N.

Pff.

ii.

3.

34. Palmse-CoryphinsB-

brasiliensis Mart.

N.
Pff.

^.
TRITONIA
oleaB.

Pff.

I.

c.

Nich. Diet. 94.

S. Brazil.

Ker.

N.

ii.

5.

155.

Iridaceae-Ixioideas-Gladi;

crocata Ker. Bah. Irid. 190 Fl. Cap. vi. 119 B. M. 1. 184 S. Africa. Jacq. H. Sch. t. 24, sub Ixia. t. 609 21 May. lineata Ker.Bak. Irid. 194 Fl. Cap. vi. 125; B. M. t. 487
; ;

Bed. Lil.

t.

55.

400,

as

Gladiolus.

S.

Africa.

2^

May.
Pottsii Benth.Bak. Irid. 195
;

Fl. Cap. vi. 127


.

6722.Montbretia Pottsii Bak. S. Africa. 2|:

B. M. May.

TROPiEOLUM
azureum
fig.

L.N.

Miers.

Buchenau, TropcBol. {B.

Pff.

iii.

4.

26. Tropaeolaceae.
V. C. iv. 131.), 31.
t.

14. r.

violcBflorum Dietr. Fl. d. S.

7.

and 1106.

Chili. 2;.

brachyceras Hook. Am.

B.

21

Tropaol. {B. V. C.
2;.

iv. 131.),

M. 33. i^^.

t.

3851; Buchenau,
t.

d. S.

368. Chili.
iv. 131.),

majus
;

L.

DC.
t.

March.
i.

683; Buchenau, Tropceol. {B. V. C.


.

B. M.

23. Peru, Ecuador, Colombia.

Nearly

always.

pentaphyllum Lam.
{B.
V.

DC.
30;

i.

684

Bolivia, Brazil, Argentina. polyphyllum Cav. DC. 684; Buchenau,


t.

C.

iv.

131.),

B. M.

t.

3190;

Buchenau, Tropceol. Lodd. B. C.

1989.

m.

April-

May.

i.

Tropceol. {B. V. C.
.

iv. 131.), 19. fig. 7;

B. M.t.

4042. Chili, Argentina. 2^

HOETUS MOETOLENSIS

325

TROP^OLUM
fig.

{continued).

tricolor Sioeet.

Buchenau,
t.

TtoijcboI.

(B. V. C.

iv. 131.),

31.

13. r.

elegans G.

Barn. Fl.

d. S.

Don. B. M. t. 3169. T. pallescens 369. Bolivia, Chili. 2^ .


Pff.
iii.

TUBERARIA

8pach.N.

6.

306, under Helianthemtm.

Cistaceae.
Cist. (B.

melastomatifolia Grosser, Helianthemum Tuheraria


18.

V.
i.

C.

iv.
;

193.), 52.
t.

Mill.

Western Mediterranean region.


L.N.
Pff.
ii.

DC.

270
2^.

Sweet, Cist

May-June.

TULBAGHIA
panthieae.

5.

54. Liliacee-Allioidee-Aga;

violacea Harv. in B. M. t. 3555 Kunth, En. Cap. vi. 407. S. Africa. 2j:. May-October.

iv.

485

Fl.

TULIPA L.N.
acuminata

Pff'. ii. 5.

Vahl.
iv.

Nich.

62. Liliacese-Lilioideae-Tulipea;.
Diet.
fig.

117.

T. turcica Eoth,
t.

iv.

Kunth, En.
11.

221.

T. cornuta

Bed. Lil.

445.

Orient

April.

Clusiana
Orient.

DCBed. Lil.
v.
If:.

t.

37; B.

M.

t.

1390

Kunth, En.

223; Boiss. Fl. Or.

194: Fl. d'lt. n.

626. S. Europe,

Gesneriana
Asia.

L. Kunth,

April.

En.

iv.

Fl. Or. V. 194;

Fl. d'lt. n.

221; B. M. t. 1135; Boiss. 629. Western and Central


d. S.

Greigii Begel.B. M. Turkestan. V. 196.

If..

April-May.
t.

6177; Fl.
1(..

t.

2261 Boiss. Fl. Or.


;

humilis Herb. praecox Te7i.


Fl. d'lt. n.

saxatilis

Boiss. Fl. Or. 199. Persia. March Kunth, En. 223 Boiss. Fl. Or. 192 March. 627 y.Palestine, Greece, Italy. Sieb. Kunth, En. 196 226 Boiss. Fl. Or.
v.
1(..

iv.

v.

If

iv.

v.

Fl. d'lt. n. 625

B.

M.
En.

t.

6374. Crete, Asia Minor. if


224
;

March.
sylvestris
t.

L.Kunth,
var.

iv.

Fl. d'lt. n. 624


if.

B. M.

1902.

Europe, Mediterranean region.


australis
Celsiana Bed. Lil.
;

March.

{Link). Fl. d'lt. n. 624^. T, Kunth, En. iv. 224. t. 38 Italy, N. Africa. T. fragrans Munby. If. March-April.

undulatifolia Boiss. Fl. Or. April. Minor. if.

v.

195

B.

M.

t.

6308. Asia

326

HORTUS MORTOLENSIS
Hooh.f.
<&
.

+TUPIDANTHUS

<&

Thorns. N.

Pff.

iii.

8.

28. Arali-

acese-Schefflereae.

calyptratus Hook. f. ii. 740. India. T?

Thorns.B. M.

t.

4908

Fl. Brit. Ind.

ULEX

L.

N.

Pff.

iii.

3.

238.

Leguminosae - Papilionatae
it

Genisteae.

europaeus
d'lt. n.

L.DC.

ii.

144

Gren.

Godr. Fl. Fr.


f?
.

i.

344; Fl.

nanus Smith. DC.

Western Europe. Fr. 144 Gren. Godr. England, Western France. January-March.
1904.
ii.
;

February-March.
Fl.
i.

<&

345.

Tp

ULMUS L.N.

Pff.

''^campestris L.

DC.

iii.

1.

62. UlmacesB-Ulmoidese.
xvii.

156;

Fl. d'lt. n. 910.

Europe,

N.Asia. I?.

March.
Nutt.

lUMBELLULARIA
californica Nutt.
Neesj B.
XV.
1.

N.
Pff.

Pff.

iii.

2.

116.

Lauraceaecalifornica

Persoideae-Cinnamomeae.

N.

I.

c.

Oreodaphne
cal.

M.

t.

5230. Tetranthera
Tp

Hook. & Arn. DC.

192.

California.
Pff.

UMBILICUS DC.N.
sulaceae.

iii.

2a. 33,

under Cotyledon GiSiS-

Aizoon Fenzl. Boiss. Fl. Or. ii. 774. Asia Minor. if.. chrysanthus Boiss. & Heldr. Fl. Or. ii. 773 Nich. Diet.
;

388.

fig.

536, as Cotyledon. Orient.


d'lt.

2|.

horizontalis DC. iii. 400; Fl. Mediterranean region. 2|

n.

1698, as Cotyledon.

ii.

April-June.
Cotijledon.

"pendulinus DC.

iii.

400;

Fl. d'lt. n. 1697, as


If.

Mediterranean region, N. Africa.


May.
iii.

April-June.
April-

Pestalozzse Boiss. Fl. Or.

771. Asia Minor. 2;.


;

Sempervivum DC.
Diet.
fig.

399

Boiss. Fl. Or.

ii.

111. Nich.
N. Persia.
d. S.

537,

as

Cotyledon.

Uspinosus DC.
t.
iii.

E.

Caucasus,

400; Ledeb. Fl. Boss.

ii.

174; Fl.

1894.

Siberia, China.

c.

2^.

UNGNADIA^nd/. A''.P/.iii. 5. 365. Sapindacege-Harpullieae.


speciosa
E^idl.

N.

Pff.

I.

Northern Mexico, Texas. ^


;

UNIOLA L.N.
latifolia

567.

N.America.

Pff. ii. 2. 71. Graminese-Festuceae. L.Kunth, En. i. 424 Gray, Man. Bot. N.
if..

U. S.

June-July.

HOETUS MORTOLENSIS
URBINIA
Bose in Bull. N. York Bot. Gard.
I.

327
iii.

11. Cras-

sulaceae.

Mexico. N. 65. Liliacese-LilioideaelURGINEA Steinh. 657. U. Scilla Steinh. Kunth, maritima Bah. Fl. 332. 116. MediEn. Scilla maritima L. Bed. Lil. terranean region, Canaries. July-August. 658. undulata Steinh. Kunth, En. 334 Fl.
Purpusii Bose,
c.

2;.

Pff.

ii.

5.

Scilleae.

cl'It.

n.

iv.

t.

if,.

iv.

d'lt. n.

Scilla undulata Desf. Fl. Atl.

i.

300.

t.

87. N.

Africa,

Sardinia, Corsica.

-2^.
178.Valerianacese.
iii.
;

VALERIANA L.N.
Phu L.DG.
iv.

Pff. iv. 4.

637

Boiss. Fl. Or.

88; Fl. d'lt. n. 3329

Caucasus,
VALLISNERIA
spiralis L.
regions.

Siberia,

Armenia.

if.

May-June.

Michx.N.
d'lt.

Pff'. ii. 1.
.

251. Hydrocharitaceffiand temperate

Vallisnerioideae- Vallisnerieae

Fl.
ij:.

n.

563.

Tropical

VALLOTA
vi.

Herb.N.

Pff.

ii.

5.

106. Amaryllidaceae-Amarylliv.

doideae-AmaryllidesB.

purpurea Herb.
218.

Kunth, En.
=
Carica.
Pff.
t.
ii.

531

Bak. Am. 53; Fl.


t.

Cai).

Amaryllis purpurea B. M.
t.

1430.

A. elata Jacq.

H. Sch.

62. S. Africa. 2|.

June.

Vasconcellea St. Hil.

VELLOZIA

Vandelli.N. elegans Oliver. B. M.

5.
;

5803

Fl. Cap. vi.


ii.

127.Velloziaceai. 245. Natal. 4


5.

VELTHEIMIA
-Scillese.

Gleditsch.N.

Pff.

69. Liliaceae-Lilioideae
;

S.Africa. November. 308, under VENIDIUM Less. N. -Arctotideae-Arctotidinae. 492 FL Cap. decurrens Less. DC. 0. March193.
if.

77 Kunth, En. iv. 282 Fl. Cap. vi. Bed. Lil. t. 440. S. Africa. if viridifolia Jacq. H. Sch. t. 78 Kunth, En. iv. 281 Fl. Cap. Lodd. B. C. t. 1245 B. M. t. 501 Bed. Lil. t. vi. 471
t.
;

glauca Jacq. H. Sch.


471
;

B. M.

t.

1091

Pff. iv. 5.

Arctotis.

vi.

iii.

Compositae 461.
S. Africa.

April.

328

HOETUS MORTOLENSIS
solaneae-Verbasceae.

VERBASCUM L.N. Pff. iv. 3b. 50. Scrophulariaceae- Pseudo-Boerhavi L.DC. . May.
x.

231

Fl. d'lt. n.

2893. S. Europe.

olympicum
t.

Boiss.

FL

Or. iv. 323.


x.

Orient.

phoeniceum L.DC.
637.

242
234;
x.

Fl. d'lt. n.

S.

Europe, Central Asia.


x.

May. if. 2898 Lodd. B. C. 2^. April-May.


;

=:=sinuatum

L. DC.

Fl. d'lt. n.

2895. Mediteriv.

ranean region.
S.

if..

speciosum Schrad.

DC.
.

April- September.

236

Boiss. Fl. Or.

325.

Europe, Orient.

VERBENA L. N.
Euverbenese.

Pff. iv. 3a. 146.

Verbenaceae-Verbenoidesexi.

Aubletia L.B. M.
bonariensis
S.

DC. t. 308 N. U. S. 299. N. America. If.


;

554

Grmj, Man. Bot.

All the year.

L.DC.

xi.

541

Dill. Hort. Elth. fig.

387.

America,

S. Africa, &c.

DC. xi. 537; B. M. t. 3333. chamsedryfolia Juss. 7. Melindres Gill. Lodd. B. C. t. 1514. Argentina, S.
Brazil.

if.

if.

April-June.

erinoides Lam.
June,

DC.

xi.

552.

S. Brazil,

Peru.

0.

April-

hispida Biiiz d Pav. DC. xi. 542. Bolivia, Peru, Chili. June- August. If: incisa Hook, in B. M. t. 3628; DC. xi. 538. S. Brazil. 2|. paniculata Lam. DC. xi. 545. N. America. 14.. tenera Spreiuj. DC. xi. 552. S. Brazil. if.
.

VERBESINA L.N.
Verbesininas.

Pff. iv. 5.

238. Compositae-HehantheseRica.

diversifolia

DC. DC.

v.

615.

Costa
v.

i?

November21

January.

{Werckle, 1905.)

helianthoides H.B. K.
virginica L.
v.

616.

DC. 613. N. and S.America. Atlantic N. America. Sepif


.

tember-October.

VERNONIA

N. mespilifolia Less. DC. pectoralis Bak. Journ.


Schreb.

Pff'.

iv.

5.

124. Compositae-Veriii.

noniege-Yernoninae.

v.

29

Fl. Cap.

50.

S. Africa.

Bot, xx. 1882, 139.

spec.

Costa Rica.

{Werckle, 1905).

Madagascar.

I?

HOETUS MORTOLENSIS
JVERONICA L.N.
All the year.
Pff. iv. 36.

329

85. Scrophulariacee-Rhinant.

thoideae -Digitaleae.

Andersonii Lindl.

Fl.

d. S.

658.

Garden

origin.

Tj

austriaca L.~DC. x. 470 Boiss. Fl. Or. iv. 449 Fl. d'lt. n. 2950 y. S. Europe, Asia Minor. 2|:. May-June. buxifolia Benth. in DC. x. 462 Hdh. Fl. N. Zeald. 210.
; ;

New

Zealand.

carnosula Hook.

fil.

Hdb.

Fl. N. Zeald. 210.

New Zealand.

'?
;

Dieffenbachii Benth. in DC. x. 459 Hdb. Fl. N. Zeald. 206; B. M. t. 7656. New Zealand. 24. Hulkeana F. Muell.Hdb. Fl. N. Zeald. 213. New Zealand. April-May. 1?

incana L.DC. x. 466; Boiss. N. Asia. May-June. If.

Fl. Or.

iv.

456. S. E. Europe,

longifolia

L.DC.

x.
If..

465
x.

Fl. d'lt. n.

May-June. salicifolia Forst.DC. 459 Hdb. Fl. N. Zeald. 207. All the year. New Zealand. Hdb. Fl. N. Zeald. 208 B. M. Traversii Hook. 6390. New Zealand. ^ May-June. Hdb. Fl. N. Zeald. 208. New Zealand. verrucosa Hook.
Minor, Siberia.
;

2958. Europe, Asia

\^

fil.

t.

fil.

-^
virginica L.DC. x. 463 America. June. 14..
;

Gray, Man. Bot. N. U.

5. N.

VIBURNUM L.N.

Pff. iv. 4.

Schneider, Hdb. Laubh. ii. 648. betulifolium Batal. China {Wilson, n. 590, 669, 1262, 1263a). >? Carlesii Hemsl. in Journ.Linn. Soc. xxiii. 350 B. M. t. 8114.
. ;

163. Caprifoliaceae-Viburnese.

Korea. ^ cotinifolium D.
III. 1.

Don.DC. iv. 327

Fl. Brtt. hid.


.

iii.

121; Brandis, For. Fl.

cylindricum Hamilt. Schneider, Hdb. Laubh. ii. 654. J? India, China {Wilson, n. 697). dasyanthum Behd. Schneider, Hdb. Laubh. ii. 647. China {Wilson, n. 463, 467). !?. Davidii Franch. Schneider, Hdb. Laubh. ii. 652. China {Wilson, n. 963). !?. dilatatum Thunb. DC. iv. 329 Schneider, Hdb. Laubh. ii.

258. India. ^

3 Wight, April-May.
;

645.

Japan.

Ij

330

HOETUS MOETOLENSIS
{continued).
;

VIBURNUM
,,

fcetidum Wall.DC. iv. 325 Fl. Brit. Ind. iii. 4. India, China {Wilson, n. 1360). J? Schneider, Hdb. Lauhh. var. rectangulum Rehd. ii. 643. China {Wilson, n. 1131). 1? hupehense Behd. Schneider, Hdb. Lauhh. ii. 649. China

{Wilson,r\.2^1). ichangense Behd. Journ. Linn. Soc.


\2.

xxiii.

352

Schneider,

Hdb. ^Laubh. 392). 1?.

ii.

650. China
iv.

{Wilson, n. 221, 228, 239,

odoratissimum
Fl. Brit. Ind.

Ker.
iii.

7.

DC. 326 Benth. Fl. Hongk. 143; India, Burma, China, Japan.
;

Tp

Opulus

L. var. sterilis DC.

iv.

328

Fl. d'lt. n.

3315.

Tp Europe. May-June. plicatum Thunb.DC. iv. 329;


.

Sieb.

<&

Zucc. Fl. Jap. t.37;


ii.

Fl. d. S.
April.

t.

278

Gard. Chron. 1901,


in

320. Japan. I?
Soc.
xxiii.

propinquum Hemsl.

Journ.
ii.

Linn.

355

Schneider, Hdb. Laubh.

652.

^
rigidum
124
;

China {Wilson,
rugosum Pers.

n. 498).

Vent. J.
t.

Malm.

t.

98.

V.

DC.

iv.

B. M.

2082

Sandankwa

Hassk.

Lodd. B. C. t. 859. Canaries. Tp B. M. t. 6172 Journ. Linn. Soc. xxiii.


;

355. China. l?

Sargenti Koehne. Schneider, Hdb. Laubh. Ip Manchuria, China {Wilson, n. 281).

March-April.
ii.

640.

Japan,

siispensum Lindl.

theiferum Behd. Schneider, Hdb. Laubh. ii. 645. China {Wilson, n. 236). !?. Tinus L.DC. iv. 324 Fl. d'lt. n. 3313. Mediterranean Tp region. February- April.
;

Sandankioa.

tomentosum Thunb.

DC.
Tp.

iv.

329

Journ. Linn. Soc.

xxiii.

356. Japan, China {Wilson,


{Wilson, n. 1288).

n. 117,

234). Tj
i.

Veitchii C. H. Wright in Gard. Chron. 1903,


Schneider, Hdb. Lauhh. Wilsonii Behd. {Wilson, n. 1120). ^
.

257. China
647.

ii.

China

VILLARSIA

Vent.N.

Pff. iv. 2.

106. Gentianaceae-Menyaniv.

thoideae-Menyanthese.

reniformis B. Br.
Sol. B.

Fl. Austr,

376.

Menyanthes exaltata

M.

t.

1029. Australia, Tasmania. 2^.

HOETUS MORTOLENSIS
VIMINARIA Sm.N. Pff.
-Podalyriese.
iii.

331

3.

209. Leguminosge-Papilionatae
;

denudata Sm.
1190;

DC.
iv.

ii.

107
t.

Fl. Austr.
S.

Bossche, Ic. Sel.


S.

32. N.

ii. 68 B. M. t. Wales, Victoria,


;

Tasmania,

and W. Australia.
2.

f?

May-June.

VINCA

L.

N.

Pff.

145.

Apocynaceae-Plumieroideae2735. F.
viedia Hffgg.

Plumiereae-Alstoniinae.

difformis Pourr.Fl.

d'lt. n.

& Lk.

DC.

viii.

384.

V. acutiflora Bert.

If.

February-April.
viii.

major L.DC.
region.
'^..

384

Fl. d'lt. n.

Mediterranean region. 2734. Mediterranean


n.

February-April.
;

minor L.DC.

viii. 383 Fl. d'lt. South Europe. if.. March-June. rosea L. = Lochnera rosea Reichb.

2736. Central and

VINCETOXICUM Moench.N. Pff. iv. 2. 251, under Cynanchum.

Asclepiadaceae-Cynanchoideae-Asclepiadeae-Cynanchinae.
atratum Morr. & Decne.
June-August. If. fuscatum Beichb.Boiss. Fl. Or.
If..

DC.

viii.

523.

N. China, Japan.
Fl. d'lt. n. 2742
8.

iv.

55

Orient, Dalmatia. May-June. 524. Japan. japonicum Morr. d Decne. DC. Boiss. Fl. Or. 523 medium Decne. DC.
viii.

if.

viii.

iv.

55.

Caucasus, Persia.
d'lt. n.

if.
viii.

nigrum Moench.DC.

524

Boiss. Fl. Or.


.

iv.

53

Fl.

2741. S. Europe, Asia Minor. if

May-June.

VIOLA L.N.

"alba Bess. Fl. d'lt. February-March.

Pff'. iii. 6.

334.Violaceae-Violeae.
n.

1294^.

i.

Istria, Italy, Corsica.

if.

cornuta L.B. M.
iii.

t.

791
If.
;

DC.

301

W.

ct-

Lge. Fl. Hisp.

=:=tricolor

Pyrenees. April-May. 1294 ;<. Europe, Africa, 296 Fl. odorata L.DC. January- April. N. Asia. 1301. Europe, Asia, 303 Fl. L.DC. N. America. 0. April-June. 13018. 303; Fl. hortensis DC. Pansy Pensiero.") Garden
700.
i.

d'lt. n.

If.

i.

d'lt. n.

var.

i.

d'lt.

n.

origin.

("

"

"

March-April.
Virgilia aurea

Lam.

Calpurnia aurea.

332

HORTUS MORTOLENSIS
L.f.N.
.

VISNEA

Pff.

iii.

6.

190. Theaceae-TernstrcemiesB.
;

Mocanera L.f.DG. xvii. 298

Nich. Diet. fig. 200. Canaries.

April-May.

VITEX

L.

N.
t.

Pff.

iv.

3a.

170.

Verbenaceae - Viticoideae
;

Viticeae.

-Agnus-castus L.DC.
Fl. Ment.
14.

xi.

684

Fl. cVIt. n. 3217

Mocjgr.
Tp
.

Mediterranean region, Central Asia.


xi.

August-October.
incisa

Lam.
519.

Negundo L.
684
;

Negundo L.DC.
Ic.
,,

Fl. Brit. Inch iv. 583


J?
.

Wight,

t.

Tropical Asia.
;

June-July.

var.

incisa C. B. Clarke. Fl. Brit. Ind. iv. 584 DC. xi. 684 B. M. t. 364. India, E. Asia. i?

June-July.

JVITIS Tourn.N.
armata
Diels
cC-

Pff.

iii.

5.

442. Vitaceae-Vitoideae.

antarctica Benth.

Cissus Baudiniana.

Gilg var.
ii.

cyanocarpa Gagnep.

Schneider,
603).
;

Hdb. Lauhh.

303. China

(T7i/so?i, n. 291, 409,

betulifolia Diels

&

Gilg in Engl. Bot. Jahrh. xxix. 460


ii.

Schneider, Hdb. Lauhh.


134,

303.

China
n.

(Wilson, n. 77,

1046a). T?.
i.

flexuosa Thtmh.DC.

634

Schneider, Hdb. Laubh.

ii,

309. Japan
Henryana
C.

to

Malaya {Wilson,

170). 1?
ii.

Henryana Hemsl.

in Journ. Linn. Soc. xxiii. 132.

Psedera

K. Schneider, Hdb. Laubh.

318.

China.

T?.S

heterophylla Thunb.

Hookeri
178.

Laivs.

Fl.
=

= Ampelopsis heterophylla.
Brit. Lid.
ij .
i.

661

Brandis, Lid. Trees,

Himalaya, Java.
i.

inconstans Miq.
2440.

Parthenocissus tricuspidata Planch.

May-June. N. America, Japan, China. oblonga Benth. Fl. Austr. 447. Queensland. ^ Schneider, Hdb. Laubh. 306. pentagona Diels 134, 1046a). China {Wilson, 303. China Fiasezkii Maxim. Schneider, Hdb. Laubh.
n.
l?

Labrusca L.DC.

634

N.

Pff.

I.

c.

443.

fig.
.

215

Fl. d'lt.

i.

ct

Gilg.

ii.

n. 77,

l?

ii.

{Wilson, n. 215, 248).

T? .

pterophora Bak.

Cissus gongylodes.

reticulata Thivaites.

Fl.

Brit. Ind.

i.

655.

Ceylon, China

{Wilson, n. 260, S78). ^^h

HORTUS MOETOLENSIS
VITIS
{continued).

333

striata Miq. var. viridis.

Nich. Diet. 188.


Fl. d'lt. n.

S. Brazil,

Uru-

guay.
vinifera
region.

1?

.
i.

L.DC.

633

2436. Mediterranean
Aj^p. 53; Nich. Diet.

T? .

May.

Keto Bull. 1898, Voinieriana Hort. Stijjpl. 738. China. T? .


Vittadinia triloba Hort.

Erigeron miicronatus DC.

WACHENDORPIA L.N.

Pff.
vi.

ii.

5.
;

hirsuta Tkunh.Fl. Cap.

B. M.

96. Hsmodorace*. t. 614. S. Africa.

V,.

April.

WALLICHIA

Boxb.N.

Pff.

ii.

3.

55. Palmae-Ceroxylinevi.

Arecinae-Caryoteae.

caryotoides Boxb.

Fl. Brit. Ind. N.


Pff.

419

Nich. Diet.

fig.

210. Burma. Tp.

IWASHINGTONIA
filifera

Wendl.

Nachtr.

i.

51. Palmse-

Coryphinae-Sabaleae.

Wendl.Bot. Gaz. 1907,


var.

ii.

418. S. California. i?

June.

microsperma

Beccari.

Bot. Gaz.

I.

c.

420.

Tp

June.

bgracilis Parish, Bot. Gaz. 1907, California. sonorse Wats. Bot. Gaz. 1907,
Tp

var.

robusta (Wendl.) Parish, Bot. Gaz.


ii.

I.e.

420.

420.

S. or

Lower

ii.

422.

Lower

California.

-^'

WATSONIA

Mill. N.

Pff.

ii.

5.

157. Iridace^-Ixioideffit.

Watsonieae.

Meriana Mill.Bak. Irid. 175 Fl. Cap. vi. 101. . M. 418 Bed. Lil. t. 11. S. Africa. i^ April.
; ;
.

Weigelia Thunb.

Diervilla.
Pff.
iv.

WESTRINGIA Sm.N.
theroideae.

Sa.

217. Labiata-ProstanFl. Austr. y. 128.

rosmariniformis Sm. DC. xii. 570; Tp N. S. Wales. March-December.

334

HORTUS MORTOLENSIS
H. B. K.N.
Pff. iv. 3a.

tWIGANDIA
Nameae.
755.

70. HydrophyllaceseB.

caracasana H. B. K.DC.
t.

x.

184

M.

t.

4575
fig.

Fl. d. S.

urens

Venezuela. Chois. DC.


.

J?

March-April.
;

(Mexico ?). ^

x. 184 Nich. Diet. March-April.

221.

Peru

WISTARIA Nutt.N. Pff. Nachtr.


natae-Galegeae-Tephrosiinae.

i.

201. Leguminosse-Papilio2083
;

chinensis DC.
China.

ii.

390. S. M.

t.

Lodd. B. C.
Bot. N.

t.

773.

I?

April-May.
Graij,
ii.

frutescens DC. ii. 390; Schneider, Hdh. Laubh. April-May. 1?.

Man.

U. S. 96;

76; B.

M.t 2103. N.

America.

WITHANIA
d'lt.
n.

Pauq.N.

Pff.

iv.

Sb.

19. Solanacese-Solanese;

Solaninae.

somnifera

Dun.DC.
;

xiii. 1.

453

Wight,

Ic.

t.

853

Fl.

2876

Fl. Cap.

iv. 2.

107. Mediterranean

region,

India, S. Africa.

>>

March-October.
Pff.
i.

WOOD WARD lA
radicans
Canaries,

Sm. N.

4.

253.

Polypodiaceee37.
Japan,
China,

Aspleniese-Blechninse.

Sw.Hook. Syn.
Mediterranean

Fil.

188;

Fl. d'lt. n.

region,

India,

Central America, &c.

24.

IXANTHORRHCEA
arboreum B.
"Wales.

Sm.N.

Pff.

ii.

5.

51. Liliaceae-Aspho-

deloideae-Lomandreae.
Br.

Fl.

Austr.

vii.

115.

Queensland, N.

S.

f?

Xanthoxylon Spreng.
Xerotes R. Br.

Zanthoxylum L.
Labill.
Pff.
iii.

= Lomandra
G.

XYLOSMA

Forst.N.

6a. 39,

Nachtr.

i.

252.

Flacourtiaceae-Flacourtieee-Euflacourtiese.

ciliatifolium Eichl.N. Pff.

racemosum
O. Ktze.

Miq.

N.
ii.

I.

c.

41. S. Brazil. Tp
Myroxylon racemosum

JYUCCA
DC.

Hong Kong. L. N. Liliaceae-DracaenoideaB-Yucceae.


Ip

Pff.

I.

c.

41.

Pff.

5. 70.

aloifolia L.Trel. Yucc. {Bept. Miss. B. G. 1902), 88.


PI. Gr.
t.

t.

49

Mexico, &c.

20
.

Bed. Lil.
June-July.

t.

401-2

B. M.

t.

1700.

HOETUS MOETOLENSIS

335

YUCCA
,,

(continiced)

aloifolia var. foliis variegatis.


var. tricolor.

aloifolia

x recurva

Garden origin.
glauca.

June-July.

t? i?

angustifolia Pursh.

arborescens Trel.

Clistoyucca arhorescens.

australis Trel. Yucc. {Bept. Miss. B. G. 1902), 103. t. 60-61. Y. filifera Chab. B. M. t. 7197.Mexico. ^. July.
.

baccata Torr.Trel. Yucc.


68-69.

Arizona, New Mexico. brevifolia Schott.Trel. Yucc. {Bept. Miss. B. G. 1902), 100. 57-59. Arizona.
I?
.

{Bept. Miss. B. G. 1902), 109.

t.

t.

Tj

canaliculata Hook.

Treculeana.

constricta Buckley .Trel. Yucc. {Bept. Miss. B. G. 1902),


54.
t.

20-21. Texas. t?
Trel.

decipiens

Bept.

Miss. B.

G.

1907,

228.

Mexico.

-^
De Smetiana
87.
t.

Bak.Trel. Yucc. {Bept. Miss. B. G. 1902),


.

48. Mexico. h

Engelm. radiosa. elephantipes Begel. Trel. Yucc. {Bept. Miss. B. G. 1902), 94. t. 51. F. guatemalensis Bak. Bef. Bot. t. 313 Gard. Chron. 1895, ii. 523. 525 B. M. t 7997. Central America. September-November. ^ var. Ghiesbreghtii Hort.Trel. Yucc. I. c. 94. ip September-November, var. gigantea. Tre^. Bept. Miss. B. G. 1898, 141. t. 40-42, and 1902, 71, and 1907, 226. t? September-November.
elata

,,

Ellacomhei Bak.
filifera

gloriosa v. nohilis.

Chab.

australis.

flaccida

Haw. Trel.
t.

Yucc. {Bept. Miss. B. G. 1902), 49,

t.

12-17; Bef. Bot. June-July.


flexilis

323. Southern United States. if.

var. glaucescens Trel. I. c. 51. B. M. t. 6316. 2f. Garr.Trel. Yucc. {Bept. Miss. B. G. 1902), 78. t. 47. ip Mexico. July-September.

var.

Peacockii

Trel.

I.

c.

79.Keiu Bull. 1892, 8.

July-September. ^ glauca Nutt.Trel. Yucc. {Bept. Miss. B. G. 1902), 59. t. 23 -25. F. angustifolia Pursh. B. M. t. 2236. Central

United States.

ij

336

HORTUS MORTOLENSIS
(continued).
t.

YUCCA
46.
,,

gloriosa L.Trel Yucc. {Rept. Miss. B. G. 1902), 72.

43-

Florida,
var.

S. Carolina.

V^

July.
I.

var. nobilis Carr. Trel. Yticc.

c.

75.

Y. Ellacomhei

Bak. B. B.

t.

317. I?

plicata Carr.

July-September.
Yucc. (Rept. Miss. B. G.

Trel.

1902), 75.~T?.

September-February.
Yucc. {Rept. Miss. B. G. 1902),
States,

guatemalensis Bak.

mohavensis
113.
t.

Sarg.

Trel.

elephantipes.

68.
Tp

fornia.

t.

South

Western United

Lower

Cali-

Peacockii Bak. ^^flexilis.

radiosa
B. M.

Trel. Yucc. [Rept. Miss.

B. G. 1902), 56.

t.

21-22.

7650, as Y. elata

Engelm.

New

Mexico, Northern Mexico.

Southern Arizona,

Tj

recurvifolia Salisb.Trel. Yucc. {Rept. Miss. B. G. 1902), 76. t. 46-47 Ref. Bot. t. 321. Y. gloriosa reciirvifolia
;

Engelm.
,,

Georgia.
var.
.

ip July-September. variegata Trel. Yucc. I. c.


.

78.

t.

Tp

rigida Trel. Yucc. {Rept. Miss. B. G. 1902), 65. ij Mexico.

35-36.

rostrata Engelm. Trel. Yucc. {Rept. Miss. B. G. 1902), 68.

Northern Mexico. t. 36. ^ rupicola Scheele.Trel. Yucc. {Rept. Miss. B. G. 1902), t. 37-39; B. M. t. 7172. Texas. 2|:.
.

67.

Treculeana Carr. Trel.


t.

Y^icc. {Rept.

Miss. B. G. 1902), 96.

52-54.

N. Mexico,
=

Texas.

>>

July-August.

valida Brandegee.Trel. Yucc. {Rept. Miss. B. G. 1902),


107.
t.

62-67. Mexico, Lower California.

f?

Whipplei Torr.

Hesperoyucca Whipplei Bak.

= Encephalartos horridus Lehm. Zamia spiralis Salisb. = Macrozamia spiralis Miq. Zantedeschia Spreng. = Richardia Kunth.
Zamia
horrida Jacq.

tZANTHOXYLUM

L.N.

Pff.

iii.

4.

115. Rutaceae-Eutoideae

-Zanthoxylese-Evodiinae.

ailanthoides Sieb. d' Zucc. Schneider, Hdb. Laubh. ii. 121. Ij Japan, Formosa. alatum Roxb. Fl. Brit. Ind. i. 493 Brandis, hid. Trees, l? 116. January-April. Himalaya, China.

HOETUS MORTOLBNSIS

337

ZANTHOXYLUM
americanum
ii.

{continued).
;

Mill. Gard. Diet. n. 2

Schneider, Hdh. Laubh.


i.

Bungei Planch. N. 118. China.


America.
Tj

118.^. fraxineum Willd. DC.


Pff.
. ;

276. Atlantic North

ii.

f?

I. c. 115 Schneider, Hdh. Laiihh. April-May.

ZAUSCHNERIA
Bpilobiese.

Presl.

N.
t.

Pff.

iii.

7.

208.

Onagracese-

californica Presl.
ii.

418.

B. M. California.
Kunth,
Summer.
Schnizl.
Pff.
ii.

if.

Schneider, Hdb. Lauhh. 4493 September-November.


;

ZEA L.N.
Mays

2.

19. Graminege-Maydeffi.
En.
i.

0.

L.

19

Fl. d'lt. n. 104.

America.
Spring-

ZEBRINA

Schnizl.N.

pendula

Nich. Diet. 238. Mexico.


Herb.N.
Pff.
ii.

Pff.

ii.

4.

69. Commelinaceae.
if.

autumn.

ZEPHYRANTHES
t.

5.

107. Amaryllidaceffi;

Amaryllidoideas-Amaryllideae-Zephyranthinae.

Candida Herb. Bale. Am. 34


1419.

Argentina.
(Oaxaca, 1911.)
Pff'.

if..

B. M. t. 2607 Lodd. B. October-December.


;

C.

Conzattii Greenm. in Proc. Am. Acad,

xxxiii. 473.

Mexico.

If..

ZINNIA L. N.
Zinninse.

iv.

5.

225.

Compositae-HeliantheEeDC.
v.

hybrida Sims

in B.

M.

t.

2123

536. S. America.

October-January.
Pff.
ii.

ZIZYPHUS L.N.
Lotus
2424.

iii.

5.

401. Rhamnacese-Zizyphese.
ii.

Lam. DC.

19

Boiss. Fl. Or.


Tj
,

Mediterranean region.
ii.

12

Fl. d'lt. n.

mucronatus Willd. DC.


Afr.
i.

19
t.

Fl. Cap.

i.

475

Fl. Trop.
S. Africa.

380; Wood, Natal PI.

47. Tropical and

Pp.

August -October.

sativa Desf. Fl. d'lt. n. 2423. Z. vulgaris Lam. DC. ii. 19 Boiss. Fl. Or. ii. 12. Mediterranean region, Temperate
;

Asia.

T?

June.

SUPPLEMENT.
ACACIA,
csesia
1?
.

p. 2.

W. & Arn.Fl.

Brit. Inch

ii.

297. India, Malaya.


;

{Cambridge, 1911.)
ii.

discolor Willd.DC.
t.

468

B. M.
S.

601; Fl. Austr.


T?.

ii.

414.

N.

Lodd. B. C. t. 1750 Wales, Victoria, Tasmania.


413.

(Staer, 1911.)

elata

A.

Cunn.

Fl.

Austr.

ii.

N.
M.

S.

Wales.

Tp

{Staer, 1911.)

elongata Sieb.DC.

381. N.

S.

ii. 451 B. M. t. 3337 Fl. Austr. Wales, Victoria. ?? {Sydney, 1911.)


;
; . ;

ii.

lineata A. Cunn.Fl. Austr. ii. 353 Wales, Victoria, S.Australia. >>

B.

t.

3346. N.

S.

March.
413.

{L. Winter,

1911.)

spectabilis A. Cunn.

Fl. Austr.
Pff.

ii.

Queensland, N.

S.

Wales. v..

{Sydney, 1911.)

ADENOCALYMNA
-Bignoniese.

Mart.N.
ix.

iv.

Sb.

214. Bignoniaceae
Tp

comosum DC.
November.

201;

B.

M.

t.

4210. Brazil

AGAVE,

p. 10.

candelabrum

Tod. H. Bot. Pan.

i.

66.

t.

15. Mexico? 2^.

{Palermo, 1911.)

coarctata Jacobi, Nachtr.


Mexico.
11.

i.

147.

A. ])otatorum Hort.

longisepala Tod. H. Bot. Pan.

ii.

34.

t.

31

Bah. Am. 176.


June,
v.

Mexico?

marmorata
potatorum
Jacobi 78.

Bah. Am. 179.Mexico. Kunth, En. 89 Mexico. 4. {Munich, 1909.)


Boezl.
2^,.

11.

{Palermo, 1911.)

Zucc.

BoiijjI.

vii.

824

ALBUCA,
Bot.

p. 16.
vi.

Cooperi Bak.Fl. Cap.


t.

455.

A. flaccida Bak. in Ref.


leg.

334.

thaler).

S. Africa (near

Port Elizabeth,

Brunn-

2^.

SUPPLEMENT
ALCE,
p. 17.

339

Straussii Berger.

{Dahlem, 1910.) variegata x Gasteria verrucosa.


{Weinberg, 1911.)

Tropical E, Africa. February-March. Garden


ii
.

origin.

2^.

ALOPECURUS
America.

L.N. Pff. ii. 2. 48. Graminege-Agrostidese. arundinaceus Poir. Boiss. Fl. Or. v. 487. A. nigricans Hornem. Kunth, En. i. 24. Europe, N. Africa, Asia, N.

21

April,
d-

castellanus Boiss.
11
.

Beut.

W. & Lge. Fl. Hisp.

i.

40. Spain.

April.
p. 24.

ALYSSUM,
Persia.

desertorum Stapf

in Denkschr.

Akad. Wien. (1886),

33.

2^.

ALYXIA,
.

p. 24.

daphnoides A. Cunn. in B. M. t. 3313. Norfolk November-December. [Borne, 1910.) ^

Island.

AMOMUM

L.

N.

Pff.

ii.

6. 26.

Zingiberaceae-Zingibereae.
;

Granum-Paradisi L.B. M. t. 4603 304. Upper Guinea. 2^. (Bovelli,

Fl.

Trop. Afr.

vii.

1911.)

ANEMOP-EGMA
Bignoniese.

Mart.N.

Pff.

iv.

Sb.

214. Bignoniaceffi.

racemosum
1911.)

Mart.

DC.

ix.

189.

Brazil. ^

(Bettkart,

ANTHOLYZA,

p. 28.

paniculata Klatt.Bak.
Africa. 2f.

Irid.

229;

Fl. Gap. vi.

168. S.

{Herb, 1^11.)
p. 34.
t.

ARISTOLOCHIA,

arborea Linden. B. M.

^
;

5295

DC.

xv. 1.

477. Mexico.

{Bovelli, 1911.)

ARUM,
24

p. 36. n. 2

-italicum Mill. Diet.


Madeira, Azores.
Nickellii Schott

Fl. d'lt. n. 530.

Mediterranean
April-May.

B. M.

t.

2432

Kunth, En.

iii.

region.

Canaries,

2^.

italicum.

ASCLEPIAS,

p. 36.

glaucescens

H. B. K.

DC.

viii.

565.

Mexico.
z 2

2^

{Oaxaca, 1911.)

340

HOETUS MORTOLENSIS
p. 37.

ASPARAGUS,

myriocladus Bah.

in Joiirn. Bot. 1889, 43

Fl. Ccq). vi. 271.

Natal 1?.

{Diirban, 1910.)

ASTRAGALUS,
iii.

p. 39.

lusitanicus Lam.
277.
April.

Boiss. Fl.
haetica

Or.

ii.

267;

W. &Lge.

Fl. Hisp.

Phaca

L.

Mediterranean

region.

i^.

sanguinolentus M. B.DC. ii. 304; Ledeb. Fl, Boss. i. 648 Boiss. Fl. Or. ii. 459. Caucasus. 2^. {Tiflis, 1911.) schahrudensis Bunge. Boiss. Fl. Or. ii. 416. Persia. 2^.
;

{Tiflis, 1911.)

ATRIPLEX,

p. 41.
ix.

lentiformis S. Wats, in Proc. Am. Acad.


Arizona.

1874, 118.

{F. Franceschi, 1911.)


ii.

AVENA
n.

L.

N.
y.

Pff.

55.

Gramineae-Aveneae.
S.

-barbata Brot.Bicknell, Fl. Bord. d


243

Bem. 305

Fl. d'lt.

Mediterranean region, Asia Minor, Arabia. 0. May-June. planiculmis Schrad. Kunth, En. 301 and Suppl. 254. Europe, N. Asia. 4. April-May. *sterilis L.Bicknell, Fl. Bord. & Bem. 305 Fl. 243 Mediterranean region, Orient. February-June.
i.

S.

d'lt. n.

(3.

BANKSIA,
556.

p. 43.

semula B. Br.DC.

xiv.

461

B.

M.

t.

2671

Fl. Aiistr. v.

B.

serratifolia Salisb.

Queensland,
S.

N.

S.

Wales,

Victoria. Tp.
collina B. Br.
Lindl. B.
Tp.

DC.
t.

{Staer, 1911.)
xiv.

454

Fl. Austr. v. 548.

B. littoralis

M.

3060. Queensland, N.
;

Wales, Victoria.
v.

{Staer, 1911.)
;

Br. DC. xiv. 460 B. M. t. 2406 Fl. Austr. 555. Queensland, N. S. Wales. Tp {Staer, 1911.) marginata Cav.DC. xiv. 455 B. M. 1. 1947 Lodd. B.
latifolia B.
. ; ;

C.

t.

61

Fl. Atcstr. v. 553.


.

N. S. Wales, Victoria, Tasmania,


S.

S.

Australia. Tp

{Staer, 1911.)

serrata L. fil. DC. xiv. 461; Fl. Austr. v. 556. N. Wales, Victoria, Tasmania. ^ {Staer, 1911.)

spinulosa

Sm.DC.

xiv.

453

FL

A^istr. v.

547. N.

Wales. Tp.

{Staer, 1911.)

S.

BAUHINIA,
1910.)

p. 43.

bryonisefolia Hart. Paris.

Origin unknown. ^

{Antibes,

SUPPLEMENT

341
1.

IBEAUCARNEA Lem.Trel. in Proc. Am. Phil. Soc. vol.

427.

-Liliaceae-Dracaenoideae-Nolinese

gracilis Lem.

Trel.

I.

c.

430.
fc.

B. cedipus Eose in Contrib.

U. S. Nat. Herb.

x.

88.

23. South Central Mexico.


;

^
recurvata Lem.
Bah. Al.
June.
stricta Le^n.

Fl.

d. S. xviii. 26. figure

Trel.

I.

c.

427.

Pincenectitia tuberculata

Lem.

NoUna

reciirvata

Hemsl.

&

Yucc.

234.

South
&

Eastern Mexico.

l?

Trel.

I.

c.

429.

Pincenectitia glauca

Lem.

B. recurvata stricta Bak. Al.

Eose

in Contrib.

U. S. Nat. Herb.

Yucc. 234:. B. Purpusi x. 89. South Central

Mexico.

T7

June.

BEEBBEIS,

p. 45.

concinna Hook.
Himalaya.

fil.
.

B. M.

t.

4744

Fl. Brit. hid.

i.

111.

T7

BILLBEEGIA,

Bak. Brom. 72. Brazil. 120. AmaryllidaceseBOMAREA Mirbel. N.


horrida Begel.
2^.

p. 48.

Pff.

ii.

5.

Hypoxidoideae-Alstroemerieae.

ovata MirbelKunth, En.


2848.

v.

798

Bak. Am. 154. 5. M.


{Oaxaca, 1911.)

t.

Tropical America.
B.

14.^.
ii.

BRASSAVOLA
Perrinii
1906.)

Br.N.
t.

Pff.

6.

148.

Orchidaceae{Vienna,

Monandrse-Lseliinae-Cattleyeae.

Lindl.B. M.

3761.Brazil. 4.

BRASSIA LindlN.

Pff.

ii.

6.

199. Orchidaceae-Monandrgen.
.

Oncidiinae-Odontoglosseae.

maculata B. Br.B. M.
Schmidt, 1911,)

1.

1691.Jamaica.
Diet.
i.

{H. Gold-

verrucosa Batem. {H. GoUschmidt,

Nich.
1911.)
d'lt. n.

210.

Mexico.

l^

BEASSICA,

p. 51.

boetica Boiss.
S. Spain.

Fl.

1409.

B. sicula Arc.

S. Italy,

U. May-June. rupestris Baf.Fl. d'lt. n. 1401 v. Sicily. 4. May-June.

BEODI^A,

p. 51.

uniflora Engl, in N.

Pff.

I.

c.

57.

Triteleia uniff^ora Lindl.


t.

Nich. Diet. 9S.Milla unifl. E. Grah. B. M. March-Api-il. Argentina. If..

3327.

342

HORTUS MORTOLENSIS
H. B. K.N.
Pff.
iii.

BRONGNIARTIA
sericea Schlecht.

3.

266. Leguminosae
i?
.

-Papilionatae-Galegeae-Brongniartiinae.

N.

Pff.

I.

c.

Mexico.

(Oaxaca, 1911.)
x.

ICALIBANUS
Hookerii

Bose.Gontr. U. S. Nat. Herb.

90. Liliaceas
Dasylirion

-Dracaenoidese-Nolineae.
Trel. in Proc.
p.

Am.
t.

Phil. Soc. vol.

1.

426.

Hookerii hem. (see

104 of this Catalogue).


5099.

D. Harkve-

gianum Hook,

U.

in B.

M.

East and Central Mexico.


121.

July.
p. 55.

CALLISTEMON,
S. Australia.

paludosus F. Mull.

Fl. Austr.

iii.

Victoria, Tasmania,

1?

{Sydneij, 1910.)

CASUARINA,

p. 63.

lepidophloia F. Mull. Guilfoyle, Austr. PI. 102. Victoria, N. S. Wales, S. Australia. !? {Sydney, 1911.)
.

CEDRONELLA,
mexicana
Lindl. B.

p. 64.

Benth.

M.

t.

DC. xii. 405. Gardoquia hetonicoides 3860. Mexico. 4. {Antibes, 1911.)

CELTIS,
i.

caucasica Willd.
231.

DC. Schneider, Hdb. Laubh. 170 From the Punjab to the Caucasus. ^ OGcidentalis L. DC. 174 Schneider, Hdb. Laubh. 233. N. America. April.
xvii.
; .

p. 65.

xvii.
.

i.

l?

CENTAUREA,

p. 65.

transalpina Schleich. DC. vi. 571; Fl. Southern Europe. June. 2^.

cVIt. n.

3719

f.

CEROPEGIA,
2|.

p. 73.

gemmifera K. Schum.Fl.
{Cambridge, 1910.)
p. 74.

Trop. Afr.

iv. 1.

620. Togo.

CESTRUM,

Gonfertum Buiz & Pav.DC.


Louis, 1911.)

xiii. 1.

622. Peru. i?
326; DC.

(-S^.

salicifolium Jacq. H. Sch.

iii.

421.

t.

xiii. 1.

670.

Venezuela. 7
sonieae.

{St.

Louis, 1911.)
iii.

CHORISIA

H. B. K.N.

Pff.

6.

62. Bombacace^-Adant.

speoiosa St. Hil. Plantes f? {Parma, 1911.)


.

its.

des Bras.

63.

S. Brazil.

SUPPLEMENT

343

CLEOME

L.N.

Pff.

iii.

2.
;

spinosa L.~DG. i. 239 0, Summer.

222. Capparidacese-Cleomoideffi. B. M. t. 1640. Tropical America.

COCCINIA,
^.

p. 86.

quinqueloba Cogn.

DC. Mon. Phan.


iv.

iii.

533.

S. Africa.

{Beukart, 1911.)
p. 87.

COFFEA,
Incl.

bengalensis Boxb.DC.
iii.

499

India, Siam, Java. 1911.) COLUMNEA L. N. 169. Gesneriacese-Cyrtandroideae-Columneae. 364. Mexico. erythrophaea Decne. Nich. Diet.
153.
\^
.

B. M.

t.

4917

Fl. Brit.

{Zilrich,

Pff.

iv.

36.

i.

T;

CONVOLVULUS,
incanus

DC. 409. N. and Soutli America.


Vahl.
ix.

p. 89.

G. dissectus Cav.
2^.

DC.

ix.

411.

(Santiago, Chili, 1911.)

COEDYLINE,
.

p. 90.

indivisa Steiid. Hdb. Fl. N. Zeald. 282. ip (Dorr ien- Smith, 1911.)

New Zealand.

CORONILLA,

p. 91.

cappadocica Willd. Boiss. Fl. Or. ii. 180. C. ihcrica M. B. Lodd. B. C. t. 789. Asia Minor. 2^. April-May.

DRAC^NA,
Ombet

p. 112.
tC

Kotschy

Peyr.Fl. Trop. Afr.

vii.

438. Nubia.

Eritrea.

I?.

{Palermo, 1911.)

ECHEVERIA,

p. 114.

setosa Rose

Mexico. U.
ECHIUM,
p. 123.

d Purpm,

Contr. U. S. Nat. Mus.

xiii.

45.

t.

10.

{Haage

&

Schmidt, 1911.)

Pininana Webb &

Berth. Phyt. Can.

iii.

44.

Canaries. .
i.

{Dr. Perez, 1911.)

ELvEODENDRON,
australe Vent.
land, N. S.

p. 124. J.

Malm.
.

t.

117

Fl. Austr.

402.

Queens-

Wales. T?

{Sydney, 1911.)
iii.

ENDIANDRA B. Br.N. Pff.


-Acrodiclidieae.

2.

122. Lauraceae-Lauroidese
Fl. Austr.
v.

Sieberi Nees.DC. xv. 1. 79 Wales. ^. {Sydney, 1910.)

301. N.

S.

344

HORTUS MORTOLENSIS
{continued).
xv. 1.

ENDIANDRA
virens F.

Midi DC.

509

Fl. Austr. v.

302. N.

S.

Wales. T?.

{Sydney, 1911.)

EPHEDRA,
n.

p. 125.

pumila Brandegee.
412.-1910.)

N. America.
;

T?

{Dendr. Ges. Vienna,

EPIDENDRUM,

p. 125.

pygmseum Hook.B. M. t. 3233 Fl. W. Ind. 615. Brazil, W. Indies. 1^. {H. Goldschmidt, 1911.)
tampense Lindl.Nich.
Diet. Suppl. 344.

Florida.

i;.

{Washington, from Niami and Oneco, 1911.)

ERYTHROSTICTUS Schlecht.Androcymbium
ii.

Liliaceae-Melanthioideae-Anguillarieae. 170. Palestine. palestinus Boiss. Fl. Or.


5. 28.

Willd. N. Pff.

v.

if..

{Herb,

1911.)

EUCALYPTUS,

p. 129.
iii.

Fl. Austr. 215. tereticornis Sm. DC. 216 Fl. Austr. land, N. Wales, Victoria.
odorata Behr.
{Lisbon, 1909.)
iii.
;

S.

Australia.

iii.

241.

Queens;

S.

l?

EUPHORBIA,

p. 132.
;

aspera M. B.Ledeb. Fl. Boss. i. 566 DC. xv. 2. 124 Boiss. Ic. Euph. t. 74 Fl. Or. iv. 1101. Caucasus, N.
;

Persia. 2^.

{Tiflis, 1911.)

EXOGONIUM
Purga
FICUS,

Choisy.N.

Pff.

iv.

3a.

27. Convolvulacese15.

Convolvuloideae-ConvolvuleaB.

Benth.

N.
ix.

Pff'.

I.

c.

28. fig.
.

Ipomcea Purga
Milller, 1911.)

Wender. DC.
p. 138.

374. Mexico. 2(

{W.

Bellengeri C. Moore, Hdb. Fl. N. S. Wales, 81 Guilfoyle, Austr. PI. 178, fig. p. 57. Australia. T? {Palermo, 1911.)
; .

FRITILLARIA,

p. 141.

conica Boiss. FL

Or. v. 184.

Greece.

ij:.

{Herb, 1911.)

GASTERIA, minima

p. 143.

Hori.
145.

S.

Africa?

{Weinberg, 1911.)

GAZANIA, p. montana
April.

Sprenger in Gartenfl. 1899, 442.


{Sprenger, 1910.)

S. Africa.

4.

SUPPLEMENT
GENISTA,
Tj
.

345

146.

stenopetala Webb

&

Berth. Phyt. Can.

ii.

39.

Canaries.

{Dr. Perez, 1911.)


p. 150.
;

GKABOWSKIA,

duplicata Arn.B. M. t. 3841 DC. xiii. {Sprenger.) to Southern Brazil. ^

1.

19. Argentine

GEEVILLEA,

p. 150.

buxifolia B.

Br.DC.

xiv.

369

Fl. Austr. v.

464. N.

S.

Wales. I?.
crithmifolia B.
Australia.

{Staer, 1911.)

Br. DC.
Br.

xiv.

387

Fl. Austr. v.

477. W.

{Staer, 1911.)

mucronulata B.
1911.)

DC.
t.

xiv.

357

Fl. Austr. v. 443.

G. cinerea Locld. B. C.

857. N.

S.

Wales. Tj

{Staer,

HAKEA,

p. 153.

cristata B.
tralia.
1?

Br.DC.
.

xiv.

406

Fl. Austr. v.

510. W. Aus-

{Staer, 1911.)

HEUCHEKA,
!{.
.

p. 162.

undulata Begel & Bach.


April.
p. 163.

Ind. Keio.
i.

ii.

1142.

N. America.

HIBISCUS,
\^
.

Huegelii Endl.

Fl. Austr.

217.

S.

and W. Australia.

{Sydney, 1911.)
p. 164.

HIPPEASTRUM,

pratense Bah. Hdb. Am. 46. Habranthus 'pratensis Herb. Chili. 4. rutilum Herb. Bak. Am. 51. Amaryllis rutila Gawl. Lodd. B. C. t. 1449. Brazil. 2^. {Herb, 1911.)

HIPPO CRATE A L.N.


uniflora DC.
i.

567.

Mexico.
iv.

Pff.

iii.

5.

226. Hippocrateace.
Tj
.

{Oaxaca, 1911.)

HUMEA

Sm.N.

Pff.

5.

192. Composit-Inulee-Gnat.

phalinae.

elegans Sw. Exot. Bot. i. 589. N. S. Wales. e.

DC.

vi.

158

Fl. Austr.

iii.

{Sydney, 1910.)

HYMENANTHERA,
ohathamica
T,

p. 167.

New

Kirk Zealand. ip
.

in Trans.

N. Zeald.

Inst, xxviii. 514.

{Dorrien- Smith, 1911.)

346

HOETUS MOBTOLENSIS
p. 169.
ii.

ILEX,

Integra Thimb.DC.

Japan.

16

Schneider, Hdb. Laubh.

ii.

164.

1?

{W.

Mtiller, 1911.)

IBIS,

p. 172.

illyrica

Tomm.

{Triest, 1911.)

maricoides
1911.)

Fl. Begel. Bak.

d'lt.

n.

777

/S

Irid. 44.

Bokhara.
{ex jJarte).

Istria.

V,.

{Herb,

musulmanica Fom.
Orient. 2^.

ex Delect. Semin. H. Bot. Tiflisiens.

(^^/^is, 1911.)

odoratissima var. magnifica Hort. {Varvaro 1910)

pallida.

palaestina Boiss. Fl. Or.

v.

122

Bak. Irid. 45.


389.

Syria,

Mesopotamia. 2|. {Herb, 1911.) sofarana Foster in Gard. Chron. 1899,

ii.

Lebanon.

{Herb, 1911.)
p. 176.
;

ISOPOGON,

anemonifolius Knight. DC. xiv. 279 Lodd. B. C. t. 1337. Protea anemonif. Salisb. B. M. t. 697. N. S. Wales.
I?
.

{Staer, 1911.)
p. 177.
viii.

JASMINUM,
2.

angulare Vahl.DC.
481.
J.

311

B. M.
S.

t.

6865

FL

Cap.

iv.

capense Thunb.

Africa.

l?

{Palermo,

1911.)

JUNCUS L.N.
JUSSIEUA
L.

Pff. ii. 5. 5. Juncacese. Chamissonis Kunth, En. iii. 348. S. America.

2^.

N.

Pff.
iii.
.

iii.

7.

206.

Onagraceae-Jussieueae.
t.

repens L.DC.

54./. grandiflora Michx. B. M.


June-July.

2122.

Tropics. U
KABATAS,
p. 181.

denticulata Bak. Brom. S. Brazil. 2^.

4.

Nidularium denticulatum Begel.

KCELBEUTEBIA,

p. 184.

bipinnata Franch. Schneider, Hdb. Laubh. T? {Schtveinfurth, 1911.) Formosa.

ii.

256.

China,

LANNEA

A.

Bich.N.

Pff.

iii.

5.

153

Nachtr.

i.

213. AnaS.

cardiaceae-SpondieEe.

caffra Hort.

Damm.

Odina caffra Hort. Damm.

Africa?

SUPPLEMENT
LANTANA,
p. 187.

347

flava Medic.

{Coimhra, 1^11.) America? I?. rosea Bafin.Ind. Kew. iii. 29. Native country unknown.

DC.

xi.

599.

L. melissafolia Ait.

Tropical

I?

{Palermo, 1911.)

velutina Martens
-October.

& Gal DC.

xi.

605. Mexico. f?

July

LENOPHYLLUM
1904, 159.

Bose. Smithson. Miscell. Crassulacese. 162. Mexico. acutifolium Bose,


I.

Collect, vol. xlvii.

c.

l^.

October-May.

LESPEDEZA
juncea

Michx.N.

Pff.

iii.

3.

332. Leguminosae-PapiT?
.

lionatae-Hedysareae-Desmodiinae.
Pers.

DC.

ii.

348.

Northern Asia.
520.

October.

(W. Mailer, 1910.)

LYCIUM,

p. 199.
xiii. 1.

Berlandieri Dun. in DC.


{F. Franceschi, 1911.)

Texas, Arizona.
242.

Tp

MARKHAMIA
Tecomeae.

Seem.

N.

Pff.

iv.

3b.

Bignoniaceae-

Hildebrandtii Sjmcgue and British E. Africa.

in Fl. Trop. Afr. iv. 2. 526.

German
Tp

T?

{Nairobi, 1911.)

MELALEUCA,

p. 207.
iii.

crassifolia Benth. Fl. Austr.


{Stacr, 1911.)

145.

Deanei

F. Milll.

Ind. Keio, Suppl.


iii.

i.

W. Australia. 269. Australia.


iii.

Tp

elliptica Labill.
Australia.

DC. 215; Fl. Austr. 131. W. 1911.) 142. 212; Fl. Austr. Leucadendron L. DC. {Sydney, 1910.) Australia, Malayan Archipelago. ^ 145. Australia. parviflora Lindl. Fl. Austr.

>,
.

{Staer, 1911.)

{Staer,

iii.

iii.

iii.

Tp

{Dorrien- Smith

Staer, 1911.)
iii.

squarrosa Sm.DC.
1130
S.
;

215

B. M.
S.

t.

1935

Lodd. B. C.

t.

Fl. Austr.
Tp

iii.
.

139.

N.

Wales, Victoria, Tasmania,

Australia.

{Staer, 1911.)

METROSIDEEOS,
diffusa

p. 216.

Sm.Hdb.

Fl. N. Zeald.

71. New Zealand, Northiii.

ern Island.

Tp

falcata Dum.-Cours.

Ind. Kew.

{Dorrien- Smith, 1911.)


221.

Australia.

Jp

348

HOETUS MOETOLENSIS
p. 217.
t.

MILTONIA,

Clowesii Lindl.B. M.
schmidt, 1911.)

4109. Brazil. 4.
2|
.

{H. Gold{H. Gold-

flavescens Lindl
Schmidt, 1911.)

Nich. Diet. 368. Brazil


ii.

MIMOSA,

p. 217.

hamata Willd.DC.

427

Fl. Brit. Ind.

ii.

291. India.

MONNINA
-April.

Buiz

<&

Pav.

N.

Pff.

iii.

4.

340. Polygalaceae.

Polygaleae.

ciliolata Mog.

Sessd ex

DC.

i.

340. Mexico. T?

March

{Dar7nstadt, 1910.)
p. 222.

NAKCISSUS,
4.

Pseudo-Narcissus L.

cyclamineus Haiu. Bak. N. cyclamineus Bak. B. M. t. 6950. Portugal.


var.

A7n.

U-

{Miss Willmott, 1910.)

NISSOLIA

Jacq. N. Pff. iii. 3. 317. Leguminosee-PapilionatsB -^schynomeninse. multiflora Rose in U. S. Dept. Agr. Contr. Nat. Herb. v. 161.

Mexico.

^>

{Oaxaca, 1911.)
p. 227.
t.

ODONTOGLOSSUM,
schmidt, 1911.)

grande Lindl.B. M.
nobile Bchb. fil. Colombia. 4.

3955. Guatemala.
Linden. Fl.

1|:

{H. Gold-

0. Pescatorei
271
;

d. S.

t.

1624.

[H. Goldschmidt, 1911.)

OLEARIA,

p. 228.

elliptica

DC.
T?

v.

Fl. Austr.

iii.

483. Queensland, N.

S.

{Dorrien- Smith, 1911.) 474. Queensland, N. Nernstii F. Milll.Fl. Austr. Wales. ^ [Dorrien-Smith, 1911.) nummularifolia Hook. fil.Hdh. Fl. N. Zeald. 127. New Zealand. {Dorrien-Smith, 1911.)
Wales.
iii.

S.

Tp

OLIVERELLA
elegans Bose,

Bose.Btill. N.

York Bot. Gard. 1903,


^

2.

Crassulaceae.
I.

c.

Mexico.
;

24

May-June.

OPUNTIA,

p. 230.

grandis

Pfeiff.

En. 155

Berger in Monatsschrft.
.

171, with figure.

Mexico. ^

f.

K. 1904,

June-July.

SUPPLEMENT
OPUNTIA
{contimied.)

349

guatemalensis Berger.

Nopalea
1.

Smithson. Miscell. Collect, vol. T? mala. {Eichlam, 1910.)

330.

guatemaUnsis Eose in t. 41-42. Guate-

littoralis Britton

^>

May-June.
S.
.

molesta K.
fornia.

K. Schum. Mon. 725. California. Brand. K. ScJmm. Mon. 677. Lower


d
Rose.
Cali-

Tp

(K. S. Brandegee, 1906.)

occidentalis Engelm.
California.

it Bigel. K. Schum. Mon. 725. May-June. oligacantha Salm, Cact. H. Dyck. 241. Tp Mexico.

June-July.

ORNITHOGALUM,
176.

p. 237.

Visianicum Tomm. ex

Vis. in

Dalmatia.
p. 239.

Me7n.

1st.

Venet. xx. 1876,

2^.

April.

OXALIS,

catharinensis N. E. Br.Nich. Diet.

U.

Supj^l.

577. S.
347. S.

Brazil.

April-June.

flabellifolia

Jacq.DC.
i.

i.

702

Fl. Cap.

i.

Africa.

usericea

L.DC.
p.

695

Fl. Cap.

i.

348. S. Africa. 2^.


Minor.
April

PAPAVBR,
-May.

241.
i.

Heldreichii Boiss. Fl. Or.

108.

Asia

1(..

PARKINSONIA,
Torreyana

p. 242.

S.

Wats, in Proc. Am. Acad.

xi.

1876, 135.

Western North America.

{F. Franceschi, 1911.)

PASPALUM

L.N.

dilatatum Poir. Ktmth, En. December-January. 11

Pff.

ii.

2.

33. Gramineffi-Paniceffi.
i.

60.

Argentina, Uruguay.
324.

PASSIFLOEA,

p. 243.
dt

Dictamo Moq.

Sesse

ex

DC.

iii.

Mexico.

T?

{Oaxaca, 1911.)

PENNISETUM,
macrourum
PERSEA,
p. 248.

p. 247.

Trin.

Fl. Cap.
%.

vii.

434.

S. Africa, St.

Helena,

Ascension Island.

June.

carolinensis Nees.
States.
Tj

DC. xv.

1.

50.

South

Eastern United

350

HOKTUS MORTOLENSIS
p. 248.

PERSOONIA,
N.
S.

Lhotsky. DC. xiv. 336 Fl. Austr. v. 402. Wales, Victoria. I? {Staer, 1911.) nutans R. Br.DC. xiv. 335 Fl. Austr. v. 401. P. flexi; . ;

Chamsepeuce

folia Lodd. B. C.

t.

922. N.

S.

Wales. l?

{Staer, 1911.)

PINUS,

p. 255.

pyrenaica Lapeyr. 19 Veitch, Man.


;

DC.
p. 258.

xvi. 2.

384;

Conif. 156.

Pyrenees. ^

W. d Lge.
.

Fl. Hisp.

i.

PITHECOCTENIUM,
cinereum DC.
I?

ix.

195.

Distictis

cm. Greenm.

Mexico.

{Oaxaca, 1911.)
p. 258.

PITTOSPORUM,
Fairchildii

Cheesem. in Trans. N. Zeald. Inst. xx. 147.

New

Zealand.

I.

ij

{Dorrien- Smith, 1911.)

PLEIOGYNIUM
Spondieae.

E7igl. in

N.

Pff.

iii.

5.

151. Anacardiacesei.

Spondias Benth. Fl. Austr. 492. Queensland. 224. CapparidaceaPOLANISIA Baf. N. Cleomoideae. 242. Canada to Mexico. 0. graveolens Baf. DC.
Solandri Engl.
c.

Sol.

ip

Pff.

iii.

2.

i.

Summer.

POTENTILLA,

p. 262.

adscharica Somm. & Lev. Th. Wolf, Mon. Potent. 11. {Th. Wolf, 1911.) Caucasus, Northern Persia i;. argentea L. var. calabra Ser. DC. ii. 577 Fl. d'lt. n. 1790/3; Th. Wolf, Mon. Potent. 266. S. Italy. i;. May. Th. Wolf, Mon. Potent. atrisanguinea Lodd. B. C. t. 786

230. Himalaya. i;. {Th. Wolf, 1911.) Th. Wolf, Mon. Potent. 318. bannehalensis Camh. {Th. Wolf, 1911.) Himalaya. U Th. Wolf, Mon. Potent. 179. chinensis Ser. in DC. ii. 581 Eastern Asia, Japan, Formosa. U. {Th. Wolf, 1911.) Wall.B. M. t. 2700 Hook. f. Brit. Ind. ii. 349 fulgens Th. Wolf, Mon. Potent. 145. Himalaya. 24. {Th. Wolf,

1911.)

Hippiana Lehm. Th. North America. 2^.

Wolf, Mon. Potent. 197.


{Th. Wolf, 1911.)

Western

SUPPLEMENT
POTENTILLA
{continued).

351

hirta L. var. pedata Koch. Th. Wolf, Mon. Potent. 367. Spain to Caucasus. 2;. {Th. Wolf, 1911.)
Th. Wolf, kurdica Boiss. d Hoh.Boiss. Fl. Or. ii. 711 Mon. Potent. 431. Kurdistan. 4. {Th. Wolf, 1911.) Lechenaultiana Ser. in DC. ii. 584 Fl. Brit. Inch ii. 350 {Th. Th. Wolf, Mon. Potent. 167. India, S. China. 2|:.
; ; ;

Wolf, 1911.)

montenegrina Pant. to Montenegro. 2|. nepalensis Hook.B.


Wolf, Mon. Potent. Wolf, 1911.)

Th.
C.
t.

Wolf, Mon. Potent. 447.

Bosnia
355
24:
. ;

{Th. Wolf, 1911.)

1031

Fl. Brit. Incl.

ii.

Th.
{Th.

223. Western Himalaya.

Th. Wolf, Mon. Potent. 432. Spain. {Th. Wolf, 1911.) Newberryi A. Gray. Th. Wolf, Mon. Potent. 394. Western {Th. Wolf, 1911.) North America. pulcherrima Lehm. Th. Wolf, Mon. Potent. 208. Western North America. {Th. Wolf, 1911.) Rydbergiana Bose. Th. Wolf, Mon. Potent. 515. Central
nevadensis
Vr.

Boiss.

S.

If

2f.

Mexico. 2f. {Th. Wolf 1911.) sikkimensis Th. Wolf, Mon. Potent. 169. t. 4. Himalaya. 4. {Th. Wolf, 1911.) thuringiaca Bernh. var. genuina Th. Wolf, Mon. Potent.
,

464. Europe. 2;.

var.

{Th. Wolf, 1911.)

Buquoyana
Wolf,

Th.

Wolf, Mon. Potent. 465.

Bohemia. 2;.
villosa

{Th. Wolf, 1911.)

Pall. Th.

Mon. Potent. 243. N.E. Asia,

N.

W. America. 21:.
Seem,
d;

{Th. Wolf, 1911.)

PRITCHARDIA
pacifica
Islands.

H. Wendl.N.

Pff.

ii.

3.

35. Palmae

-Coryphinae-Sabaleae.

Seem.
.

& H. Wendl.Fl.

d.

S.

t.

2262-3. Fiji

^ {Palerrno, 1911.) 155. Verbenaceae-VerbenoidesePRIVA Adans. N. Priveae. 533 Nich. Diet. 224, Argentina. laevis Juss. DC.
Pff. iv. 3a.
xi.
;

14..

{Haage & Schmidt, 1910.)

PSEUDOPANAX,
chathamicus
ij
.

p. 266.

T. Kirk, Fl.

N. Zeald. 223.

New Zealand.

{Dorrien- Smith, 1911.)

352

HORTUS MOLENSIS
p. 266.

PSIDIUM,

montanum
EANDIA,
f?
.

Stv.

Fl.

W.

Ind. 242.

Jamaica.
xxxiv. 574.

Jp

p. 269.

Nelsoni Greenm.

in Proc.

Am. Acad,

Mexico.

{Oaxaca, 1911.)
p. 269.

RANUNCULUS,

constantinapolitanus Urv. var. palsestinus Boiss. Fl. Or. {Herb, 1911.) i. 49. Asia Minor, Syria. if. Boiss. Fl. Or. Siopjjl- 12. Lebanon. Schweinfurthii 2^.

April-May.

{Vienna, 1910.)

RHIPSALIS,

p. 272.

Tonduzii Web.

K. Schum. Mon. Nachtr. 141. Costa Rica.


in Bev. Hort. 1892, sep. pr. p. 2.

ip

{Gastaud, 1911).

zanzibarica Web.

Zanzi-

bar. Tp.

(Pans, 1908.)
p. 288.

SCHEFFLERA,

Paratropia rotundifolia Tenore, Cat. rotundifolia Ten. {Palermo, 1911.) Nap. 1845, 89. Tp Orto.
.

SEDUM,

p. 291.
xii.

allantoides Bose in Contr. U. S. Nat. Herb. {Weinberg, 1911.) Mexico. 1^.

440.

t.

79.

Treleasii Bose.

Mexico.

21

{Haage & ScJimidt, 1911.)

SOPHORA,

p. 303.

chrysophylla Seem.
{Sydney, 1911.)

Nich.

Diet. 459.

Polynesia.

Praseri Benth. Fl. Austr. ii. 274 Guilfoyle, Austr. PI. fig. v 451. {Sydney, 1911.) Queensland, N. S. Wales.
;

p.

STENOLOBIUM,

p. 311.
iv. 2.

fulvum Sprague in Fl. Cap. DC. ix. 224. Peru. Tp.

448, adnot.

Tecomafiilva

STERCULIA,

alata Boxb.
nobilis B.

Fl. Lid. Brandis, Ind. 360 India. {Proschowsky, 1909.)


Brit.
i.
;

p. 311.

Trees, 83.

Tp

Br.DC.
S.

i.

482

Fl. Brit. Ind.

i.

358

Brandis,
t.

Ind. Trees, 84.

China, Sumatra.

monosperma Vent. ^. {Paler7no, 1911.)

J.

Malm.

91.

SUPPLEMENT
TELFAIRIA Hook.~N.
thrieae-Telfairiinae.
Pff. iv. 5.

353

22. Cucurbitacese-Melo;

pedata Hook,
1911.)

in B.

M.

t.

2751-2

Fl. Trap. Afr.

ii.

523,

Tropical E. Africa, Mascarene Islands.

2^ .

{Schweinfurth,

TEUCEIUM,

p. 317.

massiliense L.
diez, 1911.)

Fl. d'lt. n. 3071.

DC. 585 Gren. d Godr. Fl. Fr. 710 Mediterranean region. {E. Jahanxii.
;

ii.

if.

THUNIA

Bchh. f.N.

Pff.

ii.

6.

122. Orchidace^-Monandr^-

Thuniinae.

alba Bchb. f.N. Pff. I. c.Phajus alhus Lindl. B. M. t 3991 Fl. Brit. Ind. v. 818 King d- Pantl. Orch. Him. iii.
;
;

t.

153. Himalaya. 2^.


p. 320.

{F.

Hanbury, 1908.)

TILLANDSIA,
caespitosa

Leconte.

Bak.

Brom. 175

Florida

ii

{Washington, 1911.)

utriculata

L.~FL W.
S.

Ind. 596

Bak. Brom. 229. Florida,


(Washington, 1911.)

W.

Indies to
p. 321.

America.

if.

TITHONIA,

tubaeformis

(7as5.
t.

H. Sch.

375.

DC 581. Mexico.
v.
ix.

Helianthus
.

ixibaj.

Jacq.

October-December.

{Oaxaca, 1911.)

TOUENEFOETIA,
trichocalycina
1911.)

p. 322.

DC.

517.

Mexico. h

(Oaxaca,

TULIPA,

p. 325.

fulgens Hort.

Origin unknown.

Baker

in Journ. Linn. Soc. xiv. 1874, 285.

If.

Boiss. Fl. Or. Bed. Lil. t. 219 Oculus-solis St. Am. 192 Fl. d'lt. n. 627. Southern Europe, Western Asia. March-April. (Herb, 1^11.) If.
; ;

(Herb, 1^11.)
v.

VITIS,

p. 332.

bracteolata Wall.
(Sprenger, 1911.)

Fl. Brit. Ind.


Gard.
iv.

Lindeni Nich.

Diet.

Himalaya. 188. Colombia. ^


i.

654.

Tp

(Sprenger, 1911.)
"

2 A

NOTES.
Abies.
Several species have been tried, but only A. alba, A. balsamea, A. cilicica, and A. PinsajM are doing well. The latter species is generally reported as inhabiting the Sierra Nevada, but the tree does not occur there its real habitat" being the Sierra de Eonda and the Sierra de las Nieves between Cadiz
;

and Malaga.
Acacia.

Most

of the Australian species

grow very

well.

A great number

were already planted in the autumn of 1867, procured from nurseries in Hyeres others were received from Villa Thuret, Antibes. Some species, such as A. dealhata, A. decnrrens, A. harpophylla, and A. melanoxylon, are long living trees with excellent hard wood, the last-named forming a fine erect stem. Most other species, for
;

instance, A. cyanophylla, A. longifolia, A. armata, A. cyclopis, &c., do not attain any considerable age. A. dealhata, A. Baileyana, A. ijodalyricefolia, and several other species dislike calcareous soil, and are therefore generally grafted on A. retinodes. A. Hanburyaiia is a hybrid between A. dealbata and A, podalyIt has an elegant erect growth and is bluish-glaucous riafolia. throughout. A. De Neufvillei and A. Siebertiana are hybrids

The former has narrow, strangely twisted leaves. These three hybrids originated in Mr. L. Winter's gardens at Bordighera.
between A. pycnantha and A. podalyriafoUa.

The following species (commonly called " Mimosa ") are now extensively planted on the Riviera for the exportation of their flowers A. dealbata, A. pycnantha, A. cultriformis, A.iJodalyricBfolia, A. obliqica, and A. Baileyana.
:

A. sphcerocepkala. Seeds of this plant were sent to us by Dr. Hermann Ross, Keeper of the Royal Herbarium, Munich, who collected them during the summer of 1906, near Mirador, in Mexico. So far the plants, though quite hardy, are small and have not yet flowered. From the form of the spines it seems to be this species rather than the very similar A. spadicigera. Both species have long been
* Willkomm & Lange, Flora Hispanica, i. p. 17. Natunv. Zeitschriftf. Land-u. Forstw. Heft. 8. 1909.

Dr. Neger-Tharandt in

NOTES

355

known to science and were formerly comprised under the name of A. cornigera Willd. They attracted special attention, when Th. These Belt" showed that they were inhabited by small ants. ants live in the large hollow spines, which they perforate. The plants provide them with food and drink the rachis of the leaves bears large black glands, from which, especially in the morning, a fluid exudes, which afi'ords the drink, whilst on the tips of the young leaflets small fleshy appendages are produced for food. The ants, in their turn, defend the plants against herbivorous During the dry season these Acacias lose insects and animals. most of their leaves and the thorns become depopulated, only a few ants surviving.! At La Mortola ants are frequently observed feeding on the glands of the leaves, but not on the fleshy appendages.
;

ACANTHOSICYOS.
A. horrida'Wel-w. The " Naras " of South- West Africa, where it grows on the sand-dunes and constitutes the chief food of the Hottentots,! has been tried several times first in May, 1881, from seeds sent by the late Prof. Charles Naudin, of Villa Thuret (received from the late Sir Joseph Hooker), and in 1898 and 1899 from seeds received through Mr. K. Dinter. The seeds germinated quickly, but the young plants never lived through the winter.
;

Acanthus.
A, arboreus forms large and very decorative bushes. It is quite hardy, flowering abundantly, but has not, so far, produced It was introduced by Prof. G. Schweinfurth from southern seeds. Arabia at the end of last century, and distributed by Cav. C. Sprenger, in Naples. The similar A. montanus does not do so
well.

Acer.
A. ohlongum, an evergreen tree, was grown from seeds received from M. Thuret, Antibes, January, 1870.

ACTINOSTROBUS.
A. pyramidalis, a curious little Conifer, allied to Fitzroya and Callitris, is reported by Parlatore as growing in places which are inundated during winter by the sea, but succeeds at La Mortola in a very dry position. It was grown from seeds given by Messrs. Veitch & Sons, in 1893.

Adenia.
A. repanda Engl, was brought to La Mortola by Mr. K. Dinter from Windhoek, in 1905. It has a large tuber, from which in spring it sends up slender shoots. The plant is dioecious both It is grown sexes are represented. The flowers are insignificant.
;

Th. For

Belt, this

The Naturalist in Nicaragua, p. 218, 1874. myrmecophily see also Schimper, PJlanzengeographie auf

Physiologlscher Grundlage, pp. 154-155. \ Kew Bulletin, 1907, p. 343, plate 1. De Candolle, Prodromus, xvi. 2. p. 444.

2 A 2

356

HORTUS MORTOLENSIS

under

A. Pechuelii was also brought by Mr. C. Dinter in glass. 1905, but did not live long.

Aerides.
A. japonicum has been grown in the open for several years and flowered several times. are indebted for it to Dr. H.

We

Goldschmidt, Essen.
A. umbellatus was

November

27th, 1868

Agapanthus. planted by Sir Thomas Hanbury, procured from Messrs. Veitch & Sons.
first

Agave. Agaves are perfectly at home at La Mortola, attaining their full size. Every year a number of interesting species throw up Only a few tropical species are liable to their tall inflorescences.
suffer during winter.

The foundation of the present collection was laid by a large contribution from Mr. W. Wilson Saunders, of Reigate, whose classical collection of these plants furnished much of the material for Prof. Baker's elaborate account of the genus. The first consignment was received in June, 1868 it contained A. yucccefolia, A. Saundersii, A. laxa, A. Cantala, A. Bumpliii, A. angustifolia, A. stricta, A. Jacqumiana, A. elongata, and three unnamed plants. In spring, 1869, the following were received: A. scabra, A. mitis, A. applanata, A. Bouchei, A.ferox, A. EUevieetiana, A. filamentosa, A. lopliantka, with several varieties of the last-named, and in 1870 A. Bouchei and A. xylonacantlia. Our knowledge of this interesting and beautiful genus is still very incomplete, and the confusion existing in books and gardens regarding their nomenclature is bewildering. Since Jacobi's" and Baker'sf works, the Agaves have not been comprehensively dealt with, and a new and up-to-date monograph is urgently wanted. I am greatly indebted to Prof. Pax, Breslau, for the kind loan of General von Jacobi's drawings and photographs, which were of great help to clear up many doubtful or neglected species, and to Prof. Trelease, Director of the Missouri Botanical Garden, for help in naming several Agaves of our garden, as well as for many of his newly described species. The names given here can, in some cases, only be considered I hope to give before long a full account of the as provisional. Agaves grown at La Mortola.
:

A. americana. This is the plant now seen everywhere in Southern Europe as far north as the Itahan Lakes and Southern Tyrol, and which is particularly abundant on roadsides and rocks
G. A. von Jacobi, " Versuch zu einer systematischen Ordnung der Agaveen," published in Hamburger Gartenzeitung, 1864-1867, and in Abhandlitngen der Schlesischen Ges., Naturw. Abt. 1868-1870. t J. G. Baker, " Tlie Genus Agave," in Gardeners' Chronicle, 1877; reprinted in Baker's Handbook of the Amaryllidece. London, 1888.

NOTES
:

357

along this coast. It has been regarded in all European Floras as the plant of which Linnaeus"''' says " Cortusus plantam primus in Europa habuit 1561, hodie ab ea sepes in Lusitania." have several variegated forms of it var. marginata, var. medio-picta, var. striata and under the name of A. Celsiana Hort. Ital. (not A. Celsii of Hooker !) a form with pale green margins. A. americana takes about fifteen years before arriving at the flowering period.

We

A. angustifoUa.

Under
from Mr.

this

name

plant

was

W. Wilson Saunders

in June,

is identical with what later on in excelsa I do not know. These plants agree with the description and figures of A. angustifoUa as given by Prof. Trelease.f but do not usually produce bulbils with us.

La Mortola Whether this the garden was called A.


brought
to

1868.

A. asperrima. The true A. asperrima is rather rare in gardens, A. marmorata being generally cultivated under its name. Our plants were given to us by Mr. A. Purpus, Botanic Garden, Darmstadt, having been collected by his brother near Viesca, in the State of Cohuahila, Mexico. In general aspect the plant resembles A. Salmiana, but it is smaller and the leaves are extremely rough on both
sides.

A. atrovirens.

With

this species

is

generally united the closely allied A.

Salmiana. A. atrovirens has the leaves more contracted at the base and more acuminate, with a very long and slender terminal spine their colour is an almost shining dark green, very different from the ashy green or grey of A. Salmiana. We also grow a narrow-leaved variety, and a variegated form, A. atrovirens marginata.
;

A. aurea. This species flowered in May-June, 1911, perhaps for the time in Europe. The flowers are of a fine golden yellow.

first

A. barbadensis.
It is " the received from Prof. Trelease. " Coratae " or " the Silk-grass " of Barbados, where

Was

Maypole,"
it

taneous on the lee side and


it

is

is sponplanted in hedgerows from which

escapes.

(Trelease in

litt.)

A. Beguini. This hybrid was given to us in March, 1899, by M. le Chanoine Beguin, of Brignoles (Var), who informs me that it was probably raised in the Pare de la Tete-d'Or in Lyon, and that it was named and distributed by M. Pierre Eebut, at Chazey-d'Azerognes. The parents are not known. It belongs to the Littaa section,
* Caroli Linnaei Species Plantaruni.
t

Second edition,

See Report Missouri Botanical Garden, 1908,

p. 461. p. 279, plates 30-35.

35S

HOKTUS MORTOLENSIS
old,

and forms large patches when


year.

which flower almost every

A. Bouchei. One of the plants received from Mr. W. Wilson Saunders in 1868 flowered for the first time in 1874 and since then has blossomed and fruited every year.
;

A. Cantala.

Another plant from Mr. W. Wilson Saunders's collection; flowered repeatedly and produced quantities of bulbils, from which the plant was largely distributed under the narne of It has established A. vivipara Baker (not A. vivipara Linn.!). itself on half wild places of the garden by means of its bulbils.
A. dasylirioides and A. dealbata are united by Prof. Baker from Jacobi's descriptions and the plate in Bot. Mag. t. 5716 it seems, however, advisable to keep them distinct. A. dasylirioides was grown from seeds received from the Vienna Botanical Garden, 1908.
;

A. decipiens. We are indebted for bulbils of this species to Mrs. MacAdow, Punta Gorda, and to Messrs. Reasoner, Oneco, in Florida.

A. densiflora.

Probably received from Mr.

W. Wilson Saunders

it is

now

large stemless bush, flowering annually.

A. elongata. Often met with in gardens along the Riviera is generally known here as A. rigida or A. Ixtli. It forms a stout stem, 0-501'50 m. high, with a rosette of very stiff, prickly margined leaves. The large panicle is ovate and produces innumerable bulbils. This is the true Henequen.
;

A. Engehnannii. Seeds from the typical plant were sent by Prof. Trelease in March, 1892. The first plant raised from them flowered in 1903, but did not produce any seeds or suckers.
A. ferox. A very stately and ornamental plant. Though nearly related to A. Salmiana and A. atrovirens it presents sufficient characters It was first given to La to be considered a distinct species. Mortola by Mr. W. Wilson Saunders in April, 1869. A. Franceschiana. A new, yet undescribed, species. Its leaves are entire or nearly so, with a few very minute teeth, in shape similar to those of A. Their thick sisalana, but softer, more fleshy and more glaucous. bases form a short round stem. The plant was received under the name of A. angustifolia in April, 1900, from the late Prof.

NOTES

359

It Zacharias, Director of the Botanic Garden, Hamburg. Many of flowered in summer, 1909, and produced many bulbils. these bulbils, while still remaining on the mother plant, in 1910 formed little inflorescences a foot or more long, each carrying

several flowers,

A. Franzosini. Next to A. Sahniana the tallest species, with beautiful greyish white or bluish leaves, and called by Prof. Baker " The Prince of the Agaves." It was introduced at La Mortola about 1878, and flowered for the first time in 1889.
A. Friderici.* This very curious and elegant species was received from some garden as A. Vem-Cricz. It belongs to the " Americanae" section and is one of the taller species. It is remarkable in having the leaves very irregularly toothed and partly unarmed. A. Funkiana. This is an old inhabitant of our garden. Although closely related to A. lophantha, it is in leaf characters quite distinct, and agrees perfectly with Jacobi's description and photograph. A. geminiflora. This species has leaves with fibrous margins. under A. Knightiana.
A. Hanburyi.

See also note

This was named by Prof. Baker during his visit to La Mortola November, 1891. The plant consists of a single rosette, which so far has not produced any sucker and has not grown much since 1897. Below t I give a description of the plant as it is at present as will be seen, this description difl'ers in some respects from that given by Prof. Baker.
in
A. Frlderici Berger, n. sp. ex affinitate A ainencance.B.osnlei acaulis, Folia circ. 35-40, juniora erecta supra medium leviter recurvula, 0-90-1-00 m. longa, basin versus angustata seniora patentia, oblanceolata, et 11cm. lata, crassa, plana, superne tenuiora, carnoso-coriacea, late canaliculata praBsertim apicem versus supra medium 24 cm. lata et hinc sensira acuminata, Iffivia, glauca, ad margines irregulariter dentata, saspissime a basi usque late medium integra vel basi aculeolis paucis instructa, superne m^rginibus et profunde sinuato-dentatis aculeisque validis cornels uncinate in- vel recurvatis 3-5 cm. distantibus et 10 mm. longis juventute rubro-brunneis vel roseis armata, aut etiam medio integra et supra et subtus aculeata, ad apicem profunde canaliculatum spina terminali subulata atrobrunnea 3-4 cm. longa supra canaliculata et per 4-6 cm. decurrente munita. Flores adhuc ignoti. Mexico? Certe
*
.

sobolifei-a.

bona
t

species, vix hybrida hortensis.

40, rigide patentia vel erecto-patentia, e basi 7 cm. lata et ca. 25 mm. crassa sensim acuminata, 36 cm. longa, supra basin plana superne late canaliculata, subtus convexa, subglauca Isevia, ad margines linea cornea continua brunnea cincta et in spinam terminalem robustam 3 cm. longam brunneam supra canaliculatam exeuntia, et a basi ad apicem aculeis marginalibus valde irregularibus tenuibus aetata fere ecoloratis armata, basalibus irregulariter con-

A. Hanburyi Baker

Rosula

simplex, ca. 70 cm. diam.

Folia circ. 35-

Interdura folia dorso fluentibus superioribus distinctis fiexis 7-8 mm. longis. basin versus verrucosoasperiuscula et lineis obscurioribus substriata, et apice carinula aculeisque paucis more Aloarum instructa.

360

HOETUS MOETOLENSIS

A. Haynaldi. Was received in May, 1897, from Dr. H. Ross, then Acting Director of the Botanic Garden, Palermo. It flowered from November, 1910, till March, 1911. A. Henriquesii. Was received in March, 1891, from Prof. Henriques, Director of the Botanic Garden, Coimbra, and from Messrs. Haage & Schmidt, of Erfurt. It flowered for the first time in the summer of 1905.
A. ingens (nom. no v.). The variegated form of this species was described by Prince Salm-Dyck in 1859 as A. picta. He states that it was introduced into the Jardin des Plantes, Paris, and that its normal type was unknown to him. This variegated plant is now very common in all gardens, and has often been confused with variegated forms of A. aviericana, from which it is however readily distinguished by its slender end-spine and differently shaped marginal prickles. The normal green type of the species was first discovered by the author on rocks at La Mortola, where it had grown from seeds of the variegated form." have since sowm seeds of the variegated form, and the seedlings were invariably of the green type. As Salm's name A. picta can only be referred to the variegated form, the green type had to be named. Whether A. Millerioi Salm and other authors has anything to do with it I do not know. A. Milleri Haworth { A. Virginia Mill. Diet. ed. 8, n. 2), however, cannot be the above, as it is said to be " scapo simplicissimo," nor can A. ingens be identified with A. americana L.

We

A. Kanvinskii. The history and intricate synonymy of this species have been cleared up by Prof. Trelease. When old it forms a stem, along which the leaves are disposed in an elongated rosette the plant thus resembles, from a distance, a Yucca rather than an Agave. The Mortola plant was brought from the Botanic Garden, Palermo, in January, 1901.
;

A. Kniglitiana. This plant is generally grown as A. geminiflora, and has also been figured as such by Lindley in Bot. Begister (1828) t. 1145. Mr. Drummond, of Kew, has pointed out t that Lindley's text does not correspond with his plate, and that the latter represents an undescribed species, to which he gave the above name. It differs chiefly from A. geminiflora by having the leaves without any fibres along the margin. I have, however, no experience yet as to the validity of this character and the amount of variation of it in A. geminiflora and A. Knightiana.
*

See my note and figures in Gartemcelt, 1904, p. 337. In Bot. Mag. under plate 8271.

NOTES

361

A. Kochii. This species is closely related to A. xylonacantha, but has It sufficient characters to be considered specifically distinct. flowered in the summer of 1909 and subsequently died, but having produced many seeds we were enabled to propagate and distribute it. It is smaller than A. xylonacantha, and has narrower and

more numerous

leaves.

A. latissima. This plant is known in gardens as A. coccinea, which, of course, resembles it to some extent. It is no doubt the A. latissima of Jacobi, a very distinct species, and by no means a mere variety of A. atrovirens or A. Salmiana. A. Legrelliana.

A most beautiful plant, with enormous orange flowers according to Prof. Trelease the most imposing species when in bloom. Our plant was received through the kindness of Prof. C. F. Baker, when in Santiago de las Vegas, in Cuba, and came from the coast hills of Cojimar. So far the rosette has not produced any sucker. It seems to be hardier than A. Willdingii.
;

A. lurida.

We have at least three different plants under this name. In agreement with Mr. Drummond I retain the name for what is known in gardens here as A. mexicana.
A. macroacantha.

The variety planifolia has the leaves flatter, or even concave above, with smaller marginal spines than the type.
A. marmorata. A very decorative species, with almost white and very rough leaves, was received from Kew and Palermo, and flowered in June, 1911. It has small bright yellow flowers. A. massiliensis.

Probably of garden origin was grown from seeds received from Messrs. Haage & Schmidt, of Erfurt, in March, 1901.
;

A. miradorensis. This plant is now frequently seen, as the inflorescence produces It resembles A. sisalana, but has denticulate leaves. bulbils.
A.
mortolensis.-''-

This seems to be a hybrid which has originated in our garden,


* A. mortolensis Berger, n. hybr. Rosula maxima, acaulis, sobolifera. Folia circ. 25-30, e basi eleganter patentia, erecta vel erecto-patentia, apice recurva, lineari-lanceolata vel e basi lata crassissima 20 cm. lata sensim attenuata et angustata, 1-60 mm. louga, subtus valde convexa, supra late canaliculata apicem versus convoluta, Itevia, glauca, ad margines aculeia crebris late deltoideis in- vel recurvato-uncinatis atrofuscis 15-30 mm. distantibus et 4-5 mm. longis, saepe minore interjecto, armata, apice in spinam 4 cm. longam subulatam supra canaliculatam et per 10-12 cm. decurrentem terminantia. Nondum floruit.

362

HORTUS MORTOLENSIS
It is a very

perhaps a cross between A. imjens and A. Salmiana. stately plant, producing many suckers.
A. neglecta.

Was sent by Prof. Trelease in December, 1911. wild Agave of Florida.


A
.

It is the large

parrasana. This was collected in 1905 on the Sierra de Parras by Mr. C. A. Purpus. The three plants on which the species was founded have not yet flowered.

A. paucifolia. In 1905 we received several plants through Mr. C. A. Purpus from Mexico, without further indication of the locality. One of them flowered in the summer of 1910, and proved to be this species. Some specimens have leaves of a fine brownish violet hue.
A. potatorum. A plant received under this name from the Botanic Garden at Munich, in 1909, seems to agree in every detail with the original description. It is a small plant, allied to A. Scolymus, and quite different from the one erroneously known in gardens as A. potatorum/'' which is in fact A. coarctata Jacobi. A. portoricensis. This, the " Cocuiza," of Porto Rico, was sent to us by Prof. Trelease, April 17th, 1908. It is viviparous. The plant was originally found at Sabanah Grande, at the western end of the
island.

A. Pringlei.

Under this name I found several plants in the garden, apparently all grown from the same seeds, but differing greatly among themselves. One specimen flowered twice and its flowers correspond with those of A. Peacockii as figured on plate 7757 in Bot. Mag., except that the segments were not blotched as shown on the plate. Our plants are probably of hybrid origin. The peduncle, flowers, and capsules seem to present the mixed characters of the sections Littcea and Euagave.
A. pumila. This is the smallest of the genus, t never growing taller than 1 inch or IJ inch it produces some offsets, but has never shown any tendency to flower. The plant agrees exactly with Prof. Baker's description, except that it belongs to his section " Marginatae," and not to the " Submarginatae." It was given us by M. le
;

See Gardeners' Chronicle, 1894, i. p. 628, with Supplement figure of 19th, 1894. Trelease, " The Smallest of the Century Plants," figs. 5 and t See also 14 (in Popular Science Monthly, December, 1910).

May

Wm.

NOTES
Chanoine Beguin,
of A. Simonis.
of Brignoles, in

363

March, 1899, under the name

A. Beginm.

A garden name for a very distinct species with small glaucous rough leaves; may possibly be A. viegalacantha Hemsley. The plant was received from Mr. M, Herb, Naples, in January, 1901.
A. rig id a Hort. As Prof. Trelease has shown," the true
.4.

rigida Mill,

is

not

known

to exist

anywhere

in

cultivation.

The plants generally

called A. rigida in gardens are A. elongata.

A. Rovelliana.

Under this name a small Agave is cultivated, which has the I could not ascerleaves mottled like those of A. Terraccianoi. tain where Todaro has described it, although the species is attributed to him in the " List of Seeds of the Palermo Botanic Garden."
A. Salmiana.

Though somewhat variable, this plant is generally larger than A. atrovirens, and always recognisable by its ashy-grey leaves, which are generally few in a rosette, and very thick and broad at We their base the end-spine is stouter than in A. atrovirens. have several forms and a narrow-leaved variety. A. Salmiana and A. atrovirens are much cultivated in Mexico for "pulque."
;

A. Sartori.

We are indebted for this plant to Prof. A. Borzi, Director of the Palermo Botanic Garden. A plant purchased from Messrs. Haage & Schmidt as ^4. s^j. from Paso del Macho proved to be the same species.
A. Schlechtendalii.
I identified this species with the help of Jacobi's original photograph. It is by no means a form or variety of A. atrovirens, but a very distinct species. It is slow growing, with very glaucous leaves.

A. schidigera.

Though

closely allied to A. filifera, this


It

is

specifically distinct.

never produces

offsets,

without doubt but always dies

after flowering.

A. Schottii. Introduced at La Mortola by Mr. C. A. Purpus from Mexico, in 1905. This throws out suckers freely. A. Scolynms.

Under this name several closely allied plants are grown here. One of them, which approaches the type very closely, flowered in
1909.+

See Report Missotiri Botanical Garden, 1908, pp. 273-279. See my note in Gardeners' Chronicle, 1910, i. p. 422.

364

HORTUS MORTOLENSIS

The plant figured as A. Scolymus in Gartemvelt is now lost, the flowering specimens having produced neither seeds nor It is altogether a different plant, resembling in many suckers. ways A. crenata. I have not seen it elsewhere, and as it is yet undescribed, I give it the name A. calodonta.''
A. Shatvii. Was procured in May, 1905, from Mr. C. A. Purpus,
it

who

sent

from Flagstaff, California.

A. sisalana. This is the plant so much valued and cultivated on a large scale in many tropical countries for its strong fibre, the " Sisal Hemp." It is not a variety of A. rigicla nor of A. elomjata, but a distinct species. It succeeds perfectly well at La Mortola, and is easily propagated by the many hundreds of bulbils, which each plant throws out after having flowered.
A. spectabilis. A very fine species with long linear glaucous leaves, for which we are indebted to Prof. Borzi, of the Botanic Garden, Palermo. received it in January, 1901.

We

A. spicata Cav. Kunth, En. v. 828. In Kew Bulletin (1892, p. 6) Prof. Baker speaks of this as cultivated at La Mortola. The plant is not mentioned in our Catalogue of 1897, nor have I been able to discover it in the garden. A. spiralis. This was sent by Mr. C. A. Purpus from California in 1905. According to my idea it does not differ from A. decipiens, an opinion which is shared by Prof. Trelease.

A. Terraccianoi.

A
is

Was received from the Botanic Garden, BerHn, in July, 1898. plant received from Messrs. Haage & Schmidt as A. maculata evidently the same species.
Our

A. imcinata. This deserves to be considered as a distinct species. plant agrees with Jacobi's description and photograph.

A. Verschaffeltii. A rather variable species, closely allied to A. Scolymus. We are indebted for several plants to Mr. A. Purpus, of the Botanic Garden, Darmstadt, whose brother, Mr. C. A. Purpus, collected them near Puebla, Mexico.

A. VictoricB-BegincB var. laxior.

Was

received

from

Mexico

through

Messrs.

Nabonnand,

* A. calodonta Berger, n. sp. A. Scohjmus Berger (not of Karwinski) in Gartcnwelt, 1898, ii. p. 603, with figure.

NOTES

365

It differs from the type by having fewer Golfe-Juan, in 1903. From leaves in the rosette, which therefore looks much looser. a horticultm-al point of view it is much less beautiful than the

type.

A. Villarum. Said to be a hybrid grown from seeds of ^4. filifera fertilized by A. xylonacantka. One of the brothers Villa, Cesare Villa, was head gardener at La Mortola. A. Weber i.

Eeceived from the late Dr. A. Weber, Paris, and again from the Jardin des Plantes in 1910. This species is cultivated north of San Luis Potosi for the production of the Mexican national It was first brought to Paris by Dr. beverage, the " pulque." Weber in 1866. also have a plant from Puebla, collected by Mr. C. A. Purpus.

We

A. Wercklei. This was received from Mr. C. Werckle by Dr. A. Weber, who gave it to La Mortola in September, 1901. Mr. C. Werckle sent it again in 1911.
A. Willdingii. Was nearly killed by frost in January, 1905, but flowered subsequently in the summer and produced several bulbils. have very similar and possibly identical young plants in cultivation, the seeds of which were sent by Prof. C. 1\ Baker, March, 1907. They were collected by Mr. van Hermann on the summit of the Sierra Pinar del Kio, Cuba.

We

A. xylonacantka v. mediopicta. This rare plant was received from the late Mr. Justus Corderoy, of Blewbury, Didcot. A. zaintpe. Is the plant grown as " Zapupe " for its fibre between Vera Cruz and Victoria. The plant was sent by the author in 1909.

Akebia.

Both

species do well and flower abundantly, but have never

fruited here.

Albeeta.
A. magna, a beautiful shrub, has been tried several times, but so far without success.

Aloe. These plants generally thrive very well at La Mortola, especially those from the Cape. They are so well acclimatized that they have adapted their flowering season to our latitude. Many, including the most beautiful species, which flower in their South African home during June-July, flower here from Christmas till spring and are at this time a great ornament to the garden.

366

HOETUS MORTOLENSIS
sensitive to frost

Buds and flowers are, however, very damaged during cold winters.
For a
full

and easily

account of the Aloes and allied genera cultivated at

La Mortola
It

number of seeds of these plants. We must be remembered, however, that they are very often the product of fertilization by bees, from which numberless hybrids
result.

see my monograph." distribute annually a large

A. abyssinica. For the intricate synonymy and history of this species see my monograph. The plant has been largely distributed in gardens under the names of A. elegans and A. Peacockii. Its hybrid with A. striata (syn. A. Hanhuryana) originated at La Mortola. It is an attractive plant with the habit of A.
abyssinica.

A. (Bthiopica.
It

The single specimen of this plant used to flower at Christmas. was figured in Bot. Mag. t. 7667 under the wrong name of A. The plant suffered during the winter of 1901 Schweinfurthii.

and subsequently died. It is a native of Abyssinia and grows near Abba Gerima at an elevation of 6-9000 feet. The plant never produced seeds, not even by artificial impollination, nor offshoots, and it has not been possible to procure another specimen. A.
land,

ScJmeinfurthii, quite a different plant, and has never been introduced.

is

a native of

Niam-Niam-

A. arbor escens.
large
(var. Milleri) has a tall stem, green leaves, and a pyramidal spike of deep red flowers. It is rather rare. There is a good specimen of it in the Temperate House at Kew. Very near to it comes the var. Ucrice, with longer, more falcate Var. viriclifolia has broad leaves and shorter and paler flowers. green leaves and paler flowers than the type. Var. natalensis has the flowers similar to the type, but very glaucous leaves. It is generally accepted for instance, by Prince Salm-Dyck as the

The type

true A. arborescens. On the Riviera, where it is commonly cultiVar. pacJiythyrsa vated, it flowers from December to February. is similar to it, but the leaves are stouter and even more glaucous the flowers, in very thick racemes, are larger and showier. Var. frutescens is hardly distinguishable from var. natalensis when out It is Its spikes are much shorter and appear later. of flower. the most commonly planted variety, though less attractive. For a more detailed account see my monograph. A. arborescens and \qx. frutescens were first brought from Kew anbury, in July, 1868, and the former again from by Mr. Daniel Villa Thuret, in October, 1871.
;

*
iii.

A. Engler, Bag Pjlanzenreich, Regni vegetabilis conspectus. Part Alwin Berger, Liliaceie-Asphodeloidem-Aloinece. Leipzig, 1908.

iv. 38,

NOTES
A. aristata.

367

During the diy summer the rosettes close entirely, being wrapped up by the old withered leaves, and nearly buried in the ground they open again with the first autumnal rains.
;

A. Bainesii.

We
height

is

have a young vigorous plant of this species. Its total now 3-50 m., its stem 1-90 m. with a diameter of 19 cm.

So far it has not flowered. It requires a very sheltered place, and is apt to sufl'er during a cold winter.
A. hamangioatensis. This is an interesting form of the widely spread A. zehrina. It was sent us by the author. Prof. S. Schoenland, of Grahamstown,
in

May, 1905.
ccBsia.

A.

This pretty arborescent Aloe is often seen on the Riviera. flowers on into the summer, but seldom fruits.
A.

It

Gameroni.

A
and

is

It is not quite hardy tropical species received from Kew. often damaged during winter, but nevertheless flowers

annually.

A. capitata. Was introduced by the late Max Leichtlin, of Baden-Baden. A fine specimen flowered in the open in May, 1899, and produced
seeds, from which it was propagated and distributed. The old plant, figured in my monograph, was killed by frost in January, 1901.

A.

ciliaris.

sent to La Mortola by Mr. Daniel Hanbury in August, now forms large bushes with intertwining branches, From which occasionally climb up trees nearly 10 m. high.

Was first
It

1870.

December

to

March

it is

mass

of

gorgeous flowers.

A. commutata. When out of flower this is difficult to distinguish from A. saponaria. A. tricolor Baker certainly belongs to the same species and is scarcely a variety.

A. Corderoyi. This hybrid was raised by the late Mr. Justus Corderoy between A. plicatilis and A. variegata, the extremes of the genus. It is a dichotomously branched shrub. It flowered first at La Mortola in May, 1907. For a full description of this curious plant see my monograph of the genus.
A.

Davy ana.

Was kindly sent by Prof. S. Schoenland in May, 1905. It flowered in March, 1907. A very similar plant was found in the garden, without label, in 1897. Its origin is unknown.

368

HORTUS MORTOLENSIS

A, Dawei. Only succeeds in very sheltered places. It was grown from seeds sent from Entebbe by Mr. Dawe in 1905. A. dichotoma. One of the giants of the genus is only represented by a few seedlings, which are of slow growth. They came from seeds sent from German South West Africa by Mr. K. Dinter.
;

A. eru.

the plant almost invariably seen in gardens under the of A. abyssinica. It w^as re-introduced by Prof. Schweinfurth. There are several forms, named by Cav. C. Sprenger, Naples, from whom we received the following erecta, glauca, mamilata, and 'parviimncta.
is

This

wrong name

A. ferox. Seeds of this species, which, next to A. supralcevis, yields most of the drug Aloe,'''- were introduced to La Mortola in June, 1872, by Mr. Daniel Hanbury, probably received from Prof. MacOwan. Further, seeds of " a medicinal Aloe of Natal, 10-15 feet high," were sent in 1871, no doubt from the same source. From these seeds all the tall specimens in the garden must have grown. The variety xanthostaclujs has flower-spikes entirely yellow, whilst in the type the buds are red and the open flowers yellow.
A. Greenii. This was received, in 1905, from Mr. I. Lynch, of Cambridge, and Prof. S. Schoenland, of Grahamstown. It grows and flowers abundantly, though rather sensitive to cold. A. hereroensis. This has been repeatedly tried, but has never succeeded for any considerable period.

A. lateritia. Is rather tender. It has flowers of an extremely fine glossy red. We are indebted for the plant to Prof. Dr. A. Engler, Director of the Botanic Garden, Dahlem, who brought it from Mount Bomule, near Amani, German East Africa, in 1902.

A. longiflora.
It

Belongs to the section " Principales," and has yellow flowers. was received from Glasnevin through Mr. (now Sir Frederick)

Moore, in 1906.
A. Marlothii. Was kindly sent by Dr. R. Marloth, of Cape Town, in 1905. It belongs to the section " Pachydendron," and is allied to A. ferox, but has the leaves more prickly on both sides, and the branches of the inflorescence spread almost horizontally.

Fliickiger

&

Hanbury, Pharmacographia,

p.

616; second edition,

p. 679.

NOTES

369

A. mortolensis. Is a hybrid between A. variegata and Gasteria acinacifolia. It is probably one of the hybrids raised by M. le Chanoine Beguin, in Brignoles.
A. PeglercB. Was received from Prof. Schoenland, of Grahamstown, in 1905, and recently again from Kew.

A. pendens. This was received July, 1898, from the Eoyal Botanic Garden at Berlin, where it was introduced through Prof. Schweinfurth. It flowered for the first time in March, 1902, and was figured in
Bot.

Mag.

t.

7837.

A. percrassa.

Of this we only possess the variety with large bracts (var. saganeitiana Berger).
A. Perry i. This is the plant yielding the Socotrine aloe.* Seeds of it were received through Prof. R. von Wettstein, of Vienna, in February, 1901, but the plant perished during the winter of 1910-11.
A. pUcatilis.

Cooper

procured by Mr. Daniel Hanbury from Mr. Thomas and again in October, 1871. It forms little trees or bushes and grows but slowly.
first

Was

in July, 1868,

A. pratensis.

bought in July, 1888, from Prince Troubetzkoy's garden and came from Basutoland.j We have only this single rosette, which flowers annually without producing seeds or
at Borghetto,
offsets.

Was

A. rubrolutea. Next to A. clichotoma the largest species in South Western Africa, was recently introduced, having been collected by Mr. Kurt Dinter, in German South West Africa, and by Mr. H. Baum, of Rostock, on the Cunene River. It flowered first at La Mortola in November, 1907, and was figured in Bot. Mag. t. 8263. The flowers resemble very closely those of A. percrassa, which is, however, a stemless plant. A. rubrolutea is perhaps not different from A. litoralis Bak.
A. rubroviolacea.

One of Prof. Schweinfurth's numerous introductions, was received from the Berlin Botanic Garden in July, 1898, and flowered for the first time in April, 1900. The plant was figured in Bot. Mag. 1903, t. 7882. From the seeds came a number of
hybrids with very fine flowers.

Fliickiger

& Hanbury,

Pharmacographia, p. 622
J.

This

is

the plant mentioned by Prof.

second edition, p. 684. G. Baker in Fl. Cap. vi. 308.


;

2 B

370

HORTUS MORTOLENSIS

A, Salmdyckicma. Prince Salm-Dyck states that he first beHeved this species to be A. africana, under which name he saw it in the Imperial Garden, at Schoenbrunn, in 1815. This name is still much in use for it, and was found attached, in 1897, to plants probably bought by Mr. Daniel Hanbury in April, 1872, from M. Pfersdorff, in Paris. It is one of the finest arborescent species, with fiery red, long Our tallest specimen is about 2-50 m. high, and flower spikes. composed of five big stems, each 50 cm. in circumference at their bases hundreds of smaller rosettes have formed. The Yunety fulgens is distinguished by more channelled leaves and even more robust stems. Our tallest specimen is 300 m. high.
'''

A. spuria. Is a plant of unknown origin, which I found in the garden as It has very long flowers, and may be a hybrid. A. conwmtata.
A. striata {A. Hanhuryana). The seeds of this were received from Prof. MacOwan in April, "Aloe, dwarf species, leaves rosulate, 1873, and entered as: thick, red margined, flower stem 2 feet high, flowers scarlet, very handsome. Mr. MacOwan wishes to be told if this succeeds" (D. H.). "Aloe alboLater on Mr. Daniel Hanbury added a note: cincta " (a synonym of A. striata). A small plant was given by Mr. Daniel Hanbury to Prof. Charles Naudin,f who believed it to be a new species, and described it as A. Hanhuryana, a name which unfortunately cannot stand.

A. Steudneri.

"Was collected in Eritrea by Prof. Penzig and Prof. Schweinand presented by the former to the garden in 1901 as an unnamed species. It first flowered in 1911, and could be identified
furth,

as this rare and, so far, insufficiently

known

species.

A. Straussii.\ This new species

was received

in 1910,

from the Royal Botanic

* Aloe africana Mill, is a rare plant in gardens. I saw it in flower in the Public Gardens of Monaco in November, 1911. There is a good figure of it in Bot. Mag. t. 2517. t Then at CoUioure in the Department of the Eastern Pyrenees, Eosula acaulis, circ. 15-foliata, 40 cm. lata \ A. Straussii Berger, n. sp. Folia patentia leviter in- vel recurvula, 18-20 cm. longa at 55et 22 cm. alta. 62 mm. lata, 8 mm. crassa, carnosa, mollia, lanceolato-deltoidea apicecontractoacuminatis, supra pauUum canaliculata obscure viridia vel viridi-brunnea maculisque ssepe geminatis oblongis irregulariter transverse fasciata, subtus magia maculata et obscure striata basin versus fere albida, ad margines linea cartilaginea tenui cincta aculeisque deltoideis gracilibus acutis sed baud pungentibus 2-4 mm. Pedunculus simplex (semper?) 45 cm. altus longis pallidis vel rubellis dentata. bracteae anguste deltoidese nudus brunneus, racemo brevi laxo 18-20-floro pedicelli erecto patentes rubelli 3 cm. longi. Periancuspidatae, 15 mm. longiie thium 32 mm. longum basi inflatum supra ovarium constrictum hinc pauUum decurvatum et inflatum segmentis brevibus ovato-deltoideis recurvulis luteolis faucem rotundam formantibus antherae breviter exsertae. Affinis A. lateritice, sed differt floribus pallidioribus minus curvatis et circa ovarium et faucem versus minus ampliatis, foliisque minus carnosis apice contracto-acuminatis dentibusque cartilagineis crebrioribus.

NOTES
Garden, Dahlem, through Mr. H. Strauss.
It

371

was

collected

by
It

the late Mr. Walter Gotze in German East Africa in 1899. has proved quite hardy at La Mortola.

A. striatula. The history of this species is rather complicated. It was first introduced at Kew by Bowie in 1823, and described as A. striatula by Haworth in 1825. Of this plant two beautiful watercolour drawings were made which are in the Royal Herbarium at Kew. It had previously been collected by Burchell in 1813. Later on Prof. MacOwan collected the same plant in woods of the Boschberg, and sent dried specimens to Kew and living specimens to La Mortola. The dried material was described as a new species in 1880 {A. Macowanii), and the living plant at La Mortola, in 1892, as A. aurantiaca. Dr. Otto Kuntze collected near East London, and named A. cascadensis, what is most likely the same plant, which has thus received four names. Our plants agree exactly with the watercolour drawings of

Haworth's type.
A. succotrina. This plant became known to science at the beginning of the seventeenth century, and got introduced into most botanical gardens. Its native habitat was forgotten for nearly two hundred years, and amongst other localities even Socotra was credited with being its home until the mystery was solved a few years ago by Dr. R. Marloth's rediscovery of the species in a hidden glen of the Table Mountain. -= Most pharmaceutical text-books erroneously mention A. succotrina as the chief supplier of the drug " Cape Aloe," but it is chiefly the following species and A.ferox which supply this commodity. A. supralcevis. A native of Southern and South Eastern Cape Colony, is very similar to the Natal ^. ferox, but its flowers are always disposed in dense cylindrical spikes, and are not bent to one side only, as in A.ferox. No doubt it was grown here from seeds sent by Prof.

MacOwan.
A. vera. This was at one time much cultivated in Barbados! for the production of the drug. Though found in the Mediterranean region it is probably not a native there, but was most likely introduced from the Canaries and Cape Verd Islands. On the Riviera it is not quite hardy, and is liable to suffer in the cold nights of late autumn and winter.

E. Marloth, "Notes on Ala succotrina Lam." in Trans. South African Philos. Soc. vol. xvi. part 3 (August, 190(5), pp. 213-215. G. Freemann, " The Aloe Industry of Barbados," in West Indian t Bulletin, iii. (1902), pp. 178-188.

Wm.

2 B 2

372

HORTUS MORTOLENSIS
Anisacanthus.

A. coccineiis, a shrub with pretty red flowers on long slender branches, was given us by the late Dr. Otto Kuntze, of San Remo. It is evergreen, whilst A. Wrightii is deciduous and lea^ess during winter.

Anona.
A. GherimoUa (the Cherimoya), a native of Peru, Colombia, Venezuela, and Brazil, has never produced fruits at La Mortola, but does so in several gardens in Southern France, for instance,
in Villa

Hindoue, Garavan.

Anthocercis.
A. viscosa has been
lost.

A. (Bthiojnca

Thuret in

Antholyza. grown from seeds received from Villa January, 1870. It is now almost a weed in the garden,

was

first

but useful for covering bare places under trees with a pleasant green during winter and spring. It flowers and seeds freely. The flowers are much visited by small birds {Silvia sp. ?) which pick holes in the bottom of the flower tube so as to get easy access to the honey. Our plants correspond with the figure given in Bot. Becjister on plate 1159 (var. bicolor Baker, Fl. Cap. vi. 167). We also have a few plants with larger flowers, which may be var. immarginata

Bak.

I.e.

A R alia.
in gardens under this generic name are not as yet exactly determined, and are not true Aralias. Of most of them the flowers are unknown.

Most

of the plants

grown

Araucaria.
do quite well except A. brasiliensis and A. imbricata, for w^hich the climate seems unsuitable. A. Bidwilli succeeds very well in many other gardens on the Riviera, but here the soil is most likely too dry for it. A. Cunninghami was grown from seeds sent by Mr. Daniel Hanbury in June, 1872. The tree is now about 15 m. high, and the circumference of the stem is 1*70 m. at the base. A. excelsa was bought from the Jardin d'Essai, Hamma, Algeria, in February, 1873. The largest specimen is now about 22-50 m. high. The stem measures 143 m. in circumference. The Araucarias frequently bear cones, but I have not seen any seedlings grown from them. Old trees often become rather bare, but if the branches are judiciously pruned they will soon put out a great many branchlets.
of the species

Some

Arbutus.
A. Unedo, a native of this coast, but chiefly growing on sandstone, was first brought from Hyeres in December, 1867. The largest tree is about 6-50 m. high, with a stem of 1 m. in circumference. The fruits of A. Unedo are often seen on the market,

NOTES
Archontophgenix.

373

A. Cunningliamii, known in gardens as Seaforthia elegans, though quite hardy and producing seeds freely in some gardens in Garavan, has suifered severely from cold several times at La Mortola.

Argania.
A. Sideroxylon, the Argan tree of Morocco, was introduced by seeds received from Mr. Daniel Hanbury in March, 1870. At La Mortola it is a thorny shrub, producing fruits the size of an olive. A kind of oil is made in Morocco from these fruits (graines d'Argans). The wood is very hard."

Aristolochia.
tropical species, such as A. grancliflora, require shelter under glass, but then flower in profusion. A. brasiliensis was grown for several years on an olive tree and flowered well. A. elegans, if grown in the open, seldom flowers.

The

The

first

Bambusa. Bamboos, including Arunclinaria and Phyllostachys,

were planted in February, 1873, having been procured from the Jardin d'Essai, at Hamma, in Algeria. In 1904 another large collection was presented to the garden by Mr. Geoffroy St. Hilaire, of Gros Pin, Hyeres.
Banksia. Of B. granclis we had a fine specimen about 15 feet high, which flowered and fruited freely. It was received from Kew in January, 1879, and died in the summer of 1899. It has been impossible to replace it. Of B. marcescens there was a large tree near the house, which was given to Mr. Daniel Hanbury by

M. Thuret, October

31st, 1871.

This died in the winter of 1905,

and was replaced by a younger specimen received from the Imperial Gardens at Schonbrunn. Probably Banksias do not become old trees, as they die without any obvious cause, often very suddenly.

Beaucarnea.
group Nolinece was considered by Engler as consisting of two genera only, namely Nolina and Dasylirion.j- The genus BeaiLcarnea was merged under Nolina. Eecently, however, American botanists have re-established this genus of Lemaire and added a new one. I According to Prof. Trelease these four genera can be distinguished as follows

So

far the

* There i8 an interesting account of this plant in Hooker's Journal of Botany, vi. (185i), pp. 97-107, plates 3-4. t Engler in Kngler und Prantl, NatilrUche Pflanzenfamilien, ii. 5, p. 71

(1888).
\

The

Calibanus, Rose in Oontrib. U.S. National Herbarium, x. p. 90 (1906). desert group NoUnece, by William Trelease, in Proc. Ainer. Phil. Soc.

vol.1, pp.

405-443 (1911).

374
A.

HOETUS MOETOLENSIS
Ovary
a.

B.

Leaves serrulate-roughened. 3-celled fruit wingless. Fruit deeply 31obed, often inflated seeds nearly globose, fleshy walled. Pedicels articulated rather far below Nolina. the flowers b. Fruit globose-triangular, not lobed or inflated seed melon-shaped, thin walled. Pedicels articulated close to the flowers Calibanus. Ovary 1-celled fruit 3-sided and 3-winged, not lobed or inflated. a. Pedicels articulated somewhat below the flowers. Perianth segments entire, acute. Leaves serrulately Beaucariiea. roughened on the margin. Inflorescence a panicle b. Pedicels articulated close to the flowers. Perianth segments denticulated, rather obtuse. Leaves on the margin (except the square-leaved species D. longissimitm Lem. = D. quadrangulatum Wats.) armed with strong prickles and usually also serrulately roughened. Inflorescence a stout compound Dasylirion. spike
; ;

.......
.

Beaucarneas are stately arborescent plants with a stem more or less swollen at the base. Of B. gracilis seeds and seedlings were received from Mr. Purpus, of Darmstadt Botanic Garden, from

The

the Dendrol. Ges. Vienna, and from Dr. Rose, of Washington. largest specimen of B. recurvata is now 3-50 m. high, has six branches and a stem of 2-55 m. circumference at the base. It was bought from Prince Troubetzkoy's garden in July, 1888.

Beschorneria.
Beschornerias are very decorative plants. The species are closely allied, some of them probably but forms of B. yuccoides.''B. yuccoides was first bought by Mr. Daniel Hanbury from M. van Geert, in Ghent, in August, 1872. B. argyrophylla was received from Mr. Geoffroy St. Hilaire, Gros Pin, Hy6res, in March, 1902. A yet unnamed plant was kindly sent by Dr. J. N. Rose, of the United States National Museum at Washington, in November, 1906. It was collected by him and Dr. Pringle (n. 19259) in the valley of Mexico at an elevation of 10,000 feet.

BiGNONIA.

keep this old genus partly in the sense of De Candolle, but have followed more recent monographers, where it was possible to do so. Schumann's arrangement in N. Pff. iv. 3b. is difficult to follow, as it is impossible to place well-known garden plants, if fruits are wanting.
I

B. Tioeediana is a rampant climber, easily covering walls and rocks, flowering and fruiting abundantly. Mr. D. Hanbury received it from Prof. Decaisne, of the Jardin des Plantes, in Paris.

BiLLBERGIA. good many species are quite hardy and free flowering some do well as epiphytes on trees. The hybrid B. Leopoldi x Moreli was raised thirty years ago by Dr. Attilio Ragionieri, of Castello,

See

my

note in Gardeners' Chronicle, 1906,

ii.

p. 350.

NOTES

375

near Florence. So far the plant has not flowered, neither have the three large specimens which Dr. Eagionieri sent us in October,
1909.

BOCCONIA.
B. frutescens, a shrub with decorative leaves but insignificant flowers, was received in February, 1902, from Cav. C. Sprenger, of Naples.

BOUGAINVILLEA.

The variety a feature of Eiviera gardens. lateritia, also known as B. Warscewiczii, only differs in the brickred colour of its bracts and in being somewhat less hairy than the type. B. glabra and its lower form or variety Sanderiana are shrubs with glabrous leaves, and almost equally decorative. I
B. spectahilis
is

have not seen Bougainvilleas producing fruits. Bougainvilleas were first bought from the Jardin d'Essai, Hamma, Algeria, in February, 1873.

Brachychiton.
B. acerifolius, the " Flame tree," does not blossom every year, but in some seasons it is literally covered with flowers. Our largest plant is 7-40 m. high and its stem has 87 cm. circumB. Bichuilli is a smaller tree, producing every ference at base. summer beautiful red flowers and ripening fruits. Its var. planior has more opaque and flatter leaves. B. luridus, a very handsome B. populnem is frequently young tree, has not yet flowered. planted along the Eiviera. B. ruijestre was received from Kew in January, 1879. It is growing very slowly and has not made much progress in height during the fifteen years that I have observed it, except that the stem has become much thicker at the base and the plant is more branched. It is now a small tree with conical

stem and pyramidal crown.

BUDDLEIA.
Buddleias are among the most beautiful plants in the garden. B. madagascariensis is a huge climber covered in spring with hundreds of long fine yellow racemes. B. auriculata is a smaller, white-flowered not climbing shrub. B. americana forms a large shrub or almost a tree with stems of considerable size. It was B. received from Villa Thuret and planted in November, 1874. globosa was procured from Messrs. Veitch & Sons by Mr. Daniel Hanbury in January, 1868. B. Colvilei (not B. Colvillei) came from Kew some years ago, but does not grow so well here, nor has
it

ever flowered.

Buxus.
B. balearica, procured from Hyeres in December, 1867, slow growing small tree. Calibanus.
is

A monotypic new genus of NoUnecB; see note C. Hookerii Trelease is the exact name now for
erii

Lem.

nnder Beaucamea. DasyUrion HookThe plant has a depressed globose trunk with numerous

die

HORTUS MORTOLENSlS
of

crowns
1871.

leaves.

It

was received from Kew

in

November,

Callistemon. Tliese Australian shrubs do very well on the Riviera and They mostly flower in early resist a good deal of drought. summer. Some twenty plants of different species were procured from Messrs. Huber & Co., of Hyferes, in the autumn of 1867. C. lanceolatiLs, C. linearis, and G. rigidus were grown from seeds received from Villa Thuret, in February, 1869.
Callitbis. Seeds of C. quadrivalvis were received from M. Thuret, There are now many small trees in Antibes, in February, 1869.
the valley and in the garden. The wood is hard, fine-grained, and very beautiful when polished. It was highly prized by the Romans under the name of Citrus."

Calodendeon capense.
Seeds of this were sent from the Cape by the late Prof. MacOwan in November, 1870. From these a large tree was grown, which did not flower until July, 1903, but now blossoms This tree loses its leaves in spring for a few weeks, annually.! whilst some younger individuals remain leafless for a longer period. At present the tree is about lO'oO m. high with a stem of 1*20 m. circumference at the base.

Caltha.
C. polypetala was brought ten years ago from the Vatican Gardens by Miss Hanbury. It much resembles C. palustris but is far more vigorous.

Canarina Campanula.
interesting climber with a large fleshy rootstock. It rests during summer and completely dies down, but begins to grow in It is rather the autumn and flowers from midwinter to spring. The fruits (produced here only after artificial sensitive to frost. impollination) are eaten on the Canaries, where they are known as " Bicarro."

An

Cantua.
C. buxifolia was given to Mr. Daniel Hanbury by M. Thuret, of Antibes, in October, 1871. It is a most beautiful shrub, when in flower, but rather unsightly when at rest during summer. C. species,

two equally interesting and beautiful from the garden. They came from the Imperial Gardens at Schonbrunn.
hicolor
C. pyrifolia,

and

are

now

lost

Cappaeis.
C. spifiosa, the

common

caper, is planted

on walls

all

along

* See Strasburger, Rambles on the Riviera. t See note in Gardeners' Chronicle, 1903, ii.

p. 69,

and

figure in Gardeners''

Chronicle, 1883,

i.

p.

217.

NOTES

377

Its variety rupestris, the Eiviera, but is never seen to fruit here. vifhich is distinguished by herbaceous and deciduous (not woody and spinescent) stipules, fruits abundantly.

Caealluma.
cremdata was sent by Lt.-Col. Dr. D. Prain, when Director of the Calcutta Botanic Garden, from the Shan Plateau in Burma, in April, 1903. It flowered freely in August of the same year, but did not live long. C. europcea and its varieties are doing very well. The type collected on the Island of Lampedusa was sent in 1908 by the late Dr. Levier, from Florence var. Simonis was gathered in Tunisia by Dr. A. Aaronsohn in April, 1909.
C.
;

It was sent C. Nebroivnii is the giant of the cultivated species. by Mr. K. Dinter and flowered repeatedly. One specimen was Other species have been received figured in Bot. Mag. t. 8267. from Mr. N. E. Brown, of Kew Mr. K. Dinter, of Okahandya Cav. C. Sprenger, of Naples; Mr. G. Capelle, of Springe, &c.
;

Carica.
C.

canclamarcensis was

in cultivation for a

number

of years,

and produced fruits, but was killed by frost in January, 1901. The other species are deciduous The plants were 2-3 m. high. and more hardy. Seeds of C. quercifolia were received from Cav.
C. Sprenger, Naples, in February, 1902.

Casimiroa edulis.
sent out from England by Mr. Daniel They have grown into fine Hanbury, September 22nd, 1869. trees, about 9 m. high, flower every year, and often produce a good crop of fruit in October. The fruit is delicious when eaten at once, but becomes very bitter after a few days.

Two

plants were

Castanospeemum australe.
tree, which does quite well in a garden at Garavan (Chalet des Kosiers), does not succeed at La Mortola, though it has been tried in almost every place in the garden. It is an evergreen, quick growing tree with interesting and The fruits are edible when roasted, as are beautiful flowers.* chestnuts, hence the name.

This beautiful

Casuarina, These are excellent garden trees, much planted along the Eiviera. The tallest species, which is more or less pyramidal in It has slender 6-8 ribbed branchlets, and habit, is C. suberosa. Our largest tree is small, somewhat elongate or oblong cones. about 17 m. high with a stem of 2-20 m. in circumference. C. Cunninghamiana comes very near it, but has even finer C. stricta, the branchlets, and smaller, nearly globular cones. '.'She oak" of the Australian colonists, has long pendulous 9-14
*

See

my

note in Gardeners' Chronicle, 1905,

ii.

p. 245.

378

HORTUS MORTOLENSIS
;

valves.

the rather large cones are ovoid with acute ribbed branchlets C. glauca is a smaller tree with somewhat thick and roundish 10-12 ribbed branchlets. A plant received in 1902 as G. sumatrana from Messrs. Veitch & Sons I presume to be the widely distributed and more tropical Similar in habit is another tree, which may be C. equisetifolia. Neither has yet fruited. C. torulosa. Casuarinas produce an excellent, very hard wood.'''

Catha edulis.
first planted by Sir Thomas Hanbury, November 27th, 1868, who had procured it from Messrs. Veitch & Sons. In Southern Arabia the plant is known as " Kat," of which the Latin name is an adaptation. The Arabs chew the leaves for a tonic, and also make something like a tea from

An

evergreen shrub,

them.f

Cedeus. Of this genus C. Deodara is doing best. C. atlantica and especially G, Lihani are apt to die without visible cause, probably on account of our long summer drought.

Ceratonia Siliqua.
Locust-bean tree," or " Carob Twelve young trees were planted in December, 1867; they are now fine large trees, mostly male, the tallest measuring 8-00 m. with a stem of 2-50 m. in circumference.

The

" St. John's bread tree," "

tree."

Cerbera lactaria.
This beautiful plant has been tried, like Plumiera alba and P. rubra, but cannot be grown in the open.

Cercis Siliquastrum.
the " Judas tree," is extremely beautiful when Our specimen is 8"00 in flower. It is a native of this coast. m. high, with a stem of 2-00 m. in circumference at the base.

Known

as

Cereus. In June, 1868, Mr. Daniel Hanbury brought two large cuttings of G. peruviamis from Nice, and planted them against a wall. Strangely enough, however, G. peruvianus does not succeed in most parts of the garden, though it grows well in the neighbourhood, otherwise these first two cuttings ought to have grown by
into big trees. He also planted, in July of the same year, G. tortuosiis, and G. triangularis, which he had received from Kew, and G. hamatus, which was obtained from

now

G. nycticalus,

* About the industrial value of Casuarina see F. von Mueller, Select ExtraTropical Plants, pp. 76, 77. t For a full account of its use see AlbertBeitter, Pharmacoynostisch-ehemUche Untcrmchung der Catha edulis (Strassburg, 1900).

NOTES

379

Mr. Thomas Cooper, of Eeigate. All these species are still in the garden, and some are no doubt the original specimens planted by Mr. Daniel Hanbury. In April, 1872, he bought from Mr. C. Pfersdorff, in Paris, a well-known cultivator of succulents: Bridgesii, C. chalyhmis, C. chilensis, C. Forbesii, C. fossulatus (= C. Gelsianus), C. geometrizans, G. hexagomcs, C. macrogonus, Spachianus, and C. tephracanthus. Most of these are still living, and have grown into fine specimens. The collection has been greatly increased in later years by exchanges and purchases. A large number of very rare and interesting species were presented to the garden, in August, 1906, by Mr. W. Weingart, of Georgenthal, who has made a special study of the genus. Others were received from Dr. A. Weber Mr. J. Sohrens, of the Botanic Garden, Santiago, Chili Mr. C. Werckle, of San Jose, Costa Kica Mr. Winter, of IBordighera Mr. Grassner, of Perleberg the late Mr. Harry Franck, Frankfort-on-Main; Messrs. Haage & Schmidt, of Erfurt, &c., also from the Botanic Gardens of Berlin, Kew, Palermo, Paris, &c. The large C. giganteus was planted in front of the house on April 24th, 1904. It was procured from Belgium as a large cutting without root, and planted in pure charcoal, where it soon took root. It was then 1-50 m. high, and now (January, 1912) measures 2-10 m., with a circumference of 1-20 m. The genus Cereus, as originally established by Miller, includes In 1905 I published a a great number of very different plants. systematic revision of the genus, based chiefly on observations made on the plants at La Mortola. In this paper ' I established some twenty-three natural sections founded on characters of flower and fruit, with which the vegetative characters admirably combine many of them occupy well-defined geographical areas. Later on Professors Britton and Rose f raised these subgenera and sections to genera.

Oestrum. genus comprising many interesting and sometimes very handsome and freely flowering shrubs. G. elegans and G. fasciculakim were first introduced at La Mortola from Hyeres in December, 1867. They are much alike in general appearance and in their flowers, but may be easily distinguished. G. elegans has a graceful habit, the flowers hang from long and slender branches, the leaves are longer, narrower and more acute, and the racemes are longer, without bracts or nearly so. G. fasciculatum has more upright branches, broader and less acuminate leaves, the flowers in more globular racemes surrounded at their base by a

number

of small leaf-like bracts.

* Alwin Berger, " A Systematic Kevision of the Genus Cereus Mill.," published in Report Miss. Bot. Gard. 1905, pp. 57-86, plates 1-12. t N. L. Britton and J. N. Bose, " The Genus Cereus and its Allies in North America," published in Contributions from the United States Nat. Herbarium, xii. part 10, pp. 413-437, plates 61-76 (1909).

380

HORTUS MORTOLENSIS
Cham^rops
humilis.
Riviera,'"'

The
has

"

dwarf palm," though once indigenous on the

disappeared as a wald plant, but is much grown in gardens. It is a very variable species, almost each individual plant differing from the others. The var. arborescens is the one with a tall stem there are, however, forms with smaller and larger leaves. Var. elegans has slender petioles with small spines. Var. tomentosa has the leaves covered underneath with a somewhat scaly white tomentum. Var. macrocarpa is distinguished
;

now

by larger fruits. These plants were introduced at La Mortola from Hyeres in December, 1867, and again from the Jardin d'Essai, Hamma,
Algeria, in February, 1873.

Cheiranthus mutabilis.
very free flowering half-shrubby species, was introduced by Mr. Daniel Hanbury, in January, 1869.

Chrysanthemum.
All along the Riviera the

shrubby Canadian species are now

extensively
sonetii,

grown

for export, particularly C. fnitescens, C. BrousIt

also does very well. received from Cav. C. Sprenger, in October, 1901.

and C. grandifiomm. The Japanese C. niiyponicum

was

it evidently dislikes the calcareous soil. Beautiful trees are occasionally met with on different soil along the Riviera.

Is not

growing well

CiNNAMOMUM CaMPHORA. at La Mortola, where

CiRSiuM (Cham^peuce) gnaphalodes.


almost subspontaneous in the garden, was introduced by Mr. Daniel Hanbury from the Botanic Garden of Naples in May,
1872.

Now

CiSTUS.
species of Cistus was observed growing wild in the grounds of the Palazzo" (Daniel Hanbury, MS. notes of the garden, July, 1867). Seeds of C. albidus and C. salvifolius were collected by Mr. Daniel Hanbury near Mortola Superiore in the
"

No

same month and sown in the valley, where they are now common and quite established. The Cistus were favourite plants of the late Sir Thomas Hanbury. A great number were procured on several occasions, for instance, from Hyeres as early as December,
* For Chamcerops humilis as a native of the Riviera, see Dr. F. Mader in Aniiales de la Soc. d. Lettres, Sciences et Arts des Alpes Maritimes, xix. 1906, note in Gardeners' Chronicle, 1907, i. p. 213. p. 263, and

my

NOTES
1867, from Messrs. repeatedly later on.

381
in

Veitch

&

Sons

October,

1868,

and

Citrus.
collection of " Agrumi " now in the garden is one of the most complete in existence. It was begun very early by Sir Thomas Hanbmy and his brother. I give the systematic arrangement with some alterations, I consider C. decumana, C. jcqyoiiica, C. according to Engler.

The

medica, C. myrtifolia, and G. nobilis as distinct species. The form Bizzaria is a most interesting plant, as it is said to have originated as a graft hybrid in Florence before 1674. Eisso calls it " I'arbre le plus singulier et le plus curieux de tout le r^gne vegetale," and gives a long and detailed description, with an excellent plate. The tree produces fruits which are composed of the characters of oranges, lemons, and limes, and is also exceedThis strange plant, as mentioned by ingly variable in its leaves. Prof. Strasburger in his Bamhles on the Riviera, was lost for a long time, but he succeeded in finding it in the Koyal Horticultural Since 1908 we have a few small plants School at Florence.
of
it.

C. japonica was introduced in March, 1869, from Sir Thomas Hanbury's garden in Shanghai. It is a small shrub or tree, with
fruits the size of a nut.

In this the carpels are not united at the top, but free like the outstretched fingers of a hand. The tree constantly produces such fruits. Similar abnormalities are also known in the comfruit

The form known as "Buddha's fingers" was through Mr. Artindale, of Shanghai, in April, 1880.

received

mon Lemon.
"The East Indian islands are the native C. decumana. Here it grows in country of the Pampelmouse or Shaddock. the greatest perfection, and when cultivated with care, as at Batavia, it is an exquisite fruit. It was carried to the West Shaddock,' Indies by the master of a trading vessel called whose name it continues to bear." (Crawfurd, History of the Indian Archipelago.) Through the kindness of Prof. Schweinfurth, we received in 1911 fruits of the lemon, generally grown in the East under the Arab name Beledi, from which we are growing a number This variety does not seem to be described by of seedhngs. It is said to be a very thorny small writers on " Agrumi."
'

tree.

The Bitter Orange is largely cultivated near Cannes and Grasse for the production of Orange Flower Water and Neroli oil. Essential oil of Lemon is also manufactured in Sicily and Calabria. The essential oil of Bergamot is obtained chiefly at Keggio from the full grown but still unripe and more or less green fruits gathered in the months of November and December. On the history and use of the Lemon, the Bergamot, and the

382

HORTUS MORTOLENSIS

Bitter Orange, see the full account in Fliickiger & Hanbury, Pharmacographia, pp. 103-116, second edition, pp. 114-129."

Clistoyucca. monotypic genus, very near to Yucca, and chiefly differentiated through the absence of the style. Seeds were kindly sent by It is the "Joshua tree " of the Prof. Trelease in August, 1909. Mohave desert, " the most imposing of the Yuccese of the United

States."

COCCINIA SESSILIFOLIA,
sent by Mr. K. Dinter from German S.W. Africa. It is an interesting climber with an enormously thick and long irregular tuber and pretty leaves and flowers. It dies down every

Was

autumn.
Cocos.

Of these very beautiful palms some extra-tropical species are much grown in the gardens of the Eiviera, but generally under wrong names. They form the subject of an elaborate paper by Odoardo Beccari.t which unfortunately contains neither an analytical key nor descriptive notes. Only two sections are represented in our garden, namely Arecastruvi and Butia. The former is easily known by its smooth and tall stems on which the leaf scars form distant rings. The leaves, which have
a long base almost like a sheath, are bright green the pinnae or being plumose in arrangement. C. Eomanzoffiana is the only species of the section Arecastrum grown at La Mortola. Barbosa Rodrigues considers C. aiistralis Mart., C. plumosa Hook, fil., C. Datil Gris., C. Geriba Barb. Rodr., C. acrocomioides Drude, and C. Martiana Drude and Glz., as mere synonyms of it.| He nevertheless figures eight different forms, but assures us that they all belong to one and the same species. No doubt most of these forms have been introduced The future into Europe, and are also grown on the Riviera. will show whether they are only forms. The one which I keep here as var. plumosa Hort. has a strong and stout stem and
;

leaflets

rounded seeds.

The species which form the section Butia are very different from those just mentioned. In habit they have much in common with the species of Phoenix, and form, when old, a stem like these. Four species are in cultivation, occurring in gardens under a good many wrong names. Without flowers and seeds they are
of the '-Agrumi," see Gallesio's and Kisso's further, Dr. Bonavia, I'he Cultivated Oranges and Lemons of India and Ceylon Engler in Engler und Prantl, Natilrliche Pflanzenfamilien, iii. 4, p. 195 ; 0. Penzig, Studi Botanici sugli Agrnmi, and Strasburger's Rambles on the Eiviera. Malpighia, vols. i. and ii. t " Le Palme incluse nel genere Cocos." T. Barbosa Rodrigues, Palvice Mattogrossenses Novae vet minus Cognitce, &c. J Eio de Janeiro, 1898, pp. 13-18, t. iv. *

For a further account


;

works

NOTES
nofc

383
it
:

easily determined.

If

flowers are present,

will

not be

difficult to

distinguish

them by the following key


BoTiA Beccari.

A. B.

Spathe (sheath of inflorescence) fuscous woolly outside Spathe smooth.


a. Petiole

C. eriospatha.

b.

nearly as long as the leaf, leaves curved at the top Petiole decidedly shorter than the leaf. a Leaflets or pinnaj regularly set
.

much

re-

C. Jutay.
.

C. capltata
var. leiospatha.

p Leaflets or pinnas often crowded by 3-4 together

C. capitata.

Petiole about 80 cm. long, with deltoid spines, C. eriospatJia. the lowest comparatively small. The leaf is 2-30 m. long, pinnae equidistant, 50-60 cm. long in the middle of the leaf, upper ones gradually getting smaller, rachis very slender towards the top. Spathe about 1-20 m. long, thickly covered with brown wool
outside.

Petiole 0-85-1-00 m. long with uncinate slender C. capitata. Leaf 1-65spines, the lower ones rather long and pectinate. 1-80 m. long, pinnae often crowded by 3-4, the middle ones 65-70 cm. long. Spathe 1'40 m. long, smooth on both sides.
G. capitata var. leiosimtha is very similar to the last. Petioles 1-20 m. long, with stouter but shorter deltoid uncinate spines leaf 1-50 m. long, with the pinnae regularly set, about 65 cm. long,
;

upper ones only

little

shorter.

Spathe somewhat smaller, smooth.

Petiole 1*55 m. long and stout, with C. Jatay (not Yatay). stout spines and very long fibrous ones at the base. Leaves 1'65 m., much recurved at the top, pinnae irregularly grouped, often 3-4 together, 70-75 cm. long, the uppermost a little shorter but much narrower, nearly filiform. This Palm has not yet

flowered with us.

COFFEA,

The

coffee tree only exists with difiiculty.

Was grown
1869.
C. floriclus,

COLLETIA SPINOSA, from seeds received from M. Thuret, in February,


Convolvulus.

an interesting shrub of 2 m. and more, was raised from seeds sent by Mr. Daniel Hanbury, in January, 1869, and some plants were bought at Hyeres. This, and C. scoparius, another neither climbing nor winding shrub, furnish the " rosewood " of the Canaries, which when rubbed has a scent of roses.

CORONILLA.
has established itself in the semi-wild places of the garden, as has also, to a less extent, C. valentina. The latter was
C. glauca

384
first

HORTUS MORTOLBNSIS
sown
in several places

by Mr. Daniel Hanbury, on December

10th, 1874.

Cotyledon.
I maintain the genus in the sense of Pyrame De Candolle, for With the only exception of C. Eckloniana the African species. all the species enumerated succeed perfectly well. Some of the species, among them most likely C. macrantha, were introduced from seed sent by the late Prof. MacOwan, forty years ago.

For
suitable.

this fine Conifer our climate

Cryptomeria japonica. and soil

are evidently

little

Cryptostegia grandiflora.
This beautiful climber was tried several times in the open, but without success.

CUPRESSUS.
greatly indebted to Dr. A. Henry, of Cambridge, for the determination of the Cypresses of the garden. C lusitanica is much grown, and varies a great deal individually in habit. All the trees of this species were raised from seeds received from M. Thuret, of Antibes, in February, 1869, as G. Benthamii. Our largest trees are now about 16 m. high, with a crown of 12 m. diameter, and a stem of 2-20 m. circumference at the base, and 1-70 m. at 1 m. above the ground. The type has rounded cone scales, the var. Benthamii has pointed ones. The tallest specimen of G. sempervirens was measured in 1909 total height 31 m., bare stem 8 m., circumference 1'30 m. The tallest C. macrocariKi is 15-70 m. high, the stem is 3-45 m.
I
.

am

in circumference.

Cycas.
neo-caledonica were lost. Of revohUa only female individuals were known in gardens, but some years ago a good number of male plants flowered in Mr. Winter's garden at Bordighera. We have now both sexes, and expect to have well-formed seeds in future.
C.

Normanbyana and

C.

C.

Cynomorium coccineum.
This interesting parasite was grown for several years on the We are indebted for it to the roots of Atriplex portulacoides. Director of the Royal Botanic Garden at Cagliari.

Cyphomandra.
the " tree tomato," has pleasant edible fruits. C. fragans, with showier flowers, was received from Kew, in October, 1903 so far this has not fruited.
C.
betacea,
;

Dahlia.
imperialis, the prince of the noble genus, presents a marIt was introduced into the garden vellous sight when in flower.

D.

NOTES
in

385

December, 1867, from Hyeres.


is

stems, and

less

beautiful.

It

D. Maximiliana has shrubby was figured in the Botanical

Magazine from La Mortola specimens.


Dasylirion. genus of very ornamental plants, all having prickly margined leaves, with the exception of D. quadmngulatum which has smooth quadrangular leaves. D. Hookeri is now called Calibanus Hookerii Trel. (see Supplement and note).

Datura.
species are great ornaments of our southern gardens, especially during summer. Of D. arborea we only have the double-flowered form. D. sanguinea occasionally ripens fruits. D. chlorantha came from Kew a few years ago.

The shrubby

Dendrobium.
D. nohile and D. densiflorum are not hardy here, but must be placed under glass during winter. They were received some years ago from Mr. Frederick Hanbury.

DiANTHUS ARBOREUS.

Was
1874.

brought from

Kew

by Mr. D. Hanbury, November 27th,

DiCKSONIA ANTARCTICA.
great many of these have been tried, but, like other tree ferns, did not succeed for the want of a sufficiently cool and

shady

place.

DiMORPHOTHECA ECKLONIS.
I
acid,

am
and

informed that this beautiful


is,

little

shrub contains prussic

therefore, poisonous.

DiOON EDULE.
large male plant was bought from Prince Troubetzkoy's garden in July, 1888. It stands in a very sunny position, in dry

sandy

soil,

and does extremely

well.

DiPLOPAPPUS.

genus scarcely differing from Aster. D. filifolius flowers It was introduced, March, 1870. in autumn and winter. D. fruticulosus, introduced in March, 1872, has somewhat broader Both succeed well on dry and leaves, and flowers in spring. sunny banks.

DORYALIS CAFFRA (OR AbERIA CAFFRA).


Kai-apple " of South Eastern Africa, is a very thorny bush or small tree, suitable for hedges. In September it produces quantities of small apple-like edible fruits, which can be made It was grown from seeds introduced by Mr. D. into preserve. Hanbury in March, 1872. The plants are dioecious.

The

"

2 c

386

HOETUS MORTOLENSIS
Drac^na.

Of D. Draco we have one much-branched plant, which, however, has but a low stem, and shows little of the majestic character of the species. It occasionally flowers and fruits. Another specimen, which is just beginning to form a stem, was planted in the " Canarian " group in 1900 some fifteen other young plants were put in the same place in October, 1909. D. cinnahari, which in habit resembles the former, but has shorter and stiffer leaves, was given to us by Prof. Balfour, of Edinburgh. D. Ombet was received from Palermo, having been collected by
;

Drt 0. Beccari, in Nubia.

ECHEVERIA.
This genus was united with Cotyledon by Baker, Bentham and Hooker, and Schoenland. It is, however, well characterized by habit and geographical distribution (all the species are American), and in spite of some connecting links may always be readily recognized." We are indebted to Drs. Britton and Rose, and to Mr. Purpus, of Darmstadt, for several of their new species. The genera Lenophyllum, OUvereUa, and Urbinia differ but little

from

it.

ECHINOCACTUS.
species of this genus do well some have perished but will be replaced. A number of rare species were acquired from the late Mr. Harry Franck,. of Frankfort-on-Main, in the autumn of 1905. The large E. Grusonii was bought from Mr. Berge, of Leipzig, in October, 1897; it is now 40 cm. high, and 1-50 m. in circumference. For Chilian species we are indebted to Dr. J. Sohrens, Director of the Santiago Botanic Garden, and to Mr. E. Framm, of Hamburg for species from Uruguay to Prof. Arechavaleta, Director of the National Museum at Montevideo, and for several Mexican species to Mr. Weinberg, of New York.
; ;

Most

ECHINOCEEEUS.
well be retained as distinct from Cereus, with which it is often united. The flowers are invariably actinomorphous, the stamens always of equal length, and connivent round the style, thus closing the tube. In these points they difi'er essentially from the great majority of the species of Cereus. Other distinguishing characters are presented by the stigmata, the ovary, tube and fruit, and the general habit of the species. E. cinerascens and E. Ehrenbergii were bought from the Jardin d'Essai, Hamma, Algiers, in February, 1873. They now form large patches in the garden, flowering every year in great profusion.

This genus

may

* See
vol.
liii.

note " Uber einige unbeschriebene Echeverien," in Gartenflora, (1904), pp. 200-206.

my

NOTES

387

ECHIUM. The large shrubby species are very ornamental in spring. They were first introduced by seeds sent by Mr. Daniel Hanbury in January, 1869. E. Wilclpretii is a new and interesting species, similar to E. simplex, but with pink flowers. It was given to us by Lord Walsingham in October, 1909, and flowered for the
first

in

time, April, 1911. Seeds of E. Pininana were kindly sent December, 1911, by Dr. G. Perez. It also makes a single spike The seeds were six to twelve feet high, with light blue flowers. collected from a wild plant on the island of Palma.

El^odendeon capense.
pretty evergreen shrub or small tree with white fruits the size of an olive, was introduced by seeds, probably received from the late Prof. MacOwan, in June, 1872.

Erica.

mentioned in the Catalogue, Ericas have not been very successful, on account of the calcareous soil and water.
of the species

With the exception

Erigeron Karwinskyanus var. mucronatus.


Seeds of this plant were given to Mr. D. Hanbury by Prof. Planchon, of the Jardin des Plantes at Montpellier, in May, 1868, under the name of Vittadenia triloba. The plant is now naturalized in the garden and in the neighbourhood, as well as in several other places on the Mediterranean. The ray-florets are at first pure white at that time only the pollen is ripe when the pollen has been shed and the stigmata
;
;

become mature the

ray-florets

become pale pink.

Eeythrina,
crista-cjalli

E. Hy^res from Messrs. Huber & Co., in December, 1867. E. insignis is a large bush or tree about 11 m. high, deciduous in winter, with thick and thorny sterns and branches. It flowers abundantly in spring and occasionally ripens fruits. It agrees exactly with Todaro's description and
E. caffra
is

a most beautiful, profusely flowering shrub.


in

was bought

plate.

Eucalyptus.
E. Glohilus and twenty other species were planted as early as December, 1867. In 1869 a great number of species were grown from seeds received from M. Thuret, in Antibes. In November, In 1870, one hundred young trees were bought at Golfe-Juan. February, 1880, there were fifty different species growing in the garden, but as they took up too much room, Sir Thomas Hanbury decided to reduce their number and only a few are now
in cultivation.

c 2

388

HORTUS MORTOLENSIS
;

down

The largest specimen of E. Glohulus, on the main path leading to the house, was planted in the spring of 1869 it was then 90 cm. high. On November 21st, 1871, it was measured by Mr. D. Hanbury and had then a circumference of 50 cm. at the base and On March 19th, 1873, it of 48 cm. at 1 m. above the ground. was found to have 75 cm. circumference at 1 m. above the soil; next year it was measured on March 6th, the stem was then 92 cm. in circumference and 14-65 m. high. It now measures 5-50 m. at the base and 4-55 m. 1 m. higher up, whilst the height
is

24-50 m.
;

E. diversicolor is also growing very tall our largest trees are about 21 m. high, with 2-40 m. circumference of the stem.

EUCLEA PSEUDEBENUS.

small tree with tiny white flowers, grown from seeds sent
Africa.

by Mr. K. Dinter from German South West

According to Dr. A. Henry, the bark of this tree is much esteemed by the Chinese as a tonic, and various other properties are attributed to it. received the tree some years ago through the kindness of M. de Vilmorin, and again later on through Mr. Wilson.

EUCOMMIA ULMOIDES. The Chinese Indiarubber tree; is deciduous.

We

Eugenia. were grown from seeds received from E. edulis and E. Mato the Botanic Garden at Buenos Aires in April, 1901.

EULOPHIA COLE^,
This orchid was received in 1905 from Prof.
I.

Baldrati, in

Asmara, and lived named it for me.

for

some

years.

Mr. Rolfe,

of

Kew, kindly

EUPHOEBIA.
E. ahyssinica. There was formerly in front of the house a fine specimen, believed to be the largest in Europe, 19 feet high, with a circumference of the stem of 2| feet. It perished during the winter of 1896, when it was twenty-nine years old. A photograph of this plant was figured in Gard. Ghron. 1896, ii. p. 497, and is reproduced here on plate 5. E. Avwiak was received from the Botanic Garden at Dahlem,
in 1906.

a perennial herbaceous species, attractive Seeds were collected by Mr. Daniel and several young plants were raised Hanbury in from them in March, 1873, It has now become subspontaneous The young fruits of this species are so eagerly in some places. eaten by birds that the plants must be covered with fine netting in order to obtain seeds. E. canariensis was received from Kew in May and July, 1868, and also from Mr. Cooper, of Reigate. Our finest specimen is a

E. biglandulosa
habit and

is

in

flowers. Calabria,

NOTES

389

dense bush, 2-10 m. high with a circumference of 8-50 m. It sometimes suffers severely from frost. E. candelabrum was received as a small plant from Kew. It stands under the shelter of the big Eucalyptus and is now 2-30 m.
high.

E. Dinteri. This has often been confused with E. virosa and Seeds figured as such. It is, however, quite a distinct species. were first received from Salem in August, 1898, through Mr. K. Dinter. It is not quite hardy here, the climatic conditions of its native habitat summer rains and dry winter being exactly

reversed in our case.

E. Erythraa was introduced from Eritrea by Profs. Penzig and Schweinfurth. The tallest specimen stands in front of the It is now 3-00 m. high, and ripens every summer a house. few fruits the size of a small cherry, from which it has been
propagated. E. grancUcornis, which is furnished with ferocious spines, succeeds with difficulty in the open, but grows freely under glass shelter. A small cutting of this was brought from Palermo in 1901. E. Marlotkii has a cactus-like stem, which is leafless and resting during winter. In summer it throws out a number of branches about a foot long with large leaves. It flowers and seeds frequently. It was received from Mr. K. Dinter in 1905 and has proved more successful than E. Dinteri. It comes very near E. Monteiri Hook. fil. in Bot. Mag. t. 5534, but has lanceolate acute leaves and bracts. E. multiceps, a very interesting little succulent, received in 1905 from Dr. R. Marloth, of Cape Town, was lost. E. neriifolia was first procured from Mr. Cooper, of Reigate,
in July, 1868.

E. neutra, a tall arborescent species, is not infrequent in large collections, where it is often named E. abyssinica or E. Boylei, though quite different from either. Our plant was introduced from the Palermo Botanic Garden in 1901. E. jjarciramulosa. Cuttings of this were kindly sent from Cairo by Prof. Schweinfurth in April, 1911. E. Phillipsice was received in 1906 from Mr. R. I. Lynch, of

Cambridge. E. polyacantha we had from Prof. Penzig, of Genoa, and native specimens from Eritrea through Prof. I. Baldrati, of Asmara. E. Beinhardtii was received from the Royal Botanic Garden, Dahlem, in 1906. E. resinifera. A cutting of this pharmacologically '' interesting plant was brought to La Mortola by Mr. D. Hanbury in June,
1870.

E. Schimperiana was brought from Eritrea by Prof. Penzig in June, 1891. It is quite hardy.

See Fliicldger

&

Hanbury, Pharmacograpkia,

p. 502,

and second

edition,

p. 558.

390

HOETUS MORTOLENSIS

E. Stapfii, an interesting shrubby species, was received from Entebbe in August, 1906. Unfortunately it is not hardy. E. uncinata was lately collected by Dr. J. Brunnthaler on hills
near Port Elizabeth. E. viscosa grows extremely slowly. The plants in the garden must be nearly forty years old. They are quite hardy.*

EUEYOPS SPATHACEUS.
This pretty shrub was sent to the garden by Mr. D. Hanbury When not in flower it much resembles a in August, 1870.

shrubby pine.

Falkia eepens.
pretty little Cape plant, adapted for borders and rock-work, was received from the Botanic Garden at Genoa, in November, 1901.

Grows here

into an

Ferdinanda eminens. enormous bush, and flowers every year

in

great profusion.

Ferula communis.
almost a w^eed, was originally introduced by Mr. D. Hanbury on May 20th, 1868, and sown near the sea and in the garden.
very
Ficus.

Now

common and

Comparatively few species

of this chiefly tropical

genus can be

The most commonly planted is F. macrophylla, cultivated here. which in foliage and habit much resembles the tenderer and consequently rarer F. elastica. The two species can be easily distinguished; the former has smaller leaves of a more ovate oblong outline with very numerous and fine reticulate nerves underneath, whilst the latter has oblong leaves with the nerves less visible and much less reticulate. Both species are quick growing and
form large trees with many aerial roots. F. " glumosa" of this garden, a near relative to F. viacrophylla, and most likely also a native of Australia and not of Abyssinia, has the under side of It is possibly the leaves covered with a rusty tomentum. F. rubiginosa, a tree with identical with F. magnolioides Borzi.f smaller leaves than the above-mentioned species, is quite hardy. If its branches are allowed to touch the soil, they take root and also grow grow into additional trees, soon forming a thicket. F. comosa Low^e, which is quite hardy and a fine tree. F. stijmlata grows to perfection and fruits everywhere. In its young form it is a well-known greenhouse or stove creeper. Several other species do quite well, but some tropical species, for Some of instance, F. religiosa, are not making much progress. the hardier kinds produce figs, but I have never seen ripe seeds, exoept of F. Carica.

We

For further information

see

my

handbook Sukkuleiite Euphorbien,


i.

t Bolletino

Orto Botanico Palermo,

p. 47.

NOTES
Of
this,

391

Riviera.

We

common fig, several forms are cultivated along the good accomit of them is given by E. Sauvaigo.* grow the following at La Mortola
the

Fruits %ohite or (jreeidsh : " Couol (Cuor) de Dama" (F. Carica var. carnosa Geny). " Pissalutta " (F. Carica var. ligurica Geny, Ficus Liviana Plinius). " Bernisotta bianca " (F. Carica var. grandis Sauvaigo).
Fi'uits grey to reddish
:

" Imperiala " (F. Carica var. iniperialis Eisso).


Fruits brown to " Salvatico " Bellona " " Peroquin black : " " Caprifico" (F. Carica var. silvestris Tournef.). (F. Carica var. bellona Risso). " (F. Carica var. nicaensis liisso). " Padretta." " Barnissota nera " (F. Carica var. Barnissoia Tournef. Ficus a/ricana
Plinius).

Feaxinus.
F. Ornus, the "manna ash," a native of the Riviera, was planted at La Mortola by Mr. Daniel Hanbury, November 19th, 1867. This tree is cultivated in Sicily for the production of " Manna. "f

Fuchsia.

was received from Count SolmsBotanic Garden, Strassburg, in May, 1899. With a few exceptions Fuchsias do not thrive well in the dry climate of
large collection of species
of the

Laubach

the Riviera.

FURCR^A.I
species of this genus may be divided into two well The Eufurcrcea are mostly stemless, differentiated subgenera. have green leaves, and much resemble Agaves in their appearance. They are generally somewhat tender on the Riviera, and therefore After do best if planted in protected spots, under trees, &c. having flowered they produce quantities of bulbils. F. Delcedevanti was given me by the late Dr. A. Weber, of Paris, in 1902. F. elegans was received from Palermo and flowered in 1911-12. It is quite hardy, and forms an imposing rosette with leaves over 2 m. long. The two species of the second subgenus, Rcezlia, resemble Beschorneria in having similar rough, glaucous, and finely serruWhen sufficiently mature late leaves, but develop a distinct stem. they produce a tall pyramidal richly branched inflorescence, which

The

afterwards bears many hundreds of bulbils, from which they are F. Bedinghausii makes a stem about 1 m. readily propagated. In its high, whilst F. longceva attains with us a height of 4 m.
Flora Mediterranea Exotica, pp. 172-181. On the history and use of tlie see also Fliickiger & Hanbury, Pliarmacographia, pp. 487-489, second edition, pp. 542-544. t See Fliickiger & Hanbury, Pharinacographia, pp. 366-374, second edition, pp. 409-417. priority this name is now used in place of X According to the rules of
*

fig tree

Fourcroija.

See

my

note in Monatssckrift fiir Kakteenkunde, 1911, pp. 41-43.

392

HOKTUS MOETOLENSIS

native land it is said to reach 13 m. ( = 40 feet), and not to flower before liaving attained the age of four hundred years (?) With us it seems to flower after twenty to thirty-five years, but there may be two species in question. Our plant, received from Kew in 1881, is no doubt the species figured in Bot. Mag. t. 5519, which flowered in Kegent's Park Koyal Botanic Garden, in 1864, for the first time in Europe.

Garrya Thureti.

Was received from Villa Thuret in


It is not included in

1903 it has not yet flowered. Mr. Wangerin's monograph in B. V. C.


;

Gasteria.
acinacifolia and others were bought from the Jardin d'Essai, Hamma, Algiers, in February, 1873. Gasterias easily hybridize in gardens, and there are various forms of doubtful ori-

G.

gin.

See

my

notes about them in

my monograph

on

Aloinecz,

I.

c.

Gazania. Of these wonderful spring flowers the following garden forms were sent by Cav. C. Sprenger, Naples G. angelica, G. elmen:

sis,

G. ochroleuca, G. vomerensis.

G. Parthenojpe,

G. splendens, G.

Trinacria,

Gerbera Jamesoni.
received from satisfactory at La Mortola.
first

Was

Kew

in October,

1890.

It is not

Giraldia Stapfii,
Received from Cav. C. Sprenger, October, 1901 is a small perennial plant resembling Atractylis, with which the genus ought perhaps to be united.
;

Gleditschia macracantha.
This tree was for a long time in cultivation in the garden under the wrong name of G. casjnca. Dr. A. Henry recognized it as the plant which he collected in South Wushan, Szechuen, and which was described as G. officinalis Hemsl. in Kew Bull. The pods are the Chinese drug exported from the 1892, p. 82. province of Szechuen under the name of " Ya-tsao." These pods were described by Mr. Daniel Hanbury in his " Notes on Chinese Materia Medica " (Legumes of Prosojns D. Hanbury, Science
'?

Pa;pers, p. 248).

Gnidia.

These small shrubs succeed well on sandy banks in the upper part of the garden. We received them from Mr. F. Rehnelt, of the Botanical Garden at Giessen.

GOODENIA OVATA.
shrub to the kindness of the late Mr. L. van den Bossche, Tirlemont. It is our only plant of the
this interesting

We

owe

GoodeniacecB.

NOTES
GOSSYPIUM.

393

The cotton succeeds and ripens well


GOUELIEA.

its fruits if

sown

early

under glass and planted out in the beginning of May.

G. chilensis and G. decorticans are the " chafaar " or " chafiar breda " of the Indians of the Gran Chaco. The sweet fruit is the staple food of the natives, who also prepare a beverage from it.

The wood
Both

is

tough and valuable.

Geabowskia.
species are thorny shrubs with glaucous leaves were received from Cav. C. Sprenger, Naples.
;

they

Geevillea.

Many
here.

of these interesting Proteacece are perfectly acclimatised

G. Banksii was procured from Messrs. Veitch & Sons in June, 1902. It is a low shrub with fine bright red flowers. G. HilUana forms a beautiful tree with white flowers in long racemes. This and G. asplenifolia were bought by Mr. D. Hanbury from Mr. Van Geert, Ghent, in August, 1872. G. robusta was first raised from seeds received from M. Thuret, of Antibes, in March, 1872. G. Thelemanniana and G. Preissii, two small shrubs with pretty red flowers, were received from the Koyal Botanic Garden, Dahlem-Berlin, in November, 1897 although much alike they are
;

two

distinct species.

Geewia occidentalis.
Eaised from seeds sent by Prof. MacOwan, in February, 1875, grew into a large semi-scandent shrub, but perished during the

summer

of 1911.

Hakea.

Many species succeed well at La Mortola. Of the rare H. Baxter


we have
a small tree about 4'50 m. high. Its leaves resemble in shape those of Ginkgo hiloha. H. cucullata was received from M. Geoffrey St. Hilaire, Gros Pin, Hy^res, in 1903. Several other young plants of this species have been grown from seeds received from the Canaries. The leaves of the sterile branches are narrow and elongated, whilst those of the flowering branches become much shorter, broader, and thicker, and assume a pale yellow colour at their base the white flowers are almost concealed by them. H. ceratopliylla was collected for Messrs. Veitch & Sons from Chester's Pass in South Australia, and seeds were given to Sir Thomas Hanbury in September, 1893. H. ohliqua, H. glabella, H. florida, and H. varia were received from the Imperial Gardens at Schoenbrunn, and the Botanic Gardens of Dahlem-Berlin and
;

Karlsruhe. the species.

H. laurina
soil
;

(better
its

everywhere in our

known as H. eucalyptoides) grows flowers are perhaps the showiest of all

Halleeia lucida.

Was grown
1869.

from seeds received from Villa Thuret in February, Flowers abundantly from the old wood.

394

HOETUS MORTOLENSIS
Hardenbergia.
Very pretty climbers,

much

planted in the gardens of the

Riviera.

II. vionophijlla is

cultivated in white, rose,

and

violet

flowering varieties.

It

remains

much lower than H. ComjHoniana.

Haworthia.
plants, closely related to Aloe, but with Most of them do very well small, two-lipped whitish flowers. The softhere, and are excellent plants for rockwork and walls. Some species, leaved species, however, prefer half shady places. such as H. cymhifolia, H. granata, H. retusa, and H. subulata, were bought from the Jardin d'Essai, Hamma, Algiers, in February,

genus

of small

Other species w^ere received from the Botanic Gardens of 1873. Berlin, Kew, Palermo, &c., from Dr. E. Marloth, of Cape Town, from Mr. W. J. Skinner, of Thornton Heath, and others.

Hechtia.
Is a genus of decorative xerophilous Bromeliacece. H. argentea was received from Mr. Willy Miiller, of Nocera Inferiore, near H. glomerata from the Botanic Garden of Ziirich Naples, in 1909. H. rosea (?) was collected for It flowered in 1909. in July, 1898. Sir Thomas Hanbury by Mr. C. A. Purpus on the Sierra de Parras It is almost entirely red during summer. in 1905.

Hedera.
I

have followed Mr. C. K. Schneider in the nomenclature

of this

H. canariensis, w4aich now covers many walls in the genus. garden, was first procured from Messrs. Huber & Co., Hyeres, in December, 1867. Helleborus lividus.
valley, in

Seeds from Corsica were sown by Mr. D. Hanbury in the June 9th, 1868, where still one plant survives.

Hermannia.
little shrub with yellow flowers, collected by Dr. J. Brunnthaler near Genadenthal in 1910.

H. angulata, a pretty

was

Hesperoaloe.
Seeds of both species were received from Prof. Trelease, of the Missouri Botanical Garden.

Hesperoyucca.
It rightly separated generically from Yucca. dies after having flowered. In its leaves it more resembles Agave Several specimens have flowered at La IMUcifolia than a Yucca.

H. Whipplei

is

Mortola (1891, 1896, 1899 and 1901), but never produced any The plate in Bot. Mag. was drawn by Lady Thiselton-Dyer Seeds were first received from Mr. at La Mortola in April, 1891. L. Winter, Bordighera, in January, 1882.
seeds.

NOTES
A
tall

395

Heteromorpha arborescens. bush or a small tree with the bark similar to birch trees The seeds were sent by Mr. D. flowers and fruits abundantly. Hanbury in November, 1870, who probably received them from
Prof.

MacOwan.
Hibiscus.

H. venustus var. roseits was received through the kindness of Prof. C. F. Baker from Santiago de las Vegas, in Cuba, April, 1906. It is a large bush, which flowered in December, 1907, and which differs from the typical H. venustus in the colour of its flowers.
H0LLB(ELLIA LATIFOLIA.
Flowers abundantly, but has never set
artificially impollinated.
fruit,

not even

when

HOODIA CURRORI.
received several times from Mr. Dinter and from Messrs. Haage & Schmidt, but always perished during our often wet and cold winter months. HOVENIA DULCIS.
Is
stalks.

Was

much
Our

planted in the Far East for its edible fleshy fruit oldest plant w^as procured from Hyeres in December,

1867.

HOWEA.
H. Behnoreana and H. Forsteriana, better known
under the name
of Kentia,

in gardens do not do well at La Mortola, but grow

to perfection in other places on the Eiviera, for instance, in some gardens at Garavan (Villa Hindoue, Villa Paradu, Villa St. Louis, &c.). The genus differs chiefly from Kentia in having a simple unbranched spadix, 30-40 stamens in the male flower, and different

seeds in habit the plants of the two genera resemble each other a good deal. The two species are very closely related, and Bentham does not regard them as specifically distinct. H. Behnoreana, the " Curly Palm," is said to attain 12 m. in height, with leaves over 2 m. long, the numerous acuminate leaflets of which converge towards the apex. R. Forsteriana, the "Thatch or Flat Leaved Palm," closely resembles the former, but has the leaflet always
;

pendulous.

HoYA CARNOSA.
Is quite hardy in sheltered places, and is therefore frequently planted. It flowers abundantly, but never fruits.

Hymenosporum flavum.
Seeds were sent by Mr. D. Hanbury in June, 1872, and probably It is received from Baron Ferdinand von Miiller, of Melbourne. a tree similar in habit and flowers to Pittosporum, but the seeds are very thin (hence the name), and not viscous as are those of The flowers are at first white, but after the pollen Pittos]Qorum. has been shed and the stigma matures they become yellow Our

396
oldest plant ference.
is

HORTUS MORTOLENSIS
a tree 9 m. high, with a stem of 1'20 m. in circum-

Idesia polycarpa.

deciduous tree, has been tried several times, and is also included in the last collection of Mr. Wilson. The climate and soil are rather too dry for it.
Ilex.
Suffers from the same disadvantages, and they proved fatal to I. insignis and I. Tar ajo.

Illicium.
religiosum and the Chinese I. verum were formerly often confused under the name of /. anisatum/'- I. verum produces the true Star Anise exported from China, whilst the Japanese plant is poisonous. Dr. Bretschneider, the Medical Officer of the Russian Embassy at Peking, and author of a book on the history of botanical discoveries in China, was the first to recognize the Chinese Star Anise plant as a distinct species, to which Sir Joseph Hooker in Bot. Mag. t. 7005 gave the name of /. verum, so as to settle its nomenclature definitely. In the same year (1888) Prof. Fliickiger took up the subject I and mentions a plant of the true Chinese Star Anise grown at La Mortola in 1884 and corresponding with Hooker's plate and description. This plant is still there and now a dense bush about 2 m. high. It was planted on November 15th, 1870, and was procured from M. Nabonnand of Golfe-Juan.
I.

The Japanese

Impatiens.

The
in

tropical species flower

Sphagnum under damage by frost. I.

and fruit freely when cultivated the pergola they are, however, liable to Oliver i is by far the hardiest.
;

lOCHROMA. genus comprising about fifteen species, all very ornamental shrubs. I. coccineum has bright red flowers and tomentose branches and leaves. This is often confused with I. fuchsioides,

which
I.

is

quite glabrous.

lanceolatum and I. luhulosum are much alike. The latter has, however, flowers of a more reddish hue and a larger calyx. I. grandiflorum has beautiful large violet-blue flowers. It is very glandular and viscid, and emits a disagreeable smell, especially after rain.

Ipomcea.

Many species warm season. I.


hot-bed.

I.

genus are of great beauty during the Batatas succeeds only when cultivated on a damarana has a large woody bulb it was introduced
of this
;

See also Fliickiger & Hanbury, Pharmacographia, p. 20. F. A. Fliickiger, "Illicium verum, der Sternanisbaum." Pharmacie, xxvi. (1888), pp. 893-897.
t

In Arckiv der

NOTES

397

/. i)anduraia dies down by Mr. K. Dinter, from Okahandja. every autumn. I. murucoides and /. ruhrocarulea must be culThe latter, with large blue flowers, is of tivated as annuals. great beauty in the autumn, until the middle of December.

Iris.

species grow well at La Mortola, and some are very are indebted for a great many species to drought-resisting. Miss Willmott, and to Mr. J. Lynch, of the Koyal Botanic Gar-

Most

We

den, Cambridge. I. Ciengialti var. veneta was kindly sent by Prof. E. Pampanini, of Florence, in 1910, from the classical locality "Provincia di Treviso presso Vittorio nella Valle Meridionale del Passo di S. Uboldo, &c."
:

Jacaranda ovalifolia.
This is an excellent tree for the Eiviera. It has graceful deciduous foliage, and bright blue flowers, which appear in June and July, and are succeeded by flat, round capsules.

Janusia prolixa.
are indebted for this interesting climber, as well as for a great many other plants, to Prof. G. Poirault, of Villa Thuret, Antibes.

We

Jasminum.

Most
fine /.

species of this noble genus do very well, especially so the


J.

primulinum.

grandiflorum

much

resembles /.

officinale

in habit, shape, and colour of its leaves and flowers. The leaflets, however, are more equal in size, and generally broader than in /. officinale, which has small lateral and a large terminal leaflet. The flowers, too, are about double the size.

JUB^A

SPECTABILIS.

received by Mr. Daniel Hanbury from Prof, Decaisne, Director of the Jardin des Plantes, Paris, in May, 1868. Its trunk, with the bases of the old leaves, measures now 3'50 m. in circumference. J. spectabilis is very hardy, and is successfully grown as far north as the Italian Lakes. The most stately specimen of it along the Eiviera was to be found, until a few years ago, at Villa Thuret, Antibes. It had a trunk 7-50 m. high, with a circumference of 4-10 m. at 1 m. above the soil. This specimen flowered for the first time in June, 1894, and produced large quantities of fruits.

A young plant was

JUNIPERUS.
Cedrus was repeatedly sent by grown from seeds three male plants January, 1868, by
J.

received from Kew in 1909, and seeds were Dr. G. Perez, of Orotava. J. hermudiana was received from Kew in 1910. Of J. drupacea were procured from Messrs. Veitch & Sons in the late Mr. D. Hanbury. J. chinensis, J. ex-

398
celsa, J. rigida,

HORTUS MORTOLENSIS

and /. thurifera were bought from the same firm a few years ago. /. procera was introduced by Prof. G. Schweinfurth, from Abyssinia, and received through tlie BerUn Botanical Garden in February, 1893. At present the plants have attained a height of 5 m. is the common Juniper along this coast. J". Oxycedrus have specimens in the wood 10 m. high, with a circumference
of 1-20

We

m. There is a Juniper tree, 5 m. high, in the lower part of the garden, with drooping branchlets and very glaucous, less pungent It is apparently spontaneous and agrees with another leaves. plant, which Lord Walsingham found in the spring, 1911, near Roccabruna. This latter, no doubt a wild specimen, is a tree over 10 m. (40 feet) high with a stem about 1-60 m. (4 feet 8 inches) Dr. A. Henry, of Cambridge, who has seen in circumference. the Mortola specimen, is convinced that the Juniper in question
is

/.

Cedrus, so far only

known

as a native of the

Canaries.

Another specimen at La Mortola, not far from the first one, seems to be a hybrid between J. Cedrus and J'. Oxycedrus. The plant grown as /. macrocarpa is still too young to be
identified.

Kalanchoe.
Succulent herbs or perennials with pretty flowers, more or less hardy, according to their native habitat.

Kentia. These elegant palms have been tried repeatedly at La Mortola, as they do quite well, and produce flowers and seeds in some gardens at Garavan. The genus differs from Hoivea in the branched spadix, and in having only 6-12 stamens in the male flower, &c. K. Canterburyana ("Umbrella Palm ") is a tall species much resembling the In K. Baueri and K. scqyida the petioles, two species of Hotvea. rachis, and nerves of the leaflets are covered with a browm tomentum. The former is a stouter plant with broader leaflets in the second the leaflets are very narrow and long acuminate.
;

Keteleeeia Fortunei. So far we have not been successful in growing this fine Chinese tree. There are large specimens on the Lago Maggiore.
KiGELIA ^THIOPICA.

Has been tried in several sheltered places, but perished in winter.


Kleinia. This genus hardly differs from Senecio except in habit, but All are for horticultural purposes it may well be kept distinct.'-'
excellent plants for

sunny and

arid rockeries,

though their flowers


in cultivation see

* For a complete synopsis of the species known handbook Stapelieen und Kleinien,

my

NOTES
are,

399

in most cases, inconspicuous, except those of the section K. neriifolia was introduced from Mr. W. Wilson Notonia. Saunders's collection in April, 1869. It is quite at home now at La Mortola, germinates all over the garden, and, if left alone, would soon become subspontaneous, although it occasionally K. AnIt loses its leaves during summer. suffers through frost. teupliorhium was introduced from Kew in July, 1868. K. odora came from Villa Thuret in November, 1869. K. tomentosa was procured from Mr. Cooper, of Keigate, in July, 1868 it is a very shy bloomer.
;

Kniphofia.
Better

known

K. primulina

in gardens as Tritoma, partly succeed quite well. are indebted for flowers at the end of the year.

We

this species to the late

Mr. Gumbleton, and to Messrs. Beamish and Dorrien-Smith.

for the tall

K. Northia

Labuenocytisus.
L. Adami is one of the classical examples of graft-hybrids, having been raised, in 1826, by Adam, of Paris, by grafting Cytisus purpureus on Laburnum anagyroides. The tree has three kinds some bearing foliage and flowers of Laburnum of branches and yet others representing others those of Cytisus purpureus intermediate stages between the two. Our plants were received in the spring of 1911 from Messrs. Pennick & Co., near Dublin."':

L.ELIA.

L. anceps grows very well epiphytically on a tree, without

any

shelter.

Lagerstecemia.
L. indica, a most beautiful shrub, does not succeed here. It grows, however, perfectly well in the garden of the Convent of San Dalmazzo di Tenda, in the Koja valley. L. speciosa has also been tried in vain. Lagetta lintearia.

The famous

"

Lace Tree "

of

Jamaica only succeeds under glass.


;

Lagunaria Patersoni.
have now two fine trees of this beautiful Malvacea. They were grown from seeds introduced by Mr. D. Hanbury in June, 1872, and correspond with the description of the Norfolk Island plant given by Bentham {Fl. Austr. i. 218), the leaves being very white underneath. The largest specimen is now 13-10 m. high, with a stem of 87 cm. circumference.

We

Lapageria rosea.

Has been

tried repeatedly, so far

without success.
Catalogue, and

* For further information see the literature cited in also Strasburger's Eambles on the Riviera,

tlie

400

HORTUS MORTOLENSIS
Lardizabala biternata.
climber

This fine Mortola.

has

never

produced

any

fruit

at

La

Lathr^a clandestina.
this interesting saprophytic plant growing on the roots of a willow for several years, but the host perished during a

We

had

dry

summer and with

it

the saprophyte.

Laurentia tenella.

A
It

pretty

was

perennial grows among the moss on a fountain. introduced about ten years ago from seeds collected by Mr.
little
;

Hartmann

in

Cyprus.

L. nohilis, the
is

common

laurel,

Laurus. was planted

at

La Mortola and

well established, germinating everywhere, especially in the wood, probably dispersed by birds. L. canariensis succeeds quite This latter, which is not well, as does also L. maderensis Hort. identical'- with Ocotea fastens, but very similar to L. nohilis, was bought from Messrs. Huber & Co., of Hydres in December, 1867, and again by Mr. Daniel Hanbury from M. Nabonnand, of GolfeJuan, in November, 1870.

now

Lavandula.
L. Spica grows abundantly on the rocky slopes of our neighbouring mountains, and from this species the lavender oil is L. Stoschas distilled everywhere in this country during summer. prefers sandy soil. L. abrotanoides is a freely growing little shrub, which is almost constantly in flower.

Leichtlinia protuberans. Agavoid, was received from M. Max Leichtlin, of Baden-Baden, in February, 1891, and later on from Mr. DorrienThe genus is related to So far it has not flowered. Smith. Manfreda. Leonotis Leonurus. Seeds were received by Mr. Daniel Hanbury from Prof. MacOwan in March, 1873.

curious

little

Leptospermum l^vigatum.

Was given to Mr. D. Hanbury by M. Thuret, of Antibes, in October, 1871. It forms a large bush, and succeeds well in dry The other species do not grow so easily. places.
Leptosyne.
L. gigantea forms a low thick, succulent, and sparsely branched stem, which during the summer resting period is entirely leafless. It begins growing about the end of September, and when in full growth and flower is a very stately plant. L. maritima resembles it a good deal, but does not form such a thick stem.

See Meiasner in DC. xv.

1.

pp. 118

and 237.

NOTES
Was

401

Leptotes bicolor. procured from the late M. Binot in July, 1904. It has been grown epiphytically in the open, without any protection in winter, and flowers freely every year.

Leucadendron.
L. argenteum is the " Silver Tree " of Cape colonists. We had a magnificent specimen about 5 m. high, which suddenly perished in the summer, 1902. It has not been possible to replace the tree, neither have the other species become established in the garden. any All these fine-rooted ProteacecB need careful watering neglect in this respect generally proves quite as fatal as the use of
;

animal manure.

Leuchtenbergia Principis.
This is with us of extremely slow growth. The flowers rise from the top of the mamillae and not from their axil, as wrongly stated in the Bot. Mag. t. 4393.

LiMONIASTRUM. an old inhabitant of the gardens along the It succeeds on dry and hot Eiviera, known as Statice rosea. banks and near the sea, and needs no watering during summer. For L. Guyonianum we are indebted to Lord Walsingham.
L. monopetahim
is

LiPPIA.

L. citriodora and L. chamadrifolia we have had for a long time. L. asperifolia and L. lycioides were grown from seeds received from the Botanic Garden of Buenos Aires in 1901.

LiRIODENDRON TULIPIFERA.

Has been

tried,

but so far without success.

LissocHiLUs Erythr^^.
sent by Mr. K. Dinter from German South West Africa, It flowered several times, and was named by Prof. in 1905. Kranzlin. The plant has since been lost.

Was

Has been

tried several times, but

LiTCHI SINENSIS. without success.


LiVISTONA.

Of L. anstralis two young plants were brought from the Jardin des Plantes in Paris and planted May 15th, 1868, by Mr. Daniel Hanbury. The largest plant has now a trunk 8 m. high with a circumference of 1-70 m. above the ground. L. chinensis is common in Eiviera gardens, though there is no large specimen at La
Mortola. L. decipiens is a much rarer plant, known here among It has also been wrongly gardeners as Copernicia cerifera. identified with L. inermis and L. humilis, both natives of Northern Australia and quite different from our plant, as pointed
2 D

402

HORTUS MORTOLENSIS

out by Prof. O. Beccari. L. deciinens is nearer related to L. australis in flower and fruit, but in habit it is quite different, the There are old plants in leaves being deeply cut and filiferous. the gardens of Dr. Robertson-Proschowsky near Nice, at Villa

Paradou, Garavan, and in several other French gardens. oliviformis is known on the Riviera as Conjpha Gehancjar'-

L.

LOMATIA.

The Australian
L. ferruginea.

species succeed quite well, but not the Chilian

LOMATOPHYLLUM.
L. macrum and L. horhonicum are rather tender, but the former does very well in sheltered places, as, for instance, on the rocks of Monaco. L. horhoniciim was sent us in 1907 by Dr. Koenig from Port Louis, Mauritius.

LOEOPETALUM CHINENSE.

pretty shrub

did not succeed.

Lycaste Deppei.
This orchid does quite well and flowers abundantly in the open We are indebted for this and at the foot of an old tree fern. other orchids to Dr. Hans Goldschmidt, of Essen.

Lysiloma latisiliqua
did not succeed.

Macadamia teenifolia.
Seeds were first sent to La Mortola by Mr. Daniel Hanbury in There are only young trees now at La Mortola, one July, 1872. The nuts have the taste of of which first ripened fruits in 1910. There is a large specimen in the garden of Villa Hindoue hazel. t What was received as M. australis from M. Geoffroy at Garavan. St. Hilaire, Gros Pin, Hy6res, will probably prove to be the same
species.

Maceozamia

spiealis.

staminate specimen was bought from Prince Troubetzkoy's garden in July, 1888.

Magnolia.

M. grandiflora was bought from Messrs. Huber &


Hyferes, in

Co.,

of

though quite vigorous, does not succeed so well here as in cooler and moister parts of M. puviila only grows with difiiculty. Italy. Under the name of M. inodora we grow an evergreen bush, with coriaceous and glossy, lanceolate acute, undulate leaves. The flowers, which have not appeared for many years, are white and much smaller than those of M. grandiflora. It is evidently
December, 1867.
This
tree,
*

See Gardeners^ Chronicle, 1901, ii. p. 406. See Baron Ferd. von Mueller, Select Extra-Tropical Plants,

p. 204.

NOTES
an old inhabitant
catalogues.
of the garden,

403

though not included in former

Magydaris.
stately perennials. M. tomentosa was collected in Sicily and sent in December, 1898,

Very

grown from seeds by Dr. H, Ross, of

Munich.

Mamillaria. For some species the climate is evidently too hot and dry. Others suffer in winter more from moisture than from cold, but
the majority of the species succeed quite well.

Manihot carthaginbnsis.
deciduous shrub, raised from seeds received from the late Prof. Ch. Naudin, of Villa Thuret, in April, 1877.

Medicago arborea.
procured by Sir Thomas Hanbury in November, 1868, from Messrs. Veitch & Sons. It forms neat green bushes, resisting drought on the hottest banks, but then shedding most of its

Was

leaves.

Melaleuca.
Most species and flower and
early period.
of this interesting
fruit

abundantly.

genus succeed extremely well, They were introduced at an

M. Preissiana was planted in 1872. It forms rather tall shrubs or small trees. In some species, for instance, M. styphelioides, the bark peels
off in thin, paper-like sheets.

Melanoselinum decipiens.
Is one of the noblest of all UmbellifercB, with stems about 1 m. high and tufted umbrella-like heads of fine pale green foliage. It " The whole plant, when cut or bruised, gives dies after flowering. out a copious fragrant glutinous transparent shining gum or resin with a strong scent of turpentine and carrots, or something like the flowers of the large blue Iris (J. germanica) " (Lowe, I.e.).

The
ated in

Melhania Erythroxylon. Redwood " of St. Helena has been practically exterminthe island, where now only few, if any, individuals are to
"

be found. We received a small shrub from Kew in November, Another St. Helena endemism, 1883, but it has never flowered. M. melanoxylon Ait., the "Blackwood," is reported to have shared the fate of its relative, and most likely it has been lost in
cultivation too.

Melianthus. M. comosus was introduced by seeds received from Prof. MacOwan in March, 1872. M. pectinatus was brought by Mr. Daniel Hanbury from Kew on November 27th, 1874, where it was sent by Sir Henry Barkly, then Governor of the Cape of Good Hope.

404

HOKTUS MORTOLENSIS

It flowered and fruited for the first time at La Mortola in 1879, and was figured in Bot. Mag. M. intermedius originated in this garden, and is a hybrid between M. comostis and M. major. It is more vigorous and taller than the parents. The leaves are of the size of M. major, but less glaucous, their stipules are smaller, and the raehis is less broadly winged moreover, they are almost glabrous underneath and not tomentose as in M. comosus. The
;

inflorescence is not so long as in M. major, but exceeds the length of the leaf, whilst in M. comosus it is shorter than the leaf, and brighter coloured. The bracts, pedicels and flowers are exactly

intermediate between the parent species. This hybrid does not produce seeds, but has come up again from seeds of M. comosus.--'

Melocactus.
quite well if kept indoors during winter. For various specimens we are indebted to the late Prof. Zacharias, Director of the Hamburg Botanic Garden.

M. communis does

Meryta.

M. macrophylla, a
pistillate

dioecious plant, of

which we only have a

specimen.
of the species are quite at
first

Most

Mesembeianthemum. home at La Mortola.

great

brought from Kew by Mr. Daniel Hanbury, and others were received through Prof. MacOwan. M. ahyssinicum was received from the Berlin Botanic Garden, where it was introduced by Prof. Schweinfurth. M. acinaciforvie is very vigorous. Its flowers, the largest of the genus, are very conspicuous in early summer. Of M. Bolusii, one of the striking examples of mimicry in plants, the single specimen sent us from Kew in October, 1890, was for a long time the only one existent in Europe.! It flowered every autumn without producing seeds. After this had died the late Mr. Harry Bolus, of Cape Town, kindly sent us seeds in From these the plant has been grown in February, 1902. quantities. Older specimens now produce seeds, so that we have The resemblance of this Mesembeen able to distribute it. brianthemum to pebbles is surprising, especially during dry weather, when it assumes a greyish hue. The species of the section Sphmroidca, such as M. minutum, M. Wettsteinii,

many were

M.

ohcordellum, M. pseudotruncatellum, &c., are equally strikM. Bosscheanum was named in ing examples of mimicry. honour of the late Mr. L. van den Bossche, of Tirlemont,
;]:

' An interesting account of the fertilization of these and some other ornithophilous flowers is given by Mr. C. F. Scott-Elliott, Annals of Bot., iv. p. xiv. (1890). At La Mortola Melianthris is fertilized by insects, chiefly bees. t See my note with photograph in Monatsschrift fiir Kakteenkunde, ix.

(1899), p. 39. " Morphological Notes," in Annals of \ See Sir W. T. Thiselton-Dyer, Botany, vol. XX., no. Ixxviii. (April, 1906), pp. 123-127, tt. vii.-viii. and
;

my

handbook, Mesembrianthemen und Poitulacaceen, pp. 11-14.

NOTES
to

405

whom we are indebted for this species and for many other rare plants. It belongs to the section Ringentia, comprising low-growing species with thick leaves, which have been compared with the throats of animals, and hence have been named: M. tigrinum, M. lupinum, M. fclimim, M. canimim, M. murinum,
&c. Most species of this "zoological" group have fine large flowers. M. eduU grows in abundance near our seashore, and is subspontaneous in many similar places of the globe. M. geniculiflorum was brought from Palermo in January, 1901. M.

grown in 1910 from seeds taken from a dried specimen collected by Dr. Otto Kuntz, at Tow Eiver Station, as Of M. lingiiiforme we grow a great far back as February, 1894. many varieties. Its soft leaves suffer much from slugs. M. canum and M. pubescens, which had been lost for nearly a hundred years, were re-discovered by Dr. Marloth, of Cape Town. M. ochraceum, M. Behneltianum, and M. vespertimim are three old inhabitants of gardens, which had long remained undetermined. M. pygmcBum was received from Kew and from Mr. W. It Skinner, of Thornton Heath, about ten to twelve years ago. has never flowered. M. vittatum was recognised by Mr. N. E. Brown as identical with the plant which he described under M. this name. It was probably received from Mr. Cooper. Wettsteinii, an introduction of Prof. MacOwan, is, together with M. pseudotruncatellum, one of the plants which were erroneously believed to be Haworth's M. truncatellum. In addition to the species enumerated in the Catalogue, we grow many new, and as yet undetermined, South African species lately received from Dr. J. Brunnthaler and from Mr. Kurt
granulicaule was
Dinter.

Among the Mesembrianthema collected by Dr. Brunnthaler, M. cigarettiferum-'- is perhaps the quaintest. The sheaths formed by the older leaves when dried-up are of a paper or parchmentlike appearance, and assume a cylindrical shape, resembling the
paper-mouthpieces of cigarettes. These sheaths are about 1 cm. long, evenly cut at the top, and a little compressed at the side. With two little prominences, which are rudimentary leaves, they enclose the following pair of leaves, which are quite different and
triquetrous.

The capsules of Mesembrianthema remain for a long time on Some have a beautiful the plants, and only open during rain. mechanism, by which they throw the seeds to a considerable The seeds germinate very irregularly, and retain their distance.! germinating power for a long time.
Metbosideros. M. tomentosa, a small tree with bright red

flowers, is very

* See Alwin Berger, " Einige neue afrikanische Sukkulenten," in Engler's Botanische Jahrhilclier, xlv. (1910), p. 225. t See figure and deseription of the fruit of M. linguiforme in my handbook, pp. 9-11.

406
beautiful in

HORTUS MORTOLENSIS
It is
tree.

June and July. Christmas bush or Christmas

known

in

New

Zealand as

MiLTONIA.

Are

all

quite hardy,

and grow epiphytically on a Ficus

tree.

MONSTEBA.
quite hardy, and climbs up walls or trees in shady and sheltered places. It produces a sweet fruit.
deliciosa
is

M.

MONTANOA.
This genus comprises a number of beautiful shrubs, which M. bipinnatifida, flower abundantly in late autumn or winter. with large branched inflorescences and white star-like flowers, is much grown along the Riviera. M. molUssima is a lower, much-branched shrub with fewer flowers. It was received from Villa Thuret, Antibes, in November, 1874. M. tomentosa, with rather small flowers, came from the same garden a few years ago. M. Wercklei was grown from seeds sent in 1905 by Mr. Charles Werckle, of San Jose de Costa Rica, under the name of " Toona quirita." It is a shrub 5-6 m. high, with large elegant leaves and white tomentose branches and petioles.

MUSA. M. paradisiaca ripens its fruits in some of the most sheltered Riviera gardens, where it can be sufficiently watered.
Narcissus.

genus succeed well. They are largely used for undergrowth to cover the soil. N. Tazetta grew originally wild under the olives in the lower part of the garden. I am informed by Lord Walsingham that N. Tazetta var. canariensis is found growing wild near Hyeres.
species of this lovely

Most

Nephelium.
N. leiocarpum was received a few years ago from Villa Thuret. This and N. tomentositm are quite hardy.

Neeium Oleander.
Several cuttings were planted in the torrent-bed by Mr. Daniel Hanbury on June 10th, 1868. They are now large bushes, flowering and fruiting abundantly every summer. This shrub is very poisonous.

NiCODEMIA.
a rare low shrub with insignificant flowers, was received from Prof. Poirault, Villa Thuret, Antibes, in 1906.

N.

divei'sifolia,

NiCOTIANA.

N. wigandioides, a
in flower.

shrub or small tree, very beautiful when It was received from the Botanic Garden of Freiburg in
tall

NOTES
Breisgau.

407

N. tomentosa is also arborescent, but its flowers are less N. glauca is subspontaneous along the Eiviera, coming up everywhere, especially on walls. In good soil it forms almost

showy.

a small tree.

NOLINA.
species of this are now included under Beaucarnea. N. erum])cns is stemless, whilst N. longifolia and N. Beldingi form a stem 2-5 m. high, when full-grown.

Some

OCIMUM. was received from Sir William Thiselton-Dyer in 1902. It was recommended to him as a plant useful against mosquitoes. It grew well for several years, but was finally lost.
0. viricle

OCOTEA.
O.fcetens, the "Til" of the Canaries, is a large tree with fruits According to a letter from Dr. George exactly resembling acorns.
this

Perez, of Orotava, to whom we are greatly indebted for seeds of and many other Canarian plants, this is the tree an enormous specimen of which grew in the little Island of Hierro and perished This tree was said to have had in a storm three centuries ago. the wonderful property of condensing the mountain mist, thus supplying the inhabitants of Hierro with drinking water, which was gathered in two small tanks under the tree, as it trickled

down from

the leaves.*

fine trees at Antibes and Golfe-Juan. a very acid juice, and the wood a bad smell.

There are

The

tree has

0.

Odontospermum. maritimum has been established on the rocks near the sea. sericeum, with silky white leaves and large yellow flowers, is
0.

a low shrub of great beauty, called the " Canarian edelweiss " by Dr. Christ.

Olea.

which were cultivated on the property when Sir Thomas Hanbury bought it, have been spared. Some of them must be more than four hundred years
of the olive trees (0. europcea),

Many

old.f

All species of Olea are of very slow growth.

Oncidium.
Several species of this genus grow perfectly well in the open, epiphytically on trees. 0. bifolium has been grown since April, It was given to us by 1903, flowering abundantly every summer.
* Pithecolobium saman Benth. is popularly known as the " rain tree "of South America; it is infested by a suctorial insect, and produces a liquid, which often falls copiously to the ground. (Medley Wood in Agricult. Journ.

of S. Afr.
t
.

ii.

p. 713.)

For the history of the Olive and the extraction of the oil see Fliickiger & Hanbury, Pharmacooraphia, pp. 374^377, second edition, pp. 417-421, and Strasburger, jRambte oil </(e jRuwn-.
.

408

HOETUS MOETOLENSIS

0. Prof. Penzig/'i of Genoa, where it is also grown in the open. Pohlianum was received from Prof. R. von Wettstein in 1906, who had collected it in Brazil. The other Brazilian species came from the late M. Binot in 1904.

Opuntia.
species thrive exceedingly well at La Mortola those from the United States and the Andes succeed less, and evidently find om* summer too dry. Opuntias in general are " strong feeders," and enjoy good soil and plenty of water whilst growing. have perfectly realized here what Mr. David Griffiths writes about them in Bulletin No. 60, p. 29 " Prickly pear and other cacti are apparently inseparably connected in the public mind with drought and heat, but this conception of the requirements for their best development is far from perfect. Our driest deserts produce none of these plants in economic quantities, and the same is true of our hottest regions.

Most Mexican

We

Rather than say they are adapted to conditions of extreme heat and drought, we should say that they thrive best in a region which has an equitable temperature, and a considerable rainfall periodically distributed. There is certainly no region in the world where these plants grow naturally in such profusion as they do

upon the plateau


is it

Mexico, but this is not a hot country, neither during ... it has a considerable rainfall summer, and then the country looks like anything but a desert." The present large collection of Opuntias at La Mortola was begun by Mr. D. Hanbury. In later years almost every available form from European gardens has been tried here. Many of them still need identification. A large number of species were given us in 1901-4 by the late Dr. A. Weber, of Paris, including many type specimens. Others were received from Mrs. K. Brandegee, of Flagstaff, in California; from Prof. Arechavaleta, of Montevideo, Mr. D. Griffiths, of the United States Department of Agriculture, Prof. Britton, of New York, from the late Mr. Eichlam, of Guatemala, from M. Puteaux, of Versailles, from Prof. Sohrens, Santiago de Chili, from Prof. Trabut, of Algiers, and from Mr. Winter, of Bordighera. A complete set of species collected in the
of

excessively dry.

United States by Mr. C. A. Purpus was sent by his brother, Mr. A. Purpus, from the Darmstadt Botanic Garden. The genus Opuntia is one of the most interesting of the CactacecB, being so rich in forms and varieties that it almost approaches Bosa or Buhus. A careful monograph drawn up from living plants is urgently needed. From an economic point of view many species are greatly esteemed in their native land as fruit for man and as food for stock. In the United States Department of Agriculture this question has been seriously studied by Messrs. D. Griffiths and R. F. Hare, who have al* Prof. 0. Penzig states {Malpighia, viii. (1894), p. 464) that his plant came from the garden of an Italian gentleman at San J'rancesco d'Albano, where it was grown for more than thirty years on an orange tree in the open.

NOTES

409

ready published several interesting and useful accounts. In other countries efforts are being made to plant as food for cattle the " spineless Cactus," a form of 0. Ficus-indica, originally introduced from Italy to the United States Department of Agriculture. Mr. In several Griffiths gives a negative account of these trials. " districts of South Africa and in Austraha the " prickly pears have spread to such an extent as to become a real pest. So far, 0. albicans seems to be closely related to 0. robusta. the individuals that have flowered showed the ovarium without We received ovules, the flowers being thus practically only male. our plants from Mr. Winter, of Bordighera. This, as 0. aoracantha was received from Palermo in 1901. well as many other species from great altitudes of South America, only growls with difficulty. 0. arbuscida was received from the New York Botanic Garden a few years ago. 0. basilaris was first introduced from Kew by Mr. Daniel

Hanbury, July, 1868. 0. Beckeriana is an old inhabitant not know^n. Dr. Weber was inclined
0. sericea. 0. Bergeriana

of this

garden
it

to consider

its history is identical with


;

is another old inhabitant of the Eiviera, growing abundantly on almost barren sandstone at Bordighera, but disIt is a fine species, and produces throughout the liking heavy soil. year a profusion of brilliant red flowers. The fruit is dark red. 0. brasiliensis, though succeeding in the open, does not escape The injury from frost and has therefore been put under glass. first specimen was brought from Kew by Mr. Daniel Hanbury, in July, 1868. 0. caracasana was received from Dr. Weber, of Paris, Its in 1901, and later on from the Botanic Garden at Catania. very curious flowers and fruits were first described from our

specimens.
0. cholla

was

also received

from Dr. Weber.

came from the New York Botanic Garden. 0. cochmelifera was brought from Kew by Mr. Daniel Hanbury in May, 1868. 0. crinifera was bought from M. Pfersdorff, of Paris, by Mr. Daniel Hanbury in April, 1872. We have now large bushes of Young plants, especially when growing in the this fine species.
0. chlorotica

shade, form a trunk covered with long white hair {0. senilis Parm.).
0. decumana Haworth was brought from Kew by Mr. Daniel Hanbury in May, 1868. This name has remained rather obscure. Schumann in his monograph does not describe the plant, he
it in a footnote after the description of 0. Ficusindica, together with 0. elongata and 0. gymnocarpa. The latter is of more recent introduction, whilst 0. elongata was recognized, without a doubt, among our Opuntias by the late Dr. A. Weber. Haworth's description" of 0. deciimana can only be applied to the plant known in gardens as 0. Labouretiana Console.

simply mentions

Haworth, Revisio Plantarum Succulentartan,

p. 71.

410

HORTUS MORTOLENSIS

very old specimen, bearing this name, in the garden, I preIt fully is the 0. decumana brought from Kew in 1868. agrees with Console's plant, as specimens received from Palermo" show, and the late Dr. A. Weber shared the opinion that this is The description of Haworth agrees well with our 0. decumana. plant, especially as he compares it with 0. Ficiis-indica, evidently meaning thereby the plant which w-e now generally know as No doubt 0. decumana is very similar to 0. Ficus-indica Guss. this species and more so to 0. elongata, but its joints are far longer, thicker, and not at all tuberculated, with only a very few The flowers are orange red and very conspicuous. It prickles.

sume

is

certainly specifically distinct from both. De Candolle.t Pfeiffer^ and Labouret merge 0. elongata and hence Console's new name for the 0. decumana into one species plant can be explained, the more so as I am informed by Prof. Borzi that Console knew 0. robusta under the name of 0. decumana. Haworth says that he is not sure whether 0. decumana is
;

really 0.

maxima Mill., at any rate, the name 0. decumana cannot be used for 0. Ficus-indica, as recently proposed by -Mr. Burkill-H 0. elongata, an old inhabitant of the garden, determined by the late Dr. A. Weber, agrees perfectly with the description given by Prince Salm-Dyck. For 0. Engelmanni we are indebted to Sir Edmund Loder, of Leonardslee, Horsham. This new species stands very close to 0. subulata, 0. exaltata. and may be easily mistaken for it, but when grown side by side 0. exaltata is a taller plant the differences are quite obvious. with generally longer branches, and somewhat glaucous instead The tubercles are more elongated and differently of grass green. marked. The leaves are shorter, the spines, when young, are not I have white, but yellowish brown, generally stouter and stiff er. not yet seen a flower of it. It is an old inhabitant of our gardens, sometimes called 0. Ctimingii. It probably comes from about the same region as 0. subulata, 0. Ficus-indica, the common prickly pear, is planted everywhere along the coast and has become subspontaneous in South France, Italy, Spain, Morocco, Algeria, Greece, &c., on the Red Sea coast, and in South Africa. Its fruits are not eaten here to Daniel and Thomas the same extent as in Southern Italy. Hanbury planted 0. Ficus-indica in a great many places in the garden on May 20th, 1868. Mr. Burkill has shown^ that this cannot be Miller's plant,
*

Through the kindness

of Prof. A. Borzi, Director of the p. 473.

Palermo Botanic

Garden.
t
t

De CandoUe, Prodr.
Pfeiffer,

iii.

!|

Enumeratlo Diagnoslica, p. 152. Labouret, Monographie de la Famille des Cactees, p. 347. " J. H. Burkill, "Determination of the Prickly Pears now Wild in India
vol.
iii.

(in

Records of tite Botanical Snrvei/ of India, iv. p. 6). pp. 288-289. 1 See also J. D. Hooker & B. Daydon Jackson, Inde.x Keicensis,

p. 357.

NOTES

411

which differed by larger spines arranged in star-Hke clusters and by a red juiced fruit. Thus Miller's plant evidently belonged to the group of Dillenii, &c. Mr. Burkill substitutes for our plant the name of 0. decumana. But Haworth's description of 0. decumana does not agree with our plant, nor can the latter have been unknown in England before 1820, which year is given by Haworth I therefore as the time of the introduction of 0. decumana.
prefer to retain for our plant the name 0. Ficus-indica Guss. (not Miller), under which designation it has been known for such a long time, at least, until Miller's plant has been incontestably identified. See also the note on 0. decumana. 0. Ficus-indica var. Amyclaa was collected by the writer on December 26th, 1900, on Monte Pellegrino, near Palermo, where It differs from the common it grows in hedges along the roads. prickly pear by being more aculeate and is believed to be the aboriginal form of that species. 0. hcematocarpa, 0. Hanhuryana, and 0. inceqiiilateralis were They have all first described from plants grown at La Mortola. very fine yellow flowers. 0. inermis is well figured in De CandoUe's Plantes Grasses I have not yet (1797) and is identical with 0. stricta Haw. (1803). been able to ascertain whether the plant reported as 0. inermis/'' from Catalonia and the Balearic Islands, really belongs to this
species.
0.

Lemaireana

is

closely allied to 0. vionacantha, but


it

much

from Dr. Weber. 0. leptocaulis was bought from the Jardin d'Essai, Hamma, It has very small yellowish green Algiers, in February, 1873.
smaller.

We

received

flowers. 0. leucotricha is easily recognized

by its long white hairs proit forms tine truding from the areoles together with the spines plants, with pretty yellow flowers and nice aromatic fruits, known in Mexico as " Duraznilla." 0. monacantha is an old inhabitant of the gardens of this neighbourhood, and is occasionally seen subspontaneous on rocks between Mortola and Nice. It is well figured in De Candolle's Plantes Grasses, t. 137, as Cactus Oimntia tuna. 0. NasMi was received in 1904 from New York Botanic Garden. It belongs to the section " Consolea." 0. nigricans was sent by Dr. A. Weber, in 1901. This is one of the smallest of the " Tuna " group. 0. parva. It is a low shrub, about \ m. high, with obovate thick joints, 5-10 m. high, distant areoles, and with only a few single spines, or almost inerme. The flowers are yellow, the fruits small, turbinate, about 2 cm. long, scarcely reddish. In habit it much resembles the figure given in De Candolle's Plantes Grasses as Cactus Opuntia nana, but it is not procumbent. 0. pilifera was also received from Dr. Weber. So far its flowers are not known.
;
.

See Schumann, Monographia Caclacearum,

p. 718.

412
0. ovata

HOETUS MOETOLENSIS
was received from Mr.
and
J.

Sohrens from the Botanic

Garden
Weber,

at Santiago. 0. quitensis

0. i^rolifera, 0. quipa, in 1901.

were received from Dr.

0. robusta is a variable plant in the size of its joints, their form, spines, and colom-, but flower and fruit offer scarcely sufficient characters on which to establish varieties. The first plants

were bought from M. Pfersdorff,


in April, 1872.

of Paris,

by Mr. Daniel Hanbury,

0. rosea has been included by all authors since Salm-Dyck under 0. imbricata, to which of course it is very closely allied. It has, however, more slender branches of brownish hue and

from those
distinct.

tubercular ribs. The flowers, too, are very different of 0. imbricata. They have fewer petals, and are of rather dull purple rose colour. In habit the two plants are very
different

0. rubescens, one of the interesting section "Consolea"; is not hardy in the open. 0. ruficla of Engelmann, which differs from 0. microdasys var. rufida of Schumann, was sent by Mr. Griffiths from Torreon, in

Mexico. 0. Buthei

is

related to 0. imbricata, but exhibits a different

growth and larger flowers. 0. Salmiana was sent by Mr. Daniel Hanbury from Clapham
in October, 1869.
first described from plants of this garden. from Mr. Winter, of Bordighera, in 1899. 0. sjjinosissima is another species of the section " Consolea," and when well developed is of a striking appearance, the stems and branches being totally different from the usual manner of the genus. The stem grows up quite straight, and throws out straight branches at a perfect right angle. These branches, in their turn, throw out, on both sides, secondary branches which again stand off at a right angle, and so the plant grows on as a perfect system of right angles, affording some similarity to a Lorraine cross, hence the vulgar names: "Croix de Lorraine" and " Cruz de matrimonio." This species is not quite hardy here, but a fine specimen can be seen in the Palermo Botanic Garden. 0. streiHacantha was received from Dr. Weber in January, It is the " Tuna Cordona " of the Mexicans, and is held 1901. in great esteem on account of its very palatable fruit, which can be eaten in quantity without any deleterious effect.

0.

Schumanni was
it

We

received

''

0. subulata was formerly known as Peireskia subulaia, but Engelmann changed its generic name after having received, in April, 1883, from Sir Thomas Hanbury, fruits, &c., from one of our plants, which is still alive, though it has in the meantime been badly damaged by a gale. The figure published in Gardeners'

See Griffiths

&

Hare, The Tuna as Food for Man, Bulletin n. 116,

p. 50.

NOTES
Chronicle, 1903,
of this species

413

The fruits ii. 91, fig. 38, shows it at its best. remain green, even when ripe, and they have the
;

The spines make excellent pins. largest seeds of the genus. it forms a 0. tomentosa is the tallest species which we grow small tree with beautiful, fiery red flowers. Generally almost spineless forms are cultivated, but seedlings are more or less armed. This is a small plant with the habit of 0. 0. triacantha.
polyantha, as pointed out by De Candolle. We received it from Dr. Weber in 1901 so far it has not flowered. There has always been great uncertainty about this 0. tuna. species. Linnaeus comprises several species under this name, and, therefore, only Miller's plant can rightly claim the name. Miller* thus describes his plant: "Articulis ovato-oblongis, spinis Indian fig with oblong oval joints and awl-shaped subulatis. branches are armed with longer spines. The thorns of awl shape they are whitish and come out in clusters. The flowers are large, of a bright yellow colour." Haworth, Ue Candolle, and Salm are therefore wrong when they include here Dillenius's plant figured in HorUis Elthamensis, fig. 380, as 0. tuna major flore gilvo. If the name of 0. tuna should be used again, it could only be applied to 0. Dillenii or a plant similar to it. 0. tuna major flore My 0. gilva is most likely identical gilvo has to be separated.
; . . . . . . .
.

with this

latter.

Further, I wish to draw attention to the fact that the plant figured by Wight f has a much longer clavate ovary than can be seen on Dillenius' plate, where a much shorter, almost globular,

ovary

is

figured.

of this group, apparently including several undescribed species. They are somewhat tender and apt to suffer in winter. 0. gilva was received in 1907 from Prof. C. F. Baker, from Cuba. 0. tunicata was sent by Mr. D. Hanbury from Clapham in October, 1869. It is the most formidably armed species, and very striking, with its numerous spines, each enclosed in a white paper-like sheath. Flowers and fruits were first described from these specimens. 0. Turpini is the only one of the section of Tephrocactus which has flowered at La Mortola. 0. velutina was received from the late Dr. A. Weber in November, 1902. 0. Winteriana was first described from this garden. It belongs to the " Tuna " group, and is distinguished by large flowers of a brilliant red. 0. zacuapanensis, a fine new species with bright orange flowers. received this plant a few years ago from M. L. Puteaux, Versailles, as Opuntia spec, from Zacuapan. Joints 13-20 cm. long and 9|- cm. broad, obovate, smooth, glossy green, areoles

We

grow a great many plants

We

f Illustrations

Miller, Diet. Gardening, eighth edition, n. 3. of the Indian Botany, ii. t. 114.

414

HOETUS MORTOLENSIS

mm. distant, slightly elevated, small, roundish or obovate. Spicules yellow, short, not numerous. Spines generally two, white, with yellowish points and base, terete, the lower deflexed shorter, the upper one spreading (2-) 3 cm. long. Flowers numerous from the top of the joint, 7h cm. long and 6h cm. broad, ovary obovate turbinate, 3|-4 cm. long and 22 mm. broad, areoles somewhat elevated, prickly petals obovate lanceolate, acute and aristate, orange-yellow, with a more reddish-brown hue along the midrib on the back and as well on the shorter obtuse outer petals stamens yellow, style yellowish, thickened or clavate above the base, stigmata (6-) 7, dirty rose coloured. Besides the species enumerated in the Catalogue, a great number of plants are grown which have not yet been identified."
15-25
;

Obeopanax.
genus comprising very ornamental shrubs or small trees from Central America, which are quite at home at La Mortola. About eighty species have been named, but in most cases only insufficiently described. In the absence of a good monograph, and without the aid of a large herbarium of native specimens, the genus is difficult to deal with. Prof. Harms in N. Pff. I. c. divides the species into three sections according to the shape of the leaves DigitatcB, Lobatce, and SimpUcifolicE. Of the last section we grow 0. caintatum, but have only a female specimen, though male specimens are not uncommon in other gardens of this neighbourhood. The male plant has the leaves a little more elongated and more rounded at the base, whilst in the female they are more ovate and more attenuated at the base. But the shape of the leaves varies to some extent with the age of the plant. Of the second series we grow 0. dactylifolius, which forms a very fine tree. It was bought by Mr. Daniel Hanbury, in August, 1872, from M. Van Geert, of Ghent. Of this we have both sexes. The female plant has larger leaves with more divided lobes. I keep the name of 0. Epremesnilianus for the plant, which I found here under this name, though it is quite different from the one figured by G. Nicholson {Diet. 522, fig. 772). It is a fine, small tree with 5-lobed leaves, one or two of the middle lobes being generally free nearly to the base, whilst the two lower lobes have each a small outer lobe. In young specimens the leaves are larger and 7-lobed, but agree in shape with those of the adult plant. Count Epremesnil, after whom the plant is named, was one of the first to found a garden on the Riviera, the Villa Les Cocotiers, at Golfe-Juan, now transformed by his heirs into a horticultural establishment. 0. ixdmatus, another species of this section, occurs in gardens under the name of Aralia
* For further notes on Opuntias grown at La Mortola, see Gardeners' Chronicle, 1902, ii. 89-93, with figs. 32-42; 1904, i. U, figs. 14-16; Engler's Botanisehe Jahrbilcher xxxvi. pp. 443-457, and various notes in the MonatsschriftfUr Kakteenkunde.

NOTES

415

pahnata. It agrees fairly well with the meagre description given It has been suggested by De Candolle as Hedera cheirojjhylla. that it might be 0. platan ifolius, but this is said to have 7-lobed leaves and entire lobes, whilst our plant has the leaves 5-lobed

and the lobes


is

distinctly dentate.

0. Thihautii species belong to the DigitatcB. a small shrub with short petioles and narrow acuminate leaflets. 0. xalapensis is a much larger shrub or small tree, with long petioles and broader, obovate, less acuminate leaflets. 0. stellatus was received in 1903 from Mr. Geoffroy St. Hilaire, of Gros Pin, Hy6res. It seems to agree with the plant figured by Nicholson under fig. 772 as 0. Epremesnilianus. All these species are dioecious, and none has borne fruit here.

The following

Oethostemon.
0. Sellowianus is a hardy shrub recommended for its delicious The flowers fruit," which so far has been but rarely produced. being very pretty, it is also of decorative value. It was first introduced by M. Andre from Uruguay to his garden, Villa Colombia,

Golfe-Juan.

OSTEOSPERMUM.
0. monilifernm was raised from seeds given by M. Thuret, of It is a quick-growing shrub with Antibes, in February, 1869. The soft and herbaceous branches, and pretty yellow flowers.

berry-like fruits

ai'e

remarkable for a Gomposita.

Othonna.
Seeds were sown by Mr. Daniel Ilanbury, November 21st, 1870. It is a small succulent herb with pretty yellow flowers, now nearly subspontaneous in the garden, doing well on the driest places. 0. triplinervia is a pretty succulent shrub with yellow flowers. It was first introduced from Kew in July, 1868, and again by Mr. Daniel Hanbury in October, 1871. Both species came from Prof. MacOwan.
0.
crassifolia.

OXALIS.
0. cernua

must now be pronounced a very troublesome weed,

however reluctant one may be to apply this epithet to so beautiful It is recorded as a garden escape in 1806, and has since a plant.
spread over all the Mediterranean region. Curiously enough, the plant is not known to produce seeds in this country, and can only be propagated by very small bulbs produced in quantities on the roots. The short-styled form only exists here, and one with double flowers is occasionally found. The plant is so perfectly acclimatized that it has adapted its flowering season to its new
* This fruit is known as " Araca do Brazil," " Arasa do Eio Grande," and " Goyabo del Pays." It is about the size of an egg. A good account has been recently published by Mr. F. W. Popenoe, '^ Feijoa Sellowiana: Its History, Culture, and Varieties," in Pomona College Journ. of Economic Botany, ii., February, 1912.

416

HORTUS MORTOLENSIS
is

home.

0.p2irp2irata, with beautiful purple flowers, several parts of the garden.

spreading in

OXERA.
0. pulchella is a beautiful climber, but rather tender for the Riviera. It flowers in the garden of Villa Cava at Bordighera,

whence we received

it.

Pachyphytum.
Differs scarcely from Echeveria.

P. bracteosum was procured


in

by Mr. Daniel Hanbury from Mr. Thomas Cooper, Reigate,


July, 1868.

P^ONIA.
a native of our nearest mountains (Monte Grammondo and Mt. Mulac^), where it grows in the most rocky places (at about 1200 m.), and produces in May most beautiful flowers. Like all other species, with the exception of P. hitea, it does very well in the garden.

P. peregrina

is

Pandorea.
P. (Tecoma) australis is a very vigorous, tall and woody, freeflowering climber. Seeds were received from Villa Thuret, Antibes, in February, 1869. We grow two varieties of it, one corresponding exactly with Ventenat's figure, with large flowers, and another wdth somewhat smaller pale yellow flowers. P. jasminoides is considerably less vigorous it was bought at Hyeres in December, 1867.
;

Paphiopedilum.
Better

known

enumerated do

All the species in gardens as Cypripedium. well in the open, in the shade of the pergola.

Passiflora.
species thrive beautifully, and P. actinia, P. ccsrulea, P. racemosa have been long established in the garden. P. Hahnii and P. capsularis were received from Kew in 1905, and succeed perfectly. Many of them produce fruit more or less abundantly, but I have never seen P. actinia and P. racemosa do so. P. edulis

Some

produces
position.

its

much appreciated

fruit freely

when planted

in a

warm

Peireskia.*
Peireskias just manage to live in the open, but do not make much progress. Under glass they grow and flower in great profusion, especially P. aculeata, which occupies a large space in one of the greenhouses. In autumn it is literally covered with pretty little flowers, with a strong and rather disagreeable smell, but it rarely
fruits.

It

Kew

in July, 1868.

was probably procured by Mr. Daniel Hanbury from P. brasiliensis and P. discolor were received
Others were received in 1906 from Mr.

in 1901

from Dr. Weber.

* The genus was named in honour of Nicolas- Claude Fabri de Peiresc Peiresc, the or Peiresk (1580-1637), one of the most learned men of his time. feudal fief of the family, is a little village near Nice. See Dr. F. Mader in Monatsschrift filr Kakteenkimde, 1910, p. 23, with figure.

NOTES
W.
Weingai't.

417
its

P. grandifolia ripens
of Elba.

large pear-shaped fruits

on the Island

Pelargonium.
Nearly all the species of this large, chiefly South African, genus do exceedingly well at La Mortola. We have constantly tried to increase our collection, but have not yet been able to obtain many of those interesting species which form so striking an element of the flora of South Africa, and which would certainly succeed with us. Some of the species, like P. imlverulentum and P. triste, have been a long time in the garden, and were first planted by Mr. Daniel Hanbury. We are indebted for plants of this genus to Miss Willmott

and to many botanical gardens, Kew, and to Mr. Willy Miiller,

chiefly to
of

Dahlem, Hamburg, and


Inferiore.

Nocera

Pentzia.
P. virgata, an elegant little shrub with almost filiform branches, is one of the chief Karroo plants of South Africa, eagerly eaten by It was probably introduced by Prof. MacOwan.='= sheep.

Periploca.
P. grcBca, a well known deciduous climber. P. lavigata evergreen. It was grown from Canarian seeds in 1900.
is

Persea.
P. gratissima, the Alligator or Avocato Pear,f is extensively Thirty cultivated in many tropical and subtropical countries. young plants were procured from Messrs. Nabonnand, GolfeOne tall plant still in the garden Juan, in November, 1870. probably dates from this planting. P. inclica, a small tree from the evergreen forests of the Canaries, is liable to suffer from P. sericea cannot be said to flourish here. thrips.

Peumus.
P. Boldus is a fine evergreen tree, common in the Chilian Andes, which furnishes excellent wood, whilst the leaves were formerly used in medicine.

Ph^deanthus.
P. buccinatorius is one of our finest climbers, with magnificent It grows in Central Mexico at elevations large red tubular flowers. I have, however, never of about 2500 m., and is quite hardy here. seen it fruiting, though it does so in Sicily.

Pharbitis.
Pharbitis {Ipomcea) Learii is the finest and most commonly planted of the Gonvohidacem family, and has almost become sub*

See also F. Miiller, Select Extra-Tropical Plants, &c., p. 253. See Strasburger, Rambles on the Riviera.

2 E

418

HORTUS MORTOLENSIS

spontaneous in many places on this coast. The flowers, which are an exquisite blue, are produced in great quantity from spring to summer, and often continue till late in the autumn, but they seldom produce seeds. We received it from Prof. Charles Naudin
of in April, 1877.

Phasbolus.
P. Caracalla has very interesting flowers. It succeeds quite well on the Italian Lakes, but here it has never lived long, although it has been tried repeatedly.

Phillyrea.
Prof. Fiori, in Fiori and Paoletti, Flora analitica cVItalia, has united the three Italian species into one, which of course may be justified by their great variability. "With us, however, P. angustifolia, which is common on the rocks near the sea, is a very distinct plant, and I have never seen intermediate forms running into P. media. Our plant of P. latifolia came from the Royal Botanic Garden of Munich (October, 1909), where it was originally

introduced by Dr. H. Ross from Sicily. P. Vilmoriniana is a more showy plant, but seems rather less adapted to our soil and
climate.

Phcenix.

The common Date Palm (P. dactylifera) is abundantly planted near Bordighera, where it has been in cultivation since the sixteenth century for the production of palm leaves for Catholic and
Jewish
ritual service.* There are several big old specimens in the garden, all planted by Sir Thomas Hanbury, with the exception of the one west of the house. The latter is a sucker from an old plant, which was already on this spot, when Sir Thomas Hanbury bought the property, but was blown down in a gale a few years
later.

The dates produced on the Riviera are of little value, but better results might certainly be obtained if offshoots of good and early kinds were introduced. There is a form grown in Nice as
P. melanocarpa Sauvaigo, which is said to produce good dates,! and so does one known as P. macrocarpa in Mr. Winter's establishment at Bordighera. The Pho&nix being dioecious are therefore disposed to hybridize the plants grown from seeds collected in gardens are often of hybrid origin. The species catalogued as P. acaulis Hort. is probably a hybrid between P. jpumila Hort. and P. reclinata. P. macrocarpa originated in the Canary Islands, and is said to be a hybrid between P. canariensis and P. dactylifera. P. hybrida Hort. and P. Bivieri are hybrids of P. canariensis too. P. pumila Hort., most likely another hybrid, is a plant with a short stem and short leaves, with the petioles invariably yellow and the
;

Le les Jardins de Nice. Phcenix melanocarpa de la Villa Henry de Cessole," in Revue Horticole, 1894, pp. 375 and 493.
t

See Strasburger, Rambles on the Riviera. Emile Sauvaigo, " Les Phoenix cultives dans

NOTES

419

spines almost black. P. caiiariensis is the most decorative and most generally planted species along the coast. It is very hardy, succeeds on every soil, and ripens annually a great quantity of seeds. Many other forms are grown on the Eiviera. Their nomenclature is much confused, and a thorough study of them is much needed. I am greatly indebted to Dr. Odoardo Beccari, of Florence, for helping me to name the Phmnix and other palms of this garden.

Phyllocactus. genus of Cactacece, with flat leaf-like stems and showy flowers. Several are quite hardy in half-shady places, and can also be grown epiphytically. P. anguliger and P. latifrons were first brought here by Mr. Daniel Hanbury from Kew in July, 1868. Other species were received from various sources. P. grandis was brought from Palermo Botanic Garden in 1901. Besides the species enumerated in the Catalogue a great number of hybrids are

cultivated.

P. trichomanoides.

growing this plant,

for

Phyllocladus. have always had great difficulty in which the climate and soil are little adapted.

We

PiCEA.

our Alps, just manages to exist in the shadiest place of the valley, but succeeds quite well near Bordighera. We are more successful with the Himalayan P. Morinda.
P. excelsa, a native of

Pilocarpus.
P. pennatifolius'"'

was received from the Strassburg Botanic

Garden through Prof. Fliickiger in June, 1880. It is now a handsome and dense round bush, 3-20 m. high and 3-00 m. broad. The plant received under the name of P. racemosus seems scarcely
to
difi"er.

PiNGUICULA.
P. grandiflora this dainty little plant is a native of wet rocks in the Eoja valley between Fontan and San Dalmazzo, whence Sir Thomas Hanbury annually used to bring a supply of fresh specimens, which were planted on a wet wall.
;

PiNUS.
tried a great number of species, but only a few have The finest pine of the garden, with an elegant succeeded. Thirty young trees were pyramidal growth, is P. canariensis.

We have

in

procured by Mr. Daniel Hanbury from M. Nabonnand, Golfe-Juan, November, 1870. The largest specimen now in the garden is 23 m. high and has a stem of 2-40 m. circumference at the base. The species is extremely resinous.

* See the interesting history of this plant in Fliickiger & Hanbury, Pharmacographia, second edition, p. 113 and the recent study of the species, founded partly on material from La Mortola, by R. Jenzer, Pharmakognostische Untersuchungen iiber Pilocarpus pennatifolius Lem., &c. Ziirich, 1910.
;

2 E 2

420

HORTUS MOETOLENSIS

P. Pinaster, P. halepensis, and P. Pinea have been planted in the lower western part of the garden, and on the cape, as a wind-break. P. halepensis, which now densely covers the western slopes of the valley, has grown up after it had been
protected by strict prohibition of cutting and pasturing, against depredation of men and goats. It is a good example of the (See recuperative power of a forest, when not interfered with.
plate III.)

P. radiata was grown from seeds received from M. Thuret, The tallest tree is now 15-80 m. Antibes, in February, 1869. high, with a circumference of the stem of 1-90 m. at the base, and a crown spreading 9-00 m.

PiRUS.

Apple and pear trees do not succeed well at La Mortola. The soil is apparently too dry for them during summer, and they suffer A few hundred a good deal from insect and fungoid diseases. metres higher up on our mountains they grow vigorously in company with lemon trees. P. syriaca was collected for us by Mr. Hartmann, in Syria, whence we received it again through Mr. A. Aaronsohn, of Haifa. P. trilohata, a very interesting and rather rare tree in gardens, was procured from Messrs. Veitch & Sons, in November, 1868. It is now 9-20 m. high, 5-50 m. broad, and has a circumference of 1-10 m. at the base. PiTHECOCTENIUM.
P. muricattcm was given by Prof. Decaisne, Jardin des Plantes,
Paris, to Mr. Daniel Hanbury, in April, 1872. It is a large climber, almost deciduous in spring. The large white and yellow flowers are succeeded by a most interesting elliptic capsule, the covers of which are muricate, with little prickly warts outside (whence the

name Pithecoctennitn = monkey's number of densely packed seeds.

brush).

It

contains a great

PiTTOSPOEUM. genus comprising a large number of pretty evergreen shrubs

and trees, much planted along the Riviera. Several of them bear nice and often very sweet-scented flowers. The commonest species is P. undidatum. P. procerum was received from Villa Thuret, Antibes, in 1904. P. rhombifolium, the " diaIt has large leaves and forms a tree. mond-leaved " Pittosporum, is a small tree with light green foliage and yellow fruits. The seeds were received from Mr. R. T. Baker, P. umbellatum and P. patulum of Sydney, in January, 1898. were received from Tresco Abbey, in 1909.
Platyceeium.
P. alcicorne has been grown for many years in the open, and also epiphytically on a Ficus tree. For a fine specimen we are indebted to the Botanic Garden at Groningen.

NOTES
PODRANEA.

4^1

P. BicasoUana is one of our most vigorous climbers, and during its flowering time a great ornament to the garden. It is a native of Pondoland, where it grows in the thickets at the mouth of the Umzimwubu (St. John's) Eiver. Nothing positive is known about its introduction, but it is probably due to Prof.

MacOwan.
The genus differs from Pandorea by its elongate-linear capsule, with thin flexible, coriaceous entire valves Pandorea has short and oblong fruits and woody valves as well as by the large inflated calyx and oblong ovary.

POLYGALA.
P. apopetala is a very pretty shrub, 1-50-2-00 m. high, with thin and slender branches terminating in elegant racemes. It was raised from seeds collected by Mr. C. A. Purpus in Lower California, and is figured in Bot. Mag. t. 8065 from specimens sent from La Mortola. In its native home it is stated to be only 2-3
feet high.

P. myrtifolia forms shrubs, or even small trees, at La Mortola. itself on the driest and most arid places of the garden, and is of great beauty when in flower. It varies somewhat in habit, shape of the leaves, and the colours of the flowers. Seeds were first sent to La Mortola by Mr. Daniel Hanbury, in March, 1872. P. oppositifolia is very similar, but never so vigorous. Of P. vircjata seeds were sent by Prof. MacOwan, in June, 1872. PORLIEEIA.
It establishes

P. hygrometrica was procured from Hyeres in December, 1867. now a small shrub, about 1 m. high and 1^ m. in diameter. The leaves, which resemble those of some Mimosas, open and
It is

close periodically.

PORTULACAEIA.
received from M. Thuret, Antibes, in November, 1869. It has been reintroduced, but, although quite vigorous, has never shown any sign of flower.

P.

afra

was

first

POTERIUM.
P. spinosum was given to Mr. Daniel Antibes, in October, 1871.

Hanbury by M. Thuret,

POUTEEIA.

Of P. suavis we received several young plants from Signer Giovanni Lanteri, formerly of Villa Gamier, Bordighera, who first had the plant in Europe, and later on from Kew Gardens. The plant is said to attain the size of a tree, with the appearance of a laurel. The apple-shaped fruit is the size of an apricot, yellow and scarlet when mature, and possesses a delicate perfume. For further particulars see the description by Mr. W. B. Hemsley, in Kezv Bull. I. c.

422

HOETUS MORTOLENSIS
Primula.

P. Allionii and P. marginata, natives of our Alps, live and flower for some time if brought into the garden, but lose much of their natural beauty. P. Palinuri, endemic in Southei'n Italy, where it grows on Cape Palinuri and Calate della Molpe, does It was sent by Lady Ilchester. quite well here.

Peotea mellifeea.
plant received from Messrs. Nabonnand, Golfe-Juan, in 1903, which has not yet flowered, is most likely this species. Seeds of P. abyssinica were sent in 1908 and 1911 by Prof. I. Baldrati, of

Asmara.

Peunus.
Mr. Daniel from Antibes, December 7th, 1874 "Cherries thrive exceedingly well in this country, and produce excellent fruit and very early. But the trees must not be pruned pruning is apt to make them exude gum and is but of
Peaches, cherries, and plums succeed very well.
in a letter

Hanbury remarks

use." P. ursina, a native of the subalpine regions of the Lebanon, was grown from seeds collected there by Mr. Hartmann, in 1900. An unnamed species comes from Chitral Valley, where it was collected by Col. A. A. Barnet, in 1904. It is said to be a shrub or small tree, with numerous pure white flowers. With us it is deciduous, with glabrous virgate branches. For the seeds we are indebted to the late Sir Dietrich Brandis, who sent them in October, 1904.
little

PSIDIUM.

These shrubs ripen their fruit perfectly well here. P. Cattleianum was first brought here from Hyeres, in 1868, and again by Mr, Daniel Hanbury, in October, 1869, from England.
Pteronia.
P. incana was introduced at La Mortola, in June, 1872, by Mr. Daniel Hanbury, who probably received the seeds from Prof. MacOwan. It is a shrub, 1-00-1-30 m. high, flowering from April to May, but not ripening seeds. It thrives on the hottest and driest banks of the garden, and has a very sweet scent.

PUNICA.
P. Granatum, the pomegranate. The large bush on the south front of the house existed already when Sir Thomas Hanbury bought the property in 1867. The variety nana, a much smaller tree or bush, was planted by Sir Thomas Hanbury, on November 27th, 1868, on the north side of the house. It came from Messrs Veitch.

PUYA.
P. chilensis was received from Mr. Dorrien- Smith, of Tresoo

Abbey, Scilly Islands, in May, 1901.

NOTES
QUILLAJA.
Q. Saponaria, the quillai or soap bark tree, was given to Daniel Hanbury by M. Thuret, Antibes, in October, 1871.

423

Mr.

The

two trees are now about 15-50 m. high, 1"74 m. in circumference.

and have stems about

Eamona.
a rather pretty perennial or subshrub, with large red flowers. B. polystachya, which is far less attractive, shows interesting movements of the style, which is finally bent to one side of the flower.

B. grandiflora

is

Eaphiolepis.

B. indica, one of our prettiest shrubs, rarely produces seeds, whilst B. japonica fruits abundantly.
Eeevesia.
B. thyrsoidea was grown from seeds received by way of Kew from Hong Kong Botanic Garden in January, 1883. It is a shrub about 2-50 m. high.

Eesbda. For a long time much doubt existed regarding the native country of the Mignonette {B. odorata), but it is now ascertained that it is the Cyrenaica, where the late Dr. Taubert collected the
plant near Derna,''' in 1887. Prof. Schweinfurth recalls the fact that it was introduced at the Jardin des Plantes, about two hundred years ago, by the French traveller Granger.

Ehipsalis.

genus can be grown here epiphytiand do perfectly well. B.funalis { = B. grandiflora Haw.) and B. pachyptera were first introduced by Mr.

Most

of the species of this

cally in the open,

Daniel Hanbury in July, 1868. We owe most of our species to the Botanic Gardens of Dahlem, Kew, and Paris to Dr. Weber, Mr. Weingart, &c. Two species were received from Mauritius through the kindness of Dr. Koenig, several from M. C. Werckle, of San Jose de Costa Eica, and from Prof. C. F. Baker, of Cuba.
;

Ehododendeon.
Except B. indicum we cannot grow any species of genus, on account of the calcareous nature of soil and water. arboreum we had for some time, but it ultimately perished.
this

B.

Ehus.
Several species of this genus are known to be extremely poisonous. B. venenata and B. vernicifera have proved so here.

See Durand

et Barratte, Florce Lybic<e

Prodromus, p. 27.

424

iiOETUS

iVIOHTOLENSlS

From the juice of the latter the Japanese obtain their excellent varnish. B. tomentosa, B. excisa, and B. Icmcea were introduced in June, 1872, by seeds received from the late Prof. MacOwan.
KosA. Of B. Allionii there is one plant in the valley it is easily known by its distant leaflets. B. BanksicB with single yellow flowers is the most abundant Eose in the garden, and is of great beauty during the month of April. Nothing is known as to its introduction here, but it was already cultivated before December, 1870. The late Sir Joseph Hooker, who gives a full account of the introduction of the Banksian Eose into Europe, figures this yellow form from La Mortola as the type in Bot. Mag. t. 7171. I am, however, informed by Dr. A. Henry that this is not the original wild form of the species,
;

but a product of cultivation in China, whilst the real type, a single, white-flowered plant, is very common in the Ichang Province, &c. This single w'hite B. Banksice. is at present not represented in the garden, unless it is included in the collection recently received from Mr. Wilson. B. berberifolia has often been tried without success. B. bracteata is growing very well; it is late flowering and does not fruit. B. bo'urboniana is a large, most vividly coloured and almost single-flowered, very sweet-scented rose. It is an upright shrub, about l-00-l*50 m. high. B. damascena conditorum and triginUpeiala were bought from Dr. Dieck, of Zoschen, in November, 1898. Three plants of the latter variety were presented to Sir Thomas Hanbury by King Ferdinand of Bulgaria, in 1903, from the rose fields of Kazanlik, which is the chief locality for its cultivation."- This historic town is situated on the southern exit of the Shipka Pass in a beautiful undulating plain, where the principal occupation of the inhabitants is the manufacture of Attar of Eoses or Eose Oil. B. foliosa X rugosa was received from M. Maurice L. de Vilmorin in 1906. B. Fortuniana resembles a large double white B. Banksice, but it must not be mistaken for the " Bose Fortune's double yelloiv," a marvellous hybrid rose, figured in Bot. Mag. t. 4679. Mr. Fortune found this latter at Ningpo, in the garden of a rich Mandarin. It was introduced into England in 1845. B. gigantea was grown from seeds received from Mr. Thompson, of Ipswich. It was introduced into Europe in 1888, but has been everywhere a very shy bloomer. It first flowered at Chateau Eleonore, Cannes. B. indica major is generally used as stock for budding. It is the most common rose along the coast, occurring almost sub-

See Fliickiger pp. 262-268.

&

Hanbury, Pharmacographia pp. 233-238, second


,

edition,

NOTES
beautiful

425

spontaneously, and being very ornamental with its numerous B. indica semperflorens, an oldpale rose flowers. fashioned but very pretty rose, was introduced into England about 1790. B. indica semperflorens simplex was bought from Dr. Dieck, It is a very fine single rose. of Zoschen, in November, 1898. B. indica viridiflora is a monstrous form with green flowers, the
petals having

become green and

leaf -like.

as Eose " Camellia," is much planted on the Eiviera and very effective with its beautiful foliage and large single, very regular, pure white flowers. B. Fortuniana The hybrid is probably a cross between this and B. Banksia. Its flowers are very ''Anemone''' comes very near B. Icevigata. deep rose-coloured and of great beauty in April. B. lutea and the var. bicolor were received from M. Edm. Boissier, the author of the Flora Orientalis, in November, 1877. B. Lyelli is a fine climber, of the habit of B. moschata. Of B. microphylla we have only the double-flowered form. B. moschata is an extremely vigorous climber with a great profusion of flowers. It has long been grown in this garden under the name of B. Leschenaultiana. It was sent to La Mortola by Mr. W. Saunders, of Keigate, before 1873. B. multiflora and its varieties were procured in 1898 from Mr. Euschpler, of Dresden. We also received a plant from Cav.

B.

Icevigata,

commonly known

Sprenger in 1910, which was collected in Hupeh. The " Crimson Banibler " is not so successful as in the North, and flowers rather late. B. nuthana, B. oxyodon and others came from Dr. Dieck in 1898. B. phcenicia was grown from seeds collected near Beirut by Mr. Hartmann in January, 1900. B. semp)ervirens x moschata fl. pi. was planted by Mr. Daniel Hanbury. It is now climbing into a large Yucca tree. Not all of its flowers are double. The origin of the plant is not known. B. Soulieana was received from M. Maurice L. de Vilmorin in 1906 and 1907. B. Watsoniana, named in honour of the American botanist, Sereno Watson, is distinguished from all the others by its elegant growth, the narrow linear lanceolate leaflets, and the very small
C.

flowers.

Besides these species and varieties a great quantity of garden Most of these flower twice a roses are cultivated at La Mortola. year, from October to the middle of January, and again in spring from about the middle of March till the middle of June, but they During summer are generally at their best in April and May. these roses rest. The cultivation of roses for export forms a very Lord important branch of agriculture all along the Eiviera. Brougham and Vaux has pubhshed an interesting catalogue of his rose garden, which deserves the attention of every rose grower

on

this coast."

* List of Roses now in Cultivation at 1898. Descriptive Notes. London.

Chateau Eleouore, Cannes, with

426

HORTUS MORTOLBNSIS
Rosmarinus.
B,.

grows abundantly everywhere in the grounds. It varies a great deal in the colouring of its flowers. There is a tendency in some individuals to suppress the development of the stamens, so that the flowers become entirely female. The var.
officinalis

and

humilis has a prostrate habit with closely adpressed branches, is, therefore, well adapted for covering walls and rocks.

ROUPALA. Only B. Pohlii multijuga is still in the garden. B. De Jonghii Hort., B. elegantissima Hort., B. corcovadensis Hort., and B. Vervaneana Hort. were procured from Messrs. Veitch in 1905,
but only lived a short time.

ROYENA. B. Uicida was introduced by seeds sent by Mr. Daniel Hanbury in September, 1871. With us it is a small densely branched bush, but in South Africa, where it grows on the Table Mountain and in Knysna forests, it reaches a height of 12-15 m.
RULINGIA.
Seeds of B. corylifolia were received from Dr. Alfred Russel Wallace in 1905.

Sabal. low-growing palm with creeping stem, was grown from seeds received from M. Thuret, Antibes, in February, 1869. S. Blackburnianum was bought from Prince Troubetzkoy in July, 1888. It is now 4 m. high, with a stem of 2 m. circumference at the base. S. umhraculifenim is given as a synonym of S. BlackMirnianum in Index Keivensis, and, in fact, the plants grown here as such do not seem to differ. Some fine specimens may be seen in Mr. L. Winter's garden " Vallone," near
S. Adansonii, a

Bordighera. Besides these there occur in the gardens along the Riviera plants with the following names S. Palmetto, S. princeps, and S. serrulata, which apparently belong to S. Blackburnianum and /S. Adansonii.
:

Saccharum.

The Sugar-cane,

S. officinarum,

has been tried several times,

but never flourishes here.

is

Salix babylonica. bought from Fratelli Rovelli, Pallanza, in April, 1877. It planted near the water in the valley, and has grown into a fine

Was

tree.

Salvia.

Most

of the

regions of

shrubby species from Mexico and the subtropical South America are very showy during the winter.

NOTES
Perhaps the
S. mentiens,

427

and the

finest are S. gesnercBflora, S. Heerii, S. invoUicrata, tall S. Sessei.

S. albocmrulea has white and blue flowers, as the name indicates the flowers and foliage emit an agreeable smell like The foliage apples. S. aurea has terra-cotta coloured flowers. smells like Eosemary. S. cacaliafolia somewhat resembles S. S. cyanea was patens, for which in our garden it is a substitute. received some years ago from Mr. C. Werckl6, of Costa Eica. It has drooping flowers of a S. discolor is a curious species. This viscid exudation very dark violet with viscid peduncles. probably protects the flowers against slugs, ants, flies, and other small insects. S. Grahami is very drought-resisting, succeeding in very dry places. The leaves of S. leonuroides are chewed in Peru as a remedy against toothache. S. mentiens much resembles S. involucrata, but has a larger and glandular pubescent calyx.
;

Samuela.
This genus differs from Yucca, which in habit it closely resembles, by having the perianth distinctly tubular and gamophyllous below, with the stamens beoming free only at the throat. are indebted to Prof. William Trelease, of St. Louis, who established the genus, for seeds of both species, received in October, 1900.

We

Sarcocaulon.

Burmanni was received from Kew in October, 1890. S. Patersonii was first grown from seeds received from Prof. MacOwan in February, 1875. They are low succulent thorny shrubs, the thorns being formed by the persistent petioles.
S.

Saxegoth^a.
S. cojispicua did not succeed.

In Pare Chambrun at Nice

fine

specimens

may

be seen.

SCHINUS.
S. Molle, the so-called " Pepper-tree," " le faux poivrier," is much planted along the coast for its elegant foliage and habit. The
first

trees were procured from Hy6res and planted December, 1867.

at

La Mortola

in

SCHOTIA.
S. brachypetala flowered for the first time in July, 1909, without fruiting. The flowers are of a deep crimson tint and rather

showy.

S. latifolia flowers

pod containing one

and fruits freely. The fruit is a large to three large seeds with a big yellow arillus.*
SCHUBERTIA.

S. grandiflora was received from Messrs. Haage & Schmidt, of Erfurt, in 1905. The genus is closely allied to Araujia.
*

See note in Gardeners' Chronicle, 1909,

ii.

p. 375.

428

HOETUS MOETOLENSIS
SCILLA.
S.

was procured from Messrs. Wildpret & Schenkel, Hamburg and Orotava, in 1908. S. hyacinthoides is a native of the olive woods near Mortola. S. italica grows on our mountains, whence it has been introduced into the garden.
hcBviorrhoidalis

Sechium edule.
perennial with a thick and fleshy rootstock ripens its fruits from December to January. They are known as " Chocho " in the West Indies, where they are much appreciated and eaten by all classes. Occasionally they are shipped to England and sold The plant was long ago introduced to the as " Chayotes." Mediterranean region from Madeira. Our plants were grown from fruits sent by Mr. Majc Herb, of Naples, in 1902. The fruit only contains one seed, which germinates whilst the fruit is still fresh and green.
;

Sedum.

Some

of the perennial species of

Northern temperate regions

find our climate

and

soil

too hot and dry.

Semele androgyne.
cladodia, has been generally separated from Buscus on account of its mostly hermaphrodite flowers, the perianth and the stamens of which are united into a short tube at the base. So far our plant has never borne fruit.

A fine climber with large

Sempeevivum.
the Canarian (arborescent or woody) species succeed very well at La Mortola, although many are sensitive to frost. They all flower and fruit abundantly. Many of them are old inhabitants of the garden, but the greater part were procured in later years from many botanical gardens, chiefly from Basel and
all

Almost

Prague.

The Alpine species have been given up, as with a few exceptions they do not thrive, our climate being too hot and
dry.
species, on the contrary, are perfectly at home and afford an excellent illustration of xerophytic adaptation. After having flowered and ripened their seeds they lose, on the approach of the hot season, their old leaves, and finally retain only a small and very compact rosette, in which the leaves are

The Canarian

here,

densely imbricated, thus exposing only a very small surface. When the moist autumn begins the rosette opens and produces much larger leaves, quite different from those of the summer
resting state.

However, not all species behave in the same way *S'. tahulabut then this forme, for instance, never loses its flat form species only grows well in shady places, where it does not need special protection against excessive evaporation.
;
;

NOTES
Senecio.
S'.

429

angulatus was introduced by seeds sent by Prof. MacOwan It is now widely spread along the Eiviera, in February, 1875. covering in autumn and winter the banks and walls with a rich mass of golden yellow flowers. S. Barha-Johannis and S. Prainianus were procured from Mr. Willy Miiller, Nocera, in 1909 both were originally introduced by Cav. C. Sprenger from the neighbourhood of Vera Cruz. Of S. deltoideus seeds were sent by Mr. D. Hanbury in November, This is now semi-wild in 1870, probably from Prof. MacOwan. some parts of the garden, where it climbs over shrubs and trees and forms a great mass of fresh green. The flowers are insignificant. It has run wild in S. mikanoides is a more decorative plant. some places, for instance at Bordighera, where it climbs over hedges. S. macroglossus is a much finer climber, with showy flowers. It was received from Kew in February, 1875. S. hadiensis was received from Cav. C. Sprenger in 1901 its introduction is due to Prof. Schweinfurth. S. grandifolius and S. Petatites are Mexican shrubs with ornamental foliage. S. Prainianus is much related to the last species, but it differs from it by its large drooping panicles, larger flower heads, and almost glabrous leaves. S. 2^^'(Scox is another Mexican, almost succulent, species, collected by Mr. C. A. Purpus in 1905. The species had previously been in the garden, and flowered in 1891 (see plate V.). S. longifolius is a half succulent shrub from the Cape. Seeds were received in June, 1872, probably from Prof. MacOwan. It is almost subspOntaneous in the garden. S. junceiLS and S, scaposus are succulents.
; ;

Sequoia.

Of

S. gigantea, the "

young
wood,"

plant.

" of California, we have only a S. senipervirens, the evergreen " Calif ornian Eed-

Big Tree

is not quite so fine with us as it can be seen in S.W. Ireland and on the Italian Lakes. Our tree is about 22 m, high, with a circumference of 3 m. at the base.'''

* Prof. Willis Linn Jepson, in his book The Silva of California, gives an excellent account of both species, illustrated by many fine photos, their geographical areas, and economic value. According to him S. sempervirens reaches 100-340 feet in height. It is an inhabitant of the humid coast region from the south-west corner of Oregon to Montery County, a narrow strip 450 miles long and 20 miles wide, reaching an altitude of 3000 feet. " This Redwood belt is as distinctly marked by its physical and climatic characteristics as by its presence of Redwood trees. It is distinguished as a region of high rainfall in the rainy season, of prevailing fogs in the dry season, and of slight change of temperature during each day and during the year." S. gigantea " It inhabits the western slope of the Sierra is said to become 150-325 feet high. Nevada from Placer Corner to Tulare County, a longitudinal range of 250 miles. The southern groves reach an altitude of 7500 feet above the sea. It is a region where the average rainfall is 45-GO inches, where the snow becomes two to ten feet deep, and lies on the ground three to six months The average age of adult trees is 400-1500 years. A few trees show as high as 2200-2300 rings."
!

430

HORTUS MORTOLENSIS
SOLANDRA.
S.

macrantha, a glabrous climbing shrub, grows well in the open in a very sheltered place, but does not flower there, though it does so regularly under glass. S. (jrandiflora is a pubescent shrub, grown from seeds sent by Mr. C. Werckl6 from Costa Eica it has not yet flowered.
;

SOLANUM.
species enumerated in the Catalogue do very well here some, such as S. acanthocarpum, S. aviculare, S. auriculatiim, S. crinitum var. costaricense, S. giganteiwi, and S. Warszewiczii
;

Most

almost form small trees. S. acanthocarpum has fruits of the size and colour of a small orange. It was first grown from seeds sent by Mr. D. Hanbury, in January, 1869. S. Cervantesii was reintroduced into the garden through seeds collected in Mexico by Dr. H. Ross, of Munich, in 1906. S. crinitum var. costaricense was grown from seeds sent by Mr. C. Werckl6 it is a fine plant wnth elegant, very tomentose foliage and fine blue flowers. For S. crispum we are indebted to Lord Walsingham for S. gicjanteum to Cav. C. Sprenger. S. jasminoides is a vigorous climber, which flowers with great profusion and is frequently met with on the Riviera. I have rarely seen it fruiting here, although it does so quite freely in some other places, for instance, at Caravan. Seeds of S. lanceolatum were received from M. Thuret, Antibes, in Feb;

ruary, 1869. It is a small shrub with pretty pale violet-blue flowers. S. Pocote was received under this name from the Buenos Aires Botanic Garden in 1901, and also from Messrs. Lemoine, of Nancy. It has pretty yellow fruits. S. Wendlandii is a tall climber with perhaps the largest flowers of the genus. Unfortunately the plant is deciduous during winter and only flowers in summer and autumn, but is then of unrivalled beauty. Mr. F. Ledien sent it from the Botanic Garden of Dresden in 1901. S. aviculare, S. marginatum, S. rostrat2im, S. sisymbrifolium, S. sodomceum, and others occasionally come up spontaneously in the garden as weeds.

SONCHUS.
are indebted to Dr. George Perez, of Orotava, for seeds of the shrubby Canarian species. Of these, S. Jacquini has proved most suitable for our garden.

We

SOPHRONITIS.

These little orchids grow quite well epiphytically in the open. They were procured a few years ago from the late M. Binot, who introduced them from the Organ Mountains.

Spar AXIS.
S. grandiflora and S. tricolor are scarcely more than varieties of one species. They are very showy spring flowers, useful for

covering the ground on dry spots of the garden.

NOTES
Sparmannia afeicana.

431

shrub with soft, large leaves and white flowers with numerous yellow stamens, was first obtained from Messrs. Huber & Co., Hy6res, in December, 1867.

SPHiERALCEA.
S. umhellata is

much grown on

this coast.

It is a

much

branched shrub, from 2-3 m. high, flowering abundantly


time.

for a long

free obovate, stipitate

are of a brilliant reddish brown colour, with and deciduous involucral leaflets. The leaves measure 3^-4 inches across. S. speciosa''' has been grown so far in the garden as Hibiscus spec? It is a much larger plant, closely related to S. nutans Scheidw., figured in Flore des Serves, t. 726, with which it agrees in almost every detail except that the involucral leaflets are connate in the lower half and form an outer calyx with three broad ovate obtuse lobes. The flowers are very large and showy, of a fine purple rose. The leaves are 6-7 inches broad, acutely fiveI know nothing about the origin of this plant, and do not lobed. remember having seen it elsewhere. As S. nutans is said to be a native of Guatemala, our plant is very likely Central American, too.

The flowers

Sph^rosicyos.

was received a few years ago through the Bishop of Lebombo, from Lourenco Marques. If sown early enough in spring it will ripen its fine globular fruits, which remain fresh and green for several years.
S. sphcBricus

Stanhopea.
has been grown for several years in the open on an olive tree, and has flowered once or twice, but it is rather too tender for our winter. Stapelia.
S. oculata

Most species of this genus succeed very well here, and have been largely cultivated. S. variegata was planted as early as 1868. This species and its near allies are now almost subspontaneous in the garden, coming up everywhere from seeds if left undisturbed. S. grancliflora was bought from the Jardin d'Essai, Hamma, in Algeria, in February, 1873, and seeds were also introduced from Prof. MacOwan, in 1875. Since then this species has been one of the most interesting plants in the garden. It forms large patches with as many as 40-50 stems, from which a constant succession of flowers is produced from September until December. In 1899 and later on a great number of species and varieties were obtained from Messrs. Dammann & Co., in San Giovanni a
speciosa Berger, n. sp., ai3Snis S. nutanti, a qua differt involucri usque medium campanulato-connatis, apice lobis tribus ovato-rotundatis appressis, calyce pauUum brevioribus, floribusque magis erectis vix nutantibus speciosis roseo-purpureis.
* S.

foliis

432

HOKTUS MORTOLENSIS
of

Others were received from the Royal Messrs. N. E. Brown, of Kew, G. Capelle, of Springe, near Hanover, the late Justus Corderoy, of Blewbury, Didcot, K. Dinter, of Okahandja, Pillans, of Rosedale, near Cape Town, Haage & Schmidt, of Erfurt, &c.
Teduccio, near Naples.

Gardens

Dahlem and Kew, from

many species and varieties Stapelias are fertilized Vjy flies flower at the same time, so that hybridization often occurs. For a detailed description of the Stapelias grown at La Mortola, their fertilization, hybrids, &c., see my handbook.
;

'i^

Statice.

shrubby Canarian species succeed perfectly well, and are of great beauty when in flower, especially S. fruticans. They We owe most of them to are, however, apt to suffer from frost. the kindness of Lord Walsingham and Dr. George Perez, of
fine

The

Orotava.

STENOIiOBIUM.

This genus differs from Tecoma by having pinnate (not 3-5digitate) leaves, from Tecomaria by its free anther lobes and by having two rows of ovules in each cell. S. stans was grown from seeds received from M. Thuret, Antibes, in February, 1869. It is S. sambucifolium, which a small tree with fine yellow flowers. it resembles closely, was received from Dr. F. Franceschi, of Santa Barbara, California. *S'. alatum is, according to Mr. Sprague, the correct name for Tecoma Smithii, a plant said to have been grown from seeds of T. vehitina fertilized with Tecomaria cayensis. "We grew it from seeds received from Messrs. Haage & Schmidt, Erfurt, in January, 1898.
S. ciliatum succeeds quite well,

Stigmatophyllum. and flowers beautifully

in

sheltered corner.

The flowers

are of a fine bright yellow and

shaped

like

those of an Oncidium.

Strelitzia.
S.

Augusta and
in

S. Begince.

were bought from the Jardin d'Essai,

1873. They are now fine bushes, which flower every year. One plant of S. Augusta, on the south side of the house, was planted there on June 16th, 1897. It is now 3-30 m. high. S. parvifolia, as well as the hybrid S. Begina x parvifolia, was received in 1901 from the Botanic Garden at Genoa. The flowers of Strelitzia offer fine examples of fertilization by birds.! In spite of artificial impollination they have never produced

Hamma,

Algeria,

in

February,

any

fruit here.

Styrax officinalis.

A
*

dozen young trees were planted near the house on NovemStapelieeii

und Kleinien.

See G. F. Scott-Elliot, "Note on the Fertilization of Musa, Strelitzia RegincB, and Ravenala madagascariensis " in Annals of Botany, vol. iv. No. xiv. (May, 1890), pp. 259-262.
t

NOTES

433

ber 14th, 1868, by Mr. D. Hanbury. They are now large bushes or small trees. From this tree the drug " true storax," a solid resin of balsamic odour, is obtained." After having long searched for this resin in many localities, Mr. D. Hanbury to his delight found it on one of the young trees at La Mortola, on December 9th, 1874.

SUTHEKLANDIA.
Seeds of S. frutescens were sent by Mr. D. Hanbury, in June> 1872, probably received from Prof. MacOwan.

Tacsonia.
only differing from Passiflora in the longer receptacle contains a number of very fine flowering climbers. Many of them are but short-lived plants. Perhaps the showiest among them are
T. Van-Volxemi

A genus

and

T. insignis.

The

latter

was purchased from

Messrs. Veitch & Sons, in June, 1905. T. manicata is a very free flowerer its blossoms have but a short receptacle and scarcely
;

differ

from Passiflora.
given to Sir

Was

Talauma Hodgsoni. Thomas Hanbury about


It

ten years ago by

Mrs. Brian Hodgson.

has not yet flowered.


Tavaebsia.

have often been tried, but always succumbed during the wet winter months. T. angolensis was first brought from Kew, in July, 1868, by Mr. D. Hanbury.
fine StapeliecB

These

Templetonia retusa.

Was
1872.

introduced from seeds sent by Mr. D. Hanbury, in June,

Testudinaria elephantipes.

Some very large stems had been imported, but the plants seem to have suffered from our winter rains. We have now a seedling plant growing on a dry wall.
tried repeatedly.

Has been

Tetrapanax papyrifer.
the plant from the pith of which the Chinese rice paper is prepared. It was believed for a long time to be a native of Formosa only, but has been found by Dr. Henry in the Province of Hupeh,f and according to Alexander Hosie | it grows luxuriantly in the Province of Kueichow; it is also found in Szu' ch'uan, but in this district the stems are not so fully developed as those produced in the somewhat more southern province. This corresponds with the growth of our plants on the Eiviera, which have
is

This

* See Fliickiger & Hanbury, Pharmacographia, p. 246, second edition, pp. 271-276, and D. Hanbury's Science Papers. t F. B. Forbes & W. B. Hemsley, "Enumeration of all the Plants known from China Proper," &c. in Jourii. Linn. Soc, vol. xxiii. p. 341. Western China, second edition. I See Alexander Hosie, Three Years in London, 1897, pp. 22-24 Hooker, Journal of Botany, ii. (1850) p. 20 and iv. (1852) p. 50.
;

2 F

434

HOETUS MORTOLENSIS

too slender stems to produce any good-sized pith. If planted in a moist place the species attain a much more vigorous growth. For making the paper, the pith is first cut into pieces up to one foot long. These pieces are then rolled on a flat stone with the left hand against a very sharp knife, which is kept by the worker in his right hand, and in that way cut spirally into very thin sheets of uniform thickness. This work requires a steady hand and a keen eye, and is done in the middle of the night, when the makers are not liable to be disturbed.

Thea
The
" tea

sinensis.

shrub " only grows with difficulty here, neither climate nor soil being adapted for it. It succeeds much better on the Italian Lakes. TiLLANDSIA.
Several xerophile species are grown epiphytically on trees. T. xiphioides has been cultivated in the pergola for nearly forty the T. dianthoidea,^- T. Dtirati, &c., do equally well years. former flowers almost annually. The strange T. usneoides was sent to us by Dr. H. Ross, of the Munich Botanic Garden, who It does best when hanging fully collected it in Mexico in 1906. are indebted for the same plant and exposed to the sun. several other Tillandsias to Prof. D. Fairchild, of the United States Department of Agriculture. This Floridan T. tisneoides has much thinner branches than the Mexican one.
;

We

A
for

large

stem

of

this

Hanbury through
Miiller, of

Prof.

TODEA BARBARA. fern was presented to Sir Thomas Penzig by the late Baron Ferdinand von
It lived for several years, but finally died

Melbourne.

want

of a suitably cool

and moist

place.

TOONA

CILIATA.

It is almost large tree of a remarkably quick growth. evergreen, as it only sheds its leaves for a few weeks at the end of the winter, and is green again from the beginning of April. Young As it fruits abundantly we have trees are, however, evergreen. It deserves to be largely planted, distributed quantities of seeds. especially in town gardens, where shade trees are required.

It

wants good and fresh

soil.

According to Sir Dietrich Brandis {Forest Flora of North-west and Central India, p. 73) " the sap wood is whitish, the heart wood red or reddish brown, light, even, but open-grained, not strong, seasons readily, is easily worked and polishes well, someThe bark is a what fragrant, when sawn or broken. powerful adstringent, and from the flowers a red or yellowish dye is made."
: . .

T. dianthoidea is the most commonly cultivated epiphyte in this country often met with on trees, on balconies, &c. Prof. 0. Penzig has observed in 1892 in the Genoa Botanic Garden seedlings coming up spontaneously on the branches of Callistemon linearis. [Malpighia, viii. 1894, p. 461. t. 8.)
*
it is

NOTES

435

In June, 1897, the largest tree in the garden was about 1-60 m. high, and as thick as a little finger. Its present height is 13 m., with a circumference of 2 m. at the base.

TORREYA NUCIFEBA.

Was

procured from Messrs. Veitch & Sons in July, 1868.

Trachycarpus. one of the commonest palms. It is hardier than any other species, and is successfully grown in the open in Northern Italy, Southern England, &c. Although the individuals vary to some extent, there are no characters by which to separate another species {T. Forkmei). The characters given by Sir William Hooker {Bot. Mag. t. 5221) have proved fallacious (see Bot. Mag. t. 7128). Several specimens of this palm were imported by Sir Thomas Hanbury from China. The tallest specimen has now a stem 7*10 m. high, with 50 cm. circumference. T. Wagneriana has been in commerce for several years, under different names. It is closely related to the former, especially in the way the leaves are cut, in the stem and the petioles, but it is much smaller, the petioles and leaves are stiffer and more erect.
T. excelsa is

The plant appears

to be closely allied to T. nana Beccari. It was introduced by Mr. Wagner, a horticulturist at Leipzig, and has flowered and fruited in Mr. Winter's establishment in 1911. Of T. Takil we have one single specimen, which was named for us by Dr. O. Beccari. So far it had been grown as T. Martiana. It is easily recognized by the stem having the fibres closely and densely adpressed. Its leaves are decidedly glaucous underneath and have stiffly radiating, not pendulous, segments. The basal segments are very convergent, so that the whole blade has an almost circular outline. The plant was received from Kew in February, 1884. Trichilia.

Seeds of T. havanensis were received, without name, in 1906, from Dr. H. Eoss, of Munich, who had collected them near Mirador at an elevation of 900 m. The plant blossomed first in April, 1910.

The flowers

are fragrant.

Tristania.

enumerated succeeds so well as T. conferta, which forms a small tree. It was grown from seeds sent by Mr. D. Hanbury in June, 1872, probably received from Baron Ferdinand von Mtiller, of Melbourne.
of the species

None

T. brasiliensis is only
it

for

Trithrinax. hardy in very sheltered places. several years, but it was finally damaged badly by

We grew
frost.

Tupidanthus.
T. calyptratus, a beautiful Araliacea, is not unfrequently met with in gardens on the Riviera. Fine specimens may be seen in

2 F 2

436

HORTUS MORTOLENSIS

the Madonna garden of Mr. L. Winter, near Bordighera, and in the garden of Villa St. Louis, Garavan. With us the plant is a shrub, whilst in its native forests it forms a gigantic climber.

Umbellularia califoenica.
of this, but it gradually died. It has strongly scented deep green leaves, which are apt to cause violent sneezing. According to Dr. F. Franceschi, of Sa. Barbara,* the it may attain 60-80 tree will succeed best if planted near water feet, or more.

We

had a large tree

Urginea maritima.
large bulb, generally found in this country planted at the I have foot of fig trees, where in time it forms large patches. not been able to ascertain the reason for this custom. If cut into the juice is very acid, pieces the bulb is an efficacious rat poison
;

causing irritation of the skin.

Veronica. Zealand species succeed quite well. V. DieffenbacJiii, V. carnosula, and V. verrucosa were received in 1909 from Capt. Dorrien-Smith, of Tresco Abbey.

Many

of the

New

VlTIS.

a vigorous evergreen climber with coriaV. received it some years ago ceous or nearly succulent leaves. from M. L. de Vilmorin as V. carnosa. It has not yet flowered, and may prove to be V. lanceolaria Roxb. {Fl. Brit. Incl. i. 660). V. Voinieriana, which is generally considered a stove plant, is doing quite well here in the open.
is

Hookeri Laws,

We

Washingtonia.
Mr. S. B. Parish has given an elaborate account f of this These plants are very much seen in small genus of palms. gardens along the Riviera, but generally wrongly named, so I transcribe the key worked out by Mr. Parish, by means of which they may easily be distinguished.
A.
Petiole acuminately prolonged in the blade.
a.

Blade abundantly filiferous. Margins of the petiole armed througha.


out
/3.

W.Jiliferavar.robusta.
of the petiole

Margins

unarmed near
W.Jilifera.l

the blade
y.
b.

Margins of the petiole armed only near


the base
.

B.

Blade destitute of filaments or nearly so Petiole obtuse at junction with the blade
.

W. filifera var. microsperma, W. gracilis.


.
.

JV.

sonora.

See Pomona College Journal oj Economic Botany, i. p. 202. " A Contribution toward a knowledge of the genus Washingtonia''^ in. Botanical Gazette xliv. (1907, ii.) pp. 408-434. \ The Californian Fan Palm [W filifera) grows along the alcaline streams, rivulets, or springs on the western and north-westerly margins of the Colorado desert, and thence southward to Lower California. (W. L. Jepson, The Silva
*

of California, p. 172, plates 6, 55.)

NOTES

437

W. gracilis grows the quickest and soon overtops the others. Fine specimens can be seen at Villa Hindoue, and Villa St. Louis, at Garavan. Two small plants of W. sonorcs were sent by Mr. F. Ledien from the Eoyal Botanic Garden of Dresden in 1899 the tallest is now about 5 m. high and has a stem of 2*20 m.
WiGANDIA. These form large bushes or small trees, and are of quick growth. W. caracasana is far more showy than W. urens. It has large bunches of violet coloured flowers. The leaves are green on both sides, whilst those of W. urens are tomentose underneath. Both come up very easily from seeds and suckers, and if once established in a place can only be removed with difficulty. They are sensitive to frost and easily damaged, but soon come up again from the roots.

Xanthoerhcea arboeeum.
our only representative of a very peculiar genus, comprising eleven species, which form a conspicuous feature in the Australian landscape, and are known to the colonists by the names of " grass trees " or " black boys." Our plant'is just beginning to form a stem, which may grow to several feet in height. There are some fine specimens in the Botanic Garden at Palermo.
is

This

Yuccas. Are perfectly at home here, although with a few exceptions they do not produce fruit. Y. aloifolia, which was introduced from Hyeres in December, 1867, and is now common in the
garden, ripens fruit regularly every year Y. elephant ipes only does so occasionally. Some sixteen or twenty years ago Sir Thomas Hanbury introduced from America the moth Pronuba Yuccasella, which is the only insect able to fertilize the Yuccas. But as the moth is so small and only visible at night during a few weeks of the year, nobody could ascertain whether the insect was really established. In 1897 and 1898, however, I found in the garden capsules of Y. flaccida, which exhibited the peculiar holes from which the larvse may have escaped. These capsules are still preserved in the Museum. Since then no other fruits have been observed on these plants. The most stately Yucca tree in the garden is Y. elephantipes. This species has a remarkably thick or broad stem with a rough bark, somewhat like Beaucarnea. Its native country has not been ascertained, but according to Prof. Trelease it may come from the Atlantic coast of Nicaragua. In Guatemala, Honduras, &c., this tree is only known in cultivation. It is chiefly used as a rather poor hedge plant. In Guatemala, and probably also in Costa Eica, its flowers are sold in the markets, as they are eaten
;

fried

with eggs.

grow three forms of this species one with very long and broad, often less canaliculate leaves, which is var. gigantea;

We

438

HOETUS MOETOLENSIS
;

a second with medium sized and always canaliculate leaves (the type) and a third one with shorter, stiffer, more rigidly spreading, This is the var. Ghiesbreghtii. paler green leaves. Of Y. australis, with large pendulous inflorescences, we have one old specimen, which has flowered repeatedly. A very fine plant of it may be seen at Villa Thuret, at Antibes. Y. Trecideana, another arborescent species, was bought by Mr. Daniel Hanbury from M. Van Geert, of Ghent, in August, 1872. Seeds collected from wild specimens of Y. baccata, Y. brevifolia, Y. constricta, Y. flaccida var. glaucescens, Y. glmica, Y. mohavensis, Y. racliosa, Y. rigida, Y. rostrata, and Y. rupicola were received about ten years ago from Prof. Wm. Trelease also Y. decipiens (as Y. valida), which he had collected near Gutierrez, Y. valida we received at about the same time from in Mexico. Mr. C. A. Purpus, from Lower California. Y. Mazeli, another tall and arborescent species, often grown on the Eiviera, is doubtfully referred by Prof. Trelease to Y. Schottii, from which it seems to differ only in having the leaves persistently a little denticulate. There is a fine specimen of it at Villa Thuret, at Antibes. Y. Hanburii, described by Mr. Baker in the Keio Bulletin 1892, 8. 217, I could not find in the garden. Prof. Trelease in his monograph (Bept. Miss. Bot. Gard. 1902, 60) refers this doubtfully to Y. glauca.
;

Zanthoxylon.
Z. alatum was first planted by Sir Thomas Hanbury on November 27th, 1868, having been procured from Messrs. Veitcb & Sons. It was raised again from seeds sent by Mr. D. Hanbury, November, 1871. This plant is very sensitive to drought. As soon as it begins to suffer it rolls back its leaves, so that their under side is concealed a few drops of rain cause them to flatten out again. Of the deciduous Z. Bungei seeds were sent by Mr. D. Hanbury in June, 1872.
;

ZlZYPHUS.
Z. viucronatus was received from Cav. C. Sprenger, of Naples, in October, 1901, and also at about the same time from Mr. K. Dinter, of Okahandja in German South West Africa. Z. saliva is cultivated in Southern Europe for its fruit, which ripens in September-October.

wish to express my thanks to those who have given me kind assistance in compiling this Catalogue, especially to Mr. James Britten, F.L.S., Mr. Clarence Bicknell, M.A., of Bordighera, and to Mr. Alban Voigt, of Dresden. A. B.
I their

La Mortola

Easter, 1912.

SYSTEMATIC SYNOPSIS OF THE GENERA.


EMBRYOPHYTA SIPHONOGAMA.

GYMNOSPERM/t.
CYCADALES.
CYCADACE^.A^.P/.
Cycadese.
Cycas.
ii.

PINACEiE. A^.
21.
1. 6.

Pff.

Nachtr.

1.

Araucarieae.
Agathis. Araucaria.

Zamiese.
Ceratozamia. Dioon. Encephalartos.

Abietinese.
Abies. Keteleeria. Picea.

Macrozamia.

Pinus.

GINKGOALES.
GINKGOACB^.
Nachtr. i. 19. Ginkgo.

Taxodiese. Cryptomeria.
Pff.

N.

Sciadopitys. Sequoia.

Taxodium. Cupressinese.
Actinostrobinae.

CONIFERS.
TAXACE^ ^.
i.

Actinostrobus.
Callitris.

Pff.

Nachtr.

Thujopsidinae.

20.

Podocarpoidese.
Podocarpese.

Libocedrus. Thuja. Thujopsis.


Cupressinie.

Podocarpus.
Saxegothaea.

Phyllocladoideae.
Phyllocladus.

Chamsecyparis. Cupressus.
Juniperinae.

Taxoidese.
Cepbalotaxese.

Juniperus.

Cephalotaxus.
Taxese.

GNETALES.
GNETACE^. ^. Pff.
Ephedra.
ii.

Taxus. Torreya.

1.

116.

440

HOETUS MOKTOLENSIS

ANGIOSPERM/E.
MONOCOTYLEDONEiE.
HELOBI^.
Oryzese.

POTAMOGETONACE^. N.
Pff.
ii.

POTAMOGETONINE^.
1.

Lygeum.
Phalaridese. Anfchoxanthum.
Phalaris.

194.

Posidoniese.
'"Posidonia.

Potamogetonese

Agrostidese. Alopecurus.
-Agrostis.

Potamogeton.

APONOGETONACE^.
Pff.
ii.

1.

218.

Aponogeton.

Apera. Gastridium. Lagurus. Muehlenbergia.

ALISMACE^. jY.
227.
Sagittaria.

ALISMINEJE.
Pff.
ii.

1.

Phleum. "Piptatherum. Polypogon.


Sporobolus.
Stipa.

Avenese.

BUTOMINE^. HYDEOCHAEITACE^.
Pff.
ii.

"'Arrhenatherum.

N.

*Avena.
''Holcus.

1.

238.

Vallisnerioideae.
Vallisneria.

Trisetum. Chloridese.
Chloris.
''Cynodon.

Stratiotoidese.
Stratiotes.

GLUMIFLOR.E.

GEAMINE^.2^.
Maydese,
Coix. Zea.

Pff.

ii.

2. 1.

Pestucese. "Arundo. *Bracliypodium.


''Briza.

Cortaderia. -'Gynosurus.
''Dactylis.

Andropogoneae.
Andropogon.
Erianthus. Imperata. Miscanthus.

'^Desmazeria.

^Eragrostis. Festuca.

Graphephorum.
''Koeleria.

Saccharum.
Panicese.
'''Digitaria.f

Melica.

Oplismenus.

*Molina. -Poa.
*Sclerochloa. Uniola.

Panicum. Paspalum. Pennisetum.


Spinifex.

Stenotaphrum.
t

Hordese. *Agropyrum. *^gilops.

The names marked

are indigenous genera not included in this Catalogue.

SYSTEMATIC SYNOPSIS OF GENEEA


"Hordeum.
''Lolium.

441

SPATHIFLOR^. ABACF^M.N. Pff. ii. 3.


Monsteroidese.
Monstereae.

102.

Secale.
''Triticum.

Bambusese.
Arundinaria.

Epipremnum.
Monstera.

Bambusa.
Phyllostachys.

Philodendroidese.
Zantedeschieae.
ii.

CYPERACE^. A^. Pjf.


Scirpoideae.
CyperiiiEe.

2. 98.

Eichardia.

Colocasioidese.
Colocasieae.

Cyperus.
Scirpinae.

Colocasia.

Scirpus.

Caricoidese.
Rhynchosporese. ''SchoGnus.
Caricese.

Aroideae. Are 86. Ambrosinia.


Arisaema. ''Arisarum. ''Arum.

Carex.

Biarum. Dracunculus.
Helicodiceros.
3. 1.

PRINCIPES.

PALMiE.^.
Coryphinae.
Phoenicete.

Pff.

ii.

Sauromatum.

Phoenix.
Sabaleae.

FARINOSE. ENANTIOBLASTjE.

Brahea. Ghamaerops. Erythea.


Livistona. Pritchardia.

RESTIONACB^.
4. 3.

N. P/.

ii.

Haplantherse. Dovea.

BBOMELIINEM.

Rhapidophyllum.
Rhapis.
Sabal.

BROMELIAOE^. A^.
4.32.

Pff.

ii.

Trachy carpus.
Trithrinax.

Bromeliese.
Billbergiinae.

Washingtonia. Ceroxylinse.
Arecineee. Caryotecs.

Ananas.
Billbergia. Greigia.

Wallichia.
Mo7'eniecB.

Karatas. Nidularium. Rhodostachys.


.iEchmeinae.

ChamaBdorea.
ArececB.

Archontophoenix.

-^chmea. Hohenbergia.
Pitcairniese.
Pitcairnia.

Howea.
Kentia.
Cocoineae. Attaleece,

Puyeae. Dyckia.
Hechtia.

Cocos.
Jubaea.

Puya.

442
Tillandsiese.

HORTUS MORTOLENSIS
Aloince.

Tillandsia.

Aloe. Apicra.

COMMELINACEiE.
ii.

COMMELININEj^.
^^.

Chamsealoe.
Gasteria.
Pff-

4. 60.

Haworthia. Lomatophyllum.
Aphyllanthese.

Commelinese.
Commelina. Tradescantiese.
Tradescantia. Zebrina.

Aphyllanthes.
Louiandrese.

Lomandra.
Xanthorrhoea. AUioidese.
Agapanthieae.
Pff-

PONTEDEBIINEM.

PONTEDERIACE^.^.
ii.

Agapanthus.
Allieae.

4. 70.

Eichhornia. Pontederia.

Allium. Brodisea.

Nothoscordum.
Lilioidese.
Tulipeae.

LILIIFLOR^.

JUNCINEM.

Calochortus.
ii.

JUNCACE^. ^.
Juncus. Luzula.

P/.

5. 1.

Fritillaria.

Tulipa.
Scillese.

Albuca.

LILIINEM.

LILIACE^. 2^.
AnguillarieEe.

Pff.

ii.

5. 10.

Melanthioidese.
Erythrostictus.
Colchiceae.

Chionodoxa. Eucomis. Hyacinthus.


Lachenalia.

Colchicum. Asphodeloidese.
Asphodeleae. Asj^hodelince

Massonia. Muscari. Ornithogalum.


Scilla.

Asphodeline. Asphodelus.
AnthericincB.

Urginea. Veltheimia. Dracsenoidese.


Yucceae.

Clistoyucca.

Arthropodium.
Bulbine.

Chlorophytum.
Eriosperonince.

Bowiea.
Dianellince.

Hesperoaloe. Hesperoyucca. Samuela. Yucca.


Nolinese.

Dianella.

Beaucarnea.
Calibanus. Dasylirion. Nolina.
Dracseneae. Astelia.

Stypandra.
Hemerocallideae.

Hemerocallis.

Phormium.
Aloineae.

KniphofiincB

Kniphofia.

Cordyline. Dracaena.

SYSTEMATIC SYNOPSIS OF GENEKA


Asparagoidese.
Asparagese.
Narcissince.

443

Narcissus.
PancratiincB.

Asparagus.

Danae. Euscus.
Semele.
Convallariese.

Hippeastrum.
Lycoris.

Pancratium.
Sprekelia.

Aspidistrin^. Aspidistra.

Agavoidese.
Agave. Beschorneria Bravoa. Doryanthes.
Furcrsea. Leichtlinia.

Ehodea.

Ophiopogonoidese.
Liriope.

Ophiopogon.
Sansevieria.

Luzuriagoideae. Eustrephus.
Geitonoplesium. Lapageria.

Hypoxidoidese.
Alstrcemerieae.

Alstroemeria.

Bomarea.
Hypoxidese.

Smilacoidese.
Smilax.

Hypoxis.
Conostylideae.

H^MODOKACE^.^. Pff.n.
5.92. Wachendorfia.
125.

Auigozanthus.

VELLOZIACE^. ^. Pff.
Vellozia.
Pff.

ii.

5.

AMAEYLLIDACE^.^.
ii.

5.

97.

DIOSCOEEACE^. ^.
5.

Pff.

ii.

Amaryllidoideae.
Amaryllidese.

130.

DiosGorese.
Dioscorea.

HcemanthincB
Olivia.

Tamus.
Testudinaria.

Haemanthus.
GalanthincB.

Leucojum.
Amai-yllidince

IBIDINEM.

lEIDACE^. 2^.
Crocoidese.
Crocus. Iridoidese.
Morseese. Iridince.

Pff.

ii.

5.

137.

Amaryllis. Brunsvigia. Nerine.


Vallota. ZephyranthincB. Cooperia. Sternbergia.

Hermodactylus.
Iris.

Zephyranthes.
Crinince.

Moraea.
MaricincB. Cypella.

Chlidanthus.

Crinum.
Cyrtanthus.
Ixiolirin<B,

Marica.
Tigridieae.

Ixiolirion. Narcisseae.

Tigridince. Tigridia. Cipurince.

Eucharidince.

Ferraria.

Hymenocallis.

Homeria.

444
Sisyrinchieae. LibertincB.

HOETUS MOKTOLENSIS
Monandrse.
Ophrydinse (Basitonse).
Serapiadece.

Belamcanda.
Diplarrhena.
Libertia.
Sisyrincliince.

"Ophrys.
Orchis.
(Acrotonae.) Neottiinae.

Sisyrinchium.
Aristeae.

CephalantherecB.

Aristince.

"Cephalanthera.
"Epipactis.
Sjnranthecs. ''Spiranthes. Thuniinae.
Bletilla.

Aristea.

Ixioidese.
Ixieae.

Ixia.
Gladiolete.

Antholyza. Babiana. Crocosma.


Gladiolus. Melasphaerula. Sparaxis. Tritonia. Watsonieae. Freesia.

Thunia.
Ccelogyninse.

Coelogyne.
Pleurotballidinae.

Restrepia.
Laeliinae.

Cattleyece.

Brassavola.
Cattleya.

Lapeyrousia. Watsonia.

Epidendrum.
Lgelia.

SCITAMINE^.

MUSACE^.^.
Musese. Musa.

Leptotes. Sophronitis.
6. 1.

Pff.

ii.

Cyrtopodiinae.

Eulophia.
Lissochilus.
Lycastinae.

Strelitzia.

ZINGIBEEACEiE. ^.
6. 10.

Lycaste.
Pff.
ii.

Gongorinae.

Hedychiese. Hedychium.
Zingibereae.
Alpinia.

Stanhopea.
Dendrobiinae.

Dendrobium.
Cymbidiinae.

Cymbidium.
Maxillariinae.

Amomum.
Ellettaria.

Maxillaria.
ii.

CANNACE^.
Canna.

A^. Pff.

6. 30.

Oncidiinae.

Odontoglossece.

M ARANTACEiE.- N.Pff.
Marantese.
Thalia.

ii.6.

33

Brassia. Miltonia.

Odontoglossum. Oncidium.
Sarcanthinae. Aeridece.

MICROSPERME^. ORCHIDACE^.-i^.P/. ii. 6. 52


Diandrse.
Cypripedilinae.

Aerides.

Paphiopedilum.

SYSTEMATIC

SYNOPSIS

OF GENERA

445

DICOTYLEDONEiE.
ArCHICHL AMYDE^
VERTICILLAT^.
1. 16.

URTICALES.
Pff.
iii.

CASUARINACE^.^.P/.iii. ULMAOE^. A^.


59.

1.

Casuarina.

Ulmoideae.
Holoptelea.

PIPERALES.

SAURURACE^. A^.
1. 1.

Ulmus.
Pjf.
iii.

Celtidoidese.
Celtis.

Houttuynia.

PIPERACE^. ^.
Peperomia.
Piper.

HORACES.
Pff.
iii.

N.

Pff.

iii.

1.

1. 3.

66.

Moroidese.
Broussonetieee.

Broussonetia.

CHLORANTHACE^.^. Pff.
iii.

Madura.
Artocarpoidese.
Euartocarpese.

1. 12.

Chloranthus.

Cudrania.

SALICALES.

Ficeae.

SALICACE^. ^. Pff.
Populus.
Salix.

Ficus.
iii.

1.

29.

URTICACEiE. A^.
98.

Pff.

iii.

1.

MYRICALES.

Urereae.
*Urtica.
iii.

MYRICACE^.
26.

7v^.

Pff.

1.

Procrideae.
Pilea.

Myrica.

Boehmeriese.
Boehmeria. Debregeasia.
Pff,
iii.

JUGLANDALES.

JUGLANDACE^. AT.
1. 19.

Parietariese. Gesnouinia.
Parietaria.

Juglans. Pterocarya.

PROTEALES.

PAGALES.

PROTEACEiE.^.
119.
Pff.
iii.

Pff.

iii.

1.

BETULAGE^. ^.
38.

1.

Persoonoidese.
Persoonieae.

Coryleae. Ostrya.

Persoonia.
Proteese.

FAGACE^. AT.
Castanese. Quercus.

Pff,

iii.

1.

47.

Isopogon. Leucadendron.
Petrophila. Protea.

446
Grevilloidese.
Grevilleae.

HORTUS MORTOLENSIS
CENTROSPERMiE.

Grevillea.

CHENOPODIINEjE.

Hakea. Macadamia.
Roupala.
Embothrieae.

CHENOPODIACE^.2^.
iii.

Pff.

la. 36.

CyclolobesB.
Beteae.

Embothrium.
Knightia.

Beta.
Chenopodieae.

Lomatia. Stenocarpus.
Telopea.
Banksieae.

^'Chenopodium. Rhagodia.
Atripliceae.

Atriplex.

Banksia. Dryandra.

Eurotia. Spinacia. Camphorosmeae.

SANTALALES.

Camphorosma.
Enchylaena. Kochia. Spirolobeae.
iii.

SANTALINE^.

SANTALACE^.
202.

iS^.

Pff.

1.

Suaedeae.

Suaeda.

Thesiese.

"Thesium.

AMARANTACE^.A^.
ARISTOLOCHIALES.
la. 91.

Pff.

iii.

Amarantoidese.
Celosieae.

ARISTOLOCHIACE^.-A^.P/.
iii.

1.

264.

Celosia.

Aristolochiese.
Aristolochia.

Deeringia. Amaranteae. AmarantincB.

Amarantus.

POLYGONALES.

Bosia.
AchyrantJiince.
Pff.
iii.

POLYGONACE^. A^.
la. 1.

Cyathula.

Rumicoideae.
Eriogonese. Eriogonince.

Gomphrenoidese
Gomphreneae.
Iresine.

Eriogonum.
Ri-imicese.

Rumex.
Polygonoidese.
Atraphaxideae.

PHY TOLA COINED. N YCTAGIN ACE^.^. Pff.


16. 14.

iii.

Atraphaxis.
Polygonese.

Mirabilese.
Boerbaviinae.

Polygonum. Coccoloboidese.
Coccolobese.

Mirabilis.

Oxybaphus.
Bougainvilleinae.

Muehlenbeckia.
Triplaridese.

Bougainvillea. Pisoniese.
Pisonia.

Ruprechtia.

SYSTEMATIC
iii.

SYNOPSIS OF GENERA
RANALES.

447

CYNOCRAMBACE^. A^. Pff.


la. 121.

NYMPHMINEM.

'''Cynocrambe.

NYMPH^ACE^. i^.
2. 1.

Pff.

iii.

PHYTOLACCACE^. A^.
iii.

Pff.

Ih. 1.

Phytolacceae.
Ercilla.

Nelumbonoidese. Nelumbo. Nymphaeoideae. Nymphaea.

Phytolacca.

AIZOACE^. A^.
33.

TROCHODENDRACE^. 7^.
Pff.
iii.

TBOCHODENDBINEM.
Pff.
iii.

Ih.

2. 21,

Nachtr.

1.

158.

Eupteloidese.

Picoidege. Mesembrianthemeae.

Eucommia. Trochodendroidese.
Trochodendron.

Mesembrianthemum.
Tetragonia.

POETULACINEM.

RANUNCULACE^. ^.
iii.

RANVNCULINEM.
2. 43.

Pff.

PORTULACACE^. ^.
iii.

Pff.

Paeoniese.
Pseonia.

Ih. 51.

Anacampseros.
Calandrinia. Lewisia. Portulaca. Portulacaria.

Helleborese.
Aquilegia. Caltha.

Delphinium.
Eranthis. Helloborus.
pff.
Hi.

BASELLACE^. AT.
la. 124.

^^^Nigella.

Anemoneae.
*Adonis.

Boussingaultia.

Anemone.

CABYOPHYLLINE^. CARYOPHYLLACE^.-^.P/.
iii.

Ranunculus. Thalictrum. Clematideae.


Clematis.

lb. 61.

Silenoidese.
Lychnideae.

LARDIZABALACE^.-^. Pff.
iii.

Lychnis.
Silene. Diantheae.

2. 67.

Akebia. Decaisnea.
Hollboellia.

Dianthus. Gypsophila. Saponaria.


'^Tunica.

Lardizabala.

BERBERIDACE^.
iii.

N. Pff

Alsinoidese.
Alsineae.

2. 70.

Berberis,

Arenaria.

Epimedium.
Leontice.

Cerastium.
Polycarpese.

"Polycarpon.

Mahonia. Nandina.

448

HORTUS MORTOLENSIS
Litseese.
iii.

MENISPERMACE^. ^. Pff.
2. 78.

Litsea.

Cocculese.
Menispermina3,

Lauroideae.
Laurese.

Cocculus.

Laurus.
Acrodiclidieae.

Menispermura.

Endiandra.

MAGNOLIINEjE.

MAGNOLIACE^. A^.
2. 12.

Pff.

iii.

RHCEADALES. BHCEADINEJE.

Magnolieae.
Liriodendron. Magnolia. Michelia.

PAPAVERACE^.
2.

.?^.

Pff.

iii.

130.

Papaveroideae,
Eschsoholtzieae.

Eschscholtzia.

Talauma. Schizandreae. Kadsura.


lUicieae. Illicium.

Hunnemannia. Romneya.
Cbelidonieae.

Bocconia.
Papaverese.

CALYCANTHACE^.^.
iii.

Pff.

Argemone. Glaucium.
Papaver.

2. 92.

Calycanthus.

Fumarioideae.
Dicentra. ''Fumaria.
iii.

Chimonanthus.

ANONACE^. iV.
23.

Pff.

2.

CAPPABIDINEJE.

Uvariese. Asimina. Xylopieae.

CRUCIFER^. A^.
145.

Pff.

iii.

2.

Sinapeae.
Lepidiinae.

Anona.

Eupomatiese.
Eupomatia.

Lepidium.
Cochleariinae.

^thionema.

MONIMIACE^. iV. Pff.


94.

iii.

2.

Iberis.

lonopsidium.
-Thlaspi.
Sisymbriinae.

Monimioideae.
Hedycaiiese.

Hedycarya.

"Cakile.

Peumus.

"Sisymbrium.
Brassicinae.

LAURACE^. N.
106.

Brassica.
Pff.
iii.

2.

Crambe.
Morisia.

Persoidese. Cinnamomese.

Raphanus.
''Rapistrum. Cardamininse.

Cinnamomum.
Ocotea. Persea. Umbellularia.

"Cardamine.
Lunaria. Nasturtium.

SYSTEMATIC
Hesperidese.
Capsellinae.

SYNOPSIS OF GENEKA
Sempervivum.
Umbilicus. Urbinia.

449

Aubrietia. "Capsella.

Draba.
Tunitinae. Arabis. Erysiminae.

SAXIFRAGACEiE. ^. Pff.
2a. 41.

iii.

Saxifragoidese.
Saxifrageae.

Cheiranthus.

Saxifragince.

Erysimum.
Alyssinae.

Bergenia.

Heuchera.
Saxifraga.
Tiarella.

Alyssum.
Malcolmiinae. Farsetia.

Prancoidese.
Francoa.

Malcolmia.
Hesperi(]infe.

Hydrangeoidese.
Philadelpheae.

Matthiola.
Moricandiinae.

*Moricandia.

CAPPAEIDACEiE. ^. Pff.
209 Cleomoideae.
2.

iii.

Carpenteria. Deutzia. Fendlera. Philadelphus. Hydrangeeae.

Isomeris.

Hydrangea. Schizophragma.
Escallonioideae. Anopterus. Carpodetus.
Escallonia.

Cleome.
Polanisia.

Capparidoidese.
Capparideae.

"Capparis.

Eibesioidese.
Ribes.
iii.

BESEDINEM.

EESEDACE^. A^.
237.

Pff.

2.

PITTOSPORACEiE.
iii.

^.

Pff.

2. 106.

Reseda.

Pittosporese. Bursaria.

ROSALES.

Hymenosporum.
Pittosporum.
Billardierese.
iii.

SAXIFRAGINE^. CRASSULACEiE. ^. Pff.


2a.
1.

Bryophyllum.
Cotyledon.
Crassula.

Citriobatus. Sollya.

CUNONIACE^. 2a. 94.

N. Pff

iii.

Echeveria.

Kalanchoe. Lenophyllum.

Callicoma.

HAMAMELIDACE^.
iii.

-N.Pff

Monanthes.
Oliverella.

2a. 115.

Hamamelidoidese.
Parrotieae.

Pachyphytum.
Pistorinia.

Parrotia.

Rochea.

Hamamelidese.

Sedum.

Loropetalum.
2

450

HORTUS MORTOLENSIS
ROSINED.
Prunoideae.

CROSSOSOMATACE^.
Pff.

N.
3. 1.

Nuttallia.

Prunus.

Nachtr.

i.

185.

Crossosoma.

LEGUMINOSiE.^.

Pff.

iii.

ROSACE^. ^.
Spirseoidese.
Spiraeeae.

Pff.

iii.

3.70.

Mimosoidese.
Ingeae.

Phj'socarpus. Sorbaria.
Spiraea.

Albizzia. Calliandra.

Stephanandra.
Quillajea;.

Lysiloma. Pithecolobium.
Acacieae.

Exochorda.
Quillaja.

Acacia.

Eumimoseae.

Pomoidese.
Pomarieae.

Desmanthus.
Leucaena.

Cotoneaster. Crataegus. Cydonia. Eriobotrya. Mespilus. Osteomeles. Photinia.


Pirus.

Mimosa.
Adenantbereae.

Dichrostachys. Prosopis. Csesalpinioideae.


Cynometreae.

Pterogyne.
Amherstieae. Schotia. Baubinieae. Cercis.

Raphiolepis.
Stranvaesia.

Rosoideae.
Kerriese.

Bauhinia.
Cassieae.

Kerria.

Neviusa.

Cassia.

Rhodotypus.
Potentilleae.

Ceratonia.
Eucaesalpiniese.

Rubince.

Rubus.
Potentillince.

Caesalpinia. Gleditschia.

Mezoneuron.
Parkinsonia.

Eragaria.
Potentilla.

DryadincB.

Peltophorum. Papilionatse.
Sophoreae.

Cowania.
Fallugia.

Geum.
Sanguisorbese.

Cadia. Calpurnia.

Castanospermum.
Gourliea.

Acaena.

*Agrimonia.

Sophora.
Podalyriese.

Bencomia.
Cliffortia.

Anagyris.
Baptisia.

Margyricarpus. Poterium.
Eosese.

Brachysema. Chorizema.
Viminaria.

Rosa.

SYSTEMATIC

SYNOPSIS OF GENEEA

45

452

HORTUS MORTOLENSIS
iii.

TROP^OLACE^. N. Pjf.
4. 23.

Toddalioidese.
Toddalieae.

Tropaeolum.

Toddaliina. Gasimiroa.
iii.

LINAGE^. ^'.
Eulineae.

Pff.

4. 27.

Skimmia. Aurantioidese.
Aurantieae.

Linum.
Reinwardtia.

Limoniince. Atalantia.

ZYGOPHYLLACE^. A^.
iii.

Murraya.
Pff.
CitrincB.

4. 74.
.

Z ygophylloidese
Zygophjlleae. Zygophyllince. Porlieria.
Tiibuleee.

Gitrus.

SIMARUBAGEtE. i^.
4.

Pff.

iii.

202.

Simaruboidese.
Picrasmeae. Ailanthince.

*Tribulu8.

Ailanthus.

GNEORAGEiE. ^.
93.

Pff,

iii.

4.

MELlkG^M.N.Pff. iii. 4. 258.


Cedreloidese.
Cedrelese.

Gneorum.

RUTAGE^. ^.
Rutoidese.
Zanthoxyleae. Evodiince. Geijera.

Pff.

iii.

4. 95.

Gedrela.

Toona. Melioidese.
Melieae.

Melia.
Trichilieae.

Melicope.

Zanthoxylum.
Choisyince.

Tricldliincs.

Owenia.
Trichilia.

Ghoisya.
Rutese.

Butince.

MALPIGHIINEM,

Ruta.
DictaninincB.

MALPIGHIAGE^. ^^. Pff. in.


4. 41.

Dictamnus.
Boronieae. BoroniincB.

Pyramidotorae.
Banisteriese.

Banisteriince.

Acradenia. Boronia.
Eriostemonince

Heteropteris. Janusia.

Growea.
CorreirK^.

Stigmatophyllon. Planitorae.
Galphimiese. GalpliimiincB.

Gorrea.
Diosmeae. CalodendrincB.

Galphimia.

Galodendron.
DiosmincB.

POLYGALINEM. POLYGALAGEiE. ^. Pff.


4.

iii.

Barosma. Goleonema.
Cuspariese. Pilocarpince.

323.

Polygaleae.

Monnina.
Muraltia. Polygala.

Pilocarpus.

SYSTEMATIC)
TRICOCC^.

SYNOPSIS

OF GENEEA

453

EUPHOEBIACE^.
iii.

?^.

Pff.

ANACARDIINEM. ANACAEDIACEiE.^. Pff.


5.

iii.

5. 1.

138.

Platylobese.

Phy llanthoidese
Pliyllan these.

Phyllanthince. Eliiggea.

Spondiese. Lannea. Pleiogynium. Rhoidese.


Cotinus.
Lithraea. Pistacia.

Securinega.
Dapliniphyllese.

Daphniphyllum. Crotonoidege.
Acalypheae. Chrozophorince.

Ehodosphaera. Ehus.
Schinus.

*Chrozophora.
MercurialincB.

CELASTBINEM.

Mallotus. *Mercurialis.
Bicinince.

CYEILLACE^. ^.
179.
Cyrilla.

Pff.

iii.

5.

Eicinus.
Jatrophese.

Jatropha.
Manihotese.

COEYNOCAEPACE^. ^.P#.
Nachtr. i. 215. Corynocarpus.

Manihot.
Cluytiese.

CluytiincB.

AQUIFOLIACE^. ^. Pff.
5.

iii.

Cluytia.

183.
Ilex.

Hippomanese.

Hippoman ince Homalanthus.


Sapium.
Euphorbieae.

CELASTEACE^. N.
5.

Pff.

iii.

189.

Euphorbia. Synadenium.

Celastroidese. Evonymese.

Evonymus.
Eucelastreae.

Catha.

SAPINDALES,

Celastrus.

BUXINEM.

Gymnosporia. Maytenus.
Cassinioidese.
iii.

BUXACE^. ^.
130.

Pff.

5.

Eucassiniese.

Buxese. Buxus.
Sarcococca.
iii.

Elseodendron. Maurocenia.

HIPPOCEATEACEiE. ^. Pff.
5.

222.

Hippocratea.

COBIARIINE^.
COEIAEIACEiE.
5. 128.

^.

STAPHYLEACE^.
Pff\
iii.
iii.

xY.

Pff

5.

258.

Staphyleoidese.
Staphylea.

Goriaria.

454

HORTUS MORTOLENSlS
Rhamnese.
5.
iii.

SAPINDTNEM. ACERACEiE.2^. Pff.


Acer.

263.

Ceanothus. Hovenia.
Noltia.

SAPINDACE.^. ^.
277.

Pff.

iii.

5.

Phylica.

Eusapindacese.
PauUinieae. Euiiaulliniece.

Pomaderris. Riiamnus. CoUetiese.


Colletia.

Cardiospermum.
Serjania.
Sapindeae.

Discaria.

VITACE^. A^.
Cissus.

Pff.

iii.

5.

427.

Sapindus.
Melicocceae.

Vitoidese. Ampelopsis.
Parthenocissus.
Vitis.

Melicocca.
Neplieliese.

Heterodendron.
Litchi.

Nephelium. Pappea.
Cupaniese. Diploglottis.

MALVALES.

Dyssapindacese.
Koelreuteriese.

ELMOCARPINE^. BLiEOCARPACE^. N.
iii.

Pff.

6. 1.

Koelreuteria.
Cossigniese.

Elseocarpese. Crinodendron.
Elgeocarpus. Aristoteliese.
Aristotelia.

Llagunoa.
Dodonseese.

Dodonaea.
HarpuUiese.

Ungnadia.

MELIANTHINEJE.

MELIANTHACE^. 2^.
iii.

MALVINEM. TILIACE^.A^. Pff\


Pff.

iii.

6. 8.

Tiliese.

5.

374.

Entelea.
Lij.hea.

Melianthese.
Melianthug. Greyiese.
Greyia.

Sparmannia. Grewieae.
Grewia.

BALSAMININE^.

MALVACE^.A^. Pff.
iii.

iii.

6. 30.

BALSAMINAOE^. jY. Pff.


5.

Malopese.
Kitaibelia.

383.

Impatiens.

Malvese.
Abutiliuse.
iii.

EHAMNALES.

RHAMNACE^.^.
393.
.

Pff.

5.

Abutilon. Sphseralcea.
Malvinae. Althaea.

Zizyphese. Berchemia.
Paliurus.

Lavatera.

Zizyphus.

*Malva. Malvastrum.

SYSTEMATIC
Sidiuse.

SYNOPSIS OF GENERA

455
Pff.

EUCRYPHIACE^. 2^.
iii.

Hoheria. Plagianthus.
Sida.

6.

129.

Eucryphia.

Urenese.
Malvaviscus. Pavonia. Hibisceae.

OCHNACE^. A^.
131.

Pff.

iii.

6.

Exalbuminosse.
Ourateese.

Gossypium.
Hibiscus. Lagunaria.

Ochna.

THEACE^
-N. Pff.
iii,

(TEENSTEGEPff,
iii.

BOMBACACE^.
6.53.

MIACE^). AT.
175.

6.

Adansoniese.
Chorisia.

Theeae.
Camellia.

STERCULIACE^. ^. Pff.
6. 69.

iii.

Premontiese.
Fremontia.

Thea. Ternstroemieae. Ternstrcemia. Visnea.

Dombeyese. Dombeya.
Melhania.

GUTTIFEE^. N.
194.

Pff.

iii.

6.

Hypericoideae.
Hypericese.

Hermanniese. Hermannia.
Biittneriese.
Buttnerinse. Biittneria.

Hypericum.

Rulingia.

TAMABICINEM. FEANKENIACEiE. A^.


iii.

Pff.

6.

Lasiopetalese. Guichenotia. Thomasia. Helicterese.


Reevesia. Sterculieae.

283.

Frankenia.

TAMAEICACE^. A^.
6.

Pff.

iii.

289.

Tamaricoideae.
Eeaumurieae.

Brachychiton. Firmiana.
Sterculia.

Eeaumuria.
Tamaricese.

Tamarix.

PARIETALES.

THEINEM. DILLENIAGE^.- N.
6.

Pff.

iii.

CISTINE^. CISTACE^. N. Pff.


299.
Cistus.

iii.

6.

100.

Dillenioidese.
Hibbertiese.

Fumana.
Halimium. Helianthemum.
Lechea.
Tuberaria.

Hibbertia. Actinidioidese.
Actinidiese.

Aotinidia.

456

HOETUS MOETOLENSIS
iii.

FLACOURTIINEM. OPUNTIALES. VIOLACE.E. i^. Pff. iii.6.322. CACTACE^. ^. Pff.


Binoreese.
156.

6a.

Hymenanthera.
Melicytus. Violese.
Viola.

Cereoidese,
Echinocacteae.

FLACOURTIACEiE. N.
iii.

Pff.

6a.

1.

Oncobeae.
Oncoba. Pangieae.
Kiggelarieae.

Cephalocereus. Cereus. Discocactus. Echinocactus. Echinocereus. Echinopsis. Epiphyllanthus.

Kiggelaria.

Flacourtieae.
Euflacourtiese.

Epiphyllum. Leuchtenbergia. Melocactus. Phyllocactus.


Mamillaiiese.

Azara. Doryalis.
Olraediella.

Ariocarpus. Mamillaria. Pelecyphora.


Rhipsalideae.

Xylosma.
Idesieae.

Pfeiffera.

Idesia.

Rhipsalis.

PASSIFLORACE^. AT.
iii.

Opuntioidese.
Pff.

Opuntia.
Peireskiopsis. Pterocactus.

6a. 69.

Passiflorese.

Adenia.
Passifiora.

Peireskioidese.
Peireskia.

Tacsonia.

PAPAYINEM.

MYRTIFLOR/E.
iii.

CARICACE^. A^.
94.

Pff\

6a.

Carica.

THYMELMINEM. OLINIACE^. A^. Pff.


213.
Olinia.

iii.

6a.

LOASINE^.
LOASACEiE.
100.

^'.

Pff.

iii.

6a.

Mentzelioidese.
Mentzelieae.

THYMEL^ACE^. iii.

N. Pff

6a. 216.

Mentzelia.

Thymelseoidese.
Gnidiese.

Loasoidese.
Loasese.

QnidiincB.

Cajophora.

Gnidia. Daphneae.
LagettincB.
Pff.
iii.

BEGONIINE^.

BEGONIACE^. ^.
6a. 121.

Lagetta. Daphnince.

Daphne.
Edgeworthia.

Begonia.

SYSTEMATIC
Passerinints.

SYNOPSIS

OF GENEEA
Leptospermum.
Melaleuca. Calothanmince. Beaufortia.

457

Dais. Passerina.
Pimeleeae.

Calothamnus.

EL^AGNACEiE. ^.
6a. 246.

Pff.

iii.

Elgeagnus.

Eegelia. B^cheince. Baeckea.

Hypocalymna.

MYBTINEM.

LYTHEACE^.A^. P/.iii.7.1. MELASTOMATACE^.-.?^.P#.


Lythrese.
Lythrinae.
iii.

7.

130.

Melastomatoideae.
Tibouchineae.

Cuphea. Lythrum.
Nesseese.
Nesseinae.

Tibouchina.

ONAGEACE^.^.
199.

Pff.

iii.

7.

Heimia.
Lagerstrcemiinae.

Lagerstrcemia.

PUNICAOE^. ^.
22.

Pff.

iii.

7.

Jussieueae. Jussieua. Epilobese. Epilobium. Zauschneria.

Punica.

Onagrese.
CEnotherinte.
Pff.
iii.

COMBEETACE^.^.
7.

106. Quisqualis.

Terminalia.

CEnothera. Puchsiese. Fuchsia. Lopezieae. Lopezia.

MYETACEiE. A^. Pff.


Myrtoidese.
Myrtese. Ortliostemonince.

iii.

7.57.

HAL OBBHA GIDINE^. HALOEEHAGIDACEiE. N.


Pff.
iii.

Orthostemon.
Myrtince.

7.

226.

Halorrhagese.
Halorrhagis.

Myrtus. Psidium.
EugeniincB.

Myriophyllum.

Eugenia.

Leptospermoidese.
Leptospermeae. Metrosiderince

CYNOMOEIACE^. N.
iii.

GYNOMOBIINE^.
1.

Pff-

250.

Metrosideros.
Tristania. Eucalyptince.

Cynomorium.

UMBELLIFLOR^.

Angophora.
Eucalyptus.
LeptospermincB Agonis. Callistemon.

AEALIACE^. A^.
Schefflereae.

Pff.

iii.

8. 1

Acanthopanax.
Cussonia.
Fatsia.

Kunzea.

Hedera.

458
Meryta.

HOETUS MOKTOLENSIS
Seselince.

Nothopanax. Oreopanax. Pseudopanax.


Schefflera.

Athamanta. "Crithmum.
*Foeniculum.

Kundmannia.
Libanotis.

Tetrapanax.
Trevesia.

(Enanthe.
Seseli.

Tupidanthus.
Araliese.
Aralia.

Thaspium.
Peucedanese.
AngelicincB.
iii,

UMBELLIFEE^.^.
8.63.

Pff.

Agasyllis.

Conioselinum.
Ferulince.

Hydrocotyloidese.
Mulineae. Azorellin(^.

Dorema.
Ferula. Johrenia.

Pozoa. Saniculoidese.
Saniculeae.

Opopanax. Peucedanum.
Laserpitieae. ElceoselincB.

Eryngium.
Lagceciese.

Petagnia. Apioideae.
Echinophorese.

Elaeoselinum.
Thapsiince.

Laserpitium.

Echinophora.
Scandicineae.

Melanoselinum.
Thapsia.
DaucesB.
''=Daucus.

Scandicince.

Chserophyllum. "Scandix.
Caucalince.
''Caucalis.

COENACE^. ^.
250.

Pff.

iii.

8.

''Orlaya.
"-'Torilis.

Smyrnieae.

Aucuba. Cornus.
Corokia.
Griselinia.

Hippomarathrum.
Hladnikia.

Magydaris.

Helwingia.

Pleurospermum.
Prangos.
''Smyrnium. Ammineae.
Carince.

GAEEYACE^.iJ.
56a.

V.

C.

iv.

Garry a.

Apium. Bupleurum.
Cryptotsenia.

ALANGIACE^.E.
2206.

V.

C. iv.

Heteromorpha.
Petroselinum.

Alangium.

SYSTEMATIC SYNOPSIS OF GBNEEA

459

Metachlamyde^
ERICALES.

or

Sympetal^.
Pff.
iv.

PRIMULACE^. ^.
1.98.
Pff. iv.

CLETHRACE^. N.
1. 1.

Primulese.
Primulinae.

Clethra.

Primula.
Pff.
iv.
1.

PIROLACE^. iV.
3.

Monotr opoidese
ERICACEAE.
15.

Samolese. *Samolus. Lysimachieae.


Lysimachiinae.

*Monotropa.

Lysimachia.
Anagallidiiiae.

^.

Pff.

iv.

1.

''Anagallis.

Cyclaminese.
Cyclamen.
Coridese.
*Coris.

Rhododendroidese.
Rhododendrese.

Ehododendron. Arbutoidese.
Andromedeae.

Andromeda.
Arbutese.

PLUMBAGINACE^. ^.
iv. 1.

Pff,

116.

Arbutus. Arctostaphylos. Vaccinioideae.


Thibaudiese.

Plumbaginese.
Ceratostigma.

Plumbago.
Staticese.

Pentapterygium.
Thibaudia. Ericoidese.
Ericeae.

Limoniastrum.
Statice.

Erica.

EBENALES. SAPOTINE^.
Pff.
iv.

EPACRIDACE^.xY.
1.66.

SAPOTACE^. ^.
126.

Pff.

iv.

1.

Epacridese. Dracophyllum.

Palaquiese.
Sideroxylinae.

Argania.

Bumelia.

PRIMULALES.

Lucuma.
Pff.
iv.

MYRSINACE^. ^.
1.

Pouteria. Sideroxylon.
Chrysophyllinae.

84.

Myrsinoidese.
Myrsineae.

Chrysophyllum.

Heberdenia. Myrsine.

DIOSPYBINEM.

Rapanea.
Ardisiese.

EBENACE^..Y.
153.

Pff.

iv.

1.

Ardisia.

Hymenandreae.

Diospyros. Euclea.

Oncostemon.

Eoyena.

460

HOETUS MOKTOLENSIS
Pff. iv.
1,

STYEACACE^. A^.
172.

APOCYNACE^. N.
2.

P/.

iv.

109.

Styrax.

Plumieroidese.
Arduineae. Melodinino}.

CONTOET^, OLEINEM.

Acokanthera. Arduina.
Plumiereae.
Alstoniince.

OLEACE^. ^.
Oleoidese.
Fraxineae.

Pff. iv. 2. 1.

Amsonia. Lochnera.
Plumiera.

Fontanesia. Fraxinus.
Syringeae.

Ehazya.
Vinca.
Bauwolfiince. Alyxia.

Forsythia. Syringa.
Oleineae.

Hunteria.
CerherincB.

Chionanthus. Ligustrum.
Noteleea. Olea.

Cerbera. Thevetia.

Echitoidese.
Echitideae.

Osmanthus.
Phillyrea.

Apocynum.
Mandevilla.

Jasminoidese.
Jasmineae.

Nerium. Trachelospermum.

Jasminum.

ASCLEPIADACE^.
iv. 2.

.?/.

Pff.

189.

GENTIANINEM.

Periplocoidese.
Periploceae.

LOGANIACE^. ^.
19.

Pff. iv. 2.

Chlorocodon.
Cryptostegia. Periploca.

Loganioidese.
Gelsemieae.

Cynanchoidese.
Asclepiadeae.

Gelsemium. Buddleioidese.
Chilianthus. Buddleia.

Glossonematince, Araujia.

Schubertia.
Asclepiadino}.

Nicodemia.

Asclepias.

GENTIANACE^.A^.
2. 50.

Gomphocarpus.
Pff. iv.

Gynanchince.

Cynanchum.
Morrenia.

Gentianoidese.
Erythraeinse.

Sarcostemma.
OxypetalincB.

"Chlora. *Erythraea.

Oxypetalum.
Tylophoreae. CeropegiincB {Stapeliince).

Menyanthoideae.
Menyantheae.

Limnanthemum.
Villarsia.

Caralluma. Ceropegia.

SYSTEMATIC
Duvalia. Echidnopsis. Heurnia. Heurniopsis. Hoodia.
Stapelia.

SYNOPSIS

OF GENERA
Phacelia.

461

Phaceliese.

Nameae.
Wigandia.

BORRAGINACE^. 2^.P/.iv.
3a. 71.

Tavaresia. Marsdeniince

Cordioideae.
Cordia.

Hoya.
Marsdenia.
Stephanotis.
Gonolobeae.

Ehretioidese.
Ehretia.

Gonolobus.

Heliotropioideae. Heliotropium.
Tournefortia.

TUBIFLOR^.

CONVOLVULINEM. CONVOLVULACEiE. A^.


iv.

Borraginoidese.
Cynoglosseae.
Fff.

Caccinia.

3a. 1.
.

C onvolvuloidese
Dichondrese.

Cynoglossum. Omphalodes.
Solenanthus.
Anchusese.

Dichondra.
Falkia.
Convolvulese. Argyreiince.

Anchusa. *Borrago, Pulmonaria.

Argyreia.
ConvolvulincB.

Symphytum,
Trachystemon.
Lithospermeae. Cerinthe.

Calonyction.
Calystegia.

Convolvulus.

Exogonium.
Ipomoea. Mina.
Pharbitis.

Lithospermum.
Myosotis.
Echieae.

Echium.

Quamoclit.

VEBBENINEM.

Cuscutoideae. *Cuscuta.

VERBENACE^. A^.
3a. 132.
Pff.

Pff. iv.

POLEMONIACE^. A^.
iv. 3a.

Verbenoideae.
Euverbenese.

40.

Cobseese.
Cobsea.

Verbena.
Lantanese.

Lantana.
Lippia.
Privese.

Cantueae.
Cantua.

Polemoniese.
LcBselia.

Priva.
Citharexyleae.

Phlox.

BOBBAGININEM.

HYDROPHYLLACE^.
Pff. iv. 3a. 54.

Citharexylum. Duranta. Viticoideae.

N.

Callicarpeae.

Callicarpa.
ViticesD.

Hydrophylleae. Nemophila.

Vitex.

462
Clerodendreae.

HORTUS MORTOLENSIS
Hy88opince.

Clerodendron. Oxera.

Hyssopus.
Thymince.

Caryopteroidese.
Caryopteris.

Bystropogon. Majorana. Origanum.

LABIATE. ^.
Ajugoidese.
Ajugese.

Pff. iv. 3rt. 183.

Thymus.
Menthince. "^Lycopus.
* Mentha. Ocimoideae.

Ajuga.

Teucrium.
Rosmarineae.

Plectranthinae.

Rosmarinus. Prostantheroidese.
Westringia. Prasioideae. Prasium. Scutellarioidese.
Scutellaria.

Coleus. Plectranthus. Moschosminae.

Ocimum.

SOLANINEJE.

Lavanduloidese.
Lavandula. Stachyoidese.
Marrubiese.

SOLANACE^. 7^. Pff. iv. 36. 4.


Nicandreae.
Nicandra. Solanese.
Lyciinae.

Marrubium,
Sideritis. Nepetese.

Cedronella.

Acnistus. Atropa. Dunalia.

Nepeta.
Stachydeae. BrunellincB. "'Brunella.

Grabowskia. lochroma. Lycium.


Hyoscyaminse. Physochlaena.
Solaninas.

Lamiinm.
Ballota.

Colquhounia. Eremostachys.

Capsicum. Lycopersicum.
Physalis.

*Lamium.
Leonotis. Molucella.

Solanum. Withania.
Mandragorinae.

Phlomis. Stachys.
Salviese.

Cyphomandra.
Mandragora. Datureae. Datura.
Solandra. Cestrese.
Cestrinae.

Ramona.
Salvia. Monardeae.

Monarda.
Hormineae. Sphacele.
Satureieae.

Cestrum.
Nicotianinae.

MelissincB.
''Melissa.

Satureia.

Thymbra.

Fabiana. Nicotiana. Nierembergia. Petunia.

SYSTEMATIC SYNOPSIS OF GENERA


Salpiglossidese. Anthocercis. Browallia.
Brunfelsia.

463

Anomalse.
Dermatobotrys.

BIGNONIACE^.^.
U.
189.

Pff.

iv.

Schizanthus.
Streptosolen.

SCROPHULARIACE^.
Pff. iv. 3&. 39.

N.

Bignonieae. Adenocalymna.

Anemopsegma.
Bignonia. Clytostoma.

Pseudosolanese.
Verbascese. Celsia.

Doxantha.
Phaedranthus. Pithecoctenium.
Pyrostegia.

Verbascum. Antirrhinoidese
.

Hemimerideae. Alonsoa. Diascia.


Calceolariese.

Tecomeae.
Campsis.
Catalpa.
Chilopsis.

Calceolaria.
Antirrhinese.

Jacaranda.
Incarvillea.

Antirrhinum. *Cymbalaria.
*Elatinoides. Linaria.

Markhamia.
Pandorea. Podranea. Stenolobium. Tecomaria.

Maurandia. Nemesia. Rhodochiton.


Chelonese.

Eccremocarpeae.
Eccremocarpus. Crescentieae.
Kigelia.

Bowkeria.
Freylinia. Halleria.

Paulownia. Pentstemon.
Phygelius. Russelia. Scrophularia.
Gratioleae.

MARTYNIACE^. 2^.
36. 265.

Pff. iv.

Martynia. Proboscidea.

OROBANCHACE^.
iv. 36.

iV^.

Pff.

Diplacus. Lindenbergia.

123. Lathraea.

Mimulus.
Torenia.
Selagineae.

Orobanche.

GESNERIACE^.
Zh. 133.

A/-.

Pff. iv.

Hebenstreitia. Selago.

Cyrtandroidese.
Ramondieae. Saintpaulia.
Streptocarpese.

Rhinanthoideae.
Digitaleae.

Digitalis.

Streptocarpus.
Trichosporeae.

Isoplexis.

Rehmannia.
Veronica.
Rhinantheae.

Trichosporum.
Coronanthereae. Coronantherince.

*Odontites.

Rhabdothamnus.

464
Mitrariince. Mitraria.

HOKTUS MORTOLENSIS
PLANTAGINALES.

Columnese. Columneince.

PLANTAGINACE^. N.
iv. 36.

Pff.

363.

Columnea. Gesnerioideae.
Kohlerie*. Kohleria.
I

Plantago.

RUBIALES.

RUBIACE^. iV.
Cinchonoideae.
Cinchoninae. EondeletiecB.

Pff. iv. 4. 1.

LENTIBULARIACE^.
Pff. iv. 3b. 108.

N.

Utricularieae. Pinguicula.

Rondeletia.
Citichonecs.

GLOBULARIACE^. iV.
iv. 3b.

Pff.

Bouvardia. Manettia.
Gardeniinae. Gardeniecs.

270. Globularia.

Lytanthua.

Burchellia.

ACANTHINE^.

ACANTHACE^. A^.
36. 274.

Pff.

iv.

Gardenia. Hamelia. Randia. Coffeoidese.


Guettardinae. Alberte(B.

Thuntoergioideae. Thunbergia.

Alberta.
Psychotriinse. Ixorece.

Acanthoidese.
Contortse. Strohilantliece,

Coffea.
Pcederiecs,

Strobilanthes. Buelliea. Ruellia.


Barleriece.

Leptodermis.
Psederia.
Antho8pe7'7necB.

Barleria.
Imbricatse.

Coprosma.
Nertera.
Phyllis.

AcanthecB.

Acanthus.
Graptophyllece.

Plocama.
Putoria. Morindece.

Anisacanthus.
OdontonemecB.

Damnacanthus.
Galiece.

Duvernoia.

Mackaya.
Justiciecs.

*Asperula. *Crucianella.

Jacobinia.
Justicia.

Galium. Rubia.
Sherardia.

MYOPOBINEjE.

CAPRIFOLIACE^. ^.
Pff.
iv. iv. 4.

UYOVO'RACF^M.N.
36. 354.

Pff.

156.

Bontia.

Sambuceae. Sambucus.
Viburneae. Viburnum.

Myoporum.
Oftia.

SYSTEMATIC
Linnseeae.
Abelia.

SYNOPSIS

OF GENERx\
Luffa.

465

Momordica.
Sphgerosicyos.
Trichosanthinae.

Lonicereae.
Diervilla.

Leycesteria. Lonicera.

Trichosanthes.
Cucurbitinae.

Cucurbita.
Abobrinse.

VALERIANACE^.^. Pff. iv.


4. 172.

Abobra. Sicyoidese.
Coccinia. Echinocystis.

"Centranthus.
Fedia. Valeriana.
''Valerianella.

Sechium, Sicyosperma. Cyclantherese.


Cyclanthera.
Pff. iv. 4.

DIPSACACEiE. AT.
182.

Gephalaria. Dipsacus. Knautia. Pterocephalus.


Scabiosa.

CAMPANULINEM.

CAMPANULACE^. ^.
iv. 5.

Pff.

40.

Campanuloideae.
Campanuleae. Cam'panulince.

Campanula.

CAMPANULAT^. CUGURBITINEM.

Canarina. Michauxia.
Ostrov^skia. "Specularia.

CUCURBITACE^. A^. P/f.iv.


5. 1.

Trachelium.
Platycodince.

Fevillese.

Gomphogyninse.

Actinostemma.
Thladianthinae.

Thladiantha. Melothriese.
Melothriinse.

Musschia. Platycodon. Lobelioideae.

Heterotoma.
Laurentia. Lobelia.

Melothria.
Anguriinse.

Siphocampylus.

Kedrostis.
Telfairiinse.

Telfairia.

GOODENIACE^. ^.
5. 70.

Pff. iv.

OuGurbitese.
Cucumerinae.

Goodenioideae.
Goodenia.

Acanthosicyos. Benincasa. Bryonia. Bryonopsis. CitruUus.

COMPOSITE. ^.
87.

Pff.

iv.

Tubuliflorae.
Vernonieae. Vernonince.

Cucumis.
*Ecballium. Lagenaria.

Vernonia.
2

466
Eupatoriese. AgeratincB.

HOKTUS MORTOLENSIS
Silphium.
Petrobince.

Ageratum. Eupatorium. Hebeclinium.


Adenostylince.

Podanthus.
Zinnince.

Kuhnia.
Asterese.

Heliopsis. Zinnia.
Verbesinince,

Solidaginince, Grindelia.

Actinomeris.
Borrichia.

Haplopappus.
Neja. Pteronia.
Bellidlnce.

Echinacea. Ferdinanda. Helianthus.

Montonoa.
Tithonia. Verbesina.
Coreopsidint^.

*Bellis. Aaterint^.

Agathgea.
Aster.

Coreopsis.

Bellium. Diplopappus. Erigeron.


Felicia.

Cosmos.
Dahlia.

Hidalgoa. Leptosyne.
Helenieae.

Olearia. ConyzincB.

Chrysocoma. Conyza.
Psiadia. BaccharidincB.

HelenincB. Gaillardia.

Tagetinince.

Tagetes.
Anthemidese.

Baccharis.
lauleae.

Anthemidince.
Achillea.

Tarchonanthince.

Tarchonanthus.
FilaginincB,
-'Eilago.

Anthemis.
Diotis.

Eriocephalus.

Gnaplialince.

Gonospermum.
Santolina.

Cassinia

Gnaphalium. Helichrysum.

Chrysanthemince. Artemisia.

Humea.
Phaenocoma. *Phagnalon.
Angianthince.

Chrysanthemum.
Pentzia.
Senecionese. SenecionincB.

Calocephalus,
InulincB.

Inula. *Pulicaria.

Cineraria. Kleinia. Ligularia.

Buphthalmince.

Othonnopsis (Hertia).
Petasites. Senecio.
-=Tussilago.

Buphthalmum. Odontospermum.
*Pall6nis. Helianthese.

Othonnince.

Melampod/incs.

Polymnia.

Euryops. Othouna,

SYSTEMATIC SYNOPSIS OF GENEEA


Calenduleae.
Mutisiese.

467

Calendula.

MtUisincB.

Dimorphotheca. Garuleum. Osteospermum.


Tripteris.
Arctotideae. Arctotidi'nce.

Gerbera.
Proustia. Liguliflorse.
Cichorieae.

Cichorince,

*Cichorium.
-""Hedypnois.

Arctotis.

Venidium.
GorterincB.

*Hyoseris.
'''Lapsana.

Berkheya. Gazania.
Cynarese.
Echino2)sidi7ice.

*Khagadiolus.
Leo7i todontince.

Echinops.
CarlinincB.

Achyrophorus. *Leontodon. *Helminthia.


*Picris.

Atractylis. Carlina.
Giraldia. Carduince.

Scorzonera. *Thrincia.

*Tragopogon.
* Urospermum
Crepidince.

Cirsium. Cynara.
*Galactites. Jurinea.

*Andryala.
*Chondrilla. *Crepis.

Onopordon.
Saussurea.

Hieracium. Lactuca.
*Picridium. *Pterotheca. Sonchus.
''Taraxacum.

Silybum.
Stgehelina. Centaureince.

Carduncellus.

Carthamus.
Centaurea.

COEEIGENDA.
Page
2. 9.

Ahutilon striaUim, add Brazil.

For Mi-ides, read Aerides.


After Agonis flexuosa, read sub Leptospermo.

15. 24.

Alyssum

saxatile,

add Europe.
Morelli,

48.

For Billhergia Leopoldi x Leopoldi x Moreli.

read

Billbergia

48.
74.

Bocconia fnUescens, add West Indies, Mexico to Peru.

Under

Cestruni fasciculakim, cancel


celeste

and 5659.
celeste

81.

For Arancio
delta Cina.

delta

China, read Arancio

86.

After Coccinia, for Abobrinse, read Sicyoideae,

96. 99.

Under Crinodendron,

for

Pataqua, read Patagua.


Island.

Under Cupressus guadatupensis, read Guadalupe


For Dance, read Danae.

103. 110. 138.

After Diplacus, for sub Mimulus, read sub Mimulo.

Under Festuca ovina Under Umhellularia


t.

L. var. gtauca Hort., for S. Europe, read Northern temperate and arctic regions.
catifornica, for 5.
ilf t.
.

326.

5230, read

5320.

PRINTED BY WEST, NEWMAN AND

CO.,

HATTON GARDEN, LONDON,

E.C.

IV.

View of the House, with Pinus

canariensis.

V.

^^i -^/i

Group

in

Front or the House


Euphorbia ahyssinica.

in

1895.

Aloe ferox

to the left

and Senecio

jprcecox to the right.

VI.

Group of Succulents.
Opuntta Ficus-indica and Aloe arhorescens
var. natalensis.

QK73.V38A2

1912

gen

Giardino Botanico H/Hortus Mortolensis

3 5185 00052 6952

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