OF THE CAMEROONS MOUNTAINS, ETC. 189 
12. SrMARUBEJX. 
]. BRUCEA ANTIDYSENTERICA, Miller. 
Hab. Cameroons Mountains, alt. 7000-7500 feet. (Fl. Dec.-Feb.) 
Mann's plant seems identical with the Abyssinian. It grows 
20 feet high. 
13. OcHNACEZ. 
1. GoMPHIA MICRANTHA, H. f. (ante, vi. 8). 
Hab. Fernando Po, alt. 5000 feet. (Fl. Nov.) 
14. IrrciNEx. 
l. Ibex Capensis, Sond. & Harv. Fl. Cap. i. 473. 
Hab. Cameroons Mountains, alt. 4000-7500 feet. (Fl. Feb.) 
Apparently a very common South-African plant, found from the 
vicinity of Cape Town to Macalisburg. It attains 40 feet high on 
the Cameroons. 
15. AMPELIDEX. 
1. Vrris (Cissus) CYPHOPETALA, Fres.; A. Rich, Fl. Abyss. i. 110, 
Var. occidentalis, foliolis glabratis acutius serratis. 
Hab. Cameroons Mountains, alt. 7000 feet. (Fl. Nov.) 
Very near indeed to the Abyssinian plant, but differing in the 
rather narrower, more acuminate leaflets with sharper serratures, 
and in being everywhere less pubescent; the structure of the 
remarkable flowers is identical. The leaves show a tendency to 
become digitate. 
16. SAPINDACEX. 
l. SCHMIDELIA ABYSSINICA, Hochst. in Pl. Schimp. S. Africana, 
DC. ex A. Rich., Flor. Abyss. i. 102, sed vix. 
Hab. Cameroons Mountains, alt. 7000-7500 feet. (Fl. Dec.) 
The ripe carpels of the Cameroons specimens are rather larger 
than those of the Abyssinian (S. Abyssinica, Hochst.), and more 
distinctly pedicellate. Our specimens are from a tree 30-40 feet 
high. Schimper describes it as “arbor altissima," and says it 
grows in the mountain-region of Semajata. A. Richard unites 
the Abyssinian plant with the Oware one of Palisot; but they 
differ so much in the size of the flowers, that they seem scarcely 
the same specifically. 
17. LEGUMINOSE. 
l. ADENocaRPUs Manni, H. f. Cytisus Mannii (ante, vi. 8). 
Hab. Fernando Po, alt. 9000 feet. Cameroons Mountains, alt. 7000- 
12,000 feet. (Fl. Dec.) 
The flowers of the Cameroons Mountains' specimens are con- 
