240 DRS. HOOKER AND THOMSON ON EUPTELEA. 
61. Licnenes. (Named by Dr. Nylander.) 
feet. 
Leptogium Burgessii, Lightf. ..........- Cameroons Mountains — 7,000 
inflexum, Nyl. sessesssesesoresrseseree » 
Stictina quercizans, Mich. ............... » 
—— fuliginosa, Dicks. ................. » 
Peltigera polydactyla, var. dolicho- l 
rhiza, Nyl......... eee " 
—— — rufescens, Hoffn................. s. » 
polydactyloides, Nyl. ............... » 
Usnea ceratina, Ach. ......ceccecseceecseeees » 8,000 
— florida, Ach, .......... eee » 8,000 
Stereocaulon turgescens, Nyl. ............ » l 7,000 
denudatum, FI.................... ee » 
Cladonia diplotypa, Nyl. .................. » 6,000 
fimbriata, Hoffm. ..................... » 
Ramalina scopulorun, Ach. ............... » 8,000 
Physcia speciosa, var. dactylifera, Nyt... » 8,000 
— , var. hypoleuca ............... » 8,000 
— dilatata, Nyl........... eese » 8,000 
speciosa, Wulf................. eee » 8,000 
Parmelia megaleia, Nyl. .................. » 8,000 
—— revoluta, Fl. .............. eese » 
—— sp.? non typica ........... esses » 8,000 
Urceolaria scruposa, Ach................... » 
Lecanora subfusca, var. allophora ...... » 
On the Genus  Euptelea, Sieb. & Zucei] 
By Dr. J. D. Hóbxzxn and Dr. T. THOMSON. 
[Plate II.] 
Ix Siebold and Zuccarini's ‘Flora of Japan’ (a work which con- 
tains figures and descriptions of a great number of remarkable 
forms of plants, many of which extend to the eastern provinces of 
India) there is figured, at t. 72, a genus Euptelea, referred provi- 
sionally by the authors to Ulmaces, the absence of ripe fruit 
making it impossible to determine its affinities with certainty. 
In preparing for distribution the monochlamydeous plants of 
the Griffithian Herbarium, we have been so fortunate as to meet 
with specimens in fruit of a plant evidently belonging to the same 
genus, perhaps even specifically identieal with that figured and 
described by Siebold and Zuccarini. These specimens were 
collected by Griffith on the mountain Thumathaya, in the Mishmi 
country to the east of the valley of Assam, in an extremely humid 
