56 PROFESSOR LINDLEY’S CONTRIBUTIONS TO 
300. E. B1FALCI8; folis linearibus coriaceis obtusis apice valde obli- 
quis, spica araneosa dissitiflora simplici terminali, floribus albo-tomen- 
tosis, labello cuneato 3-lobo laciniis lateralibus faleatis intermedia 
oblata tridentata, tuberculo apicis maximo inflexo baseos obsoleto. 
Borneo, T. Lobb. 
In habit much like E. Reinwardtii, but not more than 5 or 6 
inches high. Flowers the size of 2. obliqua. 
301. E. scLEROPHYLLA; foliis patentibus duris lanceolatis distichis 
apice acutissimis obliquis, racemis pluribus elongatis terminalibus 
albo-tomentosis, labelli cuneati lobis lateralibus acutissimis intermedio 
a lata basi lineari apice dilatato cuspidato, tuberculo apicis maximo 
baseos erecto foveato, lamella lineari а quoque isthmo decurrente 
apice libera. 
Java, Junghuhn (279). 
Much like Е. paniculata; but the leaves are shorter, broader, 
and more spreading, and the lip wholly different. No. 300 of 
Junghuhn seems to be the same, but is only in fruit. 
Mycaranthes latifolia, Blume, may also belong to this section. 
$ IX. Твтснотовтл, Blume. 
This supposed genus differs in nothing whatever from Eria. 
It may only stand as a section, with a caulescent habit and flowers 
covered with coarse ferruginous hairs. The surface and degree of 
division of the lip offer no available mark of recognition. All the 
species are conspicuous for the long brown hair that clothes the 
stem and leaves. 
302. E. biflora. (Trichotosia biflora, Griffith, Not. iii. 331. t. 315.) 
Malacca; on rocks and trees, Goondong Toondook, Mount Ophir, 
Griffith. 
Near E. annulata, В)., from which its excessively shaggy lip 
distinguishes it, as well as the want of the long glabrous recurved 
bracts of that species. 
303. E. PuLVINATA; villosissima, caulibus brevibus ascendentibus, 
foliis ovatis, pedunculis unifloris, sepalis hirsutis in cornu obtusum basi 
productis ovario sequale, petalis linearibus sepalo dorsali sequalibus, 
labello obovato emarginato intus piloso infra apicem pulvinato. 
Mergui, Griffith, no. 2, Aug. 17, 1834. | 
I only know this from a drawing by Griffith, who represents it 
as having whitish solitary flowers, with an obcordate-spathulate 
lip, hairy and speckled with red inside, and a tuft of longer hairs 
below the apex. The clinandrium is also shown to be 4-lobed. 
It-is probably the same as one of T. Lobb’s plants distributed 
as coming from Borneo, but I suspect from Moulmein, of which 
E 
