190 - INDIAN SPECIES OF UTRICULARIA. 
Pedicellus infimus demum patens v. adscendens, calyce 2-3-plo longior. 
Bractee bracteoleque minutissime, a basi vix solute. Calyx lobo 
superiore suborbiculato coroll labium superius excedente, inferiore 
valde minore subrotundato calcari 2-3-plo breviore. A basi posteriore 
calcaris ad extremum corolle labii inferioris 1-2- lin. 
Ab U. brachiata (cujus semina matura non certe vidi) differt, foliorum 
forma presertim, statura minore, et a ceteris sectionis hujus seminibus 
longe-appendiculatis vel corollz labii calearisque forma. 
Utricularie Indice mihi non satis cognite. 
26. U. minutisstma (Vahl). Scapo capillari 2-3 unc., squamis raris 
bracteisque (ut mihi videtur) basifixis, floribus parvis paucisque sub- 
remotis, pedicellis brevissimis bracteam æquantibus v. parum exce- 
dentibus, calycis lobis vix zequalibus subobtusis. 
Loc. Malacca (in hb. Smith. vidi). 
27 (?). UrRICULARIA (Madras coll. No. 52). Habitu U. reticulatam 
revocans, differt corolle labio superiore ovato elliptico vel sub- 
rotundato marginibus reflexis emarginato, calcari labium inferius 
equante v. interdum non parum ezcedente. 
That this paper may embrace all the Indian members of the 
natural order Lentibularia, I append to the foregoing monograph 
of the Utricularie a notice of the only species of Pinguicula 
hitherto discovered in India. 
PINGUICULA, L. 
1. P. AL PINA, L. 
Loc. Himalaya alpina; Sikkim, alt. 10,000-13,000 ped., J. D. Hooker! 
(? Kumaon, alt. 11,000, ped., Strachey et Winterbottom). Planta 
Kumaonensis (exempla fructifera tantum, in hb. Hook. vidi) verisi- 
militer ad speciem eandem pertinet. 
The occurrence of this plant in the Himalaya is an interesting 
extension of its area towards the south and east. 
Regarding the P. flavescens of Florke as a form of the same 
species, we may trace it from the north of Scotland, through 
Scandinavia, and Northern and Central Russia, to the Urals, and 
the vicinity of Lake Baikal. At more considerable elevations it 
crosses Europe from the Pyrenees, through the Alps, Austria, &c. 
I do not discover any material difference between Dr. Hooker's 
specimens, aided by a coloured drawing from the fresh plant, and 
the European series of P. a/pina in the Hookerian herbarium. 
The Sikkim specimens are almost or quite glabrous, of the stature 
of P. vulgaris, and with pale yellowish-white flowers, bearing a 
yellow spot in the throat. 
