93. CONVOLYULACEZX. 169 
9. Cuscuta pedicellata, Ledeb. Fl. Alt. i. p. 293, t. 234; 
Engelm. in Trans. Acad. Sc. St. Louis, i. p. 472; Maxim. Ind. 
Fl. Pek. in Prim. Fl. Amur. p. 475. 
CuiHLr: near Peking (ex Maximowicz). 
Siberia. 
94. SOLANACELE *. 
l. Solanum biflorum, Zour. Fl. Cochinch. (1790), p. 129; 
Choisy in DC. Prodr. xiii. 1. p. 178; Hook. et Arn. Bot. Beech. 
Voy. p. 267; Mig. in Ann. Mus. Bot. Lugd.-Bat. iii. p. 118; 
Clarke in Hook. f. Fl. Brit. Ind. iv. p. 232; Hance in Journ. 
Linn. Soc. xiii. p. 114. 
Solanum decemdentatum, Roxb. Fl. Ind. ii. (1824), p. 247 ; Benth. Fl. 
Hongk. p. 242; Choisy in DC. Prodr. xiii. 1. p. 179. 
Solanum Osbeckii, Choisy in DC. Prodr. xiii. 1. p. 179. 
Solanum Calleryanum, Choisy in DC. Prodr. xiii. 1. p. 178. 
Formosa: without locality (Oldham, 337 !), Kelung (Ford !); 
Hurren: Ichang and the immediate neighbourhood (A. Henry!) ; 
Kwanerune: Lofaushan and other localities (Ford!); Hoxne- 
KONG (Champion !); Lucnu AncniPELAGO (Beechey! Wright !). 
Mus. Brit.; Herb. Kew. 
Malay peninsula and archipelago. 
2. Solanum Dulcamara, Linn. Sp. Pl. ed. 1, p. 185; DC. 
Prodr. xiii.1.p. 78; Boiss. Fl. Or. iv. p. 285 ; Clarke in Hook. f. 
Fl. Brit. Ind. iv. p. 229; Hance in Journ. Linn. Soc. xiii. 
p. 84; Franchet in Mém. Soc. Sc. Nat. Cherbourg, xxiv. p. 239 
(var. chinensis, Dunal). 
Solanum lyratum, Thunb. Fl. Jap. p. 92; Dunal in DC. Prodr. xiii. 
l. p. 79. 
* Several exotic members of this order are cultivated and more or less 
naturalized in China; among them the tomato, Lycospersicum esculentum, 
Mill.; Cayenne pepper, Capsicum frutescens, Linn., C. baccatum, Linn., and 
C. annuum, Linn. ; the Cape gooseberry, Physalis peruviana, Linn. ; the egg- 
plant, Solanum Melongena, Linn., syn. S. esculentum, Dunal; and tobacco, 
Nicotiana Tabacum, Linn., and N. rustica, Linn. See Bretschneider's ‘ Early 
European Researches into the Flora of China,’ p. 164, and DeCandolle, ‘ Origine 
des Plantes Cultivées, éd. 3, pp. 111, 229, and 230. Capsicum sinense, Jacq. 
(Hort. Vindob, iii. t. 67), Nicotiana chinensis, Fisch. (Linnza, xiv. Literaturbl. 
p. 160), and Solanum ethiopicum, B. violaceum, Dunal (DC. Prodr. xiii. 1. 
p. 351), were all founded on cultivated plants. 
LINN. JOURN.—BOTANY, VOL. XXVI. N 
