DESCRIBED BY LINNÆUS ETC. 341 
E. Species described by Murray. 
A species referred to Eranthemumn is merely a changed Linnzan 
name, and belongs to Agathelpis. 
F. Species described by Thunberg. 
Of thirteen additional species of Selago, two do not belong to 
the Order, viz. one PAyllopodium and one Vandellia ; and three 
more are now excluded from the genus, namely two of Microdon 
and one Ayathelpis; the latter, however, is a species of Linneus 
under a new name; and one of the former is a species of Ber- 
gius's, also under a new name. One Selago is a form of an old 
one; and the remaining seven are new. Of three species of 
Hebenstreitia, two now belong to Dischisma ; the third belongs to 
the genus, but is a Linnean species under a new name. One old 
name, quoted by Thunberg under Se/ago, represents two species, 
but neither of them the plant of Linnzus; so that I have been 
compelled to deseribe them as new. A third species is also de- 
scribed from one of Thunberg's sheets which does not correspond 
with two others agreeing with the description, which latter are 
therefore considered as the types. One species of Hebenstreitia 
is wrongly referred to a Linnean name; and in this case also two 
species are represented on the sheets. 
Species originally published in Linneus’s ‘Species Plantarum, 
ed. i. (1753). 
P. 95. Guroputarta AnyPuM, L.! Two specimens on one 
sheet. Founded on Alypum monspelianum sive frutex terri- 
bilis, J. Bauh. Hist. i. p. 598, &c., and correctly understood by 
authors. 
P. 96. G. bisnagarica, L.! There is no trace of this in the 
Linnean Herbarium. It is founded on Scabiosa bisnagarica 
sive Globularia frutescens etc. Pluk. Almagest. p. 336, t. 58. 
fig. 5, which no one appears to have yet determined. A. De Can- 
dolle (Prod. xii p. 614) classes it as “Species verisimiliter de- 
lenda.” Ihave consulted Plukenet’s type, now in the British 
Museum, and find it is nothing but GrosurLARiA VULGARIS, L., 
under which the former name will sink as a synonym. “ Bis- 
nagur is an ancient kingdom of Hindostan, and comprehended 
almost all the countries in the peniusula south of the 16th pa- 
rallel " (Rees’s * Cyclop.' vol. iv.). So thatthe locality given by 
