BOTANY OF THE CEYLON PATANAS. 947 
ANAPHALIS CINNAMOMEA, C. B. Clarke. Hooker, iii. 281. Trimen, 
in. 28. 
Perennial. Stems woody at the base, covered with old 
leaf-remains, lanate in the younger parts; leaves linear, 
densely cinnamomeous-woolly beneath, white-grey floccose 
above, with recurved margins. Above 6000 ft. (560, 
7000 ft.) 
A. oBLONGA, DC. Hooker, iii. 283. Trimen, iii. 30. 
Perennial. Taproot stout; stem erect, floccose ; leaves 
mostly radical, linear, lanate on both surfaces, with re- 
curved margins, dead remains persisting. Abundant every- 
where, particularly at and below 4000 ft. (474, 2000 ft. ; 
810, 4000 ft.; 277, 5800 ft. ; 557, 6000 ft.) 
A. Thwaitesii, C. B. Clarke. Hooker, iii. 284. Trimen, iii. 29. 
A low shrub. Roots fibrous, woody, and very long ; stem 
woody and leafless below, lanate above; leaves densely 
erowded on the upper part of the stem, small, oblong, con- 
duplicate or rolled, densely lanate. Atthe highest elevations; 
very rare. (359, 8000 ft.) 
A, zeylanica, C. B. Clarke. Hooker, iii. 286. Trimen, iii. 30. 
Perennial. Root-system shallow ; stems slender, decum- 
bent, leafless below, lanate above; leaves crowded on the 
upper part of the stem, erect, densely lanate on both 
surfaces (nearly glabrous in 637), with recurved margins. 
No. 357 is Thwaites’ Form 2, vide Fl. Br. Ind. loc. cit. 
Abundant above 5000 ft. (350, 5800 ft. ; 357, 637, 8000 ft.) 
A. MARCESCENS, C. B. Clarke. Hooker, ii. 286. Trimen, iii. 31. 
Perennial. Rootstock erect, stout and woody ; stem 
decumbent, woody below, floccose above; leaves narrow, 
linear, semi-erect, fulvous-lanate below, grey-floccose above, 
with recurved margins. Very abundant above. 5000 ft., 
especially where the humus is shallow. (276, 5800 ft.; 
835, 6200 ft. ; 558, 7000 ft. ; 358, 8000 ft.) 
A. BREVIFOLIA, DC. Hooker, iii. 286. Trimen, iii. 31. 
Perennial. Root-system shallow; stems decumbent, 
tomentose ; leaves crowded, semi-erect, narrow, linear- 
oblong, tomentose on both surfaces, with recurved margins. 
Very abundant above 5000 ft., especially where the humus 
is deep. At 7000 ft. the plant is dwarfed and much more 
branched than at lower elevations. (344, 5800 ft.; 836, 
6200 ft.) 
LINN. JOURN.—BOTANY, VOL. XXXIV. 25 
