c 



Chrispora.] x. crucifer^. (Hook. f. & T. Anderson.) 167 



r 



lose, style rigid subulate. E.f. <k T. in Journ. Linn. Soc. v. 181 : Sous. Fl 

 OruiiL ii 143. 



Western Himalaya and the Punjab ; Kashmir, alt. 5-7000 ft. T. T. ; Salt Eaxgev 

 r>mi«gr.— DisTiuB. Central Asia and westward to Asia-Minor. 



., Iilose or rough glandular, rarely glabrous. Stem 6-9 in., much branched from the 

 base. Zea2?e5 shortly petioled ; lower sometimes pinnatifid; upper entire or toothed. 

 rhwerg small, remote, purple (like those of Malcolmia africana). Racemes much 



elongate in fruit. Pods 1\ in., ascending, slender, curved, transverse-jointed, not con- 

 stricted between the seeds, beak long subulate ; pedicels l-\ in., spreading, ultimately 

 *• thick as the pods. ♦ 



^ 



s 



' '; 9: slbirica, DC. Syst il 437 ; annual, glandular-hairy, leaves inter- 

 ruptedly pinnatifid, pedicels slender, pods slender curved torulose monib' 

 lorm, beak slender subulate. II. f. & T. in Journ. Linn. Soc. v. 181. 



;Hasora in Western Tibet, Winterbottom. — Distrib. Western and Altaian Siberia, 

 vv- A straight, spreading herb, 6-8 in., with numerous branches from the base. Leaves 

 narrow- lobes equal, entire or lobulated, acute; terminal long, lanceolate. Flowers 

 ^tlier large, yellow, few, very remote in lengthened racemes. Pods 1 in., -aBnally 

 Cwved; cells 2-seriate, opposite, or one row a little higher than the other, but never 

 ai^rnate, pedicels more slender than the pods, ascending or sometimes arched. 



3. C. sabulosa, Camh. in Jacq. Voij. Bot. 15, t. 15 ; perennial, glan- 

 •3^^-Y^iry, leaves entire toothed or pinnatifid, flowers yellow or purplish, 



it 



144 



) 



Griff. Itin. Notes 



er, pods irregularly deeply torulose, joints gibbous, be 

 /. <k T. in Journ. Linn. Soc. v. 181 : Boiss. FL Orient 



mh 



Y ■_ 



■Western Himalaya, from Kunawur to Kashmir: and Western Tibet, alt. 10-17,000 

 n.-DisTRiB. Affghanistan. 



DPr I J T^*^' ^^"'^y' fuBiform, branching at the crown. Leaod all radical, tufted, 

 Fiioied, oblong-lanceolate, lobes obtuse. Racemes springing from among the leaves, 

 "^nse at first, soon elongating to 6-9 in. Flowers large. Pods \-\ in. long, straiglit, 

 TnT °r..t7'3ted ; cells opposite or almost alternate, tuborculated ; pedicels erect, 



«oaer, thickened at the top, as long as the pod. 



T * 



V A 



*y ^ ^ 



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Order XL 



) 





^Herhs shrubs or trees, erect or climbing. Leaves simple or palmately 

 ^»-toliolate ; stipules 2 or 0, sometimes spinescent. Inflorescev^ indeh- 

 usn,ii T*^^ solitary racemed corymbose or umbeUed, regular or irregular, 

 T^Tl 2-sexuaL Sepals 4, free or connate, valvate or imbricate rare y 



or at t? 1?^ °P*^^ ^" ^^^' Stamens 4 or' inore, hypogynous 



linint, fl! , ^^ or on a long or short gynophore. Disk-, ,^n 



S.A ^^lyx-tube. Oz'ar/sessUe or stalked, 1-ceUed ; style, short or 0, 



0, or tnn)id, or 



. ._ , indefinite, on 2-4 parietal placentas 



rTS: ^' ^^anipy-lotropous. huit capsular or berried Seeds j^ig]ed or 

 m^ embryo incurved-DisTBiB, Genera 23, species 



ncaL 



lateral A^'r'f. ^^'^ NkbuhriaT\v\A"^^"--'^^^^ ^"'^ r^nK-riAoral : Cadaba 



fn.^ r^^ axile placentation anrl « 



iak- u]^^ ^^^^ various abnormal genera.— Cra/cpra 

 Wr'al '"^'^ an - - - 



^ovA Pth 6 -pal, a Sdocda^-jar^^^J^s^^^^^^ 



Order. 



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