^ 



4 



Totentilla.} li, eosace^. (J. D. Hooker.) 355 



alt 14-16,000 ft., Thomson. Small forms of this are undistinguishable in a dry state 

 mm those of P. multifida, especially when the leaflets are reduced to 3 or 5 ; its nu- 

 mwous forms have many names in Europe, Asia, and America. 



ttt Leaves du/itately ^foliolate, or upper 3-foltolate. (See also states of 

 -^4. P. multifida, 25. sericea, and 37. nivea). 



T f ^QQ?" ^^^^'•^orum, Bunffe in Zedeb, Fl Alt ii. 257 ; FL Ross, ii. 53 ; 

 ic.t.337; erect, leafy, glandular hairy, radical leaves long-petioled 6-foliolat«, 

 leatiets sessile membranous obovate coai'sely crenate, cauline stipules large lan- 

 ceolate quite entire, flowers in capitate leafy heads, achenes very minute 

 ^nlded, styles short subterminal. Lehm. Revis. Potentil 90. 



Western Himalaya ; in the dry region of Kashmie and Kishtwar, alt. 7-9000 ft., 

 .^T^' ^- ^- Glarke,--T>isTn^3. Soongaria. 



' All parts covered with soft spreading often glandular hairs. Steins tufted on a 



W(^y roots took, soft, erector ascending. Radical leaves 4-8 in.; leaflets 1-2 in., 



n ire towards the cuneate base, nerves slender, green on both surfaces ; petiole 



?^ ^~^j°-; cauline leaves short-petioled or sessile, 3-foliolate; stipules |-J in. 



/^^« i^l in. diam., sunk amongst the uppermost leaves; peduncle elongating in 



'i strict and stout. Calyx large, \ in. long; lobes lanceolate, acute; bracte- 



es entire or 3-fid. Peila?^ or bicnlar-obovate, dark yellow, not much exceeding the 



Fe^' ^^.^.^f^ ^^^ numerous, on a globose villous receptacle. P. Kotschyana, 



°^i' ^^ Cilicia, &c., seems to me to be this plant 





^ih\' ^' "^^Palensis, Hook. Exot. Flor. ii. t. 88 ; more or less clothed 



lat 1 ^ ^^^^ spreading hairs, stem leafy branched, leaves long-petioled 5-folio- 



^ leaflets obovate or elliptie-obovate acute or obtuse coarsely serrate green, 



,<e tinkled. Wall. 



"Ii- MSS. P. fnrn. 



Fl. Gard. t. 136. 



aiu r J •. -"""'♦• -i'«t. K>ein. siort. 



Ind, Senu Hart, Hamb, 1820. P. coccinea, JToJ^n. Brief. 



P. Gulielmi Walduieri, Klotzsch in Rets. 



estern temperate Himalaya, alt. 5-9000 ft., from Mubhee to Kttmaon. 

 rtloii^/ ®^®c^ from a woody root^tock, 1-3-flowered, stout or slender, from densely 

 »iemW ^^^^^^^6- Radical leaves 12 by 3 in.; leaflets sessile, 1-3 by ^-IJ in., 

 Plen^j/f °^^®\ I'arely acute, teeth obtuse or acute; base entire, cuneate; petiole 

 h\ in !i-^"^^'^^ stipules f-1 in., ovate or oblong, lower entire, upper lobed. Flowers 

 ^lesok °^ ; fruiting pedicels sometimes 3 in., divaricate. Calyx-lobes acute ; brac- 

 S^en tK*^^' M'henes very numerous, on a globose hairy receptacle. — In English 

 .8 this species has been long cultivated and much hybridized, 



leaves' i ' ^^shmirica, Hook.f. ; erect, leafy, clothed with spreading hairs, 

 laterali^V^^^P^^^^^ed 5-folioIate, leaflets obovate-oblong very coarsely serrate 

 ^oua ®^^^^y ^^^^y ^^ ^th surfaces, flowers in large wide-spreading dicho- 

 ieniii^^'^^8; petalg obcoitJate yellow, achenes deeply wrinkled, style short sub- 



H 



:^S^^^^,^'^'^,S^^ Clarke. r n ^ - i « . 



I-Ujj^ * '^t high, rather slender ; hairs soft, flexuous. Leaves 2-3 in.; leaflets 



*cate Iq'i! ^^®®"«» thp lateral much shorter and broader, all cut § way down into sub- 

 ^^W "^^ ^^rratures, paler and almost silky beneath; petiole 1-2 in.; stipules 

 ftniipa :'^^^^- ^nft'^rescevce e in. diam., repeatedly forked and more corymbose 

 ^'^^ ovaf "i^ny-flowered. Flowers i in. diam. ; pediceb slender. Calyx silky ; 

 *^ffi7' ^^ttiinate; bmcteoles ' obtuse. Petals about ^ larger than the calyx. 

 .^nj, on a globose hairy receptacle.— A very distinct plant, allied to P. ^lepa- 



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