334 CV. LENTIBULARIEZ. (C. B. Clarke.) [ Utricularia. 
ALPINE SIKKIM, alt. 8-11,000 ft., J. D. H. 
Scapes 2-3 in. Leaves à in. diam.; petiole } in., linear. Pedicels j in. ; bracts 
minute, ovate. Calyx, upper segment jj, in., ovate, purple. Corolla white, yellow- 
spotted. Seeds not seen. . 
19. U. orbiculata, Wall. Cat. 1500; scape slender 1-5-fid., leaves 
petioled orbicular, lower lip of corolla 1 in. 5-lobed yellowish, spur jm. 
linear acute, seeds obovoid glochidiate. A. DC. Prodr. viii. 18; Oliver in 
Journ. Linn. Soc. ii. 187; Dalz. & Gibs. Bomb. Fl. 136. U. pusilla, Grah. 
Cat. Pl. Bomb. 165. U. glochidiata, Wight Ic. t. 1581. 
Almost throughout INDIA in the hills: Himalaya Mts., alt. 3-8000 ft., from Nepal 
to Bhotan, common ; Khasia Hills frequent; W. Deccan Peninsula and Ceylon ; 
Tenasserim to Malacca.—DistriB. Malaya, S. China. 
Scapes 2-5 in., slender. Leaves À in. diam.; petiole } in. Pedicels'} in. Lower 
lip of corolla broader than long, with 5 subequal obtuse short lobes (more unequal in 
an example of Parish from Moulmein) ; pinkish or whiteish, but the spots or tinge of 
yellow usually prevailing. 
20. U. multicaulis, Oliver in Journ. Linn. Soc. ii. 188; scape 
1-3-fld., leaves petioled spathulate-orbicular, lower lip of corolla 3 in. 3—4- 
(sometimes 6-) lobed, spur 4, in. linear-cylindrie obtuse. 
ALPINE SIKKIM ; Lachen, alt. 10-11,000 ft. ; Lachoong, alt. 6-7000 ft., J. D. H. 
Tufted; scapes 1-2 in. crowded stouter than those of U. orbiculata. Pedicels 
0-1 in. Flowers pale-flesh colour, throat yellow. Seeds not seen. —Allied to U. 
orbiculata, from which it differs at first sight by the much smaller flowers. 
21. U. furcellata, Oliver in Journ. Linn. Soc. iii. 189 ; scape 2-6-fld., 
leaves petioled spathulate-orbicular, lower lip of corolla i-j in. 4-lobed 
purplish, spur 3- in. linear curved. 
& "id HIMALAYA; at Darjeeling, alt. 7-9000 ft., frequent (Herb. Griffith, 
e. ). 
Scape 2-3 in., slender, resembling that of U. orbiculata. Lower lip of corolla 
narrower than broad, purple pink or white, not distinctly yellow. Seeds obovoid, 
glochidiate, as of U. orbioulata.— Known in the field from U. orbiculata by the 
smaller, less yellow, flowers. 
VaR. minor; scapes 3-1 in. very slender 1-3-fld.— Temp. Sikkim; Lachen, 
J. D. H. Khasia Mts., Boga Pani, J. D. H. These examples were the type of U. 
.furcellata, Oliver; the plentiful arrival of subsequent material shows the * Jarger 
Darjeeling form” referred to by Oliver to be the fairly developed state of the 
species. 
22. U. kumaonensis, Oliver in Journ. Linn. Soc. iii. 189; scape 
slender 1-3-fld., leaves petioled spathulate-orbicular, lower lip of corolla 
§-¢ in. 5-lobed, spur à in. narrowly cylindric, seeds with a tuft of hairs at each 
end. Diurospermum album, Edgew. in Proc. Linn. Soc. i. 351. 
TEMPERATE W. HIMALAYA; Kumaon, alt. 7500 ft., near the river Pilti, Strach. 
& Winterb. , 
Resembling altogether U. furcellata ; but the lower lip of the corolla is 5-lobed, 
the spur shorter. The young seeds are ellipsoid, smooth, scabrous-papillose at each 
end; the ripe seeds have at their end tufts of capillary hairs as long as the seed. 
IMPERFECTLY KNOWN SPECIES. 
1. U. MINUTISSIMA, Vahl Enum. i. 204 ; scape 2-3 in. capillary, bracts basifixed, 
flowers blue subsessile, calyx-lobes subobtuse. DC. Prodr. viii. 16; Oliver in Journ. 
Linn. Soc. iii. 190.—Malacca (Koenig). The basifixed scales will not do for U. racemosa 
