344 DROSERACEZ. 
calyx. Y%.G. Native of the Cape of Good Hope. Flowers 
white or red. 
Fen-flowered Sun-dew. Fl. July, August. Clt. 1821. Pl. 
4 foot. 
5 D. rusya (H. B. et Kunth, nov. gen. amer. 5. p. 390. 
t. 490. f. 1.) leaves spatulate, glandular, with an obovate limb, 
upper surface as well as margins beset with hairs, scapes 2-3- 
flowered, and are glabrous as well as the calyx ; seeds somewhat 
globose. X.S. Native in humid sandy places on the banks 
of the river Orinoco. D. biflòra, Willd. in Roem. et Schult. 
syst. 6. p.763. Flowers red? Stipulas palmately-5-parted. 
Small Sun-dew. Fl. July, Aug. Pl. 4 foot. 
6 D. rene’tta (H. B. et Kunth, l. c. p. 391. t. 490. f. 2. 
Willd. in Roem. et Schult. syst. 6. p. 763.) leaves spatulate, with 
an obovate-roundish limb, upper surface as well as margins 
beset with glandular hairs; scapes capillary, elongated, 2-3- 
flowered, and are glabrous as well as the calyx ; seeds oblong. 
u.S. Native of New Andalusia in alpine situations. Like 
D. capillaris. Flowers purple ? 
Pliant Sun-dew. Fl. July, Aug. Pl. 4 foot.’ 
7 D. umpetra‘ra (Lour. fl. coch. ed. Willd. 1. p. 232.) leaves 
ovate, on long footstalks ; scape naked at the apex, umbellately 
‘5-flowered. %. G. Native of China. Flowers white. 
Umbellate-flowered Sun-dew. PI. 4 foot. 
8 D. sreviro'r1a (Pursh, fl. amer. sept. 1. p. 211.) leaves 
wedge-shaped, on very short footstalks ; stipulas scarious, 3-5- 
cleft; scape 1-4-flowered. ©.H. Native in sandy swamps 
from Carolina to Georgia. Flowers rose-coloured. 
Short-leaved Sun-dew. FI. June. PI. 1 inch. 
9 D. rareacea (D.C. prod. 1. p. 318.) leaves oblong, 
stalked ; stipulas scarious, acutely cut at the top; scape erect, 
glabrous, twice as long as the leaves ; flowers in racemes at the 
top of the scape. ©.G. Native of New Holland at King 
George’s Sound. Flowers red ? 
Chaffy Sun-dew. Pl. + foot. 
10 D. tomentosa (St. Hil. in mem. mus. 11. p. 343.) leaves 
elliptical-oblong, very blunt, on very short footstalks, with the 
margin and upper surface beset with glandular hairs, under sur- 
face villous; stipulas ciliated to the middle; scapes erect, to- 
mentose, but covered with glandular down at the top; calyxes 
densely clothed with glandular hairs. %.S. Native of Brazil 
in marshes on the mountains near Itambe in the province of 
Minas Geraes, at about the height of 2015 feet above the level 
of the sea. Hairs on the leaves white, but those on the scapes 
are brown. Flowers purple, all leaning to one side. 
Var. 3, glabrata (St. Hil. 1. c. p. 344.) scapes more or less 
glabrous. X.S. Native of Brazil near the village called Mil- 
hoverde in that part of the province of Minas Geraes vulgarly 
called Distritodos-Diamantes, at about the height of 3700 feet 
above the level of the sea. 
Tomentose Sun-dew. PI. 4 to 4 foot. 
11 D. nrTE'LLA (St. Hil. in mem. mus. 11. p. 344.) leaves 
spatulate, covered with glandular hairs on both surfaces ; foot- 
stalks one half shorter than the limb of the leaf; stipulas 3- 
parted, ciliated ; scape ascending at the base and covered with 
soft hairs, but with down towards the top; calyxes clothed with 
glandular hairs. Y%.S. Nativeof Brazil in dried up marshes 
near the town of Formigas in the province of Minas Geraes, 
and on the mountains called Serra-dos-Pyreneos in the province 
of Goyaz. Flowers purple, leaning to one side. 
Var. B, lutéscens (St. Hil. l.c. p, $45.) leaves smaller, obo- 
vate, usually naked on the under surface; hairs on the scape 
manifestly stiffer and yellowish. 
Hairy Sun-dew. FI. Ju. Jul. Pl. 4 to 4 foot. 
12 D. rrrse’rvsa (Spreng. anleit. i. p. 298.) leaves spatu- 
late, wedge-shaped, sessile, 3-nerved ; scapes few-flowered, and 
I. DROSERA. 
are as well as the calyxes pubescent. 
the Cape of Good Hope. Flowers red ? 
Three-nerved Sun-dew. PI. 4 foot. 
13 D. cunzrroxria (Thunb. prod. 57.) leaves obovately- 
wedge-shaped, sessile, reticulately veined ; scape few-flowered, 
and is as well as calyxes pubescent. 2%. G. Native of the 
Cape of Good Hope. Burch. trav. 1. p. 57. cat. no. 599, 
Flowers red and white. 
Wedge-leaved Sun-dew. FI. July, Aug. Pl. } foot. 
14 D. Burma’nnt (Vahl. symb. 3. p. 50.) leaves spatulately 
wedge-shaped, sessile, reticulately-veined ; scape erect, few- 
flowered, and is as well as calyxes glabrous. ©. Y. S. Native 
of Ceylon, Coromandel, and perhaps China. Burm. zeyl. t. 94. 
f. 2. Flowers white. - 
Burmann’s Sun-dew. Fi. July, Aug. Pl. 3 foot. 
15 D. sesstriridra (St. Hil. in mem. mus. ii. p. 341. t. 19. f. 
a.) leaves sessile, cuneated, very blunt at the apex, covered to 
the middle with glandular hairs, base and under surface naked ; 
stipulas ciliated; scape flat, glabrous ; calyxes clothed with 
glandular pubescence; style 5-parted; stigmas — 5-7-parted. 
Native of Brazil in marshes near Tapeira and Riachao in the 
desert called Certab-do-Rio-S-Francisco in the province of 
Minas Geraes. Flowers purple, leaning to one side. 
Sessile-leaved Sun-dew. Fl. July, Aug. Pl. 4 foot. 
16 D. mari'rma (St. Hil. in mem. mus. ii. p. 346. t. 19. f. 
b.) leaves spatulate, almost exstipulate ; with a wedge-shaped 
roundish border, upper surface clothed with glandular hairs; 
margins ciliately jagged ; footstalks equal in length to the leaves ; 
scape short, filiform, terete at the base, but flattened at the apex, 
clothed with glandular down as well as the calyx. 2%. S. Na- 
tive of Brazil in the sea-sand near Ararangua at the termination 
of the province of St. Catharine and Rio-Grande-de-St.-Pedro- 
do-Sul, also on a mountain called Pao-de-Assucar on the sea- 
shore in the province of Cisplatine. Flowers purple, leaning to 
one side. 
Sea-side Sun-dew. FI. Ju. Oct. Pl. 2 inches. 
17 D. searnura‘ta (Lab. nov. holl. t. 106. f. 1.) leaves ob- 
long-spatulate, tapering somewhat into the footstalk ; scape glan- 
dular at the top as well as calyxes ; flowers almost sessile, dis- 
posed in short racemes. ©. 4%. G. Native of Van Diemen 5 
Land and about Port Jackson. Flowers reddish ? 
Spatulate-leaved Sun-dew. Fl. July, August. Pl. 4 foot) 
18 D. Periora'ris (R. Br. ined. and D. C. syst. 1. p- 31 
leaves orbicular, peltate, on long footstalks ; footstalks, calyx, an 
scape thickly beset with hairs, which are not glandular. yY. i 
Native in New Holland near Endeavour River. Flowers red 
Stalked-leaved Sun-dew. Fl. June, Aug. Pl. 3 foot. i 
_ 19 D. carrLLa`ris (Poir. dict. 6. p. 299.) leaves obora y 
spatulate, on short footstalks ; scape erect, and is as yee 
calyxes glabrous. ©. H. Native of Carolina and about Phila 
delphia in sandy or gravelly swamps filled with Sphagnum. at 
rotundifòlia, Mich. fl. bor. amer. 1. p.186. Pursh, f. am i 
sept. 1. p.210. Perhaps sufficiently distinct from the Europe 
D. rotundifòlia. Flowers white. i 
Capillary Sun-dew. FI. July, Aug. Clt.? Pl. 3 cer éi 
20 D. monta‘na (St. Hil. in mem. mus. 2. p- 342.) ak at 
short, oblong, very blunt, tapering into a very short footsta, ‘ur 
the base, upper surface and margins covered with glano ije; 
hairs, under surface pilose ; stipulas linear, jagged to the mı vell 
scapes flat, 3-5-flowered, covered with glandular down as bé 
as the calyxes and pedicels. 4%. S. Native of Brazil oor the 
mountains called Serra-do-Papagayo on the southern part “de 
province of Minas-Geraes. Flowers red, leaning to one Si®* 
Mountain Sun-dew. Fl. March. PI. 4 to 4 foot. leaves 
21 D. parviro rra (St. Hil. in mem. mus. 11. p. 345.) a we 
small, somewhat spatulate or obovate, very blunt, upper $ 
©. Y.G. Native of 
