Rubus.] XLVIII, ROSACEH (OLIVER). 375 
base rounded, unequally serrate, on petiolules usually of 1 line or less, 
thinly hairy above, pafer and shortly hoary-tomentose or shortly thinly 
and softly pilose especially on the nervures beneath. Panicles ter- 
minal, pilose-tomentose, the flowers usually clustered or compact. 
Calyx-lobes linear-lanceolate acuminate. Petals 0 or scarcely exceed- 
ing the carpels which are glabrous, at length dry and sculptured or 
thinly succulent.—R. exsuceus, Steud. ; Rich. Fl. Abyss. i, 256. 
Wile Land. Abyssinia, Schimper! Roth! 
Mozamb. Distr. Foot of Mount Tschiradzura, Dr. Kirk! 
Originally described from Mascarene specimens. 
3. R. rigidus, Smith ?; DC. Prod. ii. 556, Loosely branching shrub, 
attaining 7—8 ft., branches closely appressed hoary-tomentose, with a 
few microscopic glandular hairs towards the panicle; prickles decurved. 
Leaves 3-foliolate on the flowering branches, glabrous above, paler 
hoary-tomentose beneath, leaflets more or less ovate ovate-elliptical 
or -rotundate, acute, unequally broadly serrate, petiolules of lateral 
leaflets 0 to 1 line. Panicles lax, more or less leafy. Calyx-lobes ovate- 
lanceolate apiculate. Petals shorter than calyx. “Carpels thinly vilose, 
glabrescent, at length thinly succulent, “ black-purple.” 
a gd Guinea. Huilla, Angola, 5500 ft. (2. huillensis, Welw. mss.), Dr. Wel- 
WUSCH ! 
Differing from the above in little but the stem more loosely tomentose or pilose- 
tomentose, and more aculeate inflorescence, are specimens collected by Messrs. Chap- 
man and Baines in South-West Africa, lat. 23°; no precise locality on the label. I have 
not seen barren shoots nor 5-foliolate pinnate leaves on either of the above plants. 
4. R, Steudneri, Schneinf. in Verh. Zool. Bot. Gesell. Wien. 1868, 669. 
Stem angular, greyish-tomentose, and with crowded patent glandu- 
lar hairs; prickles straightly reflexed, towards the apex tomentose. 
Leaves 3-foliolate ; leaflets oval acuminate, rounded or obscurely cor- 
date at base, doubly serrate, glabrate above, densely whitish-tomentose 
beneath. Panicle terminal much-branched, branches glandular-tomen- 
tose ; pedicels slender, aculeate, much exceeding the tomentose eglan- 
dular calyx. Petals obovate-oblong twice as long as the calyx, pur- 
plish. 
Nile Land. Abyssinia, Steudner. 
Description taken from Dr. Schweinfurth’s Memoir. 
M. Richard (Fl. Abyss. i. 256-57) describes two Rubi gathered in Abyssinia by 
Messrs. Q.-Dillon and Petit, of which I have not seen specimens. They are: 2. Peti- 
tianus (? also 2. compar, R. Br. in Salt, App. 64). Stem and petioles tomentose. Leaflets 
ternate, inciso-serrate concolorous, closely pubescent (not tomentose). Sepals oval, 
abruptly acuminate. Petals and fruit undescribed: and 2. Quartinianus. Stem and 
petioles pale-tomentose. Leaves pinnate, leaflets usually 5, whitish-tomentose beneath. 
Flowers solitary, or two or three on a common peduncle in the upper axils. Sepals oval- 
oblong acuminate. Petals 0. I take this to be probably a form of R. apetalus, _Poir. 
Schimper’s recent nea collections, include also two or three Rubi not identifiable 
with those in the Kew Herbarium, but no good purpose would be served by describing 
them from the materials as yet to hand. 
