RHIPSALIS. 227 
Hitherto unknown wild within the continental United States, the plant was found 
or august 5, 1923, by C. A. Mosier on trees in Wallenstein’s Hammock, Dade County, 
lorida. 
Cactus cassythoides Mocifio and Sessé was given by De Candolle (Prodr. 3: 476. 1828) 
as a synonym of R. cassytha mociniana. 
Lofgren (Arch. Jard. Bot. Rio de Janeiro 2: 40. pl. 11. 1918) has figured and described 
as new a plant under the name of Khipsalis cassythoides which may belong here. The name 
had already been used by Don and we have referred it as a synonym of R. cassutha. 
Cactus epidendrum Linnaeus (Amoen. Acad. 8: 257. 1785) is without description and 
has been referred to Rhipsalis undulata. It was from Surinam. 
Cereus bacciferus (Hemsley, Biol. Centr. Amer. Bot. 1: 548. 1880) appears only as a 
synonym of Rhipsalis cassutha. 
Cassytha baccifera Miller (De Candolle, Predr. 3: 476. 1828) and C. polysperma Aiton 
(Gaertner, Fruct. Sem. Pl. 1: 137. 1788) are known in synonymy only. 
Rhipsalis pendula Hortus (Pfeiffer, Enum. Cact. 133. 1837) occurs only as a synonym. 
Rhipsalis caripensis Weber is listed as one of the synonyms of this species by Schumann 
(Gesamtb. Kakteen 622. 1898). 
Rhipsalis cassytha vars. major and pilosiuscula (Salm-Dyck, Hort. Dyck. 228. 1834) 
and var. tenuior (Schumann, Monatsschr. Kakteenk. 1: 78. 1891) areonly names. The first 
has been referred to R. floccosa, while the second is sometimes referred to R. pulvinigera. 
Illustrations: De Tussac, Fl. Antill. 3: pl. 22, as Cactus pendulus; Plunkenet, Phyt. 
pl. 172, f. 2. 1692, as Cuscuta baccifera, etc.; De Candolle, Mém. Mus. Hist. Nat. Paris 17: 
pl. 21; Forster, Handb. Cact. ed. 2. 888. f. 121. as Rhipsalis cassytha mociniana; Ann. Inst. 
Roy. Hort. Fromont 2: pl. 3, as R. parasitica; Arch. Jard. Bot. Rio de Janeiro 2: pl. 11, as 
R. cassythoides; Gartenwelt 13: 117, as R. minutiflora; Méllers Deutsche Gart. Zeit. 25: 
477.{. 11, No. 18, as R. sansibarica; (Hortus malabaricus pl. 7, fide Miller) ; Gaertner, Fruct. 
Sem. Pl. 1: pl. 28, f. 1; Torreya 9: 154. f. 1; Ann. Rep. Smiths. Inst. 1908: 537. f. 1; Journ. 
N. Y. Bot. Gard. 11: f. 23; Loudon, Encycl. Pl. 413. f. 6907; Loddiges, Bot. Cab. 9: pl. 
865; Goebel, Pflanz. Schild. 1: pl. 4, f. 2; Karsten, Deutsche Fl. 887. f. 501, No. 5; ed. 2, 
2: 456. f. 605, No. 5; Stand. Cycl. Hort. Bailey 2: f. 712; Nov. Act. Nat. Cur. 19: pl. 16. 
f. 13; Hooker, Exot. Fl. 1: pl. 2; Curtis’s Bot. Mag. 58: pl. 3080; Gartenwelt 16: 633. 
Plate xxvu, figure 1, shows a plant received from the Hope Botanical Garden in 
Jamaica. Figure 222 is from a photograph showing branches of a plant sent us from 
R. Lamb’s collection at Manchester, England. 
12. Rhipsalis virgata Weber, Rev. Hort. 64: 425. 1892. 
Main stem or branches 1 meter long or more, terete, about 5 mm. thick, erect or ascending 
but in time often pendent, often bearing aérial roots; uppet branches short, 1 to 6 cm. long, terete; 
areoles small, a little hairy, often with a white or pinkish bristle, subtended by a minute bract; 
flowers borne along sides of the 2 and 3-year old branches, solitary at areoles, rotate, 8 to 10 — 
broad, open throughout day; outer perianth-segments few, ovate, greenish yellow, sometimes tinge 
with red; inner perianth-segments 4 to 6, oblong, cream-colored, obtuse; filaments erect, white; 
style white, about as long as stamens; stigma-lobes 3, white; ovary broader than high, crowned by 
a circle of scales and bearing one on the side. 
Type locality: Described from a garden plant supposed to have come from Brazil. 
Distribution: Eastern Brazil. . 
Illustration: Méllers Deutsche Gart. Zeit. 25: 477. f. II, No. 12. _ 
Plate xxv, figure 4, shows a plant, received from M. Simon of St. Ouen, Paris, in 1901, 
which flowered and fruited in the New York Botanical Garden in 1916. 
13. Rhipsalis teres (Vellozo) Steudel, Nom. ed. 2. 2: 449. 1841. 
Cactus teres Vellozo, Fl. Flum. 207. 1825. 
Rhipsalis conferta Salm-Dyck, Cact. Hort. Dyck. 1849. 229. 
Hariota conferta Kuntze, Rev. Gen. Pl. 1: 262. 1891. 
Hariota teres Kuntze, Rev. Gen. Pl. 1: 263. 1891. 
1850. 
