278 THE CACTACEAE. 
On page 144, vol. 1, under Trichocereus schickendantzi, add to illustration : Mollers 
Deutsche Gart. Zeit. 25: 475. f. 7, No. 16, as Echinopsis schickendantzit. 
On page 146, vol. 11, under Echinopsis catamarcensis, add: Illustration: Méllers Deutsche 
Gart. Zeit. 25: 475. f. 7, No. 19. 
On page 149, vol. 11, under Harrisia eriophora, add to illustration: Journ. N. Y. Bot. 
Gard. 11: 234. f. 34; Roig. Cact. Fl.Cub. pl. [5], as Harrisia undata. 
Insert: Cactus peruvianus jamaicensis appears in Grisebach’s Flora (Fl. Brit. W. Ind. 
301. 1860) as a synonym of Cereus eriophorus, but refers to Harrisia gracilis. 
On page 151, vol. 1, under Harrisia nashti, add: Illustration: Descourtilz, Fl. Med. 
Antill. 1: pl. 66, as Cactus divaricatus. 
On page 151, vol. 11, under Harrisia gracilis, add the synonym: Cactus subrepandus 
Sprengel, Syst. 2: 495. 1825. | 
Add to illustrations: Férster, Handb. Cact. ed. 2. f. 139; Blithende Kakteen 2: pl. 84; 
Watson, Cact. Cult. 85. f. 28; ed. 3. f. 19; Diet. Gard. Nicholson Suppl. 220. f. 255, as 
Cereus repandus; Addisonia 2: pl. 61. 
On page 154, vol. 11, under Harrisia aboriginum, add: Illustration: Journ. N. Y. Bot. 
Gard. 22: pl. 253. 
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FIGs. 252,253, 254.—Borzicactus fieldianus. 
On page 163, vol. 11, insert: 
9. Borzicactus fieldianus sp. nov. 
Forming thickets 3 to 6 meters high, the branches elongated, at first erect or ascending but 
sometimes becoming pendent or even prostrate; ribs few, perhaps only 6 or 7, stout, broad, 1 to 2 
cm. high, depressed between the areoles and on young shoots and appearing as tubercled; areoles 
large, circular, short-lanate and spiny, with a depression extending upward from its upper side to 
constriction of rib; spines 6 to 10, white, subulate, very unequal, the longest ones 5 cm. long or 
longer; flowers several, from near tip of branches, but with only one from an areole, with a cylindric 
tube 6 to 7 cm. long and~a very narrow limb; ovary and flower-tube bearing ovate, acute scales, 
1 to 3 mm. long, these with long brown hairs in their axils; flower-tube within glabrous below its 
throat, bearing many stamens 4 cm. long; perianth-segments red, 1 cm. long; stamens exserted only 
beyond the perianth-segments, if at all; ovary globular, perhaps somewhat tuberculate, with scat- 
tered, long-hairy areoles; fruit probably fleshy, globular to ovoid, 2 cm. in diameter. 
Collected by Macbride and Featherstone on gravelly river bluffs, eastern exposure 
at Huaraz, Peru, altitude about 2,600 meters, October 6, 1922 (No. 2519). 
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