282 BOTANY OF THE VOYAGE OE H.M.S. HEUALD. 
Am 
Beech, p. 419. Cerro de Pinal; Tepic (Barclay !) ; Realcjo (Sinclair !). ■ 
173. Mimosa asperata, Linn., Wlprs. Rep. vol. i. p. 879^ Tcpic (Lay !). 
174. myios^ florihinda, WiUd., Wlprs. Rep. vol. i. p. 865. Tepic (Lay !), Acapnlco (Barclay !). 
175. Mimosa arahami, A. Gray, PI. Wright, part ii. p. 52. Sierra Madre. 
176. Acacia Farnesiana, Willd., Wlprs. Rep. vol. i. p. 909.— Nomen vernacul. "Visacha." 
Common throughout the region, covering large districts of the table-land of Durango. 
177. Acacia glabraia, Schlecht., Wlprs. Rep. vol. i. p. 920. Baranca, near Santa Teresa, on the 
road from Durango to Tepic. 
1 
178. Calliandra grandiftora, Benth., Wlprs. Rep. vol. i. p. 926, et vol. v. p. 608.— /w^a ano- 
mala, Hook, et Am. Bot. Beech, p. 419. Cerro de Pinal; Tepic (Barclay !). 
■ According to Aiidricux, vemacularly termed in some parts of Mexico " Cabeza del angel." 
179. Calliandra humilis, Benth., Wlprs. Rep. vol. i. p. 927. Chihuahua (Potts !)■ 
180. PiTHEcoLOBiuM dulce, Bcuth., Wlprs. Rep. vol. v. p. QlO.—Inga pungens, Willd.— Nomen 
Tcmacul. " Guamuchil." Cultivated about Mazatlan and San Sebastian, and naturalized m some 
parts. 
The fruit is boiled and eaten. 
ROSACEA. 
181. RuBus strigoBus, Michx., De Cand. Prodr. vol. ii, p. 557.-Torr. et Gray, M. N. Amer. 
vol. i. p. 453. Rancho of Guadalupe, on the road from Mazatlan to Dm-ango; Peak of Orizaba 
(Galeotti, no.3082!). 
182. RuBus tHlobus, Moz. et Sesse, De Cand. Prodr. vol. ii. p. 566.-72. Neo-Mea^icanus, A. 
Gray, PI. Wright, part ii. p. 55 ! 
R. l^eo-Mewicanus does not appear to diifer from B. trilohns, described from a figure of Mozino and 
Sesse • and I consider the following specimens as belonging also to this species, viz. New Mexico (Wright, 
no. 1061), Oaxaca (Galeotti, no. 3098, Linden, no. 639), Veracruz (Galeotti, no. 3083), San Felipe (Andiicnx, 
no. 393), and some other (not specified) part of Mexico (Hartweg, no. 456). 
Seeds of a third species of Huhis (caule frutieoso, foUis 5-foliolatis utrinque pubescentibus) was sent 
by Mr. Potts to Mr. Scheer, from Chihuahua, but the plants raised from them have not yet flowered, and 
must therefore remain for the present undetermined. 
183. Fragaria vesca, Linn., De Cand. Prodr. vol. ii.'p. 569.— Torr. et Gray, Fl. N. Amer. vol. 
i. p. 448.— Nomen vemacul. "Fresa dc la Serra." Common in the Sierra Madre; collected also in 
Mexico by Hartweg (no. 1715 !) and Coulter (no. 94!). 
Strawberries (several kinds), introduced from foreign countries, are cultivated in the gardens of Du- 
rango. 
184. Alchemilla sibaldiafolia, H.B. et K., De Cand. Prodr. vol. ii. p. 590. Sierra Madre. 
I have seen specimens of this plant from Orizaba Peak (Galeotti, no. 559 !), Zmapan (Coulter !), Quite- 
nian Andes and Pichincha (Jameson!). 
