440 SCROPHULARINES. 
Herba, ut videtur, perennis, parce glanduloso-pilosula, robustiuscula, forsan 2-3 ped. alta, caulibus 
ramosis. Folia (caulina tantum visa) usque ad 6 poll. longa; lamina tenuis, late deltoideo- 
trilobata, basi cordata, petiolo paullo brevior, duplicato-dentata, dentibus secundi ordinis 
minutis ; petioli basi alis latissimis connati, angustissime alati vel omnino apteri. Flores 
mediocres, densiuscule corymbosi; calycis segmenta ut videtur viridia, tenuia, ovata, acute 
acuminata, inconspicue longitudinaliter 5-nervia; corolla labium superius parvum, inferius 
calycem paullo excedens, supra medium apertum ; antherarum loculi distincti, leviter inequales, 
magni, crassi, filamentis brevibus vel brevissimis. 
GuaTeMaLa, Volcan de Fuego, 7000 to 10,000 feet (Godman & Salvin, 239).— 
CotomBia. Hb. Kew. 
The description was mainly drawn up from Hotton’s Colombian specimen, n. 575 ; 
and Linden’s 738 is the same species. 
4. Calceolaria, sp. 
Costa Rica, Volcan de Irazu (Wendland). Hb. Kew. 
A distinct species, though the material is insufficient for description. 
[Two or three species of Verbascwm, an Old-World genus, are more or less naturalized 
in Mexico, e.g. V. thapsus and V. blattaria. | 
4, ALONSOA. 
Alonsoa, Ruiz et Pav. Syst. Veg. Fl. Peruv. et Chil. p. 150; Benth. et Hook. Gen. Plant. ii. p. 930. 
A genus of herbs and half-shrubs, comprising about six species, inhabiting America 
from Mexico to Peru. 
1. Alonsoa caulialata, Ruiz et Pav. Syst. Veg. Fl. Peruv. et Chil. p. 152; DC. 
Prodr. x. p. 250. 
Hemimeris parviflora et mutisii, H. B. K. Nov. Gen. et Sp. ii. p. 376. 
SoutH Mexico, Cordillera of Oaxaca, 7000 feet (Galeotti, 1724); Guatumata, Volcan 
de Fuego, 8300 feet (Salvin).—CotomBia to Perv. Hb. Kew. 
5. ANGELONIA. 
Angelonia, Humb. et Bonpl. Pl. Aiquin. ii. p. 92, t. 108; Benth. et Hook. Gen. Plant. ii. p. 930. 
A genus of herbs and half-shrubs, comprising upwards of twenty species, inhabiting 
Tropical America, chiefly Brazil, one species occurring in Mexico and the West Indies. 
1. Angelonia angustifolia, Benth. in DC. Prodr. x. p. 254. 
South Mexico, Vera Cruz, 2000 feet (Galeotti, 1013), Mirador (Linden, 206).— 
Cusa; Jamaica. Hb. Kew. 
[Linaria canadensis, Dum.; Bot. Mag. t. 3473, may be expected to occur in Mexico, — 
as it ranges in North America from Canada and Oregon to California, Texas, and 
Florida, recurring in subtropical and temperate South America. |] 
