A REVISION OF THE GENUS CAPSICUM. 65 
SyNopsIs. 
A Herbaceous or suffrutescent, annual or biennial. 
Cc. ANNUUM L. 
Capsicum annuum Linn. Hort. Cliff. 59. 1787. 
Herbaceous or suffrutescent plants usually growing two 
or three feet high, sometimes four or five, rarely only a 
foot, with numerous erect angular branches usually rising 
from near the ground, generally smooth, sometimes 
sparsely pubescent. Leaves medium small to very large, 
ovate acuminate to oblong elliptical; petioles smooth or 
sparingly hairy. Peduncles solitary, sometimes in twos, 
usually smooth. Corolla white or dingy white, except in 
one variety when it is more or less blotched with purple. 
Fruits variable in size, color and form. 
This species furnishes all the leading commercial varieties 
now in cultivation. In temperate latitudes they are treated 
as annuals, while in tropical countries some varieties are 
biennial or perennial. 
a@ Fruit oblong linear, 
* Calyx usually embracing base of fruit. 
+ Fruit usually less than 14 in. long; peduncles about as long or longer. 
C. annuum conoides (Miller). 
Capsicum conoides Miller, Gard. Dict. 1771 [no. 8. ed. 6].— Linn. Syst. 
4: 562. 1819 [ed. Rém. et Schult.].— Fingerh. Monogr. Gen. Cap- 
sici 14.¢. 3.7.6. 1882.— Don, Hist. Dich. Pl. 4: 446. 1838.— Rich. 
Fl. Abyss. 2: 96. 1851.—Dunalin DC. Prodr. 18': 414. 1852.— See- 
mann, Bot. Herald 402. 1852-57.—Miquel, Fl. Ned. Ind. 2: 659. 1856, 
Capsicum conoides sulcatum Fingerh. Monogr. 15.t. 3. f. ¢. 1832.— Dunal 
in DC, Prodr. 18!: 415. 1852. 
Capsicum conoides chordale Fingerh. 1. c. f. d.— Dunal, l. c. 
Capsicum conoides oblongo-conicum Dunal, 1. c. 
Piper oblongum, exiguum erectum pyramidale. Greg. de Reg. in Clus. 
Cur. Post. 97, f. 4,98. 1611.—Jonstonus, Dendrog. t. 56. 1662.— 
Raius, Hist. Pl. 1: 677. 1686. 5 
Piper Indicum siliquis surrectis & oblongis diff. 8. majus et minus (excl. 
majus). Bauhin. Pinax 103. 1623. 
Capsicum exiguum erectum pyramidale. Parkinson, Theat. Bot. 357. /. 
6. 1640. 
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