“840 CRASSULACEAE (Harv.) [Crassula. 
ute, emarginate. DC. 1. c. p. 384. EL. § 2.1 1879. Zey ! 2533. DC. Pl. 
Grass. t. 19. : 
- Has. Woods near Zwartkops R., and Zoutpanshoodge, Z. § Z./ (Herb. Sd., 
op og feet high, glabrous, corymbosely branched ; branches suberect. Leaf 
irs 3-6 lines apart ; leaves 14-1} inch long. 2-24 lines thick, widely spreading at 
teas: falcato-incurved. Peduncle 2-3 inches long; panicle much branched, the 
divisions densely cymose. Flowers small and white. 
12. C. fruticulosa (Linn ?); stem suffruticose, spreading, branching ; 
leaves connato-perfoliate, fleshy, subulate, acuminate, glabrous, longer 
than the internodes ; cymes terminal, pedunculate, corymbose, with 
subulate bracts, few-flowered ; calyx-lobes one-third of petals, broadly 
lanceolate, keeled, subacute ; petals connate at base, oblong, subacute, 
suberect ; styles subulate. Zey/ Z.n. N.n. H. 109. 2. 
Has. Uitenhage? Zeyher! (Herb. Sond.) 
This has the foliage nearly of C. acutifolia, but larger flowers and proportionably 
longer petals. Flowers white, 2-24 lines long. Leaves an inch or 14 inch long, 
shrivelling. The specimens are much broken. 
13. C. acutifolia (Lam. Dict. 2. p. 175) ; stem suffruticose, (erect or 
decumbent), branching ; leaves opposite, fleshy, tereti-subulate, acute, 
patent, glabrous, not much exceeding the internodes ; cymes terminal, 
pedunculate, corymboso-paniculate, with toothlike bracts ; calyx-lobes 
short, oblong, blunt, thick, keeled; petals connate at base, oblong- 
obovate, thin, spreading; styles shortly subulate ; mz minute. 
DC. lc. 384. HE. § Z.1 1882. Zey? 2532. Drege .b. 
Var. 8. radicans; stem decumbent, rooting, subherbaceous, short ; peduncle 
often forked below the cyme. Zey! 2531. Drege! 6907. a. DO. Pl. Grass. t. 2. 
Has. Hills, &c., near Zwartkops River, Z. § Z./ both varieties. §. Mountain 
rocks near Welgelegen, Drege/ (Herb. Sd., Hk., D.) : 
The erect form resembles C. tetragona, but is smaller, with shorter leaves ; our 
var. B., very like DeCandolle’s figure, is subherbaceous and diffuse, with larger 
leaves, Leaves 4-1 inch, in f. 1¢ inch long, thick and fleshy. Peduncles 2-6 
inches long. Flowers minute, white, densely crowded, in 8. more lax. 
14. C. biplanata (Haw. Phil. Mag. 1824. p. 186) ; stem suffruticose, 
erect, with spreading branches ; leaves suberect, smooth, subulate, 
acute, flat on both sides, channelled beneath. DC.1. c. 384. 
Has. Cape, Haworth. (Unknown to us), — 
I fear to quote Z. § Z.! 1880 (Herb. Sond.) and which looks very like C. acuti- 
folia, as it is impossible to say, from the dried specimen, whether or not the leaves 
were flat ; they seem to have been fleshy. 
15. C. densifolia (Harv.) ; stem suffruticose, dichotomous, fleshy, 
with very short internodes ; leaves closely-set, subimbricate, connate, 
broadly subulate-trigonous, fleshy, acute, spreading, glabrous ; cymes 
terminal, on long peduncles, corymboso-paniculate, with minute, tooth- 
like bracts ; calyx-lobes short, ovate, keeled, blunt ; petals slightly 
connate, oblong-obovate, spreading; styles shortly subulate. C. bi- 
bracteata, E. § Z. 1 1881. (Vix Haw. ?) 
Has. Sandy and stony ground on the sides of the Devil’s Mt., Capetown, EZ. § Z.! 
(Herb. Sond.) 
A small, robust, corymboso-dichotomous undershrub, 8-12 inches high, with very 
