short calyx-tube and the oblong, mucronate segments villous ; w 
@ ‘ke 
Pelurgonium.| -GERANIACE (Harv.) a07- 
ments. Many varieties or hybrids, partly derived from this species, are in English 
gardens. : 
157. P. viscosissimum (Sw. Ger. t. 118); “ umbels capitate, many- 
flowered ; leaves palmate, 5—7-lobed, viscid, the segments flat, sinuated. 
and toothed,*recurved at the apex ; stem very viscid ; petals oblong, 
obtuse ; calys-segments very obtuse, the tube sub-sessile, not much longer 
than the limb” “Sw. lc. DOC. Prod. 1. p. 679. 
Has. Described from a garden plant, grown from Cape seeds, Sweet. 
“* Stem and branches covered with a viscid substance, which sticks to the fingers 
like bird-lime. Leaves clammy, 3-4 inches long. Stipules narrow lanceolate. Bracts 
ovato-cordate. Calyx nts unequal, orbicularly-obovate, concave, very blunt, 
with incurved points. Petals :or white, the upper marked with red lines.” Sw. 
158. P. hispidum (Willd. By. p. 677); suffruticose at base, herba- 
ceous upwards, much branched, hairy and glandular ; leaves on long 
petioles, palmately-5-7-lobed, the lobes acuminate, unequally sharply toothed 
and lobulate, both sides hispid, the nerves progninent,underneath ; sti- 
pules cuspidate ; inflorescence panicled, th® ial peduncles longer 
than the leaves, glandular and map ed; pedicels longer than 
the calyx-tube, ‘hith ia shorter than the lanceolate, acuminate, hispid 
segments ; flowers small.’ DC. Prod. 1. p.679. Cav. Diss. t. 110. 7. 1. 
£. §& Z. ! 616, also O15. = 
Has. Moist, shady, alpine situations; in the Western Districts. Baviansberg, 
Gnadendahl and Wintérhoek, Tulbagh, Z.¢@Z./ Witzenberg, Zeyher! 200. Paarl- 
berg, Drege! (Herb. T.C.D., Hook., Sond). 
A free-growing, much-branched, but imperfectly ligneous plant, 2-3 feet high. 
Leaves 4-5 inches broad, deeply divided, the divisions jagged and finely serrated. 
All parts of the plant are roughly hairy and viscid. Panicle terminal, much-branched, 
eymose. Flowers white, with streaks. Long cultivated in Europe. 
159. P. Radula (Ait. Kew. 2. p. 423); shrubby, much branched, hispid 
and viscoso-pubescent ; leaves on longish petioles, palmati-partite, 
roughly hispid on the upper, softly pubescent on the lower side, the 
lobes narrow-linear, pinnatifid, obtusely lobulate, with revolute margins ; 
stipules ovate-acuminate ; peduncles short, hispid, 4-5-flowered ; flowers 
pedicellate, the short calyx-tube and lanceolate sepals densely setose and 
glandular. DC. Prod.1. p. 679. I Her, Ger.t. 16. Cav, Diss t. tor. 
J. 1. P. revolutum, Jacg.! Ic. t. 133. P. Radula, E.& Z.! 644. P. 
roseum, E. & Z.! 645., also 646. Zey.! 2096, 2097. Drege! 7444. 
Has. Among shrubs on mountain sides, east and west. Tulbagh, F. 4 Z./ Com- 
_ in Uitenhage and Albany. (Herb. T.C.D., ae gH oe 
large, ‘branched, glandular, balsamic-scented bush, very rough and hairy 
with short, stiff bristles. Flo small, pale e, with dark streaks. E & Z.’s 
ci distributed as “ P. denticulatum” (No. 646) belong to this species, from 
which their “ P. roseum” in no respect differs. 
160. P. denticulatum (Jacq. ! Hort. Schoenb. t. 1 35); suffruticose,much — | 
branched, erect, slender, glutinous and scabrous ; leaves on long petioles, ie 
palmati-partite, glabrous and viscid above, hispidulous beneath, the lobes _ 
mle or pinnatifid, linear, flat, coarsely toothed; stipules ovato-lan- 
ceolate; peduncles short, hairy, 3-4-flowered ; flowers sub-sessile, the 
