Adenandra | RUTACEE (Sond.) 387 
Var. a. glabra; branches and leaves glabrous. 4. ewspidata, Mey. 
lc. Herb. Un, It. No. 4. ex pte. 
Var. 8. villosa; branches and leaves pubescent. A. villosa, Lich- 
tenst ! B. & W. 1. c. 85, excl. syn. Thunb, A. wmbellata, a, speciosa, 
Eckl.! Linn. 1831. p. 198. Hartogia villosa, Berg. ! Cap. p. 70 et Herb! 
Spec. 2 (sed tertium difert et ad A. biseriatam pertinet.) 
Has. On the Cape Flats ; round Table Mt., and at Campsbay, common. Mow. 
oe a Aug.-Oct. (Herb. Holm., Wendl., r. Ber.,Lehm., T.C.D., 
» &e.), 
1-2 feet high, dichotomous, with slender branches. Leaves 3-6 lines Iong, 13-3 
lines wide, with a percurrent nerve beneath. Petiolés } line long, mostly glandular 
at base. Peduncles hairy, 3—7 in a cluster, 3 lines long. Calyx 5-6 lines long, its 
lobes 2 lines wide, pellucid-dotted. Petals on short claws, the limb 6 lines long, 
white above, reddish underneath, Fil. hairy, the sterile and fertile of equal length. 
—Very near A. wmbellata and A. uniflora, and perhaps a variety of the former, 
from which, however, it differs, at first sight, by the smaller, acuminate, and evi- 
dently margined leaves, densely imbricated at the ends of the branches. 
7. A. umbellata (Willd. Enum. Hort. Bert. p. 257); the erect stem 
and the branches glabrous, twigs downy; leaves Linear-oblong, and ob- 
long, sub-acute, sub-ciliate, many-dotted beneath, the lower spreading, the 
upper erect, swb-imbricate ; flowers terminal, crowded ; calyx glabrous 
or pubescent, its lobes linear-oblong, glandular-denticulate, ciliate ; pe- 
tals obovate-elliptical, ciliate, twice as long as the calyx. 
Var. a. speciosa (B. & W. p. 81); leaves linear-oblong, ciliate. Glan- 
dulifolia wmbellata, Wendl.! Coll. 1. p. 37. t. 10. Diosma speciosa, Bot. 
Mag. t. 1271. A. speciosa, Link. A. Wendlandiana, E. & Z.! Dios- 
ma rugosa, Don! Hort. Cant. (with sub-solitary flowers.) 
Var. 8. glandulosa (B. & W.); leaves oblong, glabrous. D. uniflora, 
Lin. f.! non Linn. pater. Hartogia uniflora, Berg. Cap. p. 71. Gland. 
uniflora, ovata, Wendl. Coll. t. 33. A. glandulosa, Licht. EB. & Z.! 786. 
Var. y. sub-pubescens; calyx pubescent. 
Has. Common round Capetown. At Hott. Holland, Ludwig. Wupperthal, 
Drege! jo72z. Ful.-Oct. (Herb. Wendl, sont PO Dig Wy 8 r= cae, 
1-2 feet high or more ; the branches mostly crowded, erecto-patent, leafy above. 
Leaves alternate, glandular-denticulate at the margin, in var. a. 9-12 lines long, in 
B. more oblong, 6-8 lines long, 13-2 lines wide. Petioles one line long. Flowers 
Solitary, or two together, the largest and handsomest in the genus. Bracts sever 
narrow, leafy. Calyx 5-6 lines long, its lobes acute, rarely sub-obtuse. Petals 
on short claws, the limb apiculate, white, with a purple streak within, reddened 
beneath. Sterile filaments as long as the fertile, hairy ; fertile shorter than the 
Ceca 
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anthers,—In starved specimens the leaves are shorter and wider, and the flowers 
. 
8. A. amoena (B. & W.! l.«. p. 80); stem erect, branching ; twigs 
leafy, downy ; leaves elliptical, tapering at both ends, sub-obtuse, obso- 
letely glandular-crenulate at the margin, quite glabrous, punctate and 
obsoletely ribbed beneath ; flowers terminal, solitary, sub-sessile ; bracts — 
ovate, sub-acute, ciliate; calyx glabrous, its lobes ovate, ciliate, im- 
presso-punctate beneath ; petals orbicular, pointed, twice aslongasthe __ : Coa 
calyx. Bot. Reg. ! t. 553, Lodd.! Cab. Bot. t. 161. A. ovata, Link ee 
A. amoena and acuminata E. & Z.! 791, 79% 
