388 RUTACEZ (Sond.) [A denandra. 
Has. Tulbaghskloof and Witsenberg, Worcester, H. & Z./ Oct. Foot of Devil's 
Mt., Drege! (Herb. Wendl., Lehm., Sond.). : 
Allied to A. umbellata and A. cuspidata, from both which it differs in the dwarfer 
and weaker stem, more slender branches, and smaller leaves and flowers. Twigs 
leafy, even to the calyx. Leaves alternate, 3-5 lines long, 1} wide, ovate-ob- 
long, with a short, obtuse point. -Petiole very short. Calyx four lines long, green- 
red. Petals clawed, twice as long as the calyx, white, with a purple streak above, 
deep red underneath. Filaments hairy, the sterile twice as long. 
9. A. Kraussii (Meisn. ! pl. Krauss.) ; the erect stem and branches 
glabrous, the twigs downy and leafy ; leaves spreading, ovate-oblong or 
ovate, sub-obtuse, pointless, nearly nerveless, concave above, glabrous, 
beneath flat, punctate and downy ; flowers terminal, sub-sessile, soli- 
tary or in pairs ; bracts keeled, cuspidate ; calyx glabrous, its lobes 
ovate, sub-acuminate, glabrous at the edge, glandular at apex, purplish ; 
petals glabrous, twice as long as the calyx, the sterile filaments longer 
than the fertile. 
Has. Outeniquasberg, George, Dr. Krauss. June. (Herb. Sond.). 
Branches sub-dichotomous, the twigs crowded. Leaves alternate 2—3 lines long, 
11 wide, obsoletely nerved, and scarcely paler beneath, many-dotted, with a slightly 
thicker margin. Calyx 21 lines long, surrounded by the uppermost bract-like leaves. 
Petals oval-orbicular, white above, reddish beneath. Sterile fil. hairy. 
10. A. ciliata (Sond.); branches and twigs very thinly pubescent, 
leafy ; leaves horizontally patent, obovate-oblong, obtuse, flat, crenulate 
near the point, quite glabrous above, paler beneath, impunctate or thin- 
ly sprinkled with immersed glands, downy, ciliate ; flowers 2-4, sub- 
sessile at the ends of the branches ; calyx hairy, its lobes oblong, 0b- 
tuse, ciliate ; petals elliptic-orbicular, downy externally, ciliated, twice 
as long as the calyx. ‘ 
Has. Muysenberg, Cape, v. Ludwig. May. (Herb. Sond.). 
2 feet high or more, clothed from the base with very minute pubescence. Branches 
and twigs few, dichotomous, sometimes elongate. Leaves 4~-5-ranked, alternate, om 
very short, ciliate petioles, 4~5 lines long, 2 lines wide, the uppermost shorter, evi 
dently crenulate from the middle to the apex, nerveless. Flowers rather large. Calyx 
4 lines long, with a few glandular dots. Petals apiculate. Fertile filaments very 
short ; sterile, with long hairs, taller than the anthers. 
11. A. uniflora (Willd. enum. p. 256); erect ; branches glabrous, 
twigs downy, leafy ; leaves horizontally patent, lanceolate, mucronulate, 
with revolute margins, quite glabrous, paler beneath, punctate ; flowers 
solitary, sub-sessile ; calyx sub-pubescent, its lobes ovato-lanceolate, 
acuminate, ciliate from the base to the middle ; petals obovate-subro- 
___ tund, ciliolate at the apex, twice as long as the calyx. B. & W./ p.77: 
a £. § Z.! 793. Diosma uniflora, Linn.! Sp. 287. Thunb. Cap. p. 228. 
oe Bot. Mag. t. 273. D. cistoides, Lam. D. acuminata, Lodd. Bot. Cat. t. 
5 . 493. Eriostemon capense, Pers. Syn. 1. p. 46 5. 
' Var. B. pubescens ; altogether covered with soft hairs, or the leaves 
_ glabrous above, A. villosa, Hort. : 
y. linearis ; leaves lanceolate, or linear-lanceolate, sparingly 
- ciliate; calyx lobes mostly ciliate from base to apex. Diosma linearis, 
= = Thunb. Fl. cap. p. 226. ‘A. linearis, Juss. l.c. p. 471. 
