334 SOUTH AMERICAN BOTANY. 
stitute that of Salpichroma for Salpichroa, the genus described in 
the Lond. Journ. Bot. vol. iv. p. 321. The plants from Columbia 
and New Grenada, there alluded to in p. 325, I now find to 
belong to a new species, very distinct from Dr. Meyen’s Afropa 
hirsuta, of which I have since seen an original specimen. The 
number of species, to which I have still to add another, will there- 
fore stand as follows. 
§. Eusalpichroma 1. Salpichroma glandulosa, loc. cit. 
» dependens, ib. 
» hirsuta, infra descrip. 
à ramosissima, loc. cit. 
3 
4. 
5. » diffusa, n. sp. infra deser. 
6 
7 
a 
P tristis, n. sp. infra descr. 
+ eS rhomboidea, loc. cit. 
8. x ciliata, ib. 
3. Salpichroma Airsuta. Atropa hirsuta, Meyen. (Riese em 
die Erde, vol. i. p. 466. Nees ab Esenb. Nov. Act. 19. Suppl. 
1. p. 389): caule suffruticoso, ramosissimo, diffuso, ramulis mol- 
liter hirsutis; foliis alternis vel in turionibus fasciculatis, ovatis, bast 
obtusis, inæqualibus, apice acutiusculis, utrinque pilis articulatis 
sparse hirsutis longissime petiolatis, petiolo complanato, tenuis- 
simo, ciliato, limbo 3 vel 4-plo longiore; pedunculo capillari pe- 
tiolo breviore; calyce hirsuto, profunde 5-partito, laciniis lineari- 
subulatis, erectis; corolla longe tubulosa, extus pilosula, tubo imo 
gracili, superne infundibuliformi, calyce 4-plo longiore et petiolo 
æquilongo, antheris styloque sub-exsertis; bacca ovalis, calyce 
persistente suffulta.— Peruvia, circa Pisacomam, altit. 15,000 ped. 
—v. s. in herb. Hooker (Atropa hirsuta, Dr. Meyen). | 
The specimen above referred to, being named by Dr. Meyen 
himself, leaves no doubt as to the identity of the species, so that 
in accordance with it, I have given the above amended diagnosis. 
Nees v. Esenbeck describes the plant as being much branched 
but the specimen here referred to, consists only of a small single | 
branchlet, which is slender, with alternate distant leaves, the blade — 
being about nine lines long, and six lines broad, the petiole almost —— 
§. Perizoma 
