304 
do ample justice to the memory of this eminent and lamented 
traveller. 
385. (1.) Kageneckia oblonga, R. et P.—K. crateegoides, Don 
in Ed. New Phil. Jour. n.23. p. 111.—Lydzea Lyday Mol. 
Chil. (ed. 2), p. 300.—Chili; San Gabriel and Collina, 
Dr. Gillies. Valparaiso and Quillota, Bridges, 1832 (N. 
240.) Valparaiso, Cuming (N. '/16.)— Cordillera of 
Chili, Cuming (N. 264.) Baths of Collina, Macrae.— 
Nom. vernac. Guayo Colorado, R. et P.; Lyday, Mol.; 
Bollen, Dr. Gillies. The serratures of the leaf are not 
obtuse, as they are usually described, but they sometimes 
appear so by the glandular tip falling off. We agree 
with Kunth that the genus is dicecious, and not poly- 
gamous, the stamens that accompany the germens being 
certainly sterile. Don’s character * floribus solitariis" 
(Ed. N. Phil. Journ. No. 20. p. 231) is taken solely from 
the female flowers: his K. crategoides being the male, 
in which, as Kunth states, the flowers are corymbose. - 
386. (2.) Kageneckia angustifolia, Don. l. c.—Cordillera of 
Chili, Cuming. (N. 311.) Bridges, 1832—(N. 241.)— 
Ten to fifteen feet high ( Bridges). 
387. (1.) Quillaja saponaria, Mol. (descr. pessim.)—Q. Smeg- 
madermos, DC.—Q. Molinz, DC.—Smegmadermos 
emarginatus, R. et P.—Chili, Dr. Gillies. Andes of 
Chili (Ist and 2d ranges), Cuming (N. 161).—Quepuy 
and near Quillota, Bridges, 1832 (N. 395). Baths of 
Collina, Macrae. Nom. vernac. Quillai. The speci- 
mens from Dr. Gillies are in fruit, and have solitary 
our plate and description were first prepared of Bridgesia spicata, yet we are 
anxious to declare that the right of priority from publication belongs to M. de 
Jussieu, and that the name we had imposed must, on that account, give place to 
Ercilla volubilis, Juss. It is satisfactory to find how nearly our respective figures and. i 
descriptions accord, whatever difference of opinion there may be, in regard to the 
Natural Order to which the Genus should be referred. We have considered it to 
belong to Rutaceæ. Jussieu inclines to place it with the Menispermee ; and 
Mr. Don, in Jameson's Ed. Phil. Journ. for October, 1832, among the Phytolaccee- 
