178 BOTANY OF THE VOYAGE OF THE SULPHUR. 
883. Uniowa paniculata, Linn.—Kunth, Enum. 1. p. 425.—Isthmus of Darien; Atacames. 
884, ANDROPOGON incompletus, Presl.—Kunth, Enum. 1. p. 503.—Realejo. 
885. Diecromis fastigiata, Beauv.— Kunth, Enum. 1. p. 510.—Realejo. 
There are also in the collection a considerable number of Ferns, which have 
been intrusted to Sir William Hooker for publication in his Species Filicum. 
IV.—PERU AND CHILI. 
The collection contained a parcel marked Callao, and several from Valparaiso, 
but as they had been made up in the earlier part of the voyage, they had suffered 
more than any others from insects. Most of the specimens were, indeed, reduced 
to powder. Out of what remained, I was enabled to recognise about fifty species, 
but none of them either new or deserving any special mention on this occasion. 
V.—ISLANDS OF THE PACIFIC. 
The collections made in the Sandwich Islands, the Marquesas, and Taiti, 
amounted to rather more than two hundred species, but with the exception, per- 
haps, of two or three doubtful Composite and Rubiacez, the whole are already 
described. A tolerably complete enumeration of the plants of the Society Islands, 
may be found in the first volume of the Annals of the Vienna Museum, and in 
Guillemin’s Zephyritis Taitensis in the Annales des Sciences Naturelles, 2nd 
series, vols. vi. and vii. The Sandwich Island flora is much less completely known, 
and can only be collected either from general works, or from the botanical por- 
tions of different voyages, such as those of Captain Freycinet’s voyage, published 
by Gaudichaud ; of Captain Kotzebue’s, by Chamisso and others in the Linnea ; 
: Captain Beechey’s, by Hooker and Arnott, etc. A complete enumeration of 
the botanical productions of the Sandwich Islands, as far as known, would be a 
valuable work, and very considerable materials might be found in our herbaria, 
but the collection made by the Officers of the Suupuor, bears too small a pro- 
