12 Britton : Studies of West Indian plants 



grows especially in the famous gorge of the Yumury or Yumuri 

 River (Rugel 145). Mr. Schulz (loc. cit. 170) erroneously spells 

 this "Tomory," while Mr. A. H. Moore* also has it wrong as 

 "Sumuri." This gorge is one of the scenic attractions of the 

 northern coast of Cuba; the handwriting of Rugel's labels is 

 somewhat difficult to decipher. In Pinar del Rio it inhabits 

 limestone rocks at San Diego de los Banos {Britton, Earle & 

 Gager 6674); C. Wright's specimen 381 was collected in Oriente; 

 the locality of the type specimen is doubtfully cited as Havana. 



21. NOTES ON TWO JAMAICA PLANTS 



Ampelocissus Alexandri Urban, Symb. Ant. 6: 15. 1909 

 To the description may be added "berry depressed-globose, 

 black, shining, 1.5 cm. in diameter, the pulp watery; seeds 2 or 3, 

 depressed-obovoid, slightly rugose, rather deeply and broadly 

 grooved, 5 mm. long, 4 mm. wide." 



Wooded hillside, Union Hill near Moneague, St. Ann's, 

 Jamaica, at 500 meters altitude, Britton & Rollick 2767; this 

 station is within a few miles of the type locality at Mount Diablo. 



Tabernaemontana discolor Sw. Prodr. 52. 1788 

 Tabemaemontana ochroleuca Urban, Symb. Ant. 6: 34. 1909. 



An examination of the type specimen of Swartz' species in 

 the herbarium of the British Museum of Natural History estab- 

 lishes the identity of these species. 



22. THE GENUS GINORIA IN CUBA 



GlNORIA AMERICANA Jacq. 



As intimated by Koehne (Bot. Jahrb. 3: 349) this species 

 may sometimes bear spines, as observed by me on plants in the 

 palm barren at Santa Clara, in March, 1910 (Britton & Wilson 

 60Q3). This shrub grows along brooks and streams, attaining a 

 height of 2.5 meters, at lower elevations in all provinces of Cuba, 

 ascending to 160 meters in Oriente. 



* Proc. Am. Acad. 42: 530. 



