142 Annals of the Carnegie Museum. 



325. Mucuna altissima (Jacquin) P. DeCandolIe. 



Dolichos altissimus Jacquin, Enumeratio Plantarum Quas in Insulis Caribaeis 



Detexit, 1760, p. 27. 

 Stizolobium altissimutn Persoon, Synopsis Plantarum, II, 1807, p. 299. 

 Mucuna altissima DeCandolle, Prodromus Systematis Naturalis Regni Vege 



tabilis, II, 1825, p. 405. 

 Mucuna urens Stahl, Estudios sobre (para) la Flora de Puerto-Rico, III, 1885, 



p. 85 (not DeCandolle). 



In jungle along stream southwest of Bibijagua, May 7, 1910, 

 0. E. Jennings, No. 8j. General Distribution: Cuba, the Isle of 

 Pines, Jamaica, Haiti, St. Kitts, Guadeloupe, Martinique, St. Vincent, 

 Panama, and Brazil. 



A vine, climbing in the dense jungle to a height of eight or ten 

 feet. The pods (on our specimen) are borne, four together, on a 

 long hanging peduncle. The largest pods are 20 cm. long, 5 cm. in 

 width, and on one edge ridged with two somewhat scalloped flanges. 

 The valves are irregularly ridged, and are more or less brown-velvety 

 with fine stiff hairs, which, to the skin, are very irritating and some- 

 what poisonous, evidently in this respect resembling closely the notori- 

 ous "cowhage" {Mucnna pruriens). The seeds are borne one to 

 four in a pod and are a dirty yellow-brown, shading towards the 

 raphe into a lighter ashy color, the raphe itself being black and 

 extending about four-fifths the way around the seed. The beans 

 are about 2.5 cm. in diameter, almost orbicular, and about 1.5 cm. in 



thickness. 



326. Calopogoniuin caeruleum Desvaux. 



Calopogonium. cceruleum, Desvaux, Annales des Sciences Naturelles, Ser. I. IX, 



1826, p. 423. 

 Stenolobium cceruleiim Bentham, Annalen d. K. K. Naturhistorischen Hofmuseums, 



Wien, II, 1838, p. 125. 



Near Nueva Gerona, December 14, 1903, A. H. Curtiss, No. 226. 

 General Distribution: West Indies, and from Mexico to southern 



Brazil. 



327. Calopogonium oithocarpum Urban. 



Calopogonium orthocarpum Urban, Symbolae Antillanae, I, 1899, pp. 327-328. 



Near Nueva Gerona, January i, 1904, A. H. Curtiss, No. 26^. 

 General Distribution: Isle of Pines, Porto Rico, Haiti, and Colombia. 



328. Galactia parvifolia A. Richard. 



Galactia parvifolia A. Richard, in Sagra, Histoire Physique, Politique et Naturelle 

 de rile de Cuba, Plantes Vasculaires, 1845, p. 414. 



