202 Annals of the Carnegie Museum. 



Peduncles axillary, solitary (or more), one-flowered; leaves oboval 

 to oblong-oboval, 2.5-4 cm. long 504. Eugenia brevipes. 



Flowers short-peduncled, in short axillary clusters; leaves elliptic- 

 ovate, 3-5 cm. long 513. Eugenia axillaris. 



Peduncles i-flowered and simple, or branched and 3-4-flowered, 

 bibracteolate below the flower, short and congested in the axils. 



503. Eugenia far amoides. 



503. Eugenia faramoides A. Richard. 



Eugenia faramoides A. Richard, in Sagra, Historia Fisica, Politica y Natural de 

 la Isla de Cuba, X, 1845, p. 281. 



Small shrub in a thicket along bank of arroyo, near Sante Fe, 

 May 24, 1910, 0. E. Jennings, No. 562, General Distribution: Cuba 

 and the Isle of Pines. 



504. Eugenia brevipes A. Richard. 



Eugenia brevipes A. Richard, in Sagra, Histoire Physique, Politique et Naturelle 

 de rile de Cuba, I, 1845, p. 584. 



Northern part of island, Blain, No. 54 (Millspaugh). General 

 Distribution: Cuba and the Isle of Pines. 



505. Anamomis dichotoma (Vahl) Sargent. 



Myrtus dichotoma Vahl, in Poiret, Encyclopedic Methodique, Supplementa, IV, 



1816, p. 63. 

 Eugenia dichotoma DeCandolle, Prodromus Systematis Regni Vegetabilis, III, 



1828, p. 278. 

 Anamomis dichotoma Sargent, Garden and Forest, VI, 1893, p. 130. 



Northern part of the island, Blain, No. 114 (reported by Mills- 

 paugh). General Distribution: Rocky woods, Florida, the Bahamas, 

 and several West Indian islands. 



506. Eugenia Jambos Linnaeus. Rose-Apple. Jambos. 



Jamrosade. 



Eugenia Jambos Linn^us, Species Plantarum, I, Ed. I, 1753, p. 470. 

 Jambosa vulgaris P. DeCandolle, Prodromus Systematis Naturalis Regni Vege- 

 tabilis, III, 1828, p. 286. 

 Jambosa Jambos Millspaugh, Field Columbian Museum, Botanical Series, II, 



1900, p. 80. 



Near Nueva Gerona, January 22, 1904, A. H. Curtiss, No. 308; 

 among palmettoes on savanna, two miles east of Nueva Gerona, 

 May 5, 1910, 0. E. Jennings, No. 13. General Distribution: Native 

 to the tropics of the Old World, but now extensively cultivated and 



