March, 1900. Plant.*: Utowanve Millspaugh. 77 



exuberant growth, with the large-toothed leaves, 8-10.5x3.5-4.5 

 cm. Fields and ditches about Charlotte Amalia, St. Thomas (456, 

 526), Port Antonio, Jamaica (889), and Georgetown, Grand Cayman 

 (1260), the usual form with more lanceolate leaves, 7-9x2.2-3.2 cm. 

 Dunes of the coast in coco groves Santurce, Porto Rico (296), waste 

 grounds environs San Domingo city (853, 856), and at Monro Hill, 

 Santiago de Cuba (1088), a small-leaved form, 3-5 x 1.5-2 cm., downy 

 pubescent beneath. Bay shores at Santiago de Cuba (1024), a divari- 

 cately branching form with small narrowly-lanceolate bicolor leaves, 

 2.3-3 x -8-i. 1 cm. 



Turnera scabra sp. nov. 



Low spreading from a short rootstock, stems rusty-tomentose, 

 leaves broadly ovate, 3-3.5x2-2.5 cm., rusty-hairy beneath, scab- 

 rous above, coarsety and sharply serrate, short-petiolate with two 

 small crateriform glands at the summit buried in the rusty tomen- 

 tum; flowers large, chrome, sessile, bracts aristate nearly twice the 

 length of the calyx tube, calyx lobes 5, chartaceous, lanceolate- 

 apiculate, about one-half the length of the large oblong petals. 

 Fruit unknown. On sandy spots in dry fields among the foot hills 

 at Bayamon, Porto Rico (323). Type in Herb. Field Col. Mus. Cat. 

 No. 60323. Species prox T. ulmifolia L. 



Turnera triglandulosa sp. nov. 



An erect purple-stemmed glabrous shrub, 1-2 meters high, with 

 long virgate wide-spreading branches, and linear-lanceolate leaves. 

 Leaves 9-12 cm. long, 1-1.2 cm. broad, narrowed at both ends, 

 distantly notched along the margin (not serrate), pale beneath, oliva- 

 ceous above, the midvein slightly hairy, petiole 1-1.4 cm. long, 

 mostly triglandular; 2-quoit shaped, opposite at the summit, i-lozenge 

 shaped about midway of the upper surface. Pedicels short petiolar, 

 bracteoles lanceolate entire throughout, nearly twice the length of 

 the calyx tube, calyx lobes lanceolate attenuate about the length of 

 the deep yellow corolla. Capsule ovoid, punctate, slightly hairy, 

 seeds elongated-pyriform (lachrymate), slightly curved, the surface 

 marked by sixteen longitudinal rows of minute rectangular pits; 

 aril ovate-lanceolate, apiculate, one-quarter longer than the seed. 



Coco groves and waste grounds at "The Creek," Cayman Brae 

 (1152), where it is known as "Cat-bush," and where the leaves are 

 used in laundrying linen in lieu of soap; southwest point of the 

 island in the same situation (1195, 1209). Type in Herb. Field Col. 

 Mus. Cat. No. 6; 152. 



PASSIFLORACE.F. 



Passu lora minima Linn. Sp. PI. 950. 



Pagets, Bermuda (44). Distinguished from the next species to 

 which it is referred by authors, by its longer petioles hairy in lines, 

 the smaller and seldom trilobed leaves tending to a blunt apex, stipi- 

 tate attenuate petiolar glands, and smaller general habit. Leaves 

 ovate 34x1.4-1.7 cm., subentire or entire, petioles .5-. 7 cm. 



