168 PROCEEDINGS OF THE ACADEMY OF [May-Oct., 



Type, Santa Marta Mountains, collected in flower and fruit about 

 April, 1899, H. H. Smith 1497; in Herb. New York Botanical Garden. 

 The note for 1497 is stated by Smith to have been lost, but he tells 

 us that the plant is ''probably from Valparaiso, 4500 ft. [ = 1350 m.] " 

 altitude. I suspect that this plant came from much higher than 

 this. 



Rusby has compared this with Purdie's plant from Santa Marta 

 and has written on our sheet "Purdie's plants are more hairy than 

 this," an excellent confirmation of Purdie's specimens cited in DC. 

 Prod. 10. 250: being this same species. 



Magdalena. Valparaiso, Santa Marta Mts., H. H. Smith 1497 (C, 

 H, U, Y). 



20. FAGELIA Schwencke. 



Fagelia Schwencke, [in Verh. Bataafsh. Genootsch. Rotterdam 1: 474. pi. 13. 



1774, generic diagnosis only]; J. F. Gmel., Syst. Nat. 40. 1791. 

 Calceolaria L., in Kongl. Vetensk. Acad. Handl. 31: 288, 1770, not Calceolaria 



Fabr., Enum. Meth. PI. Host. Med. Helmstad. ed. II. 37. 1763, 



Type species, F. flavicans J. F. Gmel., probably from Ecuador. 



Anther-sacs proximate on the simple filament, both alike and fertile. 



Anterior lip of corolla ( = sac) not over twice width of posterior 



• lip ( = hood). Leaves entire to coarsely serrate-dentate, the 



blades at times triangular. [CHEiLONCOfi Kranzl.] 

 Capsule ovate or broader, no longer than broad, thick-walled, 

 shorter than or but slightly exceeding the sepals. Corolla 

 8-25 mm. long, with the posterior lip broadly truncate to 

 notched. Filaments stout, not or but little longer than the 

 oblong anthers. Inflorescence corymb-like, both secondary 

 branches developed, and at least some of the lateral flowers 

 without bracts. 

 Shrubs. Glutinous above, on stems, pedicels, sepals and leaves. 

 Leaf-blades lanceolate, entire to slightly serrate, shortly 

 petiolate. Corolla appearing l^roader than long because 

 the sac is pressed tightly against hood; orifices to lips broad 

 and rounded, so sac is shallow. 

 Calyx 4-6 mm. long. Leaves glaucous beneath. Plant less 

 glutinous. Branches of the inflorescence once branched, 

 so that flowers occur in fours. 1. F. microbefaria. 



Calyx 2-3 mm. long. Leaves slightly paler beneath. Plants 

 very glutinous. Branches of the inflorescence irregularly 

 twice branched, so that flowers occur usually in clusters 

 of more than four. 2. F. fruticosa. 



Herbaceous throughout. Not glutinous, but often with stalked 

 glands. Leaf-blades lanceolate to broadly triangular, ser- 

 rate to doubly dentate. Corolla evidently elongated sagit- 

 tally, with sac usually not pressed against hood and so 



