OCTOBER 1 TO DECEMBER 31, lUlT. 45 



45513. CiTRULLUs VULGARIS Scliracl. Cuciirbitaceae. Citron. 



From Bell, IMd. Presented by Dr. W. \'an Fleet. Received November 

 22, 1917. 



"A pre.serving citron, 6 to 8 inches lonj? and 3 to 4 inche.s in diameter. Skin 

 green and smooth; liesh wh!te and solid; seed in green frnit soft. Ma.v prove 

 valuable for marmalades and preserves, also for cooking with fish or meat;" 

 (B. T. Galloiray.) 



45513 to 45533. Saccharum officinarum L. Poacea'. 



Sugar cane. 



From Mauritius. Presented by Mr. H. A. Tampany, Director of Agriculture, 

 Reduit. Mauritius. Received November 20, 1917. 



45513 and 45514. " Var. M. P. 55. Foliage broad, canes stout and tall, 

 inclined to trail, 10 to a stool; internodes cylindrical, rather long, 

 dark purple with waxy coating, no channel ; eye bud rather large, 

 broad, and slightly bulging at base, apex flat and adhering." {Tam- 

 pany.) . 



A widely grown variety, exceeded only by White Tanna in area under 

 cultivation in Mauritius. Of all the land devoted to sugar-cane raising 

 12 per cent is occupied by this variety. In Mauritius this variety seems 

 to prefer the lowlands, two-thirds of the area devoted to it being below 

 600 feet in altitude. The origin of this variety is traced to Mr. G. Per- 

 romat, manager of the Clemencia estate, Flacq, who began to grow canes 

 from seed in 1891. M. P. 55 is the best of the varieties he succeeded in 

 raising. (Adapted from Henri Robert, Sugar-Cane Varieties in Maiiri- 

 tius. ) 



45513. "Cuttings." 45514. "Seeds." 



45515. "Cuttings of M. P. 131. Foliage narrow; canes tall, inclined to 

 trail, of medium size, 10 to 15 to a stool ; internodes zigzag, of medium 

 length, dark violet, slightly waxy, the channel slightly marked in some 

 cases, apparent in others ; eye bud broad, pentagonal, flat, base straight, 

 sides perpendicular, apex adhering." {Tampany.) 



A variety of minor importance on the island of Mauritius, occupying 

 only a small part of the land devoted to sugar cane. It is a variety 

 which prefers the lowlands, most of it being grown below 600 feet 

 altitude. This is one of the varieties grown from seed by Mr. G. 

 Perromat, manager of the Clemencia estate, Flacq. It ranks second 

 in value of all the varieties that he originated. (Adapted from Henri 

 Robert, Sugar-Cane Varieties in Mauritius.) 



45516. "Cuttings of M. 1237. Foliage rather broad; canes erect, rather 

 tall, of medium size, 10 to 12 to a stool; internodes straight, of medium 

 length; reddish purple, waxy, the channel deeply marked, running 

 almost the entire length of the iuternode; eye bud of medium size, 

 pentagonal, bulging at the center, apex adhering." {Tampany.) 



45517 and 45518. " Z). K. 7^. Foliage broad; canes medium in size, 

 fairly tall, inclined to trail. 11 to a stool; internodes cylindrical, of 

 medium size, yellow, sunburns red, no channel; eye bud of meilium 

 size, triangular, slightly bulging at base, apex not quite adhering." 

 {Tampany.) 



A variety of minor importance on the island of Mauritius. It occu- 

 pies 5.48 per cent of the land devoted to sugar-cane raising. It is a 



