(230) ÏENTAMEN FLOR^ LUTCHUENSIS. 497 



Arn. Bot. Beech. Voy. p. 263 ; Miq. Prol. FI. Jap. pp. 352 et 

 368 ; Franch. et Sav. Enum. PI. Jap. I, p. 167, in adnot.; Clarke, 

 in Hook. f. Fl. Brit. Ind. II, p. 581 ; Alph. DG. Orig. PL Cult. 

 p. 189 ; Nyman, Conspect. Fl. Europ. p. 245 ; Forbes et Hemsl. 

 Ind. Fl. Sin. I, p. 306 ; Henry, List PI. Formos. p. 44. 



P. nana, L. " Sp. PI. ed. 2, p. 676 "; AVilld. 8p. PL 

 II, p. 981 ; DC. Prodr. Ill, p. 4 ; Bot. Mag. t. 634. 

 LÛTCHÛ, sec. Hooh. et Ar noil. Cult. 

 Insula Utchinâ : in oppido Nâfa ad pagum Idsun- 

 zatchi-mura [Yamadal 1882, steril.). Cult. 



Insula Irabu, adjectis iusulis Myaku, cult., fide T. ltd. 



Nom. Lutch.: Djakura (U. et Y.) fide T. ltd. 



DiSTBiB. Supposed to be indigenous in Cabul and Persia ; 



widely cultivated in Japan, Formosa, China, India, Malaya, 



and in the warmer regions of Europe, Africa and America. 



Prof. Bayley Balfour made the interesting discovery, in 



Socotra, of a curious form, to which he gave the name of P. 



protopunica, and of which he suggests may be the primitive 



state of the cultivated race. 



ONAGRAEIE^. 



Jussiena, L. 



J. repens, L. Sp. PL ed. l, p. 388, et Mant. p. 381 ; 

 Willd. Sp. PL II, p. 574; DC. Prodr. Ill, p. 54; Buch.- 

 Hamilt. in Trans. Linn. Soc. XIV (1824) p. 305 ; Roxb. '' Hort. 

 Beng. p. 33," et FL Ind. II, p. 401 ; " Hook. Bot. Misc. Ill 



