in my original accounts. It therefore seems more logical 
to look upon the various gatherings as forms of one spe- 
cies, the general floral structure and especially the column 
showing very close agreement. 
14. Angraecopsis breviloba Summerhayes in Bot. 
Mus. Leafl. Harvard Univ. 11 (1945) 256. 
Kenya Cotony: Mgong, 1800 m. alt., in forest, May 7th 1934, 
C. Van Someran(Coryndon Mus. No. 3653); same locality and altitude, 
May 1932, Mainwaring 1858 (Coryndon Mus. No. 3104); Ngong and 
Langata Forest, 1800 m. alt., in dense shade on Acokanthera Schimperi, 
April-May 1950, Piers 2; North Nyeri District, Nyeri, Thego River, 
March-April 1941, Copley 26; Tana River basin, steppes of the Thika- 
thika, July 16th 1893, Gregory. 
TANGANYIKA Territory: Mondul, W. of Arusha, 1800 m. alt., May 
6th 1942, Moreau 304 (Tyrer); Mbulu, June 7th 1942, Moreau 3044; 
Kilimanjaro, Marangu, 1350 m. alt., in riverain forest, Nov. 27th 
1941, Moreau 107; Lolbene Mt., 50 miles S. of Moshi, in forest, coll. 
F. M. Page-Jones, cult. and flowered Amani, April 10th 1944, Moreau 
815. 
This and the previous species have the short stipites 
of the pollinia geniculately incurved so that the pollinia 
lie close to one another. The viscidium is more or less 
rectangular with the front and back rounded-truncate. 
The present species may be distinguished from A. aman- 
zensis by the shorter much inflated spur. 
SPECIES REJICIENDA 
Angraecopsis Boutoni (Rehb.f.) Perrier de la Bathie 
in Humbert, Fl. Madag. Orchid. 2 (1941) 82. 
Angraecum Boutoni Reichenbach filius, Otia Bot. 
Hamburg. (1881) 117. 
Examination of the type specimen of this species 
shows that it is not an Angraecopsis at all, but a Cham- 
aeangis closely allied to, if not identical with, C. Harv- 
otiana (Kraenzl.) Schltr. I am refraining, however, from 
making a new combination in Chamaeangis, as | am not 
certain of the correct specific epithet for the species 
concerned. 
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