The specimens determined as DD. Gordonii are so 
named with reservations. I have not seen authentic spe- 
cimens of that species and the little group (of a dozen 
or so species) to which it belongs is one of the most diffi- 
cult in the genus. 
Dendrobium Hornei Baker in Journ. Linn. Soc. 
Bot. 20 (1884) 873. 
This species is probably not distinet from D. Tokai 
Reichb. f. 
Fri: ( Horne). 
Dendrobium (Subg. Grastidium §. Bambusacea) 
Kraenzlinii L.O. Williams nom. nov. 
Dendrobium vitiense Kriinzlin in Mitteil. Inst. allgem. 
Bot. Hamb. 5 (1922) 268, non Rolfe 1921. 
Fist: ( Kleinschmidt). 
Dendrobium Mohlianum Reichenbach filius ex 
Mohl & Schlechtendal in Bot. Zeit. 20 (1862) 214— Reich- 
enbach filius in Bonpl. 10 (1862) 334, t. 16; in Seemann 
FI]. Vit. (1868) 303, t. 91. 
The two plates cited above, which are copies of the 
same drawing, show the flowers to be deep red in color. 
The specimens examined seem to indicate (in the dry 
state) that the flowers were not red. Smith has noted the 
color of the five specimens which he collected as ‘‘bright 
orange’’ or ‘‘rich orange’’. 
Fit: Gillespie 2783b, 8155, 3276, 3298, 5111; (Gibbs 620); 
Seemann 578; Parks 20608, 20756; Wilkes U.S. South Pacif. Expl. 
Exped.; Smith 269, 703, 1650, 1766, 1996; (Horne 793). 
Samoa, New Hebrides, New Guinea. 
Dendrobium Mooreanum Lindleyin Journ. Hort. 
Soe. Lond. 6 (1851) 272. 
Fur: Wilkes U.S. South Pacif: Expl. Exped. 
New Hebrides. 
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