4 SMITHSONIAN MISCELLANEOUS COLLECTIONS VOL. 98 



Heliotropium curassavicum L. Sp. PI. 130. 1753. 



Clipperton Island (no. 103). Common on shores throughout the 

 Tropics. 



Tournefortia pubescens Hook. f. Trans. Linn. Soc. 20: 198. 1847. 



Charles Island (no. 121). Endemic to the Galapagos. Identified 

 by I. M. Johnston, of the Arnold Arboretum of Harvard University. 



VERBENACEAE 



Lantana peduncularis Anderss. Vet. Akad. Handl. Stockh. 1853: 200. 1854. 



Charles Island (no. 124). Probably endemic to the Archipelago. 

 Identified by H. N. Moldenke, of the New York Botanical Garden. 



SOLANACEAE 



Cacabus miersii (Hook, f.) Wettst. in Engl, and Prantl, Nat. Pflanzenfam. 

 IV 3,J : 16. 1891. 

 Dictyocalyx miersii Hook f. Trans. Linn. Soc. 20: 203. 1847. 

 Thinogeton miersii Miers, Ann. Mag. Nat. Hist. II. 4: 359. 1849. 



Elizabeth Bay, Albemarle Island (no. 108). Endemic. First fruit- 

 ing specimens to be received at the National Herbarium. 



Physalis angulata L. Sp. PI. 183. 1753. 



Charles Island (no. 117). Widely distributed in tropical America. 



Solanum nigrum L. Sp. PI. 186. 1753. 



Clipperton Island (no. 105). A widely distributed, highly variable 

 species. 



