456 SUPPLEMENT. 



mainly consisting of the high-arched pahite . spur slender-snbulate, soon deflexed. — Enum. 

 i. 302; Gray, Proc. Am. Acad. xx. 287, 288. U. personaia, LeConte, Ann. Lye. N. Y. i. 77, 

 t. 6, f. 10, as shown by original drawing. U. cornuta in part, of authors ; Benjamin in Linn. 

 XX. 305, & Fl. Bras. x. 240. — E. North Carolina to Texas. (Cuba to Brazil.) 



U. longeciliata, A. DC. Filiform stem a span or more high, 2-7 -flowered • ovate bracts 

 and bractlets and the calyx fringed with long bristles : lips of the yellow corolla 2 or 3 

 lines long. — Prodr. viii. 23. — Tampa and Manatee, Florida, Garber. (Cuba to Brazil.) 



U. simplex, C. Wright. A span or two high, very slender, strict, spicately 2-6-flowered : 

 bracts minute, ovate , bractlets subulate : sepals ovate, the larger acute or acuminate : 

 corolla shorter than the calyx, the erect lips and obtuse spur only a line or so in lengtli : 

 seeds oval, coarsely favose-reticulated. — Wright & Sauvalle, Fl. Cubana, 9L — Near 

 St. Augustine, Florida, Miss Reijnolds. Probably sometimes with larger corolla. (Cuba.) 



2. PING-UlCULA, Tourn. 



P. pumila, MiCHX., p. 317. P. Fhridensis, Chapm. Fl. Suppl. 635, appears to be the same, 

 as also the wrongly described P. australis, Nutt., while the P. australis, Chapm. Fl. 284, is 

 P. elatior, Michx. 



BIGNONIACE^. 



3. CATALiPA, Scop. Two North American species are now distinguished, 

 not very definitely, viz. : — 



C. bignonioid.es, Walt., p. 319. Low and much-branched tree, with thin bark: leaves 

 (unpleasantly scented) moderately acuminate, and not rarely a pair of lateral salient teeth: 

 corolla hardly inch and a half long, thickly spotted within, the tube campanulate, limb 

 oblique, lower lobe entire : capsule very slender. — Exclude from the syn. the figure in 

 Duhamel. — S. W. Georgia, Alabama, &c. , and widely cultivated. 

 C. speciosa, Warder. Large and tall tree, with thick bark: leaves (inodorous) caudate- 

 acuminate: corolla larger (2 inches high), nearly white, inconspicuously spotted, and with 

 broader little oblique limb, the tube obconical, lower lobe emarginate : capsule equally long 

 but nearly twice as thick: flowering earlier (May). — Engelm. Bot. Gazette, v. 1 ; Sargent, 

 Forest Trees, 10th Census, 115. C. cordifolia, " Jaume" in Duham. ed. nov. ii. t. 5, as to 

 the plate. — S. Illinois and adjacent States. A more showy as well as larger and more val- 

 uable tree. First discriminated by the late Dr. J. A. AVarder, and scientifically published by 

 Engelmann under Dr. Warder's name. 



Crescextia cucurbitiva, L. (see p. 320), was collected by the late Dr. Garber in S. Flor- 

 ida : probably not indigenous. 



ACANTHACE.E. 



3. CAL6PHANES, Don. 



C. oblongifolia, Dox, p. 324. The sepals much surpass the capsule, and sometimes nearly 

 equal the corolla. The var. anrjusia should give place to 



C. angusta. A span or two high, erect or ascending from a creeping base, only minutely 

 puborulcnt, usually very leafy : leaves half to three-fourths inch long, from oblong to al- 

 most linear, obscurely veined : flower small: corolla barely half-inch long, rather narrow: 

 sepals distinct to near the base, subulate-setaceous, hardly surpassing the capsule. — C. oh- 

 loncp'folla, var. angusta, p. 324. Dipteracanthus linearis, Chapm. Fl. 303, not Torr. & Gray. 

 — S. Florida, Chapman, Palmer, Garber, Curtiss. 

 DiPTERAclxTiius iifspiDUS, Bertol. Misc. Bot. xvii. 17, t. 1, is Gratiola pilosa, Michx. 



On the other hand, Nicotiana humilis, Bertol. 1. c. xili. t. 1, is Ruellia ciliosa, Pursh. 



