152 Annals of the Carnegie Museum. 



Low mat-forming shrubs with small, spiny-lobed, leathery leaves. 



358. Malphigia horrida. 

 Leaves not lobed. 



Stem short, gnarled, and thickened, lying at or close to the ground; leaves 

 mullein-like and terminal in a kind of rosette. 



361. Byrsonima verbascifolia. 

 Not as above. 



Flowers in small umbel-like corymbs; shrubs or vines with leaves vary- 

 ing from elliptic to linear 356. Stigmaphyllon Sagraanutn. 



Flowers in terminal raceme-like panicles. 



Connectives projecting beyond the anther-sacs as acute appendages, 

 leaves rounded or emarginate at apex. 



362. Byrsonima coccolobcefolia. 

 Connectives not so projecting; leaves mostly acute or shortly acumi- 

 nate at apex. 

 Leaves 3-5 cm. long; anthers oblong, glabrous. 



360. Byrsonima Wrightiana. 

 Leaves 3-17 cm. long; anthers narrowly oblong, pubescent. 



359. Byrsonima crassifoUa. 



356. Stigmaphyllon Sagraeanum Jussieu. 



Stigmaphyllon Sagraanum Jussieu, Annales des Sciences Naturelles, Ser. IL XIII, 



1840, p. 290. 

 Stigmaphyllon reticulatum Jussieu, I. c. 

 Stigtnaphyllon Fauslinum Wright, in Sauvalle, Anales de la Academia Ciencias, 



Habana, V, 1868, p. 244. 



Near Nueva Gerona, December 8, 1903, and February 7, 1904, 

 A. H. Curtiss, No. 21 j; shrub, 3 feet high, among palmettoes, on 

 savanna near Nueva Gerona, May 5, 1910, 0. E. Jennings, Nos. i 

 and jj; a low clambering shrub, on soil derived from coralline lime- 

 stone, between Bogarona and Caleta Grande, May 22, 1910, 0. E. 

 Jennings, No. 471; a slender woody vine, near Hato, May 22, 1910, 

 0. E. Jennings, No. 520. General Distiibution: The Bahamas, 

 Cuba and the Isle of Pines. 



This species is remarkable for the great variation in the shape of 

 its leaves. In the savannas and open woods of the northern part 

 of the island it grows as a low shrub with oval, oboval, or oblong 

 leaves, while in the southern part of the island, on the coralline lime- 

 stone of the "South Coast," it grows as a vine and its leaves there 

 become very narrowly lance-oblong or even linear. The writer is not 

 yet prepared to claim that the differences noted are due to the differ- 

 ences in the soil, but our collections would seem to indicate such a 

 relationship. 



