170 FLORA OF BRAZIL. 
Has. Common on dry wooded hills, about Rio. Fl. Sept. 
25. /Eschynomene fecta. Vogel in Linnea, 12, p. 87. ` 
Has. Among bushes in marshes, about Rio. Fl. July, 
Aug, 
26. Cassia rotundifolia. Pers. Syn. 1. p. 456.— Cassia bifoliata. 
D.C. Prodr. 2. p. 501. 
Has. Common in dry open places, about Rio. Fi. July, 
Aug. 
27. Stylosanthes viscosa. Sw.—D.C. Prodr. 2, p. 317. 
Has. Common in arid sandy places, about Rio. FI. all the 
year. 
28. Sophora tomentosa. Linn.—S. littoralis. Schrad. D.C. 
Prodr. 2, p. 96. 
Has. Common on the sandy shores of Brazil, from Rio 
northward. FT. during the greater part of the year. 
29. Crotalaria vitellina. Ker, Bot. Reg.t. 447. D.C. Prodr.?, 
p. 132. 
Has. Common in dry sandy places, about Rio. Fl. Aug. 
Sept. 
29 (2). Zornia reticulata. Sw. var. ò; punctata. Vogel in Linnet, 
12, p. 58. 
Han. In open sandy places, about Rio. Fi. Aug. 
The bracts are not sufficiently reticulated in my plant to 
warrant its being considered the true. Z. reticulata of Smith; 
but I have no hesitation in referring it to the above-quoted 
var. of Vogel. 
30. Rubus urticefolius. Poir. Enc. vol 6, p. 246. D.C. 
Prodr. 2. p. 563. Cham. et Schlect. in Linnea, 2, p. 12- 
Han. Very common in hedges and bushy places, about Rio. 
Fi. Aug., and ripens its fruit in Sept. The fruit is black, 
‘and about half the size of that of Rubus Sruticosus. 
This plant agrees somewhat with the description of R. 
Jamaicensis, (Linn.); but I find that Sir J. E. Smith, i? 
Hees’ Cyclopedia, believes the latter to have been described 
from a cultivated plant of R. fruticosus. The sample d 
R. Jamaicensis in the Linnean Herbarium, he says, has 
double flowers. My Rio specimens of R. urticefolius are 
