208 ENUMERATION OF PHILIPPINE PLANTS i 
3. NASTURTIUM R. Brown 
NASTURTIUM INDICUM (Linn.) DC. Syst. 2 (1821) 199, Prodr. 1 (1824) 
139; Mig. Fl. Ind. Bat. 1* (1858) 93; F.-Vill. Novis. App. (1880) 19; 
Merr. in Govt. Lab. Publ. (Philip.) 27 (1905) 17, Philip. Journ. 
Sci. 5 (1910) Bot. 350, Fl. Manila (1912) 218, Sp. Blancoanae 
(1918) 157. 
Sisymbrium indicum Linn. Mant. 1 (1767) 93. 
Cardamine glandulosa Blanco FI. Filip. (1837) 531. 
Cardamine impatiens Blanco op. cit. ed. 2 (1845) 363, ed. 3, 2 (1879) 
306, non Linn. 
? Nasturtium montanum Rolfe in Journ. Bot. 23 (1885) 210; Vidal 
Phan. Cuming. Philip. (1885) 94, Rev. Pl. Vasc. Filip. (1886) 
46, non (?) Wall. 
In and about towns along drains, ditches, etc., waste places, along 
streams, etc., throughout the Philippines in the more or less settled areas, 
apparently introduced. Tropical Asia and Malaya. 
Local names: Alalahia (Ibn.); apopo (Bon.); gandei (Bon.); gelgelai 
(Bon.); gilgiloi (Ig.); lampaka (Ilk.); sabi (Bag.); undi (If.). 
NASTURTIUM OFFICINALE R. Br, in Ait. Hort. Kew ed. 2, 4 (1812) 110. 
Sisymbrium nasturtium Linn. Sp. Pl. (1753) 657. 
Roripa nasturtium Rusby in Mem. Torr. Bot. Club 3 (1893) 4; 
Britt; & ‘Br. tS Flu. So 2 (1897) 126, 7.1722. 
Luzon (Benguet), Wester. Abundant in shallow water and in small 
streams in Trinidad Valley, altitude about 1,300 m. Probably introduced 
since 1912. A native of Europe and northern Asia, now naturalized in 
most temperate and subtemperate countries. Water cress. 
4. CARDAMINE Tournefort 
CARDAMINE REGELIANA Miq. Ann. Mus. Bot. Lugd.-Bat. 2 (1865) 73; 
J. R. Drummond ex Merr. & Rolfe in Philip. Journ. Sci. 3 (1908) 
. Bot. 100; Merr. op. cit. 5 (1910) Bot. 350. 
Cardamine parviflora Merr. in Philip. Journ. Sci. 1 (1906) Suppl. 
194, non Linn. 
Luzon (Bontoc, Lepanto, Benguet). Occasional in open damp places, 
altitude 1,200 to 1,800 m. Eastern Asia and Japan southward to Malaya. 
Local name: Gilgiloi-ti-anito (Bon.). 
EXCLUDED GENERA 
RAPHANUS SATIVUS Linn. Sp. Pl. (1753) 669; F.-Vill. Novis. App. (1880) 
10; Merr. Fl. Manila (1912) 214. 
The common radish is widely cultivated in the Philippines and is com- 
monly known as rabanos (Sp.), locally corrupted into labanos (Tag.). 
The shepherd’s-purse (Capsella bursa-pastoris Medic.) has been collected 
once in Baguio, but apparently occurs there only as a casual plant. 
CAPPARIDACEAE 
1. CLEOME Linnaeus 
CLEOME SPINOSA Jacq. Enum. Pl. Carib. (1760) 26; Linn. Sp. Pl. ed. 
2 (1762) 939; Usteri Beitr. Ken. Philip. Veg. (1905) 112. 
