Nathusia| LXXX. OLEACER, 657 
ApysstInIA.—A tree. In valleys near Gennia, Memsach ; fl. and fr. 
14 Dec. 1837. Schimper,i. n. 245. 
Var. B. tomentella (Welw. in Trans. Linn. Soe., J.c., p. 42). 
HviLia.—An arborescent shrub of 5 to 8 ft. or almost a small tree, 
very hard, with patent brittle branches, ash-like foliage, and very 
fragrant jessamine-scented whitish sordid-purplish flowers. In the 
rocky more elevated drier parts of Morro de Lopollo, at an elevation 
of 5200 to 5500 ft. ; fl. and young fr. end of March 1860. A form 
with the branchlets, leaves, peduncles, and pedicels silky-tomentellous. 
No. 939. 
2. N. golungensis O. Kuntze, Rev. Gen. Pl. ii. p. 412 (1891). 
Schrebera golungensis Welw., l.c., p. 40, t. xv. 
Gotunco ALtTo.—A handsome tree, 15 to 30 ft. high; trunk 3 to 
2 ft. in diameter at the base; branches erect-spreading or spreading ; 
flowering branchlets somewhat nodding ; leaves evergreen or deciduous, 
moderately coriaceous, shining ; flowers very sweetly fragrant especially 
by night; calyx shortly campanulate, green, fleshy, shortly 4- to 6- 
toothed, often quasi-truncate, the teeth very delicately fringed ; corolla 
salver-shaped, inserted at the bottom of the calyx-tube; the limb 
constantly 6-cleft ; the segments obovate, densely beset within from 
the base to the middle with red papille, patent at the time of full 
flowering ; the whole corolla soon tinged with a cinnamon colour and 
in this state emitting a clove-like aroma; stamens included or sub- 
exserted ; anthers ellipsoidal-obovoid, attached about the middle of the 
back; ovary free; ovules 3 or 4 in each cell; style elongated ; 
cotyledons oblong, rather fleshy, flat, not longitudinally folded ; radicle 
tolerably conspicuous, obtuse, directed towards the hile. In elevated 
primitive forests among the mountains of Serra de Alto Queta, here 
and there ; fl. Dec. 1855 ; fr. May 1856. No. 933 and Cott. Carp. 711. 
3. N. trichoclada O. Kuntze, /.c. 
Schrebera trichoclada Welw., l.c., p. 41. Nathusia foliis indivisis, 
Welw. in Journ. Linn. Soe. ii. p. 153 (Feb. 1859). 
AmpBaca.—A robust shrub, with the habit somewhat of Salix caprea 
L., perhaps at length arborescent ; leaves very readily falling off in 
the course of drying, those at the ends of the branchlets larger and 
acute, those at their base smaller and very obtuse, flowers very 
pleasantly fragrant. In rocky mountainous places among tall bushes 
at the great cave of Puri-Cacarambola, rather rare ; fl. end of Oct. 
1856. No. 934. 
Punco ANDONGO.—An arborescent shrub, 8 to 10 ft. high ; branches 
patent. In the sandy Panda forests between the river Lutete and the 
' presidium, very sporadic and rather rare ; fl. Oct. 1856 ; fr. June 1857. 
A form with the leaves and calyces sparingly hairy but the flowering 
branches hoary-tomentellous as in the type; the leaves shorter and 
broader, obovate-elliptical and more compact. No. 935. A small tree, 
15 ft. high or rarely more, or sometimes a bush of 8 to 12 ft.; trunk 
straight, patently branched above; wood used for making domestic 
utensils ; leaves hard-membranous, deciduous ; stamens 2, inserted on 
the corolla-tube a quarter below its throat, included ; filaments rather 
broad, compressed ; anthers linear-oblong, very obtuse at both ends ; 
ovary nearly glabrous; style glabrous, cylindrical, central, straight ; 
stigma clavate, obtuse at the apex, more or less deeply bilaminate, 
viscid ; capsule pyramidal, acuminate. In thin sandy forests between 
