58 



and 



a 



styles, 

 appendix to, 



(Trinity Coll. 



very much corrugated 

 the spadix. Siam. 

 B. G., Dublin.) 



Amygdalus warleyensls. {G. C, 1913, 



liii. 61.) Rosaceae. H. An open 

 bush about 6 ft. high, with slender 

 dark brown twigs. Flowers not 

 flhowy, about | in. across, produced 

 freely in twos and threes on leafless 

 wood of the previous year. Calyx 

 reddish, finely toothed. Petals 

 pinkish-white, i in. long, 1-12 in. 

 broad. Country not known. (Miss 

 Willmott.) 



"Androsace tfbetlca. [G. C. 1913, 



liii. 256, 362, f. 154. Primulaceae. H. 

 A small-growing species, in habit 

 somewhat resembling A. semper- 

 v'ivoides, but it has broader leaves, 

 and the whole plant is more softly 

 hairy. Leaves in rosettes, spathu- 

 late, about | in. long and i in. broad ; 

 new rosettes are product on short 

 stolons which arise at the time of 

 flowering. Flowering - stem about 

 1 in. long. Umbels 6-9- flowered. 

 Pedicels long. Flowers about | in. 

 across, white, with a yellow eye. 

 In text (p. 362) this plant is re- 

 ferred to as A^ tihttica var. Mariae, 

 which has broader leaves than the 

 type. Kansu, China. (J- Veitch & 

 Sons.) 



L- 



*Anemone Pulsatilla roraa. (<7. (7. 



1913, liii. 57, suppl. ill.) Ranuncu- 

 laceae. H. A sport from the type 

 from which a form with pink flowers 

 has been selected, (Royal Totten- 

 ham Nurseries, Holland.) 



Angraecum recurvum. [G. C. 1913, 



liv. 367, f. 132; G, M, 1913, 899, f. ; 

 0. R, 1913, 369, f. 65.) Orchidaceae. 

 S. A strong-growing species pro- 

 ducing its numerous flowers from the 

 old stems. Pedicels slender, 6 in. 

 long, 1 flowered. Flowers pure 

 white, fragrant, stellate, about 2 in. 

 across. Lip rather broader than the 

 equal sepals and petals. Spurs long, 

 slender. Madagascar. (Charles- 

 worth & Co.) 



Anthurium conchiflorum. [G. C. 1913, 



liii. 334.) Araceae. S. Garden 



hybrid h^ivje^n A. Chamberlainianum 

 and A^ Scherzerianum, 

 tawrence.) 



(Sir Trevor 



Afiocarpus trigonus. [M. K. 1913, 



65, ft.) Cactaceae. G. Plant simple 

 or wjUi several heads, about 4 in. 

 high and 5 in. across. Tubercles up 

 to 2 in. long, more or leas sharply 

 3-angled, with a shining hornv obtuse 

 apex. Flowers from the axils near 

 the summit, funnelshaped-campanu- 



late, at first white, later more or Ics* 

 rose-coloured, nearly 2 in. long in- 

 cluding the ovary, about 1| in. 

 across. Mexico. (R. Graessner, 

 Perleberg, Germany ; Darmstadt B. 

 G.) [Syn. Anhalonium trigonusy 

 Weber.] 



Arthrostylidium angustiflorum. (K. 



B, 1913, 268.) Gramineae-Bambuseae. 

 S. Stems slender, with very many 

 whorled erect-spreading very slender- 

 branches 6-8 in. long. Leaves linear, 

 long-attenuated above, contracted at 

 the base into a short pubescent 



petiole, 

 broad. 



racemes 

 America. 



%^ in. long, 2^-2^ lin. 

 Spikelets in terminal 1-sided 



Tropical 

 Sons.) 



a- 4 m. Ion 

 (F. Sander 



Asparagus robustus floribundus. {M^ 



G. Z. 1913, 14, 68.) Liliaceae, G. 

 Apparently the same as A> LutzU 

 {A* erectus floribundus) of the list for 

 1912. (T. Lattmann, Blankenburg. 

 am Harz, Germany.) 





*A8ter Purdomil. (5. M, t. 8476 



G. C, 1913, hii. 333; Gard. 1913, 260; 

 271, f.) Compositae. H. ,A pretty 

 and distinct new species differing 

 from all the other Asiatic Asters by 

 the stalked ovate or ovate-elliptic- 

 radical leaves, with 2 or 3 small 

 teeth, scarcely leafy flowering-stems, 

 solitary flower-heads, .qnd by the 

 outer bristles of the pappus being^ 

 much shorter than the inner. The 

 flower-heads are pale violet, 2\ in. 



across. Northern China. (J. Veitch: 

 & Sons.) 



*Aster yunnanensis atroviridis. {G. 



M- 1913, 217; Bees, Cat No. 41, 1913, 

 6.) H. A, dwarf -growing plant, only 

 about 9 in, high. Flower-heads with 

 broad light-blue ray-florets. Yunnan,. 

 China. (Bees, Ltd.) 



""Berberis aggregata. {G C. 1913, 



liv, 225; (?. M. 1913, 744.) Berberi- 

 daceae- H, A small spreading- 

 bush. Leaves in rosettes about 9' 

 together, ovate to oblanceolate, 

 entire or with a few teeth or spiny^ 

 hairs in the upper half, dull green 

 above, grey-green beneath, usually 

 about \ in. long and \ in. broad. 

 Berries small, creamy green, suffused' 

 with coral, in dense sessile clusters. 

 China. (Hon. Vicary Gibbs.) 



"Berberis diaphana. (PZ. VfiU. i. 



353.) H. The correct name of the* 

 plant included in the 1908 list 

 M, yunnanensis. 



Berberis Francisci-Ferdinandi. (M. 



D. G. 1913, 266; PL Wils. i. 367.)' 

 H. Shrub, 61-10 ffc- high. Shoots 



