16 BRITTON: STUDIES OF WeEsT INDIAN PLANTS 
** Peduncles much shorter than the leaves. 
Leaves 2-lobed, mostly broader than lon 
Flowers solitary, senderpednced. 3-4 cm. 
road; whe t 3-5 cm. in diamet 16. P. rubra. 
tered in the axils, 1.5 m. broad, 
very 5 et gS esragen: the peels slender; 
it about 8 mm. in dia 17. P. sexflora. 
Leaves entire or bate adnan ies than broad. 
Leaves oblong or hg ips oie fg entire, 
rounded at the 18. P. multiflora. 
Leaves broadly shes prrens 3-lobed, mostly 
ordate at the base. 19. P. holosericea. 
C. Published Bist not grouped. a 
Leaves ovate to sey dentate 20. P. dasyadenia. 
D. Known only from foliage. Vines deeply 3-lobed, the 
lobes dentate. 21. A plant of the Isle 
of Pines. 
I. PASSIFLORA MALIFORMIS L. Sp. Pl. 956. 1753 
TYPE LOcALITY: Near Port de Paix, Santo Domingo. 
DIsTRIBUTION: Oriente, collected by Wright:—Hispaniola to 
Barbadoes; Jamaica; South America. Perhaps not indigenous 
in Cuba. 
2. PASSIFLORA QUADRANGULARIS L. Syst. Ed. 10, 1248. 1759 
TYPE LOCALITY: Jamaica. : 
DIsTRIBUTION: Uncommon at Santiago de las Vegas (Van 
Hermann 616) :—Native of Nicaragua; widely cultivated in tropical 
America, and locally spontaneous. 
3. PASSIFLORA LAURIFOLIA L. Sp. Pl. 956. 1753 
TYPE LOCALITY: Surinam. 
DIsTRIBUTION: Thicket, upper valley of the Rio Navas, 
Oriente (Shafer 4411) :—native from St. Thomas and St. Jan to 
Trinidad and South America. Spontaneous after cultivation in 
Hispaniola and Jamaica. 
4. PASSIFLORA PEDATA L. Sp. Pl. 960. 1758 
TYPE LOCALITY: Santo Domingo. 
DIsTRIBUTION: Woods and thickets, Santa Clara, I Pinar del 
Rio:—Hispaniola; northern South America. 
