236 Rock: Notes ON HAWAIIAN LOBELIOIDEAE 
irregularly lobed, the lobes of uneven length from 4-10 mm., corolla 
more or less hidden in the calyx tube, dark purple; the upper 
anthers not bearded. [PLATE 16.] 
Hawall: Waipio Bay, December, 1851 (?), J. Remy 309 (with- 
out flower or fruit), in the herbarium of the Natural History Mu- 
seum at Paris; Waipio Valley (Waima branch), July 16, 1909, 
J. F. Rock 4629 (flowering specimen), type, in the herbarium of 
the College of Hawaii. 
A distinct variety, differing in the very shortly and unevenly 
lobed, cylindrical calyx, and in the upper anthers which are not 
bearded; the leaves are not openly pinnate, but closely pinnate in 
the lower portion and pinnatisect in the middle and upper portions 
of the leaf. 
11. Cyanea Hardyi sp. nov. 
A small tree 5-7 m. in height, with several straight ascending 
branches bearing large crowns of leaves at the apices; branchlets 
covered with leaf-scars; leaves narrow, linear-oblong, chartaceous, 
the margins crenulate to denticulate, denticulations close in the 
upper portion, coarser and wider apart in the second third, 
lacking at the base, midrib prominent underneath, the veins 
purplish, closely reticulate, dark green above, lighter underneath, 
20-30 cm. long, 2 2.5-5 cm. wide, acuminate to acute at the apex 
gradually tapering into a margined petiole 2.5—8 cm. in length; 
racemes very slender, axillary, in the axils of the leaves and 
below the crown of leaves in the axils of the scars of fallen leaves, 
20-25 cm. long, naked in the lower three fourths, minutely brac- 
teate; the filiform pedicels bibracteolate at the middle; flowers 
deep purplish black, the calyx turbinate, strongly ribbed when 
dry, minutely toothed; corolla semi-curved, the dorsal slit ex- 
tending to the middle, glabrous, anthers and — column 
glabrous, the lower anthers bearded; fruit unknow 
Kavat: Olokele Canyon, at an elevation of 1400 hie Novem- 
- ber, 1915, W. V. Hardy 12767 (flowering specimens), type, in the 
herbarium of the College of Hawaii; Olokele Canyon, one mile 
from intake, October, 1916, J. F. Rock 12765 (sterile specimens 
only); same locality, October, 1916, A. P. Hitchcock 15242, in 
the United States National Herbarium; below Kaholuamano, at 
an elevation of 2600 feet, October, 1916, J. F. Rock 12766 (with 
undeveloped racemes). 
The species is named in honor of Mr. W. V. Hardy, Assistant 
Engineer in the United States Hydrographic Survey. — 
