BRITTON: STUDIES OF WEsT INDIAN PLANTS 11 
Apparently nearest related to B. grandiflora (Poir.) Griseb., 
which has smaller, obtuse leaves with much narrower petioles. 
Bourreria Nashii sp. nov. 
A shrub, about 1 m. high, the young twigs pilose. Leaves 
obovate to oblong-obovate, 18 mm. long or less, 4-7 mm. wide, 
coriaceous, revolute-margined, densely rough-papillose and in- 
conspicuously veined above, canescent, reticulate-veined and the 
midrib prominent beneath, obtuse, retuse or apiculate at the apex, 
narrowed at the base, the margin papillose-hispid, the pubescent 
petiole about rt mm. long; fruits solitary or 2 together, orange- 
brown, terminal, subsessile, depressed-globose, about 6 mm. in 
diameter, persistent calyx-lobes ovate-lanceolate, acute, loosely 
pubescent. 
Foothills, between Marmelade and San Michel, Haiti, Aug. 4, 
1905 (Nash & Taylor 1380). 
Nearest related to the Cuban B. pauciflora O. E. Schulz. 
28. NOTES ON PSYCHOTRIA* 
PSYCHOTRIA LIGUSTRIFOLIA (Northr.) Millsp. Field Col. Mus. 2 
172. 1906 
To the range of this species may now be added BEeRmupa, 
where it is locally abundant, and hitherto referred to P. undata 
Jacq.; FLorma: Key Largo (Curtiss 5501); CuBA; on coral-rock, 
Madruga (Britton & Shafer 776). 
PsyCHOTRIA SULZNERI Small, Fl. Miami 176. 26 Ap 1913 
Psychotria pulverulenta Urban, Symb. Ant. 7: 456. 15 Au 1913. 
29. NOTES ON VARIOUS SPECIES 
JUNIPERUS LUCAYANA Britton, N. A. Trees 121. 1908 
Juniperus australis Pilger, in Urban, Symb. Ant. 7: 479. 1913. 
The types of both are from the Bahamas. 
THRINAX MICROCARPA Sargent, Gard. & For. 9: 162. 1896 
Western part of Cayo Cruz, Camagiiey, Cuba (Shafer 2800). 
Not heretofore recorded from Cuba:—South Florida; Bahamas. 
: * See Urban, Symb. Ant. 7: 433-477. . 
