214 3. C. fibuliforne, N.E. Br. Grorths obconic, flettened et 

 the top, slightl;^ pubescent, whitish or hoary,, v.itliout spots. 

 Flovers unknovrn. 1-. fibuliforne. Haw, Misc. -^fet., p. 22^1803), 

 and "^ev. Pi. 3ucc., p. 85. 



Locality unknown. Introduced by ^-ssson in 1795, but soon 

 dies out o-*" cultivation, end does not e.^pe&r to have been redis- 

 covered. 



HaT'orth states thpt it is of the sixe of --, truncttelluia and 

 resembles thet species in form, but is more depressed and more 

 evenly trunceted. Tiie description {riven by bonder (5*1. Gap., 

 "Vol. 2, p« 393) is evidentlj?- partly based upon ^av/orth's description 

 and pprtly upon a '"lant collected by --^eyher it is certainly a nixed 

 description of tv;o species, and must, therefore, be discredited, 

 ■^e above pccou.nt contains all that is knovra of the plant at 

 present. 



4. CJ. f imbriatxim, N.E.Br. Growths obconic, apparently flat- 

 tish or slightly convex on the top, minutely puberulous. Gaiyx 

 five-lobes, gland-dotted. Corolla with a tube about If line long, 

 and narrowly linear acute petals about 2^ line long, marked (in 

 the dried state) v/ith nurierous linear imiaersed glands along their 

 entire length. Style short, with five filiform stigmas, gland- 

 dotted like the netels.-- -*'^. ' finbriatum, ^ond. in ?1. ^e^., 



Vol. ^, p. 393. 



Near the Gsmbka River in either ^eaufort -'est ^iv. or -trince 

 Alb^T ^iv., Burke , Zeyher 693, 



The gland-dotted flowers distinguish this from every other 

 species known to me. bonder describes the species as glabrous, 

 from specimens collected by ^eyher. I have not seen ^eyher's 

 specimens, ^rom which Sender described, but es Burke and -^eyher 

 travelled together, and in most cases collected the same species, 

 the specimens collected by Burke at the same loc?lity are probably 

 identical with those of ^eyher, and ere decidedly m.inutely puber- 

 . ulous, as in Ze^rher 693, which Sender v/rongly quotes as being '^, 

 mi nut urn Hav;, 



5. C, pisinnum, N, 3, 3p, Growths obconic or subglobose, 

 2-|-3§ lines in diameter, convex on the top (type S), slightly vel- 

 vety to the touch from being covered v-ith very minute points, scarce- 

 13'' amounting to ^-ubescence, only visible under a lens and best seen 

 on the old v/ithered sheaths, of a slightly greyish-green, often 



more or less tinged with purple on the sides, and inconspicuously 

 marked with scattered dets on the top. ?lov/Ers unknovm. 



Locality unknov.n. _I%roo, Marloth. 



^-. ^isinnum, W.E. s^t. in '''ourn. I'inn. ■^oc. Bot., v. 45, p. 98. 



AA. 



Surface glabrous, excerpt at the orifice, which isusually min- 

 utely r>uberulous, minutely tubercnle te all over in G. ovif orme , end 

 in a few species with the dots raised and tubercle-like, but in^ 

 the others quite smooth. (Species 5-49.) 



B. 



Gro^-'ths uni'^ormly green, or green v;ith the sides or sometimes 

 the tc" or Ground the orifice purple, usually vdthout dots or mark- 

 in^-'s, but in G. jucundum, G. minutum, G. saxetanum, G. viridicstina 

 pn'" G. V/ettTTteinii there are sometimes a fev/ indistinct dots on 



