enslform acute complicate serrulate on the marg-in and carina, 

 rigid, 15-25 cm. long ; panicle terminal, the peduncle and branches 

 clothed with lanceolate submembranous sheaths, 7-10 cm. long ; 

 bracts lanceolate or ovate-lanceolate, a little shorter than, or equal 

 to, the pedicellate ovaries in length ; sepals ovate, rather obtuse, 

 minutely pellucid-punctate, O'o cm. long ; petals obliquely ovate, 

 rather obtuse, 0*4 cm. long ; lip spoon-shaped, oblong in outline 

 when flattened, provided with two fleshy ridges rising at the base 

 of the lip which divide up into 4 ridges in the intermediate lobe, 

 0*4 cm. long (from the mouth of the spur to the apex of the 

 intermediate lobe), Slobed, the lateral lobes erect rotundate or 

 subacute lineate, not quite 0*2 cm. long, intermediate lobe strongly 

 concave, rotundate or subtruncate undulate — crisped on the 

 margin, the spur short subglobose, scarcely 0*2 cm. long ; column 

 without a foot, 0"3 cm. long; pollinia subglobose, the caudicle 

 broadly linear ; gland subquadrate; capsule pendulous ovoid up to 

 2 cm. long, 1*5 cm. diam. 



Described from two dried specimens. I am indebted to Mr. 

 R. A. Rolfe for calling my attention to the fact that Acrolophia 

 fimbriata, Schltr. is identical with A. viicrantha^ Schltr. &f Bolus 

 (Eulophia inicrajitha Lindl.) and that the commoner species 

 figured b}' me in the first volume of this work under Tab. 4, as 

 Exilophia micrantha^ Lindl. is A. cochlearis, Schltr. & Bolus, 

 while the plant figured under Tab. 5, as Eulophia cochlearis LindL 

 {^A. cochlearis Schltr. drr" Bolus) was really an undescribed species 

 and quite distinct from the latter. 



