REVISION OF THE NATURAL ORDER BIGNONIACE;E. 31 
Tecoma rosefolia amd T. azaleaffora proving identical, and being 
published simultaneously, I have chosen the name * roszefolia,” as the 
leaves look more like those of a Rose, than the flowers like those of an 
Azalea. s 
3. TECOMARTIA Capensis ; fruticosa, ramulis teretibus glabris ; foliis 
oppositis pinnatis 2—5-jugis eum impari, petiolo communi aptero, fo- 
liolis breviter petiolulatis ovatis vel subrotundatis obtusis vel acumina- 
tis, basi euneatis, serratis, supra glabris, subtus pallidioribus, axillis 
venarum barbatis ; racemis terminalibus multifloris ; calyce campanulato 
5-nervio, nervis subcostatis vel vix conspicuis in dentes 5 acutos desi- 
nentibus, corolla clavato-tubulosa leviter curvata (aurantiaco-coccinea), 
lobis oblongis obtusis, extus glabra, intus versus basin villosula ; stami- 
nibus infra medium tubi insertis, filamentis antheris ovario styloque gla- 
bris, capsula (5—6 poll. long., 3 lin. lat.) glabra (v. s. sp. et v. cult.). 
Tecomaria Capensis, Fenzl, in Herb. Vindob. 
Tecoma Capensis, Lindl. Bot. Reg. t. 1117 ; De Cand. Prodr. ix. 
p. 223. 
Bignonia Capensis, Thunb. Prodr. p. 105 (sed in Fl. Cap. omissa). 
Tecomaria Petersii, Klotzsch, in Peters’ Reise nach Mozambique ( Bo- 
tanik), p. 192. 
Tecomaria Krebsii, K7. mss. in Herb. Berol. 
Grog. Distr. Cape of Good Hope (Ecklon! Bergius! Krebs D) 
Zneuwbergen, South Africa (Drége / Masson /), Delagoa Bay (Forbes ! 
Peters !), Uitenhage (Herb. Hook. /), Port Natal (Krauss / n. 236, 
Sanderson !), all along the coast of Lower Albany (Athurton /), Is- 
land of Dominica, West Indies (Imray !), North of Macahé, Brazil 
(Miers !), Madras (G. Thomson !), WMereara (Hohenacker ! n. 523). 
Cultivated in Europe. 
When normally developed, the flowers have five lobes. I have not 
altered the speeifie name, ** Capensis," although I believe it not to be a 
native of that country, and for the following reasons, previously pub- 
lished in Gard. Chronicle for 1860, p. 4, and ‘Bonplandia,’ 1860, 
p.l:— ; p 
It is well known that a number of Australian, American, Asiatic, 
and European plants have become perfectly naturalized, and to all ap- 
pearance wild, at the Cape of Good Hope. Even our first steps on 
the ‘soil of South Africa show us the hard struggle of the children- 
of the native Flora with foreign intruders. Gigantic Gum-trees of 
