410 ORIGIN OF CULTIVATED PLANTS. 



suggests some doubts as to the wild condition of this 

 plant, 1 which Parlatore believes to be G. hirsutum, 

 Linnaeus. Hemsley, 2 in his catalogue of Mexican plants, 

 merely says of a Gossypium which he calls barbadense, 

 " wild and cultivated." He gives no proof of the former 

 condition. Macfadyen 3 mentions three forms wild and 

 cultivated in Jamaica. He attributes specific names to 

 them, and adds that they possibly all may be included 

 in Linnaeus' G. hirsutum. Grisebach 4 admits that one 

 species, G. barbadense, is wild in the West Indies. As 

 to the specific distinctions, he declares himself unable to 

 establish them with certainty. 



With regard to New Grenada, Triana 5 describes a 

 Gossypium which he calls G. barbadense, Linnaeus, and 

 which he says is " cultivated and half wild along the 

 Rio Seco, in the province *of Bogota, and in the valley of 

 the Cauca near Call ; " and he adds a variety, hirsutum, 

 growing (he does not say whether spontaneously or no) 

 along the Eio Seco. I cannot discover any similar asser- 

 tion for Peru, Guiana, and Brazil ; 6 but the flora of Chili, 

 published by Cl. Gay, 7 mentions a Gossypium, "almost 

 wild in the province of Copiapo," which the writer 

 attributes to the variety G. peruvianum, Cavanilles. 

 Now, this author does not say the plant is wild, and 

 Parlatore classes it with G. religiosum, Linnaeus. 



An important variety of cultivation is that of the 

 cotton with long silky down, called by Anglo-Americans 

 sea island, or long staple cotton, which Parlatore ranks 

 with G. barbadense, Linnaeus. It is considered to be of 

 American origin, but no one has seen it wild. 



In conclusion, if historical records are positive in all 

 that concerns the use of cotton in America from a time 

 far earlier than the arrival of Europeans, the natural 



1 Nascitur in calidis humidisque cultis prcecipue locis (Hernandez* 

 Nova Hispanice Thesaurus, p. 308) . 



Hemsley, Biologia Centrali- Americana, i. p. 123. 



Macfadyen, Flora of Jamaica, p. 72. 



Grisebach, Flora of Brit. W. India Is., p. 86. 



Triana and Planchon, Prodr. Fl. Novo-Granatensis, p. 170. 



The Malvaceae have not yet appeared in the Flora Brasiliensis* 



Cl. Gay, Flora Chilena, i. p. 312. 



