Typha.'\ cxlix. TYPHACEiE (brown). 137 



in. long, contiguous or shortly separated. Male flowers with brownish 

 linear-spathulate or cuneate-spathulate, entire or variously lobed or 

 toothed, acute bracteoles ; pollen simple. Female flowers usually 

 ebracteolate, occasionally with a few narrow spathulate-lanceolate 

 colourless bracteoles mingled with them ; stigmas spathulate-lanceo- 

 late, longer than the simple hairs. — Kronfeld in Verhandl. Zool.-Bot. 

 Gesell. Wien, 1889, 180, t. 5, fig. 13; N. E. Br. in. Dyer, Fl. Cap. vii. 

 32 ; Rendle in Cat. Afr. PI. Welw. ii. 85 ; Graebner in Engl. Pflanzenr. 

 Typhacea;, 10. T. latifolia, Krauss in Flora, 184;"), 343, not of Linn. 

 T. cequinoctialis, Welw. ex Kronfeld in Verhandl. Zool.-Bot. Gesell. 

 Wien, 1889, 156. 



Iioiver Guinea. Loango : Chinchoclio, iS'o^a?<.r,87 ! Angola: Golungo Alto ; 

 in marshes on the right of the Coango and Quiapose rivulets, Welwifsch, 241 ! 

 Hailla ; by river banks near Lopollo, and in pools on the banks of the stream Quipum- 

 punhine, near Humpata, Weltvitsch, 243 (ex Rendle) ; Mossamedes ; in deep pools 

 near Mossamedes (Aguadas), and in lakes at the mouth of the River Giraul, 

 Welwitsch, 244 ! 



IMEozamb. 3>lst. German East Africa : Dar-es-Salaam, Hildehrandt, 1229 ! 

 Portuguese East Africa : by the River Refubwe (Revngwe), near Tete, Kirk ! 

 Also in South Africa. 



This may be distinguished from T. latifolia, Linn., by the bracteoles of the male 

 inflorescence being brownish and usually more or less lobed or forked at the top, and 

 by the simple pollen. A specimen without flower, collected by pools near the sea, 

 and near San Pedro, in the district of Loanda ,Angola {Wehvitsch, 242), is doubtfully 

 referred to this species by Rendle in Cat. Afr. PI. Welw. ii. 85. Kronfeld and 

 Graebner have erroneously referred T. cequinoctialis, Welw. to T. australis, Schum. 

 & Thoun., from which the absence of bracts to the female flowers at once distin- 

 it. 



Order CL. AROIDE^. (By N. E. Brown.) 



Flowers unisexual or hermaphrodite, with or without a perianth, 

 sessile on a spadix enclosed within, adnate to, or subtended by a green 

 or coloured spathe. Spadix monoecious or entirely covered with her- 

 maphrodite flowers, or rarely unisexual, with or without a terminal 

 barren appendix, and with or without neuter organs on various parts 

 of it. Perianth, when present, of 3-9 free or connate segments. 

 Stamens 4-6, rarely more or fewer (when the male flowers have no 

 perianth, the stamens are crowded together, so that the number belong- 

 ing to each flower is often indeterminable), free or connate; filaments 

 none, or broad and flat, or rarely filiform or clavate ; anthers opening 

 by terminal pores, or by short or long longitudinal slits ; pollen often 

 emitted in sausage-like strings. Ovary sometimes surrounded by 

 staminodes, superior, or very rarely inferior, witli or without a style ; 

 1- to many-celled, with axile, parietal, basal or apical placentation ; 

 stigma entire or lobed ; ovules 1 to many in a cell, orthotropous, campy- 

 lotropous or anatropous. Fruit a 1 to many-seeded berry. Seeds 

 albuminous or exalbuminous. — Erect, creeping or climbing herbs or 

 shrubs, simple or branched. Rootstock often tuberous or thick and fleshy. 



