490 INIr. J. Mici's on the Tribe Colletiese. 



compressiusculis, pallide viridibus, glaberrimis, junioribus 

 sfEpe spinosis, spinis longiusculis, decussatim oppositis, sim- 

 plicibus ; foliis oppositis, ovalibns, imo in petiolum brevera 

 attenuatis, integris, aut crenulato-dcntatis,3-nervibus, margine 

 glandulifei-is, glabris, junioribus utrinque pilosulis, et pulvere 

 resinoso flavicantibus ; lloribus binis in axillis oppositis, et in 

 ramulis novellis, foliorum defectu, ssepe glomerato-spicatis ; 

 calyce colorato, late cylindrico, baud constricto, extus valde 

 pubescente, intus imo piloso ; limbi laciuiis 5, brevibus, erec- 

 tiusculis, cum petalis 5, fequilongis, niveis, eucullatis, alternis ; 

 staminibus totidem, petalis inclusis, et iis dimidio breyioribus ; 

 filamentis brevibus, in lineis totidem patenti-pilosis decur- 

 rentibus; stylo brevi ovarioque 3-loculari longe patenti- 

 pilosis, stigmatibus 3, oblongis, obtusis, adpressis, glabris ; 

 drupa carnosula, prsecedentis 4.-plo majore, ovata, nuce dura, 

 crassiter lignosa, 3-loculari.— Chile. — v. s. in herb. Hook. ; 

 Bustamante, in via ad Santiago, alt. 2000 ped. (Bridges, 

 435 ; Cuming, 641). 



This species is unquestionably distinct from the preceding, 

 though much resembling it in general aspect ; it is, however, 

 much more spiny, its branchlets are thinner and straighter, its 

 spines longer and more slender, its leaves smaller and more 

 caducous. The internodes are 1^ inch apart, the spines \\-\\ 

 inch long; those of the lateral spiuose branchlets are about ^ 

 inch long ; the floriferous branchlets are 1^ inch long, the axils 

 being from 1 to 3 lines apart. The leaves are 3-5 lines long, 

 and 2 lines broad, upon a petiole 1 line in length ; its flowers 

 are constantly 5-merous ; its calyx, 2 lines long, is double the 

 diameter of that of the former species, and is scarcely contracted 

 in the middle ; externally ic is very pubescent, its ovary is always 

 3-locular (not 2-celled), and it produces a much larger fruit, 

 which is two or three times the size of that of T. trinervis; being 

 4 or 5 lines long, and 3 or 4 lines in diameter : the ligneous walls 

 of its 3-locular nut are thicker than in the foregoing species. In 

 other respects both kinds are much alike. It appears to grow 

 further away from the coast, upon the more elevated table-lands, 

 and in the valleys of the interior*. 



3. Trevoa Berteruana. — Retauilla spinifer, Clos, in Gay, Chile, 

 ii. 27 ; — spinosa, ramulis rectis, teuuibus, striatulis, glabris, 

 fusco-viridibus, ortis sub spinis; spinis oppositis, tenuibus, 

 subulatis, calloso-acicularibus, paulo patentibus ; foliis op- 

 positis, vel saepe in axillis utrinque binis, cuneato-ovatis, vel 

 obcordatis, apice obtusis, retusis et mucronulatis, integris vel 



* This species will be represented lu the ' Contributions/ Plate 40 b. 



