Mr. J. Miers on tlie Ehretiaceae. 209 



different dates, with his Boiirreria spinifex and B. montana^ 

 as will be presently shown, which renders the synonyms dif- 

 ticult of explanation. 



13. Bourreria spinifex, nob. (non Griseb.) ; — Bourreria diva- 

 ricata, Griseb. {non Don) Cat. PL Cuh. 210 ; — Ehretia spini- 

 fex, li. cD Sch. iv. 805 ; DC. Prodr. ix. 506 ;— ramis diver- 

 gentibus, teretibus, ramulis in apice ramoruni proxiniis, 

 glabris, axillis spiniiIoso-cu])ularibus ; foliis oblongis, apice 

 obtusissimis ant rotundatis, inio obtusis, coriaceis, convexis, 

 in costa valde sulcatis, nervis pancis immersis, arcuatini 

 nexis, marginibus valde revolutis, supra nitentibus, tuber- 

 culis albis exasperatis, scabrido-pilosis, snbtus fusco-opacis, 

 subglabris, nervis prominentil)US ; pctiolo glabro, limbo 8- 

 plo breviore : racemis terminaliljus, brevibiis, sub-3-floris ; 

 calyce glabro, acute 5-dentato ; corollas tubo cylindrico, ca- 

 lyce duplo longiore, lobis oblongis, patentibus ; stylo bre- 

 viter bifido ; drupa globosa. — In Antillis : v. s. in herb. Mus. 

 Brit. J Cuba (Wright, 3118, sub nom, B. divaricata). 



This plant quite agrees with the characters given by Homer 

 and Schulz to their Ehretia spinifex. Dr. Grisebach, in 

 1862, referred a Cuban plant to this species, under the name 

 oi Bourreria spinifex^ quoting the synonym of those botanists; 

 but in 1866 he converted this same plant (Wright, 3123) into 

 a new species, B. montana, which he pronounced to be distinct 

 from Homer and Schulz's species ; and at the same time he 

 referred Wright's plants 1365, 3118, and 3136 to his Bourreria 

 divaricata (not Don's), and synonymous with £"7^ /-e^/a sjn'nifex^ 

 E..& Sch. : I have shown the latter corresponds with Wright's 

 3118, while 1365 (in parte) and 3136 belong to Don's B. di- 

 varicata. Here is a sad confusion, w^hich runs alike through 

 most of the determinations of Dr. Grisebach in this family, all 

 which have been made incautiously and in too much haste. 



This is a small shrub, with numerous divaricatiiig branches, 

 which soon become bare and rugose from the decadence of the 

 leaves, the axils becoming somewhat spiniform ; the leaves, 

 solitary on each alternate node, are 8-10 lines long, 3-5 lines 

 broad, on a petiole 1-1 1 line long. The British-Museum 

 specimen has only a single flower, the others probably having 

 fallen away ; its calyx is 3 lines long, the tube of the corolla 

 5 lines, the lobes 2\ lines long. 



14. Bourreria microphi/IIa, Griseb. Cat. PI. Cub. 210 ; — 

 ramulis tenuibus, teretibus, cinerascentibus, striatcllis, gla- 

 bris ; foliis minimis, patentibus vel recurvis, ovalibus vel 

 suborbicularibus, coriaccis, valde convexis, supra profunde 



