Utricularia.] cv. LENTIBULARIE^E. (C. B. Clarke.) 329 



| in. diam. Capsule in. ; fruit-sepals |- in. Seeds thickly discoid, concavo-convex 

 by the inflexion of the entire thin hardly winged margin. 



VAB. inflexa ; corolla white with tiolet stripes. U. inflexa, ForsTc. Fl. JEg. Arab. 

 9; Delile Fl. Mg. 4, t. 4, fig. 1; A. DC. Prodr. viii, 4j Boiss. Fl. Orient, iv. 3. 

 U. Thonningii, Schum. PL Guin. 12. Bengal; frequent, Clarke. Distrib. N. and 

 Central Africa. The spur of the corolla is frequently as pubescent and as little curved 

 as in U. stellaris. Whether this plant be reckoned species or variety, it is by no 

 means rare in Bengal. 



"f"f Peduncles ebracteate or with a few obscure scales. 



2. U. flexuosa, Valil Enum. i. 198 ; flowers pedicelled yellow, calyx- 

 segments ovate somewhat enlarged in fruit, corolla-spur nearly as long as 

 the lower lip, margin of the seeds entire inflexed scarcely winged. Blume 

 Bijd. 739 ; A. DC. Prodr. viii. 24; Oliver in Journ. Linn. Soc. iii. 175. U. 

 australis, Br. Prodr. 430; A. DC. 1. c. 6. U. fasciculata, Roxb. Fl". Ind. 

 i. 143; Wall. Cat. 1499; A. DC. I.e. 7; Wight Ic. t. 1568. U. confervi- 

 folia, Don Prodr. 84 ; A. DC. 1. c. 8. II. inaequalis, Benj. in Linncea, xx. 

 304. TJ. Bluinei, Miq. Fl. Ind. Bat. ii. 994. U. extens'a, Hance ; Walp. 

 Ann. iii. 3. 



Throughout INDIA ; in rice-swamps, tanks, and jheels, common. DISTRIB. S.E. 

 Asia, Malaya, N. Australia. 



Generally resembling U. stellaris, but rather larger in all its parts. Corolla 

 g in. diam. Calyx-segments in fruit ovate, subacute, patent, hardly so long as the 

 capsule. Seeds as of U. stellaris, but rather larger ; margin thin, incurved towards 

 the concave face, described by some authors as winged, by others as wingless. The 

 branches near the base of the peduncle are sometimes inflated, falsely whorled, bearing 

 reduced leaves, but are always much longer and less bract-like than those of U. 

 stellaris. 



3. U. punctata, Wall. Cat. 2121 ; pedicels slender erect in fruit, 

 flowers blue, capsule thin much longer than the calyx, seeds discoid margin 

 thin sharply toothed. A. DC. Prodr. viii. 5; Wight Ic. t. 1570; Oliver in 

 Journ. Linn. Soc. iii. 1.75. 



PEGU and TENASSERIM; from Rangoon, WallicTi, to Mergui, Griffith, &c. 

 DISTRIB. Borneo. 



Leaves multipinuate, segments capillary, with bladders. Peduncles 6 in., 515- 

 fld., glabrous ; pedicels often |-f in. Corolla \ in. diam., blue (Parish) ; spur 

 shorter than the lower lip. Capsule ^ in., ovoid, obtuse. Seeds differing little from 

 U. stellaris, but the thin margin is patent or obscurely inflexed towards the concave 

 face, with numerous triangular teeth. 



4. U. exoleta, Br. Prodr. 430 ; leaves very small bearing bladders, 

 peduncles slender 1-3-fld., flowers small yellow, capsule globose exceeding 

 the fruit-sepals, seeds discoid margin thin patent subentire. A. DC. Prodr. 

 viii. 7. U. diantha, Boem. Sf Sch. Syst. i. Mant. 169; Wight Ic. t. 1569; 

 Oliver in Journ. Linn. Soc. iii. 175, not of A. DC. U. diflora, Roxb. Hort. 

 Beng. 4. U. biflora, Roxb. Fl. Ind. i. 143, not of Lamk., nor of Wall. U. 

 Koxburghii, Sprang. Syst. i. 52. U. elegans, Wall. Cat. 1502. U. ptero- 

 sperma, Fdgew. in Proc. Linn. Soc. i. 352. 



Throughout INDIA, from the N.W. Himalaya and Assam to Ceylon, not common. 

 DISTRIB. S.E. Asia, Malaya, N. Australia. 



Leaves sometimes 2-3 in., multipinnate, segments capillary, often inconspicuous 

 or very slender, easily detached from the peduncle. Peduncle 1-4 in., minutely 

 bracteate near the middle. Corolla J in. diam., spur slightly exceeding the lower lip. 

 Capsule \ in. diam., thin. Seeds subtrapezoidal, much depressed ; margin somewhat 



