Utricularia.] cv. LENTIBULARIE^E. (C. B. Clarke.) 333 



In his Herbarium Wight has marked his n. 2709 one sheet V. Wallichii, the other 

 U. macrolepis ; of this the seeds exhibit none of the glochidia shown in Wight's figure 

 of U. macrolepis, and insisted on in the accompanying description. 



VA~B,.firmula, Oliver in Journ. Linn. Soc. iii. 182; steins stouter erect. Khasia 

 Mts., alt. 3-5000 ft., common. ALPINE SIKKIM, alt. 9-11,000 ft. ; Lachen, J. D. H. 

 The Sikkim examples are 1-2 in. high, but appear to be high-level forms of the 

 Khasian plant. 



ff Scales of the scape and bracts produced backwards below their point 

 of insertion. 



15. IT. verticillata, Senj. in Lmn&a, xx. 312 ; glabrous, scapes often 

 branched, pedicels (many of them) as long as the fruit-calyx, lower lip of 

 corolla in. Oliver in Journ. Linn. Soc. iii. 184. U. bifida, Wight Ic. 

 t. 1584, fig. 2, not of Linn. 



MALACCA, Griffith. 



Scapes 6-10 in. Pedicels \ in. Calyx-lobes in fruit T 1 2 in., ovate, obtuse. Cap- 

 sule T ' 3 in., globose. Seeds minute, cells of the testa subhexagonal rather than 

 oblong. 



16. U. rosea, Edgew. in Proc. Linn. Soc. i. 352 ; flowers subsessile, 

 lower lip of corolla nearly ^ in. exceeding the obtuse spur. Oliver in Journ. 

 Linn. Soc. iii. 184. 



BENGAL ? Edgeioorth. CEYLON ; Gardner. 



The plant here diagnosed is Gardner's n. 507, which is the type of U. rosea, Oliver. 

 Whether any such plaut was ever found in Bengal is doubtful, there being no type of 

 Edgeworth's to refer to. Oliver quotes for this species U. racemosa, Wight Ic. t. 1584, 

 fig. 1, which looks more like U. racemosa, Wall., with the flower drawn a little large; 

 the seeds are like none of this set, in all of which they are minute with large obscurely- 

 marked scrobiculations. According to Thwaites (Enum. 172), U. rosea, racemosa 

 and filicaulis are forms of one species. 



17. U. racemosa, Wall. Cat. 1496 ; glabrous, scapes 6-16 in. some- 

 times branched, flowers subsessile numerous blue lower distant uppermost 

 often subcapitate, lower lip of corolla in. hardly as long as the subacute 

 spur. A. DC. Prodr. viii. 21 ; Oliver in Journ. Linn. Soc. iii. 186. U. 

 complanata, Wall. Cat. 1497. U. coerulea, A. DC. 1. c. 19; Wight Ic. 

 t. 1583, not of Linn. 



KHASIA MTS., alt. 3-5000 ft., common. CHOTA NAGPOBE ; Clarke. DECCAN. 

 PENINSULA and CEYLON ; Wight, &c. PEGU ; Kurz. DISTBIB. Cambodia, 

 China. 



Flowers often subfasciculate on the spike. Calyx-loles orbicular in fruit, T ' n -| in., 

 obtuse. Lower lip of corolla blue or whiteish, obscurely 4-lobed. Capsule T ' 3 in., 

 globose. Seeds minute, obscurely coarsely scrobiculate. 



Dalz. 8f Gibs. Bomb. Fl. 135. U. setacea, Wall. Cat. 6398, partly. U. campestris, 

 Miq. in PI. Hohenack. n. 596. From Nepal and the Khasia Mts. to Ceylon and 

 Tenasserim (S.E. Asia and Malaya to Hongkong and Borneo). 



*** Leaves at the base of the scape orbicular or reniform, persistent. 

 Calyx-loles very unequal. Seeds glochidiate (or in U. kumaonensis 

 comose). 



18. U. brachiata, Oliver in Journ. Linn. Soc. iii. 187 ; scape slender 

 1-2-fld., leaves reniform slenderly petioled, lower lip of corolla - in. 

 5-lobed, spur \ in. linear- cyliiidric obtuse. 



