N 



NABALUS. See Prenanthes. 



N^GfiLIA (Karl von N^egeli, late professor of bot- 

 any iit Muuich). GesnerAteie. About half a dozen 

 ti'dpical American herbs allied to Achimenes, but the 

 lis. arranged alternately in a leafless terminal panicle 

 (in Achimenes the tls. are axillary). Because of the 

 pauicled flowers, Nsegelias are very ornanientnl plants. 

 They are warmhouse subjects, propagatiiiL; tiy stulons 

 or offsets. In cultivation the plants art- '>tt«-ii.-r called 

 Gesnerias than Niegelias, but they arc distiiiguished 

 from that genus in usually having an annular or ring- 

 like disk at the base of the corolla, rather than a deeply 

 lobed disk. Tubers usually none. Nsegelias hybridize 

 with other Gesnerias. One hybrid race is known as 

 NiPgelio-.^chimenes and another (F.S. 10:987-8) as 

 Maudirola. L H B 



In general, the cultural methods given under Ges- 

 veria suit Neegelias well. The bulbs should be stored 

 in the pots iu which they have been grown. It is a bad 

 plan to keep any bulbs or tubers of the GesneriaceBe in 

 dry sand in a dry store-room. After being well ripened, 

 NiPgelia bulbs should be kept in the greenhouse under 

 the benches. Keep them out of the drip, but water 

 them occasionally. T. D. Hatfield. 



A. Fix. nearly scarlet, or hrick-red, marked wilh 

 ichite. 



cinnabarlna, Lind. {Gesneria einnabar}na, Lind 

 Fine wiiiter-Mooming plant, lJ^-2 ft. tall, soft-hairy: 

 Ivs. round-ovate and cordate, crenate-dentate, thickish, 

 greeu, with red or purplish hairs: (Is. about l'.< in. 

 long, hanging on the ends of spreadiin,' p. .li.. Is. i;ib- 

 bous-tubuiar to the very base, the calyx lol.. s .ouic and 

 spreading, the short corolla-lobes unefjual and olituse, 

 the dower cinnabar-red or nearly scarlet on the upper 

 side, but paler and spotted on the under side. Mex. 

 B.M. 5036. Lowe, 33. 



AA. Fls. orange-scarlet or scarlet, marked with 

 yellow, 



zebrlna, Kegel (Gesneria zebrXna, Paxt. ). Fig. 

 14154. Much like the above, but brighter colored, red- 

 dotted below, and yellow within and on the under side: 

 calyx-lobes short and appressed : corolla contracted 

 towards the base, whereas they are gibbous or swollen 

 to the very base in N. cinnabarina. Brazil. B.M. 

 3940. B.R. 28:16. P.M. 271. -A fine plant, of which 

 there are several forms. The commonest species. 

 Names belonging here are Gesneria regalis and 

 G. spleudens. 



achimenoides, Hort. Hybrid of iV. aebrina and 

 Achimenes or Gloxinia (said to be with A. glox- 

 iniivflura ) : fls. very large (often 2 in. long), yel- 

 lowish rose on the outside, yellow and rose- 

 spotted on the inside, the segments clear rose. 

 AAA. Fls. white, cream color or rose. 



amAbills, Decne. (N. multifUra,'Koo^.). Fls. white 

 or cream color, numerous, hanging, the tube curved 

 and not much swollen, the obtuse lobes subequal : 

 plant bearing long, glandular hairs in additiou to the 

 velvety covering: otherwise ranch like iV. zebrinn. 

 Mex. B.M. 5083. F.S. 12:1192 (as Achimenes [Nifqe- 

 lia]amabilis). G.C. III. 22:413. -The tenable name' of 

 this species is usually held to be Hooker's iV. mnlti- 

 flniii. wliich dates from 1858; but Decaisne's iV. atnab- 

 ilis. iir A', ani'ibilis, Hort., is older. 



hvacinthina, Carr. Of horticultural origin, probably 

 a hybrid: tls. white or rose, in a very compact pyra- 

 nii 'al panicle. R.H. 1877:29. 



.V. fi'dgida. Ort. Fls. vermilion: Ivs. large, oval, deeply 

 toothed. Mex.— .v. Oeroltiana, Regel. Continuous -flowering 



plant, allied to N. zebrlna. Mex. F.S. 2:pl. 4. for April. — N. 

 sceptre corail, Carr. Fls. many in an open panicle, cinnabar- 

 red, yellow-spotted inside. R.H. 1K69. p. 154 and col. plate. 

 For pictures of varieties and hybrids, see F.S. 16:1071-2: 10, 

 987-8. L, H. B. 



NiEGELIO- ACHIMENES is a trade name mentioned 

 uuder SageUti. 



NANDlNA (Japanese name). BerhericUcecp. A 

 small, ttndt_-r shrub, with bright red or white berries, 

 said to be cult, iu every little garden in Japan. "At a 

 distance, says Ksempfer, it has a reed-like appearance, 

 many simple stems springing up from the same root, 

 which are branched toward the top only, and are termi- 

 nated with a pyramidal panicle ot" red berries the size 

 of a pea." — B.M. The stems are about as thick as a fin- 

 ger. The foliage is evergreen, and graceful at all times, 

 being twice or thrice ternately cut. The young growth 

 is prettily tinged with red, and the bases of the lower 

 stalks are often swollen into red globular bodies. 

 The fls. are small, numerous, white and panicled 



1454. Naegelia zebri 

 Geuerally known as a Gesneria. 



This shrub is rarely grown North under glass. Pot- 

 grown plants or seeds are procurable from Japanese 

 dealers. The seeds are said to be of an uncommon 

 shape, being convex on one side and concave on the other. 

 The genus contains but one specie.'*. It is the only erect- 

 growing shrub in the barberry family outside of Berberis. 

 it agrees with the common barberries in having 6 stamens 

 and an indehiscent berry, but the fls. are differently 



67 



(1055) 



