I'hnnbergia] xciv. acanthace.e. S05 



segments 10. narrowly lanceolate, .' to ,',, in. long, glabrous: seeds 

 solitary, ,'. in. in diameter, umbilicate, with short adpressed papillae. 

 Between the pra^sidium and Caghuy, in company with other Acanthaceae ; 

 fr. Feb. IS.-.T, No. 5218. 



2. TUBIFLORA Gmolin, Syst. Nat. 2, i. pp. 11>, 27 (1791). 



Ebitraria Midi. V\. Bor. Anier. i. p. 8 (1803); Vahl, Emun. i. 

 p. 106 (1801) ; Benth. & Hook. f. Gen. PI. ii. p. 1073. 



1. T. caroliniensis Gmelin, I.e. 



Ji'siicia acaxlis L. f. tSuppl. PI. p. 84 (1781). Anonijmos caro- 

 liniensis Walter, Fl. Carol, p. 60 (1788). Klytraria Vahliana 

 !Mich., I.e., i. p. 9, t. 1. E. crenata Yahl, I.e. ; S. Moore in Journ. 

 Bot. 1880, p. 196; BurkiU in Flor. Trop. Afr. v. p. 27 (1899). 

 K. b/rata and E. vinjata Vahl, I.e. E. caroliniensis and E. indica 

 Pers. Syn. PI. i. p. 23 (1805). E. rnarqinata Vahl ex P. Beauv. 

 Fl. Owar. ii. p. 58, t. 93, fig. 2 (1818) T. acaulis 0. Kuntze, 

 Eev. Gen. PI. ii. p. 500 (1891). 



Gor,rNGi) Alio.— Habit of I'lant<(g<i. Cungulungulo; {1. Feb. 1855. 

 No. 5209. A low herb : leaves membranous, bright green ; flowers 

 white ; calyx bibracteolate at the base, 4-cleft nearly to the base, the 

 top segment the broadest, the lateral ones narrow, the bottom one 

 deeply bifid ; ovary narrowly oblong, a little compressed ; style- 

 filiform-subulate, stigmatose at the apex. In moist wooded, half- 

 shady places among the Queta mountains at the banks of the river 

 Coango, rather rare : late fl. beginning of May 185G. No. 5157 

 Quibolo ; fl. May 1856. Xo. 5210. A stemless herb, with the aspect 

 of Plantngo major L., perennial or biennial ; rhizome horizontal, 

 rather thick ; leaves obovate-spathulate, on the margin almost entire 

 or sometimes runcinate towards the base, dull green, membranous, 

 much attenuate into the petiole ; flowers whitish. In the more 

 elevated forests of Sobato Cabanga-Cacalungo, among the Cungulungulo 

 mountains ; fl. and few fr. middle of June 185(). No. 5156. 



3. NELSONIA E. Br. ; Bentli. ct Hook. f. Gen. PI. ii. p. 1073. 



1. N. campestris E. Br. Prodr. p. 481 (1810); Burkill in Fl. 

 Trop. Afr. v. p. 28 (1899). 



Justicia hruaelloides Lam. Tabl. Encycl. i. p. 40 (1791). ./. 

 caneseens Lam., I.e., p. 41. ./. ori</anoides, ■/. hirsuta, it J. 

 ■)a'.vwiularia' folia Y:ih\, Fnum. i. p. 122(1804). J.tomentosa and 

 ./. lamifolia\loxh. Hort. Beng. p. 4 (1814) ; Wall. List, n. 2370 

 (1830). ^V. rotundifolia R. Br., I.e. X. hirsuta Roem. & Schult. 

 8yst. Veg. i. p. 172(1817). N. nummular icefolia ct X. oriijanoides 

 Eoem. & Schult., I.e., p. 173. X. albicans H. B. & K. Nov. Gen. 

 ii. p. 234 (1817). .V. lamiifolia E. Br. ex 8preng. Syst. Veg. i. 

 p. 42 (1825). X. caneseens ^[n-.. I.e. X. tomentosa A.'D\Qtv.ii\). 

 Pi. i. p. 419 (1831); S. Moore in Journ. Bot. 1880, p. 196. X. 

 hrumllodes O. Kuntze, Eev. Gen. PI. ii. p. 493 (1891). 



GoLUNCO Alto.— A quite prostrate herb, only the spikes of pale 

 blue flowers erect. In the arimo of Senhor Mariano on the right 

 bank of the river Cuango, sparingly in plots formerly cultivated ; fl. 

 and fr. Dec. 18.''i4. No. 5217- Habit of Pnoirlla ; spikes very dense, 

 whitish shaggy, soft and limp in the living state ; flowers small. 



