ACCOUNT OF GENUS SEDUM AS FOUND IN CULTIVATION. 55 



spreading, twice the sepals ; scales conspicuous, quadrate, more or less retuse 

 carpels nearly equalling the petals, slender, erect, slightly divergent above. 

 Female flower : — sepals long-triangular to oblong, blunt, tube short ; petals 

 linear, blunt, i^ times the sepals ; scales % the sepals, strap-shaped, emarginate, 

 reflexed ; carpels very erect, slightly longer than the petals. 



Flowers May-June. Hardy. 



Habitat. — Himalayan region ; western Yunnan. 



The flowers vary in colour. My male plant is a white-flowered 

 form — sepals dark purple with a green tube, petals and filaments 

 white, anthers purple, scales orange, carpels green — a very bright 

 little flower. Dried specimens at Kew appear to have the same 

 coloration, but purple throughout the flower seems to be more 

 usual. My female plant has flowers of a deep red-purple, the 

 carpels and scales of a deeper tint than the petals, the sepals green. 

 Plants collected in Yunnan by Forrest had pale lemon-yellow flowers, 

 others greenish. 



Not recorded as in cultivation. The male plant came to me from 

 Lissadell nursery as S. quadnfidum, where it was raised from Darjeeling 

 seed. The female was sent to Kew from Hexham-on-Tyne, where 

 it grows in a school garden, and is supposed to have been found wild 

 in Cornwall or Scotland ! 



Series II. Crassipedes. 



14. Sedum crassipes Wallich (figs. 20, 21). 



5. crassipes, Wallich Catalogue, No. 7234, 1828. Hooker fil, and 

 Thomson in Journ. Linn. Soc, Bot., 2, 99. 



Synonyms. — S. asiaticum Clarke ex Hooker, " Flor. Brit. India," 2, 

 41Q. Masters in Card. Chron., 1878, ii. 267. (Not of De CandoUe, 

 *• Prodromus," 3, 401, 1828.) S. Wallichianum Hooker, " Icon. Plant.," tab. 604. 



Illustration. — Hooker, loc. cit. 



A very distinct plant, at once recognized among the Rhodiolas 

 by its linear toothed bright-green leaves and greenish-white flowers. 



Description. — A smooth herbaceous perennial. Rootstock thick, elongate, 

 branched, aerial, J-f inch diameter, bearing withered bases of old stems. 

 Stems several from each crown, smooth, round, erect, unbranched, 6-12 inches 

 high. Leaves many, alternate, bright green, glabrous, ^-f inch long by -ra-J 

 inch broad, flat, fleshy, linear to- lanceolate, sessile, pointed at both ends, 

 with I to 3 remote teeth on either side in the upper half. Inflorescence terminal, 

 dense, flatfish, an inch across, leafy with leaf-like bracts. Buds oblong, bluntly 

 pointed, tVtV inch long. Flowers \ inch across when wide open, 5-parted, 

 hermaphrodite. Sepals green or purple, subulate, blunt, wide-spreading. 

 Petals yellowish-white to greenish, linear, acute or blunt, boat-shaped, mostly 

 wide-spreading or reflexed, ij times the sepals. Stamens slightly exceeding 

 the petals, spreading, filaments greenish, anthers yellow. Scales quadrate, 

 orange, slightly notched. Carpels green, erect, slender, equalling or shorter 

 than the stamens ; in fruit erect, and | inch long. 



Flowers June, and often again later. Hardy. 



Habitat. — Widely spread in the Himalayas, 11,000-16,000 feet ; 

 central China ; Yunnan. 



This is the plant usually grown under the name of S. asiaticum 

 DC. or sometimes S. Wallichianum Hooker ; but as pointed out 

 by Maximowicz (Bull. Acad. Petersb., 29, 126) De Candolle's plant 



