•27S 



Plants of the Punjab. 



Heebs, Ebect, with Alteenate Exstipulaie Simple Leave 



Leap [^L^egixs Extiee. 



Sedum miiltieaule, 

 Ceassulace^. 

 E. B. L ii. 422. 

 Himalaya, 

 4-7,000 ft. 

 Simla (CoUett). 

 Kashmir. 



Petals ttnuxited. 



smaU, smooth, mnch divided from the base, leaves 

 f-1 in. long, linear-oblong, short-pointed, flowers yeUow, 

 nearly sessile in dusters, follicles spreading in fruit, not 

 rongh, seeds rongh, ovate with a broad top : otherwise 

 like the last species. 



Drosera peltata, 

 var. lunata, 

 Chitra. 



Deoseeace^. 

 F. B. I. -ii. 424. 

 Himalaya, 

 4-8,000 ft. 

 Simla (CoUett). 



small to medium size, perenni^, sometimes unbranch- 

 ed, slender, glandular ; leaves J in. across, semi-lunar, 

 covered above and on margins with sticiy glandular 

 hairs, radical leaves smaller, soon falHng-off; flowers J 

 in. dianL, white, in terminal branching racemes, calyx 

 5-toothed, glandular, petals 5, stamens 5, styles 3, stigmas 

 minutely fringed ; capsule 3-valved, enclosed in the calyx 

 and petals, seeds many, minute, united to the valves. 

 This plant is allied to the English sundew and is an insec- 

 tivorous plant ; the remains of insects are found sticking 

 to the leaves. 



Ammannia baccilera, see Herbs, Erect, Opposite, Exstipulate, Simple, 



Entire. 



Epilobium latiioliuin, see Herbs, Erect, Opposite, Exstipulate, Simple, 



Entire. 



EpiiObium 

 origaniiolium, 



Ox AGP. At E^. 



F. B. I. ii. 586. 

 Himalava, 

 9-14,000 ft. 

 Kashmir. 



small to large, stem cyhndrical with 2 hnes of hairs, 

 sometimes velvety all over, leaves vary much, mid-stem 

 leaves opposite, sessile or shortly stalked, ovate or ovate- 

 obJong, 1 in. long, sometimes 3 in., flowers usually few, 

 at the end of branches, petals less than J in., stigmas club- 

 shaped, capsule l|-3 in., seeds narrow, long, somewhat 

 narrowed at the top, seeds minutely dotted ; othsrwise 

 Uke E. latifohum. 



