376 Flori cultural and Botajiical Notices, 



491. IPOMCE'A [3665. 



*bonariensis Hook. Buenos Ayres A El or 10 au P Buenos Ayres 1826 S r.m Bot. mag. 



A handsome stove twiner, with flowers nearly as beautiful 

 as those of Ipomoe^a insignis. It is common on ditch banks 

 about Buenos Ayres, whence seeds were sent to Britain by 

 Mr. Tweedie in 1826, [Bot. Mag., July.) 



Scrop/iula/iacece. 



1777. JVTEME'SIA 



*floribunda Beni/i. many-flowered O or 1 j>i.au W.Y C. G. H. ... S s.l Bot. reg. n. s. t. 39. 



An upright-brf.nching annual, nearly glabrous in all its parts, 

 and requiring the same treatment in the garden as the annual 

 linarias. {Bot. Beg., July.) 



Labiatce. 



76. SA'LVIA 

 687a canescens Met/, hoary ^ A or 2 jn.au P Caucasus ... C co Bot. reg. n. s. t. 36. 



A hardy perennial herbaceous plant, with flowers of a fine 

 deep purple, and leaves covered with whitish wool. It comes 

 near ^Salvia flavoides, and is very ornamental. It inhabits rocks 

 in the Caucasus, and seeds were sent to the Horticultural Society 

 from Dr. Ledebour of Dorpat. {Bot. Beg., July.) 



Prhnuliicecc. 



451. PRI'MULA 



*carni61ica Hort. Carniolan £ A or J mr.ap P Carniola 1826 D p.l Maund bot. gard. 651. 



A beautiful little plant, well adapted for rockwork, in which 

 it may be planted in peat soil, under the shade of a ledge of 

 stone to protect it from the midday sun. The plant is at present 

 rather scarce in collections. {Bot. Gard., July.) 



Orchid acece. 



2554. EPIDE'NDRUM [mag. 3666. 



»viridi.purpilreum Hook, purplish-green £123 or IJ au.o G.P Jamaica ... D p.r.w Bot. 



An epiphyte imported from Jamaica by Mr. Horsfall of 

 Liverpool, and also sent to the Glasgow Botanic Garden from 

 Jamaica by Dr. M'Fadyen, resident in that island, and author 

 of the Jamaica Flora. It roots in the ground, and produces a 

 stem a foot and a half high. {Bot. Mag., July.) 



•PHAL.I;M0'PSIS Blume. Butterfly Plant. (From p/ialaina, a moth, and optis, resemblance.)' 



*amat)\\\s Blume lovely £ (Z5J cu IJ jn W.R.Y Manilla ... D p.r.w Bot. reg. n. s. t. 34. 

 Synonyme : Kpid^ndrum amlbile Linn. Sp. PI., 1351. ; Angrx^cum album m^jus Rumph. Herb. 

 Amboin., 6. p. ^. t 43. 



A very rare and beautiful epiphyte, which flowered for the 

 first time in Europe in the Tooting Nursery, in July, 1838. 

 " The curious form of the flowers, the graceful way in which 

 they hang down from below the leaves, their large size, and the 

 brilliant whiteness of their broad leathery petals, give this species 

 a most striking and uncommon appearance." It grows in Am- 

 boyna, on short thick trees covered with moss, hanging down in 

 entangled tufts. It succeeds best when fixed to pieces of decay- 

 ing wood, along with a little turf or moss, and suspended from 

 the roof. Not sending out shoots freely, it is probably rather 

 difficult to propagate. {Bot. Beg., July.) 



