82 ORIGIN OF CULTIVATiiD PLANTS. 



A species is also cultivated in the West Indies, Ma- 

 raiita indica, which, Tussac says, was brought from the 

 East Indies. Kornicke believes that M. ramosissima of 

 Wallich found at Sillet, in India, is the same species, 

 and thinks it is a variety of 31. arundinacea. Out of 

 thirty-six more or less known species of the genus 

 Maranta, thirty at least are of American origin. It is 

 therefore unlikely that two or three others sliould be 

 Asiatic. Until Sir Joseph Hooker's Flora of British 

 India is completed, these questions on the species of the 

 Scitaminecv and their origin will be very obscure. 



Anglo- Indians obtain arrowi'oot from another plant 

 of the same family, Curcuma angustifolia, Roxburgh, 

 which grows in the forests of the Deccan and in Mala- 

 bar.^ I do not know whether it is cultivated. 



Roxbiirpli, Fl. Ind., i. p. 31; Porter, The Tropical Agiiculturalist, 

 p. 2-il 3 AiusHc, Materia Medica,i. p. 19. 



