THE PASSION-FLOWER FAMILY. 439 



P. Buonapartea, Hort. Probably a hybrid between P. alata 

 and P. quadrangularis. 



P. cceruleo-racemosa, Sabine, 'Trans. Hort. Soc.,' iv. 9; Lodd. 

 ' Bot. Cab.,' p. 573. A well-known hybrid between P. ccerulea 

 and P. racemosa (see Herbert's ' Amaryllidaceae,' p. 354). 



P. carulea-Kermesina. Probably a cross between P. ccerulea 

 and P. Raddiana. 



P. Colvillei, Sw., 'Brit. Fl. Card.,' ii. 126. Said to be a 

 hybrid between P. ccerulea as the male parent and P. incarnata 

 as the female. 



P. Decaisneana, ' Fl. des Serres,' viii. 848 ; ' Revue Hort.,' 

 1855, P- J 5- Said to be a hybrid between P. quadrangularis 

 and P. alata. 



P. Hartwiesiana, Hort. Rollison, is probably a seedling 

 variety of P. ccerulea with white flowers. 



P. hybrida-floribunda, Hort. Apparently a cross between P. 

 ccerulea and P. Raddiana. 



P. Imperatrice Eugenie, '111. Hort.,' 1858, p. 175. Appa- 

 rently a cross between P. ccerulea and P. alata or P. quadran- 

 gularis. 



P. Innesii, Mast, 'Gard. Chron.,' 1870, p. 891. A cross 

 between P. alata as the female and P. macrocarpa as the male 

 parent. This was raised by Mr Munro. 



P. Lawsoniana, Mast., 'Card. Chron.,' 1868, p. 1288. A 

 cross between P. racemosa as the male parent and P. alata. 



P. Loudoniana, Hort. Several garden plants exist under 

 this name, but the original P. Loudoniana was probably a cross 

 between P. Raddiatia and P. racemosa. 



P. Madonna. Said to be a cross between P. racemosa and 

 P. Buonapartea. 



P. Munroit, Mast, <Gard. Chron.,' 1868, p. 1288. A cross 

 between P. ccerulea as the male and P. alata as the female 

 parent. This .hybrid, along with several others, was raised by 

 Mr Robertson Munro, of the Lawson Company's Nursery, 

 Edinburgh. 



Dr Masters remarks that many seedling and hybrid varieties 

 of the common hardy P. ccerulea exist; and amongst these 

 he names " angustifolia," "glauca," "imbricata," "alba," and 

 "Neumann!." Paxt 'Mag. Bot,' xv. 270. 



P. palmata-ccerulea is a hybrid raised in the Jardin des Plantes, 

 Paris, in 1829, by M. Delaire, and is the result of fertilising P. 

 palmata with pollen from P. ccerulea, and is itself fertile, an- 

 other variety less highly coloured having been raised from its 

 seeds. (Porcher's ' Du Fuchsia,' 4th ed. p. 29.) 

 Tacsonia. A genus of South American climbing plants nearly 



