126 VANDES. 
disk with three parallel lamelle ending in a coarsely fimbriate patch on the terminal 
lobe; spur slender, curved, cylindric, obtuse, about half as long as the column, 
Column without a foot, curved, constricted in the middle, grooved in front. Рой ша 
oval, attached by a short stout conical caudicle to a small flat gland. 
Dehra Dun, Mackinnon (Duthi?s Nos. 22708(a), 22724); Kheri district of N. 
Oudh, Duthie’s collector No. 22797; Mussoorie range up to 6,000 feet, Mackinnon 
(Duties No. 22708); common in the pine forests of Jaunsar and T'ehri-Garhwál up to 
6,000 feet; Bashahr at 7,000 feet, Lace No. 880; banks of the Siran river near 
Abbottabad in Hazdra at about 3,000 feet, Colonel Barrett; (ujar Valley in the 
Chitral district, found by Sir W. Gatacre in 1895. It flowers during March and April. 
This species is closely allied to Е. campestris. It differs chiefly by its shorter scapes, larger 
flowers and the shorter and more dense racemes; the shape of the lip and the general colouring of 
the flower are also very different. E. campestris is essentially a species of the plains of India, 
whereas E. Hormusjit extends up to the temperate region of the Himalaya, where the climatic 
conditions are more favourable for leaf development. JI have named this species after Mr. H. 
Hormusji Deboo, who has worked for many years as artist in the Botanical Department of Northern 
India, and by whom all the drawings for this volume have been prepared. 
Prate 109. Eulophia Hormusjii Duthie.—A flowering plant,—of natural size; a plant 
with leaves, reduced to $ size. Fig. 1, single flower; 2, ditto, with sepals and petals 
removed ; 3, lip spread out; 4, column and upper portion of ovary; 5, summit of column 
with anther; 6, side view of anther; 7, pollinia;—all enlarged. 
5. EULOPHIA CAMPESTRIS Wall. Cat. 7367. 
Tuber irregularly oblong, often lobed. Leaves two, developing if at all long after 
the flowers, linear, acuminate, plicate, 25 to 4 dm. long, rising from the apex of a 
slender sheathed pseudo-stem. Scape 2:5 to 3 dm., stout or slender, sheathed at intervals 
by loose membranous acute bracts; raceme laxly many-flowered. lowers subsecund, 
drooping, pink, about 2*5 em. across; bract membranous, linear or lanceolate, acuminate, 
usually longer than the slenderly-stalked ovary. Sepals slightly attached to the base 
of the lip, linear-lanceolate, acute or acuminate, 5—7-nerved, yellow or green 
striped with pink. Petals narrower, spreading, oblanceolate, 3—5-nerved. Zip as long 
as the sepals, cuneate-obovate or oblong; side lobes short, rounded or subacute, incurved. 
round the column, the margins of a deep rose colour; midlobe orbicular quadrate or 
oblong, crenulate, usually purple; basal portion of disk with three median lamellate 
nerves ending in a fimbriate or tubercled patch on the terminal lobe; spur short, 
conical subclavate or subacute. Column as long as the lip, slender, without a foot. 
Ройіта broad; caudicle stout; gland elongate. Capsule about 2 cm. long, ellipsoid. 
Lindl Gen. and Sp. Orch. 185; іп Journ. Linn. Soc. iii, 24 (excl. syn. Wight); Royle 
IH. 366; Reichb. f. in Walp. Ann. vi, 647; Hook. f. Fl. Br. Ind. vi, 4; King & 
Pantl. in Ann, Roy. Bot. Gard. Calc. viii 178, t. 941. Е. rupestris and ramentacea 
Lindl. in Wall Cat, 7368, 7370; Gen. and Sp. Orch. 185; in Journ, Linn. Soc. iii, 
25. E. hemileuca Lindl, in Journ. Linn. бос. ui, 25. Е, vera Royle Ш. 370. Limodorum 
ramentaceum Roxb. Hort. Beng. 63; Fl. Ind. ii, 407. ZL. dubium Ham. MSS. Bletia 
Dabia Don Prod. Fl. Nep. 30. 
