— Cent: stem tetragonal: leaves pergameneous, cane 
somewhat narrowed to a cordate-truncate base, 23-3 inches — 
1888. | ; BOTANICAL GAZETTE. 75 ae 
ent base of style. — Distinguished by secondary branches — 
of inflorescence two to three times exceeding primary ones.— J 
Mountain forests of Pansamala, Dept. Alta Verapaz, alt. — 
3,800 feet, Aug., 1886. (Ex Pl. cit. 1,035.) Ks 
: ee, 
Cobwa triflora.—Leaflets 3-jugate, uniform, oblong-lance- 
olate, tapering from the middle to an acute mucronulate apex, 
of later development from alternate foliaceous bracts: calyx-_ 
I 
dotted with red, pale within: corolla broadly subcampanu- 
’"Amér. Centr. t. xvr: flowers nearest to the Ecuador C. 
campanulatus Hemsl.—Banks of Rio Cajabon, near Coban, - 
alt. 4,300 feet, Dec., 1886. (Ex PI. cit. 204.) . 
~ 
_Beloperone Pansamalana. (§ Beloperonides. )—Fruticulose, — 
epiphytal, prostrate: branches ascending, dichotomous, te- 
tragonal, pubescent in two lines: leaves membranaceous, — 
opaque, beset with cystoliths, glabrous, dark-green above, — 
glaucous beneath, rhomboidal to elliptical, each end acumi- 
, 12-16 lines long, 6-7 broad, petioles 1-3 lines long: 
flowers 2-4, at length pedicellate in a subsessile fascicle : 
and each other, hairy without, glabrate within, the posterior” 
re bidentulate, the anterior 4 lines broad with lobes 2 lines 
Calcarate - 
feet, Oct. 
Thyrsacanthus geminatus.—Suffruticose, ferruginous-pubes- — 
dous ex-— 
