1888. | BOTANICAL GAZETTE. _ . "7 
and broad; endocarp shining-white, callose, delicately retic-» 
ulated. —Pansamala forest, alt. 3,800 feet, Sept., 1000, 
April, 1887. (Ex Pl. cit. 751.)—Freiherr von Tiirckheim’s 
c 
no tendency toward lobing of leaves. The originals of Dr. 
Watson’s description, sparingly collected by him in the ééerr@ 
caltente, are somewhat less robust plants, and the leaves hav. 
a more distinctly continuous intermarginal vein; the flowers 
were not described, and in the specimens seen are insufficient 
for examination. 
Asplenium Vera-pax. (§ Diplazium.)—Stipes tufted from a 
short rhizome witha few black scales toward base, 18 inches — 
long: fronds subcoriaceous, glabrous, pale beneath, punctate, 
ovate-lanceolate. 12 inches long, lower half pinnate, the up- 
lines long, falling short of both midrib and ma 
zioid chiefly below middle of pinne. (Plate 1.)—lans 
gah Dept. Alta Verapaz, alt. 4,000 feet, Sept., 1886. 
1. cit. 850.) 
Baltimore, Mad. 
Notes on Western Umbellifere. 1. 
JOHN M. COULTER AND J. N. ROSE. 
In the following notes those specific names are used w 
are commonly known to collectors. 
hich 
forms than their labels show, and their range has been very 
materially extended. ee ee 
