Spartium Scoparium ! 
Spartium junceum ! 
Cytisus Laburnum. 
nigricans. 
Chorozema ilicifolium. 
Amorpha sp. 
Phaseolus sp. 
Prunus sylvestris. 
Laurocerasus ! 
Rosa sp. ! 
Spirea sp. ! 
Cotoneaster microphylla! 
Ailanthus glandulosus. 
*Fraxinus Ornus ! 
* excelsior ! 
Melia Azedarach. 
Xanthoxylum sp. ! 
Sambucus nigra ! 
Aucuba japonica. 
Erica sp. cult. 
Jasminum nudiflorum ! 
officinale ! 
Olea europea. 
Punica Granatum. 
Tex aquifolium ! 
PASCIATION. i! 
Daphne indica. 
Daphne odora. 
Suzeda fruticosa. 
Ulmus campestris. 
Alnus incana. 
Salix vitellina, &e. ! 
Thuja orientalis. 
Pinus pinaster ! 
sylvestris ! 
Abies excelsa ! 
Taxus baccata. 
Larix europea. 
ENDOGENS. 
Lilium Martagon. 
candidum ! 
*Fritillaria imperialis ! 
Asparagus officinalis ! 
Hyacinthus orientalis ! 
Tamus communis! 
Narcissi sp. ! 
Gladiolus sp. 
Zea Mays. 
Filices. 
See also—Moquin-Tandon, ‘Elem. Ter. Veget.,’ p. 146; C. O. Weber, 
‘Verhandl. Nat. Hist.,’ Vereins, f. d. Preuss., Rheinl. und Westphal., 
1860, p. 347, tab. vii; Hallier, ‘Phytopathol.,’ p. 128; Boehmer, ‘De 
plantis Fasciatis,’ Wittenb., 1752. 
Cohesion of foliar organs ——This takes place in several 
ways, and in very various degrees ; the simplest case is 
that characterised by the cohesion of the margins of 
the same organ, as in the condition called perfoliate in 
descriptive works, and which is due either to a cohesion 
of the margins of the basal lobes of the leaf, or to the 
development of the leaf in a sheathing or tubular 
manner. As an abnormal occurrence, I have met with 
this perfoliation in a leaf of Goodenia ovata. The 
condition in question is often loosely confounded 
with connation, or the union of two leaves by their 
bases. In other cases the union takes place between 
the margins of two or more leaves. 
Cohesion of margins of single organs —The leaves of Hazels 
may often be found with their margins coherent at the 
