CLUSIACEM. 



399 



ovules may diminish to two in each cell.' In Renggeria,- rightly 

 referred as a section to the same genus, there are ten stamens, the 

 filaments of which are united in a short and thick tuhe, at the summit 

 of which the anthers display their two distinct and divergent cells. 

 In llavetiopsisf which we do not separate generically from the 



Qunpoya (Iicngifa) scandens. 



Fig. 362. Female flower. 



361. Andrcecium. 



Fig. 363. Female perianth. 



365. Long. sect, of female 

 flower. 



Fig. 364. Diagram of 

 female flower. 



Fig. 366. Female flower, 

 perianth removed. 



preceding types, there are often only four stamens, monadelphous 

 below, but the anthers of which become introrse. Some, which have 

 been named Oligospora,* have only from two to four ascending ovules 

 in each cell ; others (HavetieUa 5 ) have a greater number. Balboa 6 

 comprises species of Havetiopsis, the stamens of which, four to six 

 in number, are surrounded by four petals of variable imbrication 

 and not, constantly decussate. In Œdematopus, 7 generically con- 

 founded by the most recent authors 8 with Havetiopsis, the stamens 

 have the same configuration as in the true Quapoya; but their 



1 They are ascending when they are few in 

 numher, and approach the horizontal direction 

 as the number increases. 



- Meissn. Gen. 42 ; Comm. 31. — Endl. Gen. n. 

 5436.— II. Bn. Payer Fam.Nat. 270. — Sehweig- 

 gt , ii Mart. Nov. Gch. et Sp iii. 106, t. 297, fig. ii. 



3 Pl. et Tri. Ami. Se. A'at. sér. 4, xiv. 246. — 

 B. H. Gen. 172, n. 6. 



J Pl. etTui. he. cit. 248. 



6 Pl. et Tin. lue. cit. 247. 



Pl. et Tki. he. elt. 252.— B. H. Gen. 172, n. 

 8.— II. Bn. Bull. Sue. Linn. Par. 77. 



"• Pl. et Tri. lue. cit. 249. 



s B. II. Gin. 172, n. 6 (" Œdematnpodc sepa- 

 rated from Havetiopm by characters apparently 

 of less importance"). — See H. Bn. Bull. Hue. 

 Linn. Par. 78. 



